Mpoletsang v Sol Plaatje Municipality and Another (2748/17) [2018] ZANCHC 39 (6 July 2018)

80 Reportability

Brief Summary

Pension Funds — Withholding of pension benefits — Applicant dismissed for misconduct involving fraud and dishonesty — Municipality seeks to withhold pension benefits pending recovery of damages — Application for release of benefits under section 37A of the Pension Funds Act — Section 37D(1)(b)(ii) permits withholding of benefits to protect employer's right to recover losses — Counter-application by Municipality for interdict against payment of benefits granted, preventing second respondent from paying out pending adjudication of action.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


Introduction


This was an opposed motion application in the High Court of South Africa, Northern Cape Division, Kimberley, in which the applicant, Ms Mpoletsang Beauty Kilelo, sought an order directing the second respondent, Consolidated Retirement Fund, to pay to her all pension benefits administered on behalf of the first respondent, Sol Plaatje Municipality. The applicant also initially sought payment of accrued leave days, but that relief became moot because the Municipality paid the leave entitlement before the hearing.


The matter had a procedural interlocutory component concerning condonation for the late filing of the applicant’s heads of argument and practice note, which were filed outside the time limits prescribed by the Northern Cape practice rules. The application was previously postponed by agreement (15 December 2017 to 20 April 2018), and it ultimately came before Mamosebo J for determination.


The dispute concerned the lawfulness and appropriateness of withholding pension benefits in circumstances where an employee was dismissed for alleged misconduct involving fraud, dishonesty, theft and corruption, and where the employer intended (and by the hearing had instituted) civil proceedings to recover losses. The Municipality opposed the release of the pension benefit and launched a counter-application seeking an interdict restraining the Fund from paying out the benefit pending adjudication of the Municipality’s claim.


Material Facts


The applicant was employed by the Municipality as an accountant in the payroll office. A material aspect of her functions was the uploading of a file (the ACB.txt file) into the Standard Bank Business Online Platform for payment of salaries to municipal employees. While employed, she contributed to a pension fund falling under the Consolidated Retirement Fund umbrella.


It was common cause that the applicant’s employment was terminated following disciplinary processes (the judgment notes a dispute about whether dismissal occurred on 2 February 2017 or 23 March 2017, but the court regarded the exact date as immaterial). After termination, the applicant sought payment of accrued leave (later paid) and her pension payout. She was informed that the pension benefit was being withheld because the Municipality intended to pursue a damages claim arising from alleged misconduct.


On the Municipality’s version—treated by the court as effectively not seriously controverted—payroll reconciliation anomalies led to internal investigations and the appointment of attorneys, forensic investigators, and digital forensic investigators, with investigation costs said to exceed R1 million. The applicant was suspended and charged with misconduct, including fraud, gross dishonesty and theft, and disciplinary proceedings followed in 2016.


The Municipality stated that criminal charges were laid against the applicant and others, investigated under CAS 136/12/2016, with the docket referred by the Directorate for Priority Crime Investigations (the Hawks) to the Director of Public Prosecutions for a decision on prosecution. The Municipality also engaged the Asset Forfeiture Unit in recovery efforts. The existence of criminal proceedings was treated as undisputed.


The applicant was found guilty at the disciplinary hearing in relation to the depletion of R796 788.80, which the Municipality alleged as the damages it suffered and sought to recover from her. The Municipality determined that the pension benefit due to the applicant was R567 211.00. The Municipality’s attorneys wrote to the Fund on 7 April 2017 requesting that payment be withheld in terms of section 37D of the Pension Funds Act 24 of 1956 pending pursuit of its claim. By the time of the hearing, the Municipality had issued summons (dated 18 April 2018), and the Fund had withheld the benefit.


In her replying affidavit, the applicant largely responded by stating she “NOTE” the Municipality’s allegations. The court regarded this manner of response, in the context of material allegations calling for admission or denial, as carrying the risk that the allegations would be treated as effectively admitted or insufficiently disputed in motion proceedings.


Legal Issues


The central legal question was whether, notwithstanding the general statutory protection against execution or attachment of pension benefits, the applicant was entitled to immediate payment of her pension benefit, or whether the Municipality (and the Fund) could lawfully withhold payment pending the determination of the Municipality’s claim for compensation arising from alleged misconduct.


This required the court to consider the interaction between section 37A of the Pension Funds Act 24 of 1956 (the general protection of benefits) and the exception in section 37D(1)(b)(ii) (permitting deduction/payment to an employer in specified circumstances relating to theft, dishonesty, fraud or misconduct, and subject to conditions).


A further issue concerned the Municipality’s counter-application for interim interdictory relief: whether the requirements for an interdict restraining payment by the Fund were met, and whether the Fund’s withholding of payment fell within the discretionary framework recognised in applicable authority.


The dispute primarily involved the application of law to facts (whether the statutory exception and relevant principles justified withholding in these circumstances), with an evaluative component in balancing prejudice and convenience between the applicant’s asserted hardship and the Municipality’s asserted risk of irrecoverable loss.


Court’s Reasoning


On condonation, the court applied the principle that the High Court has inherent power to regulate its own process, and that there are limits to excusing non-compliance based on a legal representative’s failings. The court considered that the heads of argument were filed a few days late, that the delay was not inordinate, and that the client should not in the circumstances be penalised for the practitioner’s dilatoriness. Condonation was therefore granted, with an express warning that non-compliance should not persist.


On the merits, the court accepted the statutory premise that pension benefits are generally protected from reduction, transfer, or execution under section 37A of the Pension Funds Act. The court then identified section 37D(1)(b)(ii) as the pertinent exception, enabling a fund to deduct and pay to an employer compensation for damage caused by theft, dishonesty, fraud, or misconduct, provided that either the member admits liability in writing or judgment is obtained.


The court placed significant weight on the interpretation and practical approach endorsed by the Supreme Court of Appeal in Highveld Steel and Vanadium Corporation Ltd v Oosthuizen, which recognised that the object of section 37D(1)(b) is to protect an employer’s right to recover misappropriated money, and further acknowledged the practical difficulty that employers typically cannot obtain judgment before an employee’s exit and the payout of benefits. The court relied on the SCA’s acceptance that, in appropriate circumstances, funds have a discretion to withhold payment pending the employer’s pursuit of recovery, particularly where allegations are detailed and not seriously challenged.


In applying these principles, the court characterised the Municipality’s counter-application as not seeking to execute against or transfer the benefit, but rather to preserve the benefit by restraining payment pending adjudication of the civil action. The court considered the Municipality’s contention that release of the benefit could cause irreparable harm through dissipation, undermining recovery efforts, and that there was no adequate alternative remedy to preserve the amount.


The court also addressed the applicant’s asserted prejudice: she contended she was a breadwinner with no income since dismissal and required the pension benefit for subsistence. The court treated this as requiring a balancing exercise, weighing the applicant’s hardship against the Municipality’s interest in preserving a potential recovery source for alleged losses arising from serious misconduct. The court found no evidential basis showing that the Municipality was unreasonably delaying the prosecution of criminal or civil proceedings or failing to take reasonable steps to bring the civil matter to conclusion, noting that summons had been issued.


The court further took account of the applicant’s manner of engagement with the Municipality’s allegations—largely “noting” them—against the backdrop of authority cautioning that failure to squarely deny material allegations in motion proceedings may justify adverse inferences. The court considered this relevant to whether there was a “serious challenge” to the dishonesty allegations, aligning with the approach described in Highveld Steel and Vanadium Corporation Ltd v Oosthuizen.


Ultimately, on the evidence before it, the court was not persuaded that the applicant had established a basis for an order compelling immediate payment of the pension benefit. Conversely, it was satisfied that the Municipality had made out a proper case for the restraining order sought in the counter-application.


On costs, the Municipality sought attorney-and-client costs. The court canvassed the distinction between party-and-party costs and attorney-and-client costs and the principle that punitive costs may be awarded where special considerations justify ensuring the successful party is not out of pocket. However, given that the applicant was unemployed and the court was ordering the withholding of her pension benefit, and considering that she had approached court to vindicate what she understood to be her rights, the court concluded that punitive costs would not be fair or equitable and might discourage litigants. The counter-application costs were therefore limited to the party-and-party scale.


Outcome and Relief


The court granted condonation for the applicant’s late filing of heads of argument.


The applicant’s main application for payment of pension benefits was dismissed with costs.


The Municipality’s counter-application was granted with costs on the party-and-party scale, with the effect that Consolidated Retirement Fund was restrained from paying the applicant’s pension benefits pending adjudication of the Municipality’s instituted action to recover its alleged losses.


Cases Cited


Salojee and Another, NNO v Minister of Community Development 1965 (2) SA 135 (A) at 141C.


S v Mohlathe 2000 (2) SACR 530 (SCA) at 536e–f.


Makhuva v Lukoto Bus Service (Pty) Ltd 1987 (3) SA 376 (VSC) at 386C–F; [1987] 3 All SA 565 (VSC).


McWilliams v First Consolidated Holdings (Pty) Ltd 1982 (2) SA 1 (A) at 10E–D.


Highveld Steel and Vanadium Corporation Ltd v Oosthuizen 2009 (4) SA 1 (SCA) at 5F–I; [2009] 1 BPLR 1 (SCA) at E–G; also reported at [2008] JOL 22846 (SCA).


Hawkins v Gelb & Another 1959 (1) SA 702 (W) at 705B.


Nel v Waterberg Landbouwers Ko-operatieve Vereeniging 1946 AD 597.


Legislation Cited


Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996 (Act 108 of 1996), section 173.


Pension Funds Act 24 of 1956, sections 37A and 37D(1)(b)(ii).


Income Tax Act 58 of 1962.


Rules of Court Cited


Northern Cape Rules, Rule 3(4).


Uniform Rules of Court, Rule 6(4)(d) and Rule 6(4)(e).


Uniform Rules of Court, Rule 22(2) and Rule 25(1).


Held


The court held that, although pension benefits are generally protected from reduction, transfer, or execution under section 37A of the Pension Funds Act 24 of 1956, section 37D(1)(b)(ii) and the approach recognised in Highveld Steel and Vanadium Corporation Ltd v Oosthuizen support withholding payment in appropriate circumstances to protect an employer’s right to recover losses allegedly caused by employee dishonesty.


On the facts before the court, the applicant did not establish entitlement to immediate payment of her pension benefit, while the Municipality established grounds for an order restraining the Fund from paying the benefit pending adjudication of the Municipality’s instituted action. The applicant’s application was dismissed with costs, and the Municipality’s counter-application was granted with party-and-party costs.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


Section 37A of the Pension Funds Act 24 of 1956 establishes a general rule that pension benefits are not reducible, transferable, or executable, subject to limited statutory exceptions.


Section 37D(1)(b)(ii) provides an exception permitting a registered fund, in defined circumstances involving theft, dishonesty, fraud, or misconduct, to make deductions and payments to an employer in respect of compensation for damage, subject to the statutory conditions (including written admission of liability or judgment).


The object of section 37D(1)(b), as recognised by the Supreme Court of Appeal, is to protect an employer’s right to pursue recovery of money misappropriated by employees, acknowledging practical realities that judgment is seldom obtained before termination and benefit payout.


In motion proceedings, a party who does not squarely admit or deny material allegations, and instead merely “notes” them where a direct response is required, runs the risk of adverse inferences and the allegations being treated as effectively undisputed for purposes of deciding the application.


Awards of attorney-and-client costs are not automatic upon success and require special considerations; fairness, equity, and the circumstances of the losing party may justify limiting costs to the party-and-party scale even where serious allegations are involved.

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[2018] ZANCHC 39
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Mpoletsang v Sol Plaatje Municipality and Another (2748/17) [2018] ZANCHC 39 (6 July 2018)

IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
NORTHERN
CAPE DIVISION, KIMBERLEY
Case
number: JA 78/10
Case No: 2748/17
Heard
on:   20/04/2018
Delivered
on: 06/07/2018
In
the matter between:
MPOLETSANG BEAUTY
KILELO

APPLICANT
And
SOL PLAATJE MUNICIPALITY

FIRST RESPONDENT
CONSOLIDATED RETIREMENT
FUND

SECOND RESPONDENT
Summary:
Applicant dismissed from employment- misconduct based on fraud,
gross dishonesty, theft and corruption- pension benefits
withheld-
application for release of pension benefits 37A of Pension Fund Act
24 of 1956- s 37D(1)(b)(ii) followed to protect the
employer’s
right to pursue recovery of money misappropriated by its employee-
Counter-claim granted. Second respondent interdicted
from paying the
pension benefit.
JUDGMENT
MAMOSEBO J
[1]
The applicant, Ms Mpoletsang Beauty Kilelo, seeks the following
relief: 1.1 An order for the payment of all her benefits or
interests
administered by the second respondent, Consolidated Retirement Fund,
on behalf of the first respondent, Sol Plaatje Municipality

(Municipality); and
1.2     An order for monetary
payment of all accrued leave days and costs    of the
application. By
the time this application was heard the Municipality
had already paid to the applicant all her accrued leave   days.
This
relief has therefore become moot. The application was opposed by
the Municipality which also filed a counter-application. There
is no
opposition by the second respondent, the Consolidated Retirement
Fund.
Condonation application
[2]
This application served before Lever AJ on 15 December 2017 and by
agreement between the parties postponed to 20 April 2018.
Mr
Motlhamme appeared for the applicant and Mr van Tonder for the
Municipality when the matter was postponed by agreement. Although
no
schedule for the filing of the affidavits and heads of argument was
agreed upon, the Rules are clear on that aspect.
[3]
The Northern Cape Rules
[1]
provide the following in Rule 3(4):

In
respect of each opposed application heads of argument shall be filed
with the registrar and served on the opposing party –
(a)
Before 12:00 on the
Monday preceding the trial date on behalf of the applicant; and
(b)
Before 12:00 on the
Wednesday preceding the trial date on behalf of the respondent:
Provided
that in respect of long or complicated applications the heads of
argument shall be filed and served at least eight and
six court days,
respectively, before the trial date.”
[4]
The applicant served and filed her heads of argument and the practice
note the day before the matter was heard, on 19 April
2018. The
notice of motion for condonation was only filed the morning of the
hearing. The only reason advanced for the late filing
of the heads of
argument by Mr Pela, counsel for the applicant, was that from 10
April 2018 to 17 April 2018 he was unable to attend
to any work
including the drawing of the applicant’s papers. The affidavit
did not disclose or specify any reason.
[5]
The High Court has inherent power to protect and regulate its own
process
[2]
where the blame for
the late filing of the heads can be laid squarely at the door of the
legal practitioner. Steyn CJ held
in
Salojee and Another, NNO v Minister of Community Development
[3]
that
:

there
is a limit beyond which a litigant cannot escape the results of his
attorney’s
lack of
diligence or the insufficiency of the explanation
tendered”.
The Court warned
:

To
hold otherwise might have a disastrous effect upon the observance of
the Rules of this Court. Considerations ad misericordium
should not
be allowed to become an invitation to laxity.”
See
also
S v Mohlathe
[4]
The
heads were filed three days out of time. The delay was not
inordinate. The application for condonation was filed in the morning

of the hearing. Although this is also a matter of 4 days late, it
should, in my view, send a warning to the applicant’s
practitioner that non-compliance with the court rules should be a
thing of the past. In this instance, however, dilatoriness of
the
practitioner should not be visited on the client. The condonation for
the late filing of the heads of argument is therefore
granted.
The salient facts underpinning
this case
[6]
Ms Mpoletsang Kilelo was employed by the Municipality as an
accountant in the payroll office and her responsibilities included

uploading the ACB,txt file into the Standard Bank Business
Online Platform for the payment of salaries to the Municipality’s

employees. She claims to have been dismissed on 02 February 2017
following a disciplinary enquiry. Although the Municipality maintains

that the dismissal date was 23 March 2017, nothing turns on the
difference or the exact date.
[7]
While she was in the employment of the Municipality she contributed
towards her pension fund under the umbrella of the Consolidated

Retirement Fund. Upon dismissal, she made an effort to claim monetary
payment for her accrued leave days and her pension pay out.
She was
informed that because the Municipality was to pursue a claim for
damages suffered as a consequence of her misconduct her
pension
benefit was withheld. Ms Kilelo further claims to be prejudiced by
the non-payment of her pension benefits as regards her
subsistence
and livelihood. She now brings this application in terms of s 37A of
the Pension Funds Act
[5]
.
[8]
It was contended on behalf of the Municipality that after anomalies
were detected in the reconciliations of the payroll run
through
internal processes, attorneys and forensic investigators were
appointed to attend to the matter further. They unearthed
fraudulent
activities which led to the appointment of digital forensic
investigators to add to the team of investigators. The estimated

costs for the appointment of such investigators ran up to over One
Million Rand. The applicant was suspended from work and later
charged
with misconduct.  She faced charges of fraud, gross dishonesty
and theft. Disciplinary proceedings followed in 2016.
The
Municipality has further laid criminal charges against the applicant
and other employees involved in the alleged activities.
The
Commercial Crime Investigation Unit probed the matter under CAS
136/12/2016. The Commanding Officer of the Directorate for
Priority
Crime Investigations (DPCI)(the Hawks) has referred the docket to the
Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP), for a decision
whether to
prosecute the applicant or not. The Municipality has also engaged the
Asset Forfeiture Unit (AFU) in its efforts to
recover its losses.
[9]
The applicant was found guilty in the disciplinary hearing for
depleting the amount of R796 788.80 now owed for damages
that
the Municipality has suffered as a result of the applicant’s
involvement in the fraudulent activities which the Municipality
seeks
to recover from her. The Municipality has since determined that the
benefit due to her from the fund is R567 211.00. The
Municipality’s
attorney, Mr Oban Cronje, wrote to the Consolidated Retirement Fund
on 7 April 2017 requesting them to withhold
payment of the
applicant’s pension benefits in terms of s 37D of the Pension
Funds Act
[6]
pending
adjudication of their claim in the action that it intends to
institute against her within 60 days of the order. The Municipality

has since issued summons on 18 April 2018. The Fund has withheld the
money from the applicant which is now the subject of this

application.
[10]
In the counter-application, the respondent seeks an order
interdicting and prohibiting Consolidated Retirement Fund from paying

any pension benefits or proceeds therefrom to the applicant pending
the adjudication of the action as pointed out, has already
been
instituted, and costs on an attorney and client scale.
[11]
Mr van Tonder, for the Municipality, submitted that the Municipality
has a clear or prima facie right which stands to be protected
by s
37D of the Pension Fund Act. Should the applicant succeed in her
current application for her pension benefit to be released
the
Municipality may suffer irreparable harm since the money may be
dissipated and the Municipality may not be able to recover
its
damages. Counsel argued that the balance of convenience tilts towards
the granting of the interim interdict. Counsel further
submitted that
the applicant will not suffer any prejudice since the Municipality is
not reducing, transferring or executing the
pension benefit but
merely asking the Court that it be preserved pending adjudication in
the action proceedings. There is no other
remedy than to approach
this Court for the interim relief. The pending criminal charges will
not assist the Municipality to recover
its losses in terms of the
Pension Fund Act.
[12]
The applicant seems to “
NOTE

most of the allegations made by the Municipality in her replying
affidavit. These are the remarks made by the Court in
Makhuva
v Lukoto Bus Service (Pty) Ltd
[7]
pertaining
to allegations being “
noted

in affidavits:

In
the course of the replying affidavit many of the allegations made by
the second respondent in regard to the company’s affairs,
for
instance in regard to the authority to sign cheques, was merely dealt
with on the following basis: ‘The contents of this
paragraph
are taken note of.’
In
the course of argument I put it to counsel for the applicant that,
where a deponent is under a duty to admit or deny or to confess
and
avoid a direct allegation, a reply that the allegations are ‘taken
note of’ would, in the circumstances, amount
to an admission.
See in this respect the case of McWilliams v First Consolidated
Holdings (Pty) Ltd
1982 (2) SA 1
(A) at 10E – D where it is
stated that whilst ‘quiescence is not necessarily
acquiescence’, a party who does
not make a firm repudiation of
an allegation when bound to do so incurs the risk of an adverse
inference being drawn against him.
As to admissions, denials,
confessions and avoidance in pleadings see Rules 22(2) and 25(1) and
as to affidavits in motion proceedings
see Rule 6(4)(d) and 6(4)(e).
It is clear that affidavits really constitute both pleadings and the
evidence in support of the allegations
made, and the rules as to
pleadings should, to that extent, be applied to affidavits.”
[13]
The general rule is that pension benefits are not reducible,
transferable or executable unless permitted by the Income Tax
Act
[8]
see in this regard   s 37A of the Pension Funds act.  The
exception to this provision is found in s 37D(1)(b)(ii)
which
stipulates the following:

(1)
A registered fund may –

.
(b) deduct any amount due by a member to his employer on the date of
his retirement or on which he ceases to be a member of the
fund, in
respect of-
(ii) compensation (including any legal costs recoverable from the
member in a matter contemplated in subparagraph (bb)) in respect
of
any damage caused to the employer by reason of any theft, dishonesty,
fraud or misconduct by the member, and in respect of which

(aa) the member has in writing admitted liability to the employer; or
(bb) judgment has been obtained against the member in any court,
including a magistrate’s court,
from
any benefit payable in respect of the member or a beneficiary in
terms of the rules of the fund, and pay such amount to the
employer
concerned.”
[14]
It is undisputed that the Municipality has laid criminal charges
against the applicant and is also applying for an interdict
against
the fund pending the adjudication of the action. The Supreme Court of
Appeal in
Highveld
Steel and Vanadium Corporation Ltd v Oosthuizen
[9]
per Maya JA
(concurred in by Harms ADP, Scott and Brand JJA et Griesel AJA) held:

[16]
It has been stated in a number of cases that the object of s
37D(1)(b) is to protect the employer’s right to pursue the

recovery of money misappropriated by its employees. This approach is,
in my view, supported by the plain wording of the section
and is,
with respect, correct.”
The
Court continued at para 17:

[17]
However, a practical problem threatens the efficacy of the remedy
afforded by the section. In many a case employers only suspect

dishonesty on the date of termination of an employee’s service
and fund membership with the consequence that pension benefits
are
paid before the suspected dishonesty can be properly investigated.
Furthermore, it has to be accepted as a matter of logic
that it is
only in a few cases that an employer will have obtained a judgment
against its employee by the time the latter’s
employment is
terminated because of the lengthy delays in finalizing cases in the
justice system. The result, therefore, is that
an employer will find
it difficult to enforce an award made in its favour by the time
judgment is obtained against him.”
[15]
The Supreme Court of Appeal further remarked at para 19:

[19]…..The
Funds therefore had the discretion to withhold payment of the
respondent’s pension benefit in the circumstances.
I daresay
that such
discretion
was properly exercised in view of the glaring absence of any serious
challenge to the appellant’s detailed allegations
of dishonesty
against the respondent.”
[16]
The Municipality, in its counter-application, is not applying to this
Court to reduce, transfer or execute the applicant’s
pension
benefit but urges the Court to order the fund to withhold payment of
such benefits pending resolution of its claim against
the applicant.
[17]
Mr Pela, for the applicant, raised the spectre of prejudice to the
applicant if the pension benefits are withheld as she is
a
breadwinner and has not earned any income since her dismissal. She
needs money to support her family. In my view, this involves
a
balancing act by the Court. The interests of the Municipality to
protect its right to recover damages also need to be taken into

account. There is no evidence before me by the applicant that shows
that the Municipality is unreasonably delaying the prosecution
of
either the criminal or civil matters or that it has not taken any
reasonable steps to bring the civil matter to a conclusion.
[18]
Regard being had to the evidence before me, I am not persuaded that
the applicant has made out a case for this Court to order
the Pension
Fund to pay out her pension benefits at this stage. The application
stands to fail. I am satisfied that the respondent
has made out a
proper case in the counter-application for the restraining order to
be granted against the Pension Fund.
Costs
[19]
The Municipality has, in its counter-application urged me to grant it
costs against the applicant on a scale as between attorney
and
client. Cillié J in
Hawkins
v Gelb & Another
[10]
expessed himself in these terms:

It
is relevant to refer firstly to the essential differences between
party and party costs and attorney and client costs. The former
is
defined at p.391 of The Civil Practice of the Superior Courts in
South Africa by Herbstein and van Winsen as follows:

Party
and party costs are those costs which have been incurred by a party
to legal proceedings and which the other party is ordered
to pay to
him.’ The definition of the other class of costs appears on
p.392:

Attorney
and Client costs are the costs which an attorney is entitled to
recover from his client for the disbursements made by him
on behalf
of his client and the professional services rendered by him. In the
wide sense it includes all the costs the attorney
is entitled to
recover against his client on taxation of his bill of costs, but in
the narrow and more technical sense the term
is applied to those
costs, charges and expenses as between Attorney and Client which
ordinarily the client cannot recover from
the other party.’”
[20]
Tindall JA has dealt with the awarding of attorney and client costs
in
Nel v Waterberg
Landbouwers Ko-operatieve Vereeniging
[11]
as
follows
:

[T]he
true explanation of awards of attorney and client costs not expressly
authorised by Statute seems to be that, by reason of
special
considerations arising either from the circumstances which give rise
to the action or from the conduct of the losing party,
the court in a
particular case considers it just, by means of such an order, to
ensure more effectually than it can do by means
of a judgment for
party and   party costs that the successful party will not be
out of pocket in respect of the expense caused
to him by the
litigation.”
[21]
Mindful of the fact that the applicant is now unemployed and I am
about to order that her pension benefit be withheld, it will
not be
fair and equitable to order costs against her on attorney and client
scale.  I accept that she approached this Court
in an attempt to
protect her rights in respect of money owing to her. A cost order
should not, in these circumstances, discourage
would be litigants
from approaching this Court as a punitive may have the effect of.
[22] In the result, the following order is made:
1.
The applicant is granted condonation for the late filing of the heads
of argument.
2.
The application is dismissed with costs.
3.
The first respondent’s counter-application is granted with
costs on
a party and party scale.
_____________________
MAMOSEBO J
NORTHERN CAPE DIVISION
For
the applicant:

Adv TJ Pela
Instructed
by:

Motlhamme Attorneys
For the respondent:
Adv AG van Tonder
Instructed by:

Van de Wall Incorporated
[1]
Superior Court Practice  Volume 3 Erasmus Second Edition M1-2
[2]
Section 173 of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, Act
108 of 1996, as amended.
[3]
1965 (2) SA 135
(A) at 141C
[4]
2000 (2) SACR 530
(SCA) at 536e - f
[5]
Act 24 of 1956
[6]
24 of 1956
[7]
1987 (3) SA 376
(VSC) at 386C- F; [1987] 3 All SA
565 (VSC)
[8]
58 of 1962
[9]
2009 (4) SA 1
(SCA) at 5F – I;
[2009]
1 BPLR 1 (SCA) at E – G; also reported at [2008] JOL 22846
(SCA)
[10]
1959 (1) SA 702
(W) at 705B -
[11]
1946 AD 597