Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 644South Africa
C.F v M.F and Others (26446/2015) [2022] ZAGPPHC 644 (2 September 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
2 September 2022
Headnotes
if an applicant bases a claim 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.”[8]
Judgment
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## C.F v M.F and Others (26446/2015) [2022] ZAGPPHC 644 (2 September 2022)
C.F v M.F and Others (26446/2015) [2022] ZAGPPHC 644 (2 September 2022)
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SAFLII
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 26446/2015
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
Date:
2 September 2022
In
re:
C[...]
G[...] F[...]
Applicant
and
M[...]
F[...]
First Respondent
M[...]
F[...] NO TRUSTEE OF THE F[...]
BUSINESS
TRUST
Second Respondent
M[...]
F[...] NO TRUSTEE OF THE F[...]
BUSINESS
TRUST
Third Respondent
J[...]
J[...] F[...] NO TRUSTEE OF THE F[...]
BUSINESS
TRUST
Fourth Respondent
RAMREF
MANAGEMENT AND HOLDINGS (PTY) LTD
Fifth Respondent
FERMAR
(PTY)
LTD
Sixth Respondent
KAMEELDORING
VLAKTE BOERDERY (PTY) LTD
Seventh Respondent
SCHWEIZER
ABATTOIR (PTY) LTD
Eight Respondent
DRIVEN
DIESEL ENTERPRISES (PTY) LTD
Ninth Respondent
FERMAR
CAPE TOWN (PTY) LTD
Tenth
Respondent
SABLE
GRANITE (PTY) LTD
Eleventh
Respondent
BHEJANE
MINING AND CRUSHING (PTY) LTD
Twelfth
Respondent
BHEJANE
GRANITE (PTY) LTD
Thirteenth Respondent
MAXON
SECURITY SERVICES (PTY) LTD
Fourteenth Respondent
R
& M RANCH (PTY)
LTD
Fifteenth Respondent
LEGAD
(PTY) LTD
Sixteenth Respondent
AFROPULSE
177 (PTY) LTD
Seventeenth Respondent
NORTHERN
SPARK TRADING (PTY) LTD
Eighteenth Respondent
SILVER
SNAKES TRADING (PTY) LTD
Nineteenth Respondent
BIG
CEDAR TRADING 89 (PTY) LTD
Twentieth Respondent
HIGHLAND
GATE BOERDERY (PTY) LTD
Twenty-first
Respondent
GVDM
COLLECTIONS (PTY) LTD
Twenty- second Respondent
EV
PROPERTY HOLDINGS (PTY) LTD
Twenty-third Respondent
BLOEMFONTEIN
EV PROPERTIES (PTY) LTD
Twenty-fourth
Respondent
LOWVELD
SPORTS INITIATIVE (PTY) LTD
Twenty-fifth Respondent
M[...]
F[...]
Twenty-sixth Respondent
J[...]
J[...] F[...]
Twenty-seventh Respondent
THE
MASTER OF THE HIGH COURT
Twenty-eighth Respondent
In
the matter between:
M[...]
F[...]
Plaintiff
and
C[...]
G[...] F[...]
Defendant
#
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
#
# DE VOS AJ
DE VOS AJ
# Introduction
Introduction
[1]
This is a joinder application in the context of ongoing divorce
proceedings.
The applicant seeks the joinder of several
companies and a family trust.
[2]
The applicant wishes to seek relief against the trust and the
companies.
The crux of this relief is that the assets owned by
the trust and companies are to be considered for purposes of the
divorce.
In order to seek this relief, the applicant requires,
as a first step, to join them to the divorce proceedings.
[3]
The relief ultimately sought by the applicant is competent relief.
[1]
Our Courts have permitted the piercing of the veil of a company and
the vesting of trust assets in a person's estate, in the context
of
divorce proceedings.
[2]
However, without the joinder of the additional parties the applicant
cannot seek this relief.
[4]
The first respondent contends that the applicant has not made out a
sufficient
case to ground the joinder application. The case therefore
turns on the test for joinder.
LEGAL
PRINCIPLES AT PLAY
Test
for joinder
[5]
The applicant has to show a direct and substantial interest in the
subject
matter of the proceedings. If the applicant shows that
the entities to be joined have "some right which is affected by
the order issued" then they are to be joined.
[3]
[6]
The principle which belies the issue of joinder is that no court may
make
a decision "adverse to any person’s interests,
without that person first being a party to the proceedings before
it."
[4]
The Court cannot
grant relief, ordinarily, where any other person’s interests
may be directly affected without formal judicial
notice of the
proceedings.
[5]
[7]
Once the applicant shows a direct and substantial interest in the
subject-matter
of the case, the Court ought to grant leave to
intervene.
[6]
In
Greyvenouw CC
[7]
the
court held that if an applicant bases a claim 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.”
[8]
Facts
[8]
The applicant is unemployed and the first respondent is involved in,
and
stands in control of, a large business empire. The applicant
alleges that the first respondent is a "well-known and
successful
businessman and a director as well as shareholder in
several profitable businesses". The applicants sets out in
the
founding papers, the basis for the additional parties' direct and
substantial interest. There are three sets of additional
parties.
[9]
First, the trustees and beneficiaries of the trust. The
applicant
intends to seek relief against the trust. The applicant
alleges that if the claim succeeds against the trust, it follows that
benefits
of the trustees and beneficiaries may be affected.
[9]
These parties have conceded, rightfully, that they have an interest
in the proceedings. The 3rd, 4th, 26th and 27th respondents
concede
the substantive test for joinder have been met.
[10]
Second, the trust. The applicant alleges that the trust is the
alter ego of the first
respondent.
[10]
During their marriage, the applicant was made to believe that the
trust was used as a vehicle holding several shares and assets
which
the first respondent did not want to hold in his personal
capacity.
[11]
The applicant
deposes that "all the assets held by the trust are de facto and
de jure, part of the assets of the first respondent".
[12]
In addition, the applicant deposes that the trust and the companies
are interlinked legal entities.
[11]
Third, the companies. The applicant sets out the various shareholding
of the first respondent
in the companies, they range from 100%
shareholding to 20% shareholding.
[13]
[12]
These allegations are, in their substance, not disputed by the first
respondent.
The
opposition
The
applicant does not meet the test in REM v VM
[13]
The first respondent contends that in terms of
REM
v VM
[14]
the applicant carries the onus to prove that the veil of the
companies must be pierced, that the trust assets are de facto assets
of the first respondent and that the creation of the entitles were
invalid from the outset.
[14]
The first respondent correctly identifies the hurdles the applicant
has to overcome, however,
misidentifies when these hurdles have to be
overcome. They are hurdles for the trial, not for the stage of
joinder.
At this stage, the applicant seeks the joinder of the
additional parties and the only standard to be met is that of a
direct and
substantial interest.
[15]
Our courts have repeatedly expressed that these issues, the merits of
the joinder and the
merits of the relief sought at trial, must be
kept separately.
[16]
RP v DP
and Others
[15]
Alkema J refers to the applicant's contentions that the first
respondent effectively used the trust as a vehicle to accumulate
personal wealth, and to various transactions conducted through the
trust for his personal benefit. These allegations are, "of
course, vehemently denied by the first respondent "in his
answering affidavit.
[16]
The
Court holds "it is unnecessary for purposes of this application
to make any factual findings in this regard — this
is the
function of the trial court and the less said the better."
[17]
[17]
In
EEVW
v PJVW
[18]
Erasmus AJ held that "the issue of joinder should not be
conflated with the issue whether the party seeking joinder has a
good
cause against the party sought to be joined". The Court
express held that it is "not required to assess the
merits of
the applicant's claim in the divorce action. As long as the relief
may be claimed against such a party, and the latter's
interest may be
prejudicially affected, joinder becomes necessary".
[19]
Only if the relief sought is bad in law and/or cannot be supported by
any reasonable interpretation of the amended particulars
of
claim.
[20]
[18]
In
ML v
AJ
the
Court held that the "issue of joinder should not be conflated
with the issue whether the party seeking joinder has a good
case
against the party sought to be joined."
[21]
[19]
The distinction is one that must be kept alive, and the Court dealing
with the merits of
the joinder application must not venture into the
merits of the relief ultimately sought. This Court must not entertain
the merits
of the ultimate relief, and must confine itself to the
issue of joinder.
The
applicant's allegations are unsubstantiated
[20]
The respondent contends that the applicant's allegations in support
of the joinder application
are vague and "unsubstantiated".
[22]
Essentially, the opposition is that the applicant has not proven the
allegations made against the entities. This argument
has been
repeatedly made, and consistently rejected as incorrect by our
Courts. The correct approach is to assume that the applicant's
allegations are correct, and based on that assumption, whether the
legal requirements for joinder have been met.
[21]
In
RP v
DP and Others
[23]
Alkema J holds that –
"the
correct approach in considering the application for joinder and
amendment, is to decide whether, if the applicant's allegations
are
found to be proven by the trial court, she has met the legal
requirements for a joinder and amendment."
[22]
In
BC v
CC
[24]
Dambuza J affirmed this test –
"[i]n
my view, if the plaintiff's allegations are proved to be correct, the
plaintiff will have succeeded in proving that the
assets ostensibly
owned by the trust, or some of them, are de facto the property of the
first defendant, and that their value ought
to be taken into account
in determining the extent of accrual of the estate of the first
defendant."
[23]
Dambuza J affirms that "the approach is to accept the
plaintiff's allegations as correct".
[25]
[24]
In
EVW
the Court held that it must accept the "allegations of the
plaintiff, as set out int he amended particulars of claim, as correct
and determine whether these are capable of supporting a cause of
action".
[26]
The Court
considers that as the relief sought by the applicant is legally
competent, if the facts to substantiate the averments
are proven
during trial.
[27]
[25]
In
International
Pentecost Holiness Church
[28]
this Court, per Basson J, held that 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 proven, would entitle it to relief".
[29]
[26]
Based on this principle, the Court concludes that it is
therefore
not, for purposes of this application, necessary to consider the
merits of the applicant’s 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.
[30]
[27]
In the
SA
Riding Case
[31]
the Constitutional Court held –
"the
applicant does not have to satisfy the court at the stage of
intervention that it will succeed. It is sufficient
for such
applicant to make allegations which, if proved, would entitle it to
relief."
[28]
Ex
Parte Moosa: in re Hassim v Harrop-Allin
[32]
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.
[33]
[29]
Of course, if the applicant fails to make out a substantive case
against the additional
parties, they are not without any remedy.
It will remain open to them to raise an exception if no cause of
action is made
out against them.
[34]
[30]
The approach of our courts, to accept the
applicant's allegations as correct for purposes of joinder, has been
repeatedly applied
in the context of divorce proceedings. This body
of jurisprudence evinces a consistent rejection of the ground on
which the first
respondent has opposed the joinder relief.
COSTS
[31]
Costs must be considered in circumstances where –
13.
1 The applicant sought costs only in the event of opposition.
13.
2 The first respondent opposed the relief, despite the clear
jurisprudence on the point.
13.
3 The applicant was the defendant and therefore did not have the
luxury of joining the necessary parties from the outset.
# ORDER
ORDER
[32]
In the result, the following order is granted:
1.
The 2nd to 28th respondents are joined in the action instituted by
the plaintiff
against the defendant in case number 26446/2015.
2.
The first respondent is ordered to pay the costs of this application.
I
de Vos
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Delivered:
This judgment is handed down electronically by uploading it to the
electronic file of this matter on CaseLines.
As a courtesy gesture,
it will be sent to the parties/their legal representatives by email.
Counsel
for the applicant:
HF
Fourie
Instructed
by:
Cronje
de Waal Skhosana Inc
Counsel
for the 3,4, 26 and 27 respondents:
C van
Schalkwyk
Instructed
by:
TMJ
Attorneys
Counsel
for the remainder of the respondents:
FW
Botes SC
Instructed
by:
Schoeman
Borman Inc
Date
of the hearing:
01
August 2022
Date
of judgment:
02
September 2022
[1]
Badenhorst
v Badenhorst
2006(2) SA 255 [par 9]
[2]
MJ K v II K (360/2021)
[2022] ZASCA 116
(28 July 2022)
[3]
South African Riding for the Disabled Association v Regional Land
Claims Commissioner and Others (CCT172/16)
[2017] ZACC 4
;
2017 (8)
BCLR 1053
(CC);
2017 (5) SA 1
(CC) (23 February 2017)
paragraph
[10].
The
position in
SA
Riding
case
(dealing with intervention) should also apply to the obligatory
joinder of a party who has a direct and substantial
interest in the
subject matter of the litigation (Erasmus "Superior Court
Practice";
RS
18, 2022, D1-
126B)
[4]
Matjhabeng Local Municipality v Eskom Holdings Ltd
2018
(1) SA 1 (CC)
where
the Constitutional Court stated (at 33E–F); See also Hlophe
v Freedom Under Law, and Other Matters
2022
(2) SA 523
(GJ)
(a
decision of the full court) at paragraphs [34]–[47].
[5]
In Philippi Horticultural Area Food and Farming Campaign v MEC
for Local Government, Western Cape
2020
(3) SA 486
(WCC)
paragraph
[29].
[6]
South African
Riding
for the Disabled Association v Regional Land Claims Commissioner and
Others (CCT172/16)
[2017] ZACC 4
;
2017 (8) BCLR 1053
(CC);
2017 (5)
SA 1
(CC) (23 February 2017)
paragraph
[11].
[7]
Nelson Mandela Metropolitan Municipality v Greyvenouw CC
2004
(2) SA 81
(SE)
quoted with approval in South African Riding for the Disabled
Association v Regional Land Claims Commissioner and Others
(CCT172/16)
[2017] ZACC 4
;
2017 (8) BCLR 1053
(CC);
2017 (5) SA 1
(CC) (23 February 2017)
fn
7.
[8]
Nelson Mandela Metropolitan Municipality v Greyvenouw CC
2004
(2) SA 81
(SE)
at paragraph [9] quoted with approval in South African Riding for
the Disabled Association v Regional Land Claims Commissioner
and
Others (CCT172/16)
[2017] ZACC 4
;
2017 (8) BCLR 1053
(CC);
2017 (5)
SA 1
(CC) (23 February 2017)
paragraph
[11].
[9]
Written
submissions of the children's counsel dated 20 May 2022, CL11-84
submit -
"naturally
they have an interest in the proceedings, given that the
applicant/defendant intends to claim relief in respect
of the F[...]
Familie Trust in the divorce action." further, "if a
claim succeeds in the divorce action that
the F[...] Familie Trust
be declared to be the alter ego of the plaintiff, it follows that
the 34d,4th and 26yh and 27th respondents
stand to be deprived of
the benefits that may be derived by virtue of their capacities as
beneficiaries of the F[...] Familie
Trust. They have an interest in
the proceedings by virtue of their capacities as trustees and
beneficiaries of the trust and
as such, oppose the joinder
application.
[10]
Founding
Affidavit, para
5.2.5
[11]
Founding
Affidavit, para
5.2.5
[12]
Founding
Affidavit, para
5.2.6
[13]
Th
applicant alleges -
1.
The fifth respondent: The first respondent is the director
of the
fifth respondent which is "extremely profitable".
The first respondent holds 75% shares in the fifth respondent
and
the trust owns 20% shares. The deponent further states that it
believes that fifth respondent has loan accounts in
several of the
other companies interlinked with one another. The first respondent
is "the beneficial owner" of the
fifth respondent and that
it was "established with the first respondent’s funds".
2.
The sixth respondent: The first respondent is the director
of the
sixth respondent. The first respondent holds 15% shares and
the trust owns 20% of the shares. The deponent
further states
that it believes that sixth respondent has loan accounts in several
of the other companies interlinked with one
another. The first
respondent is "the beneficial owner" of the fifth
respondent and that it was "established with
the first
respondent’s funds".
3.
The seventh respondent: The applicant deposes that she
believes the
seventh respondent to be the pinnacle of the first respondent'
business empire. The applicant states that
she has been
"advised by my son who is also joined in this application, that
all the expenses of the first respondent as
well as the business
empire, are being made through this entity".
[13]
The
first respondent holds 50% of interest in the company and the
applicant believes the first respondent to be the sole beneficial
owner of the seventh respondent. The deponent alleges that: "I
believe that the first respondent might have, in the time
leading up
to our divorce as well as during the divorce proceedings, attempted
to estrange some of the asset in our communal
estate and it might
have occurred that certain assets were registered in the name of
alternative person which would have been
improper to do so."
[13]
4.
The eighth and ninth respondents: The applicant is unaware
of the
shareholding in this company, however, the first respondent is the
director. These entities were established after
the respondent
instituted divorce proceedings. The deponent states that the first
respondent is "a cunning business man
and that he would not be
involved in a new business ventures if no financial gain is to be
gathered therefrom". The deponent
also wants to establish what
funds were used in establishing the entity.
5.
The tenth respondent: The first respondent and the trust
(through
the fifth respondent) own 99% of the tenth respondent. The
applicant alleges that the tenth respondent "was
established
with funds from the joint estate of myself and the first respondent
and as such, the company holds a substantial
and real interest in
the main action".
6.
The eleventh, twelfth and thirteenth respondents: The
first
respondent holds a 50% interest in Northern Sparks, which owns a
share in Afropulse 177 (Pty) Ltd which holds 85%
of the shares
in the eleventh respondent.
7.
The fourteenth respondent: The first respondent owned
95% shares in
this company.
8.
The fifteenth respondent: The fifteen respondent was
established
after the divorce proceedings were instituted. The deponent is
unaware of the shares in this company, but the first
respondent is
the director of this company.
9.
The sixteenth, seventeenth, eighteenth, twenty-first
to
twenty-fourth respondents: The first respondent owns the majority
shares in the these companies.
10.
Nineteenth, twentieth and twenty-fifth respondents: The deponent
knows
these companies were created with known business associates of
the first respondent.
11.
Twenty-second respondent is a new company created after the divorce
proceedings
were instituted.
[14]
2017 (3) SA 371 (SCA)
[15]
2014
(6)
SA 243 (ECP)
[16]
Id
at para 8
[17]
Id
at para 8
[18]
Case
number 627/2016 handed down on 31 January 2017, Northern Cape.
[19]
Para
11
[20]
Id
para 12
[21]
Id
para 11
[22]
Written
submissions para 2.17
[23]
2014
(6)
SA 243 (ECP)
[24]
BC v CC and Others
2012 (5) SA 562
(ECP) para 18
[25]
Id
at para 12
[26]
EEVW
(above)
[27]
EVW
para 15
[28]
I
nternational
Pentecost Holiness Church In re: MBS v BMS and Another (63920/2020)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 296 (5 May 2022)
[29]
Id
at
para 14
[30]
Pentecostal
para 23
[31]
South African Riding for the Disabled Association v Regional Land
Claims Commissioner and Others (CCT172/16)
[2017] ZACC 4
;
2017 (8)
BCLR 1053
(CC);
2017 (5) SA 1
(CC) (23 February 2017) at para 9
[32]
1974(4) SA 412 (T) at 416F
[33]
Quoted
in Pentecostal para 24
[34]
In S v S
(347/2015)
[2016] ZAFSHC 1
(20 January 2016)
our
Courts weighed the presence of this relief in the context of divorce
proceedings. In
S
v S
the Court was faced with an applicant seeking to join a company
which she believed her husband held a valuable property called
Gottenburg. The Court held that it would lead to great
injustice were the wife able to prove the property was held
by the
company, but unable to meaningfully obtain relief as the company had
not been joined. The Court also noted that
if the wife fails
to make out a case against the company, after it had been joined,
then the company can take issue with the
pleadings through an
exception.
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