Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 846South Africa
Volvo Financial Services Southern Africa (Pty) Ltd v Adamas Tkolose Trading CC (2023/067290) [2023] ZAGPJHC 846 (1 August 2023)
Headnotes
Summary
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Volvo Financial Services Southern Africa (Pty) Ltd v Adamas Tkolose Trading CC (2023/067290) [2023] ZAGPJHC 846 (1 August 2023)
Volvo Financial Services Southern Africa (Pty) Ltd v Adamas Tkolose Trading CC (2023/067290) [2023] ZAGPJHC 846 (1 August 2023)
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F
LYNOTES:
CIVIL
PROCEDURE – Urgency –
Rei
vindicatio
–
Save
where a statute says so there is no particular kind of matter that
enjoys “inherent urgency” – Urgency
is
determined by the circumstances in which an application is
brought, not the kind of right being enforced – Even
if
there were such a thing as inherent urgency, the rei vindicatio is
not the sort of proceeding that would enjoy it –
The
contrary decision
Jacobs
v Mostert
[2021]
ZAWCHC 213
is wrong and not followed.
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG)
Case No.
2023/067290
REPORTABLE
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
REVISED
1/08/23
In
the matter between:
VOLVO
FINANCIAL SERVICES
SOUTHERN
AFRICA (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
ADAMAS
TKOLOSE TRADING CC
Respondent
Summary
Practice - Urgency - Save
where a statute says so, there is no particular kind of matter that
enjoys “inherent urgency”
– Urgency is determined
by the circumstances in which an application is brought, not the kind
of right being enforced –
It follows that the
rei vindicatio
is not an inherently urgent proceeding – Even if there were
such a thing as inherent urgency, the
rei vindicatio
is not
the sort of proceeding that would enjoy it – The contrary
decision
Jacobs v Mostert
(16942/2021)
[2021] ZAWCHC 213
(25
October 2021) is clearly wrong.
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J:
1
The applicant, Volvo, is a financial
services company. It leased two tractors to the respondent, Adamas.
Adamas fell into arrears
on the payments due under the lease. Volvo
cancelled the lease and applied urgently to me to take possession of
the tractors.
2
On 25 July 2023, I struck Volvo’s
application from my urgent roll. I ordered Volvo to pay the costs of
the urgent hearing.
I indicated that I would give my reasons for
doing so in due course. These are my reasons.
3
Ms. Vergano, who appeared for Volvo,
contended that the application, being vindicatory in nature, was
inherently urgent. This was
incorrect for at least two reasons. The
first is that, save where prescribed by statute, there is no such
thing as an inherently
urgent claim. The second is that, even if
there were such a category of claim, a vindicatory proceeding of this
nature could never
be part of it. I will deal first with the nature
of urgency. I will then explain why vindicatory proceedings do not,
in any event,
enjoy privileged status in urgent court.
The nature of urgency
4
Sometimes, Parliament sets out the
circumstances in which a court ought to determine a specific type of
matter urgently (see, for
example,
section 18
(4) (iii) of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
and
section 5
of the Prevention of
Illegal Eviction from, and Unlawful Occupation of Land Act 19 of
1998). In all other cases, urgency is determined
not by the nature of
the claim brought, but by the circumstances in which the applicant
seeks its adjudication. Uniform Rule 6
(12) says that a matter is
urgent if the applicant will not be able to obtain “substantial
redress at a hearing in due course”
without at least some
urgent relief.
5
It follows that, whatever the nature of the
claim, there must be some reason why the applicant will not be able
to protect or advance
their legal rights later, unless they are given
specific relief now. Most of the time, the applicant requires no more
than temporary
protection from harm while the process of finally
determining their rights progresses. Sometimes, though, a final
determination
of rights is necessary on an urgent basis because those
rights will have little or no practical effect if the applicant has
to
wait weeks or months to vindicate them in the ordinary course.
6
There is, accordingly, no class of
proceeding that enjoys inherent preference. Counsel appearing in
urgent court would, in my view,
do well to put the concept of
“inherent urgency” out of their minds. There are, of
course, some types of case that
are more likely to be urgent than
others. The nature of the prejudice an applicant will suffer if they
are not afforded an urgent
hearing is often linked to the kind of
right being pursued. Spoliation is a classic example of this type of
claim. Provided that
the person spoliated acts promptly, the matter
will nearly always be urgent. The urgency does not, though, arise
from the nature
of the case itself, but from the need to put right a
recent and unlawful dispossession. The applicant comes to court
because they
wish to restore the ordinary state of affairs while a
dispute about the right to possess a thing works itself out. Cases
involving
possible deprivations of life and liberty, threats to
health, the loss of one’s home or some other basic essential of
daily
life, such as water or electricity, destruction of property, or
even crippling commercial loss, are also likely to be urgent.
7
It is sometimes said that contempt of court
proceedings are inherently urgent (see, for example,
Rustenburg
Platinum Mines Limited v Lesojane
(UM44/2022)
[2022] ZANWHC 36
(21 June 2022) at paragraph 7 and
Gauteng
Boxing Promotors Association v Wysoke
(22/6726)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 18 (28 April 2022) paragraph 14). I do not think that
can be true as a general proposition. I accept that
the enforcement
of a court order may well qualify as urgent, in situations where time
is of the essence, but it seems to me that
contempt proceedings
entail the exercise of powers which often demand the kind of careful
and lengthy consideration which is generally
incompatible with urgent
proceedings. For example, it cannot be sound judicial policy to
commit someone to prison, even where the
committal is suspended, or
to impose a fine, on an urgent basis, simply because that might be
the only way to enforce a court order.
There must, in addition, be
some other feature of the case that renders it essential that the
court order be instantly enforced,
such that the penalties associated
with contempt require immediate imposition.
8
The fundamental point is that a matter is
urgent because of the imminence and depth of harm that the applicant
will suffer if relief
is not given, not because of the category of
right the applicant asserts.
Vindicatory
proceedings
9
Even if there were special classes of
urgent claims, I do not think that the
rei
vindicatio
would be one of them. Every
day people buy, sell, lease and use each other’s property. If
an urgent application were justified
every time one of these
transactions went awry to the detriment of an owner who then sought
to retake the property concerned, High
Court Judges would seldom do
anything other than handle urgent vindicatory claims. Anyone familiar
with the daily work of the High
Court knows that vindicatory claims
are generally and effectively dealt with on the ordinary motion and
trial rolls, often in very
high volumes.
10
This is, of course, not the same as saying
that a vindicatory claim could never be urgent. Where there is an
imminent threat that
property will be destroyed, lost, hidden or
otherwise placed permanently beyond the reach of the owner, then a
case of urgency
may well be made out. But that depends on the
circumstances in which the claim arises, not the vindicatory nature
of the claim
itself.
11
All of this may seem self-evident, but for
Ms. Vergano’s reliance upon the decision of the Western Cape
High Court in
Jacobs v Mostert
(16942/2021)
[2021] ZAWCHC 213
(25 October 2021).
In that case, the court held that “inherent urgency underlies a
claim for the return of property (a vindication
claim)”. Such
urgency “is inferred from the importance our law attributes to
this remedy” (paragraph 14). In
addition, the court expressed
the view that “our law supports an approach that in respect of
a claim where a litigant pursues
vindication then the proceedings
always have an element of inherent urgency to it” (paragraph
15).
12
It is not clear to me where the court in
Jacobs
found
support for such far-reaching statements. None of the authorities
cited in the decision support the view that vindicatory
claims are
inherently urgent, and it appears to me that the concept of the
inherent urgency of vindicatory claims was something
the court
fashioned on its own. The
Jacobs
court itself appeared to appreciate the
extraordinary nature of its pronouncements when it suggested, later
on in the decision,
that the inherent urgency of vindication did not
mean absolving a litigant “from complying with the general
accepted principles
of urgency” (paragraph 16). I cannot say
how that remark is to be reconciled with the court’s earlier,
bolder pronouncements
on the inherent urgency of vindicatory
proceedings.
13
In any event, for the reasons I have given,
there can be no such inherent urgency.
Jacobs
is clearly wrong, and I declined to follow it.
Volvo’s claim to
urgency
14
Aside from the stillborn proposition that
vindicatory claims are inherently urgent, Ms. Vergano pressed the
argument that Volvo
had no guarantee that it would be able to recover
its property if it had to pursue a
rei
vindicatio
in the ordinary course.
However, Ms. Vergano was constrained to accept that there were no
facts on the papers to support such an
apprehension.
15
Ms. Vergano did, though, suggest that the
wear and tear to which the tractors will continue to be subjected
while the claim is heard
in the ordinary course will prejudice Volvo
as the owner of the vehicles. However, it is in the nature of
contracts of lease that
the thing let out will be worn and torn. That
is taken into the bargain when the parties agree on the rent payable,
which Volvo
is entitled to recover in an action on the contract.
Volvo did not allege that the damage to the tractors goes beyond fair
wear
and tear. Even if it does, there was no indication that Volvo’s
rights cannot be fully vindicated by an action for damages
brought at
a later stage.
16
It was for all these reasons that I struck
the application from the roll, and directed Volvo to pay Adamas’
costs.
S D J WILSON
Judge of the High Court
This judgment was
prepared by Judge Wilson. It is handed down electronically by
circulation to the parties or their legal representatives
by email,
by uploading it to the electronic file of this matter on Caselines,
and by publication of the judgment to the South African
Legal
Information Institute. The date for hand-down is deemed to be 1
August 2023.
HEARD ON:
25 July 2023
DECIDED ON:
25 July 2023
REASONS:
1 August 2023
For
the Applicant:
V
Vergano
Instructed
by
Sennekal
Simmonds Inc
For
the Respondent:
J
Magayi
Instructed
by
Magayi
Attorneys Inc
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