Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 176South Africa
Thamani Mobile (Pty) Ltd v F Casey and Associates (Pty) Ltd and Others (145565/2024) [2025] ZAGPPHC 176 (26 February 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
26 February 2025
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Thamani Mobile (Pty) Ltd v F Casey and Associates (Pty) Ltd and Others (145565/2024) [2025] ZAGPPHC 176 (26 February 2025)
Thamani Mobile (Pty) Ltd v F Casey and Associates (Pty) Ltd and Others (145565/2024) [2025] ZAGPPHC 176 (26 February 2025)
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sino date 26 February 2025
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Case No. 145565 / 2024
(1)
REPORTABLE:
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
(3)
REVISED:
YES
DATE 26 February 2025
SIGNATURE
In the matter
between:
THAMANI MOBILE (PTY)
LTD
APPLICANT
and
F CASEY &
ASSOCIATES (PTY) LTD
FIRST RESPONDENT
DATA WALLET (PTY)
LTD
SECOND RESPONDENT
SULIWARE (PTY)
LTD
THIRD
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
NEUKIRCHER, J
[1]
This application was set down in the urgent
court of 18 February 2025. Although I am of the view that the
application is not urgent,
it is appropriate that another court not
be burdened with its adjudication at a later date as, in my view, the
application falls
to be dismissed for the reasons set out herein.
[2]
The main relief sought by the applicant
(Thamani) is the following:
a)
that the first respondent (Casey) be
ordered to make payment of all amounts collected from the City of
Tshwane (CoT) and City of
Ekurhuleni within 24 hours of this order,
in accordance with Schedule A;
b)
that Casey be ordered to process new
contracts concluded between the applicant and individual employees
and collect the payments
from the payroll and pay over to the
applicant;
c)
attorney and client costs.
[3]
When
Thamani launched this application on 10 December 2024
[1]
,
it gave Casey 24 hours to file an answering affidavit, so pressing
was the alleged urgency.
[4]
However, it failed to join two essential
parties to the application: they are Data Wallet (Pty) Ltd and
Suliware (Pty) Ltd (collectively
called NuMobile). NuMobile has a
direct interest in the outcome of this application by virtue of a
successful application launched
by it against Thamani under case no
090086/24 – I will deal with this in due course.
[5]
NuMobile
sought leave to intervene in this application which was successful,
and on 17 December 2024 Basson J granted them leave
to intervene in
the main application
[2]
and file an answering affidavit. These affidavits are dated 12
January 2025. The replying affidavit is dated 28 January 2025. The
Notice of Set Down on the Urgent Court Roll of 18 February 2025, is
dated 5 February 2025.
[6]
Thus, by the time the application was
enrolled, some two months had passed since its launch and any
possible urgency had dissipated.
[7]
In my view, this application was launched
to steal the march on the relief granted to NuMobile by Teffo J on 25
October 2024 and
the pending action proceeding instituted
subsequently by NuMobile. She granted an interim interdict against
Thamani pending finalisation
of an action to be instituted within 30
days. Thamani filed an application for leave to appeal that order –
it is set down
for hearing in May 2025. A section 18(3) application
by NuMobile was heard by Labuschagne AJ. He:
a)
found that the interdict granted by Teffo
J, although interim in nature, was final in effect. He found that the
application for
leave to appeal therefore suspended the order in
terms of s18(1) of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013 (the Act);
b)
refused NuMobile’s application in
terms of s18(3) of the Act.
[8]
Thus, at date of hearing of this
application, the order of Teffo J is suspended pending the outcome of
the appeal procedures prescribed
in the Act and Uniform Rules (the
Rules).
[9]
The result of this, argues Thamani, is that
there is no operative order, the status quo ante of the parties is
restored and there
is no bar to the court granting the relief sought.
Given the facts of both applications and the pending action, the
submission
is astounding.
Background
[10]
Until
April 2022 Thamani ran a business whereby it provided smartphone
contracts to employees of employers in the public sector
eg
municipalities who are represented by the South African Municipal
Workers’ Union (SAMWU).
[3]
[11]
NuMobile provides the same service but to
employees in the private sector.
[12]
Both
Thamani and NuMobile supply hardware (mobile phones, laptops and
tablets) as well as airtime and data contracts
[4]
,
to the employees at competitive rates (ie cheaper than at the retail
cost).
[13]
Employees sign a smartphone contract which
includes authorisation for a deduction to be processed by each
employer from the employee’s
monthly salary. These contracts
generally run for 24 months and are renewed when the contract
expires.
[14]
The salary deductions are collated by the
employers and paid over to a collection agency – in this case
Casey – who
then pays the funds over to either Thamani or
NuMobile (ie the service providers) as the case may be.
[15]
Thamani ran its business with the approval
of SAMWU who assisted in the facilitation of the deals for their
public sector employees.
In fact, Casey states that it operates upon
the authorisation of SAMWU.
[16]
During
2021, Thamani’s director (Mashele) approached NuMobile for
assistance as it was experiencing cash flow constraints.
In April
2022 Thamani sold its assets and ceded its contracts to Data
Wallet
[5]
.
Thamani then became essentially dormant.
[6]
[17]
Mashele was then employed by Data Wallet
and was paid a salary until his resignation in July 2024. His job was
to sell contracts
to the public sector users and manage the
relationship Thamani had built up with them. Mashele was the “face”
of the
business and NuMobile alleges that he had the business
relationship with SAMWU and Casey. None of this is contentious.
[18]
It
is also common cause that, until July 2024, payments from Casey were
made to Data Wallet each month
[7]
in respect of not only the contracts ceded to NuWallet by Thamani in
April 2022, but the renewed contracts that Thamani’s
original
customers had with NuWallet upon expiry of the 24-month contract with
Thamani.
[19]
The undisputed facts are that, once Casey
pays over the monies received from the employers, NuWallet then pays
MTN and Vodacom as
well as the suppliers of the hardware (ie the
cellphones, laptops and tablets).
[20]
There is no dispute that the arrangement
between Thamani and NuMobile ran smoothly until July 2024 when
Mashele resigned from Data
Wallets’s employ and went back to
running Thamani (which had been dormant for over two years). He
alleges that Data Mobile
failed to comply with their written
agreement but this is disputed by Data Wallet. The actual dispute is
not relevant to the adjudication
of this application and therefore
nothing more need be said in respect thereof.
[21]
Suffice
it to say that the present issue arose during July 2024 when Mashele
issued an unauthorised written instruction
[8]
to Casey to change the bank details for payment of the monthly salary
deductions from Data Wallet to Thamani. Casey complied with
this
instruction.
[22]
As soon as NuMobile realised what had
happened it launched the urgent application under case number
090086/2024 that was heard by
Teffo J on 28 August 2024.
[23]
The order granted on 24 October 2024 by
Teffo J reads as follows:
“
2.
That this order hereby serves as an interim order with immediate
effect pending the finalisation of an action
to be instituted within
30 days from the date of granting this order.
3.
That the first and second respondents
hereby, jointly and severally, be prohibited from interfering with
the applicants’ business
activities in any manner whatsoever,
including but not limited to:
1.1
Be prohibited from giving any instruction
to the third or fourth respondent or any other client of the
applicants to change, vary
or amend the applicants’ banking
particulars;
1.2
Be prohibited from diverting and/or
misappropriating any funds payable to the applicants from the
following clients:
1.2.1
Ekurhuleni Municipality;
1.2.2
Tshwane Municipality;
1.2.3
Mogale City Municipality;
1.2.4
City of Johannesburg COJ Core –
SAMWU;
1.2.5
Johannesburg Water – SAMWU;
1.2.6
Emfuleni Municipality;
1.2.7
Rand West Municipality – RWC; and
1.2.8
Sefako Makgatho Science University
(MEDUNSA).
1.3
Be prohibited from holding out or
representing that the first and/or second respondents are the
applicants or the applicants’
duly authorised representatives;
1.4
Be prohibited from representing to the
applicants’ clients including but not limited to those
mentioned in this order, that
the applicants’ business is that
of the first and second respondents;
1.5
Be prohibited to induce, procure or solicit
payments from the applicants’ clients, including but not
limited to those listed
in this order, to make payment payable to the
applicants to the first and/or second respondents.
4.
That the third and fourth respondents is
hereby prohibited from making any payments to the first and/or second
respondents or their
nominees for payments received from the
applicants’ clients listed in this order.
6.
That the third respondent be hereby
prohibited from taking accepting or implementing any instruction
received from the first and/or
second respondents or their nominees,
relating to the collection of the funds due and payable to the
applicants in respect of the
clients listed in this order.
7.
The first, second and third respondents are
hereby ordered to pay the cost of this application, jointly and
severally, the one paying
the other to be absolved including the
costs of two counsel where so employed on Scale C.”
[24]
NuWallet argues that, given that the
entirety of the dispute was before Teffo J, and given the relief
sought by Thamani in this
application, it would have been appropriate
for Thamani to have launched a counter-application – it did
not.
[25]
Thamani was also aware at the launch of
this application that Casey was caught squarely in the middle of the
dispute between it
and NuMobile, and yet it chose not to join
NuMobile to this application.
[26]
Lastly, given the correspondence that
flowed between the parties as at date of this application Thamani was
well aware of the disputes.
[27]
On 19 November 2024 and under case number
134581/2024 NuWallet launched the directed action against Thamani:
Mashele and Casey are
second and third defendants respectively in
that action. Amongst the relief sought is that:
a)
Thamani and Mashele be prohibited from
interfering with NuWallet’s business activities including that
they be prohibited from
diverting / misappropriating funds payable to
NuWallet by, inter alia, Ekurhuleni and Tshwane Municipalities;
b)
they pay to NuWallet an amount of
R5 022 962-87 in respect of the months of July, August,
September and October 2024 which
were not paid to plaintiff; and
c)
damages in the amount of R4 million.
[28]
This is important as in the application in
casu, Thamani seeks an order directing Casey to pay to it an amount
of R3 178 699-40
that Casey collected from CoT and
Ekurhuleni for the months of October and November 2024.
[29]
Given that both the application before
Teffo J and the action deal with this very issue it is, in my view,
clear that to grant the
relief pre-empts the decision on issues that
are in dispute and fall to be decided in the instituted action: ie
the liability of
these parties towards each other, the causa for that
liability, whether the April 2022 contract was validly terminated,
whether
Thamani is entitled to payment and, if so, in what amount.
[30]
In my view:
a)
Thamani waited two months to finalise this
application in circumstances where the original grounds of urgency
were that it will
be unable to obtain substantial redress in due
course; and
b)
that “the continued recalcitrance of
Casey…. means utter ruin of the applicant’s business.”
[31]
But,
as stated, Thamani has dragged its heels for two months. Added to
this is the common cause fact that Thamani was dormant until
July
2024 and that the change of banking details was made by Mashele
without NuWallet’s knowledge or consent. Furthermore,
there is
both an application and an action pending before this court between
the same parties, and based on the same facts and
the same cause of
action. Thus, the dispute is already before court. NuWallet’s
point of lis pendens
[9]
must be upheld.
[32]
Given this, the application is both not
urgent and stillborn.
Costs
[33]
In my view, given all the above, this
application should be dismissed with costs to be taxed in accordance
with Scale C given the
complexity of the issues.
Order
1.
The application is dismissed.
2.
The applicant is ordered to pay the costs
of the first, second and third respondents to be taxed in accordance
with Scale C.
B NEUKIRCHER
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
This judgment was
prepared and authored by the judge whose name is reflected, and is
handed down electronically by circulation to
the parties/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 26 February 2025
For
the applicant
:
Adv
Prinsloo
Instructed
by
:
Friedland
Hart Solomon & Nicholson
For
the first respondent :
Adv
Pendani
For
the second and third
respondent
:
Mr
Sachs
Instructed
by
:
Bagraim
Sachs Inc. Attorneys
Matter
heard on
:
19
February 2025
Judgment
date
:
26
February 2025
[1]
And set it down for hearing on 17 December 2024.
[2]
As second and third respondents
[3]
Who Thamani has also failed to join in these proceedings
[4]
From MTN and Vodacom
[5]
Second Respondent
[6]
Which was conceded in argument.
[7]
Per paragraphs 13 to 15 supra
[8]
Ie without NuWallet’s knowledge/consent
[9]
Nestle
(South Africa) (Pty) Ltd v Mars Inc
2001 (4) SA 542
(SCA) par 16
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