Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1011South Africa
Manamela v Maite (2023/055949) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1011 (6 September 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
6 September 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Urgent contempt application – enrolled on urgent court roll on two occasions despite a previous similar contempt application being struck from the roll for lack of urgency which remains pending – counter application for rescission of order on which contempt application based also pending - lack of proper service – contempt applications - inherent urgency – still requires factual context why particular contempt application is urgent - abuse of process of urgent court - de bonis propriis costs order granted against applicant’s attorney of record – attorney and client scale - disentitled to charge applicant fees
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Manamela v Maite (2023/055949) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1011 (6 September 2023)
Manamela v Maite (2023/055949) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1011 (6 September 2023)
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sino date 6 September 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE NUMBER:
2023-055949
REPORTABLE
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
REVISED
In
the matter between:
MERRIAM
MAKWENA MANAMELA
APPLICANT
and
GRACE
MAITE
RESPONDENT
Summary:
Urgent
contempt application – enrolled on urgent court roll on two
occasions despite a previous similar contempt application
being
struck from the roll for lack of urgency which remains pending –
counter application for rescission of order on which
contempt
application based also pending - lack of proper service –
contempt applications - inherent urgency – still
requires
factual context why particular contempt application is urgent - abuse
of process of urgent court -
de bonis propriis
costs order
granted against applicant’s attorney of record – attorney
and client scale - disentitled to charge applicant
fees
ORDER
[1] The applicant’s
urgent contempt application dated 20 July 2023 is dismissed.
[2] The costs of
the application in [1] above, including the reserved costs in the
urgent court on 1 August 2023 are to be
borne by the applicant’s
attorney of record, Mr Vincent Seloane,
de bonis propriis,
on
the scale as between attorney and client.
[3] The applicant’s
attorney of record, Mr Seloane, is directed not to present a bill,
nor to recover any fees or disbursements
from the applicant in
respect of any work performed in respect of the contempt application
dated 20 July 2023;
[4] A copy of this
judgment and order is to be served by the applicant’s attorney
of record on the applicant forthwith.
JUDGMENT
Delivered:
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ legal representatives by e-mail, and being uploaded
to
the CaseLines digital system of the GLD. The date and time for
hand-down is deemed to be 10h00 on the 06th of SEPTEMBER.
DIPPENAAR J
:
[1] The pernicious effect
of legal practitioners simply disregarding the rules of court is that
the very fabric of the Rule of Law
is being eroded.
[2] There appears to be
an alarming trend that legal practitioners through apparent hubris or
feigned ignorance directly ignore
or flaunt their indifference
towards the rules of Court and worse yet, merely do not comply with
Court orders.
[3]
As Yeats
[1]
once wrote:
“
The falcon
cannot hear the falconer;
Things fall apart; the
centre cannot hold;
Mere anarchy is loosed
upon the world,
…
The best all lack all
conviction, while the worst
Are full of passionate
intensity…”
[4]
The
Constitution affirms its supremacy
[2]
and the judicial authority of our Courts.
[3]
To maintain these attributes of our constitutional order, judicial
decisions must be implemented and judicial authority should
not be
impugned. Courts are constrained to protect their institutional
authority and judgments.
[5]
In
Letsi
[4]
,
Opperman J highlighted the following apposite remarks by Deputy
Judge President Sutherland:
“
.
. In a climate of burgeoning caseloads and the unrelenting pressure
on courts to deliver on the expectations of the litigating
public, it
is plain that the dependence of the judge on the legal practitioner
is acute… The symbiotic relationship between
the roles of
judge and legal practitioner warrants the respect necessary to
produce efficient and fair litigation… The critical
imperative
is that legal practitioners act ethically…
”
[5]
[6]
This urgent contempt application sharply
brings this relationship and the duties on a legal practitioner into
focus.
[7]
It is necessary to set out the history of
the litigation between the parties in some detail as it sets out the
course of conduct
embarked upon by the applicant’s attorney of
record, Mr Vincent Seloane. This history emerges from the undisputed
facts in
the respective parties’ affidavits.
[8]
The litigation between the parties
commenced by way of a spoliation application launched by the
applicant’s attorney of record
over a weekend in the urgent
court, resulting in an order being granted on 10 June 2023 by
Shepstone AJ (“the spoliation
order”).
[9]
On 15 June 2023, the applicant launched an
urgent contempt application based on the respondent’s alleged
wilful non-compliance
with the spoliation order (“the first
contempt application”).
[10]
The applicant attempted to enroll the
application on the urgent roll for 20 June 2023, but it was not
enrolled by the Registrar,
presumably because the applicant did not
meet the requisite deadlines.
[11]
The application was enrolled in the urgent
court on 27 June 2023. It was removed from the roll as Makume J was
not satisfied that
proper service had been effected on the respondent
and required service by Sheriff, as is the norm.
[12]
The applicant again enrolled the first
contempt application on the urgent roll for 11 July 2023, where it
was heard by Motha J.
[13]
According to the undisputed facts in the
affidavits filed of record, the spoliation order and the contempt
application were only
properly served on the respondent on 5 July
2023, thus after the launching of the first contempt application.
[14]
The respondent opposed the application and
launched a counter application in two parts: the first, seeking the
stay of the execution
of the spoliation order on an urgent basis; the
second, seeking the rescission of the spoliation order in the normal
course. The
respondent delivered a comprehensive answering affidavit
setting out the grounds underpinning both her opposition to the
allegations
of contempt and why rescission of the spoliation order
was being sought. On both issues, the lack of proper service on the
respondent
of the various legal proceedings was raised.
[15]
After hearing argument from the parties, on
13 July 2023 Motha J struck the first contempt application and the
respondent’s
counter application from the roll. Costs were
directed to be in the cause.
[16]
Having struck the matter from the roll, it
is clear that after due consideration of the facts placed before the
court, Motha J exercised
his discretion against hearing the first
contempt application as a matter of urgency. It is well established
that matters are struck
from the urgent roll where they lack urgency.
[17]
Both the contempt application and the
respondent’s counter applications remain pending and are due to
be heard in the normal
course on the opposed motion roll.
[18]
Shortly thereafter and on 17 July 2023, the
applicant’s attorney addressed a letter to the respondent’s
attorney, demanding
that the respondent comply within 24 hours with
the order of Shepstone AJ, failing which an urgent contempt
application would be
launched. At this juncture, the applicant was
fully aware of the respondent’s defences to the contempt
application and the
grounds upon which rescission of the spoliation
order was being sought.
[19]
In response thereto, the respondent’s
attorney on 20 July 2023,
inter alia
pointed out that the applications which had been struck from the
urgent court’s roll remained pending and should be heard
in the
normal course. It was recorded that the respondent’s affidavits
made it clear that she could not restore possession
of the property,
was not responsible for the dispossession which allegedly occurred
and that portions of the spoliation order were
unenforceable as the
respondent was not resident on the property. The letter concluded:
“
We
also record that your client has now approached this court on an
urgent basis on 20 June 2023, 27 June 2023 and 13 July 2023-
none of
which was successful. We now caution you against approaching the
court for a further urgent application as, clearly, this
matter is
not urgent and your client is not entitled to urgent relief”.
[20]
In response, on 20 July 2023 the
respondent’s attorney again demanded an urgent undertaking to
comply with the spoliation
order, failing which the contempt
application “would be reinstated” on an urgent basis. In
relevant part, the letter
further stated:
“
You
will also note that your client’s counter-application was also
struck off the roll therefore there is no pending counter
application
for our client to oppose. Your client’s counter application has
no merit. We are not in a position to address
your client’s
(sic) regarding urgency and other points of law”.
[21]
Notwithstanding the caution from the
respondent, the second urgent contempt application was launched on 20
July 2023, enrolled for
hearing on 1 August 2023. The current
proceedings concern the second contempt application.
[22]
The application was enrolled for hearing
before Opperman J. On the eve of the hearing, the applicant’s
attorney addressed
a letter to Opperman J requesting a postponement
due to his illness and consequent inability to represent the
applicant at the
hearing.
[23]
At the hearing on 1 August 2023, the
applicant’s attorney’s candidate attorney, Mr Qakayi,
appeared and sought a postponement
of the matter to 8 August 2023.
The respondent objected to such postponement and argued that
the matter should be removed
from the roll as the matter was not
urgent, having been considered and struck off the urgent roll for
lack of urgency by Motha
J. The applicant’s attorney did
not brief counsel to attend the matter, but instead simply sent his
candidate attorney,
who he would have known had no right of
appearance in the High Court, to seek a postponement.
[24]
After consideration, Opperman J removed the
matter from the roll and reserved costs.
[25]
It was undisputed that during the course of
those proceedings, Opperman J cautioned the applicant against again
enrolling the application
on an urgent basis and warned that it could
result in an adverse costs order. The applicant was further warned
about the proper
processes and advised that the rescission
application could be determined in the fullness of time. This caution
was, on instruction
of Opperman J, conveyed to Mr Seloane by the
respondent’s counsel by way of correspondence, the contents of
which was confirmed
by the candidate attorney, Mr Qakayi.
[26]
Undeterred, the applicant’s attorney
however simply re-enrolled the application for hearing on the urgent
roll of 8 August
2023, disturbingly without notifying the
respondent’s attorneys of the enrollment and without serving a
notice of set down
on them.
[27]
In doing so Mr Seloane effectively
disregarded the decision of Opperman J not to grant the applicant the
postponement which was
sought in the hearing before her and ignored
her caution.
[28]
The applicant’s replying affidavit
was not delivered prior to the hearing of 1 August 2023. It was only
uploaded onto the
electronic platform on Monday 7 August 2023, the
day before the hearing. The document does not reflect that any
service thereof
was effected on the respondent’s attorneys.
[29]
When counsel for the applicant appeared on
Tuesday the 8
th
of August 2023, it was not brought to my attention that no notice of
set down had been served on the respondent. The respondent’s
counsel was not present. As it was clear that the application was
opposed, I instructed the applicant’s counsel to make contact
with his opponent so that they could both appear in the matter
simultaneously before it could be heard.
[30]
When the respondent’s counsel, Adv
Lindazwe, appeared, I was informed by her that, had it not been for
my instruction, the
respondent would have been unaware that the
application had been re-enrolled on the urgent court roll and that no
notice of set
down had been served on the respondent’s attorney
of record. That submission was not disputed.
[31]
It is disconcerting that the applicant’s
attorney believed he could blatantly exclude the respondent from the
further proceedings,
given the history of the litigation.
[32]
In the second contempt application, the
following substantive relief was sought:
“
2
That the respondent be found to be in contempt of the court
order granted by Honourable Shepstone AJ on 10 June 2023 (“the
court order”);
3 That leave is
granted to the applicant to reinstate and supplement her application
of 15 June 2023;
4 That the respondent
be committed to prison for contempt of court for a period of 6 (six)
moths or such period as the court deems
just and equitable;
5 That a fine of
R30 000 be imposed upon the respondent;
6
The respondent pay the costs of this application on attorney and
client scale.”
[33]
In the founding affidavit, under the
heading “
Leave to Supplement”
it was acknowledged that the contempt application and the
respondent’s counter application to stay execution had been
struck
from the urgent roll on 13 July 2023. The applicant did not
seek to supplement the first contempt application, but rather
launched
a further substantive contempt application. It was contended
that “
little had changed since the
court order of 10 June”
, that
service of the order had been achieved and that the respondent
remained in contempt of court. Leave was sought to reinstate
and
supplement the application for contempt “in the interests of
justice”. No mention was made of the respondent’s
pending
rescission application of the spoliation order in the founding
affidavit.
[34]
To justify urgency, it was contended that
the application “
remains urgent
due to the inherent nature of contempt proceedings”
coupled with the broad allegation that “the applicant and her
family suffer ongoing prejudice against their dignity”.
Reliance was also placed on the contention that as the spoliation
order had been obtained on an urgent basis and those circumstances
still prevailed, the contempt application was urgent.
[35]
The respondent opposed the application and
attached copies of her affidavits in the first contempt application
which set out her
version and defences to the application in detail.
Therein the respondent
inter alia
contended that proper service of the
spoliation application had not been effected on her. As in the first
contempt application,
she challenged urgency. In her affidavit, the
respondent characterised the application as an abuse as it was based
on exactly the
same facts and grounds as the first contempt
application which had been struck from the urgent roll by Motha J and
accused the
applicant and her legal representative of
mala
fides
. The respondent sought the
dismissal of the application with a
de
bonis propriis
costs order against Mr
Seloane.
[36]
The belated replying affidavit of 7 August
2023 did not factually contribute to the determination of the issues
in dispute. It was
argumentative, replete with dubious legal
arguments and contained an unwarranted and scathing attack on the
respondent.
[37]
Given that the respondent had in her
answering affidavit sought costs against the applicant’s
attorney
de bonis propriis,
and
no affidavit had been filed by Mr Seloane in response, I enquired
from applicant’s counsel whether the attorney wanted
an
opportunity to deliver an affidavit dealing with such issue. I was
informed that Mr Seloane wanted to deliver such affidavit.
Accordingly, I stood the matter down and set timelines for the
delivery of such an affidavit and a response thereto by the
respondent.
[38]
Mr Seloane’s affidavit did not
meaningfully address the
de bonis
propriis
costs issue. In challenging
the respondent’s version as to why the first contempt
application had been struck from the roll,
it was baldly contended
that the respondent should have attached the order of Motha J. On his
version, the application was struck
from the roll on the basis of
“lack of knowledge” of the spoliation order. It is
however clear that the merits of the
first contempt application were
not dealt with or determined by Motha J.
[39]
The high water mark of the affidavit was
that Mr Seloane was apparently acting on behalf of the applicant on a
pro bono
basis
and had paid expenses from his own pocket. That is irrelevant to the
present enquiry. Inasmuch as that explanation was proffered
as a
justification or excuse for his conduct, the argument does not pass
muster and can never justify a disregard of the Rules
of Court.
[40]
In setting out the history of his attempts
to enroll the contempt application on the urgent court roll, it
became clear that Mr
Seloane had attempted to do so without serving
the application papers on the respondent via Sheriff, until directed
by Makume J
to do so on 27 June 2023.
[41]
The argument that pursuant to his demand,
the respondent blatantly refused to comply with the court order,
disregards the various
factual disputes which already arose between
the parties in the first contempt application, which still must be
determined in due
course.
[42]
He further launched a further unwarranted
blistering attack on the respondent and her attorney of record and
sought a
de bonis propriis
cost order against them on the basis that the respondent continued
with her disregard of the law “by raising technical points”.
Those averments were based on the pending applications and again
disregards the substantial factual disputes between the parties
on
those issues. No cogent grounds were advanced in support of the
granting of such order.
[43]
In the respondent’s responding
affidavit, deposed to by her attorney, Ms Ehlers, the relevant events
which occurred were particularised,
including in some detail the
events which transpired before Opperman J on 1 August 2023, to which
I have already referred. Mr Seloane
did not seek any opportunity to
respond to those averments and they remained unchallenged.
[44]
Significantly, Mr. Seloane did not in his
affidavit deal at all with why the notice of set down for 8 August
2023 was not served
on the respondent’s attorneys, despite such
issue having been raised as a matter of concern before the matter was
stood down.
[45]
Against this backdrop it is necessary to
consider the second contempt application. Considering the history of
the litigation and
the facts, it is clear that the applicant
manifestly failed to make out any case for urgency or why the matter
was to be dealt
with on the urgent roll for 8 August 2023.
[46]
The pending rescission application of the
spoliation order is destructive of any notion that this second
contempt application could
be urgent. The applicant and her attorney
were already forewarned of the folly of proceeding with the
application in the urgent
court by Opperman J on 1 August 2023.
[47]
The applicant’s broad reliance on
“contempt proceedings being inherently urgent” is also
misconceived. Simply
because an application concerns contempt
proceedings, that does not of itself justify the enrolment of such
application on the
urgent court’s roll. As in every other
urgent application, the issue of urgency must be evaluated in the
context of the specific
facts of the matter. There must be exact
compliance with the requirements of r 6(12)(b) and an applicant must
explicitly set out
the specific facts which render such application
urgent and why an applicant could not be afforded substantial redress
at a hearing
in due course.
[48]
In doing so, primary facts must be
presented rather than secondary conclusions devoid of primary facts
substantiating them. The
mere payment of lip service to these
requirements and the bald contention that contempt proceedings are
urgent, does not meet the
relevant criteria. In the present case, no
proper case for urgency was made out.
[49]
The notion that simply because legal
proceedings were commenced in the urgent court, renders whatever
follows also urgent, is also
misconceived, more so where the facts
relied on in the urgent spoliation application were not placed before
the Court and are in
dispute between the parties, as in the present
instance.
[50]
For these reasons, I would have been
justified in striking the application from the roll for lack of
urgency.
[51]
However, there are further issues which
require consideration.
[52]
Considering
all the facts, the second contempt application can best be described
as an abuse of process. It is trite that a Court
has the inherent
jurisdiction to prevent an abuse of its process
[6]
.
[53]
It is clear that the applicant and her
attorney of record have entirely misconceived the proper procedures
and due legal process.
Centrally, the present contempt application is
one which impermissibly seeks to review or appeal the decision of
Motha J to strike
the application from the roll. On this basis alone,
the second contempt application should be dismissed.
[54]
It would have been open to the applicant to
seek leave to supplement her papers in the first contempt
application, if a proper case
was made out to do so. Simply launching
a second contempt application, whilst the first remained pending, was
an improper avenue
to pursue.
[55]
Moreover, the applicant further cannot
simply frustrate the pending rescission application by the launching
of a fresh contempt
application. Insofar as that may have been the
motive for the launching of the second contempt application, as
appears from the
tenor of the applicant’s attorney’s
correspondence to the respondent’s attorney, that of itself
constitutes an
abuse of process as the application was launched with
an ulterior motive, justifying its dismissal.
[56]
Such
abuse is exacerbated by the lack of service of the notice of set down
for 8 August 2023 on the respondent. This failure is
egregious and
flaunts a fundamental norm of our law. As recently again emphasised
in
Mazetti
[7]
:
“
In
our law, there is the fundamental norm that no decision adverse to a
person ought to be made without giving that person an opportunity
to
be heard. In a court of law, this norm is scrupulously observed.”
[57]
Well knowing that the respondent was
opposing the application, it smacks of
mala
fides
that her legal representatives
were not notified of the enrolment for 8 August 2023. That cannot be
attributed to the applicant,
but is squarely to be placed at the door
of her attorney, Mr Seloane.
[58]
There is no basis to deviate from the
normal principle that costs follow the result. The issue is what
costs order would be appropriate.
[59]
The unfounded launching of the second
urgent contempt application resulted in substantial unnecessary legal
costs being incurred
in relation thereto by the respondent.
[60]
Significantly, in the second contempt
application not all the relevant facts were disclosed in the founding
affidavit or brought
to the Court's attention, notably the pending
rescission application against the spoliation order underpinning the
applicant’s
claim to relief.
[61]
Given the advance warning of the risks
involved in continuing on his path of abusing the urgent court by
Opperman J, and in light
of the fact that the matter had already been
struck from the urgent roll by Motha J, the applicant’s
attorney had full knowledge
that the enrolment of the application on
the urgent court roll for 8 August 2023 would be inappropriate,
specifically after the
request for a postponement to that roll was
declined by Opperman J.
[62]
Seen cumulatively, the conduct of the
applicant’s attorney was entirely unbecoming of a legal
practitioner and displays a
disturbing disrespect for the Court, its
rules and for judicial authority.
[63]
As illustrated by the history of the
litigation, Mr Seloane flouted important and fundamental tenets
pertaining to service and urgent
applications and ignored decisions
made by the Judges who heard the matter in the urgent court.
[64]
Such conduct can and should not be
countenanced, as it undermines the authority of the Court and impacts
negatively on the efficacy
of its orders.
[65]
I
conclude that on the present facts, a
de
bonis propriis
cost order would be appropriate marking the Court’s displeasure
at Mr. Seloane’s conduct
[8]
.
On the facts, an order on the scale between attorney and client
is justified, considering the egregious nature of his conduct
and as
the respondent has been put to unnecessary legal expense in defending
the multiple applications
[9]
.
Even though such order was not expressly sought by the respondent,
such order is warranted in light of Mr Seloane’s conduct.
[66]
The respondent further sought an order that
the applicant’s attorney be disentitled to charge his client,
the applicant, any
fees in the matter.
[67]
Considering what transpired in this matter,
it is clear that as a lay person, the applicant would not have been
aware of the intricacies
of the legal processes and that she relied
on her attorney’s advice on such issues.
[68]
I
have already referred to the relevant facts. Although put up through
the notional mouth of the applicant, the contents of the
applicant’s
affidavits and the substantial argumentative matter raised therein,
were demonstrably founded on contentions
in respect of which a lay
person would not have had insight and in respect of which she would
be dependent upon advice from her
attorney to have conceived and to
have made those statements
[10]
.
The applicant would also have relied on the advice from her attorney
pertaining to how to conduct the litigation.
[69]
For that reason, I am persuaded that it
would be appropriate to disentitle Mr. Seloane from charging any fees
in relation to the
contempt application dated 20 July 2023.
[70]
I grant the following order:
[1] The applicant’s
urgent contempt application dated 20 July 2023 is dismissed.
[2] The costs of
the application in [1] above, including the reserved costs in the
urgent court on 1 August 2023 are to be
borne by the applicant’s
attorney of record, Mr. Vincent Seloane,
de bonis propriis
on
the scale as between attorney and client
;
[3] The applicant’s
attorney of record, Mr Seloane, is directed not to present a bill,
nor to recover any fees or disbursements
from the applicant in
respect of any work performed in respect of the contempt application
dated 20 July 2023;
[4] A copy of this
judgment and order is to be served by the applicant’s attorney
of record on the applicant forthwith.
EF DIPPENAAR
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT JOHANNESBURG
APPEARANCES
DATE
OF HEARING
: 8 and 9 August 2023
DATE
OF JUDGMENT
: 6 September 2023
APPLICANT’S
COUNSEL
:
Adv
Matshidza
APPLICANT’S
ATTORNEYS
:
Seloane Vincent Attorneys
RESPONDENT’S
COUNSEL
:
Adv
S Lindazwe
RESPONDENT’S
ATTORNEYS
:
Joubert
Scholtz Inc
[1]
The Second Coming by William Butler Yeats
[2]
Section
2 of the Constitution.
[3]
Section
165 of the Constitution.
[4]
Letsi
v Mepha and Another
(42/2021)
[2022] ZAFSHC 122
(13 May 2022) para 2.
[5]
2021, Sutherland, Deputy Judge President of the Gauteng Local
Division of the High Court, Dependence of Judges on Ethical Conduct
by Legal Practitioners: The Ethical Duties of Disclosure and
Non-Disclosure, South African Judicial Educational Journal, (2021)
4
(1), December 2021 at page 47. Quote on page 64.
[6]
Beinash v Wixsley
[1997] ZASCA 32
;
1997 (3) SA 721
SCA
[7]
Mazetti Management Services (Pty) Ltd and Another v Amabhungane
Centre for Investigative Journalism NPC and Others (2023-050131)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 795 (3 July 2023), para 1.
[8]
South African Liquor Traders Association and Others v Chairperson
Gauteng Liquor Board and Others
2009 (1) SA 565
(CC) paras [48],
[54]
[9]
Nel
v Waterberg Landbouers Ko-operatiewe Vereeniging
1946 AD 597
at 601;
Swartbooi and others v Brink 2006 (1) SA 203 (CC)
[10]
Le Car, Auto Traders v Degswa 1038, CC and others (2011/47650)
[2012] ZAGPJHC 286 14 June 2022
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