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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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[2022] ZAGPPHC 943
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## Spartan SME Finance (Pty) Ltd In re: Insurance Underwriting Managers (Pty) Ltd v Zululand Bus Services CC and Others (38929/2022)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 943 (7 December 2022)
Spartan SME Finance (Pty) Ltd In re: Insurance Underwriting Managers (Pty) Ltd v Zululand Bus Services CC and Others (38929/2022)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 943 (7 December 2022)
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sino date 7 December 2022
FLYNOTES:
ABUSE OF MANDAMENT VAN SPOLIE
Civil
procedure –
Ex-parte
application –
Mandament
van spolie
– Failure to make full disclosure or
establish possession – Deliberate failure to serve on
relevant parties –
Unreasonable opposition to application
for intervention by true owners of property and discharge of order
by bona fide possessor
– Improper use of writ of attachment
to procure payment of debt due by company in liquidation from
third parties.
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
Case
No. 38929/2022
REPORTABLE:
YES/NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/NO
REVISED
DATE:
7 December 2022
In
the matter between:
SPARTAN
SME FINANCE (PTY) LTD
First
Intervening Applicant
In
re:
INSURANCE
UNDERWRITING MANAGERS (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
ZULULAND
BUS SERVICES CC
First Respondent
MDUDUZI
WILFRED SITHOLE
Second Respondent
SHERIFF,
PRETORIA SOUTH – WEST
Third Respondent
KOBUS
VAN DER WESTHUIZEN N.O
Fourth Respondent
VUSUMZI
LUKAS MATIKINCA N.O
(in
their capacities as joint liquidators of AFRICA
PEOPLE
MOVERS (PTY) LTD (in liquidation))
NATIONAL
EMPOWERMENT FUND
Fifth Respondent
Coram:
Millar J
Heard
on:
28
November 2022
Judgment:
28
November 2022
Reasons:
7 December
2022 – These reasons were handed down electronically by
circulation to the parties' representatives by email, by
being
uploaded to the CaseLines system of the GD and by release to SAFLII.
The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 10H00
on 7 December
2022.
Summary:
Ex-parte
application – mandament van spolie – return date –
failure of applicant to make full disclosure or establish
possession
of property at the time of the bringing of the application –
deliberate failure to serve on relevant parties –
unreasonable
opposition to application for intervention by true owners of property
and discharge of order by bona fide possessor
– applicant’s
improper use of writ of attachment to procure payment of debt due by
company in liquidation from third
parties to be deprecated -
rule nisi discharged with punitive costs and return of the property
to true owners ordered –
conduct of applicant’s attorney
and sheriff in acting to circumvent the order granted ex-parte and to
conceal the whereabouts
of the property to be brought to the
attention of the Legal Practice Council, Gauteng and Sheriff’s
Board.
ORDER
1
.
The order
marked “X1” was made an order of court on 28 November
2022.
REASONS
FOR JUDGMENT
MILLAR
J
1.
On 4 October
2022 and in the urgent court, the applicant (“IUM”)
obtained an order for the repossession of 4 Volvo busses
that were in
the possession of the first and second respondents (“ZBS”).
This order was an interim order, brought
ex
parte
and
authorized the immediate repossession of the busses. It also
provided for a return day – 13 December 2022 when
ZBS would be
entitled to appear and to show cause why it should not be made
final. After the granting of this order, 2 further
parties, the
first intervening party (“Spartan”) as well as the fifth
respondent (“NEF”) sought leave to
intervene and,
together with ZBS to seek the discharge of the interim order.
2.
The interim
order was sought by IUM on the pretext that it was in possession of
the busses and that ZBS had spoliated the busses
from it.
Spartan and NEF sought leave to intervene on the basis that IUM had
in fact never been in possession of the busses
and made common cause
with ZBS that IUM in fact had no right upon which the order of 4
October 2022 had been granted.
3.
The background
to this matter is that IUM was a creditor of the fourth respondent
(“APM”) who had obtained a default
judgment against APM
for R2 million on 21 July 2021. Unbeknown to IUM, there had
been an application for business rescue
for APM which had been
opposed and on 25 June 2021, an application for its liquidation.
4.
After the
granting of the default judgement and on 27 July 2021, a warrant of
execution had been issued and on 28 July 2021, 11
busses were
attached to satisfy the writ. Meanwhile on 11 August 2021 IUM
was informed by the attorneys acting for the provisional
liquidators
of APM that the busses that had been attached were not the property
of APM. Thereafter, on 28 September 2021, an order
was granted for
the provisional winding up of APM. This order was made
final on 30 November 2021.
5.
On 11 November
2021, NEF had sought the release of certain of the busses through the
liquidators of APM. When the busses were
not released, NEF
brought an application and on 25 January 2022, judgment was handed
down setting aside the attachment and inter
alia declaring any
possession of the busses by IUM to be unlawful. On 28 January
2022, an application for leave to appeal
that judgment was filed.
Thereafter, no steps were taken to prosecute the application.
6.
What
followed was an attempt by the parties to resolve the dispute
regarding the possession of the busses. It was not seriously
in
dispute that APM was not the owner of the busses – instead IUM
sought to persuade ZBS to enter into an agreement with
it in terms of
which it would pay APM’s debt in full and in exchange obtain a
cession of IUM’s claims against APM in
liquidation. Had
this agreement come into existence
[1]
,
IUM would have then surrendered possession of the busses to ZBS.
7.
Subsequent to
the failed attempt by IUM to enter into an agreement with ZBS, ZBS
and NEF entered into an agreement in terms of which
ZBS purchased the
busses from NEF. The purchase was financed by Spartan and by 19
August 2022, the relationship between ZBS,
NEF and Spartan had
reached the point where all that was now required was for ZBS to
obtain the possession of the busses that it
did not already have and
which it had purchased, before the sale and financing agreements
could be concluded.
8.
On 24
September 2022, ZBS being aware of where the busses were being kept
and having been furnished with the permission of NEF,
the owner, went
and removed the busses. It is this removal that precipitated
the urgent
ex
parte
application that was brought and resulted in the order of 4 October
2022.
9.
When the
attachment of the busses had been made on 28 July 2021, these had
been attached at APM’s premises located at 365
Charlotte Maxeke
Street Pretoria West. Thereafter and on 10 November 2021, the
disputed busses were removed. They were
not removed and taken
to the premises of the sheriff to be stored but were instead taken to
766 Sterkfontein Avenue Doornkloof
East. It is common cause
that these premises are neither the premises of the Sheriff Pretoria
South West or of any of the
other parties.
10.
The order
granted on 4 October 2022 provides –
“
2.1
The First and Second Respondents are directed to return forthwith a
Volvo with registration number [....](Vin Number:
[....]) and a Volvo
with registration number [....](Vin Number: [....]) (hereinafter
called “the busses”) to the following
premises, being 766
Sterkfontein Avenue, Doornkloof East, Pretoria, Gauteng and the
Sheriff, the Third Respondent, is directed
and authorized to seize
forthwith the said busses and to return them to the premises
described above”
11.
In bringing
the
ex
parte
application IUM predicated its right to claim the return of the
busses on the assertion that “
The
respondents were aware that the two busses were under judicial
attachment and were kept at 766 Sterkfontein Avenue, Doornkloof
East
Pretoria.”
12.
The purported
urgency upon which the application was brought was that since ZBS is
a bus company that conveys passengers, it would
use the busses and
that – “
The
busses are not road worthy and as such pose a risk to passengers,
road users and property.”
It
was also asserted that “
There
is a reasonable apprehension that the First and Second Respondents
will remove the busses elsewhere if they get wind or notice
of this
application and it is conceivable that the busses taken may be
stripped down for parts for the First Respondents other
busses or to
make their identification impossible”
and
that “Redress in the normal course will not prevent the First
and Second Respondents from disposing of or hiding of or
damaging of
the busses and will not prevent harm to others if they are used to
convey passengers.”
13.
Further
allegations of impropriety on the part of ZBS were made and in
particular that a whistle blower had shown IUM’s attorney
an
alleged proof of payment on a cellular telephone ostensibly for a
bribe to allow ZBS to remove the busses on 24 September 2022.
14.
Despite a
written judgment in the NEF application delivered on 25 January 2022,
IUM failed to attach a copy of the judgment to the
ex parte
application – it was simply referred to in passing as follows:
“
.
. . The Applicant applied for leave to appeal against that
order and which is pending at this time. The application
for
leave to appeal I submit suspended that order and as such the busses
remain under attachment.”
15.
The
allegations made in the
ex
parte
application
were made without any basis having been laid for them
[2]
.
No affidavit was placed before the court by the alleged whistle
blower and no copies of any screenshot were attached to
the papers.
16.
Save for a
reference to the fact that the judgment granted on 25 January 2022
had been taken on appeal, a copy of the judgment in
that matter was
not attached to the papers. That application was brought, and
judgment granted in terms of a
rei
vindicatio
on the part of NEF. While it is on appeal, the finding in
paragraph 4 of that judgment, which reads:
“
[4]
The Third Respondent’s attorneys (APM) Thompson Wilks Inc,
addressed a letter, dated 5 August 2021 to
the First Respondent
(Sheriff Pretoria South West) informing him, inter alia, that the 15
busses attached by the Sheriff are owned
by third parties and the
ownership particulars of the owner are displayed on the windscreens
of the said busses.”
is
not contentious and is common cause in the present matter in that
while IUM may dispute the ownership of the busses by NEF,
it
is not open to it to dispute that the busses were not owned by APM
and could therefore not be sold in execution for the judgment
against
APM
[3]
.
It was argued by Spartan and ZBS that in any event the default
judgment and any subsequent action taken in consequence of
it were
void
ab initio
having
regard to the provisions of section 359 of the Companies Act
[4]
17.
While I am of
the view that the judgment obtained by IUM is
void
ab initio
and any subsequent attachment similarly void, this finding is not
dispositive of the present application.
18.
There are two
issues that arise for determination in this application:
18.1
Firstly,
should Spartan and NEF be granted leave to intervene?
18.2
Secondly,
whether IUM was in possession of the busses at the time they were
removed by ZBS.
19.
Both
Spartan and NEF have established their rights
qua
owner in regard to the busses. IUM was not able to seriously
dispute their ownership or the interest in the whereabouts and
ultimate possessor and possession of the busses. This to my
mind militates in favour of their being granted leave to intervene
in
the proceedings
[5]
. The
ownership of the busses and the right of the owner to exercise
possession is not in issue in this application.
However, an
owner does have an interest in his property and a right to
participate in proceedings relating to that property even
if in doing
so, he is unable to claim the exercise of one of his rights in the
property.
20.
Was
IUM in possession
[6]
of the
busses at the time they were removed by ZBS on 24 September 2022?
From the returns of service that were attached to
the papers, it is
apparent that the busses, having been initially attached on 28 July
2021 were left
in
situ
on the premises where they were attached. The sheriff’s
return of service confirms this. On the eve of the launch
of
NEF’s
rei
vindicatio
application on 11 November 2021, IUM caused the execution of a second
writ in terms of which the 4 busses in issue in this application
were
then removed.
21.
The
return of service relating to the removal is a preprinted form
purportedly completed by the Sheriff which bears no stamp or
other
identifying mark which indicates that it emanates from the office of
the sheriff. The original return of service relating
to the
attachment on 28 July 2021
[7]
records the attachment of various busses.
22.
No typed
return of service was placed before the court relating to 10 November
2021. Notwithstanding that the first return
of service records
“
Attachment
of Assets”
but
no removal, the subsequent preprinted return reflects “
Assets
– Attached and Removed”.
Of
course, there was no need for any further attachment of the assets on
10 November 2021 if the warrant that had been executed
on 28 July
2021 was still in effect. Furthermore, there was nothing placed
before the court to indicate how the busses that
had been removed on
10 November 2021 had found their way to Doornkloof.
23.
During
argument, counsel for IUM was asked to clarify how it came about that
the busses had been removed and taken to premises other
than the
sheriff’s premises. The court was informed that this had
been arranged between IUM’s attorney and the
sheriff orally.
24.
The existence
of the agreement, so the argument went, meant that the attachment of
28 July 2021 and subsequent attachment and removal
on 10 November
2021 were in their terms lawful and that IUM as the execution
creditor of APM was a “co-possessor” of
the property
under judicial attachment. IUM sought to argue that there were
2 categories of possession – the first
was
de
facto
possession and the second, the right to possession. It was
argued that the present application concerned
de
facto
possession – unsurprisingly as this is a pre-requisite for the
mandament
van spolie.
It
was further argued that the right to possession is one of the rights
that is part of the bundle of rights enjoyed by an owner
but that the
exercise of that right,
qua
owner
, in
the present matter was not an issue to be decided now.
25.
In a similar
vein to the allegations made against ZBS purportedly justifying
urgency, nothing was placed before the court to indicate
the
existence of any such agreement. It was argued that such
agreements are entered into and that the oath of the deponent
to the
founding affidavit and the confirmatory affidavit of IUM’s
attorney were sufficient to establish the existence of
the
agreement. What was unexplained was why there was no
confirmatory affidavit from the sheriff to confirm the existence
of
such an agreement and furthermore, why the ex-parte application in
which the sheriff was ostensibly, at least on the version
of IUM, a
co-possessor, was not served on the sheriff. The application
was not served on the sheriff prior to the hearing
of the application
on 4 October 2022. The application was also not served on the
sheriff at any time thereafter.
26.
The highwater
mark of IUM’s argument on this issue was that the sheriff had
been invited to the case on the court’s
digital filing platform
CaseLines and that this constituted sufficient notice to the sheriff
of the proceedings. Not wanting
to create the impression that
IUM had this single arrow in its quiver, it was then argued that in
any event, the sheriff had executed
upon the order granted on 4
October 2022 and was thus now fully aware of the proceedings.
27.
It was the
case for IUM that: -
“
46.
The precise details of exactly how the First and Second respondents
managed to remove the busses are not known fully
to the Applicant but
the person in charge of the premises was paid an amount of R75 000.00
on the day and he showed Engelbrecht
(IUM’s
attorney)
the
proof of payment into his account by the Respondent on his cellular
telephone.”
28.
The identity
of the person in “charge of the premises” is not
disclosed in the papers but at the very least it was neither
the
sheriff nor an agent of IUM. No case was made out that either had
physical possession or any control over the premises or the
busses.
29.
It
is thus clear that neither IUM nor the sheriff were in charge of the
premises at which the busses were kept. Furthermore,
there is
nothing on the papers to indicate how the busses were removed from
the premises – whether they were driven or towed.
It is
was not canvassed on the papers whether or not the keys to the busses
had been attached by the sheriff when the busses were
originally
attached on 28 July 2021 or subsequently on 10 November 2021 and
whether or not those keys had been furnished to the
person in charge
of the premises at Doornkloof and whether or not those keys were ever
used either by ZBS or subsequently by IUM
to move the busses
[8]
.
30.
The sheriff’s
return for the execution of the order of 4 October 2022 records that
on 5 October 2022:
“
That
on the 05 October 2022 at 05h30 at 365 CHARLOTTE MAXEKE STREET,
PRETORIA WEST being the Respondant business the VOLVO, REG
NO.
[....], VIN [....] AND REG NO. [....]VEN. [....] as described in the
order of court was judicially attached, by removing it
from the
possession of ZULULAND BUS SERVICES CC. MDUDUZI WILFRED SITHOL, and
handed in full control of MR Gert – instructing
attorney, whey
were towed by Joewies Towing and documents were affixed to the main
office as the employees of the respondent refused
to accept the
document. Time spent – 05h30 – 11h30”
31.
During the
course of the argument, the court enquired from counsel for IUM as to
where the busses were now located. I was
initially informed
that the applicant’s attorney Engelbrecht did not want to
disclose the whereabouts of the busses.
I adjourned the court
for a short while to enable him to consider his position on this.
When the court reconvened, I was
informed that the busses were now
stored at the premises of Eco Car Hire at 34 Whittakers Way,
Bedfordview Johannesburg. The wheels
of the busses had been removed
and they were now “on blocks” so they could now neither
be towed nor driven away –
this was explained from the bar as
having been done because when vehicles stand on their tyres for any
length of time, the tyres
deteriorate.
32.
The
ex parte application brought by IUM was for a mandament van spolie.
It was held in Anale Ngqukumba v The Minister
of Safety and
Security and Others
[9]
that:
‘
10.
The essence of the mandament van spolie is the
restoration before all
else of unlawfully deprived possession of the possessor.
It finds expression in the maxim
spoliatus ante omnia restituendus
est (the despoiled person must be restored to possession before or
else). The
spoliation order is meant to prevent the taking
of possession otherwise than in accordance with the law. Its
underlying
philosophy Is that no one should resort to self-help to
obtain or regain possession. The main purpose of the
mandament van
spolie is to preserve public order by restraining
persons from taking the law into their own hands and by inducing them
to follow
due presses.’
33.
It
is a pre-requisite, before a party is entitled to claim relief under
the mandament van spolie that they be in possession.
“
Possession
involves detention and animus, and to the acquisition of possession,
therefore, the physical and mental element are both
necessary.
[10]
”
34.
IUM
claims “co-possession” of the busses through the sheriff
of the court. The manner in terms of which the sheriff
of the
court
[11]
in executing a
warrant is required to act, is set out in Rule 45(3) – (6) of
the Uniform Rules of Court
[12]
which provide:
“
(3)
Whenever by any process of the court the sheriff is commanded to levy
and raise any sum of money upon the
goods of any person, he shall
forthwith himself or by his assistant proceed to the dwelling-house
or place of employment or business
of such person (unless the
judgment creditor shall give different instructions regarding the
situation of the assets to be attached),
and there –
(a)
Demand
satisfaction of the writ and, failing satisfaction,
(b)
Demand
that so much moveable and disposable property be pointed out as he
may deem sufficient to satisfy the said writ, and failing
such
pointing out,
(c)
Search
for such property.
Any
such property shall be immediately inventoried and, unless the
execution creditor shall otherwise have directed, and subject
to the
provisions of sub rule (5)
shall
be taken into the custody of the sheriff
;
Provided:
(i)
That if
there is any claim made by any other person to any such property
seized or about to be seized by the sheriff, then, if the
plaintiff
gives the sheriff an indemnity to his satisfaction to save him
harmless from any loss or damage by reason of the seizure
thereof,
the
sheriff shall retain or shall seize
,
as the case may be, make an inventory of
and
keep the said property
;
and
(ii)
That if
satisfaction of the writ was not demanded from the judgment debtor
personally, the sheriff shall give the judgment debtor
written notice
of the attachment and a copy of the inventory made by him, unless his
whereabouts are unknown.
(4)
The sheriff shall file with the registrar any process with a return
of what he has done thereon, and
shall furnish a copy of such return
and inventory to the party who caused such process to be issued”
(5)
Where any movable property has been attached by the sheriff, the
person whose property has been so attached
may, together with some
person of sufficient means as surety to the satisfaction of the
sheriff, undertake in writing that such
property shall be produced on
the day appointed for the sale thereof, unless the said attachment
shall sooner have been legally
removed, whereupon the sheriff shall
leave the said property attached and inventoried on the premises
where it was found.
The deed of suretyship shall be as near as
may be in accordance with Form 19 of the First Schedule.
(6)
If the judgment debtor does not, together with a surety, give an
undertaking as aforesaid, then, unless
the execution creditor
otherwise directs, the
sheriff
shall remove
the
said goods to some convenient place of security or
keep
possession thereof
on
the premises where they were seized, the expense whereof shall be
recoverable from the judgment debtor and defrayed out of the
levy.”
[my
emphasis]
35.
On
a plain reading of Rule 45(3) to 45(6), it is the sheriff himself who
must take the property into his “
custody”
and who must “
retain”
and “
keep”
the property that has been attached. There is no provision in
either the Sheriffs Act or in the Uniform Rules of Court which
either
contemplates or provides for a situation in which the sheriff is
permitted to share or delegate his functions to another
party save as
provided for in section 6
[13]
of the Sheriffs Act. Accordingly, it is the sheriff alone who
must take into and maintain in his possession the property
that has
been attached.
[14]
It
was held in Liquidators Union and Rhodesia Wholesale Ltd v Brown &
Company
[15]
that:
“
While
an ordinary arrest of property under the Roman-Dutch Law gives no
preference, an arrest effected on property in execution
of a judgment
creates a pignus praetorium or to speak more correctly, a pignus
judiciale, over such property. The effect
of such a judicial
arrest is that the goods attached are thereby placed in the hands or
custody of the officer of the Court”
36.
Even if the
sheriff was, as a matter of law, entitled to co-possess the property
that had been attached with the judgment creditor,
before any such
co-possession could be shared, the sheriff would have to have ensured
that the attachment was itself valid and
legal in all respects.
37.
The
failure on the part of IUM to place any evidence before the court in
its founding papers as to the circumstances under which
the busses
were attached on 10 November 2021 and then removed to Doornkloof
casts doubt on whether or not the attachment and the
removal was
valid. Furthermore, the failure to provide any documentary
proof of either the instructions, indemnity or subsequent
carrying
out of those instructions by the sheriff and reliance on a purported
oral agreement is a matter of grave concern.
In its heads of
argument, IUM sought to justify the dearth of an explanation or
supporting documents in substantiation of its claim
to co-possession
by stating
[16]
:
“
48.
IUM submits that just as there is a duty to disclose all material
facts, there is a duty not to mulch a Court with
irrelevant facts.
49.
The liquidation of APM and its ramifications were overtaken by the
NEF order and the application for leave
to appeal and as such are
entirely irrelevant in respect of spoliation and de facto possession.
50.
The facts that the challengers claim ought to have been placed before
the Court in the ex parte application
are in the submission of IUM
irrelevant in spoliation proceedings because they are all aimed at or
about entitlement to possession
and the lawfulness thereof.”
38.
It is trite
that in
ex
parte
proceedings, an applicant and its representatives are required to
disclose all material facts.
39.
The
failure of the part of IUM to produce any proper return of service to
reflect that this was done according to law together with
the failure
of the sheriff to file with the registrar
[17]
his return of service reflecting what he had done also, to my mind,
calls into question the validity of the attachment. If
the
attachment and removal of the busses was not validly executed and the
sheriff did not maintain possession of the busses, then
the sheriff
was at no stage a possessor and in the circumstances IUM could not be
a co-possessor.
40.
It is trite a
judgment creditor acquires no rights to any property under attachment
other than to the proceeds of any sale in execution.
In the
present circumstances, IUM was aware, at least a year before the
present ex parte application was brought, that the busses
in question
were not the property of APM and therefore could therefore never,
notwithstanding the prior liquidation proceedings
which invalidated
both the default judgment and any warrants issued pursuant thereto,
have been sold in execution of a judgment
against APM.
41.
On
consideration of this matter as a whole, IUM improperly sought to use
the execution process in order to garner for itself an
advantage to
which it was not entitled.
42.
Despite being
aware of the fact that the busses were not the property of APM, IUM
persisted with the attachment of the busses after
11 August 2021.
It went further and sought to subvert the rights of NEF by
instructing the sheriff to then remove the busses
to the premises of
a third party. This all occurred in circumstances where there
was no compliance with the rules of court
by either IUM or the
sheriff.
43.
The
conduct did not end there. After judgment was delivered on 28
January 2022 in which it was recorded that there was no
dispute about
the ownership of the busses, an application for leave to appeal was
filed and then left dormant. This application
was brought for
no other purpose than to ensure that NEF would be unable to exercise
its rights qua owner of the busses in the
hope that IUM could lever
payment of what was due to it by APM. When it became apparent
that NEF would not be levered, IUM
then sought to do so with ZBS
[18]
who had entered into an agreement with NEF for the acquisition of the
busses.
44.
All the while
the busses were located at the Doornkloof premises – in
circumstances where it is unclear whether the sheriff
even knew that
the busses were kept there. There is certainly nothing before
the court to indicate that the sheriff knew
that the busses were
there or that he exercised any possession over the busses.
To my mind, once the busses were delivered
to the Doornkloof
premises, they were now in the possession of the person in charge of
those premises and neither the sheriff nor
for that matter IUM.
It follows then that the
mandament
van spolie
was not available to IUM when it sought and was granted the order of
4 October 2022.
45.
In opposing
the application for intervention by Spartan, IUM raised a number of
points
in
limine
.
Some of the points raised have been dealt with elsewhere in this
judgment and I intend dealing now with the remainder of
these
briefly:
45.1
The
first of these was that Spartan was not properly before the court.
This was raised on the basis that there was no resolution
authorizing
the institution of the application to intervene. This was
subsequently rectified but, in any event, IUM failed
to utilize the
provisions of Rule 7(1) of the Uniform Rules of Court which was the
appropriate way in which to challenge authority.
I was referred
to Unlawful Occupiers, School Site v City of Johannesburg
[19]
as authority for this proposition with which I agree. This
point is without any merit.
45.2
The second of
these, was that it was not permitted to anticipate the return date.
There is no merit to this point. A
party cannot seek an order
ex parte
,
without notice to those affected by it and then argue that an
affected party has no right to approach the court to be heard.
45.3
The third of
these was that there was an existence of an alleged factual dispute.
This purported dispute is alleged to relate
to the ownership of the
busses. This is irrelevant for purposes of the present
application. There is no factual dispute
in this matter
relating to the
mandament
van spolie
that
cannot be resolved on the papers. The entirety of IUM’s
case is predicated on co-possession of the busses and the
case made
out in the founding papers when it brought the
ex-parte
application.
45.4
The final
point
in
limine
is
that IUM was obliged because of the NEF order is on appeal to keep
possession and maintain the
status
quo.
This
point is contrived and self-serving as IUM is well aware of the fact
that the highwater mark of any right that it has is
qua
creditor
of APM. It has no right to the assets of APM which would vest
in its liquidators but in any event, the liquidators indicated
clearly and unequivocally that the busses were not assets or property
of APM.
46.
If IUM made a
full and proper disclosure of all the facts relating to the
circumstances under which the busses had been removed
from APM’s
premises and taken to Doornkloof, I am in no doubt that absent
service on either the sheriff, ZBS or for that
matter any other
party, the court on 4 October 2022 would have not have granted the
order that it did.
47.
In regard to
costs, ZBS, Spartan and NEF all sought a punitive order for costs
against IUM which costs were to include the costs
consequent upon the
employment of two counsel. It was argued that the conduct of
IUM and its legal representatives had been
improper and in disregard
of the law.
48.
Besides the
fact that the institution of the liquidation proceedings against APM
on 25 June 2021 had to all intents and purposes
rendered the default
judgment and every other step taken pursuant thereto by IUM
void
ab initio
,
they had persisted in attempting to gain an advantage by virtue of
the unlawful attachment of busses which they were aware, at
least
from 11 August 2021, were the property of third parties and not APM.
The identity of the true owners is of no moment
to IUM and at no
stage was it ever suggested that they either obtained or retained
possession of the busses as
negotiorium
gestors
.
49.
Rather on
consideration of what has been set out above, I am of the view that
IUM and its representatives have engaged in conduct
which is an abuse
of the law and improper. There is no evidence before this court
as to what dividend if any, would be paid
by the liquidators of APM
to the creditors or whether there was a danger of a contribution –
what is clear, is that IUM rather
than content itself with lawful
process in the winding up of APM, sought to use the unlawful
attachment of the busses as a lever
to procure payment of its
judgment debt from an innocent third party.
50.
The conduct of
the proceedings by IUM, as set out above, is hardly salutary and on
its own would to my mind have justified the granting
of a punitive
costs order. There is however a further and concerning aspect.
51.
Notwithstanding
the clear and unequivocal terms of the order granted on 4 October
2022, that the busses be returned to the Doornkloof
premises, IUM’s
attorney, Engelbrecht, arranged for the busses to be towed to another
address – in another jurisdiction
and beyond the reach of the
sheriff whose attachment purported to found the right upon which the
application was brought.
52.
The conduct of
IUM and its representatives in opposing the discharge and setting
aside of the order granted on 4 October 2022 in
circumstances where
they well knew that they were in contempt of that order is to my mind
demonstrative of a lack of appreciation
of the wrongfulness of the
course of conduct which they have embarked upon since at least 11
August 2021. Their misuse and
abuse of the legal process to try
and procure a favourable commercial outcome, irrespective of the law,
is to be deprecated.
53.
When legal
representatives conduct themselves in this fashion, they bring not
only themselves but also the legal profession as a
whole into
disrepute. IUM through Engelbrecht has acted in breach of the
order of 4 October 2022 and it would seem based
on the return of
service of 5 October 2022 that this was done deliberately and with
the co-operation of the sheriff.
54.
It is for the
reasons set out above that I made the order that I did, set out in
annexure “X1” hereto.
55.
On
consideration of what is set out in this judgment and in particular
paragraphs 49 to 53 above, I direct that a copy of this judgment
be
furnished by Spartan and/or ZBS and/or NEF to the Legal Practice
Council, Gauteng and the Board for Sheriffs for their consideration
of the conduct of IUM’s attorney and the sheriff respectively.
A
MILLAR
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
HEARD
ON:
28
NOVEMBER 2022
JUDGMENT:
28 NOVEMBER 2022
REASONS:
7 DECEMBER 2022
COUNSEL
FOR THE 1
ST
INTERVENING
APPLICANT:
ADV. FH TERBLANCE SC
ADV.
AJ WESSELS
INSTRUCTED
BY:
TIM DU TOIT & COMPANY INC
REFERENCE:
MR W DU RANDT
COUNSEL
FOR THE APPLICANT:
MR
A MYBURGH
INSTRUCTED
BY:
ENGELBRECHT ATTORNEYS INC
REFERENCE:
MR G ENGELBRECHT
COUNSEL
FOR THE 1
ST
& 2
ND
RESPONDENTS:
ADV. D RAMDHANI SC
INSTRUCTED
BY:
GIYAPERSAD INC
REFERENCE:
MS T NAICKER
COUNSEL
FOR THE 5
TH
RESPONDENT
ADV. N MAHLANGU
INSTRUCTED
BY:
DM 5 INC
REFERENCE:
MR M MAPIYEYE
NO
APPEARANCE FOR THE 3
RD
& 4
TH
RESPONDENTS (THE SHERIFF AND JOINT LIQUIDATORS RESPECTIVELY)
[1]
The
agreement was subject to a suspensive condition which was never
fulfilled.
[2]
National
Director of Public Prosecutions v Alexander and Others
2001 (2) SACR
1
(T) at 8G-H.
[3]
Weeks
and Another v Amalgamated Agencies Ltd 1920 (AD) 218 at 236-7;
referred to in Reynders v Rand Bank BPK
1978 (2) SA 630
(T) at 633H
[4]
71
of 1973 and in particular section 359(1)(b) which provides that:
“
any
attachment or execution put in force against the estate or assets of
the company after the commencement of the winding-up
shall be void.”
Furthermore, the date on which a winding up is commenced is the date
upon which the application is brought, in the present instance,
almost a month before the default judgment was granted – see
LL Mining Corporation Ltd v Namco (Pty) Ltd (in liquidation)
2004
(3) SA 407
(C) at 413F-H.
[5]
De
Villiers and Others v GJN Trust and Others
2019 (1) SA 120
(SCA) at
paragraph 22
[6]
“
Possession”
– “The action or fact of possessing something; the
holding or having something as one’s own
or in one’s
control; actual holding or occupancy as distinct from ownership;
law
visible
power or control over a thing” The Shorter Oxford English
Dictionary, Volume 2, 6
th
Ed, Oxford University Press, 2007
[7]
The
typed return of service reflects that the warrant was executed on 28
June 2021, but this is presumably a typographical error.
[8]
Whitman
t/a JW Construction v Headfour (Pty) Ltd and Another
[2008] ZASCA 6
;
2008 (3) SA 371
(SCA)
[9]
2014
(5) SA 112
(CC) at 117D – 118A, see also Sithole v Native
Resettlement Board 1959(4) SA 115 WLD at 117; see also [9]
Stocks
Housing (Cape Pty Ltd) vs Chief Executive Director, Department
of Education and Cultural Services and Others
1996
(4) SA 231
(C) at 240B-C where the court said:
‘
The
element of unlawfulness of the
dispossession which must be shown in order
to claim a spoliation order relates to the manner in which the
dispossession took place, not to the alleged title or
right of the spoliator to claim possession. The cardinal
enquiry is whether the person in possession
was deprived thereof without his acquiescence
and consent. Spoliation may take place in numerous
unlawful
ways. It may be because It was by force or by stealth or
deceit or by theft . . .’
[10]
Groenewald
v Van Der Merwe 1917 AD 233
[11]
Appointed
in terms of section 2(1) of the Sheriffs Act 90 of 1986
[12]
Uniform
Rules of Court published in GN R48 of 1965 and amended in particular
in respect of rules 45(3) and 45(4) by GN R2410 of
30 September
1991.
[13]
6
Appointment of deputy sheriffs and
employees
(1)
Any sheriff or acting sheriff may
with the approval of the Board and on such conditions as the Board
may determine appoint one
or more deputy sheriffs, for whom he shall
be responsible.
(2)
A deputy sheriff may, subject to
the directions of the sheriff or acting sheriff appointing him,
perform the functions of any
such sheriff or acting sheriff.
(3)
Any sheriff or acting sheriff may
appoint such other persons in his employ as he may consider
necessary.
[14]
Reynolds
Grofts (SA) Ltd v Wessels
1977 (1) SA 583
(C) at 585G – 586E;
see also Rule 45(5) which provides that in circumstances where the
judgment debtor is able to furnish
a surety to the satisfaction of
the sheriff together with an undertaking that the property attached
will be produced on the day
of the sale, the property will not be
removed by the sheriff and in terms of Rule 45(6), in the absence of
such a surety or undertaking
“. . . the sheriff shall remove
the said goods to some convenient place of security or keep
possession thereof on the premises
where they were seized.”
See also Deputy-Sheriff v Curtis
1910 TS 18
; Adjunk-Balju,
Vanderbijlpark v Sentraal Westelike Ko-op Maatskappy BPK
1970 (2) SA
124
(T) at 127D
[15]
1922
AD 549
at 558
[16]
Applicant’s
heads of argument filed for the return date.
[17]
No
returns of any nature have been filed by the Sheriff on the
CaseLines system notwithstanding its operation for more than a
year
before either of the attachments on 28 July 2021 or 10 November
2021.
[18]
See
Van Eck NO And Van Rensburg NO v Etna Stores
1947 (2) SA 984
(A) -
headnote:
“
The
principle that powers given for a particular purpose cannot be used
for attaining other objects applies, not only to powers
conferred on
public bodies, but also to powers conferred on officials or even on
private persons or corporations. To pretend
to use a power for
the purpose for which alone it was given, yet in fact to use it for
another is to act in fraudem legis and
is an abuse of that power
amounting to mala fides.”
[19]
2005
(4) SA 199
(SCA) at paragraph 16.
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