Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 88South Africa
Johan N.O and Another v Kensington Residents and Ratepayers Association NPC and Others (2019/2080) [2022] ZAGPJHC 88 (21 February 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
21 February 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Johan N.O and Another v Kensington Residents and Ratepayers Association NPC and Others (2019/2080) [2022] ZAGPJHC 88 (21 February 2022)
Johan N.O and Another v Kensington Residents and Ratepayers Association NPC and Others (2019/2080) [2022] ZAGPJHC 88 (21 February 2022)
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sino date 21 February 2022
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
1.REPORTABLE:
NO
2.OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
3.REVISED
NO
CASE NUMBER:
2019/2080
In
the matter between:
UNODA
JOHAN
N.O
1
st
Applicant
KATJA
DOROTHEA MARTINI N.O
2
nd
Applicant
And
KENSINGTON
RESIDENTS AND
RATEPAYERS
ASSOCIATION
NPC
1
st
Respondent
CORLIA
ROBERTS
2
nd
Respondent
JOHANNESBURG
CITY BACK PACKERS CC
3
rd
Respondent
THE CITY OF
JOHANNESBURG
METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY
4
th
Respondent
JUDGMENT
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down electronically
by circulation to the parties’ legal representatives by e-mail. The
date and time for
hand-down is deemed to be 10h00 on the 21st of
February 2022.
DIPPENAAR J
:
[1]
The applicants, by way of application
launched on or about 15 February 2021, seek orders respectively
rescinding and varying different
portions of an order granted in this
court on 21 May 2019 pursuant to a provisional order granted by
agreement between the parties
on 11 April 2019. It was common cause
that the final order granted was in terms of the respondents’
notice of motion dated 23 January
2019 and that in terms of the
interim order, the parties had agreed on attenuated relief. The
applicants are the sole trustees of
the Martin John Family Trust
(“the Trust”). The application is opposed by the first
respondent.
[2]
The applicants’ case is that it was
not open to the respondents to seek the relief granted in the final
order on the return date
as the basis of the orders differ
fundamentally from the interim order which should have been subject
to finality. As the applicants
were under the impression that on the
return date the provisional order granted by agreement would be made
final, they did not appear
on the return date and the order was
erroneously granted in their absence as envisaged in r 42(1)(a) of
the uniform rules of court.
On their version, the parties through
their legal representatives had agreed that it would not be
appropriate for the court to prohibit
the use of the property for
accommodation purposes and the Trust could not be prohibited from
conducting a business it was always
intended for. They further
contended that there was no justification for the punitive order
granted against them.
[3]
In its answering papers, the first
respondent opposes the application on the basis that there are no
bona fide reasons why the final
order should not have been granted
and the applicants’ misunderstanding of the interim order, which
clearly envisaged that on the
return date the respondents would seek
relief in terms of their notice of motion. It further disputes that
any final agreement was
concluded not to prohibit the property from
being used for accommodation purposes and contend that the agreement
was limited to the
interim order. The first respondent further
contends: (i) that the first applicant was not authorised to depose
to the founding affidavit
or to launch the application on behalf of
the Trust, which lack of authority could not be ratified; and (ii)
that there is no valid
explanation for the unreasonable delay in the
launching of the present application. It seeks the dismissal of the
application as
an abuse.
[4]
I
agree with the applicants that the objection pertaining to the lack
of authority of the first applicant lacks merit. In its answering
papers, objection was taken to the authority of the first applicant
to depose to the founding affidavit. It is well established that
it
is the institution of the proceedings which must be authorised
[1]
rather than the authority of a witness to depose to an affidavit. The
Martini John Family Trust, which owns the properties in question
has
two trustees and both are cited as applicants in the proceedings
[2]
.
The first respondent did not put up any countervailing evidence
casting doubt upon their status as such.
[5]
Whilst
there was a considerable delay in the launching of the proceedings
and there is merit in the first respondent’s criticism,
it is not
necessary for a party to show good cause under r42(1)(a) if the
applicants establish that the order had been erroneously
sought or
erroneously granted
[3]
.
[6]
The
principles pertaining to an order being erroneously sought or granted
are usefully summarised in
Kgomo
v Standard Bank of South Africa
[4]
.
Relevant to the present proceedings are the principles that : (i) the
rule caters for a mistake in the proceedings; (ii) the mistake
may
either be one which appears on the record of the proceedings or one
which subsequently becomes apparent from the information
made
available in an application for rescission of judgment; (ii) the
error may arise either in the process of seeking the judgment
on the
part of the applicant for default judgment or in the process of
granting default judgment on the part of the court; and (iv)
a
judgment cannot be said to have been erroneously granted in the light
of a subsequently disclosed defence which was not known or
raised at
the time of default judgment.
[7]
Prayer 6 of the interim order, granted by
agreement between the parties, provides:
“
The
Respondents are called upon to show good cause in this Honourable
Court on the return date of the rule nisi being 13 May 2019
at 10h00
why the Prayers in terms of the Notice of Motion in this matter
should not be made a Final Order
”.
[8]
The
wording of the order is clear. At the time the applicants were
legally represented. The applicants admitted not appearing on the
return date as “
we
did not know that the court could procedurally go beyond the interim
order and make a far-reaching order with unintended consequences”
.
I agree with the first respondent that ignorance of the law is not a
valid defence. The applicants were at the time legally represented
and any incorrect legal advice received
[5]
,
cannot be translated into a procedural irregularity in the granting
of the order.
[9]
The agreement now contended for by the
applicants in any event would constitute a subsequently disclosed
defence which was not disclosed
at the time of granting of the final
order. That is not, however, dispositive of the issue, as the first
respondent contends.
[10]
It
is trite that an order is erroneously granted if there existed at the
time of its issue a fact of which the court was unaware,
which would
have precluded the granting of the judgment and which would have
induced the court, if aware of it, not to grant the
judgment.
[6]
This is such a case.
[11]
In their founding affidavit, the applicants
contend that the respondents’ application was opposed and rely on
an answering affidavit
dated 10 April 2019 and delivered on 11 April
2019.
[12]
In
its answering papers, the first respondent pleads that the answering
affidavit “
was
not accepted by the above Honourable Court as being properly before
the court…As such, for the Trust to now aver that the matter
was
fully opposed is disingenuous and seeks to mislead the above
Honourable Court herein”
.
[7]
Elsewhere in the answering affidavit, the first respondent pleads:
“
Lastly
and most importantly, it should be noted that the Answering Affidavit
which was attached to the Founding Affidavit…as proof
of a bona
fide defence, was previously rejected by the above Honourable Court
as not being properly before the Court and was as such
disregarded by
the above Honourable Court for the purposes of the Main Application.
The reason for this was due to the fact that
the affidavit was out of
time and the Trust did not seek condonation for the late filing of
the Affidavit. As such, same should be
disregarded in this
application, for the same reasons.
In
reply the contention that the court discarded the answering affidavit
was hotly contested as being untrue and applicants persisted
in
contending the application was opposed. The record of the proceedings
on 11 April and the interim order make no reference to the
fate of
the answering affidavit.
[13]
On this issue there has been a procedural
irregularity. Even if the answering affidavit was not considered by
the court who made the
interim order, which appears to be the case as
an order was granted by agreement between the parties on 11 April
2019, the answering
affidavit was served and filed and should have
been placed before the court which made the final order on 21 May
2019.
[14]
From the record and specifically the index
to the main application dated 13 May 2019, it does not appear that
the answering affidavit
formed part of the application papers which
served before the court when the final order was granted on 21 May
2019.
[15]
That court was not aware of the existence
or content of the answering affidavit, which may well have induced
the court, if aware of
it, not to grant the order or at least to have
taken the contents of the answering affidavit into account in
considering the matter.
For present purposes it is not necessary to
consider the merits of the defences raised in the applicants’
answering affidavit.
[16]
Moreover, the final order was granted, not
on the designated return date of 13 May 2019, but on 21 May 2019. A
notice of set down
of respondents’ application in the unopposed
motion court for 21 May 2019 was served on the applicants’
attorneys on 13 May 2019.
No notice of set down was delivered for 13
May 2019. The interim order lapsed on that date. These discrepancies
were however not
raised or explained by either of the parties in
their papers.
[17]
Although the main emphasis of the
applicants’ challenge was the limitation of the order to that
agreed upon in the interim order,
which in my view lacks merit for
reasons already stated, I am persuaded that there has been a
procedural irregularity which renders
the order of 21 May 2019
“erroneously sought or erroneously granted” as envisaged by
r42(1)(a) and justifies the rescission of
the order.
[18]
I am not however persuaded that a valid
basis has been established to vary the final order in the terms
contended for by the applicants.
[19]
There is no reason to deviate from the
normal principle that costs follow the result. Although the
applicants are not granted all
the relief sought, they have achieved
substantial success.
[20]
I grant the following order:
[1] The order granted on 21 May
2019 is rescinded;
[2] The first respondent is
directed to pay the costs of the application.
EF
DIPPENAAR
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT JOHANNESBURG
APPEARANCES
DATE
OF HEARING
:
08 February 2022
DATE
OF JUDGMENT
:
21 February 2022
APPLICANTS’
COUNSEL
: Adv. C. Malatjie
APPLICANTS’
ATTORNEYS
: Mathopa Sebushi Attorneys
1
st
RESPONDENT’S COUNSEL
: Adv. T. Paige-Green
1
st
RESPONDENT’S ATTORNEYS
: Schindlers Attorneys
[1]
Ganes
and Another v Telecom Namibia Ltd (608/2002)
[2003] ZASCA 123
;
[2004] 2 All SA 609
(SCA) par [19]
[2]
Mariola
and Others v Kayeeddie NO and Others
1995 (2) SA 728
(W) at 731C-E
[3]
Rossiter
and Others v Nedbank Limited (96/2014)
[2015] ZASCA 196
para 6;
Kgomo v Standard Bank of South Africa
2016 (2) SA 184
(GP) para [11]
and the authorities referred to therein
[4]
2016
(2) SA 184
(GP) at 187F-188C.
[5]
De Wet
v Western Bank Ltd 1979 (2) SA 1031 (A)
[6]
Occupiers,
Berea v De Wet
2017 (5) SA 346
(CC) at 366E-367A
[7]
Para
13 and 22 answering affidavit
sino noindex
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