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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Moodliyar & Bedhesi Attorneys v Madatt and Another (11188/15)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 630 (18 August 2022)
Moodliyar & Bedhesi Attorneys v Madatt and Another (11188/15)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 630 (18 August 2022)
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sino date 18 August 2022
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REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO: 11188/15
REPORTABLE: NO
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO
REVISED: NO
Date of judgment: 18
August 2022
In the matter between:
MOODLIYAR &
BEDHESI ATTORNEYS
PLAINTIFF
and
YASINE
MADATT
FIRST DEFENDANT
BERNADETTE AUBREY
MADAT
SECOND DEFENDANT
JUDGMENT
Olivier, AJ:
Introduction
1.
The parties are embroiled in a dispute over
the payment of legal fees and disbursements. The Plaintiff is a firm
of attorneys based
in Johannesburg. The First Defendant is Yasine
Madatt; the Second Defendant is Bernadette Aubrey Madatt. The
Defendants are the
natural parents and guardians of A [....]. M
[....], born 16 July 2002. There are two claims – the
Defendants are sued in
their personal capacity, and also in their
representative capacity as the natural parents and guardians of A.
2.
The Defendants raise two special pleas of
prescription to the claims against them. They allege that most of the
claim against them
in their personal capacity has prescribed, and
that the entire claim against them in their representative capacity
has prescribed.
Linked to the second special plea is the joinder and
citation of A, as a (third) Defendant in this matter.
3.
The papers in this matter are voluminous –
just shy of 2 700 pages on CaseLines. On the day of trial, the
parties agreed in
chambers that the special pleas of prescription
should be heard separately, as the outcome would determine the future
conduct of
the trial.
4.
In essence, the question is whether the Plaintiff still has
valid claims against the Defendants in their personal and
representative
capacities, or whether the whole or part of one or
both claims has prescribed.
Central to this
enquiry is determining the date on which
prescription started
to run (which is when the debt became due), and whether prescription
was interrupted at any point.
Background facts
5.
The case has a long history. On 14 October
2006 the Defendants, in their personal capacity and in their
representative capacity
on behalf of their minor daughter, signed a
power of attorney with the Plaintiff, in terms of which the Plaintiff
was mandated
to institute an action against the MEC Health, Gauteng,
for negligence during the birth of A at Coronation Hospital, which
caused
her to sustain life-altering injuries (“the first POA”).
6.
The parties signed a second power of
attorney (“the second POA”) on 15 January 2009. The terms
of the second POA were
the same, except that it provided for an
increase in the hourly rate, and an annual escalation rate.
7.
The mandate was terminated by the
Defendants on 21 May 2012 (after enrolment but before the allocated
trial date of 7 November 2012).
The Defendants subsequently procured
the services of a new firm of attorneys, who prosecuted the principal
claim successfully.
8.
The principal claim was instituted in the
First and Second Defendants’ personal capacity, and also in
their representative
capacity as parents and natural guardians of A.
On 4 August 2015 the Defendants were awarded damages of R 2 000
000.00 in their
personal capacity, and R 16 000 000.00 in their
representative capacity on behalf of A. They were awarded costs,
which amounted
to approximately R 1 300 000.00, which was paid by the
State Attorney.
9.
The Plaintiff contends that it duly
performed prior to termination of the mandate and is therefore
entitled to claim its fees and
disbursements from the Defendants.
10.
The bill of costs was taxed and allowed in
the amount of R 381 831.75 on 15 October 2013. It covers the period
14 October 2006 to
21 May 2012. Demand was made on 21 October 2013.
Summons was issued on 23 March 2015. According to the combined
summons, the Plaintiff
claims a total amount of R R 381 831.75 from
the Defendants in their personal and representative capacities, the
latter the result
of an amendment to the particulars of claim.
The legal principles
11.
It is useful at this stage to give a brief
overview of the relevant law. Prescription is regulated by the
Prescription Act 68 of
69 (“the Prescription Act”). It
provides that a debtor
has
a specific period of time within which to institute a claim. If the
action is not commenced within that period, the debt will
prescribe.
A prescribed debt will not support a claim. Failure to institute the
claim within the required period cannot be condoned.
The principle is
simple, its application less so.
12.
The Act makes provision for different categories of claim,
each with a specific prescription period. The claim in this case does
not fall into any of the special categories in the Act. It is,
therefore, a claim that prescribes after
three years
from the
date that the debt becomes due and payable, unless it is regulated by
other legislation. In the instant case, when the
debt became due is
in dispute, and is critical to the determination of whether the debt,
or part thereof, has prescribed.
13.
According
to section 12(1) and (2) of the Act, prescription will run as soon as
a
debt
is
due
,
or when the creditor becomes aware (or ought to have through the
exercise of reasonable care) of the existence of the debt.
A
debt is
due
once the creditor can identify the debtor and the facts from which
the debt arose. If the debtor prevents the creditor from gaining
knowledge of the debt, prescription runs from when the creditor gains
knowledge of the existence of the debt.
[1]
14.
Prescription may be interrupted. This means that prescription
will stop running and will start running afresh from the date of
interruption.
Prescription of the whole debt is interrupted if there
is an acknowledgment of liability, whether explicitly or implicitly,
by
the debtor. Prescription can also be interrupted by “judicial
operation” with formal service of a legal process (e.g.
summons).
Once the legal process has been served,
the matter will be dealt with in terms of the Rules of Court.
However, legal process
in the prescription context has a limited
meaning. It is not all processes that interrupt prescription.
Service of summons interrupts prescription. It is a legal process
that sets the claim against the defendant in motion.
15.
A suspension of prescription differs from the interruption of
prescription. In the case of the former, prescription does not start
running afresh but rather, as the phrase implies, the running of
prescription is “suspended” for a particular period
of
time. The Act, in section 13, identifies certain instances in which
prescription can be suspended for a period of up to a year.
16.
It is clear that the issue in this case is
when the debt became due – at the time when the mandate was
terminated, or earlier,
during the course of the mandate, as and when
the work was done and disbursements made.
17.
The
Constitutional Court recently interpreted provisions of the
Prescription Act that are relevant to the present case. In
Trinity
Asset Management Pty Limited v Grindstone Investments 132 Pty Ltd
,
the minority judgment of Mojapelo AJ sets out the relevant law in
clear and simple terms:
[2]
[36] The current
Prescription Act provides that “a debt shall be extinguished
after the lapse of [the applicable period]”
[3]
which in this instance is “three years”,
[4]
and that prescription “shall commence to run as soon as the
debt is due.”
[5]
[37] The term
“due” is not defined in the Prescription Act. Its meaning
was recently considered by the SCA in
Miracle
Mile
where it was held:
“
In terms of the
[Prescription] Act, a debt must be immediately enforceable before a
claim in respect of it can arise. In the normal
course of events, a
debt is due when it is claimable by the creditor, and as the
corollary thereof, is payable by the debtor. Thus,
in [
Deloitte
Haskins
]
[6]
at 532G-H, the court held that for prescription to commence running,
‘there has to be a debt immediately claimable by the
creditor
or, stated in another way, there has to be a debt in respect of which
the debtor is under an obligation to perform immediately’.
(See
also
The
Master v I L Back & Co Ltd
1983
(1) SA 986
(A) at 1004F H). In
Truter
v Deysel
[2006] ZASCA 16
;
2006 (4) SA 168
(SCA) (
[2006] ZASCA 16) para 16, Van Heerden JA
said that a debt is due when the creditor acquires a complete cause
of
action for the recovery of the debt, i.e. when the entire set of
facts which a creditor must prove in order to succeed with his
or her
claim against the debtor is in place”.
[7]
[38] A debt is due
when it is immediately claimable by the creditor and immediately
payable by the debtor. In
Truter
[8]
the SCA held that, for the purpose of prescription, a debt is due
when the creditor acquires a complete cause of action to approach
a
court to recover the debt.
[39] …
[40] A
fundamental principle of prescription … is that it will begin
to run only when the creditor is in a position
to enforce his right
in law, not necessarily when that right arises.
[9]
[41] A
further principle has been developed, based on policy considerations,
which provides that a creditor should not
by his or her own inaction
delay the running of prescription.
[10]
This policy-based principle appears to have influenced courts to
accept as a general rule that all debts payable on demand are
immediately enforceable on the conclusion of the contract, and that
it is at this point that prescription begins to run.
[11]
[47]
In sum, the relevant principles may, in my view, be restated as
follows. A contractual debt becomes due as per the terms of
that
contract. When no due date is specified, the debt is generally due
immediately on conclusion of the contract. However, the
parties may
intend that the creditor be entitled to determine the time for
performance, and that the debt becomes due only when
demand has been
made as agreed. Where there is such a clear and unequivocal
intention, the demand will be a condition precedent
to claimability,
a necessary part of the creditor’s cause of action, and
prescription will begin to run only from demand.
This, in my view, is
not an incident of the creditor being allowed to unilaterally delay
the onset of prescription. It is the parties,
jointly and by
agreement seriously entered into, determining when and under what
circumstances or conditions a debt shall become
due.
The powers of attorney
18.
The parties signed two powers of attorney.
The first was signed on 14 October 2006, but not witnessed; the
second POA was signed
on 15 January 2009, and witnessed. Paragraphs
1—3 and 5 of each are the same, but paragraph 4 in the second
POA increases
the hourly rate from R900/h, to R1200/h; it provides
also for an annual escalation rate of 15 per cent, which was absent
from the
first POA.
19.
The relevant section of the second POA
reads as follows:
We further agree to pay
all fees and/or legal costs to be charged by our attorneys in the
performance of this mandate, which fees
and/or legal costs on the
attorney and own client scale at the agreed rate of R 1200 per hour
or such pro rata amounts in respect
of parts of an hour, which rate
shall increase at a rate of 15% per annum from date of signature
hereof.
20.
Plaintiff contends that they are regular
fee agreements. Defendants submit that had the powers of attorney
been true fee agreements,
Plaintiff would have been bound by the
rules of the relevant professional body to submit accounts within 3
months of completing
the specific work or making the disbursements.
However, Defendants’ counsel made no reference to any specific
rule to show
that Plaintiff was bound to do what Defendants claim.
21.
The Plaintiff’s reply is that
although nothing precludes an attorney from agreeing with the client
that interim payments may
be made, there is nothing in either of the
agreements to that effect – nowhere does it say that fees will
be charged every
3 months in the form of interim payments. It is only
paragraphs 4 and 5 that address fees, and these make no mention of
interim
payments.
22.
Defendants submit further that the powers
of attorney are in substance contingency fee agreements, because
Plaintiff argues that
the fees were payable only on completion of the
mandate.
23.
In
my view, this argument carries no water. The
Contingency Fees Act 66
of 1997
stipulates certain requirements which a contingency agreement
must meet. The powers of attorney do not comply, and would be invalid
in terms of the legislation. Defendants referred me to
Mkuyana
v Road Accident Fund
[12]
where Van Zyl DJP analysed the elements of a contingency agreement,
but I am of the view that it does not assist Defendants.
FIRST SPECIAL PLEA:
The claim against the parents in their personal capacity
24.
Defendants submit that all claims prior to
23 March 2012, the date that summons was issued, have prescribed in
terms of section
11(d) of the Prescription Act. They pray that the
Plaintiff’s claim for legal fees incurred and due, owing and
payable prior
to 23 March 2012, be dismissed with costs.
25.
Plaintiff’s reply is that a creditor
need claim only when there has been either performance, or
termination of the mandate.
Plaintiff’s counsel referred me to
Blakes Maphanga Inc v Outsurance
in which the Supreme Court of Appeal held that:
The
relationship between an attorney and client is based on an agreement
of
mandatum
entitling
the attorney, in the absence of an agreement to the contrary, to
payment of fees on performance of the mandate or the
termination of
the relationship.
[13]
26.
In
the rule 28 judgment,
[14]
Cele
AJ, referring to the
Benson
case, observed as follows:
As a
general proposition, it is in terms of our law that where the parties
do not agree on a time for performance or payment, it
is due on
demand. I do not believe that this general principle finds
application, in terms of the common law, in a relationship
of an
attorney and his or her client which is based on
mandatum
.
In the absence of an agreement to the contrary, an attorney is not
entitled to payment of fees and disbursements until the mandate
has
been performed, or until the employment of the services has been
terminated.
[15]
27.
Plaintiff submits that since the mandate
was terminated prior to its completion, on 21 May 2012, the
plaintiff’s fees and
disbursements became due and payable on 21
May 2012, on and from which date prescription commenced running;
therefore the claims against the Defendants
would have prescribed only on 21 May 2015.
28.
In am inclined to follow what was stated in
the
Blakes Maphanga
case and the conclusion reached by Cele AJ in the Rule 28
application. In other words, in the absence of an agreement to the
contrary,
an attorney is entitled to payment of fees on performance
of the mandate or the termination of the relationship. There is
nothing
in the powers of attorney indicating an intention to the
contrary.
29.
Accordingly, the
first
special plea is dismissed
. The question
of the correct rate at which the services and disbursements were
charged is a matter for evidence
SECOND SPECIAL PLEA:
The claim against the parents in their representative capacity as
parents and guardians of minor daughter,
A
30.
In
the original particulars of claim the Plaintiff had cited the parents
only in their personal capacities. The Plaintiff gave notice
to the
Defendants on 21 August 2017 of its intention to amend its
particulars of claim in terms of Rule 28 of the Uniform Rules
of
Court, to cite the Defendants also in their representative capacity
as parents and guardian of A. The Defendants unsuccessfully
opposed
this amendment, but successfully opposed other proposed
amendments.
[16]
The amendment
was effected on 19 June 2018 pursuant to a court order granted on 7
June 2018.
31.
Defendants argue that if a mandate is found
to have existed between the Plaintiff and Defendants in their
personal capacities, the
Plaintiff’s mandate was terminated on
18 May 2012 at which date, at best for the Plaintiff, prescription
commenced running
in terms of s 12(1) of the Prescription Act.
32.
Plaintiff’s notice of intention to
amend, dated 21 August 2017, was served on Defendants’
attorneys on 25 August 2017,
being more than 3 years after
commencement of prescription.
33.
The period of prescription was completed by
18 May 2015 in terms of section 11(d) of the Prescription Act in
respect of / vis-à-vis
the “new” Defendant, A. The
Defendants therefore pray that the Plaintiff’s claim against
them in their representative
capacities be dismissed.
34.
The original paragraph 4 cited the
Defendants in their personal capacity only. The amendment added them
to the proceedings in their
representative capacity. Paragraph 4 now
reads: “The Defendants are cited herein in their personal and
representative capacities
as guardian of the minor child, A [....] M
[....] (“the minor”).”
35.
A [....] has not been cited by name as a
third defendant in this action. The Defendants take issue with this,
arguing that a joined
party must be cited; in the present case,
therefore, she should be cited as third defendant, duly represented
by first and second
defendant, in accordance with the amended
particulars of claim.
36.
I do not consider it necessary for A [....]
to be cited by name as third defendant. It is clear from the
amendment that the Defendants
are cited in their representative
capacity as parents and guardians of A [....]. The effect would be
the same as if A [....] were
cited specifically by name as a third
defendant. Therefore, as the parents are cited in their personal and
representative capacities,
A [....] need not be cited separately.
37.
It is useful to quote the following passage
from the Rule 28 judgment of Cele AJ, dealing with the citation of
Defendants in their
representative capacity:
[19] … Before the
amendment, the only parties as Defendants are the parents to the
exclusion of their minor daughter.
In truth the amendment seeks to
introduce the minor daughter as one of the Defendants.
The
Plaintiff could initially have achieved this either by citing the
minor duly represented by her guardians or the guardians
acting in
their representative capacity for the minor. A claim against a minor,
in what way she is represented, is clearly distinct
from a claim
against her guardians in their personal capacity. The fact that
service of the summons in a claim against the minor
would be effected
on her guardian does not merge her claim into that of her guardian.
It must follow that the amendment seeks to
introduce a new party to
these proceedings. The Defendants raise the question whether service
on the Defendants in their personal
capacity interrupted
prescription. This is an objective test and the Court may only look
to the summons and the Particulars of
Claim, and not to: a) the
annexures to the Particulars of Claim, or b) the subjective intention
or knowledge of the parties. (My
emphasis.)
38.
I
align myself with the view of Cele AJ that the amendment seeks to
introduce a new party to the proceedings. Where a debt is owed
in a
representative capacity, it cannot be recovered from that person in a
personal capacity.
[17]
39.
The
Plaintiff relies on the
Blaauwberg
case
[18]
in support its
argument. In
Blaauwberg
the Supreme Court of Appeal considered s 15(1) of the Act, in
particular whether prescription is interrupted by service of a
summons
in which the debtor is wrongly described but which is
rectified after the prescriptive period. Of relevance is paragraph
[18]:
[In] the context of s
15(1), though not necessarily in relation to the amendment of
pleadings, the existence of another entity which
bears the same name
as that wrongly attributed to a creditor in a process is irrelevant.
That is not the creditor’s concern
or responsibility. Second,
an incorrectly named debtor falls to be treated somewhat differently
for the purposes of s 15(1). That
that should be so is not
surprising: the precise citation of the debtor is not, like the
creditor’s own name, a matter always
within the knowledge of or
available to the creditor. While the entitlement of the debtor to
know it is the object of the process
is clear, in its case the
criterion fixed in s 15(1) is not the citation in the process but
that there should be service on the
true debtor (not necessarily the
named defendant) of process in which the creditor claims payment of
the debt. The section does
not say ‘. . . claims payment of the
debt from the debtor’. Presumably this is so because the true
debtor will invariably
recognize its own connection with a claim if
details of the creditor and its claim are furnished to it,
notwithstanding any error
in its own citation. Proof of service on a
person other than the one named in the process may thus be sufficient
to interrupt prescription
if it should afterwards appear that that
person was the true debtor. This may explain the decision in Embling
supra where the defendant
was cited in the summons as the Aquarium
Trust CC whereas the true debtors were the trustees of the Aquarium
Trust. Service was
effected at the place of business of the Trust and
came to the knowledge of the trustees. In the light of what I have
said such
service was relevant to proof that s 15(1) had been
satisfied and was found to be so by Van Heerden J (at 700D, 701D).
40.
I am of the view that
Blaauwberg
is distinguishable from the present case. That case dealt with the
debtor who was incorrectly named. In the present case, a new
debtor
was introduced when the amendment to the Particulars of Claim was
made. The Defendants, in their representative capacity,
were added
only when the amendment was effected.
41.
The work done and disbursements incurred
were done more than 3 years earlier than the date that the amendment
was made, namely 19
June 2018.
42.
In the result,
the
second special plea is upheld.
The
claim against the Defendants in their representative capacity is
therefore dismissed.
Costs
43.
Considering that the matter is to proceed
to trial in respect of the claim against the Defendants in their
personal capacity, I
think it best that costs should be reserved for
determination at the end of the trial.
IN THE RESULT, I MAKE
THE FOLLOWING ORDER:
a.
The first special plea is dismissed. The
claim against the Defendants in their personal capacity is postponed
sine die
for adjudication.
b.
The second special plea is upheld. The
claim against the Defendants in their representative capacity as
parents and guardians of
A [....] M [....], is dismissed.
c.
Costs are reserved for determination at the
end of the trial.
M
Olivier
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Johannesburg
This judgment was
handed down electronically by circulation to the parties and/or
parties’ representatives by email and by
upload to CaseLines.
The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 16h00 on 18 August
2022.
Date of hearing:
10 May 2022
Additional submissions:
30 May 2022
Transcribed record
received:
2 August 2022
Date of
judgment:
18 August 2022
Appearances:
On behalf of the
Plaintiff:
Ms A.J. Lapan
Instructed by:
Moodliyar & Bedhesi Attorneys
On behalf of the
Defendants:
Ms F.F. Docrat
Instructed by:
Ivan Maitin Attorneys
[1]
See e.g.
Macleod
v Kweyiya
2013 (6) SA 1
(SCA) para [9].
[2]
2018
(1) SA 94
(CC). Mojapelo’s exposition of the legal principles
is referred to with approval in para [95] of the majority judgment
of Cameron J.
[3]
S
10(1).
[4]
S
11(d). This is the applicable provision in this case as the
debt does not fall into any of the other prescribed categories.
[5]
S
12(1).
[6]
Deloitte
Haskins & Sells Consultants (Pty) Ltd v Bowthorpe Hellerman
Deutsch (Pty) Ltd
[1990]
ZASCA 136;
1991 (1) SA 525 (A).
[7]
Standard
Bank of South Africa Ltd v Miracle Mile Investments 67 (Pty) Ltd
[2016]
ZASCA 91
;
2017
(1) SA 185
(SCA) at para 24.
[8]
Truter
v Deysel
[2006] ZASCA 16
;
2006 (4) SA 168
(SCA) at para 16.
[9]
See
Lubbe
“Die Aanvang van Verjaring waar die Skuldeiser oor die
Opeisbaarheid van die Skuld kan Beskik” (1988) 51
THRHR
135.
[10]
Uitenhage
Municipality v Molloy
[1997]
ZASCA 112
;
1998 (2) SA 735
(SCA) at 742E-743B;
Benson
v Walters
1984
(1) SA 73
(A) at 86C; and
The
Master v I L Back and Co Ltd
1983 (1) SA 986
(A) (
I
L Back
)
at 1005G.
[11]
See
Webb
v Van der Wath
1914
OPD 17
at 19;
Nicholl
v Nicholl
1916 WLD 10
at 12;
Cassimjee
v Cassimjee
1947
(3) SA 701
(N);
Lambrecht
v Lyttleton Township (Pty) Ltd
1948
(4) SA 526
(T) at 529; and
Damont
N.O. v Van Zyl
1962 (2) SA 47
(T) at 50D-51F.
[12]
See
2020 (6) SA 405 (ECG).
[13]
Blakes
Maphanga Inc v Outsurance
2010
(4) SA 232
(SCA) at para [16].
[14]
Moodliyar
and Bedhesi Attorneys v Yasine Madat and another
,
unreported judgment by Cele AJ, case no 11188/2015 ( 7 June 2018)
(“Rule 28 judgment”).
[15]
At
para 31.
[16]
See
Moodliyar
and Bedhesi Attorneys v Yasine Madat and another
,
unreported judgment by Cele AJ, case no 11188/2015 ( 7 June 2018)
(“Rule 28 judgment”).
[17]
See
Blakes
Mapanga Inc supra
at
para 14.
[18]
Blaauwberg
Meat Wholesalers CC v Anglo Dutch Meats (Exports) Ltd
2004 (3) SA 160
(SCA).
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