REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case No: 39600/2022
Reportable: No
Of interest to other Judges: No
Revised: No
SIGNATURE
Date: 4/03/2025
In the matter between:
UNIVERSAL SERVICE AND ACCESS AGENCY Applicant (Respondent)
and
MT CREATIONS TRADING ENTERPRISE Respondents (Applicants)
PTY
(LTD) & 16 OTHERS
JUDGEMENT – APPLICATION FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL
___________________________________________________________________________
2
MOOKI J
1 The applicant seeks leave to appeal the order that the applicant pay the respondents the
sum of R5 730 679.41, with interest. The applicant also seeks co ndonation for its failure
to comply with the Practice Directive in relation to the filing of an application for leave to
appeal. The respondents oppose the applications.
2 The court delivered judgement in favour of the respondents on 13 August 2024. T he
applic ant serv ed t he respondents with the application for leave to appeal on 3
September 2024 . The application was filed by being uploaded to Caselines on 13
November 2024. It should have been filed by 30 August 2024 .
3 The applicant filed the condonation application on 28 February 2025. The respondents
filed an answer, opposing condonation. The applicant did not reply to the opposition.
4 The applicant ’s explanation is essentially that the assigned attorney at the Stat e
Attorney ’s office work e-mail was not operational during the period September to
October 2024, and that she had intermittent e-mail availability on the work e-mail during
that period and relied on her Gmail e-mail address. The suggestion was that she could
not upload the application to Caselines without access to her work e-mail.
5 The respondents pointed out, in their answer, that access to e-mail is not required to
upload documents to Caselines. They also point ed out that the attorney ’s Gmail address
was associated with access to Caselines. The point being that the attorney should have
used her Gmail address to upload the application if her work e-mail address was not
operational for the uploading.
6 The respondents take issue with the applicant ’s averment regarding the prospect of
success – in that the applicant ’s claim for such prospects is unsubstantiated. T he
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respondents also dispute that they are not prejudiced, given that they became obliged to
incur additional costs in opposing the application.
7 The applicant raised several grounds for leave to appeal in its notice, but moved the
application on one ground. T he essence of the ground is that the respondents were not
entitled to seek payment because the parties had settled their dispute; with the
settlement agreement made an order of court. T he applicant thus contended that the
respondents were re-litigating an issue previously determined by a court.
8 It was submitted on behalf of the applicant that the court ought not to have ordered
payment of the amount of R5 730 679.41, because the parties had settled their dispute.
9 It was submitted for the respondents that the applicant did not plead that the
respondents were not entitled to payment because the parties had settled their dispute.
The Court was referred to the averment by the applicant ’s CEO, in the a nswering
affidavit, that the payment of R5 730 679.41 was subject to a verification process; with
the applicant contending that the verification was ongoing. The respondents, on the
other hand, contended that verification had been completed, and relied on the stock
count report .
10 The condonation application limps. The court, however, will grant condonation in the
interests of justice.
11 The applicant seeks leave to appeal on an issue that was not pleaded and that was not
raised when the court first heard the matter. Counsel for the applicant sought to
demonstrate that the issue was pleaded. This was unpersuasive. More fundamentally,
counsel for the applicant, in his reply, did not address submissions on behalf of the
respondents concerning averments by the applicant ’s chief executive officer about the
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nature of the dispute between the parties . The court was instead referred to several
clauses in the settlement agreement, as somehow showing that the respondents were
not entitled to payment.
12 The applicant ’s contention that there was no dispute for the court to consider is
hopeless. That was not the applicant ’s case . The case advanced in this application is
wholly at odds with the issues that were presented to the court. More fundamentally, the
applicant ’s chief executive officer accepted that there was a dispute as to whether the
respondents had made-out a case to be paid the amount of R5 730 679.41 . The case
made in the application for leave to appeal is that there was no dispute at all about the
respondents being paid any sum of money.
13 A litigant is not allowed to make a new case in an application for leave to appeal. The
applicant has not met the test for the granting of leave to appeal. There are no prospects
of success and there is no compelling reason to grant leave. 1
14 Counsel for the applicant submitted that the respondents be mulcted with a punitive cos t
order . That was because, it was submitted, the respondents ’ opposition to the
application for leave to appeal is frivolous .
15 The applicant brought a meritless application. The applicant has had the benefit of legal
representation throughout. T he applicant ought to have appreciated that it was futile of
the applicant to seek leave to appeal by relying on an issue that was not pleaded.
16 I make the following order:
(1) The application for condonation is granted.
1 Ramakatsa and Others v African National Congress and Another (724/2019) [2021] ZASCA 31
(31 March 2021), para 10
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(2) The application for leave to appeal is dismissed.
(3) The applicant is ordered to pay costs in the application for leave to appeal and in the
condonation application, such costs to be on an attorney and client scale.
_______
OMPHEMETSE MOOKI
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA
Appearance:
On behalf of the applicant C Setlhako
Instructed by: The State Attorney, Johannesburg
On behalf of the respondents T Mphahlane
Instructed by: Madima Attorneys
Heard: 4 March 2025
Decided: 4 March 2025