Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 760South Africa
Sable Place Properties 106 (Pty) Ltd and Others v Visa Security Group (Pty) Ltd and Another (097988/2025) [2025] ZAGPPHC 760 (18 July 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
18 July 2025
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Sable Place Properties 106 (Pty) Ltd and Others v Visa Security Group (Pty) Ltd and Another (097988/2025) [2025] ZAGPPHC 760 (18 July 2025)
Sable Place Properties 106 (Pty) Ltd and Others v Visa Security Group (Pty) Ltd and Another (097988/2025) [2025] ZAGPPHC 760 (18 July 2025)
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sino date 18 July 2025
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION:
PRETORIA)
Date: 18 July 2025
Case number:
097988-2025
(1) REPORTABLE: NO
(2) OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO
(3) REVISED
DATE: 18 July 2025
SIGNATURE
In the matter between:
SABLE
PLACE PROPERTIES 106 (PTY) LTD
First
Applicant
REDEFINE
PROPERTIES LTD
Second
Applicant
TADVEST
COMMERCIAL (PTY) LTD
Third
Applicant
And
VISA
SECURITY GROUP (PTY) LTD
First
Respondent
MINISTER
OF POLICE
(REGISTRATION
NUMBER: 2015/224619/07)
Second
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MINNAAR AJ,
[1]
On 17 June 2025, and under case number
081761-2025, the first respondent lodged an application for leave to
appeal. This was in
response to an order I had granted earlier that
day in the urgent court (‘the urgent application’).
[2]
The granted order was in accordance with a draft
order that the applicants’ counsel handed up in court. The
following relief,
relevant to the first respondent, was granted:
a.
That the first respondent, and any other persons,
entities or bodies, and employees, as the case may be, acting through
the first
respondent, is hereby ordered to forthwith vacate the
applicants’ property at H[...] Office Park, 9
[...]
B[...] Road, Vorna Valley, Sandton, Gauteng.
b.
That the first respondent, and any other persons, entities or
bodies,
as the case may be, acting through, or under the first respondent,
are hereby restrained, and interdicted, from attending
upon the
applicants’ property at H[...] Office Park, 9[...] B[...] Road,
Vorna Valley, Sandton, Gauteng, with the aim and
sole, or other
purpose of:
i.Demanding that the
applicants employ them as security service providers, at the
applicants’ property at H[...] Office Park,
9[...] B[...] Road,
Vorna Valley, Sandton, Gauteng; and
ii.Frustrating, and
interfering with, the applicants’ business thereat; and
iii.Harassing and
intimidating tenants, employees and security service providers of the
applicants; and
iv.Interfering with,
harassing or intimidating the applicants’ managers, and/or
security service providers; and
v.Without limiting the
generality of the aforesaid, prohibited from doing anything
whatsoever related to or in connection with the
harassment,
intimidation and assault of the applicant’s employees, its
security or other contractors, tenants and security
service provider
and preventing the applicants’ security and other contractors
from performing their daily duties and functions.
c.
That the first respondent be ordered to pay the
costs of this application on scale C in terms of Rule 67, read with
Rule 69.
[3]
Together with the application for leave to appeal,
the first respondent also sought written reasons for the order. These
were provided
on 24 June 2025. The first respondent’s
application for leave to appeal was not supplemented on receipt of
the written reasons.
[4]
On 25 June 2025, the applicants lodged this
application in terms of section 18(1) and 18(3) of the Superior
Courts Act, 10 of 2013
(‘the Section 18 application’).
[5]
Section
18 applications are by their very nature urgent.
[1]
As such, I directed that both the application for leave to appeal and
the Section 18 application were to be heard on 1 July 2025.
For
reasons that will be dealt with later in this judgment, the
applications were not argued on 1 July 2025. Both applications
were
postponed to 9 July 2025 for argument.
[6]
In terms of the Section 18 application, the
applicants are seeking urgent relief that the order of 17 June 2025
and the judgment
of 24 June 2025 shall operate pending the outcome of
the appeal process, including the application for leave to appeal and
any
appeal noted, if any.
[7]
The first respondent delivered an answering
affidavit, and the applicants delivered their replying affidavit.
[8]
Section 18(1) to (3) reads:
“
18
Suspension of decision pending appeal
(1) Subject to
subsections (2) and (3), and unless the court under exceptional
circumstances orders otherwise, the operation and
execution of a
decision which is the subject of an application for leave to appeal
or of an appeal, is suspended pending the decision
of the application
or appeal.
(2) Subject to
subsection (3), unless the court under exceptional circumstances
orders otherwise, the operation and execution of
a decision that is
an interlocutory order not having the effect of a final judgment,
which is the subject of an application for
leave to appeal or of an
appeal, is not suspended pending the decision of the application or
appeal.
(3) A court may only
order otherwise as contemplated in subsection (1) or (2), if the
party who applied to the court to order otherwise,
in addition proves
on a balance of probabilities that he or she will suffer irreparable
harm if the court does not so order and
that the other party will not
suffer irreparable harm if the court so orders.”
[9]
From the wording of section 18(3), read with
section 18(2), it is evident that a party who seeks a departure from
the ordinary rule
that a final order is suspended pending an appeal,
need to prove three things, namely:
a.
The existence of exceptional circumstances;
b.
Proof, on a balance of probabilities, that he or
she will suffer irreparable harm if the interim order is not
suspended; and
c.
Proof, on a balance of probabilities, that the
respondent (i.e. the party in whose favour the interim interdict was
granted) will
not suffer irreparable harm if the interim order is
suspended.
[10]
In
Tyte
Security Services CC v Western Cape Provincial Government and Others
2024
(6) SA 175
(SCA) at paragraph 9 it is stated that the Supreme Court
of Appeal has examined the requirements for the implementation of an
execution
order pending an appeal in
University
of the Free State v AfriForum (AfriForum);
[2]
Ntlemeza
v Helen Suzman Foundation;
[3]
Premier
of Gauteng v Democratic Alliance;
[4]
Knoop
v Gupta (Knoop);
[5]
and
,
in Zuma v Downer and Another.
[6]
[11]
In paragraph 10 of
Tyte,
the Supreme Court of Appeal states:
“
Whilst
there are indeed statements in those judgments that would appear to
support counsel's fundamental hypothesis, they seem to
have been made
in passing. They thus call for closer examination in this matter. An
important point of departure, so it seems to
me, is that
consideration of each of the so-called three requirements is not a
hermetically sealed enquiry and can hardly be approached
in a
compartmentalised fashion.”
[12]
In
Afriforum
the
Supreme Court of Appeal has explained that section 18 “
places
a heavy onus on the applicant”
and
does not seek merely to codify the common law but to “
introduce
more onerous requirements”.
[7]
[13]
The
existence of ‘exceptional circumstances ' is a necessary
prerequisite for the exercise of the court’s discretion
under
section 18. If the circumstances are not truly exceptional, that is
the end of the matter. The application must fail and
falls to be
dismissed. If, however, exceptional circumstances are found to be
present, it would not follow, without more, that
the application must
succeed.
[8]
[14]
In paragraph 12 of
Tyte
it is stated:
“
It
has long been accepted that it is 'undesirable to attempt to lay down
any general rule' in respect of 'exceptional circumstances'
and that
each case must be considered upon its own facts.
[9]
In
MV
Ais Mamas
Thring
J summarised the approach to be followed. He said that '(w)hat is
ordinarily contemplated by the words "exceptional
circumstances"
is something out of the ordinary and of an unusual nature; something
which is excepted in the sense that the
general rule does not apply
to it; something uncommon, rare or different . . .'.”
[10]
[15]
In paragraph 13 of
Tyte
,
the Supreme Court of Appeal stated:
“
What
constitutes irreparable harm is always dependent upon the factual
situation in which the dispute arises, and upon the legal
principles
that govern the rights and obligations of the parties in the context
of that dispute. It was accepted in
Knoop
that
'(t)he need to establish exceptional circumstances is likely to be
closely linked to the applicant establishing that they will
suffer
irreparable harm if the . . . order is not implemented
immediately'.
[11]
The
same, I dare say, can be said of its counterpart, the absence of
irreparable harm to the respondent. In that sense, the presence
or
absence of irreparable harm, as the case may be, can hardly be
entirely divorced from the exceptional circumstances enquiry.
It
would perhaps be logically incoherent for a court to conclude, on the
one hand, in favour of an applicant that exceptional circumstances
subsist, but, on the other, against an applicant on either leg of the
irreparable harm enquiry.”
[16]
Referring
to paragraph 17 of
Tyte
,
counsel for the first respondent submitted that the Supreme Court of
Appeal held that any irreparable harm (or even the potentiality
of
irreparable harm) to a respondent, no matter how slight, would
irredeemably tip the scales against an applicant. It is further
submitted that the Supreme Court of Appeal, in addition, stated that
unless there was no or zero irreparable harm to a respondent,
the
Section 18 application had to fail.
[12]
[17]
Paragraph 17 of
Tyte
does not contain such a finding. If
regard is had to paragraphs 16, 17 and 18 of
Tyte
,
it is clear that the Supreme Court of Appeal noted submissions made
by counsel and that the finding of the Supreme Court of Appeal
was
made in paragraph 18 thereof. Paragraph 18 of
Tyte
reads:
“
Counsel
did not shrink from the logical consequence of the contention, namely
that
such
a mechanistic approach, which rested on the supposition that the
second and third had to be approached as isolated enquiries,
may well
strip a court of any discretion that it may possess or that it could
give rise to a manifestly inequitable conclusion,
which could serve
to undermine the rule of law. This approach, if it is to be favoured,
would disregard entirely the rationality,
reasonableness and
proportionality yardsticks that have become important touchstones in
our jurisprudence. It likely would also,
to all intents and purposes,
set the bar so high as to render the remedy illusory
.
Counsel was, however, willing to accept that there must always remain
a residual discretion. What exactly was meant by a residual
discretion, or when precisely it was to be exercised, remained
opaque.
However,
on the acceptance of a discretion, even a residual one, the argument
against a weighing-up evaporates. If the argument
were correct, the
court would have no discretion to grant relief under s 18, whatever
the consequences or however irreparably disastrous
to an applicant.
”
(
my
emphasis).
[18]
It is thus evident from
Tyte
that the second and third requirements are not to
be approached as isolated enquiries as this would strip a court of
any discretion
that it may posess or that it could give rise to a
manifestly inequitable conclusion, which could serve to undermine the
rule of
law. The court has the discretion to grant the relief under
Section 18.
[19]
In paragraphs 19 to 21 of
Tyte
,
the Supreme Court of Appeal discussed ‘irreparable harm’
and stated:
[19]
Irreparable harm, it has been said in a somewhat different context,
is more than a rationale — it is a critical factor
in testing
the claim for an interlocutory injunction.
[13]
The
nature of irreparable harm is not easy to define. RJ Sharpe points
out:
'The
rationale for requiring the plaintiff to show irreparable harm is
readily understood. If damages will provide adequate compensation,
and the defendant is in a position to pay them, then ordinarily there
will be no justification in running the risk of an injunction
pending
the trial. While it is easy to see why this requirement should be
imposed, it is difficult to define exactly what is meant
by
irreparable harm.'
[14]
[20] Over a century
ago Innes JA, after referring to Van der Linden's Institutes, where
the essentials for an interdict application
had been enumerated, had
this to say:
'That
element [the injury feared must be irreparable] is only introduced by
him in cases where the right asserted by the applicant,
though prima
facie established, is open to some doubt. In such cases he says the
test must be applied whether the continuance of
the thing against
which an interdict is sought would cause irreparable injury to the
applicant. If so, the better course is to
grant the relief if the
discontinuance of the act complained of would not cause irreparable
injury to the other party.'
[15]
Interim interdicts
(akin to interlocutory injunctions) are regular fare in our courts.
They provide a flexible and most useful tool
in the aid of justice.
Our courts have accordingly come to accept that the remedy should not
be granted if there is a danger that
it may work an injustice.
[21] In
F
Hoffmann-La Roche v Secretary of State for Trade and Industry
Lord Wilberforce expressed the view that:
'The
object of [an interim injunction] is to prevent a litigant, who must
necessarily suffer the law's delay, from losing by the
delay the
fruit of his litigation; this is called "irreparable"
damage, meaning that money obtained at trial may not
compensate
him.'
[16]
Albeit said in the
context of the consideration of a wholly discretionary remedy, and
thus not perfectly analogous, the sentiment
expressed is not entirely
without value here, inasmuch as it echoes precisely the position in
which Royal finds itself.”
[20]
In the urgent application, the applicants alleged
that there was no agreement between the applicants and the first
respondent.
The first respondent placed reliance on a partly
written, partly oral, alternatively tacit agreement between the first
respondent
and Abreal Property Management (‘Abreal’)
(which is now Strive) and/or Keypoint Intelligence (Pty) Ltd
(‘Keypoint’).
It is the first respondent’s case
that the purported agreement was concluded in February 2021
.
[21]
In the urgent application, I found that
the
first respondent failed to prove that a contract, spanning 5 (five)
years, was concluded back in 2021. I further found that
there is no
objective evidence to support the first respondent's contention. For
instance, the first respondent’s participation
in the tender
process is further indicative that there was no existing agreement as
relied on by the first respondent. My conclusion
was that there was
no
nexus
between the applicants and the first respondent. On
the same date as this judgment, I will deliver the judgment in the
application
for leave to appeal: this application for leave to appeal
is dismissed.
[22]
The first respondent did not wait for any time to
pass before lodging its application for leave to appeal. The
application for leave
to appeal was filed within hours of the urgent
order being granted. Effectively, this resulted in the suspension of
the urgent
order's execution. On receipt of the written reasons, the
first respondent did not supplement its grounds for leave to appeal.
The application for leave to appeal was couched in a broad sense to
include allegations that I erred in entertaining the application
as
an urgent application and that I erred in granting costs on Scale C.
It was only in the first respondent’s supplementary
heads of
argument and submissions that the grounds of appeal on costs and
urgency were abandoned. The aspects of urgency and costs
are both
discretionary issues in which a Court of Appeal would not easily
interfere; yet the first respondent included them and
persisted
therewith. The first respondent will take all steps it deems
necessary to remain in occupation of the premises despite
my order.
[23]
I am satisfied that exceptional circumstances
exist herein. Fidelity was awarded the security contract after its
successful participation
in the tender process, and as such, the
applicants should be allowed to implement the contract they have with
Fidelity.
[24]
On the requirements of irreparable harm to the
parties, the following is stated in paragraph 15 of
Tyte:
‘
Although
it has been postulated that the second and third are distinct and
discrete enquiries, they are perhaps more accurately
to be understood
as being two sides of the same coin. The same facts and
circumstances, which by that stage ought largely to be
either common
cause or undisputed, will inform both enquiries. The logical
corollary of an applicant suffering irreparable harm
will invariably
— but not always — be that the other party has not. The
enquiry into each can thus hardly be mutually
exclusive, particularly
because, as far as the third is concerned, unlike the second, the
onus cast upon an applicant would be
to prove a negative, in
accordance with the usual civil standard. This suggests that, as with
the exceptional circumstances enquiry,
a court considering both the
second and third must have regard to all of the facts and
circumstances in any particular case. Insofar
as the third goes,
although s 18(3) casts the onus (which does not shift) upon an
applicant, a respondent may well attract something
in the nature of
an evidentiary burden.
[17]
This
would be especially so where the facts relevant to the third are
peculiarly within the knowledge of the respondent. In that
event it
will perhaps fall to the respondent to raise those facts in an
answering affidavit to the s 18 application, which may
invite a
response from the applicant by way of a replying affidavit.’
[25]
I am satisfied that, on a balance of
probabilities, the applicants stand to suffer irreparable harm if the
order is not granted.
Absent an agreement with the first respondent,
the applicants have no control over the first respondent and the
applicants and
their tenants will be left at the mercy of the first
respondent.
[26]
The submission that the application should fail if
the applicants have not been able to prove that the first respondent
will not
suffer irreparable harm has been dispelled by the finding in
Tyte.
I
have considered the irreparable harm the first respondent contends it
will suffer (reputational harm in the security industry
and rendering
services without payment). These alleged harm can be fully addressed
in a damages claim if the first respondent so
elects. The harm relied
on by the first respondent is not sufficient to prevent the Section
18 relief from being granted.
[27]
Should
the first respondent elect to pursue its appeal further by way of
special leave to the Supreme Court of Appeal, I am not
convinced that
it would have prospects of success.
[18]
[28]
In the premises, it follows that the Section 18
application should be granted.
Wasted costs: 1 July
2025:
[29]
In terms of the applicants’ notice of
motion, it was stated: ‘
... that
the applicants intend to make application on 1 July 2025 at 08h30, or
as soon after that as counsel for the applicants
may be heard and,
after the application for leave to appeal brought by the first
respondent against the applicants before the Honourable
Mr Justice
Minnaar AJ.’
[30]
In the confirmatory affidavit by Mr Manentsa, the
first respondent’s attorney, it is confirmed that the Section
18 application
was served electronically on their offices at 10h23 on
26 June 2025.
[31]
In terms of the application, the first respondent
was required to deliver an answering affidavit by 27 June 2025 at
12:00. The first
respondent only delivered its answering affidavit on
4 July 2025.
[32]
On 27 June 2025, the applicants’ attorney
made a widely shared note on Caselines stating: “
Please
take notice that the matter has been removed from the Roll by notice
– Notice of Removal appears on 020-1 to 020-3
as same is before
Honourable Minnaar AJ as per correspondence which appeas at 074-1 to
074-4’
[33]
There are conflicting versions of what was
understood by this widely shared note. Suffice it to state that the
words ‘
the application is
withdrawn
’
do not appear in this
note; I do not deem it necessary to elaborate on the conflicting
versions.
[34]
When the Section 18 application was called on 1
July 2025, there was no answering affidavit by the first respondent.
This, despite
the service of the application on 26 June 2025 and the
request to deliver an answering affidavit by 27 June 2025 at 12:00.
[35]
In the confirmatory affidavit by Mr Manentse, no
explanation is provided as to why the answering affidavit was only
delivered on
4 July 2025.
[36]
The absence of an answering affidavit and heads of
argument by the first respondent in the Section 18 application caused
both the
application and the application for leave to appeal to be
postponed to 9 July 2025 for argument.
[37]
I can see no reason why the applicants should be
out of pocket for the wasted costs of 1 July 2025, and it follows
that the first
respondent will be liable for these costs.
Costs:
[38]
There is no reason why costs should not follow the
outcome.
[39]
The applicants are seeking costs on the scale as
between attorney and client, alternatively, that costs be awarded on
Scale C.
[40]
There is no justification for punitive costs. Both
sides employed senior counsel, and as such, I deem it appropriate to
award costs
on Scale C.
[41]
Consequently, I make the following order:
1.
The application is regarded as urgent in terms of
Rule 6(12).
2.
The operation and execution of the order granted
on 17 June 2025, under case number 081761-2025 by this Court against
the first
respondent is not suspended pending the finalisation of any
subsequent appeal(s), or the expiry of the period for the launching
of any subsequent appeal(s).
3.
The first respondent to pay the costs of this
application, inclusive of the wasted costs occasioned on 1 July 2025,
such costs to
be taxed on Scale C.
Minnaar AJ
Acting Judge of the
High Court
Gauteng Division,
Pretoria
For
the applicants:
Adv
G T Avvakoumides SC
Instructed
by Mark Efstratiou Inc
For
the first respondent:
Adv
P G Cilliers SC with Adv T Ngakane
Instructed
by Adams & Adams
Heard
on:
9
July 2025
Date
of judgment:
18
July 2025
[1]
Caterpillar
Financial Services South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Zero Azania (Pty) Ltd
(57252/2021)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 1117 (2 October 2023) at para 14;
Downer
v Zuma and Another
(12770/22P;
13062/22P) [2023] ZAKZPHC 75 (3 August 2023) at para 10.
[2]
University
of the Free State v AfriForum and Another
2018
(3) SA 428 (SCA)
[3]
Ntlemeza
v Helen Suzman Foundation and Another
2017
(5) SA 402 (SCA)
[4]
Premier
for the Province of Gauteng and Others v Democratic Alliance and
Others
[2021]
1 ALL SA 60 (SCA)
[5]
Knoop
NO and Another v Gupta (Execution)
2021
(3) SA 135 (SCA)
[6]
Zuma
v Downer and Another
2024
(2) SA 356 (SCA)
[7]
Afriforum
at
para 11
[8]
Tyte
at
para 11
[9]
Norwich
Union Life Insurance Society v Dobbs
1912
AD 395
at 399.
[10]
MV
Ais Mamas: Seatrans Maritime v Owners, MV Ais Mamas, and
Another
2002
(6) SA 150
(C) at 156H – J.
[11]
Knoop
at
para 47
[13]
PM
Perell 'The Interlocutory Injunction and Irreparable Harm' (1989) 68
The Canadian Bar Review 538 at 540.
[14]
RJ
Sharpe Injunctions and Specific Performance (1983) at 77. Cited in
PM Perell id.
[15]
Setlogelo
v Setlogelo
1914
AD 221
at 227.
[16]
F
Hoffmann-La Roche & Co AG and Others v Secretary of State for
Trade and Industry
[1975]
AC 295
([1974]
12 All ER 1128)
at 355 (AC) and at 1146 (All ER).
[17]
MV
Tarik 3: Credit Europe Bank NV v The Fund Comprising the Proceeds of
the Sale of the MV Tarik 3 and Others
[2022]
4 All SA 621
(SCA) ([2022] ZASCA 136) paras 24 – 34.
[18]
Afriforum
at
para 14 and 15
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