Peretz v City of Cape Town and Others (19069/2021) [2026] ZAWCHC 8 (19 January 2026)

60 Reportability
Administrative Law

Brief Summary

Administrative Law — Interim interdict — Application to rescind interim interdict preventing building work on property. The applicant, Ms Peretz, sought to rescind an interim interdict that prohibited her from conducting building work on her property, pending a review of planning approvals granted by the City of Cape Town. The legal issue revolved around whether the legal and factual basis for the interim interdict had disappeared, as claimed by Ms Peretz, against the Camps Bay ratepayers' contention that the interim order should remain in effect. The court concluded that the interim interdict should remain in place due to the ongoing legal issues surrounding the planning approvals.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


The proceedings took the form of an application to rescind, alternatively vary, an interim interdict granted on 13 December 2021 by Henney J in Part A of the main application under case number 19069/2021. The interim interdict restrained the applicant from continuing building work on her property in accordance with building plans approved by the City of Cape Town, pending a review application brought by certain respondents challenging the City’s planning approvals.


The applicant was Adrienne Peretz. The respondents included the City of Cape Town (first respondent), certain provincial and administrative functionaries, and private parties associated with the opposition to the development. In this rescission application, the sixth to ninth respondents (collectively referred to in the judgment as the Camps Bay ratepayers) made common cause in resisting the rescission and were centrally involved in the interlocutory steps that led to the postponement.


The matter came before Greig AJ for hearing on 3 December 2025, but the merits of the rescission application were not reached. Instead, the court was confronted with interlocutory disputes arising from the late filing of further affidavits and the propriety of procedural steps taken shortly before and during the hearing. A related application by the City to reconsider or set aside the interim interdict existed under the same case number, but it was not ripe for hearing and was not heard together with the applicant’s rescission application on the allocated date.


The general subject-matter of the broader dispute concerns planning approvals granted by the City and the legality of building works undertaken pursuant to those approvals. However, the judgment delivered by Greig AJ was directed narrowly to the strikeout application launched during the hearing and, most substantially, to the allocation of wasted costs occasioned by the postponement on 3 December 2025, together with case-management style directives for the further conduct of the proceedings.


2. Material Facts


The interim interdict granted on 13 December 2021 prevented the applicant from conducting further building work under City-approved plans, pending the determination of a review application brought by the Camps Bay ratepayers. The planning approvals at issue had been granted approximately four years before the interim interdict, and the judgment records that the approvals were granted almost 10 years ago at the time of hearing, underscoring the protracted nature of the underlying dispute and the delays affecting its progress.


The court treated as significant the procedural chronology concerning affidavits filed in the rescission application after the applicant’s replying affidavit. The applicant delivered a replying affidavit on 16 September 2022 and later delivered a further supplementary affidavit on 29 November 2023 without an accompanying substantive application for its admission. This affidavit was referred to as the “2023 affidavit”. More than two years later, shortly before the hearing, the Camps Bay ratepayers objected to that affidavit and threatened proceedings to protect their clients’ rights if the document was not removed from the file.


Instead of launching the threatened proceedings at that stage, the Camps Bay ratepayers delivered a further affidavit on 25 November 2025, accompanied by an application seeking the exceptional admission of that further affidavit. The following day, 26 November 2025, the applicant delivered a further affidavit (the “26 November affidavit”) without an accompanying application for its exceptional admission.


On the hearing date, the Camps Bay ratepayers initially pursued an application to strike the matter from the roll or obtain a postponement, brought on notice of motion but without a supporting affidavit. During argument, that postponement/strike application was withdrawn without explanation and without a tender of costs. In its place, the Camps Bay ratepayers handed up an application to strike out numerous paragraphs of the applicant’s 26 November affidavit, on the basis that it introduced contentious new matter.


The court regarded it as material that, at the time the strikeout application was launched, no ruling had yet been made on whether any of the further affidavits filed after the replying affidavit (including affidavits filed by both sides) would be admitted, and that the applicant’s 26 November affidavit itself had been delivered without any accompanying application for admission. This state of flux in the papers, coupled with the late interlocutory litigation on the hearing date, rendered it impossible for the court to proceed to the merits of the rescission application on 3 December 2025.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal questions determined in this judgment were procedural and discretionary rather than substantive. The court was required to determine whether the Camps Bay ratepayers’ strikeout application could properly be adjudicated at the time it was launched, given the unresolved question of whether the relevant further affidavits (including the 26 November affidavit) were properly before court and admissible.


A further central question concerned the appropriate allocation of wasted costs resulting from the postponement of the hearing on 3 December 2025. This required the court to decide where responsibility lay for the abortive proceedings and whether the conduct of the parties (particularly the Camps Bay ratepayers) justified an adverse costs order, including the scale and the costs of two counsel.


The dispute engaged primarily the application of procedural law and judicial discretion to the facts, including an evaluative assessment of delay, procedural choices, the timing of objections, and whether the interlocutory steps taken were justified and properly supported. The court’s determination did not involve deciding the merits of the rescission application or the underlying planning-law review, but rather the propriety and consequences of the interlocutory skirmishing that prevented the merits from being heard.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The court emphasised that the strikeout application was premature because it was launched in a procedural “limbo” where the admissibility of any of the parties’ further affidavits filed after the replying affidavit had not yet been determined. The judgment accepted as a point of principle that further affidavits in motion proceedings are not filed as of right, and that their admission generally requires leave of the court on a proper explanation, consistent with the approach articulated in Standard Bank of SA Ltd v Sewpersadh and Another 2005 (4) SA 148 (C). Against that background, the court reasoned that it could not sensibly rule on whether particular paragraphs constituted impermissible new matter in reply when it had not yet determined whether the affidavit containing those paragraphs was properly before it.


The court also noted that the Camps Bay ratepayers’ own position entailed that a ruling on admissibility could not be made where no substantive application for admission had been delivered. That position, coupled with the absence of any prior ruling admitting the post-reply affidavits, made the strikeout application misconceived. The court therefore held that adjudicating the strikeout relief at that stage was not possible and that the application could not resolve the procedural impasse.


On wasted costs, the court exercised its discretion by evaluating the timing and conduct of the parties. While the court accepted the cogency of the criticism that affidavits were filed out of sequence without proper applications for their admission, it considered the broader context. In particular, it found that the Camps Bay ratepayers’ objection to the 2023 affidavit was raised over two years after it had been filed and was not properly explained. The court rejected the justification that the affidavit could simply be ignored as pro non scripto until it appeared in the index, holding that procedural compliance is not a “game” and that available procedural remedies should be invoked timeously.


The court attached weight to the existence of the Rule 30 procedure for irregular steps, which was available shortly after the 2023 affidavit was filed, yet was not utilised. Although the court recognised that failure to invoke Rule 30 does not necessarily alter the legal position as to the proper set of affidavits, it treated the non-use of available procedures as relevant to assessing responsibility for the later postponement. The court further reasoned that, irrespective of any notional entitlement to treat the affidavit as pro non scripto, that was not the approach adopted in practice. Instead, late objections led to a late responding affidavit, which in turn triggered a further affidavit from the applicant, followed by last-minute applications on the hearing date.


The court regarded the postponement/strike application as procedurally deficient because it sought substantive relief without a supporting affidavit, resulting in submissions from the bar venturing into factual matters without proper evidential foundation. The withdrawal of that application during argument, without tendering costs, and its replacement with a belated strikeout application, reinforced the court’s conclusion that the bulk of the hearing day was consumed by eleventh-hour interlocutory manoeuvring for which the Camps Bay ratepayers bore primary responsibility.


In assessing costs, the court considered that the interim interdict had been in place since 2021, and that further delays were not contrary to the Camps Bay ratepayers’ interests. Without making a finding that the motive was delay, the court accepted that the parties could not have been unaware that the interlocutory disputes pursued on the day would inevitably cause a further postponement. On this evaluative basis, the court concluded that the wasted costs should be borne by the Camps Bay ratepayers (sixth to ninth respondents).


5. Outcome and Relief


The court did not determine the merits of the rescission application on 3 December 2025. It held that the strikeout application launched during the hearing was premature and misconceived, because it was brought before any ruling on the admissibility of the sequence of further affidavits filed after the replying affidavit.


The court issued procedural directives regulating further steps in the matter. It ordered that any party wishing to file a further affidavit in response to the applicant’s 26 November affidavit had to do so within 15 court days from the date of the order. It directed that, after the delivery of such affidavit or the lapse of that period, and after delivery of the requisite applications and affidavits concerning the admission of the parties’ post-reply affidavit sets, the parties were granted leave to approach the Judge President for allocation of a new hearing date.


The court further directed that the rescission application should, as far as possible, be heard together with the City’s related reconsideration application dated 23 May 2024, unless that application had been withdrawn or was not proceeding. It also directed that any further heads of argument needed on the affidavit-admission issues, strikeout applications, or related matters be delivered at least 10 court days before the postponed hearing.


On costs, the court ordered that the sixth to ninth respondents pay the wasted costs of the hearing on 3 December 2025, including the costs of two counsel where employed, on scale C.


Cases Cited


Whittaker v Roos and Bateman 1911 TPD 1092


Standard Bank of SA Ltd v Sewpersadh and Another 2005 (4) SA 148 (C)


Waltloo Meat and Chicken SA (Pty) Ltd v Silvy Luis (Pty) Ltd and Others 2008 (5) SA 461 (T)


Hano Trading CC v JR 209 Investments (Pty) Ltd and Another 2013 (1) SA 161 (SCA)


Legislation Cited


City of Cape Town Planning By-law, 2015


Rules of Court Cited


Uniform Rules of Court, Rule 30


Held


The court held that the strikeout application directed at portions of the applicant’s 26 November 2025 affidavit was not capable of determination at that stage because the admissibility of the post-reply affidavits had not yet been decided, and the strikeout relief was therefore premature and misconceived. The court further held that the postponement of the hearing on 3 December 2025 was unavoidable due to the late, procedurally defective, and shifting interlocutory applications pursued on the day, and that responsibility for the wasted costs lay primarily with the sixth to ninth respondents. Procedural directives were issued to regulate the filing of any further affidavits and the steps required to ready the matter for a properly constituted hearing, ideally together with the City’s related reconsideration application.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The judgment applied the principle that further affidavits in motion proceedings are not filed as of right and require leave of the court, which is exercised on discretion and generally requires a satisfactory explanation and consideration of prejudice, consistent with Standard Bank of SA Ltd v Sewpersadh and Another 2005 (4) SA 148 (C).


The judgment recognised that procedural mechanisms exist to address irregular steps, including the Rule 30 procedure, and that the failure to invoke available remedies timeously may be relevant when a court exercises its discretion on wasted costs arising from late procedural disputes.


The judgment applied a discretionary approach to wasted costs, allocating responsibility by examining the timing of objections, whether interlocutory applications were properly supported, the withdrawal and reformulation of relief sought during argument, and the causal connection between that conduct and the inability to proceed with the merits on the allocated hearing date.


The judgment further reflected the principle that a court may issue case-management directives to prevent procedural derailment and to facilitate the orderly determination of interlocutory disputes concerning the admissibility of affidavits and the scheduling of related applications that should sensibly be heard together.

IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case Number: 19069/2021
In the matter between:
ADRIENNE PERETZ
and
THE CITY OF CAPE TOWN
THE WESTERN CAPE PROVINCIAL
MINISTER OF LOCAL GOVERNMENT,
ENVIRONMENTAL AFFAIRS AND
DEVELOPMENT PLANNING
THE PREMIER OF THE WESTERN
CAPE PROVINCE
THE REGISTRAR OF DEEDS, CAPE
TOWN
OVH UNIT NO 6 CC
THE CAMPS BAY & CLIFTON
RATEPAYERS' ASSOCIATION
LINDIE NOVICK
LESLEY DIANA SCOTT
Applicant
First Respondent
Second Respondent
Third Respondent
Fourth Respondent
Fifth Respondent
Sixth Respondent
Seventh Respondent
Eighth Respondent

TRUSTEES FOR THE TIME BEING
OF THE STING TRUST
Coram: Greig AJ
Heard: 3 December 2025
Delivered: 19 January 2026
GREIGAJ
INTRODUCTION
JUDGEMENT
2
Ninth Respondent
[l] This is an application to rescind, alternatively vary, an interim interdict
granted the Henney J on 13 December 2021 in relation to Part A of the notice
of motion in the main application under the above case number.
[2] The interim interdict prevents the applicant from conducting further building
work on her property in terms of plans approved by the City of Cape Town
('the City'). It was granted pending the outcome of an application to review
planning approvals granted by the City at the instance of the seventh to ninth
respondents (I will refer to these respondents, who make common cause in
this rescission application, by the shorthand of 'the Camps Bay ratepayers').
[3] In a related application under the same case number the City seeks relief
reconsidering or setting aside the interim interdict. I will refer to this as 'the
City's application' or the 'related application'.
[ 4] The impugned planning approvals were granted some four years before the
interim interdict was granted. There are various reasons advanced by the
Camps Bay ratepayers for their delay in bringing the application for review
and the associated interim relief. It is not necessary to canvass or consider

3
these reasons here, but it remains a fact that the impugned approvals were
granted almost 10 years ago.
[5] The applicant, Ms Peretz, also complains of the 'languid pace of the main
application' since the interim interdict was granted which, she says, benefits
the Camps Bay ratepayers whilst preventing her from pursuing the
development and posing a threat to the integrity of the existing half-built
structure.
[6] In seeking to rescind the interim interdict Ms Peretz says that the 'legal and
factual substratum for this relief ... has disappeared'. She therefore relies upon
various authorities which allow courts to rescind or vary interlocutory orders
under defined circumstances.
[7] The Camps Bay ratepayers deny that the substratum for the relief has
disappeared, and contend that interim orders are rarely capable of discharge
unless there is no longer a live issue between the parties in the application for
final relief. They aver that a discharge of the interim interdict will allow Ms
Peretz to commit an offence by deviating materially from approved building
plans, by building without building plans, or by building in breach of the
City's Development Management Scheme.1
[8] For reasons which will become clear from what follows, I was not able to hear
the merits of this rescission application on the date it was set down on 3
December 2025. Instead, I was initially requested to adjudicate an application
to strike the matter from the roll, or grant a postponement, brought by Camps
Bay ratepayers. I will refer to this as the postponement/strike application
(although the primary relief was to strike the matter from the roll, alternative
1 In the City of Cape Town Planning By law, 20 I 5.

4
relief was claimed postponing the application, and the effect in either event
would have been a postponement of the matter).
[9] The postponement/strike application was, however, withdrawn on the day of
the hearing, after some interchanges during argument which I detail further
below .
[10] After withdrawing postponement/strike application, the Camps Bay
ratepayers thereupon handed up during the hearing an application to strike
various paragraphs from a further affidavit filed by Ms Peretz. This judgement
is directed at dealing with this application to strike out portions of the further
replying affidavit (I will refer to this as 'the strikeout application'), as well as
the costs of the day on 3 December 2025.
PRELIMINARY ISSUE: RELATED APPLICATION BY CITY FOR
RECONSIDERATION OF INTERIM INTERDICT
[ 11] There is one issue which I consider deserves mention at the outset which I
perceived as a possible hindrance to the proper finalisation of this application,
even absent the disputes around further affidavits. This pertains to the separate
but related application by the City for reconsideration of the interim interdict
which is apparently not yet ripe for hearing as the City has not filed a replying
affidavit.
[12] In Ms Peretz' practice note of 25 November 2025 she says that, at the
screening roll meeting on 14 November 2025, Erasmus ADJP asked whether
the hearing would be completed in one day. The Camps Bay ratepayers'
attorney raised the issue that the City had brought a similar application to
reconsider the interim interdict. The practice note proceeds to record that

5
'however, after confirmation that the hearing would be limited to Ms Peretz'
application, it was agreed that the hearing could continue. '2
[13] In light of the above the practice note advised me that I 'need NOT read all
the papers in the court file', 3 and that, 'as the City of Cape Town is not
participating, the dispute is narrow'.
[14] The above situation is in my view regrettable (though I see no reason why
any of the parties to this rescission application should be held responsible for
it). The original intention was always (sensibly) to have both applications
heard together, as various prior court orders attest. Furthermore, it is apparent
that, after their bifurcation, much of the further heat generated around the
affidavits yet to be admitted arises from contentions by the Camps Bay
ratepayers that the City, as the municipality charged with enforcing planning
regulations, has tellingly lost its stomach for the fight; and by Ms Peretz, in
her tum, adopting many allegations and contentions holus bolus from the
City's affidavits in the related application.
[15] It seems to me, therefore, that these two applications (the City's and Ms
Peretz') should still - if possible - be heard together on the same day, as many
of the issues are closely related. If nothing else this will prevent the
speculation I endured as to the possible reasons for the City's absence from
the fray.
2 In argument before me it seems that this agreement was disputed to the extent that the Camps Bay ratepayers'
attorney contends that be merely accepted that, if the City did not wish to proceed on the same day, then he had
no alternative but to accept this.
3 The emphasis is not mine.

6
[ 16] On the other hand, if the City's related application has been withdrawn or
will not be proceeding, 4 this situation should be timeously confinned before
the matter is again set down.
[ 17] Save for these remarks, which are intended merely as observations to explain
the order I intend making to try and prevent a possible further derailment of
this application, I say nothing further as to the related application. In the same
vein, I will also take the liberty of providing some directives in relation to the
further conduct of the matter, in the order I make.
ALLOCATION OF THE MATTER FROM THE SCREENING ROLL
[ 18] It is first necessary to provide some background as to how the matter came
before me on 3 December 2025.
[19] This rescission application, together with the City's application, came before
Erasmus ADJP for allocation to a judge at a 'screening roll' meeting on
Friday, 14 November 2025.
[20] Ms Peretz's practice note explains the situation thus:
(a) At the screening meeting on 14 November 2025 before Erasmus ADJP the
parties confirmed that this rescission application was on the roll for
Wednesday, 3 December 2025, a date obtained pursuant to an email to the
Judge President's office on 21 September 2020.
(b) Erasmus ADJP asked whether the hearing would be completed in one day.
However, after confirmation that the hearing would be limited to this
rescission application, the matter was sent for the allocation of a judge.
4 If the City is dragging its feet there is nothing to prevent the parties from applying for appropriate relief to
expedite the City's reconsideration application.

7
( c) The practice note then records that 'without warning, after close of
business on Friday, 21 November 2025, Mr van Rensburg (for the Camps
Bay ratepayers) sent out a practice note suggesting that the matter should
not be allocated to a Judge for hearing on 3 December 2025.' This is
described as a 'strategic shift' which the Camps Bay ratepayers justified
by the fact that (I) were not in a position to file supplementary founding
papers in relation to the final relief claimed in the main application and (2)
the papers in the rescission application and Ms Peretz's heads of argument
were voluminous. 5
THE POSTPONEMENT/STRIKE APPLICATION
[21] It is further necessary to provide some detail as to the genesis of the
withdrawn postponement/strike application given its relevance to costs.
[22] The postponement/strike application was brought on notice of motion,
without any supporting affidavit. Whilst it may be debatable whether an
application to strike a matter from the roll would require a supporting
affidavit, in general a postponement application does require a supporting
affidavit. In any event, in this instance I have little doubt that a supporting
affidavit was essential, whatever name or designation one may be inclined to
give to the application. In the absence of any supporting affidavit many
submissions from the bar traversed factual territory for which there was little
proper basis.
[23] What is clear from the record is that the sequence of events in relation to the
filing of further affidavits was as follows.
s I should note that this Court was not provided with the above practice note filed by the Camps Bay ratepayers
on 21 November 2025: the only indication of its existence and content is to be found in the practice note from
Ms Peretz's legal representatives

8
(a) Ms Peretz delivered a replying affidavit on 16 September 2022. She then
delivered a further supplementary affidavit on 29 November 2023 (the
matter had been set down on the semi-urgent roll for hearing on 20
February 2024 in tenns of an order of Goliath AJP of 8 September 2023).
This affidavit was unaccompanied by any application for its exceptional
admission on the principles enunciated in Standard Bank of SA Ltd v
Sewpersadh and Another. 6 I will refer to this affidavit as the '2023
affidavit'.
(b) More than two years later, in the lead up to the hearing on 14 November
2025, the Camps Bay ratepayers' attorney sent a letter to Ms Peretz'
attorneys stating:
'We notice that you proceeded unilaterally to place a document on the court file and
in the index referred to as a 'Supplementary affidavit - Ivor Kaye - dated 29 November
2023'. A litigant is not at liberty to file an affidavit out of sequence, at will. We object
to this conduct and demand that this document be removed from the court file
immediately. If you wish to submit further documentation, please comply with the
rules. If we do not receive confirmation from you as to this affidavit, by close of
business on Monday, 17 November 2025, then we have instructions to proceed with
an application to ensure that our clients' rights are protected, together with an adverse
costs order.'
( c) The proceedings threatened in the above letter were not launched and
instead a further supplementary affidavit was filed by the Camps Bay
6 2005 (4) SA 148 (C).Here it was held that a litigant is not entitled to file further affidavits without first
obtaining the leave of the court, which retains a discretion to admit them only in special circumstances or where
it considers it advisable. The party seeking to fi)e. an additional affidavit must provide a satisfactory explanation
showing that the new material was not omitted earlier due to mala fides or culpable remissness and the court

must also be satisfied that admitting the affidavit will not cause prejudice to the opposing party that cannot be
cured by an appropriate costs order - see para [9).

9
ratepayers on 25 November 2025. This affidavit was accompanied by an
application supporting its exceptional admission.
(d) On the following day, 26 November 2025, Ms Peretz filed a further
affidavit in response, unaccompanied by any application for its
exceptional admission. I will refer to this as the '26 November affidavit'.
[24] In supporting their application to postpone or strike the matter from the roll
the Camps Bay ratepayers complain that, without leave or application, Ms
Peretz has raises contentious new matter in the 26 November affidavit. They
say that the affidavit requires a response but, if they are afforded an
opportunity to respond, the prejudice will be assuaged. For this reason, they
submit the hearing could not proceed on 3 December 2025.
[25] After some considerable time spent on argument on 3 December 2025, the
postponement/strike application was however withdrawn without explanation
or tender of costs. In its stead, the strikeout application was launched.
[26] I turn now to deal with the strikeout application before addressing the issue
of costs.
THE STRIKEOUT APPLICATION
[27] As mentioned, during the hearing on 3 December 2025, the Camps Bay
ratepayers launched a further application for an order striking out paragraphs
7 - 12, 14 - 17, 19-41, 34, 35 -41, 42.2, 44 - 51, 53 - 72, 75, 77-80 and
83 - 93 of the 26 November affidavit.
[28] It is immediately apparent that this application to strike out the above
paragraphs was launched in limbo. I had made no ruling on the extraordinary
admission of any of the parties' preceding further affidavits which followed
the replying affidavit, including those delivered by the Camps Bay ratepayers
(albeit that the matter were accompanied by applications for their exceptional

10
admission). Possible agreement on these issues was explored during the
hearing, but it was clear that the parties were not willing to agree to the
admission of all their further affidavits unconditionally. Furthermore, to the
extent that there was consensus on the admission of certain further affidavits,
particularly those filed before the further affidavits of 25 and 26 November,
any decision on their admission could only be made, in my view, as integral
to a decision on the admission of all further affidavits which the parties have
chosen to file. Furthermore, on the Camps Bay ratepayers' own showing, I
can make no decision on the admission of affidavits when no accompanying
application has been delivered.7
[29] Consideration as to whether the paragraphs referred to in paragraph [27]
above should be struck out as being new matter in reply was therefore
premature. The strikeout application was misconceived: I was not in a position
to make any ruling on it.
[30] Nonetheless, argument in relation to the strikeout application consumed yet
more time during the hearing and postponement of the matter became
inevitable.
[31] In the circumstances, the only issue for me to determine is that of the wasted
costs arising from the postponement of the matter, to which I tum below.
DISCUSSION: WASTED COSTS
[32] In argument I enquired why the issue with the 2023 affidavit was not raised
by the Camps Bay ratepayers until shortly before the hearing, in their letter of
14 November 2025. Apparently, the reason was, as stated in that letter, that
the 2023 affidavit had found its way into the index.
7 See further Walt/oo Meat and Chicken SA (Pty) Ltd v Silvy Luis (Pty) Ltd and Others 2008 (5) SA 461 (T) at
para 35.

11
[33] Despite the threat to launch proceedings in the letter of 14 November 2025,
these were not initiated and instead a responding affidavit was delivered. This
in tum engendered the 26 November affidavit from Ms Peretz.
[34] I am mindful of the cogency of the point raised by the Camps Bay ratepayers
that delivery of further affidavits required a substantive application for the
extraordinary admission of these affidavits. I am also mindful of the fact that
only the Camps Bay ratepayers' further affidavits were accompanied by such
applications.
[35] Nonetheless, as I raised with the Camps Bay ratepayers' counsel in
argument, the period of over 2 years which elapsed after the delivery of the
2023 affidavit before these issues were raised is not properly explained. The
fact that the 2023 affidavit appeared in the index was surely not the first time
that it was realised by the Camps Bay ratepayers' attorneys that Ms Peretz'
intention was to have the affidavit admitted, and rely upon it at the hearing.
Whilst the fact that the 2023 affidavit was unaccompanied by any substantive
application for its admission may have justified the proceedings threatened in
the Camps Bay ratepayers' letter of 14 November 2025, those proceedings
were not launched. Instead, the Camps Bay ratepayers elected to file yet a
further responding affidavit on 25 November 2025, which was followed in
short order by the further responding affidavit from Ms Peretz on 26
November 2025.
[36] It is obvious that the objection to the 2023 affidavit which was raised more
than two years later on 14 November 2025, could have been raised far earlier.
Furthermore, the decision to file an affidavit in response, and the filing of that
affidavit, could likewise have been done years earlier. In other words, the
issues with the admission of the further affidavits, whether they contained new
matter, and so on, could have been dealt with long before the hearing, but
were not.

12
[37] The response from the Camps Bay ratepayers was that they were entitled, in
the absence of any application for the extraordinary admission of these
affidavits, to treat them as pro non scripto and to 'ignore' them. This changed
only after the index was filed and it became apparent that Ms Peretz intended
to rely on the 26 November affidavit in argument.
[38] For three reasons, I am not persuaded by this argument:
(a) Firstly, compliance with the rules is not akin to a game where, if a mistake
is made, the forfeit is paid. 8 The Camps Bay ratepayers were and remained
entitled to write the letter of complaint after the 2023 affidavit was filed
to suggest that an application was required for its admission; instead, this
was only done on the threshold of the hearing more than 2 years later, in
November 2025.
(b) Secondly the irregular step mechanism in Rule 30 was available for 10
court days after the 2023 affidavit was filed (and for longer, subject to
condonation), but was never utilised.9
( c) Finally, whilst the filing of a further affidavit without a substantive
application for its admission may have been irregular, and therefore the
affidavit could notionally be treated as 'pro non scripto ', 10 ultimately this
is not the approach which was taken. Instead, the letter eventually written
on 14 November 2025 threatened unspecified proceedings, and then,
without explanation, a choice was made to file a further responding
affidavit delivered on 25 November 2025, a week before the hearing.
8 Whittaker v Roos and Bateman 1911 TPD 1092 at 1102-3.
9 I accept what was said in Sewpersadh, at para 11 viz. that, even if a party omits to exercise a right they had in
terms of Rule 30, this does not change the law regarding the set of affidavits to be filed. But Sewpersadh is still
clear that this Rule 30 right it available to a litigant.
10 See Sewpersadh at paras 12 - 13 as well as Hano Trading CC v .JR 209 Investments (Pty) Ltd and Another
2013 (I) SA 161 (SCA) at para 13.

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Thereafter a decision was made to apply to strike the matter from the roll
or postpone it. I can only agree with the submission by Ms Peretz that this
appears to have been a 'strategic shift' at the eleventh hour.
[39] Thus, whilst I am in agreement with counsel for the Camps Bay ratepayers
that the failure to file substantive applications for the extraordinary admission
of these several further affidavits is to be deprecated, the relationship that this
bears to the fact that this matter was not ready for hearing on 3 December
2025, and the consequential responsibility for the wasted costs of the ensuing
postponement, is a broader question. In exercising my discretion I must take
other considerations, especially those arising from the delays in raising the
issue in the first place, into account.
[ 40] Moreover, as I have said, for reasons which were not clear, the
postponement/strike application was withdrawn during the course of the
hearing, and in its stead the strikeout application was launched. This
precipitate withdrawal, without any tender of costs, is again an issue I need to
consider in assessing wasted costs of the hearing on 3 December 2025.
[ 41] The greater part of the day on 3 December 2025 was expended on arguing
the postponement/strike application and later the strikeout application. The
former, as I have mentioned, was withdrawn, whilst the latter was belated and
misconceived. As the day had been expended on these interlocutory
applications, and given that the state of the papers was still in flux, it was not
possible to hear the merits of the rescission application.
CONCLUSION: COSTS
[ 42] Postponement having become inevitable, the only question remaining is as
to costs. The wasted costs of the hearing on 3 December 2025 must lie where
the responsibility for the abortive proceedings properly rests. The Camps Bay
ratepayers elected, at a very late stage, and after more than two years of

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inaction, to raise objections to the further affidavits and to pursue associated
interlocutory relief. Those issues could and should have been addressed long
before the allocated hearing date. Instead, they were raised on the threshold
of the hearing, precipitating an inevitable postponement.
[ 43] Moreover, the postponement/strike application was procedurally deficient,
having been brought without any supporting affidavit, and was ultimately
withdrawn during the course of argument. The strikeout application that
followed on its heels during the hearing was belated and misconceived, being
launched before any ruling had been made on the admissibility of the further
affidavits.
[44] The greater part of the hearing on 3 December 2025 was consequently
consumed by eleventh hour interlocutory skinnishing for which the Camps
Bay ratepayers must bear the primary responsibility. Whilst I cannot say that
the Camps Bay ratepayers' primary motivation was delay, there can be little
doubt that further delays were not inimical to their interests, given the interim
interdict which has remained in place since 2021. No party could be ignorant
of the fact that this interlocutory skirmishing during the hearing would
inevitably lead to a further postponement .
[ 45] Accordinlgy, in the exercise of my discretion, and taking into account the
lateness of the objections, the failure to utilise available procedural remedies
timeously, and the withdrawal and reformulation of applications on the day
of the hearing, I am satisfied that that the Camps Bay ratepayers should pay
the wasted costs occasioned by the postponement of the matter on 3 December
2025.
ORDER
[ 46] I accordingly make the following order:

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( a) In the event that any party wishes to file a further affidavit in response to
the applicant's affidavit of 26 November 2025, whether in preference to
or as an alternative to any striking out application, they shall do so not
later than 15 court days from the date of this order.
(b) After:
(i) The delivery of the affidavit or lapse of the period referred to m
paragraph (a) above;
(ii) delivery of the required applications and all affidavits in relation to the
admission of the parties' further sets of affidavits filed after the
applicant's replying affidavit of 16 September 2022;
the parties are given leave to approach the Judge President for the
allocation of a further date for the hearing of this application.
(c) This rescission application shall as far as possible be heard together with
the related reconsideration application by the City of23 May 2024 unless
the latter application has been withdrawn or is not proceeding.
( d) To the extent that further heads of argument are deemed necessary by any
party, whether as to the admission of the parties' further affidavits,
applications to strikeout, or otherwise, these shall be delivered not less
than 10 court days prior to the postponed hearing.
( e) The sixth to ninth respondents are to pay the wasted costs of the hearing
on 3 December 2025, including the costs of two counsel (where so
employed), on scale C.
Greig AJ
Acting Judge of the High Court

Appearances
For Applicant: Adv D Borgstrom SC, Adv M Basson
Instructed By: Johan Victor Attorneys
For Respondent: Adv DM Lubbe
Instructed By: Van Rensburg & Co
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