Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 7South Africa
Tiador 119 CC and Others v Nedbank Limited and Others (000011/2025) [2025] ZAGPPHC 7 (13 January 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
13 January 2025
Headnotes
by Tiador be suspended pending the
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Tiador 119 CC and Others v Nedbank Limited and Others (000011/2025) [2025] ZAGPPHC 7 (13 January 2025)
Tiador 119 CC and Others v Nedbank Limited and Others (000011/2025) [2025] ZAGPPHC 7 (13 January 2025)
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sino date 13 January 2025
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO:
000011/2025
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
DATE
13 JANUARY 2025
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
TIADOR
119 CC
1
st
Applicant
HERMANUS
JOHANNES ROODT N.O.
(In
his capacity as trustee of THE RED HOT TRUST)
2
nd
Applicant
LYNNETTE
ROODT N.O.
(In
her capacity as trustee of THE RED HOT
TRUST)
3
rd
Applicant
DAVID
NEWMAN N.O.
(In
his capacity as trustee of THE RED HOT
TRUST)
4
th
Applicant
and
NEDBANK
LIMITED
1st Respondent
KURT
ROBERT
KNOOP
2
nd
Respondent
DALLIE
VAN DER MERWE
3
rd
Respondent
ABSA
BANK
LIMITED
4
th
Respondent
ANDREW
JOHNSTON
5
th
Respondent
MIKE
VAN DER
VEEN
6
th
Respondent
MASTER
OF THE MAKHANDA HIGH COURT
7
th
Respondent
CIPC
SOUTH
AFRICA
8
th
Respondent
CHARALAMBOS
CHRISTODOULOU
9
th
Respondent
SHOPRITE
HOLDINGS LIMITED
10
th
Respondent
JUDGMENT
Order:
1.
The application is struck from the role due to lack of
urgency.
2.
The applicant is ordered to pay the costs of the respondents
on an attorney and client scale.
TOLMAY
J
Introduction
1.
The applicant brought this application on
an urgent basis. The
application was so called
ex parte
, but no less than ten
respondents were cited. There was no service on any of the
respondents, according to the heads of argument
filed by the second
to fifth respondents they became aware of the application when the
attorneys got sight of the urgent court
roll for the week of 6
January. They apparently informed the ninth respondent, who was also
represented at the hearing. The founding
affidavit did not explain
why the application was not served on the respondents, the applicants
seem to be under the mistaken belief
that service on the respondents
was not required.
2.
The applicants seek in Part A for an order
that the settlement that
was made an order of court in the matter of
Lot 38 Bizana
Properties cc v Tiador 119 CC (IN LIQUIDATION) & Others
under
case number 2278/2022 in the Eastern Cape Division Makhanda,
pertaining to the lease held by Tiador be suspended pending the
determination of the validity of the liquidation orders. At this
point the applicant also requires certain documents to be provided
to
it by the respondents. In Part B the applicant seeks an order
declaring the liquidation orders, previously referred to, to be
declared invalid, or alternatively that no liquidation order was
granted. It also asks that that the status quo ante of the first
applicant and Silver Falls Trading 178 CC be restored.
3.
At this point I will only determine the question
of urgency, but it
must be noted that it is, to put it lightly, doubtful that this court
has jurisdiction to entertain the matter.
The order that the
applicants are seeking to suspend is an order of another division of
the High Court, and the documents the applicants
seek to obtain
relate to that order. Part B of the application requires of this
Court to declare the order of another Division
to be a nullity. On
what legal basis this Court can do it is still a mystery to me. Then
there is the question of locus standi,
in light of the liquidation of
the first applicant, this fact raises the question if the applicants
have locus standi to bring
this application. The matter stood down
for me to deliver a ruling on urgency, without obtaining permission
of the Court or informing
their opponents an affidavit by the
deponent Mr Roodt, a letter by an auditor and the CIPC (Companies and
Intellectual Property
Commission) document was uploaded. The
affidavit and letter questioned the authenticity and correctness of
the CIPC document. If
the applicants seek to persist with this
application the court hearing the matter will have to determine these
questions. It must
also be noted that Lot 38 Bizana Properties Ltd,
the applicant in the liquidation proceedings and a party to the
settlement was
not joined in the proceedings before me.
4.
As far as urgency is concerned the following
is relevant. The
applicant says the matter is urgent, because the Applicants only
became aware of the contents of the agreement
between the liquidators
and Lot 38 Bizana on 14 November 2024 in which it was agreed
that Tiador 119 CC will continue collecting
rent from Checkers
Holdings based on the lease the first applicant has with the previous
owner of the property, until 28 February
2025, after which date the
first applicant’s rights to any rental in respect of the
property shall be permanently terminated.
The alleged nullity of the
liquidation order, which was used to put the First Applicant in
liquidation was only confirmed to the
Applicants, on their
version, from a reputable source, at the latest 21 November 2024. If
the matter was to be heard in the
normal scope a date would only be
obtained after the settlement agreement stripping the First Applicant
of its last income generating
assets. This, the applicant says will
amount to irreparable harm, considering that the alleged
forged/fraudulent nature of the
Court order allow the liquidators to
exercise powers they do not have. There is clear prejudice, the
applicant says, which is serious
of nature, which prejudice cannot be
cured by some other remedy. The interim order the applicants say will
not affect the respondents
save for those who now benefit from the
asset(s) and income of the First Applicant.
5.
The respondents say the matter is not urgent
inter alia as the
resolution to bring the urgent application was signed and dated 12
and 13 August. The applicants on their
own version became aware
of the settlement on 14 November 2024, the founding affidavit was
signed and commissioned on 6 December
2024. Despite all of the above
the application was only issued on 2 January 2025 on an extremely
urgent basis to be heard on 7
January 2025. No explanation was
provided the way the application was brought. The respondents say
this is clearly an abuse of
process that justifies not only a
striking from the roll due to lack of urgency, but also justifies a
punitive costs order.
6.
The law regarding urgent applications is trite.
One should only
deviate from the procedures as far as is strictly necessary. In this
instance the applicants were aware of the
settlement and its
consequences at the very latest on 24 November 2024, despite that the
application was only launched on 2 January
2025. During argument, the
court inquired why this time lapsed. The extraordinary response was
that the court was “in deep
recess”. This astonishing
claim is mind baffling as the urgent court in this division sits
every single day of every single
week of every year around the clock.
The applicants took a leisurely approach and enrolled the matter at
their convenience with
an absolute disregard for the time honoured
principles in relation to urgent applications. No proper case was
made out for urgency.
The way this application was brought is a clear
abuse of the court and its processes If any urgency exists it was
self-created.
The
following order is made:
3.
The application is struck from the role due to lack of urgency.
4.
The applicant is ordered to pay the costs of the respondents on an
attorney and client scale.
R
TOLMAY
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Appearances:
For Applicant:
Adv H P Van Staden
instructed by Riekie Erasmus Attorneys.
For 2
nd
– 5
th
Respondent:
Adv J Eastes
instructed by Schoerie & Sewgoolam Inc (2
nd
&
3
rd
Respondents) and Cassim Inc Attorneys (4
th
& 5
th
Respondents)
For 9
th
Respondent:
Adv A R Whitaker
instructed by Mason Incorporated.
Date of Hearing:
7 January 2025
Date of Judgment:
10 January 2025
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