Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 996South Africa
Ants Liquor Store and Another v Mthethwa (35743/23A) [2023] ZAGPJHC 996 (6 September 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
30 March 2023
Headnotes
as follows:
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Ants Liquor Store and Another v Mthethwa (35743/23A) [2023] ZAGPJHC 996 (6 September 2023)
Ants Liquor Store and Another v Mthethwa (35743/23A) [2023] ZAGPJHC 996 (6 September 2023)
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sino date 6 September 2023
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
Number: 35743/23A
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
REVISED
In
the matter between:
ANTS
LIQUOR STORE
First
Applicant
ANTHEA
RABIE
Second
Applicant
And
NHLANHLUA
EUGENE MTHETHWA
Respondent
JUDGMENT
C
BESTER AJ:
Introduction
[1]
On Friday 18 August
2023, the applicants approached this Court on an urgent basis to stay
the execution of the order of Magistrate
Mthembu handed down on 30
March 2023 in the Magistrates Court for the District of Johannesburg
Central under case number 19948/2021.
[2]
The first applicant conducts business as a
liquor store and the second applicant says that she depends on the
business as her only
source of income.
[3]
The learned
magistrate ordered that the applicants vacate the premises situated
at no. 160. Bellavista Road, Turf Club, Johannesburg
within fourteen
days, failing which the Sheriff was authorised to take the necessary
steps to execute the order.
[4]
The application
arises from the fact that on 18 August 2023, the Sheriff notified the
attorneys of the applicants of his intention
to immediately commence
with the execution of the order of the Magistrates Court of 30 March
2023.
The
Issue
[5]
The central issue
concerns the first applicants’ entitlement to a stay of
execution in circumstances where they have failed
to prosecute their
appeal brought against the judgment and order of the learned
magistrate following the delivery of a notice of
appeal on 19 April
2023.
[6]
The
notice is styled as a notice in terms of Rule 49 but since appeals
from the Magistrates Court are brought in terms of Rule 50
of the
Uniform Rules of Court, I will treat the notice as one delivered in
terms of Rule 50 for purposes of this application.
[1]
[7]
While the papers were
admittedly prepared under some pressure, and did not represent a
modicum of clarity, I deem it necessary to
first consider the status
of the appeal since for so long as a valid appeal remains pending,
the successful party in the Magistrates
Court is not entitled to
enjoy the fruits that come with the execution of a judgment granted
in its favour, unless it takes steps
in terms of section 78 of the
Magistrates Court Act 32 of 1944 for the judgment to be carried into
execution. It is
common cause on the papers that the
respondent has not invoked section 78.
[8]
Although the
respondent argued that the application was one of self-created
urgency, I intend to immediately proceed to deal with
the merits of
the application since it is evident that the application is stillborn
at a substantive level. To strike the
matter for lack of
urgency in these circumstances will only result in the return of the
application to this Court on a later date,
occasioning a waste of
scare judicial resources that can be avoided by disposing of the
application once and for all on its merits.
Discussion
& Analysis
[9]
At
common law the general rule is that the execution of a judgment is
automatically suspended pending the noting of an appeal with
the
consequence that until the finalisation of the appeal, the judgment
cannot be carried into effect.
[2]
The
reason is to prevent irreparable damage to a losing party pending the
outcome of the appeal if the judgment is put into motion
under a
warrant or by execution of the judgment.
[3]
[10]
After the noting of
an appeal, a party is obliged to prosecute its appeal to finality
within the time periods prescribed in Rule
50(1) of the Uniform Rules
of Court which provides as follows:
“
An
appeal to the Court against the decision of a Magistrate in a civil
matter shall be prosecuted within 60 days after the noting
of such
appeal, and unless so prosecuted it shall be deemed to have lapsed.”
[11]
Prosecuting
the appeal means making a written application to the Registrar on
notice to all parties for a date for the hearing of
the appeal in
terms of Rule 50(4).
[4]
The
sixty-day time-period referred to in Rule 50(1) was extended to 14
weeks in terms of Rule 6(1) of the
Rules
Regulating the Conduct of Proceedings in the Gauteng Division of the
High (“
the
Gauteng Rules
”
)
.
[5]
[12]
Where the appeal is
not prosecuted within the time-period prescribed, Rule 50(1) provides
that the appeal shall be deemed to have
lapsed. This is also
the position in terms of Rule 50(9) of the Magistrates Court Rules
which enjoins a party noting an appeal
to prosecute the appeal within
such time as may be prescribed by rule of the court of appeal and,
failing which, the appeal shall
be deemed to have lapsed, unless the
court of appeal sees fit to make an order to the contrary.
[13]
Where an appeal has
lapsed, there is no legal impediment to the implementation of the
judgment and successful party is entitled
to execute the judgment in
its favour.
[14]
This
is so because there can be no continued suspension of an order in the
absence of a valid appeal and not even the subsequent
delivery of
condonation application will suspend a judgment in respect of an
appeal that has already lapsed.
[6]
[15]
In the present
instance, the applicants noted an appeal on 19 April 2023 but have
taken no further steps to prosecute the appeal
because of the costs
of the Magistrates Court proceedings which they say rendered them
unable to take the next step in the litigation.
[16]
The appeal therefore
lapsed on 3 August 2023 by the latest as a result of the failure of
the applicants to make written application
to the Registrar for a
date for the hearing of the appeal in terms of Rule 50(4).
[17]
The second applicant
explains this on the basis that she had instructed their attorneys
not to take any further steps aimed at advancing
the appeal until she
could raise the funds to do so.
[18]
There is no attempt
made in the founding affidavit to explain what steps the applicants
have undertaken, if any, to raise the funds
to prosecute the appeal
in the intervening months since the noting of the appeal.
[19]
In the absence of a
more fulsome explanation, the Court is left with the distinct
impression that the applicants have simply adopted
a supine attitude
to the matter and now approach this Court well after the appeal has
already lapsed.
[20]
In light of the fact
that the appeal has lapsed, the applicants can therefore not rely on
a pending appeal to avoid the execution
of the order and were obliged
to make out a case on the basis for a stay of execution in terms of
the general principles that inform
applications of this nature.
[21]
Relief of this kind
is not simply there for the asking, lest the effective functioning of
the administration of justice be frustrated
by aggrieved litigants
relying on spurious, if not opportunistic grounds that bring an
orderly execution process to a grinding
halt so as to delay the
inevitable finality that must come with all litigation.
[22]
I can do no better
than quote from the judgment of De Villiers AJ in
BP
Southern Africa (Pty) Ltd v Mega Burst Oils and Fuels (Pty) Ltd and
Another; BP Southern Africa (Pty) Ltd v ZA Petroleum and
Another
2022 (1) SA 162
(GJ) at paragraph 25 where it was
held as follows:
“
A
litigant
with an enforceable judgment is entitled to payment, and only in rare
cases would be delayed in that process. In my view
there may be
exceptional cases where a court would still exercise a discretion to
prevent an injustice in staying execution.”
[23]
As I show below, the
applicants have failed to satisfy the Court that they are entitled to
a stay of the learned magistrate’s
order.
[24]
Without
embarking on an extensive discourse of the law, the legal position
today is that a Court will grant a stay of execution
where real and
substantial justice is required, or an injustice will otherwise be
occasioned.
[7]
[25]
The Court considers
the factors that inform the granting of interim interdicts, with due
regard to the fact that an applicant is
not asserting a
prima
facie
right
but is seeking to avoid an injustice. The Court must be
satisfied that:
a.
the applicant has a well-grounded apprehension
that the execution is taking place at the instance of the respondent;
and
b.
irreparable
harm will result if execution is not stayed, and the applicant
ultimately succeeds in establishing a clear right.
[8]
[26]
It
follows that irreparable harm will invariably result if there is a
possibility that the underlying
causa
may
ultimately be removed or where the underlying
causa
is
the subject matter of an ongoing dispute between the parties.
[9]
Although
the Court is not ordinarily concerned with the merits of the
underlying dispute, this Court in
BP
Southern Africa
found
that the Court in the exercise of its judicial discretion may examine
the prospects of success when faced with an application
for a stay of
execution.
[10]
[27]
The reasoning in
BP
Southern Africa
strikes me as sound.
[28]
Assuming for a moment the applicants in these
proceedings can revive their appeal through a properly motived
condonation application
delivered in due course,
permitting
an enquiry into the merits of the appeal at this stage with the
available evidence at hand is useful if not necessary.
The
greater their prospects of success on appeal, the more likely it is
that a considerable injustice will be done if the applicants
are
evicted from the premises that the first applicant trades from.
Conversely and if those prospects on appeal are no more
than
negligible, the risk of an injustice will be less likely.
[29]
Although the second applicant says that the
business of the first applicant is her only source of income, the
papers do not suggest
that the business of the first applicant cannot
find suitable alternative premises from which it can trade.
I accept
that the execution of the order may be disruptive for the
applicants, but I am unable to find that the injustice occasioned to
the applicants in the event that the order is put into operation will
lead to a substantial injustice.
[30]
Giving effect to an order of the Magistrates Court
in the absence of any compelling grounds to suggest that the learned
magistrate
erred in evicting the applicants from the premises or that
hint at the fact that the underlying
causa
may be expunged must not be confused
with an injustice of the kind that should tilt the balance in favour
of an applicant in the
exercise of the Court’s discretion.
[31]
In my view there is nothing before the Court
to suggest that the merits of any appeal that may be revived in due
course favour the
applicants.
[32]
Two reasons inform this conclusion.
[33]
Firstly, the applicants made no attempt of any
kind to deal with the merits in their founding affidavit and as
counsel for the applicants
properly conceded in argument, this was
not touched on which he attributed to the haste with which the
application was brought.
[34]
Secondly, the applicants chose not to file a
replying affidavit in response to the allegations of the respondent
in answer to the
effect that no rental has been paid since the
commencement of the first applicant’s occupation of the
premises three years
ago while the lease agreement in existence
between the parties has long since expired. The respondent’s
version must
therefore be accepted.
[35]
The absence of any prospects on appeal in my view
means that the applicants cannot show the existence of a real and
substantial
injustice that would justify the exercise of my
discretion in their favour.
[36]
Not only do the merits of any appeal appear to be
hopeless but there is no indication that a further thirty days that
the applicants
seek to raise funds will make any difference, at least
not in the absence of cogent evidential material placed before me to
show
why there is a reasonably strong prospect that funds will be
forthcoming in the next thirty days to somehow allow them to take the
necessary steps aimed at reviving the lapsed appeal.
[37]
There are no reasons to depart from the ordinary
rule that the successful party should be awarded the costs of the
application.
[38]
I accordingly make an order in the following
terms:
[1]
The application is dismissed.
[2]
The applicants are ordered to pay the respondent’s
costs jointly and severally the one paying the other to be absolved.
C BESTER AJ
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
JOHANNESBURG
Heard:
18 August 2023
Delivered:
6 September 2023
For
the Applicant:
LP
Nkosi
Instructed
by
SE
Dube Attorneys
For
the Respondent:
LP
Motau
Instructed
by
Mosimanegape
Attorneys
[1]
An
appeal must be
noted
within
the time period provided in Rule 51 of the Magistrates Court Rules
but
is prosecuted in the High Court within the time period and in the
manner set out in Rule 50 of the
Uniform
Rules of Court. See Erasmus
Superior
Court Practice
RS
21, 2023, D1-687.
[2]
Sabena
Belgian World Airlines v Ver Elst
1981
(1) SA 1235 (W)
at 1236H
; Rentecor
(Pty) Ltd v
Rheeder
and Berman NNO
1988
(4) SA 469
(T) at 503E–504C;
Schoeman
v Nedbank Ltd
1989
(4)
SA 812 (W) at 815D-816C.
[3]
Reid
v Godart
1938
AD 511
at 513;
Kalahari
Salt Works (Pty) Ltd v Bonne Fortune Beleggings
Bpk
1973
(4) SA 471 (NC)
at 477A.
[4]
Hall
v Van Tonder
1980
(1) SA 908
(C) at 910.
[5]
Rule
6(1) of the Gauteng Rules.
[6]
See
Panayiotou
v Shoprite Checkers (Pty) Ltd and Other
2016
(3) SA 110
(GJ) per Sutherland J
(as he then was) at
115A-B.
[7]
See
Gois
t/a Shakespeare's Pub v Van Zyl and Others
2011
(1) SA 148
(LC) at para 37;
Road
Accident
Fund v Legal Practice Council
2021
(6) SA 230
(GP) (a decision of the full court) at
paragraphs
30 to 33.
[8]
Ibid.
[9]
Gois
t/a Shakespeare's Pub
supra
at
paragraphs 37 to 38.
[10]
At
paragraphs 25 and 26.
sino noindex
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