Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 290South Africa
Siyandasabelo Trading (Pty) Ltd v Rivermeadow Manor (Pty) Ltd and Others (Ex Tempore) (021361/2025) [2025] ZAGPPHC 290 (26 February 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
26 February 2025
Headnotes
Summary: -Applicant seek condonation, non-compliance with the normal Rules of Court with regard to service, form and time -periods as contemplated in Rule 6(12). Uniform Rule 6(12) -Matter is urgent if applicant will not be able to obtain “substantial redress at a hearing in due course” without at least some urgent relief- Applicants should set forth explicitly the reasons why the matter should be treated urgent. -Application is struck-off for lack of urgency.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Siyandasabelo Trading (Pty) Ltd v Rivermeadow Manor (Pty) Ltd and Others (Ex Tempore) (021361/2025) [2025] ZAGPPHC 290 (26 February 2025)
Siyandasabelo Trading (Pty) Ltd v Rivermeadow Manor (Pty) Ltd and Others (Ex Tempore) (021361/2025) [2025] ZAGPPHC 290 (26 February 2025)
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sino date 26 February 2025
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA)
Case No.
021361/2025
1. REPORTABLE: NO
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
3.
REVISED: NO
SIGNATURE:
DATE:
14 March 2025
In
the ex-parte application; -
SIYANDASABELO
TRADING (PTY) LTD
First Applicant
and
RIVERMEADOW
MANOR (PTY) LTD
First
Respondent
RMM
PROPERTIES (PTY) LTD
Second Respondent
RHONA
ELIZABETH TOPKA
Third Respondent
UDO
PAUL TOPKA
Fourth Respondent
WE
BUY CARS
Fifth Respondent
LOUIS
ESTERHUIZEN
Sixth Respondent
2
Summary:
-Applicant seek condonation, non-compliance with the normal Rules of
Court with regard to service, form and time -periods
as contemplated
in Rule 6(12). Uniform Rule 6(12) -Matter is urgent if
applicant will not be able to obtain “substantial
redress at a
hearing in due course” without at least some urgent relief-
Applicants should set forth explicitly the reasons
why the matter
should be treated urgent. -Application is struck-off for lack of
urgency.
JUDGMENT-
EX
TEMPORE
YENDE
AJ
[1]
This is an application in terms of the Uniform Rule 6 (12) brought
before this court on urgency basis.
[2]
As part of the introduction, I deem it fit to refer to the Practice
Directive that was uploaded on caselines and circulated
to all
parties who had matters that appeared before this court on urgency
basis.
Paragraph
(3) thereof states that “An allocation by acting Justice Yende
does not automatically mean that the matter is considered
sufficiently urgent to hear on merits. Submissions will indeed need
to be made regarding the ground of urgency.
(See Luna Muebel
Vervaardigers and Moyane v Ramaphosa and others in this regard)
.
Those case pertinent cases on the issues of urgency and what
needs to be pleaded on the issue of urgency.
[2.1]
On paragraph 6.1, as per the court’s directive, I have also
highlighted firstly: “
To set matters down which are not
really ripe for hearing, not urgent, in which case there is
self-created urgency, is frowned by
this court and it is not
permitted”.
3
[2.2]
Secondly, I mention that: “Urgent
Court is not intended to
hear complex factual and/or legal issues set out over lengthy
hundreds of pages which take a long time
to consider and finalize as
this tends to clog up an extremely busy urgent court and prevents the
deserving on urgent basis
”.
[2.3]
I further on mention that “
These complex or long matters are
to be removed from the roll and the parties are advised to seek an
allocation from the Deputy
Judge President in a special court on a
future date
”.
[3]
Now, I turn to the matter before court. I listened to both counsel
for the applicant as well as the counsel for the respondents.
It is
this court’s strong view that matters that are urgent should
comply with urgency, rule 6(12). It is very much important
for one to
consider that urgent court is solely preserved for those matters that
are deservedly urgent and not those matters where
urgency is
self-created, self -orientated or perceived to be urgent.
[4]
Although, it was submitted by counsel for the applicant that there is
imminent harm to be suffered by the applicant if the order
is not
granted in their favour. This application involves two motor vehicles
that were part of the sale that took place in 2019.
[5]
What struck the court and causes concern is the fact that if theses
vehicle were indeed part of the business transaction, and
upon taking
ownership of the business and when the applicant became aware of the
fact that these vehicles were not delivered and/
transferred to the
applicant. The applicant should have sought recourse there and then,
not to wait for almost six years wherein
to start legal action to
recover those vehicles if indeed they belonged to the business.
[6]
The truncated timeframes under which this matter took place, under
which this application is premised, makes the court to consider
making findings against the applicant in so far as the urgency is
concerned.
4
[7]
Having considered the submissions made by the counsel for the
applicant
per se,
not
even looking at the submissions made by the counsel for the
respondents, the urgency in this matter has been self -created.
The
urgency averred in the applicant’s case is not urgency as
envisaged in rule 6(12).
[8]
In summary, the requirements for an urgent application in general
are;
(a) the applicant has to
set out explicitly the circumstances which renders the matter
urgent
with full and proper particularity;
(b) reasons must be
stated why he/she (believes that he/she cannot get substantial
redress at a hearing in
due course;
(c)
where final relief is sought the court must even be more circumspect
to determine
whether urgency has
been established;
(d)
the urgency must not be self- created; it should never be a
subjective perceived urgency;
(e)
respondent’s prejudice as a result of abridgement of prescribed
time limits and an
early hearing is also
relevant;
(f)
More immediate reaction by the applicant by instituting
litigation points favourably
to urgency
[1]
.
[9]
Was there any urgent litigation instituted by the
applicant in these proceedings since 2019 when he took over the
business after the alleged inventory which was given to IDC raise and
/or approve funding for the business, the answer is in the
negative.
5
[10]
There was no delivery of those vehicles and yet the applicant failed
to take any legal action to recover those vehicles. For
almost six
years there is nowhere on papers where the applicant avers that he
has been trying to get hold of the respondent and/
or that the
respondent had fled the country, thus he could not pursue the
respondents. Even if the respondent had fled the country
and hidden
those vehicles, the court were open for the applicant to seek
recourse on urgent basis.
[11] It is this court’s
view that this matter is not deserving of urgency and as such it is
struck off from the roll and the
costs should follow suit.
[12] Counsel for the
respondents argued that the costs should be on attorney and client C
scale. I have reconsidered that in light
of the peculiar
circumstances of this matter, the court is still unsure as to why did
the applicant took so long to seek relief
from the court months after
he took ownership of the business.
[13] As the
consequence, the court is the satisfied that the applicant in this
matter has failed to convince the court
that he has overcome the
threshold prescribed in Rule 6(12) and I am of the firm view that the
application ought to be struck off
from the roll for lack of urgency.
[14] This application
therefore falls to be struck from the roll and I hereby make the
following order.
6
Order
[1] The applicants’
urgent application is struck off from the roll for lack of urgency.
[2] The applicant is to
pay the respondents cost on party and party scale.
J
YENDE
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
This
judgment was prepared by
YENDE AJ.
It is handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties/their legal
representatives by e-mail and uploaded on Caselines
electronic
platform and by publication of the judgment to the South African
Legal Information Institute. The date for hand-down
is deemed
26
February 2025.
Appearances:
Advocate(s) for
Applicant:
F Letoaba
Appearing with:
L Makhoba
Instructed by:
Msiza & Co.
Attorneys
C/O
Pantsi
Madiba Attorneys
Advocate(s) for
Respondent(s):
C Georgiades
Instructed by:
HMK Naidoo
Attorneys
C/O
Muthray and
Associates INC
Heard:
26 February 2025
Delivered:
26 February 2025
[1]
Association of Mineworkers and Construction Union and Others v
Northam Platinum and another [ 2016]37 ILJ 2840 (LC) at para 20-26,
and the authorities cited in it; Select PPE (Pty) Ltd v Ryan Holmes
and Universal Safety Products (Pty) Ltd, unreported judgment,
Labour
Court, Case No 115703-2024.
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