Churran v Singh NO (9974/2008) [2019] ZAKZPHC 41 (24 May 2019)

80 Reportability
Legal Practice

Brief Summary

Damages — Legal malpractice — Claim against attorney for negligence in allowing claim to prescribe — Plaintiff settled for R1 million plus costs — Dispute regarding costs orders arising from adjournment and amendment of particulars of claim. Plaintiff claimed damages from the defendant, an attorney, for negligence in failing to pursue a claim against a dog owner, resulting in prescription. The matter was settled for R1 million, but issues regarding costs from a prior adjournment and amendments to the claim were contested. The court held that the plaintiff was responsible for costs related to the adjournment and the amendment application, while the defendant was ordered to pay the remaining costs of the action.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


This was a professional-negligence damages action in which the plaintiff sought compensation from an attorney (and, after his death, his deceased estate) for having allowed her underlying personal-injury claim to prescribe. The proceedings ultimately concerned the consequences, in costs, of a late amendment that caused the matter to be postponed shortly before trial.


The parties were Neshanie Churran as plaintiff and Reka Devi Singh NO, in her capacity as the executrix of the deceased attorney’s estate, as defendant. The attorney originally sued had died before a scheduled trial date, after which the executrix was substituted as defendant.


The matter had a lengthy procedural history. Summons was issued in July 2008. The action was set down for trial on multiple occasions (2011, 2014, 2015, and again in September 2018), but repeatedly did not proceed, for reasons including insufficient allocated trial time, agreed removal from the roll, and the death of the defendant attorney.


By the time the court delivered judgment, the merits and quantum of the plaintiff’s claim had been settled on the basis that the defendant’s deceased estate would pay R1 million plus costs. The dispute placed before the court for decision was narrow: it concerned which party should bear specific reserved and wasted costs, primarily those arising from the adjournment of the trial on 3 September 2018, and certain associated costs items.


2. Material Facts


The court proceeded from the fact that the plaintiff’s case against the attorney was that she had instructed him to pursue a claim against a third party (the dog owner) arising from an incident initially pleaded as a dog bite, and that the attorney negligently allowed that claim to prescribe, causing her loss. The original pleaded damages were R1 033 368.


A significant feature of the litigation was the progressive expansion and reshaping of the plaintiff’s pleaded case. In December 2014 the plaintiff amended her particulars of claim to introduce additional heads of damages, including future medical expenses, the cost of an automatic motor vehicle, a domestic aide, and future loss of income, and increased the quantum to R5 958 124.


The material events leading to the costs dispute occurred in August and September 2018. The trial had been set down for 3 to 14 September 2018, with notice of set down having been served on 1 September 2017. On 15 August 2018, shortly before the trial, the plaintiff delivered a notice of intention to amend her particulars of claim in a manner that the court regarded as substantial. The proposed amendment replaced the earlier allegation of a dog bite with an allegation that two dogs chased and jumped on the plaintiff, causing her to fall and injure her hip and head. The amendment also introduced additional allegations of negligence against the attorney and asserted further medical sequelae (including the need for multiple hip replacements, specially made shoes, and additional medication), increasing the claim by more than R3 million.


Within the period allowed for objection, the defendant delivered a notice of objection on 28 August 2018. The objection was based on alleged prejudice arising from the lateness and breadth of the amendment, and it raised the contention that the amendment introduced a new cause of action that had prescribed, as well as new injuries and significantly increased quantum. On 29 August 2018, two clear court days before trial, the plaintiff launched a substantive application to amend.


On 3 September 2018, when the matter was called for trial, an order was made (described as being by agreement) adjourning the trial to 20 to 31 May 2019. The order recorded, among other things, that the defendant withdrew the objection to the amendment in light of the postponement agreement, and it directed the parties to file amended pleadings and related steps on specified dates. The order further provided that the wasted costs occasioned by the adjournment would be reserved for determination by the trial court.


After the plaintiff effected the amendments, the defendant amended her plea to contend that a new, prescribed cause of action had been introduced and that, in any event, the plaintiff would not have recovered the alleged damages from the dog owner. The plaintiff replicated.


The court accepted as an operative background fact, based on what it was told from the Bar, that the matter subsequently became settled when it emerged that the deceased estate was insolvent and that the limit of the attorney’s professional indemnity insurance was R1 million.


The key disputed factual contention relevant to costs was whether the adjournment on 3 September 2018 was attributable (in whole or part) to the defendant’s alleged lack of cooperation in pre-trial procedures, or whether it was attributable to the plaintiff’s late amendment. The court also treated as significant the plaintiff’s concession that absent the amendment, the trial would have proceeded.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal question was a costs allocation question: which party should bear the wasted and reserved costs arising from the adjournment of the trial on 3 September 2018, and which party should bear the costs of the amendment process (including the notice of amendment, the objection, and consequential pleading amendments).


This dispute was not one of substantive delict or professional-negligence liability (those issues having been compromised). Instead, it concerned the application of costs principles to the procedural facts, and the exercise of a judicial discretion/value judgment as to fairness in allocating responsibility for costs occasioned by the plaintiff’s late procedural step.


A further, subsidiary issue concerned the appropriate form of a costs order in relation to expert witness expenses, specifically whether the court should attempt to specify detailed witness-related costs, or limit itself to identifying categories (notably, qualifying fees) and leave the remainder for taxation.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The court approached the matter on the basis that the action had settled, and that the only remaining substantial question was how to dispose of reserved and wasted costs arising from the September 2018 postponement and related procedural steps. It recorded that there was no dispute that the plaintiff was entitled to the general costs of the action, including costs consequent upon employing two counsel; the dispute lay in carving out exceptions to that general position for costs caused by the plaintiff’s late amendment and the resultant postponement.


In evaluating the cause of the postponement, the court considered the chronology and the practical effect of the plaintiff’s litigation choices. The notice of intention to amend was delivered roughly two and a half weeks before trial, the objection was delivered within the time contemplated by the notice, and the substantive application to amend was delivered only two clear court days before trial. The court treated the magnitude of the proposed changes as significant, including the alteration of the pleaded mechanism of injury (from dog bite to being chased and falling), the expansion of alleged injuries and future treatment needs, the addition of grounds of negligence, and a quantum increase exceeding R3 million.


The plaintiff’s argument sought to attribute the postponement, at least partly, to the defendant’s alleged lack of cooperation in pre-trial procedures. However, the court regarded the plaintiff’s concession as important: if there had been no application to amend, the trial would have proceeded. The court also noted that on 3 September 2018 the defendant withdrew her objection to the amendment on condition that the matter be adjourned to allow time to consider her position and to effect consequential amendments to the plea. The court treated this as consistent with the notion that the amendment itself was the operative cause of the adjournment.


The court rejected the characterisation of the defendant’s objection as frivolous. It reasoned that, regardless of the ultimate merits of the defendant’s consequential pleading amendments (including the prescription-related contentions), the defendant was entitled to time to consider and respond to such substantial changes. The court further reasoned that even if the defendant had not objected within the ten-day period allowed, and the plaintiff had simply effected the amendments, the defendant would likely have succeeded in an application for an adjournment at the plaintiff’s expense, precisely because the changes were significant and late and would reasonably necessitate reassessment and further preparation.


On that basis, the court concluded that the real reason for the adjournment on 3 September 2018 was the plaintiff’s amendment application, and that fairness required that the plaintiff bear the costs occasioned by that adjournment, as well as the costs occasioned by the amendment process itself. Because the opposed hearing in May 2019 concerned only the costs dispute (the merits having long since settled), the court also allocated the costs of that opposed hearing against the plaintiff.


On the form and content of the costs order relating to witnesses, the court declined to make highly granular orders resembling extracts from bills of costs. It regarded those matters as appropriately dealt with by the taxing master, subject to review if necessary. The court confined itself to ordering the inclusion of qualifying fees of specified expert witnesses in the relevant costs orders, rather than attempting to determine or list all recoverable witness-related charges.


5. Outcome and Relief


The court granted judgment for the plaintiff in the agreed amount of R1 million.


In relation to costs, the court made a split costs order. The plaintiff was ordered to pay (i) the costs occasioned by the plaintiff’s amendment of her particulars of claim pursuant to the notice dated 15 August 2018, including the objection thereto and the consequential amendments to the defendant’s plea; (ii) the costs occasioned by the adjournment of the trial on 3 September 2018, including the qualifying fees of Dr Fraser, Rene Stewart, and Sonia Hill; and (iii) the costs of the opposed hearing on 20 May 2019.


Save for those specified exceptions, the defendant was ordered to pay the costs of the action (including costs previously reserved), including costs consequent upon the employment of two counsel. The court further ordered that those costs include the qualifying fees of specified experts, namely CB Wright, Thilor Naidoo, Ureka Sinanin, Prof Schlebusch, Dr RN Gongal, Gerard Jacobson, Jackpersad and Partners, Pradeep Bahadur, Kavisha Naidoo, and Nirvenie Elder.


The court indicated that more detailed disputes about witness-related and similar costs were matters for determination on taxation rather than by detailed judicial enumeration in the costs order.


Cases Cited


No cases were cited in the judgment.


Legislation Cited


No legislation was cited in the judgment.


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were cited in the judgment.


Held


The court held that the postponement of the trial on 3 September 2018 was attributable in substance to the plaintiff’s late and substantial amendment of her particulars of claim, and that the defendant’s objection and need for time to consider consequential pleading steps were not frivolous. As a result, the plaintiff was held responsible for the wasted costs of the adjournment and for the costs associated with the amendment process, as well as the costs of the later opposed costs hearing. Subject to these exceptions, the defendant remained liable for the general costs of the action as part of the settlement-related disposition, including the costs of two counsel and specified expert qualifying fees.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


Costs are determined by applying principles of fairness and responsibility for procedural steps that occasion unnecessary or wasted litigation expense, particularly where a party’s late amendment materially changes the case close to trial and necessitates an adjournment to avoid prejudice.


Where an amendment is substantial in timing and content, an opposing party’s objection and request for an opportunity to consider its implications and to deliver consequential pleading amendments may be treated as reasonable, with the costs consequences flowing from the party who introduced the late procedural change.


Courts may refrain from making costs orders that descend into the detail of bill items (such as extensive witness-expense specification), leaving granular quantification and allowability to the taxing master, while nonetheless identifying categories such as qualifying fees that are to be included in the recoverable costs.

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[2019] ZAKZPHC 41
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Churran v Singh NO (9974/2008) [2019] ZAKZPHC 41 (24 May 2019)

IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
KWAZULU-NATAL
DIVISION, PIETERMARITZBURG
CASE
NO:
9974/2008
In the matter between:
NESHANIE CHURRAN

Plaintiff
and
REKA DEVI SINGH NO

Defendant
ORDER
(a)
There will be judgment for the plaintiff in the amount of R1 million.
(b)
The plaintiff is ordered to pay the costs occasioned by the amendment
of her particulars
of claim pursuant to the notice dated 15 August
2018, the objection thereto and the consequential amendments to the
defendant’s
plea.
(c)
The plaintiff is ordered to pay the costs occasioned by the
adjournment of the trial
on 3 September 2018, including the
qualifying fees of Dr Fraser, Rene Stewart and Sonia Hill.
(d)
The plaintiff is ordered to pay the costs of the opposed hearing on
20 May 2019.
(e)
Save as aforesaid, the defendant is ordered to pay the costs of the
action, including those
previously reserved, all such costs to
include those consequent on the employment of two counsel.
(f)
The costs referred to in (e) above will include the qualifying fees
of the following expert
witnesses: CB Wright, Thilor Naidoo, Ureka
Sinanin, Prof Schlebusch, Dr RN Gongal, Gerard Jacobson, Jackpersad
and Partners, Pradeep
Bahadur, Kavisha Naidoo and Nirvenie Elder.
JUDGMENT
Delivered
on:
24
May 2019
Ploos
van Amstel J
[1]
The plaintiff in this matter claimed damages from an attorney who had
allowed her
claim against the owner of a dog to become prescribed.
The matter has now been settled on the basis that the defendant’s
deceased estate will pay to the plaintiff a sum of R1 million plus
costs. What remains in issue, and was argued before me, was what

order should be made in respect of the costs that were reserved on 3
September 2018, when the matter was on the trial roll, but
was
postponed. There are also some minor issues as to what should be
included in the costs orders.
[2]
The summons was issued on 22 July 2008. It was pleaded in the
particulars of claim
that the plaintiff had instructed the defendant
to claim damages from one Chetty, whose dog had bitten her. The case
against the
defendant was that he had negligently allowed the claim
to become prescribed, in consequence of which the plaintiff suffered
damages
in an amount of R1 033 368.
[3]
The matter was set down for trial on 14 March 2011, but was removed
from the roll
as one day was not enough. The matter was then set down
for trial on 12 to 14 March 2014, and was again removed from the roll
by
agreement. It was then set down for trial for 2 to 13 March 2015.
The defendant passed away before the trial date arrived and the

matter was again removed from the roll. The executrix of his deceased
estate was substituted in his stead.
[4]
By then the particulars of claim had been amended pursuant to a
notice dated 15 December
2014, and additional claims were introduced
relating to future medical expenses, the cost of an automatic motor
vehicle, the cost
of a domestic aide and future loss of income. The
quantum of the claim was increased to an amount of R5 958 124.
[5]
The trial was then set down for 10 days for the period 3 to 14
September 2018. The
notice of set down was served on 1 September
2017.
[6]
On 15 August 2018 the plaintiff delivered a notice of intention to
amend her particulars
of claim. The effect of the proposed amendment
was that the averment that the plaintiff was bitten by a dog was to
be deleted and
replaced by an averment that two dogs chased and
jumped on the plaintiff, causing her to fall and injure her hip and
head. Further
grounds of negligence on the part of the attorney were
added, and averments that the plaintiff would require at least three
hip
replacements, specially made shoes and additional medication. The
quantum of the claim was increased by more than R3 million.
[7]
The notice of 15 August gave the defendant a period of 10 days within
which to object
to the proposed amendments. A notice of objection was
delivered on 28 August 2018. It stated that the primary ground for
the objection
was the prejudice to the defendant occasioned by the
lateness of the application for the amendment, which did not afford
the defendant
sufficient time to properly investigate and consider
its full impact and if deemed necessary make consequential amendments
to its
plea and secure additional evidence in relation thereto. It
also stated that the proposed amendment would introduce a new cause

of action which had prescribed, introduced additional grounds of
negligence on the part of an attorney who was no longer alive,
sought
to introduce new injuries, and increased the quantum of the
plaintiff’s claim by more than R3 million. On 29 August
2018
(two clear court days before the trial) the plaintiff delivered a
substantive application for the amendments foreshadowed
in the notice
of 15 August.
[8]
On 3 September 2018 the matter came before the deputy judge president
for trial. The
order which he made, apparently by agreement, was that
the matter was adjourned to 20 to 31 May 2019; the defendant was
directed
to furnish the plaintiff with copies of her discovered
documents; it was recorded that the defendant withdrew her objection
to
the plaintiff’s proposed amendments in the light of an
agreement between the parties that the trial would be postponed and

that the wasted costs be reserved; the plaintiff was directed to file
her amended pages on or before 5 September; the defendant
was
directed to deliver any consequential amendments to her plea by 26
September; the plaintiff was directed to file any replication
by 3
October; and the wasted costs occasioned by the adjournment were
reserved for determination by the trial court.
[9]
Pursuant to the amendments to the particulars of claim the defendant
amended her plea
and contended that a new cause of action had been
introduced, which was prescribed, and that in any event the plaintiff
would not
have been able to recover from the owner of the dog the
damages which she sought from the defendant. This elicited a
replication
from the plaintiff.
[10]
I was informed from the Bar that when it became known that the
deceased estate of the attorney
is insolvent and that the limit of
his professional indemnity insurance was R1 million, the matter
became settled.
[11]
It is not in issue that the plaintiff is entitled to the costs of the
action, including those
consequent upon the employment of two
counsel. The parties are not ad idem about the detail of the costs
order, and in particular
the costs reserved when the matter was
adjourned on 3 September 2018. Today’s hearing concerned mainly
the question of the
reserved costs, and the parties are also not in
agreement as to who should pay the costs of today’s hearing.
[12]
Counsel for the plaintiff urged me to find that a lack of cooperation
on the part of the defendant’s
attorneys with regard to
pre-trial procedures contributed to the need for the adjournment on 3
September 2018 and that the plaintiff’s
application to amend
was not the sole cause. He was however constrained to concede that if
there had been no application to amend
the trial would have
proceeded.
[13]
It should be noted that on 3 September the defendant withdrew her
objection to the proposed amendments
on condition that the matter
would be adjourned so as to give her time to consider her position
and effect consequential amendments
to her plea.
[14]
Counsel for the defendant informed me from the Bar that if the
plaintiff had not pursued the
amendment the matter would have
proceeded on 3 September. This may have been a predicament for the
plaintiff as the particulars
of claim stated that she had been bitten
by a dog, which turned out not to be the case.
[15]
It seems plain to me that the real reason for the adjournment on 3
September was the application
by the plaintiff to amend her
particulars of claim. Counsel for the plaintiff criticised the basis
on which the defendant objected
to the proposed amendments and
suggested that it was frivolous. Whatever the merits were of the
consequential amendments to the
plea, I would not label them as
frivolous. In any event, if the defendant had not objected to the
proposed amendments within the
10 day period allowed in the notice,
and the plaintiff effected the amendments, I have little doubt that
the defendant would have
succeeded in an application for an
adjournment at the plaintiff’s expense so as to allow her to
consider her position in
the light of the new factual allegations and
the increase of the quantum by more than R3 million.
[16]
The plaintiff will therefore be ordered to pay the costs occasioned
by the adjournment of the
matter on 3 September 2018. She should also
pay the costs occasioned by the application for the amendments.
Today’s hearing
only concerned the costs issue, as the matter
became settled some time ago.
[17]
The draft costs orders proposed by the parties with regard to the
witnesses look more like extracts
from bills of costs than costs
orders. These matters seem to me to be for determination by the
taxing master, and if either party
is unhappy with the taxation the
remedy is a review. The only order I am willing to make in relation
to the expert witnesses relates
to their qualifying fees.
[18]
The order that I make is as follows:
(a)
There will be judgment for the plaintiff in the amount of R1 million.
(b)
The plaintiff is ordered to pay the costs occasioned by the amendment
of her particulars
of claim pursuant to the notice dated 15 August
2018, the objection thereto and the consequential amendments to the
defendant’s
plea.
(c)
The plaintiff is ordered to pay the costs occasioned by the
adjournment of the trial
on 3 September 2018, including the
qualifying fees of Dr Fraser, Rene Stewart and Sonia Hill.
(d)
The plaintiff is ordered to pay the costs of the opposed hearing on
20 May 2019.
(e)
Save as aforesaid, the defendant is ordered to pay the costs of the
action, including those
previously reserved, all such costs to
include those consequent on the employment of two counsel.
(f)
The costs referred to in (e) above will include the qualifying fees
of the following expert
witnesses: CB Wright, Thilor Naidoo, Ureka
Sinanin, Prof Schlebusch, Dr RN Gongal, Gerard Jacobson, Jackpersad
and Partners, Pradeep
Bahadur, Kavisha Naidoo and Nirvenie Elder.
Ploos van Amstel J
Appearances:
For
the Plaintiff

:           Y Moodley
(together with RK Ramdass)
Instructed
by

:
Siva Chetty and Company
:
Pietermaritzburg
For
the Defendant

:
R Pillemer
Instructed
by

:
Bowman Gilfillan
C/o A K Essack, Morgan
Naidoo & Co
:
Pietermaritzburg
Date
Judgment Reserved
:
20 May
2019
Date
of Judgment

:         24 May 2019