Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 454South Africa
Tabraz Enterprises (Pty) Limited t/a Copper Chimney v Kitty Naicker Property Holdings CC t/a Waterfall Centre (2024/013591) [2025] ZAGPPHC 454 (5 May 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
5 May 2025
Headnotes
accountable. This consideration is amplified by the fact that the applicant is litigating with money belonging to the concursus (and which currently vests in the Master as aforesaid). B. MAIN RELIEF [6] The applicant’s main relief is a rescission based on the provisions of Uniform Rule 42(1)(a). Rule 42(1)(a) reads as follows:
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Tabraz Enterprises (Pty) Limited t/a Copper Chimney v Kitty Naicker Property Holdings CC t/a Waterfall Centre (2024/013591) [2025] ZAGPPHC 454 (5 May 2025)
Tabraz Enterprises (Pty) Limited t/a Copper Chimney v Kitty Naicker Property Holdings CC t/a Waterfall Centre (2024/013591) [2025] ZAGPPHC 454 (5 May 2025)
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sino date 5 May 2025
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO: 2024/013591
(1)
REPORTABLE:
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
(3)
REVISED:
NO
(4)
Date: 05 May 2025
Signature:
In
the matter between:
TABRAZ
ENTERPRISES (PTY) LIMITED T/A COPPER CHIMNEY
Applicant
[Registration
Number: 2015/366142/07]
And
KITTY
NAICKER PROPERTY HOLDINGS CC T/A WATERFALL
Respondent
CENTRE
[Registration
Number: 1998/010558/32]
JUDGMENT
NYATHI
J
A.
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This is an urgent application for the rescission of a provisional
liquidation
order granted on 3 February 2025, alternatively, for the
suspension of the said order pending its return date.
[2]
The application is opposed both on the basis of urgency and on the
merits.
[3]
The applicant contends that the matter is urgent because there is a
pending
action before the Randburg Magistrate between the same
parties over the payment of fees. The respondent has approached the
court
prematurely before the Magistrate’s court makes a
determination on the indebtedness of the applicant or otherwise.
[4]
Furthermore, if the applicant were to wait for the return date, it
would be
tantamount to acquiescence to the granting of the
provisional liquidation order and render its eventual withdrawal
academic in
nature.
[5]
In opposition to the application, Mr. Van Schalkwyk submitted that:
5.1
The respondent does not take
issue with urgency. The submission is made based on the lack of merit
in both the main relief as well
as the alternative relief.
5.2
That the rescission cannot
succeed. The applicant's reliance on Rue 42 of the Uniform Rules of
Court is misplaced.
5.3
the alternative relief can
also not succeed for the following reasons:
5.3.1
First, the applicant does
not have the requisite locus standi.
5.3.2
Second, the applicant has
not cited the Master. The property of the applicant vests in the
Master until such time as a provisional
liquidator is appointed.
5.3.3
Third, even if it is found
that the applicant has the requisite
locus
standi
and that the
applicant has joined the relevant and necessary parties (and given
notice to the relevant parties), the applicant
has no right to seek
the relief it seeks.
5.3.4
Fourth, the applicant has
not satisfied the requirements for interim relief.
5.4
It is submitted that the
applicant has launched a hopeless case. In circumstances where a
hopeless case is pursued, the legal practitioners
ought to be held
accountable. This consideration is amplified by the fact that the
applicant is litigating with money belonging
to the concursus (and
which currently vests in the Master as aforesaid).
B.
MAIN RELIEF
[6]
The applicant’s main relief is a rescission based on the
provisions of
Uniform Rule 42(1)(a). Rule 42(1)(a) reads as follows:
“
42 Variation
and rescission of orders
(1) The court may, in
addition to any other powers it may have, mero motu or upon
the application of any party affected,
rescind or vary:
(a) An
order or judgment
erroneously sought or erroneously granted
in the absence of any party affected thereby;”
[emphasis added]
[7]
For the
applicant to become entitled to the relief it seeks, it must
therefore prove that (a) an order was granted in its absence
and (b)
an error was committed by the court. In this regard the
Constitutional Court decision of
Zuma
v Secretary of the Judicial Commission of Inquiry into Allegations of
State Capture, Corruption and Fraud in the Public Sector
Including
Organs of State
[1]
is instructive on the meaning of the
absence
requirement:
The
words
"granted in the absence of any party affected thereby",
as they exist in rule 42(1)(a), exist
to protect litigants
whose presence was precluded, not those whose absence was elected.
Those words do not create a ground of rescission
for litigants who,
afforded procedurally regular judicial process, opt to be absent.
[8]
In the
instant case, the applicant was aware that the matter had been set
down for 3 February 2025. Moreover, the applicant's legal
representatives had the contact details of the respondent's legal
representatives and could easily have made contact with Madam
Justice
Khumalo's secretary.
[2]
[9]
Additionally, the applicant failed to file heads of argument and
chose not to
participate further in the matter.
[10]
Quite importantly, the applicant’s defence was considered
before the order was granted.
[11]
As regards the second requirement, it was submitted that the
applicant’s entire defence was premised
on the allegation that
its legal representatives had limited/restricted access to the
Caselines filing system. This has been substantively
denied by the
respondent.
[12]
In Bakoven Ltd v GJ Howes (Pty) Ltd
1992 (2) SA 466
(E)
,
Justice Erasmus held at 371E-F that:
"An
order or judgment is 'erroneously granted"
when the
Court commits an 'error' in the sense of a 'mistake in a matter of
law (or fact) appearing on the proceedings of a Court
of record'
(The Shorter Oxford Dictionary). It follows that a Court in deciding
whether a judgment was 'erroneously granted' is, like a Court
of
appeal, confined to the record of proceedings."
[13]
On the facts of this matter, the applicant has not made out a case
for the main relief sought.
C.
ALTERNATIVE RELIEF
Locus
standi
[14]
It is the respondent’s contention that the applicant does not
have the requisite
locus standi
to seek the alternative
relief.
[15]
Upon a winding-up order being granted against a company, whether
provisional or final, a director's
duties cease to exist, save for
special residuary powers. The residual powers are limited and
include (a) the right to anticipate
a provisional order in terms of
Section 11(3) of the Insolvency Act, 24 of 1936, (b) the right to
appeal and the right to launch
a rescission application.
[16]
Section 354 of the Companies Act, 61 of 1973 ("the 1973 Act")
states:
"
354.
Court may stay or set aside winding-up –
(1)
The Court may at any time after the commencement of a
winding-up, on the application of any liquidator, creditor or member,
and
on proof to the satisfaction of the Court that all proceedings in
relation to the winding-up ought to be stayed or set aside, make
an
order staying or setting aside the proceedings or for the continuance
of any voluntary winding-up on such terms and conditions
as the Court
may deem fit.
(2)
The Court may, as to all matters relating to a winding-up,
have regard to the wishes of the creditors or members as proved to it
by any sufficient evidence."
[17]
If regard is had to the founding affidavit, it is apparent that
the application is launched by
the applicant company, i.e. its board
of directors. It is submitted that the board does not have the
requisite
locus standi
to launch the proceedings for the
alternative relief.
[18]
The founding affidavit is by the applicant's legal representative, Mr
Busani Lucky Nkuna, no confirmatory
affidavit is filed. A Rule 7
challenge regarding authority to litigate remains unanswered as at
the hearing date.
[19]
The
omission or failure to cite the Master as a party is massively
problematic to the applicant’s case. The applicant’s
property vests in the Master “
until
a provisional liquidator has been appointed and has assumed
office.”
[3]
[20]
Concerning the right which the applicant seeks to protect, that right
does not exist by virtue of the
effect of the provisional order of
winding-up. The director's duties have ceased to exist.
[21]
As regards irreparable harm, the applicant will not suffer this
because it will have an opportunity
to oppose the proceedings on the
return date of 02 June 2025.
[22]
A further alternative and adequate legal remedy is that the
applicant may anticipate the return
date under
section 11(4)
of the
Insolvency Act, 24 of 1936
.
[23]
On the issue of costs of this application, which is premised to fail
having regard to the foregoing
reasons, costs generally follow the
results. Punitive costs may be granted in view of the established
principles where the application
was pursued unnecessarily at the
court’s discretion, judicially exercised.
[24]
The following order is made:
The
application is dismissed. The applicant to pay the costs of the
application to be taxed at scale B.
J.S.
NYATHI
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Pretoria
Date
of hearing: 18/02/2025
Date
of Judgment: 05 May 2025
On behalf of the
Applicant:
Adv. R. Baloyi
Instructed by:
BL Nkuna Attorneys,
Pretoria
On behalf of the
Defendants:
Adv. R. Van
Schalkwyk
Instructed by:
Kally & Co
Inc., Pretoria
Delivery
:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties' legal representatives by email and uploaded on the
CaseLines
electronic platform. The date for hand-down is deemed to be 05 May
2025.
[1]
Zuma v Secretary of the Judicial Commission of Inquiry into
Allegations of State Capture, Corruption and Fraud in the Public
Sector Including Organs of State
2021 (11) BCLR 1263
(CC):
[2]
Submissions
on behalf of the respondent and annexures attached.
[3]
Section
361 of the 1973 Act.
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