Moloi v Tau and Another (2572/2015) [2024] ZAFSHC 116 (25 April 2024)

50 Reportability
Civil Procedure

Brief Summary

Rescission of Judgment — Rule 42(1)(a) — Application for rescission of default judgment — Applicant contended that judgment was erroneously granted due to lack of proper service of summons — Court found that service was valid as it complied with Rule 4 of the Uniform Rules of Court — Applicant failed to demonstrate a bona fide defence with prospects of success — Application for rescission dismissed with costs.


SAFLII Note: Certain personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been redacted from this
document in compliance with the law and SAFLII Policy

IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
FREE STATE DIVISION, BLOEMFONTEIN

Reportable: NO
Of Interest to other Judges: NO
Circulate to Magistrates: NO
CASE NO: 2572/2015

In the matter between:

DR E. MOLOI APPLICANT

And

MACHABALALA ALICE TAU
FIRST RESPONDENT

MEDI-CLINIC (PTY) LTD SECOND RESPONDENT

HEARD ON: 26 October 2023

CORAM: JORDAAN, AJ

DELIVERED ON: 25 April 2024

[1] This is an opposed application brought in terms of Rule 42(1)(a) of the
Uniform Rules of Court, for rescission of the judgment granted by default by this
Honourable Court on the 22
nd of September 2022 in the following terms:1


1 Pjginated Bundle: Founding Affidavit - Court Order pages 19 to 20

''The Defendant shall pay to the Plaintiff the following amount in
respect of damages suffered by the said Plaintiff as Follows:

1.1 Past medical expenses in the amount of R43 069.95;
1.2 Future medical treatment R563 907.00;
1.3 General damages in the amount of R150 000.00.

2. Interest on the said amounts at a rate OF 10% per annum a
tempore one mora to date of final payment.

3. The Defendant shall pay the Plaintiff's taxed or agreed party and
party costs for the Instructing attorney and correspondent attorneys which
costs shall include but not be limited to the following:

3.1 All reserved costs will be unreserved, if any;
3.2 The costs of obtaining all expert medical, actuary and other
reports of on expert nature;
3.3 The reasonable qualifying) preparation and reservation Fee
of all experts, including the costs of consultation fees with the legal
team, if any
3.4 The reasonable travel and accommodation costs incurred in
transporting the Plaintiff to all medico-legal appointments;
3.5 The costs of an interpreters attendance at the medico-legal
appointments of translation of information and during consultations
with legal teams if any;

4. Costs of suit including costs of this application."

[2] It is apposite to have a pithy background of the events that led to the
Applicant currently having a default judgment of the nature registered against
him.


[3] The First Respondent was with child when she, on the 26
th of April 2013,
consulted the medical practice of the Applicant, a gynaecologist, who informed
her she was suffering from high blood pressure. The Applicant advised her to
attend the premises of the Second Respondent in order to be admitted, which
she did.

[4] On the 28th of April 2013, the First Respondent's condition deteriorated
as she started bleeding.

[5] The Applicant, at the premises of the Second Respondent, on the 29th of
April 2013 performed an emergency caesarean section on the First Respondent,
ala her baby was stillborn.

[6] The First Respondent alleged that it was due to the negligence of the
Applicant that her baby was stillborn on the 29
th of April 2013.

[7] As a consequence of the Applicant and Second Respondent's
negligence, alternatively as a result of the breach of their duty of care, the First
Respondent issued summons for damages against both the Applicant and the
Second Respondent on the 02
nd of June 2015.

[8] This summons was served on the Second Respondent on the 14
th of July
20152 which action was opposed by the Second Respondent.

[9] On the 21 st of April 2016 the Court granted default judgment on the
merits 100% in favour of the First Respondent against the Applicant and ordered
separation of the adjudication of the quantum of damages which was postponed
sine dies.

[10] On the 21st of October 2016 the First Respondent withdrew the action
against the Second Respondent.

2 Paginated Bundle: Founding Affidavit Annexure "JE3" page 61


[11] On the 03 rd of November 2015 3 the First Respondent re- issued
Summons which was served on the Applicant on the 07
th of December 2015.4

[12] Evident from the 22nd of September 2022 default judgment bundle on file,
the Court considered the documents before it with the affidavits filed in terms of
Rule 38(2) of the Rules of Court as well as having heard the submissions
of the legal practitioners, proceeded to grant default judgment against the
Applicant on the 22
nd of September 2022.

[13] The provisions of Rule 42(1) reads as follows:

"(1) The court may, in addition to any other powers it may have, mero
motu or upon the application of any party affected, rescind or vary:

(a) An order or judgment erroneously sought or erroneously
granted in the absence of any party affected thereby;
(b) an order or judgment in which there is an ambiguity, or a
patent error or omission, but only to the extent of such ambiguity,
error or omission;
(c) an order or judgment granted as the result of a mistake
common to the parties."

[14] Where an application is brought in terms of Rule 42(1)(a) the Defendant
should show that the judgment was erroneously sought and erroneously granted
in his absence.

[15] In Kgomo v Standard Bank of South Africa
5 Dobson J, held that the
following principles govern rescission under Rule 42(1)(a):


3 Paginated Bundle: Opposing Affidavit- Combined Summons page 180
4 Paginated Bundle: Opposing Affidavit - Return of Service page 151
5 2016 (2) SA184 (GP)

"13.1 the rule must be understood against its common-law background;
13.2 the basic principle at common law is that once a judgment has
been granted, the judge becomes functus officio, but subject to certain
exceptions of which rule 42(1)(a) is one;
13.3 the rule caters for a mistake in the proceedings;
13.4 the mistake may either be one which appears on the record of
proceeding or one which subsequently becomes apparent from the
information made available in an application for rescission of judgment;
13.5 a judgment cannot be said to have been granted erroneously in the
light of a subsequently disclosed defence which was not known or raised
at the time of default judgment;
13.6 the error may arise either in the process of seeking the judgment on
the part of the applicant for default Judgment or in the process of granting
default Judgment on the part of the court; and
13.7 the applicant for rescission is not required to show, over and above
the error, that there is good cause for the rescission as contemplated in
rule 31(2)(b)."

[16] A judgment is erroneously granted if there existed at the time of its issue,
a fact of which the Court was unaware, which would have precluded the granting
of the judgment and which would have induced the Court, if aware of it, not to
grant the judgment.6

[17] In the case of Ferris and Another v FirstRand Bank Ltd7 it was held:

"...good cause (including a bona fide defence) is not required for
rescission under Rule 42(1)(a)"

[18] Under the common law, a Court is empowered to rescind a judgment
obtained on default of appearance provided that sufficient cause is shown. The
requirement for good cause in Rule 31(2)(b) and for sufficient cause under the

6 Rositer v Nedbank Ltd unreported SCA case96/2014 delivered 01 December 2015
7 2014 (3) SA 39 (CC)

common law is the same. In Chetty v Law Society, Transvaal8 the court held:

"Although the term 'sufficient cause' or 'good cause' defies precise or
comprehensive definition, two essential elements of sufficient cause for
rescission of a Judgment by default are that:

(a) the applicant for rescission presents a reasonable and
acceptable explanation for his or her initial default; and
(b) on the merits the applicant has a bona fide defence which
prima facie carries some prospect of success.
It is not sufficient if only one of these two requirements is met, for obvious
reasons a party showing no prospect of success on the merits will fail in
an application for rescission of a default judgment against him, no matter
how reasonable and convincing the explanation of his default."

[19] It is the Applicant's case that judgment was erroneously sought and
erroneously granted as no notice of the action was received by the Applicant
because no summons commencing action in June 2015 was served on the
Applicant by the sheriff and this is borne out by the First Respondent's
Application for Default Judgment.
9 That summons was only served on the
Second Respondent.

[20] The First Respondent submitted that the Applicant was indeed served
referring the Court to "C2" as the relevant return of service.
10This return of service
is for service of a summons and particulars of claim on the 07
th of December
2015. There was no notice of intention to defend filed.

[21] It must be borne in mind that there was a merit judgment granted on the
21
st of April 2016 against the Applicant based on a summons which was issued

8 1985 (2) SA 756 (A) at 746,756A-C
9 Paginated Bundle: Founding Affidavit Annexure "JE3" page 61and First Respondent's
Application for Default Judgment Bundle page 28 Aru1exure "B" return of service
10 Paginated Bundle: Opposing Affidavit -Return of Service page 151

on the 02 nd of June 2015 and served on the Second Respondent on 14 July
2015. This summons was re- issued on the 03
rd of November 2015 and served
on the Applicant on the 07
th of December 201511, to which there was no notice of
intention to defend filed.

[22] The Applicant contended that the service was not in compliance with Rule
4 of the Uniform Rules of Court.

[23] The First Respondent submitted that a Windeed Search was conducted
to trace the Applicant who was then served with the summons in terms of Rule 4
of the Uniform Rules of Court on his gardener, Mr. Letsoera, on the 07
th of
December 2015. In terms of the case of Barens v Lettering 2000 (3) SA 305 (C) it
was held:

"... when a person may have more than one residence or place of
business, service at any one would be good"

[24] The Applicant at no stage denied ownership of the residential
addresses or claimed alienation of the addresses, in fact from 03 October 2015
his address was indicated as 9[…] B[…] S[…] Flamingo Park Welkom, where the
sheriff served Mr Letsoera on 07 December 2015. The only change in address on
Windeed is from after the 07 th of December 2015, on 20 December 2015 when
the postal address change, not the residential address.

[25] A judgment is erroneously granted if there existed at the time of its issue
a fact of which the Court was unaware, which would have precluded the granting
of the judgment and which would have induced the Court, if aware of it, not to
grant the judgment- this Court finds that there was no fact in existence at the time
of the issue of judgment such which had the court been aware would have
precluded the granting of the judgment and which would have induced the Court
to not grant the judgment had it been aware of it.

11 Paginated Bundle: Opposing Affidavit -Return of Service page 151


[25] The Applicant's seemed to raise as a defence his protracted legal battle
with the Second Respondent that resulted in him being barred from the premises
and the eventual termination of his lease sometime in February 2013 prior to the
29th of April 2013 preventing his consultation and treatment of patients. The
Applicant's actions of booking the First Respondent into the very same facility at
the Second Respondent on the 26
th of April 2013 would then be actions contrary
to that of a reasonable man in the circumstances as the First Respondent was
recommended to be booked into that facility by the Applicant. His actions also
further belie his submissions as the Applicant indeed performed the caesarean
section on the First Respondent on the 29
th of April 2013.

[26] On the Applicants own submissions and affidavit it is shown that on the n-
1erits, the Applicant does not have a bona fide defence which prima facie carries
some prospect of success.

[27] The Applicant's explanation that he was residing in Kroonstad when the
summons was served on Mr. Letsoera is contrary to the Windeed search which
shows that the only residential address the Applicant has from 25 January 2015
until 17 September 2017, is 9[…] B[…] Street, Welkom. It is only the Applicant’s
postal address that changed 13 days after service on Mr. Letsoera at the
residential address. There is also no denial of any knowledge of Mr. Letsoera and
there is a return to the same residential address during February 2018. The
Applicant was rather evasive in this regard and did not present a reasonable and
acceptable explanation for his initial default.

ORDER

[28] Consequently, it follows that the application for rescission falls to be
dismissed with costs.

M.Y Jordaan

Acting Judge of the High Court,
Free State Division, Bloemfontein

FOR THE APPLICANT Adv Z. Nyezi
INSTRUCTED BY BLAIR ATTORNEYS
Ermail

FOR THE DEFENDANT: Adv P C Ploos van Amstel
INSTRUCTED BY VZLR ATTORNEYS
Email