Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 366South Africa
Pooe v Macheke (72144/2018) [2024] ZAGPPHC 366 (10 April 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
10 April 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Pooe v Macheke (72144/2018) [2024] ZAGPPHC 366 (10 April 2024)
Pooe v Macheke (72144/2018) [2024] ZAGPPHC 366 (10 April 2024)
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Before
His Lordship Mr Justice Labuschagne AJ on 10 April 2024
Case
No: 72144/2018
In
the matter between:
MPHO
RACHEL
POOE
Applicant
and
STANLEY
TIYANI MACHEKE
Respondent
URGENT APPLICATION
HEARD ON 10 APRIL 2024: JUDGMENT
[1]
The applicant and respondent have been embroiled in litigation
since
2018. A judgment was delivered by Modau J on 8 November 2023 in
which Mudau J found that a commercial and property
partnership
existed between the applicant and the respondent.
[2]
Paragraphs 2 and 3 of the order read as follows:
“
2.
It is declared that the plaintiff has an undivided half share in the
partnership and
the assets listed in paragraph 3.18.3 off the
particulars of claim and the further assets, as may be idenntified ,
and which were
acquired from the income and profits earned from the
businesses and properties of the partnership;
3.
It is declared that the partnership between the parties is terminated
with effect from the date hereof.”
[3]
The remainder of the order deals with the appointment
of a liquidator
if they cannot agree on the net benefit accruing to the plaintiff
from the partnership and the manner and date
of delivery of such
benefit to the plaintiff.
[4]
The respondent filed a notice of leave to appeal against
the judgment
of Mudau J on 29 November 2023. That judgment is consequently
suspended.
[5]
On 28 December 2023 the applicant approached the urgent
court for
relief precluding the respondent from accessing bank accounts.
That application failed.
[6]
An urgent application again served before Potterill J
on 26 March
2024. She directed the parties to expedite the application for
leave to appeal and granted an order against the
respondent
restraining him from disposing of assets, pending finalisation of the
application for leave to appeal.
[7]
On 9 April 2024 the applicant again brought an urgent
application in
the urgent court, in which she sought the following relief on the
basis of urgency:
“
2.
That the respondent shall declare monthly profit of both companies,
namely,
Exodec 286, duly registered with enterprise number B[...] and
Macs Engineers, duly registered with enterprise number K[...].
3.
That the monthly profits shall be shared equally between the parties.
4.
That the respondent is ordered to pay the costs of the application
on
attorney and own client scale.”
[8]
The respondent contends that the two companies referred
to are
essential parties who have not been joined to these proceedings.
The respondent therefore raises a special plea of
non-joinder.
[9]
The order that the applicant seeks relates to the monthly
profits of
the two companies, the determination of an equal share between the
applicant and the respondent and payment of such
profits by the
companies to its shareholders. The relief consequently directly
affects the interests of the two companies,
and they should have been
joined as parties. The special plea is well taken.
[10]
Further, the relief sought presupposes an effective order that the
applicant
is entitled to 50% of such profits. Such a claim
flows from the order of Mudau J, but that order is suspended.
The
applicant can therefore not establish a right to the relief
whilst that order is still suspended. This is not a section
18(3)
application in terms of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
, for
the putting into operation of the Mudau J order pending leave to
appeal or finalisation of any appeal.
[11]
On 8 April 2024 the attorneys for the respondent wrote a letter to
Mudau
J, requesting dates for the hearing of the application for
leave to appeal. I am advised that certain dates have been
proposed
and that the application for leave to appeal will be heard
in the near future.
[12]
The respondent has sought a special cost order against the
applicant.
This is the third application in the urgent court
since 28 December 2023. I am tempted to accede to the request
for a punitive
cost order. However, the applicant contends that
she is destitute, that the whole family lived off the profits of
Exodec
286, that the respondent had paid the municipal account and
the cost of utilities of their jointly owned home in the past but has
now ceased doing so. The applicant contends that the
municipality has cut off her electricity due to arrears and contends
that the respondent has ceased sharing the profits of the company
with her. I have to take into account that at least one judge
has
found in favour of the applicant and her entitlement to 50% of the
joint estate. The fact that she has repeatedly approached
the
urgent court may very well be a manifestation of desperation, rather
than vexatiousness.
[13]
In the premises I am not inclined to grant a punitive costs order.
[14]
I therefore make the following order:
1.
The application is dismissed with costs.
LABUSCHAGNE,
AJ
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