Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 480South Africa
Notshe v State Attorney, Johannesburg and Another (2022/00966) [2023] ZAGPJHC 480 (15 May 2023)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Notshe v State Attorney, Johannesburg and Another (2022/00966) [2023] ZAGPJHC 480 (15 May 2023)
Notshe v State Attorney, Johannesburg and Another (2022/00966) [2023] ZAGPJHC 480 (15 May 2023)
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sino date 15 May 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO:
2022/00966
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES
In
the matter between:
VIWE
SAMUEL NOTSHE
Applicant
and
THE
STATE ATTORNEY, JOHANNESBURG
First Respondent
THE
SOLICITOR-GENERAL
Second
Respondent
Neutral
citation:
Viwe Samuel Notshe v The State
Attorney, Johannesburg and The Solicitor-General
(Case
No: 00966/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 480 (15 May 2023)
JUDGMENT
This
judgment is deemed to be handed down upon uploading by the Registrar
to the electronic court file.
Gilbert AJ:
1.
Mr Viwe Notshe, as the applicant in the main
application, initiated motion proceedings against the State Attorney,
Johannesburg
and the Solicitor-General, as respondents in the main
application, for recovery of what he asserts are his fees for legal
services
rendered. The State Attorney and Solicitor-General, as
respondents in the main application, seek to join the Special
Investigating
Unit (“SIU”) as a co-respondent in the main
proceedings.
2.
For ease of reference, I shall refer to the
parties as they are described in the main application.
3.
The respondents seek to join the SIU on the basis
that, they contend, it has a direct and substantial interest in the
matter in
that the SIU had and still are investigating whether
inter
alia
the State Attorney is indebted to the
applicant for legal fees. The applicant opposes the joinder
application in a short answering
affidavit on the grounds that (i) as
there were prior Rule 30 proceedings that had not yet been finalised,
the joinder application
could not proceed; and (ii) the respondents’
reliance upon Rule 10(3) to effect joinder was misplaced as the
joinder of a
respondent in terms of Rule 10(3) can only be effected
at the instance of an applicant and not at the instance of a
respondent.
4.
The initial ground of opposition fell away as I
was informed during the address of counsel that the Rule 30 issues
had been resolved
and so that no longer presented an obstacle to the
joinder application.
5.
It is evident from the joinder application that
the respondents have sought to effect the joinder of the SIU as a
co-respondent
in the main application in terms of Rule 10(3). This
appears both from the header to the joinder application which
unambiguously
refers to the application being in terms of Rule 10(3)
and also in the body of the founding affidavit itself in paragraph
1.3 where
specific reference is made to Rule 10.
6.
The respondents have chosen to engage the
applicant in seeking joinder on the playing field of Rule 10 and it
is upon that field
the applicant has engaged the respondents in
opposing the joinder application. The applicant does so by asserting
that Rule 10(3)
in its express terms cannot be used by a defendant
(or a respondent, as Rule 10 applies also to motion proceedings,
in terms
of Rule 6(14)) to join another respondent.
7.
Rule 10(3) provides that:
“
Several defendants may be sued
in one action either jointly, jointly and severally, separately or in
the alternative, whenever the
question arising between them or any of
them and the plaintiff or any of the plaintiffs depends upon the
determination of substantially
the same question of law or fact
which, if such defendants were sued separately, would arise in each
separate action.”
8.
I agree with the applicant’s submission
that Rule 10(3) cannot be used at the instance of a respondent to
join another respondent.
9.
The respondents’ counsel’s argument
was not directed at persuading me that Rule 10(3) applied, but rather
that a more
generous approach must be taken to the respondents’
joinder application, more particularly that the application should
also
be seen as a joinder based upon the common law, and that under
the common law the court would have a jurisdiction to join the SIU
because, the respondents contend, it has a direct and substantial
interest in the main proceedings.
10.
The difficulty in adopting this approach is that,
as set out above, the respondents have specifically chosen the
playing field of
Rule 10(3). The applicant confined himself to
challenging Rule 10(3) as the applicable playing field, and having
succeeded in persuading
the court that that was an inappropriate
playing field, he would now be prejudiced if the respondents are
permitted to change the
playing field of joinder under Rule 10(3) to
joinder under the common law. Had the respondents asserted in their
joinder application
that joinder was also sought under the common
law, it may have been that the applicant would then have gone further
in his opposition
and, for example, dealt with the issue as to
whether the SIU had a direct and substantial interest that required
its joinder. The
applicant has not done so, and, in my view, did not
need to do so as he has come home on the basis that Rule 10 does not
apply.
And so the applicant would be prejudiced if the matter is
decided on the basis advanced by the respondents’ counsel that
all that needs to be looked at is whether the SIU has a direct and
substantial interest.
11.
In the circumstances, I am not in a position to
determine the matter of joinder other than on the basis of Rule
10(3), and on that
basis the joinder is to fail as that rule does not
apply.
12.
I therefore need not, and do not, decide whether
the SIU has a direct and substantial interest which would require its
joinder to
the main application. Notably, the respondents have raised
in their answering affidavit in the main application what is in
effect
a plea of non-joinder. The respondents complain that the
applicant has done nothing to remedy what they contend is the
material
non-joinder of the SIU and that motivates their present
joinder application. Whether or not a respondents can seek to in
effect
cure their own plea of non-joinder by bringing a joinder
application is something I need not, and do not, decide.
13.
Similarly, I need not, and do not, decide whether
joinder by one respondent of another respondent on the basis of a
direct and substantial
interest is permissible under the common law
generally, rather than pursuant to one or other of the recognised
procedural mechanisms
for effecting joinder, such as in terms of
the third-party procedure provided for in Rule 13, which too is
applicable
to motion proceedings of Uniform Rule 6(14).
14.
The respondents’ counsel implored the court
that the difficulties that have been raised above are to be
overlooked as “
technicalities
”
and that the real issue is whether the SIU has a direct and
substantial interest, and that should be determinative of the
application. But, as I have explained, this would be prejudicial to
the applicant and in the circumstances, I cannot accede to
the
request.
15.
The application for joinder is dismissed, with
costs.
Gilbert AJ
ACTING JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Date of hearing:
12 May 2023
Date of judgment: 15
May 2023
Counsel
for the applicants in the joinder (respondents in the main
application):
M
H Mhambi
Instructed
by:
The
State Attorney
Counsel
for the first respondent in the joinder (the applicant in the main
application):
Mr
S Vobi
Instructed
by:
Buthelezi
NF Attorneys
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