Case Law[2024] ZAWCHC 289South Africa
De Filippo v Micillo (Reasons) (11709/2017) [2024] ZAWCHC 289 (23 September 2024)
Headnotes
in the trust account of Bowman Gilfillan Inc., are to be paid forthwith into the trust account of Webber Wentzel Attorneys.
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## De Filippo v Micillo (Reasons) (11709/2017) [2024] ZAWCHC 289 (23 September 2024)
De Filippo v Micillo (Reasons) (11709/2017) [2024] ZAWCHC 289 (23 September 2024)
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sino date 23 September 2024
SAFLII
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Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
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SAFLII
Policy
In
the High Court of South Africa
(Western Cape
Division, Cape Town)
Case no.: 11709/2017
# In the matter between:
In the matter between:
#
# MANFREDI DE FILIPPO
MANFREDI DE FILIPPO
(substituted
for
GIANCARLO DE
FILIPPO
)
Plaintiff
and
ALESSANDRA
MICILLO
Defendant
REASONS DELIVERED ON
23 SEPTEMBER 2024
Delivered electronically
via email
VAN ZYL AJ:
Introduction
1.
This
action involves a dispute about the ownership of two immovable
properties in Cape Town. The plaintiff has been substituted
[1]
for the erstwhile plaintiff, Mr Giancarlo de Filippo (his father,
[2]
referred to as “Giancarlo”), who passed away on 9 August
2018.
2.
On 2 September 2024 I granted an order in
the following terms:
1.
The defendant shall pay to the
plaintiff the amount of R12 181 781,48.
2.
The defendant shall pay interest on
the aforesaid sum at the legally prescribed rate,
a
tempore morae
.
3.
The defendant is directed to do all
things necessary to enable the plaintiff to sell the immovable
property situated at 1[...] K[...]
C[...] Road, Constantia, Cape
Town.
4.
The Sheriff of the High Court is
authorized and directed to comply on the defendant’s behalf
with the order in paragraph 3
above, in the event of the defendant
failing to do so.
5.
The plaintiff is released from
having to provide security for the defendant’s costs and, to
the extent necessary, Webber Wentzel
Attorneys are released from the
bond of security in the defendant’s favour dated 8 December
2017
6.
The entire amount of the proceeds of
the sale of the immovable property situated at [...] B[...] Avenue,
Constantia, Cape Town,
currently held in the trust account of Bowman
Gilfillan Inc., are to be paid forthwith into the trust account of
Webber Wentzel
Attorneys.
7.
The defendant shall pay the
plaintiff’s costs of suit on the scale as between attorney and
client.
3.
The order was granted after hearing the
plaintiff’s evidence-in-chief on 31 July 2024 and in the
absence of the defendant,
who was in default of appearance at the
resumption of the trial on 2 September 2024.
4.
Seven
affidavits deposed to by Giancarlo over the years leading up to the
hearing of the action for purposes of
inter
alia
an anti-dissipation application, the defendant’s rescission and
variation applications, as well as two contempt applications,
were
admitted as evidence for the purposes of the trial.
[3]
5.
These are the reasons for the grant of the
order. In what follows, I shall discuss the merits of the action
first, and thereafter
deal with the circumstances surrounding the
defendant’s default.
Background
6.
Giancarlo
and the defendant, both Italian citizens, had a romantic
relationship. They lived together from February 2009 to November
2014, when Giancarlo terminated the relationship.
7.
While
the parties were still together, two immovable properties were
purchased in Cape Town, namely 1
[...]
C
[...]
Road,
Constantia (“K[...] C[...]”) and
[...]
B[...]
Avenue, Contantia (“B[...]”). It is common cause that the
purchase of both properties was funded Giancarlo, and
acquired in the
defendant’s name. I shall return to the reasons for this
arrangement.
8.
B[...]
was sold after the termination of the parties’ relationship.
The defendant retained the proceeds of the sale. She also
continued
to reside at K[...] C[...] with Giancarlo’s consent. She is
still residing there.
[4]
9.
The
plaintiff alleges the existence of an oral agreement between the
parties to the effect that Giancarlo had agreed to fund the
purchase
of the properties to be registered in the defendant’s name, on
condition that they would eventually be sold and
the proceeds paid to
Giancarlo.
The plaintiff thus
seeks an order that the proceeds of the B[...] property be paid to
him, and that the K[...] C[...] property be
sold and the proceeds
paid to the plaintiff.
10.
The
defendant denies the existence of the oral agreement. She contends
that the properties were donated to her.
11.
On
25 April 2017 Giancarlo obtained an order
[5]
(“the anti-dissipation order”) interdicting the defendant
from alienating K[...] C[...], and from disposing of the
proceeds
from the sale of B[...], pending the outcome of the action. This was
because the defendant was residing in K[...] C[...],
and had retained
the proceeds of the B[...] sale in her own bank accounts. The Court
(the Honourable Justice Baartman presiding)
inter
alia
interdicted
the defendant from:
11.1
directly
or indirectly dealing in any way with, disposing of or removing from
the Republic of South Africa any of the funds, including
present or
future funds, held in any one or more of various enumerated bank
accounts on condition that a monthly amount of R34
000-00
[6]
could be drawn from one such account to provide for her living
expenses;
11.2
selling, alienating, encumbering or in any
way disposing of K[...] C[...], pledging, mortgaging or in any way
encumbering the property,
and in any way damaging, or causing or
allowing damage to be caused to the property.
12.
On
8 September 2017
[7]
the Court
ordered the proceeds of the sale of the B[...] property to be held in
the trust account of Bowman Gilfillan Inc, the
defendant's fourth set
of attorneys at the time, pending the finalisation of the action.
13.
Various
interlocutory skirmishes followed
[8]
before the matter was declared trial ready during November 2023 and
set down for hearing on 12 March 2024. I shall return to the
events
leading up to 12 March 2024 and thereafter, which culminated in the
order of 2 September 2024 being granted in the absence
of the
defendant.
The claim, and the
defence
14.
The pleadings and the evidence on record
indicate the following:
The acquisition of the
immovable properties
15.
During
2013
[9]
Giancarlo and the
defendant entered into an oral agreement (“the first
agreement”) with the following material terms:
15.1
Giancarlo would buy a house in Cape Town,
preferably in Constantia, to be registered in the defendant’s
name.
15.2
The property would be paid for by
Giancarlo, and although it would be acquired in the defendant’s
name, it would not be a
gift or a donation.
15.3
The parties would enjoy the use of the
property during the South African summer season for a few years,
whereafter it would be sold
and the proceeds of the sale
“repatriated” to Giancarlo’s bank account in Europe
where the money to finance the
purchase originated from.
15.4
It was a tacit term of the first agreement
that, in the event of the termination of the parties’
relationship, the property
would be sold and the proceeds paid to
Giancarlo’s bank account in Europe where the funds to finance
the purchase originated
from.
16.
On 22 June 2013, pursuant to the first
agreement, the defendant entered into an agreement for the purchase
of the B[...] property,
at a purchase price of R11,5 million.
Giancarlo discharged his obligation under the first agreement by
transferring sufficient
funds from his bank account in Europe to pay
the purchase price.
17.
Following registration of B[...] into the
defendant’s name on 2 December 2013, Giancarlo decided to sell
B[...] because renovating
it would take too long, and be too costly.
18.
Between 2 December 2013 and 9 March 2014,
the parties entered into a further oral agreement (“the second
agreement”)
with the same material terms as the first
agreement. It was also a tacit term of the second agreement that in
the event of the
termination of the parties’ relationship the
new property would be sold and the proceeds paid to Giancarlo’s
bank account
in Europe.
19.
On 10 March 2014, pursuant to the second
agreement, the defendant concluded an agreement for the purchase of
the K[...] C[...] property,
at a purchase price of R14 million.
Giancarlo discharged his obligation under the second agreement by
transferring sufficient funds
from his overseas bank account to pay
the purchase price, and K[...] C[...] was registered in the
defendant’s name on 6 May
2014.
20.
Two
considerations led to Giancarlo’s decision to purchase
immovable property in South Africa:
[10]
The first consideration was that the defendant had previously lived
in South Africa for about five years before the commencement
of the
parties’ relationship, and frequently expressed the wish to
return to South Africa, if even for a few months a year
during the
European winter season. This was an agreeable proposition to
Giancarlo who started to investigate the real estate market
in Cape
Town and, in particular, in Constantia.
21.
The
second consideration was that, towards the end of 2010, the Italian
Commission of Control of the Italian Stock Exchange (“CONSOB”)
started investigating Giancarlo’s financial affairs for
possible insider trading and buying and selling activities in respect
of a listed Italian company. This was followed in 2011 by a formal
charge by the prosecuting authority in Milan. To protect his
assets,
or at least some of them, against possible judicial
sequestration,
[11]
he decided
to buy property in South Africa, the purchase of which he would
finance, but to register it in the defendant’s
name.
22.
B[...] was sold for a purchase price of
R12,6 million on 20 July 2015.
23.
As
of 27 July 2015, the amount expended by Giancarlo in respect of
various contracts for the renovation of K[...] C[...] amounted
to
R5 457 829,13.
[12]
The dispute between
the parties
24.
It is common cause that the defendant
caused the net proceeds of the B[...] sale in an amount of
R12 181 781,48 to be
paid to herself into two bank
accounts, namely R1 million thereof into her Société
Générale account
number 0[...], and the balance into
her First National Bank account number 6[...].
25.
The plaintiff alleges that the retention of
the proceeds was in breach of the provisions of the first agreement.
As a result of
the defendant’s breach of contract, Giancarlo
suffered damages in an amount of R12 181 781,48, and the
plaintiff
claims payment of that amount, plus interest.
26.
In breach of the second agreement, the
defendant continues to occupy K[...] C[...] and claims it to be hers
to do with as she pleases,
whereas the plaintiff alleges that the
property should be sold and the proceeds paid over to him. The
plaintiff therefore claims
an order mandating him to appoint an
estate agent to market and sell the property, obliging the defendant
to sign all documents
necessary to transfer the property to a future
buyer, and to give instructions for the purchase consideration to be
paid into a
bank account designated by him. Should she fail to do so,
the Sheriff of the High Court should be directed to comply with the
order
on the defendant’s behalf.
27.
Giancarlo made many attempts to resolve the
outstanding matters between him and the defendant prior to his death.
He made various
settlement proposals in relation to the properties,
all more than €2 million in value, the most favourable of which
was of
the order of €2,4 million in value. None of the proposals
was acceptable to the defendant.
28.
The defendant denies that the purchases
were made pursuant to any agreement between her and Giancarlo. She
avers that she became
the lawful owner of the properties, and that
the transfers made by Giancarlo from his bank account in Europe were
donations to
her. That being the case, she was entitled to the
proceeds of the sale of B[...]; and she is the lawful owner of K[...]
C[...]
and has no obligation to sell the property.
29.
The defendant avers further that it was a
joint decision to sell B[...]. Giancarlo, in consultation with her,
had given instructions
for B[...] to be put up for sale, decided
which estate agent would market B[...], what the asking price would
be, and which offer
to accept.
30.
Most of this information appears from the
pleadings and the affidavits admitted into the records. The current
plaintiff gave oral
evidence on the aspects that he was aware given
his conversations with his father over the years.
31.
The trial was postponed after the
plaintiff’s evidence-in-chief on 31 July 2024, and resumed on 2
September 2024. On that
day, the defendant did not appear, and the
plaintiff was not cross-examined. No further oral evidence was led on
behalf of either
party.
The relevant legal
principles
A written contract is
not essential
32.
The agreements on which the plaintiff
relies are not in writing.
33.
In
Goldblatt
v Fremantle
[13]
the Court stated that: “
Subject
to certain exceptions, mostly statutory, any contract may be verbally
entered into; writing is not essential to contractual
validity.”
[14]
34.
One of the exceptions requiring writing for
the coming into being of a valid agreement is to be found in section
2(1) of the Alienation
of Land Act 68 of 1981 (“the ALA”),
which provides as follows:
“
No
alienation of land after the commencement of this section shall,
subject to the provisions of section 28,
[15]
be of any force or effect unless it is contained in a deed of
alienation signed by the parties thereto or by their agents acting
on
their written authority.”
35.
Section 2(1) gives rise to the question
whether the agreements which the plaintiff relies upon concern
alienation of land which,
to be of any force or effect, requires to
be contained in a deed of alienation signed by the parties thereto.
36.
The
answer to that question is in the negative. As the section involves
an alteration of the common law, it must be interpreted
strictly.
[16]
37.
Section 1 of the ALA defines “
alienate”
,
“
in relation to land”
,
as meaning to “
sell, exchange or
donate, irrespective of whether such sale, exchange or donation is
subject to a suspensive or resolutive condition,
and ‘alienation’
has a corresponding meaning”
.
38.
On
Giancarlo’s version, the agreements between himself and the
defendant did not involve the sale, exchange, or donation of
land.
[17]
On the contrary,
they required the defendant, in defined circumstances, to sell the
land that had been purchased and registered
in her name, subsequent
to which she would have had to reimburse Giancarlo. The sale of the
land would involve a third party, and
that sale would have to comply
with the provisions of section 2(1) of the ALA, as the sale of B[...]
did. In fact, the current
position as far as B[...] is concerned
illustrates the point: The property was sold to a third party and the
plaintiff now claims
the proceeds in accordance with the agreement
that Giancarlo and the defendant had concluded. The upshot of the
agreements does
not involve an ineffective sale of land but one that
would see the proceeds of valid sales between the registered owner,
the defendant,
and a third party, which comply with section 2(1) of
the ALA, being paid over to the plaintiff.
39.
Dadabhay
v Dadabhay and another
[18]
concerned
a matter where the appellant had orally agreed with the first
respondent that he would purchase an erf from the Community
Development Board as her “
nominee”
.
The respondent duly purchased the erf without
ex
facie
the written agreement purporting to represent the appellant. The
respondent denied concluding a contract with the appellant and
pleaded that he was entitled to ownership of the property having
entered into a written agreement with the Board. The Appellate
Division concluded as follows:
“
To
sum up, in the present matter, on the case pleaded in the appellant’s
particulars of claim, there was an oral agreement
that the respondent
would buy an erf from the Board; that he would do so as ‘nominee’
(which, as I have said, may well
have been intended to mean
‘trustee’) for the appellant; that there is no mention of
monetary consideration for his
service; and that, when called upon,
he would sign all documents necessary to enable the erf to be
registered in her name. Having
regard to the authority cited above,
in my view the oral agreement is not hit by s 1(1) of Act 68 of 1957;
it is not a contract
of sale or a cession in the nature of a sale.”
[19]
40.
In
Mossop
v McLaren
[20]
this Court held that the plaintiff had discharged the onus of proving
an oral agreement which the parties had concluded, prior
to the
acquisition of immovable property, in terms of which the defendant
undertook to purchase and acquire the property as nominee
and trustee
for and on behalf of the plaintiff. In this regard the Court found
that: “
The
Plaintiff’s version that the Defendant would hold the
Durbanville property as nominee and would be obliged to deliver
the
said property on demand is, on a conspectus of all the evidence in
this case, more plausible and credible than the Defendant’s
version.”
[21]
The burden of proof
41.
It is trite that the burden of proving the
existence of a contract is on the party who alleges such existence,
and thus the plaintiff
has to show that the contracts exist and what
their terms are.
42.
In
Stocks
& Stocks (Pty) Ltd v TJ Daly & Sons (Pty) Ltd
[22]
the Appellate Division stated the law to be as follows: “
Ordinarily,
the general rule is that a plaintiff who sues on a contract must
prove his contract, even though this may involve proving
a negative,
viz that an additional term alleged by the defendant was not agreed
to by the parties ...”
[23]
43.
As indicated, the plaintiff relies on a
tacit term of the agreements which would see the sale of the
immovable properties in the
event of the termination of the original
parties’ relationship, and the repatriation of the proceeds to
Giancarlo’s
bank account in Europe.
44.
In
Bremer
Meulens (Edms) Bpk v Floros
[24]
the Appellant Division stated the following: “
Insofar
as the essentials are concerned, there is no difference between
express and tacit agreements. Indeed the only difference
lies in the
method of proof, the former being proved either by evidence of the
verbal declarations of the parties or the production
of the written
instrument embodying their agreement, the latter by inference from
the conduct of the parties.”
45.
A
tacit term of a contract, or a term implied from the facts, was
described in
Alfred
McAlpine & Son (Pty) Ltd v Transvaal Provincial
Administration
[25]
inter
alia
as “
an
unexpressed provision of the contract which derives from the common
intention of the parties, as inferred by the Court from the
express
terms of the contract and the surrounding circumstances. In supplying
such an implied term the Court, in truth, declares
the whole contract
entered into by the parties.”
46.
This
dictum
was followed in
Scholtz
v Scholtz
[26]
as follows:
“
[12]
Tacit terms, on the other hand, are by definition not to be found
through interpretation of the express terms. They are by
definition
neither recorded nor expressly agreed upon by the parties. They often
pertain to matters which the parties did not even
consider. They
emanate from the common intention of the parties, as inferred by the
court from the express terms of the contract
and the surrounding
circumstances (see, for example, Alfred McAlpine & Son (Pty) Ltd
v Transvaal Provincial Administration
(1974 (3) SA 506
(A) at 531H).”
47.
To
determine whether a tacit term is to be imported into the contract,
the express terms of the contract must be examined. The question
to
be asked is whether, regard being had to the express terms of the
contract, there is any room for importing the alleged implied
term.
[27]
When an examination
of the express terms does not immediately exclude the possibility of
importing a tacit term, the next question
is what general tests the
Court should apply to decide whether the importation of a tacit term
would be appropriate.
[28]
48.
In
Buffalo
City Metropolitan Municipality v Nurcha Development Finance (Pty) Ltd
and others
[29]
the Supreme Court of Appeal held as follows:
“
[16]
The test for establishing the intention of the parties to conclude a
tacit contract is now settled. In Butters v Mncora
2012 (4) SA 1
(SCA) …, where a universal partnership between co-habitees was
relied upon, Heher JA said (para 34):
‘
This
appeal is about an alleged tacit agreement. As in all such cases the
court searches the evidence for manifestations of conduct
by the
parties that are unequivocally consistent with consensus on the issue
that is the crux of the agreement and, per contram,
any indication
which cannot be reconciled with it. At the end of the exercise, if
the party placing reliance on such an agreement
is to succeed, the
court must be satisfied, on a conspectus of all the evidence,
that
it is more probable than not that the parties were in agreement
,
and that a contract between them came into being in consequence of
their agreement. Despite the different formulations of the
onus that
exists (see the discussion in Joel Melamed and Hurwitz v Cleveland
Estates (Pty) Ltd; Joel Melamed and Hurwitz v Vorner
Investments
(Pty) Ltd
[1984] ZASCA 4
;
1984 (3) SA 155
(A)) … this is the essence of the
matter.’
This statement is a
minority judgment but the majority did not take issue with the
principle. It was only the application of the
principle that was in
dispute.
…
[21] In Butters, Brand
JA for the majority, in deciding whether a universal partnership had
been established, held that (para 18):
‘
Where
the conduct of the parties is capable of more than one inference, the
test for when a tacit universal partnership can be held
to exist is
whether it is more probable than not that a tacit agreement has been
reached.’”
The required standard
of proof
49.
In
Govan
v Skidmore
[30]
the Curt, having alluded to the different standards of proof
variously applicable to criminal and civil matters, held that it was
“
trite
law that, in general, in finding facts and making inferences in a
civil case, the Court may go upon a mere preponderance of
probability, even although its so doing does not exclude every
reasonable doubt”
,
so that one may, “
by
balancing probabilities, select a conclusion which seems to be the
more natural, or plausible, conclusion from amongst several
conceivable ones, even though that conclusion be not the only
reasonable one”
.
50.
It
has been held
[31]
that
“
plausible”
in this context means “
acceptable,
credible, suitable”
.
51.
The
onus of proof must be distinguished from the evidentiary burden
(“weerleggingslas”) which, itself, involves at least
two
discrete concepts, namely a duty to adduce evidence to combat a
prima
facie
case made by one’s opponent; and the duty cast upon a litigant,
who has to begin, of adducing evidence in order to escape
certain
procedural consequences. The evidentiary burden is the evidential
burden of combating a
prima
facie
case made by one’s opponent.
[32]
52.
The
principles applicable to
prima
facie
inferences apply to civil and criminal cases but this does not mean
that in some cases a party may obtain a verdict without producing
the
ordinary degree of proof. The requisite standard must always be
satisfied. However, in considering whether the onus has been
discharged, the Court is entitled, in appropriate cases, to take a
party’s failure to adduce evidence into account.
[33]
In other words, in civil cases the overriding question is whether the
party who bears the onus has discharged it but the absence
of an
explanation can be a circumstance to be taken into account in
arriving at a conclusion.
[34]
53.
A
defendant’s failure to testify justifies a verdict for the
plaintiff if there is enough evidence to enable the Court to
conclude
that, having regard to the absence of an explanation, the plaintiff’s
version is more probable than not. In
Marine
& Trade Insurance Co. Ltd v Van der Schyff
[35]
the Appellate Division held that the plaintiff’s evidence must
be such that, should he decide to close his case, an order
of
absolution from the instance would not be warranted.
The nature of the
evidence
54.
The rule is that parties present their
evidence at trials orally, but the High Court has the power to give
leave for evidence in
a trial to be proved by affidavit. Rule 38(2)
provides that a court may at any time, for sufficient reason, order
that all or any
of the evidence to be adduced at any trial be given
on affidavit, provided that where it appears to the Court that any
other party
reasonably requires the attendance of a witness for
cross-examination, and such witness can be provided, that witness’s
evidence
shall not be given on affidavit.
55.
Pursuant
to this sub-rule the Court granted leave, by agreement between the
parties, that seven affidavits deposed to by Giancarlo
be admitted in
evidence. It was fair
[36]
to
have done so, given Giancarlo’s death in 2018, and the
circumstances to which I refer further below.
56.
According
to
Erasmus
[37]
the factual allegations in the affidavits stand unchallenged and no
dispute of fact in respect thereof arises if the parties agree
that
the deponent will not be cross-examined. In the present matter the
parties knew in advance that they were agreeing to the
affidavits
being used in evidence without there being the possibility of
cross-examination of Giancarlo.
57.
The
Courts are reluctant to allow evidence in action proceedings to be
tendered on affidavit when a deponent will not be available
for
cross-examination, as this may prejudice the other party. However, in
Robinson
v Randfontein Estates Goldmining Co Ltd
[38]
the Court remarked that the prejudice is not necessarily one-sided:
“
The
person who produces on paper the evidence of a witness is, as a rule,
at a disadvantage, because the Court will pay more attention
to the
evidence of witnesses who appear before it, who are examined and
cross-examined before it, than to those witnesses whom
it has not had
an opportunity of seeing, and if a question arises as to the
credibility of such a witness, or whether the Court
ought to accept
his testimony, it would prefer to base its judgment on what it has
seen and heard than on testimony about which
some doubt may exist.”
58.
In the present matter there is less reason
to be concerned about the fact that the Court must decide the matter
also with reference
to the evidence on affidavits deposed to by a
person who cannot be cross-examined, because those affidavits were
not deposed to
for purposes of the trial. The defendant had occasion
to respond to all of them. The current plaintiff has, moreover, given
viva voce
evidence corroborating Giancarlo’s evidence on affidavit, and
was available for cross-examination by the defendant. The defendant
chose not to do so by failing to appear on the date of the resumption
of the trial on 2 September 2024.
59.
Part VI of the Civil Proceedings Evidence
Act 25 of 1965 contains various provisions regarding documentary
evidence. Section 34
deals with the admissibility of documentary
evidence as to the facts in issue. The approach in section 35(1),
which deals with
the weight to be attached to evidence admissible
under Part VI, assists this Court in the evaluation of Giancarlo’s
evidence
on affidavit. It reads as follows:
“
In
estimating the weight, if any, to be attached to a statement
admissible as evidence under this Part, regard shall be had to all
the circumstances from which any inference can reasonably be drawn as
to the accuracy or otherwise of the statement, and in particular
to
the question whether or not the statement was made contemporaneously
with the occurrence or existence of the facts stated, and
to the
question whether or not the person who made the statement had any
incentive to conceal or misrepresent the facts.”
60.
In the application proceedings prior to the
commencement of the trial in which the affidavits featured over a
number of years, this
Court had no reason to doubt Giancarlo’s
credibility.
61.
I have mentioned earlier that it was fair,
in the circumstances, to have the affidavits admitted as evidence.
This is because delays
on the defendant’s side in agreeing to a
hearing date prior to Giancarlo’s death were in some part to
blame for the
eventual non-availability of his oral evidence.
62.
It
appears from the application to admit the affidavits in evidence that
in some of his affidavits Giancarlo mentioned the fact
that his
health was seriously impaired.
[39]
On 13 September 2017 his attorneys wrote a letter to the defendant’s
attorneys at the time, in which they referred to the
ongoing issues
with his health: “
In
fact, we intend to approach you in due course as to the possibility
to expedite the trial and/or hearing of the matter, which
would be in
both parties’ interest, and kindly request that you also advise
whether your client would be amenable to such
an approach and/or
arrangement.”
63.
On 14 September 2017 the defendant’s
attorneys responded as follows: “
Our
client is agreeable to the expedited hearing suggested by you.”
That letter letter was written by an attorney who subsequently left
the firm, and another attorney from the same firm took over.
64.
The
parties became engaged in an application
[40]
for the variation of the anti-dissipation order, in which
judgment
[41]
was given in May
2018. On 10 July 2018 Giancarlo’s attorneys again wrote the
defendant’s attorneys, stating:
“
4.
As you are aware, and as is common cause, our client has been
suffering ongoing issues
with his health, being our initial reason
for suggesting an expedited trial.
5.
Further to the above our client’s health condition has
deteriorated over
time and we are now in the precarious position of
our client’s health having deteriorated to such an extent that
it is becoming
increasingly difficult for him to travel. Moreover,
our client has commenced a new form of treatment which will require
him to
be in Monaco between the months of July and September.
6.
As you are aware, the time period for obtaining a trial date in the
ordinary
course is more than a year, which would result in prejudice
to our client for obvious reasons, and would also not be in the best
interest of your client. Our client is therefore desirous of dealing
with this matter in the shortest time period possible.
7.
In the circumstances, and having regard to the in principle agreement
referred
to in 2 and 3 above to expedite the trial we kindly request
that you provide us with your formal written consent, so as to enable
us to approach the Judge President to obtain an expedited trial date.
In this regard, we intend to deliver a letter to the Judge
President,
a copy of which is annexed hereto marked ‘C’, proposing
that the trial be set down on a date between 15
and 22 November 2018.
8.
Having regard to the fact that the pleadings have closed, and
discovery has been
completed, we submit that the abovementioned dates
allow more than sufficient time for any further trial preparation.”
65.
Giancarlo saw this letter before it was
sent and noted that although it was difficult for him to give
realistic periods due to his
health problems, he was able to say that
tentatively the second half of November 2018 would be a good time for
setting down the
trial.
66.
On 26 July 2018 Giancarlo’s attorneys
received a call from the defendant’s attorney, during which the
latter advised
that he would be involved in trial proceedings from 19
November 2018 for a few days, and that he would try and clarify the
exact
dates and revert. This never happened.
67.
Instead,
in a letter that was dated 13 July 2018, the defendant’s
previous attorney indicated that he now represented the
defendant
again and that, although she was aware of Giancarlo’s ill
health, exact details of his current state of health
were unknown to
her. He asked to be provided with documentary proof regarding the
state of Giancarlo’s health, stating that
a certificate
emanating from the institution providing treatment would carry more
weight than a letter from his doctor.
[42]
68.
In his view the matter was not trial ready.
The defendant intended amending her plea by the introduction of two
further alternative
defences, and might call for further documents.
He also suggested that, before applying for an expedited date,
Giancarlo’s
attorneys should call a Rule 37 conference to agree
on a timetable dealing with the various issues.
69.
By letter dated 1 August 2018 Giancarlo’s
attorneys reminded the defendant’s attorney that the defendant
had previously
been agreeable to an expedited hearing, and asked
whether that was still the case. The defendant’s responded on
10 August
2018, the day after Giancarlo passed away, and although his
letter indicated that the defendant remained agreeable to an
expedited
date, this would only be the case provided that the matter
was ready and her witnesses available, a statement followed by a
repetition
of the unidentified “
intention
to amend and to obtain further and better discovery”
.
70.
The strategy seems to have been to delay
the matter in view of Giancarlo’s illness, presumably because
it was assumed that
he and the defendant were the only persons with
first-hand knowledge of the agreement between them regarding the two
South African
properties. This is particularly evidenced by the
contents of paragraph 3 of the letter which reads as follows: “
It
is also important to Ms Micillo that any date chosen will allow for
the matter to run its course in one sitting. She would be
unwilling
to agree to any date where there would be a danger of the matter
becoming part-heard over the Christmas break.”
This signified that there would have been resistance to, for example,
a proposal that Giancarlo’s testimony be given on an
expedited
basis and for the remainder of the evidence to be given at a later
stage.
71.
As it turned out Giancarlo was found by his
son to be extremely dehydrated and malnourished and in need of
immediate hospitalisation
during the week of 30 July to 3 August 2018
and, following his admission to the hospital Centre Princesse Grace
de Monaco on 3
August 2018, he died on 9 August 2018. The defendant’s
attorney was informed of Giancarlo’s death by letter dated 15
August 2018.
72.
It appears from a medical certificate on
record that, following his hospitalisation, Giancarlo would not have
been able to give
evidence before a commissioner nor by way of video
link, and that he was so weakened that it would also not have been
possible
for him to depose to another affidavit.
73.
In all of these circumstances, the best
evidence of Giancarlo’s version has become his affidavits.
The evidence on
behalf of the plaintiff
74.
Against the backdrop of the relevant legal
principles I now turn to the available evidence.
The purchase of the
properties
75.
I have referred to the fact that the
defendant and Giancarlo lived together from 15 February 2009 until 19
November 2014 when their
relationship came to an end. Since the
defendant was significantly younger than Giancarlo, she was concerned
for her financial
security in the event of his death and, to allay
her fears, he established a real estate company in Monaco on 2 July
2009 which
purchased an apartment in a French village called
Roquebrune-Cap-Martin, 10 km from Monaco. Giancarlo provided the
funds for the
purchase of the apartment in an amount of €1 455
000,00.
76.
He and the defendant were the shareholders,
with him holding the usufruct and the defendant the remaining
interest, a scheme which
would have enabled her to re-unite the
usufruct with the remaining interest in the event of his death and so
become the legal owner
of the company and its very significant asset.
This would mean that, in the event of Giancarlo dying before the
defendant during
their relationship, she would have acquired
unencumbered ownership of the company and would have been at liberty
to use or dispose
of the apartment as she saw fit. In the event of
the termination of their relationship as a result of causes other
than his death,
the apartment would still have become the defendant’s
sole property
77.
The defendant confirmed during oral
evidence given on 30 July 2024 that she had sold the apartment in
2019. She declined to disclose
how much it was sold for and where the
proceeds are being held.
78.
I have earlier above mentioned the two
considerations that led to Giancarlo’s decision to purchase
immovable property in South
Africa. When Giancarlo’s bought the
South African properties, the agreement between him and the defendant
was simply to enjoy
the use thereof during the summer season for a
few years, after which they would sell them and repatriate the
proceeds of the sale
to her bank account in Europe and from there to
his bank account where the funds originated from.
79.
Giancarlo thus financed the purchases of
two properties in Constantia, having agreed with the defendant that
although the assets
would be acquired in her name, they were not to
be considered a gift or a donation, but would only be registered in
her name for
the reasons already referred to.
80.
Giancarlo gave all the required mandates to
the estate agents, including to buy or sell the properties, and
co-signed the purchase
agreements as a witness. He also had a right
of signature in respect the defendant’s CFM Monaco bank
account, as well as
her accounts in Switzerland and with Banca dello
Stato. He assisted with the opening of these accounts, as also the
ones in the
defendant’s name at First National Bank’s
Constantia branch.
81.
The defendant never liaised directly with
the various people involved in the acquisition and renovation of the
properties, such
as real estate agents, lawyers, conveyancers,
architects, project managers, builders, subcontractors, and banks.
Giancarlo did
all of this but kept her fully informed of what was
going on.
82.
Giancarlo and the defendant visited South
Africa on six occasions (between 11 April 2013 and 29 October 2014)
inter alia
to buy B[...] and then to sell it again; and buy K[...] C[...] and
oversee the bulk of the renovations and refurbishing thereof.
83.
On 20 June 2013 they made an offer of R11,5
million for B[...] which was signed by the defendant and accepted by
the owner. It was
transferred into the defendant’s name on 2
December 2013. Giancarlo conducted all the negotiations with Mr
Eugene Pienaar
of Rawson Properties, attorney CLT Bollo of Biccari
Bollo Mariano Inc., and the valuer, Mr R. Gouveia of Valuetec.
84.
Giancarlo paid for the purchase of B[...]
by transferring €1 350 000,00 from his Swiss bank directly to Mr
Bollo’s trust
account and €100 000,00 from his Swiss bank
account to the defendant’s Monaco CFM bank account, and from
there to Mr
Bollo’s trust account.
85.
Giancarlo spent the rest of 2013
instructing his architects in Rome to devise a preliminary project
for the renovation works that
he wanted carried out according to his
preferences and, once this was done, he obtained a quote from Steel
Consulting. Steel Consulting
having estimated the cost of the project
to be about R10,5 million and that it would take 18 months to
complete, Giancarlo decided
not to continue with any further
alterations but rather to buy a second property which would require
less renovation and less time
within which to do it.
86.
He searched for another property during
January and February 2014 and finally decided to buy K[...] C[...],
to which he was introduced
by estate agents Fine & Country. The
defendant, as nominal purchaser, and Giancarlo, as witness, signed an
offer to purchase
on 7 March 2014 which was subsequently amended by
their attorney, Mr Arno Watson, who had power of attorney to do so,
and it was
finally accepted. Transfer was registered on 6 May 2014.
87.
K[...] C[...] was purchased for R14
million. To finance this Giancarlo transferred €300 000,00 from
his Swiss bank account
to the defendant’s Swiss bank account
from where she transferred it to her FNB Constantia bank account. The
defendant paid
the deposit from this, and transferred some of the
funds to her FNB Constantia bank account. Giancarlo also transferred
€1
200 000,00 from his Swiss bank account to the defendant’s
Swiss bank account from where she paid R12,6 million for the balance
of the K[...] C[...] property purchase price. Further transfers of
R2,8 million, R2,9 million and R900 000,00 were also made
from
the defendant’s Swiss account to her FNB Constantia bank
account.
88.
Their last visit to South Africa together
was between 29 October 2014 and 17 November 2014, on which date
Giancarlo decided to terminate
his relationship with the defendant,
which he did on 19 November 2014.
89.
Giancarlo made one last journey to South
Africa by himself on 5 May 2015 to return on 22 May 2015 to assist
the defendant, who was
alone in Constantia busy with finalising the
renovation work in respect of K[...] C[...].
90.
B[...] was finally sold on 20 July 2015
with Mr Watson as the conveyancer. As indicated, the defendant
retained the proceeds.
The evidence emanating
from the anti-dissipation application
91.
Giancarlo was concerned that the defendant
would continue to dissipate his assets (she had access to his credit
card for a substantial
period after the end of their relationship,
and was in control of the B[...] proceeds) and that he would not be
able to recover
anything even if he were to successfully institute an
action for the recovery thereof. His apprehension was furthered by
her refusal
to come to any kind of arrangement with him.
92.
He had taken some time to institute legal
proceedings mainly because of efforts to resolve the matter amicably,
which involved an
exchange of 40 e-mails between him and the
defendant in an attempt to settle the matter between them. The first
proposal was made
on 27 July 2015, and the last attempt which he had
made to convince her to settle the matter amicably, and to which she
did not
respond, was made on 1 August 2016.
93.
When Giancarlo deposed to the founding
affidavit in the anti-dissipation application, he did not consider it
necessary to burden
the Court with the flood of correspondence
between the defendant and him which followed upon the termination of
their relationship,
but she elected to refer to some of that
correspondence, ostensibly because it supported her claim that he had
donated the properties
to her.
94.
He therefore referred more extensively to
the background in his replying affidavit,
inter
alia
to show that his letters to the
defendant were mostly generous settlement offers which almost
invariably got rejected, and all
of which got rejected in the final
analysis. The correspondence shows, too, that the apartment near
Monaco was acquired shortly
after the commencement of their
relationship as confirmation of his affection for the defendant and
to provide her with security
in the fulness of time. B[...] and
K[...] C[...], however, were purchased significantly later following
the commencement of the
CONSOB investigation, and were registered in
her name for the reasons already mentioned.
95.
The objective facts, which the defendant
had not challenged, such as when the apartment was purchased, when
the CONSOB investigation
commenced, and when B[...] and K[...] C[...]
were purchased, as also the correspondence between them, confirmed
Giancarlo’s
version that he did not donate three immovable
properties valued significantly in excess of R50 million more than
ten years previously,
to the defendant.
96.
The
defendant’s case in the anti-dissipation application was that
“
it
was the Applicant’s intention to donate the Cap Martin property
[the apartment] (being the first property which the Applicant
admits
having given to me at the start of our relationship to ‘reassure’
[her] of his feelings for [her] and the K[...]
C[...] property
and
cash from the proceeds of the sale of the B[...] property
”
.
[43]
97.
It is telling that the defendant did not
say “
the proceeds of the sale of
the B[...] property”
but “
cash
from the proceeds”
of that sale.
I agree with the submission made on the plaintiff’s behalf that
this is an implicit acceptance of the fact
that it was never
Giancarlo’s intention to buy two properties for the defendant
in South Africa, and consistent with his
offer to give K[...] C[...]
to the defendant and to use some of the proceeds of the sale of
B[...] to refurbish it - an offer that
the defendant did not accept
but which is in line with his position that K[...] C[...] was his to
dispose of.
98.
As far as Giancarlo’s motivation was
concerned, the defendant’s case was that he had purchased the
properties for her
“
by virtue of
our relationship, out of generosity and a desire to provide me with
security”
. This is so inherently
improbable that it can safely be rejected. The amount involved is
clearly more than security. It is wealth
such as most people only
dream of. He would never have parted with more than R50 million
ultimately at the expense of his son,
for whom he had to make
provision before he made provision for the defendant.
99.
After about 2 months following their
separation, Giancarlo paid serious attention as to how he could
address the situation. First,
he had to calculate how much he should
give to the defendant, and calculated what he had spent in respect of
the three properties,
the total of which was approximately €4
million. He proceeded from the assumption that had they been married,
it would have
been reasonable, fair and generous to let her have the
equivalent of 50% of that amount, that is, about €2 million.
100.
Next he considered how to achieve such an
outcome, to which he applied his mind from December 2014 to March
2015, all the while
managing the renovation works in progress at
K[...] C[...] and the sale of B[...], while throughout having to
attend to questions
and problems that the defendant was posing
through a large volume of e-mails and telephone calls, most of which
concerned her future
life.
101.
Following receipt of a proposal from the
defendant’s law firm in Milan on 16 March 2015, Giancarlo
arranged for an appointment
with the lawyers in Milan on 23 March
2015 to whom he explained his case and presented a proposal in terms
of which the defendant
would effectively get €2,3 million which
equated at the time to more than R30 million, the largest part of
which was represented
by 50% of the value of the three immovable
properties. To avoid co-ownership of any of the properties, he
proposed that she should
become the full owner of K[...] C[...],
particularly since she had previously verbally expressed this
preference. His intention
was to give K[...] C[...] (then worth €1
607 314,65) to the defendant, as well as €650 506,85 in cash and
furniture valued
at €42 178,50.
102.
Between March 2015 and 1 August 2016
Giancarlo made several offers, all above €2,3 million in value,
in attempts to reach a
friendly agreement with the defendant which
would have obviated a need for recourse to legal action, but she
consistently refused
his proposals, sometimes accepting a proposal
but changing her mind a day later and rejecting it.
103.
He came to suspect that this was a scheme
to take advantage of some of what he was offering, such as renewal of
the defendant’s
residence card in Monaco, the continuation of
her employment contract, living in the apartment near Monaco, pocket
money in excess
of €2 000,00 per month and, finally, moving the
furniture from the apartment to K[...] C[...].
104.
The e-mail exchanges between Giancarlo and
the defendant speak of, on the one hand, the fact that his intentions
were always
bona fide
and that he was prepared to treat her generously and kindly and, on
the other, her unreasonableness in the circumstances. His responses
were aimed at allaying the defendant’s concerns and to
demonstrate that he was “
no
emotional blackmailer”
. In the
course of these emails he made a number of offers to the defendant
which she never accepted. Not only had the defendant
not placed any
of the material contents of the correspondence in issue, but
Giancarlo’s responses were also consistent with
his version of
the facts as set out in the founding affidavit.
105.
He said that he did not want any money from
her, but that he was offering her money to ensure a future with
dignity. He continued
by saying that he was thinking of assigning a
large part of his current possessions to her. However, before he did
so, he needed
her to be patient and wait for the sale of B[...] and
for her to tell him how she intended disposing of the apartment. This
was
consistent with his position that the apartment was hers and
B[...] his.
106.
Of K[...] C[...] he said that this was “
the
property that I now wish to give you, to be your own, fully and
independently, while I reserve the right to sell B[...] to recover
a
part of the money I invested, and which will also serve to raise cash
for you”
. This was consistent
with his position that both properties belonged to him.
107.
In his last e-mail to the defendant, in
final attempt to convince her to accept a friendly resolution of the
matter, Giancarlo made
a proposal worth €2,525 million and
expressed the sincere hope that she would take his advice and accept
the proposal.
108.
A significant aspect of the matter was that
the defendant did not revert to say that the properties were hers to
begin with, an
omission consistent with what Giancarlo said the
understanding between them had been.
109.
The correspondence which the defendant
invoked in the anti-dissipation application has to be seen for what
it was, namely various
and different settlement proposals, none of
which corroborated her version that Giancarlo had donated three
different properties,
worth in the region of R50 million. Giancarlo’s
version of the facts is substantiated by the many settlement
proposals he
had made to the defendant, including the ones referred
to by her, all of which proceeded from the premise that the
properties were
his to dispose of as he saw fit, as also the fact
that she did not challenge that.
110.
As counsel for the plaintiff remarked,
there is a boundary between generosity and madness. The fact that
Giancarlo had put in place
a Monaco company which owns the apartment
which would have left the defendant as owner of an asset worth more
than €1,4 million
in the event of his death, was done by virtue
of their relationship. The purchase of the South African properties
was on another
footing.
111.
The defendant’s statement that
Giancarlo had indicated that he had found another property, that is,
K[...] C[...], and was
going to sell B[...], is consistent with his
version of the facts. In the founding affidavit in the
anti-dissipation application
Giancarlo said that during January and
February 2014 he had searched for another property to buy and finally
decided on K[...]
C[...]. The defendant admitted the contents of this
paragraph and continued by saying: “
The
Applicant indicated to me that he had found another property, the
K[...] C[...] property, and was going to sell B[...] due to
the high
costs of renovating it ...”
112.
This is consistent with Giancarlo’s
version that the property was not the defendant’s, but his.
Even on the defendant’s
version the plan was to buy a house in
Constantia in South Africa to live in, not to buy two houses and for
Giancarlo to sell the
one and donate the proceeds thereof to the
defendant while also giving the second house to her. It was never
Giancarlo’s
and the defendant’s intention to have two
houses in Cape Town. They were actively trying to sell B[...].
113.
Giancarlo instructed Mr Watson to attend to
the transfer of B[...]. From the e-mails between him, estate agents
and Mr Watson concerning
B[...], and the correspondence between him,
estate agents and Mr Watson concerning K[...] C[...], it is apparent
that Giancarlo
was the principal in the transactions. He appointed Mr
Watson, and he took all the decisions regarding the purchasing,
renovating,
and selling of the properties. He arranged for payments
and gave Mr Watson detailed instructions on a continuous basis in
respect
of how money should be allocated and where it should be
invested. When requiring instructions or decisions, Mr Watson would
refer
to Giancarlo.
114.
Giancarlo was the one who liaised with the
owners of K[...] C[...], and he determined the commission which the
estate agents would
get The emails indicate that it was within the
parties’ contemplation (as Giancarlo had said in the
anti-dissipation application)
that K[...] C[...] might in future be
sold. Mr Watson knew what Giancarlo wanted to achieve with the
purchase of that property:
although the property would be registered
in the defendant’s name, she would not be the owner. Mr Watson
accounted to Giancarlo
throughout, not to the defendant, although
Giancarlo had instructed him that his invoice should be in the
defendant’s name
only.
115.
The only time Mr Watson did not act on
Giancarlo’s instructions was when he transferred the proceeds
of B[...] to bank accounts
which Giancarlo assumed, although Mr
Watson did not say so, were in the defendant’s name. In view of
the fact that Giancarlo
had given Mr Watson detailed instructions
regarding every aspect, even what could be considered as
minutiae
,
of the purchase and sale of the properties, it was unusual for Mr
Watson to transfer the proceeds of the balance of the sale of
B[...]
to the defendant’s bank accounts without having received or
requested instructions from Giancarlo.
116.
Be that as it may, Giancarlo did not take
issue with Mr Watson’s conduct because, as is apparent from the
papers filed of
record in the anti-dissipation application, he had
made proposals for the settlement of the issues between him and the
defendant
which, had they been accepted, would have seen her receive
a significant portion of the proceeds of the sale of B[...].
The evidence emanating
from the variation application
117.
In his answering affidavit to the
defendant’s application for the variation of the
anti-dissipation order (principally to
allow her access to more money
on a monthly basis), Giancarlo referred to what the defendant had not
disclosed in her founding
affidavit.
118.
On of the aspects was that, so as not to
delay the conclusion of the trial by becoming involved in unnecessary
interlocutory disputes,
Giancarlo had been prepared to deposit the
sum of R1,5 million as security for costs into his attorney’s
trust account. Had
he known that the indication of his willingness to
provide security for the defendant’s costs would almost
immediately be
followed by an application that her costs be financed
out of the proceeds of the B[...] sale, he would not have agreed to
furnish
security for costs.
119.
The defendant should have informed the
Court of this fact because it had direct implications for her second
prayer, which was that
her attorney should be allowed to allocate a
portion of the sum of the remaining proceeds of the B[...] sale held
by them in an
amount of R3,382 million towards payment of her legal
fees. The fact that security had been provided in the amount of the
defendant’s
own estimate of her fees and disbursements, was
dispositive of her second claim in that variation application.
120.
The defendant failed to disclose what had
happened to the difference between the amount of R12 181 780,48
(the proceeds
of the B[...] sale which were paid to her in two
instalments during 2015) and the amount of R9,9 million which she
claimed was
all that remained. That meant that R2 281 781,48 of
the proceeds had seemingly been spent in less than a year and a half,
or in any event remained unaccounted for.
121.
The defendant also did not disclose that by
mid-2015 she had R202 813,82 in her non-resident FNB account
6[...], more than
R488 614,57 in an FNB investment account, and
more than R2 081,71 in an FNB business account in the name of AM
Monaco
(Pty) Ltd, which added up to another R693 510,12.
122.
Giancarlo established, in the variation
application, that R2,281 million of the proceeds of the B[...] sale
effectively remained
unaccounted for. Equally importantly, in the
context of an application for a significant increase in the
defendant’s monthly
“
allowance”
and for funds to be made available to finance her legal expenses, her
attorneys of record had also declined to provide particulars
of the
whereabouts of almost R700 000,00 which, it was not in dispute,
Giancarlo had paid into various bank accounts. The
money unaccounted
for, not counting the monthly allowance which Giancarlo continued to
give her until December 2016 and which totalled
approximately
R300 000,00, amounted to approximately R2 939 134,00.
123.
The additional correspondence which the
defendant invoked in the variation application was mostly settlement
offers, all of which
she had rejected.
124.
The futility of attempting to reopen the matter with reference
to further correspondence between Giancarlo and the defendant, which
she could have used in the context of the anti-dissipation
application at the outset, was illustrated when the defendant invoked
a sentence from a letter dated 16 April 2015 from Giancarlo to her,
reading as follows: “
In my heart, I never believed that the
second property (K[...] C[...])
belonged to
me alone but simply to both of us, as a joint project which I would
have left you in case of my demise.”
125.
The statement is not inconsistent with
Giancarlo’s claim regarding the agreement between the defendant
and him in respect
of K[...] C[...]. It signifies that it was within
his power to bequeath K[...] C[...] to her. It was, however, clearly
inconsistent
with her claim that she was the sole owner thereof.
126.
What the defendant did not refer to was Giancarlo’s
statement in the same letter, where he said that he had the right to
a
refund of the costs, or at least a major portion thereof, incurred
in respect of the purchase of B[...], the money which she then
wanted
to use to finance her monthly living costs and her legal expenses. In
any event, if regard is had to the letter as a whole,
it is clear
that it was a settlement offer, in which Giancarlo’s “
new
proposal”
(which the defendant rejected) would have seen
her get R30 210 800,00.
127.
Further correspondence put up in the variation application
evidences that Giancarlo’s intentions were
bona fide,
and that he was prepared to treat the defendant generously. There is
nothing which is inconsistent with his case in these proceedings.
128.
In his answering affidavit Giancarlo reiterated that, when
their ways parted in November 2014, his personal assets were of
significantly
diminished because of the world-wide financial and
economic collapse at the time. Most of his investments had been
dramatically
hit and he could not afford to be excessively generous
when he considered how best to discharge his moral obligation towards
the
defendant. He nevertheless paid serious attention as to how best
he could address the situation. This is followed by a repetition
of
how, in the final analysis, he arrived at his proposal of €2,3
million, which he had previously explained in the context
of the
anti-dissipation application.
129.
Against this backdrop Giancarlo said that
he found it impossible to understand how the defendant could expect
to whittle away the
proceeds of the B[...] sale to which, as a matter
of law, she had no entitlement.
The evidence of
Manfredi de Filippo
130.
Manfredi de Filippo, Giancarlo’s son,
gave oral evidence. He has tertiary qualifications in law and
banking.
131.
Shortly before he died, Giancarlo wrote a
power of attorney to Manfredi to deal with the lawyers and all his
affairs. Manfredi had
promised his father that he would see the case
through. Manfredi has no vendetta against the defendant but came to
South Africa
out of filial duty to his father.
132.
He testified that Giancarlo had called him
on a regular basis to assist him with the case, to understand general
concepts of law,
and to help him draft and communicate with his legal
representatives.
133.
On Manfredi’s birthday, the day on
which Giancarlo had been re-diagnosed with cancer, he asked Manfredi
to become more involved
in the case to assist him, because the
diagnosis of cancer was a death sentence. Thereafter they had worked
on the case together
with renewed vigour and focus.
134.
Following the termination of the
relationship, the defendant’s financial future was the subject
of substantial contemporaneous
and subsequent conversations between
Giancarlo and Manfredi. Having just come out of a bruising divorce,
Giancarlo was not going
to remarry, but he wanted to be generous and
to provide for the people he had been in a relationship with. That
was also the case
with the defendant.
135.
Giancarlo had confided in Manfredi that
when the defendant came to Monaco when they first met, she was a
woman of extremely limited
means, and he maintained her throughout
the relationship. Following the termination of the relationship
Giancarlo still wanted
to do well by her and made an offer of the
order of €2,3 million that he would remit to the defendant,
having sold the properties.
This was entirely a matter of his
generosity which was disproportionate to what Manfredi would have
advised, but it was Giancarlo’s
right and Manfredi respected
him for that.
136.
Giancarlo, being Italian, wanted to a good
head of family. He assisted the defendant’s mother financially,
and made substantial
financial provision for the defendant’s
brother in the form of loans (but effectively donations) worth about
€50 000,00
to €70 000,00. Manfredi is in possession of
the loan contract in his capacity as executor to his father’s
estate, but
Giancarlo had asked him never to enforce it.
137.
In response to the defendant’s claim
that Giancarlo bought two properties for her in South Africa,
Manfredi testified that
Giancarlo repeated many times,
contemporaneously and during the litigation afterwards, that he was
aging; he had suffered reversals
of fortunes during his divorce and
the investments that he retained subsequent to that did not perform
as well as he had expected;
and that it was not a particularly good
time in global finance.
138.
Manfredi did not regard Giancarlo as the
most gifted of business people. His world-weariness was getting
worse, and he was losing
trust in a number of institutions broadly.
He was slightly dissatisfied with life in Monaco and yearned for new
horizons. He was
ensnared in legal matters in Italy where he was a
co-defendant, and he had become concerned that the Italian state was
over-reaching
and would continue to over-reach. As an aging man, the
winters in Europe were no longer attractive and Giancarlo had
thought, in
consultation with the defendant who had lived in South
Africa previously, that South Africa would be a good place to be. He
discovered
to his great pleasure that there were many Italians here,
usually involved in the wine and restaurant industry, and decided
that
he wanted to acquire a property here to spend the winter months.
Giancarlo believed that South African real estate, as long as it
was
not levered, was likely to be a good investment.
139.
Because Giancarlo was concerned about the
over-reach and the delicate legal situation in Italy, he had thought
to register the first
property, B[...], in the defendant’s
name. CONSOB and his general character explained why he had entered
into this arrangement
with the defendant. Manfredi remembered that,
after a 45-minute diatribe about roofers who never showed up to
restore B[...], Giancarlo
decided that there was another property in
Constantia which was far nicer, better located, with better bones,
and “
more amenable to fix up”
.
Since it was going to be sold quickly, he decided that he would buy
K[...] C[...] even before selling B[...] and that, when he
sold
B[...], the money had to come back to him.
140.
Giancarlo took all the decisions to the
degree that he was there with the conveyancers, and the accountants,
and did all the designs
himself. The money (all of it) came from
Giancarlo and there was no doubt that when he wanted B[...] to be
sold, it was sold and
when he wanted K[...] C[...] to be acquired, it
was acquired. He paid for the work that was performed. When the
matter came to
a head, the three properties (including the apartment
near Monaco) represented more than 50% of his estate.
141.
Manfredi testified that the defendant gave
Giancarlo no support, only problems, and that she antagonised almost
everyone. There
were voluminous exchanges of e-mails between
Giancarlo and the defendant after the termination of the
relationship. Manfredi’s
general understanding of it is that
they concern broadly the matter of Giancarlo’s wish to see her
well looked-after following
the end of the relationship, and
Giancarlo was concerned about various particulars by which this could
be achieved.
142.
Manfredi referred to an e-mail of 8 March
2014 from Giancarlo to Mr Watson in which he mentions that they might
want to re-sell
the property and re-export the money in future, which
was consistent with Giancarlo’s thinking about the properties.
They
were supposed to be summer properties to be acquired and used
and then, when it would no longer be convenient, or he could not take
enjoyment out of them, they would like any holiday property be
re-sold and the funds repatriated to him. Giancarlo’s intention
was to find one property, not two, and he was very much the
decision-maker in the fate of these assets.
143.
Manfredi said that the defendant was aware
of Giancarlo’s legal problems. He pointed to correspondence
from the defendant
to Giancarlo to the effect that in accommodating
him with the sale in progress at the price that he had accepted for
B[...] she
would transfer the proceeds as he had requested except for
an amount needed to cover all costs of the housing claim and her
upkeep
until the sale of the company in France. This, Manfredi said,
was consistent with the conversations that Manfredi and Giancarlo
had
regarding arrangement of his affairs in a way that would be morally
fair to the defendant.
144.
With reference to correspondence to which
he had been referred, Manfredi said that it testified quite clearly
to the fact that Giancarlo
was the owner of the properties. As to the
defendant saying that “
I insist on
asking you how much you think to leave me of the sale of B[...] Cape
Town and I beg you to answer”
, he
commented that she was obviously not talking about an entitlement but
she was asking for something.
145.
In an e-mail of 27 July 2015 Giancarlo
inter alia
told the defendant that he had donated the apartment to her after two
years of their cohabitation but that he never spoke of donating
either B[...] or K[...] C[...] to her and that she knew very well
that their registration in her name was exclusively due to his
need
to protect his investments from possible recourse action, following
his well-known judicial “
events”
.
Manfredi commented that this was entirely consistent with what
Giancarlo had told him, as it was consistent “
with
the analysis of his estates when he was then deceased afterwards”
.
146.
Following the rejection of Giancarlo’s
last settlement offer he had become extremely disillusioned and felt
betrayed by the
defendant. As a result he resorted, for the first
time in his life, to legal action.
147.
The apartment was furnished twice. The
first time Giancarlo paid for everything which the defendant, without
notifying him, subsequently
shipped in a container to South Africa.
Giancarlo had to refurbish it again. Shortly after he died Manfredi
went there with staff
to select for transfer Giancarlo’s
remaining movable assets, mainly clothes, furniture, and some objects
of artistic value.
The next day the defendant arrived at the
apartment and called the police, claiming that she did so because the
neighbours had
reported that some suspicious people were emptying the
building, and she wished to protect Giancarlo’s assets.
Manfredi believes
that she was foiled in an attempt to take his
father’s belongings.
148.
Manfredi concluded his evidence by stating
that Giancarlo lived his final years in a way that no human being
should. He was consumed
by this case, and by the fact that what he
thought was rightfully his and rightfully his heir’s was going
to be denied him.
Despite the cancer, despite the work, he would wake
up every morning and write long e-mails to his lawyers, compiling
Excel sheets
and spreadsheet models to show what evidence there was.
“
This was a case that consumed
him, and he did not live well for it.”
149.
Manfredi believes that the defendant had
litigated his father to death. She brought application upon
application, vexatious and
without merit, in attempts to delay the
trial and the final determination of the dispute. The last discussion
that Manfredi had
with his father was about the litigation.
The circumstances in
which default judgment was given against the defendant
150.
I have mentioned that the defendant did not
cross-examine Manfredi, and that judgment was given in her absence at
the resumption
of the trial on 2 September 2024. This came about as
follows.
151.
Since 2016, when the litigation between the
parties commenced, attorneys have come on record for the defendant on
eight occasions,
and she was, at different times, represented by at
least five advocates, three of whom were senior counsel. On the last
two occasions
when the trial was set down (being 12 March 2024 and
again on 29 July 2024), the defendant was unrepresented. This caused,
on each
occasion, a postponement to assist her in obtaining legal
representation, to no avail.
152.
It
is necessary to take a step back.
[44]
153.
On 3 November 2023 (six years after the
institution of the action) the Honourable Justice Cloete issued a
certificate of trial readiness.
At the time, the plaintiff formally
placed the following on record:
"The
Plaintiff records that he is prejudiced by the Defendant's continuous
attempts to delay the finalisation of this matter.
The Defendant
records that she does not agree but that she too wishes the matter to
be finalised as quickly as possible. The Acting
Deputy Judge
President has thus granted permission for an expedited trial date,
preferably in the first term of 2024."
154.
The transcript of the proceedings indicates
that Cloete J emphatically urged the defendant to obtain legal
representation, and the
services of an interpreter, without delay.
155.
The Registrar allocated 12 March 2024 as
the expedited trial date. It soon became apparent that the defendant
was not keen on going
to trial, and she instituted a second
application for the rescission of the anti-dissipation order barely a
month before the trial
was to commence. She also failed to supplement
that trial bundle, as she had been directed to do by Cloete J in
November 2023 in
preparation for trial.
156.
The plaintiff’s attempts nevertheless
to have the trial commence on 12 March 2024 came to naught. On 13
March 2024 the Honourable
Acting Justice Sidaki, having declined to
determine the second rescission application, postponed the trial to
29 July 2024 for
the reason that the defendant was still
unrepresented.
157.
Whilst giving his judgment postponing the
trial, Sidaki AJ expressly directed the defendant to get legal
representation immediately,
granting a postponement specifically to
give her an opportunity to do so. He pointed out that the defendant
had been cautioned
repeatedly by the plaintiff’s attorneys to
ensure that her legal representation was ready for trial. Sidaki AJ
gave firm
directives to the defendant to appoint legal
representatives without delay and to have them liaise with the
plaintiff's legal representatives
to secure the commencement of the
trial on 29 July 2024. It is clear from the transcript of the
proceedings that the defendant
understood this. She confirmed that
she understood and that she would give effect to the directives.
158.
Yet, on 29 July 2024, when the trial
commenced, the defendant was still unrepresented, eventually
resulting in a postponement of
the matter on 31 July 2024 for one
month to 2 September 2024 in order for her to obtain legal
representation. This was done after
argument by both parties of the
second rescission application and the contempt application, and after
the plaintiff had given his
evidence in chief. The defendant insisted
that she was not capable of cross-examining the plaintiff, and that
she required legal
representation. She also maintained that her
mental health was suffering as a result of the litigation, and that
she was for that
reason unable to continue on her own.
159.
The
reasons proffered by the defendant for her failure to engage legal
representation are not satisfactory. In her oral evidence
before this
Court in opposition to an application to hold her in contempt of
court,
[45]
the defendant
explained that she had approached various attorneys, but that they
were not willing to assist her. She provided a
list of the attorneys
that she approached, but could not be specific as to exactly when she
asked for assistance from each of them.
It transpired that the
defendant had requested those attorneys to assist her on a
contingency basis as, so she stated, she could
not afford legal
representation.
160.
Under cross-examination the defendant
admitted that she had in 2019 sold the apartment in France, for which
Giancarlo had paid €1
455 000,00 in 2009. I have referred to the
fact that the latter had purchased the apartment in a real estate
company of which he
and the defendant were the only shareholders,
with him holding a usufruct and the defendant the remaining interest,
resulting in
her becoming the legal owner of the company and its
asset upon his death in 2018. She was at liberty to use or dispose of
the apartment
as she saw fit.
161.
Taking into account the current exchange
rate, and assuming that the apartment was sold for the same amount as
that for which it
had been purchased (she has not protested that it
was sold for less), the probabilities are that the defendant has
access to some
R28 million from the sale.
162.
The defendant was, however, adamant that
the sale price and the whereabouts of the proceeds of the sale were
none of the plaintiff’s
or this Court’s business, and
refused to disclose what she had done with the funds. The impression
with which the Court was
left was that the defendant held the view
that her overseas funds were to be left untouched, and that she was
unwilling to use
them to defend the action in South Africa.
163.
The defendant was, for the same, reason,
unwilling to engage an interpreter for whose services she had to pay.
She challenged the
Court with the fact that, in the magistrate’s
court, she had on a previous occasion utilised the services of an
interpreter
for free. When it was pointed out to her that she would
have to pay for the services of an interpreter in the High Court, she
flatly
refused to do so on the basis that she could not afford it.
164.
The defendant’s evidence also
indicated that she did not trust or “like” lawyers who
displayed anything but the
fullest confidence in her case. It
appeared that several of the firms that she had consulted conveyed
doubts about the merits of
her case to her. This resulted in her not
engaging them.
165.
According
to the defendant, most of her legal representatives had failed her
either because they were in cahoots with the plaintiff's
legal team
or intimidated by the plaintiff’s senior counsel –
allegations without substance that have been repeated
throughout
correspondence and in affidavits before this Court, as well as before
Cloete J at the time when the matter was declared
trial ready, and
before Sidaki AJ when the trial was set down for hearing on 12 March
2024.
[46]
Despite the
defendant having been warned against the making of these
unsubstantiated allegations, she has not desisted from doing
so.
166.
Be that as it may, the defendant was warned
on 31 July 2024 that the trial would proceed on 2 September 2024. She
was dissatisfied
with the date and asked for more time, because she
said that she had planned to take a trip to Italy at the end of
August 2024.
When the Court asked her for confirmation of her travel
arrangements, she conceded that she had not in fact made any
arrangements
yet.
167.
The Court was not inclined to delay the
trial yet again for more than a month. The defendant pertinently
asked what would happen
if she did not come to Court on the date of
the resumption of the trial. The Court warned her not to do that, as
the matter could
proceed in her absence. It was impressed upon her
that she should approach an attorney without delay, and not at the
last minute.
The defendant understood all of this.
168.
The plaintiff’s attorney sent
correspondence to the defendant between 31 July 2024 and 2 September
2024 to remind her that
she should act expeditiously. This had no
effect. On 30 August 2024, the Friday afternoon prior to the
resumption of the trial,
the defendant called for a meeting with the
plaintiff’s representatives and with me as presiding judge. It
transpired at
the meeting that she had still not obtained legal
representation. She gave no reason for the situation other than
stating that
it was for the same reason as before – meaning
that she could not pay for legal services. That excuse is not
credible. The
defendant cannot cry poverty on the one hand, and on
the other refuse to tell the Court what the status is of the proceeds
of the
sale of the apartment in France.
169.
The defendant was asked whether she
intended to seek a postponement when the trial resumed the following
week, and she expressly
replied in the negative. She made much of her
alleged fragile mental health, and asked the Court to take cognizance
thereof. She
offered to email a medical certificate from her general
practitioner. I requested that such certificate be furnished under
cover
of an affidavit from the general practitioner, or that the
latter make herself available to give evidence as to the defendant’s
condition on the resumption of the trial.
170.
The defendant sought a directive to the
effect that the trial would continue online, so that she would not
have to come to court.
The plaintiff opposed the request, and I
declined it because of the practicalities involved in running a trial
remotely. The defendant
resided locally and had easy access to the
Court. Running virtual hearings is, moreover, not an entitlement in
this Division, and
there should be cogent reasons for such an
arrangement. The meeting concluded with the defendant being warned to
appear in Court
on the Monday morning.
171.
On 2 September 2024 at 10:00, when the
matter was called, the defendant was absent. After having stood the
matter down for inquiries
to be made, the plaintiff’s counsel
informed me that the defendant had sent email correspondence to his
attorney at about
09:45 that morning. The email had not immediately
been picked up on given the plaintiff’s team’s efforts to
get to
Court in time for the start of the hearing. It transpired that
she had sent the email to my registrar, too, who saw it at about
10:15 and forwarded it to me. There had been no prior phone call to
alert anyone to the email.
172.
In the email the defendant stated that her
health status “
significantly
impairs [her] ability to be physically present at the upcoming trial
scheduled for today 2 September 2024
”.
She stated that her “
health issues
have been exacerbated by the prolonged stress of the legal
proceedings
”, and asked the Court
to take this into account in dealing with the matter.
173.
The defendant attached a certificate from
her general practitioner. It was dated 29 August 2024 and recommended
“sick leave”
from 29 August 2024 to 8 September 2024. It
described the diagnosis and stated that the defendant had been
referred to another
healthcare provider for evaluation. The
certificate was not given under cover of an affidavit, and the
defendant made no mention
in her email of her general practitioner
being available to furnish oral evidence.
174.
The defendant further attached an email
message from a receptionist at a private hospital informing the
defendant that an appointment
with the healthcare provider in
question would only be available in October 2024. The receptionist
indicated that an in-person
consultation would be required. The email
had been sent on 29 August 2024 at 17:22, that is, after the meeting
with the defendant
on the Friday afternoon before the trial.
175.
The final attachment was a letter from a
doctor in Rome who had seen the defendant in February 2024. He
prescribed medication to
treat the condition.
176.
All of this correspondence is a far cry
from constituting evidence of a condition that required immediate
medical assistance and
that would have prevented the defendant from
attending Court in person.
177.
The defendant may be a lay person, but lay
people are also expected to play by the rules. The defendant had
litigated this matter
for eight years, and she knew what her
responsibilities were. The Court had on more than one occasion bent
over backwards to assist
her. Despite this, the defendant’s
strategy to delay the trial once again at the last minute was
transparent. She had been
wilful in her failure to obtain legal
representation. Her oral evidence had previously revealed that she
did not genuinely try
to carry out the Court’s directives, in
that she persisted in refusing to pay for legal advice despite the
fact that she
was on the probabilities more than able to do so. The
defendant cannot cry poverty on the one hand, and on the other refuse
to
tell the Court what the status is of the proceeds of the sale of
the apartment in France. As I have mentioned, too, the defendant
refused to appoint any legal representative who dared to give her
objective advice as to the merits of her defence. To overcome
these
obstacles, the defendant started to beat the health drum.
178.
When it becomes clear that a litigant’s
conduct is aimed at delay and at abusing the process of Court, it
should not be tolerated.
The plaintiff had yet again travelled from
Italy for the resumption of the trial. His father’s estate
needed to be wound
up. Costs were mounting. In these circumstances, I
was not inclined to delay the finalization of the matter any longer.
There was
no postponement application before me, and I accordingly
allowed the plaintiff to wrap up such evidence as he wished to give,
heard
argument on his behalf, and granted an order in the defendant’s
absence. I was of the view that the plaintiff’s evidence,
viewed as a whole, had overcome the requisite standard of proof, and
the defendant furnished no evidence to contradict it.
Costs
179.
Whilst the defendant bemoaned the fact that
the litigation between the parties was dragging on unreasonably, she
was herself to
blame for the state of affairs. She complained about a
lack of legal representation, but persisted in the attitude of not
wishing
to pay for the services of an attorney, and of not trusting
any legal representative who offers advice that did not accord with
her own beliefs in the merits of her case. She made offensive
allegations of the most serious kind against most of the attorneys
and advocates involved in this matter to date, and it is thus small
wonder that she ultimately claimed that none of the law firms
which
she had approached was prepared to represent her.
180.
The
defendant showed a marked disrespect for the Court and the plaintiff
in the manner in which she approached the trial, and in
the manner in
which she conducted herself in court. Her conduct was objectively
vexatious. I was of the view that it warranted
an award of costs on
the attorney and client scale.
[47]
Order
181.
In the circumstances, I granted the order
set out at the beginning of these reasons.
P. S. VAN ZYL
Acting judge of the
High Court
Appearances:
For
the plaintiff
:
J. C. Heunis SC, instructed by Webber Wentzel Attorneys
The defendant in
person
[1]
Under
Rule 15(3) of the Uniform Rules of Court.
[2]
The
current plaintiff is Giancarlo’s sole heir.
[3]
By
court order 16 June 2019, in the light of Giancarlo’s death in
August 2018.
[4]
She
initially retained occupation initially with Giancarlo’s
consent, but the current plaintiff has not given consent for
her to
remain there.
[5]
Under
case number 23724/2016.
[6]
The
defendant subsequently brought a so-called variation application
inter
alia
to increase this amount, which application was refused in May 2018.
[7]
Following
an unsuccessful application for the rescission of the
anti-dissipation order: unreported judgement under case number
23724/2016, delivered on 8 September 2017.
[8]
The
details of the various interlocutory applications are set out in
five unreported judgments of this Court, delivered on 8 September
2017, 25 May 2018, 22 February 2022, 11 September 2024, and 16
September 2024 respectively.
[9]
A
year before the end of their relationship.
[10]
Giancarlo’s
son was able to give oral evidence as to his father’s mindset
in deciding to purchase the properties.
[11]
Which
eventually did not happen.
[12]
Particulars
of how much money Giancarlo transferred to the conveyancers and to
the defendant for onward transfer to them, to whom
the transfers
were made, when they took place, and so forth, are set out in the
founding and replying affidavits in the anti-dissipation
application.
[13]
1920
AD 123
at 128.
[14]
Not even words are essential, since an acceptance may be inferred
from conduct:
Timoney
& King v King
1920
AD 133
at 141.
[15]
The
provisions of section 28 are not relevant to present purposes.
[16]
Du
Plessis v Nel
1952 (1) SA 513
(A) at 527E.
[17]
Bradfield
Christie’s
Law of Contract in South Africa
(7ed)
at 132-1333 u
sefully
lists contracts that have been held to fall outside the definition
of the section 2(1) concept of alienation.
[18]
1981
(3) SA 1039
(AD), concerning the forerunner to section 2(1) of the
ALA.
[19]
At
1050A-B.
[20]
Under c
ase
number 13020/2005 (unreported).
[21]
The
judgment is not in the court file and Le Grange ADJP’s (the
presiding judge) registrar was unable to be of assistance.
The quote
is from the plaintiff’s heads of argument in the defendant’s
unsuccessful application for leave to appeal.
[22]
1979
(3) SA 754
(A) at 762G-H.
[23]
See also
D&H
Piping Systems (Pty) Ltd v Trans Hex Group Ltd and another
[2006] ZASCA 29
;
2006
(3) SA 593
(SCA) at 699G-H.
[24]
1966
1 PH A36 (A).
[25]
1974
(3) SA 506
(A) at 531-532.
[26]
2012
(5) SA 230
(SCA) at 234I-J.
[27]
Pan
American World Airways Inc v SA Fire & Accident Insurance Co.
Ltd
1965
(3) SA 150
(A) at 175C.
[28]
See
Delfs
v Kuehne & Nagel (Pty) Ltd
1990
(1) SA 822
(A) at 827B-828B.
[29]
2019
(3) SA 379
(SCA) at paras [16]-[21].
[30]
1952
(1) SA 732
(N) at 734A-B and C-D.
[31]
Ocean
Accident & Guarantee Corporation Ltd v Koch
1963
(4) SA 147
(A) at 159C.
[32]
South
Cape Corporation (Pty) Ltd v Engineering Management Services (Pty)
Ltd
1977
(3) SA 534
(A) at 548.
[33]
Terry v
Senator Versekeringsmaatskappy Bpk
1984
(1) SA 693
(A) at 699C-F.
[34]
New
Zealand Construction (Pty) Ltd v Carpet Craft
1976
(1) SA 345
(N) at 349.
[35]
1972
(1) SA 26
(A) at 37.
[36]
Madibeng
Local Municipality v Public Investment Corporation Ltd
2018
(6) SA 55
(SCA) at 61F-H.
[37]
Superior
Court Practice
Volume
2 (2ed) at D1 (Rule 38-9).
[38]
1918
TPD 420
at 422; and see
Grant
v Grant
1949
(1) SA 22
(C) at 30.
[39]
The current plaintiff deposed to the founding affidavit in the
application to admit Giancarlo’s affidavits in evidence.
[40]
Instituted
by the defendant.
[41]
Refusing
the application.
[42]
This was less than a month before Giancarlo died.
[43]
Emphasis
supplied.
[44]
The
correspondence and events leading up to the allocation of 29 July
2024 as the trial date are set out in more detail in the
unreported
judgment dated 16 September 2024 delivered in respect of the
contempt application.
[45]
On
30 July 2024. The defendant had failed to deliver an answering
affidavit but wished to oppose the application.
[46]
Similar
allegations were made before the Taxing Master at the taxation in
2024 of various costs orders that had been granted against
the
defendant over the preceding years.
[47]
Johannesburg
City Council v Television and Electrical Distributors (Pty) Ltd and
another
1997 (1) SA 157
(A) at 177D: “ …
in
appropriate circumstances the conduct of a litigant may be adjudged
‘vexatious’ within the extended meaning that
has been
placed upon this terms in a number of decisions, that is, when such
conduct has resulted in ‘unnecessary trouble
and expense which
the other side ought not to bear’ (In re Alluvial Creek
1929
CPD 532
at 535)
.”
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