Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 1013South Africa
TFM Customising Centre (PTY) Ltd v Firstrand Bank Ltd t/a First National Band and Another (048154/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 1013 (15 December 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
15 December 2022
Headnotes
in Durban. On the 15th of November 2022 the High Court in Durban granted an order in favour of the respondent regarding the Durban business. However, the applicant has taken this order on appeal. [5] It is trite that the purpose for the reconsideration of an order under Rule 6(12) (c) is to provide an aggrieved party with a mechanism to redress the injustices and oppression resulting from the granting of an urgent order in the absence of that party. It is further settled that an applicant in ex parte applications bears a duty of utmost good faith in disclosing all material facts within his knowledge which may influence the Court in making its decision.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## TFM Customising Centre (PTY) Ltd v Firstrand Bank Ltd t/a First National Band and Another (048154/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 1013 (15 December 2022)
TFM Customising Centre (PTY) Ltd v Firstrand Bank Ltd t/a First National Band and Another (048154/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 1013 (15 December 2022)
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sino date 15 December 2022
SAFLII
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Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
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Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 048154/2022
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
15
th
December 2022
In
the matter between:
TFM
CUSTOMISING CENTRE (PTY) LTD
APPLICANT
And
FIRSTRAND
BANK LTD t/a FIRST
NATIONAL
BAND
FIRST RESPONDENT
SPECIALIZED
VEHICLE MANUFACTURERS
(PTY)
LTD
SECOND RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name
is reflected and is handed down electronically by circulation to
Parties / their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on Case Lines. The date
of the
judgment is deemed to be the 15
th
of December 2022
TWALA
J
[1]
On the 24
th
of November 2022 the applicant came before
Court on urgent basis with an ex parte application seeking and was
granted a provisional
order pending litigation, against the first
respondent to retain and not pay out or alienate in any way (and put
a hold on) any
and all funds received in the bank account of the
second respondent with account number [....], to the maximum amount
of R4 518 318.66
plus any interest earned on the said
amount.
[2]
The order provided further that, should there be insufficient funds
in the above account at the
time of service of the order on the first
respondent to put a hold on the sum of R4 518 318.66 plus
interest earned,
the first respondent is ordered to put a hold on all
funds remaining in the account and, in addition to provide the
applicant with
a full statement of all amounts paid from the account
with particulars of the payees (including account numbers) of any of
such
amounts. The order is effective from the date it is issued
provided the proceedings are instituted against the second respondent
within thirty (30) days of this order until the finalization of such
proceedings with the costs to be costs in the action to be
instituted.
[3]
In anticipation and reconsideration of the order of the 24
th
November 2022, the second respondent has approached this Court on
urgent basis. It is convenient to refer to the parties as they
are
referred to in the main application, the applicant as the applicant
and the second respondent as the respondent.
[4]
The genesis of this case is the agreement of purchase and sale of
businesses that was concluded
between the applicant and the
respondent on the 31
st
of August 2022. The applicant sold
its businesses operated from Durban and East London as a going
concern to the respondent for
the sum of R5 million. The respondent
effectively took control of the business from the 1
st
of
September 2022. A dispute arose between the parties which culminated
in an application for a spoliation order brought by the
respondent in
the High Court Local Division KwaZulu –Natal held in Durban. On
the 15
th
of November 2022 the High Court in Durban granted
an order in favour of the respondent regarding the Durban business.
However,
the applicant has taken this order on appeal.
[5]
It is trite that the purpose for the reconsideration of an order
under Rule 6(12) (c) is to provide
an aggrieved party with a
mechanism to redress the injustices and oppression resulting from the
granting of an urgent order in
the absence of that party. It is
further settled that an applicant in ex parte applications bears a
duty of utmost good faith in
disclosing all material facts within his
knowledge which may influence the Court in making its decision.
[6]
In
Schlesinger v Schlesinger
1979 (4) SA 342
(W)
the Court
quoted a paragraph from the work of Herbstein and Van Winsen on ‘The
Civil Practice of the Superior Courts in South
Africa 2
nd
Edition to the following effect:
“
Although, on
the one hand, the petitioner is entitled to embody in his petition
only sufficient allegations to establish his right,
he must, on the
other, make full disclosure of all material facts, which might affect
the granting or otherwise of an ex parte
order.The utmost good faith
must be observed by litigants making ex parte applications in placing
material facts before the court;
so much so that if an order has been
made upon an ex parte application and it appears that material facts
have been kept back,
whether wilfully and mala fide or negligently,
which might have influenced the decision of the court whether to make
an order or
not, the court has a discretion to set the order aside
with costs on the ground of non-disclosure. It should, however, be
noted
that the court has a discretion and it is not compelled, even
if the non-disclosure was material, to dismiss the application or
to
set aside the proceedings.”
[7]
The same principle was adopted by the Constitutional Court per Langa
CJ in
Thint (Pty) Ltd v National Director of Public Prosecutions
and Others; Zuma and Another v NDPP and Others
[2009] (1) SA 1
(CC)
the Constitutional Court per Langa CJ stated the following:
“
Paragraph
102: It is our law that an applicant in ex
parte applications bears a duty of utmost good faith
in placing all
the relevant material facts before the court. The duty of good faith
requires a disclosure of all material facts
within the applicant’s
knowledge. The Supreme Court of Appeal reiterated in Powell that an
applicant for a search warrant
is ‘under a duty to be
ultra-scrupulous in disclosing any material facts that might
inference the Court in coming to its
decision.’ However, an
investigator cannot be expected to disclose facts of which he or she
is not aware. The duty is also
limited to the disclosure of facts
that are material. In a complex and vast case such as the present,
there can be no crystal-clear
distinction between facts which are
material and those which are not. There will always be room for
debate. In follows that, in
cases such as the present, an applicant
for a search and seizure warrant will inevitably have to make a
judgment as to which facts
might influence the judicial officer in
reaching its decision and which, although connected to the
application, are not sufficiently
relevant to justify inclusion. The
test of materiality should not be set at a level that renders it
practically impossible for
the state to comply with its duty of
disclosure, or that will result in applications so large that they
might swamp ex parte judges.”
[8]
Before this Court the respondent contended that, when approaching the
court on ex parte basis,
the applicant has failed to disclose to the
Court that as a consequent of the agreement of purchase of the
business as a going
concern concluded between the parties the
respondent was entitled to the control of the applicant’s
customers account including
the funds deposited in the account.
Furthermore, there was no reason, so the argument went, for the
applicant to approach the Court
ex parte for it knew before the 10
th
of November 2022 when it filed its answering affidavit to the
spoliation application in the Durban High Court that a sum of about
R4.5 million had been transferred from its bank account to that of
the respondent and had no fear of the respondent dissipating
those
funds.
[9]
The applicant submitted that the memorandum of agreement was void ab
initio for it did not have
the essentials of the sale of business
agreement and therefore no rights arose from it nor were transferred
to the respondent.
Moreover, even if it is accepted to be a valid
agreement, so it was contended, the memorandum of agreement was
cancelled on the
26
th
of October 2022. The respondent was
not entitled to the money deposited in the account of the applicant
nor was it entitled to
transfer the money into its own account.
Furthermore, there was no cause for the respondent to transfer this
money into its account.
It was pure theft or fraud or negligence on
the part of the respondent.
[10]
It is apposite at this stage to restate the clause of the Memorandum
of Agreement that is relevant
to these proceedings which provides as
follows:
“
1.
Interpretation and Definitions
1.2.9 Implementation
Date – means earlier of –
1.2.9.1
the date in which the Sale of Business Agreement is implemented; or
1.2.9.2
if the sale of business is not implemented, the Signature Date.
[11]
I do not understand the applicant to be disputing that a memorandum
of agreement was concluded
between the parties which agreement placed
the respondent in control of the Durban business of the applicant
from the 1
st
of September 2022. The applicant is
challenging the validity of the agreement and this issue was not
placed before the Court hearing
the ex parte application.
Furthermore, the applicant contends that the agreement was cancelled
on the 26
th
of October 2022. But that does not mean that
the respondent did not take control of the business and more
specifically the Durban
business effectively from the 1
st
of September 2022 because of the agreement concluded between the
parties on the 31
st
of August 2022. The applicant failed
to disclose this fact to the Court hearing the ex parte application.
I therefore hold the
view that the respondent was entitled to receive
and dispense these moneys as it was in charge and control of the
business.
[12]
It should be recalled that the transactions which caused discomfort
to the applicant occurred
more than a month before the launch of
these proceedings. The applicant was fully aware of the transfer of
the R4.5 million by
the 10
th
of November 2022 when it
filed its answering affidavit in the spoliation application and still
did not disclose this fact to the
Court. Instead, the applicant
stated that the money was stolen from its account or was fraudulently
or negligently transferred
by the respondent and that it was going to
lay criminal charges against the perpetrators thereof. The applicant
went on to misstate
the facts and misled the Court in stating as a
fact that nothing has changed during the negotiations and after the
signing of the
agreement when in actual fact there was significant
change in the management and running of the Durban business in that
the respondent
took control and paid salaries of its staff and other
business expenses including creditors from its own account.
[13]
Furthermore, it should be recalled that the applicant was prevented
from wrestling control of
the Durban business premises from the
respondent by refusing it access to the premises when the High Court
in Durban granted the
spoliation order on the 15
th
of
November 2022. Three days later, on the 18
th
of November
2022 the applicant sought and was granted an ex parte order without
disclosing all these material facts to enable the
Court to decide
whether to grant the ex parte order or not. This clearly demonstrates
the extent to which the applicant is prepared
to go to frustrate the
respondent. The unavoidable conclusion is that the applicant has
failed to place material facts which are
known to it and which would
have influenced the Court hearing the ex parte application in making
a decision. This failure demonstrates
the mala fides on the part of
the applicant and is fatal to its application.
[14]
In the circumstances, the following order is made:
1.
The ex parte order granted by the above Honourable Court on 18
November 2022
under the above case number, is hereby reconsidered and
set aside.
2.
The first respondent is directed not to retain and not to refuse to
pay out or
to prevent the alienation in any way of any and all funds
received in the bank account of the second respondent with account
number[….]
, and to release the funds from attachment.
3.
The applicant is to pay the costs of this application.
TWALA
M L
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION
Date
of Hearing:
29
th
November 2022
Date
of Judgment:
15
th
December 2022
For
the Applicant:
Advocate R Raubenheimer
With Advocate WR Du
Preez
Instructed
by:
Goodes & Co Attorneys
Tel: 011 656 1452
george@goodesco.co.za
For
the Second
Respondent:
Advocate M Desai
With Advocate R
Peterson
Instructed
by:
Andraos & Hatchett Inc
Tel: 072 9454 182
jarryd@ahlaw.co.za
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