Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 236South Africa
N.J.M v NBC Holdings (Pty) Limited and Others (2021/55545) [2023] ZAGPJHC 236 (16 March 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
16 March 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Costs de bonis propriis - against applicant’s attorney – pursuing application after disputes resolved – clear warning given - where purpose was for attorney’s benefit, attorney bears the obligation to pay the additional costs incurred.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## N.J.M v NBC Holdings (Pty) Limited and Others (2021/55545) [2023] ZAGPJHC 236 (16 March 2023)
N.J.M v NBC Holdings (Pty) Limited and Others (2021/55545) [2023] ZAGPJHC 236 (16 March 2023)
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sino date 16 March 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
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
No: 2021/55545
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED NO
DATE:
16 March 2023
In
the application between:
N[....]
J[....] M[....]1
Applicant
and
NBC
HOLDINGS (PTY) LIMITED
First
Respondent
M[....]
D[....] M[....]2
Second
Respondent
CAPITEC
BANK LIMITED
Third
Respondent
JUDGMENT
TURNER
AJ
Heard
:
17 January 2023
Delivered:
16 March 2023 – This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties' representatives by
email, by being
uploaded to
CaseLines
and by release to
SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 10:00 on 16
March 2023.
Summary:
Costs de bonis propriis -
against applicant’s
attorney – pursuing application after disputes resolved –
clear warning given - where purpose
was for attorney’s benefit,
attorney bears the obligation to pay the additional costs incurred.
[1]
This application relates to liability for
costs and is pursued only between the applicant and the first
respondent. The issues as
between the applicant and the remaining
respondents have been resolved. The applicant seeks an order for
costs against the first
respondent and the first respondent seeks a
punitive costs order against the applicants. The primary relief
sought by the first
respondent is an order
de
bonis propriis
against the applicant’s
attorney and, in the alternative, it seeks an order for costs on a
scale as between attorney and client
against the applicant herself.
[2]
The matter started life as an
ex
parte
application, launched by the
applicant on 24 November 2021 and heard on 25 November 2021. It
focussed on the applicant’s interest
in the funds being paid
out by the second respondent’s pension fund. (The second
respondent is the applicant’s ex-husband.)
The applicant
contended that, in terms of their 2002 divorce order, she was
intended and entitled to receive an amount equal to
50% of the second
respondent’s net pension interest, calculated as at 14 August
2002.
[3]
In the founding affidavit, the first
respondent was identified as “
the
administrator of Toyota South Africa Provident Fund, the fund on
which the second respondent holds the pension interest
”
.
The Toyota South Africa Provident Fund itself was not joined.
[4]
When the applicant’s attorney found
out that the pension interest had in fact been paid out on 25
November 2021, the applicant
launched a second
ex
parte
urgent application, seeking
relief against the second respondent and Capitec Bank, being the bank
to which the pension funds had
been paid and where the second
respondent held his bank account. This second application was heard
on 26 November 2021.
[5]
The orders granted
ex
parte
by Wright J on 25 and 26 November
2021 were framed as rules
nisi
returnable on 17 March 2022.
[6]
Shortly before the
ex
parte
applications were delivered and
heard, the applicant’s attorneys, Mawzeka Nkogatsi Attorneys
Inc, had exchanged correspondence
with the first respondent, NBC
Holdings. In that correspondence, NBC Holdings noted that it was
writing to the applicant’s
attorneys “
on
behalf of the Toyota South Africa Provident Fund (the Fund)
”
.
NBC Holdings did not indicate that the pension fund administrator was
a different NBC entity. In the email correspondence exchanged
on 25
November 2021, the person sending the correspondence and allegedly
“
finalising the retrenchment
benefit to the member
”
, is
identified in the correspondence as being “
Loshni
Naidoo, Senior Administrator : Team Leader
”
employed
by NBC Holdings (Pty) Ltd.
[7]
It was only after the 25 November 2021
court order was delivered to the first respondent that the first
respondent pointed out that
the “
section
13B Administrators of the Fund are NBC Fund Administration Services
(Pty) Ltd
”
not NBC Holdings (Pty)
Ltd, the first respondent. Later correspondence sent on 25 February
2022 is also signed-off by Loshni Naidoo
but, this time, Loshni
Naidoo is identified as representing NBC Fund Administration Services
(Pty) Ltd.
[8]
In my view, given the correspondence
exchanged, the applicant (and her attorneys) cannot be criticised for
having joined NBC Holdings
as the first respondent given the names
which appeared on the correspondence exchanged prior to the
application being launched.
However, this is where the reasonableness
of the applicant’s attorneys’ conduct ends.
[9]
In argument before me, the applicant’s
counsel insisted that the position taken by NBC Holdings in the
correspondence preceding
the 25 November application was wrong in law
and so the applicants were entitled to pursue the application for
costs. The argument
was that NBC Holdings should pay all costs
because they had been wrong in their correspondence and had
precipitated the
ex parte
applications.
[10]
Having regard to the orders granted by
Wright J, the rule
nisi
would
expire on 17 March 2022, if not extended. One must remember that the
key relief sought by the applicant was a payment of money
to her by
the second respondent, in settlement of their divorce obligations.
The citation of NBC Holdings and Capitec Bank were
purely to enable
the applicant to secure relief against the second respondent, there
was no independent claim for a debt owed by
NBC Holdings or by
Capitec Bank. Importantly, by early 2022, the applicant’s
attorney knew that NBC Holdings was not the
Fund and was not the
administrator of the Fund and so the attorney would have known that
even if the relief had been enforceable,
NBC Holdings could not have
prevented payment out of the pension fund monies.
[11]
At the hearing before me, it was common
cause that the total amount owed by the second respondent to the
first respondent was R35,694.67
(plus interest from 25 November 2021
to date of final payment). It appears that the applicant and her
attorneys were only informed
that this was the amount after the
November orders had been granted. It seems clear that the legal
representatives would have realised
that they would not receive much
(if any) from this pay-out to compensate them for the two urgent
applications launched in November
and their other attendances on the
matter.
[12]
On 10 March 2022, the second respondent
signed a settlement agreement in which he undertook to pay this full
amount to the applicant.
The settlement agreement was signed by the
applicant on 16 March 2022. There was no provision in the settlement
agreement for the
second respondent to pay the applicant’s
costs of the court applications. The settlement debt was paid to the
applicant and
the settlement agreement confirms that it is the “
whole
agreement between the parties in respect of the matters dealt with
”
.
[13]
The rule
nisi
return date was 17 March 2022 and, clearly, with
the settlement agreement having been signed, it was anticipated that
the matter
could be resolved on that date. As it turns out, the
applicant’s attorney did not set the return day down in
accordance with
the Court’s directives and so the application
was not on the court roll for 17 March 2022.
[14]
In my view, this should have been the end
of the matter. There is no dispute that the Fund had paid out the
second respondent’s
pension benefits to his account at Capitec
Bank on or about 25 November 2022. The amount owed by the second
respondent to the applicant
pursuant to the divorce decree was
determined and agreed in the amount of R35,694.67 and the primary
dispute giving rise to the
proceedings had become settled between the
applicant and the second respondent. That amount was paid by the
second respondent.
There was therefore no reason further to pursue an
interdict against NBC Holdings and it appears that no further steps
were required
to be taken against Capitec Bank either.
[15]
On 18 March 2022, NBC wrote to the
applicant’s attorneys asking whether those attorneys had
instructions to proceed with the
matter, imploring the applicant not
to proceed, attaching an unreported decision in
Mapho
Thoma v Pension Funds Adjudicator and others
(2015)
and warning those attorneys that if they insisted on proceeding
against NBC, NBC would seek a costs order
de
bonis propriis
against the attorney.
[16]
This was then followed by a WhatsApp
conversation on Saturday 19 March 2022. On 22 March 2022, NBC wrote
to the applicant’s
attorneys to confirm the “WhatsApp”
conversation on Saturday 19 March 2022 and set out why it contended
that the original
application was bad in law and also why, as at 22
March 2022, it considered the proceedings to be moot and why
enrolling the matter
merely to obtain a costs order was not
justified. NBC also warned the applicant’s attorneys that they
would be seeking a
costs order
de bonis
propriis
if the matter was set down
merely to obtain a costs order.
[17]
On 7 April 2022, Shepstone & Wylie
Attorneys came on record for NBC and again requested the applicant to
withdraw the application,
failing which it would deliver an answering
affidavit and seek a punitive costs order. This indicates that, up to
this point, NBC
had not incurred external legal costs in dealing with
the matter.
[18]
On 12 April 2022, the applicant’s
attorneys responded to record that “
our
instructions are, to make an application to the court for the
extension of the rule ... and to proceed with the matter
”
.
This then elicited the respondent’s answering affidavit which
was delivered on 17 May 2022.
[19]
The following facts appear from the
answering affidavit: NBC is the legal service provider of the Fund
whereas NBC Fund Administration
Services (Pty) Ltd is the Fund’s
administrator; by the time of the answering affidavit, the second
respondent had made payment
of 50% of the relevant pension fund to
the applicant. The first respondent contended that pursuing the
application when it was
moot was unreasonable and justified a
punitive costs order
de bonis propriis
against the legal representatives.
[20]
Despite the letters received in March and
the answering affidavit in April, the applicant delivered a replying
affidavit and persisted
with the application. In her replying
affidavit, the applicant states that “
where
I make any submission of a legal nature herein, know that I do so on
the advice by my legal representatives, the advice which
I believe to
be correct
”
. Despite the call for
an order
de bonis propriis
against the attorney, the applicant’s
attorney did not deliver an affidavit.
[21]
The thrust of the replying affidavit rests
on a series of legal assertions. The first is that the orders
obtained by the applicant
on 25 and 26 November 2021 remained in
place and even if they were taken against the wrong NBC entity, they
are enforceable against
the first respondent. The applicant argues
that the only way in which the first respondent could have avoided
the consequences
of those orders was if it had applied to rescind the
court orders. As these are legal submissions, one must accept that
they were
included by the applicant’s attorneys (as stated in
paragraph 2 of the applicant’s replying affidavit).
[22]
The basis for these submissions is
fallacious for at least the following reasons:
22.1
The applications heard by Wright J on 25
and 26 November were heard
ex parte
.
22.2
No order for costs was made, save that the
costs of the application were to be “costs in the main
application”.
22.3
It was common cause that the funds had been
paid out on 25 November, before the orders (or even the existence of
the applications)
had been notified to NBC.
22.4
The first respondent was not required to
anticipate the return date or to bring an independent application to
rescind the original
orders. It was entitled to wait until 17 March
2022 and to deal with the consequences then.
22.5
As a settlement had been reached between
the main protagonists before 17 March 2022, there was no reason for
NBC to remain involved
in the application and there was clearly no
basis on which an interdict could be confirmed against NBC where it
was undisputed
that the monies had already been paid out in November
2021.
[23]
The applicant’s attorneys also argue
in paragraph 26 of the reply that the “
general
principle is that the costs should follow the cause which is why the
first respondent should pay the costs in this application
”
.
In doing so, sight is lost of the fact that the original application
was
ex parte
and
the respondent did not have an opportunity to answer that case at the
time. Moreover, the judge who heard that application did
not grant an
order for costs against the first respondent at that stage. As the
monies had already been paid out by the Fund by
the time the order
was communicated, there was nothing further to be interdicted and so
no further reason for the first respondent
to remain a respondent in
the proceedings. Further, as was undisputed, the wrong NBC company
had been cited in those
ex parte
proceedings and so the applicant would not have
succeeded on the return day in any event.
[24]
Having regard to all of these
circumstances, pursuing this application after 17 March 2022 was
wholly unreasonable and unjustified.
On a review of the answering
affidavit, the replying affidavit and the relevant correspondence, it
is clear that the basis on which
this application was pursued after
17 March 2022 was on the basis of the advice and encouragement of the
applicant’s legal
representatives. It seems that the only
reason for the attorneys to do so was to attempt to recover some
costs that would be paid
to them. The applicant’s attorney has
not put up any version to contradict this.
[25]
The attorney’s conduct is, in my
view, irresponsible and reckless and sufficiently egregious to
justify me exercising my discretion
in favour of granting an award
de
bonis propriis.
(
Stainbank
and another v SA Apartheid Museum at Freedom Park & another
2011
(10) BCLR 1058
(CC) at [52])
A further
factor reinforcing this view is the fact that the conduct was
motivated by the personal interest of the attorney as it
would be
him, not the applicant, that would be the beneficiary of any costs
recovered through this extended process. (see
Pieter
Bezuidenhout- Larochelle Boerdery v Wetorius Boerdery (Edms) Bpk
1983 (2) SA 233
(O) at 236 F-G). The first
respondent is entitled to recover its costs but, in my view, the
applicant cannot be required to bear
those costs personally. As the
only reason the costs were incurred was because the applicant’s
attorneys chose to pursue
the irresponsible and reckless course of
prolonging the matter, I am compelled to order that those attorneys
pay the costs, on
a punitive scale.
[26]
In the circumstances, I make the following
order:
(1)
Each party shall bear its own costs in
respect of the period up to and including 17 March 2022.
(2)
The applicant’s attorneys are not
entitled to recover fees or disbursements from the applicant in
respect of any of the work
done after 17 March 2022 in respect of
this application, including the extensions of the rule.
(3)
The applicant’s attorney, Mawzeka
Nkogatsi Attorneys Inc, is liable
de
bonis propriis
to pay the costs of the
first respondent incurred after 17 March 2022 on the scale as between
attorney and client.
TURNER
AJ
Counsel
for the applicants: Adv
K I Boko
Instructed
by: Mawzeka
Nkogatsi Attorneys Inc
Counsel
for the first respondent: Adv
K Magan
Instructed
by: Shepstone
& Wylie Attorneys
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