Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1421South Africa
ABSA Bank Limited v Prinsloo Familie Trust and Others (2020/10026) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1421; 2024 (3) SA 80 (GJ) (4 December 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
4 December 2023
Headnotes
SUMMARY
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## ABSA Bank Limited v Prinsloo Familie Trust and Others (2020/10026) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1421; 2024 (3) SA 80 (GJ) (4 December 2023)
ABSA Bank Limited v Prinsloo Familie Trust and Others (2020/10026) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1421; 2024 (3) SA 80 (GJ) (4 December 2023)
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sino date 4 December 2023
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE NUMBER: 2020/10026
In the matter between:
ABSA
BANK LIMITED
Applicant
and
PRINSLOO
FAMILIE TRUST
First Respondent
PRINSLOO:
JASPER JOHANNES N.O.
Second Respondent
PRINSLOO:
SANDRA N.O.
Third Respondent
JAHASAN
FAMILY TRUST
Fourth Respondent
HOLL:
THEUNIS N.O.
Fifth Respondent
This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties' and/or the parties'
representatives by email and by
being uploaded onto CaseLines. The
date and time for hand-down is deemed to be on 4 December
2023.
JUDGMENT
FARBER AJ:
introduction
[1]
On 25 March 2020 Absa Bank Limited (“the
Bank”) issued summons out of this Court against the Prinsloo
Family Trust,
Mr Jasper Johannes Prinsloo N.O., Ms Sandra
Prinsloo, the Jahasan Family Trust, and Mr Theunis Holl N.O. as the
first, second,
third, fourth and fifth defendants respectively. Where
appropriate, the third defendant will be referred to in this judgment
as
“Ms Prinsloo”. similarly, where appropriate, the
first, second, fourth and fifth defendants will be referred to herein
as “the remaining defendants”.
[2]
The relief sought by the Bank was
formulated in the particulars of claim attached to the combined
summons thus.
“
As
against the second and third defendants jointly (in their
representative capacities as trustees for the first defendant) for:
and
“
Against
the second, third and fifth defendants jointly (in their
representative capacities as trustees for the fourth defendant)
for:
and
jointly and severally the one
paying the other to be absolved against the second and third
defendants jointly and severally (in
their personal capacities) for:
CLAIM A
1.
Payment of an amount of R15 009
972,27;
2.
Interest on the amount of R15 009
972,27 at the rate of 9,25% (prime 10% less 0,75%) linked per annum,
calculated and capitalised
monthly from 19 September 2018 to date of
payment, both days included;
3.
An order whereby the following
property be declared executable in respect of the first defendant:
Erf 570 Blair Atholl Extension
Township; registration division J.Q., Province of Gauteng;
In extent: 3069 (three thousand and
sixty-nine) square metres;
Held under Deed of Transfer No.
T3907/2011
4.
Costs of suit on the scale between
attorney and client;
5.
Further and/or alternative relief.
CLAIM B
1.
Payment of an amount of R3 781
483,52;
2.
Interest on the amount of R3 781
483,52 at the rate of 10,25% (prime 10% plus 0,25%) linked per annum,
calculated and capitalised
monthly from 2 September 2018 to date of
payment, both days included;
3.
Costs of suit on the scale between
attorney and client;
4.
Further and/or alternative relief.”
[3]
The third defendant and the remaining
defendants entered appearances to defend the action.
[4]
On 2 November 2022 this Court (per Makume
J) entered judgment in favour of the Bank against Ms Prinsloo (the
default judgment) in
the following terms:
“
1.
The defence of the Third Respondent/Defendant, in her personal
capacity, is hereby struck out.
2. Judgment is granted
in favour of the Applicant/Plaintiff against the Third
Respondent/Defendant in her personal capacity
for:
2.1.1.
Payment of an amount of
R15 009 972,27;
2.1.2.
Interest on the amount of
R15 009 972,27 at the rate of 9,25% (prime 10% less 0,75%)
linked per annum, calculated and
capitalised monthly from 19
September 2018, to date of payment, both days included;
2.1.3.
Payment of an amount of R3 781
483,52.
2.1.4.
Interest on the amount of R3 781
483,52 at the rate of 10,25% (prime 10% less 0,25%) linked per annum,
calculated and capitalised
monthly from 2 September 2018, to date of
payment, both days included;
3. Costs of suit on the
scale between attorney and client.”
[5]
The Bank subsequently abandoned the default
judgment. Following thereon, the remaining defendants advanced the
contention that despite
its subsequent abandonment the default
judgment had the effect of finally disposing of the suit between the
Bank and them. They
on this score asserted that when the
default judgment was granted the Court became
functus
officio
and that the
lis
between the Bank and them became
res
judicata
. Ms Prinsloo was to follow
suit.
[6]
This resulted in the Bank making
application to rescind the default judgment on the basis that it had
been erroneously sought and
granted within the meaning of Uniform
Rule of Court 42(1)(a). in the alternative, the bank grounded its
application for the rescission
of the default judgment on the common
law. The Bank’s application is opposed by both Ms
Prinsloo and the remaining
defendants. The remaining defendants
have moreover instituted a counter application against the Bank
wherein they seek the
dismissal of the Bank’s application for
the rescission of the default judgment. additionally, they seek
declaratory
orders to the effect that on the entry of default
judgment the Court became
functus
officio
and that the Bank’s
claims in the action were finally disposed of not only as between the
Bank and Ms Prinsloo but as between
the Bank and them.
[7]
I am now seized with both the application
and the counter application.
FACTUAL MATRIX
[8]
The facts are relatively straight forward,
albeit that in some respects they are quite unusual. These facts are
now summarised in
the paragraphs which immediately follow.
[9]
On 25 March 2020 the Bank instituted the
proceedings more fully referred to in paragraphs [1] and [2] hereof.
[10]
On 18 June 2020, the remaining defendants
entered an appearance to defend the action. shortly thereafter, Ms
Prinsloo’s then
attorneys entered an appearance to defend the
action on her behalf.
[11]
On 26 March 2021, the Bank furnished notice
of its intention to amend its particulars of claim. On 13 April
2021, the remaining
defendants served a notice in terms of Rules 30
and 30A, asserting that the Bank’s notice of intention to amend
constituted
an irregular step and that it had not complied with the
Rules in several identified respects.
[12]
On 28 April 2021, Ms Prinsloo, pursuant to
Rule 28(3), objected to the proposed amendments.
[13]
On 29 April 2021, the remaining defendants,
under a notice in terms of Rule 28(3), raised a series of objections
to the foreshadowed
amendments.
[14]
Following thereon, the Bank delivered an
application for leave to amend its particulars of claim in terms of
its notice of intention
to amend of 26 March 2021 (“the
amendment application”).
[15]
On 19 May 2021, Ms Prinsloo gave notice of
her intention to oppose the amendment application and following
thereon she delivered
a document detailing the points of law upon
which she relied in founding her opposition.
[16]
On 9 June 2021, the remaining defendants
delivered their answering affidavit (referred to by them as an
opposing affidavit) in the
amendment application. On 24 June 2021,
the Bank filed a replying affidavit therein, in which affidavit it
dealt with both the
opposing affidavit of the remaining defendants
and with the points of law raised by Ms Prinsloo.
[17]
On 11 November 2021, the Bank served its
heads of argument, practice note, list of authorities and chronology
table in the amendment
application in terms of the Practice Manual
regulating the conduct of proceedings in this Division. on
Ms Prinsloo’s
attorneys of record. By reason
thereof, Ms Prinsloo was required to deliver her heads of argument,
practice note, list of
authorities and chronology table in the
amendment application by 25 November 2021. She failed to do so
and she was then put
on terms to do so by 7 January 2022. This was
extended to 8 January 2022. There was still no compliance and
in February 2022,
the Bank instituted motion proceedings against Ms
Prinsloo for the delivery by her of the documents in question, such
to be effected
within three days of the grant of an order compelling
the delivery thereof, failing which “Ms Prinsloo’s
defence (was
to) be struck out”. The matter was not opposed and
on 2 August 2022, Acting Judge Thupaatlase issued an order in the
following
terms:
“
1.
The Third Respondent shall deliver heads of argument and a Practice
Note
within 3 (three) days from the date of this order being granted.
2. The
Third Respondent shall pay the costs of this application.”
[18]
This order was served on Ms Prinsloo on 12
August 2022. She failed to comply with it and on 2 November
2022, the Bank made
application for an order striking out her defence
and for the entry of default judgment against her for payment of the
sums of
R15 009 972,27 and R3 781 483,52,
together with interest thereon, and costs. On 2 November 2022,
default judgment
in those terms was granted.
[19]
On 12 December 2022, Ms Prinsloo in terms
of Rule 49(1)(c) requested Judge Makume to furnish reasons for the
Order. It is
not clear from the papers filed of record whether
reasons were in fact furnished or not. Be that as it may,
Ms Prinsloo
on the same day (12 December 2022) lodged an
application for leave to appeal against the whole of the Order,
including that relating
to costs.
[20]
In the interim, the Bank had instituted
proceedings for the rescission of the default judgment. On 19
January 2023, the Bank’s
attorney addressed a letter to
Ms Prinsloo attorney in the following terms:
“
1.
The above matter and the Third Defendant’s Notice of
Application for Leave to Appeal served on us on 12 December
2022
refer.
2. The
Third Defendant’s Notice of Application for Leave to Appeal is
defective because the judgment
granted against the third defendant
was granted by default.
3. However,
our instructions are that our client is prepared to abandon the
judgment on condition that:
3.1. The third
defendant deliver her heads of argument to our client’s
application to amend within one week;
3.2. If the third
defendant fails to deliver heads within one week as per 3.1 above,
then she is deemed to have consented
to withdrawing her opposition to
the application for leave to appeal.
4. We look
forwarded to your response by return correspondence.
5. All our
client’s rights remain strictly reserved.”
[21]
On 7 February 2023 (09:36), Ms Prinsloo’s
then attorney addressed an e-mail to the Bank’s attorneys
recording the following:
“
I
refer to previous correspondence.
We propose that the matter be
settled as follows:
1.
Applicant abandons the judgement (if
any) and order granted on 1 November by the honourable Makume J.
2.
My client withdraws her opposition
to the application for amendment of the plaintiffs’ particulars
of claim.
3.
Each party is to pay its own cost
relating to compel the heads of argument, the Application that served
before Makume J. on 2 November
2022 and the Application for leave to
appeal.
Can you please revert.”
[22]
Pursuant to that exchange, the Bank on 13
February 2023 abandoned the default judgment.
[23]
On 24 February 2023, the remaining
defendants service a notice on the Bank indicating that it intended
raising a series of questions
of law relating to the consequences of
the default judgment. The questions raised are twenty-two in number
and those relevant to
the central issues which arise in the case now
under consideration were formulated thus:
“
1.
…
2. …
3.
In granting the default judgment, this Could duly pronounced a final
judgment or order and thereby becomes functus officio and its
authority over the subject matter of litigation in the main action
ceases.
4.
The principle of finality of litigation being in the public interest,
is thereby confirmed and dictates that the power of the Court comes
to an end.
5.
…
6.
The judgment granted is an order of the above Honourable Court and
stands until set aside by a Court of competent jurisdiction.
7.
The notice to abandon does not constitute a setting aside of the
judgment granted and does not constitute the setting aside by a
Court/Court of competent jurisdiction as the same is merely a notice.
8.
The notice to abandon filed by the plaintiff does not constitute an
order by a competent Court that may alter or supplement the default
judgment.
9.
A notice to abandon does not nullify the court being functus officio
subsequent to the granting of the judgment.
10.
…
11.
By applying for judgment against the third defendant, the plaintiff
elected
to seek judgment in respect of the entire action. By
virtue thereof, the plaintiff cannot continue against other
parties/defendants
to its action subsequent to exercising the
election to obtain judgment against one party.
12.
An abandonment is yet another election available to the plaintiff,
whether to
enforce the rights obtained in terms of the judgment, if
any, or not.
13.
The notice of abandonment does not extinguish the existence of the
judgment,
wherefore the prosecution of any relief that forms the
subject matter of the main action, cannot continue against any other
party
to this action.
14.
By virtue of the judgment granted, the main action became res
judicata.
15.
…
16.
The judgment renders the entire action res judicata
vis-a-vis
any other parties and/or defendants cited in
the action.
17.
…
18.
…
19.
…
20.
…
21.
A pronouncement by this Court and/or the seeking of the pronouncement
pertaining
to any issue which stands to be adjudicated cannot be
heard and/or adjudicated upon until the default judgment has been set
aside,
alternatively until there is a pronouncement upon its
validity.
22.
...”
[24]
On 1 March 2023, the Bank instituted an
application for the rescission of the default judgment. As
I have said, the
remaining defendants have raised a counter
application in those proceedings, in which they seek relief in the
following terms:
“
1.
That the applicant’s application for rescission of default
judgment
granted on 2 November 2022 be dismissed with costs on the
scale as between attorney and client, including the cost of two
counsel.
2.
That this Court is functus officio in the action under the above case
number.
3.
That the action under the above case number is res judicata and is
hereby dismissed.
4.
That the applicant pays the costs of the action on a scale as between
attorney and client, including the cost of two counsel.”
The issues raised
The Rescission Application
[25]
The rescission application raises the
following questions:
25.1.
Does the abandonment of the default
judgment hold the consequence that the Bank has forfeited the rights
which it might otherwise
have held in relation thereto,
including the right to rescind it, whether under Rule 42(1)(a) or
under the common law?
25.2.
Was the default judgment final in nature,
in consequence whereof this Court became
functus
officio
in the sense that its authority
over the subject matter of the litigation in the main action ceased?
25.3.
Is the default judgment
res judicata
as between the Bank and Ms Prinsloo and as between the Bank and the
remaining defendants, thereby finally disposing of the
lis
between the parties?
25.4.
Have cognisable grounds in any event been
established for the rescission of the default judgment, more
particularly whether it was
erroneously sought or granted within the
meaning of Rule 42(1)(a)?
25.5.
Does the Bank have the legal competence to
institute proceedings for the rescission of the default judgment,
whether under Rule
42(1)(a) or under the common law?
25.6.
Whether given the excipiable nature of the
Bank’s particulars of claim as they now stand it may fairly be
said it has no prospects
of success in the action, thereby precluding
it from making an application for the rescission of the default
judgment?
The Counter Application
[26]
The remaining defendants seek the dismissal
of the Bank’s rescission application.
[27]
They moreover seek two declarations, namely
that on entry of the default judgment this Court became
functus
officio
and that the
lis
between both the Bank and Ms Prinsloo and the Bank and the remaining
defendants was finally disposed of, according to all of them
the
right to raise a plea of
res judicata
.
The approach
[28]
It will readily be appreciated that the
main application and the counter application are closely connected,
dominated as they are
by principles of law common to both of them.
[29]
Given this commonality, I intend
approaching the application and counter application as a composite
whole. In doing so, I will deal
with the relevant principles of law
and apply those principles to the facts which I have already set out,
which facts constitute
common cause matter.
THE LEGAL EFFECT OF AN ABANDONMENT
OF A JUDGMENT OR ORDER
[30]
In the case of
Body
Corporate of West Road South v Ergold Property Number 8 CC
2014 (JDR) 2258 (GJ), Boruchowitz J characterized the nature of an
act of abandonment and its consequences thus:
“
The
act of abandonment is of a unilateral nature and operates ex nunc and
not ex tune. It precludes the party who has abandoned
its rights
under the judgment from enforcing the judgment but the judgment still
remains in existence with all its intended legal
consequences
.”
[31]
In my judgment the abandonment, however,
does not hold the consequence that the abandoner is irretrievably
deprived of the right
to rescind the abandoned judgment in
appropriate circumstances. Despite the abandonment, the
abandoner may still retain a
very real interest in the abandoned
judgment and thus may be affected should it continue to exist. This
may notionally arise in
a situation where there is a dispute between
the abandoner and the abandonee in relation to whether the abandoned
judgment is final
and definitive in nature (and that in consequence
the doctrine of
res judicata
applies
)
or not. The abandoner may contend that
the abandoned judgment is not final in effect and ought thus not to
be subject to the strictures
of the
res
judicata
doctrine.
To that end, the abandoner will be an affected party in relation to
the abandoned judgment. As such it will
notionally be open to
it to take steps to undo the consequences of the abandoned judgment
by for example, by an application to
set it aside.
[32]
It moreover needs to be stressed that an
abandonment will not without more result in a successful defence of
res judicata
.
This much appears from paragraph [48] of the judgment in the case of
FirstRand Bank Ltd t/a First National
Bank v Fondse and Another
(A5027/2016)
[2017] ZAGPJHC 184 (23 June 2017) at para [48]), which judgment is
addressed in greater detail later herein.
THE FINALITY OF JUDGMENTS AND THE
CONCEPT OF A COURT BEING
FUNCTUS OFFICIO
[33]
On the face of it the default judgment was
vis-à-vis Ms Prinsloo final in nature for it fully determined
her liability to
the Bank in the action which it had commenced
against her. Thus, on the pronouncement of the default
judgment, the Court’s
jurisdiction vis-à-vis Ms Prinsloo
was on the face of it fully and finally exercised with the result
that its authority
over the subject matter in the action against her
ceased. The Court would then ordinarily have become
functus
officio
(
Firestone
SA (Pty) Limited v Genterico AG
1977(4)
SA 298 (A) at 306 F-G and
First National
Bank of SA Ltd v Jurgens
1993(1) SA 245
(W) at 246 J). as such, the Court would ordinarily have no
authority to correct, alter or supplement the order.
[34]
The Rule serves considerations of public
interest, more particularly that of bringing litigation to finality
and permitting litigants
to conduct their lives accordingly (
Zandi
v MEC, Traditional and Local Government Affairs
2006(3) SA 1 (CC) at para 28).
[35]
There are some recognised exceptions to the
general rule. The order may be supplemented in respect of
accessory or consequential
matters in circumstances where the Court
overlooked or inadvertently failed to deal therewith, default
judgments or orders may
be clarified in circumstances where their
meaning is obscure, ambiguous or otherwise uncertain, clerical,
arithmetical or other
errors in the order may be corrected and costs
orders may be corrected, altered or supplemented when the need to do
so arises.
[36]
The list is by no means exhaustive. Thus,
in the case of
Zondi v MEC, Traditional
Local Government Affairs
2006(3) SA 1
(CC), Ngcobo J said the following in paragraphs 34, 35 and 46:
“
[34]
what emerges from our pre-constitutional era jurisprudence is that
the general rule that an order once made is
unalterable was departed
from when it was in the interests of justice to do so and where there
was a need to adapt the common law
to changing circumstances and to
meet modern exigencies. It is equally clear that the case law
that in departing from the
general rule, the Court invoked its
inherent power to regulate its own process. Thus, in West Rand
Estate, the Court held that:
“
It
is within the province of this Court to regulate its own procedure in
matters of adjective law. And, now that the point
has come
before it for decision, to lay down a definite rule of practice.
I am of the opinion that the proper rule should
be that which I have
just stated. The Court, by acting in this way, does not in
substance and effect alter or undo its previously
pronounced
sentence, within the meaning of the Roman and Roman-Dutch Law.
The sanctity of the doctrine of res judicata remains
unimpaired and
of full force, for the Court is merely doing justice between the same
parties, on the same pleadings in the same
suit, on a claim which it
has inadvertently overlooked.”
[35] This
approach to the general rule by the Appellate Division is consistent
with the Constitution. It is now entrenched
in s173 of the
Constitution, which provides that:
“
The
Constitutional Court, Supreme Court of Appeal and High Courts have
the inherent power to protect and regulate their own process,
and to
develop the common law, taking into account the interests of
justice.”
[46]
In my view, an application to extend the period of suspension of the
declaration of invalidity falls to be dealt
with under the Court’s
power to make an order that it is ‘just and equitable’.
In view of this conclusion, it
is not necessary to consider whether
such application can also be dealt with under the Court’s power
to develop the common
law under s 173. Nor is it necessary in this
case to develop the common law and adapt it to the powers of this
Court in deciding
the constitutional matters within its
jurisdiction. And as indicated above, our
pre-constitutional jurisprudence indicates
that the power of the
Court to vary an order is rooted in the interests of justice
and the need to adapt the common law to
changing circumstances.
And furthermore, as this Court observed in Ntuli, the determination
of what is ‘just and equitable’
or is ‘in the
interests of justice’ involves similar considerations.
What is just and equitable will ordinarily
be in the interests of
justice.”
[37]
Despite its seeming finality, it is thus
plain that the true content of a judgment may be revisited where
justice and equity so
demand. Similarly, and as will presently
became evident, the true effect of a judgment seemingly final in
nature may be revisited
where the equity so requires. I at this
stage merely record that on a conspectus of the facts as a whole, I
for reasons which
will presently follow, consider that it is “just
and equitable” and “in the interests of justice”
that
the default judgment is not to be treated as a final order. It
would, I perceive, be unconscionable to decree otherwise.
THE CONCEPT OF
RES JUDICATA
AND THE RELAXATION THEREOF: THE BANK VIS-À-VIS MS PRINSLOO
[38]
The application of the
res
judicata
doctrine arises where
proceedings in respect of a dispute between the same parties, on the
same cause of action and for the same
relief have been previously
dispositively determined (
Prinsloo N.O.
v Goldex 15 (Pty) Ltd and Another
2014
(5) SA 297
(SCA) at para [10] and the authorities referred to therein
and
FirstRand Bank Ltd t/a First
National Bank v Fondse and Another
(A5027/2016) [2017] ZAGPJHC 184 (23 June 2017) at para [23]).
[39]
The doctrine is not immutable and may be
relaxed in circumstances where a substantial injustice would result
from its application.
(
Goldex
at para [24],
Fondse
at para [25] and
Molaudzi v The State
2012 (2) SACR 341
(CC) at para [16]).
[40]
The facts in
Fondse
affords a classic illustration of the circumstances under which the
doctrine will be relaxed. Mr and Mrs O'Neil were loan
debtors
of FirstRand, which indebtedness was secured by mortgage bonds
registered over their home. The O'Neils fell into arrear
and stopped
paying altogether. FirstRand then instituted action against
them for a money judgment. The action was opposed
and FirstRand
launched summary judgment proceedings, which proceedings were
sustained against. The O'Neils then launched an application
for leave
to appeal and at the commencement of the hearing of that application
FirstRand abandoned its summary judgment.
It did so in the
realisation that it had no answer to the application for leave to
appeal and the appeal which would follow thereon,
postulating that
leave would in fact be granted, which seemed inevitable. FirstRand
thereafter abandoned the proceedings and instituted
proceedings
against the O'Neils afresh. They, in the fresh proceedings, relied
upon the
res judicata
doctrine in resisting FirstRand’s claim. The defence was
upheld.
[41]
In the following appeal, a Full Bench of
this Division (per Sutherland J [as he then was] with whom Matojane
and Makume JJ concurred)
held that the Court
a
quo
erred in applying the
res
judicata
doctrine which, on the
specific facts of the case, ought properly to have been relaxed.
The Full Bench on this score expressed
itself in paras [48] and [49]
(footnotes omitted) thus:
“
[48]
In my view, the traverse of these cases illustrates the wisdom of the
fact-specific nature of
the assessment. None of these decisions offer
strong support for the proposition that an abandonment of a judgment
ought ordinarily to
result in a successful defence of Res
Judicata.
[49]
The relevant fact-specific attributes of the present case are these:
49.1
If the act of abandonment can, in an appropriate case (i.e. together
with other facts), constitute a waiver, it must
also mean that the
intention of the party abandoning the judgment must be relevant. No
question of a waiver of the right to claim
the indebtedness, which
was ongoing, can be contrived from the events because all the
evidence contradicts an intention to release
the O'Neils from their
indebtedness. Moreover, as it is, apparently, not uncommon for a
party to abandon part of a judgment and
retain another part, the
intention of that party to make that distinction has to be expressed
and is thus a legitimate source of
information in determining the
extent of the abandonment, a point well illustrated in Feyt v
Myers
1919
CPD 122.
In
that case, a ruling was given by a magistrate that the onus lay with
the defendant and the case was subsequently decided against
him. The
plaintiff, thereafter, whilst on appeal, abandoned reliance on the
wrong ruling and tendered to begin the case afresh.
The court held
that the abandonment was limited and did not result in a sacrifice of
his claim.
49.2 The
judgment that the appellant had obtained was guaranteed to be
overturned on appeal for want of compliance with a
peremptory
procedural requirement, which if challenged for non-compliance would
result merely in a dilatory defence. To acquiesce
in the grant of
leave to appeal and embark on the long, ritualistic slouch towards
the court of appeal where the point would be
upheld, before resuming
the litigation in earnest, is so obviously an exercise in costly
futility, that any reasonably minded person
would wince at having to
endure such a process. Seeking to obviate it is not pernicious.
49.3 No
alternative suitable remedy existed. No grounds to invoke Uniform
Rule 42 exist, there being no error committed
within the meaning
of that rule. The summary judgment ought not to have been granted
because the section 129 point was good, but
that is not a procedural
error as contemplated by Rule 42; rather, it is a reason to overturn
the judgment on appeal. Inasmuch
as the appellant might be said to
have been obliged to allow the appeal to run its course, and that,
tiresome as it would be, was
the alternative procedural channel, the
contention is correct, but ought not to trump the application of
common sense and fairness
to the exact circumstances shown to
exist. In Feyt v Myers the court remarked that the parties
were compelled to exhaust
the appeal procedure to achieve the
objective of a fresh beginning, but the impact of res
judicata was not considered
in that case and therefore that
decision cannot be authority for a proposition adverse to the finding
in this case that the appellant
ought not be unsuited by the defence
of Res Judicata under the particular circumstances.
49.4 The
effect of applying res judicata would result in a gift of
involuntarily releasing the debtors from the debt with
no quid
pro quo. That outcome would be grossly unfair.
49.5 There
is, on the facts, no abuse of the process. The policy rationale for
the existence of the defence of Res Judicata is
not at all
upset by its relaxation in this case. It was argued that the
appellant's predicament is the consequence of its own conduct
and it
is not the random victim of an unfair procedure. This is true, but
that notion does not offer a cogent reason not to relax
the
application of Res Judicata, upon a holistic appreciation
of the circumstances, amongst which is no shred of unfairness
that
could be suffered by the debtor owing an admitted debt.
49.6
Lastly, section 34 of the constitution is worthy of being given
weight:
'Everyone
has the right to have any dispute that can be resolved by the
application of law decided in a fair public hearing before
a court
or, where appropriate, another independent and impartial tribunal or
forum.'”
[42]
It is thus clear that dependent on the
specific facts of a particular case, the
res
judicata
doctrine may be relaxed.
[43]
The facts giving rise to the abandonment of
the judgment and what was then to happen in relation to the
litigation vis-à-vis
Ms Prinsloo are clear, albeit somewhat
unusual. The Bank and Ms Prinsloo agreed that the judgment was to be
abandoned and that
the Bank would not enforce its terms. it was
furthermore agreed that the litigation between the Bank and
Ms Prinsloo
was to continue. Ms Prinsloo was
in this regard required to withdraw her opposition to the Bank’s
application to amend its
particulars of claim. It was clearly
implicit in what had been expressly agreed upon that Ms Prinsloo’s
appeal against
the grant of the order would be abandoned and that the
litigation between the Bank and her would continue. The Bank’s
particulars
of claim would be amended, and Ms Prinsloo would be
required to deliver a plea to it. In short, the matter would
have continued
as if the judgment had not been granted to begin with.
[44]
Ms Prinsloo now contends that a situation
of
res judicata
has arisen between her and the Bank and that by virtue of the Bank’s
abandonment of the default judgment, it is now powerless
to secure
any form of redress against her, whether in the current action or any
subsequent action. This consequence would in my
view be quite
unconscionable and most certainly inimical to what is “just and
equitable” and “in the interests
of justice”. The
Bank in its dealings with Ms Prinsloo did not have the slightest
intention of bestowing a gift on her running
into several millions of
rand. Ms Prinsloo, moreover could not have reasonably
believed that this most generous gift
would accrue to her. The
result she seeks will, if upheld, amount to a denial of justice.
[45]
It thus seems to me on the facts of the
case that the
res judicata
principle needs to be relaxed, provided only that the Bank does not
have some alternative form of redress. As will presently
emerge
there is none.
[46]
Ms Prinsloo (and the remaining defendants)
sought to avoid the relaxation of the
res
judicata
doctrine on two additional
grounds. Firstly, reliance was placed on a series of cases to the
effect that once the Court enters
judgment it becomes
functus
officio
with the result that it is
precluded from further entertaining the suit. (See for example
Jacobson v Havinga t/a Havingas 2001(2)
SA 177 T)
.
Secondly, it was contended that the
Fondse
judgment was of no application on the facts of the case. It was
in this regard contended that in
Fondse
the Court was concerned with a summary
judgment and not a default judgment.
[47]
As to the first, it seems to me that the
principle that a Court on entering a final judgment becomes
functus
officio
is
closely aligned to the operation of the
res
judicata
doctrine in the sense that
where the principles of
res judicata
apply, finality is reached with the consequent result that the Court
truly does become
functus officio
.
This is a principle of general application. However, a party
always remains free to contend that the
res
judicata
doctrine does not apply to the
particular judgment because, as was said in
Fondse
,
the enquiry as to whether it does or does not apply is fact-specific
to each case. Thus, a judgment may on the face of it
be so
framed that it supports the notion that its effect is final and that
res judicata
does in fact operate. Further enquiry, however, may reveal that
because of equitable considerations the
res
judicata
doctrine should be relaxed.
In that event finality will not have been reached and the Court will
not be considered
functus officio
.
It will remain free to determine the
lis
.
It short, it may happen that a contest arises as to whether a
particular judgment has the effect of being
res
judicata
between the parties.
This as the facts of this case illustrated may arise in the very
litigation where judgment is taken.
I can conceive of no reason why
the judge in that litigation cannot determine the issue. All
that needs to happen is that
the party who asserts that the action is
now barred because of the operation of the
res
judicata
doctrine is to file a special
plea asserting that position. Its protagonist may contend
otherwise and that of course is an
issue which the Court will
determine. I see no advantage in the judge declining to
entertain the matter on the basis that
he or she is now
functus
officio
, thereby possibly compelling an
aggrieved party to resort to further litigation.
[48]
Cases which proclaim finality must be
understood in the context that the
functus
officio
principle will only apply in a
situation where it is either common cause or beyond dispute that the
judgment granted brings the
res judicata
doctrine into operation. Where there is a dispute in relation
to whether the doctrine applies or not, the Court is duty-bound
to
determine that dispute and it cannot avoid doing so on the basis that
it is now
functus officio
.
To hold otherwise would be to subordinate substance to form.
[49]
As to the second, I fail to comprehend the
distinction sought to be drawn between a summary judgment and a
judgment by default in
relation
to the application of the
res judicata
principle and its possible relaxation in any given case.
The
fact that the judgment in issue in this case was one taken by default
and is not a summary judgment as was the case in
Fondse
does not in my view impact on the situation. Both default
judgments and summary judgments will ordinarily have final effect
capable of sustaining the operation of the
res
judicata
principle. The question
whether that doctrine will in any particular case fall to be relaxed
will not turn on whether it is a summary
judgment or a default
judgment but rather on their effect and whether there are, on the
specific facts of the case, any considerations
of equity which would
warrant a departure from the operation of the doctrine. In short,
summary judgments and default judgments
may each give rise to
situation of
res judicata,
provided only that the requisites for the operation of the doctrine
are satisfied, namely a
lis
between the same parties on the same cause of action for the same
relief which has previously been dispositively adjudicated.
Equitable considerations which might persuade a Court to relax the
application of the doctrine will apply irrespective of whether
the
judgment is summary in nature or has arisen in consequence of a
litigant’s default.
THE CONCEPT OF
RES JUDICATA
AND
THE RELAXATION THEREOF: THE BANK VIS-À-VIS THE REMAINING
DEFENDANTS
[50]
I am of the view that in the particular
circumstances of the case Ms Prinsloo cannot contend that the default
judgment is
res judicata
as between the Bank and her.
[51]
Given this, it is not open to the remaining
defendants to rely on that principle in seeking to resist the claims
which the Bank
has proffered against them. Strikingly, they were not
even parties to the proceedings before Judge Makume and they thus
fall short
of one of the essential elements necessary to sustain the
defence of
res judicata
.
[52]
The remaining defendants, however, contend
that by applying for default judgment against Ms Prinsloo the Bank
elected to seek judgment
in respect of the entire action. Thus, so
the argument runs, when granting the default judgment against Ms
Prinsloo, the Court
pronounced a final judgment and that in
consequence it became
functus officio
with the result that its authority over the subject matter of the
litigation as a whole came to an end. Hence, the contention
that a situation of
res judicata
arose not only as between the Bank and Ms Prinsloo but also as
between the Bank and the remaining defendants. I have rejected
these contentions vis-à-vis Ms Prinsloo, and I similarly
reject them vis-à-vis the remaining defendants.
[53]
It is perhaps well to remember that the
liability of debtors
in solidum
is joint and several and each one of them is liable to the creditor
for the full amount of the debt (
Williams
v Kirk
1932 (CPD) 159). The
creditor may elect to sue any one of them for the full debt or any
lesser amount (
Segell v Kerdia
Investments (Pty) Limited
1953(1) SA 20
(W) at 26G). The creditor in electing to sue one debtor
for the full amount or for that matter more than
one of the debtors
for equal or varying amounts does not thereby limit himself to
recovering from that debtor or those debtors
alone with any
accompanying abandonment to claim from the others (
Boyce
v Bloem
1960 (3) SA 855 (T) at
857D). This is so even if the creditor pursues his claim to
judgment for as long as the judgment
remains unsatisfied the debt
remains owing to him jointly and severally by all his debtors (
Grek
v Jankelowitz
1918 CPD 140
at 140 and
Williams v Kirk
1932 CPD 159
at 162).
[54]
It is thus clear that the Bank did no more
than seek judgment against one of several parties jointly and
severally liable for payment
of the debts sued upon. It did so
because that party (Ms Prinsloo) was in default, and this is
precisely what principles of procedure
permitted the bank to do. this
judgment has not been satisfied and on all known authority the Bank
was despite its default judgment
against Ms Prinsloo perfectly
entitled to proceed against the remaining defendants. This
entitlement will have endured even
if a situation of
res
judicata
had obtained between the Bank
and Ms Prinsloo.
THE RESCISSION APPLICATION
[55]
The Bank in the founding affidavit in the
rescission application relies on the provisions of Rule 42(1)(a),
alternatively on the
common law.
[56]
Rule 42 (1) reads as follows:
“
(1) The
Court may, in addition to any other powers it may have, mero motu
or upon the application of
any
party affected
, rescind or vary—
(a)
an order or judgment erroneously
sought or erroneously granted in the absence of
any
party affected
thereby;
(b)
an order of judgment in which there
is an ambiguity, or a patent error or omission, but only to the
extent of such ambiguity, oerror
or omission;
(c)
an order or judgment granted as a
result of a mistake common to the parties.”
(My
underlining)
[57]
Before determining whether the Bank has the
competence to invoke Rule 42(1)(a) it is perhaps desirable that I
consider the grounds
upon which it seeks to do so.
[58]
The Bank contends that the default judgment
against Ms Prinsloo was erroneously
sought
and granted in that it was entitled to no more
than an order striking down her opposition to the Bank’s
application to amend
its particulars of claim and not to the striking
down of the defence on the merits of the claim. In its replying
affidavit,
the Bank sought to enlarge the grounds upon which it had
invoked Rule 42(1)(a). It in this regard contended that the default
judgment
had also been erroneously sought and granted by virtue of
the fact that the Bank’s particulars of claim in their then
form
were excipiable and did not sustain a cognizable cause of
action. This enlargement was grounded on a point in law and the
Bank’s
reliance thereon will not occasion prejudice to the
defendants. I will consequently approach the matter on the
basis of the
enlarged grounds.
[59]
The Practice Manual provides for the
following in Directive 9.8.2:
“
Where
a party fails to deliver heads of argument and/or a practice note
within the stipulated period, the complying party may enrol
the
application for hearing. Such party shall simultaneously bring an
application on notice to the defaulting party that on the
date set
out therein, (which shall be at least 5 days from such notice), he or
she will apply for an order that the defaulting
party delivers his or
her heads of argument and practice note within 3 days of such order,
failing which the defaulting party’s
claim or defence be struck
out. Such application shall be set down on the interlocutory
roll referred to in 9.10. below.”
[60]
The application which had been enrolled
related to the Bank’s attempt to amend its particulars of
claim. The defendants
had opposed the amendment and the matter
would necessarily have had to be determined by the Court.
[61]
Heads of argument and the required practice
notes needed to be filed. Ms Prinsloo omitted to do so,
which omission endured
despite the compelling order which had been
granted against her and which had put her on terms to file the
necessary documents.
It would thus have been quite proper for the
Bank to approach the Court in order to strike down Ms Prinsloo’s
defence on
the merits of the action. The Bank was not confined to
striking down Ms Prinsloo’s opposition to the amendment,
thereby
(and postulating that relief was given to that effect)
allowing it vis-a-vis Ms Prinsloo to amend its particulars of claim
on an
unopposed basis. I am in this regard mindful that Ms
Prinsloo had as yet not filed a plea in the action. She had however
entered an appearance to defend it and it is that entry which the
Court was entitled to strike down. This would have entitled
the
Bank to take the default judgment which it did in fact take. I
am by no means persuaded that the order was on this ground
erroneously sought and granted.
[62]
It is common cause that when default
judgment was sought by the Bank against Ms Prinsloo its
particulars of claim were excipiable
and did not sustain a cause of
action. It was clearly errant on the part of the Bank to seek a
default judgment on those defective
particulars of claim. (See
Silver
Falcon Trading 333 (Pty) Ltd and Others v Nedbank Ltd
2012 (3) SA 371
(KZP)). It seems to me that had the true facts
been drawn to the attention of Judge Makume, he would not have
granted judgment.
To that extent, Rule 42(1)(a) would notionally have
been available to the Bank but for the impediment to which I will now
refer.
[63]
The question arises whether the remedy of a
rescission under Rule 42(1)(a) is available to the Bank.
[64]
The words
“
any
party affected” where it appears for the first time in Rule 42
are of wide import and on the face of it, it would include
any one or
more of the parties to the suit. On that basis a plaintiff who
had sought and obtained a judgment will have the
competence to
subsequently seek its rescission. However, the words “any
party affected” where they appear in
subsection (a) of Rule
42(1) must be given effect to. Those words connote that the
foreshadowed remedy is to be confined
to the party who was absent at
the time when the judgment was sought and granted. It
would not have been necessary
for the words in question to be
qualified by the words “in the absence” if it had not
been intended to impose some
limitation on the party competent to
apply for the rescission of the judgment in question. This
holds the consequence that
the remedy under sub-rule (a) is only
available to the absent party and thus not to the party who had
initially sought and obtained
the judgment. This constraint
does not apply where relief is grounded on subsection (b) and (c) of
Rule 42(1).
[65]
I am mindful of the decision in
Ex
parte Jooste
1968(4) SA 427 O where it
was held that Rule 42(1)(a) is in its terms wide enough to permit a
party who had obtained a judgment
in an
ex
parte
application to subsequently apply
for the rescission of that judgment. This gives rise to an
incongruent result. If
the application is
ex
parte
in nature the applicant who
sought and obtained the order, may seek to rescind it. However
the applicant who sought and obtained
the order in an application
where others were party to it would not enjoy that competence.
Rescission in the latter situation
would only be available if one of
those parties was absent and then only at the instance of that absent
party. This incongruence
is perhaps due to the fact the words “in
the absence of any party affected thereby” in sub-rule (a) will
have no application
where the application is
ex
parte
in nature.
[66]
In short, the words “
in
the absence of any party affected thereby”
are
in my judgment of a limiting nature. It confines the remedy
under Rule 42(1)(a) to the absent party only and thus not
to the
party who had initially sought and obtained the judgment.
[67]
This approach is consonant with the
approach which was adopted in
Stander v
Absa Bank
1997(4) SA 873 (E) where
Nepgen J at 882 E – F
had this to say
on the sub-rule:
“
It
seems to me that the very reference to “absence of any party
affected,” is an indication that what was intended was
that
such party, who was not present when the order or judgment was
granted, and who was therefore not in a position to place facts
before the Court which would have or could have persuaded it not to
grant such order or judgment, is afforded the opportunity to
approach
the Court in order to have such order or judgment rescinded or varied
on the basis of facts, of which the Court
would initially have
been unaware, which would justify this being done. Furthermore,
the Rule is not restricted to cases
of an order or judgment
erroneously granted, but also to an order or judgment erroneously
sought. It is difficult to conceive
of circumstances where a
Court would be able to conclude that an order or judgment was
erroneously sought if no additional facts,
indicating that this is
so, where placed before the Court.”
[68]
The approach of Nepgen J was endorsed by H
J Erasmus J in
President of the RSA v
Eisenberg and Associates
2005 (1) SA
247 (C) at 264 D – J.
[69]
It would thus seem to me that Rule 42(1)(a)
is designed to afford a remedy to the party who is absent when a
judgment which affects
that parties’ interests is taken,
provided only that the judgment was erroneously sought or erroneously
granted. This remedy
does not extend to the party who sought the
order and who was thus present when it was moved and granted.
[70]
Ms Prinsloo was absent when Judge Makume
granted the default judgment against her. Notionally then, she
enjoyed the right under
Rule 42(1)(a) to institute proceedings for
the rescission of that order, provided she could demonstrate that the
order was either
erroneously sought or granted. The Bank was not the
absent party and could consequently not rely on the sub-rule to
secure the
required rescission.
[71]
I remain unpersuaded that the Bank had the
necessary
locus standi
to institute proceedings for the rescission of the default judgment.
This then disposes of the rescission application, insofar
as it
is based on Rule 42(1)(a). I merely add that but for the
locus standi
issue I would have been disposed to rescind the default judgment.
[72]
The Bank’s reliance on the common law
in grounding its application for rescission is equally misplaced.
It in this regard
seems to me that the common law remedy is confined
to persons who in consequence of some or other default have been
saddled with
a judgment against them (see in this regard
De
Wet & Others v Western Bank Limited
1979(2) 1031 (AD) at 1041A-1043A.
[73]
The Bank consequently has no alternative
remedy.
SUMMARY
[74]
In the result, the Bank cannot succeed in
its application to rescind the default judgment. It falls to be
dismissed.
Prayer 1 of the counter-application was not
necessary and I need not make an order in relation thereto. As
to rest the case
asserted by Ms Prinsloo and the remaining defendants
must fail. This Court is not
functus
officio
and the default judgment is not
to be treated as a final judgment.
Res
judicata
does not arise
,
whether as between the Bank and Ms
Prinsloo or whether as between the Bank and the remaining defendants.
The action will consequently
proceed in the ordinary course and
presumably the next step in those proceedings will be concerned with
the Bank’s application
to amend its particulars of claim.
[75]
As to costs, it is of course true that the
Bank’s application for the rescission of the default judgment
must fail. Ms
Prinsloo and the remaining defendants have
to that end enjoyed some degree of success. Having said this,
the Bank has enjoyed
overall success in the litigation. It has
defeated the central and all important contentions that the Court is
functus officio
and that the litigation between it, Ms Prinsloo and the remaining
defendants is at an end by virtue of the
res
judicata
doctrine. The Bank has
enjoyed the overall substantial success and it seems to me that in
all the circumstances it would
be proper to direct the respondents to
pay the costs of the proceedings, jointly and severally, the one
paying the others to be
absolved, on the attorney and client scale,
being that which was contractually agreed upon.
I consequently make the following
orders:-
1.
The applicant’s application to
rescind the judgment of Makhume J of 2 November 2022 against the
third respondent in her personal
capacity is dismissed.
2.
There will be no order on prayer 1 of the
counter-application.
3.
The orders sought in prayers 2 and 3 of the
counter-application are dismissed.
4.
The first to fifth defendants are to pay
the costs of the proceedings, jointly and severally, the one paying
the others to be absolved,
on the scale as between attorney and
client.
Gerald Farber
Acting Judge of the High Court
Gauteng Division, Johannesburg
Counsel
for the Applicant
:
AC
Botha SC
N
Alli
Instructed
by
:
Jay Mothibi
Incorporated
melissa@jay.co.za
Counsel
for 1
st
,
2
nd
,
4
th %
5
th
Respondents
:
J de Beer
ACJ van Dyk
Instructed
by
:
A
Kock & Associates
alet@mk-inc.co.za
Counsel
for the 3
rd
Respondent
:
R
du Plessis SC
M
Boonzaaier
Instructed
by
:
LDV
Attorneys Inc
shani@sv-law.co.za
sino noindex
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