Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 1962South Africa
Putter and Another v Ariogenix (Pty) Ltd and Another (21365/2022) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1962 (23 November 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
23 November 2023
Headnotes
to be in contempt of the order granted in his absence.[2]
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Putter and Another v Ariogenix (Pty) Ltd and Another (21365/2022) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1962 (23 November 2023)
Putter and Another v Ariogenix (Pty) Ltd and Another (21365/2022) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1962 (23 November 2023)
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sino date 23 November 2023
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THE
REPBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
HIGH COURT DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
No: 21365/2022
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE
23 NOVEMBER 2023
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
ANDRIES
HURCULES PUTTER
First Applicant
TYRON
STUART
CROOK
Second Applicant
And
ARIOGENIX
(PTY) LTD
First Respondent
LOUS
JACOBUS HEYNS
Second Respondent
JUDGMENT
MAKHOBA,
J
[1]
This is an application to find the respondents in contempt of the
court order given
by Kuney J on 8 March 2022. The applicants seek to
have second respondent imprisoned for 30 days.
[2]
In the two urgent
ex parte
in
camera Anton Pillar applications under case number 74902/2018 and
75276/2018 the applicant’s files, data and information
were
removed by the first respondent.
[3]
Kuney J set aside the two Anton Pillar orders and ordered the first
respondent to
return all files, data and information to the
applicants forthwith.
[4]
The first applicant used to be employed by the first respondent. The
first applicant
and the second respondent are shareholders in the
first respondent.
[5]
The second applicant is Tyron Stuart Crook, he is cited as respondent
in the Anton
Pillar application in case no: 75279/2018.
[6]
The first respondent is Ariogenix (Pty) Ltd a private company with
registered address
at 3[...] V[...] Road, Route 2[...] B[...] P[...],
Centurion. The second respondent is Dr Louis Jacobus Heyns the
managing director
of the first respondent.
[7]
The applicants submit that the first respondent did not return any of
the deleted
items to the applicant.
[8]
It is submitted further
that the first respondent should have returned all forensic
images of
all the storage devices that was made, and the first respondent’s
IT expert should have returned the deleted files
and data to their
original position on the said devices.
[9]
The main issue in this matter is that the applicants are adamant that
all forensic
images with the applicant’s data, documents and
information were not returned, and some 20885 file remains deleted,
which
is also confirmed by the inventory lists, reports filed by
independent attorneys and the sheriff’s return of service.
[10]
According to the applicants most of the files on the hard disc they
received are corrupted and
cannot be opened and various information
was deleted from the devices.
[11]
Counsel for the applicants argued that the second respondent as the
director of the first respondent
should have ensured that the first
respondent complies with the court order which he did not do. The
applicant asked for cost on
a punitive scale.
[12]
It is submitted on behalf of the respondents that the answering
affidavit comprehensively dealt
with the fact that it had complied
with the March order and that the Court cannot find that there was
non-compliance with the order
and, even if it is so found willfulness
and
mala fides
are absent.
[13]
It is further submitted that a new case is advanced in the replying
affidavit and the allegations
raised were not advanced in the
applicant’s founding affidavit at all and the court should not
allow the new matter raised
therein.
[14]
Counsel for the respondents argued that the second respondent is
neither mentioned nor obligated
to perform any action in the court
order. Therefore, initiating contempt proceedings against the second
respondent is legally incompetent.
[15]
It is argued that should this court find that there is contempt, the
court should dismiss the
application because there is no proof of
willful and
mala fide
conduct on the part of the first
respondent.
[16]
It was contended by the respondent that, the relief sought by the
applicant in that the respondent
instruct an IT specialist to restore
and upload the data onto their electronic devices in not contained in
Kuny J’s order.
[17]
The respondents filed their answering affidavit out of time, in my
view failure to condone the
late filing might lead to the
incarceration of the second respondent which is not in the interest
of justice
[1]
.
[18]
Paragraphs 2 and 3 of the order by Kuny J date 4 March 2022 reads as
follows;
“
2.1
The Anton Pilar order granted by this Honourable Court against the
first applicant herein on 15 October under Case Number 74903/2018,
is
hereby set aside.
2.2
The first respondent is ordered forthwith to return all files, data
and information taken
from the first applicant pursuant to the
execution of the aforesaid Anton Pillar order.
2.3
The first respondent is ordered to pay the first applicant’s
cost relating to obtaining
of the aforesaid order to be taxed on an
attorney and client scale.
3
3.1
The Anton Pillar order granted by this Honourable Court against the
second applicant herein
on 15 October 2018 under Case Number
75279/2018, is hereby set aside.
3.2
The first respondent is ordered forthwith to return all files, data
and information taken
from the second applicant herein pursuant to
the execution of the aforesaid Anton Pillar order.
3.3
The first respondent is ordered to pay the second applicant’s
cost relating to the obtaining of the Anton Pilar order,
to be taxed
on an attorney and client scale.
4
The first respondent is ordered to pay the cost of this application
on an
attorney and client scale.”
[19]
The wording of the order clearly orders the first respondent to
comply with the order. The second
respondent in this matter before me
was never cited and was not before court.
[20]
A party who was not cited before obtaining the court order cannot be
held to be in contempt of
the order granted in his absence.
[2]
[21]
In my view the mere fact that the second respondent is a director of
the first respondent cannot
make him guilty of contempt of court if
he was not cited in the order of Kuny J.
[22]
The founding affidavit of the applicant together with the inventory
lists, reports filed by the
independent attorneys and the sheriff’s
return of service shows clearly that the first respondent did not
return some of
the deleted items to the applicants.
[23]
The question that arises is whether the conduct of the first
respondent meets the requisites
of contempt as set out
in
Matjhabeng Local Municipality v Eskom Holdings Ltd and others
.
Shadrack
Shivumba Humo Mkhonto and others v Compensation Solution (Pty)
Ltd
.
[3]
[24]
It is further my view that the first respondent did not properly
ensure that all the forensic
images, deleted files and data are
returned.
[25]
The first respondent was not obliged to provide and pay for the
services of an IT Specialist,
I am satisfied that the first
respondent should have ensured that the order was properly complied
with. In my view the first respondent
was willful and
mala fide
in not complying fully with the order of Kuny J.
[26]
The court does not order the costs of another litigant on the basis
of attorney and client unless
some special grounds are present.
[27]
Failure to comply fully with the order of Kuny J has led to a
protracted litigation against the
respondent and unfairly prejudiced
the applicants. In my view this conduct warrants a punitive costs
order.
[28]
I make the following order:
28.1
The first respondent is held to be in contempt of the court order
granted on 8 March 2022 in case number
36692/2021 (by Kuny J) and the
first and second respondents are ordered to within 30 days from
granting of the order to restore
and upload the information and files
deleted from, the first and second applicants electronic devices,
from the mirror images made
from the said devices, and stored on the
four hard drives mentioned in the inventory of the sheriff in case
number 74901/18,27527/18
and 749031.
28.2
The first and/or second respondent and after execution of prayer 1
supra are ordered to return the four hard
drives as set out in
Annexure CRN 8 to the applicants, and the notebook and papers, as
mentioned in the said inventory of the sheriff.
28.3
The first respondent is ordered to pay the costs of this application
on an attorney and own client scale.
MAKHOBA
J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
HEARD
AND RESERVED JUDGMENT: 16 OCTOBER 2023
JUDGMENT
HANDED DOWN ON: 23 NOVEMBER 2023
Appearances
:
For
the Applicant:
Adv
R F De Villiers (instructed by) Deneys Zeederberg Attorneys
For
the Frist and Second Respondents’:
Adv
L Kotze (instructed by) GMI Attorneys
[1]
Grootboom
v National Prosecuting Authority and another 2014 I BCLR 65 CC.
[2]
Vereeniging
Abattoir (Pty) Ltd v Food and Allied Workers Union and others
(J2151/13) [2014] ZALLC JHB 249
(11
July 2014) par 6.
[3]
2017
CC para 35.
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