Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 871South Africa
Cassim N.O and Another v Coetzee and Others (018324/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 871 (16 November 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
16 November 2022
Headnotes
by a competent court, or by written agreement amongst the applicants and the trustees of the SMN Trust, those being the First, Second and Third Respondents to be entitled thereto;
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Cassim N.O and Another v Coetzee and Others (018324/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 871 (16 November 2022)
Cassim N.O and Another v Coetzee and Others (018324/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 871 (16 November 2022)
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sino date 16 November 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
Number:
018324/2022
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
NO
In
the matters between: -
ZAHEER
CASSIM NO
First
Applicant
THEA
CHRISTINA LOURENS NO
Second
Applicant
And
COETZEE
First
Respondent
AF
VAN HEERDEN NO
Second
Respondent
JH
VAN HEERDEN NO
Third
Respondent
AF
VAN HEERDEN NO
Fourth
Respondent
KM
GOVENDA NO C/O T GOVENDA
Fifth
Respondent
P
GOVENDA NO
Sixth
Respondent
T
GOVENDA
NO
Seventh
Respondent
T
GOVENDA
NO
Eighth
Respondent
SK
PILAY NO
Ninth
Respondent
THE
MASTER OF THE HIGH COURT, PRETORIA
Tenth Respondent
THE
SHERIFF OF THE HIGH COURT,
Eleventh
Respondent
GERMISTON
SOUTH
JUDGMENT
BALOYI-MERE
AJ
Introduction
1.
This is the anticipated return day of a
rule nisi
granted
ex parte
in
terms of rule 6(8) alternatively the set down for reconsideration of
an order granted in absence of the respondents in an urgent
application in terms of rule 6(12)(c).
2.
The Applicants (in the first/main
application) brought an
ex parte
application interdicting the First, Second and Third Respondents
(“Collectively referred to as S & M Trust”) from
disposing of a certain helicopter (“the Huey”), the
attachment and return of the helicopter to the Applicants and for
the
helicopter to be declared an asset of the Applicants, the
preservation of the assets of S & M Trust pending the
finalisation
of an enquiry in terms of section 417 of the old
Companies Act, alternatively pending the finalisation of any steps to
be taken
subsequent to the said enquiry.
3.
Collis J granted the order on the 30
th
August 2022 with a return date of the 08
th
November 2022. The order granted by Collis J reads as follows:
“
1)
That the matter is enrolled and heard as one of urgency as
contemplated in uniform rule 612 of the Uniform Rules of the above
Honourable Court.
2)
That a rule nisi issued calling upon the First to Ninth Respondent to
show cause, if any, on the 08
th
November 2022 at 10h00 or
so soon thereafter as counsel may be heard, as to why an order in the
following terms should not be made
final:
2.1
That the First to Third Respondent are interdicted and restrained
from deposing of the
1969 Bell 204
HP helicopter (“Huey
helicopter”) with tail number: ZU-RXX and serial number: 1104
(herein after referred to as the
“Huey helicopter”);
2.2
That the collusive disposition of the Huey helicopter is set aside in
terms of the provisions of section 31 read together with
section 32
of the Insolvency Act 24 of 1936 (herein after referred to as the
“
Insolvency Act&rdquo
;);
2.3
That in terms of the provisions of
section 32
of the
Insolvency Act,
the
Huey helicopter be returned to the Applicants and be declared an
assets of the insolvent estate of Ipower Services (Pty) Ltd (in
liquidation) (herein after referred to as “Ipower”), to
be administered by the Applicants in the insolvent estate of
Ipower;
2.4
That the Sheriff of the above Honourable Court be and is hereby
authorised upon the granting of this order to give effect to
paragraph 2.3 above and in so doing take all steps as may be
necessary to attach, cease and take into his/her possession the Huey
helicopter and all/any books, registers of title, flight registers
and any other documents in relation to ownership and return
same to
the Applicants;
2.5
That pending the finalisation and outcome of commission of enquiry
into the trade, dealings, affairs and property of Ipower
in terms of
the provisions of 416, read with section 418 of the Companies Act 61
of 1973 (herein after referred to as “the
enquiry”)
alternatively, any proceeding to be instituted in due course by the
Applicants against such respondents pursuant
to the information
obtained during the enquiry;
2.5.1
That the First to Ninth Respondents be and are hereby interdicted and
restrained from deposing of all and/or any of the their
assets of
whatsoever nature, which includes but is not limited to the right to
sell, alienate, destroy, encumber or in any other
way deal with these
assets, pending the outcome and finalisation of the enquiry
alternatively, any proceedings to be instituted
in due course by the
Applicants against such Respondents pursuant to the information
obtained during the enquiry;
3.
That the order set out in paragraph 2 above, shall operate as interim
orders with immediate effect, pending the return date of
this matter;
4.
That the First to Ninth Respondents are order to, within 10 (ten)
days after services upon them of this order, under oath to
state and
list all assets belonging to and/or in their possession or under
their control and/or list any assets they have any direct
or indirect
interest in;
5.
That upon the granting of this order a copy of this application
together with this order be served on the Respondents and that
the
First to Ninth Respondents be granted leave to anticipate the return
date following the granting of this order, upon no less
than 24
hours’ notice to the Applicants;
That
the First to Ninth Respondents are ordered to pay the costs of this
application, jointly and severally on the attorney and
client scale.”
4.
The helicopter was attached on the 01
st
September 2022. This was the same date that S & M Trust became
aware of the
ex parte
order.
5.
A company called Money Global (“MG”)
brought an urgent application on 19
th
September 2022 for the reconsideration of the order granted by Collis
J. A copy of this application was served on all the parties.
6.
Van Der Westhuizen J reconsidered the
order granted by Collis J and granted an order on the 30
th
September 2022 in the following terms:
“
1.
The matter is urgent;
2.
Money Global (Pty) Ltd t/a aviation sales international is granted
leave to intervene as a further respondent in the ex parte
application under case number 2022/018324;
3.
The joinder of the Sheriff of the High Court, Germiston South as the
Eleventh Respondent in the application is authorised and
ratified;
4.
Prayers 2.1, 2.2, 2.3, and 2.4 of the ex parte order granted by this
court on 31
st
August 2022 in the ex parte application that
was before it, are set aside and deleted therefrom;
5.
The Eleventh Respondent, the Sheriff of the High Court, Germiston
South, is directed to forthwith uplift his attachment pursuant
to the
ex parte order of the 31
st
August 2022 of the
1969 Bel 204
HP Helicopter (the Huey helicopter) bearing the manufacture’s
serial number 1104 and registration ZU-RXX (the Huey);
6.
The Eleventh Respondent, the Sheriff of the High Court, Germiston
South is directed to forthwith uplift his attachment pursuant
to the
ex parte order of 31
st
August 2022 of all the log books
and documentation relating to the Huey being:
(a)
One x engine log book
(b)
One x air frame log book;
(c)
One x flight folio;
(d)
One x red file with accepted maintenance schedules;
(e)
One x black file containing all log cards and records;
(f)
One x REF File – Sw04 GP flight manual;
(g)
One x orange file containing a certificate of registration, and
authority to fly certificate (expired), a certificate to release
, to
service, and inspection reminder and radio station license;
7.
The Sheriff of the High Court, Germiston South, is directed to return
to Money Global (Pty) Ltd t/a as Aviation
Sales
International the Huey and documents listed in prayer 6 above;
8.
The attorneys of record of Money Global (Pty) Ltd t/a Aviation Sales
International, messers. Ulrich Roux and Associates of Ground
Floor,
15 Chaplin road, Illovo, Sandton are directed to retain in trust the
purchase price of R4 million paid by Money Global (Pty)
Ltd t/a
Aviation Sales International for the Huey for the benefit of the
party held by a competent court, or by written agreement
amongst the
applicants and the trustees of the SMN Trust, those being the First,
Second and Third Respondents to be entitled thereto;
9.
The First and Second Applicants in the ex parte application were
ordered to pay the costs of this application for reconsideration
jointly and severally, the one paying the other to be absolved, in
the scale as between attorney and client, such cost to include
the
cost consequent of the employ of two counsel.”
7.
The Applicants brought an application
for leave to appeal the order of Van Der Westhuizen J, which
application was dismissed with
costs on a punitive scale.
8.
The S & M Trust brought an
application for the reconsideration or the anticipation of the order
granted by Collis J. The S &
M application is brought in terms of
rule 6(8) which provides as follows:
“
6(8)
any person against whom an order is granted ex parte may anticipate
the return day upon delivery of not less than 24 hours’
notice.”
And
in the alternative the application is brought in terms of rule
6(12)(c) which provides as follows:
“
6(12)(c)
a person against whom an order was granted in such person’s
absence in an urgent application made by notice set down
the matter
for reconsideration of the order.”
9.
Both these provisions, that is, rule
6(8) and rule 6(12)(c) have the same jurisdictional requirements
which are:
9.1
Was granted
ex
parte
;
9.2
Was granted in the absence of the
applicants; and
9.3
Was granted in an urgent application.
10.
The
provisions of the sub rule only apply where an order has been granted
against a person
ex
parte
and where a return day has been fixed. And that is the situation in
this matter. The sub rule comes to the aid of a person who
has been
taken by surprise by an order granted
ex
parte
.
The sub rule does not apply where the return date of the
rule
nisi
obtained ex parte has been extended with the knowledge or in the
presence of the persons affected thereby. In this case there was
never an extension of the
rule
nisi
.
This sub rule deals with a somewhat different situation and allows a
person against whom an order was granted in his absence in
an urgent
application to set the matter down on notice for reconsideration of
the order. In
Competition
Commission v Wilmar Continental Edible Oils and Fats (Pty) Ltd and
Others
[1]
the court held as follows:
“
In
terms of rule 6(12)(c) the respondents are entitled to have an order
reconsidered on the presence of two jurisdictional facts”
That
the main application was heard as a matter of urgency; and
That
the first order was granted in their absence.
The
dominant purpose of the Uniform Rule is to afford to an aggrieved
party a mechanism designed to redress imbalances in, and injustices
and oppression flowing from an order granted as a matter of urgency
in his absence. I find that the required jurisdictional facts
exist
in this matter”
11.
I also need to pause here and indicate
that because the Applicants had anticipated the return date of the
08
th
November 2022, therefore the hearing of this application is dealt
with as if it is on the return date as it has been anticipated.
It is
therefore trite that there is no need for the parties to go back to
court on the 08
th
November 2022 as the matter has now served before court on the
anticipated return date.
Urgency
12.
The Applicants in the interim interdict
argue that the Respondents did not make out a case for urgency. The
Applicants further argued
that this matter is complex and there would
be no prejudice if the matter is dealt with on the return date or at
a hearing in due
course. I have already dealt with the issue of the
return date in the preceding paragraph. I will only deal now with the
issue
of urgency.
13.
In
United
Medical Devices LLC v Blue Rock Capital Limited
[2]
the court held as follows:
“
The
same applies in respect of argument of lack of urgency. As stated,
the purpose of rule 6(12)(c) is to allow parties who were
not present
when an urgent ex parte order is made, to approach the court for
reconsideration of the order and place facts before
the court. To
permit the respondents to themselves now claim lack of urgency on the
part of the applicants would undermine audi
alterem partem which rule
6(12)(c) gives effect to”.
14.
In
Faraday
Taxi Association v Director Registration and Monitoring and Others
[3]
the court held as follows:
“
For
similar reasons, FTA’s complaints about the absence of any
urgency in the matter do not find favour in me. OFUTA did not
seek to
make out a case on urgency. Its contention was that being sui
generis, as a matter of practice such matters may be enrolled
in the
urgent court without the usual constraints of the applicant for rule
6(12)(c) relief having to show that the application
is urgent. In
this regard, I agree with the views expressed by the learned Modiba J
in LA v LW to the extent when applications
under rule 6(12)(c) are
enrolled in the urgent court:
“
the
circumstances of each case and considerations of convenience and
fairness are private when the court exercises its discretion
to enrol
a rule 6(12)(c) application. There may well be cases where resort to
the urgent court is not justified. What renders this
case suitable
for consideration in the urgent court is the complaint that there
were material non-disclosers by FTA when it approached
Crutchfiled AJ
urgently. If this averment is found to be meritorious, then there
should be no delay in the order obtained in such
circumstances being
set aside.”
15.
I will deal with the issue of material
non-disclosure in the next few paragraphs.
16.
Van Der Westhuizen in his judgment dated
the 30 September 2022 stated the following:
“
Rule
6(12)(c)of the Uniform Rules of Court provides that a person against
whom an order was granted in such person’s absence
in an urgent
application may by notice set down the matter for reconsideration of
the order. Furthermore, rule 6(8) provides that
any person against
whom an order is granted ex parte may anticipate the return day upon
delivery of not less than 24 hours’
notice. From the
aforementioned two rules it is clear that such set down, or
anticipation of the return day, are inherently urgent.
There is
accordingly no merit in the first point in limine. It is ruled that
the matter is urgent.”
17.
Similarly, I find that the matter is
urgent and should be enrolled as such.
Material
Non-Disclosure
18.
The Respondents argue that the
Applicants did not disclose all the information that they had at
their disposal when Collis J heard
the matter and granted the order
ex parte
.
The Respondents submitted that the Applicants made a fleeting
reference to the affidavit filed by the Fourth Respondent in the
liquidation matter but did not divulge the details in order for the
Honourable Judge to make an informed decision. The Applicants
only
divulge some of the allegations in their answering affidavit
resisting this reconsideration application. Those averments were
not
before Collis J when she granted the
ex
parte
order.
19.
A party bringing an ex parte application
should act in the utmost good faith and disclose all the relevant
information, including
those averments that are not favourable to
that party’s application.
20.
In
Estate
Logi v Priest
[4]
it was held as follows:
“
In
an ex parte application the utmost good faith must be observed by an
applicant. A failure to disclosure fully and fairly all
material
facts known to him (or her) may lead, in the exercise of the court’s
discretion, to the dismissal of the application
on that ground
alone.”
21.
Regardless
of whether or not the material non-disclosure is willfull, mala fides
or as a result of negligence, the court still has
the discretion to
set aside an order granted on the ground of non-disclosure. The duty
is one that extends to the legal representative
for a party
proceeding on ex parte basis as it was held in
Toto
v Special Investigation Unit and Others
[5]
as follows:
“
It
is trite that it is the duty of a litigating party’s legal
representative to inform the court of any matter which is material
to
the issues before court and of which he is aware… This court
should always be able to accept and act on the assurance
of a legal
representative in any matter it hears and, in order to deserve this
trust, legal representatives must act with the utmost
good faith
towards the court… A legal representative who appears in court
is not a mere agent of his client but has a duty
towards the
Judiciary to ensure the efficient and fair administration of justice…
the proper administration of justice could
not easily survive if the
professions were not scrupulous of their dealings with the court.”
22.
The Applicants disclosed to the court
that urgent sequestration proceedings were instituted against the
Fourth Respondent under
case number 48817/21 which application is
currently pending before court. They also disclosed that the
sequestration application
is opposed by the Fourth Respondent. They
however did not attach the answering affidavit of the Fourth
Respondent as an annexure
but merely referred to an extract
therefrom, merely dealing with the helicopter being registered in the
name of the trust.
23.
The Applicants only attached the Fourth
Respondent’s detailed answering affidavit in this proceedings
but failed to attach
it in the proceedings before Collis J.
24.
The Applicants failed to refer to the
defence of the Fourth Respondent in the sequestration application or
the exonerating version
presented by the Eighth Respondent under oath
in support of the Fourth Respondent’s opposition in their
founding affidavit
in this application. The Respondents in this
application content that the detailed defence of the Fourth
Respondent might have
influenced the court in coming to a decision in
the ex parte application had it been disclosed. Several other
averments are made
by the Respondents that they allege that the
Applicants failed to disclose in the ex parte application that was
heard by Collis
J. Amongst those averments are that the Applicants
had failed to deliver any replying affidavit in the sequestration
application
and thus the Fourth Respondent’s contention stands
uncontested and also that the Fourth Respondent eventually delivered
its
heads of argument in order to advance the application to
finality. The other averments that were made by the Applicants is
that
the Applicants instituted both criminal and other civil
proceedings in an attempt to secure certain assets as well as obtain
redress
against the Respondents and these averments were made in the
founding affidavit in the sequestration application which was deposed
to on the 28
th
September 2021. To date no such proceedings have been
instituted against the Fourth respondent.
25.
The
Respondents, in their heads of argument, quoted extensively from the
case from the Supreme Court of Appeal,
Recycling
and
Economic
Development Initiative of SA NPC v Minister of Environmental
Affairs
[6]
from paragraph 45 to paragraph 52. This case captures the effects of
material non-disclosure aptly that it deserves to be repeated
in this
judgment. The court in the
Recycling
and Economic Development Initiative of SA NPC
held
as follows:
“
[45]
The principle of disclosure in ex parte proceedings is clear. In NDPP
v Basson the court said:
“
Where
an order is sought ex parte it is well established that the utmost
good faith must be observed. All material facts must be
disclosed
which might influence a court in coming to its decision, and
withholding or suppression of material facts, by itself,
entitles a
court to set aside an order, even if the non-discloser or suppression
was not willfull or mala fide.
See
also
Schlesinger v Schlesinger
1979 (4) SA 342
(W) at 348 E –
349 B
[46]
The duty of the utmost good faith, and in particular the duty of full
and fair disclosure, is imposed because orders granted
without notice
to affected parties are a departure from a fundamental principle of
the administration of justice, namely, audi
alteram partem. The law
sometimes allows a departure from this principle in the interest of
justice but in those exceptional circumstances
the ex parte applicant
assumes a heavy responsibility to neutralise the prejudice the
affected party suffers by his or her absence.
[47]
The applicant must thus be scrupulously fair in presenting her own
case. She must also speak for the absent party by disclosing
all
relevant facts she knows or reasonably expects the absent party would
want placed before the court. The applicant must disclose
and deal
fairly with any defences of which she is aware or which she may
reasonably anticipate. She must disclose all relevant
adverse
material that the absent respondent might have put up in opposition
to the order. She must also exercise due care and make
such enquiries
and conduct such investigations as are reasonable in the
circumstances before seeking ex parte relief. She may not
refrain
from disclosing matters asserted by the absent party because she
believes it to be untrue. And even where the ex parte
applicant has
endeavoured in good faith to discharge her duty, she will be held to
have fallen short if the court finds that a
matter she regarded as
irrelevant was sufficiently material to require disclosure. The test
is objective.
[48]
S Waller J said, in Arab Business Consortium, points in favour of the
absent party should not only be drawn to the Judge’s
attention
but must be done clearly:
“
There
should be no thought in the minds of those preparing affidavits that
provided that somewhere in the exhibits or in the affidavits
the
point of materiality can be discerned, that is good enough.”
[49]
The ex parte litigant should not be guided by any notion of doing the
bare minimum. She should not make disclosure in a way
calculated to
deflect the Judge’s attention from the force and substance of
the absent respondent’s known or likely
stance on the matter in
issue. Generally this will require disclosure in the body of the
affidavit. The Judge, who hears an ex
parte application, particularly
if urgent and voluminous, is rarely able to study the papers at
length and cannot be expected to
trawl through annexures in order to
find material favouring the absent party.
[50]
In regard to the court’s discretion as to whether to set aside
an ex parte order because of non-disclosure, Le Roux J
said in
Schlesinger v Schlesinger:
“…
unless
there are very cogent practical reasons why an order should not be
rescinded, the court will always frown on an order obtained
ex parte
on incomplete information and will set it aside even if relief could
be obtained on a subsequent application by the same
applicant.”
[51]
This is consistent with the approach in English Law, that if material
non-disclosure is established a court will be astute
to ensure that a
plaintiff who obtains an ex parte order without full disclosure, is
deprived of any advantage he may have derived
by that bridge of duty.
[52]
As to the factors that are relevant in the court’s exercise of
its discretion whether or not to set aside an ex parte
order on
grounds of non-disclosure, in NDPP v Phillips this court said that
regard must be had to the extent of the non-disclosure,
the question
whether the Judge hearing the ex parte application might have been
influenced by proper disclosure, the reasons for
non-disclosure and
the consequences of setting the provisional order aside.
26.
I find that there was material
non-disclosure by the Applicants when they dealt with the
ex
parte
application that served before
Collis J.
27.
The
Applicants rely on the
Peacock
Television (Pty) Ltd v Transkei Development Corporation
[7]
where Madlanga J (as he was then) dealt with the issue of
anticipation of a return date. I find that this case is not
applicable
in the present case as the Peacock Television case dealt
with a situation where the
rule
nisi
was extended with the knowledge of the Respondent and therefore the
Respondent no longer had a right to anticipate or reconsider
the
order.
The
Order Granted by Collis J
28.
Apart from order number 2 (quoted above
at paragraph 4 above), including the sub paragraphs 2.1 to 2.4 which
have now been set aside
by Van Der Westhuizen in the judgment of the
30
th
September 2022, Collis J gave two further final orders on an ex parte
basis. These are orders number 4 and the cost order at number
6.
29.
The
applicant, during argument, conceded that these two orders should not
have been granted on
ex
parte
basis. In Engen Petrolium Ltd v Multiwaste (Pty) Ltd and
Others
[8]
the court held as
follows:
“
An
ex parte application, or an application using the short form notice
of motion (Form 2) is used either because it is not necessary
to give
notice to the respondent, or the relief claimed is not final in
nature … Rule 6(5)(a) provides that every application
other
than one brought ex parte shall be brought in accordance with Form
2(a) of the first Schedule to the Uniform Rules.”
30.
I find that the orders in paragraphs 4
and 6 as granted by Collis J should be set aside.
31.
I also find that the Thirteenth
Respondent should be joined in this proceedings in her official and
authorised capacity as a trustee
of S & M Trust.
32.
In the premises I make the
following order:
1.
That this matter is urgent;
2.
Directing and ordering that Mariette Van Heerden in her official and
authorised capacity as a trustee of the S & M Trust,
be joined to
the application as the Thirteenth Respondent and that such joinder be
ratified;
3.
That the
ex parte
order dated 22
nd
August 2022 be
discharged and set aside in its entity, alternatively discharging,
deleting or setting aside the inclusion of the
First to Fourth
Respondent in paragraphs 2.5.1, 4 and 6 of the ex parte order granted
by the above Honourable Court on the 30
th
August 2022, in
the
ex parte
application that was before it;
4.
That the amount of R4 000 000.00 held in trust by the
attorneys of the Twelfth Respondent immediately be paid over
to the
trustees of the S & M Trust or its nominated beneficiary and that
the order of this court dated 30
th
August 2022 in so far
as it may be necessary, be amended accordingly;
5.
That the attorneys of the Twelfth Respondent Ulrich Roux and
Associate be authorised in terms of this order to pay the said amount
of R4 000 000.00 to the attorneys of record of the S &
M Trust;
6.
That the Applicants and the Applicant’s attorneys be ordered to
pay the cost of this application on an attorney and client
scale,
jointly and severally, the one paying the other to be absolved, such
costs to include the cost of two counsel.
EM
Baloyi-Mere AJ
16
November 2022
Matter
heard the 27
th
October 2022
Judgment
16
th
November 2022
Counsel
for the Applicant AB
Rossouw SC
Counsel
for the Respondent MA
Badenhorst SC with R Grundlingh
[1]
2020 (4) SA 527
(KZP) at paragraph 17.
[2]
2016 JDR 0570 (KZD).
[3]
(58879/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 213 (5 April 2022)
[4]
1926 AD 312.
[5]
2001(1) SA 673 (E).
[6]
2019(3) SA 251 (SCA).
[7]
1998 (2) SA 259
(Tk).
[8]
2012
(5) SA 596
(GSJ)
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