Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 110South Africa
CS Hentiq 1009 Proprietary Limited whose name was changed to Khulani Proprietary Limited and Another v National Empowerment Fund (14490/2018) [2022] ZAGPPHC 110 (18 February 2022)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## CS Hentiq 1009 Proprietary Limited whose name was changed to Khulani Proprietary Limited and Another v National Empowerment Fund (14490/2018) [2022] ZAGPPHC 110 (18 February 2022)
CS Hentiq 1009 Proprietary Limited whose name was changed to Khulani Proprietary Limited and Another v National Empowerment Fund (14490/2018) [2022] ZAGPPHC 110 (18 February 2022)
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sino date 18 February 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO:14490/2018
In
the matter between:
CS
HENTIQ 1009 PROPRIETARY LIMITED
Whose
name was changed to
KHULANI
FORESTS (PTY)
LTD
First Applicant
And
BZ
ZELF PROPRIETARY LIMITED
whose
name was changed to
KHULANI
SAWMILLS PROPRIETARY LIMITED
Second Applicant
and
NATIONAL
EMPOWERMENT
FUND
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MBONGWE
J:
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This is an interlocutory application for leave to amend particulars
of claim in terms
of Rule 28(1) of the Uniform Rules of Court. For
clarity, the parties are referred to herein as in the main action
between them.
The Applicants are the Plaintiffs in the main action
and the Respondent is the Defendant. The defendant has filed a notice
in terms
of Rule 28(2) marking its objection to the amendments sought
by the Plaintiffs on the grounds that the sought amendment not only
amounts to a withdrawal of facts admitted by the Plaintiff and set
out in the original plaintiffs’ particulars of claim. The relevant
facts, also admitted by the Defendant, form the basis of the
Defendant’s counterclaim against the Plaintiffs. In addition to the
withdrawal of admitted fact by the Plaintiff, the proposed amendments
introduce a new cause of action that has legally and effectively
prescribed.
THE
PARTIES
[2]
The First Plaintiff is
CS HENTIQ 1009 (PTY) LTD,
whose name
was changed to
KHULANI FORESTS (PTY) LTD
on 26 July 2013, a
private company duly registered and incorporated as such in terms of
the company laws of the Republic of South
Africa with chosen
domicilium
address at Berghoek Plantation, Mpumalanga, 1109.
[3]
The Second Plaintiff is
BZ ZELF (PTY) LTD,
whose name was
changed to
KHULANI SAWMILLS (PTY) LTD
on 11 December 2013, a
private company duy registered as such in terms of the company laws
of the Republic of South Africa with chosen
domicilium
address
at Portion 5 of the farm Vriesland 650, registration division JT,
Mpumalanga.
[4]
The Defendant is the
NATIONAL EMPOWERMENT FUND,
a statutory
Trust established in terms of the
National Empowerment Fund Act 105
of 1998
with registration number IT 10145/00 in terms of Section 4
(1) of the NEF Act 105 of 1998. The Defendant has the capacity to,
inter
alia, sue or be sued in its own name. The Defendant’s
principal place of business is situated at West Block 187 Rivonia
Road, Morningside,
Johannesburg, Gauteng Province.
FACTUAL
MATRIX
[5]
The First and Second Plaintiffs in are separate legal entities with
individual and distinct business
premises, but integrally connected
and co-dependant as a result of their respective operations of a
forestry and sawmill businesses,
respectively. The First Plaintiff
plants, grows and harvests trees which it supplies/sells to the
Second Plaintiff who processes
the harvested trees and cut them into
different timber size of planks which are then sold to the public.
[6]
The Defendant financed the business of the Plaintiffs for the purpose
of facilitating and securing
a shareholding for the employees of the
applicants in the forestry and saw mill industry, in line with its
statutory mandate in terms
of the National Empowerment Act.
THE
LOAN AMOUNTS, AGREEMENTS AND SECURITIES
FIRST
PLAINTIFF AND DEFENDANT’S AGREEMENT
[7]
The First Plaintiff and the Defendant entered into a written Senior
Loan Facility Agreement
at Sandton on or about the 12 June 2012 in
terms of which the Defendant made available to the First Plaintiff a
loan facility in
the order of R7 450 000,00 (Seven million
four hundred and fifty thousand rand). As a partial security for the
facility,
the parties entered into and registered a General Notarial
Bond in terms of which the First Plaintiff hypothecated all its
movable
property in favour of the Defendant to the tune of R200
000-00 (Two hundred thousand Rand) and a further R40 000-00
(Forty thousand
Rand).
[8]
As additional security for the loan mentioned above, the First
Plaintiff hypothecated
its immovable property to and in favour of the
Defendant. The property concerned is described as ‘the Farm
Berghoek 751, Registration
Division JT, Mpumalanga and the Farm
Uitsig 568, Registration Division JT. The relevant General Covering
Bond was registered on or
about the 16 August 2012 in the amount of
R7 450 000-00 (Seven million four hundred and fifty
Rand) and an additional
amount of R1 490 500-00 (One
million four hundred and ninety thousand five hundred Rand).
SECOND
PLAINTIFF AND THE DEFENDANT AGREEMENT
[9]
On or about the 9 October 2012 and at Sandton, the Second Plaintiff
and the Defendant entered into
a written Senior Loan Facility
Agreement in terms whereof the Defendant made available to the Second
Plaintiff a loan facility in
the amount of
R4 708 878-60
(Four million seven hundred and eight thousand eight hundred and
seventy eight rand and sixty cents).
[10]
On the 21 January 2015 the Second Plaintiff and the Defendant
concluded an addendum approving an additional
amount of
R560 000-00
(Five hundred and sixty thousand rand) and amending the total amount
of the loan to
R6 160 000-00
(Six million one
hundred and sixty thousand rand) -
[11]
As a partial security for the above loans in paragraphs 9 and 10,
above, and on or about the 26 September
and at Mpumalanga, a General
Notarial Covering Bond was registered by the Second Plaintiff in
favour of the Defendant under Bond
Number 7542/2012. In terms of the
said bond, the Second Plaintiff bonded and hypothecated all its
movable property unto and in favour
of the Defendant to the extent of
R891 121-40 plus an additional amount of R137 800-00.
[12]
In terms of the two agreements, the Defendant loaned and advanced a
total amount of
R8 195 000-00
to the First Plaintiff
and
R13 857 676-15
to the First and Second
Defendants, respectively.
APPLICABLE
TERMS AND CONDITIONS OF THE
LOAN
AGREEMENTS
[13]
EVENT OF DEFAULT
13.1 An event
of default shall occur if:-
13.1.1
The Borrower fails to pay any amount due pursuant to
this Agreement
strictly on due date and fails to remedy such failure within the
period set out in 12.1.14;
13.1.2
The Borrower breaches any warranty given by it pursuant
to clause 10
above and, if such warranty is capable of being remedied, falls to
remedy it within 14 (Fourteen) Business Days of being
called upon in
writing by the Lender to do so, or within such period as may be
reasonable in the circumstances;
13.1.4
The Borrower commits a breach of the Suspensive Sale
Agreement;
13.1.8
The Borrower utilises the Facility for purposes other
than
contemplated in this Agreement;
13.2
If an event of default occurs, the
Lender shall be entitled to, in
addition to any other rights it may have: -
13.2.1.
Suspend performance of any obligation owed by the Lender
to the
Borrower in terms of any agreement concluded between the two,
including but not limited to refuse to allow the Borrower to
make any
further Draw Downs against the Facility and;
13.1.2.
On the giving of written notice to the Borrower, demand
that the
Borrower, within 30 (thirty) Business Days after receipt of the
aforesaid notice discharge the whole of its indebtedness
to the
Lender, which amount shall be the aggregate of all amounts which have
become payable in respect pf the Facility, whether in
respect of the
principal, interest or otherwise, which are outstanding, as well as
paying to the Lender as cash security, an amount
determined by the
Lender to secure the Lender against its maximum potentially liability
in respect of any conditional indebtedness,
or indebtedness the
amount of which has still to be determined;
13.2.6.
Sell, surrender or otherwise realise any other assets furnished
as
security and/or
13.2.7.
Cancel this Agreement and institute an action for damages
against the
Borrower;
13.3.
The Lender may exercise any of these rights
and any other rights it
may have together or separately and at any time and in any
order.
DEFAULT
[14]
The Plaintiffs had previously admitted to breaching the terms of the
loan agreements by employing a part(s)
of the loaned amounts in other
business ventures that did not form part of and/or serve the purpose
for which the loans were made
available. During or about August 2017,
the Plaintiffs fell in arrears with the repayments of the loaned
amounts, a fact that they
have acknowledged in paragraph 13 of the
original particulars of claim and which the sought amendment seeks to
expunge.
[15]
The Defendant delivered a notice of demand on the Defendants on or
about the 5 September 2017 demanding payments
of the full outstanding
balances plus interest within 3 days.
PERFECTION
OF THE BONDS
[16]
On the 17 September 2017 and upon failure by the Plaintiffs to meet
the demand, the Defendant took occupation
of the Second Plaintiff’s
premises, that is, the sawmill and employed a security company to
keep the premises under guard with
instructions not to allow the
Plaintiffs access to the premises and the movable assets thereon.
[17]
Notwithstanding the failure to meeting the Defendant’s demand for
the full repayment of the loans and
interest, the plaintiffs’
attorneys wrote to the Defendant on the 18 September 2017 advising it
that the Plaintiffs had an order
for timber and demanded the
restoration of the possession of the premises and access to the use
of the equipment. The Plaintiffs
accused the Defendant of unlawfully
displacing them from the premises of the sawmill and disturbing their
peaceful possession and
use of the equipment thereon and thereby
preventing them from doing business and earnings of hundreds of
millions of rand – the
subject of the claim for damages in the
sought amendment of the plaintiffs’ particulars of claim.
[18]
The Defendant responded by launching an urgent application to court
for hearing on the 4 October 2017
seeking an order in terms of which
it sought to perfect it security. However, the Defendant did not
proceed as the application became
opposed by the Plaintiffs,
preferring instead for the application to be heard in the opposed
motion court. That application has not
been withdrawn and is still
pending. A further delay of that application was occasioned by
interlocutory unsuccessful applications
the Plaintiffs’ had brought
against the Defendant in purported attempts to regain possession of
the premises and the equipment
thereon
.
[19]
On the 20 November 2017 and as a result of the Defendant’s
steadfast refusal to give the Plaintiffs access
to the premises, the
Plaintiffs’ attorneys wrote to the Defendant’s attorneys
cancelling the agreements relating to the First
Plaintiff. The
Plaintiffs alleged that the Second Plaintiff had followed suit, an
allegation the Defendant denied. The Plaintiff
however failed to
provide the relevant proof.
[20]
On the 5 March 2018 the Plaintiffs instituted action proceedings
against the Defendant seeking orders
that;
A. In respect
of the First Plaintiff;
20.1 The agreements
between the First Plaintiff and the Defendant be
cancelled;
20.2 The security in
the form of a Notarial bond be cancelled;
20.3 The
General Covering Mortgage Bond be cancelled;
20.4 Payment
of the amount of R100 000 000,00;
20.5
Interest thereon at the rate of 15% a tempora mora (sic);
20.6 Pending payment
of the capital amounts advanced by the Defendant to
the 1
st
Plaintiff until such time as the damages claims of the 1
st
and Second Plaintiffs have been adjudicated and set-off
against the said capital amounts;
20.7 Costs of suit.
B. In respect of the
Second Plaintiff that;
20.8
the agreements between the Second Plaintiff and the Defendant be
cancelled;
20.9. the security
in the form of a Notarial General Bond be cancelled;
20.10
the Defendant pays the Second Plaintiff the amount of
R350 000 000,00
in damages;
20.11. interest
thereon at the rate of 15% a tempora mora (sic);
20.12
pending payment of the capital amounts advanced by the Defendant to
the Second Plaintiff
until such time as the damages claims of the First and
Second Plaintiffs
have been adjudicated and set-off against the said capital
amounts.
20.13
costs of suit.
[21]
For the relief /orders sought above, the Plaintiffs seek to rely
essentially on four grounds, namely;
21.1
that the Plaintiffs have maintained regular repayments of the loaned
amounts.
21.2
Secondly, the agreements between the Plaintiffs and the Defendant,
particularly the
clauses thereof on which the Defendant relies, were
contrary to public
policy and, therefore, unenforceable.
21.3
In the third instance, the Plaintiffs aver that the actions of the
Defendant were
unlawful and deprived the Plaintiffs of business
opportunities
causing them a loss of income. The Plaintiffs seek a
payment of damages
as a result.
21.4
Lastly, the Plaintiffs seek to premise their claims on
the Defendant’s
taking occupation of the premises of the Second
Plaintiff – an
event that occurred on 17 September 2017
APPLICABLE
LEGAL PRINCIPLES
[22]
The right to amend pleadings is not a given and will not be granted
unless the court is satisfied, firstly,
of the reasons for the
amendment and having regard to the prejudice the amendment may
occasion to the other party. The Plaintiffs’
assertion that they
have a right to seek an amendment at any time and in any manner fails
to recognise the importance of the consideration
of the rights of the
other party. It is inconceivable that a party may seek to
assert its right to by invoking the provisions
of section 34 of the
Constitution to justify a situation, as is the case herein, where the
exercise of that right will invariably
cause prejudice to the other
party.
[23]
The amendment sought by the Plaintiffs seeks to expunge an admission
of default by the Plaintiffs and, noteworthy,
it stands to completely
displace the Defendant from its position after the close of
pleadings. The introduction of new causes of
action will require that
the Defendant pleads anew. The Constitutional Court in
Affordable
Medicines Trust and Others v Minister of Health and Others
[2005] ZACC 3
;
2006
(3) SA 247
(CC) enunciated the applicable principle in the following
terms:
“
[9]…
Amendments
will always be allowed unless the amendment is
mala fide (made
in bad faith) or unless the amendment will cause
an injustice to
the other side which cannot be cured by an
appropriate order
for costs, or ‘unless the parties cannot be put
back for the
purpose of justice in the same position as they were
when the pleading
which it is sought to amend was filed.’’
The
withdrawal of an acknowledged breach of the agreement inherent in
the
sought
amendment points to mala fides on the part of the Plaintiffs.
[24]
In addition to the principle aforementioned, in
Krogman v Van
Reenen
1926 OPD 191
at 195, the Court emphasised that a proposed
amendment must raise a triable issue that is of sufficient importance
to justify the
prejudice and costs to the other parties and the
Court. The introduction of new causes of action and the withdrawal of
an admitted
breach of the agreement by the Plaintiffs fails the
muster in this regard. The Defendant stands to suffer overwhelming
prejudice
were the amendment to be granted.
[25]
A ‘satisfactory explanation’ is required for the intention to
withdraw an admission. [see
Bellairs v Hodnett and Another
1978 (1) SA 1109
(A) at 1150]. The circumstances in the present
matter are aptly encapsulated in the Court’s findings in President
Versekeringsmaatskappy
Bpk v Moodley
1964 (4) SA 109
(T) in the
following terms:
“
The approach
is the same [as for other admissions], but the
withdrawal of an
admission is usually more difficult to achieve
because (i) it
involves a change of front which requires full
explanation to
convince the court of the bona fides thereof, and (ii)
it is more likely
to prejudice the other party,
who had
by the
admission been
led to believe that he need not prove the relevant
fact
and might, for that reason have omitted to gather the necessary
evidence.”
(own emphasis).
[26]
The Plaintiffs’ failure to give a full and satisfactory explanation
for the deficits in the particulars
of claim and absence of an
affidavit by the Plaintiff’s erstwhile attorneys explaining the
erroneous admissions leaves much to
be desired and casts doubt in the
Plaintiffs’ bona fides. It is a well established principle that:
“
when a client alleges a breach of duty by an attorney, the
privilege is waived as to all communications relevant to that
issue’’
. [ see
S v Boesman
1990 (2) SACR 389
(E) 394 G
- H, cited with approval in
S v Tandwa and
Others
2008
(1) SACR 613
(SCA) at para 20 where the Court said the following:
“
[20
]
The canon seems to us to be clearly right. Where an accused
charges a legal
representative with incompetence or neglect
giving rise to a
fair trial violation it seems to us most sensible
to talk of
imputed waiver rather than to cast around to find
an actual waiver.
Even without an express or implied waiver,
fair evaluation
of allegations will always require that a waiver
be imputed to the
extent of obtaining the impugned legal
representative’s
response to them. Rightly therefore, counsel
on appeal
accepted that the advocate’s affidavit was
admissible in
assessing the accused’s claims.
’’
[27]
In the Boesman case the Court admitted evidence from advocates who
were accused by their former clients
of making admissions on their
behalf in error. Zietsmann J held that:
“
Where, as has
happened in this case, the accused have elected
to
give evidence concerning the instructions given by them to
their counsel,
and where they seek to withdraw admissions
made by their
counsel on their behalf on the ground that their
counsel
acted contrary to their instructions in making the
admissions, they
have waived the privilege attaching to the
communications
made by them to their counsel in that regard,
and the
element of fairness referred to in the passage in
Wigmore, quoted
by Rumpff JA in Wagner’s case, requires that the
State should be
allowed to call the counsel concerned to give
evidence
concerning such communications.’’
[28]
It is consequently a fallacy on the part of the Plaintiffs in this
matter to
entertain the thoughts of the
success of this application on the basis of the imputation of
unsubstantiated blame for their admissions
of default on their
erstwhile attorneys. The allegations of having made regular payments
towards the reduction of the loan amounts
fly in face of the
admissions of the Plaintiffs’ to have defaulted in payments of the
loans in August 2017. In addition, the Plaintiff
have not
demonstrated that they are not themselves to blame, be it wholly or
partially, for the alleged erroneous admissions. The
Appellate
Division stated in
Saloojee and Another, NNO v Minister of
Community Development
1965 (2) SA 135
(A) at 141.that:
‘’
There is a
limit beyond which a litigant cannot escape the results of
his attorney’s
lack of diligence or the insufficiency or explanation
tendered. To hold
otherwise might have a disastrous effect upon the
observance of the
Rules of this Court. Considerations and
misericordiam
should not be allowed to become an invitation to
laxity
….if he relies upon the ineptitude or remissness of his own
attorney,
he should at least explain that none of it is to be imputed
to himself. That
has not been done in this case.’’
[29]
In relation to time, it has taken an unreasonably substantial period
for the Plaintiffs to bring this application.
The summons was issued
over three years ago. The judgment dismissing the Plaintiffs’ Rule
33(4) application was handed down some
two years ago, the mandate of
the Plaintiffs’ former attorneys was terminated in 2019 and the
present attorneys appointed. No explanation
whatsoever is given for
the delay, particularly the delay of more than a year after the
appointment of the present Plaintiffs’
attorneys who proposed the
bringing of this application. The Court held in Zarug v Parvathie NO
1962 (3) SA 872
(D) at 876C that:
“
If the
application for amendment is not timeously made,
some reasonably
satisfactory account must be given for the
delay.’’
[30]
Unexplained delays are a necessary consideration in the assessment of
whether the application is brought in
good faith and whether the
delay itself is not a calculated mechanism to prejudice the other
party [see
Trans-Drakensberg Bank Limited (under Judicial
Management) v Combined Engineering (Pty) Ltd and Another
1967 (3)
SA 632
(D) at 640].
CONCLUSION
[31]
The amendment sought by the Plaintiffs entailing the withdrawal of
their entire particulars of claim
to which the Defendant had already
pleaded and which effectively expunges admitted facts cannot be
justified. The introduction of
new causes of action at a stage where
the pleadings had already closed is procedurally flawed. In any
event, in my view, taking into
account the principles in the various
cases as cited above, the Plaintiffs have failed to satisfy this
Court that the amendment is
sought on bona fide grounds. The
application ought, therefore, fail.
COSTS
[32]
The general principle is that costs follow the outcome of the case.
The conduct of the Plaintiffs found
to be wanting in almost every
respect points to this application being a typical abuse of process.
It is on this basis that I find
the Defendant’s prayer for a
punitive costs order justified.
ORDER
[33]
In the light of the findings in this judgment the following order is
made:
1. The application
for the amendment of Plaintiffs particulars of claim is
dismissed.
2. The Plaintiffs
are jointly ordered to pay the costs of this application on an
opposed
attorney and own client scale, the one paying the other to be
absolved.
M.
MBONGWE J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
APPEARANCES
For
the 1
st
& 2
nd
Plaintiffs:
Adv A.D. Wilson
Instructed
by:
Spella
Lengertn Kuebler Braun Inc
C/O
Hack Stupel & Ross
Standard
Bank Chambers
2
nd
Floor
Church
Square
Pretoria.
For
the Defendant:
Adv N. Mayet (Ms)
Instructed
by:
Mathopo Moshimane Mulangaphuma Inc t/a DM5 Inc
C/O
Hutten Odendaal Inc
310
Sadie Street
Lynwood
Park
Pretoria.
Date
of hearing: 07 September 2021
JUDGMENT
ELECTRONICALLY TRANSMITTED TO THE PARTIES/ LEGAL REPRESENTANTIVE ON
THE 18 FEBRUARY 2022.
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