Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 632South Africa
Industrial Development Corporation of South Africa v Reddy and Others (5159/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 632 (2 September 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
3 August 2022
Headnotes
the delivery of a rule 35 notice did not suspend the period in which the defendant was obliged to deliver a plea. This reasoning was also followed in Distell Limited v Naidoo and Others[2], wherein, in the context of a notice in terms of rule 35(12) it was held that the delivery of a rule 35 (12) notice did not suspend the relevant time periods and the respondent should have availed itself of the remedies envisaged by rule 27 to extend any time period not provided for in terms of the rules.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Industrial Development Corporation of South Africa v Reddy and Others (5159/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 632 (2 September 2022)
Industrial Development Corporation of South Africa v Reddy and Others (5159/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 632 (2 September 2022)
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sino date 2 September 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NUMBER:
5159/2021
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED
NO
In
the matter between:
INDUSTRIAL
DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION OF SOUTH AFRICA
Applicant
and
GONASGREN
GANESAN
REDDY
First Respondent
LINDA
REDDY
Second Respondent
PIETER
HENDRIK
STEYN
Third Respondent
TANIA
STEYN
Fourth Respondent
ADC
ENERGY
CC
Fifth Respondent
ADC
CABLES (PTY)
LTD
Sixth Respondent
AVIWE
NDYAMARA
N.O.
Seventh Respondent
JUDGMENT
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to
the parties’ legal representatives by e-mail. The date and time
for hand-down is deemed to be 10h00 on the 2nd of September 2022.
DIPPENAAR
J
[1]
This application was set down for hearing on 14 July 2022 as an
unopposed application
for default judgment on 3 August 2022. The
notice was served electronically on the respondent’s attorneys
by consent between
the parties. Judgment was sought against the first
to fifth respondents as guarantors (collectively referred to as the
“respondents”)
in respect of various claims for
significant monetary amounts.
[2]
At the hearing, counsel representing the respondents appeared and a
debate ensued
between the parties as to the fate of the main
application. The applicant contended that it was entitled to default
judgment in
the absence of an answering affidavit, whilst the
respondents sought an order striking the application from the roll,
together
with punitive costs.
[3]
The respondents argued that as there was an opposed interlocutory
application pending
to compel discovery under rule 35(14) which had
been launched during February 2022 and that the enrolment of this
application on
the unopposed roll was flawed and constituted an abuse
of the process of court.
[4]
Due to the congested state of the roll and the fact that the
respondents’ submissions
were only produced during the hearing,
judgment had to be reserved.
[5]
It is necessary to set out the history of the application in some
detail. The main
application was launched on 4 February 2021. An
intention to oppose was delivered by the respondents on 22 April
2021. To date
no answering affidavit has been delivered. The
respondents delivered notices in terms of rule 35(12) and rule
35(14), seeking various
documents. The main application was enrolled
on the unopposed roll on 17 August 2021. On 16 August 2021, the
respondents delivered
a postponement application. On 17 August 2021
an order was granted by Makume J by agreement between the parties,
inter alia
directing that the documents and recordings
specified in the respondents’ rule 35(12) and 35(14) notices
dated 13 August
2021 be furnished to the respondents to the extent
that the said documents or tape recordings were in the applicant’s
possession.
The documents in the applicant’s possession were
furnished to the respondent during November 2021, save for a
so-called Halkerd
report, which formed the subject matter of a
further rule 35(14) notice delivered by the respondents on 2 February
2022. The applicant
objected to the production of the report and
contended that the report was irrelevant and contained confidential
information and
trade secrets of the applicant.
[6]
The respondents launched their interlocutory application to compel
compliance with
the rule 35(14) notice and provision of the Halkerd
report on 21 February 2022. Heads of argument in the interlocutory
application
were filed by the respondents on 14 July 2022. At the
time of the hearing, the applicant had not yet delivered its heads of
argument.
[7]
No formal application was launched by the respondents and the
striking off application
was orally argued from the bar. In the
pending interlocutory application, the respondents did not seek any
extension of the time
periods for the delivery of answering papers,
nor the stay of the main application. No notice under rule 30 was
delivered by the
respondent pursuant to the service of the notice of
set down.
[8]
Against this backdrop the arguments of the parties must be
considered. The applicant’s
stance was that it was entitled as
a matter of law to proceed with the main application in the absence
of an answering affidavit.
Reliance was placed on
Potpale
Investments v Mkhize (“Potpale”)
[1]
,
wherein Gorven J held that the delivery of a rule 35 notice did not
suspend the period in which the defendant was obliged to deliver
a
plea. This reasoning was also followed in
Distell
Limited v Naidoo and Others
[2]
,
wherein,
in the context of a notice in terms of rule 35(12) it was held that
the delivery of a rule 35 (12) notice did not suspend
the relevant
time periods and the respondent should have availed itself of the
remedies envisaged by rule 27 to extend any time
period not provided
for in terms of the rules.
[9]
Navsa JA in
Democratic
Alliance and Others v Mkhwebane and Another
[3]
(“Mkhwebane”)
also commended the reasoning in
Potpale
and pointed out that the party seeking documents would be put to a
choice whether to file an answering affidavit or seek an extension
of
time pending the finalisation of an application to compel production
of documents.
[10]
The reasoning in
Potpale
was confirmed by the Supreme Court of Appeal in
Caxton
and CTP Publishers and Printers Limited v Novus Holdings Limited
[4]
,
wherein Petse AP confirmed the finding of Gorven J that delivery of a
notice in terms of rule 35(12) or rule 35(14) does not suspend
the
period referred to in rule 26 or any other rule. Petse AP further
pointed out:
““
There is
nothing in the language of rules 35(12) and 30A to suggest that once
a demand has been made for the production of the documents
to which
the rule 35(12) notice relates, the party is excused from complying
with the time frames prescribed in terms of Uniform
Rule 6(5)(d)(ii)
or 6(5)(e), as the case may be. In Potpale, Gorven J rightly observed
that the delivery of a notice in terms of
r35(12) or (14) does not
suspend the period referred to in r26 or any other rule.
Whilst there is much
to be said for the view expressed by the learned Judge, sight should
however not be lost of the fact that it
is open to the court, in the
exercise of its discretion, to extend the prescribed time periods
prescribed in terms of the rules
whenever a proper case therefor has
been made out by the party seeking such indulgence. Indeed, this is
what Uniform Rule 27 itself
contemplates”.
[11]
From the aforesaid authorities is it clear that a party in the
position of the respondents is
not left without a remedy, which a
court in the exercise of its discretion may grant.
[12]
In its “notes on argument” (as they were referred to),
the respondents provided an
extensive version regarding the history
of the dispute between the parties. Reference was made to the
respondent’s intention
to raise various defences to the
applicant’s claims, being predatory lending on the part of the
applicant, a public policy
defence based on
Sasfin
v Beukes
[5]
and the contention that the enforcement of the guarantees on which
the applicant’s claims are based, would be
contra
bonos mores
.
It was stated that these proposed defences were raised in the pending
interlocutory application.
[13]
The respondents sought to distinguish
Potpale
on its specific
facts on two grounds. First, as it pertained to action proceedings
and a notice of bar under rule 26, whereas the
present proceedings
are application proceedings where there is no similar provision to
rule 26 which applies. Second that in
Potpale
, the defendant
had not launched proceedings to compel compliance with its rule
35 (12) and 35(14) notices and it was in this
context that it
concluded that the defendant does not have a right to the
documentation sought and cannot engineer a stay of the
plaintiff’s
proceedings.
[14]
Reliance was further placed by the respondents on
Sanniegraan
CC v Minister of Police
[6]
, and the authorities
referred to therein. However, in
Potpale,
Gorven J referred to and considered the very authorities relied on by
the respondents as referred to in
Sanniesgraan
.
Insofar as the reasoning in
Sanniesgraan
diverges from
Potpale
,
I respectfully decline to follow S
anniesgraan
.
The weight of the authorities supports the interpretation in
Potpale.
[15]
Whilst it is correct that each case must be determined on its own
facts, the distinctions sought
to be drawn by the respondents are
artificial. If the principles in
Potpale
are considered in the
context of
Caxton
and the other authorities, they apply
irrespective of whether the proceedings are instituted by way of
action or motion. As made
clear in
Caxton
, the delivery of a
notice in terms of rule 35(12) or rule 35(14) does not suspend the
period referred to in rule 26 or any other
rule.
[16]
The launching of a compelling application would not make any
difference to the above principle,
save of course if an extension of
time periods had been sought in that application. No authority was
advanced by the respondents
in support of the proposition that the
launching of an application to compel does that which the notice
under rule 35(14) could
not achieve.
[17]
The respondents further do not at present have a procedural right to
the documents. The fact
that a compelling application was launched
does not equate it to a right to the documents. A further complexity
is that the present
matter concerns a rule 35(14) notice rather than
a rule 35(12) notice. Those complexities are more appropriately to be
considered
by the court seized with the interlocutory application and
I express no view thereon.
[18]
Ultimately a party in the position of the respondents is left with a
choice, either to deliver
its affidavit without the documents or to
seek to extend the time periods for filing, pending the finalisation
of the application
to compel. The respondents did not exercise their
remedies.
[19]
In these circumstances it cannot be concluded that the enrolment of
the application was flawed
or constituted an abuse. It follows that
the respondent is not entitled to the punitive costs order sought
against the applicant.
[20]
I am not however persuaded that in the circumstances of this matter
default judgment should be
granted, as the applicant urged me to do.
The application is clearly opposed and it would not be in the
interests of justice to
deprive the respondents of an appropriate
opportunity to protect their interests and exercise the remedies at
their disposal.
[21]
In my view, analogous to a situation where a respondent appears on
the day of the hearing of
a default judgment application and seeks an
opportunity to oppose, in the present instance the respondents are
seeking an indulgence.
As such it would be appropriate to direct the
respondents to pay the wasted costs.
[22]
I grant the following order:
[1] The application is
postponed sine die;
[2] The respondents are
directed to pay the wasted costs.
EF
DIPPENAAR
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT JOHANNESBURG
APPEARANCES
DATE
OF HEARING
: 3 August 2022
DATE
OF JUDGMENT
: 2 September 2022
APPLICANT’S
COUNSEL
: Adv. D. Mokale
APPLICANT’S
ATTORNEYS
: Cliffe Dekker Hofmeyr Inc.
RESPONDENT’S
COUNSEL
: Adv. P.F. Louw SC
: Adv. L Van Rhyn Van
Tonder
RESPONDENT’S
ATTORNEYS
: Krause Attorneys Inc.
[1]
2016 (5) SA 96
(KZN) paras [18]-[23]
[2]
(2557/2016) [2019] ZAKZPHC 80 (4 December 2019) paras [68]-[69]
[3]
(1370/2019)
[2021] ZASCA 18
(11 March
2021); 2021 (3) SA 403
(SCA)
paras [47]-[48]
[4]
(219/2021)
[2022] ZASCA 24
(9 March 2022);
[2022] 2 All SA 299
(SCA)
para [85];
[5]
1989 (1) SA 1 (A)
[6]
2021 JDR- 2057 (NWM)
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