S v Thupuli (504/2021) [2022] ZAFSHC 67 (7 March 2022)

80 Reportability
Civil Procedure

Brief Summary

Civil Procedure — Combined summons — Defectiveness — Applicant sought to declare respondent's combined summons defective for non-compliance with Rule 18(1) and to set aside notice of bar as an irregular step — Applicant contended that the summons did not indicate whether the respondent's attorney had a right of appearance in terms of the Right of Appearance in Courts Act 62 of 1995 — Respondent argued that the attorneys had the requisite rights and that the application was out of time — Court held that the lack of indication of the right of appearance did not render the summons defective as both attorneys had the right to appear in the High Court — Application dismissed, notice of bar uplifted, and applicant granted leave to file further pleadings.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


These proceedings concerned an interlocutory application in the High Court of South Africa, Free State Division, Bloemfontein, in which the applicant sought procedural relief directed at the respondent’s combined summons and a subsequent notice of bar. The application was brought in terms of Uniform Rule 30 (irregular proceedings) and Uniform Rule 30A (non-compliance with the Rules), and was premised on an alleged failure to comply with Uniform Rule 18(1) (signature requirements for pleadings).


The applicant was Itumeleng Victoria Moloi, cited as the second defendant in the main action. The respondent was the Municipal Manager, Fezile Dabi District Municipality, cited as plaintiff in the main action. The application arose within the broader action instituted by the respondent against Anna Magagudi Olifant (first defendant) and Itumeleng Victoria Moloi (second defendant).


Procedurally, after receiving the respondent’s combined summons, the applicant delivered a notice under Rule 30A calling upon the respondent to remedy what the applicant characterised as non-compliance with Rule 18(1). The respondent did not amend the summons; instead, it responded by letter asserting compliance. Thereafter, the respondent served a notice of bar on the applicant. The applicant reacted by delivering a Rule 30 notice contending that the notice of bar constituted an irregular step. When the respondent did not remove the notice of bar, the applicant launched the present application.


The general subject-matter of the dispute was therefore not the merits of the underlying municipal claim, but the formal validity of the combined summons (specifically its signatures and what it reflected about rights of appearance), and the consequential procedural validity of the notice of bar.


2. Material Facts


The respondent issued a combined summons in the main action. On the face of that summons, Noge Attorneys Incorporated appeared as the respondent’s instructing attorneys of record, with Modise and Modise Attorneys reflected as correspondent attorneys.


The applicant’s complaint was based on what appeared from the summons and particulars of claim regarding signatures. The summons appeared to be signed by the respondent’s attorneys, but, according to the applicant, it did not indicate in its contents whether the respondent’s attorney of record was an attorney with a right of appearance in the High Court in terms of the Right of Appearance in Courts Act 62 of 1995. The applicant also contended that the particulars of claim appeared to have been signed by Noge Attorneys “per procurationem (pp)” on behalf of counsel.


After forming the view that the combined summons did not comply with Rule 18(1), the applicant served a notice in terms of Rule 30A calling upon the respondent to comply with Rule 18(1). The respondent did not amend the summons in response. Instead, on 26 May 2021, the respondent’s attorneys wrote to the applicant confirming that the particulars of claim were signed by Mr Paul Modise of Modise and Modise Attorneys on behalf of counsel, and asserting that this was in accordance with Rule 18(1) because the attorney who signed had a right of appearance under section 4(2) of the Right of Appearance in Courts Act 62 of 1995.


On 5 August 2021, the respondent served the applicant with a notice of bar. The applicant then delivered a notice in terms of Rule 30 calling upon the respondent to remove the notice of bar as an irregular step. The respondent did not react to that notice, which led to the present application.


On the question of the signatories’ professional status, the respondent placed facts before the court that Mr Morolong Noge had obtained the right of appearance in terms of the Act on 29 July 2016, and Mr Modise in February 2014. It was also stated on the respondent’s version that Mr Modise signed in his capacity as an authorised agent, and that this did not render the particulars of claim fatally defective. The respondent additionally contended that no prejudice had been shown by the applicant.


A dispute existed as to whether Mr Noge signed the particulars of claim. Mr Noge denied signing them and asserted that they were signed by Mr Modise as correspondent; a confirmatory affidavit by Mr Modise supported that assertion. The court treated the decisive enquiry as whether the relevant documents were signed by an attorney with a right of appearance as contemplated by the Act, rather than focusing on the identity of the specific attorney between the two.


A further procedural point raised by the respondent was that the application was allegedly out of time and should fail for want of a condonation application. The applicant did not bring a separate condonation application, and the court addressed whether one was necessary.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal questions for determination concerned the application of procedural rules to the facts of how the combined summons and particulars of claim were signed and presented.


The court was required to determine whether, for purposes of Uniform Rule 18(1), a combined summons is defective if it does not reflect on its face that the attorney signing it is an attorney with right of appearance in the High Court in terms of the Right of Appearance in Courts Act 62 of 1995, even where that attorney in fact holds such right.


Closely connected to that enquiry was whether the delivery of the notice of bar constituted an irregular step in circumstances where the applicant had challenged the summons as defective and had invoked Rule 30A.


The court also had to address a procedural timing objection: whether the applicant’s recourse was out of time and, if so, whether the absence of a condonation application was fatal. This involved an evaluative procedural determination by the court as to whether condonation was required on the facts before it.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The court approached the matter by identifying the operative requirements of Uniform Rule 18(1). It noted that the rule provides that a combined summons and pleadings must be signed by both an advocate and an attorney, or, in the case of an attorney who has the right of appearance under section 4(2) of the Right of Appearance in Courts Act 62 of 1995, by that attorney alone (with an additional alternative where a party acts in person).


The court then considered the statutory mechanism under section 4(2) of the Act, which provides for the registrar to issue a certificate confirming that the attorney has a right of appearance in the High Court once the registrar is satisfied the application complies with the Act. The relevance of this provision was that the respondent placed before the court facts indicating that both Mr Noge and Mr Modise had been issued with such certificates by the time the proceedings were instituted.


In assessing the applicant’s substantive complaint, the court accepted that it was apparent from the summons that Noge Attorneys Inc were the attorneys of record and Modise and Modise were correspondent attorneys. The court also accepted that the summons, on its face, did not state that Mr Noge was an attorney with a right of appearance as envisaged by the Act. However, the court treated the critical question as whether the documents were in fact signed by an attorney with the requisite right of appearance, rather than whether that right was expressly recorded on the face of the documents.


The court acknowledged that, as a matter of practice, attorneys with rights of appearance generally reflect that status on the combined summons, and it indicated that doing so is desirable to avoid procedural disputes. Nevertheless, the court held that Rule 18(1) does not require the pleading to state ex facie that the person signing it has the right of appearance in terms of the Act. On the evidence before it, by 2021 both relevant attorneys (Mr Noge and Mr Modise) held certificates and therefore had the right of audience in the High Court. In consequence, the court concluded that the mere failure to indicate that right on the summons did not render the summons defective. The court characterised an insistence on such an explicit indication as elevating form over substance, given that the underlying requirement (signature by an appropriately qualified attorney) had been met.


On the respondent’s point regarding lateness and condonation, the court stated that it was satisfied there was no need for a condonation application, thereby rejecting the respondent’s contention that the application should be dismissed on that basis.


Although the court found that the application seeking to declare the summons defective should fail, it separately assessed the fairness of the procedural position created by the respondent’s decision to proceed with a notice of bar while the applicant’s concerns remained live. The court considered that the lack of clarity on the face of the summons about rights of appearance had prompted the application, and it expressed the view that the respondent ought to have dealt with the concerns raised by the applicant in a way that could have prevented the application. On that basis, and as a matter of fairness in the management of pleadings, the court concluded that the notice of bar should be uplifted and the applicant should be afforded an opportunity to file further steps.


This approach reflected a discretionary, case-management type evaluation: the summons was not defective in law, but the procedural posture (including the notice of bar) warranted adjustment to ensure fairness between the parties in the pleadings process.


5. Outcome and Relief


The court dismissed the application insofar as it sought relief declaring the summons defective, setting aside steps on that basis, or striking out the respondent’s claim for non-compliance with Rule 18(1).


Despite dismissing the application, the court ordered that the notice of bar delivered on 5 August 2021 be uplifted. It further granted the applicant leave to file any further notice or pleading within five days of service of the order, failing which the respondent could file a further notice or pleading it deemed fit.


The court ordered that each party pay its own costs.


Cases Cited


No case law was cited in the judgment.


Legislation Cited


Right of Appearance in Courts Act 62 of 1995 (section 4(2)).


Rules of Court Cited


Uniform Rule 18(1).


Uniform Rule 30.


Uniform Rule 30A(1).


Held


The court held that a combined summons is not defective merely because it does not state on its face that the attorney signing it holds a right of appearance in the High Court under the Right of Appearance in Courts Act 62 of 1995, where it is established that the attorney in fact holds such right and the signature requirements of Uniform Rule 18(1) are substantively satisfied.


The court further held, as a matter of fairness in the pleadings process, that the notice of bar should be uplifted and the applicant should be afforded a short period to deliver further pleadings, notwithstanding the dismissal of the main application.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


Uniform Rule 18(1) requires that a combined summons be signed either by both an advocate and an attorney, or by an attorney who holds a right of appearance in the High Court under section 4(2) of the Right of Appearance in Courts Act 62 of 1995; the rule does not, on its wording as applied by the court, require that the pleading itself expressly record that the signing attorney holds such right.


Where the substantive requirement of signature by a duly authorised attorney with a right of appearance is met, a failure to reflect that status on the face of the summons is not, without more, treated as rendering the summons defective; an insistence on such disclosure as a condition of validity may amount to prioritising form over substance.


Even where an application challenging the validity of process fails, the court may exercise a discretionary fairness-based control over pleadings and procedural steps, including uplifting a notice of bar and permitting further pleadings, particularly where procedural uncertainty contributed to the dispute and could have been addressed to avoid it.

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[2022] ZAFSHC 67
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S v Thupuli (504/2021) [2022] ZAFSHC 67 (7 March 2022)

IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
FREE
STATE DIVISION, BLOEMFONTEIN
Case Number:
504/2021
In the matter
between:
ITUMELENG
VICTORIA MOLOI
Applicant
And
THE MUNICIPAL
MANAGER, FEZILE DABI
DISTRICT
MUNICIPALITY
Respondent
In re:
THE MUNICIPAL
MANAGER, FEZILE DABI
DISTRICT
MUNICIPALITY
Plaintiff
and
ANNA
MAGAGUDI OLIFANT
1
st
Defendant
ITUMELENG
VICTORIA MOLOI
2
nd
Defendant
JUDGMENT BY:
MOLITSOANE, J
HEARD
ON:
2 December 2021
DELIVERED
ON:        07 March 2022
This judgement was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties’ representatives by
email, and released to SAFLII. The
date and time for hand-down is
deemed to be 10H00 on 7 March 2022
[1]
The applicant seeks to declare the respondent’s combined summons
defective on the basis
that it does not comply with Uniform Rule
18(1), and further seeks an order setting aside the notice of bar
issued by the respondent
on 5 August 2021 as an irregular step in
terms of Rule 30, and or striking out the respondent’s claim in
terms of Rule 30A (1)
for non-compliance with Rule 18(1).
[2]
It is contended on behalf of the applicant that although the summons
appears to have been
signed by the respondent’s attorneys of
record, Noge Attorneys Incorporated, it is not reflected in the
contents of the said summons
whether the respondent’s attorneys of
record is an attorney with a right of appearance in terms of Act 62
of 1995 (the Act). It
is further contended by the applicant that it
appears from the particulars of claim that same was signed by Noge
Attorneys
per procurationem
(pp) on behalf of the respondent’s
counsel.
[3]
As a result of the purported non-compliance with Rule 18(1), the
applicant served a notice
in terms of Rule 30A in which the
respondent was called upon to comply with the said rule 18(1).
[4]
The respondent did not comply with Rule 30A notice by amending the
summons. On 26 May 2021
the respondent’s attorneys instead wrote as
follows to the applicant:
“
We
confirm that our particulars of claim were signed by our
correspondent’s attorneys, Mr Paul Modise of Modise and Modise
Attorneys,
on behalf of our counsel.
We
further confirm that such signature was done in accordance with Rule
18(1) as the attorney who signed the particulars of claim
is an
attorney who under s4(2) of the Right of Appearance Act 1995(Act 62
of 1995) has a right of appearance in the High Court
.”
[5]
On 5 August 2021 the respondent served the applicant with a notice of
bar. Service of this
notice prompted the applicant to deliver a
notice in terms of Rule 30 calling upon the respondent to remove the
notice of bar as
he viewed the said notice as an irregular step. The
respond did not react to this notice hence this application.
[6]
The respondent on the other hand contends that the application is out
of time and avers that
seeing that there is no condonation
application, this application ought to be dismissed. It is further
contended that the applicant’s
Rule 30 notice dated 10 May 2021 was
served 3 calendar months after the institution of the claims.
[7]
Mr Morolong Noge contends that he obtained his right of appearance in
terms of the Act on
29 July 2016 while his instructing attorney Mr
Modise obtained his in February 2014.
[8]
It is the respondent’s case that Mr Modise signed the summons in
his capacity as an authorised
agent and thus the election of Mr
Modise to sign the document in his capacity as an authorised agent
does not render the particulars
of claim fatally defective as alleged
by the applicant. The respondent argues that the applicant failed to
establish any prejudice
it may have suffered by the signatures in
contention.
[9]
Mr Noge denies that he signed the particulars of claim but avers same
were signed by Mr Modise
in his capacity as the correspondent of the
respondent. In the confirmatory affidavit, Mr Modise confirms this
assertion.
[10]
Save for the issue of condonation the issues for determination are
that it is not indicated in the summons
that the respondent’s
attorney of record is an attorney with the right of appearance in
terms of the Act and the combined summons
is co-signed by the
respondent’s attorney of record and counsel. The determination of
these issues would ultimately lead to a final
determination of
whether the summons
in casu
is defective and if the delivery
of the notice of bar was irregular. I am satisfied there is no need
for a condonation application.
[11]
Rule 18 which provides for rules relating to pleadings generally. It
provides as follows:
“
(1)
A combined summons, and every other pleading except a summons, shall
be signed by both an advocate and an attorney or, in the
case of an
attorney who, under section 4(2) of the Right of Appearance in
Courts, Act has the right of appearance in the Supreme
Court (High
Court), only such attorney or, if a party sues or defends personally,
by that party.”
[12]
Section 4(2) of the Right of Appearance Act provides that:
“
If the registrar
is satisfied that an application referred to in subsection (1)
complies with the provisions of this Act, he or she
shall issue a
certificate to the effect that the applicant has the right of
appearance in the Supreme Court (High Court.)”
[13]
The summons reveal that Noge Attorneys Inc. are the instructing
attorneys of record of the respondent
while Modise and Modise are the
correspondent attorneys. The face of the summons indicate that the
summons was signed by Noge Attorneys
but do not reflect that Mr Noge
is an attorney with a right of appearance as envisaged in s4(2) of
the Act. This in my view is beyond
doubt.
[14]
The combined summons has also been signed by the respondent’s
attorney of record
per procurationem
(pp). In my view the crisp
issue in this question of signatures is whether the summons and the
particulars of claim
were signed
by an attorney of record with
a right of appearance in terms of the Act.
[15]   It
is indeed so that in practise the attorney with a right of such
appearance would usually have it reflected in
the combined summons
that he has such right of appearance. Rule 18(1) does not in my view
say that the pleading must indicate
ex facie
that the person
who signs, if he is an attorney, has a right of appearance in terms
of the Act.
[16]
The application in this case was issued in 2021. Both Messrs Noge and
Modise had by then been issued
with certificates in terms of s4(2)
and both thus had the right of audience in the High Court. The fact
that they did not indicate
such right in the summons does not,
however, render the summons defective. Rule 18(1) simply requires
that the combined summons be
signed by an advocate and an attorney,
or by the attorney with a right of appearance in terms of the Act.
Noge and Modise are such
attorneys. If this court were to insist that
they should reflect their right of appearance in the summons, then in
that case, such
a move would be elevating form over substance. It is,
however, good practise that the right of appearance in terms of the
Act should
ideally be reflected in the combined summons and pleadings
in order to obviate the necessity to bring the applications like the
one
before this court.
[17]
The fact that the combined summons did not reflect that the
signatories to the combined summons were
attorneys with the right of
appearance surely prompted the applicant to bring this application.
The respondent chose to proceed with
delivering the notice of bar
instead of effectively dealing with the concerns of the applicant. In
my view the second respondent
ought to have dealt with the concerns
raised by the applicant and could have thus prevented this
application. In fairness to the
applicant the notice of bar ought to
be uplifted and an opportunity granted to the applicant to file
further pleadings. This application
ought to fail. I accordingly make
the following order:
ORDER
1.
The application is dismissed;
2.
The notice of bar delivered on 5 August 2021 is hereby
uplifted;
3.
The applicant is granted leave to file any further
notice or pleading within 5 days of the service of this order failing
which the
respondent may file a further notice or pleading he deems
fit;
4.
Each party to pay his/its own costs.
P.E.
MOLITSOANE, J
On Behalf of the
Applicant:

Adv. Mvuyo Ndziba
Instructed
by
:
EG Cooper Majiedt Inc.
Bloemfontein
On Behalf of
Respondent:
Adv. Ayitee Ayayee
Adv. Lerato Mukome
Instructed by:

Modise and Modise
Bloemfontein