Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1349South Africa
Vastinet (Pty) Ltd v LMC Enterprise (Pty) Ltd (2021/46706) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1349 (21 November 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
21 November 2023
Headnotes
judgment in favour of the plaintiff on the 20 November 2023 as follows:
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Vastinet (Pty) Ltd v LMC Enterprise (Pty) Ltd (2021/46706) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1349 (21 November 2023)
Vastinet (Pty) Ltd v LMC Enterprise (Pty) Ltd (2021/46706) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1349 (21 November 2023)
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sino date 21 November 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG LOCAL DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO. 2021/46706
In the matter between:
VASTINET
(PTY) LTD
Applicant
/Plaintiff
And
LMC
ENTERPRISE (PTY) LTD
Respondent/Defendant
Judgment-
Supplementary Order
Thupaatlase AJ
Introduction
[1] This court granted summary
judgment in favour of the plaintiff on the 20 November 2023 as
follows:
Order
It is hereby ordered that the summary
judgment is granted;
The defendant is ordered to pay the
plaintiff: -
1.1. The sum of R 1 024 025.00.
1.2. Interest thereon at the rate of
7% per annum from the 17
August 2021.
1.3. The sum of R 37 950.00 per
month from 01 September 2021 until the date when all the remaining
goods are removed by the
defendant from the plaintiff’s place
of business or from the place where the goods are stored.
[2] It is apparent order that the
court did award costs. Upon receipt of the judgment, the plaintiff
immediately alerted me to this
omission. This was done through an
email dispatched to my registrar. I checked and confirmed that there
was indeed such an omission
on my part. The purpose of this short
judgment is to supplement my order accordingly and so that the
correct position is reflected.
This was on the same day judgment was
uploaded on Caselines.
The applicable legal principles
[
3]
The normal principle regarding award of costs is that costs follow
the results. 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
Meyers v
Abramson
1951 (3) SA 438
at page 455.
[4] The parties in this case addressed
the court on costs with each party urging the court to award costs in
its favour. This was
based on each party being successful in its
case. In the end, the plaintiff was successful and therefore costs
should follow the
results.
[5] The question is whether this court
is still competent to make such an order, given the fact that, the
initial order has omitted
to mention costs.
[6] The purpose of an award of costs
to a successful litigant is to indemnify the party for the expense it
has been put through
having been unjustly compelled to initiate or
defend the litigation, as the case may be. See
Texas Co (SA) Ltd v
Cape own Municipality
1926 AD 467
at p 488. The successful party
is the party in whose favour judgment is given.
Is the court functus officio
[7] The general principle that is that
a judge has no authority to amend his/her own order. In
West Rand
Estates Ltd v New Zealand Insurance Co. Ltd
1926 173 the Court
concluded after referring to old Roman authorities concluded that the
court has jurisdiction to supplement its
order.
[8] In the same judgment at page
184-185 the court per Solomon JA held that: ‘Our jurists
recognise the right of a Court to
supplement is order where through
oversight it has omitted, in giving judgment, for the principal, to
include something which is
accessory to the principal’
.
Kotze JA put this authority more definitively at page 186-187
of the
West Rand Estate
supra that
:
‘The general rule of Roman Dutch law, in regard to the varying
or amending of a definitive sentence once pronounced, is
that it
cannot be varied in substance. The books on practice, however, add
that so far, anything ancillary to the principal matter
adjudged upon
is concerned, such as costs, fruits and interest, the judge may alter
his judgment provided this done on the same
day on which he has
pronounced it’.
[
9]
In
Thompson v South African Broadcasting Corporation
[2000] ZASCA 76
;
2001 (3)
SA 746
(SCA) the court stated at para 5 that:’ the correct
position was spelt out
in Firestone South Africa (Pty) Ltd v
Gentiruco AG
1977 (4) SA 298
(A) at 307C-G:
‘’
The
Court may correct a clerical, arithmetic or other error in its
judgment or order so as to give effect to its true intention….
This exception is confined to the mere correction of an error in
expressing the judgment or order; it does not intend altering
its
intended sense or substance. Kotze JA made this distinction
manifestly clear in [
West
Rand Estates Ltd v New Zealand Insurance Co. Ltd
1926 AD at 186-187], with reference to the old authorities he said:
‘’
The
Court, can however, declare and interpret its own order or sentence,
and likewise correct wording of it, by substituting more
accurate or
intelligent language so long as sense and substance of the sentence
are in no way affected by such correction; for
to interpret or
correct is held not to be equivalent to altering or amending a
definitive sentence once pronounced’’.
And
in S v Wells
1990 (1) SA 816
(A) at 820C-F then matter was
dealt in these words:
‘
The
more enlightened approach, however, permits a judicial officer to
change, amend or supplement his pronounced judgment, provided
that
the substance of his judgment is not affected thereby (
tenore
substantiae perseverante
)…According
to Voet a Judge may also, on the same day, after the pronouncement of
his judgment add (s
upplere
)
to it all remaining matters which relate to the consequences of what
he has already decided but which are still missing from his
judgment.
He may also explain
(explicare
)
what has been obscurely stated in his judgment and does correct
(
amendere
)
the wording of the record provided the tenor of the judgment is
preserved’.
I accept the legal position as
postulated in these dicta.
Conclusion
[10] I am satisfied that I am not
functus officio in regard to the award of costs in this matter.
According to authority it is permissible
that in the circumstances of
this case I can supplement my earlier order. The established
principle is that the principal judgement
or order may be
supplemented in respect of accessory or consequential matters which
include costs. This will be permissible where
the Court overlooked or
inadvertently omitted to grant such orders as in the present case. I
am satisfied that I inadvertently
omitted to include the award of
costs in my order. This was despite the issue of costs being argued
before.
Order
The order granted on 20 November 2023
in favour of the plaintiff is hereby supplanted as follows:
Costs in respect of summary judgement
granted on 20 November 2023 hereby granted in favour of the
plaintiff.
THUPAATLASE AJ
HIGH COURT ACTING JUDGE
GAUTENG LOCAL DIVISION
Date of Hearing: 26 October 2023
Judgment Delivered: 21 November 2023
For the Applicant: Adv. S Ameer
Instructed by: Suveshin Co.
Incorporated.
For the Respondent: Adv. N W Maodi
Instructed: Maponya K Associates Inc.
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