Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 373South Africa
Smith and Others v Georgio and Others (93417/2019) [2025] ZAGPPHC 373 (25 April 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
25 April 2025
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Smith and Others v Georgio and Others (93417/2019) [2025] ZAGPPHC 373 (25 April 2025)
Smith and Others v Georgio and Others (93417/2019) [2025] ZAGPPHC 373 (25 April 2025)
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
Number:
93417/2019
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
DATE: 25 April 2025
SIGNATURE:
JANSE VAN
NIEUWENHUIZEN J
In
the matter between:
HENRY
ARDEN SMITH
First
Applicant
ANDRE
HANEKOM
Second
Applicant
CHRISTOFFEL
STEYN HOFFMANN
Third Applicant
DOREEN
BYRAM ABAN VAN DER
BERG
Fourth Applicant
ADRIAAN
DE KLERK STEYN
Fifth
Applicant
JUDITH
ANNE HUTCHINGS
Sixth
Applicant
JACOB
ELIZABETH
STRAUSS
Seventh Applicant
THERESA
ALICE HODGETTS
Eight
Applicant
ELIZABETH
CARYL
HENRICO
Ninth Applicant
NICOLE
GURTSCHMANN
Tenth Applicant
ESTHER
MARIE
ROUSSEAU
Eleventh Applicant
CHRISTINA
JACOBA HELENA LAUBSCHER
Twelfth Applicant
and
NICOLAS
GEORGIO
First
Respondent
MICHAEL
GEORGIO
Second Respondent
GEORGE
NICOLAS
GEORGIOUS
Third Respondent
JOHANNES
FREDERICK KLOPPER N.O.
Fourth
Respondent
JOHANNES
FREDERICK KLOPPER
Fifth
Respondent
CORNELIUS
FOURIE MYBURGH
Sixth
Respondent
PANOGIOTIS
KLEOVOULOU
Seventh
Respondent
ZEPHAN
PROPERTIES (PTY) LTD
Eight
Respondent
ORTHOTOUCH
LIMITED
Ninth
Respondent
ORTHOTOUCH
(PTY) LIMITED
Tenth
Respondent
NICOLAS
GEORGIOU N.O
Eleventh
Respondent
MAUREEN
LYNETTE GEORGIOU N.O.
Twelfth
Respondent
JUDGMENT
JANSE
VAN NIEUWENHUIZEN J:
Introduction
[1]
This judgment is in respect of two applications that was served
before me on 6 March 2025. I will
deal with the applicants
accordingly.
AD: Applicants’
application for postponement
[2]
The respondents did not oppose the application for a postponement of
the matter. The third respondent
does, however, oppose the terms of
the postponement. Prayer 2 contains the relief opposed by the
third respondent, namely:
“
2.
That
the hearing of the matter be
postponed, alternatively stayed, pending the final adjudication of
the so-called setting aside application
in respect of the Scheme of
Arrangement in respect of Orthotouch Ltd (case number 42332/14 in the
Gauteng Division of the High
Court) and in respect of which judgment
has been reserved by the honourable Mrs Justic Mali on 14 November
2024.”
[3]
In order to adjudicate the relief claimed in prayer 2
,
it is
apposite to have regard to the litigation history between the
parties. The applicants were shareholders in the fifteenth to
twenty-second respondents collectively referred to as the Highveld
Companies. The companies were placed under business rescue and
the
fourth respondent was appointed as business rescue practitioner in
2011.
[4]
In terms of the business rescue plan Orthotouch Ltd (“Orthotouch”)
would take transfer
of and grow the property portfolio of the
Highveld Companies. Orthotouch could not fulfil its obligations in
terms of the business
rescue plan, which in turn led to a Scheme of
Arrangement being entered into between Orthotouch and the investors.
According to
the applicants the Scheme was adopted by a small
minority of investors and entailed that investors would receive less
income and
virtually no security for their investments.
[5]
The Scheme of Arrangement was sanctioned by the Gauteng Local
Division (Johannesburg High Court)
on 25 November 2014. Some
investors, including the applicants, were opposed to the Scheme and
during March 2015 a certain Jurie
Johannes Geldenhuys together with
seven other investors launched an application for the rescission of
the order in the Johannesburg
High Court.
[6]
Some four years later and on or about 12 December 2019 the applicants
launched this application
to obtain
inter alia
leave to
institute a derivative action on behalf of the Highveld Companies
against Orthotouch and certain individuals involved in
the affairs of
Orthotouch.
[7]
The respondents oppose the relief claimed by the applicants on
inter
alia
the ground that the existence of the Scheme of Arrangement
precludes the applicants from obtaining the relief sought herein.
[8]
The outcome of the rescission application in the Johannesburg High
Court, therefore, has a direct
implication on the relief claimed by
the applicants herein. For various reasons that are not
relevant for present purposes,
the rescission application was only
heard during November 2024. The application served before Mali J and
judgment was reserved
on 14 November 2024. At the time of the hearing
of this application, judgment had not been handed down.
[9]
In the result and according to the applicants, it will not be in the
interest of justice to proceed
with this application whilst the
judgment in the rescission of the Scheme of Arrangement application
is pending.
[10] In
opposition to the relief claimed in prayer 2 of the notice of motion,
the third respondent points out
that should the relief be granted,
the application will most probably not be heard for another two to
three years, thus nine years
or more after the application was
launched.
[11]
The third respondent, furthermore, points out that;
11.1 he
is not a party to the rescission application;
11.2
the rescission application was launched by persons other than those
who feature as the applicants herein;
11.3 there is
not a substantial or any overlap between the issues in the rescission
application and those in this application;
11.4
should the unsuccessful party appeal the order in the rescission
application, the appeal will in all probability
only be heard in the
Full Court in 2027, a further appeal to the Supreme Court of Appeal
will only be heard in 2029 and a final
appeal to the Constitutional
Court in 2031. Such a scenario will constitute an instance of justice
being denied
11.5
the applicants make serious unsubstantiated allegations of fraudulent
conduct against him and his inability
to address these serious
allegations has caused and continues to cause enormous emotion stress
and frustration.
[12]
Although the applicants only apply for a stay of proceedings in the
alternative, the reasons provided for
the relief fall squarely within
the realm of an application for the stay proceedings and I will
proceed to adjudicate the matter
accordingly.
[13] In
Mokone v Tassos Properties CC and Another
2017 (5) SA 456
(CC), the court confirmed that a stay of proceedings may be granted
in terms of the powers bestowed on the court to regulate its
own
proceedings as envisaged in section 173 of the Constitution. The
court might exercise this power if it in the interests of
justice to
do so.
[14] In
casu
the issue to be determined in the Johannesburg High
Court, to wit the validity of the Scheme of Arrangement forms the
subject matter
of one of the grounds of defence raised by the
respondents in this application. In circumstances where the
Johannesburg High Court
is in the process of pronouncing on the
issue, it will in my view be in the interests of justice to stay the
proceedings herein
until the issue has been finally determined.
[15]
The rehearing of the issue will take up valuable court time and might
result in different findings on the
same issue. This will
self-evidently not be in the interests of justice. I am mindful that
an order staying these proceedings is
prejudicial to the third
respondent’s right to have the dispute determined speedily. The
interests of justice in
casu
¸ however, outweighs the
prejudice that the third respondent will suffer if the order is
granted.
Costs
[16] By
agreement between the applicants and the remaining respondents, the
costs of the application will be costs
in the main application. The
applicants have, however, sought costs against any of the respondent
that opposes the relief claimed
herein. In view of the history of the
matter and the fact that the applicants seek an indulgence, I am not
prepared to saddle the
third respondent with a cost order. The matter
has been dragging on for five years due to no fault on the part of
the third respondent.
The third respondent was, in my view, well
within his right to insist on the speedy resolution of the matter. In
the result, costs
will be costs in the main application.
ORDER
[17] In
the result, I grant the following order:
1.
The application is postponed until the final
adjudication of the application under case number 42332/14 in the
Gauteng Local Division
of the High Court of South Africa.
2.
Costs is costs in the cause.
AD: Second and Third
respondents’ rule 41(1)(c) applications
[18] On
17 November 2022, the applicants launched an application in this
court for the transfer of the review
application from the
Johannesburg High Court. This court does not have jurisdiction to
entertain a matter pending in the Johannesburg
High Court and having
been made aware of the jurisdictional obstacle, the applicants issued
a further transfer application in the
Johannesburg High Court in
December 2022. Notwithstanding the aforesaid, the application
in this court was only withdrawn
on 15 June 2023 at the insistence of
the respondents. The applicants did not tender costs in the notice of
withdrawal.
[19] In
the result, the second and third respondents, each launched an
application in terms of the provisions
of rule 41(1)(c) of the
Uniform rules court for an order for costs. The applicants opposed
the application and submitted that they
should not saddled with a
cost order.
[20] In
considering the appropriate cost order, if any, it is apposite to
have regard to the test applicable to
costs orders in withdrawal
applications. The test was succinctly summarised by
Boruchowitz J
in
ABSA Bank and Others v Robb
2013 (3) SA 619
(GSJ),
namely:
‘
[8] It is trite
that a party who withdraws an action or application or who abandons a
defence is in the same position as an unsuccessful
litigant, and
therefore the other party is ordinarily entitled to costs. A
departure from the principle, that costs must be awarded
to the party
which has been put to the expense of defending withdrawn proceedings,
is only warranted in exceptional circumstances.”
[20] In
opposing the second and third respondents’ respective
applications for a cost order, the applicants
advanced the following
main reasons in support of their contention that a cost order should
not be granted against them;
20.1
the application was issued on the strength of two directives, one by
Weiner J in the Johannesburg High Court
and one by the Deputy Judge
President, Ledwaba J in this division. Both directives stated,
according to the applicants, that the
applicants need to apply for a
transfer of the review application in this court;
20.2
the re-issuing of the transfer application in the Johannesburg High
Court involved the use of the same founding
affidavit than the
affidavit filed in the abortive transfer application in this
division;
20.3
the applicants are effectively representative or notional applicants,
representing the investors in class
action type litigation and a cost
order against them personally would probably scupper not only the
review application, but also
the class action claims of the
investors;
[21]
The question then arises whether any of the grounds advanced on
behalf of the applicants constitute “
exceptional
circumstances”.
In respect of the first ground, directives
issued during the case management of a matter do not exempt a party
from complying with
the provisions of the Superior Courts Act. Any
notion to the contrary is ill-conceived and opportunistic to say the
least.
[22]
Secondly, the fact that the same founding affidavit was used in the
Johannesburg High Court transfer application
is of no relevance when
a cost order in an application issued in this division is considered.
This ground is similarly devoid of
any merit.
[23]
Lastly, the applicants point out that they represent 18 300
investors who do not have the means to litigate
in their personal
capacities. Any cost order made at this stage will in essence deprive
the applicants from any chance to recover
their hard-earned money
that they in good faith invested in the Highveld Companies. Although
I have sympathy for the unfortunate
fate that has befallen the
applicants, the launching of ill-fated applications cannot be
countenanced by the court.
[24]
Furthermore, the mere fact that the applicants are not in a position
to finance the litigation is in itself
not a bar against the issuing
a cost order against them. [See:
Affordable Medicines Trust and
Others v Minister of Health and Others
[2005] ZACC 3
;
2006 (3) SA 247
CC at para
139 and
Biowatch Trust v Registrar, Genetic Resources and Others
2009 (6) SA 232
(CC) at para 18.] As such, this ground of
opposition does not constitute exceptional circumstances insofar as a
cost order in terms
of rule 41(1)(c) is concerned.
[25] In
the result, the second and third respondents is entitled to their
respective cost orders. I do not deem
the applicants’ conduct
as deserving of a punitive cost order.
ORDER
The following order is
granted:
1.
The applicants are ordered to pay the second
respondent’s costs in the Urgent application for removal dated
17 November 2022,
jointly and severally, the one paying the other to
be absolved, such costs to include the costs consequent upon the
employment
of two counsel.
2.
The applicants are ordered to pay the third
respondent’s costs in the Urgent application for removal dated
17 November 2022,
jointly and severally, the one paying the other to
be absolved.
3.
Costs of counsel on scale B.
N. JANSE VAN
NIEUWENHUIZEN
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
DATE
HEARD:
6 March 2025
DATE
DELIVERED:
25
April 2025
APPEARANCES
Counsel
for the Applicants:
Adv
Maree
Instructed
by:
Theron
& Partners
Counsel
for the Second Respondent:
Adv
Cilliers SC
Adv
Groenewald
Instructed
by:
Fluxmans
Attorneys
Counsel
for Third Respondent;
Adv
Eloff SC
Instructed
by:
MHI
Attorneys
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