Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 947South Africa
Umbomi-Tech Securities (Pty) Ltd v Richards Park Body Corporate and Others (B39194/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 947 (6 December 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
6 December 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Umbomi-Tech Securities (Pty) Ltd v Richards Park Body Corporate and Others (B39194/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 947 (6 December 2022)
Umbomi-Tech Securities (Pty) Ltd v Richards Park Body Corporate and Others (B39194/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 947 (6 December 2022)
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sino date 6 December 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
CASE
NO: B39194/2022
REPORTABLE:NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED
6
DECEMBER 2022
In
the matter between:
UBOMI-TECH
SECURITIES (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
RICHARDS
PARK BODY CORPORATE
1
st
Respondent
MOKGOATJANA
ATTORNEYS
2
nd
Respondent
OTTO
KRAUSE
INC
3
rd
Respondent
THE
SHERIFF HALFWAY HOUSE
4
th
Respondent
JUDGMENT-
URGENT APPLICATION
COWEN
J
INTRODUCTION
1.
This
is an urgent application in which the applicant, Ubomi-Tech
Securities Pty (Ltd) seeks to protect attached property from an
execution process. The property comprises attached
movables to be sold at auction. The applicant seeks, centrally,
an interdict staying this process and related relief.
[1]
2.
The first
respondent is Richards Park Body Corporate (RPBC). The second
respondent is RPBC’s former attorneys of record,
representing
the applicant in proceedings in this Court, through which an adverse
costs order was granted against the applicant
(in an exception
process). The third respondent is Mokgoatjana Attorneys, the
attorneys representing RPBC in the process
of recovery of the fees.
3.
The costs
order was granted on 15 October 2020. There is a dispute about
whether both parties were represented at the taxation
on 6 May 2022.
However, what is material is that the applicant states that it
learnt only on 28 September 2022 that the taxing
master had taxed and
allocated the bill in the amount of R52 680.30. It did so
after the applicant received a call from
an employee of the fourth
respondent, who advised the applicant that he is in possession of
instructions from the third respondent
directing his offices to
attach and remove the applicant’s property. The applicant
contacted his attorneys who then
advised that they had no knowledge
of the third respondent or who it is representing and that there had
been no notice of withdrawal
filed in respect of the second
respondent’s representation. Communication then
ensued between the applicant’s
attorneys and the third
respondent in this regard.
4.
The applicant
contends, further, that there was no deed of cession pursuant to
which the second respondent had ceded its entitlement
to the debt to
the third respondent. The fees, the applicant says, are due and
payable in respect of the second respondent’s
fees and
disbursements and it cannot be placed in a position where a process
ensues whereby its debt is satisfied in favour of
the third
respondent.
5.
On 28
September 2022, the applicant’s attorneys wrote to the third
respondent to inform them, effectively, that they had not
received
the taxing master’s allocation and they are not properly on
record and requested that they withdraw the warrant
of attachment.
They refused to do so and the fourth respondent proceeded with the
attachment on the following day, 29 September
2022.
6.
There are
three primary bases upon which the applicant seeks impugn or stay the
execution process.
7.
The
first is to enable it to reach agreement with the respondents
alternatively institute urgent interpleader proceedings to ascertain
which party it must pay (the first issue).
8.
The second
basis is that the warrant of execution was unlawfully obtained due to
the failure formally and in terms of Rule 16 of
the Rules of Court,
to substitute the third respondent with the second respondent, as the
attorneys on record, before the warrant
of execution was obtained.
Underpinning this issue are complaints that the first time that
the applicant received notice
of the taxing master’s allocation
was when contacted by the fourth respondent acting on instruction of
the third respondent
on 28 September 2022. It was, it says, at
no stage requested to make payment to the first respondent either
directly or by
its still extant attorneys of record and afforded no
opportunity to make arrangements to pay, which, it says, it needs to
do.
I refer to this as the second issue.
9.
The third
basis is to enable the applicant to make payment of the debt over a
period of seventeen months, paying some R3000 per
month. This
is sought to be justified on the basis that the applicant only
generates a pre-tax monthly profit of between
R20 000 and
R50 000 per month. The applicant says it will prejudice
its 60 employees that may be rendered unemployed
if the company fails
to meet its obligations. The applicant says it requires the
attached goods to generate an income.
The attached goods are
itemised in paragraph 13 of the founding affidavit and I do not
recite it save to point out that they include,
amongst other items,
the office furniture, computers and a range of goods used to perform
office work. I refer to this
as the third issue.
10.
The notice of
motion and founding affidavit are both dated 11 October 2022 but the
notice of motion carries a court stamp of 18
October 2022. The
first respondent delivered a notice of intention to oppose on 19
October 2022 under cover of an email that
reflects that the
application was only served that day. The delay between
finalisation of the papers and service is not explained.
There
are technical difficulties with the notice of motion: for
example, in explaining when and how any opposition should
ensue and
it fails to indicate when the application is to be heard. The
application was, according to the applicant’s
counsel,
erroneously enrolled on 25 October 2022 but thereafter removed from
the roll in circumstances where the first respondent
had briefed
counsel. Answering papers were requested only by that date.
The first respondent delivered an answering
affidavit on 24
October 2022. The third respondent only delivered an answering
affidavit on 14 November 2022. There
is a replying affidavit
dated 17 November 2022 but it replies only to the first respondent’s
affidavit. The application
was set down for 22 November 2022.
11.
On that day I
requested counsel to address me on urgency in circumstances where the
participating respondents contended that any
urgency was
self-created. There was, however, no dispute that there was urgency
in the matter that arose on 28 September 2022.
On the evidence
before me, it is correct that urgency arose on that date. The
manner in which the applicant conducted itself
thereafter raises a
number of concerns. However, the matter was ultimately only
enrolled for 22 November 2022, in circumstances
where papers had been
filed, and, ultimately, I formed the view that the matter should be
heard and that the concerns about the
conduct of the matter alluded
to in paragraph 10 above should be addressed through an appropriate
costs order. The parties
delivered supplementary submissions:
the last were received on 30 November 2022. I deal in this
judgment with the main considerations
leading to my decision.
12.
In my view,
the first issue (see paragraph 6) has become academic as these
proceedings have unfolded. Specifically, the second
respondent
withdrew as attorneys of record on 24 October 2022, after the
proceedings were instituted but before these proceedings
were heard.
Moreover, it is now quite clear that the third respondent is and,
when the warrant was secured, was acting on
behalf of the first
respondent in the recovery process and that there is no cession in
place either in favour of the second or
third respondent.
In this regard, the first respondent explains that it has paid the
second respondent its fees and
the applicant is, as per the court
order, obliged to reimburse it the taxed amount. It has
terminated the mandate of the
second respondent and appointed the
third respondent to recover the fees payable.
13.
In
my view, the applicant has failed to make out a case on the third
issue (see paragraph 9). The information supplied is,
simply,
too scant to enable this court to exercise any discretion it may have
in the applicant’s favour.
[2]
14.
However,
the second issue (paragraph 8) warrants separate consideration. There
was, sensibly, no dispute between the parties that
notice to the
applicant of the allocation was necessary before any attachment could
lawfully proceed.
[3]
The
first respondent, however, explained that it had given notice.
This was apparently done on 8 September 2022, when
first respondent’s
attorneys – by then the third respondent – had sent a
letter to the applicant’s attorneys
informing the applicant
that it was representing the first respondent, providing the taxed
and allocated bill and demanding payment
within 14 days to a named
account. There was no response and the third respondent
followed up on 13 September 2022
to no avail. Notably, the
substance of the communication is contained in an attachment to the
e-mail of 8 September 2022,
and not in the e-mail itself.
According to the applicant, there was no attachment to the e-mail
and, it continues, there
was no reason to respond as the attorneys
writing to them were not known to them as attorneys in the matter.
The respondent
has, however, supplied proof that when the e-mail of 8
September 2022 was sent, there was an attachment. I accept the
respondent’s
version.
[4]
Moreover, it is difficult to understand why an attorney would
not at least follow up on an e-mail in the above circumstances.
15.
Nevertheless,
what then becomes material are the events of 28 and 29 September
2022. On 28 September 2022, the applicant’s
attorneys
contacted the third respondent telephonically and addressed
correspondence, which highlights both that the emails of
8 and 13
September 2022 had no attachments and referred to the concern that
the third respondent was not on record as the first
respondent’s
attorneys. The attachments were again forwarded by third
respondent to the applicant’s attorney
on 28 September 2022,
presumably after the telephone call and were thus to hand before 29
September 2022 when the third respondent
secured a warrant of
attachment from the registrar.
16.
On the
information to hand, I am unable to conclude that the warrant of
attachment was unlawfully obtained. As a matter of
fact, by the
time that the warrant was secured, the first respondent had given the
applicant notice of the allocation, through
the third respondent, and
the third respondent was mandated to act on behalf of the first
respondent. That this is so is
confirmed through the answering
affidavit and its attachments.
17.
However,
it does not follow that the applicant is not entitled to any stay in
the circumstances.
[5]
In
this regard, it is difficult to understand why, upon receipt of the
letter of 29 September 2022 from the applicant’s
attorney, the
first respondent commenced immediately with the execution process.
The first respondent had, on 8 September
2022 considered a 14-day
period for payment reasonable. Even accepting, as I do, that
the third respondent sent the attachments
on 8 September 2022, it is
quite plausible that they were not received. If so, the process
would have ensued after only 24
hours’ notice to pay, in
circumstances where the taxing process had been drawn out and
apparently dealt with as far back
as May 2022, the costs order is
dated 2020 and the first respondent had considered it reasonable to
afford 14 days to pay.
In any event, the first respondent,
through its attorneys ought to have ensured that they were placed on
record through Rule 16
of the Rules of Court before either expecting
payment or proceeding to execute. The warrant is signed by a
person claiming
to be the excipient’s attorney and contemplates
that the sheriff will pay it the monies obtained through the
execution process.
That the relevant party’s attorney
sign the warrant is, moreover, contemplated by Form 18 of the First
Schedule to the Rules,
which is, according to Rule 45, to be used.
18.
I am mindful
that the applicant, in any event, is not in a position to make
immediate payment of the amounts owed. Rather
it sought an
opportunity to make payment arrangements and has now approached the
Court to secure an order to that effect.
While the first
respondent disputed the applicant’s entitlement to such an
order, and I do not grant it, the first respondent
does not say that
it would not entertain such a request had it been duly made.
19.
In
my view, on a consideration of the conspectus of circumstances in
this case, it was wholly unjust for the first respondent to
proceed
with the execution process before ensuring that its representation
was regularised and duly engaging the applicant’s
attorney in
that regard. It is a recipe for injustice and uncertainty for
an attorney not on record to demand payment of
amounts owing to a
party under a costs order and proceed with execution. That is
so even if duly mandated. Conversely,
it was reasonable for the
applicant’s attorney to insist that the third respondent’s
representation be in order at
that stage. This could
easily have been done expeditiously albeit that it would invariably
have resulted in a delay.
It was in any event, as indicated
above, unreasonable in this case to assume that the attachments, even
if sent, had been received
on 8 September 2022 and act on that
assumption. In all of the circumstances, I am of the view that
the applicant is entitled
to alternative relief being a stay of the
execution process for a period of 10 days.
[6]
The relief will serve to redress the injustice that was caused when
the execution process ensued.
20.
The
second respondent did not oppose the proceedings. It responded
by effecting its notice of withdrawal albeit only on 24
October
2022. As the applicant only seeks costs against a party
opposing the proceedings, nothing further need be said of
the second
respondent’s conduct. The third respondent did oppose the
application and raises two points in its defence.
First,
it contends that it ought not have been joined as its sole role is as
the legal representative of the first respondent.
No rights
have been ceded to it, it says. Second, it contends that as a
matter of fact, the applicant was notified of the
taxed bill and
called upon to pay it on 8 September 2022. It was only after it
failed to pay within 14 days, as required,
that the warrant of
attachment was obtained. Counsel, moreover, addressed certain
arguments opposing the application aligned
with those of the first
respondent. I agree with the third respondent that it is not a
necessary party to these proceedings.
[7]
However, on the information the applicant had to hand when it
instituted proceedings, it could not have known that with any
certainty, and it was only through the answering papers that the
third respondent’s mandate to act and the extent of its
rights
became clear. Costs were only sought against a party opposing
the proceedings. It is unfortunate that the relations
between
attorneys were not such that enabled matters of this sort to be
resolved before litigation was initiated, but on the facts
of this
case, third respondent must carry a material degree of responsibility
for this. Moreover, it is difficult to understand
why the third
respondent opposed the application instead of abiding it and
explaining its position in an explanatory affidavit.
21.
This leads me
to the remaining issue, costs. The applicant has been only
partly successful but it has obtained some relief.
However, its
conduct in prosecuting the urgent application raises concerns,
alluded to above. In my view it is entitled to
50% of its costs
from the first respondent. The third respondent should carry
its own costs.
22.
The following
order is made:
22.1.
The execution
process pursuant to the writ of execution is stayed for 10 days from
the date of this judgment.
22.2.
The first
respondent shall pay the applicant 50% of its costs on a party and
party scale.
22.3.
The third
respondent shall carry its own costs.
SJ
Cowen
Judge,
Gauteng Division,
Pretoria
High Court.
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected and is handed down electronically by circulation
to the
Parties/their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on CaseLines. The
date for
hand-down is deemed to be 06 November 2022.
Date
of hearing: 22
November 2022
Supplementary
submissions: 28, 29 & 30 November 2022
Date
of judgment: 06
December 2022
Appearances:
Applicant:
Mr
Boshomane
instructed
by Qhali
attorneys
First
respondent: Mr
Sefahamela
instructed
by Mokgoatjana
Attorneys
Third
respondent: Mr
Ngwana
instructed
by Mokgoatjana
Attorneys
[1]
The
relief sought is more elaborate. In the notice of motion, the
applicant seeks the following relief:
1.
Condoning non-compliance with the Rules
and hearing the matter urgently.
2.
An interdict preventing the respondents
from removing the applicant’s property.
3.
The stay of the execution of the warrant
of attachment pending the conclusion of a signed agreement between
the first and third
respondent regarding which respondent should
receive payment of the taxed bill alternatively the institution and
conclusion of
an interpleader application.
4.
Granting the applicant leave to pay the
taxed bill in an amount of R3000 per month over a period of 17
months.
5.
Directing any party which opposes the
application to pay the costs.
6.
Further / alternative relief.
## [2]Whether
this Court has any discretion was debated before me but it is not
necessary for me to make that determination. See
however,
Davis J’s interpretation of Rule 45A inFrim
Mortgage Solutions v Absa Bank2014(1)
SA 168 (WCC) and seeLavelikhwezi
Investments (Pty) Ltd and Others v Mzontsundu Trading (Pty) Ltd and
Others(1043/2022)
[2022] ZAECMHC 6 (12 April 2022).
[2]
Whether
this Court has any discretion was debated before me but it is not
necessary for me to make that determination. See
however,
Davis J’s interpretation of Rule 45A in
Frim
Mortgage Solutions v Absa Bank
2014(1)
SA 168 (WCC) and see
Lavelikhwezi
Investments (Pty) Ltd and Others v Mzontsundu Trading (Pty) Ltd and
Others
(1043/2022)
[2022] ZAECMHC 6 (12 April 2022).
[3]
Any
different interpretation of Rule 45(2) would, in my view, undermine
the rule of law.
[4]
Plascon
Evans Paints v Van Riebeeck Paints
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984
(3) SA 623
(A) at 634H-635C and
Wightman
t/a JW Construction v Headfour (Pty) Ltd and another
[2008] ZASCA 6
;
2008 (3) SA 371
(SCA) at para 13.
[5]
A
court may stay an execution process where real and substantial
justice requires it or where injustice would otherwise result.
See eg
Gois
v Van Zyl
2011(1) SA 148 CLC.
[6]
This
relief is lesser relief than what was prayed for yet addresses the
substance of the complaint. The related factual
matter is
fully canvassed.
[7]
Applying the test in
SA
Riding for the Disabled Association v Regional Land Claims
Commissioner and others
2017(5)
SA (CC)
.
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