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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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[2023] ZAGPJHC 146
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## Mnguni, Sello of Erf [....], Tsakane Brakpan v Shati and Another (A3065/2020)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 146 (13 February 2023)
Mnguni, Sello of Erf [....], Tsakane Brakpan v Shati and Another (A3065/2020)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 146 (13 February 2023)
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sino date 13 February 2023
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been redacted
from this document in compliance with the law and
SAFLII
Policy
FLYNOTES:
REMOVAL FROM ROLL AND ABUSE OF PROCESS
CIVIL
PROCEDURE – Removal from roll – Abuse of process –
Civil appeal – Practice manual – Parties
may not agree
to postpone the appeal without the leave of the Deputy Judge
President or the judges to whom the appeal has
been allocated for
hearing – Removed twice at short notice – Not
permitted to remove appeal second time –
Appeal struck off
the roll – Costs on an attorney and client scale.
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: A3065/2020
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
13 February 2023
In
the matter between:
MNGUNI, SELLO OF ERF
[....], TSAKANE BRAKPAN Appellant
and
NGWENYA
SHADRACK SHATI First
Respondent
EKURHULENI
METROPOLITAN MUNICIPALITY Second
Respondent
JUDGMENT
CRUTCHFIELD
J:
[1]
This appeal came before us on Thursday, 18 August 2022. The
appellant, Mnguni Sello
of Erf [....], Tsakane, Brakpan and the
second respondent, the unlawful occupiers of erf [....] Tsakane
Extension 11, did not appear
at the hearing. Nor did the third
respondent, the Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality. The first
respondent, Ngwenya Shadrack
Shati, appeared in person.
[2]
The appellant’s failure to appear at the hearing resulted from
the appellant’s
delivery of a notice of removal of the appeal
from the roll of 18 August 2022, on 16 August 2022.
[3]
The appellant did not provide a reason for the notice of removal of
the matter from the
roll. My secretary attempted to contact the
appellant’s representatives on the morning of the appeal to
inform them that
we required an appearance on behalf of the appellant
at the hearing. An appearance accordance with the attorneys’
obligations
to this Court and the administration of justice in the
light of the late delivery of the notice of removal.
[4]
The history
of this matter is of some importance. The appeal arose from an order
of the civil court for the District of Ekurhuleni
South East held at
Tsakane, case number 175/17, handed down by the learned magistrate on
11 September 2020.
[1]
‘
[5]
The first
respondent launched the proceedings in the court
a
quo
during September 2017. The
ex
parte
application
in terms of s 4(2) of PIE was dated 14 September 2017 and set
down for hearing on 22 May 2018. Various postponements
followed
thereafter in order for the appellant to locate alternate
accommodation, produce documents (including bank statements)
and for
the appellant’s witnesses to appear and lead evidence. The
court
a
quo
finalised the proceedings before it on 11 September 2020
[2]
or thereabouts, approximately three years after the proceedings
commenced.
[6]
The court
a quo
ordered the eviction of the appellant and the
second respondents from erf [....] Tsakane, Brakpan, (‘the
property’),
by not later than 31 October 2020, that they
not return to the property thereafter and in the event that they did
not vacate
the property by 31 October 2020, that the sheriff
together with the South African Police Service, if necessary, carry
out
the eviction on or after 30 November 2020 by removing the
occupants from the property (‘the eviction order’).
[7]
The lower court ordered the appellant and the second respondents to
pay the costs of the
application including the costs of the
application in terms of s 4(2) of the Prevention of Illegal Eviction
from and Unlawful Occupation
of Land Act, 19 of 1998 (‘PIE’).
[8]
On 30 March
2021, the appellant applied for the assignment of a date for the
hearing of the appeal in this Court in terms of
rule 50(4)(a) of the
uniform rules of court (‘the rules’). On 28 October 2020,
the appellant delivered an application
for condonation of the late
filing of the notice of appeal.
[3]
The appellant uploaded heads of argument on caselines on 30 April
2021.
[9]
The registrar set the appeal down for hearing, on the first occasion,
on 24 August
2021. The appellant uploaded a notice of removal of
the proceedings from the roll on 24 August 2021, the day of the
appeal.
[10]
Thereafter, the registrar allocated 18 August 2022 as the date
of the appeal. The appellant uploaded
a notice of removal of the
appeal from the roll on caselines, on 16 August 2022. The first
respondent informed us at the hearing
that the appellant’s
legal representatives failed to inform him (and presumably his
attorneys of record), prior to the hearing
on 18 August 2022,
that they intended to remove the matter from the roll.
[11]
The first respondent told us that he utilised the proceeds of his
pension to purchase the property. Due to
the appellant’s
occupation of it, the first respondent had not had access to it in
the interim. The first respondent was
69 years of age. This was
consistent with the record that reflected his age of 67 years during
the proceedings before the
court
a quo
.
[12]
The appellant was 38 years of age at the time of the proceedings
before the court
a quo
and described himself as being “abled
bodied.” The first respondent was approximately 30 years older,
a pensioner, reduced
to living in makeshift accommodation, (referred
to as a “shack” by the first respondent before us),
whilst the appellant
made use of the first respondent’s
property.
[13]
Whilst the first respondent’s attorneys remained of record, the
first respondent told us that he was
indebted to them in an amount of
approximately R70 000.00. Thus, he appeared in person. The
record reflected the first respondent’s
indebtedness to the
third respondent in the amount of approximately R30 000.00
during 2020, consequent on the appellant’s
occupation of the
property.
[14]
Paragraph 5 of chapter 7 of the practice manual of the Gauteng Local
Division provides that once a date has
been allocated for the hearing
of any civil appeal, the parties may not agree to postpone the appeal
without the leave of the Deputy
Judge President or the judges to whom
the appeal has been allocated for hearing. The appellant failed
wholly to comply with paragraph
5 of chapter 7 of the practice manual
on two occasions, without explanation on either occasion.
[15]
The public interest in the efficient running and management of the
appeal roll allocations requires that
litigants comply with the
relevant provisions of the practice manual. The unauthorised removal
of the matter from the roll by the
appellant’s legal
representatives served to deprive other litigants of an opportunity
to have dates allocated for the hearing
of their appeals.
Furthermore, the conduct of the appellant’s legal
representatives wasted precious and sparse judicial resources
in that
four judges read and prepared the record in this matter, only to be
confronted by the removal of the matter from the roll.
[16]
The first respondent, an elderly gentleman of almost seventy (70)
years of age and living in an informal
structure as a result of the
appellant’s occupation of the property, waited in excess of two
years for the finalisation of
this appeal before us, only to find
that the appellant’s legal representatives had uploaded a
second notice of removal of
the matter from the roll.
[17]
The conduct of the appellant’s legal representatives violated
the efficient and proper administration
of the justice system, was
contemptuous of this Court as well as the first respondent and should
not be tolerated.
[18]
It would be unjust and unfair to the first respondent and to other
litigants to permit the appellant to remove
this matter from the roll
and re-enrol it for a third time. This is particularly so in the
light of the first respondent’s
personal circumstances.
[19]
In the circumstances, it is not in the interests of justice to permit
the appellant to remove the matter
from the roll for a second time
and an appropriate order will follow hereunder.
[20]
The
appellant referred in the notice of appeal and heads of argument to a
report of the third respondent, allegedly placed before
the court
a
quo
and
referred to
[4]
in the
appellant’s heads of argument. The appellant, however,
did not include the third respondent’s report in
the record or
place the report before this Court. Notably, the transcripts of the
court proceedings placed before us did not refer
to the third
respondent’s report. Moreover, whilst the appellant’s
heads of argument referred to various aspects of
the third
respondent’s report, those heads of argument did not include
any caselines page references to the report.
[21]
In
addition, the copy of the court a quo’s judgment in the record
was incomplete.
[5]
[22]
The
appellant was
dominis
litis
in
this appeal. The hearing before us on 18 August 2022 was the second
date allocated for a hearing of this matter. Notwithstanding
that the
final notice of set down was uploaded on caselines on 20 May
2022, the appeal record was significantly incomplete
and incoherent.
Various documents were missing from the record placed before this
Court, including a complete copy of the judgment
of the court
a
quo
,
the third respondent’s report, the first respondent’s
replying affidavit
[6]
and the
heads of argument filed on behalf of the parties in the court
a
quo
dated 6 September 2019.
[7]
Furthermore, not a single reference to the caselines record was made
in the appellant’s heads of argument.
[23]
Volume 2 of the record commenced with the index in respect of volume
1. The appellant failed to upload an
index relevant to volume 2, thus
forcing us to trawl through the documents uploaded under volume 2
without the assistance of an
index.
[24]
The transcript of the proceedings before the court
a quo
reflected the proceedings on 12 August 2020 and 4 February
2020 only, notwithstanding that the matter was dealt with
both prior
and subsequent to those dates, including on 11 September 2020.
[25]
Neither the transcripts of the proceedings on 12 August 2020 nor
4 February 2020 referred to the
third respondent’s report.
[26]
The 77
pages of transcript reflecting the proceedings on 12 August 2020
were uploaded nine (9) times on caselines.
[8]
[27]
The transcript of the proceedings on 4 February 2020 reflected
issues that arose from and related to
a disagreement between the
appellant and his legal advisor not relevant to the substantive
aspects of this matter.
[28]
The appellant’s legal representatives failed to provide an
explanation for their failure to comply
with their duty to place a
complete and accurate record before this Court. This was despite this
being the second date allocated
to the appeal of this matter by two
judges of this Division. Thus, four judges have had to peruse the
incomplete and incoherent
record and do their best to deal with it.
[29]
Adding to the irregular state of the record were the two notices of
removal of the matter from the roll in
respect of both dates
allocated to this appeal.
[30]
It is wholly unacceptable for the appellant and his legal
representatives to subvert the proper administration
of justice and
the operation of this Court’s processes and proceedings by
delivering notices of removal from the roll and
doing so once the
Judges allocated to deal with the matter have already prepared it in
advance of the hearing date. Moreover, the
appellant’s
insistence on remaining in the property in the face of the order of
the court
a quo
whilst failing to his municipal consumption,
is being aided and abetted by his legal representatives’
unacceptable conduct
in removing the matter from the roll contrary to
the practice manual of this Division.
[31]
Rule 41(1)(a) provides that a party instituting proceedings may at
any time before the matter has been set
down and thereafter by
consent of the parties or leave of the court withdraw such
proceedings, in any of which events he shall
deliver a notice of
withdrawal and may embody in such notice a consent to pay costs and
that Taxing Master shall taxed such costs
on the request of the other
party.
[32]
Van der
Schyff J in
Dey
Street Properties (Pty) Ltd v Salentias Travel and Hospitality CC t/a
Van Hobs Dry Cleaners,
[9]
held that the implication was that a party cannot unilaterally
postpone a matter where the opposing party’s consent cannot
be
obtained. It is the discretion of the court seized with an
application for postponement that prevails. Similar logic as applies
to Rule 41(3) applies to the removal of a matter from the roll after
it’s enrolled for hearing. An applicant,
dominis
litis
,
is bound to the date determined by it in the notice of motion, for
the matter to be heard.
[33]
The same logic applies in respect of the appellant’s unilateral
removal of the matter from the roll
without the consent of the first
respondent and without the consent of the Deputy Judge President or
this Court.
[34]
It is the
duty of the appellant’s attorney to ensure that a complete and
coherent record of the appeal is placed before an
appeal court. The
attorney is obliged to peruse and consider the record in order to
ensure that it complies with the rules and
the practice manual of
this Division.
[10]
There can
be no doubt that the appellant’s legal representatives failed
in their duty to this Court, to the respondents and
to the appellant,
in respect of the appeal record herein and the prosecution of this
appeal.
[35]
In the circumstances, it would be unjust and unfair to the first
respondent as well as a violation of the
proper administration of the
justice system and this Court, to permit the removal of the matter
from the roll and thereby allow
the appellant an opportunity to place
this matter on the roll for hearing for a third time, in
circumstances where four judges
already have read and prepared these
papers, and, to expect the first respondent to wait even longer than
he has done to date,
for finalisation of the matter.
[36]
The appellant’s conduct of this appeal ought not to be
countenanced by this Court. The removal of the
matter from the roll
on the day of the hearing on 24 August 2021 and subsequently on
16 August 2022, violated and continues
to violate the first
respondent’s right to finality of this litigation together with
the first respondent’s constitutional
rights abovementioned and
the proper administration of the justice system.
[37]
The lower court’s judgment was dated and signed by the
learned magistrate on 11 September
2020. Some two years elapsed
since and the appellant failed to prosecute this appeal to finality
in a coherent manner.
[38]
In the circumstances, it is appropriate that this matter be struck
off the roll and this judgment not be
removed from caselines.
[39]
In the light of the facts set out herein, this is a matter that
justifies this Court demonstrating its displeasure
by ordering that
the appellant pay the costs of the appeal on a punitive scale as
between attorney and client.
[40]
Accordingly, I grant the following order:
1.
The appellant is not permitted to remove this appeal from the roll of
18 August 2022.
2.
The appeal is struck off the roll.
3.
This judgment may not be removed from caselines.
4.
The appellant is ordered to pay the costs of the appeal on an
attorney and client scale.
CRUTCHFIELD
J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION
JOHANNESBURG
I
agree.
DLAMINI
J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION
JOHANNESBURG
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected and is handed down electronically by circulation
to the
parties / their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on CaseLines. The
date of the
judgment is deemed to be 13 February 2023.
ATTORNEYS
FOR THE APPELLANT: Mdabe Hlongwa Attorneys
Legal
Advisory and Information Centre
ATTORNEYS
FOR THE FIRST
RESPONDENT:
Gishen-Gilchrist Inc
DATE
OF THE HEARING:
18 August 2022
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
13 February 2023
[1]
Caselines 001-31.
[2]
The
judgment is dated 11 September 2020.
[3]
Caselines 002-12.
[4]
Caselines 001-25 para 1.1.2.
[5]
Page
32 of the judgment was missing.
[6]
Caselines 001-37.
[7]
Caselines 004-60; 004-62 line 18.
[8]
Caselines 004-1; 004-78; 004-155; 004-232;
004-379; 004-386; 004-463; 004-540; 004-617.
[9]
Dey
Street Properties (Pty) Ltd v Salentias Travel and Hospitality CC
t/a Van Hobs Dry Cleaners
Case
No 25461/21 dated 15 July 2021 Gauteng Division, Pretoria at
[5]
[10]
Rennie
NO v Gordon
1988
(1) SA 1
(A) at 20D;
Hing
v Road Accident Fund
2014
(3) SA 350
(WCC) at 382D – 383A.
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