Summary of Judgment
1. Introduction
This judgment concerned an application for leave to appeal brought in the Gauteng Local Division, Johannesburg. The application followed an earlier judgment delivered by Crutchfield J on 1 February 2022, which determined a special plea of prescription raised in action proceedings.
The applicant for leave to appeal was Mdlalose Mduduzi Ishmael, who had been the plaintiff in the underlying action and was the appellant in the leave proceedings. The respondents were Doctor Brendan Lyne Medical Practice, Dr Natasha Fakier, and Dr Brendan Sean Blair, who had been the first to third defendants in the action and jointly opposed leave to appeal.
The general subject-matter of the dispute concerned whether steps taken to join additional parties to litigation—specifically an order for joinder—could constitute a “process” that interrupts prescription under section 15(1) of the Prescription Act 68 of 1969, and, if so, whether such interruption depended on service of the joinder order and related pleadings before the prescription period expired. The judgment addressed leave to appeal in light of potentially conflicting approaches in previous decisions, including Wessels v Coetzee [2013] ZAGPHC 82 (15 March 2013).
2. Material Facts
The court proceeded from the procedural and temporal facts it regarded as decisive to the prescription question that had been determined in the earlier judgment and that underpinned the leave application.
It was common cause in the leave judgment that the litigation had reached a stage where the special plea of prescription was dispositive of whether the plaintiff’s claim could proceed. The earlier judgment had held that, for an order of joinder to interrupt prescription under section 15 of the Prescription Act, the joinder order needed to be served on the defendants together with the amended summons and particulars of claim, and any further necessary process, before expiry of the prescription period. On the court’s account, that did not occur in this matter.
A fact emphasised by the plaintiff in support of leave to appeal, and accepted by the court as significant for purposes of assessing prospects, was that the joinder order had been granted before the expiry of the prescriptive period, rather than after its expiry. The leave judgment treated this timing as an important feature in evaluating whether another court might reach a different conclusion on the interruption question.
The judgment also recorded, as material to the leave enquiry, that there were different conclusions in the case law on whether service of a joinder order together with the relevant amended pleadings is merely an informative step, as discussed in Wessels v Coetzee [2013] ZAGPHC 82 (15 March 2013), and on whether a joinder application can constitute the necessary “process” under section 15 of the Prescription Act where joinder is the only route by which the plaintiff can enforce the debt against the relevant parties.
3. Legal Issues
The central legal questions for determination in this judgment were those governing the granting of leave to appeal, specifically whether there were reasonable prospects of success or other grounds justifying leave.
Within that framework, the substantive legal issue identified by the court as the principal ground of appeal concerned whether the joinder application and/or joinder order constituted a “process” and a step in the enforcement of a claim as contemplated in section 15(1) of the Prescription Act 68 of 1969, with the associated question (arising from the earlier judgment’s “central thrust”) of whether interruption required service of the joinder order and amended process before prescription expired.
The dispute was primarily one of law and the application of law to procedural facts, namely the legal characterisation of a joinder-related step as “process” for purposes of interruption, and the legal consequences attached to the timing of grant and service of the joinder order and amended pleadings in relation to the prescriptive period. The judgment also treated the presence of conflicting decisions on these questions as relevant to whether leave should be granted.
4. Court’s Reasoning
The court located the leave enquiry within the statutory and jurisprudential threshold for leave to appeal, focusing on whether the plaintiff had shown grounds on which another court may reach a different conclusion. The judgment did not revisit the merits of the prescription ruling in full, but summarised the core basis of the earlier decision and then assessed whether the plaintiff’s submissions raised a sufficiently arguable basis to warrant appellate reconsideration.
The court reiterated that the “central thrust” of the earlier judgment was that, for purposes of section 15 of the Prescription Act, a joinder order would interrupt prescription only if it was served on the defendants together with the amended summons, particulars of claim, and other necessary process before the prescription period expired. Because that did not occur, the earlier judgment had rejected interruption on the facts as then evaluated.
In the leave judgment, however, the court accepted that the plaintiff’s argument exposed aspects on which an appellate court could reasonably differ. The court identified as material, first, the fact that the order for joinder was granted before prescription expired, which could affect how one assesses whether the joinder step satisfied section 15’s requirements. Secondly, the court recognised that there are divergent approaches in prior decisions concerning whether service of the joinder order with amended pleadings is merely an informative act (as discussed in Wessels v Coetzee [2013] ZAGPHC 82 (15 March 2013)) or whether it is a necessary component of interrupting prescription.
Thirdly, the court recorded the plaintiff’s contention that the joinder application was, in the circumstances, the only means by which the plaintiff could enforce the debt against the defendants sought to be joined, which supported the argument that such a joinder step could constitute “process” as envisaged by section 15, consistently with the approach said to be reflected in Wessels v Coetzee. The court concluded that these considerations, viewed cumulatively and in light of the particular facts, were sufficient to establish a reasonable prospect that another court might reach a different result.
The evaluative judgment made by the court was accordingly confined to the leave threshold: the court did not purport to decide the appeal issue finally, but held that the identified grounds justified appellate scrutiny by a full bench.
5. Outcome and Relief
The court granted leave to appeal to the full bench of the Gauteng Local Division, Johannesburg.
The court ordered that the costs of the application for leave to appeal, as well as the costs of the application before the court a quo, would be costs in the cause of the appeal.
The judgment recorded the ground of appeal as whether the joinder application constituted a “process” and a step in enforcement under section 15(1) of the Prescription Act 68 of 1969.
Cases Cited
Wessels v Coetzee [2013] ZAGPHC 82 (15 March 2013) was cited and discussed in relation to whether service of a joinder order and associated documents is merely informative and to the broader question whether joinder-related steps may amount to “process” for purposes of interrupting prescription.
Legislation Cited
The judgment cited the Prescription Act 68 of 1969, in particular section 15(1), as the statutory basis governing the interruption of prescription by service of “process.”
Rules of Court Cited
No specific rules of court were cited in the text of the judgment provided.
Held
The court held that, notwithstanding the reasoning in its earlier judgment on prescription, the plaintiff had demonstrated grounds on which another court might reasonably reach a different conclusion. This included the fact that the joinder order had been granted before the prescriptive period expired and the existence of divergent judicial approaches to whether joinder-related steps and service requirements satisfy section 15(1) of the Prescription Act.
On that basis, the court held that leave to appeal should be granted to a full bench, with costs to stand over as costs in the cause of the appeal.
LEGAL PRINCIPLES
The judgment applied the principle that leave to appeal may be granted where there is a reasonable prospect that another court may come to a different conclusion on the issues decided, particularly where the issue concerns the interpretation and application of a statutory provision to procedural steps.
In addressing prospects, the judgment treated the characterisation of a joinder-related step as “process” under section 15(1) of the Prescription Act 68 of 1969 as a legally contestable issue. The judgment further treated the presence of conflicting judicial decisions on the service and effect of joinder orders in relation to interruption of prescription as a factor supporting the appropriateness of appellate consideration.
The judgment also reflected the principle that, where a litigant contends that a particular procedural step (such as joinder) is the only available mechanism to pursue a claim against certain parties, that contention may bear on whether the step is properly understood as part of the enforcement of the claim for purposes of interruption of prescription, though the judgment confined itself to recognising this as an arguable basis for appeal rather than finally determining it.