Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 657South Africa
Ishmael v Brendan Lune Medical Practice and Others (A5025/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 657 (7 June 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
1 February 2022
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## Ishmael v Brendan Lune Medical Practice and Others (A5025/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 657 (7 June 2023)
Ishmael v Brendan Lune Medical Practice and Others (A5025/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 657 (7 June 2023)
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sino date 7 June 2023
FLYNOTES:.
CIVIL
PROCEDURE – Prescription – Joinder –
Interruption of prescription by service of joinder order –
Claim for damages arising out of medical negligence –
Meaning of “process” – Including any document
commencing legal proceedings – Court order joining
respondents is a document commencing legal proceedings against
them for enforcement of a debt – Claim against respondents
had not prescribed –
Prescription Act 68 of 1969
,
s 15(6).
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO:
a5025/2022
REPORTABLE
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES
REVISED
07.06.23
In
the matter between:
MDLALOSE
MDUDUZI ISHMAEL
Appellant
and
DOCTOR
BRENDAN LUNE MEDICAL PRACTICE
1
st
Respondent
DOCTOR
NATASHA
FAKIR
2
nd
Respondent
DOCTOR
BRENDAN SEAN BLAIR
3
rd
Respondent
Neutral
Citation
: Mdlalose Mduduzi Ishmael v
Doctor Brendan Lune Medical Practise &Others (Case No: A5025/2022
[2023] ZAGPJHC 657 (07 June 2023)
JUDGMENT
MDALANA-MAYISELA
J (Wepener J and Dlamini J)
Introduction
[1]
This appeal came before us as a result of leave
being granted by the court below to this court. The appellant who was
cited as plaintiff
in the court below, is appealing against the whole
judgment and order made by Crutchfield J, delivered on 1 February
2022, sitting
as the court of first instance in Gauteng Division,
Johannesburg (“court order”). Crutchfield J upheld the
special
plea of prescription raised by the respondents who were cited
as defendants in the court below, and dismissed the action with
costs.
Background
facts
[2]
On 24 July 2015 the appellant, a police officer sustained an injury
on his right hand small finger when he was bitten by the
suspect
while assisting the prison warden. He was first treated at Meredale
Medical Centre, and subsequently transferred to Netcare
Garden City
Hospital (“Netcare”) for further treatment. He was
informed at Netcare that the previous treating doctors
misdiagnosed
him, and that there was no further treatment that could be performed
except to amputate his small finger. As the result,
on the 3
rd
of December 2015, his small finger was amputated at Netcare.
[3]
The appellant issued the combined summons on 28 June 2018 against the
Meredale Medical Centre (Pty) (Ltd) claiming R1 700 000.00
for general damages, R150 000.00 for past and future medical and
related expenses, and R200 000.00 for past and future
loss of
earnings resulting from the alleged negligence and breach of legal
duty by the Meredale Medical Centre treating doctors.
On 4 September
2018, Meredale Medical Centre served the appellant with a special
plea alleging that the treating doctors were not
employed by it. They
were employed by Dr. B Lyne Medical Practice with registration number
2001/024330/21 and were so employed
at the relevant time.
[4]
The appellant brought an application to join the respondents and
Padayatchi Sujen as additional defendants in the main action.
No
further relief was sought in the joinder application. The original
combined summons was attached to the joinder application
as annexure
“B” and the Meredale Medical Centre special plea and plea
were attached as annexure “C”. On
21 September 2018 all
the respondents, including Padayatchi Sujen, served a notice of
intention to oppose the joinder application,
and appointed
the
address of their attorneys Norton Rose Fulbright South Africa Inc. as
the address at which the respondents will accept notice
and service
of all documents. The basis for opposing the joinder application as
stated in the letter dated 21 September 2018 addressed
to the
appellant was that the appellant did not follow a correct procedure
by bringing a joinder application, and that he ought
to have issued
summons against the second to fifth respondents in order to claim
damages. The respondents’ attorneys sought
indulgence to be
granted extensions from the appellants’ attorneys on more than
one occasion to file their answering affidavit.
[5]
In the email correspondence addressed to the respondents’
attorneys dated 21 September 2018, the appellant’s attorneys
attached a copy of the notice of intention to amend his original
particulars of claim in terms of rule 28(7) of the Uniform Rules
of
Court. On 2 October 2018 the respondents’ attorneys sent an
email to the appellant’s attorneys advising them that
they did
not intend opposing the notice of intention to amend and that the
appellant could proceed to file the amended pages.
[6]
On 5 November 2018 Mokose AJ granted the order joining Dr. Brendan
Lyne Medical Practice as second defendant, Dr. Natasha Fakier
as
third defendant, and Dr. Brendan Sean Blair as fourth defendant. The
appellant served the joinder order on the respondents’
attorneys on 13 November 2018. Again on 21 November 2018, the
appellant’s attorneys served the notice of intention to amend
his particulars of claim in terms of Rule 28(1) and (2) of the
Uniform Rules of Court on the respondents’ attorneys of record.
The cause of action and quantum in the notice of intention to amend
was identical to the cause of action in the original particulars
of
claim. The respondents did not object to the aforesaid notice of
intention to amend which in terms of Rule 28(2) the amendment
was
duly effected. On 7 December 2018, the appellant served his amended
particulars of claim on the respondents’ attorneys.
The sheriff
effected a personal service of all the pleadings previously served on
the respondents’ attorneys to the respondents
on 25 January
2019.
[7]
The respondents’ attorneys, Norton Rose Fulbright South Africa
Inc. served a special plea of prescription and plea on
the
appellant’s attorneys on 18 March 2019. In the special plea the
respondents pleaded that the treatment the appellant
received from
them was rendered on 24 July and 11 August 2015. They relied on
sections 12(1) and 11(d) of the Prescription Act,
68 of 1969 (“the
Act”) and pleaded that the appellant’s claim for damages
against them had prescribed on 10 August
2018. The appellant filed a
replication to the defendant’s special plea contending that the
cause of action arose
on 3 December 2015 when his
small finger was amputated and
that the debt
prescribed on 2 December 2018. Further, he alleged that he instituted
the action on 12 July 2018, and the respondents
were joined as
defendants to the main action by the court order granted on 5
November 2018 and served on their attorneys of record
on 13 November
2018 before the claim prescribed. He contended that the prescription
was interrupted by the service of the court
order on the respondents’
attorneys of record.
[8]
On 30 September 2019 the respondents served a notice of substitution
of attorneys Norton Rose Fulbright South Africa Inc, and
appointed
Webber Wentzel as their attorneys of record. On 29 November 2019 the
appellant withdrew the action against the first
defendant, Meredale
Medical Centre. Further amendments of the pleadings by the parties
occurred, and I find it unnecessary to give
the details for the
purposes of the issue before us
.
Ground
of appeal
[9]
In the court below the special plea was separated from the merits by
agreement between the parties. The court determined the
special plea
first. The parties agreed that the cause of action arose on 3
December 2015 when the appellant’s small finger
was amputated,
and that the claim against the respondents prescribed on 2 December
2018. The court below upheld the special plea
and dismissed the
action with costs.
[10]
The leave to appeal was granted on one specific ground. The issue
before us is whether the joinder order (“not application”)
served on the respondents on 13 November 2018 constituted a ‘process’
whereby the appellant claimed payment of the
debt in terms of section
15(1) read with 15(6) of the Act. From the reading of the leave to
appeal judgment it seems that the court
below mistakenly understood
the issue to be the service of the joinder application and not the
service of the joinder order.
Discussion
[11]
The respondents in raising a special plea relied on section 12(1) and
11(d) of the Act. Section 12(1) provides:
“
Subject
to the provisions of subsections (2), (3) and (4), prescription shall
commence to run as soon as the debt is due
.”
Section
11(d) provides:
“…
save
where an Act of Parliament provides otherwise, three years in respect
of any other deb
t
.”
[12]
The appellant in the action where the respondents were joined by the
court as defendants, is claiming compensation sounding
in money for
delictual damages. In response to the special plea of prescription,
he contends that the running of prescription was
interrupted by the
service of the joinder order in terms of section 15(1) read with
15(6) of the Act. Section 15(1) of the
Act provides for the
interruption of the running of prescription “
by the
service on the debtor of any process whereby the creditor claims
payment of the deb
t.
”
Subsection
(6) defines process to include “
a petition, a notice
of motion, a rule nisi, a pleading in reconvention, a third party
notice referred to in any rule of court and
any document whereby
legal proceedings are commenced
.”
[13]
In
Food and Allied Workers Union obo
Gaoshubelwe v Pieman’s Pantry (Pty) Limited (CCT236/16)
[2018]
ZACC 7
;
2018 (5) BCLR 527
(CC);
[2018] 6 BLLR 531
(CC); (2018) 39 ILJ
1213 (CC) (20 March 2018
) paras [195] to
[197], the Constitutional Court endorsing what was stated by Victor J
in
Wessels v Coetzee [2013] ZAGPPHC 82 at para
29
in respect of the interpretation of the
words ‘
any document whereby legal proceedings are
commenced
’
held:
“
[
195]
…. While most of the documents to which reference is made
ordinarily constitute documents associated with courts and
the
litigation advanced there,
[144]
the
reference to “any document whereby legal proceedings are
commenced” is clearly indicative of a broader and more
generous
approach to what may constitute such a document. The second judgment
in Mnyathaza, referred to a Zimbambwean case which
dealt with a
similar provision to section 15(6) and defined the precise meaning of
“process”.[
145
] The Zimbabwe
Supreme Court per Georges CJ held:
“
The
definition of ‘process’ in subsection (6) is not
exclusive in its scope. The section merely enumerates some documents
which fall within the ambit of the word. It clearly contemplates that
other documents may fall within that ambit.”[
146
]
All
that section 15(6) requires is that the document in question is one
by which legal proceedings are commenced.
[196]
The interpretation I have attached to the term “any document”
is not offensive to the section, nor is it overly
broad and
inconsistent with the context within which it is used. In addition,
and to the extent that it may be necessary, interpreting
the term
“any document” in a narrow sense, as being confined to
documents used in formal court processes, would not
accord with what
is required if the interpretation exercise, as it must, is viewed
through the prism of section 39(2).[
147
]
The interpretation of prescription, in effect, releases the
constraint that the running of prescription has on the right to
access
to courts, which is provided for in
section 34 of the
Constitution.[
148
] It accordingly
justifies a
broader
meaning to be attached to the term
“any document”, for the same reasons advanced above in
support of a narrower meaning
to be ascribed to the term “debt”.
[197]
If ultimately the re-interpretation of the
Prescription Act must
demonstrate a fidelity to the values of the Constitution, then there
can be no justification in seeking to assign a narrow meaning
to the
term “any document”, which in any event is qualified by
the reference to it being “any document”
commencing legal
proceedings.[
149
] In Wessels, the High Court held that
the meaning ascribed to “any”, as contemplated in section
15(6), did not even
require a reading in of the term, because the
subsection was already “wide” and clearly “inclusive
of a wide
range of documents”.[
150
]”
[14]
In
Cape Town
Municipality v Allianza Insurance Co Ltd
1990
(1) SA 311
© at 334H-J
the court held that a process that
initiates proceedings for enforcement of payment of a debt interrupts
prescription:
“
It
is sufficient for the purposes of interrupting prescription if the
process to be served is one whereby the proceedings begun
there under
are instituted as a step in the enforcement of a claim for payment of
debt.
A
creditor prosecutes his claim under the process to final, executable
judgment, not only when the process and judgment constitute
the
beginning and end of the same action, but also where the process
initiates an action, judgment in which finally disposes some
elements
of the claim, and where the remaining elements are disposed of in a
supplementary action pursuant to and dependent upon
that judgment
.”
[15]
The Constitutional Court in
Food and Allied Workers Union
supra
endorsed the principle set out in
Cape Town
Municipality supra
and held:
“
[203]
What is instructive from this decision is that it recognises that the
judicial process- may consist of various steps that
are intertwined
and that it is not necessary that the process that commences
proceedings must result in a judgment in the same
proceedings. Thus
it matters not that the process that constitutes a referral to
conciliation does not result in a judgment. It
may still, and does
indeed, constitute the commencement of proceedings for the
enforcement of a debt.
”
[16]
Crutchfield J in her judgment on the special plea stated that four
decisions were relevant to the issue before her, namely,
Cape Town
Municipality supra
,
Peter Taylor & Associates v Bell
Estates (Pty) Ltd & Another
2014 (2) SA 312
SCA,
Huyser v
Quicksure (Pty) Ltd & Another
[2017] 2 ALL SA 209
(GP)
, and
Nativa Manufacturing (Pty) Ltd v Keymax Investments 125 (PTY) Ltd
& Others
2020 (1) SA 235
(GP
). She also stated that the
appellant relied on
Huyser
and the respondents relied on
Nativa
. She aligned herself with the judgment of Keightley J
in
Nativa
in upholding the special plea and dismissing the
action with costs. Counsel for the parties also referred us to the
jurisprudence
mentioned in this paragraph and other cases mentioned
in their heads of argument.
[17]
I have considered all these cases, and in my view, they are
distinguishable from the present matter. In
Allianza
the
application was for a declarator, and not about a joinder order
granted and served before the claim prescribed. In
Peter Taylor
the SCA did not make a finding that a court order granted and served
before the claim prescribed, joining the parties as defendants
in the
main action whereby the creditor claims payment of the debt, was not
a process in terms of section 15(1) read with 15(6)
of the Act. In
that matter, the SCA was determining the issue whether the ‘joinder
application’ constituted a process
whereby the creditor claims
payment of the debt for purposes of section 15(1) of the Act and
whether the service thereof had interrupted
the running of the
prescription.
[18]
In my view, Crutchfield J erred in aligning herself with Nativa case.
The present matter is distinguishable from
Nativa.
Keightley J
in
Nativa
had to determine whether an ‘application for
joinder’ served before the claim prescribed, constituted a
process whereby
the creditor claimed payment of a debt and whether
the service thereof had interrupted the running of the prescription.
In the
present matter, the issue to be determined is whether the
‘joinder order’ granted and served on the respondents,
joining
them as defendants in the main action whereby the appellant
is claiming payment of a debt before the claim prescribed,
constituted
a process for the purposes of section 15(1) read with
15(6) of the Act, and whether the service thereof had interrupted
prescription.
[19]
Crutchfield J stated that for the prescription to be interrupted in
the present matter, the appellant ought to have served
the joinder
order, the amended summons and particulars of claim before the claim
prescribed. With due respect to Crutchfield J,
this interpretation of
section 15(1) read with 15(6) is insensible. If all the aforesaid
documents ought to be served before the
claim prescribed, then
section 15 of the Act which is concerned with judicial interruption
of prescription, would be irrelevant
as the claim would have been
instituted within three years as required by sections 11 and 12 of
the Act. In
Natal Joint Municipal Pension Fund
v Endumeni Municipality
[2012] ZASCA 13
;
2012 (4) SA 593
(SCA) para
18
the SCA in setting out the approach to
interpretation held
“…
.. The process is
objective, not subjective. A sensible meaning is to be preferred to
one that leads to insensible or unbusinesslike
results or undermines
the apparent purpose of the document. Judges must be alert to, and
guard against, the temptation to substitute
what they regard as
reasonable, sensible or businesslike for the words actually used. To
do so in regard to a statute or statutory
instrument is to cross the
divide between interpretation and legislation; in a contractual
context it is to make a contract for
the parties other than the one
they in fact made. The ‘inevitable point of departure is the
language of the provision itself’,
read in context and having
regard to the purpose of the provision and the background to the
preparation and production of the document
”
.
Section 39(2) of the Constitution enjoins the court when interpreting
legislation to promote the spirit, purport, and objects
of the Bill
of Rights. The interpretation of prescription, in effect, releases
the constraint that the running of prescription
has on the right to
access to courts, which is provided for in section 34 of the
Constitution (
Food and Allied Workers Union
para [196] supra
).
[20]
Section 15(6) in defining the meaning of ‘process’
includes ‘any document commencing legal proceedings’.
In
my view a ‘court order’ joining the respondents as
defendants in the action for damages, is a document commencing
legal
proceedings against them for enforcement of a debt, and therefore a
process for purposes of section 15(1
).
The Constitutional
Court in
Food and Allied Workers Union para [203] supra
held
that it is not necessary that the process that commences proceedings
must result in a judgment in the same proceedings. It
must be a
process that constitutes the commencement of proceedings for the
enforcement of a debt. The service of the said joinder
court order on
the appellants before the claim prescribed, constituted ‘a
service of a process on the respondents whereby
the appellant claims
payment of the debt’, and therefore interrupted the running of
prescription.
[21]
The claim prescribed after the joinder order and notice of intention
to amend the particulars of claim were served on the respondents’
attorneys in accordance with their election contained in the notice
to oppose the joinder application. The service of a notice
of
intention to amend the particulars of claim in terms of section 28 of
the Uniform Rules of Court is a judicial process. The
respondents
were given 10 days to raise an objection to the proposed amendment.
The claim prescribed during the said 10 days. There
was no objection
to the notice of amendment. The amended combined summons was served
on the respondents 5 days after the claim
prescribed. It should also
be noted that the respondents contributed to the delay in setting
down the joinder application by asking
for extensions to file their
answering affidavit.
[22]
The rationale behind section 15 is that where the creditor takes
judicial steps to enforce the debt, which is indicative of
the
creditor’s intention to enforce the debt, prescription should
not continue running while the law takes its course (
Food and
Allied Workers Union para [56] supra
). In my view, the service of
the joinder order followed by the notice to amend, effected before
the claim prescribed, created the
certainty about the appellant’s
intention to enforce the debt and therefore, interrupted the running
of prescription. The
cause of action and quantum claimed in the
original particulars of claim which were attached to the joinder
application as annexure
“B”, were identical to the cause
of action and quantum claimed in the notice of intention to amend and
amended particulars
of claim. In the circumstances, the appellant
should not be denied his right to access to court.
[23]
The respondents’ counsel argued that service of the
aforementioned court documents on the respondents’ attorneys
was not good service because the attorneys were only briefed to
represent the respondents in the joinder application. I do not
agree
with this submission. The service that was effected on the
respondents’ attorneys was proper service on attorneys of
record of the respondents as postulated by Rule 4. It was not
contended on behalf of the respondents that the served documents
were
not received, let alone brought to their attention by their
attorneys. In fact, the converse is true on objective facts. That
is,
upon service of these court documents by the appellant’s
attorneys, the respondents’ attorneys sent an email to
the
appellant’s attorneys on 2 October 2018 confirming that the
respondents would not object to the amendment, and the same
attorneys
subsequently filed the respondents’ special plea in March 2019.
The correspondence and pleadings filed by the parties
show that
Norton Rose Fulbright South Africa Inc. was appointed on 21 September
2018 and remained the respondents’ attorneys
of record until
their substitution on 30 September 2019.
[24]
It follows that the appellant’s claim against the respondents
has not prescribed. The court a quo has erred in this regard
and the
appeal ought to succeed. There is no reason why costs should not
follow the result.
Accordingly,
the following order is proposed.
ORDER
1.
The
appeal is upheld with costs.
2.
The order of the court below is set aside and replaced with the
following:
‘
The special plea
of prescription is dismissed with costs’
M.M.P.
Mdalana-Mayisela
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Johannesburg
I
agree and it is so ordered
W.L.
Wepener
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng Division,
Johannesburg
I
agree
J
Dlamini
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng Division,
Johannesburg
(
This
judgment is made an Order of Court by the Judges whose names are
reflected herein, duly stamped by the Registrar of the Court
and is
submitted electronically to the Parties/their legal representatives
by email. The judgment is further uploaded to
the electronic
file of this matter on Caselines by the Judge’s secretary.
The date of this Order is deemed to be 7
June 2023.)
Appearances:
On
behalf of the Appellant: Adv
T Mathopo
Instructed
by:
N. T Mdlalose Attorneys
On
behalf of the Respondents: Adv L Choate
Instructed
by: Webber
Wentzel Attorneys
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