Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 920South Africa
Asphalt Services (Pty) Ltd v Tarspay CC (2011/26870 ; 2012/34486 ; A5061/2016) [2023] ZAGPJHC 920 (14 August 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
20 October 2017
Headnotes
–
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
>>
2023
>>
[2023] ZAGPJHC 920
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Asphalt Services (Pty) Ltd v Tarspay CC (2011/26870 ; 2012/34486 ; A5061/2016) [2023] ZAGPJHC 920 (14 August 2023)
Asphalt Services (Pty) Ltd v Tarspay CC (2011/26870 ; 2012/34486 ; A5061/2016) [2023] ZAGPJHC 920 (14 August 2023)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2023_920.html
sino date 14 August 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case Number: 2011/26870
Case Number: 2012/34486
Appeal Case Number:
A5061/2016
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTERST TO OTHER
JUDGES
NOT REVISED
14.08.23
In
the matter between:
ASPHALT
SERVICES (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
TARSPRAY
CC
Respondent
JUDGMENT
FORD, AJ
Introduction
[1] In this application,
the applicant seeks to have the order of the full court, dated 8
November 2017, more fully discussed below,
interpreted in terms of
Uniform Rule 42(1)(b). The respondent opposes the application, by way
of a counter application, claiming
in turn that the full court order
contains a patent error, namely that the order does not reflect the
intention of the judgment.
[2] The material facts in
this matter are largely common cause.
Brief factual
background
[3] The applicant
(“Asphalt”) and the respondent (“Tarspray”)
instituted separate trial actions against
each other in 2011 and
2012, respectively. The trial actions were ultimately consolidated,
and came before the Makgoka J for determination.
[4] In his judgment,
Makgoka J (“the trial judgment”), ordered Tarspray to pay
Asphalt’s costs of the trial on
the normal party and party
scale.
[5] Tarspray appealed
against the trial judgment, and Asphalt noted a cross-appeal. The
appeal and cross-appeal were noted against
certain portions of the
trial judgment.
[6] The appeal and
cross-appeal were heard by a full court and judgment was delivered on
20 October 2017 (“the appeal judgment”).
[7] Tarspray was
partially successful in its appeal in that the amount found to be due
to Asphalt by Makgoka J was reduced by the
full court. The remainder
of Tarspray’s appeal was dismissed.
[8] Asphalt’s
cross-appeal was allowed in part and dismissed in part. The effect of
the appeal judgment was that Tarspray
and Asphalt were both partially
successful in their respective appeal and cross-appeal. The order at
the end of the appeal judgment
reads as follows:
1. The appeal is
dismissed
with costs
save in so far as the amounts awarded by
the court a quo is varied herein.
2. The appellant is to
pay the costs occasioned by the inclusion of volumes 2 and 9 to 19 of
the appeal record on an attorney and
client scale.
3. The cross-appeal is
allowed in part and is dismissed in part.
4. The order of the court
a quo is substituted with the following:
4.1 In case number
34486/2012 judgment is given in favour of the appellant against the
respondent in the amount of R1 619 728.71.
4.2 In case number
26870/2011 judgment is given in favour of the respondent against the
appellant in the amount of R2 032 365.22.
4.3 The amount in the
para 4.2 above is set off against the amount awarded in para 4.1
above, resulting in a difference of R412
636.50.
4.4 The appellant is
ordered to pay the amount in para 4.3 above to the respondent.
4.5 The appellant is
ordered to pay interest on the amount referred to in para 4.3 above
at the rate of 15.5%, calculated from 15
July 2011 to date of final
payment.
4.6 The appellant is
ordered to pay the respondent’s costs in case number 26870/2011
inclusive of senior counsel fees as well
as the costs of the
postponement reserved on 12 October 2012
on the scale as between
attorney and client
.”
[9] In prayer 4.6 of the
order in the appeal judgment, Tarspray is ordered to pay Asphalt’s
costs of the trial, and the costs
of the postponement on 12 October
2012, on the scale as between attorney and client.
[10] The dispute between
the parties in relation to the interpretation of the appeal judgment
arose when Tarspray’s cost consultant,
Mr. Jordan Beagle
(“Beagle”) addressed correspondence to Asphalt’s
cost consultant, Ms. Ilono Baguley (“Baguley”)
where
Beagle disputed the taxation Asphalt’s bill of costs on a
punitive scale.
[11] The Taxing Master
does not have the authority to determine the interpretation of the
appeal judgment, and is as such incapable
of taxing the bill of
costs, until a determination by this court is made. This impasse,
resulted in Asphalt launching of
the present application.
[12] On 22 April 2022,
Asphalt filed the main application in the present matter. Tarspray in
turn filed an answering affidavit,
in the form of a counter
application on 1 August 2022.
Condonation
[13] The Tarspray’s
counter application and replying affidavit were admittedly filed
late. This court is accordingly required
to determine whether or not
to grant or refuse condonation, in accordance with Rule 27(3) of the
Rules.
[14]
In
Grootboom
v National Prosecuting Authority and Another
[1]
,
the Constitutional Court stated that:
“…
It is
axiomatic that condoning a party’s non-compliance with the
rules or directions is an indulgence. The court seized with
the
matter has a discretion whether to grant condonation.”
[15] And at paragraph 55,
the court held –
“
In this court the
test for determining whether condonation should be granted or refused
is the interests of justice. If it is in
the interests of justice
that condonation be granted, it will be granted. If it is not in the
interests of justice to do so, it
will not be granted.”
[16] The litigation
between the parties, in the matter before me, has been protracted
dating as far back as 2011. I have considered
the parties’
respective submissions in respect of condonation and have decided, in
order to bring finality to this matter,
to grant condonation in the
interest of justice.
Asphalt’s case
[17] Asphalt brought this
application in terms of Rule 42(1) (b) of the Uniform Rules, seeking
the following relief:
17.1. That the full court
decision dated 8 November 2017, and for the purposes of the taxation
of the bill of costs, be confirmed
to mean that the respondent is
ordered to pay the applicant’s costs as follows:
17.1.1. all the
applicant’s taxed costs or agreed costs in case number
26870/2011 inclusive of senior counsel's fees on the
scale as between
attorney and client; and
17.1.2. all the
applicant's taxed or agreed costs in case number 26870/2011
occasioned by the postponement on 1 October 2012, including
the costs
of senior counsel on the scale as between attorney and client.
17.2. Costs of this
application on the scale as between attorney and client.
[18] It was argued on
behalf of Asphalt that, in terms of the aforesaid Rule, this court is
empowered to clarify its judgment or
order if, on a proper
interpretation, the meaning thereof remains obscure, ambiguous or
otherwise uncertain, so as to give effect
to its true intention,
provided that it does not thereby alter the sense and substance of
the judgment or order.
[19] In support of the
aforestated proposition, it was argued that the basic principles
applicable to construing documents apply
to the construction of a
judgment or order. Further that, the court will generally consider
the following:
19.1. the court's
intention to be ascertained primarily from the language of the
judgment or order as construed according to the
well-known rules;
19.2. the judgment or
order and the court’s reasons for giving it must be read as a
whole in order to ascertain its intention;
19.3. if, on such a
reading, the meaning of the judgment or order is clear and
unambiguous, no extrinsic fact or evidence is admissible
to
contradict, vary, qualify or supplement it;
19.4. if any uncertainty
in meaning does emerge, the extrinsic circumstances surrounding or
leading up to the court granting the
judgment or order may be
investigated and regarded in order to clarify it; and
19.5. if the meaning of
the order is, however, clear and unambiguous, it is decisive and
cannot be restricted or extended by anything
else stated in the
judgment.
[20] According to
Asphalt, and this appears plainly from the papers, the parties
disagree on the interpretation of the cost order,
specifically the
scale of costs being on a punitive scale. Therefore, there exists an
obscurity, ambiguity,
alternatively
an uncertainty in relation
to the interpretation of the cost order requiring the court to
intervene and provide clarity.
[21] Asphalt contends
that the cost order as aforesaid means the following:
21.1. The respondent
(appellant in the appeal) is ordered to pay the applicant’s
costs (respondent in the appeal) in case
number 26870/2011 inclusive
of senior counsel’s fees
on the scale as between attorney
and client
; and
21.2. That the respondent
(appellant in the appeal) is ordered to pay the applicant’s
costs (respondent in the appeal) inclusive
of senior counsel’s
fees in respect of the postponement reserved on 12 October 2012
on
the scale as between attorney and client
.
[22] It contends further
that, the above interpretation is in line with the relief sought by
the applicant in its notice of cross-appeal.
Further that in terms of
ground 5 of the notice of cross-appeal, Asphalt sought to appeal the
order in relation to costs, in the
following terms:
“
The costs order
made against the appellant could not reasonably have been made by a
Court properly directing itself to air the relevant
facts and
principles. The appellant should have been ordered to pay the costs
of the action on the attorney and client scale, not
the ordinary
scale, given its:
(1)
dishonesty in relation to the settlement that it has
reached with Tarfix;
(2)
its subsequent dishonest attempt to hide such
settlement;
(3)
the dishonest attempt to contend that no part of the
3.6 million received from Tarfix related to work done by the
applicant on
the Boshoek contract and the dishonest attempt to hide
the true nature of the settlement;
(4)
the dishonest attempt to escape the consequences of its
obligation as pleaded in paragraph 3.3.5 of its plea as amended;
(5)
the dishonest claim that a different contract existed
between the parties; and
(6)
the failure of the respondent to call a witness to
explain the aforesaid conduct in relation to its settlement with
Tarfix.”
[23] It is, according to
Asphalt, evident from the aforesaid grounds of appeal, that it sought
to appeal the cost order of the court
a
quo
and to replace
and/or substitute the cost order of the court
a quo
with a
punitive costs order on an attorney and client scale.
[24] On Asphalt’s
interprets the cost order full court as follows: it succeeded in
appealing the cost order, and that the
cost order of the court
a
quo
was replaced with a punitive cost order on the attorney and
client scale.
[25] Asphalt directed the
court to the conduct of Tarspray and provided sufficient notice that
it intended appealing the cost order,
more specifically the scale of
costs. It sought to substitute the cost order of the court a
quo
with a punitive cost order awarding the costs on the scale as between
attorney and client.
[26] In addition, it
provided written heads of argument in support of its cross-appeal. In
those heads of argument, Asphalt, under
a separate and distinct
heading, indicated its submissions on costs and stated the following
at paragraph 89 thereof:
“
If the appeal
succeeds this court may impose its own cost order. Tarspray should be
ordered to pay the costs of the action on the
attorney and client
scale not the ordinary scale."
[27] It further
indicated, in its heads of argument at paragraph 97.6 that the
following relief in respect of costs was sought:
"the defendant is
ordered to pay the plaintiff's costs in case number 26879/2011
inclusive of senior counsel's fees, as well
as the costs of the
postponement reserved in October 2012 on the scale as between
attorney and client."
[28]
According
to Asphalt, if due regard is had to the notice of cross-appeal and
its heads of argument, it is clear that it sought to
appeal the cost
order of the court
a
quo
and
sought to substitute such cost order with a punitive one. Further
that, the full court in considering the grounds upon which
Asphalt
sought to appeal the cost order of the court
a
quo
stated the following
[2]
;
28.1. The court found
that all the witnesses who testified before the court
a quo
asserted that the agreement was concluded between the appellant and
the respondent;
28.2. In finding that the
agreement was concluded between the appellant and the respondent, the
court considered the dishonest claim
that a different contract
existed between the parties;
28.3. The court further
considered the fact that the respondent failed to call a witness to
explain its conduct in relation to its
settlement with Tarfix;
28.4. The court indicated
that five witnesses testified on behalf of the respondent, three of
whom asserted that the agreement was
entered into by the appellant
and the respondent. The appellant called no witnesses resulting in
the evidence being largely common
cause;
28.5. The court
considered the payment received in an amount of R3.6 million in
August 2011 from Tarfix;
28.6. In considering the
payment received in an amount of R3.6 million, the court considered
the dishonesty in relation to the settlement
and the subsequent
dishonest attempt to hide such settlement.
[29] It is therefore
evident from the full court decision, so it was argued, that the
court considered all of the grounds Asphalt
sought to appeal, in
order to substitute the court
a quo’
s cost order with a
punitive one. In consequence, the court made the following cost
order:
"The respondent (appellant in the appeal) is ordered
to pay the respondent's costs in case number 26870/2011 inclusive of
senior
counsel fees as well as the costs of the postponement reserved
on 12 October 201
2
on the scale as between attorney and
client
".
[30] On Asphalt’s
interpretation of the court order, it is submitted that:
30.1. The language of the
judgment and cost order indicate that the court intended that the
costs awarded were on an attorney and
client scale inclusive of the
costs of senior counsel;
30.2. In reading the full
court's judgment as a whole, the full court considered the grounds
raised by Asphalt and agreed with its
contentions. And in the
circumstances, the court awarded punitive costs.
Tarspray’s
case
[31] Tarspray contends
that there is nothing stated in the appeal judgment which justifies
the disputed order for costs on the attorney
and client scale. And
that the disputed order is clearly a patent error in the appeal
judgment.
[32] It is submitted
that, while Asphalt did cross-appeal against the cost order of the
court
a quo’s
trial judgment, the full court did not
deal with that portion of the cross-appeal in the appeal judgment.
Further that it cannot
be disputed that the award of costs on an
attorney and client scale, is a punitive cost order.
[33] Tarspray submitted
in addition, that the full court did not state any reasons why it
would have made an order for punitive
costs against Tarspray. In its
view, a punitive cost order does not ordinarily follow the result,
and reasons ought to have been
given justifying the award of punitive
costs. This is especially so where an appeal court intends to alter
the order of the court
a quo
.
[34] Moreover, so it was
argued, both Tarspray and Asphalt were partially successful in their
respective appeals and cross-appeals.
This would not justify a
punitive costs order because both parties were successful and
unsuccessful in their respective relief
sought.
[35] For these reasons,
Tarspray contends that the disputed order is not one open to
interpretation but rather constitutes a patent
error in the appeal
judgment. Further that the relief sought by Asphalt is incompetent.
The appeal judgment and order, and the
full court’s reasons for
giving it, must be read as a whole in order to ascertain its
intention. Tarspray contends further
that, on a reading of the appeal
judgment and order as a whole, the judgment and order are unclear and
ambiguous. They are, in
fact, at odds with each other. This must be
clarified by the full court, and the patent error must be corrected.
[36] It was argued that
when reading the disputed order in the context of the appeal judgment
as a whole, and in light of the full
court’s reasons for the
order, it is clear that the full court never intended to, and did
not, award punitive costs against
Tarspray on the scale as between
attorney and client. This is even more apparent when regard is had to
the cost order in the appeal
itself – the full court awarded
party and party costs against Tarspray in the appeal. Should the full
court have been displeased
in any respect with Tarspray, so it was
contended, it would have granted attorney and client costs both in
the appeal and in the
disputed order. It did not do so.
[37] Tarspray therefore
seeks the correction of this patent error in its counter-application,
as the disputed order does not reflect
the real intention of the full
court as it appears from the judgment itself.
Analysis
[38] The relief sought by
both Asphalt and Tarspray, is obtainable in terms of Rule 42(1)(b).
To this end, both parties relied on
the same rule, for different
purposes. Asphalt contends that the disputed order of the appeal
court ought to be properly interpreted
which in and of itself
requires a variation of that order, whereas Tarspray contends that
the disputed order contains a patent
error, also requiring a
variation.
[39]
In
Firestone
South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Genticuro AG
[3]
,
the court held that:
39.1. The principal
judgment or order
may be supplemented in
respect of accessory or consequential matters,
for example,
costs or interest on the
judgement
debt,
which the court overlooked or inadvertently
omitted to grant;
39.2. The court may
clarify its judgement or
order. If,
on
proper interpretation,
the meaning
thereof
remains obscure, ambiguous or
otherwise
uncertain, so
as
to
give effect to
its true
intention,
provided
it does not thereby alter
" the sense and
substance
"
of the judgement
or
order;
39.3. The court may
correct a clerical, arithmetical
or other
error
in
its
judgment
or
order so as to give effect to its true intention;
39.4. Where counsel has
argued the merits and
not costs of a case
(which nowadays often happens since
the question of costs may
depend upon
the ultimate decision on the
merits), but the court, in granting
judgment, also makes an
order
concerning the costs, it may thereafter
correct, alter or supplement
that order.
[40] The first question
raised in this matter, by implication, is whether a court sitting as
a single judge can vary an order of
a full court constituted by two
or more judges. Where the issue for consideration, like in the
matter before me, merely concerns,
in part, an interpretation of an
order, so as to give effect to its true intention, there seems to me,
at least, no basis to have
a full court reconvene in order to
determine such an application. This can expediently be done by a
single judge. Provided of course,
as set out in
Firestone,
that
the court sitting as a single judge, does not seek to alter the sense
and substance of the judgment.
[41] Asphalt raises
essentially four considerations, for its claim that the order of the
full court ought to be interpreted in the
manner it contended for,
namely that:
41.1. its interpretation
being in line with the relief sought in its notice of cross-appeal;
41.2. in its written
heads of argument, in the cross-appeal, Asphalt, under a separate and
distinct heading, indicated its submissions
on costs;
41.3. the language of the
judgment and cost order indicate that the court intended that the
costs awarded were on an attorney and
client scale inclusive of the
costs of senior counsel; and
41.4. in reading the full
court's judgment as a whole, the full court considered the grounds
raised by Asphalt, agreed with its
contentions and in the
circumstances, awarded punitive costs.
[42] Prior to dealing
with the listed considerations, I deem it appropriate to first
address the issue of the punitive order and
corollary thereto, the
trite legal position in this regard. It is common cause that the
relevant portion of the disputed order
is punitive in nature.
[43] In an appeal against
a cost order issued by a lower court on a punitive scale, the Labour
Appeal Court (“LAC”)
reasoned as follows:
The scale of attorney and
client is the highest scale possible that a litigant can be ordered
to pay.
It
is an extraordinary one which should be reserved for cases where
there is clearly and indubitably vexatious and reprehensible
conduct
on the part of a litigant. The nature and reach of such an order has
been described as “exceptional, very punitive
and as indicative
of extreme
opprobrium
.”
[4]
The learned authors of
Erasmus
Superior Court Practice
list various circumstances in which the courts have, over the years,
awarded costs on an attorney and own client scale. One of
the
instances is where a party’s conduct has been found to be
“unconscionable, appalling and disgraceful”. See
also
Sentrachem
v Prinsloo
[5]
where it was reiterated that an award of attorney and own client
costs had to be seen as an attempt by the Court to go one step
further than an ordinary order of costs between attorney and client
so as to ensure that the successful party was indemnified with
regard
to all reasonable costs of litigation,
and
that it was an extraordinary order which could not be made without
good reason.
[6]
[44]
It is trite
that the
primary
purpose of any cost award is to minimise the extent to which a
successful party will be financially impaired as a result
of
litigation that he or she should not have had to endure. Cost orders
often fail to achieve this objective, and fall short of
assisting the
successful party in fully recovering his or her expenses. For this
reason, it will at times be just and equitable
to award costs against
the losing party on a punitive scale, not only to punish vexatious
litigation, but also to assist the successful
party in recovering, in
most instances, substantial expenses. Generally, our courts do not
make punitive costs orders frequently.
Exceptional circumstances must
exist before they are warranted.
[7]
[45]
In
Mkhatshwa
and Others v Mkhatshwa and Others
[8]
the Constitutional Court held that the purposes of punitive costs,
being an extraordinarily rare award, are to minimise the extent
to
which the successful litigant is out of pocket and to indicate the
court’s extreme opprobrium and disapproval of a party’s
conduct. Although punitive costs are rarely awarded, the court
affirmed that existing jurisprudence indicates that they are
appropriate
when it is clear that a party has conducted itself in an
indubitably vexatious and reprehensible manner.
[46] Rule 42(1)(b)
provides that the court may rescind or vary any order or judgment in
which there is an ambiguity, or a patent
error or omission, but only
to the extent of such ambiguity, error or omission. A patent error or
omission has been described as
'an error or omission as a result of
which the judgment granted does not reflect the intention of the
judicial officer pronouncing
it, meaning, the ambiguous language or
the patent error or the omission must be attributable to the court
itself. The court is
accordingly not entitled to reconsider the whole
of its order or judgment, and its competence is limited to the
interpretation
of the order.
[47] In the present
matter, the full court did not advance any reasons for granting a
cost order on a punitive scale, and its failure
to do so was, as
argued by Mr. Naidoo, a patent error. This is so, because the reasons
for the judgment and the order, in respect
of punitive costs, appear
rather tenuous. A punitive cost order is an extraordinary one,
generally made by the court in exceptional
circumstances. The
granting of a punitive cost order against a party, having regard to
our court’s general approach, should
not be issued without at
the very least advancing reasons for that decision. Where a punitive
cost order is granted, the losing
party would be justified in
expecting a reasoning therefor being set out in the judgment.
[48] Apart from not
stating any reasons why it issued an order for punitive costs against
Tarspray, the full court also did not
deal with the cost issue raised
by Asphalt, in the appeal judgment.
[49] Ms. Mitchell argued
that the notice of cross-appeal, specifically paragraph 5, alluded to
above, did in fact raise the issue
of a punitive cost order, in
which it was stated:
“
The costs order
made against the appellant could not have reasonably have been made
by a court properly directing itself to all
the relevant facts and
principles. The appellant should have been ordered to pay the costs
of the action on the attorney and client
scale, not on the ordinary
scale, given its:…”
[50] Further that it is
clear from the cross-appeal that Asphalt sought to appeal the cost
order of the court a
quo
and to replace and/or substitute it
with a punitive one on an attorney and client scale. In addition,
Asphalt provided written
heads of argument in support of its
cross-appeal indicative of the fact that Asphalt would argue, the
issue of costs, at the hearing
of the appeal.
[51] Mr. Naidoo,
correctly contended, that the fact that a party raises the relief it
will be seeking either in a notice or heads
of arguments, does not
without more, necessarily render such, mutually inclusive with the
eventual order. A careful reading of
the appeal judgment does not
seem to promote this interpretation either. If it did, it would
logically have followed, that the
same reasoning would have been
apparent.
[52] I agree with Mr.
Naidoo that, a proper reading of the disputed order in the context of
the appeal judgment as a whole, and
in light of the full court’s
reasons for the order, makes it abundantly clear that the full court
never intended to, and
did not, award punitive costs against Tarspray
on the scale as between attorney and client. This is even more
apparent when regard
is had to the costs order in the appeal itself –
to this end, the full court awarded party and party costs against
Tarspray.
If the full court was so displeased with Tarspray, it
would have granted attorney and client costs, both in respect of the
appeal and in the disputed order. It did not do so.
[53] It was argued by Ms.
Mitchell that the language of the judgment and cost order indicate
that the court intended that the costs
awarded were on an attorney
and client scale inclusive of the costs of senior counsel; and in
reading the full court's judgment
as a whole, the full court
considered the grounds raised by Asphalt, agreed with its
contentions, and in the circumstances awarded
punitive costs.
[54] I disagree with this
contention for the following reasons:
54.1. A punitive cost
order is an extraordinary order, not lightly issued by our courts and
certainly not, without providing reasons
for such an order;
54.2. Having considered
the facts in the appeal, the appeal court concluded that both
Tarspray and Asphalt were partially successful
in their respective
appeals and cross-appeals. This would not therefore justify a
punitive costs order against Tarspray as contended
by Ms. Mitchell.
Even after having taken the conduct of Tarspray into consideration,
the full court still only ordered ordinary
costs in the appeal.
[55] The court order of
the full court contains a patent error that can be easily varied, as
proposed in the draft order of Tarspray,
in order to give effect to
the court’s true intention.
[56] In the result, I
make the following order:
Order
1. The applicant’s
application is dismissed with costs, as set out in prayer 5 below;
2. The respondent’s
late filing of its counter application and replying affidavit is
condoned;
3. The respondent’s
counter-application succeeds and is hereby granted in the terms set
out below.
4. The judgment of the
full court, dated 8 November 2017, under the above case number, is
hereby varied and substituted, in its
relevant parts, to read as
follows
“
4.6 The
appellant is ordered to pay the respondent’s costs in case
number 26870/2011 inclusive of senior counsel fees as
well as the
costs of the postponement reserved on 12 October 2012 on party and
party scale”
5. The applicant is
ordered to pay the costs of the counter-application on party and
party scale.
B. FORD
Acting Judge of the High
Court
Gauteng
Division of the High Court, Johannesburg
Delivered: This judgment
was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is reflected on 14
August 2023 and is handed down electronically
by circulation to the
parties/their legal representatives by e mail and by uploading
it to the electronic file of this matter
on CaseLines. The date
for hand-down is deemed to be 14 August 2023
Date of hearing: 24
April 2023
Date of judgment:
14 August 2023
Appearances:
For
the applicant:
Adv.
K. Micthell
Instructed
by:
A.J.
Venter & Associates
For
the respondent:
Adv.
K. Naidoo
Instructed
by:
Fairbridges
Wertheim Becker
[1]
2014 (2) SA 68
(CC), at para [20]
[2]
Full court judgment
[3]
1977 (4) SA 298
(A) at 304D
[4]
Erasmus
Superior
Court Practice
at
E12-26
[5]
Sentrachem
Ltd v Prinsloo
1997
(2) SA1
(SCA)
[6]
At
22B-D.
[7]
LAWSA,
Volume 10, Third Edition, 284 note 15.
[8]
CCT220/20
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Road Accident Fund v Vikesh (40389/2018) [2025] ZAGPJHC 312 (25 March 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 312High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)98% similar
Road Accident Fund v Yangbonga and Another (2021/9373) [2025] ZAGPJHC 122 (28 January 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 122High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)98% similar
Road Accident Fund v Ma NO Marrime and Another (060951/2023 ; 061046/2023) [2023] ZAGPJHC 730 (26 June 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 730High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)98% similar
Road Accident Fund v Muthali Others (6945/2022) [2025] ZAGPJHC 123 (28 January 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 123High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)98% similar
Road Accident Fund v Gonsalves (14756/2017) [2024] ZAGPJHC 130 (7 February 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 130High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)98% similar