Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 362South Africa
Tayob v Lifestyle Furnishers CC and Others (17584/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 362 (27 May 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
27 May 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Tayob v Lifestyle Furnishers CC and Others (17584/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 362 (27 May 2022)
Tayob v Lifestyle Furnishers CC and Others (17584/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 362 (27 May 2022)
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sino date 27 May 2022
HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
CASE
NO: 17584/2021
REPORTABLE:
NO.
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
DATE
:
27 MAY 2
In
the matter between:
MAHOMED
MAHIER
TAYOB
Applicant
and
LIFESTYLE
FURNISHERS CC (in liquidation)
First
Respondent
SHIRISHKUMAR
JIVAN KALIANJEE N. O.
Second
Respondent
TRACY
HILL N.
O.
Third
Respondent
NURJEHAN
ABDOOL GAFAAR ORMAR N. O.
Fourth
Respondent
CHETAN
KUMAR VENILAL TANNA N. O.
Fifth
Respondent
THE
MASTER OF THE HIFH COURT, PRETORIA
Sixth
Respondent
THE
MASTER OF THE HIGH COURT,
JOHANNESBURG
Seventh
Respondent
COMPANIES
AND INTELLECTUAL
PROPERTY
COMMISSION
Eighth
Respondent
THE
LEGAL PRACTICE
COUNCIL
Ninth
Respondent
THE
SPECIAL INVESTIGATING
UNIT
Tenth
Respondent
Reasons
for Judgment
This
matter has been heard in open court and was otherwise disposed of in
terms of the Directives of the Judge President of this
Division. The
judgment and order are accordingly published and distributed
electronically.
DAVIS,
J
[1]
Introduction
At the hearing
of this matter on 24 November 2021, this court refused an application
for postponement by the applicant and dismissed
his application
together with costs on a punitive scale. These are the reasons
for that order.
[2]
Relief claimed by the applicant
The applicant claimed the following
relief in his Notice of Motion:
“
1.
Declaring that the applicant fully complied with the court orders
under case number 13174/2020 in the
above Honourable Court as well as
case number 38079/2018.
2.
An order suspending the proceedings under case number 14835/2020 by
virtue of the applicant’s
compliance with the parallel
proceedings under case number 13174/2020 as well as case number
38079/2018….
3.
That the Second, Third, Fourth and Fifth Respondents be ordered to
pay the costs of this
application on a punitive scale
”
.
[3]
Chronology
To make sense of the relied claimed by
the applicant, it is necessary to refer the chronological procedural
history of the preceding
litigation. In a nutshell, it is this:
3.1
The close corporation which forms the
subject matter of the litigation is Lifestyle Furnishers CC
(Lifestyle). It is currently
in liquidation and the second,
third, fourth and fifth respondents are the joint liquidators thereof
(the liquidators).
3.2
Prior to its liquidation, Lifestyle had
commenced business rescue proceedings on 23 October 2017. Its
sole member Mr Aboobaker
had nominated the applicant as business
rescue practitioner (BRP).
3.3
This court, per Sardiwalla J, placed
Lifestyle in provisional liquidation on 20 March 2018 at the instance
of a creditor thereof.
The applicant initially opposed this
application but later abided the decision.
3.4
On 1 June 2018 a certain Mr Hoosen (Hoosen)
launched a second business rescue application (under case number
38079/2018), (the Hoosen
application) effectively suspending the
winding-up proceedings.
3.5
On 27 June 2018, a certain Mr Stokes
(Stokes) was appointed as interim manager of Lifestyle pending the
finalisation of the Hoosen
application, by way of an order of
Kollapen J.
3.6
Stokes applied in the Hoosen
application for an order to compel various individuals, including
Aboobaker, Hoosen and the applicant
to co-operate with him in order
to enable him to prepare his report to this court. He also
cited the liquidators as respondents
to his application.
3.7
On 18 September 2018 Mphahlele J ordered
Hoosen and Aboobaker to assist Stokes in the preparation of his
report. An agreement
was included in the order of Mphahlele J
that the applicant would consult with Stokes in respect of the
financial affairs of Lifestyle.
3.8
On 25 October 2018 Millar AJ set aside
Hoosen’s application for business rescue. Pursuant to
this, Lifestyle was finally
wound-up on 7 November 2018, which also
ended Stokes’ tenure as interim manager.
3.9
On 29 July 2019 the Master appointed the
liquidators as final liquidators of Lifestyle.
3.10
Since their appointment, the liquidators
have pursued the following litigation against the applicant (and some
others):
-
An action under case number 14835/2020 in
terms of
Section 64
of the
Close Corporations Act No 69 of 1984
in
order to hold the defendants thereto personally liable for the debts
of Lifestyle for having run the business thereof fraudulently
or
recklessly. The amount involved exceeds R 82 million.
-
An application under case number 13174/2020
wherein the liquidators obtained an order against the applicant,
directing him as erstwhile
BRP of Lifestyle to account for his
administration thereof.
-
A review application regarding a certain
decision taken by a Magistrate who had presided over an insolvency
requiry. The applicant
features as a respondent in the review
application.
3.11
The review application and the action under
case number 14835/2020 were at the time of the hearing of this
application still pending.
3.12
The application in which the applicant had
been ordered to account for the period that Lifestyle was temporary
under his control
as BRP (Case no13174/2020, had its own history:
-
It was served on the applicant on 6 March
2020.
-
On 24 March 2020 the applicant delivered
his notice to oppose.
-
By 4 May 2020 the liquidators set the
matter down on the unopposed motion court roll of 14 May 2020 due to
the applicant’s
failure to file his answering affidavit.
-
On 12 May 2020, that is two days prior to
the hearing of the matter, the applicant belatedly delivered his
answering affidavit,
thereby causing the matter to become an opposed
application.
-
On 26 May 2020 the liquidators delivered
their replying affidavit.
-
On 3 July 2020 the liquidators delivered
their Heads of Argument. The applicant failed to deliver any,
despite having requested
an extension to do so to 24 July 2020.
-
On 31 July 2020 the liquidators launched an
interlocutory application to compel the applicant to deliver his
Heads of Argument.
-
On 3 August 2020 the applicant by email
withdrew his opposition to the application. This resulted in a
costs order against
the applicant on the date on which the
interlocutory application had been enrolled, being 14 August 2022.
-
On 7 September 2020, Raulinga J ordered the
applicant to fully account to the liquidators, the applicant’s
“report”
thus far submitted not having carried the day.
This much is clear from the transcription of what happened before
Raulinga
J, who expressed this court’s annoyance at the manner
in which the applicant had conducted his opposition.
3.13
It is not clear how far the applicant had
complied with the order of Mphahlele J of 18 September 2018 as Stokes
has not been joined
by the applicant in the current matter.
This issue has, incidentally been raised as one of fatal non-joinder
by the liquidators.
3.14
It is against this background that the
applicant’s current application must be adjudicated.
[4]
The applicant’s contentions
4.1
The applicant contends that the litigation
against him is a vendetta, an abuse of process and amounts to
vexations litigation.
4.2
The applicant, however, is a forensic
auditor and, as a business rescue practitioner, he is an officer of
this court. As such,
he should be aware of the duties of
liquidators and their need for full accounting of the corporation
they are to wind up.
All the litigation undertaken by the
liquidators, having regard to the relief claimed, are aimed at
discharging their duties.
This can hardly be labelled
vexatious.
4.3
It must also be beyond contention that an
officer of the court, having been in control of the entity and the
estate that the liquidators
are winding-up, has a duty to co-operate
and account for what had happened under his watch.
4.4
The contentions raised by the applicant in
his founding affidavit are, to say the least, “unique”.
He, for
example, claims that “
the
declaratory relief sought from this Honourable Court is not dependent
on any other consequential relief
”
and “
should this Honourable Court
properly consider the facts and the background, it would not only
conclude that there would be a tangible
advantage should this
Honourable Court grant the declaratory relief sought, but also that
it and the specific proceedings would
not further burden this
Honourable Court
”.
4.5
It appears that the applicant, rather than
confront the specific applications and actions against him, seeks to
have them ended
by way of declaratory orders in this, a separate
proceeding. In order to consider whether this is at all
permissible, I shall
briefly refer to the applicable law hereunder,
on which the applicant also relies.
[5]
The nature of declaratory relief
5.1
Section 21(1)(c)
of the
Superior Courts
Act, 10 of 2013
, provides that a High Court may grant a declaratory
order:
“
In its
discretion, and at the insistence of any interested person, to
enquire into and determine any existing, future or contingent
right
or obligation, notwithstanding that such person cannot claim any
relief consequential upon the determination
”.
5.2
The correct approach to
Section 21(1)
(c)
of the
Superior Courts Act, 10 of 2013
appears from the following
summation by Corbett CJ in
Shoba v OC,
Temporary Police Camp, Wagendrift Dam and Another, South African
Police Murder and Robbery Unit, Pietermaritzburg and
Others
1995 (4) SA 1
(A) at 14F-I in dealing with the similarly worded
predecessor of the section, being section 19(1)(a) of the Supreme
Court Act 59
of 1959:
“
An
existing or concrete dispute between persons is not a prerequisite
for the exercise by the court of its jurisdiction under this
subsection, though the absence of such a dispute may, depending on
the circumstances, because the court or refuse to exercise its
discretion in a particular case (see Ex Parte Nell
1936 (1) SA 754
(a) at 759H – 760B). But because it is not the function
of the court to act as an adviser, it is a requirement of the
exercise of its jurisdiction under this subsection that there should
be interested parties upon whim the declaratory order would
be
binding (Nell’s case 760B – C). In Nell’s
case, supra at 759A – B, Steyn CJ referred with approval
to the
following statement by Watermeyer JA in Durban City Council v
Association of Building Societies
1942 AD 27
at 32, with reference to
the identically worded s 102 of the General Law Amended Act 46 of
1935: “the question whether or
not an order should be made
under this subsection has to be examined in two stages. First,
the court must decide whether
the case is a proper one for the
exercise of discretion conference on it
”.
5.3
The Supreme Court of Appeal in
Cordiant
Trading CC v Daimler Chrysler Financial Service (Pty) Ltd
2005 (6) SA 205
(SCA) confirmed the two-stage approach adopted by the
then appellant division in
Durban City
Council v Association of Building Societies
1942 AD 27
at 32 and held that:
“
The
two-stage approach under the subsection consists of the following.
During the first leg of the enquiry, the court must
be satisfied that
the applicant has an interest in an ‘existing, future or
contingent right or obligation’. At
this stage, the focus
is only upon establishing that the necessary conditions precedent for
the existence of the court’s
discretion exists. If the
court is satisfied that the existence of such condition has been
provided, it has to exercise discretion
by deciding either to refuse
or grant the order sought. The consideration of whether or not
to grant the order constitutes
the second leg of the enquiry
”.
5.4
In the more recent matter of
Langa
v Hlope
2009 (4) SA 382
(SCA) at
paragraph 28, the Supreme Court of Appeal has once again confirmed
the position and approach as set out in the matter
of
Durban
City Council v Association of Building Societies
(above).
[6]
Evaluation
6.1
It is clear that the “interests”
that the applicant has in an “existing, future or contingent
right or obligation”
in this matter are his rights to
participate as a respondent and defendant respectively in the
application in case no 13174/2020
(the application for rendering an
account launched by the liquidators) and as a defendant in case no
14835/2020 (the action instituted
by the liquidators).
6.2
The “interests” are therefore
in separate litigation in this Court. At the outset, I find it
improper that this
court be approached in a fresh application with a
claim to grant orders which impact on other matters. Put
simply, if the
applicant wants an order to be made in respect of any
relief granted in case no 13174/2020, then he should seek the relief
in that
matter. The same applies in respect of the other cases.
6.3
Quite apart from the impropriety referred
to above, the applicant alleges that he has complied with the order
made against him in
case no 13174/2020. Despite the applicant’s
papers spanning almost 400 pages, very little is said by him in his
founding
affidavit about compliance with the order of court granted
against him in that application, which he calls the “Application
launched for the documents”. It appears that the
liquidators where after more than simply “documents”.
The applicant concedes that the liquidators sought “an account”
from the applicant as to what had occurred in respect
of the business
of Lifestyle which under his control as BRP. The extent
of his compliance, as state by him, is that
“…
all
the information which ever was in the possession of the applicant,
has been provided to the liquidators on the previous occasion
”.
The remainder of the applicant’s affidavit under this rubric
deals with the chronology briefly referred to
in paragraph 3.12 above
and complaints about costs orders and taxation. I find that,
particularly for a forensic auditor,
this evidence of alleged
compliance with a court order regarding particularity of the
discharge of a fiduciary duty by an officer
of the court, falls far
short of what would be required to make a determination of
compliance, had it even been proper to do so
in separate proceedings.
6.4
Much the same applies to the alleged
compliance with the order for assistance sought by Mr Stokes in the
“Hoosen application”
in case number 38079/2018. In
the event those proceedings were still alive, any compliance on
non-compliance issues should
be addressed in those proceedings.
Apart from this, the relief in respect of that matter cannot even be
considered in the
absence of the other parties thereto (Hoosen and
Stokes had not been cited as respondents in the applicants’
present application,
in which he cited a number of respondents
against whom no relief is sought, such as the Legal Practice Council,
the Companies and
Intellectual Property Commission and the Special
Investigation Unit.
6.5
The second leg of the relief sought by the
applicant relates to the pending action in case number 14835/2020.
This relief
has a number of inherent difficulties. The first is
that, if a party seeks a “suspension” of a matter, it
should
be sought in that matter and not in separate proceedings.
The second, more fundamental hurdle, is the absence of a right to
“suspend” proceedings. The liquidators are
dominus
litis
and have the right (and
obligation) to pursue litigation to its finality. It is not
open to a co-defendant to “suspend”
this, whatever
“suspension” may mean in these circumstances. There
is no special plea for a stay of the liquidator’s
claims (such
as where there is an agreed arbitration to be completed, which may
oust a court’s jurisdiction or determine
a matter in an agreed
fashion). The basis for this relief is the alleged compliance
with cases 13174/2020 and 38079/2018,
labelled by the applicant as
“parallel proceedings”. I have already indicated
above that there are no factual
grounds to grant the relief sought in
respect of those cases and, even if compliance had been established
(which it has not) then
this is not an appropriate case where a court
should exercise its discretion to issue declaratory relief in respect
of other cases.
[7]
Postponement
7.1
On the day prior to the hearing of this
matter, the applicant delivered an application for postponement,
claiming the costs thereof
against the liquidators.
7.2
The basis for the postponement was that the
applicant had laid complaints against the second respondent (Mr
Kalianjee) in June 2018
at the Master of this Court, both in Pretoria
and in Johannesburg and with the Special Investigating Unit and, in
respect of the
liquidators’ attorneys, with the Legal Practice
Council. The applicant, in his complaint and subsequent
correspondence
with the Master/s insisted that the second respondent
be removed as a liquidator.
7.3
Based on the above and the allegation that
the investigations have not been concluded, the applicant contended
that his application
must be postponed sine die and for this reason,
briefed Adv. Van Rensburg SC the evening before the hearing.
7.4
The respondents who took part in the
application, principally, the liquidators, had no time to respond to
a 65 page application
for postponement which, despite the contents
thereof having been known to the applicant for many months (if not
years), was only
delivered at 15h30 on the day prior to the hearing.
The liquidators did respond, however, by way of written argument
delivered
on their behalf.
7.5
In the liquidators’ Heads of
Argument, they pointed out that all the allegations contained in the
affidavit delivered in support
of the application for postponement,
had been known to the applicant at the time when he launched his
application and were dealt
with him in his founding affidavit as
purported justification for the joinder of the Master and those
parties or entities to whom
he had directed his complaints.
Significantly, none of them chose to deliver any affidavit, either in
the main application
or in support of the application for
postponement.
7.6
Had the applicant deemed it necessary to
postpone his application pending the finalization of the
investigations, he failed to explain
why he launched the postponement
application only at the eleventh hour. In the liquidators’
answering affidavit in
the main application, delivered as long ago as
17 May 2021, it was pointed out that the investigations, such as they
may be, had
nothing to do with the merits of the matter.
7.7
It is trite that a party seeking a
postponement, is thereby seeking an indulgence. The set-down of
the main application on
the opposed motion court roll of 22 November
2021, had been done as long ago as 11 October 2021. Save for
the fact that a
hearing in respect of one of the liquidators’
attorneys by the Legal Practice Council, set down for 3 December 2021
(that
is on a day after the opposed motion court roll on which the
main application had been set down) had been postponed, there are no
cogent reasons set out in the applicant’s aforementioned
founding affidavit why his request for an indulgence had been made
so
belatedly. This is a weighty factor to the considered when a
court exercises its discretion as to whether to grant or
refuse a
postponement. See inter alia
Myburgh
Transport v Botha t/a SA Truck Bodies
1991 (3) SA 310
(NmS).
7.8
I could find no reason why the matter
should be postponed. The complaints do no impact on the
existing court order against
the applicant, nor on his duties as
officer of this court. In view of the lack of prospects of
success of the main application
I was not convinced of the
bona
fides
of the application for
postponement. See
Lekolwane v
Minister of Justice and Constitutional Development
[2006] ZACC 19
;
2007 (3) BCLR 280
(CC) at
[17]
and
Shilubana
v Nwamitwa
(
National
Movement for Rural Women and Commission for Gender Equality
as
amici curiae
)
[2007] ZACC 14
;
2007 (5) SA 620
(CC) at 624 E – F.
7.9
As a consequence and, in the exercise of
the court’s discretion, the application for postponement was
refused. Adv Van
Rensburg SC thereupon, informed the Court that
he had nothing to add or submit in respect of the merits of the
application.
In
National Police
Service Union and Other’s v Minister of Safety and Security
2000 (4) SA 1110
(CC) at 1113D the Constitutional Court held that
“
ordinarily … if an
application for postponement is to be made on the day of the hearing
of a case, the legal representatives
… must appear and be
ready to assist the Court both in regard to the application for the
postponement itself and, if the
application is refused, the
consequences that would follow
”.
A court is entitled to expect senior counsel to be aware of this
principle and this court would therefore be justified
in assuming
that nothing of substance could be advanced in favour of the
applicant’s main application, hence Adv Van Rensburg
SC’s
reluctance to make submissions.
7.10
Even if I were wrong in the aforementioned
assumption, the main application, as I have already pointed out, is
devoid of merit.
7.11
In the circumstances where there is not
only a glaring absence of merit but also clearly a persistence in an
improper attempt at
litigating by way of “parallel proceedings”
(to borrow from the applicant’s own wording) for declaratory
relief
adjunct to the actual proceedings from which the relief
emanated, such conduct amounts to an abuse of this court’s
proceedings.
This abuse becomes even more serious when it is
perpetrated by an officer of this court. To this I must add
that the lack
of proof of compliance with a court order (being one of
the applicant’s grounds for his application) means that the
applicant
is not before the court with clean hands. The fact
that he may genuinely harbor a belief in the validity of his
complaints
about one or more of the liquidators or their attorneys,
does not detract from any of these factors. I was therefore, in
the exercise of my discretion, of the view that a punitive costs
order was justified. There is no reason why the liquidators,
representing an insolvent estate, should be “out of pocket”
for any portion of the costs.
[8]
Order
It was in the circumstances as set out
above that the orders which had been given, had been made. For
the sake of clarity
and convenience, they are repeated here as
follows, even though they were contained in two separate orders on 24
November 2021:
1.
The application for postponement is
dismissed with costs on the scale as between attorney and client,
including those consequent
upon the employment of three counsel.
2.
The main application is dismissed with
costs on the scale as between attorney and client, including those
consequent upon the employment
of three counsel
N
DAVIS
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Pretoria
Date
of Hearing: 24 November 2021
Date
of order: 24 November 2021
Reasons
furnished: 27 May 2022
APPEARANCES:
For
Applicant:
Adv S J van Rensburg SC
Attorney
for Applicant:
A Mothilal
Attorneys Inc., Pretoria
For
Respondents:
Adv J M Suttner SC with Adv K Reddy
and
Adv N Diedericks
Attorneys
for Respondents: Vezi & De
Beer Attorneys, Pretoria
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