Schmidtsdrifte Communal Property Association v Steenkamp (CA&R 85/08) [2009] ZANCHC 70 (20 November 2009)

80 Reportability
Civil Procedure

Brief Summary

Civil Procedure — Exceptions — Vague and embarrassing pleadings — Appellant's exceptions against respondent's summons dismissed by Magistrate — Appellant appealed, claiming summons did not disclose a cause of action and was vague — Court held that while the summons was poorly drafted, it did disclose a cause of action based on agency — Exception for vagueness upheld as it prevented the Defendant from formulating a coherent defence — Appeal partially upheld, with costs awarded to the Defendant and leave granted to the Plaintiff to amend the summons.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


This judgment concerns an appeal from the Magistrates’ Court to the Northern Cape Division of the High Court (Kimberley) against the dismissal of two exceptions raised to the plaintiff’s summons (as amplified by further particulars). The appellant in the High Court was the defendant in the court a quo, namely the Schmidtsdrift Communal Property Association. The respondent on appeal was the plaintiff in the court a quo, Leonardo Steenkamp, who delivered a notice indicating that he abided the outcome of the appeal.


The procedural history was that the plaintiff issued summons claiming payment for “professional services rendered” in an amount of R38 000, together with interest and costs. The defendant delivered a request for further particulars, to which the plaintiff responded. The defendant then noted two exceptions: one alleging that the summons did not disclose a cause of action, and another alleging that it was vague and embarrassing. The Magistrate dismissed both exceptions with costs, and the defendant appealed.


The general subject-matter of the dispute was not the ultimate merits of the claim for professional fees, but rather the adequacy of the plaintiff’s pleadings in the Magistrates’ Court and whether they were excipiable on either of the grounds advanced.


2. Material Facts


The plaintiff’s summons alleged that the defendant owed R38 000 for professional services allegedly rendered to the defendant “at the latter’s special request and/or instance” between April and October 2005, which amount was said to be due and payable, and that the defendant was in default alternatively refused or neglected to pay despite demand.


After the defendant requested further particulars, the plaintiff stated that the request for services was made by V Mokgoro, allegedly acting on behalf of the defendant, to the plaintiff at the defendant’s offices on 23 April 2005. The plaintiff further stated that the request was made in writing, attaching a document described as a mandate/power of attorney.


The written mandate was on the defendant association’s letterhead, signed by V Mokgoro (Chairperson), and recorded that the association “has mandated Leonardo Steenkamp to act on our behalf in all matters relating to the application of the community plant in Schmidtsdrift without revoke.”


In response to requests for particulars concerning the calculation of the R38 000 and the remuneration agreed for services rendered, the plaintiff’s response did not provide a detailed computation; instead, a copy of a final demand was attached.


The court treated as central to the exceptions the contents of the summons, the further particulars (including the mandate), and the resulting lack of clarity as to the precise content of the services, the basis for remuneration, the timing of performance, and the plaintiff’s pleaded position that he was “also representing the Defendant at the time” of the alleged request.


3. Legal Issues


The High Court was required to determine whether the Magistrate was correct in dismissing the two exceptions, namely whether the summons (as amplified) was excipiable on the basis that it failed to disclose a cause of action, and whether it was vague and embarrassing to the extent that it caused prejudice to the defendant.


The dispute was primarily about the application of legal principles of pleading and exception practice to the pleaded facts, rather than a resolution of factual disputes on evidence. It also involved an evaluative assessment of whether the lack of clarity in the pleading was sufficiently serious to constitute vagueness and embarrassment producing prejudice.


A further preliminary issue addressed by the court was whether the appeal was properly before it, given that appeals against orders overruling exceptions in the Magistrates’ Court are regulated by section 83(c) of the Magistrates’ Courts Act 32 of 1944.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The court first dealt with appealability. It noted that section 83(c) permits an appeal against an order overruling an exception in specified circumstances, including where the order includes a costs order. Since the Magistrate dismissed the exceptions with costs, the High Court held that it had the power to adjudicate the appeal. The respondent’s notice to abide was treated as indicating consent to the appeal being brought.


On the merits, the court emphasised established principles governing exceptions. The onus rested on the excipient (the defendant) to show that the pleading was excipiable. The court further noted the distinction between the two grounds: for a vague and embarrassing exception, an excipient must show prejudice in the conduct of the defence if the pleading is allowed to stand; by contrast, where a summons discloses no cause of action, prejudice “naturally” follows because the pleading fails at a foundational level.


In relation to the “no cause of action” exception, the defendant argued that the pleadings were unclear as to who the contracting parties were, that there was no allegation of authority on the part of V Mokgoro, and that the claim appeared to arise from a locatio conductio operis contract without pleading its essential terms (work, remuneration, time for performance). The High Court accepted that the pleadings were poorly drafted, but held that the threshold for Magistrates’ Court pleadings is less exacting than in the High Court: pleadings need only disclose with reasonable clarity the case a defendant must meet.


Applying those principles, the court held that it was permissible to draw legitimate inferences from the summons and further particulars, and that necessary averments may be supplied by implication where appropriate. On that approach, the court considered that the papers could be interpreted as alleging a contractual relationship concluded on the basis of agency, with V Mokgoro acting for the defendant. The scope of work was described, albeit in broad terms, in the written mandate relating to “all matters” concerning the application of a community plant. Although the remuneration was not specifically pleaded as agreed, the court held that it could be argued that the remuneration would be what was reasonable in the circumstances. On this basis, the High Court concluded that the Magistrate correctly dismissed the first exception.


The court then turned to the “vague and embarrassing” exception and reached a different conclusion. It found substantial ambiguity in the plaintiff’s pleading that the mandate/request was made to him while he was “also representing the Defendant at the time.” The court highlighted the principle that a person cannot contract with himself, and held that the pleadings did not adequately explain what was meant by the plaintiff’s dual role at the time of concluding the alleged agreement. The court also identified further material vagueness: the papers did not state by when the work had to be completed, did not clearly articulate what the work specifically entailed beyond broad language, and did not plead with clarity when and on what basis the plaintiff would become entitled to remuneration.


On prejudice, the court considered it “self-evident” that the defendant would be unable to plead coherently to such a claim. The lack of clarity was held to place the defendant in an “invidious position” in attempting to formulate a meaningful defence. The High Court therefore held that the Magistrate erred in dismissing the second exception.


Finally, the court addressed the appropriate consequence of upholding a vague and embarrassing exception. It adopted the approach reflected in prior authority that such an exception typically attacks the formulation of the cause of action rather than its underlying validity. As a result, fairness generally requires that the affected party be given an opportunity to remedy the deficiency, rather than having the action dismissed outright. In keeping with that approach, the court granted leave to the plaintiff to remove the cause of complaint within a set period.


5. Outcome and Relief


The appeal succeeded in part. The High Court upheld the appeal with costs and set aside the Magistrate’s order dismissing both exceptions.


The Magistrate’s order was substituted with an order that the defendant’s exception in terms of Rule 17(2)(b) read with Rule 17(5)(c) (vague and embarrassing) was upheld with costs, and the plaintiff was granted leave to remove the cause of complaint within 10 days of the High Court’s judgment.


The practical effect was that the plaintiff’s pleading was not struck down as disclosing no cause of action, but was held to be insufficiently clear, requiring amendment to cure vagueness and embarrassment before the action could proceed on properly formulated pleadings.


Cases Cited


Jackson v South African National Institute for Crime Prevention and Rehabilitation of Offenders 1976(3) SA 1 (A)


Minister of Law and Order v Kadir 1995(1) SA 303 (A)


Brigg v Brown’s Pharmacy 1958(4) SA 526 (O)


Smit v Workmen’s Compensation Commissioner 1979(1) SA 51 (A)


San Sen Woodworks v Govender 1984(1) SA 486 (N)


WD Russell (Pty) Ltd v Witwatersrand Gold Mining Co Ltd 1981(2) SA 216 (W)


Beaufort Furniture and Joinery Manufacturing Co (Pty) Ltd v De Vos 1950(1) SA 112 (C)


Group Five Building Ltd v Government of the Republic of South Africa (Minister of Public Works and Land Affairs) 1993(2) SA 593 (A)


Rowe v Rowe 1997(4) SA 160 (SCA)


Trope and Another v South African Reserve Bank 1993(3) SA 264 (A)


Legislation Cited


Magistrates’ Courts Act 32 of 1944, section 83(c)


Rules of Court Cited


Magistrates’ Court Rule 17(2)(a)


Magistrates’ Court Rule 17(2)(b)


Magistrates’ Court Rule 17(5)(a)


Magistrates’ Court Rule 17(5)(b)


Magistrates’ Court Rule 17(5)(c)


Held


The High Court held that, despite poor draftsmanship, the summons and further particulars could be interpreted (by legitimate inference and implication appropriate to Magistrates’ Court pleading standards) as disclosing a contractual claim founded on agency, with the defendant represented by its chairperson. The exception alleging no cause of action was therefore not established.


The High Court further held that the pleading was nonetheless vague and embarrassing in material respects, including uncertainty arising from the plaintiff’s allegation that he represented the defendant at the time of contracting (against the backdrop that one cannot contract with oneself), as well as inadequate clarity on the work to be performed, the time for performance, and the timing and basis of remuneration. This vagueness was held to cause prejudice to the defendant by preventing a coherent plea.


Accordingly, the appeal was upheld with costs, the vague and embarrassing exception was upheld with costs, and the plaintiff was granted leave to amend by removing the cause of complaint within 10 days.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The party raising an exception bears the onus of showing that the pleading is excipiable. In the case of an exception that a pleading is vague and embarrassing, the excipient must also demonstrate prejudice in the conduct of the defence if the pleading were to stand.


Pleadings in the Magistrates’ Court are not required to contain the same level of particularity as in the High Court. The test is whether, with reasonable clarity, the pleading discloses the case the defendant must meet. Courts may draw legitimate inferences from the pleaded material, and necessary averments may in appropriate circumstances be supplied by implication.


A successful exception on the ground of vague and embarrassing ordinarily attacks the formulation of the cause of action rather than its substantive validity. Consistently with that characterisation, fairness generally favours granting the pleader an opportunity to cure the defect by amendment rather than dismissing the action outright.


A further principle applied was that one cannot contract with oneself, which informed the court’s assessment of vagueness where the plaintiff pleaded that he was also representing the defendant at the time the alleged request/mandate was made.

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[2009] ZANCHC 70
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Schmidtsdrifte Communal Property Association v Steenkamp (CA&R 85/08) [2009] ZANCHC 70 (20 November 2009)

Reportable: Yes /
No
Circulate to
Judges: Yes / No
Circulate to
Magistrates: Yes / No
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
[
Northern
Cape High Court, Kimberley]
Case
no: CA&R 85/08
Date
heard:
2009-11-16
Date
delivered:
2009-11-20
In
the appeal of
:
SCHMIDTSDRIFT
COMMUNAL PROPERTY
ASSOCIATION
APPELLANT
versus
LEONARDO
STEENKAMP
RESPONDENT
Coram:
KGOMO
JP et MAJIEDT J
JUDGMENT
MAJIEDT J:
The
Appellant, who was the Defendant in the Court
a
quo,
appeals against the dismissal of two exceptions raised by it against
the Respondent’s summons, as amplified by further particulars.

The Respondent has filed a notice that he abides the outcome of this
appeal.
For
the sake of convenience I shall refer to the parties
as
they were in the Magistrate’s Court. The Plaintiff claims from
the Defendant payment of the sum of R38 000 plus interest

thereon as well as costs. The cause of action is set out as follows
in the summons:
“
This being for professional
services rendered by the Plaintiff to the Defendant at the latter’s
special request and/or instance
between April and October 2005, which
amount is due and payable and the Defendant is in default with it’s
payment, alternatively
refuses and/or neglects to pay same despite
proper and due demand.”
The
Defendant requested further particulars to the summons
which
the Plaintiff responded to. The Defendant requested,
inter
alia
,
details as to the date when, the place where and the person who had
acted on behalf of the parties in respect of the request
and the
instance which were allegedly made and also asked for a copy of the
request if it was in writing. The Defendant also
requested full
particulars of the professional services which were allegedly
rendered and also the manner of calculation of the
remuneration
agreed upon. Finally it sought particulars of the computation of
the amount of R38 000.00
In
his reply the Plaintiff answered as follows:
“
The request was made by one
V Mokgoro (acting on behalf of the Defendant) to the Plaintiff
(also representing the Defendant
at the time) at the offices of the
Defendant on 23 April 2005”.
Furthermore
the Plaintiff replied that the request was in writing and attached a
copy of a mandate to which I shall allude later.
In response to the
request for particulars regarding to the computation of the
R38 000.00 and for details regarding the remuneration
for
services rendered, a copy of a final demand was
merely
attached to the reply.
The mandate referred to
above reads as follows:
“
Mandate / Power
of Attorney
Reference:
Community Plant.
This is to confirm that the above association
has mandated Leonardo Steenkamp to act on our behalf in all matters
relating to the
application of the community plant in Schmidtsdrift
without revoke.”
This
was written on a letterhead of Schmidtsdrift Communal Property
Association and
was
signed by one V Mokgoro, the Chairperson.
The
Defendant filed two
notice
of exception, the first in terms of Rule 17(2)(a) read with rule
17(5)(a) and (b). It was averred that the Plaintiff’s
summons as
amplified by the further particulars did not disclose a cause of
action. The second notice of exception was filed
in terms of Rule
17(2)(b) read with Rule 17(5)(c) and it averred that the Plaintiff’s
summons as amplified by the further particulars
is vague and
embarrassing. The Plaintiff was therefore called upon to remove the
cause of complaint, which the Plaintiff failed
to do. After
argument, the Magistrate dismissed both exceptions with costs.
It is
readily apparent from the
above
exposition of the pleadings, that the Plaintiff’s summons as
amplified by the further particulars suffers from extremely
poor
draftsmanship. But is it excipiable on either or both of the
grounds advanced by the Defendant?
Section
83(c) of the Magistrate
s’
Courts Act, 32 of 1944, provides for an appeal against a decision
overruling an exception when the parties concerned consent
to such
an appeal or when it is appealed from in conjunction with the
principal case or when it includes an order as to costs.
In the
present matter a costs order accompanied the dismissal of the
exception, so that this Court is empowered to adjudicate
the appeal.
The Plaintiff, as I have said, abides the decision of this Court
and must therefore be taken to have consented to
the appeal being
brought.
The
onus
to show that the summons is excipiable is on the party excepting to
a pleading, i.e. the Defendant in the present matter.
See:
Jackson
v SA National Institute for Crime Prevention and Rehabilitation of
Offenders 1976(3) SA 1 (A)
at 14;
Minister
of Law of Order v Kadir 1995(1) SA 303 (A)
at 318 C-E.
An
excipient who raises an exception on the grounds of a vague and
embarrassing pleading
must
satisfy the Court that he or she would be prejudiced in the conduct
of his or her defence if the summons were allowed to
stand, whereas
prejudice would naturally follow where no cause of action is set out
in a summons.
See:
Brigg
v Brown’s Pharmacy 1958(4) SA 526 (O)
at
528.
Mr. Haddad on behalf of
the Defendant has submitted that the summons, amplified by the
further particulars, does not disclose
a cause of action in the
following respects:
(a) It is not clear
exactly who the contracting parties were.
(b) There is no
allegation that V Mokgoro who signed on behalf of the Defendant
had the necessary authority to do so.
(c) That
the contract is one of
locatio
conductio operis
and
that the summons does not disclose the
essentialiae
of such a contract, namely the specific work to be performed, the
remuneration payable and the time for performance. In this regard
he
relied on
Smit
v Workmen’s Compensation Commissioner 1979(1) SA 51 (A)
at
57 C.
While
Mr. Haddad’s criticism of the summons, as amplified by the
further
particulars, is well-founded, I do not agree that it does not
disclose a cause of action. It is trite that pleadings
in the
Magistrate’s Court are not required to set out detail to the same
extent of completeness which is required in the High
Court, as long
as the pleadings disclose with reasonable clarity the case which a
Defendant must meet.
See:
San
Sen Woodworks v Govender 1984(1) SA 486 (N)
at 487.
Where
appropriate, a Court is required to draw legitimate inferences from
the meaning of the particulars set forth in the summons
and further
particulars and the necessary averments can be supplied by
implication.
See:
WD
Russell (Pty) Ltd v Witwatersrand Gold Mining Co Ltd 1981(2) SA 216
(W)
at
218.
In
cases where a Plaintiff’s action is based on contract, it is
desirable that the summons should connect the Defendant with a

contract by means of a proper averment, but this is not an imperative
requirement in the Magistrate’s Court.
See:
Beaufort
Furniture and Joinery Manufacturing Co (Pty) Ltd v De Vos 1950(1) SA
112 (C)
at
115, 117.
Applying
the aforementioned principles, I am of the view that the summons, as
amplified by the further particulars, can be interpreted
as a claim
based on agency, concluded by the Plaintiff and the Defendant, on
whose behalf one V Mokgoro was acting at the
time. The work to
be performed is set out in broad terms in the
written
mandate to which I have referred above. While the remuneration was
not specifically agreed upon, I am of the view that
it can be argued
that the remuneration would be what is reasonable in the
circumstances. In the premises I am of the view that
the first
exception was correctly dismissed by the Magistrate.
Turning
to the exception that the summons is
vague
and embarrassing, my view is that this exception should be upheld.
It is well established in our law that one cannot contract
with
oneself. It is therefore not clear on the papers what the Plaintiff
means when he states that he was also acting for the
Defendant at
the time of the conclusion of the agreement. Furthermore it is not
clear by when the work must be completed and,
furthermore, what
exactly the work entails. It is also vaguely pleaded as to when the
Plaintiff would be remunerated for what
at exactly which time.
The prejudice emanating
from this vague and embarrassing pleading is self-evident. It is
quite inconceivable how the Defendant
can reasonably be expected to
formulate a coherent plea to the summons, as amplified by the
further particulars. In my view
the Defendant would indubitably be
placed in an invidious position in mounting a meaningful, coherent
defence in this matter.
In the premises I am of the view that the
Magistrate erred in dismissing this exception.
Our
Courts have adopted the approach
in
a long line of cases that a successful exception on the ground that
a pleading is vague and embarrassing is a ground which
strikes at
the formulation of a cause of action and not its validity. It would
therefore be just and equitable that in such
circumstances, a
litigant is provided a further opportunity to remedy the deficiency,
instead of simply dismissing the action.
See in
this regard:
Group
Five building Ltd v Government of the Republic of South Africa
(Minister of Public Works and Land Affairs) 1993(2) SA 593
(A)
at 602 C – 604 I.
Rowe
v Rowe 1997(4) SA 160 (SCA)
at
167 H-I;
Trope
and
Another v South African Reserve Bank 1993(3) SA 264 (A)
at 269 H-I.
In my
view therefore the appeal should succeed in part
and
the Defendant, having been largely successful on appeal, should be
awarded its costs.
I propose making the
following order:
The appeal is upheld
with costs.
The Magistrate’s
order is set aside and substituted with the following:
“
The
Defendant’s exception in terms of Rule 17(2)(b) read with Rule
17(5)(c) is upheld with costs. The Plaintiff is granted leave
to
remove the cause of the complaint within 10 (ten) days from date of
this judgment.”
___________
__________
SA MAJIEDT
JUDGE
I
concur
and it is so ordered:
___________
__________
F
DIALE KGOMO
JUDGE-PRESIDENT
FOR
THE APPELLANT :
MR
VW HADDAD
INSTRUCTED
BY :
ELLIOT
MARIS WILMANS & HAY, KIMBERLEY
FOR
THE RESPONDENT : ABIDES DECISION