Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 451South Africa
Pretorius and Others v Khutso Naketsi Communal Property Association and Another (2024-147172) [2025] ZAGPPHC 451 (8 May 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
8 May 2025
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Pretorius and Others v Khutso Naketsi Communal Property Association and Another (2024-147172) [2025] ZAGPPHC 451 (8 May 2025)
Pretorius and Others v Khutso Naketsi Communal Property Association and Another (2024-147172) [2025] ZAGPPHC 451 (8 May 2025)
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sino date 8 May 2025
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 2024-147172
1.
REPORTABLE: NO
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
3.
REVISED: YES
DATE:
8 May 2025
SIGNATURE
OF JUDGE:
In the matter between:
HENNING
PETRUS NICOLAAS PRETORIUS
First Applicant
HPN
BESTUUR (PTY) LTD
Second Applicant
STEPHAN
PRETORIUS
Third Applicant
and
KHUTSO
NAKETSI COMMUNAL PROPERTY ASSOCIATION
First
Respondent
KHUTSO
NAKETSI AGRI (PTY) LTD
Second Respondent
and
In the matter between:
THE
EMPLOYEES OF KHUTSO NAKETSI AGRI (PTY) LTD
AS
PER ANNEXURE A TO THE APPLICATION
Applicant
and
KHUTSO
NAKETSI COMMUNAL PROPERTY ASSOCIATION
First
Respondent
KHUTSO
NAKETSI AGRI (PTY) LTD
Second Respondent
In
re
The matter between:
KHUTSO
NAKETSI COMMUNAL PROPERTY ASSOCIATION
Applicant
and
KHUTSO
NAKETSI AGRI (PTY) LTD
Respondent
JUDGMENT
HF OOSTHUIZEN AJ
[1.]
On
12 December 2024 Khutso Naketsi Communal Property Association (“the
CPA”), a communal property association registered
under the
Communal
Property Association Act
,
1996,
[1]
applied on an urgent
basis for the winding-up of Khutso Naketsi Agri (Pty) Ltd (“the
company”) on the basis that the
company is unable to pay its
debts,
alternatively
that it is just and equitable to wind-up the company under sections
344(f) and 344(h) of the Companies Act, 1973.
[2]
[2.]
On 17 December 2024 a notice of intention
to oppose was delivered by Langenhoven Pistorius Modihapula Attorneys
(“LPM”),
purportedly on behalf of the company.
[3.]
On 17 December 2024 Mr HPN Pretoirus
deposed to an opposing affidavit in which he stated that he deposed
to the affidavit on behalf
of the company and HPN Bestuur (Pty) Ltd,
the 30% minority shareholder of the company (“the minority
shareholder”),
in his capacity as director of the company and
the minority shareholder and ostensibly also on behalf of
the company’s
employees. Neither Mr HPN Pretoirus, the minority
shareholder or the company’s employees applied for leave to
intervene at
that stage.
[4.]
On 18 December 2024 a notice of intention
to oppose was delivered by LPM on behalf of the minority shareholder
and Mr HPN Pretorius
notwithstanding the fact that neither the
minority shareholder nor Mr HPN Preotirus had been cited as a
respondent in the winding-up
application.
[5.]
On 18 December 2024 the CPA challenged the
authority of LPM to act on behalf of the company in terms of rule
7(1). It is common
cause that LPM has not satisfied the court that it
is authorised to act on behalf of the company. The winding-up
application is
accordingly unopposed.
[6.]
On 23 December 2024, Minnaar AJ struck the
winding-up application from the roll due to a lack of urgency. No
costs order was granted
by Minnaar AJ, in all probability due to the
fact that there was no party in whose favour a costs order could have
been granted.
[7.]
On 17 January 2025, LPM indicated in
correspondence to the Deputy Judge President that it was in the
process of preparing various
intervention applications which it
intended to file with in the next three weeks, which did not happen.
[8.]
On 24 February 2025, LPM indicated in
correspondence to the CPA’s attorneys that the intervention
applications would be delivered
later that week, which again did not
happen.
[9.]
On 4 March 2025, the CPA’s attorneys
informed LPM that the winding up application had been set down on the
opposed motion
roll for 5 May 2025.
[10.]
On 10 March 2025, intervention applications
were instituted on behalf of Mr HPN Pretorius, the minority
shareholder, Mr S Pretorius
and the company’s employees
(collectively “the intervening parties”). HPN has failed
to upload the intervention
applications on CaseLines or place it
before me.
[11.]
On 9 April 2025, LPM indicated that the
intervention applications had been enrolled on the unopposed motion
roll of 12 August 2025
and that opposing affidavits would only be
delivered once leave to intervene had been granted.
[12.]
On 22 April 2025 (i.e. six court days
before the hearing of the winding-up application), the intervening
parties applied for the
postponement of the winding- up application,
in which applications the intervening parties sought a punitive costs
order against
the CPA.
[13.]
The CPA and the intervening parties
delivered answering and replying affidavits in the postponement
applications.
[14.]
During argument, the intervening parties
were unable to explain why the intervention applications had not been
uploaded to CaseLines
and enrolled for hearing on the date of the
hearing of the winding-up application, which was clearly the
appropriate procedure
to follow.
[15.]
Notwithstanding the fact that the
intervention applications were not before me, the intervening parties
sought an order that they
be joined as respondents in the winding-up
application and afforded an opportunity to file opposing affidavits,
if any, within
ten days.
[16.]
I was not prepared to grant such relief in
view of the fact that:
[16.1.]
I
could not establish whether the intervening parties had demonstrated
that they have a direct and substantial legal interest in
the
winding-up of the company which could be prejudicially affected by
such order and that they had made allegation which, if proven,
would
entitle it to relief;
[3]
[16.2.]
I was unable to give a direction as to
further procedure in the winding-up application (as provided for in
rule 12), including whether
there was actually a need to file further
opposing affidavits and whether the existing opposing affidavit
should simply stand as
the intervening parties’ opposing
affidavit.
[17.]
The intervening parties merely alleged in
the founding affidavit in the postponement applications that they
“
have a material interest in the
matter and will be severely prejudiced should the [company] be
liquidated
”. I am not convinced
that the directors of the company and the minority shareholder have a
sufficient direct and substantial
legal interest in the winding-up of
the company but I expressly do not make any finding in that regard.
[18.]
The only indication in the founding
affidavit in the postponement applications of the need to deliver
additional opposing affidavits
is the vague reference to alleged
contradictions between allegations in the founding affidavit in the
winding-up application and
allegations in affidavits in a subsequent
application for interdictory relief against the company’s
employees.
[19.]
The intervening parties moreover failed to
deal with any possible prejudice which they may suffer if the
postponement is refused
and a provisional winding-up order is granted
with a return date
after
the hearing of the intervention applications to enable the
intervening parties to oppose the grant of a final winding-up order
on the return date.
[20.]
After hearing argument, the CPA and the
intervening parties agreed to an order that the winding up
application be postponed for
hearing on the opposed motion roll on 25
August 2025; that the intervening parties are ordered to deliver
their answering affidavits
in the winding-up application within ten
days (i.e. before the hearing of the intervention applications); and
that I should decide
on the costs of the postponement applications
and the hearing on 5 May 2025.
[21.]
I accordingly made a draft order which was
prepared by the parties an order of court.
[22.]
During argument the intervening parties
abandoned the punitive costs order which they had previously sought
against the CPA and
argued that the reserved costs should be costs in
the winding-up application. The CPA on the other hand sought a costs
order against
the intervening parties.
[23.]
I am of the view that Mr HPN Pretorius, the
minority shareholder and Mr S Pretorius are the sole reason why the
winding-up application
was postponed and that they should for the
following reasons pay the reserved costs:
[23.1.]
The intervening parties should have sought
leave to intervene at the time of the hearing of the winding-up
application before Minnaar
AJ. Mr Brand, who appeared on behalf of
the intervening parties, but who did not appear before Minnaar AJ,
conceded that the intervening
parties erred in this regard.
[23.2.]
If the intervening parties had enrolled the
intervention applications for hearing on 5 May 2025, I would have
been able to grant
relief in terms thereof and consider whether there
was a need to deliver additional opposing affidavits and there would,
importantly,
not have been any need for formal applications for
postponement, which have substantial cost implications.
[23.3.]
The
intervening parties have moreover not furnished a full and
satisfactory explanation of the circumstances that gave rise to the
postponement application and the postponement was not sought
timeously.
[4]
[23.4.]
In view of their intervening parties’
failures, as set out in paragraphs [23.1] and [23.2] above, they
should have tendered
the intervening parties’ wasted costs. The
CPA was clearly entitled to apply for a hearing date on the opposed
motion roll
and to enrol the winding-up application accordingly.
[23.5.]
The intervening parties have failed to
convince me that the postponement applications were
bona
fide
and not used simply as a tactical
manoeuvre for the purposes of delay, as argued by the CPA
.
[23.6.]
There is no reason why the costs pursuant
to the postponement application should be paid by the company if it
is wound up. Such
order will prejudice the creditors of the company
by reducing their potential dividends.
[23.7.]
I am however not prepared to grant any
costs order against the companies’ employees, whose application
for postponement was
almost identical to the application of the other
intervening parties.
ORDER
[24.]
I accordingly grant the following order:
Henning Petrus Nicolaas
Pretorius, HPN Bestuur (Pty) Ltd and Stepan Pretorius are ordered to
jointly and severally, the one paying,
the other to be absolved, pay
the costs of the application for postponement, including the costs of
the hearing on 5 May 2025,
which costs are to include the costs of
counsel on scale B.
HF
OOSTHUIZEN AJ
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
This
Judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ and or parties’ representatives by email
and by
being uploaded to CaseLines. The date and time for the hand down is
deemed to be 10h00
on this 8 May 2025.
Appearances
Counsel
for
Henning Petrus Nicolaas Pretorius, HPN Bestuur
(Pty) Ltd and Stepan Pretorius and the employees of Khutso Naketsi
Agri (Pty) Ltd:
Johan Brand SC
and
Danelo de Kock
instructed
by Langenhoven Pistorius & Modihapula
Counsel
for
Khutso Naketsi Communal Property Association:
Mark Costa
,
instructed by Cox Yeats
Date of Hearing: 5 May
2025
Date of Judgment: 8 May
2025
[1]
Act 28 of
1996
[2]
Act 61 of
1973
[3]
SA
Riding for the Disabled Association v Regional Land Claims
Commissioner
2017 (1) SA 1
(CC) para [9]
[4]
National
Police Service Union v Minister of Safety and Security
2000 (4) SA
1110
(CC) para [4]
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