Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 263South Africa
Airports Company South Africa (SOC) Limited v Tswelokgotso Trading Enterprise CC (13733/2017) [2022] ZAGPJHC 263 (26 April 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
26 April 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Airports Company South Africa (SOC) Limited v Tswelokgotso Trading Enterprise CC (13733/2017) [2022] ZAGPJHC 263 (26 April 2022)
Airports Company South Africa (SOC) Limited v Tswelokgotso Trading Enterprise CC (13733/2017) [2022] ZAGPJHC 263 (26 April 2022)
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sino date 26 April 2022
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NUMBER: 13733/2017
REPORTABLE: No
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: No
REVISED.
26 APRIL 2022
In
the matter between:
AIRPORTS
COMPANY SOUTH AFRICA (SOC) LIMITED
Plaintiff
and
TSWELOKGOTSO
TRADING ENTERPRISE CC
Defendant
JUDGMENT
K.
MEYER AJ
[1]
In this application the plaintiff, Airports Company South Africa
(SOC) Limited, seeks
leave to effect amendments to its particulars of
claim filed in a trial action issued during April 2017 against the
defendant,
Tswelokgotso Trading Enterprise CC.
[2]
The plaintiff’s cause of action is the defendant’s
alleged failure to
pay its monthly rental obligations in terms of a
lease agreement entered into between the parties in respect of
certain premises
for the conducting of a business.
[3]
In its particulars of claim the plaintiff has claimed payment of
R5 820 280,00,
interest and costs against the defendant as
a result of the defendant’s failure to comply with its rental
obligations and
it sets out certain pertinent terms of the lease
agreement entered into between the parties. It attached a copy of the
lease agreement
to the particulars of claim.
[4]
The plaintiff avers its own proper performance of its obligations
arising from the
terms of the lease agreement, the defendant’s
breach by non-payment, its demand made to the defendant for payment
and its
consequent cancellation of the agreement.
[5]
The defendant pleaded to the particulars of claim and instituted a
counterclaim on
5 June 2017. Thereafter the plaintiff pleaded to the
defendant’s counterclaim during or about November 2020. On 23
April
2020 the plaintiff served a notice of intention to amend its
particulars of claim in terms of rule 28, whereupon the defendant
filed its objection thereto on 21 May 2020.
[6]
On 23 December 2020 the plaintiff launched its application for leave
to amend the
particulars of claim in terms of rule 28(4). In terms of
the amendment, the description of the parties in paragraphs 1 and 2
thereof
was retained and the balance of the particulars of claim,
i.e. paragraphs 3 to 6 thereof including the prayers, were
substituted
with the proposed new paragraphs. The proposed amended
particulars of claim are more detailed and comprehensive than the
existing
particulars of claim, and may be described as having
features that promote the proper ventilation of the issues between
the parties.
The plaintiff’s cause of action remains unaltered,
that is, the defendant’s alleged failure to pay its monthly
rental
obligations in terms of the lease agreement between the
parties.
[7]
The proposed amendment contains additional allegations relating to
matters such as
the court’s jurisdiction, dispute resolution,
legal costs on the scale as between attorney and client, the mora
interest
rate, the cancellation date of the agreement and the
defendant’s alleged undertaking during September 2014 to make
payment
of its outstanding debt. These are matters which are not the
subject of the defendant’s objections.
[8]
The defendant’s objection to the plaintiff’s proposed
amendment is that,
firstly, the plaintiff relies on ‘new
allegations and new amounts’ (the quantum claimed) therein,
secondly, that the
allegations and amended amounts sought to be
introduced by the amendment have prescribed in terms of the
Prescription Act 1969
, thirdly, the requisite breach notices were not
attached to the particulars of claim, and lastly that the correctness
of the amended
quantum of the plaintiff’s claim cannot be
ascertained.
[9]
The plaintiff contends that none of the grounds proffered by the
defendant in the
notice of objection justify refusal of the proposed
amendment. Further, the plaintiff contends in particular that the
notice of
objection fails to meet the requirements of
rule 28(
2) of
the Uniform Rules of Court in that the allegations objected to are
neither identified nor has the exact reason why they should
not be
allowed being set out in the notice. Similarly, the plaintiff
submits, the lack of exactitude and the alleged objectionable
impact
of the proposed amendments relating to the alleged prescription of
the new allegations, render these objections unjustifiable.
[10]
The initial amount of rental claimed by the plaintiff in its
particulars of claim was the sum
of R5 820 280,00, which
was predicated upon certain clauses in the agreement. The quantum of
the plaintiff’s claim
for rental is reduced in terms of the
proposed amendments to the sum of R3 920 395,49. This
amount is made up of the
rental previously claimed, though reduced,
and certain charges such as operating costs and disbursements made.
[11]
The issue for determination is whether the proposed amendment
introduces a new cause of action
and, if so, the defendant contends
that the amendment ought not to be allowed and the application
accordingly dismissed. The ancillary
charges such as the operating
costs and disbursements, formed part of the defendant’s monthly
rental obligation, the fixed
rental forming one component and the
variable components forming the other part of the rental obligation.
The agreement is clear
as regards both components of the monthly
rental obligation. The plaintiff correctly contended that its cause
of action remains
the same as that which was pleaded at the outset,
namely payment of the arrear rentals owed in terms of the lease
agreement. The
ancillary charges are exactly that – ancillary –
to the rental. Rather than introducing a new cause of
action, the
effect of the proposed amendment will be an expansion of the base of
the existing cause of action.
[12]
The proposed amendment will enhance the proper ventilation of the
disputes between the parties
and allow the parties to identify the
real issues for determination in the interests of justice in the
trial action. The plaintiff
has explained the necessity to amend the
quantum of its claim thus: “
the amount claimed is amended
because on a proper and diligent consideration of conciliation of the
defendant’s account the
plaintiff discovered that the amount
the defendant owes to it is less than that initially claimed in the
particulars of claim
”. This fact is relevant to the
consideration of prejudice to either party. It is trite that an
important consideration in
applications for amendment of pleadings is
the question whether allowing the amendment will cause the opposing
party such prejudice
as cannot be cured by an order for costs and,
where appropriate, a postponement of the matter. In this matter the
parties are not
yet at trial and accordingly a postponement is not
necessary. Moreover, prejudice to the defendant in the event that the
amendment
is allowed has neither been alleged nor established. In
fact, the quantum of the plaintiff’s claim is considerably
reduced
by the proposed amendment.
[13]
I turn now to the defendant’s submissions regarding the
relevance of the
Prescription Act. Prescription
begins to run as soon
as a debt is due. As stated in
Erasmus
v Grunnow
,
[1]
“t
he
legislature saw a debt as a unitary concept for the purpose of
prescription. It is not divisible in a sense that prescription
can
run against part of a debt and not run against another part.
”
[14]
Accordingly, it is clear that it is the debt that prescribes, and not
only part of the debt.
In this matter the amount introduced in the
amendment is part and parcel of the debt. The defendant’s debt
arose when it
failed to pay its rental monthly, as alleged in the
particulars of claim, and an amendment of the quantum of the claim in
respect
of the same debt does not bring about a new debt. Moreover,
submissions and arguments regarding prescription may be dealt with
more appropriately at the trial.
[15]
The defendant has further raised the objection that the proposed
amendment makes the pleadings
excipiable in the sense that certain
default notices referred to therein are not attached to the
particulars of claim. The said
notices form part of the
facta
probantia,
and not the
facta probanda
required to be set
out in a pleading. Accordingly, these are matters for evidence and
will similarly more appropriately be dealt
with at the trial.
[16]
The defendant has further submitted that the guidance provided by the
court in the matter of
Imprefed
P/L v National Transport Commission
[2]
must be taken into account. In this matter it cannot be said that the
original particulars of claim were “
positively
misleading by referring explicitly to certain clauses of the contract
as identifying the cause of action when another
is intended or will
at some later stage – in this case at the last possible moment
be relied upon
”.
The plaintiff has proffered an explanation as to how it came about
that the need for an amendment was recognised and is
now sought. On
no construction of the facts set out in the papers herein can it be
said that the plaintiff positively misled the
defendant, nor did it
wait to the “
last
possible moment
”
to change course. The plaintiff simply seeks to widen the basis of a
now reduced quantum of its claim for monthly rental
which the
defendant allegedly failed to pay. Moreover, what is to be gained by
the amendment is a clearer definition of the evidentiary
basis for
the plaintiff’s claim and definition of the issues.
CONDONATION
OF LATE UPLOADING OF DOCUMENTS
[17]
The defendant in the hearing of this matter raised a technical issue
relating to the fact that
the plaintiff had failed to upload a
complete copy of the agreement of lease to the particulars of claim
referred to in the objection.
The parties stood down for some time in
order for the plaintiff’s counsel and attorney to address the
matter with the result
that the plaintiff’s attorney filed an
affidavit confirming that this was an unintentional error. I am
satisfied with the
explanation proffered during the hearing and
accordingly condone any non-compliance in this regard.
COSTS
[18]
It was submitted on behalf of the defendant that the plaintiff ought
to be liable for the costs
of the amendment if granted, while the
submission on behalf of the plaintiff was that the determining
question is whether or not
the defendant’s opposition was
reasonable. If it was reasonable, then the plaintiff ought to carry
the costs and if not,
it should not. The objection of the defendant
to the proposed amendment was, in my view, unreasonable in all the
circumstances
of this matter. However, the plaintiff’s
application was launched some seven months after the defendant’s
notice of
objection to the proposed amendment. Moreover, the
plaintiff required the condonation referred to. I do not believe,
therefore,
that it will be an appropriate costs award to mulct the
defendant for all the costs of the application.
[19]
Accordingly, it is ordered that:
1.1
The plaintiff is granted leave to amend its
particulars of claim in terms of the notice to amend dated 23 April
2020; and
1.2
each party is to pay its own costs of this
application.
K
MEYER
Acting
Judge of the High Court of South Africa
Gauteng
Division, Johannesburg
Electronically
delivered: this judgment was prepared and ordered by the acting judge
whose name is reflected and is handed down
electronically by
circulation to the parties/their legal representatives by email and
by uploading to the electronic file of this
matter on CaseLines. The
date of the judgment is 26 April 2022.
Heard:
27 October 2021
Judgment:
26 April 2022
Counsel
for Plaintiff:
K. Mnyandu
Instructed
by:
Salijee Govender van der Merwe Inc.
Counsel
for Defendants: S.B Friedland
Instructed
by:
Beder – Friedland Inc.
[1]
1978
(4) SA 23 (O).
[2]
1993
(3) SA 94
(A) at 107D.
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