Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 218South Africa
Jooste and Others v Dr Maureen Allem Inc and Another (A5033/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 218 (6 April 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
6 April 2022
Judgment
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## Jooste and Others v Dr Maureen Allem Inc and Another (A5033/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 218 (6 April 2022)
Jooste and Others v Dr Maureen Allem Inc and Another (A5033/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 218 (6 April 2022)
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sino date 6 April 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: A5033/2021
REPORTABLE:
No
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: No
06/04/2022
In
the matter between:
JOOSTE,
B
1
ST
APPELLANT
THE
LONGEVITY INSTITUTE (PTY) LTD
2
ND
APPELLANT
T/A
THE LONGEVITY CENTRE
DR
BURT JOOSTE AND ASSOCIATES INC
3
RD
APPELLANT
XENEPHIN
LUDICK
4
TH
APPELLANT
and
DR
MAUREEN ALLEM
INC
1
ST
RESPONDENT
SKIN
RENEWAL
CC
2
ND
RESPONDNT
JUDGMENT
YACOOB
J:
1.
The appellants appeal a costs order made against
them by Molahlehi J in an interlocutory application, with leave of
the court below.
2.
The respondents (the plaintiffs in the main
action and the applicants in the interlocutory application at issue)
sought to compel
discovery by the appellants of certain documents.
The pleadings in the main action are not part of the appeal record
and this court
is limited to the papers in the interlocutory
application, and the judgment under appeal, for its understanding of
the action and
the arising issues.
3.
The documents sought by the respondents fell into
two broad categories. Items 1-11 on the discovery notice sought
client lists from
the various defendants, and items 12-35 with
payslips, invoices, and financial statements.
4.
Items 5-8 dealt with client lists of the fourth
and fifth defendants (who are not appellants, no order having been
made against
them), but on it being pointed out in the answering
affidavit that neither of these defendants had practiced for their
own account,
the respondents withdrew the relief sought regarding
items 5-8. The costs related to items 5-8 and the withdrawal of that
part
of the relief have been reserved for determination at the main
action.
5.
The respondents were partially successful in the
application to compel discovery, and the court ordered that certain
documents (items
1-4 and 9-11 on the notice of discovery) (“the
first group of documents”) be made available by the appellants
under
a confidentiality regime.
6.
The court found that the remaining documents
(items 12-35 on the notice of discovery) (“the second group of
documents”)
may well be relevant to the quantum, but that the
parties may settle on quantum once merits have been determined, and
therefore
that the disclosure of those documents should stand down
until after the determination of the merits. Although the court did
not
explicitly include in the order an order directing that merits
should be determined first, and separately, in terms of Rule 33(4),
the court did find that it was appropriate to postpone the
consideration of the quantum pending finalisation of the merits, and
this was therefore the basis on which the disclosure of those
documents has not yet been decided.
7.
Finally, the court ordered the appellants to pay
costs.
8.
In granting leave to appeal the court found that
another court may find differently on the costs award because the
reason for the
opposition to the discovery notice was to protect
confidential information, and because the respondents were not
successful regarding
items 12-35 of the notice of discovery.
ITEMS
1-4 and 9-11 (THE FIRST GROUP OF DOCUMENTS)
9.
In this court the appellants argued that they
were not just entitled, but obliged, to resist the production of the
first group of
documents, on the basis that the information was
confidential. They suggest that this is a case in which costs ought
not to follow
the result because they were obliged to take the
position they did, to protect their patients’ privacy.
10.
There is no merit in that argument. As set out
clearly in the judgment of the court
a quo
(with which the appellants do not quibble), there is a long history
of documents which are confidential being made available subject
to
confidentiality regimes. The appellants did not have to wait for the
court to suggest a confidentiality regime. They could have
insisted
that they would produce the documents only if subject to a
confidentiality regime. They did not do so, nor did they suggest
it
in their answering affidavit to the application to compel.
11.
Instead, in their response to the notice of
discovery, the appellants contended that the documentation did not
exist and is in any
event not relevant. This is inconsistent with
their current position. It is quite clear that had they admitted that
the documentation
did exist but claimed confidentiality, proceedings
may have taken quite a different turn. As it is, the appellants’
contention
in the response document that the documents simply did not
exist meant that an application to compel was unavoidable.
12.
In their answering affidavit to the application
to compel, the appellants contend that the documentation is not
relevant and that
it is subject to confidentiality and privacy
requirements. The non-existence of the documents was no longer relied
upon, presumably
since the respondents had demonstrated that the
appellants were obliged by law to keep such records. Again, the
appellants relied
on confidentiality as an absolute bar to
production, rather than stipulating that the documents would be
produced subject to a
confidentiality regime. The appellants did not
distinguish between the two groups of documents as far as relevance
is concerned.
13.
The confidentiality issue is met in the replying
affidavit by the respondents pointing out that a confidentiality
regime could be
imposed to deal with that issue. It is significant
that it was the respondents who suggested this. The respondents could
not have
done this earlier because the first time the appellants
raised confidentiality was in the answering affidavit rather than in
the
response to the discovery notice.
14.
In my view the appellants were not bound to
refuse discovery because the documents were confidential. In fact,
they did not do so.
Their refusal was based on the untrue contention
that the documents did not exist, and that would have required the
bringing of
the application to compel.
15.
Had the appellants considered at the time of
refusal that the documents were confidential, it was open to them to
suggest or request
a confidentiality regime, or to refuse for that
reason, making it possible for the respondents to, if they so wished,
request a
confidentiality regime.
16.
There is also no merit, therefore, in the
appellants’ contention that the imposition of a confidentiality
regime somehow means
that the respondents were less successful
regarding these documents. Had the context been different, for
example had the respondents
opposed such a suggestion by the
appellants, that may have been a factor in the appellants’
favour. But, as I have set out
above, that is not what happened here.
17.
There is no doubt in my mind that the court
a
quo
was correct in ordering the appellants to
pay costs of the application insofar as they related to the first
group of documents.
18.
Of course, that is not to say that a court would
not have been entitled to order the respondents to pay costs if the
application
to compel the remainder of the documents had been found
to be obviously vexatious, or had otherwise resulted in a finding
against
the respondents.
ITEMS
12-35 (THE SECOND GROUP OF DOCUMENTS)
19.
The appellants also contended that, because the
court did not grant the application with regard to the majority of
the items, it
is they, the appellants, who were overall substantially
successful in the application to compel and therefore that the costs
order
should be in their favour.
20.
They submit that a court “will not”
allow a party who does not obtain all the relief sought in their
notice of motion
to recover all their costs. This is patently not the
case, and neither of the cases referred to by the appellants in their
heads
in support of this submission bear it out.
21.
Mouton v Die Mynwerkersunie
1977
(1) SA 119
(A) deals with the circumstances in which one departs from
the general rule of costs following the results, and held that
success
only on a few of the points raised on appeal, or on a point
raised for the first time in appeal, are among the circumstance in
which a court
can
deviate
from the rule. The court emphasised that
all
the relevant circumstances are considered in the exercise of the
discretion on a costs award. (My emphasis)
22.
In
Blue
Circle
Ltd
v Valuation
Appeal
Board, Lichtenburg
[1991] ZASCA 43
;
1991 (2) SA 772
(A), the
then Appellate Division found that, substantively, the appellant had
been at least as successful in those proceedings
as the respondent,
if not more so, despite the dismissal of the appeal. It was for that
reason that the court made no order for
costs on the appeal. The
court also took into account that the respondent had not behaved in
the proceedings as properly as it
might. The authority supports the
wide discretion of the court to take all circumstances of the
proceedings into account and does
not support the appellants’
submission that a court “will not” award costs to a party
who is not one hundred
percent successful.
23.
Parties who are substantially successful
often recover all their costs, as do parties only partially
successful when the circumstances
warrant it. It is however the case
that partial success may lead to a partial costs order.
24.
In submitting that the costs order should be
overturned, the appellants submit that the respondents’ notice
called for discovery
that is far too wide, because it included
documents relevant to the quantum of their damages. They do not
explain why this was
inappropriate. At the time the notice was
served, neither party appears to have considered asking for the
separation of merits
and quantum, and the respondents as plaintiffs
were entitled to seek discovery of documents to enable to prepare for
trial on both
merits and quantum. It was only after the court,
mero
motu
, decided that it was not necessary to
deal with quantum before merits were determined that it became
appropriate to delay determining
the relevance of those documents.
The respondents cannot be faulted for having sought them at the time
they did, in the circumstances
that existed at the time.
COSTS
IN RELATION TO THE APPLICATION AS A WHOLE
25.
The respondents, naturally, contend that it is
they who were substantially successful in the application to compel
as a whole, because
they were successful in obtaining an order for
the production of the first group of documents and because they
achieved relief
they would not have achieved had they not brought the
application.
26.
That the
court
a
quo
had
a wide discretion and may in appropriate circumstances depart from
the rule that costs follow the results does not help the
appellants
if they are not able to establish either that the circumstances
support such a departure, or that they were substantially
successful
and were deserving of a costs order, and that the court’s
failure to exercise its discretion in their favour was
capricious,
arbitrary or based on an incorrect principle. The Supreme Court of
Appeal acknowledged in
Economic
Freedom Fighters v Manuel
2021 (3) SA 425
(SCA) at paragraph [131] that this has been settled
law since
Fripp
v
Gibbon
&
Co
1913
AD
354
– a period of over a century. Nor do the appellants suggest
that there is any basis on which to tamper with the principle.
27.
Even if the respondents were not substantially
successful, it would have been open to the court to make the costs
order it did,
if it considered that the circumstances warranted it.
28.
In my view the circumstances set out above,
particularly regarding the appellants’ stance during the
interlocutory application
do warrant a costs order being made against
them.
29.
Even ignoring the fact that the appellants’
stance in the discovery process forced the respondents to approach
the court,
the respondents’ incomplete success does not entitle
the appellants to a costs order that is different than that made. If
the respondents were not entirely successful, the appellants were not
successful at all. They sought the complete dismissal of
the
application, and were entirely unsuccessful on that score, on the
parts of it in relation to which the costs order was made.
30.
There is nothing starkly unfair or glaring in the
costs order of the court below and I can see nothing that entitles
this court
to interfere with the exercise of discretion. At most the
appellants may have been entitled to an order that, on the question
of
the second group of documents, each party should pay its own
costs. This does not make the order that was made inappropriate, and
I do not see any reason to interfere with the order given.
31.
For these reasons, we order as follows:
The
appeal is dismissed with costs.
S.
YACOOB
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
I
agree.
EJ
FRANCIS
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
I
agree
M
L SENYATSI
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Date
of hearing: 20 October 2021
Date
of judgment: 06 April 2022
Appearances
For
the appellants:
G Amm
Briefed
by:
Fluxmans Attorneys
For
the respondents:
S Miller
Briefed
by:
Schindlers Attorneys
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