Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 121South Africa
Koch & Kruger Brokers CC and Another v Financial Sector Conduct Authority and Others (48799/19) [2022] ZAGPPHC 121 (22 February 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
3 November 2021
Headnotes
as follows:
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Koch & Kruger Brokers CC and Another v Financial Sector Conduct Authority and Others (48799/19) [2022] ZAGPPHC 121 (22 February 2022)
Koch & Kruger Brokers CC and Another v Financial Sector Conduct Authority and Others (48799/19) [2022] ZAGPPHC 121 (22 February 2022)
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sino date 22 February 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NUMBER: 48799/19
DATE:
22 February 2022
KOCH
& KRUGER BROKERS CC
First
Applicant
DEON
KRUGER
Second
Applicant
V
THE
FINANCIAL SECTOR CONDUCT
AUTHORITY
First
Respondent
THE
OMBUDS FOR FINANCIAL SERVICE PROVIDERS
Second Respondent
HER
LADYSHIP MRS JUSTICEOF APPEAL
Third Respondent
YVONNE
MOKGORO N.O.
THE
FINANCIAL SERVICES
TRIBUNAL
Fourth Respondent
GEORGE
BABEN
Fifth Respondent
LUCILLE
MIRIAM
BABEN
Sixth Respondent
JUDGMENT
MABUSE
J
[1]
T
his matter came before me as
an application for leave to appeal the order that I made in the
written judgment that was handed down
on 3 November 2021. The
relevant order reads as follows:
“
(1)
The loss of investments suffered by the 5th and 6th respondents is
attributed to the breach of contract caused by the applicants.
(2) The
applicants are hereby ordered to pay the costs of this application.”
[2]
To recap paragraph 3 of the judgment of 3 November 2021 one reads
follows:
“
At
the commencement of the application both counsel advocate Geyer (Mr
Geyer) for the applicants and advocate Botes asked the court
to
determine first a point in limine which, in their unanimous view,
would truncate the proceedings. That point in limine involved
causation. The court was asked to determine whether the loss suffered
by the 5th and 6th respondents, under the circumstances set
out in
the overview, was caused by the breach of agreement occasioned by the
Applicants, as it was contended by the 5th and 6th Respondents,
or by
the intervention of South African Reserve Bank, as it was contended
by the applicants”.
It is for this
reason that the court made the order at the end of the judgment. The
same paragraph 3 sets out the Applicants’ view.
[3]
The parties are as fully described in the main judgment.
[4]
I have set out in paragraph [5] of the main judgment that the parties
that participate in this
point
in limine
are the Applicants
and the second despondent on the question of costs and the Babens.
[6]
In the application for leave to appeal the Applicants have fully set
out the grounds on which they
contemplate challenging the order of
the main judgment. For purposes of brevity, I do not plan to repeat
those grounds of appeal
in this judgment since the application for
leave to appeal constitutes part of the appeal papers. I also did not
plan to deal with
those grounds singly.
[7]
The application for leave to appeal was opposed by the Babens and
Advocate F Botes SC appeared
for them. As at the original hearing of
the application, Adv Geyer SC appeared for the Applicants. There was
no appearance for the
Second Respondent at the stage of the
application for leave to appeal.
[8]
Here I wish to state what I have already stated
before in many other applications of the same nature. The first
question that falls to be considered is that of the criterion or test
to be adopted in an application such as the present.
For the
purposes of this application, the test is as set out in s 17(1)(a)(i)
and (ii) of the Superior Court Act 10 of 2013 (“the
Superior Court
Act”). This section prescribes that:
“
17(1)
Leave to appeal may only be given where the judge or judges concerned
are of
the opinion that –
(a)
(i) the appeal would
have reasonable prospects of success;
or
(ii)
there is some other compelling reason why the appeal should be heard,
including conflicting
judgments on the matter under consideration.”
[9]
The enquiry as to whether leave should be granted is twofold. A Court
that adjudicates an application
for leave to appeal under section
17(1)(a)(i) and (ii) will investigate firstly, whether there are any
reasonable prospects that
another Court seized with the same set of
facts will reach a different conclusion. Should the answer be
in the positive, the
Court should grant the application for leave to
appeal, but should the answer be in the negative, the next step in
the enquiry is
to determine whether there are any compelling reasons
why the appeal should also be heard.
[10]
Section 17(1) sets out a fixed threshold to grant leave to appeal.
Accordingly, the Applicant must meet these
stringent thresholds set
out in s 17 of the Superior Court’s Act to be successful with this
application for leave to appeal.
This threshold is, under the
Superior Courts Act, even more stringent than it was under the old
Supreme Court Act 59 of 1959.
A demonstration of the stringent
threshold can be seen in
S v Notshokove & Another
[2016] ZA
SCA 112
par 2 [7 September 2016]
, where Shongwe JA, as he then
was, writing for the Courts, stated as follows:
“
An
applicant, on the other hand, faces a higher and stringent threshold
in terms of the Act, compared to the provisions of the repealed
Supreme Court Act 59 of 1959.”
Section
17(1) uses the words “
may
only be given”
and
thereafter sets out the circumstances under which a Judge or Judges
seized with an application for leave to appeal may grant
the
application. In
South
African Breweries (Pty) Ltd v the Commissioner of the South African
Revenue Services (SARS) 2017 (2) GPPHC 340 (28 March 2017),
par 5
,
Hughes J, had the following to say about the applicable test:
“
The
test which was applied previously in applications of this nature was
whether there were reasonable prospects that another Court
may come
to a different conclusion. See Commissioner of Inland Revenue V
Tuck
1989 (4) SA 888
(T) at 899. What emerges from section
17(1) is that the threshold to grant a party leave to appeal has been
raised. It
is now only granted in the circumstances set out and
decided from the word “only” in the said section.”
See
The Mont Chevaux Trust
v Tina Goosen & 18 Others 2014 JDR 2335 (LCC) at par [6]
.
Bertelsmann J held as follows:
“
It
is clear that the threshold for granting leave to appeal against a
judgment of a High Court has been raised in the new act.
The
former test whether leave to appeal should be granted was a
reasonable prospect that another Court might come to a different
conclusion. See Van Heerden v Cronwright & Others
1985 (2)
SA 342
(T) at 342H. The use of the word “would” in the new
statutes indicates a measure of certainty that another Court will
differ
from the Court whose judgment is sought to be appealed
against.”
[11]
Apropos the rigidity of the threshold, Plasket AJA, as he then was,
wrote in the judgment in which Cloete JA and
Maya JA, as she then
was, concurred in
S v Smith
2012 (1) SACR 567
, 570 par 7
:
“
What
the test of reasonable prospects of success postulates is a
dispassionate decision, based on facts and the law that the Court
of
Appeal could reasonably arrive at the conclusion different to that of
the Trial Court. In order to succeed, therefore, the
appellant
must convince this Court on proper grounds that he has prospects of
success on appeal and that those prospects are not
remote but have a
realistic chance of succeeding. More is required to be
established than that there is a mere possibility
of success; that
the case is arguable on appeal or that the case cannot be categorised
as hopeless. There must, in other words,
be a sound, rational
basis for the conclusion that there are prospects of success on
appeal.”
[12]
Have the Applicants satisfied
the test set out in
section 17(1)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of
2013
? To answer this question, one must consider what the
parties’ views are as set out in paragraph 3 of the main judgment,
or
to put it otherwise, one must consider the case of the 5th and 6th
Respondents, called the Babens. The Babens’ cause of action
is
based on a contract. In paragraph [22] of the main judgment I stated
as follows:
“
The
Babens’ version is set out in the answering declaration of facts of
Lucille Miriam Babens (Ms Babens), the 6th Respondent, supported
by
the supporting declaration of facts of the 5th Respondent. The Babens
oppose the Applicants’ application. They contend that
the factual
allegations made by the Applicants in relation to their dealings with
DK are neither true nor
are the legal
conclusions based on such allegations. According to Ms Baben,
relationship between the Babens and Deon Kruger was based
on a
contract. It was an express, alternatively tacit, and further
alternatively implied term of the contract that DK would act with
the
necessary skill, care, and diligence in providing the Babens with
financial service. According to the Babens it was an express,
alternatively tacit term of the agreement that they wanted to invest
in the low to no risk investment
.
“The words speak for themselves.
[13]
The Applicants have raised in total thirty-four grounds on which they
contemplate challenging the main judgment
of the court. I have
carefully considered those grounds. One important notable point in
those grounds of appeal is that nowhere do
the Applicants challenge
the Babens’ version that their case was based on a contract. This
point was also raised by Mr Botes. Mr
Geyer did not deal with it
reply.
[14]
In my view, in the absence of any challenge to the basis of the
Babens’ cause of action, there is no way
in which another court
seized with the same set of facts we arrived at a conclusion
favourable to the Applicants. The Applicants
have no prospects of ,
in my view, if leave to appeal is granted. That aside, there is no
compelling reason the appeal should be
heard. I have not been
persuaded by the Applicants that they have any prospect of success,
if leave to appeal is granted nor I have
they me that there are any
compelling reasons why the appeal should be heard.
In
the premises the application for leave to appeal is hereby refused,
with costs.
P
M MABUSE
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
Appearances
Counsel for
Applicants:
Adv HF Geyer
Instructed
by:
Bieldersmans Inc.
c/o Couzyn Hertzog &
Horak
Counsel for the
Fifth & Sixth Respondents:
Adv FW Botes SC
Instructed
by:
Cronje, De Waal, Skhosana Inc.
c/o HW Theron Inc.
Date
heard:
9 February 2022
Date of
Judgment:
22 February 2022
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