Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1104South Africa
Miller NO and Others v Ramsammy (21/27354) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1104 (15 March 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
15 March 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Miller NO and Others v Ramsammy (21/27354) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1104 (15 March 2023)
Miller NO and Others v Ramsammy (21/27354) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1104 (15 March 2023)
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sino date 15 March 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO: 21/27354
In the matter between:
REUBEN MILLER N.O
First
Applicant
NORMAN KLEIN N.O
Second
Applicant
VIMBAI ANGELA
TSOPOTSA N.O
Third
Applicant
REFILWE TLHABANYANE
N.O
(in their capacity
as the duly appointed final liquidators of Nkonki Incorporated (In
Liquidation), Registration Number 2002/017422/21,
Master’s
Reference G416/2018)
Fourth
Applicant
and
JAYSON
DESIGA RAMSAMMY
Respondent
JUDGMENT
FRIEDMAN AJ:
1 In this application,
the applicants seek leave to amend their notice of motion to
introduce an alternative prayer for relief.
2 In the original notice
of motion, the applicants seek an order that the respondent pay to
them the sum of R3 million, plus interest.
There is then, as is
normally the case, a separate prayer for costs. The claim is based on
an alleged oral agreement between the
applicants and the respondent.
The applicants provide various pieces of evidence in their founding
affidavit for the conclusion
of that oral agreement, and it is not
necessary for me to comment on that evidence here.
3 In his answering
affidavit in the main application, the respondent disputes the
applicants’ entitlement to relief on various
grounds. In what
might be described as a throwaway line, the respondent says that he
never received an invoice for the R3 million
now claimed by the
applicants.
4 After the applicants
read the answering affidavit, they decided to seek leave to amend
their notice of motion to introduce an
alternative claim. While
persisting with the main prayer for payment of the R3 million plus
interest, the applicants now seek to
introduce an alternative prayer
for relief which provides:
“
Alternatively,
the Respondent shall make payment to the Applicants in the amount of
R3 000 000.00 within 7 days of issuing
of an invoice by the
Applicants to the Respondent for such amount”.
5 In their application
for leave to amend, which was necessary because the respondent
objected to the amendment, the applicants
explain that they wish to
introduce the alternative prayer for relief out of caution; and, in
particular, to cater for a finding
by the court seized of the main
application that it is a precondition of the respondent’s
liability that an invoice be issued
for the R3 million.
6
The
law on amendments to pleadings is well-known and trite. As Mpati P
put it in
Imperial
Bank Ltd v Barnard
,
[1]
“[a]n application for amendment will always be allowed 'unless
it is made mala fide or would cause prejudice to the other
party
which cannot be compensated for by an order for costs or by some
other suitable order such as a postponement’”. The
example of the type of prejudice falling into this category given by
Mpati P, was an amendment which seeks to introduce a claim
which has
prescribed. Another example of prejudice which would lead to the
refusal of an amendment is if the amendment would introduce
a
pleading which is excipiable – either because it is
impermissibly vague or because it discloses no cause of action.
[2]
Another example of prejudice is where a party, through an amendment,
seeks to withdraw an admission.
[3]
7 The respondent
attempted to argue before me that the proposed amendment would be
excipiable. But I cannot see how this could be.
The respondent’s
main complaint (which was his main complaint even before this issue
of the invoice was introduced by him
in the answering affidavit) is
that this entire application is not a matter for motion court because
there are irresolvable disputes
of fact. Without commenting on this
argument, I simply note that I understand it, and it will be
something with which the court
hearing the main application will need
to grapple. However, I cannot see how the introduction of the
alternative prayer changes
the nature of that dispute. In other
words, whether this matter may be decided in the applicants’
favour in motion court,
is not changed by the introduction of the
alternative prayer. It does not make the applicants’ stronger
or weaker on that
particular issue.
8
Ms Shahim
, who
appeared for the respondent, argued that the proposed amendment is
excipiable because, if one reads the founding affidavit,
one will not
find any explanation of the basis for the claim for alternative
relief. But this criticism does not withstand scrutiny.
The only
reason why the applicants wish to introduce the alternative prayer
for relief is because of something said by the respondent
in his
answering affidavit. Their primary case is that no new or additional
invoice had to be issued after the oral agreement was
concluded and
that purely by virtue of the oral agreement, the respondent is
indebted to the company in respect of which the applicants
are the
liquidators. The respondent, in his answer, denies the oral agreement
and says that this is not a matter to be decided
on motion. And, he
then in essence says “oh, and by the way, I also never received
an invoice for the R3 million”,
which the applicants interpret
as another basis for denying liability. To meet what they perceive as
the denial of liability based
on the failure to issue an invoice,
they have included the alternative prayer for relief. In these
circumstances, it escapes me
how the applicants can be criticised for
failing to make out a case for the alternative relief in the founding
affidavit; the amendment
is sought as a fall-back position and to
cater for a stance taken by the respondent in his answer. Whether or
not the applicants
can make out a case for the alternative relief if
the main relief is not granted – an issue in respect of which
it would
be improper for me to express a view – it would not be
correct to describe it as excipiable.
9 In the respondent’s
heads of argument, it is argued that the applicants have failed to
make out a case for the amendment
because they have not addressed the
issue of prescription in their founding affidavit. To quote the
respondent’s heads of
argument: “Put differently, it [ie,
the founding affidavit] does not explain why – in the event
that the foreshadowed
amendment were to be allowed and an invoice
were to be issued in due course – the alleged debt would not
have prescribed”.
10 In the first
place, this argument suffers from the same flaw as the criticism
addressed above – it overlooks the
fact that the issue of the
invoice was never part of the applicants’ case and so the
applicants cannot be criticised for
not dealing with it pre-emptively
in their founding affidavit. Secondly, there is no duty on an
applicant or plaintiff to anticipate
the question of prescription. It
for a respondent or defendant to take the point. If the respondent
considers prescription to be
an issue which arises once the amendment
is effected, then it is free to raise the point in the further
affidavit which it may
file once the amendment is allowed. Lastly,
this is not something which was raised in the notice objecting to the
amendment, or
even in the answering affidavit in the amendment
application, and so it is not appropriate for it to be raised for the
first time
in heads of argument. This is important because if one
accepts the premise that it is for a respondent/defendant to raise
prescription,
then it follows that it must also do so if it wishes to
rely on this point as a basis for opposing an amendment. The caselaw
which
I have discussed above gives, as an example of prejudice, the
introduction of a claim which has prescribed. So, it is certainly
open to a respondent to object to a proposed amendment on the basis
that it will introduce a prescribed claim. But it is self-evident
that this must be done in the objection
and
in the answering
affidavit if leave is sought to amend, to enable the applicant to
deal with it. That was not done in this case.
11 Other than the
argument about the amendment being excipiable (and the issue of
prescription raised late in the day) –
which I have shown above
to lack merit – I asked
Ms Shahim
to point to any other
prejudice arising from the amendment. She said that the respondent
would have to file a further affidavit
to deal with the alternative
relief.
12
In
Affordable
Medicines Trust and Others v Minister of Health and Others,
[4]
the
Constitutional Court said the following:
"[9] The principles
governing the granting or refusal of an amendment have been set out
in a number of cases. There is a useful
collection of these cases and
the governing principles in
Commercial Union Assurance Co Ltd
v Waymark NO
. The practical rule that emerges from these cases is
that amendments will always be allowed unless the amendment is
mala
fide
(made in bad faith) or unless the amendment will cause
an injustice to the other side which cannot be cured by an
appropriate order
for costs, or
'unless
the parties cannot be put back for the purposes of justice in the
same position as they were when the pleading which it
is sought to
amend was filed'. These principles apply equally to a notice of
motion. The question in each case, therefore, is,
what do the
interests of justice demand?"
13 That extract is
directly applicable here. The fact that the respondent may need to
file a further affidavit to deal with
the amendment is not
prejudicial to him; on the contrary, it cures any prejudice he might
otherwise have suffered by enabling him
to be put in the same
procedural position he would have been in had the amended notice of
motion been the notice of motion in the
first place – ie, being
in the position to file an answering affidavit to oppose each prayer
in the notice of motion. If
I understood
Ms Shahim
correctly,
the prejudice to which she intended to refer was the prejudice of
being put to the time and expense of filing a further
affidavit. But
that is not the type of prejudice which our courts take into account
in amendment applications. This is unsurprising
because, if they did,
no amendment could ever be allowed if it triggered the need for the
further exchange of pleadings. This would
dramatically undermine the
purpose of rule 28 of the Uniform Rules.
14 It follows that
the respondent has been unable to point to any prejudice arising from
the proposed amendment, and that
the amendment application should be
granted.
15 On the question
of costs,
Mr Hoffman
, who appeared for the applicants, quite
fairly accepted that, if the opposition to the amendment had been
reasonable or arguable,
the applicants could be ordered to pay the
costs of this application, even if I grant the amendment. He argued,
however, that the
respondent’s opposition was unreasonable and
he should be ordered to pay the costs of this amendment application.
I agree.
No arguable or reasonable basis has been suggested –
in the notice objecting to the amendment, the answering affidavit in
the amendment application or in argument before me – for the
respondent’s objection to the amendment. He would have
saved
himself and the applicants a lot of time and money by simply agreeing
to it and then getting on with the merits. Since he
chose a different
path, he should pay the costs of this application.
16 The parties
helpfully uploaded a draft order very shortly after the conclusion of
the hearing, providing for the respondent
to file a further affidavit
to deal with the amendment. I am grateful to them for that and it is
self-evidently appropriate that
he be allowed the opportunity to do
so.
17 In the light of
what I have said above, I make the following order:
1. The Applicants are
granted leave to amend their Notice of Motion in the terms stated in
the Notice of Intention to Amend dated
8 February 2022 and which was
delivered by the Applicants’ attorneys to the Respondent’s
attorneys on 21 February 2022.
2. The Respondent shall
deliver a supplementary Answering Affidavit (if any) within 10 days
of the date of this order.
3. The Applicant shall
deliver a supplementary Replying Affidavit (if any) within 10 days
after receipt of the supplementary Answering
Affidavit.
4. The Respondent is
ordered to pay the Applicants’ costs of this application.
ADRIAN FRIEDMAN
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Delivered: This judgment
was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is reflected above
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 for hand down is deemed to
be 15 March 2023.
APPEARANCES:
Attorney
for the applicants:
Mendelson
Attorneys Inc
Counsel
for the applicants:
JM
Hoffman
Attorney
for the respondent:
Thomson
Wilks Inc
Counsel
for the respondent:
C
Shahim
Date
of hearing: 14 March 2023
Date
of judgment: 15 March 2023
[1]
Imperial Bank Ltd v Barnard and others NNO
2013 (5) SA 612
(SCA) at
para 8. Mpati P quoted from Four Tower Investments (Pty) Ltd v
André's Motors
2005
(3) SA 39 (N)
para
15; Dumasi v Commissioner, Venda Police
1990
(1) SA 1068 (V)
at
1071B; and Devonia Shipping Ltd v MV Luis (Yeoman Shipping Co
Ltd Intervening)
1994
(2) SA 363
(C)
at
369F – I.
[2]
See, for example, Recycling and Economic Development Initiative of
South Africa v Electronic Media Network 2022 JDR 0456 (GJ)
at para 8
[3]
See, for example, Small Enterprise Finance Agency Soc v Razoscan
(Pty) Ltd 2022 JDR 0508 (GP) at para 6.9
[4]
Affordable Medicines Trust v Minister of Health
[2005] ZACC 3
;
2006 (3) SA 247
(CC)
at para 9, emphasis added
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