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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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[2024] ZAGPPHC 939
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## Unemployment Insurance Fund and Another v Johnson and Others (Leave to Appeal) (134443/2023)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 939 (18 September 2024)
Unemployment Insurance Fund and Another v Johnson and Others (Leave to Appeal) (134443/2023)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 939 (18 September 2024)
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sino date 18 September 2024
HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
CASE
NO: 134443/2023
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO.
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
18 SEPTEEMBER 2024
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
UNEMPLOYMENT
INSURANCE FUND
First
Applicant
PUBLIC
INVESTMENT CORPORATION SOC LTD
Second Applicant
and
PATRICIA
CATHERINE JOHNSON
First
Respondent
HOMII
LIFESTYLE (PTY) LIMITED
Second
Respondent
URBAN
LIFESTYLE INVESTMENT
HOLDINGS
(PTY) LIMITED
Third
Respondent
JUDGMENT
(In
the application for leave to appeal)
This
matter has been heard in open court and is otherwise disposed of in
terms of the Directives of the Judge President of this
Division. The
judgment and order are accordingly published and distributed
electronically with the effective date thereof
being 18 September
2024.
DAVIS,
J
Introduction
[1]
This is the
judgment in an application for leave to appeal launched by two of the
respondents in the main application. For
the sake of
consistency and ease of reference, I shall refer to the parties as in
the judgment in the main application.
[2]
On 30 July
2024 this court declared that the UIF was entitled to exercise all
voting rights attached to shares held by Urban in
its subsidiary,
Homii. This was declared pursuant to Homii defaulting on its
payment and other obligations to the UIF, who
had lent and advanced
some R410 million of public funds to Homii.
[3]
Urban and
Homii now seek leave to appeal the above declaration and ancillary
relief to the Supreme Court of Appeal.
Reasonable
prospects of success?
[4]
The grounds
raised in the notice of application for leave to appeal and in the
heads of argument delivered on behalf of Urban and
Homii, left the
factual matrix undisturbed.
[5]
The factual
matrix, as set out in the judgment in respect of the main
application, is that the UIF had lent and advanced some R410
million
to Urban’s subsidiary, Homii. Although the capital was
not yet repayable, interest payments had become due
and had not been
paid. In addition, Homii had certain disclosure obligations
regarding its business and the utilization of
the funds, which
obligations had also not been complied with. Urban had effected
a cession and pledge in favour of the UIF
as security in the event of
Homii’s default.
[6]
The UIF had
become entitled to perfect its security and has since instituted
action in this court (as disclosed by counsel for Urban
and Homii at
the hearing of this matter) in case no 2024/066287 for the recovery
of an amount which is now in excess of R655 million.
[7]
Against this
factual background, the question is now whether there is a reasonable
prospect that a court of appeal would find that
the UIF should have
been non-suited.
[8]
During
argument Adv De Beer SC, who still appeared for Urban and Homii
(together with his learned junior), strenuously argued that
the UIF
had impermissibly been granted a proverbial third bite at the cherry
and that a court of appeal would find that this should
not have been
allowed.
[9]
The three
“bites” were the proceedings before Strijdom J, before
Collis J and before myself.
[10]
Adv De Beer SC
argued that once Strijdom J had ruled on the point
in
limine
in
respect of jurisdiction, that was the end of the matter and no
further “bites” should have been allowed. He
could
not, however, get away from the fact that, subsequent to Strijdom J
having found that the grounds of jurisdiction on which
the UIF had
relied had not sufficiently been “pleaded” in the
founding papers, those papers have thereafter been supplemented.
This resulted in a new case or at least a case with newly new pleaded
facts becoming eligible for a “bite”.
[11]
In respect of
the alleged second “bite”, Adv De Beer SC argued that
Collis J had “confirmed” the abscence
of jurisdiction and
that she had done so while the supplemented papers had been before
her.
[12]
Urban and
Homii had produced its own transcript of the proceedings before
Collis J and this transcript indicates that the above
submission is
not supported by the facts. While Collis J referred to the
findings of Strijdom J, that was not the basis upon
which she struck
the matter from her urgent court roll and neither had she considered
the supplementary papers.
[13]
As this aspect
was not as fully canvassed during the main hearing as it was during
the application for leave to appeal, I deem it
apposite to quote the
relevant part of the transcript of the proceedings before Collis J
produced by Urban and Homii in this regards:
“
Now
having regard to the order given by my brother Strijdom J, it follows
that is was not permissible for the applicant to have
once again
enrolled this application before the urgent court.
Consequently
the application falls to be struck off from this roll and should
rather be enrolled on the opposed roll. As to costs …
the order of the court reads as follows: The application is struck
off from the urgent roll with costs on a party and party scale,
including the costs of two counsel in respect of the second and third
respondents.
The
applicant will be at liberty to approach the Office of the Deputy
Judge President for an expedited date on the opposed roll
”.
(my underlining)
[14]
It is clear
that, despite the UIF having attempted to secure an urgent hearing of
the supplemented application, they were denied
a “bite”
thereof and no hearing nor a consideration of the matter had taken
place before Collis J.
[15]
The first and
only
time
the
supplemented application was heard and considered by this court, was
during the hearing of 16 May 2024 before me. There
were
therefore no “three bites” as contended by Urban and
Homii.
[16]
Adv De Beer SC
also argued that, despite the matter having been enrolled in this
court’s third court by direction of the Deputy
Judge President
of this Division, another court would find on appeal that the orders
granted could not have been made without this
court having found that
the application was urgent. Although there was still some
urgency inherent in the nature of the relief
claimed to obtain
interim security, the matter was no longer heard as one with abridged
time-periods or by way of enrolment in
an urgent court and this point
is moot.
[17]
There
are two final arguments which I have to dispose of before concluding
this judgment. The first is the proposition that
the issue of
determination of jurisdiction is final and appealable only. In
a general sense this proposition is correct.
For reliance on
this point, reference was made to
TWK
Agricultural holdings (Pty) Ltd v Hoogveld Boerderybeleggings (Pty)
Ltd
[1]
(TWK)
.
The reliance is however, misplaced. In casu, the UIF did not
seek to overturn or appeal the order of Strijdom J, who
dealt with
the point on the papers “as pleaded”
[2]
.
The UIF proceeded before this court instead on an amended set of
“pleadings”, being the supplementary founding
affidavits. This is also why Strijdom J’s order could not
be
res
judicata
on the issue of jurisdiction once the papers that had served before
him had been supplemented. The determination made by
Strijdom J
was therefore only in relation to pleadings and not as to the actual
absence of jurisdiction as in
TWK
.
[18]
The second
point is the argument that this court should not have allowed the UIF
to supplement its papers. It was argued that
there were no
exceptional circumstances to justify this. Adv De Beer SC
readily conceded that the allowance of further papers
is
discretionary, taking all the circumstances of the case into
account. Despite being unable to argue that this court’s
discretion had been exercised in an arbitrary or capricious fashion,
Adv De beer SC contended that the UIF should have been required
to
re-launch a fresh application, rather than have been permitted to
supplement an existing application.
[19]
Apart from the
fact that additional costs, time and judicial resources would have
been expended by the approach espoused by Urban
and Homii, they
suffered no prejudice by the allowance of the supplementary
affidavits. They had sufficient time to consider
the
supplementary affidavits, had delivered supplementary answering
affidavits of their own, had considered the replying affidavits,
had
prepared and delivered practice notes as well as heads of argument
and bundles of authority and had sufficiently and ably
been
represented at the
hearing of a properly set-down opposed motion. There is
therefore no scope to argue that the supplementary
papers should not
have been allowed.
Conclusion
[20]
Having
considered the arguments presented by Urban and Homii, I find that
there is no “
sound,
rational basis to conclude that there is a reasonable prospect of
success on appeal
”.
[3]
[21]
Accordingly,
the application should fail. I find no reason why costs should
not follow this event.
Order
[22]
Consequently, the following order
is made:
The
application for leave to appeal is dismissed with costs, such costs
to include that of both senior and junior counsel.
N DAVIS
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng Division,
Pretoria
Date
of Hearing: 12 September 2024
Judgment
delivered: 18 September 2024
APPEARANCES:
For the Applicants:
Advocate J
Wasserman SC together
with Adv M Msomi
Attorney for the
Applicants:
Lusenga Attorneys
Inc., Pretoria.
For the 2
nd
&
3
rd
Respondents:
Adv J de Beer SC
together with
Adv Z T Mahabma
Attorney for the
2
nd
& 3
rd
Respondents:
Mooney Ford
Attorneys,
Umhlanga
c/o Damelin Menlyn,
Pretoria
[1]
2023
(5) SA 163 (SCA).
[2]
As
also referred to by Unterhalter AJA op cit par [7].
[3]
MEC
(Health) Eastern Case v Mkhitha
(1221/2015)
[2016] ZASCA 176
(25 November 2016) par [17].
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