Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 565South Africa
Ellison v Breytenbach N.O and Another (A278/2022) [2025] ZAGPPHC 565 (5 June 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
17 June 2022
Headnotes
the appellant be evicted from the property known as 2[...] D[...] Road Waterkloof, Pretoria, and that the appellant’s counterclaim stood to be dismissed.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Ellison v Breytenbach N.O and Another (A278/2022) [2025] ZAGPPHC 565 (5 June 2025)
Ellison v Breytenbach N.O and Another (A278/2022) [2025] ZAGPPHC 565 (5 June 2025)
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sino date 5 June 2025
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE
NO.:A278/2022
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/NO
(3)
REVISED.
05/06/2025
In the matter between:
CLIVE MALCOM ELLISON
Appellant
and
MARTHINUS JACOBUS DEWALD
BREYTENBACH
First
Respondent
NO
RICHARD HICKEN NO
Second Respondent
JUDGMENT
Van
der Westhuizen, J
[1]
The appellant appealed the whole judgment and order by Collis J
delivered on 17 June 2022 in an
application for the eviction of the
appellant from the property occupied by the appellant. In her
judgment Collis J held that the
appellant be evicted from the
property known as 2[...] D[...] Road Waterkloof, Pretoria, and that
the appellant’s counterclaim
stood to be dismissed.
[2]
The said application before Collis J followed on an order on 12 April
2018 by Kollapen J as he
then was, which acknowledged an order
granted by the Deputy Registrar Schaffer of the High Court of Justice
in Bankruptcy (UK)
on 4 October 2000. In the latter order the
appellant was held to be bankrupt. Kollapen J further recognised the
appointment of
the first respondent as trustee of the appellant’s
insolvent estate. The second respondent was the trustee appointed in
the
UK.
[3]
Following investigations in South Africa, the first respondent
obtained information that the appellant
owned property situated in
South Africa that fell within his insolvent estate. That
information led to the launch of the
application before Kollapen J.
The order granted by Kollapen J entitled the first respondent to
administer the assets of the appellant
within South Africa in terms
of the South African Insolvency Act (the Kollapen order).
[4]
It is to be noted that the appellant has not yet been rehabilitated
in the UK and that he remains an
undischarged bankrupt there, and
following on the Kollapen order, in South Africa as well.
[5]
There was no appeal against the order of Kollapen J.
[6]
In the application before Collis, J., the appellant contended that
the effect of the Kollapen
order amounted to the granting of a
sequestration order against the appellant in terms of the South
African Insolvency Act. Presumably
this contention by the appellant
was derived from the wording of the Kollapen order where it stated
“
Entitling the applicant
(first respondent)
to
administer the first respondent
(the appellant)
as if a
sequestration order had been granted against him by a South African
court.”
[7]
In my view, there is no merit in the appellant’s contention in
that regard. The order by
Kollapen J is clear, and there is no
ambiguity. Primarily the bankruptcy order of the UK was acknowledged
and the empowerment of
the first respondent followed consequentially.
No “new” insolvency order in terms of the South African
Insolvency law
was granted.
[8]
Furthermore, the application before Collis J was not the forum to
address any possible ambiguity
in the Kollapen order, of which there
is none.
[9]
In respect of the principles applicable to orders of foreign
jurisdictions,
Ex Parte Palmer NO: In re Hahn 1993(3) SA 359 (C)
held as follows:
“
The
point is clearly made in the judgment in the Stegman case that
immovable property of an insolvent is governed by the lex rei
sitae
and inasmuch as his movable property is concerned by the law of his
domicile, it is a matter of convenience that a court
in whose
jurisdiction the insolvent’s immovable property lies,
in
the exercise of its discretion, permit all the property of the
insolvent situate within in its jurisdiction,
whether it
be movable or immovable, to be administered by a foreign trustee
appointed pursuant to a sequestration order issued by
the Court of
the insolvent’s domicile, who would as a matter of law, have
the authority and power to deal with immovable
property of the
insolvent.”
(my underlining).
[10]
The Supreme Court of Appeal in
Lagoon Beach Hotel v Lehane
2016
(3) SA 143
(SA) endorsed the
Palmer
dictum.
[11]
The Supreme Court of Appeal further held as follows:
“
As pointed out
above, the grant of recognition to a foreign trustee to deal with an
insolvent’s immovable property in South
Africa is a matter for
the local Court’s discretion. The discretion is absolute. It is
exercised on the basis of comity and
convenience.”
[12]
From the foregoing it is clear that the order of Kollapen J was
appropriate in the exercise of his absolute
discretion and which
order remains in force until set aside by a competent court. That has
not occurred. Consequently, the Kollapen
order was binding upon
Collis J. All that Collis J was requested by the appellant to do, was
to apply a different interpretation
to the Kollapen order, albeit in
terms of the counter application by the appellant.
[13]
The appellant contended that due to the effluxion of time, he became
rehabilitated. There is no merit in
that contention. An order was
granted in the UK which held that the period of discharge of the
bankruptcy order was suspended and
consequently the appellant
remained bankrupt as at the time of the Kollapen order.
[14] In
the foregoing, the findings of Kollapen
J
were
res iudicata
before Collis J. The court
a quo
had
no jurisdiction to entertain an apparent appeal to that order, albeit
in the form of applying a different interpretation thereof,
and
consequently correctly refused to entertain such.
[15] It
follows that there is no merit in this appeal and it stands to be
dismissed.
[16]
Accordingly, I propose the following order:
The
appeal is dismissed with costs.
C
J VAN DER WESTHUIZEN
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
I
agree and it is so ordered
N DAVIS
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
I agree
N G M MAZIBUKU
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
On
behalf of Applicant:
Adv
CB Ellis
Instructed
by:
Jacobson
& Levy Inc.
On
behalf of Respondent:
Adv
DJ Groenewald
Instructed
by:
Serfontein
Viljoen & Swart Attorneys
Date
of Hearing:
19
February 2025
Judgment
Delivered:
05
June 2025
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