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IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case number: 2022-003946
(1) REPORTABLE: YES/NO
(2) OF INTEREST TO OTHERS JUDGES: YES/NO
(3) REVISED
DATE: 21/7/2025
In the matter of:
BAREND TATI LODI First Applicant
(ID NO: 7[...])
LILLIAN SEBOLA Second Applicant
(ID NO: 7[...])
and
ABSA HOME LOANS GUARANTEE COMPANY (RF) First Respondent
PROPRIETARY LIMITED
(REG NO : 2003/029628/07)
ABSA BANK LIMITED Second Respondent
(REG NO: 1986/004794/06)
In re:
ABSA HOME LOANS GUARANTEE COMPANY (RF) First Plaintiff
PROPRIETARY LIMITED
(REG NO: 2003/029628/07)
ABSA BANK LIMITED Second Plaintiff
(REG NO: 1986/004794/06)
and
BAREND TATI LODI First Defendant
(ID NO: 7[...])
LILLIAN SEBOLA Second Defendant
(ID NO: 7[...])
JUDGMENT
Coram Ferreira AJ
1. In this application, the applicant s approached the court on an urgent basis for
interim relief claiming:
1.1 Pending the finalization of a recission application of the judgment order
granted on the 22 April 2025 and the leave to appeal or finali sation of
the recission judgment order application granted on the 14 th of June
2024.
2. Most importantly, the order of 22 April 2025 was the dismissal of a then
existing recission application (“the April 2025 recission application”).
3. The April 2025 recission application was dismissed in the absence of the
applicants.
4. The applicants, whilst being represented by legal practitioners, failed to appear
at the hearing of the April 2025 recission application. The applicants
explanation for this failure is that their legal representative arrived at court on
the morning of the hearing but, seeing the motion court roll with allocated time
slots, assumed that the matter (being low on the roll) would be heard only after
lunch; she then left the court, only returning at around 11:40, by which time the
case had been called and dismissed.1
5. The April 2025 recission application follows from a default judgment, pursuant
to a notice of bar, granted by M illar J on 14 June 2024. The applicant
repeatedly implored this court, as contained in, inter alia, paragraph 5.1.1 of
the applicants’ heads of argument dated 12 July 2025, not to consider the
merits of the aforesaid judgment and order , but to exercise a discretion to
prevent an injustice.
6. Without consideration of the merits of the default judgment of 14 June 2024
and the resultant dismissal of the April 2025 recission application, it is not
clear, how this court from which interim relief is sought ought to establish the
applicants’ requisite prima facie right. In light of the conclusion hereunder a
finding in this respect need not be made.
7. The above being said, the applicants have to overcome the hurdle of
establishing a case to be heard on an urgent basis with the timeframes that
they so chose. In this matter the applicants ’ knowledge of the sale in
execution is by no means the only material point in time for consideration in
respect of urgency. This court is approached on an urgent basis after a
number of omissions, errors and delays resulting in the applicants ’ current
predicament.
8. It is trite that there comes a point where litigants can no longer hide behind
the lack of diligence of their legal representatives. In Salojee & Ano. v
Minister of Community Development [1965] (2) 135 at 141 C to D , the
Appellate Division, as it then was, states:
“There is a limit beyond which a litigant cannot escape the results of
his attorney’s lack of diligence or the insufficiency of the explanation
tendered. To hold otherwise might have a disastrous effect upon the
observance of the Rules of the Appellate Division. Considerations ad
misericordiam should not be allowed to become an invitation to laxity.”
9. By the examination of the chronological development in the present matter,
1 CaseLines 0000057-22
this court has difficulty in coming to any other conclusion that the applicants
and their legal representatives, to a larger or lesser degree, are the authors
of the applicants ’ current misfortune and that any urgency that there may
exist was self-created.
10. The present application, in my view, represents the textbook example of an
abuse of the urgent court processes.
11. In the result the matter stands to be struck from the roll with costs on an
attorney and client scale.
12. The following order is made:
“1. The matter is struck from the roll due to lack of sufficient urgency.
2. The first and second applicant , the one paying, the other to be
absolved, is to pay the first and second respondent’s costs on an
attorney and client scale.”
EJ FERREIRA
Acting Judge of the High Court
Gauteng Division
Date of hearing: 16 July 2025
Judgment delivered: 21 July 2025
For the Applicants: Maranti Kgomo Inc Attorneys
Counsel for the Applicants: Adv MPT Maluleke
Attorney for the Respondents: Haasbroek & Boezaart Inc.
Counsel for the Respondents: Adv E van As