Case Law[2024] ZAWCHC 216South Africa
Meynell Investments Limited v Azarenka (Pty) Ltd (3706/2024) [2024] ZAWCHC 216 (22 August 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
22 August 2024
Judgment
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## Meynell Investments Limited v Azarenka (Pty) Ltd (3706/2024) [2024] ZAWCHC 216 (22 August 2024)
Meynell Investments Limited v Azarenka (Pty) Ltd (3706/2024) [2024] ZAWCHC 216 (22 August 2024)
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sino date 22 August 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN
Case
number: 3706/2024
In
the matter between:
MEYNELL
INVESTMENTS LIMITED
Applicant
and
AZARENKA
(PTY) LTD
Respondent
Coram:
Acting Justice P Farlam
Heard:
21 August 2024
Delivered
electronically:
22 August 2024
JUDGMENT
FARLAM
AJ
:
Introduction
[1]
The applicant (
Meynell
) has applied to wind up the respondent
(
Azarenka
), which it alleges is unable its debts, and more
especially unable to make payments due under a £4 million loan
facility
agreement concluded between the parties in January 2018.
[2]
The winding-up application is not yet ready to be heard, despite
having been set down for hearing on 21 August 2024 by virtue
of an
agreed order between the parties back on 25 March 2024, which also
contained a timetable regulating the delivery of affidavits
and heads
of argument to facilitate that hearing. This is in part because of an
interlocutory application brought by Azarenka for
discovery, security
for costs and a postponement pending the provision of security, and
also because Azarenka anyway failed to
comply with the timetable and,
more particularly, only delivered its answering affidavit on
19 August (two days before the
set-down date), instead of by
9 May, as required by the court order.
[3]
What accordingly falls to be considered at this stage is
(i) Azarenka’s interlocutory application and the
appropriate
costs order in respect thereof; and (ii) the
consequences of Azarenka’s non-compliance with the 25 March
court
order. These issues will be addressed in turn.
# Azarenka’s
interlocutory application
Azarenka’s
interlocutory application
[4]
Azarenka’s interlocutory application, launched on 16 July 2024,
essentially sought orders (
a
) that Meynell, as a foreign
peregrinus
incorporated in the Bahamas, provide security in
the amount of R500,000 within ten days of the court’s order;
(
b
) that Meynell “properly respond” to
Azarenka’s notice in terms of Uniform Rules 35(12) and (14)
within ten
days; and (
c
) that the winding-up application
set down for 21 August 2024 be postponed pending Meynell’s
compliance with the security
and discovery orders.
[5]
At the hearing of the matter, Azarenka’s counsel informed the
court that Azarenka was not persisting with its discovery
application. The withdrawal of that portion of the interlocutory
application was understandable. For Azarenka was not entitled
to the
documentation it sought – bank statements of Meynell for an
unspecified period – under either rule 35(12) or
rule 35(14).
5.1.
Rule 35(12)
was not applicable because there was no suggestion that Meynell had
referred to, or relied upon, the requested bank
statements in its
founding affidavit in the winding-up application, and rule 35(12) is
only potentially applicable when “reference
is made to any
document” in a pleading or affidavit of the other party.
[1]
5.2.
Rule 35(14)
could not be relied upon as: (i) it can only be utilised by “any
party to any
action
”
[emphasis added], unless the court has made the rule applicable in a
particular application under rule 35(13),
[2]
and Azarenka had not sought any such order under rule 35(13), nor
sought to contend that this was an exceptional case in which
discovery should be ordered;
[3]
and (ii) rule 35(14) anyway only applies to “clearly
specified” documents which are needed “for purposes
of
pleading”
[4]
and in this
case the requested bank statements were not only vaguely described
but could not plausibly be said to be required for
Azarenka to
deliver its answering affidavit. Azarenka had earlier contended in
this regard that it should be allowed to inspect
Meynell’s bank
statements to ascertain whether they reflected repayments allegedly
made by Azarenka which were not recorded
in the schedules attached to
Meynell’s founding affidavit. However, Azarenka plainly did not
require sight of the bank statements
in order to aver in answer, with
reference to its own records, that additional repayments had been
made. That was in fact demonstrated
by Azarenka’s belated
answering affidavit, as well as its earlier replying affidavit in the
interlocutory application, both
of which contained a list of the
further payments which, according to Azarenka, had been made between
2 August 2018 and 5 May 2023.
[6]
Azarenka
did however still press its claim for security for costs against
Meynell. It argued that Meynell, a foreign company, owns
no property
in South Africa against which a costs order could be executed,
[5]
and Azarenka should not have to seek to enforce any costs order in
its favour in the Bahamas. It also contended that there would
be no
real prejudice to Meynell in being required to provide security, as
it is not suggested that Meynell is impecunious (and
could thus not
come up with the security demanded) and that a balance of prejudice
enquiry would consequently favour Azarenka.
The latter contention was
a departure from the stance taken in Azarenka’s replying
affidavit in the interlocutory application,
where it was alleged that
Meynell was “an ‘entity’ of straw … not
having the funds to satisfy any costs
order”; but the new
contention was clearly justified, given that Meynell had after all
loaned Azarenka £4 million and
Azarenka had also earlier in its
replying affidavit stated that “Meynell is a boutique financial
operations company”.
[7]
Meynell raised various arguments in opposition to the security claim.
7.1.
It pointed
out at the outset that the court must investigate all circumstances
and consider whether equity and fairness to both
litigants dictate
that security be ordered;
[6]
and
that it would also be wrong to approach the inquiry on the basis that
a court should exercise its discretion in favour of a
peregrinus only
sparingly.
[7]
7.2. As to its grounds
for opposing the security sought:
7.2.1. Meynell submitted
that security had not been sought “as soon as practicable after
the commencement of the proceedings”,
as required by rule 47(1)
– the notice demanding security having been sent on 25 June
2024, approximately three months after
the winding-up application had
been launched – and that Azarenka had moreover taken a further
step before requesting security.
7.2.2. It also submitted
that Azarenka could set off any costs order it obtained against its
principal indebtedness to Meynell,
which far exceeds the amount of
security requested, and that Azarenka was therefore otherwise
protected.
7.2.3. Meynell argued,
too, that it should not be unduly onerous for Azarenka to enforce a
costs order against Meynell in the Bahamas
under their Reciprocal
Enforcement of Judgments Act.
7.2.4. Finally, Meynell
contended that the amount of security sought was unsubstantiated and
excessive.
[8]
It is true that Azarenka’s request for security could have been
brought earlier (albeit that security was sought prior
to Azarenka
doing anything other than delivering its notice in terms of Rules
35(12) and (14)). It is however unnecessary to consider
whether
Azarenka should be denied security on this basis, or on some of the
other grounds raised by Meynell, as an unanswerable
response to
Azarenka’s security demand is that it could simply set off any
costs order granted in its favour against its
substantial
indebtedness to Meynell and it therefore already enjoys sufficient
protection against the peregrine applicant.
[9]
Under the
common law, set-off (or
compensatio
)
is possible where debts owed by two entities are (i) of the same
nature (e.g., in money), (ii) liquidated (i.e., when the
exact
money value is certain); (iii) fully due; and (iv) payable
by and to the same persons in the same capacities (i.e.,
where two
persons reciprocally owe each other something in their own right).
[8]
In the event of Azarenka being possessed of a taxed or agreed costs
order in its favour, all the requirements for set off would
be met,
and Azarenka could consequently set off the amount of that costs
order against its next repayment to Meynell. It was recognised
more
than a century ago in
Bovenzer
that an
incola
defendant has sufficient security where it is liable for future
monthly payments to the plaintiff, and that a claim for security
against a peregrine plaintiff should be refused in such
circumstances.
[9]
In my view,
this is another such case.
[10]
Azarenka’s only response on affidavit to Meynell’s
submission that Azarenka’s interests were sufficiently
protected by its common-law right to set off a money debt owed by
Meynell to Azarenka against Azarenka’s own payment obligations
to Meynell was that: “Sett [
sic
] off is denied as no
indebtedness is admitted at all”. That was not however a good
faith disputation. For it was common cause
on the papers – as
correctly acknowledged by Azarenka’s counsel in argument –
that Azarenka still owed Meynell
a considerable amount of money under
the loan facility agreement. The extent of the payments still due by
Azarenka is neatly illustrated
by the letter from its corporate
attorneys, Covington, to Meynell’s attorneys, dated 8 September
2023, in which Covington
aver that a liquidation will prevent
Azarenka from “making payment of the next agreed payment [by
Azarenka] of £339,063
… in October 2023 or any other
payments under the loan agreement for as long as those proceedings
are ongoing” and
“could also … result in [Meynell]
realising a fraction of the outstanding Capital Amount [defined
earlier in the letter
as the original loan amount of £4
million] upon liquidation”. It is apparent from the various
affidavits in the interlocutory
and winding-up applications that
Azarenka did not make the payment of the £339,063 which on its
own version was due in October
2023. Even if that payment were to be
made, there would anyway still be a significant portion of the loaned
amount of £4
million (easily more than £2.5 million)
outstanding, and required to be repaid by Azarenka to Meynell.
[11]
Azarenka is consequently already sufficiently protected against its
foreign counterparty and does not need the security claimed.
That
also means that there is no basis for a postponement of the
winding-up application pending the provision of security –
which was the only basis on which Azarenka could persist in seeking a
postponement in the interlocutory application in the light
of its
withdrawal of the rule 35 prayer. What remains of the interlocutory
application must therefore be dismissed.
# The costs of the
interlocutory application
The costs of the
interlocutory application
[12]
There can
be no dispute as to whether Azarenka must pay the costs of the
interlocutory application. The rule 35 component thereof
was without
merit, and was thus sensibly not persisted with;
[10]
while the prayers seeking security for costs and a postponement
pending provision of security and the furnishing of the documentation
sought under rule 35 were also unsustainable and have thus been
dismissed. The only question can therefore be the scale of the
costs
order which should be granted in respect of the interlocutory
application.
[13]
Meynell’s counsel contended that the interlocutory application
was an abuse, designed to delay, and that Azarenka should
accordingly
pay the costs of that application on a punitive, attorney and client,
scale. Alternatively, it was submitted, at least
the rule 35
component of the interlocutory application warranted a punitive costs
order as it was utterly without merit. Azarenka’s
counsel, on
the other hand, argued that it was within his client’s rights
to seek documentation under rule 35, however ham-handed
the request
may have been; and that it was also entitled to ask for security from
the foreign (Bahamas-incorporated) applicant.
[14]
There are reasons to suspect that each of the components of the
interlocutory application, as well as that application itself,
were
designed to delay the winding-up application. The rule 35 request was
only made on or about 3 May 2024, less than a week
before
Azarenka’s answering affidavit was due; while the security
notice was only delivered in late June 2024, some three
weeks after
the rule 35 demand had been rejected. There was also a delay, albeit
slight, between the rejection of the request for
security and the
bringing of the interlocutory application, at a stage when time was
of the essence given the earlier set-down
of the winding-up
application. On the other hand, it is perfectly possible that the
timing of the request for security was attributable
to a belated
realisation that Azarenka was entitled to ask for security for costs
under the common law, read with rule 47. Furthermore,
while the
request for discovery under rules 35(12) and (14) was badly
misconceived, this does not mean that it was not genuinely
pursued.
It would, in any event, seem unwieldy to grant a different, and more
stringent, costs order in respect of only that component
of the
interlocutory application and prayer 2 of the notice of application,
as well as in respect of the costs pertaining to the
initial set-down
of the interlocutory application on 7 August 2024, which were,
in terms of the court order made on that day,
reserved for
determination at the hearing on 21 August 2024. Azarenka will
accordingly be directed to pay the costs of the interlocutory
application on a party and party scale.
[15]
As to the scale of counsel’s costs, under rule 67A, read with
rule 69: Meynell contended for scale C, in the event of
the costs of
the interlocutory application being awarded on a party and party
basis; while Azarenka submitted that the interlocutory
application
was straightforward and warranted no more than scale A. The rule 35
aspect of the interlocutory application was indeed
uncomplicated, but
the security for costs component was arguably more intricate. The
main application itself is also of high value
and not without
complexity. It is significant, too, that Azarenka has both on
7 August and 21 August 2024 briefed senior
counsel. While I
am not convinced that this matter justifies granting counsel’s
costs on the highest scale, it accordingly
seems appropriate to grant
Meynell’s counsel’s costs on scale B.
# The consequences of
Azarenka’s breach of the 25 March court order
The consequences of
Azarenka’s breach of the 25 March court order
[16]
As was
common cause, Azarenka must also pay the wasted costs occasioned by
its late answering affidavit and heads of argument in
the main
application – which were delivered on Monday, 19 August, well
out of time.
[11]
All that
remains to be considered in that regard is again the scale of the
costs order.
[17]
Had Azarenka’s answering affidavit in the winding-up
application been delivered timeously, Meynell could have replied
well
before the set-down date of 21 August 2024; both parties’ heads
of argument could have engaged with the allegations
as contained
therein; and the winding-up application could have been heard
immediately after the interlocutory application. Instead,
because of
Azarenka’s non-compliance with the 25 March 2024 court
order, as well as the Uniform Rules and the Court’s
Practice
Directives, Meynell’s heads of argument, filed in early August,
could only motivate the case advanced in the as-then-unanswered
founding affidavit, Meynell was also unable to deliver a replying
affidavit before the winding-up application was due to be heard,
and
the winding-up application could consequently not be argued on
21 August 2024. As a result of its disregard of a court
order,
Azarenka has thus obtained a postponement of the winding-up
application, despite having had its interlocutory application,
in
which it
inter alia
sought a postponement, dismissed. It
hardly needs to be stated that this constitutes vexatious conduct and
an abuse of process,
which is worthy of censure by a punitive costs
order. Azarenka must accordingly pay the wasted costs occasioned by
its breaches
of the court order on an attorney and client scale.
[18]
While the prejudice caused to Meynell will to some extent be assuaged
by the punitive costs order, it will be further disadvantaged
if the
hearing of the winding-up application were now to be delayed unduly.
In case this may assist with the finalisation of this
matter, I
accordingly record that, in my view, this is a matter that could
appropriately be allocated a preferential hearing date
on the
semi-urgent roll, and that the applicant may advise the Acting Judge
President of this recordal should it consider it appropriate
to do
so.
# Order
Order
[19]
I accordingly make the following order:
1. The interlocutory
application of the respondent in the main application (“Azarenka”)
is dismissed with costs on a
party and party scale. Such costs
include the costs of the postponement of the interlocutory
application on 7 August 2024 and the
costs of counsel, which are
granted on scale B.
2. Azarenka is granted
condonation for the late filing of its answering affidavit in the
main application (the “winding-up
application”).
3. The winding-up
application is postponed for hearing on a date on the semi-urgent
roll to be arranged by the parties with the
Court.
4. Azarenka is to pay the
wasted costs occasioned by the late filing of its answering affidavit
and its heads of argument in the
winding-up application, and the
resultant postponement of the winding-up application, on an attorney
and client scale.
ACTING
JUDGE P FARLAM
For
applicant
:
Adv H
C
Jansen van Rensburg
Instructed
by
:
Garlicke
& Bousfield Cape Inc., A Liebenberg
For
respondent
:
Adv
N
Redman
SC
Instructed
by
:
Thompson
Wilks Inc. (Johannesburg), John Hunter,
c/o
Thompson Wilks Inc, (Cape Town)
[1]
For a recent analysis of this requirement, see
Democratic
Alliance and Others v Mkhwebane and Another
2021 (3) SA 403
(SCA) paras [24] to [37].
[2]
That is a peremptory requirement: see e.g.,
Loretz
v MacKenzie
1999 (2) SA 72
(T) at 74B-75C.
[3]
It is well-established that an order in terms of rule 35(13), making
discovery applicable to an application, should not easily
be
granted: see e.g.,
Moulded
Components and Rotomoulding South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Coucourakis
1979 (2) SA 457
(W) at 470D-E,
Premier
Freight (Pty) Ltd v Breathetex Corporation (Pty) Ltd
2003 (6) SA 190
(SE) paras [9] to [13],
The
MV Urgup: Owners of the MV Urgup v Western Bulk Carriers (Australia)
(Pty) Ltd and others
1999 (3) SA 500
(C) at 513, and
Lewis
Group Ltd v Woollam and others (2)
[2017] 1 All SA 231
(WCC) paras [4] to [7].
[4]
Cullinan
Holdings Limited v Mamelodi Stadsraad
1992 (1) SA 645
(T) at 647E-648G;
Quayside
Fish Supplies CC v Irvin & Johnson Ltd
2000 (2) SA 529
(C) paras [11] to [16];
Business
Partners Ltd v Trustees, Riaan Botes Family Trust
and
Another
2013 (5) SA 514
(WCC) para 11.
Cf
.,
too,
Capricorn
Makelaars (Edms) Bpk and others v EB Shelf Investment No. 79 (Pty)
Ltd and others
(ECJ 050/2005)
[2005] ZAECHC 25
(10 June 2005) paras [10] to
[11], where the test was stated to involve an enquiry into what is
“reasonably required
in the circumstances”.
[5]
Echoing the basis on which security was demanded in
Silvercraft
Helicopters (Switzerland) Ltd and Another v Zonnekus Mansions (Pty)
Ltd, and two other cases
2009 (5) SA 602
(C) para [16].
[6]
Mystic
River Investments 45 (Pty) Ltd and Another v Zayeed Paruk Inc
.
and
Others
2023 (4) SA 500
(SCA) para [7].
[7]
Magida
v Minister of Police
1987 (1) SA 1
(A) at 14E-G;
Mystic
River supra
fn.6 paras [7], [13] to [15].
[8]
Du Bois (gen. ed)
Wille’s
Principles of South African Law
9ed pp 832-834; Pothier
Traité
du Contrat
(trans. Evans under the title
A
Treatise on the Law of Obligations or Contracts
)
§623-628.
[9]
Bovenzer
v Bovenzer
1898 Cape Law Journal (CLJ) 203 (O). See, too, Cilliers, Loots, Nel
Herbstein
& Van Winsen The Civil Practice of the High Courts and the
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
5ed Vol. 1 p 397.
[10]
The general rule is that a party withdrawing a claim is liable for
the costs of the withdrawn proceedings (
Reuben
Rosenblum Family Investments (Pty) Ltd and Another v Marsubar (Pty)
Ltd
2003 (5) SA 547
(C) at 550C-D; and
Wildlife
& Environmental Society of South Africa v MEC for Economic
Affairs, Environment and Tourism, Eastern Cape and Others
2005 (6) SA 123
(ECD) at 129E-130B; 131B-C); and there is absolutely
no reason to depart from that principle in this instance given that
the
rule 35 demand was evidently withdrawn because of a realisation
that it had no prospects of success.
[11]
I was advised that Meynell was not opposing the admission of
Azarenka’s late answering affidavit, or thus disputing that
Azarenka should be granted condonation for having filed it about
three months’ late. It is accordingly unnecessary to evaluate
the flimsy condonation motivation at the end of Azarenka’s
answering affidavit.
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