Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 29South Africa
Keystone Worx (Pty) Ltd v Cown N.O and Others (006243/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 29 (10 January 2024)
Headnotes
Summary: Removal-opposed motion roll. Existing order – 31 January 2023 - arbitration processes. Parties did not reach a compromise and process collapsed before being born. Prayer 4-order-opposed motion roll. Application-granted-pending arbitration proceedings.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Keystone Worx (Pty) Ltd v Cown N.O and Others (006243/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 29 (10 January 2024)
Keystone Worx (Pty) Ltd v Cown N.O and Others (006243/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 29 (10 January 2024)
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sino date 10 January 2024
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REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE
NUMBER: 006243/2023
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
DATE:
10 January 2024
SIGNATURE:
In
the matter between:
KEYSTONE
WORX (PTY) LTD
PLAINTIFF
And
MG
COWN
NO
FIRST DEFENDANT
H
BESTER
NO
SECOND RESPONDENT
NY
SERITI
NO
THIRD RESPONDENT
Delivery
:
This judgment is issued by the Judge
whose name appears herein and is submitted electronically to the
parties /legal representatives
by email. It is also uploaded on
CaseLines and its date of delivery is deemed 10 January 2024
.
Summary:
Removal-opposed motion roll.
Existing order – 31 January 2023 - arbitration processes.
Parties did not reach a compromise
and process collapsed before being
born. Prayer 4-order-opposed motion roll. Application-granted-pending
arbitration proceedings.
JUDGMENT
NTLAMA-MAKHANYA
AJ
[1]
This is an application for the removal of the matter from the opposed
motion roll
because this court granted an order on 31 January 2023
which was by agreement between the parties for the matter to be
considered
through the arbitration process in dealing with the
disputed facts. By agreement, the following agreement was made an
order of
court in that:
[1.1]
the respondents shall not proceed with the sale or disposal with the
property known as 6[...] D[...]
Road; 1[...] B[...] Park, Bronberg,
Waparand, Pretoria, pending the resolution of the dispute of the
temporary structures known
as Octagon, Workshop and Storeroom
(Octagon Structures) located on the property.
[1.2]
the applicant and respondents agree that the dispute regarding the
ownership of the structures described
as the Octagon Structures is to
be referred to arbitration.
[1.3]
the arbitration will be conducted in terms of the Commercial Rules of
Arbitration Foundation of Southern
Africa (AFSA), with the parties
jointly to appoint an arbitrator.
[1.4]
the parties will after granting of the order, and by no later than 14
calendar days, conclude a formal
arbitration agreement in line with
Commercial Rules of Arbitration Foundation of Southern Africa (AFSA),
setting out the rights
and obligations of each party, failing which,
either party may approach the court on such supplemented papers as
may be necessary
for appropriate relief.
[1.5]
The costs of this application and the wasted cost relating to the
postponed auction to be the costs
in the arbitration.
[2]
It is this order that had since become dormant, and the parties could
not find a common
ground in which to operationalise it. Instead, the
main cause of action has found its way back to the opposed motion
roll as evident
herein and was prayed for it to be struck off the
said roll to ensure compliance with prayer 4 (1.4 herein) of the
notice of motion
as endorsed in the court order.
[3]
The First-Third Respondents duly appointed as liquidators of
Vendor
Management Solutions (PTY) LTD Reg Nr 2012/056951/07 and Masters
Reference Number: T00063/21
opposed the removal of the matter
from the roll. For ease of reference, I will refer to them as
“Respondents”.
[4]
The contentious issue which has become the subject of the dispute in
this case is
the removal of the matter from the opposed motion roll
considering the above order of this court.
Background
[5]
This application arose from the order granted by this court as noted
above for the
main cause regarding the factual dispute that had to be
referred to the arbitration process. The parties could not agree and
reach
a concession on the way in which the arbitration process should
have been undertaken. The applicant contended that the defendant’s
heads of arguments dealt with the merits of the case that were not
before this court regarding the removal of the matter from the
roll.
Therefore, since the parties never went for arbitration, the conduct
of the defendant was not within the ‘decorum’
of the
court. The plaintiff emphasised that the respondents are prohibited
from selling Octagon Structures until resolved by arbitration
as
envisaged in the 31 January 2023 court order. In a letter dated 23
October 2023, the applicant wrote to the defendants indicating
that
having reached a stalemate on the arbitration, the latter have not
filed a rescission or variation of the court order and
may reconsider
its position and remove the matter from the roll.
[6]
The defendants opposed the removal of the matter from the opposed
motion roll in that
the arbitrator was granted by a court order and
argued that the attack on the integrity of the court order was not
justified. In
response to the above letter from the applicant, the
defendants averred that they are following prayer 4 of the court
order after
the parties reached a deadlock regarding the arbitration
process. The respondents then refused to take up the invitation to
remove
the matter from the roll as the case needed to be brought to
finality by the court.
[7]
The summary of this matter is traceable from an agreement to
construct the above Octagon
Structures wherein the defendants
remained indebted to the applicant in the amount of R3 384 469.94.
The parties entered into the
agreement in the year 2019 for the
construction of the said structures and at the height of the COVID
19-pandemic, the defendants
struggled to honour the payment
conditions due to the restrictions that were imposed then. On 15 May
2020, the parties reached
a compromise for the payment conditions
which was meant to pass ownership of certain assets belonging to the
defendants to the
applicant. As the applicant alleged, the compromise
was for a formal transfer of ownership of the assets pending payment
from the
defendants.
[8]
The crux of this application was also founded on the applicant’s
awareness of
the insolvency of the defendants wherein its properties
were to be sold in auction by the Vendors Management Solutions (Pty)
Ltd
in Liquidation (hereinafter referred as Respondents). The
applicant then sought an urgent interdict to prohibit the sale of
assets
on liquidation of the Respondents and without the debt being
satisfied. In turn, it claimed ownership of the property (Octagon
Structures) which it intended to remove from the property. I do not
intend to exhaust to facts of this case as they touch on the
factors
that are a determinant of the main cause of the application. The
quest is limited to an application for the removal of
matter from the
opposed motion roll and the effect of the 31 January 2023 court order
has in such a request.
Evaluation
[9]
It is of essence to state that the context of this application was
the removal of
the matter from the opposed motion roll which
(in)directly could have given meaning to the order of this court as
indicated above.
The respondents argued for the retention of the
matter in the motion court roll in the face of the glaring court
order of 31 January
2023. It is not this court to be seen as
promoting ‘
judicial apathy
’ and disregard
not just its 31 January 2023 order but the deeper content of the
arbitration process. The arbitration process
is not the ‘
poor
cousin
’ of the adjudication process but a legitimate
and an essential system in the resolution of disputes in South
Africa. Arbitration
is not the easy way out but a due process of law
that gives substance to the resolution of the dispute in question.
The
Arbitration Act 42 of 1965
is envisaged to ‘
provide for
the settlement of disputes by arbitration tribunals in terms of
written arbitration agreements and for the enforcement
of the awards
of such arbitration tribunals
. Of particular significance in this
Act is the definition of an arbitration agreement as a ‘
written
agreement providing for the reference to arbitration of any existing
dispute or any future dispute relating to a matter
specified in the
agreement, whether an arbitrator is named or designated therein or
not
…’. The
Arbitration Act carries
the substance of
the Commercial Rules Arbitration Foundation of Southern Africa
(AFSA). The arbitration process in terms of AFSA
is defined as a
‘
unique
South African process
that provides the parties with the essential supervisory and
logistical support vital for an effective outcome
’.
[10]
This matter was already scheduled to be heard before me in the motion
court on 30 October 2023
and with the applicant’s letter dated
23 October 2023 for the defendants to reconsider going ahead and
remove it from the
roll. The applicant raised several issues which
touch on the core content of the parties having ‘
played
far from the goal posts’
of resolving the matter
through the arbitration process. The defendants responded to the said
letter on the same day (23 October
2023) rejecting the proposed
removal of the matter from the roll and cited the serving of the
Heads of Arguments on 10 August 2023
and notice of set down on 13
September 2023 and the applicant to only respond on 23 October with
the proposed removal was not justified.
[11]
Following the scheduling of the matter on 30 October 2023, this court
has also not lost sight
of the prescripts of Rule 41(1)(a) that is
indicative of the time frames in which a matter may be removed from
the roll. The latter
Rule provides that ‘
a person
instituting any proceedings may at any time
before
the matter has been set down and
thereafter by consent
of the parties or
leave of the court withdraw such
proceedings
, in any of which events he shall deliver a
notice of withdrawal and may embody in such notice a consent to pay
costs; and the taxing
master shall tax such costs on the request of
the other party’.
In this instance, the matter had been
placed on the roll and the respondents had vehemently opposed the
removal and this court is
exercising its discretion to consider the
merits of the removal in this application. Of particular importance
for this court is
the court order for a failed arbitration process
that was not honoured by the parties as they blamed each other on
papers and during
argument. This court is not to deal with the
reasonableness of prayer 4 of the court order and focus on ‘
flexing
legal muscles
’ and determine who is better muscled in
this litigation as opposed to the other since the parties could not
agree on the
terms and the way in which they were going to administer
the arbitration process. The ‘
legal-slinging
’
by the parties missed an opportunity for the operationalisation of
their own agreement.
[12]
With the arbitration process having found no space in the resolution
of this matter, it is unjustifiable
for this court to grant
permission to remove the matter from the roll due to what it
considers as ‘
legal power struggle’
.
The
sore point in this matter was the ‘
throwing
out of the baby with the bath water’
wherein the arbitration process was not afforded an opportunity to be
a determinant of the disputed facts.
This court could
not find any tangible and persuasive reasons that could have
warranted not honouring the order of this court in
ensuring the
resolution of factual disputes through the arbitration process. Van
der Schyff J
in
Dey Street Properties
(Pty)
Ltd) v Salentias Travel and Hospitality CC
(25461/21)
[2021] ZAGPPHC 462
held that ‘
the implication was that a
party cannot unilaterally [remove] a matter where the opposing
party’s consent cannot be obtained.
It is the discretion of the
court seized with an application for postponement that prevails.
Similar logic as applies to Rule 41(3) applies to the
removal of a matter from the roll after it’s enrolled for
hearing. An
applicant, dominis litis, is bound to the date determined
by it in the notice of motion, for the matter to be heard’
,
(
para 5
, my emphasis)
. In the context of
this case, this court could not deal with the merits of the main
application instead had to divert its attention
and consider the
removal of the matter from roll because of the differences between
the parties on how to make an earlier order
of this court work. The
removal of the matter from the roll has the ‘
potential to
negatively affect the proper administration of justice and the
operation of this court, particularly after the allocation
of judges
that have since been allocated and ready to disperse with the
matter’
, (Crutchfield J in
Mnguni
v Ngwenya and Another (A3065/2020) [2023] ZAGPJHC
117,
para
30
).
This court is not the ‘
playing
field for a cat and mouse game between litigants
’
(Van der Schyff J in
Dey
judgment above,
para
6
).
The removal of a matter from a roll is by mutual agreement between
the parties and in this instance, despite their original agreement
for an arbitration process which was endorsed by this court, the
process could not even take off the ground because of the
unjustifiable
differences of opinion on the way in which the process
should have been administered.
[13]
The exercise of ‘
power-strength
’
is
not rationally connected to the resolution of this matter. This court
confirmed an agreement which was by consent of the parties
who then
reneged in making it work by exercising and indicating the strength
of each other’s legal muscles.
[14]
This court was therefore not misdirected in granting the said order
that could have served as
a ‘
tight-knot
’
that is integral in the adjudication and arbitration processes. There
was no misplacement of its order in that as the parties
themselves
identified, there were factual disputes that could not had been
decided on papers and argument before the court. Arbitration
was
therefore an essential process and engagement in dealing with the
said dispute. The in-depth ventilation of this matter through
the
arbitration process could have enabled this court to determine the
legitimacy of the award, if either party saw it fit to bring
it to
the attention of this court for the validation of the said award, may
be due to some factors that could have tainted the
rationality of the
process.
The interrelationship that
exists between the arbitration and the adjudication processes was
left ‘
floating in the sky
’
in that this court was denied an opportunity to determine and /or
endorse the legitimacy of the arbitration award. I must
state that
there was no substance regarding the implementation of prayer 4 which
could have opened an opportunity for either party
to approach the
court to present factors that could have justified their bringing
before the attention of this court. Let me reiterate,
the parties did
not even agree on the terms of the arbitration process which
foreshadows the outcome of the process. This court
acknowledges that
the arbitration process has a binding effect on the outcome of its
determination, and the court may also be called
upon to validate and
enforce the arbitration award if either party is seeking such a
validation or enforcement. It is only in rare
instances that an award
may not be reviewed wherein an irregularity is contended and the
recent judgment by Petse AP in
OCA
Testing and Certification South Africa (Pty) Ltd v KCEC Engineering
Construction (Pty) Ltd
(1226/2021)
[2023] ZASCA 13
(17 February 2023)
is indicative of this essential role of the court in ensuring the
linkage between arbitration and judicial review which the parties
denied this court by failing to honour their own agreement and if not
satisfied with the outcome of the process and approach this
court as
was the case in the
OCA Testing
judgment above. Therefore, the content of the endorsed prayer 4 is
not limited to either party approaching this court, but the
latter
was kept at ‘
bay
’
as the parties, of their own volition and power flexing could not
agree on the basics that could have led, may be through
either party
for the consideration of the rationality of the arbitration award.
[15]
Both parties (applicants arguing for the removal and defendants for
the retention) dragged the
finality of this matter which had an
effect not just on the costs of litigation but the development of the
principles of arbitration.
[16]
In this context I found difficulty in not removing the matter in
circumstances wherein a justified
court order which the parties had
agreed upon, could not be translated into reality and give meaning to
the principles of the arbitration
process.
[17]
In result, I accordingly make the following order:
[17.1] The
application is granted for the removal of the matter from the opposed
motion court roll pending the conclusion
of the arbitration
proceedings as per the court order granted on 31 January 2023.
[17.2] The costs of
this application are ordered on a party and party scale.
N NTLAMA-MAKHANYA
ACTING JUDGE, THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Date
Heard
: 07 November 2023
Date
Delivered
: 10 January 2024
Appearances
:
Plaintiff
:
Rudman
and Associates Inc
211
Lange Street
Muckleuneuck
Pretoria
0181
Defendant:
Van
der Venter Dlamini Inc
1
st
Floor, Surrey Avenue
Ferndale,
Randburg
2125
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