Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 1951South Africa
Mining Oil Solutions (Pty) Ltd v Vimasco Mining and Construction (Pty) Ltd and Another (Leave to Appeal) (2023-106309) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1951 (30 November 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
30 November 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Mining Oil Solutions (Pty) Ltd v Vimasco Mining and Construction (Pty) Ltd and Another (Leave to Appeal) (2023-106309) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1951 (30 November 2023)
Mining Oil Solutions (Pty) Ltd v Vimasco Mining and Construction (Pty) Ltd and Another (Leave to Appeal) (2023-106309) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1951 (30 November 2023)
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sino date 30 November 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA)
Case
No.
2023-106309
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHERS JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED
DATE 30 NOVEMBER 2023
SIGNATURE
In
the application of:
MINING
OIL SOLUTIONS (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
VIMASCO
MINING AND CONSTRUCTION (PTY) LTD
First
Respondent
ECONOMIC
FREEDOM MINERAL RESOURCES (PTY) LTD
Second
Respondent
IN
RE
:
VIMASCO
MINING AND CONSTRUCTION (PTY) LTD
First
Applicant
ECONOMIC
FREEDOM MINERAL RESOURCES (PTY) LTD
Second
Applicant
and
BOTSHELO
COMMODITIES (PTY) LTD
First
Respondent
MARYKE
LANDMAN
N.O
/ MARI HAYWOOD
N.O
(In
their capacity as provisional liquidators for
AAM
Mechanised Mining Solutions (Pty) Ltd)
Second
Respondent
SUSANNA
CAROLINA PRETORIUS
N.O
Third
Respondent
SUSANNA
CAROLINA PRETORIUS
Fourth
Respondent
SOUTH
AFRICAN POLICE SERVICES:
MARIKANA
POLICE STATION
Fifth
Respondent
MINING
OIL SOLUTIONS (PTY) LTD
Sixth
Respondent
ALL
OTHER UNKNOWN ENTITIES AND/OR PERSONS OPERATING THROUGH OR UNDER
EITHER THE FIRST, SECOND OR SIXTH RESPONDENTS
Seventh
Respondent
This
judgment and order is prepared and authored by the Judge whose
name is reflected as such, and is handed down electronically
by
circulation to the parties / their legal representatives by email
and by uploading it to the electronic file of this matter
on
Caselines. The date for handing down is deemed to be 30 November
2023.
JUDGMENT
(LEAVE TO APPEAL)
RETIEF J
INTRODUCTION
[1]
The applicant, the sixth respondent in the
main application, seeks leave from this Court to appeal the whole
judgment (in so far
as judgment was delivered) and the order granted
on 17 November 2023 to the Supreme Court of Appeal [SCA],
alternatively to the
Full Court of this Division. In so doing, the
applicant raises a number of grounds together with an unconditional
and irrevocable
tender of the delivery of the items listed in
Annexure “A”, an annexure referred to in prayer 2.1 of
the order.
[2]
The tender is followed by a concession and
admission that the items referred to in Annexure “A”
belong to the first
and second respondent [respondents], the
applicants in the main application.
[3]
The applicant’s tender and admission
appear to validate the necessity for the respondents launching the
main application and,
the basis for this Court to have granted the
relief. It too, as may appear below, may very well neutralizing the
grounds relied
on in this application by the applicant in this for
leave to appeal. Clarity on this issue will be dealt with in more
detail hereunder.
[4]
To clarify and by way of background, the
main application came before this Court on an urgent basis, and it
was dealt with as such.
The respondents in the main application
sought final interdictory relief for,
inter
alia
, the return of a chrome wash plant
situated on a property in Marikana in the Northwest Province. Such
claim premised on their ownership
of the chrome wash plant.
[5]
The applicant was the only respondent cited
in the main application against whom relief was sought, that filed a
notice of opposition
and papers.
[6]
For the sake of clarity during the hearing,
this Court highlighted that the description of the identifiable parts
which made up
the chrome wash plant, which the respondents sought the
return of, needed to be correctly identified and listed. In so doing
this
Court referred the respondents’ Counsel in argument to the
items listed in the Plant Rental Agreement dated 1 February 2018
between Botshelo Commodities (Pty) Ltd and AAM Mechanised Mining
Solutions (Pty) Ltd [the agreement]. The agreement and its terms
remained an uncontested issue.
[7]
The list of the items making up the chrome
wash plant were recorded in Annexure ‘A”. No objection
was raised in argument
during the hearing to such items being
recorded in an annexure nor for its purpose and, as it now stands,
the applicant tenders
the return of and concedes ownership of the
items listed in Annexure “A” in favour of the
respondents.
[8]
Having regard to the above, it came
as no surprise that the Counsel for the applicant in his opening
address and as the argument
developed, conceded that the applicant
does not
per se
take issue with the order granted, but that the nub of concern with
the order lay in the clarification of the word “
plant”
referred to in the body of the order. In amplification, the enquiry:
was the word “
plant
”
confined to the items listed in Annexure “A” referred to
in prayer 2.1 of the order? If so, the grounds raised
as against this
Court’s finding including the aspect of ownership miraculously
fall away.
[9]
It now, together with the tender and
concession in the applicant’s application for leave, became
abundantly clear that the
purpose for which leave to appeal any
‘erroneous decisions’ made by this Court on the papers
before it to the SCA,
alternatively to the Full Court of this
Division, was not solely initiated on the basis of erroneous
decisions, but rather
for clarification purposes. Clarification
and/or a possible ambiguity giving rise to possible uncertainty is
not the basis nor
is it the intended purpose of uniform rule
49(1)(b).
[10]
In consequence, the intended purpose for
this Court to entertain and apply the section 17(1)(a)(i) test set
out in the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
[section 17 test] becomes
irrelevant. As too, and as correctly pointed out by the respondents’
Counsel, the necessity for
the hearing and preparation of this
application.
[11]
The applicant’s Counsel appreciating
this consequence tried to salvage the position by tendering a
withdrawal of the application
with attorney client costs, albeit on
certain conditions (dealt with below). This tender was later
withdrawn, the respondents
seeking a dismissal and attorney own
client costs.
[12]
I now deal with the only remaining issue
for the sake of clarity and with costs.
CLARIFICATION OF THE WORD
“plant” IN THE COURT ORDER
[13]
Paragraph 2.1 of the Court order clearly
and concisely states the following:
“
2.
First and/or the Sixth Respondent and/or the Seventh Respondent are
interdicted, with immediate
effect, from:
2.1.
operating or using the
Applicants’
chrome wash plant, consisting of
(own emphasis) the items set out in
Annexure
“A”
attached hereto,
which is situated at Portion 139 of farm 342, Registration Division
J.Q., Marikana, North-West (“
the
property
”), (“
the
plant
”) in any way
whatsoever; and
”
[14]
From the above it is clear that the chrome
wash plant consists of the items in Annexure ‘A” (the
what), the chrome wash
plant described is situated on the described
property (the where) and furthermore, that the description of chrome
wash plant, consisting
of the items in Annexure “A” on
the property describes “
the plant
”
(the how mase-up).
[15]
Not only does common sense dictate that the
use of the word “
plant
”,
which is repeated in the body of the order, is confined to the what,
the where, by the how made-up, but the manner and
use of a word to
mean a descriptive phrase instead of repeating the descriptive phrase
is an accepted and commonly used method.
This method prevents
ambiguity. To illustrate the point yet further in the same order, the
use of the word “
property
”
is used and repeated instead of using the full property description.
No complaint or ambiguity regarding the word “
property
”
has been raised. Having made the point this Court is perplexed why
the applicant’s grounds of appeal do not specifically
deal with
the nub of the complaint, namely: “
In
so far as the plant at prayer…..includes items not in Annexure
“A” then the Court has …..”.
This
is a factor to consideration for costs.
[16]
The use of the word “
plant
”
as described and confined to in Annexure ‘A” was the
Court’s intention with the use of the word throughout
the
order. The respondents’ Counsel confirmed the same
understanding in argument, and as such, has taken the sting out of
any confusion raised by the applicant’s Counsel from the bar.
Any confusion now eliminated and settled. The word “
plant
”
in the entire body of the order refers to the description at prayer
2.1 of the order.
COSTS
[17]
The application before this Court is an
application for leave to appeal. Yet, on the papers, it was
sui
generis
. By this is meant, an
application for leave to appeal incorporating a tender and concession
of the merits in respect of the ownership
determination in the main
application and grounds raised which were at variance with such
tender and concession by persisting with
this Court’s errors.
Compounded with the application was a concession in argument that the
applicant did not take issue with
the order provided that the word
“
plant
”
was confined to the description at prayer 2.1 of the order. The
absurdity of this application now becomes apparent.
[18]
The respondents’ Counsel to my mind
correctly argued that the application was brought without merit in
light of the tender
and concessions, was an abuse of the process if
confined to clarification of a word in an order which was clear on
the face of
it and a waste of the Court’s time. The applicant’s
Counsel did not specifically reply to the contentions made,
aforesaid.
[19]
Expanding on the consequences, the
respondents now seek attorney own client costs and invited the Court
to consider the reasoning
between attorney client and attorney own
client costs dealt with in
Fidelity
Bank Ltd vs Three Woman (Pty) Ltd
[1996] 4 All SA 368
(W)
[Fidelity matter] in which Cloete J, after having considered a number
of cases, discussed and accepted the difference in the recovery
and
category of attorney own client costs before a taxing master as
opposed to attorney client costs- referring to the latter as
an
extreme award by the Court. Applying certain factors in the exercise
of his discretion, Cloete J in the Fidelity matter, considered
the
plaintiff’s conduct in the proceedings and determined them to
be dishonest, he too found the bank witnesses dishonest
and
considered the delay in process.
[20]
I have accepted that to exercise a
discretion judiciously, it occurs if applied as case specific and
exercised having regard to
all the facts. The factors listed by
Cloete J demonstrate disfavour, appeared to be centred around a
parties dishonesty in conduct
and in their evidence.
[21]
Although I find that
the
applicant
has abused the intended
purpose of the procedure, relied on unfounded grounds which were at
variance with the tender and concession,
they have done so, by openly
“
coming out of the blocks
”
so to speak. This is evident from the content of application itself
read as a whole and from the concessions made by Counsel
in his
opening address. The ‘absurdity’ of it all in the end,
and what transpired during argument, does not equate
to dishonest
conduct as described by Cloete J. Moreover, no credibility finding
was made nor required, nor appropriate in the circumstances.
[22]
This Court appreciates that the
matter has an acrimonious history but will not allow the consequence
thereof to cloud its judgment
nor influence the exercise of its
discretion. A sound cost tender, although rejected and later
withdrawn was made by the applicant.
[23]
Having regard to the above and having
regard to the papers filed, it flows that this Court applying the
section 17 test, is of the
opinion that the appeal would not have a
reasonable prospect of success and in consequence leave is denied.
The following order follows:
1.
The application for leave to appeal is
dismissed;
2.
The applicant to pay the respondents’
costs on a scale as between attorney and client, including the
employment of two Counsel.
L.A. RETIEF
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng
Division
Appearances
:
For the applicant:
Adv F.W. Botes SC
Adv S. Van
Dyk
Cell: 074 725
1080
Email:
svandyk@clubadvocates.co.za
Instructed by:
Heyns Attorneys
Incorporated
Tell: (013)
235 1625
Email:
litigation@heyns.co.za
For the
respondents:
Adv S.G. Maritz
Adv A.A.R.
Marques
Cell: 082 464
6239
Email:
advmarques17@gmail.com
Instructed by:
VFV Attorneys
Tel: (012)
460 8704
Email:
Rikus@vfv.co.za
Matter heard:
29 November 2023
Date of judgment:
30 November 2023
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