Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 1215South Africa
Datawallet (Pty) Ltd and Another v Thamani Mobile (Pty) Ltd and Others (2024/090086) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1215 (25 November 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
25 November 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Datawallet (Pty) Ltd and Another v Thamani Mobile (Pty) Ltd and Others (2024/090086) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1215 (25 November 2024)
Datawallet (Pty) Ltd and Another v Thamani Mobile (Pty) Ltd and Others (2024/090086) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1215 (25 November 2024)
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sino date 25 November 2024
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO:
2024/090086
In
the application of:
DATAWALLET
(PTY)
LTD
First Applicant
SULIWARE
(PTY)
LTD
Second Applicant
and
THAMANI
MOBILE (PTY) LTD
First Respondent
GEZANI
FREDDY
MASHELE
Second Respondent
F
CASEY AND ASSOCIATES (PTY)
LTD
Third Respondent
SEFAKO
MAKGATHO HEALTH SCIENCES
UNIVERSITY
(MEDUNSA)
Fourth Respondent
JUDGMENT
LABUSCHAGNE
AJ
[1]
During August 2024 the applicants launched an urgent
interdict
application against the respondents seeking an interim interdict
pending finalisation of an action to be instituted.
The matter was
heard by Teffo J on 28 August 2024. On 25 October 2024 judgment was
handed down and an interim order in favour of
the applicants was
granted as requested. On 28 October 2024 the first and second
respondents applied for leave to appeal
against the judgment, which
application has not yet been heard. As Teffo J is on long
leave, the application is scheduled
for hearing during January 2025.
The applicants contend that the effect of the leave to appeal needs
to be determined urgently
as it is facing financial ruin if the order
is not effective. It is argued by the respondents that the risk
of ruin applies
not only to the applicants. I am satisfied that the
application is urgent.
[2]
The order granted by Teffo J found the application to
be urgent and
reads as follows from Prayer 2:
“
2.
That this order hereby serves as an interim order with immediate
effect
pending the finalisation of an action to be instituted within
30 days from the date of granting this order.
3.
That the first and second respondents hereby, jointly and severally,
be prohibited from interfering with the applicants’ business
activities in any manner whatsoever, including but not limited
to:
3.1
Be prohibited from giving any instructions to the third or fourth
respondents or any other client of the applicants
to change, vary or
amend the applicants’ banking particulars;
3.2
Be prohibited from diverting and/or misappropriating any funds
payable to the applicants from the following
clients:
3.2.1
Ekhurhuleni Municipality;
3.2.2
Tshwane Municipality;
3.2.3
Mogale City Municipality;
3.2.4
City of Johannesburg Core – SAMWU;
3.2.5
Johannesburg Water – SAMWU;
3.2.6
Emfuleni Municipality;
3.2.7
Rand West Municipality – RWC; and
3.2.8
Sefako Makgatho Health Sciences University.
3.3
Be prohibited from holding out or representing that the first and/or
second respondents are the applicants
or the applicants’ duly
authorised representatives;
3.4
Be prohibited from representing to the applicants’ clients,
including but not limited to those mentioned
in this order, that the
applicants’ business is that of the first and second
respondents;
3.5
Be prohibited to induce, procure or solicit payments from the
applicants’ clients, including but not
limited to those listed
in this order, to make payment payable to the applicants to the first
and/or second respondents.
4.
That the third respondent is hereby prohibited from making any
payments
to the first and/or second respondents or their nominees for
payments received from the applicants’ clients listed in this
order.
5.
… (deleted).
6.
That the third respondent be hereby prohibited from taking, accepting
or implementing any instruction received from the first and/or second
respondents or their nominees relating to the collection
of the funds
due and payable to the applicants in respect of the clients listed in
this order.
7.
The first, second and third respondents are hereby ordered to pay
the
costs of this application jointly and severally, the one paying the
other to be absolved, including the costs of two counsel
where so
employed on Scale C.”
[3]
For purposes of clarity, I will refer to the parties
either by name
or as they are defined in this application. Thamani Mobile and
Mr Mashele (the “respondents”)
are of the view that the
filing of their application for leave to appeal has suspended the
order of Teffo J and they have therefore
not complied with it.
[4]
The applicants contend that, in terms of section 18(2),
the interim
order granted is not suspended by the leave to appeal. They
seek a declarator to that effect, with an alternative,
if I find that
it is not a section 18(2) scenario, for the interim implementation of
the order in terms of section 18(3).
[5]
As there is an interplay between section 18(2) and section
18(3) of
the Superior Courts Act, 10 of 2013 (“the Act”), the
subsections are quoted in full:
“
(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.”
[6]
Suliware, Datawallet and another entity called Mastercare
Mobile
Coastal (Pty) Ltd conduct business and trade under the name and style
of Numobile. The basis on which the court
a quo
granted
the relief against Thamani and Mashele can be summarised as follows:
6.1
Data Wallet and Suliware, the applicants, have a business
relationship with service providers, Vodacom, MTN and other suppliers
of mobile phones and tablets and laptops. After acquiring
the
business of Thamani (an acquisition that is disputed before me),
Numobile’s end-user clients also included the public
sector.
6.2
Without acquiring smart phone devices and airtime and data
bundles
from Numobile, the end-users are bound to prepaid rates to other
service providers and end-users cannot otherwise afford
devices,
airtime and data packages on a postpaid contract basis.
6.3
The end-users’ liability towards Numobile is deducted
by the
end-user employers, who act as collecting agents and facilitate a
payroll deduction every month and then make the payments
to Numobile
via Casey (the third respondent). Casey is a collection agency
which collects the payments from the end-user
employers and who is
then supposed to pay to Numobile, who in turn makes payment to the
service providers such as Vodacom, MTN
and other suppliers.
6.4
The applicants lay claim to the clients who were listed in
the order
of Teffo J.
6.5
Monthly collections by Casey amount to approximately R1,3 million
which, since the Teffo order was granted, have not been paid.
6.6
This was in large part due to the fact that the first and second
respondents contend that the order was suspended by the application
for leave to appeal filed on 28 October 2024.
[7]
The applicants have utilised other sources to absorb
the loss of R1,3
million a month, but contend that this cannot be sustained. The
South African Municipal Workers Union:
Greater Tshwane Region
is the Union to which the bulk of the endd users belong. That
Union recognises the dispute between
the parties and also directed
Casey not to make payment to any party and to deposit the amounts
into a trust account. This
was conveyed to Casey in a letter of
1 November 2024.
[8]
The applicants’ have made payments (including short
payments)
since July, totalling just over R5 million. This related to the
period July 2024 to October 2024. Thereafter,
approximately
R1,3 million per month needs to be paid. The applicants
therefore contend that their irreparable harm lies
in their inability
to sustain these expenses without access to the payments distributed
by Casey. The applicants contend
that they face termination of
their business relationship with end-users and service providers.
They contend that a damages
claim against Thamani and Mashele is not
an option, as they have pleaded poverty and a damages award will not
make a meaningful
contribution against the actual damages suffered by
the applicants.
AN INTERLOCUTORY ORDER
NOT HAVING THE EFFECT OF A FINAL JUDGMENT
[9]
The effect of the interlocutory order needs to be assessed.
There are a number of ways of determining the finality of an interim
order. Finality would typically require a comparison
of the
interim relief with the final relief to be sought in the proceedings
to be instituted or pending which the interlocutory
order would find
application. In this instance, the action had not yet been
instituted when this application was launched.The
time within which
that action falls to be instituted was 30 days from 25 October
2024.It was disclosed during argument that the
action had been
instituted and was being uploaded to Case Lines. The parties were
afforded an opportunity to make further submissions
by filing further
heads of argument, which they then filed.
[10]
Having regard to the action instituted the relief sought includes an
order confirming the interim order. As the interim relief will be
revisited, the interim order is interlocutory.The mere fact
of
revisiting the interim order in the action points to it not intended
to be final in effect.But whether it is final or not requires
an
assessment of its effect.
[11]
Where the interim order will not be in existence when the action is
finalised,
it is treated as final in effect. This premise is
based on
BHT Water Treatment (Pty) Ltd v Leslie and Another
1993
(1) SA 47
(W), which was considered by the SCA in
Cipla Agrimed
(Pty) Ltd v Merck Sharp Dohme Corporation and Others
2018 (6) SA
440
(SCA) where Rodgers AJA extracted from such case the principle
that, if a court granted an interim interdict in circumstances where
it should, on the basis of the
BHT case
have treated the
application as one for final relief, the interdict, though interim in
form, was final for purposes of appealability
(see
Cipla Agrimed
case
supra
at paragraph [23]).
[12]
The SCA limited the application of the
BHT
test to cases where
it was clear, at the time the court granted the interdict, that the
matter would not be able to be finally determined
before the
interdict expires (Ibid, paragraph [24]). At paragraph [23]
Rodgers AJA states the following:
“
[23]
BHT and the cases which followed it were concerned with the test to
be applied in the granting
of an interdict rather than the issue of
appealability, but I can see force in the argument that, if a court
grants an interim
interdict in circumstances where it should on the
basis of BHT, have treated the application as one for final relief,
the interdict,
though interim in form, is final for purposes of
appealability. This is particularly so where, as here, Cipla
pertinently
alleged in the court a quo, and subsequently argued, that
the matter should, in accordance with BHT, be adjudicated as a claim
for a final interdict where the court a quo’s failure to do so
is one of the grounds of appeal.”
[13]
I have scrutinised the application for leave to appeal but do not
find
an express reference to a failure by the court to apply the test
for final relief. In the application for leave to appeal,
much
is made of the fact that the respondents had put up incontrovertible
facts which were destructive of the applicants’
case and
presented disputes of fact which could not be resolved in the papers.
[14]
On the contrary, the application for leave to appeal assumes that
only
the test for interim relief is applicable. At paragraph
3.1.1 thereof the applicants for leave to appeal state: “
It
is also unclear why the court was wading into the issues of a clear
right since the application before it was for an interim
order.”
[15]
Insofar as the court
a quo
was venturing into the field of a
clear right, the application for leave to appeal does squarely engage
specific contentions.
So, for example, in paragraph 1.1 of the
application for leave to appeal the following is stated:
“
In paragraph 74
of the judgment, the court already made a finding that the agreement
on which the application was founded was in
dispute. Based on
that therefore, it could not be said that the applicants have
established a clear right.”
[16]
While the principle in
BHT Water Treatment
is not applicable
in this instance, a similar consideration arises where the respondent
is unlikely to survive the interim order.
[17]
Thamani Mobile and Mr Mashele stress that they had challenged the
applicants
about the ownership of Thamani Mobile (Pty) Ltd and the
clients brought into the business of the first applicant. It is
contended
that there was no basis on which the court could allocate
or award the clients in the court order to the applicants, in light
of
this dispute. From the perspective of the applicants for
leave to appeal, the court thereby disturbed the
status quo
rather
than restored it. The effect is final.
[18]
The respondents contend that the applicants have no contract with
Casey,
obliging Casey to make payment to them. Further, they contend
that there was no acquisition of the business of Thamani by the
applicants.
Rather, payments were transferred to the applicants by
merely changing the banking details to those of Data Wallet, to whom
Casey
would thereafter make payments on behalf of Thamani.The
respondents contend that the applicants,when Mr Mashele left with his
former
clients, soft blocked the end-users. The respondents replaced
the sim-cards of the end-users.This does point to the applicants not
having direct contracts with all the role players,like Casey and the
end-users. The respondents contend that they get access to
the
workforce of three core clients via SAMWU.The three contested clients
are City of Tshwane, Ekhuruleni Metro and Sefako Makgatho
Health
Sciences University.
[19]
It is further apparent from the application for leave to appeal that
the relationships between the parties had reached rock bottom.
The tone of heasd of argument and of the address during the
court
proceedings reflected deep differences on almost everything material.
[20]
The allegations are made that Mr Mashele’s (the second
respondent’s)
benevolence in changing payment instructions to
bank details of the first applicant without an obligation to do so,
was not reciprocated
but abused. The court order had the effect
of defining the rights between the parties (so it is alleged in
paragraph 7.3
of the leave to appeal) regarding the contract depicted
in
Annexure FA8
and determining to whom the clients listed in
paragraphs 3.2.1 to 3.2.8 belong. This is alleged to constitute
final relief
on seriously contested issues in which irreconcilable
disputes of fact were raised (Leave to Appeal, paragraph 7.4).
[21]
In
Cash Crusaders Franchising (Pty) Ltd v Cash Crusaders
Franchisees
2024 (4) SA 141
(WCC) a similar scenario unfolded.
In that matter the applicant was a franchisor and the respondents,
its franchisees in
terms of a franchise agreement that was cancelled
by the respondents, who represented 40% of the applicant’s
business and
who had proceeded to set up a rival business in defiance
of an interim interdict granted in favour of the applicant.
That
interim interdict restrained the respondents from cancelling the
franchise agreement and directed them to comply with it pending
final
determination of the dispute by an arbitrator or a court. The
court that granted the order in question also ruled that
the
applicant did not breach the franchise agreement and that its
cancellation by the respondents was therefore invalid.
The
applicant brought an application to declare the order in question
interim in nature and hence not suspended by an application
for leave
to appeal. Alternatively, it brought a section 18(3)
application for interim implementation.
[22]
The court held that, although the order in question was cast as an
interlocutory
one, it had a final effect on the parties. By
seeking to restore the
status quo ante
, it was determinative
of the
lis
between the parties and therefore appealable.
Given the breakdown of trust and confidence between the parties, it
was also
in the interests of justice to treat the order as a final
decision (Ibid at paragraphs [43] and [51]).
[23]
Both sides contend that they face financial ruin. For the applicants
ruin would ensue if the Teffo J order were not operative. And for the
respondents, if it were operative.
[24]
In this matter, at least as far as directing that the three core
clients
referred to are treated as the applicants’ clients is
concerned, the Teffo J order does decide the lis between the parties.
Although the order is crafted as an interim order, the respondents
contend that their business will not survive until the action
is
finalised. It would be an order that is final in its effect on the
respondents.
[25]
In light of the breakdown in the relationships, the interests of
justice
also require that the interim order be treated as final in
effect. I intend following a similar approach to this matter as
in
Cash Crusaders
(supra) and therefore find that the order,
though interlocutory in form, is final in effect. The
application for leave to
appeal has therefore suspended the operation
of the order of Teffo J.
THE ONUS IN RESPECT OF
INTERIM IMPLEMENTATION
[26]
There are three requirements for an interim implementation order in
terms
of sec 18(3). The first is the presence of exceptional
circumsyances, The second is that the applicant will suffer
irreparable
harm if the order is not implemented. And the third is
that the respondents will not suffer irreparable harm.
[27]
As far as the application for interim implementation in terms of
section
18(3) is concerned, the onus is on the applicants to
establish on a balance of probability that all three requirements are
present.
[28]
In what follows , I assume the existence of exceptional circumstances
and that the applicants will suffer irreparable harm if the order is
not implemented.
[29]
Data Wallet and Suliware contend that Thamani and Mashele will not
suffer
damages if the order is implemented pending leave to appeal or
an appeal. At paragraph 16.10 the following is stated:
“
Insofar as they
may claim the possibility of potentially suffering any
prejudice/harm, the prejudice the applicants will suffer
if the
relief is not granted, far outweighs any potential prejudice/harm
they will suffer if it is granted.”
[30]
This proposition by Data Wallet clearly postulates a weighing up of
the
respective prejudice and harm of the parties with the balance
tilting in favour of the applicants. That was the test under
the repealed rule 49(11). But this is not the test in terms of
section 18(3). The applicants need to establish that
they will
suffer irreparable harm and that the respondents will not.
IRREPARABLE
HARM
[31]
In referring to the merits of the dispute I am mindful thereof that
this
application is not an appeal. I refer to the contentions
advanced to assess the irreparable harm requirement in sec
18(3)
proceedings. The facts do support the contention of the
applicants that there was not merely a change of address for payment
from
Thamani to Data Wallet but a sale of business. The dispute lies
in whether there was an effective transfer of the business or not.
In
what follows the narrative of the respondents is expressed.
[32]
Thamani Mobile and Mr Mashele (second respondent) have been
conducting
the business since 2020 together with Mr Cleopas
Sanangura, who held 51% of the shares of the business. When Mr
Sanangura
expressed interest to sell his 51% share to the second
respondent, that held the prospect of him being the sole shareholder
of
Thamani Mobile. Mr Sanangura wanted R4 million for his
shares, split as follows:
32.1
R2 million in cash paid to Mr Sanangura; and
32.2
R2 million to release Mr Sanagura from the suretyship/guarantee
issued in favour
of Vodacom and MTN.
[33]
Because the second respondent did not have the funds, he approached
Mr
Johan Marais and Mr Nelius Greyling, being the CEO and Director of
the Suliware (second applicant) respectively for assistance.
Suliware, which owns the first applicant, is in the same business as
Thamani. The discussions resulted in the conclusion
of a loan
agreement in terms of which the Suliware agreed to advance R4 million
to the second respondent to buy out Mr Sanangura
and to release him
from the guarantees in favour of Vodacom and MTN.
[34]
It was a term of the agreement that the second applicant would
conduct
a due diligence on the first respondent to determine its
value. Upon completion of the due diligence, the second
applicant
would issue shares to the second respondent in the first
applicant. The upshot of the aforesaid agreement was that the
first
applicant’s loan of R4 million would enable the second
respondent to purchase Mr Sanangura’s 51% shareholding in
Thamani
Mobile.
[35]
As an act of goodwill, the second respondent decided to transfer the
business of Thamani Mobile to the applicants at a time when the
applicants have not paid any money either to Mr Sanangura or for
the
release of Mr Sanangura from the guarantees.
[36]
On 26 April 2022 the second respondent was presented with a copy of
an
agreement of sale signed by Mr Greyling, but he refused to sign
it. In the main application the second respondent contends
that
a contract was placed before court which bears a signature which is
not his. He contends that he had refused to sign.
[37]
The applicants therefore failed to pay the R4 million on behalf of
the
second respondent. An amount of R2 million was paid by the
first respondent from the revenue generated from the business.
[38]
On 26 August 2021 Suliware purported to purchase shares in Thamani
Mobile
by concluding the loan and sale of shares agreements.
However, the applicants have not complied with any of those
agreements.
[39]
The second respondent contends that he was misled in transferring the
business by assurances that the applicants would comply with their
agreements. In short, the applicants:
39.1
Failed to pay the R2 million to Mr Sanangura.
39.2
Failed to release Mr Sanangura from a bank guarantee;
39.3
Failed to conduct the due diligence that the parties had agreed to;
and
39.4
Failed to allocate shares to the second respondent in the first
applicant.
[40]
The second respondent contends that he had to pay Mr Sanangura from
the
revenue generated from contracts that he had procured.
[41]
The second respondent therefore contends that the applicants did not
invest a cent in attempting to acquire the business of Thamani
Mobile.
[42]
The first and second respondents contend that Ekurhuleni Metropolitan
Municipality, the City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality and
Sefako Makgatho Health Sciences University were signed up to Thamani
Mobile and that the applicants have no entitlement to those clients.
[43]
The second respondent contends that he was misled into enabling
Thamani
Mobile clients to be serviced by the first applicant,
believing that the applicants would honour their side of the
agreement concluded
in respect of the loan and the purchase of
shares.
[44]
It was then, when it became apparent that they were not living up to
their terms of the agreement, that the second respondent advised the
applicants that he was reversing the arrangement and was resuming
service to Thamani Mobile’s clients. It is this action which
was interdicted by Teffo J.
[45]
The first and second respondents therefore allege that the applicants
have essentially hijacked their business without paying for it.
[46]
At paragraph 34.2 of the answering affidavit the deponent, Mr
Mashele,
states the following:
“
34.2
It is of no moment that the time for the institution of the action
has not lapsed. The fact of
the matter is that the judgment and
order literally have the effect of shutting down the business of the
respondents. The
respondents have been conducting their
business even before they met the applicants. Their business
cannot be subsumed into
the applicants’ business by an interim
order without more.
34.3
As already mentioned the order practically and literally lists three
clients of the first respondent
and awards them to the applicants
with the effect that the third respondent is directed to make
payments to the applicants without
any legal basis.”
[47]
Mr Mashele also contends that the management accounts of the first
applicant
demonstrated the business generated revenue of over R34
million for the 12 months between March 2022 and February 2023.
He
contends that the applicants used the revenue that he generated to
fund other operations and salaries of employees and other companies
that they own (Answering Affiavit (“AA”), paragraph
36.3).
[48]
The second respondent contends that the prejudice that the first
respondent
will suffer with the implementation of Teffo J’s
order was the reason for the application for leave to appeal (AA,
paragraph
40.6).
[49]
The second respondent contends that when the applicants attempted to
take over the business of the first respondent by transferring the
contracts to the first applicant, the applicants left Thamani
with
liability of approximately R2,6 million as a result of the breach of
a material term of the agreement. This, he says,
is a
consequence engineered by the applicants and is a liability the first
respondent now faces.
[50]
The second respondent contends that the applicants are not entitled
to
payment of money from the third respondent from the three clients
listed to whom the first respondent lays claim. He contends
that as at 8 April 2022 the first applicant was a shelf-company with
neither clients nor assets. After the transfer of the
business
the second respondent signed ten clients with the first applicant,
which clients he has left with the first applicant.
The
applicants are receiving monthly payments from those clients.
However, because neither the sale of shares nor the sale
of business
agreement was complied with, the second respondent decided to take
back the clients that he had brought into the first
applicant.Those
that were signed after April 2022 remain with the applicants.
[51]
The respondents further contend that the applicants did not secure
the
release of mr Sanangura from his guarantees, as a result of which
he was sued. The respondents contend that the income stream generated
by the respondents for the applicants is being used by the second
applicant to finance expenses of its other businesses and
subsidiaries.That
will continue if the interim implementation order
were granted.
[52]
It is apparent from the aforesaid that the second respondent contends
that the first applicant will retain an income stream from the ten or
so clients that remain with the applicant if the order
is not
implemented.By contrast, the respondents’ will go under.
[53]
The counter arguments do not dispel these contentions. Rather,
the adverse consequences are said to flow from the correctness of
the Teffo J order.That approach does not address the issue
of
ireparable harm in the context of sec 18(3).It is an issue for a
court of appeal.Irreparable harm is assessed with regard to
the
implementation of the order, and not on an assessment of the
prospects of success on appeal.
[54]
As the applicants bear an onus to prove that the respondents will not
suffer irreparable harm, and as this onus has not been discharged, I
cannot come to the assistance of the applicants. The applicants
have
not established a basis for the implementation of the court order in
terms of section 18(3).
[55]
In the premises the following order is made:
1.
The application for leave to appeal filed
by the first and second
respondents has suspended the order of Teffo J, which is an order of
an interlocutory nature but with final
effect.
2.
The application in terms of section 18(3)
is dismissed with costs.
LABUSCHAGNE
AJ
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
25/11/2024
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