Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 70South Africa
Ex Parte: Dicks N.O and Another v Nkadimeng and Another [2023] ZAGPPHC 70; 2023-006240 (7 February 2023)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Ex Parte: Dicks N.O and Another v Nkadimeng and Another [2023] ZAGPPHC 70; 2023-006240 (7 February 2023)
Ex Parte: Dicks N.O and Another v Nkadimeng and Another [2023] ZAGPPHC 70; 2023-006240 (7 February 2023)
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sino date 7 February 2023
SAFLII
Note:
Certain personal/private details
of parties or witnesses have been redacted from this document in
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SAFLII
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
N0. 2023 – 006240
REPORTABLE:
YES/ NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/ NO
REVISED:
NO
DATE:
07 February 2023
In
the
ex-parte
application of:
BENESTE
DICKS N.O
1
st
Applicant
RASHID
AHMED PATEL N.O
2
nd
Applicant
[In
their capacity as the duly appointed trustees of Seshwahla Edward
Nkadimeng (ID: [....]) & Mathukane Evah Nkadimeng (ID:
[....])
MASTER’S Ref: [….]
And
SESHWAHLA
EDWARD NKADIMENG
1
st
Respondent
(ID:
[....])
MATHUKANE
EVAH NKADIMENG
2
nd
Respondent
(ID:
[....])
JUDGMENT
MOJAPELO
AJ
1.
This is an
urgent application brought
ex-parte
by the truatees of an insolvent estate for a warrant in terms of
section 69 of the Insolvency Act. The applicants, Beneste Dicks
and
Rashid Ahmed Patel are trustees in the insolvent estate of the
respondents, Seshwahla Edward Nkadimeng and Mathukane Evah Nkadimeng.
The respondents are married to each other in terms of community of
property.
2.
The Applicants
seek an order in the following terms:
“
1.
That condonation be granted to the Applicants for non-compliance with
the forms and service and time periods
provided for in the Uniform
Rules of Court and that same be dispensed with and that this
application be heard and finalized as
an urgent application as
contemplated in Uniform Rule 6(12)(a).
2.
That leave be granted to the Applicants in terms of s18(3) of the
Insolvency Act, read in conjunction
with s386(4) of the Companies Act
to launch this application.
3.
That the applicants be authorised in terms of s69 of the Insolvency
Act to enter the known property(ies)
& businesses of the
Respondents, and search and take into possession any and all movable
assets, books and documents belonging
to the Respondents and remove
same from the premises.
4.
That in the event the Applicants are unable to make such entry
without disturbance, the Applicants be
authorised:
4.1
to engage the services of a locksmith and/or the South African Police
Services members (SAPS) and/or
a private security company and/or the
Sherriff, as may be necessary, to remove any obstruction to them from
entering upon the said
property(ies) & businesses of the
Respondents;
4.2
to thereafter enter the property(ies) & businesses of the
Respondents, where necessary, with the
assistance of the South
African Police Services members (SAPS) and/or a private security
company and/or the sheriff, as may be
necessary:
4.2.1
to search for any assets, stock, property, motor vehicles, books,
records or documents, computers and office furniture
under the
control of the Respondents;
4.2.2
to take possession of any and all assets, stock, property, motor
vehicles, books, records, documents, computers and
office furniture
belonging to the Respondents which may be in possession of the
Respondents or any other party being under its
control;
4.2.3
to remove any such assets, stock, property, motor vehicles, books,
records or documents, computers and office furniture
so found and
hand same over to the Applicants and/or their duly appointed
representatives.
5.
In effecting the foregoing, a search warrant in terms of s69(2) read
with s69(3) of the Insolvency Act,
marked as Annexure “X”
attached to the Founding Affidavit be authorized by this Honourable
Court.
6.
The warrant shall be executed in a like manner as a warrant of search
of stolen property and the person
executing the warrant shall deliver
any articles seized thereunder to the Applicants or its duly
appointed agents.
7.
The said warrant is to be executed either by with the assistance of
the South African Police Services
members (SAPS) and/or a private
security company and/or the Sheriff of the court, as may be
necessary.
8.
A copy of the application, together with a copy of the order granted
in terms hereof, be served upon
the Respondents simultaneously with
the execution of the search and seizure warrants.
9.
Costs of this application be paid by the insolvent estate on an
attorneys and own client scale, apart
from any cost of opposition
which will be sought against the opposing party or person.”
3.
In part B of
the notice of motion the applicants seeks a declaration that the
insolvents are in contravention of sections 142(1),
142(2) and 145 of
the Insolvency Act. There is no proper prayer in part A of the notice
of motion to postpone part B. That defect
is however insignificant in
the circumstances of this matter.
4.
The
respondents’ estate was provisionally sequestrated on 08 August
2018 and the provisional sequestration order was confirmed
on 31 May
2019.
5.
The first and
second applicants, the trustees of the estate of the respondents,
were appointed as such by the Master of the High
Court on 26 January
2022.
6.
It is
submitted on behalf of the applicants that they are compelled by law
to take possession of the assets of the company in sequestration
without delay. They further state that since their appointment they
have been diligent in the performance of their duties as trustees.
7.
It is stated
by the trustees that; “
During
our investigation, it became known that the insolvent estate is the
owner of luxury vehicles”
.
In support of this allegation a document which appears to be have
been generated by a computer searching program (SearchWorks)
has been
attached. The SearchWorks documents lists five (5) vehicles; and
those are; a red 2009 Chevrolet, a white 2009 Hyundai
and a white
2016 Ford registered in the name of the second respondent. And
further a white 1999 Toyota and white 2008 Challenger
registered in
the name of the first respondent. This SearchWorks document appears
to have been generated on 28 November 2022. It
needs to be noted that
on the papers there appears to have been no activity by the trustees
prior to 28 November 2022.
8.
The next
document is an undated memorandum from a certain Rassie Erasmus who
is apparently a tracer addressed the trustees. In the
said memorandum
it is stated as follows:
“
1.
Please note that I am a male asset tracer, employed as such at Umvelo
Risk Management.
2.
I have made contact with the insolvents in an attempt for the
insolvents to amicably surrender the motor
vehicles.
3.
I was advised by the insolvents that they will not bring in the motor
vehicle or allow me to collect
the vehicles from them.
4.
I will accordingly support a Court application giving effect to an
order for me to collect the assets
by order of Court.”
9.
On the date of
the hearing, it appears that the applicants’ attorneys filed
through caselines a new annexure which was not
part of the original
application. There was no application to introduce this new annexure
but due to the urgency of this matter
and the fact that it is being
brought
ex-parte
,
I shall proceed to consider it. The new document is an e-mail by Mr.
Erasmus also on 28 November 2022. The said e-mail read as
follows:
“
Good
morning Elzeri
I
have got a matter (case) from Umvelo Risk Management to uplift a 2016
Ford Ranger 2.2 TDCI LDV with Reg [....] or [....] for a
sequestration matter that was handed by Icon Insolvency Practitioners
for Nkadimeng SE and ME with Master’s Reference Number:
[....].
We
also received a letter from Icon to uplift the asset dated 15
November 2022. On 23 November 2022 I have phoned Mrs. Nkadimeng
on
Cell Number:[…] to arrange for the upliftment (which I thought
was just a formality).
She
was very aggressive from the start of the conversation, and didn’t
want to give me any change to explain anything to her.
She just
scream that she’s not my client and that she doesn’t own
me anything and I must contact her lawyer Maphalele
and she refused
to give me anymore info regarding Maphalele.
According
to me she was totally irrational about the matter, and I couldn’t
get her to listen to me.
I
was supposed to pick up the said asset from her workplace at
Sekhukhune Municipality, 3 West Groblesdal.
I
then called Icon to ask if they can assist in this matter.
Regards,
Rassie
Erasmus”
10.
Other than the
contacts described herewinabove by Mr. Rassie Erasmus, there appears
to be no other activity by the trustees despite
filing such a lengthy
affidavit. The affidavit is full of the legal conclusions and
arguments but, unfortunately, no so much on
facts.
11.
In a nutshell,
the trustees were appointed on 26 February 2022. On 28 November 2022
a computer-based search for the vehicles apparently
owned by the
respondents was done. On 28 November 2022 the tracer, Mr. Erasmus,
contacted the second respondent who referred him
to her lawyer. This
application was launched on 24 January 2023 as an urgent
ex-parte
application.
12.
Section 69 of
the Insolvency Act provides as follows:
69
Trustee must take charge of property of estate
(1)
A
trustee shall, as soon as possible after his appointment, but not
before the deputy-sheriff has made the inventory referred to
in
subsection (1) of section nineteen, take into his possession or
under his control all movable property, books and documents
belonging
to the estate of which he is trustee and shall furnish the Master
with a valuation of such movable property by an appraiser
appointed
under any law relating to the administration of the estates of
deceased persons or by a person approved of by the Master
for the
purpose.
(2)
If the
trustee has reason to believe that any such property, book or
document is concealed or otherwise unlawfully withheld from
him, he
may apply to the magistrate having jurisdiction for a search warrant
mentioned in subsection (3).
(3)
If it
appears to a magistrate to whom such application is made, from a
statement made upon oath, that there are reasonable grounds
for
suspecting that any property, book or document belonging to
an insolvent estate is concealed upon any person, or
at any
place or upon or in any vehicle or vessel or receptacle of whatever
nature, or is otherwise unlawfully withheld from the
trustee
concerned, within the area of the magistrate's jurisdiction, he may
issue a warrant to search for and take possession of
that property,
book or document.
(4)
Such a
warrant shall be executed in a like manner as a warrant to search for
stolen property, and the person executing the warrant
shall deliver
any article seized thereunder to the trustee.
13.
The
SCA in the matter of
Cooper
v
First
National Bank of SA Ltd
2001 (3) SA 705
(SCA)
has stated that
;
“The purpose of sec 69(3) is to strengthen the hand of a
trustee in carrying out the obligation to take charge of all the
assets belonging to an insolvent estate which are being concealed or
unlawfully withheld”
.
[1]
The SCA however cautioned that; “
Resorting
to its provisions has the potential to infringe the rights of others
in relation to both their property (at least to the
extent of
depriving them of something in their possession) as well as their
privacy when it comes to search and seizure. In
those
circumstances, in my view, as a general principle, a warrant should
not be issued without affording the person or persons
affected, or
likely to be affected (to the extent that their identities are
ascertainable or reasonably ascertainable), an opportunity
to be
heard, unless it can be said that s 69(3) (the authorising
provision) excludes that right either expressly or by necessary
implication. An opportunity to be heard would require the giving of
appropriate notice to the person or persons concerned.”
[2]
14.
The SCA in
Cooper
NO
(supra)
went on to differentiate between two classes of items, that is, those
that are concealed and those that are otherwise unlawfully
held and
stated as follows:
[26]
As pointed out above, s 69(3) deals with two classes of cases: items
(property, books or documents) 'concealed' and items
'otherwise
unlawfully withheld'. 'Conceal' means: 'To keep from the knowledge or
observation of others; to put or keep out of sight
or notice, to
hide' (The Shorter Oxford English Dictionary vol I at 388).
'Concealed', in the context in which the word
is used, connotes items
which have been hidden with a view to denying their existence or
preventing their recovery. When seeking
to recover concealed items
suspected of belonging to an insolvent estate, the giving of prior
notice and affording a right to be
heard would, or at least might,
defeat the very object and purpose of the section. From this it
must be inferred, by way of
necessary inference, that the Legislature
intended to exclude the giving of notice (and the concomitant right
to be heard) in cases
involving concealed items.
[27]
In my view, the position is different, however, where the application
for a warrant relates to items suspected of being 'otherwise
unlawfully withheld'. These are words of wide import. They could
govern situations as widely divergent as where items, though not
concealed, are being surreptitiously held, or not disclosed, without
any claim of right or for no legitimate reason, to items openly
held
under a bona fide and reasonable claim of right to own or
lawfully possess them as against a trustee in his capacity
as such.
The words also comprehend situations where continued possession of an
item could prejudice the insolvent estate, as well
as those where
there is no danger of loss resulting to the insolvent estate from the
possession of such item pending determination
of any dispute
concerning the rights thereto.
[28]
In the situations postulated above one would need to have regard to
the facts of each particular case to determine whether
the matter was
one where the audi principle should have application. Where
the circumstances are such that the object
and purpose of s 69(3)
would be defeated by giving notice, or where the identity of the
affected person is not known or cannot
reasonably be ascertained, the
giving of notice would, by necessary implication, be dispensed with.
But in other instances it would
not. What must, therefore, in every
case be asked, and answered, is whether, having regard to the facts
which were known, or must
be taken to have been known, when the
warrant was applied for, the Legislature must necessarily have
intended that the audi principle
be dispensed
with. Unless the answer is an unequivocal 'yes', the audi principle
must be complied with by
giving notice to the affected person to
enable such person to be heard. In each case, therefore, the
particular circumstances will
dictate whether the giving of notice is
necessary or may be dispensed with.
15.
In this matter
it does appear that after doing a computer based search of the
vehicles, the trustees then sent the tracer, Mr. Erasmus,
to retrieve
the vehicles from the respondents. It does appear from the
correspondence by the tracer that although a contact was
made with
the second respondent, and she was requested to hand over the vehicle
she refused and referred the tracer to her lawyer
who was identified
as Maphalele. The reading of the applicants’ founding affidavit
shows that the trustees are well aware
of the location of the
vehicles as they make allegations that those vehicles are sometimes
driven by third parties.
16.
The contact
with the second respondent in relation to the retuning of the
vehicles to the trustees was made in November 2022. It
is a surprise
that an urgent application is only being made
ex-parte
more than two (2) months later. Ever since November 2022, the
respondents were always aware that the trustees are attempting to
get
hold of the vehicles. The allegation therefore that there is a fear
that the assets will be destroyed if the respondents are
notified is
therefore unsubstantiated.
17.
In their
affidavit the trustees states that they fear that should they give
notice to the respondents of this application that the
respondents
will dismantle, attempt to dismantle strip, hide, or attempt to hide
the asset, making it impossible for the applicants
to regain
possession of the asset, if at all. They go on to allege that should
the respondents be served, they will willfully and
deliberately cause
damage to the assets, hide and conceal unknown assets, alternatively,
cause damage to the assets. In the same
breath the applicants states
that; “
The
applicants attempted to reach an amicable solution with the
respondents and afforded it an opportunity assist in the matter
without the court’s intervention, to no avail, and has all the
amicable attempts as directed to the respondent to return
estate
assets to the trustees been met with the utmost disregard.”
SIC
18.
By the time
that this matter is brought before Court it is quite clear from the
applicants’ version that a contact with the
respondents was
already made in November 2022. It is therefore without doubt that the
respondents are aware of the trustees’
attempt to take
possession of the vehicles. The respondents have referred the
applicants to their lawyers. In their own version,
the trustees state
that they have attempted to reach an amicable settlement with the
respondents.
19.
Another reason
given for the
ex-parte
application is that the applicants fear that;
“…
the
respondents will encumber or cause lien over the asset, making it
impossible for the applicant to regain possession of the asset,
diluting the value of the insolvent estates assets which may further
have the cause of unnecessary litigation, which the applicants
evenly
herewith wish to avoid.”
SIC
20.
It
has been held that section 69(3) procedure was not intended to
provide a means for finally determining competing claims to property
which is allegedly belonging to an insolvent estate.
[3]
21.
In the matter
of
Putter
v Minister of Law and Order and Another No
1988 (2) SA 259
(T)
a
Court was dealing with a person who was holding on to a vehicle which
was the subject of a warrant issued in favour of a liquidator
in
terms of section 69 of the Insolvency Act. He laid claim to a lawful
pledge over the motor vehicle concerned. The existence
of this claim
was known to the liquidator of the insolvent company prior to them
applying for a warrant to be issued. The Court
then held that under
these circumstances the warrant should not have been issued without
hearing the other party. The Court stated
that;
Section
69(3) enjoins the magistrate to act after he has made a decision:
(i)
that some person has concealed
property belonging to the insolvent estate; or
(ii)
that a person is holding
property, belonging to the insolvent estate, unlawfully.
It
is the second finding that concerns me. If a magistrate finds that
the person is holding the property lawfully he must refuse
to issue
the warrant. A decision by a magistrate in favour of a trustee would
clearly prejudicially affect the property or the
rights to such
property vesting in an individual. In these circumstances the
maxim audi alteram partem must be considered.
… When
a magistrate is called upon to issue a writ because property is being
concealed, obviously hearing the other party
could frustrate the
whole object of the provision. However, when a person is
holding property openly and maintaining that
such possession is
lawful the position must be different. I balk when it is suggested
that a magistrate, on the say so of a trustee,
may decide a legal
issue without hearing both parties and the subsequent seizure of the
property leaves the absentee helpless to
prevent its removal. I
reject the respondent's contention that the Legislature intended to
exclude the operation of the maxim
when a magistrate is called
upon to consider whether or not a person holds property lawfully.
22.
The suggestion
on behalf of the applicants that the rights of the absent insolvents
will somehow be protected by filing of papers
and appearing in Court
on the return day is clearly at odds with the authorities mentioned
above.
23.
In this
particular matter the trustees have identified the vehicles that they
seek to take possession of. They have already made
contact with the
insolvents pertaining to those vehicles. The insolvent has referred,
the tracer by implication the trustees, to
her lawyers. She is
clearly disputing the title of the trustees to take possession of
those identified vehicles by referring them
to her lawyer. Under the
circumstances it is inappropriate for the trustees to approach Court
on an
ex-parte
basis. The
respondents should have been served with these papers the minute they
disputed the title of the trustees to take possession
of their
property as early as November 2022.
24.
Under the
circumstances this application should be dismissed, and the
applicants should be liable for the legal costs thereof. There
is no
opposition to the application as it was brought
ex
parte
,
however it should be clear that the costs of this application should
not be passed on to the insolvent estate.
25.
I therefore
make the following order;
a.
This
application is dismissed;
b.
The applicants
are liable for the costs.
MM
MOJAPELO AJ
07
February 2023
For
Applicants: Mr Lacante
Applicants’
attorneys: Lacante Attorneys
[1]
Cooper
NO
(supra)
at para 22.
[2]
Cooper
NO (supra)
at
para 22
[3]
Cooper NO
(supra)
.
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