Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 1996South Africa
Penthouse Holdings (Pty) Ltd v Naidoo (120617/2023) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1996 (4 December 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
4 December 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Penthouse Holdings (Pty) Ltd v Naidoo (120617/2023) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1996 (4 December 2023)
Penthouse Holdings (Pty) Ltd v Naidoo (120617/2023) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1996 (4 December 2023)
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sino date 4 December 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
CASE
NO: 120617/2023
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHERS JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED
04
December 2023
In
the matter between:
PENTHOUSE
HOLDINGS (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
SANDIRAN
JASON
NAIDOO
Respondent
JUDGMENT
NGALWANA
AJ
[1]
This is an application for an anti-spoliation order. The Applicant, a
building contractor,
wants its full access to, and possession of, a
building site restored immediately to it. It approaches this court on
an urgent
basis and claims costs on attorney and client scale.
[2]
The Respondent, the owner of the site, says the application is not
urgent and whatever
urgency there may be is self-created. He says the
high-watermark of the Applicant’s claim to urgency is a
purported builders’
lien which, he says, the Applicant had in
any even waived. The Applicant denies that it waived the builders’
lien and submits
that its director (Mr Chinyama, the deponent) never
signed the waiver agreement that the Respondent puts up under oath
from a firm
of attorneys appointed by the bank to register the
building loan, and what appears to be email correspondence to that
effect between
a conveyancer from the firm and Mr Chinyama.
[3]
Counsel also addressed me on the merits of the case. I am grateful to
them both for
their able and scholarly address. However, it is
unnecessary to engage with the merits of the Applicant’s case
for I am satisfied
that its application falters at the first hurdle
in urgent court: urgency.
[4]
The Applicant’s basis for urgency is captured in at least two
submissions in
its founding affidavit. Mindful that for urgency he
must satisfy this court that the Applicant cannot obtain substantial
redress
in due course if the order he seeks were not granted now, Mr
Chinyama says, in paragraph 58: “
If this matter were to be
heard on the ordinary court rolls, the applicant would lose its lien,
which secures its right to be paid
for work undertaken…”
.
In paragraph 60 he says: “
The applicant has invested money
in the construction site and it stands to be prejudiced if it cannot
rely on a lien in order to
claim what it has invested”
.
[5]
It is therefore clear that the Applicant’s claim to urgency
hinges on a builder’s
lien. The Respondent has put up evidence
of the Applicant’s waiver of that lien. The Applicant disputes
the evidence. That
is a factual dispute that an urgent court cannot
resolve on the papers. Motion court is about the resolution of legal
disputes
on common cause facts. Where
bona fide
disputes of
fact, not previously foreseen, arise in the course of the exchange of
pleadings in motion court proceedings, the motion
court judge may
refer those factual disputes to oral evidence. In this case, that
would require the calling of the building loan
registration firm
whose conveyancer deposed to an affidavit claiming that Mr Chinyama
had indeed signed a waiver of the builder’s
lien. It may even
require the calling of a handwriting expert to give evidence on the
authenticity of Mr Chinyama’s signature
on the waiver
agreement. Counsel did not suggest that either of these were present
in court at the hearing of the matter. In any
event, when disputes of
fact arising in motion proceedings are referred for oral evidence,
the usual practice is for the Applicant
to file a declaration which
will serve as founding papers, and for the Respondent to file a
response. That new set of papers would
then serve as the pleadings
record. That is not the stuff of which urgent court is made.
[6]
In any event, the Applicant has intimated that it intends seeking
relief against the
Respondent for payment for work done. The
Respondent claims that he has in fact overpaid the Applicant, while
the Applicant claims
he is still owed money by the Respondent for the
renovation work done at the Respondent’s property. If the
Applicant should
be successful in those mooted proceedings, then it
should recoup its investment into the project. If it should not
succeed, well
then it would not have been entitled to the order that
it now seeks. It is not for the urgent court to anticipate the
outcome of
those proceedings by granting an anti-spoliation order.
[7]
The Respondent has asked for costs on a punitive scale. It says the
Applicant puts
up “
no facts”
to justify urgency. I
do not agree. The Applicant says the Respondent informed him that he
intends selling the property that the
Applicant has built on the
construction site over which he says he enjoys a builder’s
lien, and that once the property has
been sold, the Applicant will
lose the protection afforded by the builder’s lien. But this
engages the same dispute of fact
about whether the lien was waived.
This court, sitting as an urgent court, cannot resolve that dispute
for reasons already given.
The serious allegation, essentially of
fraud, made by the Applicant against a firm of attorneys appointed by
the bank to register
the building loan – and by extension
against the Respondent – would require a deep dive into factual
and expert evidence
before making an assessment on the
appropriateness of a costs order on the scale requested. The urgent
court is not equipped for
that.
Order
In the result, I make the following
order:
1.
The application is struck off the roll for
lack of urgency.
2.
The Applicant is to pay the Respondent’s
costs on the ordinary scale, including costs consequent upon the
appointment of Counsel.
V NGALWANA
ACTING JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION OF THE HIGH COURT,
PRETORIA
Delivered: This judgement was
prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is reflected 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 hand-down is deemed
to be 04 December 2023.
Date
of hearing: 29 November 2023
Date
of judgment: 04 December 2023
Appearances:
Attorneys for the
Applicant:
Machaba Attorneys
Counsel for the
Applicant:
M Kufa (079 305
6111)
P Sila
(083 648 3580)
Attorneys for
Respondent:
LAZZARA LEICHER Inc
Counsel for
Respondent:
M Cajee (082 771
4458)
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