Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 871South Africa
Halstead v MEC for Public Transport and Road Infrastructure of the Gauteng Department (40162/2019) [2023] ZAGPJHC 871 (31 July 2023)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Halstead v MEC for Public Transport and Road Infrastructure of the Gauteng Department (40162/2019) [2023] ZAGPJHC 871 (31 July 2023)
Halstead v MEC for Public Transport and Road Infrastructure of the Gauteng Department (40162/2019) [2023] ZAGPJHC 871 (31 July 2023)
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sino date 31 July 2023
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Case no: 40162/2019
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES
In
the matter between:
HALSTEAD MICHAEL ROBERT
Plaintiff
and
THE MEC FOR PUBLIC
TRANSPORT AND ROAD
INFRASTRUCTURE
OF THE GAUTENG DEPARTMENT
Defendant
This
judgment has been delivered ex tempore in court 11F on 31 July 2023
at the Gauteng Division of the High Court of South Africa,
Johannesburg, and is transcribed on 3 August 2023. It is
uploaded to the caselines file and emailed to the parties.
J U D G M E N T
SUTHERLAND
DJP
:
[1] This is a truly awful
case.
[2] Before me is an
application for rescission. The plaintiff is an individual who
was injured in a motor car accident
on a provincial road. It is his
case that the sole cause of the accident was that of the defendant,
the Department of Public Transport
of the Province of Gauteng, in
regard to its roadbuilding activities.
[3] A judgment by
default, on the question of liability, was obtained by the plaintiff
on 30 August 2021. That order
is the subject matter of the
application for rescission.
[4] I do not intend
to burden this ex tempore judgment with a full catalogue of the
procedural missteps on the part of the
defendant and its attorney,
the state attorney, Johannesburg, which are patent and are common
cause.
[5] The critical
issue in the immediate controversy derives from the following
particular events
.
On
30 August 2021, the case came before Acting Justice Segal,
who was asked to grant default judgment in the absence of
the notice
of opposition to the claim Before her was placed the evidence of two
experts concerning the road, substantiating the
claim by the
plaintiff. There was,
ipso facto
,
not only no opposition to oppose, but no plea, and thus no indication
before her of what the defence might have been, and self-evidently,
nothing whatsoever to contradict the evidence which was adduced
before her.
[6] Why was the
defendant not represented at this hearing and why was the defendant,
in any event, not before the Court on
the back of a notice of
opposition?
[7] Prior to these
events, an order by consent had been secured, to separate the
question of liability and quantum.
At the time the matter came
before Acting Justice Segal on 30 August 2021, the only leg
of the case that she had to decide
upon was the defendant’s
liability; ie, was the defendant negligent and therefore liable for
whatever quantum of damages
the plaintiff might have sustained.
[8] It was
obviously incumbent on the plaintiff to notify the defendant’s
attorneys that such application for default
judgment was being
sought. It is common cause that such notice was given on the
5
th
of August by e-mail, and delivery by hand on
6 August 2021. Thus, there is no doubt that the defendant’s
attorneys,
and by implication, the defendant, was aware that three
weeks hence, there was going to be an application for default
judgment.
[9] A notice of set
down was similarly served on the defendant’s attorneys, the
state attorney, and nothing happened.
Thus, in terms of the rules of
the Court, and in terms of our practice, the plaintiff behaved
perfectly appropriately in seeking
a default judgment.
[10] The judgment reads
as follows,
“
The
question of liability is decided in favour of the plaintiff against
the defendant, who is ordered to pay one hundred percent
of such
damages as the applicant may prove. The defendant shall pay the
costs of suit on the party and party scale.”
[11] Subsequent to that,
several events occured, but contribute only peripherally to the
immediate controversy and the decision
which I have to make in this
hearing. Given that the judgment was given under those
circumstances, it is necessarily a high
bar that the defendant would
have to clear in order to demonstrate a reasonable explanation for
not opposing.
[12] An affidavit
supporting the rescission application has been filed. That
affidavit is bereft of any proper explanation
for the events between
the dates that I have cited, 5 August 2021 and 30 August 2021.
It must therefore follow that whatever
excuses there may be, and
whatever degree of latitude might be afforded to a party for not
responding to the application or the
notice of set down,anevaluation
can only take place on the basis of the facts placed before me.
There are no relevant facts
placed before me. Therefore, not merely
is there no reasonable explanation, there is no explanation at all.
[13] There are other
issues which bear mention in passing, which reflect on the absence of
an appropriate response to the service
of set down.
[14] The events described
took place during the time that the Covid pandemic was prevailing in
our country, and there is a suggestion,
more forcibly made elsewhere,
that the office of the State Attorney, was to some degree, if not
entirely, paralysed by lockdown
provisions. That is what I am
told. I am given no detail, I am not told who was unable to
work, what systems were dysfunctional,
or what remedial action was
taken. Indeed, all I am given is a bold sweeping
generalisation. Given the fact that, in this
Division, throughout the
whole of the Covid pandemic, this Court continued to operate, and
hundreds of firms of attorneys in Johannesburg
continued to operate,
albeit under very difficult circumstances, it is insufficient to
place before me a generalised statement
that Covid interfered with
the workings of the office, when it is clear that hundreds of other
attorneys were able to function
during that time.
[15] At a later stage, a
plea was filed. Astoundingly, this plea did not confine itself to the
quantum leg, which remained the only
lis
now open to the
defendant to defend, but also addressed the liability leg which had
been the subject matter of the default judgment.
This step was plainly
incorrect. After an exchange between the parties’ respective
counsel, by consent, that part of the plea,
in regard to liability,
was struck out. What is staggering, is that plea was filed at
all on the liability leg, instead of
addressing at once the need for
a rescission. Indeed, the rescission application came much,
much later. The circumstances
which might explain that are not
placed before me.
[16] Lastly, what is
glaringly obvious and is omitted from the rescission affidavit, is
any indication of what the defence of the
defendant might be to the
allegation of negligence. Considering that before the default
judgment Court on 30 August 2021,
the reports of two experts had been
adduced, and this rescission application is being heard in July 2023,
it is apparent that no
effort whatsoever has been made by the
defendant to address the allegations of negligence by either
considering those reports and
seeking countervailing advice, or any
other investigation. That an investigation was contemplated is clear,
because it is common
cause that an inspection was sought by the state
attorney of the spot where the collision took place. Whether
that, in fact,
took place, and what followed from it, I have been
told nothing.
[17] Thus, what we have
before me is an absence of any defence of the merits of the claim as
regards to liability. What has
been advanced to support the
rescission application are two points, both of which are bad.
[18] The first point is
that there was a failure to serve the summons in 2019 on the State
Attorney, at the same time that the summons
was served on the
defendant. It is common cause that the summons was indeed
served on the defendant. The applicant
has not only drawn to my
attention, but notified the defendant at once of the decision in the
case of
Minister of Police and others v Molokwane
, 2022 JDR
1956 (SCA). This judgment deals with precisely the point of whether
or not the failure to serve a summons on the State
Attorney in terms
of
section 2(2)
of the
State Liability Act 20 of 1957
, but
nevertheless a summons is served on the organ of state invalidates
the summons. The judgment disposes of the point,
saying that it
would be a mechanical nonsense to interpret the
State Liability Act
in
such a fashion.
[20] The point raised in
the rescission affidavit is therefore bad. It is made worse by
the fact that, after that event, of
which the complaint is raised so
belatedly, there have been dozens of further steps taken, which would
constitute a waiver against
raising such a point. At the critical
time during March to August of 2021, the State Attorney was fully
apprised and engaged with
the matter, and the absence of action, as I
have alluded to, is not explained in this affidavit.
[21] The only other point
advanced, is that the particulars of claim are excipiable on the
grounds that they are inadequate, given
the provisions of rule 18(4)
of the Uniform Rules of Court. It is true that the particulars are
lean, and indeed, it may well be,
- I make no decision, I simply
mention that as a prospect - that some criticism of the
pleadings would be valid. But
that would have resulted in
nothing more than an order directing the plaintiff to amplify its
pleadings. It certainly would
not have led to the dismissal of
the action.
[22] Therefore, in the
context of the rescission application, it is an unhelpful point to
raise, even if it had been raised at an
earlier time.
Curiously, the inappropriate plea on the liability, which was struck
out, to which I have alluded, raises no
points of excipiability,
suggesting that there was no difficulty in pleading to those
allegations, albeit that from a procedural
point of view, it was
inappropriate to have done filed a plea.
[23] All of these
circumstances are deeply regrettable, and more so, because what is at
stake is an organ of state which is being
sued for damages, who will
derive the funds for which it is liable to pay, if any, from the
people themselves.
[24] The disgraceful way
in which this matter has been conducted by the State Attorney
warrants investigation, and I shall be causing
a report to be made to
the Minister of Justice about how this case has indeed been
conducted.
[25] However,
notwithstanding my instincts to protect the public purse from
inappropriate expenditure, the legal principles, as
I understand
them, do not confer on me the powers of Father Christmas. I
cannot rescue the un rescuable.
[26] There is no merit in
this rescission application, and it is all the more disgraceful that
it is the public interest that is
prejudiced by the neglect, not only
of the State Attorney, but I can infer, from the defendant itself.
The people of South Africa
are ill-served by public servants who, in
spending other people’s money, do not take proper care of how
to deal with their
responsibilities. Such people who are responsible
for this degree of dereliction ought not to be in office.
[27] I come now to the
question of costs. In the circumstances which I have described,
the application for rescission is outrageous.
It is little more
than a delaying tactic. There are many instances that one can draw on
to infer that the conduct on the part of
the defendant and its
attorney has been little more than simply to kick the can down the
road, to avoid having to engage with the
merits of this matter.
[28] Thus, I am driven by
those circumstances to dismiss the application for rescission and in
respect of the costs, it seems that
the contention advanced on behalf
of the applicant, that the costs should be on a punitive scale, is
wholly appropriate.
[29] It is for these
reasons that I make the following order:
(1)
The application for rescission is
DISMISSED
.
(2)
The defendant shall bear the applicant’s
costs on the attorney and client scale, including the cost of two
counsel.
Roland Sutherland
Deputy Judge
President, Gauteng Division, Johannesburg.
Heard:
31 July 2023
Judgment:
31 July 2023
Appearances:
For the Plaintiff:
Adv Dewaal
With him, Adv K Nigrini
and Adv B Joseph
Instructed by A C
Rooseboom
For the Defendant:
Adv M Ramili SC
With Him, Adv Z Nxumalo
Instructed by Office of
the State Attorney
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