Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 65South Africa
Premier FMCG (Pty) Ltd v Baker and Another (50522/2021; 29020/2022) [2023] ZAGPPHC 65; 2023 (5) SA 279 (GP) (27 January 2023)
Headnotes
in terms of sections 417 and 418 of the Companies Act 61 of 1973 into the affairs of ABC Fire Projects (Pty) Ltd (in liquidation),a company in which Ms Van Zyl had an interest.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Premier FMCG (Pty) Ltd v Baker and Another (50522/2021; 29020/2022) [2023] ZAGPPHC 65; 2023 (5) SA 279 (GP) (27 January 2023)
Premier FMCG (Pty) Ltd v Baker and Another (50522/2021; 29020/2022) [2023] ZAGPPHC 65; 2023 (5) SA 279 (GP) (27 January 2023)
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sino date 27 January 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
#
Case
nos: 50522
/
2021
&
29020
/
2022
REPORTABLE:
YES
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
In
the applications of:
PREMIER
FMCG (PTY) LTD
Applicant in both applications
and
FARHAAD
JOOSUB ABOO BAKER
Respondent under case no 50522/2021
and
FARHAAD
DISTRIBUTORS
(PTY)
LTD
Respondent under
case no 29020/2022
JUDGMENT
[1]
This
judgement
relates
to
two applications to strike out material in affidavits (and to strike
out annexures to those affidavits), brought as interlocutory
applications by the respondents in respectively a sequestration and a
liquidation application, on the basis that the offending
material
constitutes inadmissible evidence.
[2]
In
what
follows
,
I
will
refer
to
the
two
striking-out
applications
(which
were heard as
one) as either
"the
applications"
or "the striking-out applications
",
and to
the
sequestration
and
liquidation
applications as such
,
i.e
.
as
"the
sequestration
application" and "the liquidation application".
[3]
The parties
bringing the applications are the respondents
in
the
sequestration and liquidation
applications,
viz
respectively
Mr Farhaad
Joosub
Aboo
Baker
(
"
Mr
Baker
")
and
Farhaad
Distributors
(Pty)
Ltd
("Distributors").
The respondent
in
the
applications
is
the
applicant in the sequestration and liquidation applications
,
Premier FMCG
(Pty) Ltd ("Premier
"
)
.
[4]
Before me
,
Mr Baker and
Distributors were represented by Mr Van der Merwe SC, and
Premier
was
represented by Mr Lourens.
[5]
The background
to the applications is essentially this:
[5.1]
Premier
applied
for the sequestration
of
Mr Baker's
estate
on
7 October 2021, under case no 50522/2021
.
[5
.
2]
The
founding
affidavit in the sequestration application
relied
extensi
v
ely
on the evidence of Premier
'
s
former senior credit
controller,
a certain Ms
Van Zyl, given at an enquiry that was
held
in terms of
sections 417 and 418 of the Companies
Act
61 of
1973
into the
affairs of
ABC
Fire
Projects
(Pty)
Ltd
(in
liquidation)
,
a
company in which Ms Van Zyl had an interest.
[5.3]
Mr
Baker
filed
notice to
oppose
the
sequestration
application,
and on 15
November
2021
filed a three-page "Provisional Answering
Affidavit
",
in which he
briefly denied the validity of
Premier
's
claim against
him and indicated the following
(I
quote from
paragraph 5 of Mr Baker's affidavit):
I
intend
bringing an
application
to
strike out the
bulk
of
the
founding
affidavit, as the Applicant unlawfully utilised
evidence
procured at an
insolvency
enquiry
other than my
own
evidence.
This is plainly inadmissible. That inadmissible evidence has been
interwoven into the merits
of
the
matter
.
I will bring a
substantive
...
application to
strike those allegations.
[5.4]
Premier filed
a replying affidavit in the sequestration application
on
2 December
2021, protesting that there is no procedural provision for a
provisional answering affidavit, and that Mr
Baker
hadn't
answered the allegations against him.
[5.5]
On 27 May
2022, Premier applied for Distributors
'
liquidation,
under case no
29020/2022.
The founding
affidavit in the liquidation application also
relied
extensively on
Ms Van Zyl's evidence at the enquiry
.
Distributors
filed notice of
intention
to oppose.
[5.6]
On
26
July
2022,
Distributors
'
attorneys
indicated
in
a
letter
to
Premier
'
s
attorneys that they intended filing a similar provisional answering
affidavit in the
liquidation
application,
and similarly applying for a striking-out
in
that
application
(apparently,
no such
provisional answering affidavit has as yet been
filed
in
the
liquidation application; but nothing turns on that).
[5.7]
This led to an
impasse between the parties, which was resolved at a case management
meeting before the Deputy Judge President relating
to both matters
(sequestration and liquidation) on 8 August 2022, at which (a) Mr
Baker and Distributors repeated their intention
to apply to strike
out and added that they required this to be resolved and
,
in addition,
required extensive discovery from Premier, before they could file
proper answering affidavits, and (b) the case direction
was given
that Mr Baker's and Distributors
'
threatened
striking-out (and now also discovery) applications were to be
launched within a certain time.
[5
.
8]
Mr Baker
and
Distributors
then each
brought
the
striking-out applications on 5 September 2022, to which Premier
answered.
[5
.
9]
I pause to mention
that the striking-out applications also each included an application
for discovery in terms of Rule 35(13)
.
But that part
of the applications has fallen away because Premier did provide
documentation
,
and so I am
only asked to make an agreed order in respect of that component to
the effect that the costs of thereof are to be costs
in the main
application
,
which is what
I will do below
.
[6]
The
two
sides'
stances
in the
striking-out
application
,
both
in
their
affidavits and
in their heads of argument, can fairly be described as follows:
[6
.
1]
Mr
Baker and
Distributors'
stance is that
there is firm case law
(Langham
&
Ano
NNO v Milne
&
Others
1961
(1) SA 811
(N);
Simmons
NO v Gilbert Hamer
& Co
Ltd
1963
(1) SA 897
(N)
;
O
'
Shea
NO
v
Van Zyl
and Others NNO
2012
(1)
SA
90
(SCA))
to
the effect that evidence procured at an enquiry
is
admissible
only
against
the party who gave evidence (in this case
,
Ms Van Zyl or
her company)
,
and not
against a third party (in this case
,
Mr Baker and
Distributors)
.
[6
.
2]
On that basis, Mr Van
der Merwe for Mr Baker and Distributors argues that the material in
question offends against this firm rule
,
and should be
struck out now rather than later
,
so that when
they come to file their answering affidavits they have only to deal
with evidence that is admissible against them
.
[6
.
3]
Premier, on the other
hand, argues that
t
hese
are matters that should not be decided now
.
They should be
decided as part of the main application. Mr Baker and Distributors
should file proper answering affidavits
,
and the
striking
-
out
applications can then properly be decided at the main hearing
,
in the light
inter ali
a
of
the content of those proper answering affidavits
.
[7]
I asked Mr Van
der Merwe at the outset whether the striking-out applica
tio
ns
were brought in terms of Rule 6(15) (material whi
ch
is
scandalous
,
ve
x
atiou
s
or
irrelevant)
,
or simply in
terms of the common law
,
a
s an
object
i
on
to
i
nadmissible
evidence
.
As
I understood him, Mr Van der Merwe said that the applications were
brought on the latter ground, in accordance with Rule 6(11
)
("interlocutory
...
applications
incidental to pending proceedings may be brought on not
i
ce
...
and
se
t
down
at a time
..
.
as directed by
a judge
"
)
.
In this
,
I
think
,
Mr Van der
Merwe was correct.
[8]
That being
so, I
also put to Mr
Van der Merw
e
my
c
oncern
,
based on
The
ro
n
and Ano NNO
v
Loubser
NO and
Others
2014 (3)
SA
323
(
SCA)
para 26 and
L
o
uis
Pasteur Holdings (Pty)
Ltd and Others v Absa Bank Ltd and Others
2019
(3) SA 97
(SCA) para 33, both to the effect that, to quote Wallis JA
in
Theron,
[i]n
general
,
...
the desirable
course to be followed in
application
proceedings
,
where the
affidavits are
both the evidence and the pleadings
,
is for all the
affidavits
to
be delivered and the entire application
to be disposed
of
in a
single
hearing.
[9]
Mr
Van
der
Merwe
conceded
the
force
of
my
concern
and
that
the
DJP
'
s
direction referred to above did not mean that I was bound to decide
the striking-out applications.
But he
contended
that
the inadmissibility
was
so clear that
this was an appropriate case for interlocutory relief.
[10]
In
so
arguing,
Mr Van der
Merwe
very
fairly referred
me to
what
I
think remains
the leading case on the topic, Price J
'
s
judgement in
Elher
(Pty) Ltd v Silver
1947
(4)
SA
173 (W), in which the learned judge dismissed an interlocutory
application to have passages in replying affidavits struck out on the
basis that
they
contained
irrelevant
and hearsay evidence
,
saying the
following on pp 176-177
(needless
to say, Mr Van
der Merwe referred me to the
case
whilst
steadfastly maintaining that it is entirely distinguishable):
I
think that
the
application to
strike
out
is
premature
.
Such an
application
must,
in
my
opinion
,
be
made to
the
Court that tries the application at
the
time the
application
is before
the
Court
for a
decision on
the
merits
.
The course now
taken of
[applying]
.
..
in a preliminary application
to
strike
out
would
lead to
the very
greatest
inconvenience
and
difficulty.
After
all, what
is
the real nature of the objection? This
is
not
an
objection to
a
pleading
,
it
is an
objection
to evidence
which
is
proposed to be tendered
to
the Court that hears the application
.
How can a
Court which
is
not hearing the application disallow
evidence
which
it is
proposed to
tender
later
on as irrelevant to the
merits of the dispute? The Court
which
ultimately
decides the
application
may have
quite
a different
view
as
regards the relevancy of
some
of the
passages
when
all the evidence is presented to it
and
the matter has
been fully
argued.
A
great waste of time
,
energy and
expense is involved in
the
procedure
which
Mr
Miller has followed
.
First of all,
there must
be
a full-dress
argument
or
,
at any
rate
,
very
considerable
argument on
the merits in order to
enable
the Court to
decide
whether
the
passages
objected to
are
or are not
relevant.
Then
a
decision
as
regards
the
relevancy
of
various
passages
must
be given
I do not agree
that Mr Miller's
client
is
entitled
,
at
this
stage,
to
a decision on this
i
ssue
.
It is
evident
that
what
the petitioner
is really
seeking
is
legal
advice from
the Court
.
The
Court
asked Mr
Miller
why
he
himself
could
not advise his
client to
ignore those allegations which
he
considered
were
irrelevant
or based on hearsay evidence
,
and
he
indicated that if his
advice
turned out
to
be erroneous
his client
would be at a
disadvantage
.
The petitioner
wishes
to
be
told
by this
Court
that
he
need not deal
with
certain
facts
alleged
,
but this
Court
is not trying
the merits of
the
dispute
and
those facts
may turn
out
to be
important
when
all the
evidence
is
before
the
Court.
[11]
In my view,
common sense and the authority of
Ether
,
Theron
and
Louis
Pasteur
is
in favour of the proposition that an interlocutory application to
strike out material in affidavits in application proceedings
on the
basis of inadmissibility should very rarely (if ever) be granted -
such relief
should be restricted to the very clearest cases of inadmissibility
,
where there is
no possibility of the court in the main application arriving at a
different conclusion (and
,
of course, if
the case is so clear, then there seems no good reason why that clear
decision shouldn't be left for the court in the
main application).
[12]
So that brings
me to the question of how clear and incontrovertible Mr Baker's and
Distributors
'
objection to
the evidence is? See what follows
.
[13]
I
hope I am not
doing a
disservice
to either
Mr Van
der Merwe or
Mr Lourens
(both of
whom
handled
their
arguments
with
aplomb)
if
I
say
that I
think that
,
much like our
law in this regard (see the developments which I sketch in paragraphs
14
.
3
to 14.6
below), the question of the precise basis for the rule as outlined in
the cases on which Mr Van der Merwe relied only crystallised
in the context
of these
applications in the course of the argument.
[14]
In this
regard:
[14.1]
Firstly, it is indeed so that as Mr Van der Merwe argues,
Langham,
Gilbert Hamer
and
O
'
Shea
are clear
authority in favour of the inadmissibility of the evidence of Ms Van
Zyl (not that of Mr Baker; his and Distributors
'
legal team has
never argued the contrary) and any material which is based thereon.
[14
.
2]
But what is the basis of that inadmissibility? Is it a rule relating
to insolvency enquiries? Or is it broader than that?
[14
.
3]
That question
was approached, but not firmly answered
,
by Rogers AJ
(as he then was) in
Engelbrecht
NO
&
Others
v
Van
Staden
&
Others
[2011]
ZAWCHC 447 (6
December 2011).
[14.4]
The circumstances of
Engelbrecht
were
similar to those of
Langham,
Gilbert Hamer
and
O
'
Shea.
In
essence, the liquidators of various companies
sought
to utilise
admissions made by employees of those companies in the
course
of
an
insolvency enquiry against the family trust which controlled the
companies
,
but
which neither employed the employees
nor authorised
their
testimony.
Rogers AJ
pointed
out that the only
conceivable basis for inadmissibility appeared to be the hearsay
objection, and that the modern law regarding
the admissibility of
hearsay evidence
as
regulated by
section 3 of the Law of Evidence Amendment Act 45 of 1988
("the
Hearsay Act")
wasn't in force at the time of any of the decisions other than
O'Shea,
and
hadn't been raised
in
O'Shea.
On
that basis, he arrived at the
obiter
conclusion
that the basis for inadmissibility is indeed the
rule
against
hearsay, and
that
(paragraph
[21])
I
am ...
inclined
to
think that
a
court may in appropr
i
ate
cases permit a
litigant
to
rely
on evidence
given by X at a s 417 enquiry for
purposes
of
making
out
a case
against
Y
provided
that
would be
in
the
interests
of
justice
,
having regard
to the
requirements
laid down in
s
3 of Act 45
of
1988.
[14.5]
Much the same
conclusion as that of Rogers AJ in
Engelbrecht,
on
much
the
same
obiter
basis and
in much the same circumstances, was subsequently reached by Griesel J
in
Von
Wielligh Bester NO and Others
v
Merchant
Commercial Finance (Pty) Ltd and Others
[2014]
ZAWCHC 16
and
by Binns-Ward
Jin
Van
Zyl
&
Ano v Kaye
NO
&
Others
2014
(4)
SA
452
(WCC).
[14.6]
Binns-Ward
J's judgement
in this regard in
Van
Zyl
was
fully reasoned.
He
concluded as follows
in
paragraph
[44]:
I
agree with the
opinion
expressed
by Rogers
AJ
in
Engelbrecht
that the
exclusion
...
would appear
to
have
been
founded
on
the hearsay
rule
.
For
all these
reasons I have
concluded that
the evidence
adduced
at
the
enquiry
is
amenable
to
being
introduced
in
the
current
proceeding
s
in terms of s
3
(
1)
(
c)
of
Act
45
of 1988
,
subject
,
of
course
,
to the
requirements of that provision being satisfied
.
[15]
In the event
,
although the
courts in
Engelbrecht
,
Von
Wielligh Bester
and
Van
Zyl
all
concluded
(with
varying
degrees
of
tentativeness)
that
the
basis
for
inadmissibility is the rule against hearsay evidence and not
something more specific
to
enquiries
,
in
all
three of
those
cases they
went on to consider whether
the
evidence
should be admitted in terms of the Hearsay Act and they decided
against such admission
(in
Engelbrecht
and
Van
Zyl
that
the interests of justice didn
'
t
justify
it
;
in
Von
Wielligh Bester
that
the applicants hadn
'
t
actually asked for
hearsay
admissibility)
.
[16]
Let
me
,
then
,
add my voice
to the chorus: our law is a law of principle and not of casuistic
development: the recent cases cited by me above are
correct in
their
conclusion
that the basis for inadmissibility is
indeed
the rule
against hearsay
,
with the
result
that
a
court
must
,
when asked,
consider
whether
the evidence
should not be admitted in terms of the provisions of the Hearsay Act.
[17]
I
did not
understand
Mr
Van der Merwe to in the least dispute this conclusion of mine
.
[18]
That
,
in my view
,
is sufficient
to dispose of the striking-out applications
-
for
so
long
as
the objected-to evidence
might
be
admitted by a court having regard to all of the factors outlined in
section 3(1)(c) of
the
Hearsay Act,
it would be inappropriate for me to bind a later court by ruling
otherwise now
.
The
situation
falls squarely
with
in
Price J's
reasoning
(with
which
,
for what it
is
worth, I fully
associate myself) in
Ether.
[19]
Mr Van der Merwe
sought to persuade me
otherwise.
He pointed out
that Mr
Lourens
hadn't (yet)
asked for hearsay-admissibility in terms of the Hearsay Act, he
argued that in those
circumstances this is as clear-cut a case as I postulated in
paragraph 11 above is necessary
,
and he
suggested that
Von
Wielligh Bester
had
been decided in relatively similar circumstances
,
viz the
raising of a
point of
inadmissibility of
evidence
in
limine
where
the party
which
should
ask for
hearsay-admissibility didn't do so.
[20]
Mr Lourens
countered by arguing that the time for him to decide whether to seek
hearsay-admissibility
in
terms
of
the
Hearsay
Act
has
not
yet
arrived.
He suggested
(tongue firmly lodged
in his cheek
,
I have no
doubt) that when he comes to file his answering affidavits (both in
personal capacity in the sequestration application,
and on behalf of
Distributors in the liquidation application)
,
Mr Baker might
well admit everything Ms Van Zyl says, in which event the admission
will take the evidence out of the realm of hearsay.
At the least,
he said
,
he
is not obliged to take that decision now
,
and Premier's
tendering of the hearsay evidence in any event implies that it will
if necessary
seek admission
in terms of the Hearsay Act.
[21]
I think Mr Lourens
has the better
of the argument
in this
regard. Whilst I
agree with Mr
Van
der
Merwe
that
it
is
advisable
for
deponents
whose
affidavits
tender hearsay
evidence to record that they will to the extent necessary apply for
admissibility
thereof in
terms of the Hearsay Act (which didn't happen here)
,
it would in my
view be inappropriately technical for me to make a ruling merely
because of the absence of such an allegation
,
and in the
final analysis I agree with Mr Lourens that the time for him to take
a decision, and the time for him to (if so advised)
apply for
hearsay-admissibility in terms of the Hearsay Act
,
is at the main
application (I think in this
regard
that
it
follows
from
the
provisions
of
section
3(1)(c)
that
such
an
application need not be a
substantive
application
-
indeed
,
generally
won't be-
but
might be in that form
,
if
for
example Premier should want to bring forth evidence in terms of for
example section 3(1)(c)(v) (
"
the
reason why the evidence is not given by the person upon whose
credibility the probative value of such evidence depends")
.
[22]
As
for
Mr Van der Merwe's reliance on
Von
Wielligh Bester
(see
paragraph 19 above), valiant though it was, I think that the
differences are obvious
.
In particular
,
Von
Wielligh Bester
didn
'
t
involve an interlocutory application such as this-
it involved the
taking of a point
in
limine
at
the main hearing
,
when
everything was supposed to be ready for argument.
[23]
To summarise
,
then
,
once one
realises that the basis for cases
like
Gilbert
Hamer
and
O
'
Shea
is hearsay
and that the
terrain
relating to
hearsay
has
changed since the Hearsay Act's coming into effect
,
it follows
that the considerations relating to whether or not the offending
evidence will be admitted (assuming for present purposes
that Premier
will in due course apply for such admission -
as I
am sure they
will) are so wide-ranging
that there is
simply no way that I should seek to bind the court which hears the
main application
.
For example
(as Mr Van der Merwe was constrained to concede, whilst not
abandoning his main plank that Premier hasn
'
t
as yet applied for hearsay-admissibility)
,
I am sure that
one of the considerations that a court will take
into
account in
considering hearsay-admissibility will be the content o
f
Mr Baker
'
s
fuller answering affidavits.
[24]
What Mr Baker and
Distributors should have done is to follow the advice of MT Steyn J
in
Wiese
v
Joubert
en
Andere
1983
(4) SA 182
(0)
at 197
,
which is to
bring a Rule 6(11) application
for
hearing with the main application.
[25]
In
the
event, I
am
satisfied
that
the relief which Mr Baker and Distributors seeks from me cannot be
granted.
The
decision must
be left for the court hearing the sequestration and liquidation
applications.
[26]
I
have
for
obvious reasons deliberately refrained from expressing any view
on
the strength
of
Premier
's
claim for
hearsay-admissibility should such claim be made. To the extent that
anything I have said might suggest a view in this
regard, that would
be mistaken -
I have no
view.
[27]
I add that the implication of my ruling in this regard is obviously
that Mr Baker
(in
the
sequestration
application) and Distributors
(in
the
liquidation application) would now be well advised to file proper
answering affidavits, therein doing what Price J
said in
Elher
and MT
Steyn J
said
in
Wiese
they must
do, which
is
to take care
to decide which allegations to respond to
,
and which not.
But beyond this comment I express no further view on the matter,
including on whether Mr Baker
and
Distributors
would be entitled without more to file such further affidavits.
[28]
As
far
as
the
costs
of
the
striking-out
applications
are
concerned
,
all concerned
were agreed that these should be reserved. Whilst one might think
that
costs
should follow the result, and that the result was the one Premier
favoured
,
the
fact is that
the court which hears the main applications might side with Mr Baker
and
with
Distributors, and strike out the evidence. And then, even if the main
result goes against them, they might be entitled to those
costs,
in the
discretion of the court.
[29]
In the circumstances, I make the following order, applicable to both
matters
:
1.
Insofar as the
Rule 35(13) applications are concerned, the costs thereof are to be
costs in the cause of the two main applications
.
2.
It is directed
that the striking-out applications brought under case numbers
50522/21 and 29020/22 shall be heard and determined
simultaneously
and together with the main applications pending under those case
numbers
,
and
the costs relating to the striking-out applications
,
including the
costs of the hearing on 24 January 2023, are reserved for later
determination in the main applications
JF
MULLINS
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
PRETORIA
Appearances:
Counsel
for the applicant for striking-out:
MP Van der Merwe SC
Counsel
for the respondents in the applicat
i
on
for
striking-out:
P Lourens
Attorneys
for the applicant for striking-out:
MacRobert Inc, Pretoria
Attorneys
for the respondents in the application
for
striking-out:
Adams
&
Adams
,
Pretoria
Date
of hearing:
24 January 2023
Date
of
judgement:
27 January 2023
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