Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 702South Africa
Khammissa v Tselana N.O and Others (2025/025127) [2025] ZAGPPHC 702 (4 July 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
4 July 2025
Headnotes
at the Magistrate’s Court in Middelburg. It was in this meeting that Mr Serumola had, inter alia, rejected a claim by First Rand Bank, a major creditor in the estate of Nel. That rejection had resulted in FRB launching an application in this court for the review and setting of Mr Serumola’s decision. The application served before Potterill J whose judgment and orders are of significance in the consideration of the present application. Potterill J’s
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Khammissa v Tselana N.O and Others (2025/025127) [2025] ZAGPPHC 702 (4 July 2025)
Khammissa v Tselana N.O and Others (2025/025127) [2025] ZAGPPHC 702 (4 July 2025)
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sino date 4 July 2025
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 2025-025127
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
04/07/2025
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
SUMAIYA
ABDOOL GAFFAR KHAMMISSA
Applicant
And
MCCLEAN
TSELANA N.O.
First
Respondent
THEODOR
WILHELM VAN DER HEEVER N.O.
Second
Respondent
DEBORAH
LYNN KHAN N.O.
Third
Respondent
THE
MASTER OF THE HIGH COURT, PRETORIA
Fourth
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MBONGWE
J:
INTRODUCTION
[1]
The challenge of the jurisdiction of the Office of the Master,
Pretoria in the insolvent
estate of Nel, who was resident in the
Mpumalanga Province, is in the heart of this urgent application
serving before me.
[2]
A final order for the final sequestration of the estate of Mr Nel was
granted by the Mpumalanga
Local Division of the High Court,
Middelburg on 6 May 202, prior to establishment of the Master’s
Office, Middelburg or prior
same becoming fully functional. In that
period and earlier, insolvent estate matters in that province,
including the present, fell
under the jurisdiction of and were dealt
with by the Pretoria Office of the Master which appointed the
Applicant as a co- Trustee
of the insolvent estate of Nel.
PAUSE
[3]
I pause to state that the Master’s office in Pretoria was
involved and assisted in
the establishment of the Office of the
Master, Middelburg. In particular, Mr Serumola, an Assistant Master
in the Pretoria office,
presided over the first meeting of the
creditors of the insolvent estate of Nel which was held at the
Magistrate’s Court
in Middelburg. It was in this meeting that
Mr Serumola had,
inter alia
, rejected a claim by First Rand
Bank, a major creditor in the estate of Nel. That rejection had
resulted in FRB launching an application
in this court for the review
and setting of Mr Serumola’s decision. The application served
before Potterill J whose judgment
and orders are of significance in
the consideration of the present application. Potterill J’s
judgment and orders did not
only review and set aside Mr Serumole’s
decision, but had also ordered; the removal of the Applicant and her
co-trustee as
trustees of the insolvent estate of Nel; that new
trustees be appointed and further that a first meeting of the
creditors be convened
and held
de novo
. New Trustees, the
second and third respondents, were subsequently appointed as
replacements for the Applicant and her co-trustee.
[4]
Importantly and of much relevance to the application before me was
Potterill J’s explicit
pronouncement in the review application
that the Master’s Office in Middelburg, Mpumalanga, did not
function independently
of the office of the Master, Pretoria. The
gravamen of the Applicant purported case in this application flies in
the face of this
pronouncement by Potterill J. An appeal against the
judgment and orders of Potterill was dismissed by the Supreme Court
of Appeal.
[5]
Despite her removal as a trustee, the Applicant has subsequently made
a payment out of the
funds in the insolvent estate account with the
‘consent of the Master’, Pretoria, and is persistently
refusing to account
to the Master and current trustees of the
insolvent Nel estate for the balance of the funds in the insolvent’s
estate account
and to handover to the appointed Trustees the assets
in the estate. The second respondent has alleged in the answering
affidavit
that some assets in the insolvent estate, including those
that had been attached by the Sheriff in terms of section 19 of the
Insolvency
Act, were questionably released / dissipated and remain
unaccounted for.
[6]
The Applicant’s persistent refusal to account for and handover
the assets in the insolvent
estate resulted in the Master, Pretoria
taking the decision in September 2023 to conduct an enquiry/
interrogation in terms of
section 152 of the Insolvency Act. The
Applicant, through her attorneys, has challenged the authority of the
Master to institute
such an interrogation citing a directive issued
by the Master’s office, Middelburg, Directive 6 of 2023, in
terms whereof
the Middelburg Master’s office terminated the
mandates of other Masters’ Offices to deal with estates/
insolvent estates
falling under its jurisdiction.
[7]
It is, in my view, curious that the Applicant has not cited the
Master, Middelburg, whose
jurisdiction the Applicant purports to
assert, as a party in this application. Clearly the Master,
Middelburg, has a substantial
interest in this matter. Statutory
provisions referred to later hereunder in para 15
do not
preclude the office of the fourth respondent from continuing with the
estate matter concerned herein.
[8]
The Applicant is under a subpoena to attend and give evidence in the
interrogation in terms
of section 152 constituted by the Master,
Pretoria.
[9]
After some engagements and disagreements on the jurisdiction issue,
the Pretoria Master’s
office took the decision on 13 February
2025 that it has the necessary jurisdiction on this matter and that
the enquiry in terms
of section 152 will proceed. The Applicant has
alleged to have launched an application for the review and setting
aside of this
13 February 2025 decision.
[10]
The enquiry in terms of section 152(2) has progressed and witnesses,
including the Applicant’s erstwhile
co-trustee, have given
evidence. Curious in this regard is that the Applicant’s
erstwhile co-trustee, according to unchallenged
evidence in the
second respondent’s answering affidavit, has testified,
inter
alia
, that she did not give consent for the Applicant to make the
payment made after their removal as Trustees. Importantly, the
Applicant
and/or her attorney or counsel have been attending the
proceedings in the enquiry without meaningful participation nor the
Applicant
testifying.
[11]
In March 2025 the inquiry was postponed to 10 April 2025. This
prompted the Applicant to bring the present
application on urgency in
terms of Rule 6 (12) to interdict the first respondent from
continuing with the inquiry on the said date
ostensibly pending the
determination of the review of the decision of 13 February 2025. This
application is opposed by all the
four respondents, including the
Master, Pretoria.
THE
LIS
[12]
From the Applicant’s perspective, the real issue appears to be
the contention that
the office of the Master, Pretoria, has no
jurisdiction over the insolvent estate of Nel and ostensibly that the
enquiry to which
the Applicant has been subpoenaed to give evidence
falls outside the authority of the Master, Pretoria.
[13]
The second issue raised by the Applicant pertains to the respondents’
alleged unexplained
late filling of their opposition papers. With
regard to this issue, the Applicant seeks that this court rejects or
not consider
the respondents’ answering affidavits or that, in
the event that the court admits and considers the evidence in these
affidavits,
the evidence in the Applicant’s belated replying
affidavits also be admitted and considered.
OPPOSITION
[14]
The respondents’ opposition to the applicant’s
application is premised on various
grounds which can be summarised as
follows;
14.1
that the matter is not urgent, alternatively, that urgency was
self-created by the Applicant;
14.2
that the applicant lacks legal standing to bring this application;
14.3
the applicant is not entitled to the relief it seeks;
14.4
the application has been brought for a sinister motive to evade
accountability by the applicant;
[15]
The fourth respondent and, by extension, the first respondent, may
statutorily exercise
jurisdiction as follows; in terms of the
Administration of Estates Act 66 of 1965
:
15.1
a single Master can exercise jurisdiction in two different High Court
jurisdictions
and a jurisdictional point would not competently be
taken against such Master;
15.2
a Master may assume jurisdiction in a matter where another Master
should exercise
jurisdiction and a jurisdictional point may also not
be competently be taken against that Master;
15.3
decisions taken by the Master in the bona fide belief the he/she had
jurisdiction
cannot be invalidated merely on it being established
that another Master had jurisdiction on the matter concerned.
Provisions similar
to the above are contained in the Trust Property
Control Act 57 of 1988.
DISCUSSION
AND ANALYSIS
[16]
It is not in dispute that the Applicant is not a party to the main
proceedings in this
matter – the sequestration of the insolvent
estate of Mr Nel. While her appointment as a co-trustee had
ordinarily clothed
her with the authority to act on behalf of the
estate, her removal as a Trustee by an order of this court
disqualified her from
representing the estate in any capacity.
Further and, in any event, the Applicant is not representing the
Master, Middelburg, whose
jurisdiction the Applicant purports to
assert in this application.
[17]
The Applicant, however, remains obligated to account to the Master of
the high Court, Pretoria,
who had appointed her for the management of
the insolvent Nel estate and incidental processes in the
sequestration thereof and
to hand over these duties to her duly
appointed replacement successors.
[18]
Other than her short-lived appointment as a co-trustee of the
insolvent Nel estate, the
applicant has no interest in this matter
and, therefore, no legal standing to bring this application to
purportedly challenge the
jurisdiction of the Master, Pretoria. As
already pointed out earlier, the Applicant has not cited as a party
the office of the
Master, Middelburg, which has an interest in this
case and whose jurisdiction the Applicant purports to assert. This is
fatal to
the Applicant’s case.
[19]
By virtue of the findings in the two preceding paragraphs, the
applicant does not meet
the barest of the requirements for
entitlement to the interdict she seeks in this application. Amongst
the requirements the applicant
has to establish are:
19.1
that she has a clear right which;
19.2
may be harmed or she has a reasonable apprehension that it may be
harmed. This applicant is in
no position to demonstrate her
possession of these minimal imperatives and, therefore, not entitled
to the interdictory relief
sought.
[20]
It is pertinent that the
Applicant does not seek the setting aside of the subpoena that was
served on her, but seeks the setting
aside of the decision of the
Master to conduct the interrogation. In effect the Applicant seeks
the vitiation of the process the
Master has commenced with,
notwithstanding that the Applicant lacks legal standing and grounding
for entitlement to that relief.
This is undoubtedly a sinister effort
by the Applicant to thwart the already running interrogation and to
render worthless the
evidence that the Master, Pretoria, has
gathered, The Applicant is in possession of material that is the
subject matter of the
interrogation she has been subpoenaed to give
evidence in. She consequently has no right to seeks to evade her
obligation to account
fully for her handling of the affairs of the
Nel estate by seeking the review of the decision of the Master and
the present interdictory
relief.
[1]
[21]
The Applicant relies on the supporting affidavit of Mr Ngako Jan
Serumola, an Assistant
Master whose decision to reject a claim by
First Rand Bank, an major creditor in the insolvent estate, was
reviewed and set aside
in the same hearing and judgment and orders of
Potterill J in this division. It is also pertinent that Mr Serumola
was cited as
a party in the review application and was a party in the
failed appeal against the judgment and orders of Potterill J and
that,
despite all this Mr Serumola has deposed to an affidavit
supporting the Applicant’s misplaced grounding in this
application.
Furthermore, convenience and the interests of justice
gravitate in favour of the office of the Master, Pretoria, continuing
with
the interrogation and to get to the bottom of the problems that
the Applicant, whom the Master had appointed, has caused and for
which the Applicant refuses to account.
[22]
With regard to the Applicant’s prayer that the respondents’
answering affidavits
not be accepted, I find that the Applicant’s
failure to serve the application on the State Attorney’s office
within
five days of service thereof on the office of the head of the
department concerned at the head office of his department as required
by the provisions of
section 2
of the
State Liability Act 20 of 1957
,
as amended by the Judicial Matters Amendment Act 8 of 2017, was the
cause of the delayed response by the first and the fourth
respondents. In any event, the interests of justice would command, in
my view of the circumstances of this case, that the delay
be
condoned. There will also be no prejudice whatsoever that may be
caused to the Applicant as her own further supplementary replying
affidavit will also be considered, as requested by her. This will be
considered once the court find that there is reason to consider
this
application to that stage.
[23]
I am satisfied, on the preliminary issues and findings thereon thus
far, particularly that
the Applicant lack
locus standi
and is
not entitled to the interdictory relief sought, that these findings
alone are dispositive of the Applicant’s case
and that a
further consideration of the matter is unwarranted.
CONCLUSION
[24]
Litigation constitutes an
abuse of court process if it was not brought to vindicate a
legitimate right, was used to achieve an improper
end such as
financial gain, prejudice and, as
in
casu
, a
strategy to evade accountability,
inter
alia
.
[2]
There are funds and
assets that were under the control of the Applicant that have not
been accounted for to the respondents and
handed over to the second
and the third respondents. The Applicant has not denied that she has
repeatedly been called upon in vain
to render the relevant accounts
to the Master. Worse still, despite her removal as a Trustee, the
Applicant refuses to render the
closing account and hand over the
continuation of the management of the affairs of the estate to the
second and the third respondents.
The prejudice to the creditors of
the insolvent Nel estate continues unabated. This application by the
Applicant, in my view, bears
the hallmarks of an abuse of the process
of the court. This conclusion holds equally in respect of the
Applicant’s application
for the review of the Master’s
decision of 13 February 2025.
COSTS
[25]
An award of punitive costs against the Applicant is appropriate in
this case.
ORDER
[26]
Premised on the findings and conclusion in this judgment, the
following order is made:
1. This
Application is dismissed.
2. The
Applicant is ordered to pay the costs on the attorney and client
scale C, including the costs consequent
upon the employment two
counsel one of whom is senior counsel, where applicable.
MPN
MBONGWE
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
DATE
OF HEARING:
25 March 2025
JUDGMENT
HANDED DOWN: 04 July 2025
APPEARANCES
For
the Applicant
Advocate
M.M.V. Van Zyl SC
Instructed
by
Goodes
& Co. Attorneys
222
Rivonia Road
Morningside
Office Park
Johannesburg
Tel:
011 656 1452
Email:
george@goodesco.co.za
Ref: GS
Goodes/tdt/MAT 2638
C/O Khammissa
Atorneys, Pretoria
Tel: 012 342
9944
Email:
sumaiya@khammissa.co.za
For
the 1
st
and 4
th
Respondents
Office of the State Attorney, Pretoria
Ref:
0665/2025/Z70
Email:
RSikhala@justice.gov.za
Enq:
MR RUDZANI SIKHALA
For
the Second and Third Respondents: Van VEIJEREN ATTORNEYS
INC
Houghton
Estate
Tel: 011 648 6074
Email:litigation@vvinc.co.za
Ref:
CVV/el/DT0171
C/o: FRIEDLAND HART
SOLOMON &
NICOLSON ATTORNEYS
79
STEENBOK AVENUE
PRETORIA
Ref: G. Painter
[1]
see
Webster
v Mitchell
1948
(1) SA 1186 (W)
[2]
see
Mineral
Sands Resources (Pty) Ltd and Others v Reddell and Others
[2022
ZACC 37
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