Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1246South Africa
Selby Panel and Paint (Pty) Ltd v Santam Limited (005540/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1246 (31 October 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
15 June 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Selby Panel and Paint (Pty) Ltd v Santam Limited (005540/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1246 (31 October 2023)
Selby Panel and Paint (Pty) Ltd v Santam Limited (005540/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1246 (31 October 2023)
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sino date 31 October 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Case No: 005540/2022
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES
NOT REVISED
In
the application for leave to appeal between
SELBY PANEL &
PAINT PROPRIETARY LIMITED
Applicant
# And
And
# SANTAM LIMITED
SANTAM LIMITED
Respondent
In
the main application between
SANTAM LIMITED
Applicant
# And
And
# SELBY PANEL &
PAINT PROPRIETARY LIMITED
SELBY PANEL &
PAINT PROPRIETARY LIMITED
Respondent
## JUDGMENT IN APPLICATION
FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL
JUDGMENT IN APPLICATION
FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL
PEARSE AJ:
1.
This is an application for leave to appeal against
a judgment and order in a main application, under the same case
number, that
I delivered on 15 June 2023.
2.
The facts and disputed issues of relevance to the
determination of both applications are detailed in that judgment.
3.
The 15-day period afforded by rule 49(1)(b) for
the initiation of this application lapsed on 07 July 2023 and it was
only on 31
August 2023 that the respondent in the main application
(
Selby
)
delivered notices requesting reasons for my determination of the main
application and seeking leave to appeal against that determination.
4.
On 05 September 2023, through my registrar, I
issued a directive in the following terms:
4.1.
It is confirmed that the judgment of 15 June 2023 contains the
reasons for the order of that date. No further reasons will be
forthcoming.
4.2.
If Selby persists with its application for leave to appeal, it must
deliver any application for the extension of the 15-day period,
including a founding affidavit addressing the issue of good cause for
delay, within 5 days of issue of this directive.
4.3.
If
the applicant in the main application (
Santam
)
opposes the extension application, it must deliver any
answering affidavit within 5 days of delivery of the application.
4.4.
If the extension application is opposed, Selby must deliver any
replying affidavit within 5 days of delivery of the answering
affidavit.
4.5.
A date and time will thereafter be allocated by the registrar for the
hearing of the extension and leave to appeal applications.
4.6.
Any written submissions in either or both applications must be
delivered not later than 48 hours before the allocated hearing date
and time.
5.
Selby
delivered a condonation application on 13 September 2023
[1]
and the parties exchanged further papers more or less in accordance
with my directive.
6.
Thereafter, I directed that both applications be
set down for hearing on 30 October 2023, on which date Selby was
represented by
Mr Ncongwane
and Santam was
represented by Mr Oosthuizen.
7.
In addition to reconsidering the papers delivered
and the submissions advanced in the main application, I have
considered the written
and oral submissions made on behalf of the
parties in the condonation and leave to appeal applications.
8.
For reasons outlined below, I am of the view that
leave to appeal should be refused.
9.
I am not persuaded that an adequate case for
condonation is made out by and on behalf of Selby. The founding
affidavit in that application
is deposed to by a manager of Selby.
There is no confirmatory affidavit in the name of any member of
Selby’s legal team.
There is consequently no explanation by
anyone with personal knowledge of the facts as to why the judgment
and order emailed to
the parties’ respective counsel and also
uploaded on Caselines on 15 June 2023 came to Selby’s attention
only on 25
July 2023. Nor is there any explanation for the further
5-week delay that ensued before delivery of the notices referred to
in
paragraph 3 above. Such explanation as is offered in the founding
affidavit was challenged in the answering affidavit as being of
a
hearsay nature – affairs of the legal team lying beyond the
personal knowledge of the deponent – yet no attempt was
made to
remedy that position in reply.
10.
In the
circumstances, I consider Selby to have failed to demonstrate good
cause for the relief sought in the condonation application,
despite
rule 49(1)(b), well-known case law
[2]
and
the directive paraphrased in paragraph 4.2 above. The application for
leave to appeal should be dismissed for that reason alone.
11.
Out of caution, I proceed to consider the merits
of that application.
12.
The grounds on which Selby seeks leave to appeal
against my judgment and order are, in essence, that I erred in:
12.1.
ordering
the release of the vehicle to Santam against entrustment of cash
security as opposed to “
concomitant
payment to [Selby] for payment of the services rendered on the
vehicle.
”
According
to Selby, I “
should
have gone ahead to finalise the matter by ruling that [Santam] must
effect actual payment for all the costs to [Selby] as
per [Selby’s]
defence in the application proceedings
”
;
[3]
12.2.
effectively
and prejudicially requiring Selby to institute “
a
fresh application [to recover payment for such services] would be an
illogical step and unreasonably delay [Selby’s] recovery
of
expenses in this regard
”
because
“
[i]t
was thus common cause between the parties that [Santam] had to pay
[Selby] for services done on the vehicle and [Selby] would
thus be
bound to release the said vehicle, accordingly
”
;
[4]
and
12.3.
awarding a costs order against Selby in
circumstances in which:
12.3.1.
it had acted in good faith and reasonably in
seeking payment of its costs in return for the release of the
vehicle; and
12.3.2.
Santam
had not achieved substantial success in the main application.
[5]
13.
The first ground of appeal is to the effect that,
in considering and deciding the main application, I ought to have
determined the
underlying money dispute between the parties because,
as I understand the argument, failing to do so would effectively
deprive
Selby of a remedy inasmuch as it would make no commercial
sense to initiate litigation aimed at recovering what it considers to
be the outstanding storage charges.
14.
The
argument is without merit, in my view, because it misconceives the
nature of the main application brought by Santam, which seeks
an
order substituting cash security for security previously provided by
the vehicle retained by Selby. The merits of Selby’s
claim for
residual storage charges were not before me in the main application
and are unpersuasive as a ground of appeal in this
application.
Before me in the main application was (only) the question whether the
cash tendered by Santam would suffice to secure
a successful outcome
to litigation envisaged to be initiated by Selby in vindication of
its asserted claim for storage charges.
[6]
I was
satisfied of that security’s sufficiency and exercised my
discretion accordingly.
15.
In argument in this application, Mr Ncongwane
acknowledged that Selby had not sought any such relief in the main
application but
submitted that I ought to have invoked the court’s
inherent jurisdiction to grant such relief
mero
motu
. I am not satisfied that this
court has that power or, in any event, that a money judgment could
have been entered on the facts
placed before court.
16.
When pressed as to why the exercise of discretion
referenced in paragraph 14 above
was
unjudicial or otherwise unsustainable, Mr Ncongwane could not take
the matter beyond the submission that it would have been
preferable
to resolve the entire dispute then-and-there. As noted, however, ‘the
entire dispute’ was not pleaded, prayed-for
or even argued in
the main application.
17.
As regards the suggestion that the claim belatedly
contended for by Selby was common cause between the parties in the
main application,
I disagree.
18.
My reading of the papers is that Santam placed in
issue whether, in the absence of any agreement between the parties,
Selby enjoyed
any entitlement to retain possession of the vehicle on
account of an alleged indebtedness in respect of its storage as
opposed
to its repair. The merits of that dispute did not require
determination in the main application and do not require
determination
in this application. In any event, Santam disputed any
obligation to pay any amount in addition to the sum previously paid
to Selby.
19.
The third ground of appeal is outlined in
paragraph 12.3 above.
20.
In my view, besides the intrinsically
discretionary nature of an award of costs, it was unreasonable of
Selby not to accept Santam’s
tender of substituted security,
for reasons traversed in my judgment in the main application. It is
also plain that Santam was
substantially successful in that matter.
21.
Finally,
in argument in this application, Mr Ncongwane belatedly submitted
that section 22 of the Constitution should have tipped
the
discretionary scales in favour of Selby inasmuch as a large insurer’s
refusal to pay the storage charges of a small tower
and repairer
could bring about the latter’s demise.
[7]
The
point was not raised in the main application or as a ground of
appeal.
It
falls outside of what the parties agreed to place before court in the
main application. It appeared to take Mr Oosthuizen by
surprise and
its lateness precluded any meaningful debate before me as to whether
a substitution of security would or could implicate
and potentially
infringe such rights as section 22 may confer on Selby, a juristic
person. It is unnecessary – and therefore
unwise – for me
to express any view on this question for purposes of deciding this
application.
22.
Ultimately,
in the exercise of my discretion, having regard to all the facts and
circumstances before me at the time of the main
application, I
determined that the substituted security would suffice for its
purpose and I am unpersuaded that an appellate court
would reasonably
reach a different determination in accordance with
section
17(1)(a)(i)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
and recent case
law.
[8]
23.
Nor do I consider there to be any other compelling
reason, within the meaning of
section 17(1)(a)(ii)
of the Act, why an
appeal should be heard.
24.
In the circumstances, the application for leave to
appeal is dismissed with costs, including the costs of the
condonation application.
PEARSE AJ
This
judgment is handed down electronically by uploading it to the file of
this matter on CaseLines. It will also be emailed to
the parties or
their legal representatives. The date of delivery of this judgment is
deemed to be 31 October 2023.
Counsel
for Selby:
Macbeth Ncongwane
Instructed
By:
Macbeth Incorporated
Counsel for Santam:
Pieter Oosthuizen
Instructed By:
Pierre Krynauw
Attorneys
Date of Hearing:
30 October 2023
Date
of Judgment:
31
October 2023
[1]
On
the same day (13 September 2023) Selby delivered a second notice of
application for leave to appeal in similar terms to that
of 31
August 2023. Any need for a second notice is not addressed in the
condonation application.
[2]
Saloojee
and Another NNO v Minister of Community Development
1965
(2) SA 135
(A) 141C
-E
;
Uitenhage
Transitional Local Council v South African Revenue Service
2004
(1) SA 292
(SCA) [6]-[7]
;
eThekwini
Municipality v Ingonyama Trust
2014
(3) SA 240
(CC) [26]-[32]
[3]
Para
1 of notice of application for leave to appeal dated 31 August 2023
[4]
Para 2
[5]
Para 3
[6]
See para 36.2 of my
judgment in the main application, which references the parties’
consensus in this regard as recorded
in para 10.1 of a joint
practice note dated 25 April 2023: “
[t]he
crisp and sole issue in dispute for the exercise of a discretion by
this honourable court is, whether the security that
has been tended
by [Santam] is sufficient for [Selby] to be ordered to release the
vehicle to [Santam] and/or [its] nominated
representative
.”
[7]
There
was no pertinent attempt to locate that fear within the wording of
the right to “
[f]reedom
of trade, occupation and profession.
”
[8]
Ramakatsa
and Others v African National Congress and Another
(724/2019)
[2021] ZASCA 31
(31 March 2021) [10]
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