Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 296South Africa
International Pentecost Holiness Church In re: MBS v BMS and Another (63920/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 296 (5 May 2022)
Headnotes
in the name of the first defendant, in fact belong to the applicant and thus do not fall within the joint estate. The applicant accordingly seeks leave to intervene as the third defendant in the divorce action in which the applicant will seek a declaratory in a counterclaim that these assets (which the plaintiff claims form part of the joint estate) are the property of neither the plaintiff nor the first defendant (the joint estate), but in fact is the property of the applicant. [6] The applicant claims that the assets in respect of which it (the church) has a direct and substantial interest are the following:
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## International Pentecost Holiness Church In re: MBS v BMS and Another (63920/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 296 (5 May 2022)
International Pentecost Holiness Church In re: MBS v BMS and Another (63920/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 296 (5 May 2022)
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sino date 5 May 2022
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IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Case Number:
63920/2020
REPORTABLE: NO
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO
REVISED
05.05.2022
In the application of:
INTERNATIONAL
PENTECOST HOLINESS CHURCH
Applicant
In the matter between:
M[...]1
B[...]1
S[...]
Plaintiff
And
B[....]2
M[....]2 G[....]
S[...]
First Defendant
B[....]2
M[....]2 G[....] S[...]
N.O.
Second Defendant
JUDGMENT
AC
BASSON, J
Nature
of the application
[1]
The International Pentecost Holiness Church (“
the applicant”
or “
the church”
) brings an application claiming
that it has a direct and substantial interest in the subject matter
of the divorce proceedings
pending between the plaintiff and the
first and second defendants. The plaintiff in the divorce action is
Ms M[...]1 B[...]1 S[...]
(born M[....]3). The first defendant is her
husband, Mr B[....]2 M[....]2 G[....] S[...]. The second defendant is
Mr B[....]2 M[....]2
G[....] S[...] N.O. in his capacity as trustee
of the Sompisi Family Trust.
[2]
The applicant seeks leave, once having been
joined, to file a plea and counterclaim within twenty days of the
order of this court.
The plaintiff opposes this application. Although
the applicant initially submitted that the plaintiff’s
opposition to this
intervention application is vexatious and
deserving of a punitive costs order, it has indicated during argument
that the applicant
no longer sought a punitive costs order.
Background facts
[3]
The plaintiff and the first defendant were
married in community of property on 21 August 2017.
[4]
The plaintiff alleges that certain
properties, which are registered in the name of the plaintiff and the
first defendant, form part
of the estate. She seeks in the divorce
action a division of the joint estate which includes certain
properties (described in paragraph
[6] hereunder).
[5]
The applicant in this application claims
that these properties as well as a Capitec Savings Account
(containing a substantial amount
of money) held in the name of the
first defendant, in fact belong to the applicant and thus do not fall
within the joint estate.
The applicant accordingly seeks leave to
intervene as the third defendant in the divorce action in which the
applicant will seek
a declaratory in a counterclaim that these assets
(which the plaintiff claims form part of the joint estate) are the
property of
neither the plaintiff nor the first defendant (the joint
estate), but in fact is the property of the applicant.
[6]
The applicant claims that the assets in
respect of which it (the church) has a direct and substantial
interest are the following:
7.1
Three portions of farm Klippoortje [....] (“
the
properties”
). The properties are registered in the joint
names of the plaintiff and the first defendant.
7.2 The
savings account at Capitec Bank in the name of the first defendant.
[7]
Both the first and second defendants have
each filed a plea to the particulars of claim in the divorce action.
The first defendant
has also filed a counterclaim in the divorce
action in which he sets out the basis upon which he alleges that he
and the plaintiff
are not the true owners of the properties but that
the church is in fact the true owner. In his counterclaim the first
respondent
states that in 2019, the church (represented by various
individuals) as well as the first defendant concluded an agreement in
terms
of which the church would buy the properties. The church would
register the properties in the name of the plaintiff and the first
defendant as its nominee. The church would pay the purchase price and
would pay all costs associated with the acquisition and development
thereof. The immovable property would be transferred to the church or
its nominee upon demand,
[8]
The plaintiff, in her plea, denies each and
every averment made by the first defendant in his counterclaim. More
in particular,
she denies that the properties and the Capitec Bank
account do not form part of the joint estate.
[9]
In these circumstances, the applicant seeks
to be joined and to intervene as the third defendant in order to
defend the plaintiff’s
case that the properties and the Capitec
Bank account belong to and fall within the joint estate and to
establish that these assets
in fact belong to the applicant.
The law
[10]
Rule 12 of the Uniform Rules of Court
provides as follows:
“
Any
person entitled to join as a plaintiff or liable to be joined as a
defendant in any action may, on notice to all parties, at
any stage
of the proceedings apply for leave to intervene as a plaintiff or a
defendant. The court may upon such application make
such order,
including any order as to costs, and give such directions as to the
further procedure in the action as to it may seem
meet.”
[11]
Herbsten
and Van Winsen
[1]
explains
that:
“
On
the wording of the rule, the applicant for leave to intervene must be
a person 'entitled to join as a plaintiff or liable to
be joined as a
defendant'. In other words the test to be applied in order to decide
whether a person can seek to intervene is to
ask whether that person
could have been joined as a party. As has been explained above,
joinder is competent either on the basis
of convenience or on the
basis that the party whose joinder is in question has a direct and
substantial interest in the subject-matter
of the proceedings. A
person is accordingly entitled to intervene in three sets of
circumstances:
(a)
Where the
requirements of uniform rules 10(1) and 10(3) are satisfied, in that
the determination of the intervening party's matter
or dispute
depends upon substantially the same question of law or fact as arises
in the proceedings in which leave is sought to
intervene.
(b)
Where wider
considerations of convenience favour intervention.
(c)
Where the
intervening party has a direct and substantial interest (legal
interest) in the proceedings.”
And
further that:
[2]
“
It
is not sufficient for a third party seeking to intervene to merely
allege an interest in the action, but such party must give prima
facie proof of the interest and right to intervene. It is
not necessary to satisfy the court of success in the litigation
in
which leave is sought to intervene. It will be sufficient to make
such allegations as would show a prima facie case
(allegations which, if they can be proved in the main action, would
entitle success) and that the application is made seriously
and is
not frivolous. Provided that such prima facie proof is
given, however, the intervening party need not show a ius
in
rem in the subject-matter of the suit.”
[12]
The
Constitutional Court In
SA
Riding for The Disabled Association v Regional Land Claims
Commissioner and others
[3]
confirmed
the law as follows:
"[10] If the
applicant shows that it has some right which is affected by the order
issued, permission to intervene must be
granted. For it is a basic
principle of our law that no order should be granted against a party
without affording such party a
predecision hearing. This is so
fundamental that an order is generally taken to be binding only on
parties to the litigation.
[11] Once the
applicant for intervention shows a direct and substantial interest in
the subject-matter of the case, the court ought
to grant leave to
intervene. In Greyvenouw CC this principle was formulated in these
terms:
'In addition, when, as
in this matter, the applicants base their claim to intervene on a
direct and substantial interest in the
subject-matter of the dispute,
the Court has no discretion: it must allow them to intervene because
it should not proceed in the
absence of parties having such legally
recognised interests.' "
[13]
The applicant argues that it has a direct
and substantial interest in the matter (a legal interest) that may be
prejudicially affected
by the judgment of the trail court presiding
over the divorce action.
[14]
The
applicant does not have to satisfy the court at the stage of
intervention that it
will
succeed.
It is sufficient if such applicant make allegations which, if provem,
would entitle it to relief.
[4]
The applicant’s
case
[15]
The applicant submitted that, although the
properties are registered in the names of the first and second
defendants, they belong
to the church which is entitled to have the
properties transferred, on demand, to the church or to its nominee.
[16]
The applicant relies on the following
facts:
16.1 On 9 February
2016 Mr Glayton Modise, who was the comforter of the church, passed
away. Following his passing, the church
became embroiled in a
leadership dispute which has not yet been resolved.
16.2 As a result of
the leadership dispute, the applicant resolved to operate from its
facility in the North West Province.
That facility was however too
small to accommodate the growing number of congregants and it was
resolved that the disputed properties
be purchased for an amount of
R6 million.
16.3 It was agreed
that the properties would be purchased in the name of the first
defendant and the plaintiff as nominee
of the church. The church
would pay the purchase price for the properties as well as all
transfer costs incidental thereto. The
properties would then be
developed by and for the church which would pay all the costs of
development.
16.4 It was agreed
that the properties would be transferred to the church on demand.
Resolutions to this effect were passed.
16.5 The church
subsequently paid the purchase price for the properties together with
the transfer costs. The church also
paid for the development of the
church on the properties. On 5 June 2021 the church sent a letter to
the transferring attorneys
advising that, in respect of portions 74
and 75, Mr and Mrs S[...] would be acquiring the properties on behalf
of the church. In
a further letter to the other transferring
attorneys, the church similarly advised the attorneys that in respect
of portion 73,
Mr and Mrs S[...] would be acquiring the properties on
behalf of the church.
16.6 In respect of
the Capitec Bank account, the applicant states that it is held by the
first defendant as nominee of the
church. All deposits (in the amount
of R260 320.55) made into the account are not for the benefit of
the first defendant but
for the benefit of the church. The source of
the money is from deposits made by tenants of the church. These
monies therefore belong
to the church and do not form part of the
joint estate.
The
plaintiff’s opposition
[17]
The plaintiff opposes this on various
grounds. Some of these grounds relate to allege procedural defects.
Firstly, that the Notice
of Motion does not give a date for the
hearing in the event that there is no opposition. There is no merit
in this point as the
application is opposed. Secondly, the plaintiff
alleges that the founding affidavit was signed after the date of the
Notice of
Motion. There is also no merit in this contention. Thirdly,
the plaintiff contends that it is “
beyond
comprehension”
that the
application was only launched in November 2021 whereas the resolution
was passed in March 2021. There is no merit in this
ground
particularly in light of the fact that the applicant is entitled to
wait until the pleadings in the divorce action were
exchanged before
it took the decision to intervene and be joined as a party to the
divorce proceedings.
[18]
The plaintiff disputes that the applicant
has
locus standi
to bring this application. I am not persuaded that the church does
not have
locus standi
in this application, at least on a
prima
facie
basis. Determining the
locus
standi
of the applicant cannot be done
in isolation. Regard must be had to the facts placed before the court
by the applicant to substantiate
as to why it is entitled to be
joined to the pending divorce proceedings. On the facts, I am
persuaded that the applicant has established
sufficient facts to
demonstrate that it has a direct and substantial interest to
intervene in the divorce action in respect of
the plaintiff’s
claim that the properties and the bank account should form part of
the joint estate,
[19]
The
plaintiff tries to establish on motion that the applicant is not the
owner of the disputed properties. Most notably the plaintiff
disputes
that the properties were purchased in the name of the plaintiff and
the first defendant as nominees of the applicant.
The applicant, as
already pointed out, contends that the properties were purchased for
the church by agreement between the applicant
and the first
defendant. And as already pointed out, the applicant had paid the
purchase price of the properties and has paid for
the development of
the church on the properties. The plaintiff, however, submitted that
it is irrelevant who paid for the properties.
This is not correct.
Although not the only factor to be considered, it may be
a
factor to be considered by the divorce court ultimately called upon
to decide what falls within the joint estate.
[5]
[20]
The plaintiff also raised various other
grounds on which she disputes the applicant’s entitlement to
the properties. It is
not necessary to refer to those arguments in
detail for purposes of this application. Suffice to point out that,
should this court
grant this application, those issues will be dealt
with in the divorce trial with the usual oral evidence and
cross-examination.
As such, I am persuaded that the applicant has
succeeded in establishing the requisite direct and substantial
interest in the outcome
of the divorce proceedings.
[21]
It is therefore not, for purposes of this
application, necessary to consider the merits of the applicant’s
case and the plaintiff’s
opposition thereto. The issues raised
in the applicant’s founding affidavit claiming to be the owner
of the disputed properties
and the Capitec Bank account and the
plaintiff’s opposition to these claims go to the heart of the
issues which have to be
decided in the divorce proceedings. This
dispute cannot be decided on motion.
Conclusion
[22]
Despite
severe opposition to the applicant’s application to be joined
as a third defendant to the pending divorce action between
the
plaintiff and the first and second defendants, I am persuaded that
the applicant has shown a direct and substantial interest
in the
subject matter of the proceedings and more importantly, that it is in
the interest of justice to grant the application.
In coming to this
conclusion, I had regard to what the Constitutional Court in
International
Trade Administration Commission v Scaw South Africa (Pty) Ltd
[6]
stated
in respect of applications to intervene:
“
[11]
Somewhat belatedly Bridon UK asks to be joined as a party to these
proceedings. The application is not opposed by any of the
other
parties. The attitude of the other parties is an important, but not
the only, consideration. The court remains obliged
to satisfy
itself whether Bridon UK is entitled to intervene in the proceedings.
Intervention of a party in proceedings is regulated
by rule 8(1) of
the rules of this court which must be read together with rule 12 of
the Uniform Rules of the High Court. The latter
rule requires that a
party seeking to intervene must have a 'direct and substantial
interest in the subject matter' of the litigation.
However, in this
court, the overriding consideration is whether it is in the interests
of justice for a party to intervene in litigation.
[7]
[12]
In considering where the interests of justice lie, the
question whether the party seeking to be joined has a direct and
substantial interest in the subject-matter of the proceedings will
rank highly along other relevant considerations. These would
include
the stage at which the application for joinder is made; whether the
party has furnished adequate explanation for the delay,
if any, in
seeking to be joined; and the nature of the relief or opposition the
intervening party puts up. Whether the intervention
would
materially prejudice the case of any of the other parties to the
litigation is also a relevant factor.”
[23]
The
applicant has, in my view, at the very least laid a factual
foundation from which it can be concluded that the applicant has
made
out a
prima
facie
case. It should be noted that it is not necessary for the applicant
to satisfy the court that it will succeed in this case. It
is
sufficient for the applicant to rely on the allegations made which,
if established in the action, would entitle the applicant
to succeed.
In assessing the applicant’s standing, the court must assume
that the allegations made by the applicant are true
and correct.
Further, the possibility that the applicant’s legal interest
exists is sufficient. It is not necessary for the
court to determine
positively that it does indeed exist. See in this regard
Peermont
Global (KZN) (Pty) Ltd v Afrisun KZN (Pty) Ltd
[8]
:
"[18] The rule is
equally applicable to applications. It has not overridden or replaced
our common law, which remains applicable
to interventions. Our courts
have held that a party is entitled to intervene as an applicant in an
application where:
[18.1]
it has a direct and substantial interest in the right that is the
subject matter of the application, which could be prejudiced
by the
judgment of the court. The interest must be such that the
intervenor's joinder is either necessary or convenient. But the
possibility that a legal interest exists is sufficient, and it is not
necessary for the court positively to determine that it exists;
[18.2]
the allegations made by the intervening applicant constitute a prima
face case or defence. It is, however, not necessary
for the
intervenor to satisfy the court that it will succeed in its case or
defence. It is sufficient for the party seeking to
intervene to rely
on allegations which if they can be proved in the main application,
would entitle it to succeed. In assessing
the intervenor's standing,
then, the court must assume that the allegations it advances are true
and correct; and
[18.3]
the application is made seriously and is not frivolous."
[24]
I
am also satisfied that the application has been made seriously and is
not frivolous. See also
Ex
Parte Moosa: in re Hassim v Harrop-Allin
[9]
where the court emphasized that at the stage of the application for
leave to intervene, the court need not be over concerned with
the
intrinsic merits of the dispute which can be fully canvassed in the
main proceedings. It is also convenient to allow the applicant
to
intervene so as to avoid a duplication of proceedings concerning the
same subject matter.
Costs
[25]
I am in agreement with the submission
that the plaintiff should be ordered to pay the costs of opposing the
application. The plaintiff
clearly misconceived the requirements and
principles relating to an application to intervene and sought to
preclude the applicant
being granted leave to intervene by having the
merits dealt with in the intervention application. The properties
forming the subject
matter of the dispute are valued at millions of
Rands, particularly taking into account the cost towards the
development of the
church. It is a matter of utmost importance to the
applicant and therefore necessitated the employment of both senior
and junior
counsel.
Order
[26]
The following order is granted:
1.
The applicant is granted leave to intervene
and be joined in the action instituted by the plaintiff against the
first and second
defendants under case no. 63920/2020.
2.
The applicant is joined as the third
defendant.
3.
The applicant is granted leave to file a
plea and counterclaim within twenty (20) days of the order of this
court.
4.
The plaintiff is ordered to pay the costs
of this application, such costs to include the cost of two counsel.
A.C.
BASSON
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION OF THE HIGH COURT, PRETORIA
Delivered:
This judgment 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 5 May 2022.
Date
of hearing
3
May 2022
Appearances
For
the applicant
Adv
M Osborne SC
Adv
P Khoza
Instructed
by S Twala Attorneys Inc.
For
the plaintiff
Adv
KJ Selala
Instructed
by KJ Selala Attorneys
[1]
5th
Ed, 2009 chapter 6 p226.
[2]
Ibid
at p 227-228.
[3]
2017
(5) SA 1 (CC).
[4]
SA
Riding
(
supra
),
para 9.
[5]
See
in this regard:
WT and
others v KT
2015
(3) SA 574
(SCA):
“
[34]
In these circumstances there was no factual or legal basis for the
further finding by the court a quo that the trust was
simply a
continuation of the previous situation between the parties. WT and
KT never owned the property in equal shares prior
to the marriage,
nor was it established on the probabilities that they ever concluded
any agreement relating to the purchase
of the property. Moreover,
notwithstanding suggestions to the contrary, it was common cause
that WT had procured the establishment
of the trust, as well as the
purchase of the property, prior to his marriage to KT, without the
participation of KT and without any
significant financial
contribution from KT.”
[6]
2012
(4) SA 618 (CC).
[7]
My
emphasis.
[8]
[2020]
4 ALL SA 226
(KZP) at para 18
[9]
1974(4)
SA 412 (T) at 416F
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