Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 851South Africa
Liberty Group Limited v Clark (43012/2018) [2023] ZAGPJHC 851 (1 August 2023)
Headnotes
Summary: Practice and Procedure – application to compel further and better discovery – rule 35(3) and rule 35(12) discussed – application for condonation for late filing of answering affidavit – discovery affidavit conclusive as to possession of documents – court not to go behind affidavit – court cannot generally go behind a discovery affidavit which is regarded as conclusive.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Liberty Group Limited v Clark (43012/2018) [2023] ZAGPJHC 851 (1 August 2023)
Liberty Group Limited v Clark (43012/2018) [2023] ZAGPJHC 851 (1 August 2023)
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sino date 1 August 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
case
NO
:
43012/2018
DATE
:
1
st
August 2023
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF NTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
REVISED
In the matter between:
LIBERTY
GROUP LIMITED
Plaintiff
and
CLARK
,
ROCHE ALLEN
Defendant
Neutral Citation
:
Liberty Group v Clark (43012/2018)
[2023] ZAGPJHC ---
(01 August 2023)
Coram:
Adams J
Heard
:
31 July 2023
Delivered:
01
August 2023 – This judgment was handed down electronically by
circulation to the parties' representatives by email, being
uploaded
to
CaseLines
and by release to SAFLII. The date and time for
hand-down is deemed to be 10:00 on 01 August 2023.
Summary:
Practice
and Procedure – application to compel further and better
discovery – rule 35(3) and rule 35(12) discussed –
application for condonation for late filing of answering affidavit –
discovery affidavit conclusive as to possession of documents
–
court not to go behind affidavit – court cannot generally go
behind a discovery affidavit which is regarded as conclusive.
Defendant’s
application to compel better discovery refused with costs.
ORDER
(1)
The defendant’s application, in terms
of Uniform Rule of Court 35(7), to compel the plaintiff to make
further and better discovery,
be and is hereby dismissed.
(2)
The plaintiff’s shall pay the
defendant’s costs of the application to compel up to and
including 06 June 2022.
(3)
The defendant shall pay the plaintiff’s
costs relating to the said application to compel after 06 June 2022.
JUDGMENT
Adams J:
[1].
I shall refer to the parties as referred to
in the main action, in which the p
laintiff
claims from the defendant an amount of R1 107 879.78, which
represents, according to the plaintiff, a ‘clawback’
of
commission paid to the defendant pursuant to and in terms of a
Franchise Consultant Agreement (‘the agreement’)
concluded between the parties on 25 October 2007.
[2].
In its plea, the
defendant admits the conclusion of the agreement and its expressed
terms. He, however, specifically denies that
he is indebted to the
plaintiff. In a counterclaim, the defendant prayed for an order
directing the plaintiff to render to the
defendant full details of
the commission accounts. The defendant is seeking a further order
directing that he be allowed to debate
the commission account with
the plaintiff and to ascertain if there is any outstanding commission
that accrued to him after the
termination of the agreement. On this
basis the defendant is resisting the plaintiff’s claim in the
main action.
[3].
Before me is an
interlocutory application by the defendant in terms of Uniform Rule
of Court 35(7) for an order compelling the plaintiff
to comply with
defendant’s rule 35(3) and rule 35(12) notices, dated 29 March
2022. The plaintiff opposed the application
but failed to file its
answering affidavit within the time limits prescribed in terms of the
rules. The plaintiff is applying for
condonation of its late filing
of the answering affidavit.
[4].
The plaintiff, in its
application for condonation of the late filing of its answering
affidavit, avers that it believed that the
defendant’s
application to compel would not proceed to hearing as he had already
replied to the notices in terms of rule
35(3) and rule 35(12) on 01
June 2022. On the same day, the plaintiff served its supplementary
discovery affidavit containing additional
documents. A rule
35(6) notice, inviting the defendant to inspect the discovered
documents, was also served on the said date.
Thereafter, the
plaintiff wrote to the defendant requesting that the matter be
removed from the roll and the plaintiff also tendered
the defendant’s
wasted costs occasioned by the application. The plaintiff was
expecting – reasonably so – the
defendant to withdraw the
application to compel at that stage and, if necessary, to remove the
matter from the roll as the issue
had become moot.
[5].
I find the
plaintiff’s reasons and its explanation for the late delivery
of the answering affidavit acceptable. Moreover,
in my view, there is
no conceivable prejudice to be suffered by the defendant should
condonation be granted. Accordingly, the condonation,
as applied for
by the plaintiff, be and is therefore granted.
[6].
That brings me to the
defendant’s application to compel, in which is sought the
following relief:
‘
(1)
That the [plaintiff] be ordered to comply with the
[defendant’s] notices in terms of rule 35(3) and 35(12) dated
29 March 2022, within ten days after service of this order by
delivery thereof by the [defendant’s] attorneys of record to
the [plaintiff’s] attorneys of record;
(2)
That the
[defendant] be entitled to approach this Honourable Court on the same
papers, amplified if necessary, for an order dismissing
and/or
striking out the [plaintiff’s] claim should the [plaintiff] not
comply with the order as set out in (1) above;
(3)
That
the [plaintiff] be ordered to pay the costs of the application,
alternatively, costs of the application on the scale as between
attorney and own client;
(4)
…
...
… .’
[6]
In his rule
35(3) notice, the defendant requested the plaintiff to discover the
‘Schedule A’ to the Financial Advisor
Agreement, as well
as the ‘Financial Advisor Agreement’. On the same date,
the defendant also served a rule 35(12)
notice, calling upon the
plaintiff, within ten days of receipt of the notice to make available
for inspection the following documents:
-
(a)
The ‘Schedule
of commission credits shown in schedule A’ as referred to in
paragraph 5.1 of the Franchise Consultant
Agreement (Annexure C to
the plaintiff’s particulars of claim);
(b)
The ‘Schedule
A’ as referred to in paragraph 5.1 of the Franchise Consultant
Agreement) (Annexure C to the Plaintiff’s
particulars of
claim); and
(c)
The ‘Financial
Advisor Agreement’ as mentioned in paragraph 1 of Annexure A to
the Franchise Consultant Agreement (Annexure
C to the Plaintiff’s
particulars of claim).
[7]
From
correspondence exchanged between the parties and the answering
affidavit, it is clear that the plaintiff was unable to timeously
reply to the defendant’s notice in terms of rule 35(3) and rule
35(12) due to the deponent to the plaintiff’s affidavit
contracting Covid-19. The plaintiff submitted a medical certificate
in this regard. When the defendant did not get the response
from the
plaintiff, he launched an application to compel better discovery on
06 May 2022.
[8]
On 01 June
2022 the plaintiff replied to the defendant’s Rule 35(3) and
Rule 35(12) notices. The plaintiff also filed a supplementary
discovery affidavit whereby the following additional documents were
discovered: A schedule of commission credits; a schedule of
production credits; and a schedule of commission and fees relating to
several years. The plaintiff,
in a
rule 35(6) notice, also invited the defendant to inspect the said
discovered
documents
at the plaintiff’s offices. In a letter dated 06 June 2022, the
plaintiff’s attorneys called on the defendant
to withdraw the
application and tendered defendant’s wasted costs occasioned by
the application. In a letter dated 12 July
2022, the defendant
refused to withdraw the application and recorded its intention to
supplement its affidavit, which, incidentally,
was never done by the
defendant.
[9]
The important point is that by 1 June 2022,
the plaintiff had replied to the defendant’s notices in terms
of rules 35(3) and
35(12) and, howsoever one views the matter, the
need for the defendant’s application to compel had fallen away.
The fact
that the defendant was of the view that the replies were
inadequate and insufficient was not a valid reason for the defendant
to
insist on pursuing the application to compel. He should have
complied with the demand by the plaintiff that he withdraws the
application
to compel and, for this reason alone, the application
should fail.
[10]
Moreover, in its answering affidavit in the
defendant’s application to compel, the plaintiff explains that
it had discovered
any and all documents relevant to the issues in
dispute between the parties. The plaintiff again explained under oath
that the
Financial Advisor Agreement referenced in annexure ‘A’
to the Franchise Consultant Agreement is in fact a reference
to the
very same Franchise Consultant Agreement. As regards schedule ‘A’,
the plaintiff explained that this is a reference
to a schedule of
commission credits, which it discovered in its supplementary
discovery affidavit. Importantly, the defendant did
not file a
replying affidavit and plaintiff’s version, as contained in its
answering affidavit, is to be accepted by the
court.
[11]
The defendant also did not take any further
steps to set down the application for hearing. The plaintiff, in
turn, was required
to bring an application to compel the defendant,
in his own interlocutory application, to file his heads of argument,
which he
was ordered to do as per the court order dated 24 January
2023. The plaintiff thereafter proceeded to set the matter down for
hearing.
The point simply being that the defendant himself probably
realised at some point that his application for compel further and
better
discovery should not be pursued, hence his supine attitude to
progressing the application to a hearing.
[12]
In summary, it was argued on behalf of the
plaintiff that it had complied with the defendant’s request for
further and better
discovery. It is further argued that the
application to compel was brought and persisted with for purpose only
of delaying the
matter which is evidenced by the failure of the
defendant to inspect the discovered documents and to bring the matter
to court.
The plaintiff submitted that the application be dismissed
with costs from the 06
June
2022 on an attorney and client scale.
[13]
It was submitted in the defendant’s
heads of argument that the plaintiff’s response to the
respondent’s request
for further and better discovery in terms
of rules 35(3) and 35(12) is inadequate. It is argued by the
defendant’s counsel
that the defendant believes that the
Financial Adviser Agreement is separate from the Franchise Consultant
Agreement that was attached
to the plaintiff’s particulars of
claim. The defendant also believes that the schedule A referred to in
the Franchise Consultant
Agreement is different to annexure A to the
agreement. It was argued further that a supplementary affidavit
would detail
further grounds why the discovery of the documents in
the plaintiff’s supplementary affidavit was wholly inadequate.
Such
a supplementary founding affidavit by the defendant was however
never forthcoming, nor was a replying affidavit by him ever filed.
[14]
The court is to decide whether the
defendant has made out a case in its papers for an order sought in
its notice of motion.
[15]
Rule 35(3)
provides as follows:
‘
(3)
If any party believes that there are, in addition to documents or
tape recordings disclosed as aforesaid, other documents
(including
copies thereof) or tape recordings which may be relevant to any
matter in question in the possession of any party thereto,
the former
may give notice to the latter requiring him to make the same
available for inspection in accordance with subrule (6),
or to state
under oath within ten days that such documents are not in his
possession, in which event he shall state their whereabouts,
if known
to him.’
[16]
It is
established in our law that when a court decides an application in
terms of Rule 35(7), the court must exercise its discretion
whether
or not to grant the relief sought based on the relevance of the
documents requested in such a notice in terms of Rule 35(3).
What is
more is t
hat, as a general
principle, a court cannot and should not without more go behind the
discovery affidavit of a party. The plaintiff
explained that it had
discovered any and all documents relevant to the issues in dispute
between the parties. T
he
courts are reluctant to go behind a discovery affidavit which is
regarded as conclusive, save where it can be shown either (i) from
the discovery affidavit itself, (ii) from the documents referred to
in the discovery affidavit, (iii) from the pleadings in the
action,
(iv) from any admission made by the party making the discovery
affidavit, or (v) the nature of the case or the documents
in issue,
that there are reasonable grounds for supposing that the party has or
has had other relevant documents or tape recordings
in his possession
or power, or has misconceived the principles upon which the affidavit
should be made.
[17]
That, in my
view, spells the end of the defendant’s application to compel
replies to his notices in terms of rule 35(3) and
(12).
[18]
For all of
these reasons, the defendant’s application falls to be
dismissed.
Costs
[19]
The
general rule in matters of costs is that the successful party should
be granted costs in its favour, and this rule should not
be departed
from except where there are good grounds for doing so, such as
misconduct on the part of the successful party or other
exceptional
circumstances. See:
Myers
v Abramson
[1]
.
[20]
The plaintiff, as the successful party,
should therefore be awarded the costs of the opposed application.
There is, however, the
concession by the plaintiff that it is liable
for the costs up to 06 June 2022, by which date the rule 35(3) and
(12) notices had
been replied to and on which date an offer to pay
the defendant’s costs was in fact made. A costs order to that
effect should
therefore be made.
[21]
I therefore intend ordering the defendant
to pay the costs of the application from 06 June 2022 and the
plaintiff to pay the costs
up to that date.
Order
[22]
In the result, I make the following order:
(1)
The defendant’s application, in terms
of Uniform Rule of Court 35(7), to compel the plaintiff to make
further and better discovery,
be and is hereby dismissed.
(2)
The plaintiff’s shall pay the
defendant’s costs of the application to compel up to and
including 06 June 2022.
(3)
The defendant shall pay the plaintiff’s
costs relating to the said application to compel after 06 June 2022.
L R
ADAMS
Judge of the High
Court
Gauteng Division,
Johannesburg
HEARD ON:
31
st
July
2023
JUDGMENT DATE:
1
st
August
2023 – Judgment handed down electronically
FOR THE PLAINTIFF:
Advocate C D Roux
INSTRUCTED BY:
R C Christie
Incorporated, Edenvale, Germiston
FOR THE DEFENDANT:
Advocate J R Minnaar
INSTRUCTED BY:
Slade Shezi Attorneys,
Waterkloof Ridge, Pretoria
[1]
Myers
v Abramson
,
1951(3) SA 438 (C) at 455;
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