Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 508South Africa
Beefcor (Pty) Ltd v De Freitas and Others (13551/2018) [2023] ZAGPJHC 508 (18 May 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
18 May 2023
Headnotes
in the name of the second defendant with ABSA Bank Limited was attached in order to obtain satisfaction of the full taxed sum of costs. In other words, the plaintiffs ended up obtaining full satisfaction of their costs order against the second defendant only.
Judgment
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## Beefcor (Pty) Ltd v De Freitas and Others (13551/2018) [2023] ZAGPJHC 508 (18 May 2023)
Beefcor (Pty) Ltd v De Freitas and Others (13551/2018) [2023] ZAGPJHC 508 (18 May 2023)
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sino date 18 May 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO: 13551/2018
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
REVISED
18.05.23
In the matter between:
BEEFCOR
(PTY) LTD
APPLICANT
and
JOSE
JORGE DE FREITAS
FIRST
RESPONDENT
FRANKLIN
DOMICIANO DE AGUAR MENEZES
SECOND
RESPONDENT
ABBYGAIL
VAN WYK ATTORNEYS
THIRD
RESPONDENT
SHERIFF
JOHANNESBURG CENTRAL
FOURTH
RESPONDENT
ABSA
BANK LTD
FIFTH
RESPONDENT
In
re the action between:
JOSE
JORGE DE FREITAS
FIRST
PLAINTIFF
FRANKLIN
DOMICIANO DE AGUAR MENEZES
SECOND
PLAINTIFF
And
CHAMDOR
MEAT PACKERS (PTY) LTD
FIRST
DEFENDANT
BEEFCOR
(PTY) LTD
SECOND
DEFENDANT
PETRUS
HENDRIK TROSKIE N.O.
THIRD
DEFENDANT
JOHANNES
LODEWIKUS LE ROUX N.O.
FOURTH
DEFENDANT
JACOMINA
ELIZABETH TROSKIE N.O.
FIFTH
DEFENDANT
CORNELIUS
JOHANNES HATEM N.O.
SIXTH
DEFENDANT
HENDRIK
LAMBERTUS JOHANNES MOULDER N.O.
SEVENTH
DEFENDANT
ERENSCHA
ALETTA ERASMUS N.O.
EIGHTH
DEFENDANT
MALCOLM
JOSEPH FARQUARSON
NINTH
DEFENDANT
PETRUS
HENDRIK TROSKIE
TENTH
DEFENDANT
CASPARUS
JAN HENDRIK WESSELS
ELEVENTH
DEFENDANT
JOHAN ROBINS WATSON
TWELFTH
DEFENDANT
HERMANUS ABRAHAM
VAN STADEN
THIRTEENTH
DEFENDANT
WESSELS JOHANNES
MULLER
FOURTEENTH
DEFENDANT
TROSKIE & DE
WET CC
FIFTEENTH
DEFENDANT
RINGDYER
INVESTMENTS (PTY) LTD
SIXTEENTH
DEFENDANT
GAUTENG
MEAT INSPECTION SERVICES CC
SEVENTEENTH
DEFENDANT
DE
FREITAS, JOSE JORGE & MENEZES, FRANKLIN DOMICIANO DE AGUAR vs
CHAMDOR MEAT PACKERS (PTY) LTD & 16 OTHERS
(Case
No: 2018/13551) [2023] ZAGPJHC 508 (18 March 2023)
JUDGMENT
THOMPSON
AJ
Introduction
[1]
On 26 January 2021, my learned
acting brother Rome handed down judgment in an opposed application
whereby the Plaintiffs sought
to amend their particulars of claim.
Consequent upon a short and direct judgment, Rome AJ made the
following order:
“
a.
The amendments as envisaged in the applicants’ notice of
amendment. . .are granted.
b.
The
respondents
are
ordered to pay the opposed costs occasioned by
the
respondents’
notice
of objection. . .”
[1]
[2]
Relevant
to the order made by Rome AJ are the following facts. The
Plaintiffs instituted action against seventeen defendants.
Of
the seventeen defendants, sixteen defended the action with only the
eighth defendant not entering any fray in relation to the
action.
[2]
The
defendants were all, at the time of entering an appearance and
delivery of a plea, all represented by the same set of attorneys.
At the time the plaintiffs gave notice of their intention to amend
their particulars of claim, the defendants in unison and still
represented by the same set of attorneys, objected to the proposed
amendment.
[3]
The plaintiffs launched an
application for leave to amend their particulars of claim against all
of the cited defendants, but only
sought costs of the application for
leave to amend against the defendants, jointly and severally.
The defendants, again in
unison and represented by the same set of
attorneys, opposed the application for leave to amend and the matter
was finally heard,
as stated above, as an opposed application.
[4]
Material to the existing matter
before me, the order by Rome AJ is absent the words “
joint
and several
”
as
prayed for by the plaintiffs. Notwithstanding the aforesaid,
the plaintiffs adopted the view that the costs order meant
joint and
several. As a result, the plaintiffs caused a writ of execution
to be issued consequent upon having the costs of
the opposed
application taxed in the sum of R67 295,02. Pursuant to
the writ, a notice of attachment was drawn by the
sheriff in terms of
which the sheriff attached the second defendant’s right, title
and interest in any and all bank accounts
held in the name of the
second defendant with ABSA Bank Limited was attached in order to
obtain satisfaction of the full taxed
sum of costs. In other
words, the plaintiffs ended up obtaining full satisfaction of their
costs order against the second
defendant only.
[5]
The
second defendant, aggrieved by the fact that the costs of the opposed
application was recovered from only it elected to launch
the present
application, which turned into an opposed application of some 135
pages. The second defendant adopted the stance
that, despite
the defendants having acted in unison in opposing the application for
leave to amend, each defendant should be liable
only for a joint
pro
rata
portion
of the taxed costs and, accordingly, sought to have the writ set
aside and repayment of the sum of R54 081,91.
[3]
[6]
The plaintiff’s countered with
a stance that the order, despite the absence of the words “
jointly
and severally
”
,
is to be interpreted as rendering the defendants jointly and
severally liable. However, in the event that the court finds
that the costs order by Rome AJ could not be recovered on a joint and
several liability basis, the plaintiffs apply to have the
costs order
varied in terms of Rule 42(1)(b) on the basis that there is a patent
error and/or ambiguity and/or omission.
[7]
The
starting point in interpreting any order is the words itself.
[4]
As
Mr
Louw
for
the second defendant correctly points out in his heads of argument,
by reference to
Roelou
Barry (Edms) Bpk v Bosch en ‘n Ander
,
[5]
the
general rule of our common law is that joint-debtors can be held
liable for no more than their equal share of the particular
debt,
unless there is clear evidence that it is the intention that they be
held liable
in
solidium
.
[6]
It is
therefore practice for a court to add the words “
jointly
and severally
”
to
an order where
in
solidium
liability
is envisaged.
[7]
[8]
Mr
Cowley
,
for the plaintiffs, relied on two authorties for the proposition that
the order must be interpreted to include joint and several
liability. The first authority relied upon, in my view, does
not more than establish a general rule that where parties make
common
cause in opposing a matter, equity demands that they should be
jointly and severally liable for such costs.
[8]
The
second authority, in my view, clarifies the general rule established
by the first authority. The second authority makes
it clear
that where parties make common cause to oppose certain relief sought,
the other party seeking the relief is entitled to
an order in respect
of joint and several liability.
[9]
[9]
More eloquently stated, as a general
rule a party seeking relief against more than one opposing party is
entitled to have his/her
costs paid on a joint and several liability
basis by the opposing parties, where such opposing parties made
common cause in the
opposition of the relief sought. However,
such entitlement must be clearly stated in the order by stipulating
that the order
envisages
in
solidium
liability
by adding the words “
joint
and several
”
to
such order.
[10]
In light of the aforesaid,
Mr
Cowley’s
submission
cannot muster scrutiny that words must be interpreted into the order
where they do not clearly appear in the order.
The second
defendant is therefore correct, the order does not stipulate a joint
and several liability on the part of the defendants.
[11]
Had it not been for the Rule
42-counterapplication, this would have been the end of the matter.
The plaintiffs, wisely so,
kept the additional string in their bow to
seek a variation of Rome AJ’s costs order in the event that it
was needed.
In this regard the plaintiff’s aver that the
order by Rome AJ contains either an ambiguity, patent error or
omission.
[12]
During argument I pointed out to
Mr
Louw
that the
general rule is that where opposing defendants make common cause with
one another, the plaintiff is entitled to an order
pertaining to
joint and several liability. I then directed
Mr
Louw’s
attention
thereto that Rome AJ continually referred in this judgment to “
the
respondents
”
and
that, in my view, is indicative of him accepting that the defendants
had made common cause with one another. As such,
the
proposition was postulated to him, the order by Rome AJ which refers
to the common cause respondents, envisaged a joint and
several
liability scenario.
Mr
Louw’s
submission
in response, at first blush, is a cogent one. Rome AJ would
have been aware of this general rule and the fact that
he made the
order he made, despite his grouping of the respondents under a common
cause umbrella is indicative thereof that he
did not intend joint and
several liability on the part of the defendants.
[13]
As I
said, at first blush this argument seemed a cogent argument.
Upon proper consideration, however, the submission is fatally
flawed. The first flaw in the submission is to be found in the
Roelou
-judgment
earlier relied upon by
Mr
Louw
.
The
Roelou
-judgment
makes it clear that the general rule of equal proportional liability
can only be deviated from where there is clear evidence
that
in
solidium
liability
is intended. The costs prayer in the application for leave to
amend is clear in this regard,
in
solidium
liability
is intended. The second flaw in the argument is the general
cost principle that costs should follow the result.
[10]
This
general costs’ principle should be considered in terms of the
other general principle that where opposing defendants
make common
cause, the plaintiff is entitled to an
in
solidium
liability
order. Otherwise stated,
in
casu
,
the plaintiff was entitled on the general costs principles stated
above to an order for costs as the successful party with such
costs
to be paid by the defendants on a joint and several liability basis.
[14]
The reasons for a court’s order
must appear clearly from the judgment. Thus, where a court is
to deviate from the general
rule(s) relating to a costs order, such
reasons must clearly appear from the judgment. In the
application for leave to amend,
Rome AJ’s judgment does not
even touch upon the issue of costs. He was, however, clearly
unimpressed with the nature
of the objection by the defendants.
In my view, in failing to specifically deal with the issue of costs,
he clearly envisaged
the usual rule(s) relating to costs to apply.
In other words, he clearly intended to apply the usual rule that
costs must
follow the result. There is nothing to indicate that
he intended to deviate from the other general rule relating to
liability
where opposing defendants make common cause with one
another. In my view, the repeated reference to the grouping of
“
respondents
”
is the clearest indication that he
intended to hold each defendant liable with each other defendant for
the whole of the costs order.
[15]
Mr Louw
submits,
in response, that the plaintiffs failed to make out a case in this
regard as they do not deal with the intention of court
when the costs
order was made by Rome AJ. Although the affidavit by the
plaintiffs in this regard is somewhat wanting, in
my view it is not
fatally wanting. The plaintiffs do allege that they interpreted
the order to give effect thereto as being
joint and several liability
in respect of the defendants. Interpretation is nothing more
than a process of determining the
intention of that which is being
conveyed. In my view, although not directly said, the
plaintiffs bring to bear that the
order does not clearly convey the
intention of Rome AJ when he made the order pertaining to costs that
he made.
[16]
The patent error or omission in the
order, in my view, is attributable to the court and does not amount
to, as submitted, a mere
dissatisfaction of the order relating to
costs on the part of the plaintiffs. Rome AJ was unimpressed
with the opposition
to the objection and dismissed same almost out of
hand; he was requested to grant a costs order in line with the
general
rules applicable to costs orders in the nature of that which
was before him; and he set out no reasons, why he is deviating from
the general rules, which reasons he should have set out if he
intended to deviate from the general rules. The patent error
or
omission in this regard therefore lies with the court.
[17]
In
my view, the above is in line with the eloquent setting out of the
law on Rule 42(1)(b) and the interpretation of court orders
as
recently discoursed by Meyer AJA (as he then was) in the matter of
HLB
International (South Africa) v MWRK Accountants and Consultants
.
[11]
In
particular, even a cursory reading of Rome AJ’s judgment
demonstrates that he grouped the defendants together as having
made
common cause with one another.
[12]
Any
other interpretation would be absurd and be contrary to established
legal principles relating to costs orders as set out earlier
herein,
particularly as Rome AJ did not deal with any reason why those
general and usual rules should be departed from.
[18]
In order to avoid further disputes as
to costs orders I add in closing in respect of this application that
neither party advanced
any reasons why any of the usual costs orders
should not be made and/or general rules should not be applied.
In my view no
such grounds exists. There was also, in the
counterapplication a prayer for a costs
de
bonis propriss
order
against the defendants’ attorney. No case is made out in
terms of any of the recognized grounds for costs
de
bonis propriss
against
the defendants’ attorney and, in light of my view expressed in
paragraph [10] of this judgment, it cannot be said
that the
defendants’ attorney acted in a frivolous or opportunistic
manner.
[19]
In the premises I make the following
order:
1.
The second defendant’s
application (dated 26 May 2022) is dismissed with the second
defendant to pay the costs of the plaintiffs
(as the first and second
respondents in the second defendant’s aforesaid application).
2.
Paragraph b. of the order by Rome AJ
handed down on 26 January 2021 is corrected and varied to read as
follows:
“
The
respondents (being the respondents who opposed the application for
leave to amend) are to pay the opposed costs occasioned by
the
respondent’s notice of objection dated 19 August 2020, jointly
and severally.
3.
The second defendant is to pay the
costs of the plaintiff’s conditional counterapplication dated
18 July 2022.
C.E THOMPSON
ACTING JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG LOCAL DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
COUNSEL
FOR THE APPLICANT:
ADV N.G LOUW
APPLICANT’S
ATTORNEYS:
MANLEY INC
COUNSEL
FOR THE RESPONDENTS:
ADV H.H. COWLEY
RESPONDENTS
ATTORNEYS:
VAN
DER WALT ATTORNEYS
DATE OF HEARING: 15 MAY
2023
DATE
OF JUDGMENT: 18 MAY 2023
[1]
My
emphasis
[2]
For
the remainder of the judgment, a reference to the defendants will be
a reference to the first to seventh and the ninth to
seventeenth
defendants.
[3]
This
sum is calculated by subtracting a tendered sum by the second
defendant together with the twelfth and thirteenth defendants
from
the sum attached in terms of the notice of attachment.
[4]
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
2012 (4) SA 593
(SCA)
(16 March 2012)
[5]
1967
(1) SA 54 (C)
[6]
Roelou
,
supra
at
59A – B
[7]
Roelou
,
supra
at
59C
[8]
Minister
of Labour & Others v Port Elizabeth Municipality
1952
(2) SA 522
(A) at 537H
[9]
Yassen
& Others v Yassen & Others
1965
(1) SA 436
(N) at 444F – H
[10]
See
generally
Ferreira
v Levin NO & Others
[1996] ZACC 27
;
1996
(2) SA 621
(CC) at para
[3]
[11]
(113/2021)
[2022] ZASCA 52
;
2022 (5) SA 373
(SCA) (12 April 2022)
[12]
See,
for example,
HLB
,
supra
at
para [26] – [28]
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