Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 223South Africa
Bhembe and Another v Industrial Development Incorporation Of South Africa (17815/2020) [2023] ZAGPJHC 223 (22 February 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
22 February 2023
Headnotes
SUMMARY
Judgment
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## Bhembe and Another v Industrial Development Incorporation Of South Africa (17815/2020) [2023] ZAGPJHC 223 (22 February 2023)
Bhembe and Another v Industrial Development Incorporation Of South Africa (17815/2020) [2023] ZAGPJHC 223 (22 February 2023)
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FLYNOTES:
DEFAULT JUDGMENT AND NOTICE OF SET DOWN
CIVIL
PROCEDURE – Default judgment – Notice of set down –
Requirements of the Division’s Practice
Directives 9.20(1)
and 9.14(1) – Requiring notice of set down to be served on
defendant where unopposed application
is made six months or longer
after the date on which the application or summons was served –
Application for default
judgment is an unopposed application –
Irregularity – Default judgment rescinded – Uniform
Rule 42(1)(a).
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
Case
No. 17815/2020
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
(3)
REVISED: YES.
DATE:
22 February 2023
In
the matter between:
SAMUEL
BHEMBE
First Applicant
SAKHILE
MASUKU
Second Applicant
and
THE
INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT INCORPORATION
OF
SOUTH AFRICA
Respondent
JUDGMENT
HOPKINS
AJ
1.
The applicants have approached this court to rescind an order granted
against
them in their absence.
2.
The application has been made in terms of Uniform Rule 42(1)(
a
)
which provides that:
The court may, in
addition to any other powers it may have,
mero motu
or upon
the application of any party affected, rescind or vary an order or
judgment erroneously sought or erroneously granted in
the absence of
any party affected thereby.
3.
On 1 April 2021, the respondent obtained a default judgment against
the applicants
who were ordered to pay the respondent R75,571,519.02
with interest. For this amount they were jointly and severally
liable. Additionally,
the first applicant was ordered to pay the
respondent a further amount of R24,438,715.61 with interest, and the
second applicant
was ordered to pay the respondent a further
R32,584,954.14 with interest.
4.
The applicants allege that the default judgment granted to the
respondent on
1 April 2021 had been erroneously sought and/or
erroneously granted.
5.
The process by which the respondent obtained its default judgment
requires further
scrutiny.
1.
2.
3.
3.1.
The respondent issued
its summons out of this court on 21 July 2020.
3.2.
The Sheriff served
the summons on the applicants on 12 August 2020.
3.3.
The summons called
upon the applicants to deliver their notices of intention to defend
within 10 days of receiving the summons.
3.4.
It is common cause
that the applicants received the summons but did not deliver any
notices of intention to defend.
3.5.
On 3 November 2020,
the respondent applied to the Registrar of this court for default
judgment against the applicants.
3.6.
On 19 March 2021, the
respondent filed a notice of set down with the Registrar.
3.7.
Default judgment was
granted against the applicants on 1 April 2021.
6.
It is this judgment of 1 April 2021 that the applicants seek to have
rescinded
in terms of rule 42(1)(
a
).
7.
In their founding affidavit, the applicants explained why it is that
they did
not enter an appearance to defend despite being served with
the summons. They also provided the basis for what they claim is a
bona fide
defence to the respondent’s claim. The
respondent, for its part, denies the adequacy of the applicants’
explanation
for not defending the action. It also denies that they
have a
bona fide
defence.
8.
I was urged by the applicants’ counsel,
Mr
Richard
,
to find that a procedural irregularity had occurred which, so he
contended, rendered it unnecessary for the applicants to show
good
cause for a rescission. The existence of a procedural irregularity,
so his argument went, was sufficient to justify rescission.
His
argued that if I am inclined to find that there was indeed an
irregularity in the process followed by the respondent, the
applicants need not establish that they have a reasonable explanation
for not defending the action nor do they need to demonstrate
that
they have a
bona fide
defence to the respondents’ claim.
9.
In support of his argument that a procedural irregularity had
occurred,
Mr Richard
referred me to the practice directives in
chapter 9 of this court’s Practice Manual, in particular
practice directive 9.20
which is entitled “stale service”.
10.
Practice directive 9.20 (1) provides that:
Where any unopposed
application is made six months or longer after the date on which the
application or summons was served, a notice
of set down must be
served on the defendant or respondent.
11.
Mr Richard
, relying on practice directive 9.20 (1), submitted
that an application for default judgment is an unopposed application
and that,
in this instance, the application for default judgment was
made more than six months after the date on which the summons was
served.
For that reason, he contended, a notice of set down should
have been served on the applicants. Taking his argument one step
further,
he then submitted that because the notice of set down was
not served on the applicants, a procedural irregularity had occurred:
non-compliance with practice directive 9.20 (1). His argument
concluded with a further submission that the procedural irregularity
is sufficient to justify a rescission of the order obtained by
default judgment, thus rendering redundant the usual requirement
of
good cause.
12.
Mr Mnyandu
, who represented the respondent, argued that
practice directive 9.20 (1) does not apply in these circumstances. He
argued that
practice directive 9.20 (1) only applies to unopposed
applications. This is made clear in the text of the practice
directive itself.
Moreover, he pointed out that the Practice Manual
itself defines an unopposed application in paragraph 9.9.1. For the
sake of completeness,
I quote the whole of paragraph 9.9.1 below:
1. For the
purposes of this directive “unopposed motions” shall
include:
1.1.
For purpose of this directive: “unopposed motions” shall
include all motions and applications
in which the respondent has
failed to deliver an answering affidavit and has not given any notice
of an intention only to raise
a question of law (rule 6(5)(
d
)
(
iii)
or a point in limine; and unopposed summary judgment applications
(not more than 30 per day);
1.2.
Opposed summary judgment applications (not more than 5 per day are to
be heard on a separate roll (the
SJ)). The judge hearing these
matters may roll over the hearing of the matter to another day of the
week. Convenience of counsel
will be considered; and
1.3.
Unopposed and opposed rule 43 applications are to be heard on a
separate roll with unopposed divorces
(the divorce roll) the judge
hearing these matters may roll over the hearing of a matter to
another day in the week. Convenience
of counsel will be considered;
and
1.4.
General opposed interlocutory applications, not more than three
(excluding opposed exceptions, interlocutory
interdicts, applications
in terms of chapter 6.5.2 are to be heard in the unopposed motion
roll; and
1.5.
Reference below to unopposed motions refer to 1.1 to 1.4 above unless
specifically referenced.
13.
Mr Mnyandu
, with reference to the definition in paragraph
9.9.1, submitted that an application for default judgment is not an
unopposed application
for the purposes of practice directive 9.20 (1)
because it has not been specifically included in the list of
unopposed motions
set out in 1.1 to 1.4 in paragraph 9.9.1. This, he
went on to submit, removes an application for default judgment from
the ambit
of practice directive 9.20 (1) because the practice
directive is limited in its application to
only
those motions
listed in 1.1 to 1.4 and no others. He therefore urged me to
interpret the words “any unopposed application”
as they
appear in practice directive 9.20 (1) in a restrictive manner.
14.
I accept that paragraph 9.9.1 provides that, for the purposes of the
practice directive, a list
of unopposed motions has been identified
in 1.1 to 1.4. However, the purpose of including the list in
paragraph 9.1.1 is to enlarge
(not limit) the group of applications
that the unopposed motion court must deal with on its roll. This is
apparent from the list
itself. Let me start with 1.1, its effect is
to allow the unopposed motion court to deal with an
opposed
application if no answering affidavit has been delivered even though
a notice of intention to oppose has been (subject to the exceptions
created in the text itself). Then I move to 1.2, its effect is to
enable the unopposed motion court to deal with
opposed
summary
judgment applications (subject to the limitation stipulated in the
text itself). And then 1.3 which makes provision for
how both
unopposed and
opposed
rule 43 applications are to be dealt
with. Finally, 1.4 has the effect of enabling the unopposed motion
court to deal with general
opposed
interlocutory applications.
Thus, the types of motions included in 1.1 to 1.4 in paragraph 9.9.1
are not typically unopposed applications.
The purpose of paragraph
9.9.1 is plainly to enlarge the group of motions that must be dealt
with in the unopposed motion court.
The purpose of paragraph 9.9.1 is
therefore not to define what an unopposed application is, but rather
to inform practitioners
about what types of matters they should place
on the unopposed motion court roll. Understood in this way, paragraph
9.9.1 was not
designed to restrict the interpretation of what an
“unopposed application” is for the purposes of practice
directive
9.20 (1).
15.
I am fortified in my view by the introduction to paragraph 9.9.1
which expressly states that “for
purposes of this practice
directive an unopposed motion shall
include
…” and
then it goes on to include a number of motions that are plainly not
unopposed applications. The word “include”
as it appears
here, given the context, must mean “in addition to…”
and not “restricted only to…”.
16.
In my view, practice directive 9.20 (1) applies to “any
unopposed application” as
its first words tells us. An
application for default judgment is an unopposed application. It is
typically obtained by a plaintiff
in the absence of a defendant
without opposition.
17.
Mr Mnyandu
raised a second reason why, in his submission,
applications for default judgment ought not to be considered under
practice directive
9.20 (1). That is so, he argued, because the
Practice Manual has a separate practice directive dedicated to
applications for default
judgment. He referred me to practice
directive 9.14 (1) in the practice manual which reads as follows:
In addition to any
requirement which the Registrar may impose, a notice of set down
shall be served and filed in all cases where
an intention to defend
has been filed. In addition, if the service of a summons took place
more than six months prior to the notice
of set down, such notice
shall be served on the defendant.
18.
However,
Mr Mnyandu
argued that practice directive 9.14 (1)
also does not apply. That is so, he submitted, because on a proper
interpretation of practice
directive 9.14 (1) a notice of set down
only needs to be served on a defendant if the defendant has filed a
notice of intention
to defend. If no notice of intention to defend
has been filed then, so his argument went, there is no obligation on
the plaintiff
to serve a notice of set down on the defendant even if
the notice of set down is produced more than six months after the
summons
was served. This he contended is implicit in the wording of
practice directive 9.14 (1).
19.
It is correct that practice directive 9.14 (1) applies pertinently to
applications for default
judgment. However, it applies in particular
to actions that have been defended. We see this from the first
sentence which suggests
that, at a minimum, a notice of set down
shall be served and filed in all cases where an intention to defend
has been filed. The
second sentence in practice directive 9.14 (1)
states that in addition to this, a notice of set down
must
be
served on the defendant if more than six months has elapsed since the
summons was served.
20.
Mr Mnyandu
argued that the words “in addition…”
at the beginning of the second sentence indicates that the second
sentence
only applies if the defendant has entered a notice of
intention to defend because that is a requirement in the first
sentence,
and the second sentence ads to what is already contained in
the first. I disagree. I am of the view that the words “in
addition…”
in the beginning of the second sentence mean
that in addition to the obligation that a plaintiff has to serve and
file a notice
of set down where the action is defended, he or she
must also, additionally, serve a notice of set down on the defendant
if the
application for default judgment is made more than six months
after the summons was served. I am therefore of the view that the
respondent in this case was obliged to serve the notice of set down
on the applicants because it was applying for default judgment
more
than six months after the summons had been served.
21.
Both practice directive 9.20 (1) and 9.14 (1) require that a
plaintiff who has issued summons
against a defendant
must
serve a notice of set down on the defendant before proceeding further
with the litigation if a period of six months has elapsed.
There
seems to be good reason for this. Six months is a relatively long
time for a case to lie dormant. There may be a number of
reasons for
the inactivity on the plaintiff’s part. Whatever those reasons
may be, the practice of this court requires that,
if more than six
months has elapsed, the plaintiff must give the defendant notice that
he or she is reviving the case. The giving
of notice may be regarded
as a tap on the shoulder. The plaintiff effectively signals to the
defendant that although nothing has
happened for six months, he or
she needs to be aware that something is about to happen imminently.
22.
It is therefore my conclusion that, because more than six months had
elapsed after the respondent
served the summons, it was obliged to
serve the notice of set down on the applicants. That obligation
arises from both practice
directives 9.20 and 9.14. They are, as
Mr
Richard
submitted, provisions that are cable of co-existing.
23.
The respondent acted in a procedurally irregular manner when it
applied for default judgment after
more than six months had elapsed
after the summons was served by not serving the notice of set down on
the applicants.
24.
But what is the consequence of this procedural irregularity?
25.
Alkema J held in
National Pride Trading
452
vs.
Media
24
2010 (6) SA 587
(ECP) at para 56 that:
Any order or judgment
made against a party in his absence due to an error not attributable
to him, is such a profound intervention
in his right to a fair trial
and right to be heard that, for this reason alone, the judgment or
order should be set aside without
further ado.
26.
The Supreme Court of Appeal has had occasion to consider the effect
of a procedural irregularity
arising out of non-compliance with a
practice directive of the KwaZulu Natal Division of the High Court
which resulted in a default
judgment being taken.
Rossitter and
Others vs. Nedbank Ltd
(96/2014)
[2015] ZASCA 196
(1 December
2015), like this case, concerned an application made under Uniform
Rule 42(1)(
a
) for rescission on the basis that a default
judgment had been erroneously sought and/or erroneously granted in
the absence of the
defendant. In
Rossiter
the defendant had
entered an appearance to defend the action but had not delivered a
plea. The plaintiff placed the defendant under
bar, requiring that
his plea be filed within 5 days. When it was not delivered within
those 5 days, the plaintiff lodged an application
for default
judgment with the Registrar and default judgment was granted. The
defendant subsequently brought an application to
rescind it. In the
founding affidavit to support the rescission application, the
defendant’s attorney confirmed having received
the notice of
bar but said that he had been too busy with other matters to attend
to it. Apparently the defendant’s attorney
also blamed his
support staff for not timeously attending to it. Although the Supreme
Court of Appeal made the point that this
explanation was far from
satisfactory, it nevertheless held that it did not consider it
necessary to decide whether or not good
cause existed for the
purposes of rescission. That is so, held the Supreme Court of Appeal,
because the judgment had been erroneously
sought and erroneously
granted in circumstances where there was non-compliance with the
practice directive in paragraph 2.3 of
that court’s Practice
Manual. Paragraph 2.3 provided that in the KwaZulu Natal Division of
the High Court “where an
application for default judgment is
made six months after the date of service of a summons it is both the
practice of the Registrar’s
office and the court to require
that a notice of set down is served on the defendant informing
him/her that default judgment will
be sought on a given date and
time, such date and time being not less than 5 days from the notice”.
In
Rossitter
the plaintiff did give the defendant notice of
default judgment but his notice failed to provide a date and time.
The Supreme Court
of Appeal held this to be a fatally defective
procedural error which justified rescission on that basis alone,
rendering it unnecessary
for the defendant to show good cause.
27.
I am guided in this case by the Supreme Court of Appeal’s
judgment in
Rossitter.
The applicants in this case are
entitled to have the order granted against them on 1 April 2021
rescinded. Furthermore, considerations
are good cause do not enter
the equation.
28.
I make the following order:
1.
The default judgment granted against the applicants on 1 April 2021
under Case
No. 17815/2020 is rescinded.
2.
The respondent is ordered to pay for costs of the application.
HOPKINS
AJ
DATE OF
HEARING:
13 February 2023
DATE OF
JUDGMENT:
22 February 2023
Appearances
For the applicants:
Adv.
C Richard
Instructed
by: Weavind
& Weavind Attorneys Inc.
Pretoria
For the
respondent: Adv.
Khaya Mnyandu
Instructed
by: Mothle
Jooma Sabdia Inc.
Pretoria
BHEMBE
& ANOTHER V INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT INC. OF SOUTH AFRICA
SUMMARY
Procedure –
Rescission of default judgment – Rule 42(1)(a) – judgment
erroneously sought/granted – procedural
irregularity rendering
it unnecessary to show good cause – interpretation of practice
directive 9.20(1) and 9.14 of Practice
Manual.
Practice directive
9.20(1) and 9.14(1) of this court’s Practice Manual require
that a plaintiff who has issued summons against
a defendant must
serve a notice of set down on the defendant before proceeding further
with the litigation if a period of six months
has elapsed. This is
for good reason. Six months is a relatively long time for a case to
lie dormant. Whatever the reason for the
inactivity, the practice of
this court requires that, if more than six months has elapsed, the
plaintiff must give the defendant
notice that s/he is reviving the
case.
In casu, despite being
served with summons, the applicants did not enter an appearance to
defend. Default judgment was granted against
them. They now seek to
rescind the default judgment. It was argued on their behalf that a
procedural irregularity occurred, rendering
it unnecessary for them
to show good cause for a rescission. The existence of this procedural
irregularity, it was argued, was
sufficient to justify this
rescission. Relying on this court’s Practice Manual,
particularly practice directive 9.20(1) which
requires a notice of
set down to be served on a defendant/respondent, where an unopposed
application is made six months or longer
after the date on which the
application or summons was served, the applicants submit that an
application for default judgment is
an unopposed application as the
default judgment against them falls in the category provided for in
the directive. For this reason,
they should have been served with a
notice of set down. Therefore, a procedural irregularity
(non-compliance with practice directive
9.20(1)) occurred.
Respondent’s
grounds of opposition
Practice directive 9.9.1
The respondent disagrees
on two grounds. The first is that practice directive 9.20(1) only
applies to unopposed applications as
confined in practice directive
9.9.1. Therefore, so the argument for the respondent went, an
application for default judgment is
not an unopposed application for
purposes of practice directive 9.20(1) because it has not been
specifically included in the list
of unopposed motions set out in
paragraphs 1.1 to 1.4 of 9.9.1. Directive 9.9.1 states “for
purposes of this directive ‘unopposed
motions’ shall
include….” and then goes on to include a number of
motions. It was argued further that the court
must interpret the
words “any unopposed application” as they appear in
practice directive 9.20(1) in a restrictive
manner.
Despite paragraph 9.9.1
providing a list of unopposed motions, the court accepts that the
purpose is to enlarge and not limit the
group of applications that
the unopposed motion court must deal with on its roll. This is
apparent from the list itself. The types
of motions included in 9.9.1
are not typically unopposed applications. The purpose of paragraph
9.9.1 is not to define what an
unopposed application is, but rather
to inform practitioners on the types of matters they should place on
the unopposed motion
court roll. Understood this way, directive 9.9.1
was not designed to restrict the interpretation of what an “unopposed
application”
is for the purposes of directive 9.20(1).
Further, the word
“include” in directive 9.9.1, given the context, must
mean “in addition to” and not “restricted
only to”.
In the courts view, directive 9.20(1) applies to “any unopposed
application”. A default judgment application
is an unopposed
application since it is typically obtained by a plaintiff in the
defendant’s absence without opposition.
Practice directive
9.14(1)
The respondent’s
second reason why applications for default judgment ought not to be
considered under practice directive 9.20(1)
since the Practice Manual
has dedicated a separate directive for default judgment applications,
that is, practice directive 9.14(1),
falls to be dismissed also. The
further argument by the respondent that directive 9.14(1) also does
not apply because on a proper
interpretation of the directive, a
notice of set down only need be served on a defendant if same has
filed a notice of intention
to defend must also fail. If no notice of
intention to defend is filed, then, the respondent’s argument
went, there is no
obligation on the plaintiff to serve a notice of
set down on the defendant even if the notice of set down is produced
more than
six months after the summons was served. It was contended
that this was implicit in the wording of practice directive 9.14(1).
Held: the words “in
addition” in directive 9.14(1) mean that in addition to the
plaintiff’s obligation to serve
and file a notice of set down
where the action is defended, s/he must also, additionally, serve a
notice of set down on the defendant
if the application for default
judgment is made more than six months after the summons was served.
The respondent in casu was therefore
obliged to serve the notice of
set down on the applicants because it was applying for default
judgment more than six months after
the summons was served.
Found: more than six
months had elapsed after the respondent served the summons, it was
obliged to serve the notice of set down
on the applicants. That
obligation arises from both practice directives 9.20 and 9.14.
Further: the respondent
acted in a procedurally irregular manner when it applied for default
judgment after more than six months
had elapsed after the summons was
served by not serving the notice of set down on the applicants.
Further: the effect of
this procedural irregularity is that the default judgment is
rescinded.
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