Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 695South Africa
Rogal Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others v Naidoo and Others (2023/066197) [2025] ZAGPPHC 695 (7 July 2025)
Headnotes
AT PRETORIA CASE NO: 2023/066197 DOH: 20 June 2025
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Rogal Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others v Naidoo and Others (2023/066197) [2025] ZAGPPHC 695 (7 July 2025)
Rogal Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others v Naidoo and Others (2023/066197) [2025] ZAGPPHC 695 (7 July 2025)
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sino date 7 July 2025
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REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
HELD AT PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 2023/066197
DOH:
20 June 2025
DECIDED: 07 July 2025
1) REPORTABLE: NO
2) OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES: NO
3) REVISED.
07 July 2025
In the matter between:
ROGAL HOLDINGS (Pty)
Ltd
First Applicant
(Registration Number:
2014/240061/07)
EIFEL PROPERTY (Pty)
Ltd (Registration
Second Applicant
Number:
1999/008408/07)
MFUNDO CLEMENT
NKUHLU
Third Applicant
ERICA NTOMBEKHAYA
NKUHLU
Fourth Applicant
and
MOGANAM
NAIDOO
First Respondent
(Identity Number:
5[…])
KESAVAN
VERAPPEN NAIDOO
Second Respondent
(Identity Number:
5[…])
MATHEW
SAMUEL DREYER
Third Respondent
(Identity Number:
7[…])
RAMESHA
NAIDOO DREYER
Fourth Respondent
(Identity Number:
8[…])
JERIFANOS
MASHAMBA N.O.
Fifth Respondent
(Identity Number:
7[…])
THE REGISTRAR OF
DEEDS
Sixth Respondent
THE MASTER OF THE HIGH
COURT
Seventh Respondent
PULENG FELICITY BODIBE
N.O.
Eight Respondent
GONASAGREE GOVENDER
N.O
Nineth Respondent
This judgment has been
handed down remotely and shall be circulated to the parties by way of
email / uploading on Caselines. The
date of hand down shall be deemed
to be 07 July 2025.
ORDER
1.
The application for leave to appeal is
dismissed.
JUDGMENT
BAM J
1.
The First and Second Applicants apply for
leave to appeal against the judgment and order of this court, of 12
February 2025, excluding
paragraph 1 of the order. The applicants’
grounds are set out in their notice of application for leave to
appeal, filed on
5 March 2025.
2.
Legislative
provision is made for applications for leave to appeal in Section 17
(1) of the Superior Courts Act
[1]
.
The relevant parts of the provision read:
‘
17
(1) Leave to appeal may only be given where the judge or judges
concerned are of the opinion that—
(a)
(i) the appeal would have
a reasonable prospect of success; or
(ii) there is some other
compelling reason why the appeal should be heard, including
conflicting judgments on the matter under consideration;’
3.
It
is trite that an applicant for leave to appeal ‘must satisfy
the court that the appeal would have a reasonable prospect
of success
or that there is some other compelling reason why the appeal should
be heard. If the court is unpersuaded of the prospects
of success, it
must still enquire whether there is a compelling reason to entertain
the appeal. A compelling reason includes an
important question of law
or a discreet issue of public importance that will have an effect on
future disputes. But here too, the
merits remain vitally important
and are often decisive.’
[2]
4.
An
applicant must ‘convince the court on proper grounds that there
is a reasonable prospect or realistic chance of success
on appeal. A
mere possibility of success, an arguable case or one that is not
hopeless, is not enough. There must be a sound, rational
basis to
conclude that there is a reasonable prospect of success on
appeal.’
[3]
Standard of appellate
interference with a lower court’s exercise of its discretion
5.
It is trite that an appellate court will
not easily interfere with the exercise of a lower court’s
exercise of its discretion
unless it can be shown that the discretion
was not exercised judiciously or it was exercised based on a wrong
appreciation of the
facts of the law, or where it can be shown that
the court did not bring an unbiased mind. In respect of a discretion
in a loose
sense, even though a court of appeal may easily intervene,
there may be policy and other considerations that militate against
such
interference. This position is encapsulated in the remarks of
the court in
Giddey NO v JC Barnard and
Partners
, where it was said that an
appellate court will not consider.
‘
whether
the decision reached by the court of first instance was correct but
will only interfere in limited circumstances; for example,
if it is
shown that the discretion has not been exercised judicially or has
been exercised based on a wrong appreciation of the
facts or wrong
principles of law. Even where the discretion is not a discretion in
the strict sense, there may still be considerations
which would
result in an appellate court only interfering in the exercise of such
a discretion in the limited circumstances mentioned
above.’
[4]
6.
The same reasoning was endorsed in
Trencon
Construction (Pty) Limited
v
Industrial
Development Corporation of South Africa Limited and Another
as may be seen from the extracts set out immediately below:
‘
[83]
In order to decipher the standard of interference that an appellate
court is justified in applying, a distinction between two
types of
discretion emerged in our case law. That distinction is now
deeply-rooted in the law governing the relationship between
appeal
courts and courts of first instance. Therefore, the proper approach
on appeal is for an appellate court to ascertain whether
the
discretion exercised by the lower court was a discretion in the true
sense or whether it was a discretion in the loose sense.
The
importance of the distinction is that either type of discretion will
dictate the standard of interference that an appellate
court must
apply… .
[87] …
An appellate court must heed the standard of interference applicable
to either of the discretions. In the instance
of a discretion in the
loose sense, an appellate court is equally capable of determining the
matter in the same manner as the court
of first instance and can
therefore substitute its own exercise of the discretion without first
having to find that the court of
first instance did not act
judicially. However, even where a discretion in the loose sense is
conferred on a lower court, an appellate
court’s power to
interfere may be curtailed by broader policy considerations.’
[5]
7.
A decision to grant or refuse condonation
for non-compliance whether with the rules or directions, requires a
court to exercise
its discretion. The test to be applied in reaching
the decision is the interests of justice. The court will not
apply one
standard for non-compliance with its directions and a
different one when confronted with non-compliance with the rules.
Basson
J, writing for a unanimous court in
Steenkamp
and Others
v
Edcon
Limited,
makes the point:
‘
[26]
…In Grootboom this Court held that— “[i]t is
axiomatic that condoning a party's non-compliance with the
rules of
court or directions is an indulgence. The court seized with the
matter has a discretion whether to grant condonation.”
[27]
And that— “It is by now axiomatic that the granting or
refusal of condonation is a matter of judicial discretion.
It
involves a value judgment by the court seized with a matter based on
the facts of that particular case.’
[6]
[31] The decision to
grant condonation is either yes or no: there is no wide range of
available options for the decision-maker as
envisaged in Trencon. A
court can either grant or deny the condonation. But the election of
either option is equally permissible
and is something that reasonable
judges could disagree on. To grant condonation is an exercise of
judicial discretion that is only
fettered by being judicially
explained…
[36] Granting condonation
must be in the interests of justice. This Court in Grootboom set out
the factors that must be considered
in determining whether or not it
is in the interests of justice to grant condonation:
“
[T]he
standard for considering an application for condonation is the
interests of justice. However, the concept ‘interests
of
justice’ is so elastic that it is not capable of precise
definition. As the two cases demonstrate, it includes: the nature
of
the relief sought; the extent and cause of the delay; the effect of
the delay on the administration of justice and other litigants;
the
reasonableness of the explanation for the delay; the importance of
the issue to be raised in the intended appeal; and the prospects
of
success. It is crucial to reiterate that both Brummer and Van Wyk
emphasise that the ultimate determination of what is in the
interests
of justice must reflect due regard to all the relevant factors but it
is not necessarily limited to those mentioned above.’
An appeal lies against
the order and not the reasons
8.
It
is further trite that an appeal lies against an order and not the
reasons,
Neotel
(Pty) Ltd v Telkom SOC & Others
[7]
.
‘Even if an applicant in an application for leave to appeal
succeeds in convincing the Court that it erred in fact and /
or in
law, it must also show that the judgment (substantive order) would
have been different if the Court applied the correct law
or facts.
The notice should therefore clearly specify what orders will be
sought on appeal’
[8]
.
Applicants’
grounds
(i)
Ground 1: Condonation
9.
The applicants submit that this court erred
in granting condonation to the fifth respondent in respect of the
late filing of his
answering affidavit, which dealt in part with his
condonation application, and merits. The thrust of the applicants’
resistance
may be broken down to two succinct points. They are: (i)
This court failed to distinguish between non-compliance with the
rules
and with directions, with the suggestion that courts rarely, if
ever, condone non-compliance with the rules. It will be recalled
that
the first directive was issued by the court while a later one was
issued by the Office of the Deputy Judge President. The
court is also
said to have misconstrued the extent of the delay which the
applicants contend was poorly accounted for if at all.
10.
The dicta extracted from
Steenkamp
dispels the notion that different standards apply when dealing with
condonation for non-compliance with the rules as opposed to
non-compliance with the Court’s directions, or that courts
rarely condone non-compliance with the rules. There is only one
standard, and that is the interests of justice, an elastic and
versatile concept which takes into account a range of factors.
11.
Significantly,
the judgment traces the timeline from the date of inception of this
litigation, placing particular emphasis on intervening
directives
issued via the Court and that issued via the Deputy Judge President’s
office. Secondly, this court identified
what factors it took into
account in applying the standard of interests of justice. Finally,
the court distinguished the circumstances
of the present case from
those prevailing
Millu
v
City
of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality
[9]
.
No point will be served by regurgitating that discussion all over
again.
12.
It was not in vain that the Constitutional
Court remarked in
Eke
v
Parsons
that the rules exist for the courts and not the courts for the rules,
as seen in the passage immediately here below:
‘…
Without
doubt, rules governing the court process cannot be disregarded.
They serve an undeniably important purpose.
That, however, does
not mean that courts should be detained by the rules to a point where
they are hamstrung in the performance
of the core function of
dispensing justice. Put differently, rules should not be
observed for their own sake. Where
the interests of justice so
dictate, courts may depart from a strict observance of the
rules. That, even where one of the
litigants is insistent that
there be adherence to the rules. Not surprisingly, courts have
often said “[i]t is trite
that the rules exist for the courts,
and not the courts for the rules”
[10]
.
13.
It may be that this court exercised a
discretion in the loose sense, as the court in
Steenkamp
demonstrates. However, based on the circumstances of this case, there
is no likelihood that a court of appeal would interfere.
The
applicants have failed to make a case demonstrating any
misdirection on the part of this court. There is no merit to
this
ground and no prospect that a court of appeal would come to a
different conclusion.
Ground 2: The court
erred in finding that FRB had an interest in the matter
14.
The gist of the applicants’
resistance to the judgment can be broken down to two points. I now
deal with the first point.
The applicants submit that the court
erred in finding that FRB had an interest in the relief they seek.
The applicants, it
will be recalled sought an order declaring the
sale concluded by the BRP, whilst lawfully in office, void. They say
that FRB, the
party paid about R2.8 million from the proceeds of the
sale they seek to set aside, has no interest in the matter because
FRB was
paid in full. They add that were the court to confirm the
order of voidness, FRB would have the right to institute a claim
against
the insolvent estate.
15.
The flaw in the applicants’ reasoning
is discussed in full in the judgment. That flaw is glaringly obvious
from these submissions.
The applicants do not answer the fundamental
question of how the order would be executed against FRB, a party that
is not before
this court. These matters are canvassed in the
judgment. There is no merit to the submission and no prospect that
another court
would come to a different finding.
Ground 3: The court
erred in treating the sale as an executory contract
16.
The court, according to the applicants
ought to have found, as was espoused in
Pride
Milling Company (Pty) Ltd
v
Bekker
NO and Another
(393/2020)
[2021] ZASCA
127
;
[2021] 4 All SA 696
(SCA);
2022 (2) SA 410
(SCA) (30 September
2021), that the disposition of the immovable property was void, and
that the court had no discretion to validate
the transaction. The
applicants find their gripping ground, it would appear, from the fact
that none of the payments made to
Pride
Milling
were validated by the court,
and later the SCA, but that reading needs to be sharpened somehow if
not corrected.
17.
The court in
Pride
Milling
distinguished between the
dispositions made in the period between the provisional winding up
and the final winding up orders. That
period was identified in that
judgment as 29 June to 14 September 2017. There the court made plain
that a court has no discretion
to validate those dispositions. It
then turned to deal with the disposition made on 7 June 2017, before
the provisional winding
up order but after the date of first
presentation of the application to court. After canvassing the facts
the court decided against
validating that payment. What is important
for present purposes is the distinction made by the court between the
two periods.
18.
The common cause facts as canvassed in the
judgment confirm that the BRP was lawfully in office from September
2021 until 3 December
2021. The judgment further confirms that the
sale was concluded on 29 November 2021 and the transfer to the 1
st
to 4
th
respondents was still outstanding when it was interrupted by the
coming in of the concursus creditorium event, (28 March 2023).
Simply, the transaction was not completed by 28 March. That makes the
transaction an executory contract, in respect of which the
liquidators elected to enforce, as stated in the judgment, a case to
which the applicants had no answer whatsoever.
19.
It does not assist the applicants to write
off the acts lawfully carried out by the BRP whilst in office in
their pursuit of an
order of invalidity of the sale. The judgment
illustrates these dates and why the transaction of purchase and sale
concluded by
the BRP was incomplete at the time of the concursus
creditorium. I see no need to repeat what is in the judgment. There
is no merit
to this ground and no prospect that another court would
come to a different conclusion.
Ground 4: The court
erred in not exercising its discretion to validate the sale, yet,
dismissing the application
20.
The applicants contend that the court erred
in not exercising its discretion to validate the disposition, as
demonstrated in
Pride Milling
,
whilst at the same dismissing the application. I refer to the
judgment and the discussion there relating to the liquidators’
election to enforce the transaction. The liquidators in this case
made the choice, as they are entitled to in law, to enforce the
sale.
Other than the submission that the transaction is not an executory
contract, the applicants make no case to upset the authorities
set
out in the judgment confirming the liquidators’ authority.
There is no merit to this submission and no prospect that
another
court would come to a different finding.
21.
As to the remainder of the attack against
the reasons, and whether the court made factual and legal errors in
finding that sections
134 and 135 of the Companies Act, Act 71 of
2008, [2008 Act] is applicable to the present application. The
established legal position
is that an appeal lies against the order.
The applicants do not suggest that the non-applicability or otherwise
of these sections
impact the order. There is thus no merit to this
ground and no prospect that another court would come to a different
finding.
Conclusion
22.
For all the reasons set out in this ruling,
the application for leave to appeal must fail.
Order
1. The application for
leave to appeal is dismissed.
N.N
BAM J (Ms)
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT,
GAUTENG, PRETORIA
Date of
Hearing:
20 June 2025
Date of
Judgment:
07 July 2025
Appearance:
Counsel for the
Applicants:
Adv D.M Leathern SC
Instructed
by:
W De Wet Attorneys Inc.
Muckleneuk,
Pretoria
[1]
Act
10 of 2013.
[2]
Caratco
(Pty) Ltd v Independent Advisory (Pty) Ltd (
982/18)
[2020] ZASCA 17
;
2020 (5) SA 35
(SCA) (25 March 2020).
[3]
MEC
for Health, Eastern Cape v Mkhitha and Another
(1221/2015)
[2016] ZASCA 176
(25 November 2016), paragraph 17.
[4]
(CCT65/05)
[2006] ZACC 13
;
2007 (5) SA 525
(CC);
2007 (2) BCLR 125
(CC) (1
September 2006), paragraph 19.
[5]
(CCT198/14)
[2015] ZACC 22
;
2015 (5) SA 245
(CC);
2015 (10) BCLR 1199
(CC) (26
June 2015), paragraph 83, 85, 87- 88.
[6]
(CCT29/18)
[2019] ZACC 17
;
2019 (7) BCLR 826
(CC); (2019) 40 ILJ 1731 (CC);
[2019] 11 BLLR 1189
(CC) (30 April 2019), paragraph 26-27.
[7]
(605/2016)
[2017] ZASCA 47
(31 March 2017), paragraphs, 23-24;
Zurich
Insurance Company South Africa Ltd v Gauteng Provincial Government
(734/2021)
[2022] ZASCA 127
;
[2023] 1 All SA 368
(SCA);
2023 (1) SA
447
(SCA) (28 September 2022), paragraph 4;
Cape
Empowerment Trust Ltd v Fisher Hoffman Sithole
(200/11)
[2013] ZASCA 16
;
[2013] 2 All SA 629
(SCA);
2013 (5) SA 183
(SCA) (20 March 2013).
[8]
Celliers
and Others v Kleinfontein Aandeleblok (Edms) Bpk and Others
(Leave to Appeal) (4755/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1060 (31 October 2024),
paragraph 16.
[9]
(25039/2021)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 1622 (18 March 2024).
[10]
(CCT214/14)
[2015] ZACC 30
;
2015 (11) BCLR 1319
(CC);
2016 (3) SA 37
(CC) (29
September 2015), paragraph 39.
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