[16]
The bundle of records filed in the appeal shows that the defendant failed to enter appearance to defend
the action within the time prescribed therefor by the summons. Pursuant to the Rules, the plaintiff applied for, and obtained, a
default judgment on 9 August 2002. As I have recounted previously, on 14 August 2002, the plaintiff’s legal practitioners requested
the clerk of the magistrate’s court, Outjo, to issue a warrant of execution, and it was duly issued on 21 August 2002. The
warrant of execution was also served on the defendant on 29 August 2003: this time, too, it was delivered to Mr. Kamapunga. In his
confirmatory affidavit, Mr. Kamapunga states that he never received the return of service of the summons and the return of service
of the warrant of execution. Nobody said Mr. Kamapunga did; of course, he would not receive them because they are documents that
are filed with the court that issued them. In my considered view, Mr. Kamapunga’s confirmatory affidavit does not, therefore,
assist the case of the defendant in any way or at all: the affidavit is equivocatory and calculated to mislead. In the result, I
have come to the conclusion that the warrant of execution was also duly served on the defendant.
[17]
In the return of service of the warrant of execution, as I have said previously, the messenger of the
court remarks that when on 7 November 2003 he attempted to remove 30 heads of cattle from the farm to a place of safekeeping in execution
thereof, he was prevented from doing so by five adult persons. It was only on 19 November 2003 that the messenger of the court succeeded
in seizing, removing and laying under judicial attachment 13 heads of “mixed cattle” from the appellant’s farm.
[18]
In his heads of argument, counsel for the defendant sought to argue that the 13 heads of cattle that
were attached did not belong to the defendant, but that they belonged to the defendant’s relatives. I will quickly dispose
of this argument. The heads of cattle were attached on 19 November 2003, and they were not sold until on or about 4 December 2003.
By that time, the defendant in respect of this matter had already approached his counsel, Mr. Mbaeva. Mr. Dicks argued that there
had been no explanation why no proceedings were bought to protect the interests of these relatives, e.g. by interpleader application.
I agree with Mr. Dicks. In the result, I have no difficulty in finding that the 13 heads of cattle that were attached and sold in
execution of the default judgment belonged to the defendant.
[19]
It was at the belated date of 18 December 2003 that the defendant lodged an application for rescission
of the default judgment that was granted on 9 August 2002, and gave notice that the application would be heard on 30 January 2004.
[20]
The defendant avers that it was only on or about 12 November 2003 that he became aware of the default
judgment granted against him when he received a phone call from a “lady” residing on the farm that a messenger had gone
to the farm to collect 13 heads of cattle. This evidence is not credible: there is no confirmatory affidavit from this mysterious
“lady”, if, indeed, there is such a “lady”. It is, in any case, curious that all along, the defendant maintained
that he never received any process that was served on him through delivery to Mr. Kamapunga on the farm prior to the execution, but
suddenly when a messenger goes to the farm to execute the warrant, all of a sudden a “lady” appears to give information
to the defendant about the execution. More important, Mr. Kamapunga, to whom the summons and the warrant of execution were delivered
at the farm, does not explain in his confirmatory affidavit what he did with the summons and the warrant of execution. One thing
is undeniable; he does not dispute having received the summons and the warrant of execution.
[21]
Although the summons was served on the defendant on 20 May 2002, the plaintiff waited for about five
weeks to pass before his legal practitioners requested and obtained default judgment on 9 August 2002. That gave the defendant ample
time within which to respond to the summons, but he did nothing. Thereafter, it took more than at least one year for the warrant
of execution that was issued on 21 August 2002 to be served on the defendant; the first occasion was on 29 August 2003. Again, he
did nothing. Even thereafter, it was only when the defendant’s heads of cattle were attached on 19 November 2003 that the defendant
suddenly sprang into action.
[22]
I cannot help but conclude that the defendant’s belated action of applying for rescission of the
default judgment was not spontaneously inspired by an intention or a desire on his part to bring this matter to finality. He was
galvanized into spirited action by the judicial attachment of the 13 heads of cattle on his farm, and their removal therefrom.
[23]
Considering the cumulative effect of the facts set out above and the examination I have undertaken in
relation to the facts, the only conclusion that can properly be reached is that the defendant, with full knowledge of the summons
and the risks attendant on his default, freely took a decision to refrain from appearing. The defendant knew what he was doing and
intended to do just that, i.e. not to enter appearance to the summons. It is, therefore, my decision that the defendant was in wilful
default, and upon the authorities, “the matter should be finished.” A fortiori, “[O]ur Rule 49(7)…, in contrast to that (the rule) in South Africa … specifically prohibits relief when it is
shown that the default was wilful.”
[24]
Nonetheless, it behoves me to deal with the point raised by Mr. Mbaeva in his submission that the case
against the plaintiff was withdrawn, implying that he was not acquitted. In a sudden attempt to improve the defendant’s case,
counsel for the defendant submitted in this connection that the learned magistrate ought not to have found that the plaintiff had
proved malicious prosecution against the defendant because the case against the plaintiff was withdrawn; he was not acquitted. The
mention of the case having been withdrawn appears in the defendant’s supporting affidavit to his notice of motion filed on
18 December 2003 with the Outjo magistrate’s court and the plaintiff’s summons. There is not one iota of doubt that the
defendant did not make the statement about the case having been withdrawn to raise a defence that a case of malicious prosecution
could not have been made out. At any rate, he never presented any evidence to the Court to the effect that the prosecution of the
plaintiff did not end in the plaintiff’s favour.
[25]
If the defendant had raised such defence properly and at the right time and had put forward facts in
support thereof that the prosecution had not ended in the plaintiff’s favour when the learned magistrate granted judgment for
malicious prosecution, in my view such a defence would have afforded the defendant a triable defence. In that event it would have, therefore, sufficed to
make the court consider granting the relief of rescission of the default judgment. But, it must be remembered that the onus was on
the defendant to show that his application for rescission of the default judgment taken against him was bona fide and that he had a bona fide defence. It cannot be said that the defence that was suddenly sprang on both the Court and the plaintiff’s counsel during counsel’s
submission has ever been the case of the defendant. The conclusion is inescapable that the defendant has never intended to raise
such defence all along.
[26]
In the course of counsel for the defendant’s argument, I asked him to explain to the Court as to
what part of the defendant’s grounds of appeal this defence related. His answer was this dry riposte: “part of the bona fide defence.” He then referred me to s. 6 of the Criminal Procedure Act, 1977(CPA), which deals with the power to withdraw a charge or to stop prosecution, and it reads:
An attorney-general or any person conducting a prosecution at the instance of the State or any body conducting an prosecution under
section 8, may –
(a)
before an accused pleads to a charge, withdraw the charge, in which event the accused shall not be entitled to a verdict of acquittal
in respect of that charge.
(b)
at any time after he accused has pleaded, but before conviction, stop the prosecution in respect of that charge, in which event the
court trying the accused shall acquit the accused in respect of that charge: Provided that where a prosecution is conducted by a
person other than an attorney-general or a body or person referred to in section 8, the prosecution shall not be stopped unless the
attorney-general or any person authorized thereto by the attorney-general, whether in general or in any particular case, has consented
thereto.
[27]
But, as matters stand, the defendant did not place any evidence before the court a quo or this Court to show that the decision of the magistrate’s court (criminal) was based on subsection (a) and not subsection
(b) of s. 6 of the CPA, i.e. the criminal proceedings terminated before the plaintiff had pleaded to the charge, and not after he
had pleaded. As I have said ad nauseum, the defendant has never raised this defence in any of his papers in any clear, unambiguous terms, let alone setting out facts, which,
if proved, would constitute a good and bona fide defence. In the circumstances, I conclude that the defendant did not, either in the magistrate’s court or this Court, discharge
the onus cast upon him.
[28]
One final point: counsel for the defendant put up an argument that made me think that he was labouring
under the illusion that the Supreme Court’s decision in Pieter Johan Myburg v The State was applicable to the present matter. The decision in Myburg has no application to the matter before me. The reason being that in that case, the Supreme Court was interpreting the words “shall
be released” in art. 12 (1) (b), read with art. 12 (1) (a) and art. 5, of the Namibian Constitution, when it held that those
constitutional provisions read together do not “allow a magistrate court to order a permanent stay of prosecution prior to
pleading to the merits by an accused.”
[29]
I have already decided that the defendant was in wilful default within the meaning of rule 49(7) of the
Rules. I have also decided that the defendant has not presented any evidence to support his contention that the prosecution of the
plaintiff has not ended in the plaintiff’s favour and, therefore, the plaintiff’s claim for malicious prosecution could
not be maintained.
[30]
That being the case, the appeal is dismissed with costs.
__________________
Parker, A J
ON BEHALF OF THE APPELLANT
Mr. T. N. Mbaeva
(DEFENDANT)
Instructed by:
Murorua & Associates
ON BEHALF OF THE
RESPONDENT
Mr. G. Dicks
(PLAINTIFF)
Instructed by:
Engling Stritter & Partners
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