Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 954South Africa
Municpality of Thabazimbi v Badenhorst and Others (2024-101788) [2024] ZAGPPHC 954 (25 September 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
25 September 2024
Headnotes
at Thabazimbi, that court interdicted Mr Tloubatla from performing the duties of municipal manager of the Thabazimbi Local Municipality and interdicted him from entering the premises of the local municipality pending finalization of certain appeals and processes set out in that order. Accordingly, the first respondent argues that whilst it may be so that the application before me was initiated lawfully on 6th September 2024, no further instructions to proceed with the application were competent.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Municpality of Thabazimbi v Badenhorst and Others (2024-101788) [2024] ZAGPPHC 954 (25 September 2024)
Municpality of Thabazimbi v Badenhorst and Others (2024-101788) [2024] ZAGPPHC 954 (25 September 2024)
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sino date 25 September 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO: 2024-101788
(1)
REPORTABLE:
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
(3)
REVISED:
YES
DATE:
25 September 2024
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
THE
MUNICPALITY OF THABAZIMBI
Applicant
and
HENDRIK
JOHANNES BADENHORST
First
Respondent
ABSA
BANK
LIMITED
Second Respondent
THE OFFICE OF THE
SHERIFF, THABAZIMBI
Third Respondent
JUDGMENT
NEUKIRCHER
J:
1]
On 8 September 2024 the applicant issued out an urgent application
giving the respondent
three days after service of the application
within which to file its answering affidavit. The relief sought by
the applicant is
the following:
a)
the application be heard as one of extreme urgency
in terms of the provisions of rule 6 (12);
b)
that
the writ of execution under case number 66933/ 2011 is
set
aside
;
[1]
c)
that
the amount of R19 941 263.96, paid out to first respondent
pursuant to the execution of the writ of execution –
on 5
September 2024 – be repaid to the applicant
within
one hour of the grant of this order
[2]
;
d)
that the first respondent’s attorney be
ordered to pay the costs of the urgent application
de
bonis propriis
.
2]
It is worth noting that, despite the order sought in (d) above, the
first respondent’s
attorney was not joined to the present
proceedings.
3]
The facts upon which the application rests are common cause and are
the following:
a)
on 18 December 2023 this court granted an order against the
applicant and in favour of the first respondent
for
payment of the amount of R8 904 556.46, together with
interest at the rate of 10% per annum from 12 December 2011
to date
of full payment;
b)
on 26 February 2024 the application for
leave to appeal this order was dismissed with costs;
c)
on 25 March 2024 the applicant then
petitioned the Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA). This petition was
dismissed with costs on 14 May
2024;
d)
in the meantime, and subsequent to the
dismissal of the petition, on 5 June 2024 the first respondent served
a writ of execution
on the applicant. The writ was re-issued on 19
August 2024;
e)
the applicant however, had launched an
application for reconsideration
in terms of s17(2)(f) of the
Superior Court’s Act 10 of 2013 (“the Superior Court’s
Act”) on 13 June 2024.
O
n 22 August 2024
this application was dismissed by the President of the SCA. I
emphasize that the writ was re-issued subsequent
to the launch of the
s17(2)(f) reconsideration and prior to the decision of the President
of the SCA;
f)
much
correspondence flowed between the applicant and the first
respondent’s attorney of record between 26 August 2024
[3]
and 5 September 2024
[4]
. The
gist of the correspondence was that the applicant informed the first
respondent that it intended to apply for leave to appeal
to the
Constitutional Court by 6 September 2024, and the first respondent
informed the applicant that it would not suspend the
writ and that it
required a court order before it would do so. The applicant also
warned the first respondent not to execute the
writ as it did not
have a s18(3) of the Superior Courts Act court order;
g)
on
5 September 2024, and despite the application for leave to appeal
being served on the first respondent’s attorney of record,
[5]
the first respondent executed the writ.
[6]
As a result, ABSA Bank paid over the amount of
R19 941 263. 96
to
the sheriff
[7]
and, after
deducting his costs and fees, the amount of R
19 937 912.46
was
paid over to the first respondent’s attorney of record;
h)
this application was prepared and issued on
8 September 2024.
4]
The second respondent (ABSA Bank) has indicated that it does not
intend to oppose the application
and abides by the outcome thereof.
The third respondent (the Sheriff, Thabazimbi) has also not opposed
the application.
5]
The first respondent opposes this urgent application. He raises
several points in limine:
a)
that the application is not urgent;
b)
that the relief sought by the applicant is
not competent given the circumstances of this case;
c)
that no case is made out for the relief
sought vis-à-vis the payment of the funds;
d)
that as the applicant failed to join the
first respondents attorney of record, the costs sought in respect of
day bones propriis
relief is not competent.
6]
By the time the matter was argued before me on 17 September 2024, a
further issue was raised
by the first respondent: on 13 September
2024 the first respondent filed a rule 7 notice disputing the
authority of the municipal
manager, Mr Tloubatla, to instruct Raphiri
Inc Attorneys to
persist
with this application and to depose to an affidavit.
[8]
Given the terms in which the rule 7 notice is framed, no issue has
been taken with the institution of these proceedings.
7]
The basis for the rule 7 notice is that on 10 September 2024 and in
the regional division
of Limpopo held at Thabazimbi, that court
interdicted Mr Tloubatla from performing the duties of municipal
manager of the Thabazimbi
Local Municipality and interdicted him from
entering the premises of the local municipality pending finalization
of certain appeals
and processes set out in that order. Accordingly,
the first respondent argues that whilst it may be so that the
application before
me was initiated lawfully on 6th September 2024,
no further instructions to proceed with the application were
competent.
8]
It would appear, that the first respondent has also attempted to add
two further bows to
its opposition of this application:
a)
that the application for leave to appeal
filed at the Constitutional Court is without merit;
b)
that the money paid over by the sheriff of
this court to the first respondent has been invested in an interest
bearing trust account
held by the attorney of record of the first
respondent in order to safeguard it pending the outcome of the
Constitutional Court
application for leave to appeal. Given that the
money is safeguarded, the first respondent argues that there is no
urgency to this
application and no prejudice to the applicant.
9]
I do not intend to deal with the rule 7 notice, failed so late in
this application, in any
great detail. The reason that I do not do so
is twofold: firstly the instructions from the municipal manager to
the applicants
attorneys of record were given prior to the court
order of 10 September 2024. Secondly, the mandate of the same
attorneys of record
to act in the Constitutional Court matter was
also challenged and that authority has been, I am given to
understand, satisfactorily
resolved.
10]
Furthermore, the basis for the objection is not that the municipal
manager had no authority to institute
these proceedings in the first
place - rather the objection is that he had no authority to instruct
the attorneys
to finalise
these proceedings on 17 September
2024. That is, in my view, nonsensical – it defies logic that
where attorneys are given
a mandate to institute proceedings, that
this mandate would not include an instruction to finalise those
proceedings as well, however
that is done i.e. by way of a court
order or a settlement. It is, at the very least, implicit in the
initial instruction. The first
respondent’s argument is
therefore, in my view, untenable.
11]
The first respondent then objects to the authority of the municipal
manager to depose to the affidavits
in this application. But the
municipal manager is no more than a witness in these proceedings and
needs no authority to depose
to affidavits, more especially when the
facts fall within his personal knowledge, he having dealt with the
issues all along.
[9]
12]
Thus, in my view, there is no merit in the rule 7 notice.
13]
Given that the applicant seeks an order that the writ be set aside,
as opposed to the writ being stayed,
the question is whether the
first respondent was entitled to issue and execute the writ pending
the finalisation of the appeal
process. The applicant argues that it
was not given the provisions of s18 of the Superior Courts Act.
14]
Section 18
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
states:
“
(1)
Subject to subsections (2) and (3), and unless the court under
exceptional circumstances orders otherwise, the operation and
execution of a decision which is the subject of an application for
leave to appeal or of an appeal, is suspended pending the decision
of
the application or appeal.
(2)
Subject to subsection (3), unless the court under exceptional
circumstances orders otherwise, the operation and execution of
a
decision that is an interlocutory order not having the effect of a
final judgment, which is the subject of an application for
leave to
appeal or of an appeal, is not suspended pending the decision of the
application or appeal.
(3)
A court may only order otherwise as contemplated in subsection (1) or
(2), if the party who applied to the court to order otherwise,
in
addition proves on a balance of probabilities that he or she will
suffer irreparable harm if the court does not so order and
that the
other party will not suffer irreparable harm if the court so orders.
(4)
(a)
If
a court orders otherwise, as contemplated in subsection (1) —
(i) the court must
immediately record its reasons for doing so;
(ii) the
aggrieved party has an automatic right of appeal to the next highest
court;
(iii) the
court hearing such an appeal must deal with it as a matter of extreme
urgency; and
(iv) such
order will be automatically suspended, pending the outcome of such
appeal.
(b)
‘
Next
highest court’, for purposes of paragraph
(a)
(ii),
means —
(i)
a full court of that Division, if the appeal is against a decision of
a single judge of the Division; or
(ii) the
Supreme Court of Appeal, if the appeal is against a decision of two
judges or the full court of the Division.
(5)
For the purposes of subsections (1) and (2), a decision becomes the
subject of an application for leave to appeal or of an appeal,
as
soon as an application for leave to appeal or a notice of appeal is
lodged with the registrar in terms of the rules.”
15]
Section 18
suspends any order granted which is subject to a pending
application for leave to appeal or an appeal. It is clear that the
purpose
of this is to prevent an injustice being done to the intended
appellant. Prior to
s18
, the position was regulated by the common
law, and then
Rule 49(11)
[10]
.
Iin
South
Cape Corporation (Pty) Ltd v Engineering Management Services (Pty)
Ltd
[11]
Corbett JA explains it thus:
“
Whatever the
true position may have been in the Dutch Courts, and more
particularly the Court of Holland (as to which see Ruby’s
Cash
Store (Pty) Ltd. Estate Marks and Another,
1961 (2) SA 118
(T) at pp.
120 – 3),
it is today the accepted common law rule of
practice in Courts that generally the execution of a judgement is
automatically suspended
upon the noting of an appeal
, with
the result that, pending the appeal, the judgement cannot be carried
out and no effect can be given thereto, except with
the leave of the
Court which granted the judgement. To obtain such leave the party in
whose favour the judgement was given must
make special application.
(See generally Oliphants Tin “B” Syndicate v De Jager,
1912 AD 477
at p. 481; Reid and Another v Godart and Another,
1938 AD
511
at p 513; Gentiruco A.G v Firestone SA (Pty) Ltd.,
1972 (1) SA
589
(AD) at p. 667; Standard Bank of SA Ltd v Stama (Pty) Ltd.,
1975
(1) SA 730
(AD) at p. 746)
The purpose of this rule as to
the suspension of a judgement on the noting of an appeal is to
prevent irreparable damage from being
done to the intending
appellant, either by levy under a writ of execution or by execution
of the judgement in any other matter
appropriate to the nature of the
judgement appealed from
(Reid’s case, supra, at p
513). The Court to which application for leave be granted, to
determine the conditions upon which
the right to execute shall be
exercised (see Voet, 49.7.3; Ruby’s Cash Store (Pty) Ltd.
Estate Marks and Another, supra at
p 127). This discretion is part
and parcel of the inherent jurisdiction which the Court has to
control its own judgement (cf Fismer
v Thornton,
1927 Ad 17
at p 19).
In exercising this discretion, the Court should in my view, determine
what is just and equitable in all circumstances…
”
16]
It is therefore clear that the entire purpose behind the erstwhile
Rule 49(11)
, and the present
Section 18(1)
, is to prevent irreparable
damage from being done to the applicant/appellant whilst the appeal
process runs its course.
[12]
In
Business
Connexion
,
a Writ of Execution was issued after a
s17(2)(c)
Superior Courts Act
reconsideration
was filed, but before that application was finalised.
That is exactly what occurred here, save that the writ was executed
upon
after that reconsideration application was refused. But, in my
view, the first respondent was well aware that the applicant intended
to petition the Constitutional Court for leave to appeal and should
have therefore waited for the appeal period to have lapsed
before
proceeding to execute the writ. This much is confirmed in the
Business
Connexion
judgment:
“
[23] A
decision, in terms of
section 18(5)
of the Superior Court’s
Act, becomes the subject of an appeal for leave to appeal or of an
appeal, as soon as an application
for leave to appeal or a notice of
appeal is lodged with the registrar in terms of the applicable rules
of court. This applies
to an application for leave to appeal or an
appeal to the full court, the Supreme Court of Appeal and the
Constitutional Court.
Put differently, an applicant for leave to
appeal is protected against execution throughout the appeal process
up and until all
appeal processes have been exhausted unless a court
under exceptional circumstances orders otherwise. “
17]
I agree with the view expressed in
Business Connexion.
In
my view, given that the writ was issued prior to the exhaustion of
the appeal processes, it must be set aside. Once this
is done the
funds paid over to the first respondent must be repaid to the
applicant. In my view, it matters not that these funds
are
safeguarded by the first respondent’s attorney in an
interest-bearing trust account – the first respondent was
not
entitled to them in the first place.
18]
There is one issue that requires further comment: ABSA Bank paid over
to the Sheriff the amount of R19 941 263.
96 on 5 September
2024. The Sheriff then paid the first respondent’s attorney of
record the amount of R19 937 912.46
after they deducted
their costs and charges. This is the amount that stands to the credit
of the first respondent (excluding the
interest the amount has
accumulated to date).
19]
As to costs: the applicant asks that the first respondent’s
attorney be ordered to pay the costs
de bonis propriis
. He is
not joined to these proceedings and I therefore decline to make such
an order. However, although it is understandable that
the first
respondent feels frustrated that he is still unable to execute the
order he obtained against the applicant as far back
as 18 December
2023, the process must be allowed to be completed. The writ should
not have been issued in the first place in the
circumstances that it
was, and it should most certainly not have been executed. This being
so, the first respondent must pay the
costs.
ORDER
20]
The order I issue is the following:
1.
The Writ of Execution issued under case number 66933/2011 is set
aside.
2.
The first respondent is ordered to refund to the applicant the amount
of R19 937 912.46,
together with such interest accumulated
on that amount since 9 September 2024, within 5 business days of the
date upon which the
applicant nominates a bank account into which the
funds should be paid, as set out in paragraph 3 below.
3.
The amount, together with interest, is to be paid into an account
nominated by the applicant
for that purpose. The applicant shall
serve this order on the first respondent’s attorneys and, at
the same time, notify
the first respondent’s attorney of record
of the full details of the nominated account. Should the applicant
fail to so nominate
a bank account, the funds will be only be
repayable within 5 business days of the account details being
provided by the applicant
to the first respondent’s attorneys
of record.
4.
The first respondent is ordered to pay the costs of this application.
NEUKIRCHER J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Delivered: This
judgment was prepared and authored by the judge whose name is
reflected, and is handed down electronically
by circulation to the
parties/their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on
CaseLines. The date for
hand-down is deemed to be 25 September 2024.
For the applicant:
Adv Kwinda
Instructed
by:
JL
Raphiri Attorneys
For
1
st
respondent:
Adv
Ward
Instructed
by:
H W
Theron Inc
Date
of hearing:
17
September 2024
Date
of judgment:
25
September 2024
[1]
My emphasis
[2]
My emphasis. In my view this time limit is unrealistic
[3]
The date on which the SCA informed the applicant of its unsuccessful
s17(2)(f)
application
[4]
When the applicant served its latest application for leave to appeal
to the constitutional Court on the first respondent
[5]
The application was filed at the Constitutional Court on 6 September
2024
[6]
It had warned the applicant of its intention to do so on 26 August
2024
[7]
Who executed the writ
[8]
My emphasis
## [9]Ganes and Another v Telecom Namibia Ltd 2004 (3) SA 615 (SCA) para
19
[9]
Ganes and Another v Telecom Namibia Ltd 2004 (3) SA 615 (SCA) para
19
[10]
Rule 49(11) of the Uniform Rules of Court was repealed with effect
from 22 May 2015. Rule 49(11) stated:
“
Where
an appeal has been noted or an application for leave to appeal
against or to rescind, correct, review or vary an order of
a court
has been made, the operation and execution of the order in question
shall be suspended, pending the decision of such
appeal or
application, unless the court which gave such order, on the
application of a party, otherwise directs
.”
[11]
1977
(3) SA 534
(A) at 544H – 545A
# [12]Ekurhuleni
Metropolitan Municipality v Business Connexion (Pty) Ltd and Others
(2024/005180) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1664 (16 April 2024)
(Business
Connexion)
[12]
Ekurhuleni
Metropolitan Municipality v Business Connexion (Pty) Ltd and Others
(2024/005180) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1664 (16 April 2024)
(Business
Connexion)
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