Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 536South Africa
Leon JJ Van Rensburg Attorneys v Matlotlo Tranding (PTY) Ltd and Others (04956/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 536 (15 July 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
15 July 2022
Headnotes
then, that the factors are interrelated and should be considered holistically when making a decision on whether or not condonation should be granted.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Leon JJ Van Rensburg Attorneys v Matlotlo Tranding (PTY) Ltd and Others (04956/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 536 (15 July 2022)
Leon JJ Van Rensburg Attorneys v Matlotlo Tranding (PTY) Ltd and Others (04956/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 536 (15 July 2022)
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sino date 15 July 2022
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO
:
04956/2020
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
NO
DATE
:
15 JULY 2022
In
the matter between:
LEON
JJ VAN RENSBURG ATTORNEYS
Applicant
and
MATLOTLO
TRANDING (PTY) LTD
First Respondent
THE
LEADERS CHRISTIAN ACADEMY
Second Respondent
MRS
S
RODRIGUES
Third Respondent
MRS
NYIKA
Fourth Respondent
EKURHULENI
METROPOLITAN MUNICIPALITY
Fifth Respondent
MRS
SAMKE
NGCOBO
Sixth Respondent
Coram:
MACHABA AJ
Heard
on
:
18 MAY 2022
Delivered:
15 JULY 2022
Delivered
: This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the party
and or her representatives via email and caseline
and released to
SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 10h00 on 15
July 2022.
ORDER
(1)
The application for condonation for the late
filing of the Applicant’s application for leave to appeal is
refused; and
(2)
The Applicant’s application for leave to
appeal is refused with costs.
JUDGMENT
MACHABA
AJ
“
[1]
It is indeed the lofty and lonely work of the Judiciary, impervious
to public commentary and political rhetoric, to uphold,
protect and
apply the Constitution and the law at any and all costs.”
[1]
CONDONATION
1.
In this matter, the Applicant seeks leave to
appeal the judgment and order of this Court handed down on about 20
December 2021 (“the
Judgment”).
2.
The Applicant advanced numerous reasons in
support of the said application and same was opposed by the First
Respondent.
3.
At the hearing of the matter, the Applicant
moved an application for condonation for the late filing of the
application for leave
to appeal.
4.
In an affidavit supporting the above
application for condonation, the Applicant submitted that the
Judgment was received by its
office on 15 January 2022 “
by
email or noted on Caseline”.
It
submitted that its offices were closed between 15 December 2022 and
15 January 2022.
5.
The Applicant submitted that the reason the
Judgment was only received on the said date was because “
nobody
has access to any emails or has authority to act on any emails during
the closure of the office
.”
6.
The deponent to the above affidavit, makes a
startling averment that although he is “
not
sure
”, but he believes “
that
there was a period of dies non during December and January were
parties were to required to act due to most law firms closing
during
festive season
.”
7.
The deponent further states that “
all
staff were required to take compulsory leave even the secretary
working on this matter was on leave hence they knew of this
matter
when they all returned from the festive holidays
.”
8.
The Applicant submitted that there is no
prejudice to be suffered by it filing its application as late as did.
It stated that it
is, instead, the one that is prejudiced because the
Court’s interpretation of rule 41(1)(c) is completely wrong.
9.
It emerged for the first time in the hearing of
the application for leave to appeal, and in its application for leave
to appeal
that the agreement in relation to the costs of the main
application extended not only to the Fifth and Sixth Respondents. In
fact,
as the Applicant’s counsel argued, the other respondents,
namely, the Second to Fourth Respondents also reached an agreement
with the Applicant in respect of costs “
hence
this Court ought not to have interfered with the arrangements made
with these other respondents
.”
10.
The Applicant states that all respondents
offered to pay their part of the costs in full when matter became
settled with them. This,
as I find, is news to this Court.
11.
In the main application for costs, the
Applicant appeared to be wholeheartedly after the First Respondent
and seeking the latter
pay the rest of the costs it incurred and
those occasioned by the withdrawal of the opposition by the First
Respondent. It contended
that the Court should not interfere with the
cost order/agreement that it and the Fifth and Sixth Respondents
agreed to. This view,
is shared by the First Respondent both in its
heads in this application and in the main application.
12.
Based on the above understanding of the matter,
this Court found against the Applicant and exercised its discretion
in a manner
it deemed meet.
13.
On the merits of the application for
condonation, the First Respondent argued that the Judgment was handed
down on 20 December 2021
and the application for leave to appeal was
filed on 24 January 2022, despite the Applicant being aware that such
an application
must be filed 15 days from the Judgment being handed
down.
14.
According to the First Respondent the Applicant
is out of time and the
dies
for
filing its application for leave to appeal has lapsed.
15.
In my analysis of the application for
condonation, it appears evident that the Applicant completely misread
the rules of this Court
with regard to
dies
non,
and has largely advanced its
internal dynamics, in its office, as reasons for the late application
for leave to appeal.
16.
It further does not look like the Applicant
willingly launched the late condonation application. Indeed, even the
application for
condonation was filed late in the day.
17.
The Applicant’s memory
in
re
condonation application, despite
it being late in the filing of the application for leave to appeal,
was probably jogged up by
the First Respondent’s undated heads
of argument which contended that the Applicant had not been granted
condonation or an
extension of time for its delays in filing the
current application for leave to appeal.
18.
It was only then and on 16 May 2022, two days
before the hearing of the application for leave to appeal, that the
Applicant filed
its application for condonation.
19.
It seems that all along and based on its
erroneous understanding of the
dies
non
, the Applicant believed that it
did not need to ask for this Court’s indulgence. This was wrong
and fatal to its application.
20.
Rule 19 of the Uniform Rules of Court provides
as follows:
19
Notice of Intention to Defend
(1)
Subject to the provisions of section 27 of the Act, the defendant in
every civil action shall be allowed ten days after service
of summons
on him within which to deliver a notice of intention to defend,
either personally or through his attorney: Provided
that the days
between 16 December and 15 January, both inclusive, shall not be
counted in the time allowed within which to deliver
a notice of
intention to defend.
[Subrule
(1) substituted by GN R2021 of 5 November 1971, by GN R2164 of 2
October 1987 and by GN R2642 of 27 November 1987.]
21.
Mavundla
J, pointed that “
[I]n
the works of Erasmus, Superior Court Practice, the learned authors
point out that the definition of the words
‘
civil
summons’ in s.1 of the Supreme Court Act 59 of 1959
“contemplates two classes of persons who may be affected
thereby, viz a person against whom relief is sought (i.e the actual
defendant or the respondent to an application) and a person
who is
interested in resisting the grant of relief (i.e creditors or other
person who may be called upon to ‘show cause’
why a
certain relief should not be granted).”
[2]
22.
From the
plain reading of the above rule, it is apparent that Rule 19(1) of
the Uniform Rules of Court provides for
dies
non
only in respect of a notice of intention to defend. During this
period, from 16 December to 15 January, the usual period of ten
(10)
business days for filing a notice to defend after receipt of a
summons is suspended.
23.
There is
nothing that permits the Applicant to assume, as it has done, that
even an application for leave to appeal is affected
by
dies
non
.
Counsel for the Applicant also did not refer this Court to any
authority in support of the Applicant’s conduct.
24.
In
Melane
v Santam Insurance Co. Ltd
1962 (4) SA 531
(A),
the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court considered the meaning of
"on good cause shown" or "on sufficient cause
shown"
and outlined the factors which need to be taken into account in this
regard. These factors are: "the degree of
lateness, the
explanation for the delay, the prospects of success and the
importance of the case". The Court held, then, that
the factors
are interrelated and should be considered holistically when making a
decision on whether or not condonation should
be granted.
25.
Although provision is made
for condonation applications, there is no uniform stance by the
courts on whether to provide leeway in
granting condonation
applications for non-compliance during the December and January
period.
26.
I suppose, as is usually the
case with our law, that each case must be determined on its own
unique facts and merits.
27.
For example, in the matter
of
South
African Airways (Soc) Ltd v Commission for Conciliation, Mediation
and Arbitration and Others (JR271/15) [2018] ZALCJHB 6
(19 January
2018),
the
Labour Court dealt with the late filing of a review application. The
reason provided for the late filing was that the staff
members who
were handling the matter over the December/January period had been on
leave. The judge in the matter accepted that
some leeway must be
allowed during the festive season, "
in
that the court has rightfully acknowledged the fact that the absence
of a Labour Court rule stipulating dies non during the ordinary
annual shutdown period over December and January should be taken into
account when delays over this period are being considered".
28.
Furthermore, the judge in
matter of
Lentsane
and others v Human Sciences Research Council (2002) ILJ 1433 (LC)
stated that, in his view, the omission of such an institution in the
Rules of this Court was "lamentable". He further
stated
that
"It
is not necessary for one to approve of the near complete collapse of
national enterprise during the traditional year-end
holiday period,
but is seems manifestly obvious and sensible that any legal
practitioner
who
institutes an action in the first week of December
must appreciate that there will be considerable hardship, done
unnecessarily, if individuals who are required to respond have,
at
the last moment, to rearrange their family and other commitments".
[Underlining
mine]
29.
The
dies non
periods prescribed in Rules 6(5)(a),
19, and 26 of the Uniform Rules of Court only apply to affidavits and
pleadings. No
dies non
period is provided for applications for leave to appeal under the
then Rule 49 or section 17 of the Superior Court Act, 2013.
30.
It is this Court’s finding that the
Applicant ought to have known this trite legal position, especially
given the professions
it purports to ply its business in.
31.
This Court has discretion in granting
condonation upon exercising same judiciously and a judicious exercise
of its discretion does
not mean that it is bound to agree with any of
the parties.
32.
Even if I
could have exercised my discretion to admit the late filing of the
answering affidavit, such discretion must be premised
on facts placed
before me, explaining the failure to have the answering application
for leave to appeal filed in time. The fact
that there would be no
prejudice, on the part of the applicants, were I to allow the
answering affidavit to stand, that fact cannot
stand alone,
especially when, for example, it is marshalled over the bar, without
any formal application for condonation.
33.
In
casu
,
there is an affidavit to explain the source of the delay. The facts
placed before this Court in support thereof i.e. that in the
Applicant’s belief,
dies non
applied indiscriminately to any
process from December to January (including to applications for leave
to appeal), smacks of ignorance
of the law (and the rules of Court).
This, from a firm of attorneys which conducts the business of law.
This I find unacceptable.
34.
From
the reading of the rule itself, it is only the commencement of
actions (including notice of motion – according to the
Judgment
of Mavundla J) and the filing of Notice of an Intention to defend (by
necessary logic from Mavundla J’s judgment)
that the reckoning
of the days falling within the
dies
non
period is not to be counted. Not in respect of applications for leave
to appeal or any other process.
[3]
APPLICANT’S
INTERNAL OFFICE DYNAMICS AS CAUSE FOR DELAYS
35.
The other grounds relied upon by the Applicant
for this condonation application have to do with its internal/office
arrangements.
The Applicant and its office resolved to take a very
risky business practice of ‘switching all the lights off’
when
judgments such as the one under attack presently could be handed
down at any time. As I have pointed out, not every process is covered
by
dies non
.
Even emails were shut off.
36.
This Court does not wish to advise attorneys on
how to run and manage their offices, however, failure of the
Applicant and its officials
to benefit from the use of the modern-day
technological advancements appears to have done the Applicant under.
37.
In light of the above facts and legal
principles, this Court is not prepared to accede to the application
for condonation.
38.
Accordingly, this application is to be
dismissed on this basis alone.
THE
TEST FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL
39.
Even if this Court were to entertain this
application for leave to appeal, the Applicant has failed to satisfy
the three cumulative
requirements for leave to appeal in terms of
section 17(1) of the Superior Courts Act:
“
(1)
Leave to appeal may only be given where the judge or judges concerned
are of the opinion that –
(a)
(i) the appeal would have a reasonable
prospect of success; or
(ii)
there is some other compelling reason why the appeal should be heard,
including conflicting judgments on the matter under consideration;
(b)
the decision sought on appeal does not
fall within the ambit of section 16(2)(a); and
(c)
where the decision sought to be appealed
does not dispose of all the issues in the case, the appeal would lead
to a just and prompt
resolution of the real issues between the
parties.”
40.
As stated herein above, leave to appeal may
only be given where the Judge or Judges concerned are of the opinion
that the appeal
would have reasonable prospect of success or where
there is some compelling reason(s) why the appeal should be heard,
including
conflicting judgments on the matter under consideration.
41.
The grounds for leave to appeal are succinctly
stated in the notice of application for leave to appeal and I do not
intend to restate
them in this judgment. Furthermore, I would like to
extend my gratitude and appreciation to both counsel for the
submissions made
in their concise heads of argument filed in this
application for leave to appeal.
42.
I am satisfied that I have covered and
considered all the issues raised in the application for leave to
appeal in the Judgment and
exercised my discretion judiciously. I am
therefore of the view that there are no reasonable prospects of
success in this appeal.
Put, differently, I am of the view that there
is no prospect that another Court may come to a different conclusion
in this case.
Therefore, the application for leave to appeal the
Judgment falls to be dismissed.
43.
Accordingly, it is ordered that:
1.
The application for condonation for the late
filing of the Applicant’s application for leave to appeal is
refused; and
2.
The Applicant’s application for leave to
appeal is refused with costs.
By
Order,
T J MACHABA
Acting Judge
Gauteng Local Division
COUNSEL
FOR APPLICANT:
Adv LM du Plessis
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Leon JJ Van Rensburg
COUNSEL
FOR 1sT RESPONDENT:
Adv Wesley Vittee
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Mayet Vittee Inc
11
[1]
Secretary of the Judicial Commission of Inquiry into Allegations of
State Capture, Corruption and Fraud in the Public Sector
including
Organs of State v Zuma and Others [2021] ZACC 18.
## [2]Du
Plessis and Another v Mjwara and Another (14848/05) [2007] ZAGPHC
134 (31 July 2007), para [16].
[2]
Du
Plessis and Another v Mjwara and Another (14848/05) [2007] ZAGPHC
134 (31 July 2007), para [16].
## [3]Du
Plessis and Another v Mjwara and Another (14848/05) [2007] ZAGPHC
134 (31 July 2007)
[3]
Du
Plessis and Another v Mjwara and Another (14848/05) [2007] ZAGPHC
134 (31 July 2007)
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