Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 787South Africa
L.T v N.A.T (2021/56157) [2023] ZAGPJHC 787 (11 July 2023)
Headnotes
Summary: Practice – Procedure – Rule 42(1)(a) - Variation of divorce order - procedurally regular judicial process followed by plaintiff in terms of rules of court - defendant’s default of appearance owing to failure by his attorney of record to inform him of hearing date - failure by defendant’s attorney to follow his instructions not falling within ambit of sub-rule - fact that plaintiff and court granting order unaware that defendant’s default of appearance not wilful not amounting to a procedural irregularity or mistake in respect of the issue of the order – application dismissed.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## L.T v N.A.T (2021/56157) [2023] ZAGPJHC 787 (11 July 2023)
L.T v N.A.T (2021/56157) [2023] ZAGPJHC 787 (11 July 2023)
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sino date 11 July 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
FLYNOTES:
FAMILY – Divorce –
Variation of order
–
Procedurally regular
judicial process followed by plaintiff in terms of rules of court
– Defendant’s default of
appearance owing to failure
by his attorney of record to inform him of hearing date –
Failure by defendant’s
attorney to follow his instructions
not falling within ambit of sub-rule – Fact that plaintiff
and court granting order
unaware that defendant’s default of
appearance not wilful not amounting to a procedural irregularity
or mistake in
respect of the issue of the order –
Application dismissed – Uniform Rule 42(1)(a).
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
###
CASE NO:
2021/56157
REPORTABLE
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
REVISED
11.07.23
In
the matter between:
T,
L
Applicant
and
T,
N A
Respondent
Summary:
Practice
– Procedure – Rule 42(1)(a) - Variation of divorce order
- procedurally regular judicial process followed by
plaintiff in
terms of rules of court -
defendant’s
default of appearance owing to failure by his attorney of record to
inform him of hearing date -
failure by defendant’s attorney to follow his instructions not
falling within ambit of sub-rule - fact that plaintiff and
court
granting order unaware that defendant’s default of appearance
not
wilful
not
amounting to a procedural irregularity or mistake in respect of the
issue of the order – application dismissed.
JUDGMENT
MAIER-FRAWLEY J:
1.
The applicant and the respondent were
previously married to one another. Their marriage was dissolved by
decree of divorce in terms
of an order granted by Dlamini J in this
division on 13 May 2022.
2.
The
respondent (as Plaintiff) had instituted an action for divorce and
ancillary relief against the applicant (as defendant). For
convenience, the applicant will hereinafter be referred to as the
defendant and the respondent will hereinafter be referred to
as the
plaintiff. The defendant appointed attorneys to represent him in the
divorce proceedings and to this end, Khoza Geffen attorneys
(the
defendant’s erstwhile attorneys) filed a notice of intention to
defend the action on his behalf.
[1]
3.
Thereafter, the parties and their legal
representatives attended a round table meeting at which time the
prospect of settling the
action was discussed. The meeting ended on
the basis that the plaintiff’s attorneys would forward a draft
settlement agreement
containing her settlement proposals to the
defendant’s erstwhile attorneys, whereafter the latter would
deliver the defendant’s
response thereto within the timeframes
agreed for the exchange of such documents at the meeting. The
plaintiff’s attorneys
forwarded the plaintiff’s
settlement proposals within the agreed timeframe, however, the
defendant’s erstwhile attorneys
failed to revert with the
defendant’s response thereto, either within the agreed
timeframe, or at all. The plaintiff’s
attorneys addressed
correspondence to the defendant’s erstwhile attorneys calling
for the defendant’s response to the
plaintiff’s
settlement proposals, which were, however, not forthcoming. Despite a
notice of bar having thereafter been served
on the defendant’s
erstwhile attorneys, no plea was filed within the time period
provided in the notice and as such, the
defendant became
ipso
facto
barred from delivering a plea in
the action.
4.
The plaintiff thereupon proceeded to set
the divorce action down for hearing on the unopposed divorce roll. A
notice of set-down
in which the defendant was notified of the date of
hearing of the action was duly served on the defendant’s
erstwhile attorneys.
It is common cause that the defendant did not
appear at the hearing of the matter on 13 May 2022, on which day the
plaintiff sought
and obtained an order as prayed for in her
particulars of claim. The order made provision, amongst others, for
the payment by the
defendant of maintenance in respect of the minor
child born of the marriage between the parties; spousal maintenance
for a period
of 24 months after divorce; all of the minor child’s
educational and related expenses; the plaintiff’s costs of
suit;
and the retention of the plaintiff on the defendant’s
medical aid.
5.
The defendant states that he found out
about the order granted on 13 May 2022 when it was served upon him
during July 2022.
6.
Aggrieved by the payment obligations
imposed upon him in terms of the order, the defendant now applies for
the order to be varied
only in so far as it pertains to:
(i)
the
amount
of maintenance payable by him on a monthly basis in respect of the
minor child – in this regard, he wants the order varied
to
reflect that the maintenance payable by him in respect of the minor
child be reduced from R5500.00 to R1500.00 per month;
[2]
(ii)
the
order obliging him to pay
all
the minor child’s educational and related expenses – in
this regard, he wants the order varied to reflect that
both
parties are jointly responsible for payment
of the minor child’s educational and related expenses;
[3]
(iii)
the
order obliging him to pay spousal maintenance in the sum of R15 000
for a period of 24 months from date of divorce –
in this
regard, he wants the order varied to reflect that ‘
both
parties forfeit their respective claims for spousal maintenance
’;
[4]
(iv)
the
order obliging him to pay the plaintiff’s costs of suit –
in this regard, he wants the order varied to reflect that
each
party pay his/her own costs of suit
.
[5]
7.
The plaintiff filed a counter-application
to vary that part of the order that provided for the defendant to
retain the plaintiff
on his medical aid for a period of 6 months
after divorce. The reason given for the variation was that the
plaintiff had procured
her own medical aid by virtue of employment
she obtained subsequent to the divorce. The counter-application was
not opposed. At
the hearing of the matter, the parties were agreed
that the order sought by the plaintiff has been rendered moot, given
that the
6 month period provided for in the order has long since
expired. In the light thereof, the relief sought in the
counter-application
was effectively abandoned at the hearing of the
matter.
8.
The main application is brought in terms of
Rule 42(1)(a) of the Uniform rules, which provides as follows:
“
(1)
The court may, in addition to any other powers it may have, mero motu
or upon the application of any party affected, rescind
or vary—
(a) an order or judgment
erroneously sought or erroneously granted in the absence of any party
affected thereby;”
9.
It
is important to appreciate that a litigant seeking a variation order
in terms of this sub-rule may only do so where certain grounds
have
been met. These are either that the party who applied for the order
had sought the wrong order, in error, or that the court
granted the
wrong order, in error, in the absence of the party affected thereby.
As pointed out by the Constitutional Court in
Zuma
,
[6]
‘
suffice
to say that these grounds are particularly, and deliberately, narrow
in scope in order to preserve the doctrine of finality
and legal
certainty.’
10.
In
Colyn
v Tiger Food Industries Ltd t/a Meadow Feed Mills Cape
[7]
,
the Supreme Court of Appeal cautioned that whilst
rule
42(1)(a)
caters
for ‘mistake,’ rescission or variation does not follow
automatically upon proof of a mistake. The rule gives
the courts a
discretion to order it, which must be exercised judicially.
[8]
Not every mistake or irregularity may be corrected in terms of the
rule. Because it is a rule of court, its ambit is entirely
procedural.
[9]
In Colyn’s
case, the pivotal
question
was whether the facts upon which the defendant relied upon gave rise
to the sort of error for which rule 42(1)(a) provides
and, if so,
whether the order was erroneously sought or erroneously granted
because of it.
[10]
The
court concluded at par 9 of the judgment that:
“
The
defendant describes what happened as
a
filing error
in the office of his Cape Town attorneys. That
is
not a mistake in the proceedings
.
However one describes what occurred at the defendant’s
attorneys’ offices which resulted in the defendant’s
failure to oppose summary judgment,
it
was not a procedural irregularity or mistake in respect of the issue
of the order.
It
is not possible to conclude that the order was erroneously sought by
the plaintiff or erroneously granted by the judge.
In the absence of an opposing affidavit from the defendant there was
no good reason for Desai J not to order summary judgment against
him.”
(emphasis
added).
11.
Colyn’s
case was cited with approval by the Constitutional Court in Zuma
supra
[11]
and still constitutes good law. The Constitutional Court indeed
recognized that in certain instances, even when a party failed
to
oppose proceedings and was absent for reasons beyond their control,
courts have held that the requirements of rule 42(1)(a)
were not met
(as was the outcome in Colyn’s case). In dealing with the
absence requirement in rule 42(1)(a), the Constitutional
Court
reaffirmed that
‘
the
issue of presence or absence has
little
to do with actual, or physical, presence and
everything
to do with ensuring that proper procedure is followed so that a party
can be present
,
and so that a party, in the event that they are precluded from
participating, physically or otherwise, may be entitled to rescission
in the event that an error is committed.’ (emphasis added)
12.
As
the defendant relies on dicta extrapolated from the
Zuma
case (albeit that such case concerned a rescission application) for
purposes of arguing that he ought to be granted relief in terms
of
rule 42(1)(a), it is apposite to sketch the background matrix in that
case to properly contextualize what was said by the Constitutional
Court. It will be remembered that the court was not dealing with a
litigant who was excluded from proceedings, or one who was not
afforded an opportunity to participate on account of the proceedings
being marred by procedural irregularities. Mr Zuma was given
notice
of the contempt of court proceedings launched by the Commission
against him. He knew of the relief the Commission sought.
Mr Zuma,
whilst having the requisite notice and knowledge,
elected
not to participate in those proceedings. It is in that context that
the Constitutional Court went on to say that
‘
I
do not, however, accept that litigants can be allowed to butcher, of
their own will, judicial process which in all other respects
has been
carried out with the utmost degree of regularity, only to then,
ipso
facto
(by that same act), plead the “absent victim.”’
13.
In par 62 of the judgment, the
constitutional court pointed out as follows:
‘
Mr
Zuma’s purported absence is not the only respect in which his
application fails to meet the requirements of rule 42(1)(a).
He has
also failed to demonstrate why the order was erroneously granted.
Ultimately, an applicant seeking to do this must show
that the
judgment against which they seek a rescission was erroneously granted
because “
there
existed at the time of its issue
a fact of which the Judge was unaware, which would have precluded the
granting of the judgment and which would have induced the
Judge, if
aware of it, not to grant the judgment.”’
(emphasis
added)
The
court went on to say in par 63:
‘
It
is simply not the case that the absence of submissions from Mr Zuma,
which may have been relevant at the time this Court was
seized with
the contempt proceedings, can render erroneous the order granted on
the basis that it was granted in the absence of
those submissions. As
was said in
Lodhi
2
:
‘
A
court which grants a judgment by default like the judgments we are
presently concerned with, does not grant the judgment on the
basis
that the defendant does not have a defence:
it
grants the judgment on the basis that the defendant has been notified
of the plaintiff’s claim as required by the rules
,
that the defendant, not having given notice of an intention to
defend, is not defending the matter
and
that the plaintiff is in terms of the rules entitled to the order
sought. The existence or non-existence of a defence on the
merits is
an irrelevant consideration and, if subsequently
and,
if subsequently disclosed, cannot transform a validly obtained
judgment into an erroneous one.
”’
(footnotes
omitted) (emphasis added)
Thus,
the court concluded in par 64 of its judgment that:
“
Thus,
Mr Zuma’s bringing what essentially constitutes his “defence”
to the contempt proceedings through a rescission application,
when
the horse has effectively bolted, is wholly misdirected.
Mr Zuma had multiple opportunities to bring these arguments to this
Court’s attention. That he opted not to, the effect being
that
the order was made in the absence of any defence, does not mean that
this Court committed an error in granting the order.
In addition, and
even if Mr Zuma’s defences could be relied upon in a rescission
application (which, for the reasons given
above, they cannot), to
meet the “error” requirement, he would need to show that
this Court would have reached a different
decision, had it been
furnished with one or more of these defences at the time.”
(emphasis
added)
14.
It is common cause
in
casu
that no procedural mistake or
irregularity occurred in the process that led to the action being
heard in the defendant’s absence
on 13 May 2022. In this
regard, the defendant agreed that ‘the Respondent [plaintiff]
followed the correct procedure and
the court granted the order after
scrutinizing the Respondent's procedure.’
That
the order granted was exactly the order requested by the plaintiff at
the hearing of the action, is also not in dispute.
15.
It bears mentioning that the defendant did
not in his papers refer to or rely on the fact that he was
ipso
facto
barred from delivering a plea,
consequent upon which the divorce action proceeded on an unopposed
basis.
16.
The nature of the error relied on by the
defendant herein is that his attorneys did not follow his
instructions, being to ‘defend
and finalize’ the matter,
in that they failed to notify him of the date of hearing of the
action on 13 May 2022 so that he
could participate in the
proceedings. Put differently, the contention is that ‘the error
in this regard is that the respondent
[plaintiff], her legal
representatives and the Honourable court operated with the
understanding that the applicant [defendant]
had been in default of
defending the matter’, whereas it was the defendant’s
erstwhile attorneys who failed to carry
out his instructions and
finalize the matter, therefore he was never in
wilful
default.
17.
Reliance
in this regard was placed by the defendant on what was said in
Christies
case,
[12]
namely:
“
This
matter is to be distinguished from the case of Ex parte Jooste &
‘n Ander,
1968
(4) SA 437
(O) where it was held that although the order originally granted was
exactly the order requested by counsel,
such
an order can be varied under the sub-rule by reason of the
failure
of
the
applicants’ legal representatives to follow their instructions
.
No similar situation presents itself in this matter. It is not the
applicant’s case that her legal representatives acted
against
her instructions.” (emphasis added)
18.
In
Christies
case, the party who had applied for a
draft order to be made an order of court (i.e., the applicant), which
contained only some
but not all the clauses contained in a settlement
agreement concluded with the opposite party, thereafter applied to
court to vary
the order by including two additional clauses from the
settlement agreement (relating to the payment of alimony) and which
had,
for reasons unknown, been omitted from the draft when the
initial court order was sought. The court held:
“
The
order she obtained was exactly the order requested by counsel.
Without evidence to the contrary, it is difficult to conclude
that
the order was erroneously sought or erroneously granted. See First
National Bank of South Africa v Jurgens & Others,
1993 (1) SA 245
(WLD):
’
The
ordinary meaning of 'erroneous' is 'mistaken' or 'incorrect'. I do
not consider that the judgment was 'mistakenly sought' or
'incorrectly sought'. The relief accorded to the plaintiff was
precisely the relief that its counsel requested. The complaint now
is
that there is an omission of an accessory feature from the judgment.
I am unable to perceive how an omission can be categorised
as
something erroneously sought or erroneously granted.’ ”
It was in this context
that the court in
Christies
case found that the facts in
Christies case were distinguishable from the facts that presented in
the
Ex Parte Jooste
case.
19.
In
Ex
parte Jooste & ‘n Ander
1968
(4) SA 437
(O),
a
n
order was granted subject to para 4 of the report of the Registrar of
Deeds. The Applicants thereafter applied for an order that
the order
as granted should be altered by the deletion of the provision that
the order was subject to the report of the Registrar
of Deeds on the
ground that it had been wrongly asked for, as the order as sought on
their behalf by their legal representative
did not accord with their
instructions. The court held as follows:
“
Hofreël
42(1)
(a)
maak
ook voorsiening vir die wysiging van 'n bevel wat verkeerdelik
aangevra of verkeerdelik gegee is in die afwesigheid van 'n
party wat
daardeur geraak word. Hofreël 42(1)
(c)
weer
gee die Hof die reg om 'n bevel te wysig of te herroep wat gegee is
as gevolg van 'n gemeenskaplike fout van die partye. Na
my mening dek
albei Reëls die geval waar daar slegs een party is, soos in
ex
parte-
aansoeke,
en 'n verkeerde bevel is gevra of een is gegee as gevolg van 'n fout
van die aansoekdoener.”
[13]
20.
In his founding affidavit, the defendant
avers that since the plaintiff is now in gainful employment, she
should contribute equally
towards the minor child’s
maintenance, including the child’s educational expenses and she
is thereby also in a position
to support herself without any need for
spousal maintenance and likewise empowered with the means to pay her
own costs of suit.
These allegations were made ostensibly to justify
the need for a variation of the order and/or to show that the c
ourt
would have reached a different decision, had it been furnished with
one or more of these ‘defences’ at the time
.
Suffice it to say that on the defendant’s own version, the
plaintiff’s employment arose only after the grant of the
divorce order in circumstances where the plaintiff had been a
stay-at-home mother during the marriage and had, together with the
minor child, been wholly supported financially by the defendant. The
plaintiff’s employment subsequent to the grant of the
order was
not a fact that was in existence at the time of the issue of the
order and was therefore not something
which
could have precluded the granting of the judgment or which would have
induced the court, if aware of it, not to grant the
judgment.
21.
As
was pointed out by the Supreme Court of Appeal in
Rossitter
v Nedbank Ltd:
[14]
“
Generally
a judgment
is erroneously granted
if there
existed at the time of its issue
a fact which the court was unaware of, which would have precluded the
granting of the judgment and which would have induced the
court, if
aware of it, not to grant the judgment.
There can be no doubt that if the registrar had been made aware of
the procedural defect in the rule 31(5)(a) notice, default judgment
would not have been granted. In
Lodhi
2 Properties Investments CC v Bondev Development (Pty) Ltd
2007
(6) SA 87
(SCA),
Streicher JA held that if notice of proceedings to a party was
required but was lacking and judgment was given against that
party
such judgment would have been erroneously granted. The following
appears in para 24:
‘
Where
notice of proceedings to a party is required and judgment is granted
against such party in his absence without notice of the
proceedings
having been given to him such judgment is granted erroneously. That
is so not only if the absence of proper notice
appears from the
record of the proceedings as it exists when judgment is granted but
also if, contrary to what appears from such
record, proper notice of
the proceedings has in fact not been given. . . .’
(emphasis
added)
22.
In
Lodhi
2 Properties Investments CC v Bondev Development (Pty) Ltd
2007
(6) SA 87
(SCA),
par 25, Streicher JA held that
‘
a
judgment to which a party is procedurally entitled cannot be
considered to have been granted erroneously by reason of facts of
which the Judge who granted the judgment, as he was entitled to do,
was unaware
...
See in this regard Colyn v Tiger Food Industries Ltd t/a Meadow Feed
Mills (Cape
)
2003 (6) SA 1
(SCA)
in paras 9-10 in which an application in terms of rule 42(1)(a) for
rescission of a summary judgment granted in the absence
of the
defendant was refused notwithstanding the fact that it was accepted
that the defendant wanted to defend the application
but did not do so
because the application had not been brought to the attention of his
Bellville attorney. This court held that
no procedural irregularity
or mistake in respect of the issue of the order had been committed
and that it was not possible to conclude
that the order had
erroneously been sought or had erroneously been granted by the judge
who granted the order.
’
(emphasis
added)
23.
The
defendant has failed to show that the court granting the decree of
divorce made the wrong order, whether as a result of an error
on the
part of the plaintiff (being the party who applied for the divorce
order in the absence of the defendant) or because the
error relied on
by the defendant would have precluded the granting of the order in
question, had the court been made aware of it.
[15]
The error relied on by the defendant is that the court and the
plaintiff were unaware that the defendant was not in
wilful
default of appearance at the hearing of the divorce action, given the
failure of his erstwhile attorneys to inform him of the hearing
date
of the divorce and his desire to present his defence at the hearing.
Whether such failure occurred as a result of a mistake
on the part of
the defendant’s erstwhile attorneys (which is questionable,
given that the defendant had in any event been
precluded from
asserting a defence in the absence of the bar being uplifted by order
of court) or something else, is impossible
to determine on the
papers.
24.
Assuming
that an error was committed by the defendant’s erstwhile
attorneys, the assumed error can in any event not assist
the
defendant herein in the light of his concession that the procedure
followed by the applicant in setting the divorce action
down for
hearing was regular and correct. Put differently, the order was
obtained was as a result of a procedurally regular judicial
process,
with proper and sufficient notice of the set-down of the matter
having been given in terms of the rules of court. This
means that the
plaintiff was procedurally entitled to the order sought when it was
granted.
The
fact that it subsequently transpired that the defendant was not in
wilful
default could not transform that order, which had validly been
obtained, into an erroneous order.
[16]
25.
The order
sought by the plaintiff at the hearing of the action was the exact
order that was granted by the court. As such, the defendant
has
failed to demonstrate that an error was committed by the plaintiff in
seeking the order as prayed for in her particulars of
claim or that
an error falling within the ambit of rule 42(1)(a), having regard to
the authorities cited earlier in the judgment,
was made by the court
in granting the order.
26.
It
therefore follows that the application cannot succeed. Although I am
cognizant of the fact that the defendant was let down by
his
erstwhile attorneys, I am not persuaded that the facts of this matter
warrant a departure from the general rule that costs
follow the
result. Reliance on the case of
Ex
Parte Jooste
case
(referred to in
Christies
case)
was misplaced for the simple reason that the facts in
casu
did
not demonstrated that any error was committed by the party who
applied for the divorce order that is now sought to be varied.
Moreover, the defendant failed to demonstrate not only that the error
relied on by him was of the nature of the mistakes that rule
42(1)(a)
caters for, or that but for the error he relies on, the court could
not have granted the impugned order.
[17]
The counter-application was not pursued at the hearing and
consequently, I intend to make no order for costs in relation to the
counter-application, which was unopposed.
27.
Accordingly the following order is granted:
ORDER
:
26.1 The main
application is dismissed with costs.
AVRILLE MAIER-FRAWLEY
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT,
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Date of hearing:
17 May 2023
Judgment
delivered
11 July 2023
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ legal representatives by email, publication on
Caselines and release to SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is
deemed to be have been at 10h00 on 11 July 2023.
APPEARANCES:
Counsel
for Plaintiff:
Adv
SE Nhlabathi
Instructed
by:
MS
Msibi Attorneys Inc
Counsel
for Defendants:
Adv
X. Hilita
Instructed
by:
Mamatela
Attorneys Inc
[1]
It is common cause that both parties were legally represented in the
divorce action.
[2]
The
reason given by the defendant for this variation is that ‘
I
have always been solely responsible for the maintenance of my dear
child without any issues... A Court Order to this effect
is,
therefore, unnecessary and academic, and it only stands, mala fide,
to prejudice me as it exposes me to contempt of Court
proceedings
whilst I have never refrained from nor refused to maintain my dear
child
.’
[3]
The
reason given by the defendant for this variation is that ‘
Respondent
[plaintiff] has been employed at Siyanda Bakgatla Platinum Mine for
over ten (10) months now and is able to contribute
towards the
maintenance of our dear child which includes educational expenses.
It is rather unfair and without sound basis to
have myself ordered
to solely be responsible for such expenses without a just and
equitable reason as to why the Respondent should
be exempted from
this natural responsibility. It is worth mentioning that the reason
I was previously solely responsible for
the upkeep of our
matrimonial home and the maintenance of both the Respondent and our
dear child was due to the Respondent previously
being a stay-at-home
mother by mutual agreement. She is, however, now able to contribute
to our dear child's maintenance and
I humbly submit that there is
currently no sound or lawful reason for her to be exempted
.’
[4]
The
reason given by the defendant for this variation is that ‘
the
Respondent [plaintiff] has been employed for over ten (10) months
now and she currently resides in a house which has been
provided and
subsidized by her employer. She is also getting contribution from me
for all the needs of our dear child which includes
payment of the
nanny's salary. The Respondent is, therefore, not in need of
maintenance
.’
[5]
The
reason given by the defendant for this variation is that the
‘
Respondent
[plaintiff] is not in need of contribution from me towards her legal
costs as she is comfortably employed and it is
not in the interest
of justice for me to bear the legal costs under the circumstances
.’
[6]
Zuma
v Secretary of the Judicial Commission of Inquiry into Allegations
of State Capture, Corruption and Fraud in the Public Sector
Including Organs of State and Others
[2021]
ZACC 28
,
par 9, fn 7.
[7]
Colyn
v Tiger Food Industries Ltd t/a Meadow Feed Mills Cape
(127/2002)
[2003] ZASCA 36
;
[2003] 2 All SA 113
(SCA) (31 March 2003)
[8]
Id par 5
[9]
Id par 6
[10]
The facts were recorded as follows in par 2 of the judgment:
“
The
present appellant was the defendant in an action instituted by the
present respondent in which summary judgment was taken
against him.
I shall for convenience refer to the appellant as the defendant, and
to the respondent as the plaintiff. The defendant,
a dairy farmer of
Vredendal in the Western Cape, was in dispute with his supplier of
cattle fodder. He refused to pay for cattle
fodder concentrate
because, he says, it was defective and caused cattle disease in his
herd with considerable concomitant loss.
The supplier of the cattle
fodder (the plaintiff) eventually issued summons against him out of
the High Court in Cape Town for
payment of R397 210.22. The
defendant caused a notice of intention to defend to be filed by his
attorneys, who have an office
in Cape Town and also an office at
Bellville. The plaintiff then filed an application for summary
judgment and served it
on the defendant’s attorneys of record
at their Cape Town office. That was the proper address for service
in terms of rule
19(3). For reasons which are not clear the
application papers were not forwarded to the Belville office to the
attorney personally
conducting the matter. The result was that the
summary judgment application was not drawn to his or the defendant’s
attention.
In consequence, no notice of intention to oppose was
given and no opposing affidavit was filed. The plaintiff’s
attorney
set the case down for hearing as an unopposed matter, and
in due course on 4 August 2000 Desai J ordered summary judgment by
default. It is accepted that the defendant wanted to defend the
action and that he would have done so if the application had been
brought to the attention of his attorney at Bellville.”
[11]
Zuma
(above
fn 2) at par 60 read with fn 28 thereto.
## [12]Christies
v Christies(705/2006)
[2007] ZANCHC 18 (2 March 2007), par 7.
[12]
Christies
v Christies
(705/2006)
[2007] ZANCHC 18 (2 March 2007), par 7.
[13]
The
English translation
,
as appears from the headnote, is that the court stated that Rule
42(1)(a) and 42(1)(c) cover the case where there is only one
party,
such as in ex parte applications, and a wrong order has been prayed
for or granted as a result of an
error
on the part of the applicant
.
[14]
Rossitter
v Nedbank Ltd
(96/2014
)
[2015] ZASCA 196
(1
December 2015) at para [16];
[15]
See
Daniel
v President of the Republic of South Africa
2103
(11) BCLR 1241 (CC), where the Constitutional Court stated that “
The
Applicant is required to show that, but for the error he relies on,
this Court could not have granted the impugned order.
In other
words, the error must be something this Court was not aware of at
the time the order was made and which would have precluded
the
granting of the order in question, had the Court been made aware of
it.”
[16]
See
Stander
v
ABSA
Bank Bpk
1997
(4) SA 873
(E), referred to in
Lodhi
2 Properties Investments CC v Bondev Development (Pty) Ltd
2007
(6) SA 87
(SCA),
par 26, where the Supreme Court of Appeal indicated as follows:
“
In
Stander the plaintiffs who obtained an order in their favour was,
unlike the UDF in Theron, procedurally entitled to the order
when it
was granted and the
fact
that it subsequently transpired that the defendants were not in
wilful default could not transform that order, which had
validly
been obtained, into an erroneous order.
”
(emphasis
added)
The
court thus held, in para 27 of
Lodhi:
“
Similarly,
in a case where a plaintiff is procedurally entitled to judgment in
the absence of the defendant the judgment if granted
cannot be said
to have been granted erroneously in the light of a subsequently
disclosed defence
. A court
which grants a judgment by default like the judgments we are
presently concerned with, does not grant the judgment on
the basis
that the defendant does not have a defence: it grants the judgment
on the basis that the defendant has been notified
of the plaintiff’s
claim as required by the rules...and that the plaintiff is in terms
of the rules entitled to the order
sought. The existence or
non-existence of a defence on the merits is an irrelevant
consideration and, if subsequently disclosed,
cannot transform a
validly obtained judgment into an erroneous judgment
.”
(emphasis added)
[17]
See
fn 10 above.
sino noindex
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