Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 418South Africa
Msimango v Peters (2021/A3026) [2022] ZAGPJHC 418 (21 June 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
21 June 2022
Judgment
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## Msimango v Peters (2021/A3026) [2022] ZAGPJHC 418 (21 June 2022)
Msimango v Peters (2021/A3026) [2022] ZAGPJHC 418 (21 June 2022)
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sino date 21 June 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
APPEAL
CASE NO: 2021/A3026
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
In
the matter between:
SANDILE
MSIMANGO
Appellant
(Applicant
(Defendant)
a quo
[‘Defendant’]
and
FRANCIS
PETERS
Respondent
(Respondent
(Plaintiff)
a quo
[‘Plaintiff’]
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected and is handed down electronically by circulation
to the
Parties / their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on CaseLines. The
date of the
judgment is deemed to be 21 June 2022.
JUDGMENT
OSSIN
AJ (MALINDI J concurring):
#
# Introduction
Introduction
[1]
This is an appeal against a judgment of the Magistrates’
Court,
Randburg, in relation to an action instituted by the respondent, as
plaintiff, against the appellant, as defendant in July
2019 [‘the
July action’]. The parties will be referred to as in the July
action – appellant as defendant and
the respondent as
plaintiff.
[2]
The July action was instituted by way of a combined summons
[‘July
summons’] served on 9 July 2019. The July action was based on a
settlement agreement concluded between the parties
in respect of a
previous action instituted by plaintiff against defendant in March
2019 [‘the March action’].
[3]
The subject of the judgment before us was an interlocutory
application brought by the defendant in July 2020, about a year after
service of summons. In that application, brought in terms
of rule 60,
alternatively rule 60A of the Magistrates’ Court, the defendant
contended that the July summons had not been
served at his residence
in terms of rule 9(3)(b) as at the time he was resident in the United
Kingdom. The defendant refers to
this application as the irregular
step application. I will likewise do so from now on.
[4]
In his summons, plaintiff cited the
defendant as follows: “…
an
adult male whose full and further particulars are to the Respondent
unknown, presently residing at…Unit 1 Les Maisons
on Fifth,
Fifth Road, Hyde Park, Johannesburg.
”
According to the deputy sheriff’s return of service,
summons was served on 9 July 2019 at the defendant’s residence
in Hyde Park, Johannesburg on his employee.
[5]
Although the defendant and his family were living in
the United
Kingdom, after summons had been served in Johannesburg, his attorneys
of record delivered a notice of intention to defend
on 23 July 2019.
This was followed the next day, 24 July 2019, with a notice to remove
cause of complaint [‘the complaint
notice’], in terms of
rule 60, alternatively rule 60A.
[6]
Although the defendant titled the complaint notice as
being a notice
in terms of rule 60 alternatively rule 60A, the substance of the
notice itself is formulated with reference to the
provisions of rule
60A and not rule 60. In my view the complaint notice is clearly a
notice brought in terms of rule 60A and not
rule 60.
[7]
The plaintiff did not remove the cause of complaint within
the 10
days’ notice period afforded to the plaintiff in terms of rule
60A(2)(b).
[8]
The defendant did not apply for the setting aside of
the service of
summons within 15 days after expiry of the notice period, as provided
in terms of rule 60A(2)(c). What he did instead
was to launch the
irregular step application on 1 July 2020, almost a year after his
complaint notice. The basis for the orders
sought in this application
primarily revolved around the defendant’s contention that there
had not been valid service, coupled
with his complaint notice. The
relief sought in this application was not for the setting aside of
service of summons (which was
the consequence envisaged by the
complaint notice), but for setting aside the summons itself.
[9]
The orders sought by the defendant in his notice of motion
read as
follows:
1.
the [plaintiff’s] summons be set aside pursuant to his failure
to
comply with the Court Rules having failed to remedy such failure
after receiving the Applicant’s Notice in terms of Rule 60,
alternatively Rule, 60A, and being ordered to do so by this Court on
29 and 30 October 2019;
2.
Alternatively, the Respondent be afforded a further five days to
comply
with the orders of this Court of 29 and 30 October 2019,
failing which the Applicant may apply for the setting aside of the
summons
based on these papers
3.
Further alternatively, the summons be set aside for non-compliance
with
Rule 9(3)(b);
4.
Costs of this application
de bonis propiis,
alternately
against the Respondent on the scale of attorney and own client,
further alternatively attorney and client;
[10]
The plaintiff opposed the irregular step application, and
simultaneously delivered
a counter application. These applications
came before the learned Magistrate Sewnarain for argument on 17
November 2020. At the
commencement of argument defendant withdrew the
punitive costs order initially sought by him, and plaintiff withdrew
his counter-application.
[11]
After hearing argument, the learned Magistrate handed down an
ex
tempore
judgment. The learned Magistrate dismissed the irregular
step application and ordered the defendant to pay the plaintiff’s
costs on the attorney-client scale including the costs of counsel on
the Magistrates’ Court tariff.
[12]
The judgment against which the defendant appeals is set out in the
transcript
of the proceedings before the learned Magistrate at Vol 3
of the appeal record from page 41 line 10 to page 54, line 5. The
order
itself appears at Vol 2, page 223.
[13]
In dismissing the irregular step application, the learned Magistrate
found
against the defendant on procedural and substantive grounds.
The procedural grounds included a finding that the irregular step
application was fatally defective as it had been served out of time,
and no condonation had been sought by defendant as required
by rule
60(9). The substantive grounds included a finding that summons had
been validly served.
[14]
The learned Magistrates’ reasons for the punitive costs order
appears
to stem from findings which include the fatally defective
nature of the irregular step application, and the fact that, at the
end
of the day, the defendant had received the summons.
[15]
There is another aspect of this appeal and the irregular step
application which
concerns me. I raise it as this point before diving
into the details of this matter.
[16]
The plaintiff, in his July action, claims R39 000.00 from the
defendant.
Summons was served in July 2019. The defendant took
exception to service but only launched his irregular step application
about
a year later. The application was argued in November 2020.
Instead of viewing the dismissal of the application as the end of the
road in so far as summons was concerned, the defendant noted this
appeal. Its hearing took place on 11 October 2021 before us.
[17]
In the face of having received the summons (which I deal with later
in this
judgment), the defendant decided not to plead but rather to
embark on a long, arduous, and costly exercise. This has not only
unduly
delayed the July action and its finalisation, but also took up
the time of the learned Magistrate and now, because of this appeal,
a
full bench of the High Court. In my view, and as will become clearer
when dealing with the background facts, the manner in which
defendant
approached the litigation in the Magistrates Court and now this
appeal, leaves much to be desired.
[18]
An example of this was on display at the commencement of the hearing
before
this court. The plaintiff had not filed his heads of argument
timeously. He did so on 6 October 2021 and sought condonation for
this failure in his heads of argument.
[19]
At the commencement of proceedings, defendant was requested to advise
this
court of his position in respect of the late filing of
plaintiff’s heads of argument. The defendant advised that he
would
be willing to condone the late filing of plaintiff’s
heads of argument if plaintiff condoned the late filing of
defendant’s
irregular step application. Bearing in mind that
the late filing of defendant’s irregular step application was a
material
basis upon which plaintiff had opposed that application and
upon which the learned Magistrate found against the defendant, the
attempt to link what is a substantive aspect of this appeal, with
something that has nothing to do with the learned Magistrate’s
judgment, to me, smacked of opportunism. The defendant did eventually
unconditionally condone the late filing of plaintiff’s
heads of
argument.
[20]
The defendant’s aforesaid approach also highlighted to me that
he was
more than cognisant of the fact that his irregular step
application was fatally defective for want of compliance with the
time
frames set out in rule 60A. Yet for some inexplicable reason,
the defendant in neither his notice of appeal nor heads of argument
before this appeal court sought to challenge the learned Magistrates’
findings to this effect. It also begs the question
as to why this
matter is before us on appeal at all. In other words, why is this
appeal being pursued when this ground of its dismissal
by the learned
Magistrate is not contested?
[21]
Finally, and as highlighted by the learned Magistrate in his
judgment, practitioners would do well not to overlook
Rule
1 which is headed “
Purpose and
application of rules”.
It
provides as follows:
(1)
The purpose of these Rules is to promote access to the courts and to
ensure
that the right to have disputes that can be resolved by the
application of law by a fair public hearing before a court is given
effect to.
(2)
These Rules are to be applied so as to facilitate the expeditious
handling
of dispute and the minimisation of costs involved.
[22]
Practitioners ought to ensure that the
manner in which they conduct litigation on behalf of their clients,
or the manner in which
they are instructed to conduct litigation on
behalf of their clients, does not disrespect these foundational
rules, and promotes
the important principles upon which these rules
are founded.
[23]
I raise the above matters in the hope that practitioners will,
when confronted with a technical issue such as the one in question
which does not and cannot prejudice their client, not only be
cognisant of the possible consequences and ramifications for their
client but also of the unnecessary burden which actions such as the
present place on the courts. I return to this issue in the
portion of
this judgment dealing with the appropriate costs order of this
appeal.
# Grounds of appeal and
issues in the appeal
Grounds of appeal and
issues in the appeal
[24]
The defendant’s broad grounds of
appeal may be gleaned from his notice of appeal read with his heads
of argument.
[25]
The first ground of appeal relates to the
validity of service of the summons. The learned Magistrate found that
summons had been
validly served in terms of rule 9(3)(b). The
defendant contends that the learned Magistrate should have found that
service of summons
was invalid because the summons had not been
served at defendant’s residence as required by rule 9(3)(b),
even though the
deputy sheriff certified service as such at his
residence in Johannesburg. He contends that because summons was not
validly served,
the July action against him has not validly
commenced.
[26]
The second ground of appeal relates to the
status of notes made by various Magistrates on the cover of
the court file of the July action [‘the file cover’]
pursuant
to appearances made by the plaintiff’s attorneys in
respect of applications for substituted service.
The
file cover reflects several appearances from 29 October 2019 to 18
February 2020. Prayers 1 and 3 of the notice of motion reference
the
appearances and notes made on 29 October and 30 October 2019. I will
refer to these notes as the October notes. The learned
Magistrate
found that these notes were only queries or informal requests. The
defendant contends that the learned Magistrate should
have found that
the October notes have the status of orders, and that the plaintiff
was obliged to give effect to them.
[27]
The third ground of appeal relates to the punitive
costs order awarded by the learned Magistrate against the defendant.
The learned
Magistrate found that circumstances justified a punitive
costs order. The defendant contends that there were no exceptional
circumstances
justifying such a costs order, and that in making such
an order the learned Magistrate did not exercise his discretion
judicially.
[28]
The defendant contends that the summons fell to be
set aside either because summons was not validly served or because
the plaintiff
did not give effect to the October notes. The defendant
argues that the learned Magistrate erred in not granting such an
order
as sought in the irregular step application.
[29]
There is a further issue which neither the
defendant’s notice of appeal nor his heads of argument address.
This issue relates
to the procedural competency of the irregular step
application. The learned Magistrate found that the irregular step
application
was, for several reasons, incompetent and fatally
defective. This was one of the reasons why the learned Magistrate
awarded punitive
costs against defendant. Although the defendant has
not addressed this aspect in his written documentation submitted on
appeal,
it would, I believe, be proper and appropriate to deal with
this issue in the judgment.
[30]
A secondary issue unconnected to the merits
of this appeal, but by no means less important, is the appealability
of the judgment.
Whilst conceding that the irregular step application
is interlocutory in nature, the defendant contends that the judgment
is final
in effect, and hence appealable. This issue is addressed
towards the end of this judgment.
# The relevant rules
The relevant rules
[31]
As alluded to above, the rules which are of
immediate relevance to the merits of this appeal are rule 9(3)(b),
rule 60 and rule
60A.
[32]
Rule 9(3)(b) provides as follows:
All process shall,
subject to the provisions of this rule, be served upon the person
affected thereby by delivering a copy thereof…at
the residence
… of the said person, … to some person apparently not
less than 16 years of age and apparently residing
or employed there…
[33]
Rule 60(1), (2) and (9) provide as follows:
(1)
Except where otherwise provided in these Rules, failure to comply
with these Rules or with any request made
in pursuance thereof shall
not be a ground for the giving of judgment against the party in
default.
(2)
Where any provision of these Rules or any request made in pursuance
of any such provision has not been fully
complied with the court may
on application order compliance therewith within a stated time.
(9)
The court may, on good cause shown, condone non-compliance with these
Rules.
[34]
Rule 60A provides as follows:
(1)
A party to a cause in which an irregular step has been taken by any
other party may
apply to court to set it aside.
(2)
An application in terms of subrule (1) shall be on notice to all
parties specifying
particulars of the irregularity or impropriety
alleged, and may be made only if —
(a)
the applicant has not himself or herself taken a further step in the
cause with knowledge
of the irregularity;
(b)
the applicant has, within 10 days of becoming aware of the step, by
written notice
afforded his or her opponent an opportunity of
removing the cause of complaint within 10 days; and
(c)
the application is delivered within 15 days after the expiry of the
second period
mentioned in subrule (2)
(b)
.
(3)
If at the hearing of an application in terms of subrule (1) the court
is of opinion that the proceeding
or step is irregular or improper,
it may set it aside in whole or in part, either as against all the
parties or as against some
of them, and grant leave to amend or make
any such order as it deems fit.
(4)
Until a party has complied with any order of court made against him
or her in terms of this rule,
he or she shall not take any further
step in the cause, save to apply for an extension of time within
which to comply with such
order.
# Relevant background facts
Relevant background facts
[35]
To fully appreciate the various aspects and nuances of the
appeal, I will now set out, in some detail, what I believe to be
relevant
background facts as gleaned from the record.
## The defendant’s
situation
The defendant’s
situation
[36]
The defendant is married with two young
children. He owns a house in Hyde Park, Johannesburg [‘the Hyde
Park house’].
This is where the deputy sheriff effected service
of summons in terms of rule 9(3)(b).
[37]
The defendant and his family lived in the
Hyde Park house until 2015 at which time the family “
permanently
moved to the United Kingdom”.
According
to the defendant he formally became resident in the UK in 2016
through a European Union Residence Card issued to him in
2016. This
card,
prima facie,
is
a work permit which allows the defendant to reside in the European
Union for such purpose until 25 October 2021.
[38]
Since moving to the UK, the defendant and
his family visit the Hyde Park house “
a
couple of times a year.”
There
are no details supplied on the record as to the length and frequency
of these visits.
## The repair agreement
The repair agreement
[39]
Sometime in either September or October
2018, defendant and plaintiff concluded an oral agreement in terms of
which the defendant
contracted the plaintiff to carry out certain
repair and paint works to the Hyde Park house [‘the repair
agreement’].
This agreement was concluded whilst the defendant
was in South Africa since the defendant states that he and the
plaintiff “
physically walked the
site,”
and the defendant showed
the plaintiff “
the repairs that
[the defendant] sought done.”
There
is a dispute on the papers as to whether the agreed contract sum was
R300 000.00 (as asserted by the defendant) or R359 200.00
(as asserted by the plaintiff). Nothing of relevance turns on this
dispute.
[40]
The defendant appears to have departed
South Africa sometime after the conclusion of the repair agreement,
and the plaintiff commenced
the scope of works soon thereafter.
[41]
The defendant returned to South Africa on
or about 21 November 2018 with the intention of staying at the Hyde
Park house from that
night. The papers do not disclose whether the
defendant was with his family at that time, and his length of stay in
South Africa.
[42]
The defendant was not, however, able to
stay at the Hyde Park house that night, instead staying over at a
hotel in the area (as
appears from an invoice for that night). The
reason for this appears from defendant’s texts to the plaintiff
in which the
defendant complained that plaintiff had painted the
inside of “
my bedrooms”
and
“
I can’t sleep here now.”
In addition, defendant’s
attorneys’ letter of 16 May 2019 asserts plaintiff’s
liability for “
R2 500.00 for
hotel accommodation on the night that [the defendant] came home but
could not sleep there because of the [plaintiff].
”
[43]
The defendant’s text messages also
requested the plaintiff to contact him urgently, expressing
consternation that the plaintiff,
contrary to the repair agreement,
had painted the entire interior of the Hyde Park house as opposed to
“
The rooms with damp on the ground
floor only…”
[44]
On the morning of 22 November 2018, the
defendant texted the plaintiff enquiring whether the plaintiff would
be stopping by the
site that morning. In this text the defendant
advised the plaintiff that “
I am
going home now from the hotel.”
The
defendant’s reference to “
home
”
is clearly to the Hyde Park house.
[45]
Further subsequent texts from the defendant
to the plaintiff raise complaints about damage caused by the
plaintiff to an expensive
painting and a general failure by the
plaintiff to supervise the repair and paint work.
## The March action
The March action
[46]
The plaintiff’s March action was also
instituted by way of a combined summons [‘the March summons’].
[47]
On 5 April 2019, and as with the July
summons, the March summons was served on the defendant’s
employee in his absence in
terms of rule 9(3)(b).
[48]
Although the pleadings in the March action
do not form part of the record before us, it appears that, in the
March summons, the
plaintiff claimed payment of an amount of
R119 200.00 as the balance owed by the defendant to him in terms
of the repair agreement.
Since the plaintiff’s version is that
the agreed amount for the repair and paint works was R359 200.00,
on the plaintiff’s
version the defendant had paid R240 000.00
at that stage. This accords with the defendant’s version (i.e.,
payment of
R240 000), save that the agreed amount alleged by the
defendant was R300 000.00. Accordingly, the defendant’s
version
was that there was a balance still owed by him of R60 000.00.
[49]
After receiving the March summons, the
defendant’s employee contacted defendant in the UK and informed
him of the summons.
The defendant thereafter telephoned his attorneys
(the same firm of attorneys who are the defendant’s attorneys
of record
in the present matter) and instructed them to oppose the
action.
[50]
It is apparent from the papers that
defendant’s attorneys were placed in possession of, at least, a
copy of the March summons,
since they, on 23 April 2019, delivered a
notice of intention to defend. This may also be readily inferred from
the contents defendant’s
attorneys’ letter of 13 May 2019
(see paragraph [52]
below).
[51]
The plaintiff then made application for
summary judgment, the hearing date being 4 June 2019.
[52]
On 13 May 2019, the defendant’s
attorneys addressed a letter to the plaintiff’s attorneys. In
this letter the defendant’s
attorneys referred to the
plaintiff’s particulars of claim and alleged that the
contractually agreed amount for the repair
and paint work was
R300 000.00. The defendant’s attorneys then alleged that
the plaintiff’s claim exceeded the
contractually agreed amount,
and that the defendant was prepared to offer the plaintiff an amount
of R60 000.00 in full and
final settlement of the plaintiff’s
claims.
The offer was open for acceptance
by 17h00 on 13 May 2019.
[53]
The letter recorded the following:
Our client is not
resident in this country and was therefore not in the country when
your client conducted the repair work.
[54]
The letter did not, however, raise as a
complaint, that service of the summons was invalid, and that the Hyde
Park house did not
constitute the defendant’s residence for
purposes of rule 9(3)(b). Instead, the letter concluded by advising
that in the
event of the matter not settling, the plaintiff should
not apply for summary judgment as he is “
fully
aware of our client’s defence
”
,
and that if the plaintiff did decide to
proceed with that application “
our
client will oppose it and ask for a punitive costs order against your
client in the circumstances.
” The
defendant accepted that he had received proper service of the summons
on this occasion.
[55]
The plaintiff’s attorneys responded
to the aforesaid letter later that same day, accepting the offer and
requiring that payment
be made by 17 May 2019.
[56]
It appears that on 15 May 2019, the plaintiff signed the defendant’s
attorneys’ 13 May 2019 letter. The defendant regarded this
signature as acceptance by the plaintiff of the settlement terms
contained in the 13 May 2019 letter.
[57]
On 16 May 2019, defendant’s attorneys sent a
further letter to plaintiff’s attorneys. In this letter
defendant’s
attorneys stated that the March action had “
become
settled on the basis of the offer outlined in our letter of 13 May
2019.
”
[58]
Recalling that plaintiff’s attorneys had in
their letter of 13 May 2019 set out the parameters for the settlement
and that
payment was to be made into their trust account (my
comment!), the defendant’s attorneys then advised that
defendant had
paid an amount of R21 000.00 into the plaintiff’s
attorneys trust account.
[59]
An explanation for the omission to pay the balance
of R39 000.00 was then provided in the form of alleging set-off.
The defendant’s
attorneys alleged that the plaintiff had caused
the defendant to suffer damages in the amount of R39 000.00.
This amount comprised
(1) restoration costs to the tune of R35 000.00
in respect of one of the defendant’s paintings which the
plaintiff had
allegedly damaged with paint, (2) transportation costs
of the painting for purposes of restoration, and (3) hotel
accommodation
costs of R2 500.00.
[60]
Regarding these alleged damages, it will be
recalled that when the defendant returned to South Africa on 21
November 2018, his texts
to the plaintiff complained of damages to a
painting and the necessity of him having to sleep at a hotel that
night as opposed
to the Hyde Park house.
[61]
With reference to the defendant’s attorneys’
16 May 2019 letter, the plaintiff’s attorneys in their letter
of
22 May 2019, then expressed dissatisfaction at the defendant’s
invoking of set-off of his alleged damages against payment
of the
full amount of R60 000.00. They alleged that the settlement was
negotiated by the defendant in bad faith, and defendant’s
reliance on set-off was “
to avoid
him having to prove his alleged claim as against our client.”
[62]
In a letter dated 29 May 2019 defendant’s
attorneys’ advised plaintiff’s attorneys that the set-off
amounts (the
R39 000.00) were liquidated, and that plaintiff had
acknowledged his liability to the defendant in principle albeit not
the
actual amounts involved. Bad faith on the part of the defendant
was denied. To put the defendant’s position beyond doubt,
defendant’s attorneys then stated as follows:
The settlement agreement
was confined to your client’s claims, and excluded our client’s
claims against your client
for which your client acknowledged
liability.
[63]
The letter concluded as follows:
In the event that your
client fails to withdraw the summary judgment application by 12h00
tomorrow, 30 May 2019, our client will
file an affidavit resisting
summary judgment on the basis that
inter alia
your client’s
claims as pleaded in the summons has become settled and that, despite
that, your client has forced him to file
such affidavit, as a result
of which he will ask for a punitive cost order on the attorney and
own client scale.
[64]
This appeal is not concerned with whether the
settlement agreement settled all claims between the parties (as
appears to be the
plaintiff’s position) or just the plaintiff’s
claim thereby leaving defendant’s claims unsettled (as appears
from the defendant’s position). However, it appears to me that
the stance taken up by the plaintiff is reasonable especially
where
the plaintiff’s attorneys’ 13 May 2019 letter made it
clear that the R60 000.00 would be in full and final
settlement
of both parties’ claims, and defendant’s attorneys must
have realised that this was the basis upon which
plaintiff
counter-signed their letter of 13 May 2019.
[65]
The defendant seems to have deliberately held back
on raising his alleged damages during the negotiation of the
settlement agreement.
Moreover, the alleged damages suffered by
defendant appear to me to have been inappropriately set-off against
the R60 000.00
because they were not liquidated. The plaintiff’s
attorneys’ theory that the alleged damages were strategically
not
referred to by the defendant during the negotiation so as to
allow the defendant to later on ‘recover’ these alleged
damages through a mere set off, as opposed to instituting action for
their recovery, appears to me to hold some water. The way
the
defendant appears to have approached the settlement agreement bears
some commonality with the defendant’s approach to
the present
litigation and this appeal.
[66]
Faced with the position taken by the defendant to
the settlement, the plaintiff withdrew his March action and
instituted the July
action for payment of the balance of the
R60 000.00, corresponding to the defendant’s set-off
amount of R39 000.00.
## The July action
The July action
[67]
As I have stated above, in the July action, the plaintiff claims
payment of
an amount of R39 000.00.
The
pleaded basis for this payment is the settlement agreement concluded
between the parties which is referred to above. The plaintiff’s
pleaded case is that of the agreed R60 000.00, only an amount of
R21 000.00 has been paid.
## Receipt of the July
summons
Receipt of the July
summons
[68]
Regarding receipt of the July summons, defendant’s
founding affidavit discloses that the security guard who received the
summons
informed the defendant of the summons. In defendant’s
letter to his attorneys which was attached to the founding affidavit,
the defendant states that the security guard informed him of
“
something in an envelope having been delivered.
”
[69]
The defendant then contacted his attorneys of record and gave
them instructions to defend the action.
[70]
It is probable that the envelope referenced in the sheriff’s
return of service accompanied the July summons, and it is also
probable that arrangements were made to have the July summons
delivered to defendant’s attorneys for they on 23 July 2019
delivered a notice of intention to defend on defendant’s
behalf, and the next day delivered the complaint notice, that is,
the
rule 60, alternatively rule 60A notice.
[71]
Having delivered the complaint notice, it would have been expected
from the
defendant to apply for the setting aside of service of
summons after expiry of the notice period. However, the defendant did
not
do so. On this basis, the complaint notice became a nullity, and
defendant would have then been required to deliver his plea. The
defendant’s founding affidavit does not deal with this aspect.
[72]
Nevertheless it appears to me that out of extra caution the
plaintiff brought an
application for substituted
service [‘the
ex parte
application’] towards the end of
October 2019 in response to the complaint notice issued on 25 July
2019. By that stage,
the appellant had not prosecuted his complaint
notice, and was well out of time within which to do so. The next
litigation step
was for the appellant to deliver his plea, or for the
respondent, in the absence of such plea, to place the appellant under
bar.
From my reading of the papers and the correspondence exchanged
between the two sets of attorneys thereafter (dealt with in detail
further below), the respondent was attempting to progress the matter
and misguidedly believed that the ex parte application was
the
appropriate way in which to do so.
[73]
That delivery of a plea was the foreseeable next
stage in the litigation appears to be confirmed from paragraph 10 of
appellant’s
founding affidavit, which states as follows:
On 21 October 2019,
unbeknown to the [Appellant], the Respondent brought an
ex parte
application for substituted service in response to the [complaint
notice].
[74]
There was no expectation at that stage that
respondent would bring or was expected to bring an application for
substituted service.
The appellant appears to have accepted this to
be the case. Having not prosecuted the rule 60/60A application after
the complaint
notice, the defendant was accordingly then under an
obligation to deliver his plea.
[75]
The
ex parte
application itself does not form part
of the appeal record. It does, however, appear that it served before
various Magistrates between
29 October 2019 and 16 February 2020, and
that a second application for substituted service served before
various Magistrates on
17 and 18 February 2020. It appears from the
papers that the plaintiff went this route because of the defendant’s
refusal
to cooperate by providing his address in the UK so that the
summons could be served there, and thereby to the extent that the
complaint
had merit, curing the complaint.
[76]
The
ex parte
application makes its first appearance
before Magistrate Tau on 29 October 2019. The relevant portions of
the learned Magistrate’s
notation in respect of this appearance
reads as follows: “
Pp
[postponed]
for specific details of address of
United Kingdom.”
[77]
It may be gleaned from the respondent’s
attorneys email sent to appellant’s attorneys later that same
day, that the
ex parte
application
was postponed because the respondent’s attorneys had been
requested by “
Magistrate Tau at
the Randburg Magistrates’ Court, in chambers, to provide your
client’s last known physical address
in the United Kingdom.
”
In this email the respondent’s attorneys requested the
appellant’s attorneys to provide them with the appellant’s
UK address if “
possessed of this
information
.” As alluded to
above, the appellant had been unaware of the
ex
parte
application.
[78]
The appellant’s attorney’s response
later that day to the aforesaid request, was to the effect that he
did not have
instructions to positively respond to respondent’s
attorney’s email. This is a surprising response. I pause to
note
that the appellant’s founding affidavit, whilst referring
to the respondent’s attorneys request, fails to disclose the
appellant’s (negative) response.
[79]
The remedial action required by the complaint
notice in order for there to be valid service (at least on
appellant’s view)
was for the respondent to obtain the
appellant’s address in the UK, and to then seek an order for
substituted service. Having
now been requested by respondent’s
attorneys to provide them with appellant’s address, the refusal
to do so (whether
because of appellant’s instruction or
otherwise) is inexplicable, more so since appellant’s attorneys
were aware that
the request had come from a Magistrate.
[80]
Even in his irregular step application, the
defendant remained coy about his UK address. For example, in the
letter to his attorneys
which was attached to the founding affidavit,
the defendant merely states that he is resident in the UK, and that
his children
go to in the UK. His letter gives no information as to
exactly where in the UK he resides, whilst stating in his
confirmatory affidavit
to the replying affidavit that he lives “
on
Warren Cutting, Kingston Upon Thames, KT2 7HH.
”,
but without stating where exactly on Warren Cutting he lives.
[81]
It appears to me that defendant was and has at all
times tried to make it as hard as possible for the plaintiff to
prosecute the
July action.
[82]
The
ex parte
application returned to court the next
day (30 October 2019) before Magistrate Persence in chambers. The
learned Magistrates’
notation in respect of this appearance
reads as follows: “
Kindly comply
with the instructions dated 29.10.19 and attach the return of
service.”
[83]
As I have said in the introduction to this judgment, the appearances
before
Magistrates Tau and Persence on 29 and 30 October 2019
respectively, and the notes made by them pursuant to such
appearances, the
October notes, are referenced in appellant’s
notice of motion.
[84]
On 10 December 2019, the plaintiff’s
attorneys emailed defendant’s attorneys in the following terms:
Please be advised that we
have attended at the Randburg Magistrates Court regarding the
Application for substituted service, however,
same was not granted as
the court was of the opinion that the appellant is aware of the
action in light of the service and filing
of the Notice of Intention
to Defend.
Should your client
maintain that proper service has not been effected, we request that
you proceed to set down the Notice in terms
of Rule 60 alternatively
Rule 60A.
[85]
According to the aforesaid email the learned Magistrate who was
seized with
the application for substituted service on that day, was
of the opinion that the application could not be granted because
defendant
had delivered a notice of intention to defend the July
action and was obviously then aware of it.
[86]
After receiving the above email, defendant’s
attorneys then requested a copy of the “
Court
Order in which the [plaintiff’s] ex parte application for
substituted service was refused.”
This
email did not deny that defendant was not aware of the July action.
[87]
On 11 December 2019, the plaintiff’s
attorneys emailed the defendant’s attorneys in reply as
follows:
The application was heard
in chambers and no court order was handed down. The Magistrate in all
likelihood reflected the order on
the face of the court file should
you wish to draw same.
Further to this, we
request that you confirm that you shall be setting your client’s
Rule 60 down for hearing.
[88]
By this stage, the plaintiff had attempted to
progress the July action by making application for substituted
service. In the face
of the learned Magistrate’s view that the
application could not be granted because defendant was aware of the
July action,
it is unclear what further steps plaintiff was required
to take in relation to the service issue.
[89]
Nevertheless, on 17 December 2019, defendant’s
attorney emailed plaintiff’s attorney. The relevant portion of
this email
is as follows:
We have accessed the
court file and made a copy of its cover, which is attached. First, we
do not see the court’s decision
on your client’s
application for substituted service. To this end, we request that you
indicate how you were informed that
the application was not granted,
and what the details of that ruling were – this is relevant to
any application which our
client may bring. Your coyness regarding
this issue is perplexing. Second, on the court file cover, there is
reference to a requirement
to comply with instructions dated 29
October 2019. What instructions are these? And were they complied
with?
[90]
I view this email as an attempt by the defendant to unjustifiably
turn the
tables on plaintiff in regard to the service issue. The
defendant had taken no steps to set aside service of summons and was
obliged
to file his plea. Fortuitously for him the plaintiff then
made the running, as it were, to progress the matter, and the
defendant
now sought to take full advantage of an apparent benefit to
which he was not entitled.
[91]
It is also not readily apparent to me why the appellant’s
attorneys made
the enquiry in relation to the instructions of 29
October 2019 reflecting on the file cover. This is because not only
had the respondent’s
attorneys already in their email of 29
October 2019 made appellant’s attorneys aware of the appearance
on that day and the
learned Magistrates’ request for the
respondent’s address in the UK, but the appellant’s
attorneys had declined
to assist respondent with such address.
[92]
Presumably because the respondent from his perspective had done
everything
in his power to progress the matter, and with his position
regarding the validity of service having been confirmed through the
appearance on 10 December 2019, on
13 February
2020, the plaintiff’s attorneys served a notice of bar on the
defendant’s attorneys.
[93]
The
notice of bar prompted an indignant letter
from the defendant’s attorneys to the plaintiff’s
attorneys later that same
day. The letter starts by taking exception
to the service of the notice of bar without warning and refers to the
previous emails
that had passed between the attorneys. It then
berates the plaintiff’s attorney for not having attended to the
other orders
and remarks of the Court in the court file. The balance
of this 13 February 2020 letter is scathing of the plaintiff’s
attorneys.
The last portion of this letter reads as follows:
Accordingly, when you
wrote to us on 10 December stating that your client’s
application was not granted as the court was of
the opinion that the
appellant was aware of the action in light of the service and filing
of the Notice of Intention to Defend,
this was blatantly false.
Equally, when you wrote to us on 11 December, that was false. Said
continuing falsity was designed to
deceive us and the appellant into
taking action to legitimise the fact that your client’s service
of the summons was irregular,
concealing that your client was in fact
ordered by the Magistrate to obtain details of, and serve, on the
appellant’s residential
address of appellant
(sic)
in
the United Kingdom, which he failed to do. Instead on 30 January
2020, after we had been asking, unanswered to date, after the
details
of how you were informed of the alleged decision not granting your
client’s
ex parte
application, you purported to withdraw
such application, without informing us of same, and proceeded on 10
February 2020 to serve
the uncolleagial Notice of Bar.
Your firm’s conduct
outlined above is highly irregular, is a gross abuse of the court
rules, and is gravely unethical. Furthermore,
it is simply
incompetent to withdraw an application in which orders were given by
the Magistrate merely to avoid complying with
those orders.
In the event that your
firm does not satisfactorily redress this conduct by noon tomorrow,
14 February, we will proceed not only
to write to the Chief
Magistrate to ensure that your client does not continue with its
deception by applying for default judgment
based on the Notice of
Bar, but we will also report your firm’s conduct to the Legal
Practice Society. Any costs that our
client will incur pursuant to
the said conduct, your firm is hereby put on notice that he will
seeks costs
de bonis propis.
[94]
I highlight that the above letter from the
defendant’s attorneys accuses the plaintiff’s attorneys
of falsity and threatens
to report them to the Chief Magistrate.
These accusations are not based on the facts that I have so far
gleaned and constitute
harassment of the plaintiff’s attorneys.
[95]
The plaintiff’s attorneys’
response to the aforesaid letter came on 17 February 2020. After
acknowledging that the absence
of a warning prior to issuing the
notice of bar was not collegial, the plaintiff’s attorneys
noted that “
the principle of
collegiality is reciprocal, which principle has unfortunately not
been extended by you.”
In
justifying this response, the plaintiff’s attorneys contended
that the settlement of plaintiff’s claim had been negotiated
by
the defendant in bad faith based on the defendant’s attorney’s
advice, and in a manner to “
avoid
[the defendant] having to prove his alleged claim
”
against the plaintiff.
[96]
The plaintiff’s attorneys letter then
proceeds to set out the lack of cooperation and collegiality on the
part of the defendant
in several instances. One could say that this
was a gloves’ off response:
5. As a result, our
client who is of limited means (whilst as you put it, your client who
“
is one of significant means”
) was forced
to launch a further action for the balance of the settlement amount.
The manner of service of the second action was
precisely the same as
that of the first action, however in this instance your client caused
to be served a Notice in terms of Rule
60, alternatively Rule 60A on
our office on 24 July 2019.
6.
On 2 August 2019, we were instructed to request that you inform us
where your client resided during service of the first action
on you
to which you responded, on 6 August 2019, that your client had been
living in the United Kingdom for the last few years.
Despite this,
there were no issues whatsoever with service of the first at your
client’s address in Hyde Park, Johannesburg.
7.
On 7 August 2019, our client denied that he was aware that your
client had been living in the United Kingdom for the last few
years
and in an attempt to accelerate and bring the matter to finality we
requested that you accept service of the summons on your
client’s
behalf. Your one liner response on 7 August 2019 was that you did not
have the requested mandate.
8.
Magistrate Tau requested your client’s last know (
sic)
physical addressed in the United
Kingdom on 29 October 2019. On even date we requested this from you
however on 30 October 2019,
you informed us that you do not have
instructions to positively respond to our email.
9.
Regarding your email of 17 December 2019, this did not require a
response as we advised you in our email of 11 December 2019
that the
Application was heard in Chambers and no Order was handed down.
Further, the instructions given were to obtain your client’s
address in the U.K, which request was refused by you and secondly to
comply with the first instruction and to attach the return
of service
of the second action. This was not an instruction to serve on your
client’s U.K address, which in any event would
not have been
possible, but to hand a copy of the return of service of the second
action to the Magistrate.
10.
Your allegation that when we advised you that our client’s
Application was not granted as the Court believed that the
Appellant
was aware of the action in light of the service and filing of a
Notice of Intention to Appellant was blatantly false
has been treated
with the contempt that it deserves and we invite you to take this up
with the learned Magistrate Tau.
11.
We request that when you write to the Chief Magistrate and the Legal
Practice Council, as it is now called, that you attach
this
correspondence.
12.
Notwithstanding the above, we will not tolerate your client’s
attempts to delay this matter any further. The notice of
withdrawal
of the bar will be served on your offices this morning and we hold
instructions to issue afresh our client’s application
for
substituted service thereafter.
[97]
I have several difficulties with the
approach taken by the defendant as set out in his attorneys’ 13
February 2020 letter,
and for the most part agree with the views
expressed in plaintiff’s attorneys’ letter of 17 February
2020. After his
complaint notice, the defendant sat back and took no
steps to prosecute the complaint. He then, through his attorneys,
sought to
take unjustifiable advantage of the plaintiff’s
desperation to progress the matter, whilst ignoring the fact that it
was
he, not the plaintiff, who had been supine. And on top of all
that the defendant had refused to disclose his address in the UK.
[98]
It appears that later that same day (17
February 2020), the plaintiff’s attorneys attended at the
Magistrates’ Court
with another
ex
parte
application for substituted
service. The file cover notes this appearance before Magistrate
Mathopa, and the following query from
the learned Magistrate: “
Why
substituted service- Already Notice of Intention to Defend
delivered.
”
[99]
On 18 February 2020, the plaintiff’s
attorneys again attended at the Magistrates’ Court, appearing
before Magistrate
Booysen. After noting this appearance, the court
file cover reflects Magistrate Booysen’s written notes as
follows:
Application for Substituted Service Refused.
Nothing wrong with service effected by the Sheriff
on
9/7/2019
[100]
After this appearance and outcome of the
ex
parte
application, the plaintiff’s
attorneys addressed a further letter to defendant’s attorneys.
In this letter the defendant’s
attorneys were advised that the
“
Application for Substituted
Service was issued yesterday, 17 February 2020”.
Details
of the appearances on 17 and 18 February 2020 before Magistrates
Mathopa and Booysen were also provided together with photograph
copies of the file cover. On the basis that the substituted service
application had been refused, plaintiff’s attorneys then
advised that “
As such, we are
notifying you in advance that a Notice of Bar shall be served on your
offices during the course of tomorrow morning.
”
[101]
In my view, the plaintiff was justified in
serving the notice of bar in the circumstances: the Rules allow it
and there had been
an absence of collegial engagement on the part of
the defendant.
[102]
On 26 February 2020, the defendant’s
attorneys addressed a letter to the Acting Chief Magistrates,
Randburg (the plaintiff’s
attorneys were copied in on the
letter). The letter commenced with the following: “
It
is regrettable that we have to address this letter to you regarding
the conduct of the Respondent and his attorneys, as outlined
below:
”
The letter then went onto summarise what had transpired after 4 July
2019 in respect of the July action and up until the
18 February 2020.
[103]
The letter concluded as follows:
4.1
We address this letter to you to respectfully and humbly request that
you intervene in the matter to ensure that the Plaintiff’s
attorneys comply with the initial ruling and to ensure that no
default judgment is entered against our client pursuant to a Notice
of Bar as contemplated in their 19 February 2020 letter, without
their first complying with the Initial Ruling.
4.2
We foresee a situation where the Plaintiff’s attorneys deliver
a Notice
of Bar without complying with the initial Ruling and on its
strength applying for default judgment. It simply cannot be that
their
way of dealing with the Initial Ruling is simply to shop around
for another ruling from different Magistrates, This makes a mockery
of your Court, its process and Rules, which we implore you not to
condone or countenance but to strongly show your disapproval
and
dismay.
[104]
The defendant’s approach to the Chief
Magistrate, was, in my view, not only unjustifiable in and of itself,
but if regard
is had to the allegations of impropriety made against
plaintiff’s attorneys (such as forum shopping), wholly
inappropriate.
The defendant was also wrong in demanding compliance
with orders that had been overtaken by two orders that service on him
was
valid.
# Procedural competency of
the interlocutory application
Procedural competency of
the interlocutory application
[105]
Rule 60A affords a party, who believes that
the other party has taken an irregular step, the opportunity to have
that step set aside.
To do so, the complaining party (in this
instance the defendant) must first afford the other party an
opportunity to remedy the
irregular step within 10 days of laying the
complaint (through the notice envisaged by rule 60A(1)). Where the
‘offending’
party does not remedy the complaint within
the requisite 10 days, the complaining party is obliged to make
application to set aside
the irregular step (if still of mind) within
15 days from the expiry of the 10 days’ notice period. An
application made later
than the 15 days is incompetent, and a
complaining party who does so is required to seek condonation for
such failure.
[106]
At the commencement of his argument before
us, defendant submitted that the irregular step application fell
properly within the
provisions of both rule 60 and rule 60A.
Following debate with this court, defendant correctly conceded that
prayers 1 and 3 of
his notice of motion could only be viewed as
seeking relief in terms of rule 60A but maintained that the relief
sought in terms
of prayer 2 was properly sought in terms of rule 60.
[107]
Prayer 2, it will be recalled, was couched
as an alternative to prayer 1. This prayer sought an order that
plaintiff be given 5
days within which to comply with the October
notes, and that if the plaintiff did not so comply then application
could be made
for setting aside the summons. Assuming that prayer 2
was properly viewed as falling within the provisions of rule 60, it
still
is not appropriate relief to set aside the summons itself. In
any event, I do not believe that defendant’s reliance on rule
60 for this prayer was appropriate not least because (1) the October
notes were not orders, and (2) rule 60 does not empower the
Magistrate Court to set aside any proceeding not least a summons. All
that rule 60(2) allows is for a court to order compliance
with “
any
provision of these Rules
”.
[108]
For the irregular step application to be
procedurally competent, defendant was obliged to show in his founding
papers that a notice
removing cause of complaint was given to the
plaintiff, that the complaint was not removed within the notice
period, and that his
application was brought within 15 days
thereafter.
[109]
There are two fundamental problems with the
irregular step application. First, the complaint notice upon which
the application necessarily
relies, and which is referred to in the
first prayer of the notice of motion, was served on 24 July 2019. The
irregular step application
was served almost a year later on 1 July
2020, was clearly out of time, and defendant never sought condonation
for its lateness.
[110]
Second, the complaint identified in the
complaint notice was that service of summons was incompetent.
Following from that, the complaint
notice correctly linked a failure
to remedy service to an entitlement to apply for setting aside such
service. However, this is
not what was sought by the defendant. He
sought the setting aside of the combined summons itself. There is no
evidence that the
defendant caused to be served a notice complaining
about the validity of the summons itself, nor did the complaint
notice itself
identify setting aside the summons itself as arising
from it. Simply put there was and is no suggestion that the issuing
of the
summons was irregular. There is no basis laid in the irregular
step application for setting aside the summons itself.
[111]
For either of the above two reasons (alone
or together) the irregular step application fell to be dismissed and
was correctly dismissed
by the learned Magistrate.
# Validity of service of
July summons
Validity of service of
July summons
[112]
It is common cause that summons was served at the defendant’s
Hyde Park house, and on
a person employed by the defendant at that
property (in this case, a security guard). The deputy sheriff
certified service of the
summons in terms of rule 9(3)(b), more
specifically relying on the residence portion of the sub-rule.
[113]
The defendant contends that the service in terms of rule 9(3)(b) was
invalid because he had
been residing in the United Kingdom since 2015
and was accordingly not resident in South Africa at the time of
service.
[114]
I point out that the defendant did not and does not assert that the
Hyde Park house is not his
residence but rather that he is not
resident in South Africa. I nevertheless proceed on the basis that
the question for decision
is whether in the circumstances of the
particular facts in this matter, the Hyde Park house fulfils the
requirement of being defendant’s
‘residence’ for
purposes of rule 9(3)(b).
[115]
In
argument before us defendant relied on an extract from
Hoosein
v Dangor
.
[1]
Hoosein
was
a judgment handed down in the context of a rule 43 application.
The
extract relied upon by defendant, and particularly the underlined
portions which is the defendant’s underlining, is as
follows:
The
concept “residence” has been considered in a number of
court decisions in the past, notably
Ex parte Minister of Native
Affairs
1941 AD 53
;
Cohen v Commissioner for Inland Revenue
1946 AD 174
to name but few such decisions. In
Robinson v
Commissioner of Taxes
1917 TPD 542
at 547–548 Bristow J
observed that perhaps the best general description of what is
imported by the term “residence”
is that it means a man’s
home or one of his homes for the time being,
though exactly what
period or what circumstances constitute home is a point on which it
is impossible to lay down any clearly defined
rule. Physical presence
at a place for a prolonged period would constitute residence.
Bristow J further observed that when the intention is to prolong
one’s presence beyond the possible limits of a casual visit,
and that intention is not abandoned, it would seem that the intention
to prolong one’s presence beyond the possible limits
of a
casual visit, that intention would constitute residence, the
intention of course being gleaned from all the circumstances
of the
case. A person’s intention is not necessarily conclusive. The
objective facts must be looked at to decide the question
of factual
evidence.
[116]
The
question in
Hoosein
was
whether the court had jurisdiction to entertain the rule 43
application that served before it. The plaintiff had claimed that
the
court did not have jurisdiction because the applicant was not
ordinarily resident in the court’s area of jurisdiction
at the
relevant time as required by section 2(1)(b) of the Divorce Act.
[2]
[117]
Whilst
Hoosein
dealt
with the meaning of ‘ordinarily resident’ as it pertains
to jurisdiction in the context of divorce matters, the
question for
decision by a full bench of three judges in
Barens
en ‘n Ander v Lottering
[3]
was whether service of summons had interrupted prescription. As in
the present matter, summons was certified as being served in
terms of
rule 9(3)(b) at the defendant’s residence.
[118]
In
Barens,
the evidence concerning the defendant’s
residence was as follows. The defendant’s family lived in
Wellington. It appears
that the defendant lived with them until July
1994, at which stage the defendant relocated to Calvinia to take up a
temporary teaching
position. During this time the defendant visited
his family regularly and had also, in official documentation, noted
that he resided
in Wellington. In February 1996, summons was served
on the defendant at the family home in Wellington. In April 1996
defendant
was granted a permanent teaching post in Calvinia. Based on
these facts, Lottering (the defendant in
Barens
), contended at
the time when summons was served, his residence was in Calvinia and
not Wellington, and that accordingly prescription
had not been
interrupted.
[119]
The full bench held that for purposes of rule 9(3)(b) a person may
have more than one residence,
and that service of process at any one
such residence would be valid. On the facts the full bench found that
the defendant had
two residences, one in Calvinia and the other in
Wellington. It accordingly held that service of summons at the
Wellington address
constituted valid service in terms of rule
9(3)(b). Since service was valid, prescription had been interrupted.
[120]
Relying heavily on
Hoosein,
defendant’s argument appears
to be that even though a person may own several residences, only that
person’s primary
residence qualifies as residence for purposes
of rule 9(3)(b). According to the defendant a person’s holiday
home would not
fall within the meaning of residence for purposes of
rule 9(3)(b).
[121]
In my view, the position expressed by the full bench in
Barens
is
more appropriate to the issues raised by the facts in the present
matter, than those that pertained in
Hoosein. Hoosein
revolved
around the jurisdiction of the court to entertain a rule 43
application, more particularly in the context of the meaning
of
“
ordinarily resident
”, whereas the issue in
Barens
related to very question being dealt with in this matter: service
of process and the meaning of “
residence”
.
[122]
There is another reason why I do not believe that
Hoosein
is
appropriately applied to this matter. The extract from the
Hoosein
judgment dealing with the concept of ‘residence’ and
upon which the defendant relies, was noted by the court itself as
being not particularly helpful:
There
is normally no difficulty in determining where a natural person
resides. It is a factual question, little helped by what a
definition
of the concept “residence” ought to be. All that can be
said about “ordinarily resident” is
that it denotes a
residence that is not casual or occasional. (See
Bisonboard
Ltd v K Braun Woodworking Machinery Ltd
1991 (1) SA 482
(A)
at 504A)
[123]
The defendant appears to place
store on the underlined portions of the extract in support of a
suggestion that residence requires
a prolonged stay in order to be
constituted as such. Whilst this may be correct when examining the
question of ‘ordinarily
resident’, it does not follow
that a person’s residence is one in which that person stays
over a prolonged period.
It was for this reason that the court in
Hoosein
examined
the concept of residence and drew from it the principle. In my view,
whilst the place where a person is ordinarily resident
would also be
regarded as the person’s residence, it does not follow that a
person’s residence is limited to the place
where the person
ordinarily resides.
[124]
Rule 9(3)(b) makes it clear that
service at the residence of a person is valid.
Barens
holds that for purposes
of rule 9(3)(b) a person may have more than one residence. This
approach allows for flexibility when it
comes to service of process
and fulfils the aim of rule 9 which is to bring the process to the
attention of the defendant.
[125]
At the end of the day, both
Hoosein
and
Barens
hold that the question
as to what constitutes a person’s residence is a factual
inquiry, and that whilst a place of permanence
would be regarded as a
person’s residence, that does not exclude other places as also
constituting a person’s residence.
[126]
The relevant facts pertaining to
the inquiry into whether the Hyde Park house constitutes defendant’s
residence for purposes
of rule 9(3)(b), include, as I see them, the
following:
126.1
The defendant owns the Hyde Park house.
126.2
The defendant is married with two children.
126.3
Up until sometime in 2015, the defendant and his
family resided in the Hyde Park house.
126.4
Sometime in 2015, the defendant and his family
moved to the UK. The defendant states that this was a permanent move.
126.5
The defendant became a resident in the UK in 2016
by virtue of an EU Residence Card. This card is a work permit which
allows the
defendant to live in the EU for such purpose until October
2021.
126.6
The defendant and his family visit the Hyde
Park house “
a
couple of times a year,”
for an unstated length of time.
126.7
During the last quarter of 2018, the
defendant contracted the plaintiff to carry out maintenance and
repair work at the Hyde Park
house. The defendant was present at the
Hyde Park house when this contract was concluded.
126.8
The defendant then departed South Africa.
126.9
About a month later he returned to South
Africa with the intention of staying in the Hyde Park house, although
for reasons dealt
with above, he was unable to sleep in the house.
One of the defendant’s texts to the plaintiff at that time
referred to the
Hyde Park house as “
home
.”
126.10
There is a security guard who is employed
at the Hyde Park house.
126.11
The security guard accepted the March 2020
summons on behalf of the defendant and thereafter contacted the
defendant to advise him
of receipt.
126.12
The defendant then contacted his attorneys
with instructions to oppose the March action and they represented him
fully in this leg
of the dispute without objecting to the service of
the summons.
126.13
The security guard accepted the July
summons on behalf of the defendant, and again contacted the defendant
to advise him of receipt.
126.14
As with the March summons, the defendant
contacted his attorneys, and they were likewise placed in possession
of the July summons
and represented him fully.
[127]
To be fair to the defendant, he does state in his
confirmatory affidavit that he did not raise the invalidity of the
March summons
in that action because it was settled when it was and
did not proceed. He states in his confirmatory affidavit that if that
matter
had not settled, he would have taken issue with what he
regarded as defective service. In my view this is an
ex
post facto
explanation for the
defendant’s omission. The March action was settled during the
middle of May 2019, but its summons was
served on 5 April 2019.
Having regard to the fact that the notice of intention to defend was
served on 24 April 2019, at best for
defendant his entitlement to
submit a notice to remove cause of complaint in terms of rule 60A
would have expired prior to the
date upon which the matter became
settled.
[128]
Whilst, on the papers it appears
that the defendant’s residence is also in the UK, this does not
exclude the Hyde Park house
from also being the defendant’s
residence. In
Barens
the
court held that even though the defendant lived and worked in
Calvinia, his return to the family home in Wellington for visits
(where he had previously permanently resided) and utilisation of that
address for formal documentation, justified a finding that
the
Wellington home also constituted the defendant’s residence for
purposes of rule 9(3)(b).
[129]
The defendant submits that the plaintiff, by
bringing applications for substituted service, conceded, and accepted
that summons
had not been validly served. Taken in context, I do not
believe that the plaintiff’s substituted service applications
give
rise to such an inference. In any event, even if that was the
case, the learned Magistrates dismissal of the substituted service
application on 18 February 2020, amounted to a court sanctioned
acceptance that summons had been validly served. As I have stated
previously, these
ex parte
applications
appear to have been instituted out of extra caution.
[130]
I am of the view, therefore, that,
for purpose of rule 9(3)(b), the Hyde Park house is to be regarded as
defendant’s residence.
[131]
There is, however, an additional
basis which supports the learned Magistrate’s dismissal of the
irregular step application.
[132]
In
Investec
Property Fund Limited v Viker X (Pty) Ltd,
[4]
the court held that where summons had come to the knowledge of the
defendant through service that had not taken place as envisaged
by
the rules of court and defendant had given a notice of intention to
defend, the purpose of the rule had been fulfilled. In the
absence of
prejudice to the defendant, summons would be regarded as having been
validly served.
[133]
Uniform
rule 30(3) (“
Irregular
proceedings
”)
and rule 60A(3) are identical in formulation. A High Court, when
seized with an application to set aside an irregular proceeding/step,
may exercise a discretion not to set aside the irregular
proceeding/step if the irregularity has not caused the complaining
party
substantial prejudice. Although
Viker
X
was
decided in the context of the High Court rules, in my view the
principle is appropriately applied to proceedings in the Magistrates
Court. When dealing with irregular proceedings, there ought to be no
distinction in principle between proceedings in the Magistrates
Court
and High Court. I am fortified in this view when regard is had to the
provisions of rule 1(2) of the Magistrates’ Court.
I am not of
the view that the often-cited principle that the Magistrates’
Court is a creature of statute bears any relevance
to this debate.
This is because what is at play here is an interpretation of the
rules themselves. To the extent that my view is
contrary to the full
bench judgment of the Eastern Cape Local Division in
Kondlo
v Eastern Cape Development Corporation
[5]
which was an appeal from the Magistrates Court, and I am not
convinced that it is, I respectfully beg to differ with the learned
Judges in that division.
[134]
Accordingly, I am of the view that
the learned Magistrate was correct when he found that summons was
validly served on the defendant
as required by rule 9(3)(b).
# Status of the notes
appearing on the court file
Status of the notes
appearing on the court file
[135]
It may be recalled that the alternative basis upon which the
defendant sought to set aside the
summons, as formulated in his
notice of motion, was because of the plaintiff’s failure to
abide by the October notes (the
notes made by Magistrates Tau and
Persence on 29 and 30 October 2019 respectively on the court file).
[136]
In his heads of argument, the defendant refers to the October notes
as rulings or directives
and argues that they constitute court
orders.
[137]
In my view the defendant faces several challenges in the context of
this alternative basis to
set aside the summons.
## Whether summons can be
set aside for failure to abide by the October notes
Whether summons can be
set aside for failure to abide by the October notes
[138]
Assuming that the October notes are to be regarded as court orders,
on what basis would a failure
to abide by these orders justifiably
result in an order setting aside the summons?
[139]
Various magistrates were seized with an application for substituted
service. At best for the
defendant, a failure by plaintiff to abide
by the orders granted pursuant to that application, would result, not
in the setting
aside of the summons, but rather a dismissal of the
application for substituted service. In other words the application
for substituted
service would be dismissed for non-compliance with
those orders. It being so, the question would remain whether the
service was
valid.
[140]
Moreover, and as with the first problem identified in the context of
the main basis upon which
defendant asserts that the summons falls to
be set aside, it is not readily apparent why a failure to abide by
the court orders
should result in an order setting aside the summons,
as opposed to an order setting aside service of the summons. As
discussed
above, the defendant failed to prosecute the complaint
notice in accordance with rule 60. It lapsed and there was no
application
for its revival by way of condonation.
## Whether the rulings are
orders
Whether the rulings are
orders
[141]
A further challenge faced by the defendant is whether the October
notes have the status of orders.
[142]
As a
starting point defendant submits that whilst the October notes do not
constitute judgments as envisaged by section 83 of the
Magistrates’
Court Act, “
these
rulings or directives do amount to orders which have been granted by
courts of law.”
[6]
[143]
The defendant then submits that plaintiff was required to comply with
these rulings for two
separate reasons. In my view neither of these
reasons support defendant’s submission. I consider them below.
## Applicability
of the Oudekraalprinciple
Applicability
of the Oudekraal
principle
[144]
The first
reason relies on the following principle stated in
Oudekraal
Estates (Pty) Ltd v City of Cape Town and
Others:
[7]
Until the Administrator's
approval (and thus also the consequences of the approval) is set
aside by a court in proceedings for judicial
review it exists in fact
and it has legal consequences that cannot simply be overlooked. The
proper functioning of a modern State
would be considerably
compromised if all administrative acts could be given effect to or
ignored depending upon the view the subject
takes of the validity of
the act in question. No doubt it is for this reason that our law has
always recognised that even an unlawful
administrative act is capable
of producing legally valid consequences for so long as the unlawful
act is not set aside.
[8]
[145]
Based on the aforesaid principle, defendant submits that a statutory
functionaries’ decision,
even if unlawful, is binding and of
legal effect until such time as it has been set aside. The defendant
submits that the notes
made by Magistrates Tau and Persence on 29 and
30 October 2019 amounted to rulings in their capacity as statutory
functionaries,
and that for as long as these rulings existed, the
plaintiff was bound to comply with them.
[146]
It is not clear to me what meaning defendant seeks to attribute to
“
statutory functionary
”, and why the Magistrates
in giving their rulings are to be regarded as statutory
functionaries. Guidance might however be
gleaned from statute.
[147]
The
Promotion of Administrative Justice Act [‘PAJA’],
[9]
does not define “
statutory
functionary
”.
However, it seems to me that, at least within the context of that Act
and having regard to PAJA’s definition of “
administrative
action”
,
a statutory functionary would be an organ of state or person
exercising a power in terms of legislation.
[148]
The Constitution itself may also provide some guidance. Section 43
provides that legislative
(i.e., statutory) authority is vested in
parliament, provincial legislatures, and municipal councils. In terms
of section 168,
judicial authority is vested in the courts. Courts
and judicial officers are expressly excluded from the definition of
“
organ of state”
in section 239.
[149]
The
Disaster Management Act
[10]
(which, unfortunately, is currently at front and centre of our daily
lives), redeemably defines “
statutory
functionary
”
as “
a
person performing a function assigned to that person by national,
provincial or municipal legislation
”.
[11]
[150]
It appears to me that defendant’s categorisation of the
Magistrates as statutory functionaries
can only be in the sense set
out above. In my view the Magistrates in their capacity as judicial
officers are not statutory functionaries,
and since the rulings were
made by them in the former capacity, their rulings cannot be regarded
as being made in an administrative
capacity. In my view the
Oudekraal
principle is not applicable to this matter. More importantly PAJA
excludes judicial functions from the purview of review.
## Whether the rulings are
equivalent to court orders
Whether the rulings are
equivalent to court orders
[151]
The
defendant’s second reason is that “
the
rulings are equivalent to court orders
”.
[12]
The question is therefore what is the status of the October notes?
[152]
Before turning to this question, even if the October notes were to be
regarded as court orders,
I once again rhetorically ask on what basis
a failure to abide by these orders justify a setting aside of the
summons, as opposed
to dismissal of the application for substituted
service or setting aside of service of summons. My answer is that
there would be
no such justification.
[153]
The defendant’s reason that the rulings are equivalent to court
orders begs the question
as to whether this is indeed so. No argument
was presented to us as to why this should be the case. What defendant
emphasises are
principles which state that court orders must be
carried out and given effect. In my view these principles are only
relevant if
the October notes have the same status as court orders.
[154]
In his judgment the learned Magistrate characterised the October
notes as “
queries or requests of the magistrates that had
minuted their requirements when the application was presented to
them.”
He held that these queries or requests were not
binding on subsequent Magistrates seized with the same application
for substituted
service. In other words, they were merely minutes on
a cryptic record of proceedings.
[155]
The defendant contends that the October notes were binding on
subsequent Magistrates seized
with the application for substituted
service and were not ‘mere queries.’
[156]
Both before the learned Magistrate and on appeal, the defendant
contended that the plaintiff’s
appearances before different
Magistrates in respect of the application for substituted service
amounted to ‘
forum-shopping
’ in order to obtain a
favourable outcome.
[157]
In defendant’s founding affidavit, which was deposed to by
defendant’s attorney,
the plaintiff’s attorneys were
accused of grossly abusing the court rules and behaving in a “
highly
irregular…and gravely unethical”
manner by virtue of
the various appearances before different Magistrates. The plaintiff’s
attorneys were accused of doing
this in order to avoid complying
with, what the defendant viewed as, court orders.
[158]
In his judgment the learned Magistrate explained the process of
rotation of presiding officers
in the Magistrates court such that the
Magistrates hearing
ex parte
applications on day 1 might well
not be the same as those on day 2. The learned Magistrate rejected
the defendant’s accusation
of forum shopping when he stated
that “
So, to assert that the respondent, plaintiff’s
legal representatives had gone forum shopping is far fetched.”
[159]
In my view the learned Magistrate correctly rejected the accusation
of forum shopping. Rotation
of presiding officers is well known to
lawyers, or at least in my view, ought to be well known. The
accusations levelled against
plaintiff’s attorneys were, in my
view, unfounded and gratuitous.
[160]
In so far as the defendant’s attorneys expressed consternation
to the Chief Magistrate
with what they perceived to be irregular
conduct by the various Magistrates, the defendant ought to have taken
whatever appropriate
litigation steps might have been available to
him as opposed to trying to side-step court process through an
unjustified extra
curial approach to the Chief Magistrate.
[161]
In my view the October notes are correctly categorised as queries or
requests. In context, and
as alluded to in the learned Magistrate’s
judgment, the first Magistrate seized with the application for
substituted service,
Magistrate Tau, did not appear to be satisfied
that a case for substituted service had been made out and requested
the plaintiff
to provide the court with the defendant’s address
in the UK. The query or request appears to have made on the basis
that
absent such information, the learned Magistrate was not minded
to grant the application. No more is to be read into it than that.
The same applies to the note made by Magistrate Persence on 30
October 2019.
## The punitive costs
awarded by the learned Magistrate
The punitive costs
awarded by the learned Magistrate
[162]
The defendant submits that there was no
basis for the learned Magistrate to grant a punitive costs order
against him. He contends
that, in the court
a
quo,
the plaintiff sought a punitive
costs order on the basis that the interlocutory application was
vexatious.
[163]
The defendant submits that the
interlocutory application was not actuated by malice and that it was
brought on the “
bona fide belief
that service of the summons was defective
”
and that there is “
no nefarious
purpose underlying these proceedings.
”
He submits that there were no exceptional circumstances justifying
the punitive costs order, and that in making such an
order the
learned Magistrate failed to exercise his discretion judicially.
[164]
The reasons advanced by the learned
Magistrate for awarding punitive costs against the defendant included
that the interlocutory
application was “
a
non-starter from the outset.”
In
this regard the learned Magistrate pointed to the fact that the
interlocutory application (1) was brought well outside the time
limits imposed by the rules with no condonation having been sought by
the defendant, (2) was convoluted in that it was not at all
clear
upon which of two rules defendant relied for its application, and (3)
the issue as to whether summons had been validly served
ought
preferably to have been raised as a special plea.
[165]
From the defendant’s heads of
argument, it is apparent that the defendant accepts the principle
that a court of appeal is
not at liberty to overturn a costs award
merely because it believes the award was wrong. Since the award of
costs is a matter for
the discretion of the court of first instance
(in this case the learned Magistrate), a court of appeal may only
interfere with
a cost award if, taking into account all the
circumstances of the case, it finds that the court of first instance
did not exercise
its discretion judicially.
[166]
Although plaintiff sought a punitive costs
order based on vexatiousness, the learned Magistrate’s judgment
did not expressly
rely on this as a basis for the costs award. I say
not expressly because, on a reading of the judgment as a whole, there
are indications
that the learned Magistrate viewed some of the
defendant’s conduct as wanting.
[167]
Whilst vexatiousness is a justifiable basis
for punitive costs, it is not the only basis. Indeed, there is not an
exhaustive list
of circumstances under which punitive costs.
[168]
In my view, the learned Magistrate
exercised his discretion judicially, and the defendant has not
demonstrated a sufficient basis
to overturn the costs award made by
the learned Magistrate.
[169]
In any event, in my view, there was on the
papers that served before the learned Magistrate sufficient basis to
grant punitive costs
against the defendant. This includes
(1)
defendant’s unjustifiable attack on plaintiff’s legal
representatives; (2) defendant’s supine attitude to
prosecuting
his complaint; (3) defendant’s still borne irregular step
application; (4) defendant’s attitude to the
litigation as a
whole which appears to be to delay the finalisation thereof and to
out-litigate the plaintiff; (5) defendant’s
reliance on a
highly technical point, and especially where the defendant was not
able to demonstrate any prejudice as a result
of the supposed
invalidity of the summons; (6) defendant’s not having raised
this same technical point in the March action
where service took
place in exactly the same manner, and where the defendant was
represented by the same firm of attorneys in both
actions; (7)
defendant’s full knowledge of the July summons; (8) defendant’s
delivery of a notice of intention to defend
the July action, his
complaint thereafter that the July summons was invalid, and the very
late prosecution of his complaint almost
a year later.
# Costs of the appeal
Costs of the appeal
[170]
Before us, and on the basis that the appeal would be upheld, the
defendant sought costs of the
appeal.
[171]
I have found that the appeal is to be dismissed. This then leaves the
question of the costs
of this appeal.
[172]
In these proceedings the plaintiff asks us for a punitive costs
award, viz attorney and client
costs.
[173]
In my view such an award is justified. I say this for the reasons set
out in paragraph [169]
above, coupled with the defendant’s
persistence on appeal with a still borne application, accusations of
impropriety on the
part of plaintiff’s legal representatives,
and the inordinate unjustifiable delay to the finalisation of the
July action
brought about first by the irregular step application and
then this appeal.
# Order
Order
[174]
I accordingly make an order in the following terms:
1.
The appeal is dismissed.
2.
The defendant is ordered
to pay the plaintiff’s costs on appeal
on the scale as between attorney and client.
T
OSSIN
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION
JOHANNESBURG
I
agree:
G
MALINDI
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION
JOHANNESBURG
Electronically
submitted therefore unsigned
COUNSEL
FOR THE APPELLANT:
M D Stubbs
INSTRUCTEDBY:
Edward
Nathan Sonnenbergs Inc
COUNSEL
FOR RESPONDENT:
M D Köhn
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Philip Silver Mathura Inc
DATE
OF THE
HEARING:
11 October 2021
DATE
OF
JUDGMENT:
21 June 2022
[1]
[2010] 2 All SA 55 (WCC)
[2]
70
of 1979
[3]
2000 (3) SA 305 (C)
[4]
[2016]
JOL 36060 (GJ)
[5]
[2014]
2 All SA 328
ECM
[6]
Defendant’s
heads of argument: paragraph 17
[7]
2004
(6) SA 222 (SCA)
[8]
At
242A-C
[9]
Act
3 of 2000
[10]
Act
57 of 2002
[11]
Section
1 (
Definitions
)
[12]
The
defendant’s heads of argument: paragraph 20
sino noindex
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