Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 764South Africa
Sable Place Properties 106 (Pty) Ltd and Others v Visa Security Group (Pty) Ltd and Another (Leave to Appeal) (081761-2025) [2025] ZAGPPHC 764 (18 July 2025)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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 (Leave to Appeal) (081761-2025) [2025] ZAGPPHC 764 (18 July 2025)
Sable Place Properties 106 (Pty) Ltd and Others v Visa Security Group (Pty) Ltd and Another (Leave to Appeal) (081761-2025) [2025] ZAGPPHC 764 (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:
081761-2025
(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
Second
Respondent
(REGISTRATION NUMBER:
2015/224619/07)
JUDGMENT
MINNAAR AJ,
[1]
On 17 June 2025, in the urgent court, I
granted the order as prayed for by the applicants. 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 Hertford 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 Hertford 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 Hertford 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.
[2]
Later that same day, the first respondent
submitted an application for leave to appeal against my order. In the
application for
leave to appeal, the first respondent stated that the
order was granted by way of an
ex
tempore
judgment, without reasons. This
is not factually correct, as the order granted was in terms of a
draft order that counsel handed
up for the applicants.
[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]
Applications for leave to appeal are dealt
with in terms of the provisions of Rule 49 of the Uniform Rules of
Court read with sections
16 and 17 of the Superiors Courts Act 10 of
2013 (“the Superior Courts Act”).
[5]
It
is trite that the grounds of appeal must be clearly and succinctly
set out in clear and unambiguous terms to enable the court
and the
respondent to be fully informed of the case the applicant seeks to
make out and which the respondent is to meet in opposing
the
application for leave to appeal. Rule 49(1)(b) is peremptory in this
regard.
[1]
[6]
In its application for leave to appeal, the
first respondent alleges that the court erred on the following
aspects:
a.
Entertaining the application on the urgent
roll where the applicants had failed to satisfy the test prescribed
under Rule 6(12)(b).
b.
Failed to consider that the applicants
would be afforded substantial redress in due course by advancing a
claim for damages in due
course.
c.
The existence of the agreement relied on by
the first respondent constituted a material dispute of facts,
incapable of resolution
on the affidavits, alternatively given that
the applicants were seeking final relief, on the application of the
Plascon Evans
rule. As such, the first respondent’s version ought to have
prevailed in that the said version was not palpably false, untenable
or far-fetched since the first respondent tendered undisputed
evidence of the agreement concluded with the applicants, through
their agent.
d.
The court ought to have found that the
first respondent’s version is presented with admissible
evidence and is uncontested
on the affidavit and should have been
accepted.
e.
The court ought to have found that on
application of the legal test holding that a tacit contract has been
established in that the
most probable conclusion from all of the
proven facts and circumstances is that a contract came into existence
between the first
respondent and the applicants. In this regard, it
is stated that the first respondent tendered evidence of unequivocal
conduct
by the contracting parties (Strive as the agent of the
applicants and the first respondent), giving rise to an inference of
consensus
on a balance of probabilities.
f.
Based on the proven agreement, which the
applicants had not terminated, the first respondent was entitled to
continue providing
security services at the applicants’
property through its agreement directly with the applicants.
g.
Erred in finding that evidence existed and
was tendered of imminent and/or any harm or risk presented by the
first respondent on
the applicants’ property and/or the tenants
at the property. The court ought to have found that the lack of
evidence rendered
the alleged harm and/or risk to the applicants’
property and/or tenants as unsubstantiated and fell to be rejected.
The court
ought to have found that the first respondent had raised a
valid defence to the order for ejectment and that the applicants had
failed to make out a case for the final interdict sought.
h.
The urgent application ought to have been
dismissed with costs, including the costs of two counsel.
i.
Failed to exercise a discretion when
awarding costs on Scale C, in circumstances where the matter was not
complex, with the facts
being straightforward, the papers were not
voluminous, and the matter lasted well under an hour.
[7]
In concluding the application for leave to
appeal, it is the first respondent’s case that there are
reasonable prospects of
success on appeal and that leave to appeal
should be granted to the Full Bench of this court.
[8]
In the first respondent’s
supplementary heads of argument in the application for leave to
appeal, it is recorded that the
first respondent will not persist
with the application for leave to appeal against the cost order.
During the argument, the first
respondent’s counsel also did
not pursue the leave to appeal on the urgency aspect. All that
remained was the first respondent’s
reliance that the court
erred concerning the adjudication of disputes of fact in application
proceedings.
[9]
Section 17(1) of the Superior Courts Act
provides the test applicable to applications for leave to appeal.
Section 17(1) reads as
follows:
“
(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;
(b)
the decision sought on appeal does not fall within the ambit of
section 16 (2) (a); and
(c)
where the decision sought to be appealed does not dispose of all the
issues in the case, the appeal
would lead to a just and prompt
resolution of the real issues between the parties.”
[10]
Section
17(1)(a)(i) of the Superior Courts Act was dealt with in the decision
of the Land Claim Court in
The
Mont Chevaux Trust v Tina Goosen & 18 Others
2014
(JDR 2325 (LCC); 2014 JDR 2325 in which Bertelsmann J held that
the use of the word “
would”
(as
opposed to could) in the provisions is an indication that the
threshold for leave to appeal has been raised. It was further
held
that the word “
would”
indicates a measure of certainty that another court will differ from
the judgment appealed against.
[2]
[11]
On the rigidity of the threshold, Plaskett
AJA (as he then was) in which Cloete JA and Maya JA (as she then was)
concurred, wrote
the following
S v Smith
2012
(1) SACR 567 (SCA) ([2011] ZASCA
15) at paragraph 7:
'What the test of
reasonable prospects of success postulates is a dispassionate
decision, based on the facts and the law that the
Court of Appeal
could reasonably arrive at a conclusion different to that of the
trial court. In order to succeed, therefore, the
appellant must
convince this Court on proper grounds that he has prospects of
success on appeal and that those prospects are not
remote, but have a
realistic chance of succeeding. More is required to be established
than that there is a mere possibility of
success. That the case is
arguable on appeal or that the case cannot be categorised as
hopeless. There must, in other words, be
a sound, rational basis for
the conclusion that there are prospects of success on appeal.'
[12]
Under
section 17(1)(a)(ii) of the Superior Courts Act, the Court
determining an application for leave to appeal ought to enquire
whether there is a compelling reason for the appeal to be heard.
[3]
The enquiry is factual and, therefore, each application ought to be
decided on its own facts.
[13]
Other
considerations beyond the abovementioned statutory provisions would
include where the material case is of substantial importance
to the
appellant and where the decision sought to be appealed against
involves an important question of law
[4]
or where required by the interests of justice.
[5]
[14]
The first respondent contends that, based
on the facts and the law, and considering a measure of certainty
implied by the word “would”,
that a court of appeal could
reasonably conclude differently from the conclusion that this court
arrived at.
[15]
It is further the contention of the first
respondent that I erred in my approach to considering and
adjudicating the evidence in
the application, on the basis that the
first respondent failed to prove the existence of an agreement
between the applicants and
the first respondent. It is submitted that
I ought to have held that a material dispute of facts existed and the
evidence stood
to be considered in accordance with the trite
principles laid down in
Plascon-Evans
Paints Limited v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984 (3) SA 623
(A) at 635 H – I.
[16]
In the first respondent’s
supplementary heads of argument, and during submissions by counsel,
reference was made to the judgment
delivered by the Supreme Court of
Appeal on 4 July 2025 in
Van den Berg
Water (Pty) Ltd t/a Oasis Water Lynnwood and Others v Oasis Water
(Pty) Ltd and Another (Case no 989/2023); Van Schalkwyk
Water CC t/a
Oasis Water Kimberley and Another v Oasis Water (Pty) Ltd (Case no
988/2023); Oasis Water (Pty) Ltd and Another v
Wynand Albertus Bester
and Another (Case no 1120/2023)
[2025]
SASCA 98 (4 July 2025) (‘the
Oasis
judgment’).
[17]
In the
Oasis
judgment, the Supreme Court of Appeal restated that, when relief
sought that is final in effect, it is required to establish a
clear
right, and an issue such as the balance of convenience does not
arise. Schippers JA (writing for the Court) also again confirmed
the
trite manner to establish disputes of fact in holding that a further
consequence of the status of orders serving as final interdicts
is
that the
Plascon-Evans
rule applies, and dispute of fact essentially fall to be determined
on the respondents’ version, unless it is farfetched
or
untenable. Reference was again made to the oft-quoted passage by
Harms in
National Director of Public
Prosecutions v Zuma
[2009] ZASCA 1
;
2009 (2) SA 277
at
para 26:
“
Motion
proceedings, unless concerned with interim relief, are all about the
resolution of legal issues based on common cause facts.
Unless the
circumstances are special they cannot be used to resolve factual
issues because they are not designed to determine probabilities.
It
is well established under the Plascon-Evans rule that where in motion
proceedings disputes of fact arise on the affidavits,
a final order
can be granted only if the facts averred in the applicant's (Mr
Zuma's) affidavits, which have been admitted by the
respondent (the
NDPP), together with the facts alleged by the latter, justify such
order. It may be different if the
respondent's version
consists of bald or uncreditworthy denials, raises fictitious
disputes of fact, is palpably implausible, far-fetched
or so clearly
untenable that the court is justified in rejecting them merely on the
papers. The court below did not
have regard to these
propositions and instead decided the case on probabilities without
rejecting the NDPP's version.”
[18]
Considering the submissions made, the
written reasons provided, and based on the facts and the law, I am
not convinced that a Court
of Appeal could reasonably conclude
differently from the conclusion reached by me. I cannot find that the
first respondent has
prospects of success and that those prospects
are not remote, but have a realistic chance of succeeding.
[19]
If regard is had to my judgment, read with
the application for leave to appeal, I conclude that, although
subjectively to the first
respondent the case might be of substantial
importance, the application lacks any semblance of prospect of
success, let alone reasonable
prospect of success.
[20]
No other compelling reason is advanced as
to why the appeal should be heard, and the interest of justice is not
implicated. Neither
is a valid, important question of law raised.
[21]
As the provisions of section 17(1)(a) of
the Superior Courts Act clearly demand, the application must be
dismissed, as leave to
appeal may only be given when the court
believes that the intended appeal “would have” a
reasonable prospect of success.
The first respondent has failed to
establish a case that another court would reach a different
conclusion or outcome from the order
in this case.
[22]
The applicants seek a dismissal of the
application for leave to appeal with costs on the scale as between
attorney and client, alternatively
with costs to be ordered on Scale
C.
[23]
There is no basis for a punitive costs
order. Both sides employed the service of senior counsel, and as
such, the costs on Scale
C are justified.
[24]
Consequently, I make the following order:
1.
The application for leave to appeal is
dismissed.
2.
The first respondent to pay the costs of
the application for leave to appeal 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]
Songomo
v Minister of Law and Order
1996 (4) SA 384
(E) at 385J – 386A
[2]
Mont
Chevaux Trust at
par
6.
See
further
Acting
National Director of Public Prosecutions and Others v Democratic
Alliance In Re: Democratic Alliance v Acting National
Director of
Public Prosecutions and Others
(1957/09)
[2016] ZAGPPHC 489 (24 June 2016) par 25
[3]
Erasmus,
Superior Court Practice (2021) A2-56 to 57
[4]
Erasmus,
Superior Court Practice (2021) A2-56 to 57
[5]
City
of Tshwane v Afriforum
2016 (6) SA 279
(CC) par 40
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