Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 470South Africa
Makhubela and Others v Thembinkosi N.O. and Others (43599/2019) [2022] ZAGPPHC 470 (1 July 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
22 March 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Makhubela and Others v Thembinkosi N.O. and Others (43599/2019) [2022] ZAGPPHC 470 (1 July 2022)
Makhubela and Others v Thembinkosi N.O. and Others (43599/2019) [2022] ZAGPPHC 470 (1 July 2022)
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REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION
PRETORIA
CASE NO: 43599/2019
DOH:
27 May 2022
REPORTABLE: NO
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
01 July 2022
In the matter between:
### MAKHUBELA, DAVID ZOMA
MAKHUBELA, DAVID ZOMA
(Identity number:
[....])
First Applicant
MAKHUSHE, SHISO DAVID
(Identity number:
[....])
Second Applicant
MAKHATSHWA, BOY
(Identity number:
[....])
Third Applicant
And
SILINDA,
MESHACK THEMBINKOSI N.O.
First Respondent
(Identity number: [....])
In her capacity as
trustee of The Mjejane
Trust IT 63358/04
NGOMANE,
SIMEON N.O.
Second Respondent
(Identity number: [....])
In his capacity as
trustee of The Mjejane
Trust IT63335/04
ZITHA,
TIKI LAZARUS N.O.
Third Respondent
(Identity number: [....])
In his capacity as
trustee of The Mjejane
Trust IT63335/04
LEDWABA,
MPONYANA LAZARUS N.O.
Fourth Respondent
(Identity number: [....])
In his capacity as
trustee of The Mjejane
Trust IT63335/04
SILINDA,
MESHACK THEMBINKOSI
Fifth Respondent
(Identity number: [....])
In his capacity as
trustee of The Mjejane
Trust IT63335/04
NGOMANE,
SIMEON
Sixth Respondent
(Identity number: [....])
In his capacity as
trustee of The Mjejane
Trust IT63335/04
ZITHA,
TIKI LAZARUS
Seventh Respondent
(Identity number: [....])
In his capacity as
trustee of The Mjejane
Trust IT63335/04
THE
MASTER OF THE HIGH COURT,
Eight Respondent
PRETORIA
PETRUS
ZEELIE
N.O.
Ninth Respondent
FIRSTRAND
BANK LIMITED
Tenth Respondent
JUDGEMENT
THIS JUDGEMENT HAS
BEEN HANDED DOWN REMOTELY AND SHALL BE CIRCULATED TO THE PARTIES BY
WAY OF EMAIL / UPLOADING ON CASELINES. THE
DATE OF HAND DOWN SHALL BE
DEEMED TO BE 01 JULY 2022
BAM
J
A.
Introduction
1.
This is an opposed application for leave to
appeal brought by the first, second, third, fifth, sixth and seventh
respondents against
the decision of this court of 7 March 2022, in
which I declined the respondents’ application for a conditional
postponement
(application for postponement) and awarded costs to the
applicants, including the costs occasioned by the employment of two
counsel.
I should at this stage note that I refer to the parties as
they are in the underlying application.
2.
The respondents had brought their
application on the same day which had been pre-arranged to hear Part
B of the main application.
Soon after I had dismissed the application
for postponement, the applicants presented their case in connection
with Part B of the
main application, at which point, Mr Mosoma,
counsel for the respondents, had already asked to be excused as his
brief pertained
only to arguing the application for postponement.
After hearing the applicants, I granted the order which saw the final
removal
of the first to the third respondents as trustees of Mjejane
Trust, including certain ancillary relief as against all the
respondents.
3.
On 11 March, the respondents requested
reasons for my refusal of their postponement application. Those
reasons were delivered on
22 March 2022. I add for convenience that
in the reasons, I dealt with the history of how the date of 7 March
2022 for hearing
Part B of the main application came about; that it
was agreed upon by all the parties, way back in November 2021. I set
out how
the respondents had engaged in delaying tactics, and how the
notion of a conditional postponement had come about; that it was
premised
on the failure of the application for intervention brought
by a third party whom I found to have no l
ocus
standi
whatsoever. I further set out
that the respondents’ application for postponement was filed on
4 March being a Friday, while
the hearing of the main application was
set down for 7 March 2022, in other words, on the eleventh hour.
4.
The respondents, conveniently, do not deal
with the absence of a cogent case for bringing their application for
postponement on
the eleventh hour in their application. I pointed out
in my reasons that the respondents had failed to file their
supplementary
answering affidavit. Initially, they had said they
required a postponement of two weeks, on the basis that the senior
counsel in
charge of settling their supplementary answering affidavit
required two weeks to finalise. The two weeks’ postponement
morphed
into a postponement until the administrator had filed his
‘final and decisive report’ but the respondents could not
state when and where the administrator had said he was to file such a
report and by when it was expected. I had stated in my reasons
that
the administrator is required in terms of an order issued by this
court to file interim reports on the governance of the trust
and that
all the parties had agreed to the dates pertaining to the filing of
their affidavits and for hearing Part B of the main
application
knowing that the administrator is bound to file those interim
reports. The respondents do challenge these points in
their
application for leave.
5.
I should add before I look at the
respondents’ grounds, that with the present application, the
respondents do not seek leave
to appeal the order granted in Part B
of the main application. They only seek leave to appeal the outcome
of the application for
postponement. In the circumstances, the order
made in part B will still remain regardless of the outcome of this
application.
B. Grounds for appeal
6.
The respondents’ grounds are set out
in their application for leave to appeal. I do not repeat them in
this judgement, save
to highlight that the respondents submit that I
erred in reaching certain conclusions and further that I did not
exercise the discretion
I am meant to exercise judiciously.
7.
The broad thrust of the respondents’
submissions is that I erred in not finding that the provenance of the
‘proper and
decisive report’ was in the administrator’s
interim report. The same point is replicated throughout the
application
and it is used to amplify other submissions. A few
examples will suffice. The respondents state that:
(i)
The court misdirected itself in relying on
the Tuchten judgment, which judgement related to the interim position
and unfairly used
same against the respondents prematurely to
determine the merits of part B of the application, including the
administrator’s
express statement that he was still to file his
‘proper and decisive report’.
(ii)
The court erred in not appreciating that
the respondents had in fact furnished the trust financial statements
from January 2015
till to-date and such filing had informed the
administrator’s comment of a proper and decisive report.
(iii)
The court’s insistence in continuing
with the hearing without the proper and decisive report of the
interim administrator
would not only deprive the respondents of their
entitlement to a fair hearing in accordance with the law ‘
but
also egregiously inconsistent with the respondents’ entrenched
rights provided for in the Constitution
’.
8.
Thus, the thread of the court having erred
in observing that there was indeed such a proper and decisive report
appears to be the
mainstay of the respondents’ application for
leave. I dealt with this in my reasons and noted that there was no
such indication
from the administrator and that the respondents’
claims that they were awaiting the administrator’s proper and
decisive
report was simply something they had coined on their own. In
any event, the respondents have still never filed audited financial
statements with the administrator.
9.
There are of course further grounds on
which the respondents state that the court misdirected itself, such
as, that the applicants
put their fate on the success of an
application for intervention by a party who had no locus standi,
which is undeniable judging
from the timing of the application for
intervention and the fact that the respondents’ application was
indeed premised on
the fate of the application for intervention. Had
the application for intervention have been successful, the
respondents would
have enjoyed a postponement without having applied
for one. Nonetheless, the court cannot be criticised for stating what
had indeed
occured.
10.
The respondents further criticise the court
for not allowing them opportunity to file a replying affidavit
following the answering
affidavits of the applicants. The respondents
have themselves to blame here. They brought their application on the
day earmarked
for hearing the main application. They cannot now
complain that the court should have allowed them an opportunity they
had denied
themselves in the first because of the late filing of
their application. The assumption that the court should have allowed
the
exchange of affidavits in a situation that was clearly engineered
to delay hearing Part B of the main application is misinformed.
11.
A further point of criticism is that the
court placed reliance on the Tuchten judgement to decide Part B of
the main application.
There is no merit to this point. The court did
not place reliance on the Tuchten judgement to decide any of the
applications. The
court referred to the judgement as part of its
illustration of how the matter had evolved.
12.
A further ground deals with how the court
erred in dealing with the intervention application. In this regard
the respondents have
taken time to set out how the court should have
handled the intervention application from a procedural point of view.
Counsel for
the respondents, Mr Shakoane SC, conceded on the day of
arguing the application that the respondents were not party to the
intervening
application. He nonetheless persisted in elaborating on
how the court had erred in respect of dealing with the application
for
intervention. This, respectfully, is a ground that should not
have concerned the respondents at all.
13.
The respondents complain that the court
should have taken into account that this was their first application
for postponement. It
is true that the respondents had made the point
that this was their first application for postponement but that did
not take their
case any further. Their application simply lacked
merit. I provided reasons for this conclusion. There is no need to
repeat those
reasons in this judgement.
14.
Finally, the respondents state that they
have reasonable prospects of success in that another court would come
to a different finding
and, that the facts and grounds upon which
they rely raise important legal issues to the parties. In all, the
respondents suggest
that it is in the interests of justice that leave
to appeal be granted. The submission that the grounds raise issues of
legal importance
is a conclusion without foundation. The respondents
have not set out what issues of legal importance are presented in
this application.
The applicants argued that the law in relation to
both postponements and leave to appeal decisions relating to
postponements is
fairly settled, and that there is absolutely nothing
in the respondents’ application that raises issues of legal
importance.
I agree.
C. The Law
15.
Section 16 (2) (a) (i) of the Superior
Courts Act provides:
‘
When
at the hearing of an appeal the issues are of such a nature that the
decision sought will have no practical effect or result,
the appeal
may be dismissed on this ground alone.’
[1]
16.
In terms of section 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 a reasonable prospect of success; or
(ii) there is some other
compelling reason why the appeal should be heard, including
conflicting judgments on the matter under consideration;
and
(b) the decision sought
on appeal does not fall within the ambit of section 16(2)(a).’
17.
The law pertaining to discretion and
whether a superior court will interfere with how the court of first
instance has exercised
its discretion is set out in
Myburgh
Transport v Botha t/a S A Truck Bodies,
where
the court remarked:
‘
A
The trial Judge has a discretion as to whether an application for a
postponement should be granted or refused.
(a)
That discretion must be exercised
judiciously. It should not be exercised capriciously or upon any
wrong principle, but for substantial
reasons.
(b)
An appeal court is not entitled to set
aside the decision of a trial court granting or refusing a
postponement in the exercise of
its discretion merely on the ground
that if members of the court of appeal had been sitting as a trial
court they would have exercised
the discretion differently.
(c)
An
appeal court is, however, entitled to and will in an appropriate case
set aside the decision of a trial court granting or refusing
a
postponement where it is appears that the trial court had not
exercised its discretion judiciously, or that it had been influenced
by wrong principles or a misdirection on the facts, or that it has
reached a decision which in the result could not have been made
by a
court properly directing itself to all the relevant facts and
principles. ‘
[2]
18.
On
the same question of interference by an appellate court on the
discretion exercised by the High Court, Mogoeng CJ as he then
was,
writing as minority in
Public
Protector
v
South
African Reserve Bank
made these comments, citing the principle as an old standing one and
relying on
Florence
v
Government
of the Republic of South Africa
[3]
.
I
note that the comments were in relation to the discretion of the High
Court in relation to the question of punitive costs. Nonetheless,
the
principle quoted deals with the exercise of the High Court’s
discretion and in what instances an appellate court may
interfere
:
‘
The
discretion exercised by the High Court when awarding personal costs
on an attorney and client scale against the Public Protector
is a
“
true
”
or
“
strong”
discretion.
It is a discretion that is not to be easily interfered with on
appeal. And it would only be permissible for this Court
to interfere
with that discretion if it can be shown that the court whose decision
is under attack
―
“
had
not exercised its discretion judicially, or that it had been
influenced by wrong principles or a misdirection on the facts,
or
that it had reached a decision which in the result could not
reasonably have been made by a court properly directing itself
to all
relevant facts and principles.
”
‘
[4]
19.
What
informs the appellate restraint according to the court in
Florence
v
Government
of the Republic of South Africa
[5]
is, ‘ … judicial comity. It fosters certainty in the
application of the law and favours finality in judicial
decision-making.’
D. Analysis
(i) Section 16 (2) (a)
(i)
20.
The question whether to grant the
respondents leave to appeal must first be answered with reference to
section 16 (2) (a) (i). The
common cause facts are:
(i)
Following the unsuccessful application for
postponement, the applicants presented their case in connection with
with Part B of the
main application and the court upheld their case
and granted the final order.
(ii)
The final order, removing the first to the
third respondents stands and has not been rescinded nor is it subject
to any application
for leave to appeal.
(iii)
The respondents seek leave to appeal only
the decision relating to the postponement.
21.
The applicants submitted that on this
basis alone, leave to appeal should not be granted as it would serve
no practical effect because
the final order will still remain. I
agree that on this basis alone, leave must be refused.
(ii) Whether the
decision is appealable
22.
The question whether the decision is
appealable at all requires some doing. More than three decades ago,
the highest court, as it
then was, answered this question in
Van
Streepen & Germs (Pty) Ltd
v
T
ransvaal Provincial Administration, and
it said:
‘
..But
not every decision made by the court in the course of judicial
proceedings constitutes a judgment or order. Some may amount
merely
to what is termed "a ruling", against which there is no
appeal. The distinction between a ruling on the one hand
and a
judgment or order on the other hand was first drawn in this Court in
the leading case of
Dickinson
and Another
v
Fisher's
Executors
1914
AD 424
, at pp 427-8
:
”
But
every decision or ruling of a court during the progress of a suit
does not amount to an order. That term implies that there
must be a
distinct application by one of the parties for definite relief. The
relief prayed for may be small, as in an application
for a discovery
order, or it may be of great importance, but the Court must be duly
asked to grant some definite and distinct relief,
before its decision
upon the matter can properly be called an order. A trial Court is
sometimes called upon to decide questions
which come up during the
progress of a case, but in regard to which its decisions would
clearly not be orders. A dispute may arise,
for instance, as to the
right to begin: the Court decides it, and the hearing proceeds. But
that decision, though it may be of
considerable practical importance,
is not an order from which an appeal could under any circumstance
lie, apart from the final
decision on the merits.” ’
[6]
23.
The applicants’ counsel, Mr Strydom
SC together with Mr
van den Bogert argued
that the decision refusing the postponement is not
appealable as it did not determine the rights of the parties in the
underlying
dispute. They referred this court to
Zweni
v
Minister of Law and Order
,
where Harms AJA, as he then was, said:
‘
For
different reasons it was felt down the ages that decisions of a
‘preparatory or procedural character’ ought not
to be
appealable (
per
Schreiner JA in the
Pretoria
Garrison Institutes
case
supra
at 868). One is that, as a general rule, piecemeal consideration of
cases is discouraged. The importance of this factor has somewhat
diminished in recent times (
SA
Eagle Versekeringsmaatskappy Bpk v Harford
[1992] ZASCA 42
;
1992 (2) SA 786
(A) at 791B – D). The emphasis
is now rather on whether an appeal will necessarily lead to a more
expeditious and cost-effective
final determination of the main
dispute between the parties and, as such, will decisively contribute
to its final solution (
Priday
t/a Pride Paving v Rubin
1992 (3) SA 542
(C) at 548H – I).”
[7]
24.
The respondents did not deal with the
question whether the decision refusing their application to postpone
had resolved any issue
or portion thereof on the relief sought in the
underlying application. In
Absa Bank
v
Mkhize,
the
Supreme Court of Appeal had the following to say, in connection with
an appeal lodged against an interlocutory of preparatory
decision:
‘
To
my mind paragraph 2 of the order, on which the present debate turns,
did not render what would otherwise have been a non-appealable
order…
, appealable. For, it amounted to no more than a direction from the
high court, before the main action could be entered
into, as to the
manner in which the matter should proceed. Being a preparatory or
procedural order that was incidental to the main
dispute, it fell
into what has been described as the general category of
‘interlocutory’….[61] In the present
case the
‘main suit’ or ‘main action’ is Absa’s
claim. An order such as that in paragraph 2 is, I
conceive, a
‘preparatory or procedural order’ which does not bear
upon or in any way affect the decision in the main
action. In
Tropical (Commercial & Industrial)
Ltd
v
Plywood
Products Ltd.
1956 (1) SA 339
(A) at
344 Centlivres CJ held:
'As
the order made by the trial Judge "decided no definite
application for relief" and was merely a direction as to the
manner in which the case should proceed it was not an order in the
legal sense.… Not being an order in the legal sense,
it was
not an order which fell within the meaning of the words "judgment
or order" in sec. 2 (c) of the Act.’
[8]
25.
More
recently, in
Grobler
v
MFC
[9]
,
this court, relying on the dictum in
Priday
t/a Pride Paving
v
Rubin
[10]
,
turned down an application for leave to appeal a decision refusing a
postponement. The court reasoned that such a decision did
‘not
dispose of any substantial portion of the merits, determine their
rights of the parties or bear any of the other commonly
apprehended
hallmarks of finality of which interlocutory orders are ordinarily
required to be possessed in order to qualify for
appealability’.
26.
In
Moch
v
Nedtravel
(Pty) Ltd. t/a American Express Travel Service
[11]
,
the court cautioned that the factors set out in
Zweni
v
Minister
of Law and Order
[12]
do not purport to be exhaustive or cast the relevant principles in
stone. Taking into account the
ratio
in the aforementioned cases, including the caveat sounded by the
court in
Moch
v
Nedtravel
,
the ineluctable conclusion one reaches is that the decision refusing
the respondents’ application for postponement is not
appealable.
(iii)
Does the
respondents’ case meet the requirements of section 17 (1) (a)
(i)
27.
Having interrogated the respondents’
application for leave to appeal through the lenses of section 16 (2)
(a) and concluded
that the issues sought to be appealed would have no
practical purpose and that the appeal should be dismissed on that
basis alone,
and having concluded that the decision was not
appealable, I nonetheless consider whether the application meets the
threshold set
out in section 17 (1) (a) (i). The test set out in
section 17 (1) (a) (i) has been the subject of interpretation by this
and the
superior courts. It is articulated in
Acting
National Director of Public Prosecutions and Others
v
Democratic Alliance
In Re:
Democratic Alliance
v
Acting National Director of Public
Prosecutions and Others
, where the
court reasoned that the Superior Courts Act has raised the bar for
granting leave to appeal. With reference to
The
Mont Chevaux Trust
(IT2012/28) v
Tina
Goosen & 18 Others
, the court
noted:
‘ “
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 343H
.
The
use of the word "would" in the new statute indicates a
measure of certainty that another court will differ from the
court
whose judgment is sought to be appealed against.” '
[13]
E. Conclusion
28.
I find that the respondents have failed to
make a case and there is no prospect that another court would come to
a different finding
on the decision I had made refusing postponement.
The mainstay of the respondents’ case in this application is
that the court
erred in not allowing them the postponement because
they were waiting for the unknown ‘proper and decisive report’.
They did not file their supplementary answering affidavit for reasons
that evolved over time with no connection to each other.
Reasons, I
found to be baseless. To add weight to their application, they
included grounds such as how the court erred in dealing
with the
intervention application, a matter that had no bearing in their
application. They claimed that the court did not exercise
its
discretion judiciously but failed to identify in what respects the
court acted capriciously or was influenced by incorrect
legal
principles. Simply, this was a conclusion with no foundation. The
respondents’ application raises no issues of legal
importance.
The application falls to be dismissed.
F. ORDER
29.
The application for leave to appeal is
dismissed with costs, including the costs occasioned by the
employment of two counsel.
NN
BAM
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT,
PRETORIA
DATE
OF HEARING
:
27 May 2022
APPEARANCES
APPLICANTS’
COUNSEL:
Adv Strydom SC
with Adv
Adv
D van den Bogert
Instructed
by:
Murphy Kwape Maritz Attorneys
℅
Phosa
Loots
Attorneys, Boardwalk,
Fearie
Glen,
Pretoria
First,
Second, Third, Fifth, Sixth and
Seventh
Respondents’ counsel:
Adv Shakaone SC with Adv Mosoma
Instructed
by:
Ngomane Inc Attorneys, Pretoria
[1]
Act
10 of 2013
[2]
[2]
1991
(3) SA 310
at 314 paragraphs F- J
[3]
[2014]
ZACC 22
at paragraph 113
[4]
[2019]
ZACC 29
at paragraph 107
[5]
[2014]
ZACC 22
at paragraph 113
[6]
1987
(4) SA 569
(A) at paragraph 12, 14
[7]
1993(1)
SA 523 (A) at paragraph 8
[8]
(716/12)
[2013] ZASCA at paragraph 59
[9]
(1548
of 2019) [2021] ZAGPJHC 469 (08 December 2021)
[10]
see
para 11 of this judgement
[11]
(329/95)
[1996] ZASCA 2
;
1996 (3) SA 1
(SCA); (22 February 1996)
[12]
para
11 supra
[13]
(19577/09)
[2016] ZAGPPHC 489 (24 June 2016) at paragraph 25
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