- Mark Newton's R779 075.40 loan claim against Teresa Klein was set aside because the summons was not properly served.
- The court ruled that serving papers at an Airbnb holiday property did not comply with the Uniform Rules governing service.
- The judgment reinforces that proper service of a summons is a fundamental safeguard in civil litigation.
Mark Newton's attempt to recover R779 075.40 from Teresa Klein under an alleged verbal loan agreement has failed after the High Court in the Western Cape found that the summons was improperly served at an Airbnb holiday property and that the particulars of claim were too vague to sustain the action.
The judgment serves as a reminder that compliance with the rules governing the service of court documents is not a technical formality but a fundamental requirement designed to ensure fairness in civil litigation.
Newton alleged that he advanced money to Klein under an oral credit agreement entered into in 2018. Following a formal demand for repayment in March 2025, he issued a summons seeking payment of R779 075.40 together with interest.
Summons served at holiday rental property
Rather than serving the summons personally on Klein or at her chosen address for legal service, the sheriff affixed it to the gate of a Camps Bay property owned by her.
Evidence before the court showed that the property had been operating as an Airbnb-style holiday rental since late 2023 and was neither Klein's residence nor her chosen domicilium citandi et executandi.
Newton's attorneys also emailed a copy of the summons to Schoeman Law Inc, the firm that had previously assisted Klein in responding to the letter of demand. However, the firm had not been authorised to accept service on her behalf.
Correspondence placed before the court showed that Newton's attorneys acknowledged the email did not constitute formal service and described it as a courtesy extended because the prescription was approaching.
Court rejects effective service argument
Newton argued that Klein had ultimately become aware of the proceedings, entered an appearance to defend the action and therefore suffered no prejudice. The court disagreed
It held that Rule 4 of the Uniform Rules prescribes mandatory procedures for serving court process on natural persons and that actual knowledge of litigation does not automatically cure defective service.
The judge found that permitting litigants to ignore those requirements simply because a defendant later became aware of proceedings would undermine the purpose of the rules and the fairness they are intended to protect.
The court also found that concerns about the impending prescription of the claim could not justify non-compliance with the Uniform Rules.
Pleadings also found defective
The court identified a second fundamental defect in Newton's case. Although he relied on an alleged verbal loan agreement, the particulars of the claim failed to set out essential terms of the agreement with sufficient clarity.
The summons did not identify the individual advances allegedly made between August 2018 and August 2019, explain how repayment was to occur, specify when repayment became due or adequately plead how Klein had allegedly breached the agreement.
The judge found that these omissions left Klein unable to plead meaningfully to the case and rendered the particulars of the claim vague and embarrassing.
Condonation granted
Klein also sought condonation for filing her Rule 30 application outside the prescribed time periods. The court accepted that she only became fully aware of the procedural defects after consulting her legal representatives and held that she acted reasonably once those irregularities had been identified.
The judge concluded that the defective service and inadequate pleadings each constituted irregular steps warranting the setting aside of the action.
Each party pays own costs
Despite Klein's success, the court declined to make a costs order in either party's favour. The judge observed that there appeared to be a genuine dispute concerning the alleged debt, but criticised Newton for delaying enforcement of his claim before attempting to prevent prescription through defective service.
At the same time, the court noted there was little evidence that Klein had made meaningful efforts to settle the alleged indebtedness.
The court granted condonation for the late filing of Klein's Rule 30 application, set aside Newton's summons and particulars of claim in their entirety as an irregular step and ordered each party to pay its own costs.
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