Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 614South Africa
van As v van As (33865/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 614 (30 August 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
30 August 2022
Headnotes
if the document is ambiguous and capable of more than one interpretation and if on one of these interpretations the Defendant may be liable on the basis alleged in the summons, the summons is not excipiable, the meaning of the document itself may be put in issue on the pleadings for decision at the trial (See also Cairns (Pty) Ltd v Playdon & Co Ltd 1948 (3) SA 99 (S) at 106; Sacks v Venter 1954 (2) SA 427 (W) at 431.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## van As v van As (33865/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 614 (30 August 2022)
van As v van As (33865/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 614 (30 August 2022)
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sino date 30 August 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 33865/2021
REPORTABLE:
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
REVISED.
30 August 2022
In
In the matter between:
MARK
PETER VAN
AS,
Plaintiff
(in her capacity as Executor Estate
late of
CHARLES JOHN SON VAN
AS)
And
VAN
AS KARIN
INGRID
Defendant
JUDGMENT
MAKUME,
J
:
[1]
On the 15
th
July 2021 the Plaintiff issued summons against
the Defendant in which he seeks the following:
i)
Payment of the sum of
R1 300 000.00.
ii)
Interest on the said
amount.
iii)
Payment of costs on an and
client scale.
[2]
On receipt of the summons the Defendant entered appearance to defend.
The claim is
based on an Acknowledge of Debt executed by the
Defendant and one Michael Van As in favour of the late Charles John
Van As.
[3]
On the 4
th
August 2021 the Defendant filed a Notice in
Terms of Rule 23(1) contending that the Plaintiff’s particulars
of claim were
vague and embarrassing in various respects and called
upon the Plaintiff to remove such offending particulars within a
certain
period.
[4]
In response to that notice the Plaintiff sent a notice to amend the
particulars of
claim by replacing paragraphs 3 to 8 with new
paragraphs. In the final analysis the claim was reduced to
R650 000.00 (Six
Hundred and Fifty Thousand Rands).
[5]
On the 22
nd
September 2021the Defendant served a second
notice in terms of Rule 23(1) still maintaining that despite the
intended notice of
amendment the particulars of claim were still
vague and embarrasing.
[6]
On the 20
th
October 2021 the Defendant filed a Notice of
Exception to the Plaintiff’s particulars of claim in which she
excepts to paragraph
3 of the amended particulars of claim.
[7]
The particulars of claim read that on the 27
th
April 2017
the Plaintiff along with the Defendant and one Michael Van As
concluded a written acknowledgement of debt marked “VA2”.
The Defendant’s complaint is that ex facie the Acknowledgement
of debt the signatories were the Defendant, Michael Van As
and the
deceased Charles Johnson Van As. In the result the Defendant argues
that the particulars and claim and Annexure “VA2”
contradicted each other thus rendering the amended particulars of
claim vague and embarrassing.
[8]
On the 27
th
October 2021 the Plaintiff filed a notice to
oppose the Exception. The gist of the exception is to the effect that
whilst in paragraph
3 of the amended particulars of claim it is
pleaded that on the 27
th
April 2017 the Plaintiff and the
Defendant as well as one Advocate Michael Van As concluded an
acknowledgement of debt agreeing
to pay Charles Van As the
Plaintiff’s father an amount of money, the Acknowledgment of
Debt was in fact not signed by the
Plaintiff but by his late father
Charles Van As.
[9]
The Plaintiff was appointed executor of his late father’s
estate on the 7th
September 2018. The Plaintiff in actual fact has
instituted action against the Defendant in his capacity as the
Executor in the
Estate of his late father Charles Van As.
[10] The
Defendant (Excipient) maintains that the allegations made in the
amended particulars of claim
when compared to annexure “VA2”
thereto upon which the Plaintiff relies for his cause of action
against the Defendant
Clearly contradicts each other and is thus
vague and embarrassing and prejudicial to the Defendant in pleading
thereto.
[11] On
the other hand the Plaintiff in opposing the exception says that it
made an error by referring
to the signatory to the Acknowledgment of
debt as the Plaintiff when it should have indicated that the
signatory to the Acknowledgement
of Debt was Charles Van As. The
Plaintiff pleads that a mere error on the pleadings does not reach
the threshold for the exception
to be granted.
[12] The
Plaintiff’s claim is based on an acknowledgement of debt which
the Defendant does not
dispute having signed during the year 2017. It
is however correct that the particulars of claim in so far as they
refer to the
Acknowledge of Debt having been concluded by the
Plaintiff in his capacity as the Executor of the estate of his late
father Charles
Van As that is clearly incorrect.
[13] It
is trite law that an excipient has the duty to persuade the Court
that upon every interpretation
which the particulars of claim could
reasonably bear no cause of action were disclosed or that the
pleadings are vague and embarrassing.
A court must look benevolently
instead of over-critically at the pleadings.
[14] The
Transvaal Provincial Division of the High Court in the matter of
MEC
and Others NNO v Mc Arthur & Others
2003 (4) SA 142
per
Basson J said the following at 149F
“
In order for an exception to
succeed it must be excipiable on every interpretation that can
reasonably be attached to it. See
First National Bank of Southern
Africa Ltd v Perry NO and Others
2001 (3) SA 960
(SCA)
at 965 D.
Further a charitable test is used on exception, especially in
deciding whether a cause of action is established. The
pleader is
also entitled to benevolent interpretation. The pleadings must be
read as a whole, no paragraph can be read in isolation.
Conclusions
of law need not be pleaded. Bound up with the last mentioned
consideration is the fact that certain allegations expressly
made may
carry with them implied allegations and the pleadings must then be so
read.”
[15] In
Small v Herbert
1914 CPD 273
it was held that if the document
is ambiguous and capable of more than one interpretation and if on
one of these interpretations
the Defendant may be liable on the basis
alleged in the summons, the summons is not excipiable, the meaning of
the document itself
may be put in issue on the pleadings for decision
at the trial (See also
Cairns (Pty) Ltd v Playdon & Co Ltd
1948 (3) SA 99
(S) at 106; Sacks v Venter
1954 (2) SA 427
(W) at
431.
[16]
According to the Defendant she is uncertain whether there is another
Acknowledgement of Debt
that the Plaintiff possess. This in my view
is a technical point the Defendant is able to plead despite the
obvious error on the
pleadings. She can easily deny that the
agreement was concluded by the Plaintiff as executor. The Plaintiff
will then have a choice
to amend or lead evidence to cure the obvious
error. There is thus no prejudice.
[17] The
Defendant knows and does not dispute that she signed Annexure VA2 and
no other agreement
and it is on that agreement that she must plead
and put her own version. The Defendant can thus not be under any
illusion that
a different agreement is being referred to.
[18] As
stated in Cairns (Pty) Ltd (supra) the meaning of Annexure VA2 may be
put in issue on the
pleadings for decision at the trial.
[19] In
the final analysis the excipient (Defendant) has failed to
demonstrate any prejudice and should
be able to plead one way or the
other. In the result I make the following order:
ORDER
1.
The
Exception dismissed.
2.
The
Defendant is to pay the Plaintiff’s taxed party and party
costs.
Dated at Johannesburg on this 30
th
day of AUGUST 2022.
M
A MAKUME
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Appearances:
DATE OF
HEARING
: 22 AUGUST 2022
DATE OF JUDGMENT
: 30 AUGUST 2022
FOR
APPLICANT
:ADV ANTHONY BISHOP
INSTRUCTED
BY
MESSRS FIONA MARCANDONATOS
FOR
RESPONDENT
: ADV POTTAS
INSTRUCTED
BY
MESSRS ROSSOUW LESLIE
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