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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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[2023] ZAGPJHC 1359
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## Auckland Park Theological Seminary v Wamjay Holding Investments (Pty) Ltd (2022/9895)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 1359 (23 November 2023)
Auckland Park Theological Seminary v Wamjay Holding Investments (Pty) Ltd (2022/9895)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 1359 (23 November 2023)
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sino date 23 November 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE NUMBER:
2022/9895
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES
REVISED
In
the matter between:
AUCKLAND
PARK THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY
Applicant
And
WAMJAY
HOLDING INVESTMENTS (PTY) LTD
Respondent
In
re:
WAMJAY
HOLDING INVESTMENTS (PTY) LTD
Applicant
And
AUCKLAND
PARK THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY
Respondent
JUDGMENT
(LEAVE TO APPEAL)
FRIEDMAN AJ
[1] On 2 October
2023, I handed down judgment in a dispute between the above-mentioned
parties relating to a contract of cession
concluded by them in 2011.
I do not intend to repeat below anything which I said in that
judgment (“
the merits judgment
”). In the unlikely
event that anyone other than the parties is interested in this
judgment, it is necessary to read it together
with the merits
judgment for it to make sense. The merits judgment may be found at
2023 JDR 3700 (GJ). In the discussion below,
I describe the parties
as ATS and Wamjay, as I did in the merits judgment. I also use the
same description as in the merits judgment
for the University of
Johannesburg – i.e., “
the University
”.
[2] On 23 October
2023, ATS filed an application for leave to appeal the whole of my
judgment and order. I do not intend to
list all of the grounds on
which leave was sought. On consideration of the application for leave
to appeal, I took the strong initial
view that leave should be
granted. Leaving aside, for the moment, the grounds listed in ATS’s
application, the core issue
is this: if the prescription defence had
been upheld, then Wamjay’s claim would have been dismissed and
ATS would not have
been ordered to pay anything to Wamjay. In my
view, it is self-evident that ATS has reasonable prospects of
convincing an appellate
court that I was wrong to dismiss the
prescription claim. The fact that I agonised about the prescription
issue for longer than
I would have liked (it ultimately took me 6
months to hand down the judgment) is perhaps irrelevant. No doubt
each party takes
the view that no agonising was necessary and that
the answer is clear. But, I mention my agonising to demonstrate that
I, for one,
found the issues complicated and sometimes novel, and I
can see the merit in both sides of the argument. In other words, it
is
certainly arguable that the debt was due as envisaged by section
12(1) of the Prescription Act as soon as the University cancelled
the
long lease; because, since it was lawfully entitled to do so (as the
Constitutional Court has told us), the cession was a nullity
from the
outset. (This was ATS’s main point in the prescription argument
which was presented to me.) I stand by my reasoning
in the merits
judgment on the issue of prescription and have not changed my mind
about what I said there. But undoubtedly, ATS
has a right to take the
matter further and has a reasonable prospect in succeeding in
overturning my order.
[3] Because I was
so strongly minded to grant leave, and because I did not want to see
more time and costs wasted, I wrote
to the parties to express my
prima facie views. My intention was to see if full argument in the
application for leave to appeal
could be curtailed, without
inhibiting Wamjay from arguing the merits of the application for
leave to appeal should it wish to
do so. To cut a long story short,
both parties responded to my note by recording that they agreed that
leave to appeal to the Supreme
Court of Appeal should be granted. On
this basis, an oral hearing (and written argument) was avoided.
[4] In order to
avoid any confusion going forward, I wish to address certain issues –
if nothing else, to assist the
Supreme Court of Appeal in
understanding the basis on which I have granted leave to appeal:
4.1 I believe that the
core issue, as it relates to the prescription defence, is when the
debt became due as envisaged in section
12(1) of the Prescription
Act. On that issue, there is a reasonable prospect that the SCA will
take a different view to what is
reflected in the merits judgment,
and uphold the appeal.
4.2 In the application
for leave to appeal, ATS also criticises me for raising the issue of
the warranty against eviction (and the
related issues which I
considered to be relevant to the application of section 12(1) of the
Prescription Act to this case) because
the parties did not argue this
point. It is not just a symptom of being thin-skinned that I mention
this. It goes to the issue
of appealability because, if I decided a
matter which was not pleaded (for instance), this might be a
self-standing basis for an
appeal. I therefore address it in slightly
more detail below. Either way, since ATS has reasonable prospects on
the prescription
issue, leave to appeal should be granted for that
reason alone.
4.3 ATS also says that it
has reasonable prospects of success on the merits because it says
that I was wrong not to find that there
were irresolvable disputes of
fact on the papers. Here, I am less convinced that ATS has prospects
of success. However, both parties’
affidavits could best be
described as cursory and there is at least a prospect that the SCA
will take a different view to me on
that issue.
[5] On the
accusation that I was wrong to refer to the warranty against eviction
because it was not argued:
5.1 As authority for this
proposition, ATS relies on
Kauesa v Minister of Home Affairs
1996 (4) SA 965
(NmS) at 973I to 974C.
5.2 My understanding of
Kauesa
(having considered both the decision a quo and the
judgment of the Supreme Court of Namibia on which ATS relies) is that
the court
a quo raised various issues and expressed views on these,
even though they were not argued. This is what led the Supreme Court
to make the remarks at 473I to 474C of the reported judgment. The
issues which the court a quo decided but which were not argued
fell,
in my view, broadly into three categories: first, those which should
not have been raised
mero motu
(ie, of the court’s own
accord) because they related to issues which ought to have been
pleaded; second, those which should
not have been decided because the
parties expressly disavowed reliance on them; and third, those which
should not have been raised
mero motu
and decided because they
were not necessary for the resolution of the case.
5.3 In paragraph 11.3 of
the replying affidavit, Wamjay said the following: “ATS’s
debt to Wamjay only became ‘due’
once the Cession
Agreement was found to be inoperable, which was in June 2021, after
the Constitutional Court handed down its judgment.”
As I
explained in the merits judgment, Wamjay was entitled to deal with
prescription only in reply. And this statement in paragraph
11.3 of
the replying affidavit makes clear that Wamjay pleaded that the debt
which ATS owed to it only became due, as contemplated
in section
12(1) of the Prescription Act, after the Constitutional Court handed
down its judgment. Its failure, there, to mention
section 12(1) is
not relevant – in my view, the point was sufficiently pleaded.
5.4 If that is accepted,
then the only question is this: was I precluded from considering
issues of law which I considered relevant
to the proper
interpretation of section 12(1) if those legal submissions were not
made by the parties (at least without calling
for supplementary
submissions)? And to go further, could the SCA overturn my judgment
on this basis?
5.5 In my view,
Kauesa
did not intend to go so far as to say that every law point not argued
cannot be decided without hearing the parties first.
5.6
Kauesa
is a Namibian case and
has been followed by the SCA on a few occasions.
[1]
However, I could find no
reliance by the SCA on the judgment in circumstances directly
analogous to the present case.
5.7 The leading case on
this issue in South African law is
Fischer v Ramahlele
2014
(4) SA 614
(SCA) (“
Ramahlele
”). My reading
of paragraphs 13 to 15 of the judgment is that the cardinal rule is
that courts should not of their own accord
raise issues which are not
raised in pleadings or affidavits. So, to use the present case as an
analogy, if Wamjay had not pleaded
(via its replying affidavit) that
the debt had become due only after the Constitutional Court’s
decision (thus bringing the
scope and application of section 12(1)
into play), then
Ramahlele
would have been a barrier to me
raising that issue of my own accord.
5.8 However, in this
case, we have the statement in paragraph 11.3 of the replying
affidavit to which I have already referred. We
then have the argument
advanced by
Mr Alli
in his heads of argument (to which I
referred in paragraphs 12 and 13 of the merits judgment) that Wamjay
did not have a complete
cause of action until after the
Constitutional Court, in substance, ordered the registration of the
long lease to be set aside.
A major focus of
Mr Alli’s
heads of argument was on the issue of when Wamjay could be said to
have had a complete cause of action. So, ATS’s ground
of appeal
amounts to saying that because Wamjay argued that the debt only
became due in 2021 for reason X (the registration of
the long lease)
and I found that it only became due in 2021 for reason Y (the
reasoning in the merits judgment relating to the
warranty against
eviction), my order cannot stand.
5.9
I
have two reasons for being concerned about whether this is correct.
In the first place, I am not convinced that
Ramahlele
intended to put such a
tight pair of handcuffs onto our courts.
Ramahlele
has
been affirmed and followed in many cases, and I do not read any of
the subsequent cases as employing such handcuffs either.
[2]
Where an issue is
squarely pleaded and argued, but the Court considers the correct
legal position to be based on different legal
reasoning, can its
decision be overturned simply because neither party raised that
reasoning? This would surely lead to the undesirable
consequence that
the correct legal outcome would often not be reached because of the
way particular parties chose to argue particular
cases.
5.10 There is a
subtle but important difference between the two scenarios which I
have sketched. The philosophical reason
for Courts not being
permitted to go wider than the pleadings relates to the “nature
of civil litigation in our adversarial
system” as explained by
the SCA in
Ramahlele
. But the need to find the correct legal
outcome on issues squarely pleaded means that courts will sometimes
have to adopt legal
reasoning not raised by the parties.
5.11 This brings me
to the second issue. ATS makes the point in its application for leave
to appeal that, in the circumstances
of this case, I should have
asked the parties for supplementary submissions on the warranty
against eviction point. This criticism
is fairly made, and I agree
that it would have been
desirable
for me to do so. I perhaps
would not go so far as to say that I was
obliged
to do so, but
I may be wrong about that. Either way, though, the issue is this:
when the SCA considers what to do in this matter,
it will be
considering an appeal against, and not a review of, my judgment. I
accept that in a rare case, a fundamental failure
of fairness might
vitiate proceedings in the High Court even if the order made by the
Court in those proceedings is legally correct.
I am not aware of any
examples, but this is at least arguably possible, taking into account
section 34 of Constitution and the
bedrock principle of fairness on
which the entire South African legal order is based. But short of
such a gross failure of natural
justice, the issue on appeal must
surely be whether my legal reasoning – on a pleaded point –
is right or wrong. I
cannot see how a failure to ask for further
submissions can turn correct legal reasoning into incorrect legal
reasoning, in circumstances
where both parties had a full opportunity
to argue the section 12(1) point. Of course, my legal reasoning might
not have been correct.
But that then brings us back to where I
started – i.e., the issue is whether I was right or wrong, and
not whether I ought
to have called for further submissions.
5.12 In short, it
seems to me that it is always desirable for a court to obtain as much
input from the parties as possible
– we all benefit from more
opportunities to be dissuaded from a course of action, and not less.
But where an issue has squarely
been raised – in this case, the
reach of section 12(1) of the Prescription Act – and the court
considers the parties
to have made legal submissions which do not
cover the full ambit of what is necessary to decide the pleaded
point, it seems to
me that a failure to call for further legal
submissions cannot, simply on its own, vitiate the judgment.
5.13 But, on this
point too, there is a reasonable prospect that everything which I
have said in this paragraph is wrong.
This is yet another reason why
ATS is correct that it has reasonable prospects of success on appeal.
For the sake of clarity, I
record that nothing said in this judgment
is intended to preclude ATS from raising any of the grounds of
appeal, listed in its
application for leave to appeal, in the appeal
to be heard by the SCA in due course (even assuming I have any power
in this regard
in the first place).
[6] For all of
these reasons, the parties were, with respect, quite correct to agree
that leave to appeal should be granted.
In my view, given the nature
of the disputes, they were also correct to agree that the SCA should
hear the appeal.
[7] I hope that the
very commendable and practical way in which the parties addressed the
application for leave to appeal
renders any costs order which I might
make
de minimus
. In any event, I intend to make the usual
order: ie, that the costs of the application for leave to appeal are
to be costs in the
appeal.
[8] I accordingly
make the following:
1. Leave to appeal
to the Supreme Court of Appeal is granted to the Auckland Park
Theological Seminary (respondent in the
decision
a quo
and
applicant for leave to appeal) against the whole of my judgment and
order dated 2 October 2023 under case number 2022/9895.
2. The costs of the
application for leave to appeal shall be costs in the appeal.
A. FRIEDMAN
Acting Judge of the High
Court
Gauteng Division,
Johannesburg
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected above and is handed down electronically
by circulation to
the parties/their legal representatives by email and by uploading it
to the electronic file of this matter. The
date for hand down is
deemed to be
23 November 2023
.
Heard:
(Decided on the papers)
Judgment:
23 November 2023
Appearances
:
For
Applicant:
No appearance
Attorneys
for the Applicant:
Hirshowitz Van der Westhuizen Inc.
For
Respondent:
No appearance
Attorneys
for Respondent:
SLH Inc
[1]
See, for example,
GN v JN
2017 (1) SA 342
(SCA); Welkom Municipality v Masureik and
Herman T/A Lotus Corporation
[1997] ZASCA 14
;
1997 (3) SA 363
(SCA) at 371
[2]
I have used the
Jutastat noter-up function to find and read all of the decisions of
the Constitutional Court and SCA which have
considered
Ramahlele
.
I do not intend to list all of those judgments here. In my view,
each of them is distinguishable from the approach which I followed
in the merits judgment. I have not conducted a similar exercise in
respect of decisions of the High Court. But, since this matter
is
going to the SCA, that strikes me as unnecessary for present
purposes.
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