Case Law[2024] ZAWCHC 179South Africa
Counterpoint Trading CC v IW van der Vyver Incorporated Attorneys and Another (71 / 2022) [2024] ZAWCHC 179 (10 July 2024)
Headnotes
in trust for these alleged thieves’ to purchase immovable property. The interdict was to prevent these stolen funds from being paid to third parties.[5]
Judgment
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## Counterpoint Trading CC v IW van der Vyver Incorporated Attorneys and Another (71 / 2022) [2024] ZAWCHC 179 (10 July 2024)
Counterpoint Trading CC v IW van der Vyver Incorporated Attorneys and Another (71 / 2022) [2024] ZAWCHC 179 (10 July 2024)
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sino date 10 July 2024
THE
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(EASTERN
CIRCUIT LOCAL DIVISION, THEMBALETHU)
CASE NUMBER: 71 / 2022
In
the matter between:
COUNTERPOINT
TRADING CC
Applicant
and
IW
VAN DER VYVER INCORPORATED ATTORNEYS
First Respondent
IZAK
WILHELM VAN DER VYVER
Second Respondent
Coram:
Wille, J
Order
granted: 30 August 2023
Condonation
filed: 7 March 2024
Reasons:
12 March 2024
Heard:
20 June 2024
Delivered:
10 July 2024
JUDGMENT
- [LEAVE TO APPEAL]
# WILLE, J:
WILLE, J:
# INTRODUCTION
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This is an application for leave to appeal against (as I understood
it) my order refusing
to hold the respondents in contempt of a court
order which was not timeously served on the respondents by the
applicant. I
handed down an order about eleven months ago. I
made myself available to hear this application for leave to appeal.
Still, due to the failure of the applicant to comply with this
court's directions, the hearing of this application took some time.
Thus, more than eleven months have passed since the dismissal of the
application. I dismissed the initial application with
costs.
[1]
[2]
Because of the excessive delays at the applicant’s instance, I
directed the
applicant to launch a formal application for
condonation, explaining why it was progressing this matter at such a
sluggish pace
and not following the relevant court directives.
A plethora of reasons were advanced for these numerous delays.
None
of these reasons were of any merit. This notwithstanding,
and to bring some finality to this outstanding matter, I granted
the
relief contended for in the application for condonation.
[2]
CONTEXT
[3]
Initially,
the
applicant sought contempt of court relief and condonation for filing
a replying affidavit. This replying affidavit was
delivered
nearly seven months late. I also granted the condonation relief
concerning this replying affidavit. In hindsight,
it seems
glaringly apparent that the applicant bears little or no regard for
the court rules, considering how it elected to litigate.
The
applicant should have explained why the final interdict order it had
obtained was not timeously served on the respondents.
It was
only served and brought to the respondents' attention a month after
it was obtained. Indeed, this was one of the core
issues that
affected my determination during the initial hearing.
[3]
[4]
The core complaint regarding my findings, as set out in my reasons
for my order (as
far as the applicant was concerned), was my
determination that the second respondent should not be
imprisoned
for thirty days for contempt of court (with such period of
imprisonment to be suspended for sixty days pending the finalization
of specific processes), failing which the second respondent should be
committed to prison.
[4]
[5]
The first respondent is an incorporated firm of attorneys, and the
second respondent
is the sole director of this incorporated entity.
The applicant launched an interdict for interim relief concerning
allegedly
stolen monies, which were then paid to the first respondent
to be held in trust for these alleged thieves’ to purchase
immovable
property. The interdict was to prevent these stolen
funds from being paid to third parties.
[5]
[6]
An interim order with a return date was granted. A copy of the
interim order
was delivered to the respondents, who were aware of it
and fully complied with it. A final order was granted after
that,
but the applicant did not serve this final order on the
respondents after the granting thereof. No explanation is given
for
this. It was, however, eventually served on the respondents
about one month later.
[6]
[7]
This failure was not the fault of the respondents, and the applicant
was entirely
to blame for this inordinate delay. During the
interim period (and even after that), the respondents communicated
with the
applicant’s then-attorneys of record and opined that
because they had received no correspondence after a significant time,
the interim order had lapsed and was no longer of any force or
effect.
[7]
[8]
In the interim, the respondents also brought to the attention of the
applicant’s
erstwhile attorneys of record (and their clients)
that the purchasers (the alleged thieves) were going to be held
liable for breach
of contract and that, as a consequence, the estate
agent’s commission and the respondents’ wasted
conveyancing costs
were now due and payable. Also, written
communication and discussions took place concerning these due and
payable amounts.
A dispute of fact existed concerning the exact
discussions that took place between the respondents and the
applicant’s erstwhile
attorneys of record.
[8]
[9]
This notwithstanding, a clear intention was communicated to the
applicant’s
erstwhile attorneys that specified amounts would be
deducted at source from the monies held in trust by the respondents.
Further, the respondents'
written
communications
recorded that two more payments, one for damages claimed by the
seller and one for further legal costs related to the purchaser’s
breach, also fell to be deducted from the monies held in trust as
contractually agreed in terms of the written sale agreement.
[9]
[10]
No protest was received in response to these communications by the
applicant’s then-attorney
of record. It was the
respondents’ case that they always acted according to their
mandate. Their case was that
they were obliged to complete
their mandate. The final interdict order was not served on them
despite the passage of a month.
Thus, they were obliged to
complete their mandate as the duly appointed transferring attorneys
for the transaction. Further,
the remainder of the monies that
the respondents held in trust (in terms of their conveyancing
mandate) was eventually paid over
to the applicant’s erstwhile
attorneys by the respondents upon completion of their mandate.
[10]
CONSIDERATION
[11]
I found that, on the facts, the second respondent's actions were not
based on any intent to violate
the dignity, reputation, or authority
of any judicial body. This was so primarily because the second
respondent was unaware
that the final order had been granted, and he
merely continued to act following the terms and conditions of his
mandate as a conveyancing
attorney. The second respondent's
facts on this issue were good. The applicant’s facts on
this issue were not
good. Most significantly, I found that the
second respondent did not act
unlawfully
or in a
mala
fide
fashion.
[11]
[12]
I say this because there was nothing to gainsay from the second
respondent's genuine belief that
the interim order had lapsed. In
any event, even disregarding a court order in such circumstances may
not be enough for a
contempt of court order since there may be a
genuine,
albeit
mistaken, belief in having been entitled to act in the way that has
been claimed to constitute contempt. Thus, good faith
(in law)
could avoid any possible suggested infringement.
[12]
[13]
What
was
crucial
and a lacuna in the applicant’s case was that the final order
was not brought to the respondents' attention timeously.
The
respondents were unaware that the interim order against them, which
they admitted knowledge of, was made final. Self-evidently,
the
respondents had not acted maliciously or carelessly to deliberately
disobey or violate any judicial body's dignity, reputation,
or
authority. This is because they still needed information
concerning the final order having been granted.
[13]
[14]
In a final throw of the dice, the applicant charters (in a now
belated amended notice of application
for leave to appeal) that the
court erred in finding that the respondents had no reason to believe
that the interim order had not
been extended or confirmed.
Herein lies the rub, as the applicant’s case is predicated on
what the applicant expected
the respondents to have believed in these
circumstances. Thus, on the applicant’s version, the only
form of intention
that could come into play is what the applicant
expected the respondents to have believed in these circumstances.
[14]
# [15]
The opposing affidavit to the condonation application fortifies a
vital consideration.
The second respondent declares under oath
that he sent correspondence to the applicant’s erstwhile
attorney after the grant
of the interim order and before the service
of the final order and never got any response to his communications.
It isimprobablethat the second respondent would have sent these communications if he
harboured an intention to disobey any court order.[15]
[15]
The opposing affidavit to the condonation application fortifies a
vital consideration.
The second respondent declares under oath
that he sent correspondence to the applicant’s erstwhile
attorney after the grant
of the interim order and before the service
of the final order and never got any response to his communications.
It is
improbable
that the second respondent would have sent these communications if he
harboured an intention to disobey any court order.
[15]
[16]
Applications for leave to appeal are now more strictly regulated.
Leave to appeal may only
be given (among other things) where the
judge or judges concerned believe the appeal
would
have a reasonable prospect of success. No doubt, a more
stringent and demanding test now applies.
[16]
[17]
Finally, the applicant argued that all its other remedies in civil
law against the respondents
have now become prescribed due to the
effluxion of time. This may be so, but this does not mean that
this court must rescue
the applicant and formulate an order akin to
incarceration to promote the collection of an alleged civil debt.
This mechanism
for imprisonment for a
debt
has now been abolished by legislation.
[17]
COSTS
AND ORDER
[18]
The respondents did not oppose the application for leave to appeal
and filed a notice stating
that they abided by the court’s
decision. However, they did file an affidavit opposing the
application for condonation.
Thus, the respondents must have
incurred some costs in this connection and also must have incurred
some costs when considering
their options in connection with the
application for leave to appeal. In my view, the respondents
should be able to recover
these costs and the disbursements they
incurred even though they did not participate in the leave to appeal
hearing application.
[18]
[19]
For all these reasons, I make the following order:
1.
The application for condonation is granted.
2.
The application for leave to appeal is refused.
3.
The applicant shall be liable for the respondents’ costs on the
party and
party scale (as taxed or agreed), following scale B (if
applicable).
#
__________
E.D.
WILLE
(Cape
Town)
[1]
My
order was handed down on the 30
th
of August 2023.
[2]
The
applicant only launched its application for condonation on the 7
th
of March 2024.
[3]
The final order was granted on the 16
th
of September 2020 and only eventually served on 16 October 2020.
[4]
I
found no contempt because the court order was not served to the
respondents timeously.
[5]
This was granted without notice at the beginning of September 2020.
[6]
The applicant’s attorneys could have easily
emailed the final order to the respondents.
[7]
The final order was granted on the 16
th
of September 2020 and served on 16 October 2020.
[8]
This
disputed issue could not be resolved on the papers.
[9]
The
respondents’ position was communicated in writing.
[10]
The
amount of R129 636,90 was paid over by the respondents on 23 March
2021.
[11]
Frankel Max Pollak Vinderine Inc v Menell Jack Hyman Rosenberg &
Co Inc
[1996] ZASCA 21
;
1996 (3) SA 355
(A) 367 H-I.
[12]
Noel Lancaster Sands (Edms) Bpk v Theron
1974 (3) SA 688
(T) at 691
C.
[13]
The applicant needs to give a reasonable explanation for this
inordinate delay.
[14]
The
respondents subjectively foresaw the possibility of the conduct
being contemptuous.
[15]
This
needs to be answered by the applicant and engaged with. It is
left untouched.
[16]
Ramakatsa
and Others v African National Congress [724/2019]
[2012] ZASCA 31(31
March 2021)
para [10].
[17]
The Abolition of Civil Imprisonment Act, 2 of 1977.
[18]
The
quantum of these costs is for the taxing master to determine.
sino noindex
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