Mafuna v Lungwengwe and Another (1265/12) [2015] ZAECMHC 69 (18 September 2015)

82 Reportability
Civil Procedure

Brief Summary

Recission of Judgment — Application for recission of default judgment — Applicant, a member of the Amajola Royal Family, sought recission of an order obtained against him by default — Applicant contended he was not served with the application leading to the order — First respondent opposed the application, providing a return of service and asserting the applicant was involved in settlement negotiations — Court assessed whether the applicant provided a reasonable explanation for his default and demonstrated a bona fide defence — Held, the applicant's involvement in settlement negotiations indicated awareness of the proceedings, and the application for recission was granted as the applicant established sufficient grounds for relief.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


The proceedings were an application for rescission of a default order granted on 12 December 2013. The rescission was sought in the Eastern Cape Local Division, Mthatha, before Brooks AJ, with judgment delivered on 18 September 2015.


The applicant, Samson Mafuna, is a member of the Amajola Royal Family and was occupying the position of Inkosana of the Mevana Administrative Area. The first respondent, Zwelibanzi Lungwengwe, opposed the rescission application and was the party who had obtained the default order. The second respondent, the MEC for Local Government & Traditional Affairs, was cited and had been the first respondent in the earlier proceedings that produced the default order, but took no part in the rescission proceedings despite notice.


Procedurally, the matter arose from an earlier application under the same case number in which the first respondent obtained relief by default, resulting in the applicant not being present when the order was taken. The applicant then approached the court to have that default order rescinded. Although the founding affidavit did not expressly identify the legal basis, the court considered it plain that the rescission was pursued under Rule 31(2)(b) of the Uniform Rules of Court, alternatively under the common law.


The dispute concerned competing claims to a traditional leadership position (Inkosana) within the Amajola Royal Family and the broader Mevana Administrative Area, and whether the default order reinstating the first respondent and displacing the applicant should stand without the merits being ventilated.


2. Material Facts


It was common cause that the applicant sought rescission of an order obtained by default on 12 December 2013, and that the first respondent opposed rescission. It was also apparent that the second respondent (the MEC) did not participate in the rescission proceedings, notwithstanding notice.


A central factual dispute concerned service of the initiating papers in the earlier application. The applicant alleged, in both founding and replying affidavits, that he was not served with the application that led to the default order. In response, the first respondent produced a return of service stating that on 21 June 2012 at 12h00 the applicant was served with a notice of motion by delivery of a copy at “Mevana A/A, Libode to Samson Mafuna”. The court noted that the return of service did not indicate personal service, did not identify whether the place was the applicant’s residence, workplace, or business, and did not clarify whether the full founding papers were served. The first respondent also filed a later affidavit by the sheriff (deposed to on 10 April 2015) asserting that service had in fact been personal and at the applicant’s place of residence at Zele Location, Libode district.


Another disputed factual issue related to whether the applicant had taken steps to oppose the earlier application. The first respondent relied on a notice of intention to oppose dated 4 July 2012, served on the first respondent’s attorneys on 14 August 2012, authored by the State Attorney. The content referred to “respondents” and appointed the State Attorney’s address, but the court regarded the document as ambiguous and “unhelpful”, including because it appeared to be prepared for a single “defendant” and because the State Attorney acts for organs of state, making it more probable that it related to the MEC rather than the applicant.


Notwithstanding the disputes about formal service and opposition, the court treated as material the first respondent’s more detailed allegations that settlement negotiations took place after the notice to oppose, involving attorney communications and meetings. According to the first respondent, a meeting scheduled for 3 September 2012 was attended by the applicant, supported by an attendance register annexed to the answering affidavit. The first respondent also attached a letter from the present second respondent inviting the royal family to a further meeting scheduled for 20 August 2013, which the first respondent said the applicant attended. The applicant’s reply accepted that he had been approached by the State Attorney to attend a meeting (he referred to 3 September 2013) and stated that no settlement was reached; he denied knowledge of, notice of, or attendance at the meeting of 20 August 2013.


The court considered it clear on the papers that the first respondent had engaged in settlement negotiations and that, by some mechanism, the applicant was involved to an extent. On that basis, the court treated it as plain that the applicant had a direct interest and must have become aware of the earlier application during negotiations, even if initial formal service was defective.


A further material factual aspect was that the first respondent’s answering affidavit did not explain why settlement negotiations were abandoned or what steps were taken to notify the applicant of the matter being set down before the default order was taken. The court treated the absence of information about notice of set down as important in assessing whether the applicant’s default was wilful or grossly negligent.


On the underlying merits (relevant to bona fides and a defence), the court recorded that the papers showed that on 19 January 2008 the Amajola Royal Family resolved to identify the applicant as Inkosana of the Mevana Administrative Area, and the resolution was annexed. The first respondent admitted that such a resolution was taken but alleged that the applicant’s appointment was unlawful because it conflicted with an earlier resolution identifying the first respondent as Inkosana, which, according to the first respondent, had never been reversed. The default order had the effect of reinstating the first respondent as Inkosana and displacing the applicant, who had held the position for a number of years.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal question was whether the applicant had shown “good cause” for rescission of a default judgment, under Rule 31(2)(b) (or, alternatively, the common law), such that the order of 12 December 2013 should be rescinded and set aside.


This required determination of interrelated questions involving the application of law to fact and an evaluative discretion, namely whether the applicant provided a reasonable explanation for his default and whether the default was wilful or due to gross negligence; whether the rescission application was bona fide rather than a delaying tactic; and whether the applicant disclosed a bona fide defence (at least a prima facie defence or an issue fit for trial) to the claim that had been determined by default.


The court also had to exercise a value judgment/discretion as to whether rescission would best serve the interests of justice, taking into account the principle that rescission restores the opportunity to have a genuine dispute heard, and the constitutional context of section 34 of the Constitution (the right of access to courts and a fair public hearing).


4. Court’s Reasoning


The court began by setting out the established requirements for rescission in applications of this kind. It relied on authority that an applicant must provide a reasonable explanation for the default; show that the application is bona fide and not brought merely to delay; and set out a bona fide defence, for which it is sufficient to establish a prima facie defence or an issue fit for trial, without proving probabilities of success. The court also stressed that the explanation must be sufficiently full to enable the court to understand how the default occurred, and that while the applicant must explain the default, the onus to establish wilful default rests on the respondent.


In considering the evidentiary approach, the court emphasised the nature and effect of rescission. It treated rescission as restoring the status quo ante and indicated that the grant of rescission could be approached in a manner akin to interim relief, by considering the applicant’s version together with facts advanced by the respondent that the applicant cannot dispute, to decide whether relief is justified. The court further highlighted that it has a wide discretion in assessing good cause to ensure justice, and that the object of rescission is to restore the chance to air a real dispute.


On the question of the applicant’s default, the court assessed the service evidence and concluded that the original return of service was materially deficient. The later sheriff’s affidavit attempted to cure this by asserting personal service at the applicant’s residence, but it was deposed to nearly three years later and did not remove the need for careful scrutiny of how default came about. The court similarly regarded the notice of intention to oppose (authored by the State Attorney) as ambiguous and not a reliable indicator that the applicant had actively opposed the earlier application, noting both the document’s internal features and the judicially noticeable fact that the State Attorney acts for organs of state, which aligned with the MEC’s position rather than the applicant’s.


However, the court accepted that the applicant had been drawn into settlement-related processes, which made it “irrelevant” whether there had been effective initial service in the strict sense: the applicant likely became aware of the earlier application through negotiations. The key consideration then became whether his absence when the default order was taken could be attributed to wilfulness or gross negligence. The court found it significant that the first respondent provided no explanation as to why negotiations were abandoned and, crucially, no account of steps taken to give the applicant notice of set down. Given the applicant’s absence when the order was granted and the lack of evidence of proper notice of the set down, the court concluded that the default could not be ascribed to wilfulness or gross negligence. On that basis, the court held that a reasonable explanation for the default emerged from the affidavits.


Turning to bona fides, the court considered the practical effect of the default order: it reinstated the first respondent as Inkosana and displaced the applicant, who had held the position for years. In that context, the court accepted that the applicant’s attempt to challenge the first respondent’s claim was genuine and not merely dilatory.


On the existence of a bona fide defence, the court recorded that the applicant raised various procedural difficulties relating to the earlier application, which the court considered could potentially be dispositive if properly ventilated. Beyond procedure, the court treated the substantive core of the defence as arising from the applicant’s tenure as Inkosana for a number of years pursuant to identification by the Amajola Royal Family, supported by objective material in the papers. Although the first respondent challenged aspects, he admitted the 2008 resolution, and the dispute about competing resolutions demonstrated that there was a real issue requiring adjudication.


Finally, the court linked these conclusions to the broader interest of justice, including the constitutional dimension that default judgment is inherently contrary to the spirit of section 34 of the Constitution, requiring balancing between access to courts and finality based on the circumstances that led to default. The court considered that there were competing claims to an important traditional position, and that rescission would restore the opportunity to have those claims expressed, explored, and resolved. Exercising its wide discretion, the court concluded that good cause for rescission had been established.


5. Outcome and Relief


The court granted rescission and set aside the default order granted in favour of the first respondent on 12 December 2013 under case number 1265/2012.


The court directed that the first respondent pay the costs of the rescission application.


Cases Cited


HDS Construction (Pty) Ltd v Wait 1979(2) SA 298(E).

Grant v Plumbers 1949(2) SA 470(O).

Silber v Ozen Wholesalers (Pty) Ltd 1954(2) SA 345(A).

Mahomed Abdulha v Chochan 1933 NPD 334.

Sanderson Technitool (Pty) Ltd v Intermenua (Pty) Ltd 1980(4) SA 573 (W).

RGS Properties (Pty) Ltd v Ethekwini Municipality 2010(6) SA 572 (KZD).

Securiforce CC v Ruiters 2012(4) SA 252 (NCK).

Spur Steak Ranches Ltd and Others v Saddles Steak Ranch, Claremont, and Another 1996(3) SA 706 (C).

Wahl v Prinswil Beleggings (Edms) Bpk 1984(1) SA 457 (T).

Lazarus v Nedcor Bank Ltd; Lazarus v ABSA Bank 1999(2) SA 782(W).


Legislation Cited


Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996: section 34.


Rules of Court Cited


Uniform Rules of Court: Rule 31(2)(b).


Held


The court held that the applicant satisfied the requirements for rescission by demonstrating a reasonable explanation for his default (with the respondent failing to establish wilful default or gross negligence), that the rescission application was bona fide, and that the applicant disclosed a bona fide defence raising issues fit for trial in relation to competing claims to the position of Inkosana.


The default order of 12 December 2013 was rescinded and set aside, and the first respondent was ordered to pay the costs of the rescission application.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


A party seeking rescission of a default judgment under Rule 31(2)(b) or the common law must place evidence before the court establishing good cause, including a reasonable explanation for the default, the bona fides of the application, and the existence of a bona fide defence that is at least prima facie or raises an issue fit for trial.


The explanation for default must be sufficiently full to allow the court to understand how the default occurred. While the applicant must provide a reasonable explanation, the onus to prove wilful default lies with the respondent.


In assessing whether a defence has been shown, an applicant need not demonstrate a probability of success; it is enough to show a prima facie defence or triable issue. A court should not refuse rescission merely because it is uncertain about the defence’s prospects, provided the defence is not, on its face, a delaying tactic.


The court retains a wide discretion to determine good cause, guided by the objective of rescission to restore the opportunity to ventilate a real dispute, and mindful of the constitutional context, including section 34’s protection of access to courts and the fair adjudication of disputes.

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[2015] ZAECMHC 69
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Mafuna v Lungwengwe and Another (1265/12) [2015] ZAECMHC 69 (18 September 2015)

IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
EASTERN CAPE LOCAL
DIVISION: MTHATHA
CASE NO: 1265/12
DATE: 18 SEPTEMBER 2015
In the matter between:
SAMSON
MAFUNA
.................................................................................................................
Applicant
And
ZWELIBANZI
LUNGWENGWE
.................................................................................
1st
Respondent
MEC FOR LOCAL GOVERNMENT
& TRADITIONAL
AFFAIRS
.......................................................................................
2nd
Respondent
JUDGMENT
BROOKS AJ
[1] The applicant is a member of the
Amajola Royal Family. He seeks the recission of an order which was
obtained against him by
default on 12 December 2013 (“the
order”) by the first respondent.
[2] The first respondent has opposed
the application for recission.
[3] It is apposite to record at this
point that the second respondent was the frst respondent in the
matter which gave rise to the
order. Notwithstanding notice to the
second respondent, that party takes no part in present proceedings.
[4] Although it is not specifically
stated in the applicant’s founding affidavit, it is plain from
the circumstances disclosed
therein that the application for
recission of the order proceeds in terms of Rule 31(2) (b) of the
Uniform Rules of Court, alternatively
in terms of the common law.
[5] It is appropriate to set out a
number of legal principles applicable to an application of this
nature before assessing the evidence
contained in the affidavits.
[6] In an application of this nature it
is encumbent upon an applicant to place evidence before the court
which demonstrates the
following:
1. He or she must give a reasonable
explanation for his or her default; if default is wilful or due to
gross negligence, the court
should not come to his or her assistance;
2. The application must be bona fide
and not made with the intention of merely delaying the plaintiff’s
claim;
3. The applicant must show that he or
she has a bona fide defence. It is sufficient if he or she makes out
a prima facie defence
which does not deal fully with the merits or
produce evidence that the probabilities favour the applicant.
(HDS Construction (Pty) Ltd v Wait
1979(2) SA 298(E) 300 F – 301 C; Grant v Plumbers 1949(2) SA
470(0) 476-477.)
[7] In amplification of the first
requirement of an application for recission, it has been held that
the explanation for the default
must be sufficiently full to enable
the court to understand how it really came about. (Silber v Ozen
Wholesalers (Pty) Ltd 1954(2)
SA 345(A) 353A.)
[8] Whilst it is for the applicant to
give a reasonable explanation for his or her default, the onus of
proof to establish wilful
default rests with the respondent.
(Mahomed Abdulha v Chochan
1933 NPD 334).
[9] The requirement that an applicant
show the existence of a substantial defence does not mean that he or
she must show a probability
of success. It is sufficient if he or
she shows a prima facie case, or the existence of an issue which is
fit for trial. (Sanderson
Technitool (Pty) Ltd v Intermenua (Pty)
Ltd 1980(4) SA 573 (W). In this regard, the following principles are
useful:
“…judgment by default is
inherently contrary to the provisions of s 34 of the Constitution.
The section provides that
everyone has a right to have any dispute
that can be resolved by the application of law decided in a fair
public hearing before
a court, or, where appropriate, another
independent and impartial tribunal or forum. Therefore, in my view,
in weighing up facts
for decision, the court must on the one hand
balance the need for an individual who is entitled to have access to
court, and to
have his or her dispute resolved in a fair public
hearing, against those facts which led to the default judgment being
granted
in the first place. In its deliberation the court will no
doubt be mindful, especially when assessing the requirement of
reasonable
cause being shown, that while among others this
requirement incorporates showing the existence of a bona fide
defence, the court
is not seized with the duty to evaluate the merits
of such defence. The fact that the court may be in doubt about the
prospects
of the defence to be advanced, is not a good reason why the
application should not be granted. That said however, the nature of

the defence advanced must not be such that it prima facie amounts to
nothing more than a delaying tactic on the part of the applicant.”
(RGS Properties (Pty) Ltd v Ethekwini
Municipality 2010(6) SA 572 (KZD) 575G-576C.)
[10] In considering the proper approach
to be adopted in the evaluation of the evidence set out in the
affidavits, it is necessary
to consider the nature of the relief
sought. The effect of recission would be to render the order a
nullity. Neither advantage
nor disadvantage can flow therefrom. The
applicant is entitled to claim that the status quo ante be restored.
(Securiforce CC
v Ruiters 2012(4) SA 252 (NCK) 216D-E). In my view,
the grant of recission can be likened to the grant of interim relief
and the
proper approach is to take the facts set out by the applicant
together with any facts set out by the respondent which the applicant

cannot dispute and to determine whether, on those facts, the
applicant is entitled to relief. (Spur Steak Ranches Ltd and Others

v Saddles Steak Ranch, Claremont, and Another 1996(3) SA 706 (C)
714E.)
[11] In evaluating the evidence placed
before the court in the affidavits, it is useful to bear in mind the
following two principles:
1. Firstly, the court has a wide
discretion in evaluating “good cause” in order to ensure
that justice is done. (Wahl
v Prinswil Beleggings (Edms) Bpk 1984(1)
SA 457 (T));
2. Secondly, the object of rescinding a
judgment is “to restore a chance to air a real dispute”.
(Lazarus v Nedcor
Bank Ltd; Lazarus v ABSA Bank 1999(2) SA 782(W)).
[12] Against the background of these
legal principles, I turn to an examination of the evidence placed
before the court in the exchange
of affidavits.
[13] The applicant states in his
founding affidavit that he was not served with the application which
gave rise to the order. This
is repeated in his replying affidavit.
In disputing this allegation, the first respondent attaches a return
of service completed
by the sheriff. This document records that “on
21 June 2012 at 12h00 the applicant was served with a Notice of
Motion by
the delivery of a copy thereof at Mevana A/A, Libode to
Samson Mafuna”. Although that is the name of the applicant,
the
return of service does not record that personal service occurred.
Nor does it indicate whether the place of service was the
applicant’s
place of residence, employment or business and
whether the full founding papers were served. It is a singularly
unhelpful document.
Realising the deficiencies in the return of
service, as part of his answering papers the first respondent
includes an affidavit
deposed to by the sheriff on 10 April 2015,
nearly three years later, in which the sheriff states that the
service upon the applicant
was personal service and occurred at his
place of residence at Zele Location in the district of Libode.
[14] In the circumstances, careful
attention needs to be given to the reasons for the applicant’s
default. It is alleged
by the first respondent that the applicant
gave notice of opposition in the matter. He files as an annexure to
his answering affidavit
a copy of a notice to oppose the application
dated 4 July 2012 which was served on his attorney of record on 14
August 2012. The
author of the notice is the state attorney. The
content of the document states that “the respondents give their
notice of
intention to oppose the application and appoint the address
of the state attorney for service of process”. In signing the

notice, the author places his signature above the words “Defendant’s
Attorney”.
[15] Once again, the document relied
upon by the first respondent is unhelpful. Nothing in its title
claims that it was filed on
behalf of both respondents. The detail
underneath the author’s signature indicates that it is filed on
behalf of a single
defendant. The document is not covered by an
explanatory affidavit deposed to by the author. Moreover, in my view
the court is
entitled to take judicial notice of the fact that the
offices of the state attorney act exclusively on behalf of organs of
state.
In his capacity nomine officio, the second respondent, who
was the first respondent in the application which gave rise to the
order, would have had access to the Mthatha office of the state
attorney, whereas the applicant, who was the second respondent in

that application, would not.
[16] However, even if there were some
doubt cast upon the applicant’s allegations pertaining to a
lack of effective service
by the allegations made by the first
respondent in his answering affidavits and the content of the
annexures to which I have made
reference, further and important
information pertaining to the applicant’s default emerges from
more detailed allegations
made by the first respondent.
[17] In an attempt to demonstrate that
the present application for recission amounts to no more than an
attempt by the applicant
to distort the truth and conceal the real
facts, the first respondent states that subsequent to the filing of
the notice of opposition
to which I have referred, settlement
negotiations resulted from telephonic exchanges between the
attorneys. Full attendance by
all involved could not be achieved on
the first date nominated, which was 12 August 2012, but the first
respondent states that
the second meeting scheduled for 3 September
2012 was attended by the applicant. An attendance register, on which
the applicant’s
name appears, is attached to the answering
affidavit in support of this allegation. So too is a letter written
by the present
second respondent as an invitation for the whole royal
family to attend a further meeting scheduled for 20 August 2013,
almost
a year later. The first respondent states that this meeting
was also attended by the applicant.
[18] In the replying affidavit the
applicant states that he was approached by the office of the state
attorney, Mthatha, with a
request that he attend the meeting of 3
September 2013 held at the state attorney’s office. He states
that no settlement
was reached on that day. He states further that
he was not aware of a meeting being held on 20 August 2013 as he was
not notified.
He denies further that either he or the whole royal
family were there.
[19] It readily apparent from the facts
which emerge in this matter that prior to obtaining the order the
first respondent was engaged
in settlement negotiations. It is also
clear that, by whatever mechanism, the applicant was to some extent
involved in the settlement
negotiation process. It becomes
irrelevant whether or not he had effective service of the initial
application papers. It is plain
that he had a direct interest in the
outcome of the initial application and must have become aware of its
existence during the
settlement negotiation process even if he had
not been served with the application initially.
[20] There is no explanation in the
answering affidavit for the obvious abandonment by the first
respondent of the negotiations
towards a settlement of the initial
application. The answering affidavit is silent as to the decision
which must have been taken
at some point by the first respondent to
proceed further with the initial application. It is plain from the
order itself that
the applicant was not present when the order was
taken. In the absence of any information in the answering affidavit
relating
to steps taken to give the applicant notice of the matter
being set down by the first respondent, one must accept on an
examination
of the common cause facts and the facts alleged by the
first respondent in the answering affidavit that the applicant’s
absence
at the time when the order was granted cannot be attributed
to wilfulness or gross negligence on his part. That being the case,

I am satisfied that a reasonable explanation for the applicant’s
default emerges from the affidavits.
[21] In evaluating the second
requirement, it is evident from the application papers that on 19
January 2008 the Amajola Royal Family
took a decision to identify the
applicant as the Inkosana of the Mevana Administrative Area. A copy
of their resolution is annexed
to the founding papers. In his
answering affidavit the first respondent admits that the Amajola
Royal Family took a resolution
to identify the applicant as Inkosana,
but alleges that the resultant appointment of the applicant as
Inkosana was unlawful as
it was in conflict with an earlier
resolution taken by the Amajola Royal Family to identify the first
respondent as Inkosana.
The first respondent alleges that the
earlier identification of himself was never reversed. His
contentions formed the basis of
the initial application brought by
him and are, to some extent, reflected in the terms of the order.
[22] In the circumstances, I am of the
view that the applicant is bona fide and has not made the present
application with the intention
of merely delaying the first
respondent’s claim. The effect of the order was the
reinstatement of the first respondent as
Inkosana of the Mevana
Administrative Area displacing the applicant who had held the
position for a number of years. I accept
that the applicant is bona
fide in wishing to challenge the first respondent’s claim.
[23] The third requirement is that the
applicant must demonstrate a bona fide defence. It is clear from the
founding affidavit
that the applicant raises a number of procedural
difficulties with the initial application. In my view, those
difficulties, if
ventilated, may indeed be dispositive of the matter.
However, the real defence emerges from the fact that the applicant
held the
position as Inkosana in Mevana Administrative Area for a
number of years pursuant to his identification as Inkosana by the
Amajola
Royal Family. Understandibly, this is a position which he
wishes to defend. His reliance upon the objective factors set out in

his affidavit which, although challenged, are admitted by the first
respondent, demonstrates the defence as bona fide.
[24] Accordingly, I am of the view that
a recission of the order would restore a chance to air a real
dispute. There are competing
claims to an important position within
the Amajola Royal Family and within the broader community. It is in
the interests of justice
that the competing claims be expressed,
explored and resolved. In the exercise of my wide judicial
discretion in this matter,
I am of the view that “good cause”
exists for the recission of the order to ensure that justice is done.
[25] In the result the following order
will issue:
“1. The order granted by default
in favour of the first respondent on 12 December 2013 under case no.
1265/2012 is hereby
rescinded and set aside.
2. The first respondent is hereby
directed to pay the costs of this application.”
BROOKS AJ
ACTING JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
Counsel for the Applicant: Adv
Luzipho
Instructed by A. S. Zono &
Associates
Applicant’s Attorneys
ECDC Building
MTHATHA
Attorneys for the Respondents: H. N.
Mkhongozeli Attorneys
Respondent’s Attorneys
Office No. 5 Park Road
MTHATHA
Matter heard on: 18 September 2015
Judgment delivered on: 18 September
2015