Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 285South Africa
Lotriet and Another v Oosthuizen and Others [2023] ZAGPPHC 285; 14413/2022 (5 May 2023)
Headnotes
a 30% each in the third respondent. The third respondent operated as a restaurant and bar catering for Afrikaans speaking people and played mainly Afrikaans music
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Lotriet and Another v Oosthuizen and Others [2023] ZAGPPHC 285; 14413/2022 (5 May 2023)
Lotriet and Another v Oosthuizen and Others [2023] ZAGPPHC 285; 14413/2022 (5 May 2023)
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sino date 5 May 2023
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 14413/2022
(1)
REPORTABLE:
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
04/05/2023
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
JOHANATHAN
LOTRIET
First Applicant
NICOLE
MEGAN HAYWOOD
Second
Applicant
and
MARCUS
PAULUS OOSTHUIZEN
First
Respondent
(Identity
no. 7[...])
SAREL
RUDOLF OOSTHUIZEN
Second Respondent
(Identity
No. 8[...])
PARK
BOULEVARD TRADING 171 CC t/a
AANDKLAS
HATFIELD
Third Respondent
BARLENTI
(PTY) LTD t/a THE BLOCK 22
Fourth Respondent
PESTOUSIS PROPERTY
INVESTMENTS (PTY) LTD
Fifth
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MBONGWE,
J
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This opposed application was initially brought on urgency and placed
on the roll of
the urgent court for hearing on 8 April 2022, but was
removed by the court on the ground that the papers exceeded 500
pages. Costs
were reserved.
[2]
The matter was again set down in the opposed motion court for hearing
on 4 August
2022. In the application, the applicants, who are
minority shareholders in the third respondent, seek an order in terms
of Section
49 (2) of the Close Corporation Act, No 69 of 1984, a slew
of interdictory orders and directives against the first, second and
third respondents and costs. No relief is sought against the fifth
respondent.
FACTUAL MATRIX
[3]
In February 2019 the first and the second applicants acquired a 20%
interest each in the
third respondent, an entity owned by the first
and second respondents who, as a result of the acquisition, held a
30% each in the
third respondent. The third respondent operated as a
restaurant and bar catering for Afrikaans speaking people and played
mainly
Afrikaans music
[4]
Subsequent to their acquisition, the first and second applicants
worked in the third respondent.
The second respondent resigned,
however, in November 2020. The first respondent was later dismissed
following an inquiry on allegations
that he had been found with his
fingers on the till. The running of the business remained in the
control of the first and second
respondents.
[5]
Issues of accountability arose resulting in the first and second
applicants demanding
information on the business on an ongoing basis.
The applicants appeared not to have been satisfied alleging that
certain information
had not been provided and they were kept in the
dark on the performance and financials of the business, including its
liabilities
to SARS.
[6]
Matters appear to have come to a head on 1 December 2021 when the
first and second respondents
did not renew the lease of the premises
which was due to expire on 31
st
December 2021. The third
respondent is alleged to have been in arrears with its rental and
owed an amount in the order of R400 000
to the owners of the
building, the fourth respondent. The latter is alleged to have
communicated its intention not to renew the
lease. The first and
second respondents took the decision not to continue with the
business of the third respondent, but to start
another business of a
similar nature, but catering for a wider market–one of the
deviations from the business of the third
respondent.
[7]
There were ongoing discussions and an exchange of correspondent
between the legal representatives
of the parties, including a meeting
on the 17 December 2021 in which the applicants were advised that the
first and second respondents
will not proceed with the business of
the third respondent beyond 31 December 2021.
[8]
In view of the fact that the owners of the premises had a lean on the
movable property
of the third respondent, the first and second
respondents paid a larger portion of the rental owed and called on
the first and
second applicants to pay their share of the debt.
Nothing had come out of this and the first and second respondents
commenced their
new business on the premises on 1 January 2022.
First and second respondents further took the decision to rent
the assets
of the third respondent for an amount of R10 000 per
month. The employees of the third respondent were retained in the new
entity called Block 22. The signage of the third respondent was
removed and replaced by that of Block 22.
[9]
The applicants are alleged to have collected their personal
belongings from the premises
on 30 December 2021 – a day before
the lease was due to expire.
[10]
Prior to the lease expiring, the first and second respondents had
invited the applicants to make an election
to pay them off or for the
third respondent to buy the interests of the applicants. The
applicants had then demanded details of
the financial status of the
business and its liabilities, particularly to SARS. The applicants
were also provided with a list of
the remaining stock and the value
thereof. The first and second respondents had also deducted from the
value of the stock the amount
they had paid towards the rental owed
to the third respondent.
[11]
The applicants allege to have become aware of the operation of the
new business of the first and second
respondents on the 14 February
2022. This set in motion the current proceedings which the applicants
brought on urgency against
the first, second and third respondents on
9 March 2022 and seeking relief in terms of section 49 (2) of the
Close Corporation
Act, 69 of 1984. The applicants allege that the
purpose of the application is “
to prevent the unfairly
prejudicial, unjust and inequitable consequences of the first and
second respondents’ breach of their
fiduciary duties towards
applicants (in their capacities as co – members) and the third
respondent.’’
THE RELIEF SOUGHT
[12]
The applicants sought the following relief in the urgent application:
12.1 an
order in terms of Section 49(2) of the Close Corporation Act 69 of
1984 that regulates the future conduct of
the affairs of the third
respondent;
INTERDICTS
12.2
an order interdicting the first and second respondents from:
12.2.1 continuing to
unlawfully compete with the third respondent and making use of its
goodwill, physical assets and intellectual
property;
12.2.2 advertising and or
promoting the fourth respondent on the third respondent’s
Facebook page;
12.2.3 using the third
respondent’s website;
12.2 4 concluding a
rental agreement with the fourth respondent on behalf of the third
respondent in respect of the movable goods;
12.2.5 selling any of the
third respondent’s movable goods to the fourth respondent or
anyone else;
FURTHER ORDERS
12.2.6 an order that the
first and second respondents place movable goods of the third
respondent in the care of the applicants;
12.2.7 an order that the
first and second respondents account and compensate the third
respondent for all trading stock that stood
to the credit of the
third respondent as at 1 January 2022;
12.2.8 an order that the
first and second respondents are not allowed to participate in the
management of the third respondent and
that places the applicants in
control of the third respondent;
12.2.9 an order that
compels the first, second or third respondents to release the SARS
E-filling profile of the third respondent
to the applicants;
12.2.10 that the first
and second respondents be ordered to pay the costs of this
application on an attorney and client scale.
FIRST TO THIRD
RESPONDENTS’ OPPOSITION
[13]
The first to the third respondents oppose the
application on the grounds that;
13.1
The matter is not urgent;
13.2
This application is an abuse of Section 49(2) of Act 69 of 1984;
13.3
Non-compliance with the requirements of the said Section 49(2).
[14]
It has to be stated that the urgent application was removed from the
roll merely on the ground that it consisted
of more than 500 pages.
And was subsequently placed on the opposed roll of the motion court.
PAUSE
[15]
I pause to state that according to the first and second respondents
the applicants addressed
a letter to them in March 2022 demanding
that they deposit on amount just over R1 900 000 into the
account of the third
respondent ostensibly as their compensation. The
applicants are yet to institute action to recover the amount they
demanded. Furthermore,
an application for the liquidation of the
third respondent launched by the applicants and a counter-application
by the first to
third respondents in terms of section 36(1)(d) of the
Close Corporation Act under case number 15145/2021 are still pending.
[16]
In their counter - application the first to third respondents seek in
the main a termination
of the applicants’ membership of the
third respondent against payment of the applicants’ interest
therein based on
the valuation of the third respondent.
ANALYSIS
THE DELAY
[17]
While the aspect of urgency of this matter was not determined, it is
necessary to consider it
in this judgment in light of the opposition
on urgency and the reserved costs. Further, it will equally be
necessary to look into
the delay in bringing this application and
whether the delay has been fully explained by the applicants as
required by the rules.
ABSENCE OF ALTERNATIVE
RELIEF
[18]
The relief sought by the applicants on urgency in terms of Rule 6(12)
requires,
inter alia
, that the applicants demonstrate absence
of alternative relief that they may obtain at a later stage in
ordinary proceedings. The
applicants’ demand for the deposit of
R1 900 000 as compensation is unambiguously an indication of the
existence of alternative
relief open to them against the first and
second respondents. The demand, consequently, waters down the alleged
urgency and was
fatal to the application in the urgent court. In its
judgment in
East Rock Trading 7 (Pty) Ltd v Eagle Valley Granite
(Pty) Ltd and Others
(11/33767 [2011] ZAGPJHC 196, the court
stated, with regard to urgency, that:
“
[7]
It is important to note that that the rules require absence of
substantial redress. This
is not equivalent to the irreparable harm
that is required before the granting of an interim relief. It is
something less. He may
still obtain redress in an application in due
course but it may not be substantial. Whether an applicant will not
obtain substantial
redress in an application in due course will be
determined by the facts of each case. An applicant must make out his
case in that
regard.
[8]
In my view the delay in instituting proceedings is not, on its own a
ground, for refusing
to regard the matter as urgent. A court is
obliged to consider the circumstances of the case and the explanation
given. The important
issue is whether, despite the delay, the
applicant can or cannot be afforded substantial redress at a hearing
in due course. A
delay might be an indication that the matter is not
urgent as the applicant would want the court to believe. On the other
hand
a delay may have been caused by the fact that the applicant was
attempting to settle the matter or collect more facts with regard
thereto.
[9]
It means that if there is some delay in instituting proceedings an
Applicant has to explain
the reasons for the delay and why despite
the delay he claims that he cannot be afforded substantial redress at
a hearing in due
course. I must also mention that the fact that the
Applicant wants to have the matter resolved urgently does not render
the matter
urgent. The correct and the crucial test is whether, if
the matter were to follow its normal course as laid down by the
rules,
an Applicant will be afforded substantial redress. If he
cannot be afforded substantial redress at a hearing in due course
then
the matter qualifies to be enrolled and heard as an urgent
application. If however despite the anxiety of an Applicant he can be
afforded a substantial redress in an application in due course the
application does not qualify to be enrolled and heard as an
urgent
application.’’
[19]
The Applicants allege to have become aware on 14 February 2022 that
the first and second respondents were
operating a new business and
using the movable assets of the third respondent, but only launched
the urgent application on 9 March
2022. The delay of just over three
weeks to launch the application has not been explained in an
application for condonation. This
was fatal. In my view, and from a
letter addressed to the applicants dated 17 December 2021, the
applicants became aware on that
date that the first and second
respondents will not continue with the business of the third
respondent. Their assertion that they
became aware of the imminent
closure of the third respondent on 14 February 2022 is devoid of the
truth. On 30 December 2021
the applicants collected their
personal belongings from the business premises of the third
respondent. Neither the delay from 17
December 2021 nor 14 February
2022 has been unexplained. This would have been fatal in the urgent
court.
[20]
The applicants’ demand for the deposit of compensation into the
account of the third respondent is
an indication that there exists
alternative relief that the applicant could obtain in an ordinary
hearing of the matter –
this also would have been fatal for a
matter brought on urgency.
MOOTNESS OF THE RELIEF
SOUGHT
[21]
Despite being aware, on their version, on the 14 February 2022, that
the first and second respondents were
operating a new business on the
premises previously occupied by the third respondent and that the
third respondent no longer existed,
the applicants seek orders that
suggest that the third respondent still exists and its future
management be directed by an order
of the court. That the third
respondent no longer exists means that the orders sought will serve
no practical purpose. The provisions
of
Section 16(2)(a)(i)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
precisely address the situation in
this case and read thus:
“
When
at the hearing of an appeal the issues are of such a nature that the
decision sought will have no practical effect or result,
the appeal
may be dismissed on this ground alone.”
In
National Coalition
for Gay & Lesbian Equity and Others v Minister of Home
Affairs
2002 (1) SA (CC), where the Court held that case is
moot and therefore not justiciable if it no longer presents an
existing or
live controversy which should exist if the Court is to
avoid giving advisory opinions on abstract propositions of law.
CONCLUSION
[22]
The applicants have not made out a case warranting the granting of
the orders sought. Consequently, the
application stands to be
dismissed.
[23]
It appears from the findings in this judgment that the applicants had
no reasons to launch this
application as the relief sought is moot,
to their knowledge. The application stands to the dismissed in the
result.
ORDER
[24]
Resulting from the findings and conclusion in this judgment, the
following order is made:
1. The
application is dismissed.
2. The
applicants are ordered to pay the costs of the application,
which costs shall
include the costs in the urgent court.
MPN
MBONGWE
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
APPEARANCES
For
the applicants
Adv.
C. M. Rip
Instructed
by
Morne
Coetzee Attorneys
72
Dely Road
Waterkloof,
Pretoria
Email:
morne@mcoetzeelaw.co.za
Tel:
(012) 751 1680
For
the 1
st
, 2
nd
, third and 4th respondents
Adv.
T.J. Jooste
Instructed
by
VFV
Attorneys
Block
A, Corporate Place
Ashlea
Gardens, Pretoria
Email:
bertus@vfv.co.za
&
Email:
bertus@vfv.co.za
&
bertuslit@vfv.co.za
Tel:
(012) 747 4400
THIS
JUDGMENT WAS ELECTRONICALLY TRANSMITTED TO THE PARTIES ON 05 MAY
2023.
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