Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 838South Africa
Roseveare and Others v Simelane and Others (27833/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 838 (24 October 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
24 October 2022
Headnotes
in the 2nd to 4th respondents. The shares were valued by application of contractually agreed formula.
Judgment
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## Roseveare and Others v Simelane and Others (27833/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 838 (24 October 2022)
Roseveare and Others v Simelane and Others (27833/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 838 (24 October 2022)
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sino date 24 October 2022
IN THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
No. 27833/2021
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
REVISED:
24/10/2022
In
the matter between:
ROSEVEARE,
SHAUN
1
st
Applicant
ROSEVEARE,
SHAUN BRADLEY N.O.
2
nd
Applicant
ROSEVEARE,
RYAN EDGAR DENNIS N.O.
3
rd
Applicant
WHITTAKER,
CHRISTINE MARY N.O.
4
th
Applicant
MUNRO,
CRAIG
5
th
Applicant
SHAULIS,
STEVEN PATRICK
6
th
Applicant
NATIONAL
AIRWAYS CORPORATION (PTY) LTD
7
th
Applicant
and
SIMELANE,
DAVID NDABENHLE
1
st
Respondent
ULTIMATE
HELI (PTY) LIMITED
2
nd
Respondent
ULTIMATE
AIRWAYS (PTY) LIMITED
3
rd
Respondent
ULTIMATE
HELIPORT (PTY) LIMITED
4
th
Respondent
REASONS
MAHOMED
A
J
# INTRODUCTION
INTRODUCTION
1.
This matter was on my opposed roll. Miltz SC appeared for the
applicants and informed the court that a few minutes before the
matter was to commence, the first respondent’s attorneys
contacted his attorney and advised that the first respondent (“the
respondent”) intended to apply for a postponement. This is the
third postponement the first respondent seeks and the third
occasion
that he applies on the morning of the hearing of the matter. The
applicants seek an order for the first respondent to
deliver share
certificates, against a tender of payment for his shares in the 2
nd
to 4
th
respondents.
# BACKGROUND
BACKGROUND
2.
The parties
were directors and shareholders in the companies cited as the 2
nd
to 4
th
respondents. The applicants rely on the prejudicial conduct of the
1
st
respondent in terms of
s163
of the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
[1]
.
Therefore, a breach was established which triggered the “deemed
offers provisions” in their shareholder agreements
in the 2
nd
and 4
th
respondents. The applicants seek to purchase his shares therein.
Furthermore, the applicants cancelled the agreements in the 3
rd
respondent, having established that the first respondent breached a
confidentiality clause and accordingly cancelled this agreement.
The
applicants therefore seek to purchase all shares which the first
respondent held in the 2
nd
to 4
th
respondents. The shares were valued by application of contractually
agreed formula.
Miltz SC proffered that
on his reading of the answering affidavit, the valuation of the
shares is disputed. The first respondent
believes that his shares are
undervalued. The first respondent has not raised any dispute as to
the validity of the contractual
terms, he disputes only the valuation
of his shares in the 2
nd
to 4
th
respondents.
# THE APPLICATIONS
THE APPLICATIONS
## Striking of Defence
Striking of Defence
3.
The applicants applied to strike out the respondent’s defence
and for the matter to proceed by default.
4.
Miltz SC submitted that the respondent has on two previous occasions
adopted the same modus operandi, when he applied for postponements
on
the morning of the hearing of the matter and without any substantive
application. He informed the court that a few minutes before
court
commenced, the first respondent filed an application for postponement
and an application for condonation. He had not had
an opportunity to
peruse the papers at this late stage.
5.
The matter
was previously before Judge Maier Frawley on 18 August 2021
[2]
when the matter was postponed sine die and the first respondent was
ordered to, file his answering affidavit and apply for condonation
for the late filing of his papers by 2 September 2021. He was ordered
to pay the costs.
6.
On 17
November 2021 the matter was before Opperman J, who granted a
postponement and ordered,
[3]
that by 2 December 2021, he was to deliver an application for
condonation due to his late filing of his answering affidavit and
his
failure to comply with the earlier order of August 2021. He was
ordered to file his answering affidavit. The applicants were
to file
their heads and practise note, by 3 January 2022 and the respondent
was to file his heads of argument and practise note
10 days
thereafter. It was ordered that should he fail to file his heads of
argument and practise note, the applicants could apply
for a strike
out of the defence.
7.
Miltz SC submitted that the respondent failed to comply with the two
previous orders and counsel that as he addressed this court
no
practise note, or heads have been filed.
8.
Furthermore, the respondent has to date failed to pay the taxed bill
of costs in respect of the last two occasions in court.
9.
Counsel applied for the striking out of the defence and to proceed by
default.
10.
He submitted further that the answering papers do not comply with
Rule 6
as they are non-responsive to the issues and grounds raised by
the applicants and from the papers the respondent disputes the
valuation
of his shares only.
Counsel reminded the
court, that the respondent participated in discussions with the
applicants, long before this application was
launched on 14 June 2021
regarding the values.
10.1.
The financial statements of each of the entities were sent to him,
and he signed off on
them. He was invited to comment of the assessed
values but failed to engage with the applicants on the valuation.
10.2.
Moreover, the valuations have been assessed based on a formula which
is included in the
agreements between the parties. The respondent has
to date not submitted any of his own valuations nor has he raised a
counterapplication.
10.3.
The evidence is that in respect of the 2
nd
and 4
th
respondents the agreements provide time periods within which the
parties were to raise objections. The respondent has failed to
take
any of the opportunities available to him.
10.4.
He submitted that all the valuations and assessments in respect of
all the respondent
companies, were presented to the first respondent
and he has had sufficient time to consider and counter them.
11.
Miltz SC argued that although the application for postponement
alludes to a valuation made by an employee of Standard Bank who
prima
facie, assessed the shares at a higher value, there are no details as
to how this valuation was arrived at, when and what
he looked at to
determine the value. He submitted this cannot assist a court either,
in the assessment of a fair value.
12.
Counsel argued that whether contractually or based on
s163
of the
Companies Act, no proper
defence is raised. Miltz SC submitted a
postponement will not assist the respondent and it only serves to
delay the finalisation
of the matter.
13.
In response to the court’s inquiry on a mediated settlement
Miltz SC submitted the mediation would not achieve any resolution
the
applicants have on several occasions tried to discuss matters with
the respondent, who has elected not to take up the opportunities
afforded him.
14.
Counsel
argued further that the delay not only prejudices the applicants but
also prejudices
[4]
the 2
nd
to 4
th
respondents, which are corporate entities.
The first respondent has
failed to authorise the release of shareholder funding.
14.1.
He failed to establish a BEE entity which is to advance the
development of Black employees
14.2.
He unlawfully threatened to liquidate a company, and the like. He has
frustrated the progress
and operations of the other respondents as
well.
15.
Miltz SC, submitted that the only explanation that the respondent has
proffered all along is that he is unable to afford the
legal fees to
litigate the matter.
Counsel argued that the
respondent was legally represented by counsel on the two previous
occasions and must have placed his attorneys
in funds to do so, there
was no indication that his legal team were acting pro bono.
15.1.
Moreover, at his hearing at the CCMA he was represented by senior
counsel, which process
he eventually abandoned, and the matter was
dismissed.
16.
He offers no proof of his earnings and fails to provide the court
with any details as to his personal commitments.
17.
Counsel submitted that the court has only a narrow discretion in this
instance and that it is only when the respondent has purged
his
default of the order of court of 19 August 2021, can a court even
consider his arguments. He has failed to do so, even at this
stage
there are no heads filed, no practise note, or chronology filed.
18.
Miltz SC submitted that nowhere in the answering affidavit nor in his
counsel’s submissions, have the contractual terms
ever been
disputed.
19.
The method of assessment of share values employed was set out in the
contract and in respect of the third respondent the agreement
provided for restitution, however the first respondent paid nothing
for those shares. The applicants nevertheless adopted the same
assessment method as in the other shares and arrived at a figure of
R230 000 for those shares, which it has tendered.
20.
If there was a valid defence in respect of the calculation methods of
the share values, the respondent would be expected to
put an argument
that the method of assessment is against public policy and
unenforceable.
21.
Nothing was done. Miltz SC argued that the submissions made by
counsel for the respondent are not new, they were all known to
the
respondent at the time that the answering affidavit was filed. The
facts submitted by counsel are not complex to have required
the
expertise of “expensive” lawyers, but they are basic
facts that were well within his knowledge. He cannot rely
on poor
legal representation as an excuse. A litigant is to ensure that he
participates in a matter sufficiently to address the
substance of the
issues raised by his opponent.
22.
He has failed to exercise his rights and take up opportunities which
he was offered through the entire process of the valuations
and his
relationship with the respondent companies.
23.
The court was also advised that each time the matter is in court a
set down was served on the attorneys. The attorneys did nothing
either and chose to ignore the court orders. There is still no
explanation for a postponement in this matter, since the first
application.
24.
Advocate Saint appeared for the first respondent and argued that
striking off the defence would effectively deny the first respondent
his constitutional right to a hearing.
25.
Counsel conceded that the answering papers say little and argued
therefor that the first respondent has not had an opportunity
to
fully ventilate his case and his papers need to be supplemented.
26.
He submitted that since he had taken over the matter, it was the
first time that the first respondent was aware that the papers
needed
to be regularised.
27.
He proffered that he advised his attorneys that the respondent must
comply with the orders of court. Therefore, he has
now filed his
condonation application earlier this morning.
# POSTPONEMENT
POSTPONEMENT
28.
Advocate Saint submitted that the papers filed earlier this morning
are relevant and present a cogent argument for the first
respondent
to succeed in this application.
29.
He informed the court that the application for condonation was filed
earlier this morning, however it is not before this court.
This court
is to determine only the application for postponement.
30.
Mr Saint submitted that the applicants have not offered fair value
for the first respondent’s shares. They seek to strike
a
bargain when they offered him only R3.2 million for his shares in the
2
nd
respondent.
31.
He argued further that the applicants have treated his client poorly
and that they have fired him from two companies and seek
to do so in
respect of the third company as well.
32.
The respondent must be allowed to fully ventilate his case. He will
suffer grave injustice if he were not granted a postponement.
His
shares will be “irretrievably lost” to him.
33.
Mr Saint argued that the court should not close the doors on this
respondent as the matter will again be set down in due course
when
the applicants can set out their argument if they are prejudiced.
34.
He submitted the applicants suffer no prejudice since the first
respondent has left the business premises after he was fired
in 2019.
He does not interfere with the business operations in any way.
35.
The court must note that he has not received dividends for many years
and due to their poor treatment of him, and his dismissal
he has had
to find employment elsewhere where he now earns only R45 000 per
month, a fraction of what he earned when he was
a director and
shareholder in the respondent companies. He has had to support a
family and lives away from home.
36.
Counsel proffered that he could not inform the applicants any earlier
about the postponement application since the papers were
not ready
any earlier for service.
37.
Mr Saint informed the court that the first respondent tenders to pay
attorney client costs to compensate for any prejudice they
suffer if
the matter were postponed.
38.
The first respondent has had no opportunity to make any inputs into
the valuation of his shares. A representative from Standard
Bank has
provided only a prima facie assessment which is far more than what
the applicants assessed the share value. He must be
given an
opportunity to obtain a proper valuation of his shares and receive
fair value for them.
39.
The respondent companies are a state-of-the-art operation and the
most sophisticated on the continent. The whole concept was
his idea,
and he is the first Black chief pilot in the country.
40.
Counsel argued that the allegations made against the first respondent
were orchestrated to trigger the deemed offer for the
shares which he
held in the second and fourth respondents. The first respondent was
simply a “front” for the applicants.
41.
Counsel submitted further that there is a dispute of fact on noting
the accusations by the applicants about the respondent’s
conduct and attitude toward the companies as director.
42.
Counsel submitted that his client has not had the money to litigate
the matter at the same level as the applicants and denied
that he was
adopting delaying tactics, to frustrate the applicants. He argued
that the applicants were in fact using his monies
to litigate against
him.
43.
Advocate Saint argued the first respondent is lay person and could
not have known that he needed to regularise his papers and
the
applicants can argue their case once the papers are supplemented.
44.
In reply,
Miltz SC referred the court to the requirements for a postponement as
set out in
MYBURG
TRANSPORT v BOTHA t/a SA TRUCK BODIES
[5]
,
which
provides that the
application
for postponement must be made
timeously,
as soon as the circumstances which might justify such an application
become known to the applicant
.
45.
Counsel further submitted that the “application
must be bona
fide and not used simply as a tactical manoeuvre for the purpose of
obtaining an advantage to which the applicant is
not legitimately
entitled
.”
46.
The applicants
in casu
were awarded costs in the earlier
matters which have not been paid and the respondents tender of costs
for a third postponement
is meaningless and will not address the
issue of prejudice as mentioned in the Myburg Transport case.
47.
Counsel referred the court to the requirements for condonation where
“good cause must be shown.”
48.
Counsel submitted that the Court has a wide discretion, and it must
look at the merits of the matter and the application is
to be seen as
a whole and determine if there is indeed a defence in this instance.
49.
Counsel submitted that nowhere in the respondent’s papers or in
his counsel’s address has he disputed the contractual
terms
that regulate the relationship of the parties. The only defence
argued today is on the valuation of shares. What he thinks
subjectively is irrelevant.
50.
Miltz SC submitted that his client and the Court are still not
informed of the “real reason” for the postponement
and
the reasons why the orders by two previous courts were not complied
with.
51.
It was argued that the first respondent failed to furnish pay slips
to prove his income. He should provide full financial disclosure
as
in a R43 procedure. He holds a prominent position as a chief pilot,
he cannot be a pauper as he claims. Each time the matter
was in court
his legal team is in funds and they arrive with counsel. Even at the
CCMA, senior counsel represented him. One cannot
simply accept his
word.
52.
Counsel submitted that there is no case to allow a postponement or to
supplement his papers.
53.
Furthermore, there is no case that the valuation is wrong, therefore
there is less possibility of successfully defending the
valuation,
and therefore more difficult it will be to get the indulgence sought.
54.
Miltz SC submitted that both the applications fail to address the
non-compliance with two previous orders of court and the failure
to
file practise note and heads or argument as ordered.
55.
The papers before court do not address the points of substance, and
the applications are simply an abuse, there are no proper
explanations.
56.
Miltz SC persisted with the application to strike out, it must be
granted, and attorney client costs be awarded.
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
57.
I shall refer to the parties as they appear in the main application.
58.
An applicant for a postponement seeks an indulgence from the court. A
court will grant the postponement if it is in the interest
of
justice.
59.
In
McCARTHY
RETAIL LTD v SHORT DISTANCE CARRIERS CC,
[6]
Schultz JA, stated:
“
a party opposing
an application to postpone, and appeal has a procedural right that
the appeal should proceed on the appointed day.
It is also in the
public interest that there should be an end to litigation.
accordingly, in order for an applicant for a postponement
to succeed,
he must show “a good and strong reason” for the grant of
such relief.
…
the interests of
other litigants and the convenience of the Court are also important.
The record and heads have been read by five
Judges, variously months
or weeks before the appeal date. The fact that this case was placed
on the roll meant that another case
had to wait for the following
term and if a postponement is granted this consequence will extend
into succeeding terms.”
60.
Three judges of the High Court of the busiest division in the
country, have read the voluminous files in this matter. The first
respondent conceded that the file is large. This matter has taken up
three allocations in the past year, all occasioned by the
first
respondent’s failure/refusal to recognise the orders of this
court, which effectively places him in contempt.
61.
Ironically though, he appoints his legal team to ask this court for
an indulgence and to “
protect his constitutional rights to a
hearing.”
62.
The court is of the view that that respondent has only himself to
blame if he feels he has not had a hearing and not fully ventilated
his matter.
63.
The objective facts are, on the evidence set out above, the first
respondent has been indulged, over the past year by two previous
courts. He has been further indulged by this court, when his counsel
was permitted to address the court on his application for
postponement filed only a few minutes before the commencement of the
hearing of this matter and when this court was obliged to
stand the
matter down to read his papers.
64.
I agree with Miltz SC that the respondent has been afforded his right
to a hearing, when he was granted two postponements, he
was afforded
a two opportunities to apply for condonation wherein he could have
set out his prospects of success, when he was afforded
an opportunity
to file his answering affidavit, and when he failed to do so
timeously, the period to file was extended by the second
order of
Opperman J. He could also have exercised his right to a hearing when
if he filed his heads of argument (although not pleadings,
they could
have persuasive value) or even on filing of his practise note. He did
not take up his opportunities.
65.
This court is asked “not to close the door on him, he will
suffer irretrievable loss of his shares.” He has failed
to
assist himself when he could have.
66.
None of his
counsel’s submissions before this court are new. The facts have
been known to him since well before the application
was launched,
even the assessment of the value of his shares. It is logical that if
he disputed the assessed values, the must furnish
his own values,
notwithstanding that he was contractually bound to the method of
calculation and assessment of the shares. In SALOOJEE
AND ANOTHER NNO
v MINISTER OF COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT
[7]
,
Steyn CJ referred to the judgment in Regal v African Superslate (Pty)
Ltd
[8]
, where the court held
that.
“
the attorney’s
neglect should not, in the circumstances of the case, debar the
applicant, who was himself in no way to blame,
from relief.”
67.
Steyn CJ
further stated
[9]
, albeit, on
considering an application for condonation,
“
There is a
limit beyond which a litigant cannot escape the results of his
attorney’s lack of diligence, or the insufficiency
of the
explanation tendered. To hold otherwise might have disastrous effect
upon the observance of the Rules of this Court. Considerations
of ad
misericordiam should not be allowed to become an invitation to
laxity. …. the attorney after all is the representative
whom
the litigant has chosen for himself, and there is little reason why
in regard to condonation of a failure to comply with a
Rule of Court,
the litigant should be absolved from the normal consequences of such
a relationship, no matter what the circumstances
of the failure are.”
68.
He failed to take up the opportunities that were afforded him and a
valuation was alluded to only at this third application
for
postponement.
69.
In his answering papers he disputed the value of his shares. I agree
with Miltz SC, disputing the assessed value of the share
is not
enough, he must do more. He failed to present the court with any
reliable valuation and even at this late stage, counsel
proffered
that a proper evaluation “will be done in due course.’ It
is noteworthy that although he disputed the valuation,
he failed to
even raise a counterclaim. In my view this is a critical issue, as
the respondent is contractually bound to the method
of calculation.
70.
I am not persuaded that he has not been able to afford legal
services. He was represented on each of the occasions when
he applied
for postponements and it is not disputed that at his hearing before
the CCMA, senior counsel represented him. It is
noteworthy that
despite the legal costs, he failed to appear for this hearing before
that forum. Moreover, the first respondent
fails to file confirmatory
papers from persons who may have paid for his legal fees as he
alleged.
71.
In
TAKE
AND SAVE TRADING CC AND OTHERS v STANDARD BANK OF SA LTD
[10]
,
Harms JA, referred to tactics sometimes employed by litigants, for
example, when a party terminates a mandate deliberately so
that a
court is obliged to grant a postponement, and stated:
“
judicial officers
have a duty to the court system, their colleagues, the public and the
parties to ensure that this abuse is curbed
by in suitable cases
refusing a postponement.”
72.
A lack of funds defence could fall into this category. There was no
evidence before this court that the attorneys acted pro
bono. They
must have been placed in funds.
73.
I cannot find it is in the interest of justice that the matter be
further postponed, but that it be finalised.
74.
Having regard to the requirements set out in
MYBURG TRANSPORT
supra, the application for postponement was not timeously brought,
including on the last two occasions. On all three occasions
the
applications were brought on the morning of the hearing of the
matter. Notices of set down were served on his attorneys on
every
occasion.
75.
In my view the respondent does not have prospects of success
particularly, in that the claim is founded in contract and he does
not dispute the terms of that contract. A further postponement will
not assist the respondent.
76.
In casu both the applicants and the 2
nd
to 4
th
respondents are prejudiced by the long delay in this matter due to
the various postponements.
77.
An order for costs as compensation for the prejudice suffered, is of
no more in casu, the respondent has failed to pay a taxed
bill for
costs.
78.
Accordingly, the application for postponement must fail. The
application is refused.
79.
Miltz SC
proceeded on a default basis and submitted that the first
respondent’s shares were assessed according to the formula
agreed to in the shareholders agreements. He identified the portions
held as, 26% in the 2
nd
respondent, 33 1/3 % in 3
rd
respondent (in terms of a restitution clause, however first
respondent did not pay for any shares, these were calculated by the
same method as the other shares for a value of R290 000) and 26%
in the 4
th
respondent.
[11]
Counsel
directed the court to the purchase of the respondent’s shares
in terms of the deemed offer in clause 16.1
[12]
and the assessed values.
80.
The
applicants relied on several breaches to constitute prejudicial
conduct in terms of
s163
of the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
,
[13]
and submitted that the applicants need to be protected.
81.
The values of the shares in each of the 2
nd
to 4
th
respondents was confirmed to the court.
I
make the following order:
1. The first respondent’s
defence is struck.
2. The order as appears
at caselines 0001-9 is granted.
3. The first respondent
shall pay the costs of Senior Counsel on an attorney client scale.
MAHOMED
AJ
Acting
Judge of the High Court
This
judgment was prepared and authored by Acting Judge Mahomed. It is
handed down electronically by circulation to the parties
or their
legal 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 24 October 2022.
Date
of hearing:
5 September 2022
Date
of Judgment:
24
October 2022
Appearances
For
applicants:
Miltz SC
Instructed
by:
G Cohen
Email:
gcohenattorney@gmail.com
For
First Respondent:
Advocate F Saint
Instructed
by:
Mayet Vittee Inc
Email:
mmayet@mvattorneys.co,za
[1]
Caselines 02-29 paragraphs 44 following
[2]
Caselines 0001-1
[3]
Caselines 0001-3
[4]
Caselines 02-29 to 56
[5]
1991 (3) SA 310
(Nm SC) a5 314-15
[6]
2002 (3) SA 482
(SCA) AT 494-95 (Herbstein van Winsen Civil Practise
in the High Courts 5
th
ed p756 -757
[7]
1965 (2) SA 135
(A) at
[8]
1962 (3) SA 18
AD at p23
[9]
Saloojee supra at 141
[10]
2004 (4) SA 1
SCA
[11]
Caselines 02-20 following
[12]
Caselines 02-57
[13]
Caselines 02-29 following
sino noindex
make_database footer start
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