Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 1010South Africa
Prinsloo and Others v Development Bank of Southern Africa Ltd (Leave to Appeal) (63387/2020) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1010 (27 September 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Prinsloo and Others v Development Bank of Southern Africa Ltd (Leave to Appeal) (63387/2020) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1010 (27 September 2024)
Prinsloo and Others v Development Bank of Southern Africa Ltd (Leave to Appeal) (63387/2020) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1010 (27 September 2024)
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sino date 27 September 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
Number: 63387 / 2020
(1) REPORTABLE:
YES
/
NO
(2) OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES:
YES
/
NO
(3) REVISED:
YES
/
NO
27
September 2024
In
the matter between:-
HOFMANN
PRINSLOO
First
Applicant
PIETER
DU PLESSIS
Second
Applicant
DR
CORNELIUS PAPENFUS
Third
Applicant
DIRK
CONRADIE
Fourth
Applicant
MASHUPYE
MATLALA
Fifth Applicant
and
DEVELOPMENT
BANK OF SOUTHERN AFRICA LTD
Respondent
In
Re:
DEVELOPMENT
BANK OF SOUTHERN AFRICA LTD
Applicant
and
HOFMANN
PRINSLOO
First Respondent
PIETER
DU PLESSIS
Second
Respondent
DR
CORNELIUS PAPENFUS
Third Respondent
DIRK
CONRADIE
Fourth Respondent
MASHUPYE
MATLALA
Fifth
Respondent
JUDGMENT:
LEAVE TO APPEAL
SNYMAN,
AJ
Introduction
[1]
This judgment concerns an application for leave to appeal brought by
the applicants on 15 August
2024. The applicants were the respondents
in the main application. In terms of a judgment handed down on 24
July 2024 in the main
application, I found against the applicants,
and gave judgment in favour of the respondent (the applicant in the
main application),
making the arbitration award in its favour an
Order of Court, and dismissing the applicants’ counter
application.
[2]
The application for leave to appeal was argued virtually on 23
September 2024, and I indicated
at the conclusion of the hearing that
judgment was reserved and that judgment in the leave to appeal
application would be handed
down on 3 September 2024. I now hand down
judgment accordingly.
Leave
to Appeal
[3]
Leave to appeal is not there for the asking.
[1]
This is evident from section 17(1)(a) of the Superior Courts Act
[2]
,
which provides that:
‘
(a) Leave to
appeal may only be given where the judge or judges concerned are of
the opinion that:
(i)
the appeal would have a reasonable prospect of success; or
(ii)
there is some other compelling reason why the appeal should be heard,
including conflicting judgments
on a matter under consideration.’
[4]
As to the meaning of ‘reasonable prospects of success’,
the Court in Member of the
Executive
Council for Health, Eastern Cape v Mkhitha and Another
[3]
said the following:
‘
Once again it is
necessary to say that leave to appeal, especially to this Court, must
not be granted unless there truly is a reasonable
prospect of
success.
Section 17(1)(a)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
makes
it clear that leave to appeal may only be given where the judge
concerned is of the opinion that the appeal would have a
reasonable
prospect of success; or there is some other compelling reason why it
should be heard.
An applicant for leave to
appeal must convince the court on proper grounds that there is a
reasonable prospect or realistic chance
of success on appeal. A mere
possibility of success, an arguable case or one that is not hopeless,
is not enough. There must be
a sound, rational basis to conclude that
there is a reasonable prospect of success on appeal.’
[5]
Next, and as to what would constitute a compelling reason for another
Court to entertain the appeal,
the Court in Caratco (Pty) Ltd v
Independent Advisory (Pty) Ltd
[4]
had the following to say:
‘
... A compelling
reason includes an important question of law or a discrete issue of
public importance that will have an effect
on future disputes. But
here too, the merits remain vitally important and are often decisive
’
Analysis
[6]
It must be membered, as a point of departure, that the respondent had
brought the application
to make the arbitration award handed down by
retired Judge C Pretorius on 12 April 2023 (the award), an order of
Court, and save
for the applicants’ counter application, there
was no other basis to oppose such relief sought. In other words, the
arbitration
award itself always stood as unchallenged, and
enforceable. Although the applicants in their counter application had
asked for
primary relief of the dismissal of the application to make
the award an order of Court, that relief sought was not pursued when
the matter was heard. Instead, the applicants focussed on the
enforcement of the award being stayed until the new litigation
brought
by the applicants in the High Court by way of a summons
issued under case number 096171/23 (the new case), had been
concluded.
[7]
It is unclear from the applicants’ application for leave to
appeal whether they focus on
reasonable prospects of success on
appeal, or whether they rely on special circumstances
(section
17(1)(a)(ii)).
That being said, it can however readily be stated from
the outset that no special circumstances exist in this case that
would justify
the granting of leave to appeal as contemplated by
section 17(1)(a)(ii)
, as there is simply no important question of law
or a discrete issue of public importance that will have an effect on
future disputes,
in existence in casu, nor has such a case been
properly made out by the applicants. The legal principles at stake in
this case
are settled and trite, and the matter raises no issue of
public importance that could affect future disputes of this kind. In
my
view,
section 17(1)(a)(ii)
finds no application in this instance.
[8]
This leaves the issue of reasonable prospects of success. Much of the
grounds raised by the applicants
in seeking leave to appeal on this
basis are little more than rehashing that which has already been
argued when the matter originally
came before me. In particular, the
applicants seek to make out in essence the very same arguments
relating to the principles of
res judicata, issue estoppel, the once
and for all rule, and the doctrine of election, which I have already
addressed in full in
my judgment, and decided based on the
application of trite legal principle to what was in essence
undisputed facts. The applicants
have simply made out no case that
another Court would decide otherwise.
[9]
I believe that as a general proposition, the applicants’
application for leave to appeal,
save for the two specific issues
dealt with in this judgment below, simply does not make out a case
for leave to appeal. All considered,
it is my view that the
applicants suggest that I have erred, simply because the applicants
disagree with the conclusions that I
came to, especially concerning
certain factual findings I had made and where I applied legal
principles to those facts. This mere
disagreement cannot make out a
case for leave to appeal. Overall, the applicants persist in arguing
more or less the same case
they argued when this matter was
originally argued before me, and just as was the case then, I remain
convinced that these arguments
have no substance. In general, the
applicants have no reasonable prospects of success on appeal on any
of the grounds for seeking
leave to appeal are concerned, where it
comes to these findings I had made.
[10]
It would seem the real gravamen of the applicants’ complaint
upon which their seeking of leave to appeal
is based, is that my
judgment in essence decided the applicants’ case brought in
terms of the new case, when that case was
not before me. Aligned to
this ground is then the further ground that I failed to exercise my
discretion properly and judicially
when dismissing the counter
application, instead of granting the stay sought. For the reasons to
follow, I remain unconvinced that
there is any substance in these
grounds for seeking leave to appeal, and there are simply prospects
of success on appeal in this
respect.
[11]
What the respondent was seeking in the main application was the
enforcement and then execution of an
unchallenged arbitration award
in its favour. It follows that what the applicants were then seeking
in their counter application
was tantamount to a stay of execution /
enforcement, pending the determination of their new case. In deciding
whether to accede
to such a request, this Court would be asked to
exercise a discretion.
[5]
An
evaluation of the prospects of success in the new case would be part
of exercising the discretion.
[6]
Another factor to be considered would be whether real and substantial
justice requires the stay, or in other words, an injustice
would be
done if the stay is not granted.
[7]
A further consideration is the potentiality of irreparable harm being
sustained if a stay is not granted. It should also not be
ignored
that the party seeking enforcement would be entitled to payment as
the award itself is simply not in dispute,
[8]
because ordinarily only where the award itself is disputed, a stay
may well be appropriate.
[9]
As
succinctly said in
Van
Rensburg and Another NNO v Naidoo and Others NNO; Naidoo and Others
NNO v Van Rensburg NO and Others
:
[10]
‘
... a court has
inherent jurisdiction, in appropriate circumstances, to order a stay
of execution or to suspend an order. It might,
for example, stay a
sale in execution or suspend an ejectment order. Such discretion must
be exercised
judicially.
As a general rule,
a court will only do so where injustice will otherwise ensue.
A
court will grant a stay of execution in terms of Uniform
Rule 45A
where the underlying causa or judgment debt is being disputed, or no
longer exists, or when an attempt is made to use the levying
of
execution for ulterior purposes. As a general rule, courts acting in
terms of this rule will suspend the execution of an order
where real
and substantial injustice compels such action’.
[12]
Also pertinent is the following
dictum
in
Belmont
House (Pty) Ltd v Gore and Another NNO
[11]
:
‘
It rather seems to
me that, what Belmont seeks to invoke, is the power of the High Court
to prevent the abuse of its process by
staying proceedings in certain
circumstances. The nature of this power, and the circumstances in
which it will be exercised, is
succinctly described as follows in
Herbstein & Van Winsen
The Civil Practice of the High Courts
of South Africa
supra at 306: '(T)he power to do so will be
exercised sparingly and only in exceptional cases. This should be
done with very great
caution and only in clear cases. Proceedings
will be stayed when they are vexatious or frivolous or when their
continuance, on
all the circumstances of the case, is, or may prove
to be, an injustice or serious embarrassment to one or other of the
parties
'
It should, however, be
borne in mind that, although a stay of proceedings can be ordered
when same are vexatious or an abuse of
the process of the court, it
cannot be granted in the exercise of an inherent discretion merely to
avoid injustice and inequity
…’
[13]
As stated above, and in the affidavits supporting their counter
application, the applicants themselves raise
very much the same facts
and issues as contained in the new case, and rely on these
contentions to substantiate a stay. Because
these facts and issues
then form the very basis of seeking a stay of the enforcement of the
award, it is difficult to understand
how the applicants can be
critical of the fact that it was considered, and then decided. The
simple reality is that all of this
needed to be considered and
decided, so as to ascertain whether it was sufficiently compelling
for me to exercise by discretion
to stay the enforcement of the award
in the light of the pending new case. It is only in this context that
I pronounced on any
aspect relating to the merits of the new case,
and even then, only to the extent as it was raised in the counter
application itself,
which was before me to decide. I did not decide
the case as set out in the summons containing the applicants’
new case, even
though it was handed to me. It was only handed to me
to substantiate to me that it existed, and I never considered or
decided anything
contained therein. I dismissed the stay application,
because in my view there was simply no merit in the case, as was set
out in
the applicants’ affidavits in the counter application
that was before me to decide. This was an issue I was compelled to
consider when exercising my discretion whether to grant the stay. I
can see no reasonable prospect that another Court would come
to a
different conclusion in this regard.
[14]
Insofar as the applicant suggest that the mere existence of the new
case is just cause for granting a stay,
this suggestion is lacking in
substance. As correctly submitted by the respondent, a stay should
only be granted if it would serve
a proper purpose, and that would
always necessitate an investigation as to the basis and reasons for
the stay. If that is not the
case, then all any party facing
execution of an adverse arbitration award would need to do is to
simply issue a summons to defeat
the execution, which cannot be a
sustainable proposition.
[15]
The aforesaid ground for seeking leave to appeal, as raised by the
applicants, has many comparisons to the
judgment of the Full Bench of
this Court in
IDS
Industry Service and Plant Construction South Africa (Pty) Ltd v
Industrius D.O.O
[12]
,
where the Court, on appeal, was called on consider whether the Court
a quo
erred in refusing to grant a stay of execution of an arbitration
award, pending new litigation. In particular, and in a manner
quite
comparable to the case
in
casu
,
the appellant in that case contended that it had a counterclaim for
enrichment it wanted to introduce during the arbitration,
but did
not, and this formed
inter
alia
the basis of the new claim (litigation), which the appellant
contended had good prospects of success at trial. It was also said
that if the stay was refused, it would be required to pursue its
claims whilst having no way of preventing execution of the
judgment.
[13]
The Court
a
quo
nonetheless refused to grant the stay sought, finding,
inter
alia
,
that the appellant's action was
res
judicata
and had no prospects, and that if the appellant was aggrieved by the
award, it ought to have taken steps to challenge it but this
was not
done.
[14]
In
casu
, I
dealt with the applicants’ case in a very similar manner.
[16]
The Court in
IDS
Industry supra
accepted that the Court
a
quo
had
a discretion to stay the execution,
[15]
and in exercising this discretion, a consideration of the prospects
of success showed that the claims the appellant was now raising
lacked such prospects. The Court held that on this basis, the Court
a
quo
properly exercised its discretion in refusing to grant the stay.
[16]
But further, and importantly, in a manner similar to what I found in
my judgment, the Court had the following to say:
[17]
‘
In any event, even
if there were some merit in the alternative claims, the action is
barred from proceeding by the arbitration agreement.
This is because
the parties agreed that the unjustified enrichment issues could be
dealt with in the arbitration proceedings
’
The
Court concluded:
[18]
‘
The dismissal of
the counter application is unassailable. The pending action has no
real prospects of success and is barred by the
arbitration agreement.
In the exercise of the court's discretion to stay, the court a quo
held that South African courts should
exhibit a 'pro-enforcement
bias' with regard to the enforcement of foreign arbitral awards. I
agree. The 'pro-enforcement bias'
is a strong factor in the exercise
of a court's discretion and should weigh in favour of enforcement of
arbitral awards and against
delaying it. However, accepting this, the
counter application does not meet the threshold for a stay, namely
the avoidance of real
and substantial injustice.’
[17]
The applicants
in
casu
argued that because of my judgment, they would be precluded from
presenting their case in the new case, as the issues raised therein
have already been decided. This however cannot be correct. I did not
finally decide any of these issues. I decided these issues
as part of
considering prospects of success in the context of exercising a
discretion to stay execution, which is a cause of action
and relief
sought distinct and separate from the new case on the merits, meaning
that
res
judicata
cannot apply.
[19]
The
applicants remain free to pursue their claim(s) in the new case, of
course subject to any defences the respondent may wish
to raise,
[20]
and should they perhaps one day succeed, they can recover their
claim(s) from the respondent. This reality runs counter to a
legitimate
case of the existence of real and substantial prejudice
sufficient to support the granting of a stay. The following
dictum
in
IDS
Industries supra
,
in this regard, is pertinent:
[21]
‘
The disadvantage
to IDS of having to enforce its claim against Industrius if, one day,
it actually pursues and finally succeeds
in that claim does not
constitute 'real and substantial injustice'. If that were so, a stay
of enforcement could always be obtained
by the simple device of
instituting a claim against the enforcer.’
[18]
The applicants finally argue that if the award is executed, and
considering it is for a considerable sum
of money, they may well be
sequestrated, which would manifestly compromise their ability to
pursue their new claim. This is unfortunately
for them not a proper
basis on which to grant a stay, as it would be a stay based on
considerations of equity, which, as I have
dealt with above, is not
permissible.
Conclusion
[19]
All the above considered, I thus conclude that the applicants have
failed to show that there exists a reasonable
prospect that another
Court would come to a different conclusion, and in my view the
applicants have negligible prospect of success
on appeal. The
application for leave to appeal falls to be dismissed.
[20]
This only leaves the issue of costs. The applicants’
application for leave to appeal failed. As such,
the respondent is
entitled to its costs. The respondent asked for punitive costs. I am
however not inclined to grant such an order,
as I do not believe the
applicants’ application for leave to appeal, although open to
some legitimate criticism as advanced
by the respondent, would fall
within the parameters of what may be considered hopeless or frivolous
to justify such an order. What
is justified is a costs award against
the applicants, including the costs of two counsel, at scale C.
[21]
In all the circumstances as set out above, the following order is
made:
Order
1.
The applicants’ (respondents in the main application)
application for leave to appeal
is dismissed.
2.
The applicants are ordered to pay the respondent’s (applicant
in the main application)
costs on a party and party scale C, the one
paying the other to be absolved, which costs shall include the costs
of two counsel.
SNYMAN
AJ
Acting
Judge of the High Court of South Africa
Gauteng
Division, Pretoria
Appearances:
Heard on:
23 September 2024
For the Applicants:
Advocate M P Van
der Merwe SC
Instructed by:
Couzyn Hertzog &
Horak Attorneys
For the Respondent:
Advocate J Vorster
SC together with
Advocate B Ramela
Instructed by:
Norton Rose
Fulbright (SA) Attorneys
Date of Judgment:
27 September 2024
[1]
See
J &
L Lining (Pty) Ltd v National Union of Metalworkers of SA and Others
(2) (2019) 40 ILJ 1303 (LC) at para 5.
[2]
Act 10 of 2013.
[3]
[2016] JOL 36940
(SCA) at paras 16 – 17. See also
Ramakatsa
and Others v African National Congress and another
[2021] JOL 49993
(SCA) at para 10, where it was held: ‘
The
test of reasonable prospects of success postulates a dispassionate
decision based on the facts and the law that a court of
appeal could
reasonably arrive at a conclusion different to that of the trial
court. In other words, the appellants in this matter
need to
convince this Court on proper grounds that they have prospects of
success on appeal. Those prospects of success must
not be remote,
but there must exist a reasonable chance of succeeding. A sound
rational basis for the conclusion that there are
prospects of
success must be shown to exist …’.
[4]
2020 (5) SA 35
(SCA) at para 2. See also
Qoboshiyane
NO and Others v Avusa Publishing Eastern Cape (Pty) Ltd and Others
2013
(3) SA 315
(SCA) at para 5;
Minister
of Justice and Constitutional Development and Others v Southern
Africa Litigation Centre and Others
2016 (3) SA 317
(SCA) at para 23;
Tshwane
City and Others v Nambiti Technologies (Pty) Ltd
2016 (2) SA 494
(SCA) at para 6.
[5]
See
Whitfield
v Van Aarde
1993 (1) SA 332
(E) at 337E-H.
[6]
BP
Southern Africa (Pty) Ltd v Mega Burst Oils and Fuels (Pty) Ltd and
Another and a Similar Matter
2022 (1) SA 162
(GJ) at paras 26 – 27.
[7]
Stoffberg
NO and Another v Capital Harvest (Pty) Ltd
2021
JDR 1644 (WCC) at para 26.
[8]
In
BP
Southern Africa (supra)
at para 25, it was said: ‘…A litigant with an
enforceable judgment is entitled to payment, and only in rare cases
would be delayed in that process …’.
[9]
Firm
Mortgage Solutions (Pty) Ltd and Another v Absa Bank Ltd and Another
2014 (1) SA 168
(WCC) at para 6. See also
Janse
van Rensburg v Obiang and Another
2023 (3) SA 591
(WCC) at para 44, where it was held: ‘
Even
where the causa of a claim is undisputed, a court may still grant a
stay where otherwise an injustice will be done. This
will be the
case, in my view, where the possibility exists that the order on
which the execution is predicated may be expunged
…’.
[10]
2011
(4) SA 149
(SCA) at paras 51 – 52.
[11]
2011 (6) SA 173
(WCC) at paras 17 – 18.
[12]
2023 JDR 2094 (GJ).
[13]
See para 9 of the judgment.
[14]
Id at para 10.
[15]
Id at para 13.
[16]
Id at para 20.
[17]
Id at para 21.
[18]
Id at para 25.
[19]
See
National
Sorghum Breweries Ltd (t/a Vivo African Breweries) v International
Liquor Distributors (Pty) Ltd
[2000] ZASCA 159
;
2001 (2) SA 232
(SCA) at para 2;
Yellow
Star Properties v MEC Department of Development Planning and Local
Government
2009 (3) SA 577
(SCA) at paras 21 – 22.
[20]
The respondent submitted in argument that they have raised
res
judicata
as a defense to the applicants’ new claim, not because of my
judgment, but because of the content of and findings made
in the
undisputed arbitration award.
[21]
Id at para 26.
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