Gwisai and Others v Nedbank Ltd and Others (4042/2020) [2026] ZAGPJHC 47 (20 January 2026)

70 Reportability
Civil Procedure

Brief Summary

Civil Procedure — Class action certification — Applicants seeking to certify a class action against banks for damages related to property sales in execution — Interlocutory applications for condonation and admission of affidavits filed late — Court emphasizing the importance of compliance with procedural rules and case management directives — Applicants' failure to adhere to deadlines and directives resulting in dismissal of applications for condonation and admission of further affidavits.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


This judgment concerns two interlocutory applications brought in the context of an application for the certification of a class action. The interlocutory applications were (i) an application for condonation for non-compliance with prior judicial case-management directives, and (ii) an application for the admission of further affidavits filed outside the ordinary sequence of affidavits in motion proceedings.


The applicants were Innocent Gwisai and 12 others (the first to thirteenth applicants). The respondents cited in the main certification proceedings included several financial institutions and public bodies; however, in these interlocutory applications only the first to fourth respondents—being Nedbank Ltd, Absa Ltd, FirstRand Bank Ltd, and Standard Bank Ltd (collectively described as “the banks”)—opposed the relief sought.


The procedural history was central to the determination of the interlocutory relief. The certification application was instituted in February 2020. The banks delivered answering affidavits between October 2020 and March 2021, and the applicants delivered replying affidavits in mid-2021. Despite the ordinary closure of pleadings at that point in motion proceedings, the applicants thereafter continued, without leave, to upload numerous additional affidavits to the electronic record over an extended period, prompting repeated objections by the banks and multiple case-management interventions by the court.


The underlying subject-matter of the proposed class action concerns allegations that the banks, in relation to sales in execution of mortgaged properties, sold properties for substantially less than market value, and/or not as a last resort, and that class members were harmed through shortfall debts and/or overcharging of legal or related enforcement fees. The judgment expressly did not deal with the merits of certification, but with the procedural permissibility of the applicants’ attempts to expand the evidentiary record and obtain indulgences for non-compliance.


2. Material Facts


The following facts were treated as material by the court and formed the basis for the determination of the interlocutory applications.


After the close of the standard affidavit sequence by mid-2021, the applicants continued to upload further affidavits to CaseLines without obtaining leave. The court recorded that the additional affidavits eventually numbered approximately 44 and were described by the applicants as “confirming” or “supplementary”, but were filed in a manner the banks repeatedly objected to and which required ongoing case-management.


A key factual feature was the existence and non-compliance with two judicial directives intended to impose procedural discipline and finality on the record.


First, following a case-management meeting in August 2024, Vally J directed the applicants to file, by no later than 25 February 2025, all affidavits they intended to rely upon for certification and to bring a formal application for their admission, together with any necessary condonation application. The applicants did not comply with that directive within the stipulated period.


Second, following a further case-management meeting on 30 May 2025, the court (Windell J) directed the applicants to bring two distinct applications—one for condonation explaining the failure to comply with Vally J’s directive, and one for the admission of the further affidavits—both to be filed by 27 June 2025.


On 27 June 2025, the applicants filed two notices of motion supported by affidavits deposed to by their attorney, Mr Douglas J Shaw. The documents did not align with the directives in the manner required: the papers included an admission application and an attempt to deal with condonation in a way the court later found misdirected and incomplete in relation to the true defaults.


On 29 August 2025, after the banks had delivered answering affidavits in the interlocutory applications and raised non-compliance, the applicants delivered a third notice of motion seeking condonation for failure to comply with the directives. This was done outside the stipulated deadlines and, on the court’s account, without a full explanation covering the entire period of default.


The applicants also sought, as part of their relief, condonation for the late filing and admission of further affidavits in the future, up to a period shortly before the certification hearing. The court treated this attempt at prospective authorisation as incompetent and dismissed it at the outset.


A further application dated 25 November 2025 (“Second Application: Supplementary Affidavits and Sundry Matters”) was delivered two days before the hearing of the interlocutory applications. The banks had no opportunity to answer it. After the court raised the procedural difficulties at the commencement of the hearing on 27 November 2025, Mr Shaw withdrew this later application, and it did not form part of the determination.


The court also accepted as material that further affidavits continued to be uploaded to the record even after the directives, with the last upload appearing to be 23 July 2025, and that some materials were uploaded to CaseLines without being formally served, requiring at least one respondent to monitor the electronic record for changes.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal questions were procedural and discretionary in nature.


The first issue was whether the applicants had made out a proper case for condonation for non-compliance with court directives, which required an assessment of the adequacy of the explanation for default and whether condonation would be in the interests of justice.


The second issue was whether the applicants had shown good cause for the court to grant leave to file and rely on further affidavits beyond the ordinary founding, answering and replying affidavits in motion proceedings. This required the court to evaluate whether the affidavits were genuinely confirmatory or impermissibly supplementary, whether there was a satisfactory explanation for lateness, and whether their admission would cause prejudice that could not be cured by a costs order.


The dispute therefore largely concerned the application of settled legal principles to procedural facts, involving the court’s discretion in relation to indulgences (condonation and the admission of further affidavits), informed by evaluative assessments of fairness, prejudice, delay, and the integrity of case-management.


A related procedural issue was whether, in consequence of the decisions on condonation and admission, the court should confirm finality by directing that pleadings are closed and that no further affidavits may be filed without leave.


Although the banks sought punitive costs and raised the possibility of a de bonis propriis costs order against Mr Shaw, the court did not finally determine that question in this judgment; it considered the procedural fairness requirements and reserved the costs issue for later determination after further submissions.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The court approached the condonation application by emphasising the settled requirement that an applicant must provide a full, detailed, and accurate explanation for the entire period of default, demonstrating that the non-compliance was not wilful and not due to gross negligence. The court relied on established authority that condonation is not granted for the asking and that inadequate explanations are fatal to such relief.


On the facts, the court found that both relevant directives were clear and unambiguous, were issued specifically to bring procedural finality, and were not complied with. It further found that the applicants’ condonation papers did not properly engage with the true defaults. The notice of motion sought condonation for the late filing of the condonation application itself rather than expressly seeking condonation for non-compliance with the directives of Vally J and of Windell J, which the court characterised as misdirected relief.


Even if that defect were to be overlooked, the court held that the explanations advanced—oversight, lack of reminders, pressure of other work, alleged disparities in resources, and the asserted effect of anxiety medication—did not constitute a satisfactory account for failing to comply with express court directives issued months apart. The court also rejected the contention that the significance of the class action justified a more indulgent approach, holding that procedural fairness and orderly administration apply equally in matters of public importance.


In determining whether condonation would be in the interests of justice, the court applied the factors articulated in Constitutional Court authority, including the nature of the relief sought, the extent and cause of delay, the effect on the administration of justice and other litigants, the reasonableness of the explanation, the importance of the issues, and the prospects of success. The court treated prospects of success as particularly important in this context because the condonation was sought to enable the admission of further affidavits; if the admission application had no prospects, condonation would ordinarily not be granted.


Turning to the admission of further affidavits, the court reaffirmed the general motion-proceedings rule that litigation is ordinarily confined to three sets of affidavits, and that further affidavits are permitted only by leave of the court on good cause shown. The discretion to admit them is exercised sparingly and with fairness to both sides as the dominant consideration, including whether a proper explanation exists and whether prejudice is remediable.


A significant aspect of the court’s reasoning was the distinction between truly confirmatory affidavits and supplementary affidavits. The court held that, particularly at the certification stage of a class action, confirmatory affidavits from numerous individual property owners are generally unnecessary because certification is a representative procedure and does not require affidavits from every prospective class member. To the extent the affidavits were genuinely confirmatory, their admission was found to add little or no probative value.


However, the court found that the affidavits were not confirmatory in substance. They introduced new factual material, additional allegations, individualised narratives, and in some instances sought to respond directly to points made in the answering affidavits. This rendered them supplementary, requiring an explanation for why the material was not included earlier and why exceptional circumstances justified admission at such a late stage. The court found no coherent explanation for the incremental late introduction over years, and considered the applicants’ assertion that affected persons came forward over time to reflect a misunderstanding of certification and to be inadequate as justification for continually expanding the record.


The court also pointed to concerns regarding the quality and form of several affidavits, including features such as template-like content, conclusory allegations, irrelevant or incomplete annexures, and, in some cases, substantive insertions after signature and commissioning. These features supported the court’s conclusion that the affidavits functioned as an impermissible attempt to bolster and supplement the applicants’ case.


Prejudice to the banks was treated as substantial and cumulative. The court reasoned that each new affidavit would require detailed investigation into particular loan accounts, execution processes, valuations, and historic court files, often involving archival retrieval. Given the historic nature of the transactions and the number of affidavits, the court found this burden would undermine procedural finality and risk indefinite delay; such prejudice was not curable by a costs order.


The court then considered two specific affidavits relied on heavily by the applicants, namely those of Mr Garth Zietsman (statistical expert) and Mr Norman Hornby (purportedly addressing class administration). Both were assessed under the same principles for further affidavits. The court found the Zietsman affidavit had been introduced in an irregular manner after the answering affidavits, without adequate explanation why the evidence could not have been obtained earlier, and without proper allegations in the admission papers explaining its role in the certification enquiry. The court further criticised its generality, noting that broad aggregated statistical conclusions were not tethered to identifiable transactions and would require the banks to answer vague, systemic allegations without sufficient specificity, thereby aggravating prejudice.


As to Hornby, the court found the affidavit was plainly directed at responding to criticisms in the banks’ answering affidavits about class management capacity and should have been in the founding papers if it was to be relied upon. It was therefore not confirmatory, and the admission application lacked the necessary detail and satisfactory explanation for lateness.


Having found that the admission application lacked prospects of success, the court concluded that the interests of justice did not favour granting condonation for repeated and prolonged non-compliance coupled with a materially expanding record. The court also held that it could not grant advance permission to depart from the rules or condone future non-compliance.


Finally, the court accepted the banks’ request for clarity and finality and directed that, in light of the refusal of condonation and dismissal of the admission application, the evidentiary record must be treated as settled: the founding, answering, and replying affidavits had long since been delivered, and further affidavits would require leave of the court.


On costs, while noting the banks’ request for punitive costs and a possible order de bonis propriis against Mr Shaw, the court held that such an order is extraordinary and requires a proper opportunity to be heard. The court therefore stood the issue down and reserved costs for later determination after further written submissions.


5. Outcome and Relief


The court dismissed the application for condonation for non-compliance with the directives issued by Vally J and by Windell J.


The court dismissed the application for the admission of further affidavits, including rejecting any attempt to obtain prospective authorisation to file further affidavits close to the certification hearing.


The court ordered that pleadings in the certification application are closed, and that no further affidavits may be filed without leave of the court.


The court reserved the question of costs, including the appropriate scale and whether any costs order should be made de bonis propriis against Mr Douglas J Shaw. Mr Shaw was directed to deliver written submissions (supported by affidavit if advised) by 26 January 2026 explaining why a de bonis propriis order should not be made, with respondents permitted to respond within ten days of service.


Cases Cited


Uitenhage Transitional Local Council v South African Revenue Service 2004 (1) SA 292 (SCA); [2003] 4 All SA 37 (SCA).


Dengetenge Holdings (Pty) Ltd v Southern Sphere Mining and Development Company Ltd and Others [2013] 2 All SA 251 (SCA).


Buffalo City Metropolitan Municipality v Asla Construction (Pty) Limited 2019 (4) SA 331 (CC).


Brummer v Gorfil Brothers Investments (Pty) Ltd and Others [2000] ZACC 3; 2000 (2) SA 837 (CC).


Van Wyk v Unitas Hospital and Another (Open Democratic Advice Centre as Amicus Curiae) [2007] ZACC 24; 2008 (2) SA 472 (CC).


Grootboom v National Prosecuting Authority and Another (CCT 08/13) [2013] ZACC 37; 2014 (2) SA 68 (CC); 2014 (1) BCLR 65 (CC); [2014] 1 BLLR 1 (CC); (2014) 35 ILJ 121 (CC) (21 October 2013).


James Brown & Hamer (Pty) Ltd (Previously Named Gilbert Hamer & Co Ltd) v Simmons, NO 1963 (4) SA 656 (A).


Milne NO v Fabric House (Pty) Ltd 1957 (3) SA 63 (N).


Transvaal Racing Club v Jockey Club of South Africa 1958 (3) SA 599 (W).


Children Resource Centre Trust and Others v Pioneer Food (Pty) Ltd and Others 2013 (2) SA 213 (SCA).


Legislation Cited


Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996.


Rules of Court Cited


Uniform Rules of Court.


Held


The court held that the applicants failed to establish a proper basis for condonation because they did not seek appropriate relief for the actual procedural defaults, did not provide a full and satisfactory explanation for prolonged non-compliance with clear court directives, and because granting condonation would not be in the interests of justice.


The court further held that the application to admit further affidavits had no prospects of success. The affidavits were either unnecessary confirmatory material in the context of certification proceedings or, in substance, impermissible supplementary material introduced years late without adequate explanation, and their admission would cause significant prejudice to the banks not curable by a costs order.


The court held that procedural finality was required and ordered that pleadings were closed and that no further affidavits may be filed without leave of the court. The issue of costs, including a potential de bonis propriis order against the applicants’ attorney, was reserved for later determination after further submissions.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


Condonation for non-compliance with procedural time limits and court directives requires a full, detailed, and accurate explanation for the entire period of delay, and the explanation must be reasonable and bona fide, showing the default was not wilful or due to gross negligence. Condonation is assessed through the flexible standard of the interests of justice, which includes consideration of the extent of delay, reasons for delay, impact on the administration of justice and other litigants, the importance of the issues, and the prospects of success in the underlying application for which condonation is sought.


In motion proceedings, the ordinary rule is that evidence is confined to founding, answering, and replying affidavits. A party seeking to file further affidavits seeks an indulgence and must show good cause, with the court exercising its discretion sparingly and guided primarily by fairness to both sides, including whether there is a satisfactory explanation for lateness and whether prejudice can be cured by a costs order.


In a class action certification context, the court emphasised the distinction between confirmatory affidavits (which merely verify existing evidence and may add little at certification stage) and supplementary affidavits (which introduce new material and require a stringent justification for late admission). Incremental expansion of the evidentiary record over years, contrary to case-management directives, undermines procedural finality and can cause prejudice that is not remediable through costs.


A court cannot grant advance permission to depart from the rules or condone future non-compliance in anticipation. Where repeated irregular filings and non-compliance threaten the integrity of the process, case management may require a clear directive that pleadings are closed and that no further affidavits may be filed without leave.


A costs order de bonis propriis against a legal practitioner is an extraordinary remedy involving serious censure and may not be made without affording the practitioner a proper opportunity to be heard.

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REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA


IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG

CASE NUMBER: 4042/2020




In the matter between:

INNOCENT GWISAI & 12 OTHERS 1ST to 13TH APPLICANTS

and

NEDBANK LTD FIRST RESPONDENT
ABSA LTD SECOND RESPONDENT
FIRST RAND BANK LTD THIRD RESPONDENT
STANDARD BANK LTD FOURTH RESPONDENT
CHANGING TIDES 17 LTD FIFTH RESPONDENT
INVESTEC LTD SIXTH RESPONDENT
NATIONAL CREDIT REGULATOR SEVENTH RESPONDENT
SA HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSION EIGHTH RESPONDENT
THE RULES BOARD NINTH RESPONDENT
MINISTER OF JUSTICE AND CONSTITUTIONAL
DEVELOPMENT TENTH RESPONDENT


(1) REPORTABLE: YES / NO
(2) OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES / NO
(3) REVISED: YES / NO

20 January 2026 __________________________
DATE SIGNATURE

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Heard: 27 November 2025
Delivered: 20 January 2026



JUDGMENT

WINDELL J:
Introduction
[1] This judgment concerns two interlocutory applications arising in an application for
the certification of a class action instituted in February 2020 against a number of
respondents, including financial institutions and public bodies. Only the first to fourth
respondents, being four major banks (“the banks”), oppose the interlocutory applications
presently before court.
[2] In the certification application the applicants seek to certify a class action to, inter
alia, claim damages against the banks. The essence of the applicants’ case is that the
banks sold their properties for amounts substantially less than their market val ue, or not
as a last resort, and that on this basis the banks are liable to the applicants for damages.
The applicants seek to include as members of the class those persons who were affected
by sales in execution of properties they owned.
[3] The applicants propose four classes. The first, described as the main class,
comprises people whose property was sold in execution for less than 90% of its market
value. The second, referred to as the “not last resort” class, comprises persons falling

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within the main class whose property was sold in circumstances where execution is
alleged not to have been a measure of last resort. The third class, described as the
“shortfall debt class”, comprises persons who are currently indebted to one of the banks,
or who were previously indebted and settled that debt, as a result of a property being sold
in execution both for less than its alleged value and for less than what was owing to the
bank. The fourth class, referred to as the “overcharged class”, comprises persons who
allege that they were overcharged legal or related fees in the course of enforcement
proceedings instituted by the banks in respect of their mortgage bonds.
[4] Very broadly, the applicants’ claim for damages against the banks is based on
three independent causes of action: in delict, in that it is alleged that the banks ’ conduct
in the form of the sale of the properties in execution was wrongful and for which the banks
are at fault; in contract, in that it is alleged that the banks charged the class members
charges and fees that are not authori sed under the contracts with their customers; and
the Constitution, in that it is alleged that the banks have acted contrary to the Constitution
in the sale in execution process.
[5] The applicants are represented by Mr Douglas J Shaw, an attorney, who has acted
throughout the proceedings.
[6] The interlocutory relief sought relates to (a) condonation for non-compliance with
judicial directives previously issued in the matter (“the condonation application”), and (b)
the admission of numerous affidavits filed after the close of the ordinary sequence of
affidavits in motion proceedings (“the admission application”).

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[7] The applications arise against the backdrop of prolonged delay, repeated non -
compliance with the Uniform Rules of Court, and persistent disregard of case -
management directions issued by this Court over several years. The issues are narrow,
but their proper determination is essential to preserving the integrity of judicial process,
particularly in complex litigation such as class actions. That objective cannot be achieved
where there is persistent non -compliance with pr ocedural rules or court directives.
Procedural fairness applies equally to all litigants, including the banks, who have been
required to meet extensive and repeatedly shifting cases over a prolonged period.
[8] The banks contend that both applications are fatally defective and that the manner
in which the litigation has been conducted warrants serious consideration of a punitive
costs order, including a costs order de bonis propriis against Mr Shaw.
[9] A hearing date for the certification application has been allocated. The matter is
set down for hearing during the week of 23 to 27 February 2026, with five court days
having been reserved for that purpose. The interlocutory applications addressed in this
judgment arise in the context of the matter being prepared for that scheduled hearing on
a settled and procedurally compliant record. No views are expressed on the merits of the
certification application itself.
Factual And Procedural Background
[10] The certification application was launched in February 2020. The respondent
banks delivered their answering affidavits between October 2020 and March 2021. The
applicants delivered their replying affidavits in mid -2021. On any ordinary application of
the Rules, pleadings would have closed at that point.

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[11] Prior to the delivery of the replying affidavits, the applicants had already filed a
number of affidavits described as “confirming” or “supplementary”. However, what
followed thereafter was a prolonged period during which the applicants, without leave of
the Court, continued to upload further affidavits to CaseLines, ultimately numbering some
44 affidavits. The banks repeatedly objected to this practice. Case-management meetings
were convened before different judges in an effort to impose procedural discipline and to
prepare the matter for a hearing on certification.
[12] Of particular importance are two judicial directives. First, following a case -
management meeting held in August 2024, Vally J directed the applicants, by no later
than 25 February 2025, to file all affidavits they intended to rely upon in support of
certification and to bring a formal application for the admission of those affidavits, together
with any necessary application for condonation. The directive was expressly aimed at
bringing finality to the evidentiary record and ensuring that the matter could proceed on a
settled set of papers.
[13] That directive was not complied with. No application was brought within the
stipulated period. As a result, a further case -management meeting was convened on 30
May 2025, before this Court. At that meeting, this Court directed the applicants to bring
two distinct applications: (a) an application for condonation explaining the failure to
comply with the directive of Vally J; and (b) an application for the admission of the further
affidavits sought to be relied upon. The two applications had to be filed by no later than
27 June 2025.

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[14] The applicants thereafter filed two notices of motion supported by affidavits
deposed to by Mr Shaw. The first is dated 27 June 2025 and purports to deal with
condonation for the late filing of the "confirming" and "supplementary" affidavits, which
include "but are not limited to" those affidavits in sections 2 and 7 of Caselines. Certain
paragraphs of this affidavit also deal with the admi ssion of the "confirming and
supplementary affidavits".
[15] The second affidavit (delivered on the same date) purports to deal with the
admission of the affidavits contained in sections 2 and 7 of Caselines. Once more, certain
submissions in this affidavit pertain to the request for condonation for the late filing of the
"confirming and supplementary affidavits".
[16] A third notice of motion was filed by the applicants on 29 August 2025, after the
answering affidavits to the interlocutory applications had already been delivered and after
the banks had expressly raised the applicants’ non-compliance with the directives of Vally
J and of this Court. It is titled “Notice of Motion (condonation for late filing of application
of inter alia for admission of affidavits)”. This application sought condonation for the
applicants’ failure to comply with the directives of Vally J and of this Court, but was itself
delivered well outside the deadlines imposed, without any accompanying application to
amend the earlier notices of m otion and without providing a full explanation accounting
for the entire period of non-compliance.
[17] In the applications the applicants further seek condonation for the late filing and
admission of any additional affidavits in similar form to those already filed, up to 15 court
days before the date of the certification hearing. In substance, the applicants seek not

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only the admission of affidavits already placed on record, but also prospective
authorisation to file further affidavits shortly before the hearing. At the outset, this aspect
of the relief sought must be dismissed. A court cannot grant advance permission to depart
from the Rules or to condone future non-compliance in anticipation.
[18] A fourth application, dated 25 November 2025 and titled “Notice of Motion: Second
Application: Supplementary Affidavits and Sundry Matters”, was delivered only two days
before the hearing of the interlocutory applications, which was set down for 27 November
2025. The relief sought in that application was wide -ranging and extended beyond what
is competent in interlocutory motion proceedings of this nature. To place the application
in proper context, the relief sought is quoted verbatim:
“1. That those affidavits filed by the applicants subsequent to the time period
of the first application for admission, that are supplementary (however labelled)
are admitted if not already admitted.
2. That the applicants are free to submit further supplementary affidavits
subject to an admission application up to 30 court days before the date of the
certification hearing, the respondents then having 5 court days to respond and
the applicants a further 5 court days, subject to an application such as this one
being submitted to be heard at the hearing of the certification matter.
3. That the contents of this affidavit that is supplementary is admitted.
4. In particular, that the recent supplementary affidavit of Nick Hornby {sic} is
admitted.

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5. Costs if this matter is opposed.
6. Further and/or alternative relief.”
[19] The banks had no opportunity to file answering affidavits or to prepare to meet the
relief sought in this latest application.
[20] At the commencement of the hearing, the Court addressed the procedural position
of all four interlocutory applications . It recorded that the applicants had been advised
during case management in May 2025 that the filing of further affidavits had to cease and
that pleadings were required to close. Mr Shaw w as reminded that l itigation cannot
progress if the record continues to shift. The continued filing of affidavits, many of them
long after prescribed deadlines and without leave of the Court, create s uncertainty and
prejudice and undermines the Court’s ability to manage the matter efficiently.
[21] Following these remarks, Mr Shaw withdrew the application dated 25 November
2025. That application accordingly does not form part of the relief to be determined in this
judgment.
The Application for Condonation
[22] It is convenient to deal first with the application for condonation. The applicants’
non-compliance is twofold. First, they failed to comply with the directive issued by Vally J
following case management in November 2024, in terms of which they were required to
bring, by no later than 25 February 2025, any application for t he admission of further
affidavits, together with any necessary application for condonation. Secondly, they failed
properly to comply with the directive issued by this Court on 30 May 2025, which expressly

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required the applicants to file both a condonation application for the failure to comply with
the Vally J directive and an application for the admission of affidavits in accordance with
a timetable fixed by the Court, including a deadline of 27 June 2025. The applicants
delivered only the admission application by that date, coupled with an application to
condone the lat e filing of the so -called “confirming” affidavits, but without the required
condonation for their prior non-compliance.
[23] Both directives were clear and unambiguous. They were issued to impose
procedural discipline and to bring finality to a matter already marked by repeated irregular
filings and prolonged delay. Notwithstanding that purpose, the condonation application
that ultimately came before Court was delivered only on 29 August 2025 — more than six
months after the deadline imposed by Vally J and approximately two months after the
deadline imposed by this Court.
[24] Notwithstanding these directives, Mr Shaw continued to file further affidavits
without awaiting the determination of the admission application. Additional affidavits were
uploaded to the record after the deadlines imposed by the Court, the last of which appears
to have been filed on 23 July 2025. It was pointed out on behalf of the second respondent,
Absa, that certain of these affidavits were uploaded to CaseLines without being formally
served, with the result that the respondent was required to monitor the electronic record
to identify new material and was deprived of the procedural certainty that proper service
is intended to secure.
[25] The principles governing condonation are trite. An applicant seeking condonation
must provide a full, detailed and accurate explanation for the entire period of default. The

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explanation must be reasonable, bona fide, and demonstrate that the non -compliance
was neither wilful nor due to gross negligence.1
[26] In the present matter, the application for condonation does not engage
meaningfully with either of the directives with which the applicants failed to comply.
Although the founding affidavit states that the application is brought to explain non -
compliance with the directive of Vally J, the notice of motion seeks only condonation for
the late filing of the condonation application itself. It does not expressly seek condonation
for non-compliance with the directive of Vally J, nor for non-compliance with the directive
of this Court. The relief sought is therefore misdirected and does not address the true
defaults requiring explanation.
[27] Even if that difficulty were to be overlooked, the explanations advanced for the
non-compliance are wholly inadequate. Mr Shaw attributes the failure to comply,
variously, to oversight, the absence of reminders during the early part of 2025 (no
indication is given as to from whom such reminders were expected, nor why compliance
with express court directives would depend on them ), pressure of other work, efforts to
secure a hearing date, disparities in resources between himself and the banks’ legal
teams, and the effect of anxiety medication on his memory. He further suggests that the
importance of the class action and the scale of the alleged wrongdoing justify a more
indulgent approach to procedural compliance.

1 Uitenhage Transitional Local Council v South African Revenue Service 2004 (1) SA 292 (SCA); [2003] 4
All SA 37 (SCA) para 6. Dengetenge Holdings (Pty) Ltd v Southern Sphere Mining and Development
Company Ltd and Others [2013] 2 All SA 251 (SCA) para 11. Buffalo City Metropolitan Municipality v Asla
Construction (Pty) Limited 2019 (4) SA 331 (CC) para 47.

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[28] These explanations do not constitute a full or satisfactory account of the periods
of non-compliance. Oversight, pressure of work, and the absence of reminders do not
explain why two express court directives, issued months apart, were not complied with.
Disparity in legal resources is not a justification for disregarding court orders, nor does it
excuse a failure to comply with timelines imposed precisely to ensure procedural
discipline and finality. In the present matter, the applicants have failed to prov ide a
satisfactory explanation for their non-compliance with the directives of Vally J and of this
Court. Compounding this difficulty, the condonation application seeks the wrong relief and
does not address the true defaults requiring explanation. That fai lure constitutes a
substantial obstacle to the granting of condonation.
[29] An application for condonation, however, requires the Court to consider not only
the explanation for the non-compliance, but also whether the granting of indulgence would
be in the interests of justice. 2 As the Constitutional Court observed in Grootboom, 3 the
concept of the “interests of justice” is inherently flexible and not capable of precise
definition. It encompasses, inter alia, the nature of the relief sought; the extent and cause
of the delay; the effect of the delay on the administration of justice and on other litigants;
the reasonableness of the explanation advanced; the importance of the issues raised;
and the prospects of success. Which of these considerations will be decisive depends on
the particular circumstances of each case.

2 Brummer v Gorfil Brothers Investments (Pty) Ltd and Others [2000] ZACC 3; 2000(2) SA 837 (CC) para
3.Van Wyk v Unitas Hospital and Another (Open Democratic Advice Centre as Amicus Curiae) [2007] ZACC
24; 2008 (2) SA 472 (CC) para 20.
3 Grootboom v National Prosecuting Authority and Another (CCT 08/13) [2013] ZACC 37; 2014 (2) SA 68

(CC); 2014 (1) BCLR 65 (CC); [2014] 1 BLLR 1 (CC); (2014) 35 ILJ 121 (CC) (21 October 2013) para 22 .

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[30] It follows that, where a litigant seeks condonation for non -compliance with court-
imposed time limits and directives, the Court is required, among other considerations, to
assess the prospects of success in the application for which the indulgence is sought. In
the present matter, that is the application for the admission of further affidavits. Where
the underlying application enjoys no prospects of success, condonation will ordinarily not
be granted, regardless of the explanation advanced for the default.
The prospects of success of the admission application
[31] The affidavits sought to be admitted fall into two broad categories. The first
consists of numerous affidavits by individual property owners, variously described as
“confirmatory” or “supplementary”. The second consists of expert or quasi -expert
affidavits, most notably that of Mr Garth Zietsman, relied upon to establish alleged
systemic under-valuation and class-wide harm.
[32] It is trite that motion proceedings are ordinarily confined to three sets of affidavits:
founding, answering and replying. Further affidavits are admitted only with the leave of
the Court, upon good cause shown. A party tendering further affidavits seeks not a right,
but an indulgence from the Court. 4 The discretion to admit such affidavits is exercised
sparingly and only in exceptional circumstances.5
[33] In Milne NO v Fabric House Pty Ltd6, Holmes J held that the enquiry is essentially
one of fairness to both sides. There must be a proper and satisfactory explanation,

4 James Brown & Hamer (Pty) Ltd (Previously Named Gilbert Hamer & Co Ltd) v Simmons, NO 1963 (4)
SA 656 (A).
5 Supra at 660 E-G.
6 1957 (3) SA 63 (N) at 65A.

13

negating mala fides or culpable remissness, as to why the facts or information were not
placed before the Court at an earlier stage. The Court must further be satisfied that the
admission of the additional affidavits will not cause prejudice that cannot be remedied by
an appropriate costs order.7
[34] In the present matter a critical distinction must be drawn between affidavits that
are genuinely confirmatory and those that are supplementary in nature. Confirmatory
affidavits merely verify evidence already placed before court. In the context of a class
action, such affidavits are generally unnecessary. Certification is a representative
procedure. It does not require affidavits from every individual who may ultimately fall
within the class. To the extent that affidavits are truly confirmatory, their admission adds
nothing of probative value and does not advance the certification enquiry. 8
[35] The applicants’ own characterisation of the affidavits highlights the difficulty with
the relief sought. They refer to the affidavits interchangeably as “confirmatory” and
“supplementary”. That inconsistency is not semantic. If the affidavits are confirmat ory,
their admission is unnecessary. If they are supplementary, the applicants were required
to demonstrate exceptional circumstances, provide a full and satisfactory explanation for
why the material was not included in the founding papers, and show that i ts admission
would not occasion prejudice that cannot be cured by an appropriate costs order.

7 Transvaal Racing Club v Jockey Club of South Africa 1958 (3) SA 599 (W) AT 604 A-E.
8 Children Resource Centre Trust and Others v Pioneer Food (Pty) Ltd and Others 2013 (2) SA 213 (SCA)
para 16 -18; 46. See also Professor Rachael Mulheron, The Class Action in Common Law Legal
Systems: A Comparative Perspective 3.

14

[36] In substance, the affidavits sought to be admitted are not confirmatory in any
meaningful sense. They introduce new factual material, additional allegations, expert
opinion and individualised narratives relating to valuations, execution processes, alleged
procedural irregularities and alleged loss, and in some instances seek directly to answer
points raised in the banks’ answering affidavits. Much of this material was available to the
applicants long before the certification application was launched, or at least before the
replying affidavits were delivered. No coherent explanation is provided for its late
introduction. The explanation advanced — that affected persons came forward over time
— reflects a misunderstanding of the nature of certification proceedings and cannot justify
the incremental supplementation of the evidentiary record years after pleadings should
have closed.
[37] A further difficulty lies in the quality and form of many of the affidavits sought to be
admitted. A review of the record reveals affidavits that appear to have been generated
from standardised templates, contain unsubstantiated or conclusory allegations, and are
accompanied by annexures that are either incomplete or of no discernible relevance to
the issues arising at the certification stage. In several instances, affidavits include
additional substantive material inserted after the deponent’s signature an d the
commissioner of oaths’ certification, a defect that is plainly irregular. These features
confirm that the affidavits constitute an attempt to supplement and bolster the applicants’
case in an impermissible manner.
[38] The prejudice arising from the admission of these affidavits is substantial and
cumulative. The litigation concerns historic transactions, some dating back more than a
decade. Each affidavit would require the respondent banks to investigate specific loan

15

accounts, execution processes, valuations and court files, often necessitating the retrieval
of archival material. That exercise would have to be repeated across numerous affidavits,
with the real prospect of further affidavits being added. This is not a t heoretical concern.
It is borne out by the procedural history of the matter, which has already been
characterised by delay and a shifting evidentiary record. If such a process were permitted,
pleadings would never close, the evidentiary record would remain in constant flux, and
the certification application would be indefinitely delayed. Such prejudice is not curable
by a costs order and is precisely the mischief the Rules and the case -management
directives were intended to prevent.
[39] Whether characterised as confirmatory or supplementary, the affidavits therefore
fail on either footing. If confirmatory, they add nothing of probative value at the certification
stage. If supplementary, the stringent requirements for admission have not be en met. In
neither event is their admission justified.
The Zietsman and Hornby affidavits
[40] Two affidavits were relied upon heavily by the applicants in support of the ir
application, namely those of Mr Garth Zietsman and Mr Norman Hornby. Although
different in content, both fall to be assessed against the same principles governing the
admission of further affidavits.
[41] The affidavit of Mr Zietsman, an expert in the field of statistics, purports to introduce
expert statistical opinion directed at matters central to the certification enquiry, including
alleged systemic under-valuation across thousands of sales in execution. It was first filed
in March 2021 in anonymised form and later supplemented with identifying information in

16

August 2021, after the answering affidavits had been delivered and without leave of the
Court. No explanation is provided for why this evidence could not have been obtained
and placed before court at the outset.
[42] More fundamentally, the affidavit supporting the application for admission does not
explain the role the Zietsman affidavit is intended to play in the certification enquiry. Its
contents are not summarised, nor is it explained how the opinion bears on the issues the
Court is required to determine at this stage. In the absence of such allegations, there is
nothing of substance to which the banks can respond.
[43] Even when the affidavit is considered on its own terms, it is cast at a high level of
generality. It advances aggregated statistical conclusions without identifying individual
properties, loan accounts, reserve prices, execution processes, or the factual
circumstances of particular transactions, and without engaging with variables such as
property condition, location, urgency of sale, or changes in the legal framework governing
execution over time. In that form, it does not permit meaningful engagement wit h the
alleged conduct of any particular bank and would require the banks to answer broad and
vague allegations untethered from identifiable transactions. That degree of generality
aggravates, rather than mitigates, the resulting prejudice, which is substantial and not
curable by a costs order.
[44] The affidavit of Mr Hornby, although different in scope, was likewise introduced
without a satisfactory explanation for its lateness or relevance. Mr Hornby states that he
is the chief executive officer of a company specialising in the administration of cl aims,
including class action claims, but the name of the company is not disclosed. His affidavit

17

addresses issues of class administration and management that ought to have been dealt
with in the founding papers if they were to be relied upon. It was filed in response to
concerns raised in the banks’ answering affidavits regarding the applicants’ and Mr
Shaw’s capacity to manage a class action and is plainly directed at remedying perceived
shortcomings in the applicants’ case. It is therefore not confirmatory in nature. The
founding affidavit in support of its admission lacks the necessary detail and provides no
satisfactory explanation for its late introduction. On the papers, its admission is not
justified.
[45] In both instances, the affidavits are relied upon in support of key aspects of the
proposed class action. Their inadmissibility therefore bears directly on the prospects of
success of the admission application. Neither affidavit meets the requirements for
admission as a further affidavit, and both would occasion material prejudice to the banks
if admitted.
Conclusion on prospects and condonation
[46] In determining whether condonation should be granted, the Court is required to
consider whether doing so would be in the interests of justice, having regard to the factors
identified in Grootboom. Those factors are not exhaustive, nor are they to be applied
mechanically. Their relative weight depends on the particular circumstances of each case.
[47] In the present matter, the nature of the relief sought weighs against the applicants.
What is sought is not a minor procedural indulgence, but condonation for repeated and
prolonged non-compliance with express court directives, coupled with the admission of a

18

large body of affidavits that would materially alter and expand the evidentiary record years
after pleadings should have closed.
[48] The extent and cause of the delay likewise weigh heavily against the granting of
condonation. The answering affidavits were delivered by 2021. The affidavits sought to
be admitted were introduced incrementally over several years thereafter. The delay is
substantial, measured in years, and no satisfactory explanation has been provided
accounting for the entire period of delay, either for why the evidence was not placed
before Court timeously or for why binding judicial directives were not complied with.
[49] The certification application has now been pending for more than five years. The
effect of the delay on the administration of justice and on other litigants is significant. The
continued filing of affidavits without leave has contributed materially to the protracted
nature of the proceedings, undermined procedural finality, and imp osed an ongoing
burden on the respondent banks to respond to a shifting and expanding case. This has
required repeated case-management interventions and delayed the determination of the
certification application.
[50] The explanation advanced for the non -compliance is not reasonable. Oversight,
pressure of work, and the absence of reminders do not account for the failure to comply
with two express court directives issued months apart. Nor does an asserted disparity in
resources justify non -compliance with court -imposed timelines designed to ensure
procedural discipline in complex litigation.
[51] The importance of the issues raised by the certification application is
acknowledged. Class actions may raise matters of constitutional and public significance.

19

However, the importance of the issues cannot, on its own, override persistent non -
compliance with procedural rules and court orders. Procedural fairness and the orderly
administration of justice apply equally in matters of public importance.
[52] Finally, and decisively, the application to admit further affidavits enjoys no
prospects of success. It is doomed to failure. The affidavits are either unnecessary in the
context of certification proceedings or impermissibly supplementary, were introduced at
an exceptionally late stage without a satisfactory explanation and would occasion material
prejudice to the banks.
[53] When these considerations are weighed cumulatively, the interests of justice do
not favour the granting of condonation.
[54] The banks requested that the Court clarify the procedural position going forward
and confirm that pleadings are now closed. In the circumstances of this matter, that
request is justified. The refusal of condonation and the dismissal of the application to
admit further affidavits bring to an end any basis upon which the applicants could seek to
supplement the evidentiary record. The founding, answering and replying affidavits have
long since been delivered, and no further affidavits may be filed without leave of the Court.
In the absence of such finality, the certification application would remain susceptible to
ongoing supplementation and delay, with the real risk that the proceedings could continue
indefinitely. Procedural finality is therefore required to ensure that the certification
application proceeds on a settled and properly constituted record.

20


Costs and the question of de bonis propriis
[55] The banks seek costs on a punitive scale and further seek an order that Mr
Douglas J Shaw be held personally liable for such costs de bonis propriis . Serious
allegations are made concerning his conduct of the litigation.
[56] An order of costs de bonis propriis is an extraordinary remedy. It carries a serious
censure and should not be made without affording the affected legal practitioner a proper
opportunity to be heard.
[57] In the present matter, the record raises substantial concerns regarding non -
compliance with the Rules, disregard of judicial directives, and conduct that has materially
delayed the proceedings. Whether this conduct justifies a personal costs order is a matter
that requires careful consideration.
[58] During the hearing, and in the interests of fairness, the issue of costs de bonis
propriis was stood down. Mr Shaw was directed to deliver written submissions, supported,
if so advised, by affidavit, on or before 26 January 2026, explaining why such an order
should not be made against him. The banks are thereafter afforded an opportunity to
respond.
[59] The question of costs, including the appropriate scale and whether any costs order
should be made de bonis propriis , is reserved for determination after receipt of those
submissions.
[60] In the result the following order is made:

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1. The application for condonation for non-compliance with the directives issued
by Vally J and by this Court is dismissed.
2. The application for the admission of further affidavits is dismissed.
3. The pleadings in the certification application are closed. No further affidavits
may be filed without the leave of this Court.
4. The question of costs, including the appropriate scale and whether any costs
order should be made de bonis propriis against Mr Douglas J Shaw, is
reserved.
5. Mr Douglas J Shaw is directed to deliver written submissions, supported, if so
advised, by affidavit, on or before 26 January 2026 , explaining why a costs
order de bonis propriis should not be made against him.
6. The respondents are granted leave to deliver written submissions in response
within ten days after service of Mr Shaw’s submissions.

_
L. WINDELL
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Delivered: This judgement was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected and is handed down electronically by circulation to the Parties/their legal

22

representatives by email and by uploading it to the electronic file of this matter on
CaseLines. The date for hand-down is deemed to be 20 January 2026.
APPEARANCES
Counsel for the Applicants: Mr D. Shaw
Instructed by: Mr Douglas J. Shaw
Counsel for the First Respondent: Mr T. Motau SC
Mr Ndumiso Luthuli
Counsel for the Second Respondent: Mr M. Salukazana
Instructed by: Webber Wentzel
Counsel for the Third Respondent: Mr A. Bham SC
Ms C. Kruyer
Instructed by: Glover Kannieappen Inc.
Counsel for the Fourth Respondent: Ms A. Hassim SC
Mr M. Mbikiwa
Instructed by: Edward Nathan Sonnenbergs Inc.
Date of hearing: 27 November 2025
Date of judgment: 20 January 2026