Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 584South Africa
Nezamparat v The Magistrate Edenvale N.O and Others (36526/2015) [2022] ZAGPJHC 584 (15 June 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
15 June 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Nezamparat v The Magistrate Edenvale N.O and Others (36526/2015) [2022] ZAGPJHC 584 (15 June 2022)
Nezamparat v The Magistrate Edenvale N.O and Others (36526/2015) [2022] ZAGPJHC 584 (15 June 2022)
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sino date 15 June 2022
# IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO
: 36526/2015
DATE
:
2022-06-15
REPORTABLE:
NO.
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO.
REVISED.
In
the matter between
MASOUD
NEZAMPARAT
Applicant
And
THE
MAGISTRATE EDENVALE NO
1
ST
Respondent
THE
DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS
2
ND
Respondent
FANUEL
TSHWENYEGO CHILWANE
3
RD
Respondent
J
U D G M E N T
VICTOR
J
:
In this matter on 10
August 2016 I granted an order in the following terms.
1. The applicant’s
submission of guilt in terms of section 57A of the Criminal Procedure
Act 51/1977 made on 5 November 2009
is removed and set aside.
2. The result and entry
in the criminal record book of the particulars contemplated in
section 57(vi) by the clerk of the court
below is set aside and such
particulars shall be expunged from the criminal record.
3. The clerk of the court
below shall procure that the fine of R500 paid on behalf of the
applicant on 5 November 2009 is refunded
to him within three months
of date of this order.
Now the contentious
aspect in terms of prayer 4, I made the draft order which is not
signed by myself but it seems to be signed
by the registrar. It
states the following and I quote:
"The third
respondent is to pay the applicant’s cost on a scale as between
attorney and client.”
And then there is another
prayer 5 and I quote
"The cost order is
reserved and to be heard by Victor J during this term.”
Quite clearly orders 4
and 5 are contradictory and certainly prayer 4 was not made by me on
that date. The whole idea was that the
third respondent should come
and make submissions as to why the cost order should not be made
against him on the attorney and client
scale.
Insofar as that court
order reflects prayers 4 and 5 that cannot be correct. There has not
been an opportunity to call for a transcript
of that hearing and in
any event, there has been a change of transcribers and it is
uncertain at this stage whether a transcription
of 2016 would be
readily available.
However, Adv Ferrar G.H.
on behalf of the applicant submits that his recollection is that the
cost order was to be reserved and
then properly argued before me.
Obviously this did not take place during the term in which I made the
order as envisaged by prayer
5. But be that as it may the applicant
has now sought to deal with the question of costs.
An application was
brought in this regard and the supplementary affidavit of Miss Swart
explains that she is the correspondent’s
attorney. She was
instructed by Attorneys Van der Walt; the applicant’s local
attorney and she states that she bears no personal
knowledge of the
facts as was not involved. She states the main purpose of today’s
hearing is to deal with the question of
costs.
She also goes on to
explain that she collated the court file. She set forth a chronology
to clarify the reasons for the matter having
taken so long and
thirdly to set for the basis as to why it is incumbent on whichever
judge is seized with the matter to hear and
adjudicate same in the
absence of Victor J. However, I am able to hear this matter. She
explains that when she approached the registrar’s
office on 17
May 2019 to try and obtain the court file, the contents of the court
file were in a state of disarray. She then sent
the collated bundle
to her counsel who then advised that the file should be put in order
and that is what she did and this was
uploaded on CaseLines.
But in order to determine
the cost order against the third respondent it is necessary to deal
with various aspects. I have already
read into the record that the
third respondent has been properly notified of the hearing today. The
third respondent who is an
advocate, Adv Chilwane does not seem to
have chambers and Ms Hannelie Swart struggled, in fact went to his
office and found it
to be empty. That is why she then communicated
with him on WhatsApp and he then agreed to an e-mail address and she
has since then
been sending all the correspondence and the relevant
notices of set down for today, to him.
This matter has an
unfortunate history. In brief, the applicant is a doctor and he went
abroad with his family. He returned and
the one child was ill and
vomiting so they had to go to a shopping centre to buy fresh clothes.
In the shopping process an allegation
was made that he had stolen a
T-shirt from Stuttafords. The child was vomiting and the applicant of
course was dealing with that
when this unfortunate situation arose
about the stealing of the T-shirt. He was taken to the magistrate’s
court and at court
there was an exchange between the prosecutor and
Adv Chilwane. The applicant paid money to Mr Chilwane, the
approximate amount
was between R2 000 and R3 000. He did not receive
a receipt. The applicant’s home language is Urdu. There was no
Urdu interpreter
present at the time when this exchange took place
between them. At some stage the third respondent came out to tell him
that the
matter had been discharged.
To the applicant’s
dismay when he applied to renew his work visa as an anaesthetist, he
had to renew his work visa. The fact
of the criminal charge and his
apparent plea of guilty came to the fore.
The applicant has made
out a clear case that he did not plead guilty to the charge. He was
not guilty of stealing the T-shirt and
he was therefore severely
prejudiced by this criminal record.
He approached this Court
and I set aside that criminal record but I reserved the question of
costs because of what appeared to be
the conduct of Adv Chilwane
where it is alleged he misled the applicant as to what the true state
of affairs was in his discussions
with the prosecutor.
Importantly the applicant
did not sign any court papers pleading guilty, agreeing to an
admission of guilt and the applicant was
still awaiting Mr Chilwane’s
version of the events. It is now six years later and there still is
not a version on oath from
him.
When this application to
set down the costs was presented, Mr Chilwane then filed a notice of
objection because he stated that the
correct affidavit had not been
filed. His notice of objection is dated 1 June 2022 and it shows that
he lives at Extension 3, Dobsonville
and he states that Ms Swart’s
supplementary affidavit does not reflect the facts which are within
the applicant’s personal
knowledge and belief. It was deposed
to by an attorney and it shows that according to him the applicant
had failed and/or neglected
and abandoned the filing of a founding
affidavit to support his notice of motion. All this is confusing but
it clear to me that
what one can infer that Mr Chilwane does know
about this application ore particularly,
(a)
That the matter is on the roll today.
(b)
That the matter is pending.
(c)
That the relief sought today is in relation to the costs order.
The matter was on the
roll previously. It came before Keghtley J but was removed because
the papers were not in order. In the result
the only order that I
make today is in relation of the costs order pertaining to the order
that I made in 2016. This was the question
of the costs order against
Mr Chilwane that was to be argued within that term. I accept Ms
Swart’s explanation why this matter
has taken so long and she
has set it out very clearly and concisely. The applicant’s
previous attorneys of record could not
continue with the matter
because it was not financially viable and they had to withdraw.
There is still the
question of today’s costs that would have been incurred in any
event for today’s hearing if this
matter had been argued in
2016. So in other words I am not going to make an additional cost
order for today. Mr Chilwane did not
appear but that is not the
reason why I am making a cost order for today, the reason is that in
any event the applicant would have
had to incur the costs of arguing
the attorney client costs against Mr Chilwane.
The applicant has asked
the costs on the attorney client scale which is based on the fact
that it necessitated him to come to court
to set aside the criminal
conviction. The application at that stage was properly served on the
magistrate who made the order as
agreed to by Mr Chilwane as well as
the DPP. They did not oppose the relief so no costs order ought to be
made against them. It
was anticipated in 2016 that hearing would only
be in relation to Mr Chilwane’s liability for cost.
Mr
Chilwane according to the applicant had falsely entered the plea of
guilty and it is for that reason that an attorney who has
not come to
court to prove the contrary has misled not only the applicant but the
magistrate, and the deputy public prosecutor
must pay the costs. The
applicant has alleged fraudulent conduct on the part of an attorney
and it is reprehensible that Mr Chilwane
has not attended Court to
clear his name. The conduct deserves a punitive cost order against Mr
Chilwane.
The order that I make is
the following:
1. The third respondent
shall pay the applicant’s costs on the attorney-client scale.
2. The apparent prayer 4
in the order of 2016 was not made by the Court and prayer 4 should be
deleted.
VIC
TOR,
J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
DATE
:
Signed 01 August 2022
Date
Heard 15 June 2022
Date
of Judgment: 15 June 2022
Counsel
for the Applicant: Adv Ferrar
Instructed
by Hannelie Swart Attorneys
Counsel
for the 3
rd
Respondent: In Person (no appearance)
Date:
2022-06-29
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