Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 161South Africa
M.F and Others v C.G.F and Others [2023] ZAGPPHC 161; 26446/2015 (3 March 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
3 March 2023
Headnotes
the test of direct and substantial interest was met and joined these additional parties. The sole relief granted was that of joinder. No other relief was granted against the additional
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## M.F and Others v C.G.F and Others [2023] ZAGPPHC 161; 26446/2015 (3 March 2023)
M.F and Others v C.G.F and Others [2023] ZAGPPHC 161; 26446/2015 (3 March 2023)
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sino date 3 March 2023
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 26446/2015
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
Date:
3 March 2023
M[....]1
F[....]1
First
Applicant
MARIUS
FREEMAN NO TRUSTEE OF THE FREEMAN
BUSINESS
TRUST
Second
Applicant
MANDI
FREEMAN NO TRUSTEE OF THE FREEMAN
BUSINESS
TRUST
Third
Applicant
JOHN
JAMES FREEMAN NO TRUSTEE OF THE FREEMAN
BUSINESS
TRUST
Fourth
Applicant
RAMREF
MANAGEMENT AND
HOLDINGS
(PTY) LTD
Fifth
Applicant
FERMAR
(PTY) LTD
Sixth
Applicant
KAMEELDORING
VLAKTE
BOERDERY
(PTY) LTD
Seventh
Applicant
SCHWEIZER
ABATTOIR (PTY) LTD
Eight
Applicant
DRIVEN
DIESEL ENTERPRISES (PTY) LTD
Ninth
Applicant
FERMAR
CAPE TOWN (PTY) LTD
Tenth
Applicant
SABLE
GRANITE (PTY) LTD
Eleventh
Applicant
BHEJANE
MINING AND CRUSHING (PTY) LTD
Twelfth
Applicant
BHEJANE
GRANITE (PTY) LTD
Thirteenth
Applicant
MAXON
SECURITY SERVICES (PTY) LTD
Fourteenth
Applicant
R
& M RANCH (PTY)
LTD
Fifteenth
Applicant
LEGAD
(PTY)
LTD
Sixteenth
Applicant
AFROPULSE
177 (PTY) LTD
Seventeenth
Applicant
NORTHERN
SPARK TRADING (PTY) LTD
Eighteenth
Applicant
SILVER
SNAKES TRADING (PTY) LTD
Nineteenth
Applicant
BIG
CEDAR TRADING 89 (PTY) LTD
Twentieth
Applicant
HIGHLAND
GATE BOERDERY (PTY) LTD
Twenty-first
Applicant
GVDM
COLLECTIONS (PTY) LTD
Twenty-
second Applicant
EV
PROPERTY HOLDINGS (PTY) LTD
Twenty-third
Applicant
BLOEMFONTEIN
EV PROPERTIES (PTY) LTD
Twenty-fourth
Applicant
LOWVELD
SPORTS INITIATIVE (PTY) LTD
Twenty-fifth
Applicant
M[....]2
F[....]2
Twenty-sixth
Applicant
J[...]
J[....]
F[....]3
Twenty-seventh
Applicant
and
C[....]
G[....]
F[....]4
Respondent
In
the matter between:
M[....]
F[....]
Plaintiff
and
CORNELIA
GERTUIDA FREEMAN
Defendant
JUDGMENT
#
#
# DE VOS AJ
DE VOS AJ
[1]
The parties are involved in divorce proceedings. The defendant, in
the divorce
proceedings, sought to join certain additional parties.
Specifically, the defendant sought the joinder of the beneficiaries
and
trustees of a family trust, the family trust and several
companies. The defendant intends to request the Court seized with the
main divorce proceedings, to pierce the corporate veil of the
companies and to vest the properties of the trust in the plaintiff.
The defendant has pleaded, amongst other allegations, that the
plaintiff runs a massive business empire, avoids keeping his personal
assets in his own name and rather secures his assets in companies and
trusts and pays his personal and business expenses of the
entire
business empire from one company.
[2]
The Court held that the test of direct and substantial interest was
met and
joined these additional parties. The sole relief granted was
that of joinder. No other relief was granted against the additional
parties. The additional parties seek leave to appeal against their
joinder.
[3]
The common law position was that interim and interlocutory orders are
not appealable,
as they are not final. The principle underpinning
this approach was that courts are loath to encourage wasteful use of
judicial
resources and to unnecessarily increase legal costs. Indeed,
permitting parties to appeal at an interim stage leads to piecemeal
adjudication of disputes and delays the final determination of
disputes.
[4]
The
position that interim and interlocutory orders are not appealable is
not an inflexible rule. The rule to be applied is that
of the
interest of justice. If the interest of justice demands, then an
interim or interlocutory order can be appealed. The test
for leave to
appeal requires the court to have regard to and weigh germane
circumstances. A court has to weigh up several considerations,
including whether the relief granted was final in its effect,
definitive of the right of the parties, disposed of a substantial
portion of the relief claimed, aspects of convenience, the time at
which the issue is considered, delay, expedience, prejudice,
the
avoidance of piecemeal appeals and the attainment of justice.
[1]
[5]
The
defendant has alleged that the plaintiff earns an income in excess of
half a million a month from the joined parties (excluding
benefits in
the form of shareholding).
[2]
The defendant has also alleged that the plaintiff uses the joined
parties as vehicles to hold his own assets which he does not
wish to
hold in his personal capacity; pays all his personal and his entire
business empire's expenses (including those of the
other joined
parties) from funds held in one of the joined parties; that the
assets of the defendant was used to set up one of
the joined parties
and that in the time leading up to the divorce as well as during the
divorce proceedings, the plaintiff attempted
to estrange some of the
assets in the communal estate through the joined parties.
[6]
The defendant has also pleaded the shareholding of the various
companies which
indicate that several of the companies hold majority
shares in each other and have inter-company loans. The defendant has
also
pleaded that the plaintiff is the director or majority
shareholder in most of the companies. In this way, the defendant has
pleaded
a web in which the joined parties are interlinked with each
other and the estate of the plaintiff.
[7]
The joined parties have not indicated what harm the joined parties
will suffer
as a result of the joinder or what right of theirs has
been infringed. Our courts have granted leave to appeal against
interim
orders where the parties' rights have been affected. The
joined parties have not identified any right that is being infringed.
The Court has made no finding on the rights of the joined parties and
have not determined any portion of the relief sought in the
main
proceedings.
[8]
Of course, the joinder of a party may inconvenience them as they have
to attend
to legal proceedings. However, this is mitigated by the
remedy contained in an exception. If the defendant cannot sustain a
cause
of action against them, the joined parties will be successful
at an early stage of the proceedings and can agitate for the costs
they incurred. Indeed, the joined parties raised no harm other than
it had to defend itself in the main proceedings. The rules
of court
and the law on costs provides the joined parties with the avenue to
address this inconvenience and attendant costs.
[9]
The defendant however, stands to suffer real harm and a limitation of
her right
to have her dispute adjudicated in a court of law, as
opposed to inconvenience, if she is not permitted to join these
parties to
the proceedings. If they are not joined, the defendant is
legally barred from seeking relief against the trust and companies.
The
defendant has no true alternative remedy or avenue available to
seek relief against the joined parties, other than to seek their
joinder in these proceedings. The defendant, if not granted joinder
at this stage, is deprived a cause of action being considered
by a
Court.
[10]
It weighs with the Court that the order for joinder is not
determinative of any rights or interests
of the joined parties.
Whilst the interim nature of the relief granted is not the sole
determining factor in an application for
leave to appeal, it remains
a relevant consideration. The Court requested the parties for
assistance in providing any case law
in which leave to appeal was
granted against an order joining a party to proceedings. I am
grateful for the assistance received.
The parties filed additional
submissions on 7 December 2022 in this regard. The parties,
represented by three sets of representatives,
could not refer the
Court to a body of case law that permitted leave to appeal in joinder
applications. Such case law is either
obscure to all three parties in
this matter or the weight of jurisprudence does not assist the
parties seeking leave to appeal.
[11]
The only
authority that could be brought to the Court's attention is the
judgment in
JW
v JW
[3]
in which the Court refused leave to appeal against a joinder decision
without considering the interim nature of the joinder. The
Court did
not need to consider the interim nature as it concluded that it was
not in the interest of justice to grant leave to
appeal. Also, in
JW
v JW
the Court was dealing with an application for leave to appeal on the
basis that there is some other compelling reason to grant
leave to
appeal. No party has made such a submission in this matter.
[12]
The Court also considers that if leave to appeal is granted, the
matter will proceed piece-meal and
the costs in an acrimonious
divorce will increase. The joined parties have raised no issue
relating to interest of justice other
than the submissions that the
Court erred in its approach to the test of joinder. The relief
granted is not final in effect, nor
is it definitive of the rights of
the parties. The joinder did not dispose of a substantial portion of
the relief claimed. It would
not be convenient to grant leave at this
stage and it would result in undue inconvenience and piece-meal
adjudication of appeals.
[13]
The Court will consider the specific grounds of appeal. The joined
parties form two categories. They
have different legal representation
and have raised different grounds of appeal. In order to afford them
each consideration, I
deal with them separately, commencing with the
arguments of the beneficiaries and trustees (3rd, 4th, 26th and 27th
respondents).
[14]
The Court considered that the trustees and beneficiaries conceded
that have an interest in the main
proceedings. The trustees and
beneficiaries submitted that they stand to be deprived of certain
benefits - if the relief sought
by the defendant is ultimately
successful. The trustees and beneficiaries submitted that they
"naturally have an interest
in the proceedings" because –
"if a claim succeeds
in the divorce action that the Freeman Familie Trust be declared to
be the alter ego of the plaintiff,
it follows that the 3rd, 4th, 26th
and 27th respondents
stand to be deprived of the benefits
that
may be derived by virtue of their capacities as beneficiaries of the
Freeman Familie Trust.
They have an interest in the proceedings by
virtue of their capacities as trustees and beneficiaries of the
trust
."
[15]
The trustees and beneficiaries seek leave to appeal on the basis that
the concession that the trustees
and beneficiaries have an "interest"
in the proceedings is insufficient to meet the test for joinder. The
breadth of
the concession however goes further as the trustees and
beneficiaries concede that "they stand to be deprived of
benefits"
if the relief sought by the defendant is granted. The
submission of the trustees and beneficiaries interests viewed
together with
the facts alleged by the defendant in relation to the
additional parties, is sufficient to indicate that the test for
joinder has
been met.
[16]
The Court
now turns to the grounds of appeal raised by the trust and companies
(1st, 2nd and 5th - 25th respondents). The trust
and companies accept
that the Court applied the correct test.
[4]
The critique is that the Court did not set out the facts on which it
concluded that the test for joinder had been met. They contend
that
the Court dealt "scarcely, if at all with the facts"
[5]
on which it concluded the test had been met. The Court set out the
facts it considered as relevant to the test of joinder in several
paragraphs.
[6]
This ground of
appeal's foundation is not born out by the judgment in this matter.
[17]
The crux of
the application for leave to appeal by the trust and the companies is
that the defendant has failed to adduce sufficient
evidence in order
to establish a lis between the parties. The trust and companies rely
on the judgment in
Tilston
v Tilston
.
[7]
The crux in
Tilston
is that as there was no reference to a trust in the counterclaim the
Court concluded that no lis had been made out to substantiate
the
joinder of the trust.
[18]
The facts of this case are different to those in
Tilston
. In
these proceedings, the defendant had made allegations, that if proven
at trial, would ground relief against the joined parties.
These
allegations appear in the affidavit motivating for joinder. The
defendant has also pleaded a detailed case against the trust
in the
proposed amendment which it will file subsequent to the joinder
application. The proposed counterclaim ought not be seen
in
isolation. The Court also notes that the amendment is merely
proposed, is not finalised and that the rules of Court will permit
the defendant to file the necessary papers after the finalisation of
this process.
[19]
The Court must consider the joinder application not only in light of
the proposed amendment but also
based on the allegations contained in
the affidavit motivating for the joinder of the parties. These
allegations indicate that
the joined parties have a direct and
substantial in the relief sought by the defendant.
[20]
The application for joinder certainly creates a lis between the
parties. The proposed counterclaim
ought not be seen in isolation.
The Court also notes that the amendment is merely proposed, is not
finalised and that the rules
of Court will permit the defendant to
file the necessary papers after the finalisation of this process.
# ORDER
ORDER
[21]
In the result, the following order is granted:
1.
The applications for leave to appeal are dismissed.
I
de Vos
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Delivered:
This judgment is handed down electronically by uploading it to the
electronic file of this matter on CaseLines. As a
courtesy gesture,
it will be sent to the parties/their legal representatives by email.
Counsel
for the applicant: HF
Fourie
Instructed
by: Cronje
de Waal Skhosana Inc
Counsel
for
the 3,4, 26 and 27 respondents: I
Vermaak-Hay
Instructed
by: TMJ
Attorneys
Counsel
for
the remainder of the respondents: FW
Botes SC
Instructed
by: Schoeman
Borman Inc
Date
of the hearing: 1
December 2022,
7 December 2022
(submissions)
Date
of judgment: 3
March 2023
[1]
Von Abo v President of the Republic of South Africa (CCT 67/08)
[2009] ZACC 15
;
2009 (10) BCLR 1052
(CC) ;
2009 (5) SA 345
(CC) (5
June 2009)
[2]
Founding
Affidavit para 9.3
[3]
JW
v JW 2021 JDR 3106 (ECP)
[4]
Grounds
of appeal, para 11 (CL 21-8)
[5]
Grounds
of appeal, para 11 (CL 21-8)
[6]
These
appear in paragraphs
[9]
- [12] of the judgment and in the eleven subparagraphs of footnote
13.
[7]
Tilston
v Tilson and Others
[2021] JOL 51609
(GJ)
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