Namibia Tourism Board v Mundial Telecom Sarl (120 of 2017) [2018] NAHCMD 198 (2 July 2018)


“ANNEXURE 11”


IN THE HIGH COURT OF NAMIBIA


Case Title:

Namibia Tourism Board vs Mundial Telecom Sarl

Case No:

HC-MD-CIV-ACT-CON-2016/02888

INT-HC-OTH-2017/00120


Division of Court:

High Court

Heard before:

Honourable Justice Herman Oosthuizen

Date of hearing:

18 September 2017

11 May 2018

Delivered on:

2 July 2018

Neutral citation: Namibia Tourism Board v Mundial Telecom Sarl (HC-MD-CIV-ACT-CON-2016/02888 [2018] NAMCMD 198 (2 July 2018)


Result on merits:

Partially successful.

The order:


Having heard Mr Kangueehi, counsel for the plaintiff, and Ms Campbell, counsel for the first and second defendants, and having read the documents filed of record:


IT IS ORDERED THAT:

1. The Namibian High Court does not have jurisdiction over the second defendant's person and did not have such jurisdiction at the commencement of the action.


2. Plaintiff's application for the dismissal of the first defendant's defence fails.


3. First defendant is barred from pleading, and its plea which was filed without this court's condonation, was irregular and to be ignored.


4. Each party to bear its own costs.

Reasons for orders:


1 Article 80(2) of the Namibian Constitution addresses the High Court's jurisdiction over causes of action.


2. This said article has territorial operation and does not operate or have effect outside the Namibian national borders in the sense advanced by the plaintiff.


3. The adagium of Van Niekerk, J in Namibia Bunker Services (Pty) Ltd v ETS Katanga Futur and Another 2015(2) NR 461 (HC) at 472 D, is confirmed. If an incola wishes to sue a peregrini to enforce a claim sounding in money, that incola is still required to attach property of the peregrinus to confirm jurisdiction even if the High Court has jurisdiction over the cause of action.


4. The above position in law is not unconstitutional.


5. First defendant was obliged to seek condonation for its noncompliance with this court's order of 9 May 2017 as soon as it became clear that it would not meet the deadline. It fails to do so and was only spurred into action by plaintiffs' application to dismiss its defense and further failed to launch an application for condonation at all.


6 First and second defendants inexplicable failure to apprise plaintiff since 2016 until they were spurred into action by plaintiff's application for dismissal, of their alleged intention to raise the jurisdictional points, while actively participating in endeavours to mediate (if they were at all serious) and compromising through a joint case plan and status reports, deprive both of them from possible costs orders in their favour.


Judge’s signature:

Note to the parties:



Counsel:

Plaintiff(s)

Defendant (s)

K Kangueehi

of Kangueehi & Kavendjii Inc., Windhoek

P Erasmus

of Erasmus & Associates, Windhoek


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