GMA Finance CC v Leonard and Others (A6/2013) [2013] ZAFSHC 103 (13 June 2013)

80 Reportability
Civil Procedure

Brief Summary

Appeal — Amendment of particulars of claim — Application for leave to amend particulars of claim refused by magistrate — Appellant sought to add jurisdictional grounds in response to special plea of lack of jurisdiction — Magistrate found proposed amendment would render particulars excipiable — Appellant contended magistrate's refusal was incorrect and order was appealable — Court held that the amendment sought was necessary to establish jurisdiction and did not render the particulars excipiable; magistrate's finding was erroneous — Order refusing amendment was deemed susceptible to appeal due to potential injustice arising from inability to present jurisdictional evidence at trial.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


The matter was an appeal to the Free State High Court, Bloemfontein, arising from a decision of the magistrates’ court in which the magistrate refused an application to amend the plaintiff’s particulars of claim under Magistrates’ Court Rule 55A. The appeal was heard by Rampai AJP and Zietsman AJ, with judgment delivered by Zietsman AJ.


The appellant was GMA Finance CC, the plaintiff in the magistrates’ court proceedings. The respondents were Elsie Leonard (first respondent/first defendant), C Karamanolis & Associates (second respondent/second defendant), and Gous Vertue & Associates (third respondent/third defendant).


The procedural history relevant to the appeal was that summons was issued in the magistrates’ court (case number 30106/2010). The first defendant did not defend the action and default judgment was granted against her. The second and third defendants defended the matter and delivered a plea raising, among other defences, a special plea disputing the magistrates’ court’s jurisdiction. The plaintiff responded by replication and thereafter attempted to amend its particulars of claim to incorporate jurisdictional averments that had been raised only in replication. The defendants opposed the proposed amendment; the plaintiff then brought a formal Rule 55A application for leave to amend, which the magistrate dismissed on 5 September 2012. This dismissal prompted the present appeal.


The general subject-matter of the dispute in the appeal was not the substantive merits of the underlying claim, but rather (a) whether the magistrate was correct to refuse the amendment and (b) whether the refusal order was appealable, notwithstanding its interlocutory character.


2. Material Facts


The material facts, as relied upon by the High Court, were largely procedural and were substantially common cause.


GMA Finance CC instituted action in the magistrates’ court against three defendants. The first defendant did not enter an appearance to defend and default judgment was granted against her. The second and third defendants defended the action and pleaded a special plea that the plaintiff had not pleaded facts establishing the magistrates’ court’s jurisdiction, with the consequence that the court allegedly lacked jurisdiction.


In replication, the plaintiff addressed the jurisdictional challenge by alleging that the third defendant was the owner of the second defendant, that the third defendant’s principal place of business was in Bloemfontein, and that the second defendant, though carrying on business in Kimberley, was said to constitute a branch office of the third defendant. On that footing, the plaintiff asserted that the Bloemfontein magistrates’ court had jurisdiction over the second and third defendants.


It was accepted in argument that these jurisdictional allegations were matters that ought to have been pleaded in the particulars of claim rather than raised for the first time in replication. To address this, the plaintiff delivered a notice of intention to amend its particulars of claim so as to include the jurisdictional averments.


The second and third defendants opposed the amendment under Rule 55A. The notice of opposition asserted that the amendment would render the particulars of claim “exculpable” (understood on appeal to mean excipiable) and stated that the summons “as amended” would “oust” the court’s jurisdiction. The opposition in the affidavits was framed as being based on a legal argument to be presented orally rather than a factual dispute about the amendment’s content.


After argument, the magistrate dismissed the amendment application. In reasons subsequently furnished, the magistrate indicated, in substance, that the proposed amendment sought to cure jurisdictional allegations not pleaded initially, and that the amendment should not be allowed because it would render the proceedings excipiable, with reference to De Klerk v Du Plessis as relied upon in the respondents’ heads of argument. The magistrate also ordered that the costs of the amendment application would stand over for determination in the main action.


3. Legal Issues


The High Court was required to determine two central questions.


The first was whether the magistrate correctly refused leave to amend the particulars of claim under Magistrates’ Court Rule 55A, on the basis that the amendment would render the pleading excipiable and/or would “oust” jurisdiction. This question concerned the application of procedural law to the content and purpose of the proposed pleading amendment, assessed against established principles governing amendments and excipiability.


The second was whether the magistrate’s order refusing the amendment was susceptible to appeal, notwithstanding that it was an interlocutory ruling in ongoing proceedings. This issue raised a question of appealability, which involves both the classification of the order (final/interlocutory) and an evaluative enquiry into its effect, including whether immediate appellate intervention was justified in the interests of justice.


4. Court’s Reasoning


On the merits of the amendment refusal, the High Court considered the magistrate’s reasoning and the nature of the proposed amendment. The High Court understood the defendants’ opposition to rest on the contention that pleading jurisdictional facts by amendment would make the particulars of claim excipiable, and that it would in some way “oust” the magistrates’ court’s jurisdiction. The High Court regarded the wording in the notice of opposition as unclear, particularly the suggestion that an amendment designed to deal with jurisdiction could “oust” jurisdiction.


The High Court reasoned that the proposed amendment was directed at introducing averments necessary to lay a foundation for jurisdiction in the pleadings, thereby enabling the plaintiff to lead evidence on jurisdictional grounds at trial. In the High Court’s assessment, there was no basis for concluding that such an amendment would render the pleading excipiable. Rather than undermining jurisdiction, the amendment’s purpose was to plead the facts upon which jurisdiction was asserted. The High Court therefore concluded that the magistrate’s finding on excipiability and the refusal of the amendment were clearly wrong.


On the appealability question, the High Court accepted that the order refusing an amendment is ordinarily an interlocutory order and not, in form, a final determination of jurisdiction or of the substantive relief claimed. The respondents relied on authority stating that an appealable order is generally one that is final in effect, definitive of rights, and dispositive of a substantial portion of the relief. The High Court considered the approach in decisions such as Jacobs and Others v Baumann NO and Others 2009 (5) SA 432 (SCA) and the principles associated with Zweni v Minister of Law and Order 1993 (1) SA 523 (AD), including the importance of considering not only the order’s form but also its effect, as discussed in Moch v Nedtravel (Pty) Ltd t/a American Express Travel Service 1996 (3) SA 1 (A).


The appellant argued that refusing the amendment would have a practical procedural consequence: if the plaintiff attempted at trial to lead evidence establishing jurisdiction, the defendants would likely object that such evidence fell outside the pleaded case; the objection would foreseeably be upheld; and the plaintiff would thus be hampered in proving jurisdiction, with the result that the special plea might succeed. The High Court accepted that, although the magistrate’s refusal did not itself decide jurisdiction, its effect could be to create a real risk of injustice by preventing the plaintiff from properly presenting a pleaded case on jurisdiction.


In evaluating whether the interlocutory order should be appealable, the High Court relied on the more flexible, pragmatic approach reflected in Phillips v South African Reserve Bank (2012) ZASCA 38 (29 March 2012) (as discussed in the judgment), including the recognition that rigid adherence to the Zweni criteria is not exhaustive and that the enquiry may incorporate considerations of convenience, timing, delay, expedience, prejudice, avoidance of piecemeal appeals, and the attainment of justice. The judgment also referred to the discussion in NDPP v King 2010 (2) SACR 146 (SCA) concerning the competing considerations between immediate correction of erroneous rulings and the systemic disadvantages of fragmentary appeals.


Applying these considerations to the case, the High Court concluded that the magistrate’s error was clear, that the refusal was capable of causing material prejudice to the plaintiff in presenting its case on jurisdiction, and that postponing correction could produce further procedural disputes and likely future appeals. The High Court also described the opposition to the amendment as unreasonable and without substance. In these circumstances, the High Court considered it appropriate, in the interests of justice, to entertain the appeal and correct the error at that stage rather than requiring the parties to proceed to trial on defective pleadings and risk avoidable jurisdictional outcomes and further appellate proceedings.


5. Outcome and Relief


The High Court upheld the appeal. It set aside the magistrate’s order of 5 September 2012, which had dismissed the amendment application and reserved costs for the main action.


The High Court substituted that order with an order granting the plaintiff’s application in terms of Rule 55A, specifically granting prayers 1 and 2 of the application (being leave to amend in accordance with the notice of amendment).


The High Court further ordered that the appeal succeeded with costs, thereby awarding the appellant its costs of the appeal.


Cases Cited


Jacobs and Others v Baumann NO and Others 2009 (5) SA 432 (SCA).


Moch v Nedtravel (Pty) Ltd t/a American Express Travel Service 1996 (3) SA 1 (A).


Zweni v Minister of Law and Order 1993 (1) SA 523 (AD).


Phillips v South African Reserve Bank (2012) ZASCA 38 (29 March 2012) (unreported, as described in the judgment).


National Director of Public Prosecutions v King 2010 (2) SACR 146 (SCA).


Beinash v Wixley [1997] ZASCA 32; 1997 (3) SA 721 (SCA).


Health Professions Council of South Africa v Emergency Medical Supplies and Training CC t/a EMS 2010 (6) SA 469 (SCA).


Government of the Republic of South Africa v Von Abo 2011 (5) SA 262 (SCA).


Liberty Life Association of Africa Ltd v Niselow (citation not provided in the judgment text).


De Klerk v Du Plessis (citation not provided in the judgment text).


Legislation Cited


Magistrates’ Courts Act 32 of 1944, section 28.


Rules of Court Cited


Magistrates’ Court Rule 55A.


Held


The High Court found that the magistrate’s refusal of the plaintiff’s Rule 55A amendment was erroneous because the proposed amendment did not render the particulars of claim excipiable and was directed at pleading jurisdictional averments necessary to found the magistrates’ court’s jurisdiction.


The High Court further found that, although the refusal of an amendment is interlocutory in form, the order was appealable in the circumstances because of its likely effect on the fairness and conduct of the trial, the risk of prejudice to the plaintiff, and the need to avoid injustice, applying a flexible and pragmatic approach to appealability.


The appeal was upheld with costs, the magistrate’s order was set aside, and the amendment application was granted.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


An application to amend pleadings under Magistrates’ Court Rule 55A must be assessed with reference to the purpose and effect of the proposed amendment. An amendment aimed at introducing allegations necessary to establish a pleaded basis for jurisdiction is not, merely for that reason, to be treated as rendering the pleading excipiable, particularly where its function is to enable the party to present its jurisdictional case properly on the pleadings.


In determining whether an interlocutory order is appealable, the enquiry is not confined to formal classification. The effect of the order, and whether immediate correction is appropriate, may be evaluated pragmatically with regard to considerations such as the attainment of justice, prejudice, expedience, delay, convenience, and the avoidance of piecemeal appeals, consistent with the flexible approach endorsed in the cited appellate authorities.

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[2013] ZAFSHC 103
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GMA Finance CC v Leonard and Others (A6/2013) [2013] ZAFSHC 103 (13 June 2013)

FREE STATE HIGH
COURT, BLOEMFONTEIN
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
Appeal No.: A6/2013
In
the appeal between:-
GMA FINANCE CC
...................................................................
Appellant
and
ELSIE LEONARD
.........................................................
First
Respondent
C KARAMANOLIS &
ASSOCIATES
.......................
Second
Respondent
GOUS VERTUE &
ASSOCIATES
...............................
Third
Respondent
_____________________________________________________
CORAM:
RAMPAI, AJP
et
ZIETSMAN, AJ
_____________________________________________________
JUDGEMENT:
ZIETSMAN, AJ
HEARD ON:
3
JUNE 2013
_____________________________________________________
DELIVERED ON:
13 JUNE 2013
_____________________________________________________
[1] This is an appeal
emanating from a decision by the magistrate in terms of which the
magistrate refused an application in terms
of Magistrates’
Court Rule 55A in which leave was sought by the plaintiff (applicant)
to amend its particulars of claim in
terms of a notice of amendment
dated the 14
th
March 2012. The application was dismissed
by the magistrates’ court on the 5
th
September 2012.
[2] This appeal revolves
around mainly two issues being:
2.1. whether the
magistrate was correct in her finding in refusing the application to
amend the particulars of claim;
2.2. whether the order
made by the magistrate is susceptible to an appeal.
[3] Before I deal with
the issues referred to above, it is apposite to furnish the following
background:
3.1. The appellant, who
is the plaintiff in the magistrates’ court issued summons
against the respondents (being the defendants)
under case number
30106/2010. The first defendant (first respondent) did not defend the
matter and judgment by default was granted
against the first
defendant. The second and third defendants however defended the
matter.
3.2. In their plea, the
second and third defendants raised a special plea, amongst others,
that the plaintiff did not advance grounds
upon which jurisdiction of
the magistrates’ court is based, and therefor the court has no
jurisdiction.
3.3. In replication, the
plaintiff replied to the special plea, by averring that the third
defendant is the owner of the second
defendant, and that whereas the
third defendant’s principal place of business is situated at 3
President Steyn Avenue, Westdene,
Bloemfontein, Free State, and that
whereas the second defendant carries on business in Kimberley, the
second defendant constitutes
a branch office of the third defendant,
and therefore the magistrates’ court, Bloemfontein has
jurisdiction over the second
and third defendants.
3.4. Whereas these
averments in replication should have been made in the particulars of
claim, the plaintiff gave notice to the
second and third defendants
of its intention to amend its particulars of claim by adding these
averments in its particulars of
claim.
3.5. The notice of
amendment was met with a notice to oppose the amendment in terms of
rule 55A on the basis that

the proposed
amendment would render the plaintiff’s particulars of claim as
being exculpable (sic) on the grounds that the
summons – as
amended – would oust this court’s jurisdiction”.
3.6.
After such notice to oppose was filed, the plaintiff made application
to the magistrates’ court in terms of rule 55A
whereby it
sought leave from the court to amend its particulars of claim in
accordance with the aforesaid notice of amendment.
3.7.
The aforesaid application was opposed by the second and third
defendants, and in the opposing affidavit the deponent on behalf
of
the second and third defendants based their opposition on the
following:

I am not
going to deal with each and every averment in the applicant’s
founding affidavit, which must not be construed as
an admission
thereof in light of the fact that the opposition of the application
is founded on a legal argument which will be orally
presented in
court.”
3.8. After the
aforementioned application for leave to amend was argued before the
magistrate, the magistrate dismissed the application
on the 5
th
September 2012.
3.9. When reasons were
furnished by the magistrate, the following was advanced in this
regard:

Looking at
the proposed amendment paragraph 6, the amendment seeks to resolve
the issue of jurisdiction over the second and third
respondent which
was never contained in the original particulars of claim. Now this
court would have accepted that it did have
jurisdiction in terms s28
of Act 32 of 1944 if the respondents simply delivered a plea is (sic)
response to the summons and attached
particulars of claim without
objecting to jurisdiction and therefore by implication, consent to
the court’s jurisdiction.
This is not the case here however as
the second and third respondents in their plea did the same objected
to this court jurisdiction.
I thus align myself with the
respondents’ Head (sic) of Argument on page 6 – 8 and
specifically paragraphs 11 –
14 and I am of the opinion that
this amendment should not be allowed as it renders these proceedings
excipiable as per the dicta
in
De Klerk v Du Plessis
,
supra
.
It is so that the general principle regarding costs is winning party
is entitled to costs, however due to the fact that the court
has
found that the amendment will render the proceedings excipiable, it
is thus also decided that costs should be adjudicated in
the main
action.”
3.10.
It would therefore seem that the oral arguments advanced
before the magistrate, by the second and third defendants, contained
the
argument that the amendment sought by the plaintiff would make
the particulars of claim excipiable and on that basis the amendment

should not be allowed.
[4] During the appeal,
the plaintiff (as appellant) argued that the aforesaid finding by the
magistrate is clearly wrong and that
the magistrate should have
allowed the amendment in accordance with the application. It is
furthermore clear that the word used
in the notice of opposition to
the notice of amendment, namely “exculpable” was meant to
be excipiable. What is meant
by the wording “… would
oust this court’s jurisdiction” in the notice of
opposition to the notice of amendment
is all but clear. What the
plaintiff sought in the notice of amendment and later the application
for leave to amend, was to add
grounds on which it could lead
evidence to prove that the magistrates’ court in Bloemfontein
has jurisdiction over the second
and third defendants.
[5] There is no basis on
which the magistrate could find that the amendment sought would have
the effect of an excipiable pleading
nor is there any basis on which
it could be argued that the amendment sought would “oust the
court’s jurisdiction”.
On the contrary the proposed
amendment was designed to plead averments necessary to lay the
foundation that the court
a quo
has jurisdiction to entertain
the action. The underlying purpose was to confer and not to oust
jurisdiction.
[6] The finding by the
magistrate is clearly wrong in that the amendment sought should have
been allowed in the circumstances.
[7] The second question,
which is a much more difficult question in the circumstances, is
whether the order made by the magistrate
is susceptible to appeal. In
this regard the following is of importance:
7.1. It was argued on
behalf of the respondents that the application for leave to amend
plaintiff’s particulars of claim,
is an interlocutory
application and that the order made by the magistrate was thus an
interlocutory order. For that reason, the
defendants argued that as a
general proposition,
“…
it
is submitted to be trite that adjustment or order is susceptible to
appeal if it is
(a) final in effect – i.e.
unalterable by the court which made it;
(b) definitive of the rights of the
parties in that it grants definitive and distinct relief; and
(c) dispositive of at least a
substantial portion of the relief claimed in the main proceedings.”
7.2. Mr Grobler, on
behalf of the defendants, relied upon the decision of
Jacobs
and Others v Baumann NO and Others
2009 (5) SA 432
(SCA) at p
436.
7.3. It was also argued
on behalf of the defendants that in determining whether or not an
order is final, consideration must be
given not only to its form but
also its effect. In this instance Mr Grobler referred us to
Moch
v Nedtravel (Pty) Ltd t/a American Express Travel Service
,
1996 (3) SA 1
(A) at p 10 and 11.
7.4. Counsel for the
appellant, Mr De Jager, also referred us to the Appellate Division’s
decision
Zweni v Minister of Law and Order
1993 (1) SA
523
(AD). Mr De Jager also argued that the effect of the magistrate’s
order in not allowing the amendment, would be that if the
plaintiff
would lead evidence during the trial that the magistrates’
court has jurisdiction, and the grounds upon which such
evidence
would be tendered, the defendants’ counsel would obviously
object to such evidence on the basis that the particulars
of claim do
not cover the alleged jurisdictional grounds, and that the plaintiff
would not be in a position to rely upon such jurisdictional
grounds
in reply. Inevitably, such objection would be upheld, which would
entail that the plaintiff would not be able to prove
that the
magistrates’ court has jurisdiction, with the result that
second and third defendants’ special plea that the
magistrates’
court does not have jurisdiction, must be and would be upheld in the
circumstances.
7.5. Although Mr De Jager
conceded, correctly so, that the order made by the magistrate in
refusing the amendment of the plaintiff’s
particulars of claim,
is not an order deciding upon the question whether the magistrates’
court has jurisdiction or not,
the inevitable result of the
interlocutory order, will be a decision that the magistrates’
court does not have jurisdiction,
unjustly so, because the magistrate
would not have been in the position to receive evidence from the
plaintiff’s side that
it indeed has the necessary jurisdiction
in the circumstances.
7.6. As referred to
above, it is not only the form, but also the effect of the order that
must be considered to determine whether
or not the order is a final
one or not.
[8] As far as the
arguments referred to above, and for purposes of our decision whether
the order made by the magistrate is susceptible
to appeal, the
following is of importance:
8.1. It is clear, and it
is also common cause, that the order made by the magistrate was an
interlocutory order refusing an amendment
to the plaintiff’s
particulars of claim;
8.2. Such an order is in
itself not a final order regarding the question whether the
magistrates’ court has jurisdiction over
the matter or not. The
effect of the order however, might, and in my opinion will bring
about an injustice to the plaintiff, as
it must be anticipated that
the plaintiff would not be allowed during the presentation of his
case, to elicit evidence or testimony,
to prove the grounds of
jurisdiction. It might be that the magistrate allows such evidence,
even if objection is taken thereto
by the defendants. It is however a
fact that a reasonable apprehension exists that the magistrate will
disallow such evidence if
objected thereto by the defendants, for
such evidence is not covered by the pleadings (in this case the
particulars of claim).
It will obviously also be argued by the
defendants that the plaintiff cannot make out a case in reply.
8.3. Even if the
magistrate allows the evidence tendered by plaintiff, notwithstanding
objection thereto, this court of appeal will
be (on probabilities) in
future again be hearing another appeal against a ruling of the
magistrate whichever way it may go. The
loser, be it the plaintiff or
the defendant, would probably take the magistrate’s ruling on
appeal.
8.4. With reference to
the Appellate Division decisions referred to above, in
Zweni v
Minister of Law and Order
,
supra
, and
Jacobs and
Others v Baumann NO and Others
,
supra
, it is apposite
to refer to a relatively recent Supreme Court of Appeal decision
referred to in Harms:
Civil Procedure and Superior Court
, on p
B-360(3) under footnote 9. The decision referred thereto is
Phillips
v South African Reserve Bank
, thus far unreported matter only
referred to as
(2012) ZASCA 38
(29 March 2012) at par [26].
8.5. With reference to
the aforementioned Supreme Court of Appeal decision Farlam JA, as
part of the minority decision (although
the majority did not take
issue with this part of the judgment and in fact concurred therewith)
discussed the question whether
the order is appealable or not as
follows:

[24] Counsel
for both respondents contended that the order was not appealable
because it is not definitive of the rights of the
parties and not the
dispositive of at least a substantial portion of the relief claimed
in the main proceedings. In this regard
reliance was placed on what
was said by this court in,
inter
alia
,
Zweni
v Minister of Law and Order
1993
(1) SA 523
(A) at 536 B – C.
[25] It must be remembered, however,
that, as Hefer JA said in
Moch v Nedtravel (Pty) Ltd t/a American
Express Travel Service
1996 (3) SA 1
(A) at 10 F, the passage in
Zweni
:

Does not
purport to be exhaustive or to cast the relevant principles in
stone.’
[26] The question of appealability in
a case such as this, where a party seeks to attack on appeal an order
made in judicial proceedings
which have not yet terminated, was
discussed by Nugent JA in a judgment with which the other members of
the court concurred in
NDPP v King
2010 (2) SACR 146
(SCA) at
166 E – 167 C (paras 50 – 51), where he said the
following:

There will
be few orders that significantly affect the rights of the parties
concerned that will not be susceptible to correction
by a court of
appeal. In
Liberty
Life Association of Africa Ltd v Niselow
(in
another court), which was cited with approval by this court in
Beinash
v Wixley
[1997] ZASCA 32
;
1997 (3) SA 721
(SCA), I observed that when the question arises
whether an order is appealable what is most often been asked is not
whether the
order is capable of being corrected, but rather whether
it should be corrected in isolation and before the proceedings have
run
their full course. I said that two competing principles come into
play when that question is asked. On the one hand justice would
seem
to require that every decision of the lower court should be capable
not only of being corrected but of being corrected forthwith
and
before it has any consequences, while on the other hand the delay and
inconvenience that might result if every decision is
subject to
appeal as and when it is made might itself defeat the attainment of
justice.’
In this case it was said on behalf of
Mr King that the order is not appealable because it is interlocutory.
Whether that is its
proper classification does not seem to me to be
material. I pointed out in
Liberty Life
that while the
classification of the order might at one time have been considered to
be determinative of whether it is susceptible
to an appeal the
approach that has been taken by the courts in more recent times
has been increasingly flexible and pragmatic. It has been directed

more to doing what is appropriate in the particular circumstances
than to elevating the distinction between orders that are appealable

and those that are not one of principle. Even the features that were
set in
Zweni v Minister of Law and Order
to be
characteristic, in general, of orders that are appealable was later
set by this court by
Moch v Nedtravel (Pty) Ltd
not
to be exhaustive nor to cast relevant principles in stone. As appears
from the decision in
Moch
, the fact that the
order is not definitive of the rights about which the parties are
contending in the main proceedings and does
not dispose of any relief
claimed in respect thereof, which was one of the features that was
set in
Zweni
to generally identify an appealable
order, is far from decisive.
[27] The matter was further discussed
in two recent decisions of this court
Health Professions Council
of South Africa v Emergency Medical Supplies and Training CC t/a EMS
2010 (6) SA 469
(SCA) at 473 C – 475 E (paras 14 –
19) and
Government of RSA v Von Abo
2011 (5) SA 262
(SCA) at
270 B – D (para 17), where Snyders JA (with whom the rest of
the court concurred) said:

It is
fair to say that there is no checklist of requirements. Several
considerations need to be weighed up, including whether the
relief
granted was final in its effect, definitive of the rights of the
parties, disposed of the substantial portion of the relief
claimed,
aspects of convenience, the time at which the issue is considered,
delay, expedience, prejudice, the avoidance of piecemeal
appeals and
the attainment of justice.’

[9] In this instance, and
although the order made by the magistrate can be argued, was not
final in its effect, nor definitive of
the rights of the parties and
did not dispose of a substantial portion of the relief claimed, the
further factors that must be
taken into account in this instance, is
convenience, the time at which the issue is considered, delay,
expedience, prejudice, and
the avoidance of piecemeal appeals, but
most importantly the attainment of justice.
[10] Where it is clear
that the magistrate erred in her finding to dismiss the application
to amend the plaintiff’s particulars
of claim, it is a real and
substantial argument that such refusal, might lead to an injustice
insofar as the plaintiff could drastically
be hampered to present
evidence during the trial to prove its grounds for jurisdiction,
which will have the effect that the defendants’
special plea
might very well be upheld in the circumstances. It is also clear that
the opposition to the application to amend was
unreasonable and
without substance.
[11] Whereas our Supreme
Court of Appeal in more recent times has been increasingly more
flexible and pragmatic, I think that in
the circumstances of this
matter, this court should also be much more flexible and pragmatic.
[12] On the aforesaid
premises the appeal must succeed. It will be in the interest of
justice that a clear wrong should be corrected
in order to enable the
parties to proceed with the hearing of the matter in the magistrates’
court whilst all the relevant
factors and evidence are taken into
account in deciding upon the issues between the parties. In the
circumstances I am inclined
to uphold the appeal.
[13] Accordingly I make
the following order:
13.1 The appeal succeeds
with costs.
13.2. The magistrate’s
order dated the 5
th
September
2012 and which reads as follows

Application
hereby dismissed. Costs to be adjudicated in the main action”
is set aside and
substituted with the order below:
13.3. “
Prayers 1
and 2 of the application in terms of rule 55A under case number
30106/2010 are granted.”
_______________
P. ZIETSMAN, AJ
I
concur.
________________
M.H. RAMPAI, AJP
On behalf of appellant:
Adv N.F. de Jager
Instructed by:
Van der Merwe &
Associates
c/o Honey Attorneys
BLOEMFONTEIN
On behalf of second and
third respondents: Adv S.
Grobler
Instructed by:
Gous Vertue &
Associates Inc
BLOEMFONTEIN
/spieterse