Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 940South Africa
Engel N.O. and Others v Tax Faculty NPC and Others (037648/23) [2024] ZAGPPHC 940 (20 September 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
20 September 2024
Headnotes
Summary: 1. Applications for security for costs in terms of Rule 47 must be brought promptly so that the other party is entitled to know its position in relation to security from the outset before it embarks in the ensued litigation.
Judgment
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## Engel N.O. and Others v Tax Faculty NPC and Others (037648/23) [2024] ZAGPPHC 940 (20 September 2024)
Engel N.O. and Others v Tax Faculty NPC and Others (037648/23) [2024] ZAGPPHC 940 (20 September 2024)
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sino date 20 September 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES / NO
(2) OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES / NO
(3)
REVISED
Date: 20/9/2024
CASE
NO: 037648/23
In
the matter between:-
KEITH
E ENGEL N.O.
First
Applicant
CARETHA
LAUBSCHER N.O.
Second
Applicant
KAREN
VAN WYK N.O.
Third
Applicant
CHRISTIAN
JACOBUS VAN DYK N.O.
Fourth
Applicant
VS
THE
TAX FACULTY NPC
First
Respondent
ERTINUS
SEBASTIAAN KLUE
Second
Respondent
ANNET
OGUTTU
Third
Respondent
CRAIG
DEAN HIRST
Fourth
Respondent
RODNEY
PASCOE SMITH
Fifth
Respondent
NEILL
BASILL WRIGHT
Sixth
Respondent
LERATO
LORAINE LEGADIMA
Seventh
Respondent
SIMPHIWE
MILE
Eighth
Respondent
THE
ALUMNI MEMBERS OF THE FIRST RESPONDENT
Ninth
Respondent
(BEING
THE INDIVIDUALS WHOSE EMAIL ADDRESSES
APPEAR
ON THE SCHEDULE MARKED X AND ATTACHED
TO
THE NOTICE OF MOTION)
COMPANIES
AND INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
COMMISSION
- CIPC
Tenth
Respondent
Heard
on:
30 August 2024
Delivered:
20 September 2024 – This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties’ representatives
by email,
by being uploaded to the
Caselines
system of the GD
and by release to SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is
deemed to be 14:00 on 20 September 2024.
Summary:
1. Applications
for security for costs in terms of Rule 47 must be brought promptly
so that the other party is entitled to know its position in relation
to security from the outset before it embarks in the ensued
litigation.
2.
The principle
in
Boost Sports Africa v South African Breweries
Ltd
2015 (5) SA 38
SCA
, paragraph 16, is cited with approval
herein. Ultimately the court must be satisfied that the main
action is vexatious, reckless
or amounts to an abuse.
3.
The factors
raised herein, namely the inability of the Trust to pay
the costs of the litigation, the delay in instituting the Rule 47
application,
as well as the nature of the matter in the main
application were considered against the standards of fairness and
equity.
ORDER
It
is ordered that:-
1.
The applicants are ordered to furnish security to the respondents.
2.
The form, amount and manner of the security is to be determined by
the Registrar
of the High Court.
3.
The main application be stayed pending the furnishing of security.
4.
The applicants are to pay the costs of this application which
includes the costs
of senior counsel on scale C.
JUDGMENT
KOOVERJIE
J
SECURITY
FOR COSTS APPLICATION
[1]
This interlocutory application has been instituted in terms of Rule
47(3) whereby
the respondents (the Tax Faculty NPC) seek an order
compelling the applicants to provide security for costs.
[2]
For the purposes of these proceedings, the parties will be referred
to as they are
in the main application. The applicants would
also be referred to as “the Trust”. The Trust is
represented
by the applicants. The respondents with the
exclusion of the tenth respondent, would be referred to as “the
Faculty”.
[3]
The Trust contests this application on the basis that the Faculty had
instituted this
application to merely delay the finalisation of the
main application. It therefore seeks the dismissal of this
application
with a punitive costs order in its favour. The main
thrust of the Trust’s case is that the Faculty had not complied
with Rule 47(1) which requires that the application should had been
brought promptly and without delay.
[4]
On the other hand, the Faculty’s main contentions were,
firstly, that the Trust
would not be able to satisfy any costs order
which it may obtain in its favour, and secondly, the main application
has no merit,
it is an abuse of the process of court, and is
vexatious.
ISSUE
FOR DETERMINATION
[5]
The main issue for determination in this matter is whether or not the
Faculty has
made out a case in terms of Rule 47(3).
RELIEF
SOUGHT IN THE MAIN APPLICATION
[6]
The Trust submitted that by virtue of the 2019 MOI, the Trust, as the
founding member,
had retained 100% of the voting rights in the
Faculty. Consequently the Trust was empowered to remove a
director from the
Faculty by virtue of a written resolution.
[7]
The Trust was established as the Tax Faculty Trust in 2016. It
was agreed that
the shares in the Tax Faculty should be held by the
Trust. The Trust was then registered as the Faculty Trust on 14
September
2018. 100% of the issued shares in the Tax Faculty
were transferred to the Trust and this was reflected in the share
certificate.
The Trust was the holder of the issued shares of
the Tax Faculty and served as the guardian to protect significant
investments
made to the Tax Faculty.
[8]
In the main application, the Trust sought relief to the effect that:
8.1
Prayer “a” the MOI of January 2022 be declared null and
void;
8.2
Prayer “b” the MOI of 2019 (Annexure “A”) is
binding and valid in
terms of the Companies Act;
8.3
Prayer “c” the board of directors of the Faculty
comprises of individuals whose
particulars appear on the list
attached to the notice of motion as Annexure “B”.
[9]
In the main application, the Trust held the view that the directors
of the Faculty
were incompetent in running the affairs of the
Faculty. The Trust thus sought to remove them.
Accordingly, the Trust
invited these directors to provide reasons why
they should not be removed. It is not in dispute that the main
application
was instituted after the Trust became aware that the 2019
MOI was amended and that the Faculty was conducting its affairs in
terms
of the 2022 MOI. Although the dispute in the main
application concerns the legal status and the validity of the 2019
MOI
of the Tax Faculty, the Trust’s objective in these
proceedings was to remove the directors of the Faculty.
[10]
The core argument of the Trust, in the main application, is that it
was lawfully entitled to
remove the directors by virtue of Article 5,
clause 3.5 of the 2019 MOI, where provision was made for a director
to be removed
by virtue of a written resolution of the Trust (the
founding member).
[11]
The Trust illustrates, by way of various communique, that it never
consented to the amendment
of the 2019 MOI. Consequently it
retains the right to remove the former directors and appoint new
directors. It is
necessary to emphasize that in 2019, the
Faculty was converted to a non-profit company (NPC) and thereafter
registered as a public
benefit organisation (PBO).
[12]
It is common cause that there were discussions regarding the
amendment of the 2019 MOI, particularly
between Mr Engel
(representing the Trust) and Dr Klue (representing the Faculty).
The amendments were necessary as the status
of the Faculty was
altered between 2019 to 2022. It was thus imperative to amend
the 2019 MOI to cater for the said conversion.
[13]
The Trust vehemently persisted in its papers that it had neither
abandoned nor consented to the
removal of its rights and privileges
as the founding member of the Trust. It is common cause that
the Trust is the Tax Faculty’s
sole shareholder and this was
adopted by way of special resolution on 15 August 2019.
[14]
It was contended that the amendments to the 2019 MOI were approved
without the participation
of the Trust. Mr Engel alleged that
he was not aware that the amendments were duly approved at the AGM
held on 13 January
2022, and to which meeting he was not invited.
It is on this basis that he challenges the amended MOI of 2022.
ANALYSIS
[15]
It is settled law that the Trust, being an incola, is only required
to provide security for costs
if the main application is vexatious,
reckless or otherwise amounts to an abuse. In the seminal
judgment of
Boost
Sports Africa
[1]
,
the court settled this principle and at paragraph 16 it expressed:
“
Absent
Section 13, there can no longer be any legitimate basis for
differentiating between an incola company and an incola natural
person. And as our superior courts have residual discretion in
the manner such as this arising from the inherent power to
regulate
their own proceedings, it must follow that the former can at common
law be compelled to furnish security for costs.
Accordingly
even though there may be poor prospects of recovering costs, a court,
in its discretion, should only order the furnishing
of security for
such costs by the incola company if it is satisfied that the
contemplated main action (or application) is vexatious
or reckless or
otherwise amounts to an abuse
.”
[2]
[16]
In
African
Farms Townships Ltd v Cape Town Municipality
[3]
the court expressed:
“
An
action was vexatious and an abuse of the process of court, inter
alia, it is obviously unsustainable. This must appear
as a
certainty and not merely on a preponderance of probability.”
[17]
The main contentions raised in this application and which requires a
determination upon are:
(i)
whether the application was brought as envisaged in Rule 47(1), in
other
words, was it instituted promptly;
(ii)
would the Trust be able to pay the litigation costs if such an order
is granted against
it; and
(iii)
is the main application of a nature that is vexatious, reckless or
constitutes an abuse
of the process of court.
RULE
47(1) REQUIREMENT
[18]
Rule 47(1) reads:
“
A
party is entitled and desiring to demand security for costs from
another shall, as soon as practicable, after the commencements
of
proceedings, deliver a notice setting forth the grounds upon which
the security is claimed and the amount demanded.”
[19]
I find the chronology of assistance, particularly in determining
whether the delay in instituting
the Rule 47 application was
extensive. It was pointed that the Rule 47(1) notice was only
delivered on 10 November 2023 whilst
the main application was
instituted months before, that is in April 2023.
[20]
The timeline illustrates the following:
20.1
in April 2023 the Trust instituted the main application and on 16 May
2023 the Faculty opposed the
said application;
20.2
on 30 May 2023 the Faculty filed the Rule 35(14) notice requesting
documents, claiming that they were necessary
for the preparation of
its answering affidavit;
20.3
on 19 June 2023 the Faculty launched an application in terms of Rule
35(13) as the Trust failed to respond
thereto;
20.4
on 5 September 2023 the Trust filed is notice of opposition in the
discovery application (three months later);
20.5
on 14 September 2023 the Trust filed its answering papers in respect
of the Rule 35(14) application;
20.6
on 6 October 2023 the Faculty filed its answering affidavit in the
main application as well as its conditional
counter-application;
20.7
the Trust failed to file its answering affidavit in the
counter-application and its replying affidavit in
the main
application in terms of the agreed timelines- 20 October 2023 and 27
October 2023 respectively;
20.8
on 10 November 2023 the Faculty issued the Rule 47(1) notice;
20.9
on 27 November 2023 the Trust advised that it would not furnish
security for costs;
20.10
on 18 December 2023 the Faculty informed the Trust that it would
proceed to issue the application in the new year;
20.11
on 9 February 2024 the Trust filed its answering affidavit in the
counter-application and replying affidavit in the
main application;
20.12
on 14 February 2024 the Faculty instituted this Rule 47(1)
application;
20.13
on 6 March 2024 the Trust filed its notice to oppose the
application.
[21]
Notably from the chronology it is evident that between May to
September 2023 the parties were
seized with the discovery application
in terms of Rule 35. Shortly after receipt of the answering
affidavit in the discovery
application on 14 September 2023, the
Faculty filed its answering affidavit in the main application on 6
October 2023. It
thereafter filed the Rule 47(1) notice a month
later, on 10 November 2023.
[22]
The Trust’s main contentions were that: the Rule 47
notice was not delivered promptly
as the main application has already
been instituted months before, that was in April 2023; the Rule
35(14) processes were merely
instituted in order to delay the matter;
the Rule 47(1) notice was only issued after the replying affidavit to
the main application
and the answering affidavit to the counter-claim
had been filed by the Trust.
[23]
On a conspectus of the timeline, as well as the contentions raised by
the parties, it was evident
that there was no intention to expedite
the hearing of the main application. Neither party objected to
the delays.
Both parties simply went along filing their
respective papers and at their convenience. The prescriptive
time periods set
out in the rules were not adhered to, and
understandably so as this matter was referred to case management
which allowed the parties
to manage their time periods.
[24]
However in respect of this Rule 47 application, it is evident that
the parties communicated on
a monthly basis, namely on 10 November
2023, the Faculty issued its Rule 47(1) notice. The Trust
informed the Faculty 17
days later that it refused to furnish
security. On 18 December 2023, when the Faculty informed the
Trust that it would proceed
with its security for costs application
in the new year, no objection was raised pertaining to the delay.
[25]
In this application, I have further noted that the Faculty, in prayer
3 of its notice of motion,
sought relief in the following terms:
“
That
the main application be stayed pending the final adjudication of this
application and the furnishing of security as set out
above.”
I have however noted that
the parties nevertheless proceeded with filing their respective
papers in the main application.
[26]
The rationale for ensuring that such applications are issued with
some expediency was dealt with
by our courts. I find it apt to
refer to the decision of the Supreme Court of Appeal in the
Honig
matter
[4]
cited with approval
various authorities and at paragraph [14] stated:
“
The
question of whether security for costs should be ordered is one which
ought to be raised and determined promptly, in that the
very nature
of such an order is that it may result in the company being prevented
from litigating its claim. And if, as sought
by the applicant
in this case, a connected claim against it is also to be stayed, in
that the company may have stayed the determination
of their claim
against it to its possible disadvantage. The right to seek
security for costs and to stay proceedings, with
a possible result
that a claim for damages is frustrated, is a powerful weapon.
Therefore, the litigant, who seeks to use
it against its opponent is
at risk of not having it available, unless the application is made
persevered with in circumstances
involving the least oppression of
his opponent.
The
primary reason why application should be brought promptly and pressed
to determination promptly is that the company, by which
assumption
has financial problem, is entitled to know its position in relation
to the security at the outset, and before it embarks
to any real
extent on its litigation, and certainly before it is allowed to or
commit substantial sums of money towards litigating
its claim
.
”
[5]
[27]
No doubt the Faculty became aware of the Trust’s financial
position after the Trust filed
its answering affidavit to the Rule
35(14) application in September 2023. This caused the Faculty
to file the Rule 47(1)
notice in November 2023. The Trust was
further advised that the Rule 47(3) application would follow in the
new year.
Although one would have expected the application in
January 2024, it was nevertheless filed in February 2024. As
alluded
to above, no objection was raised regarding the lateness of
this application at this stage.
[28]
The term “as soon as practicable” as envisaged in Rule
47(1), was considered by our
authorities. It has been suggested
that there is nothing in the present Rule which suggest that the
delay in demanding of
applying for security is to be regarded as
fatal.
[6]
A delay in
itself will rarely be an overriding and decisive consideration.
[7]
Hence the ‘delay’ factor has to be weighed together with
the other relevant factors dealt with below.
COURT’S
DISCRETION
[29]
It is common cause that the Trust does not have the necessary funds
to satisfy any adverse costs
that may be granted against it.
The Trust, in its papers, conceded this fact. It is settled law
that the inability
of a party (who is an incola) to satisfy a
potential costs order against him is insufficient in itself to
justify an order that
he furnish security. Something more is
required, namely that the court has to be satisfied that the main
action is vexatious
or reckless or amounts to an abuse of the process
of court.
[30]
Kreetiv
[8]
provided guidance on how a court should exercise its discretion when
considering these types of applications. I summarize
the
salient principles therefrom, namely:
30.1
the discretion should be exercised in a manner where the court is
entitled to consider the nature of the
particular case without
enquiring fully into the merits of the matter;
30.2
the court has to consider the financial position of the entity at the
time that the application for security
is instituted and what the
position would be if the entity loses the action;
30.3 it
is required to consider the nature of the matter brought against a
person giving security;
30.4
these said factors should be weighed in accordance with the
principles of equity and fairness in respect
of both parties.
[31]
Notably the factors which a court may consider when exercising its
discretion, are case specific.
There is no prescribed list.
The factors may include but are not limited to whether the
plaintiff’s claim is made in
good faith or whether the
plaintiff has reasonable prospects of success and whether the
application for security was used to stifle
a genuine claim.
[9]
[32]
Essentially the balance of equity and fairness boils down to weighing
the injustice of the defendant
if no security is ordered and in the
event that the plaintiff’s claim fails, the defendant would
find itself unable to recover
the costs that had been incurred in
defence of such claim. This must be weighed against the
injustice that the plaintiff
may suffer if prevented from pursuing
its proper claim.
[10]
[33]
I am mindful that the standard exercised by this court differs from
that which is to be exercised
when hearing the main application.
In
Fitchet
v Fitchet
[11]
the court stated:
“
The
test is applied in a different manner as to that in an application
for a dismissal of the action. In an application for
security
for costs the test should be somewhat less stringent and other
factors which are irrelevant in a dismissal application
should be
taken into account. Hence the detailed investigation in terms
of the merits is not necessary, nor is it contemplated
that there
should be a close investigation of the fact in issue in the action.”
[34]
In
Zietsman
[12]
the court stated:
“
I
am not suggesting that the court should, in an application for
security attempt to resolve the dispute between the parties.
Such a requirement could frustrate the purpose for which security is
sought. The extent to which is practicable to make an
assessment of the parties’ prospects of success would depend on
the nature and the dispute of the case.”
[35]
The Faculty argued that the main application is not only reckless but
the application is unsustainable.
Emphasis was placed on the
fact that the Trust has no real assets, no bank account, and moreso
it was evident from the financial
statements from the period 2020 and
2021 that the Trust was dormant and was not operating since 2019.
Despite the Trust instituting
this application in April 2023, it was
not serious in finalizing the matter. The Trust has made
serious claims against the
Faculty and against the conduct of the
directors without adducing substantial evidence to support its
accusations. There
is no merit in these allegations.
[36]
The terms “vexatious” as well as “an abuse of the
process of court” was
defined. In
Fisheries
Development Corporation
[13]
the court stated:
“
In
its legal sense “vexatious” means frivolous, improper,
instituted without sufficient grounds to serve solely as an
annoyance
to the defendant … Vexatious proceedings would also with
no doubt include proceedings which although properly
instituted,
continue with the sole purpose of causing annoyance to the defendant;
“abuse” connotes misuse, and improper
use, use mala fide,
a use for an ulterior motive.”
[37]
Upon having considered all the relevant factors, namely: the
nature of the claim, the financial
position of the Trust, the stage
at which the application for security was brought, and weighing both
parties’ versions against
the principles of equity and
fairness, I am of the view, that the Trust should furnish security.
[38]
Being specifically mindful of the rights of a litigant in terms of
Section 34 of the Constitution
[14]
,
I have considered the potential injustice to the Trust if it is
prevented from pursuing its claim due to a demand to pay security
for
costs against the potential injustice to the Faculty which may be
successful if it defends a claim and will then not be able
to recover
its costs.
[39]
Going forward, the order directing the Trust to pay security should
not deter it if it intends
to persist with the main application.
It was vehemently argued that the fact that Mr Engel, being the sole
trustee, was not
involved in the amendment and the eventual approval
of the 2022 MOI. The Trust persists with its status as recorded
in the
2019 MOI (Annexure “A”).
[40]
Mr Engel does not dispute the fact that the parties agreed in
principle to convert the Tax Faculty
from a private full profit
company to a non-profit company. However the membership of the
non-profit company was not agreed
and was subject to further
discussions between Mr Engel and Dr Klue.
[41]
It was argued that the dispute regarding the validity of the 2022 MOI
remains an issue and is
deserving of being ventilated. The
Trust remains confident that it would be successful in respect of the
relief, namely to
declare the 2022 MOI invalid and to declare the
initial 2019 MOI valid. The Trust, as the founding member, was
lawfully entitled
to participate in the amendment of the 2022 MOI.
[42]
It further emphasized that the MOI was unlawfully amended. It
was pointed out that a company’s
MOI may be amended either by
approaching the court in terms of Section 36 or in terms of a special
resolution through voting rights
which are exercised by the
shareholders. The Trust further pointed out that as the sole
voting member, it has the power to
amend the MOI. The amendment
should therefore only be effected in a legally permissible manner.
[43]
The Faculty illustrated that the Trust’s case remains
unsustainable. The main argument
premised by the Faculty was
that even if one has regard to the 2019 MOI (Annexure “A”),
the Trust’s understanding
of the provisions therein are
misconceived. The Trust relies on Article 5- “directors
and officers”, clause 3.5
which reads:
“
3.5
A director is removed through a written resolution of the founding
member.”
[44]
It pointed out that the Trust failed to however address clause 4.2
which stipulated that in the
event that the company becomes an
approved public benefit organisation, the landscape changes.
Clause 4.2 reads:
“
4.2
The powers of a company will, in the event of it
becoming an approved public benefit organisation pursuant
to Section
30 of the Income Tax Act of 1962 be subject to the following
conditions. In terms thereof the company will:
4.2.1
ensure
that no single person directly or indirectly control the
decision-making
powers relating to the company
[15]
;
4.2.2 be
required to have at least three (3) persons who are not connected
persons in relation to each other, to be
the directors of the
company.”
[45]
The said provisions in the MOI are aligned with Section 30 of the
Income Tax Act that also makes
provision that “no single person
directly or indirectly be involved in the decision making powers
relating to the organisation”.
It was common cause that
the Faculty was registered as a public benefit organisation (PBO) on
13 March 2020. The Trust could
by no means have remained the
sole voting member after the conversion to a non-profit company.
The Trust, as a juristic person,
is defined to be a person in terms
of Section 1 of the Companies Act. The Trust does therefore not
have the sole right to
remove a director.
[46]
During argument, the Trust was unable to proffer a sustainable
argument concerning its independent
power in the PBO. It
therefore suggested that it may revisit Prayer “c” and
may even abandon this relief.
Prayer “c” dealt with
the appointment of the directors:
“
(c)
The board of directors of the Tax Faculty comprises of the
individuals whose particulars appear
on the list attached as Annexure
“B” to the Notice of Motion.”
[47]
As alluded to above, the objective of the main application was
premised on the removal of the
directors due to allegations of
incompetence. The Trust’s version that it may only do so
by virtue of the 2019 MOI,
in my view, is misplaced.
[48]
It is apparent that the main application was initiated after the
email, sent by the Executive
Trustee of the Trust, to Dr Klue on 27
January 2023, wherein it demanded that Dr Klue be removed as a
director of the company and
invited him to make representations.
In such correspondence the Trust expressed its disapproval of the
directors’ conduct,
namely that they simply ignored the Trust’s
position. The grievances of the Trust were listed therein which
included
the fact that the Trust was not invited to the AGM, and the
director’s report or financial statements were not furnished to
the Trust. Hence it cannot be gainsaid that the
rationale behind seeking the court to declare the 2019 MOI valid,
was
to allow the Trust to gain the independent right to remove the
directors.
[49]
In exercising my discretion in these proceedings, on my reading of
the 2019 MOI (Annexure “A”),
I find that the Trust’s
case is unassailable as the Faculty is a PBO and the decision-making
powers are statutorily ordained,
not only in the Companies Act, but
in terms of the Income Tax Act as well.
[16]
I am therefore of the view that the prospects of success in the main
application are bleak. Consequently, under these
circumstances,
the Trust is ordered to pay security for costs in terms of Rule 47.
THE
AMOUNT OF SECURITY
[50]
The Registrar is equipped with the power to make a determination on
the form, amount and manner
of the security. I am therefore
inclined to defer this task to the Registrar so that an appropriate
amount in respect of
the security is fixed.
COSTS
[51]
The applicants are ordered to pay the costs of the application;
including costs of senior counsel
on Scale C.
H.
KOOVERJIE
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Appearances
:
Counsel
for the
applicants
:
Adv.
BC Stoop SC
Adv.
NC Hartman
Instructed
by:
SC
Vercueil Attorneys
Counsel
for the first to seventh r
espondents
:
Adv.
JH Loots SC
Instructed
by:
Scheibert
& Associates Incorporated
Attorneys
for the ninth respondent
Lucas
Deysel Crouse Incorporated
Date
heard:
30
August 2024
Date
of Judgment:
20
September 2024
[1]
Boost
Sports Africa (Pty) Ltd vs South African Breweries Ltd
2015 (5) SA
38
(SCA) at paragraph 16
[2]
my
underlining
[3]
1963
(2) SA 555A
at 565D-E
[4]
Exploitatie-
en Beleggings Maatschappij Argonauten 11 BV & Another vs Honig
2012 (1) SA 247 (SCA) 9
[5]
my
emphasis
[6]
Honig
supra p. 253 A-B
[7]
Fusion
Properties 233 CCV v Stellenbosch Municipality (SCA) case no
932/2019 dated January 2021 at paragraph 24
[8]
Kreetiv
Communication CC v Harrington N.O. and Others 2024 ZAGPPHC [89] at
paragraph 16 and 17
At
paragraph [16] and [17] the court stated:
“
[16]
In coming to a decision as to how it should exercise its discretion
to order or refuse security for
costs the court may take into
consideration the nature of the claim and the defence but the merits
of the dispute are most invariably
irrelevant in deciding whether
the plaintiff or applicant company should be ordered to furnish
security for the costs of the
proceedings. In addition to the
particular circumstances of the case, the court considering whether
or not security should
be ordered, should also have regard to the
considerations of equity and fairness to both parties. It may,
in the exercise
of its discretion, enquire into the conduct of a
party which has reduced the other party to penury.
[17]
Where it is clear that if the action fails the company will be
unable to pay its debts,
there is a duty on the court to exercise
its discretion in favour of the applicant and to order security to
be given. The court
is not, however, bound to order security in
every case where it explain that if the action fails the company
will be unable to
pay the defendant’s costs:
the
court is entitled to consider the nature of the particular case,
although not enquire fully into the merits and form an opinion
of
the plaintiff’s prospects of success. The court will
take into consideration the financial position of the company
at the
time of the application for security, what the position is likely to
be if the company loses the action and the nature
of the claim.
It is entitled to take into account the kind of action brought
against the person claiming security in order
to decide whether it
is right in all the circumstances to order the company to furnish
security.”
[9]
Barker
v Bishops Diocesan College
2019 (4) SA 1
WCC
[10]
Shepstone
and Wiley v Geyser 1998 ZASCA 48
[11]
1987
(1) SA 450
at 45 E-G
[12]
Zietsman
v Electronic Media Network Ltd and Others
2008 (4) SA 1
(SCA) at
paragraph 21
[13]
Fisheries
Development Corporation of SA Ltd v Jorgensen and Another; Fisheries
Development Corporation of SA Ltd v AWJ Investments
(Pty) Ltd and
Others
1979 (3) SA 1331
(W) at 1339 E-F
[14]
Section
34 of the Constitution states:
“
Everyone
has the right to have any dispute that can be resolved by the
application of law decided in a fair public hearing before
a court
or where appropriate, another independent and impartial Tribunal or
forum.”
[15]
my
emphasis
[16]
Section
30 of the Income Tax Act
Section
13 of the Companies Act
sino noindex
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