Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 510South Africa
Apa Africa (Pty) Ltd v Melrose Arch Investments Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others (032219/2023) [2023] ZAGPJHC 510 (18 May 2023)
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Apa Africa (Pty) Ltd v Melrose Arch Investments Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others (032219/2023) [2023] ZAGPJHC 510 (18 May 2023)
Apa Africa (Pty) Ltd v Melrose Arch Investments Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others (032219/2023) [2023] ZAGPJHC 510 (18 May 2023)
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sino date 18 May 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO:
032219/2023
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
REVISED
18.05.23
In the matter between:
APA
AFRICA (PTY) LTD
Applicant
And
MELROSE
ARCH INVESTMENTS HOLDINGS (PTY) LTD
First
Respondent
LIBERTY
LTD
Second
Respondent
2
DEGREES PROPERTIES (PTY) LTD
Third
Respondent
PROPERTY
SERVICES
Fourth
Respondent
Neutral
citation:
Apa
Africa (Pty) Ltd
v
Melrose
Arch Investments
(Case
No.
032219
/2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 510 (18 May 2023)
JUDGMENT
MAKUME, J
:
INTRODUCTION
[1] The Applicant
launched this application on eth 4
th
April 2023 in which
it seeks an order on an urgent basis in accordance with the
provisions of Rule 6 (12). In particular,
the Applicant ask
this Court to issue the following order against the Respondents:
1.1
Declaring that the new
lease agreement as defined in paragraph 32 of the Founding Affidavit
was concluded between the Applicant
and the 1
st
to 3
rd
Respondents.
1.2
Declaring that the 1
st
to 3
rd
Respondents and the Applicant are obliged to comply with the terms of
the new Lease Agreement.
1.3
Directing the 1
st
to 3
rd
Respondents to give Applicant occupation of the new premises being
Unit 20113, 2
nd
Floor, 30 Melrose Arch Boulevard Melrose Arch on the terms of the new
lease.
1.4
Directing the Applicant to
make payment to 1
st
2
nd
and 3
rd
Respondents in terms of the New Lease Agreement
1.5
Interdicting the
Respondents from leasing and giving occupation of the new premises to
any party other than the Applicant.
[2] The Respondents
have filed their Answering Affidavit in which they set out not only
their grounds of opposition on the
merits but also raise a point in
limine
that this application falls to be struck off the roll
due to lack of urgency as prescribed by Rule 6(12).
BACKGROUND
[3] On the 18
th
June 2020 the Respondent duly represented by one James Alexander De
Beer concluded a lease agreement with one Andre Pienaar in
respect of
premises described as Office 108 H3 situated at First Floor 10
Melrose North, Johannesburg measuring 344 square meters.
[4] That lease
commenced on the 1
st
August 2020 and is to terminate by
effluxion of time on the 31
st
July 2023.
[5]
It is common cause that
during the year 2021/2022 certain disputes arose between Pienaar the
tenant and the Managing Agent of the
property as a result Pienaar
decided to unilaterally withhold payment.
[6] On the 31
st
January 2023 the Applicant was registered its sole director is
Pienaar. Pienaar not being satisfied with the condition of
the
premises he was leasing then started negotiating with one of the
leasing agents using his corporate entity to lease new premises.
[7] On the 1
st
February 2023 the Applicant signed an offer to lease premises
described, as Office Number 20113 Melrose Boulevard situated on Erf
181 Melrose Township. The Applicant on signing the offer to
lease was represented by Mr Andre Pienaar. The lease was
to
take effect from 1
st
May 2023 expiring on 28 February
2026. The offer to lease was never accepted by the Respondents.
[8] In the meantime
Pienaar had breached the terms and conditions of his existing lease
with the Respondents as a result the
Respondents as they were
entitled to cancelled the lease on the 11
th
April 2023.
[9] Prior to that
cancellation the Respondents had by February 2023 already concluded a
lease with a tenant called VAT IT
in respect of office 20113 Melrose
Boulevard. That tenant took beneficial occupation of those
premises during February 2023
and commenced with renovations.
That lease is in place and the tenant has taken occupation.
[10] As I have indicated
the Respondents have raised two points in
limine
the first
being that the application is not urgent and falls to be struck off
the roll the second being one of non-joinder.
[11] When the Applicant
commenced this urgent application it had through its Attorneys
received a directive from the Office of the
Deputy Judge President to
set this application down for hearing on the 8
th
May 2023.
[12] On the 4
th
May 2023 four (4) days before the hearing of this matter the
Applicant filed and served its Replying Affidavit and on Saturday
the
6
th
May 2023 the Applicant filed and uploaded on case
lines a Notice withdrawing the application. The Respondent
refused to consent
to the withdrawal unless the Applicant tendered
costs.
[13] This matter served
before me on Monday the 8
th
May 2023. Counsel for
the Applicant Advocate Hollander informed the Court that the
Applicant no longer wishes to proceed
with the application and seeks
leave from this Court that it should issue an order removing the
matter from the roll and postpone
a decision on the costs to an
ordinary opposed motion roll. The Respondent requests the Court
to grant an order striking
the application off the roll and that
Applicant pay the costs on an Attorney and Client scale.
[14] Rule 41 of the
Uniform Rules of Court makes provisions for withdrawal, settlement,
discontinuance, postponements as well as
abandonment of proceedings.
Rule 41(1) in particular reads as follows
“
A
person instituting any proceedings may at any time before the matter
has been set down and thereafter by consent of the parties
or leave
of the Court withdraw such proceedings in any of which events he
shall deliver a notice of withdrawal and may embody in
such notice a
consent to pay costs and the taxing master shall tax such costs on
the requirement of the other party.”
[15] Rule 41 (1) deals
with two scenarios the first being when a matter has not as yet been
set down for hearing the second scenario
is when the matter has been
set down for hearing.
[16] Each scenario has
its own consequence in the event of a party seeking to withdraw and
not proceed with the matter. If
a matter has been set down for
hearing like it is in the present matter a party may only withdraw
the proceeding with the consent
of the opponent or with leave of the
Court. On receipt of the notice of withdrawal over the weekend
preceding the Monday
the Respondent’s Attorneys addressed a
letter to the Applicant drawing their attention to the provisions of
Rule 41(1) and
that because there is no tender to pay costs they as
the Respondents are not consenting to the withdrawal.
[17] A Rule 30 notice
filed by the Respondents to declare the notice of withdrawal an
irregular procedure was not proceed with on
the Monday the 8
th
.
Both Counsel addressed me from the bar. The basis as addressed
by Counsel for the Applicant why there is no tender
to costs can be
summarised as follows:
17.1 Firstly Applicant
says the Respondent withheld the name of the new
tenant of the premises
hence they could not join that third party earlier.
17.2 That this Court
being the urgent court is not suited to hear argument on
the issues of costs hence
their application to refer the issue of costs to the normal opposed
motion roll.
[18] The Applicant is
being disingenuous in this regard because as far back as February
2023 Applicant was informed that a tenant
has been allocated the “new
premises.” The Applicant is not entitled to be told of the name
of the new tenant it was
not their business to pry into the
Respondent’s business affairs. Applicant was told that it
is not possible to conclude
an agreement with them in view of that.
[19] Secondly the
Applicant is mistaken that this Court being an urgent Court should
not deal with the issue of costs. He
is wrong this Court has
that authority. The matter is before this Court for
adjudication one way or the other.
[20] It is trite law that
in terms of Rule 41(1)(a) a withdrawal of proceedings cannot occur
unilaterally once a matter has been
set down (See:
Border vs
Madzie
2017 (4) SA 166
at page 170 paragraph 8
). In the absence
of consent or leave a purported notice of withdrawal will be
invalid. In
Protea Assurance Co. Ltd vs Gamlase and Other
1971(1) SA 460 E at 465G
the Court said the following:
“
Once the matter
had been set down for hearing on the 25 May 1965 it was not competent
for the Applicant to withdraw such proceedings
without the consent of
the Respondent or after the promulgation of the new Rules of Court on
15 January 1965 without leave of the
Court. Such consent was
never obtained nor was such leave ever applied for. It follows
thereof that the purported notice
of withdrawal on 31
st
October 1969 was incompetent and invalid and must be set aside.”
[21] On the 7
th
May 2023 after receiving the Notice of Withdrawal the Respondent
attorney addressed a letter to the Applicant’s attorneys
in the
following words:
“
your client in
terms of Rule 41(1) cannot withdraw its application that is enrolled
for hearing on Monday the 8
th
May 2023 without our client
consent or leave of the Urgent Court. Our client did not and
does not consent to such withdrawal
without your client tendering to
pay the costs of the application.”
[22] Once the Respondent
refused to consent to the withdrawal it thus became imperative that
the Applicant had to file an application
and ask the Court’s
permission to admit the withdrawal on such terms as the court may
find appropriate which in my view may
include an order that the
Applicant should be liable for costs after all the issue of costs is
in the discretion of a Court hearing
the matter.
[23] In the instant
matter the Applicant requires leave that its withdrawal of the
proceedings be sanctioned by the Court on the
basis that another
Court then be approached to decide on the issue of costs. This
cannot be justified the Applicant has failed
to give plausible
reasons why this Court should not exercise its inherent discretion in
respect of the issue of costs.
APPLICABLE LEGAL
PRINCIPLE ON COSTS
[24] This Court in the
matter of
Martin N.O. vs Road Accident Fund 2000(2) SA 1023 at
1026
I said the following:
“
Costs are usually
reserved if there is a real possibility that information may be put
before the Court which eventually disposes
of the action or the
application which may be relevant to the exercise of a discretion in
regard to that although where the issues
affecting interlocutory
costs are clear the Court then dealing with the matter should not
choose an easy way out to shift the task
to another Court (See also
Fleet Motors (Pty) Ltd v Epson Motors (Pty) Ltd
1960 (3) SA 401
D
).”
[25]
His Lordship Wunsh J in Martin N.O. (supra) concluded that costs are
reserved because there is no ready view about liability
for them and
they will not necessarily follow the result of the cause. This
is not the case in this matter the Applicant
must pay the costs of
its withdrawal application and has no right to dictate to this Court
when and where or who should decide
on the wasted costs.
[26]
In
Germishuys v
Douglas Besproeingsraad
1973 (3) SA 299
(NC)
,
the court provided the applicable legal principle on costs by stating
that
at 300D-E
:
“
Where
a litigant withdraws an action or in effect withdraws it,
very
sound reasons must exist
why the
defendant or respondent should not be entitled to costs. A plaintiff
or applicant who withdraws his or her action or application
is in the
same position as an unsuccessful litigant because, after all, such
claim or application is futile, and the defendant
or respondent is
entitled to all costs
caused by the institution of proceedings by the withdrawing party.”
[27]
The court at
300H
indicated that in such a case it is not
necessary to go into the merits, there is a crucial difference
between the position of an
applicant settling his or her case on the
merits and then asking the court’s ruling as to costs, and the
position of an applicant
withdrawing his or her claim and thereafter
attempting to avoid an order for costs against him- or herself.
[28]
In
Apollo Tobacco CC and Others v Commissioner for South African
Revenue
Services
74 SATC 204
at par 23,
the court held that:
“
When a party
invites his opponent to a duel, which invitation is accepted,
thereafter the former has a second thought and withdraws
the
invitation, for whatever reason, he must tender the costs occasioned
by the invitation. He cannot be heard to say that the
other party has
not been inconvenienced by the invitation and therefore he need not
tender costs occasioned by the invitation.
He must be mulcted with
the costs attendant to such withdrawn matter.”
[29]
In
Hammond and Hammond Transactional Law Clinic v Bitou
Municipality and Others
[2021] JOL 50959
(WCC) at par 16
, the
court held that the withdrawal is viewed as a concession on the
merits, a recognition that the relief sought is futile. Whatever
the
reason for the withdrawal of a matter, the court retains a wide but
not unlimited discretion to award costs, with the general
rule being
that the respondent is entitled to all costs caused by the
institution of the proceedings, a rule which is not to be
departed
from without good grounds.
[30]
In
Master Blaster (Pty) Ltd v Sasol Dyno Nobel (Pty) Ltd [2020]
ZAGPPHC 376 at par 15,
the court held that it is trite that a
party who withdraws an action or application or who abandons a
defence is in the same position
as an unsuccessful litigant, and
therefore the other party is ordinarily entitled to costs. A
departure from the principle, that
costs must be awarded to the party
which has been put to the expense of defending withdrawn proceedings,
is only warranted in exceptional
circumstances.
[31]
In
Tshabalala v Motloung
[2020] ZAFSHC 228
at par 8
, the court
stated that it is trite that the position of a withdrawer of court
proceedings is similar to that of the loser and the
general position
in that regard is that where a party loses, he ought to pay the costs
of the aborted proceedings, unless there
are exceptional
circumstances why the other party should not be entitled to its
costs.
[32] The Applicant is a
law firm its director Mr Pienaar says in his affidavit that he has
many years’ experience and is a
successful lawyer practicing in
a prime area of Johannesburg. I have no reason not to believe that
however coupled with that it
is expected of Mr Pienaar to be
conversant with the Rules of practice. One of the issues in
this application is lack of appreciation
that the urgent court is not
meant to deal with voluminous papers. The Applicant generated a
mass of paper. The Founding
Affidavit is 26 pages long divided
into 74 paragraphs some of which are repetitive. The Replying
Affidavit stretches over
sixty-nine (69) pages divided into 118
paragraph once again with a lot of repetitive stuff.
[33] This bring me to the
issue of costs as I indicated I have retained my discretion to award
costs on a scale befitting of the
issue before me. In this
matter the Applicant not only filed a voluminous Replying Affidavit a
mere four days before the
date of hearing it waited until a weekend
to file a notice of withdrawal and expected his opponents to simply
accept its wishes.
By the time the notice of withdrawal was
filed and served Counsel for the Respondent were ready for the
hearing. Also this
Court had to be ready by reading voluminous
papers. There is no acceptable reason why the Applicant should
not have filed
a notice to withdraw before filing a Replying
Affidavit.
[34] I am satisfied that
the Applicant’s conduct requires to be visited by a punitive
costs order as required by the Respondent.
[35] In the result I make
the following order:
1.
Leave to withdraw the
application is hereby granted.
2.
The Applicant is ordered
to pay the Respondent taxed costs on an attorney and client scale.
Dated at Johannesburg on
this day of May 2023
M A MAKUME
JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Appearances:
DATE OF HEARING :
08 MAY 2023
DATE OF JUDGMENT :
18 MAY 2023
FOR APPLICANT :
ADV L HOLLAND
INSTRUCTED BY :
ANDRE PIENAAR &
ASSOCIATES
FOR RESPONDENT :
ADV W WANNENBURG
INSTRUCTED BY :
FOURIE VAN PLETZEN
INC.ATTORNEYS
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