Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 817South Africa
Dephetogo Trading CC v Minister responsible for the Department of Forestry, Fisheries and Environment and Another (019199-2024) [2024] ZAGPPHC 817 (20 August 2024)
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
>>
2024
>>
[2024] ZAGPPHC 817
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Dephetogo Trading CC v Minister responsible for the Department of Forestry, Fisheries and Environment and Another (019199-2024) [2024] ZAGPPHC 817 (20 August 2024)
Dephetogo Trading CC v Minister responsible for the Department of Forestry, Fisheries and Environment and Another (019199-2024) [2024] ZAGPPHC 817 (20 August 2024)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPPHC/Data/2024_817.html
sino date 20 August 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA)
CASE NO: 019199-2024
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: No
(3)
REVISED
DATE: 20 AUGUST 2024
SIGNATURE
In the matter
between
:
DEPHETOGO
TRADING CC
Applicant
REGISTRATION NO
2007/008821/23
And
MINISTER
RESPONSIBLE FOR THE DEPARTMENT
First Respondent
OF FORESTRY, FISHERIES
AND ENVIRONMENT
BARBARA DALLAS CREECY
N.O
DEPARTMENT
OF FORESTRY, FISHERIES AND
Second Respondent
THE ENVIRONMENT
This judgment is issued
by the Judges whose names are reflected herein and is submitted
electronically to the parties/their legal
representatives by email.
The judgment is further uploaded to the electronic file of this
matter on CaseLines by the Senior Judge’s
secretary. The date
of this judgment is deemed to be 20 August 2024.
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
COLLIS J
INTRODUCTION
1]
The applicant, on an urgent basis seeks inter alia declaratory and
interdictory relief against the Minister responsible for the
Department of Forestry, Fisheries & The Environment (‘
the
Minister
’)
and the second
respondent,
the Department of Forestry, Fisheries & The Environment (‘
the
DFFE
’).
[1]
2]
The relief sought is as a result of the
cancellation
of a number of security service contracts entered into between the
applicant and second respondent towards the end
of 2021.
3] The parties requested
this Court first to determine the urgency of the application and
thereafter whether the requirements for
a declaratory relief have
been met, together with all the ancillary relief.
BACKGROUND
4]
On
15 September 2021, the applicant and the DFFE entered into 19
agreements with exactly the same terms and conditions in terms
of
which
the
applicant had to render guarding and security services to the DFFE at
certain locations in the agreed regions.
[2]
5]
The
applicant it is alleged, was in breach of its obligations in terms of
the 19 agreements
[3]
in respect
of which the DFFE imposed penalties for certain of the applicant’s
breaches of contract.
[4]
On 29
December 2023, the DFFE then sent a cancellation letter to the
applicant.
[5]
5] The respondents
contend that the application is not urgent and that it stands to be
dismissed, alternatively struck from the
roll with a punitive cost
order as it does not meet the requirements for urgency.
6] In its founding
affidavit the urgency of the application is addressed in paragraph 72
onwards. Therein, the deponent sets out
that the respondents have
stopped making payments of the applicant’s invoices and is in
arrear in an amount of R8 888 000.00.
Further that these invoices
which remains unpaid is in respect of services already rendered and
salaries expended to enable it
to render these services.
7] In addition, the
deponent sets out that a total number of 395 security officers and a
further 8 supervisors will be rendered
jobless if these contracts are
terminated which could also lead to community unrest.
8] Furthermore, if the
applicant employees were to leave the various sites, the respondents’
assets will be left unguarded
and will be subject to vandalism and
theft.
9] The
respondent contests the urgency of the application. In its answering
affidavit it alleges that the DFFE does not have to
make any payments
to the applicant due to the improprieties in the procurement of the
applicant’s services
[6]
and/or the cancellation of the 19 agreements.
[7]
10] In addition, the
respondents set out that the applicant fails to take the court into
its confidence and state the reasons as
to why the DFFE has ceased to
make payments to the applicant.
11] Furthermore, if the
applicant is entitled to any payment, it will be able to procure
substantial redress at the hearing in due
course by the issuing of
summons for payment and granting such relief on motion will not
expedite payment.
URGENCY
12] An
urgent application pertains to the abridgement of times prescribed by
the rules
and
the departure from established filing and sitting times of the
Court.
[8]
13] In
every affidavit filed in support of any urgent application, the
applicant must set
forth
explicitly the circumstances which are averred that render the matter
urgent,
and
the reasons why the applicant claims the applicant could not be
afforded substantial redress at a hearing in due course.
[9]
14] In
the present matter it is common cause that this urgent application
was first issued and served on 20 February 2024,
[10]
as it was clear from the onset that the DFFE was not going to allow
the applicants on the premises and that it was not going to
mediate
with them.
15] It is
common cause the application was issued after the cancellation letter
was sent to the applicant on 29 December 2023 and
its written
response received, some two days later on 31 December 2023. In the
said letter the applicant first threatened to institute
urgent
proceedings,
if
the DFFE did not permit the applicant to continue to render its
services.
[11]
16] In terms of the Rule
6(12) an applicant is required to explicitly set for the
circumstances which render the matter urgent and
is further required
to satisfactorily explain why it nonetheless waited for nearly two
months before it instituted proceedings.
This the applicant has
failed to do.
17] From
its founding papers the applicant seeks damages for terminated
contracts. This relief the applicant can obtain in the form
of
substantial redress in the near future for monies allegedly due to
it, and any loss of profits for the balance of the outstanding
contractual period, as set out in its letter dated 11 January
2024.
[12]
Differently put, if
the application is not entertained in the Urgent Court, the applicant
will not be without recourse.
18]
The applicant further avers that if the security contracts were to be
terminated, and its staff required to leave the individual
sites of
the respondent, that the possibility exists that the applicant’s
security officers and supervisors will be rendered
jobless which will
lead to community unrest and violence.
[13]
The Applicant contends that its employees are vulnerable
security guards form all over the country and especially rendering
services in remote areas of the country. That these employees will
suffer not only irreparable harm should the relief not be granted,
but may in all likelihood not be able to have any income in the
foreseeable future.
19] The
applicant, save for making bold averments of community unrest,
provides no substantiation or objective evidence to support
same.
Even if it did, this per se, does not cause the application to be
urgent.
[14]
20] This Court further,
has also not been taken into its confidence as to why the staff of
the applicant cannot be employed elsewhere.
No evidence has likewise
been presented before this Court.
21] Given the exposition
of what has been set out above, this Court is not convince that the
application should be enrolled and
ventilated in the Urgent Court and
that the applicant will not be afforded substantial redress at the
hearing in due course.
COSTS
22] The respondent in
respect of costs, requested this Court that in the event that this
Court does not consider this application
urgent to struck the
application and to grant a punitive costs order in its favour.
23] I am of the opinion
that a punitive costs order is not warranted under the circumstances.
ORDER
24] Consequently, the
following order is made:
24.1 The application is
struck from the Urgent Roll, for lack of urgency;
24.2 The applicant is to
pay the costs of the respondents on a part and party scale, including
the costs of two counsel where so
employed.
C. COLLIS
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION PRETORIA
APPEARANCES:
Counsel
for the Applicant:
Adv.
M Snyman SC
Instructed
By:
M
J Hood and Associates
Counsel
for the Respondents:
Adv.
B D Du Preez SC
Adv.
P Bindza
Instructed
By:
Office
of the State Attorney, Pretoria
Date
of Hearing:
13
March 2024
Date
of Judgment:
20
August 2024
[1]
Notice
of Motion [‘
NoM
’],
prayers 1 to, CaseLines pages [‘
p
’
or ‘
pp
’]
(sic):
“
1.
Dispensing with the normal rules contained in Rule 6 and Practice
Directives of the above Honourable Court to allow this application
to be heard as one as a matter of urgency.
2.
For an order declaring that the
purported cancellation by the Second Respondent of all contracts
entered into between the Applicant and
the Second Respondent is null and void, invalid and of no force or
effect.
3.
For an order ordering the Second
Respondent, within a period of five days from the date of issue
of an order to this effect to provide
the Applicant’s attorneys with the names of three mediators as
specified in terms
of clause 8 of the service agreements entered
into between the Applicant and the Second Respondent.
4.
For an order that the Respondents may
not cancel any agreements for the provision of security services
between the Applicant and
the Second Respondent, pending the
finalisation of the mediation process.
5.
Alternatively to prayer 4, that the
Second Respondent, prior to cancelling any of the service agreements
between it and the Applicant,
provide
14
(fourteen)
days calendar notice
specifying
a
breach and demanding rectification of the said breach, failing which
the matter then must be referred to mediation in terms
of the
prayers above.
6.
That the Respondents be ordered to pay
the costs of this application.
7.
Further and/or alternative relief.
”
[2]
FA,
paras 6 to 10, p 03-3 to 03-5 & AA, paras 3.11; 4.1, p 07-8 to
07-14.
[3]
FA,
paras 17 to 21, p 03-8 to 03-9 & AA, para 6.1.2, 6.1.6 to
6.1.50, p 07-17 - 07-28
[4]
FA,
para 21, p 03-9 & AA, para 6.1.2; 14.4 pp 07-17
[5]
FA,
para 30, p 03-12 read with Annexure FA7, p 03-120 to 03-121 &
AA, para 8.2, p
07-33
& para 16.1, p 07-54
[6]
Allpay
Consolidated Investment Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others v Chief
Executive Officer of the South African Social Security Agency
and
Others
2014 (4) SA 179
(CC) [71] ['the Allpay-matter’];
Central Energy Fund SOC Ltd and Another v Venus Rays Trade (Pty) Ltd
and Others
[2022] 2 All SA 626
(SCA) [38] [‘the
Central-matter’].
[7]
Thomas
Construction (Pty) Ltd (in Liquidation) v Grafton Furniture
Manufacturers (Pty) Ltd
1988 (2) SA 546
(A); Naka Diamond Mining
(Pty) Ltd v Klopper & Another (277/2021) [2022] ZASCA (17
June 2022) [23].
[8]
Luna
Meubel Vervaardigers (Edms) Bpk v Makin (t/a Makin’s Furniture
Manufacturers)1977 (4) SA 135 (W) 136H.
[9]
Rule
6 (12) (b).
[10]
AA,
para 9.26.4 to 9.26.5, p 07-41.
[11]
FA,
Annexure FA 8, para 8: “Should you not permit our clients to
continue to render their services pending the above our
client will
apply for appropriate urgent relief against the Department” &
AA, para 9.26.4 to 9.26.5, p 07-41.
[12]
FA,
Annexure FA11, p 03-133 - 03-139, p 01-137 at para 30: “Our
client reserves its rights, however, to cancel the contract
on
appropriate notice to yourselves and to claim damages in the form of
outstanding monies due, and loss of profits for the balance
of the
outstanding contractual period” (own emphasis).
[13]
FA,
para 75-76, p 03-32.
[14]
AA,
para 9.26.7 (f)-(g) (i-xi), p 07-43 - 07-45.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Pridin Trading (Pty) Ltd and Another v Boutique Leasing Company (Pty) Ltd and Another (046326-2024) [2025] ZAGPPHC 779 (1 August 2025)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 779High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar
Eew Trading Enterprise (Pty) Ltd v DDD Diesel Deliveries (Pty) Ltd (2024/107143) [2025] ZAGPPHC 935 (29 August 2025)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 935High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar
Siyandisa Trading (Pty) Ltd v Commissioner for the South African Revenue Services (A201/2021) [2023] ZAGPPHC 126 (26 July 2023)
[2023] ZAGPPHC 126High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar
Matlhatse Trading Enterprise CC v Body Corporate of Bateleur and Others (59894/2021) [2025] ZAGPPHC 463 (10 May 2025)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 463High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar
Ecenter Trading (Pty) Ltd and Others v First National Bank Ltd and Another (28904/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 318 (2 April 2024)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 318High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar