Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 915South Africa
Silinda N.O and Others v Makhombo Farm Management (Pty) Ltd and Others (B4251/22) [2022] ZAGPPHC 915 (22 November 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
22 November 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Silinda N.O and Others v Makhombo Farm Management (Pty) Ltd and Others (B4251/22) [2022] ZAGPPHC 915 (22 November 2022)
Silinda N.O and Others v Makhombo Farm Management (Pty) Ltd and Others (B4251/22) [2022] ZAGPPHC 915 (22 November 2022)
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sino date 22 November 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
Number: B4251/22
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
YES
In
the matter between: -
MESHACK
THEMBINKOSI SILINDA N.O. 1
st
Applicant
SIMEON
NGOMANE N.O.
2
nd
Applicant
LAZARUS
TIKI ZITHA
N.O. 3
rd
Applicant
AND
MAKHOMBO
FARM MANAGEMENT (PTY) LTD 1
st
Respondent
(IN
LIQUIDATION)
DANIEL
TERBLANCHE N.O.
2
nd
Respondent
HILMI
DANIELS N.O.
3
rd
Respondent
JUDGMENT
This
Judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ and or parties representatives by email and by
being
uploaded to CaseLines. The date and time for the hand down is deemed
on 22 November 2022.
1.
On 13 July
2021 Meshack Thembinkosi Silinda N.O. (‘Silinda’), Simeon
Ngomane N.O. (‘
Ngomane
’
)
and Lazarus Tiki Zitha N.O. (‘Zitha’) (collectively,
where appropriate, ‘the applicants’) brought an
application against Makhombo Farm Management (Pty) Ltd (in
liquidation) (‘
Makhombo
’
)
and Daniel Terblanche N.O. and Hilmi Daniels N.O. (collectively ‘the
respondents’) seeking urgent relief to review
and set aside a
warrant issued by the Clerk of the Court of Johannesburg and also
certain interdictory relief against the second
and third respondents
from issuing further warrants relating to the attachment of certain
monies at an organisation called RCL
Foods, pending the dispute
regarding the ownership of that money. I will refer to this as the
"main application". No
official from the Magistrate’s
Court was cited.
2.
The main
application was brought as a matter of urgency and set down for 3
August 2021.
3.
The
matter was unilaterally removed from the 3 August 2021 hearing
date
[1]
without
the consent of the respondents and contrary to the provisions of rule
41. It was then unilaterally set down for 17 August
2021 on the
urgent roll. Justice Tolmay postponed the main application for want
of compliance with the practice directives and
reserved the issue of
costs
[2]
.
4.
For the
reasons which follow, a consideration of the facts that underpinned
the launching of the main application is irrelevant.
The main
application is dismissed on a different basis, as becomes evident in
my judgement.
5.
The attorney
that represented the applicants in the main application is the same
Ngomane that is cited as the second applicant.
He is from the firm S
Ngomane Inc. At the proverbial eleventh hour Ngomane withdraws as the
attorney of record. The notice is dated
10 November 2022. It is a
simple withdrawal and, on the face of it, does not comply with the
prescripts of the rules of how a withdrawal
is done.
6.
On 11 November
2022 a certain Gideon Magnificent Mahlalela (‘Mahlalela’)
brought an application to intervene in the
main application and that
he could be joined as the fourth applicant. He also sought that the
main application which had been set
down be postponed
sine
die
. The
attorney for Mahlalela was Ntabeni Attorneys of Pretoria and he was
represented by Advocate Mandla Ntshangase.
7.
After some
debate with Mr Ntshangase as to the appropriateness of the
application to intervene, I permitted him to make all of his
submissions on the intervention. Without going into the merits of the
intervention application, in short, Mahlalela contends that
he is a
beneficiary of the trust represented by the applicants in the main
application, that he therefore has a direct interest
in the matter
and the necessary
locus
standi
to
intervene. Mr Ntshangase submitted that the applicants had, because
of the fact that the attorney of record had withdrawn, literally
abandoned the litigation and that Mahlalela was entitled to be joined
as a party and to continue with that litigation.
8.
I heard
arguments from both parties, I dismissed the intervention application
and advised Mr Ntshangase that I will provide my reasons
for the
dismissal in this judgment. Mr Ntshangase advised that he is only
briefed in respect of the application to intervene, and
that he has
no brief in respect of the merits of the main application. He
nevertheless decided to remain in court when the main
application was
argued.
9.
I,
immediately, after the main application was heard, dismissed it and
made an order that the costs are to be paid on an attorney
and client
scale,
de
bonis propriis
against
all three applicants as well as by the attorney firm S Ngomane Inc.
that had represented the applicants until the late withdrawal
as the
attorney of record. I also made an order that a copy of this judgment
be provided to the Legal Practices Council and that
the conduct of
Ngomane, the second applicant and the erstwhile attorney of record in
the main application, be investigated. On
the strength of the papers
before me,
prima
facie
,
Ngomane has acted in a flagrant disregard of a court order and, to
exacerbate matters, without bringing the order to the attention
of
the court. His conduct in this matter fills me with no confidence
that he is a fit and proper person to be an attorney and an
officer
of this court and it is my considered view that the manner in which
he has conducted this case should be the subject of
a serious
investigation by the Legal Practices Council. This will become
apparent from my judgment.
10.
When I read
the application in preparation for the hearing, the issue that
immediately perked my interest was that no trust deed
was attached to
the founding papers and no letters of authority. In fact, I could not
even distil the name of the trust from the
founding affidavit. I
found this unusual because, experience has taught me, that it is
probably that which should form part of
the first annexes to such an
affidavit.
11.
The
respondents are represented Van der Merwe & Associates, also of
Pretoria. The answering affidavit was deposed to by a certain
Mr Gert
Thomas van der Merwe (‘
Van
der Merwe
’
),
the attorney actually representing the respondents and responsible
for these proceedings.
12.
I was not
surprised that the respondents filed a notice in terms of rule 7 in
which they disputed the authority and mandate of S
Ngomane Inc to act
as attorneys of record for the applicants. The notice required proof
of the mandate supported by:
‘
(1)
A duly signed resolution by all the trustees of the trust;
(2)
A copy of the letters of authority appointing the trustees;
(3)
A copy of a Trust Deed;
(4)
Any additional document on which the said attorney relies for
authority’.
13.
When the
respondents filed their answering affidavit, there had been no
response to the rule 7 notice. It was probably prepared
in haste in
order to deal with the urgent application that was set down on 3
August 2022.
14.
On 30 July
2021 a response to the rule 7 notice was uploaded on CaseLines. It
had apparently been served on the respondents’
attorneys on 28
July and, on the face of it, it is dated 20 July 2018. It is a
document which reads as follows:
‘
CONFIRMATORY
OF AUTHORITY
We,
the undersigned, Meshack Thembinkosi Silinda, Simeon Ngomane and
Lazarus Tiki Zitha hereby confirm that:
(1)
We are the trustees for the time being of the Mjejane Trust (IT
6335/04) appointed as such by a court order dated 20 May 2009.
We
have instructed and authorised Simeon Ngomane of the firm Messrs
Ngomane Inc. to act on behalf of the Second, Third and Fourth
respondents in this matter under case no. 91791/2018 which has been
instituted at the Johannesburg Magistrates Court.
THUS
SIGNED AND EXECUTED AT
NELSPRUIT
ON THIS THE
20TH
DAY OF JULY 2018’.
Below
that is a space for the three persons to sign, which on the face of
it they did.
15.
This,
self-evidently, is an unsatisafactory response. First, it is an
authorisation for S Ngomane Inc. to act in a matter in the
Magistrates Court and not in respect of this urgent application.
There is no reference to the court case in terms of which they
were
appointed and no copy of the court order. There is no letter of
authority from the Master.
16.
The replying
affidavit deals with this issue as follows. First, at paragraph 14 it
states:
‘
It
is correct that the respondents served the Rule 7 notice. A response
thereto was furnished by the applicants on 29 July 2021
incorporating
a confirmation of the mandate of S Ngomane Incorporated Attorneys by
the applicants, a copy of which is attached
hereto as annexure ‘W2’.
It must be noted that the confirmation of authority empowers the
applicants’ attorneys
to act in the matter relating to the
application in terms of section 69 of the Insolvency Act, which is
the object inextricably
linked to the warrant in question in this
matter’
.
17.
What then
follows is the fact that the respondents filed a rule 30 notice in
respect of the response to the Rule 7 notice. There
seems to have
been some debate as to whether or not this was an irregular step. Be
that as it may, the applicants then state at
paragraphs 16 and 17 of
the replying affidavit:
‘
(16)
As the respondents do not seem to pursue their Rule 30 notice, there
is no longer any objection against the authority of the
applicants’
attorneys as the respondents had elected to deal with that aspect
under the rule 30 notice.
(17)
Further, the respondents’ Rule 7 notice went far beyond the
scope of Rule 7. Rule 7 is confined to proof by an attorney
of his
authority to act for a party. The documents requested by the
respondents in the Rule 7 notice go far beyond such purpose.
All that
was required was for the applicants’ attorneys to provide a
document such as the confirmatory authority, on which
they rely to
prove their mandate to act for the applicants in these proceedings.
The above Honourable Court (not necessarily the
respondents) ought to
be satisfied with the confirmatory of authority that such mandate
exists’.
18.
For the
reasons which I have mentioned above, I am not satisfied that this
proves that the attorney of record and the second applicant
had the
authority to act. Far from it. What was filed in response to the Rule
7, in my view, falls woefully short of that which
is required.
Challenging the authority of an attorney to act in a particular
matter is not something which is lightly done. It
places a serious
question mark on the conduct of a litigating party and also on the
attorney representing that party. It is a challenge
laid down by the
opposing party which may or may not strike at the heart of the
bona
fides
and
credibility of a litigating party and an attorney. Such a document
should be treated with the seriousness it deserves. Attaching
a
document dated four years before the institution of the main
application and which makes reference to court proceedings in the
Johannesburg Magistrates Court does not satisfy me that the relevant
authority has been demonstrated.
19.
For that
reason I decided to dismiss the main application. There is simply no
evidence to demonstrate that S Ngomane Inc. has the
necessary
authority to act in this regard. The challenge was made and the
response failed the test.
20.
Regrettably,
the matter does not end there.
21.
What emerges
from a supplementary affidavit deposed to by Mr van der Merwe on 12
August 2021 is the following.
22.
On 11 August
2020, some two years before the institution of the main application,
Justice Tuchten under case no. 43599/19 in this
division made an
order appointing a certain Mr Zeelie as the interim administrator of
the Mjejane trust and also suspended all
of the applicants as
trustees and interim trustees of the Mjejane Trust. Importantly, the
court order of Justice Tuchten reveals
that there is, in fact, apart
from these three applicants in this matter, an additional trustee;
namely Mpoyana Lazarus Ledwaba,
a party that was not cited as an
applicant in this application. He seems to have disappeared like mist
before the morning sun.
Furthermore, in yet a further supplementary
affidavit, filed on 5 October 2022 by Mr van der Merwe, it is, for
the first time,
that one sees the letters of authority signed by the
master of the high court. That also reveals a fourth trustee, Mr
Ledwaba.
23.
Justice
Tuchten
’
s
order further states in paragraph 8 that:
‘
[8]
Each of the first to seventh respondents
[3]
inclusive
is hereby interdicted, pending the determination of the relief in
Part B of the notice of motion, from:
8.1
holding himself out as entitled to represent the trust;
8.2
involving himself in any business or affairs of the trust;
8.3
(not relevant)’.
24.
I find it, to
say the least, disturbing that in the face of that order, the main
application was launched. Moreover, none of this
was disclosed in the
founding affidavit. On the face of it, all of the applicants in this
matter, and more disturbingly, the second
applicant and the attorney
of record, were acting in flagrant contempt of the interdict granted
by Justice Tuchten. I can think
of no other conclusion.
25.
The applicants
in the application that served before Justice Tuchten then approached
this court on an urgent basis in terms of
section 18(3)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
. The reason for this application is
because the respondents in the matter before Justice Tuchten (the
applicants in the main application)
failed to comply with the court
order as there was a pending application for leave to appeal. The
matter came before Justice Hughes.
26.
The suspended
trustees, or rather, three of the four namely Silinda, Ngomane,
Zitha, were the applicants in the
section 18(3)
application. Justice
Hughes found that the order of Justice Tuchten is not suspended
pending the decision of the appeal proceedings
instituted by these
three individuals. Justice Hughes in paragraph 3 of her order
declared these individuals to be in contempt
of court and ordered
them to purge their contempt. They were ordered, in their individual
capacities, to pay the costs of the
section 18(3)
application,
including the costs of two counsel. Justice Hughes, on the same day,
under the same case number extended the powers
and duties of the
interim administrator, Zeelie. This included, in paragraph 1.11 of
her order, an order ‘to institute and/or
defend all legal
proceedings in the interests of the Trust and the protection of the
recovery of the Trust’
s
assets
’
.
Once more, these three individuals were ordered to pay the
costs personally.
27.
In
an affidavit filed by Ngomane in the main application titled
‘Applicants’ answering affidavit to Respondents’
supplementary affidavit’ he states in paragraph 9,
inter
alia
,
‘that the court orders do not prohibit the suspended interim
trustees from approaching court and report any fraud committed
in
regard to Mjejane Trust funds’
[4]
.
This affidavit is dated 13 August 2021. There can be no merit in that
interpretation of the court orders which served before Justices
Tuchten and Hughes.
28.
The
flurry of paper continued and in an affidavit dated 5 October 2022
deposed to by Van der Merwe, titled ‘Respondents’
further
supplementary affidavit’ he attaches a letter from the attorney
firm Murphy Kwape Maritz Attorneys which was addressed
on behalf of
Zeelie. The letter indicates that the interim trustees (the
applicants in the main application) were finally removed
from office
on 7 March 2022
[5]
.
29.
On
12 November 2022 Mr van der Merwe addressed a letter to S Ngomane
Inc. referring to the withdrawal of him as attorney of record
on 11
November 2022. The letter indicates that counsel has been briefed for
the matter which had been enrolled for 14 November
2022
[6]
.
He was also advised that the letter will be used in support of the
de
bonis propriis
and
punitive cost orders
[7]
.
30.
The response
of S Ngomane Inc. was dismissive.
Inter
alia
, it
stated that Mr van der Merwe should be well aware that there was an
application for intervention by ‘the fourth applicant’.
He also indicates that according to his understanding the applicants
will have new attorneys of record before 17 November 2022
and he
indicated that he will be uploading this letter to CaseLines so that
the court hearing the matter will be aware of ‘our
position in
this matter’. There were no new attorneys of record for the
first three applicants and no counsel appeared.
31.
It is the
aforesaid facts that have further confirmed my view that a costs
order
de
bonis propriis
against
the erstwhile trustees in their personal capacity is an appropriate
one. It is also the reason that I ordered that the attorney
firm S
Ngomane Inc. is also to pay the costs
de
bonis propriis
jointly
and severally. It is a punitive costs order because of their conduct
and it should be paid on the attorney and client scale.
All of
the applicants, including the instructing attorney, were aware that
this costs order would be sought, yet none of them appeared
before
court.
32.
The facts
which are currently before me leave me with the overwhelming
impression that Ngomane, in his capacity as an attorney,
acted, not
only in contempt of the court order of Justice Tuchten but also in a
dishonest manner. It is inconceivable that
he did not think it
necessary to disclose these facts. He has provided no explanation for
his conduct. It leaves serious question
marks on whether attorneys
that act in this manner are fit and proper people to hold that office
and to be an officer of the court.
It is for that reason that I
request the registrar to provide a copy of this judgment and order to
the Legal Practices Council
in order that it can do a thorough
investigation into the conduct of S Ngomane Inc. and Ngomane himself.
33.
That brings me
back to the application to intervene.
34.
I cannot grant
it, simply because there is no case to intervene in. It is a case in
which the attorney had no authority to act and
it should never have
seen the light of day. It is also for that reason that I did not
consider the merits of the application and
dismissed the application
only on the basis of a want of authority. That would give the
applicant for intervention an opportunity
to launch a fresh case,
should he so wish in which the merits can properly be placed before
court for consideration, without me,
perhaps, compromising his
position by making decisions on the facts of the main application. I
put this to Mr Ntshangase and he
made no submissions to me that my
proposition was incorrect.
35.
I am not aware
of the financial position of the applicant for intervention.
Litigation is an expensive exercise and without in any
way and
without in any way wishing to affront him I have to consider the
possibility that he might not necessarily be in a financial
position
to bear an adverse costs order. I am worried that should I grant one,
it might affect his ability to institute proceedings
and this might,
practically, affect his ability to approach the court. I do not wish
to saddle him with that unnecessary financial
burden and shut the
doors of the court on him. In any event, both matters were heard on
the same day and, apart from the papers
which the respondents
had to read, I do not believe that warrants an adverse costs order
against him. I therefore decided to make
no costs order in respect of
the application to intervene.
36.
I consequently
make the following order:
Order
37.
The
application is dismissed.
38.
The applicants
and S Ngomane Attorneys are ordered to pay the costs
de
bonis propriis
jointly
and severally on the scale as between attorney and client, which
costs shall include the wasted costs of 3 and 17 August
2021.
39.
The Registrar
of this Court is requested to bring this judgment and order to the
attention of the Legal Practice Council for further
investigation
into the conduct of Simeon Ngomane (the second applicant and attorney
of record for the applicants in the main application).
REINARD
MICHAU
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Date
of hearing:
17
November 2022
Date
of judgment: 22
November 2022
Appearance
On
behalf of the Applicant Adv
H Wessels
Cell:
060
528
6860
Email:
wessels@lawcircle.co.za
No
appearance for the first
–
third applicants
On
behalf of Applicant to intervene Adv
Ntshangase
Instructed
by Mtadeni
Attorneys
On
behalf of the Respondents
Instructed
by Van
der Merwe and Associates
Tel:
012
343
5432
[1]
CaseLines
018-1
[2]
CaseLines
014-1
[3]
Which
include the applicants in this case
[4]
CaseLines
012-6 to 012-7
[5]
CaseLines
024-5
[6]
This
being the original date for enrolment
[7]
CaseLines
018-12
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