Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 186South Africa
Black Royalty Minerals Koornfontein (Pty) Ltd v Sheriff Middelburg and Another (2024/008520) [2024] ZAGPPHC 186 (27 February 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
27 February 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Black Royalty Minerals Koornfontein (Pty) Ltd v Sheriff Middelburg and Another (2024/008520) [2024] ZAGPPHC 186 (27 February 2024)
Black Royalty Minerals Koornfontein (Pty) Ltd v Sheriff Middelburg and Another (2024/008520) [2024] ZAGPPHC 186 (27 February 2024)
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sino date 27 February 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 2024-008520
REPORTABLE:NO
OF
INTERREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
NO
DATE:
27 February 2024
In
the matter between:
BLACK
ROYALTY MINERALS KOORNFONTEIN (PTY) LTD
Applicant
And
THE
SHERIFF; MIDDELBURG
1
st
Respondent
KWIKSPACE
MODULAR BUILDINGS (PTY) LTD
2
nd
Respondent
JUDGMENT
NYATHI
J
A.
INTRODUCTION
[1]
The applicant approached this court urgently, seeking an order:
(i) Interdicting and restraining the
Sheriff for the district of Middelburg, Mpumalanga Province from
executing the Order of his
Lordship Dlamini J of 24 October 2023.
And;
(ii) Interdicting and restraining the
first respondent from trespassing and forcefully entering premises of
the applicant, intimidating
and harassing any personnel, employees
and/or representatives of the applicant within and around the
applicant’s premises.
[2]
The application is opposed by the second respondent.
B.
APPLICANT’S CASE
[3]
At the commencement of the hearing, Mr. Ntshangase appearing for the
applicant, offered a perspective of his client’s
case as
follows:
3.1
The applicant does not
challenge the validity or the lawfulness of the court order of 24
October 2023.
3.2
According to the applicant,
the question that needs to be answered is whether the respondents are
entitled to execute an order against
a party who was not party to the
proceedings or cited in the matter. The applicant is Black Royalty
Minerals Koornfontein (Pty)
Ltd with its principal place of business
at Hendrina Road, Middelburg, Mpumalanga. The party cited in the
order is Black Royalty
Minerals (Pty) Ltd. Both the applicant and
Black Royalty Minerals (being the “third party”) share
the same registered
address in Illovo, Johannesburg. There is a
director common to both entities. Other than that, there is no
otherrelationship between
these entities, there is no holding or
subsidiary relationship between them.
3.3
The
applicant is protecting its interests due to it being a separate
legal entity.
[1]
3.4
There is no rescission of or
appeal against Dlamini J’s order.
3.5
The issue of non-joinder –
the respondents have disregarded the provisions of Rule 10 by not
joining the applicant.
[4]
The annexures “AP 2” and “AP 3” referred to
in the second respondent’s answering affidavit, which
are
common cause between the parties, list the common director as one Mr.
Maleda.
[5]
Mr. Ntshangase submitted that
once a company is incorporated it assumes a separate juristic
personality separate from its members.
He bolstered his submission by
referring to the English case of
Salomon
v. Salomon & Co. Ltd
[2]
and that this same
principle of a separate legal personality was followed in
Dadoo
Ltd v Krugersdorp Municipal Council.
[3]
[6]
The thrust of the applicant’s case is that because a company
has a separate legal personality, therefore it can sue and
be sued in
its own name. It has its own rights and obligations. Furthermore,
members and directors of a company, especially directors,
are just a
mere controlling mind of a company, they are not the company
themselves. They owe a fiduciary duty to the company where
they are
appointed as directors.
[7]
Reference was then made to instances where the courts and the law
disregarded the separate juristic personality, such as instances
of
fraud. The so-called lifting of the corporate veil. Mr. Ntshangase
submitted that this case was not such an instance and was
not the
second respondent’s pleaded case.
C.
THE SECOND RESPONDENT’S CASE
[8]
Mr. Mulligan appeared for the second respondent. He submitted that
the application was by no means urgent. He recounted the
progeny of
this matter from its inception. I will not dwell thereon for purposes
of this brief judgment.
[9]
The nub of the second respondent’s case is that the applicant
has no
locus standi
to launch the application it did. This is
so, seeing that the respondent is pursuing a vindicatory remedy to
recover assets it
had delivered to the respondent in the main
application which resulted in Dlamini J’s order of 24 October
2023. According
to second respondent, it had no reason to have joined
the applicant therein.
[10]
Secondly, the second respondent raises the point that what the
applicant seeks by way of this application, is final relief.
It
submits that should the applicant succeed, and the interdict is
granted, it means that in perpetuity the Sheriff will be barred
from
carrying out her duties in respect of the modular units that are in
Koornfontein Mine in Middelburg, Mpumalanga.
[11]
An undenied fact of this matter is that the application for the order
vindicating the modular units referred to in the Court
Order was
served on Black Royalty Minerals (Pty) Ltd on 17 July 2023 at their
registered address at 1 Ford Street, Illovo, Sandton.
A copy of the
Return of Service is annexed to this application as Annexure "AP1".
A copy of a search of the registered
address of the company Black
Royalty Minerals (Pty) Ltd, showing their registered address, is
likewise annexed thereto as Annexure
"AP2".
[12]
In addition, the order of Dlamini J dated 24 October 2023, was served
by the Sheriff on the registered address of the company
Black Royalty
Minerals (Pty) Ltd on 25 November 2023, at the registered address
referred to supra. A copy of that Return of Service
is annexed hereto
as Annexure "AP4".
[13]
The applicant does not deny
that the modular units at the centre of this dispute are on the
premises at Koornfontein Mine. The applicant
evades the issue of the
units by not dealing with it at all.
[4]
[14]
The applicant alleges that the
respondents are unlawfully intimidating and harassing the applicant
and its agents, personnel and
employees, the applicant provides
absolutely no detail of any nature, illustrations or examples
thereof, and does not take this
Honourable Court into its confidence.
The allegations made are of a generic nature and one would have
expected some sort of detail
in this regard.
[5]
[15]
As regards to the applicant alleging that the respondents are
unlawfully executing the order, the respondents are obliged to
execute the order to return the possession of the modular units
referred to in the order to the second respondent. This is on a
valid
order which is extant and has not been challenged in any way.
[16]
The sheriff and Labuschagne had attended at the premises in
Koornfontein on at least two occasions where the existence of the
modular units was all but confirmed. On the second occasion however,
some employees of the applicant and/or the third party proved
to be
obstructive, and the units could not be accessed.
D.
ANALYSIS
[17]
It is admitted that the applicant and the third party in whose name
the order at issue was granted are similarly named and
directed
entities. The difference in their monikers is the name “KOORNFONTEIN”
as seen above already.
[18]
The applicant relies on established company law principles of
corporate identity in its attempts seek to stymie the respondents
from carrying out the court order dated 24 October 2023 granted by
Dlamini J.
[19]
It has been established that the two similarly named companies are
not formally declared as subsidiaries and have no relationship
save
the sharing of directorship and registered address. It is not denied
by the applicant that the modular units that are at issue
were
delivered and are at the Koornfontein Mine where one or both
companies carry on business.
[20]
The applicant’s emphasis of a distinct legal persona between
the two companies and the director is obviously contrived
as a
stratagem to evade obligations arising from the court order.
[21]
Whilst the applicant submitted that there is no subsidiary
relationship between the two entities under discussion, it is
undeniable
that there is a very proximate corporate consanguinity
between them. When two companies share premises and where board
members
serve on both entities, the potential for a conflict of
interest becomes unavoidable; in this particular case, even
deliberate.
[22]
The court order itself or its validity is not challenged by the
applicant. Nothing is said about the subject matter of the
court
order, namely, the modular units and their whereabouts by the
applicant. As the court order remains valid, it should be carried
out
by the respondents without any hindrance by the applicant or the
so-called third party.
[23]
This court shall not allow
itself to be utilized for the advancement of technical and peculiar
defences which are by apparent design
or effect aimed at defeating
the ends of justice. As in
Trans-African
Insurance Co Ltd v Maluleka
[6]
Schreiner JA held that;
'technical
objections to less than perfect procedural steps should not be
permitted, in the absence of prejudice, to interfere with
the
expeditious and, if possible, inexpensive decision of cases on their
real merits'.
[24]
As regards costs, this
application was brought to court based on extreme urgency and
affording the second respondent only two days
within which to file
its answering affidavit.
[7]
[25]
Accordingly, the following order is made:
The application is dismissed for want
of urgency.
The applicant is ordered to pay second
respondent’s costs on the attorney and client scale.
J.S. NYATHI
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng Division, Pretoria
Date
of hearing: 22 February 2024
Date
of Judgment: 27 February 2024
On
behalf of the Applicant: Adv. M.C. Ntshangase
Attorneys
for the Applicant: Mavhungu-Masibigiri Inc.
E-mail:
info@mavmas.co.za
;
precious@mavmas.co.za
Tel:
012 324 4872
On
behalf of the Respondent: Adv. S. Mulligan
Attorneys
for the Respondent: Nixon and Collins Attorneys, Pretoria
E-mail:
law@nixcol.co.za
Tel:
012 880 2313
Ms.
Benita Hansel
Delivery
:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties' legal representatives by email and uploaded on the
CaseLines
electronic platform. The date for hand-down is deemed to be 27
February 2024
[1]
Salomon
v Salomon & Co. Ltd
[1896] UKHL 1
,
[1897] AC 22
(HL);
Dadoo
Ltd v Krugersdorp Municipal Council 1920 AD 530
[2]
Ibid
[3]
Ibid
supra.
[4]
Second
respondent’s answering affidavit para 9.6.
[5]
Ibid
para 9.7
[6]
Trans-African Insurance Company Ltd v Maluleka
[1956] ZASCA 8
/ 1956
(2) SA 273 (A)
[7]
Second
respondent’s answering affidavit para 3 and 4.
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