Case Law[2024] ZAWCHC 342South Africa
Marais v Melck and Another (10304/23) [2024] ZAWCHC 342; [2025] 1 All SA 422 (WCC) (1 November 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Marais v Melck and Another (10304/23) [2024] ZAWCHC 342; [2025] 1 All SA 422 (WCC) (1 November 2024)
Marais v Melck and Another (10304/23) [2024] ZAWCHC 342; [2025] 1 All SA 422 (WCC) (1 November 2024)
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sino date 1 November 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
REPORTABLE
CASE
NUMBER: 10304/23
In
the matter between
OCKERT
MARAIS
APPLICANT
and
NICHOLAS
MELCK
FIRST
RESPONDENT
BERNARD
VAN VUUREN
SECOND
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
Date
of hearing: 23 October 2024
Date
of judgment: 1 November 2024
BHOOPCHAND
AJ:
1.
Kalahari
melons (
Citrullus
vulgaris
)
have adapted to drought and heat and grow wildly in the semi-arid
savanna, spanning Namibia, Botswana, and South Africa. The San
peoples of the Kalahari hold the rights of this flora in South
Africa. Any person wishing to exploit the wild melon needs the
consent of the San and the Department of Environmental Affairs. The
oil, processed from its seed, is rich in linoleic acid, an omega-6
polyunsaturated fatty acid. The oil is used in a variety of cosmetics
internationally. The Kalahari melon has been used for over
4,000
years by the
San
people
of the Kalahari. They ground the seed into a paste and used it to
protect their skin against the harsh desert elements, while the
pulp
mixed with water was used as a sunblock or as a potion for a healthy,
blemish-free complexion.
[1]
This
is the case of the uncle, a farmer who tilled the soil and toiled
relentlessly with his crops until the sun parched the earth,
dried
the dams and killed his yield. This is the case of the globe-trotting
nephew who, together with the uncle, harvested the
wild and sold off
the oil until each demanded more of what the other had, the nephew
the oil and the uncle the spoils.
2.
This application concerns the removal of farming equipment used to
harvest the wild melon from the Applicant's farm. The
Applicant is a
farmer in the North West district of Vryburg. It concerns proof of
ownership and the vindication thereof, although
the means of recovery
becomes conflated between founding and replying affidavits. The
application commenced
ex parte
on 26 June 2023. The equipment
involved included two tractors, two ranking machines and two
harvesters (“the equipment”).
They were removed on the
Second Respondent’s instruction with the Applicant's consent
and relocated to the First Respondent’s
farm in the Western
Cape. The First Respondent takes no part in this application.
3.
The notice of motion commences with the allegation that the equipment
was “for the Applicant to use”. The Applicant
sought its
repatriation and undertook to pay the transport costs, keep the
equipment in good working order, and not alienate
them until the
return date of the
rule nisi
. The rule called upon the Second
Respondent to show cause why the order for the return of the
equipment should not be made a final
order.
4.
A notice of
motion informs the Respondent and the Court of the relief or remedy
(i.e., the order) sought by the Applicant. The founding
or supporting
affidavit to a notice of motion sets out the grounds upon which the
relief is claimed. Sufficient facts (the evidence)
must be disclosed
to prove a cause of action. The founding affidavit contains the core
allegations or assertions a party needs
to establish to succeed (the
facta
probanda
)
and the facts or evidence to support those core allegations (
facta
probantia
).
The Applicant’s case stands or falls by the contents of his
founding affidavit. New information or issues not included
in the
founding affidavit may not be raised in a replying affidavit. There
are exceptions to the latter rule, but they do not apply
to this
application. A replying affidavit aims to rebut issues raised by a
Respondent in his answering affidavit. It does not constitute
an
opportunity to include new issues or information the Applicant forgot
to include in his founding affidavit, nor is it an opportunity
to
introduce a whole new cause of action.
[2]
5.
The Applicant states that he is a director and shareholder of African
Origins Farming (Pty) Ltd (“African Origins”).
He cites
the First Respondent, Nicholas Melck, a farmer residing on the farm
Doornfontein in the Bergriver Municipality, Western
Cape Province, as
the holder of the equipment removed from his farm. The Second
Respondent, Bernard van Vuuren, holds dual citizenship
and resides in
the United Kingdom. The Second Respondent instructed a moving company
to remove the equipment from the Applicant’s
farm and relocate
it to that of the First Respondent.
6.
The Applicant alleges that he established a joint venture, African
Origins Oil (Pty) Ltd (“African Origins Oil JV”),
with
the Second Respondent to exploit the Kalahari melon seed for its
cosmetic use. He became the equipment owner as part of the
Second
Respondent’s contribution to the joint venture. He would
provide the seed oil (Mokate oil) for the Second Respondent
to sell
internationally through the latter’s company, African Origins
UK (“Origins UK”). The Second Respondent
would provide
the equipment to harvest the melon and process the seed to extract
the oil. The Applicant alleges that he and the
Second Respondent
agreed to procure the two tractors and the harvesting equipment. He
registered the tractors in his name and paid
for their
licensing, servicing, and insurance. He paid R100 000 to import
harvesting equipment sourced from Türkiye.
The Applicant
valued the equipment at approximately R1.6 million. He alleged that
the Second Respondent sold vast volumes of the
melon seed oil.
7.
On 23 February 2023, the Applicant consented to the Second Respondent
removing the equipment used on his farm for about
two years since its
procurement. The Second Respondent intended to use the equipment to
harvest wild melons in the Velddrift area
of the Western Cape
Province. The Applicant understood that the equipment would be
returned to him in time for the harvest of the
melons on his farm.
The tractors were serviced at the Second Respondent’s request,
and the equipment was duly moved.
The equipment was not returned
to him.
8.
The Applicant alleges that his relationship with the Second
Respondent soured for reasons unrelated to this application.
The
Applicant holds all permits to plant, harvest, and produce the
Kalahari melon seed oil and sell it. The Second Respondent
had
no permits but unlawfully planted and harvested the melons. The
Applicant pays the San people a royalty every six months to
exploit
the wild melons.
9.
The Applicant asked the Second Respondent to return the equipment.
The Second Respondent declined and instructed the First
Respondent
not to return it. The Applicant does not state that the Second
Respondent challenged his right to ownership but alleges
that the
Second Respondent cited some form of storage agreement and
third-party contract with an investor known as Trend. The Applicant
denied any storage agreement and asserted that he had no contact with
any person from an entity known as Trend. These aspects become
clearer in the answering affidavit.
10.
The Applicant attempted to open a case against the Second Respondent
with the South African Police Services (“SAPS”).
He
wanted the SAPS to assist him in retrieving the equipment. The
Applicant requested the SAPS to investigate the Second Respondent
for
theft, unlawful refusal to return the equipment, operating the
vehicles without registration or licenses or his consent as
the
owner, fraudulent misrepresentation to the tractor dealership that
the Second Respondent undertook to pay for the servicing
of the
tractors, and the unlawful planting and harvesting of the melons
without the necessary permits and consents. The SAPS declined
to
assist as the Applicant had consented to removing the equipment. The
SAPS advised the Applicant to pursue a civil claim against
the Second
Respondent. The Applicant instituted this application
ex parte
,
fearing the equipment would be moved if he served his papers on the
Respondents.
11.
It is appropriate to chronicle how the application evolved before the
Court addresses the Second Respondent’s answer
to the
allegations in the Applicant’s founding affidavit. On 25 August
2023, Cloete J ordered that the
ex parte
application be served
on the Respondents and that the matter be postponed to 4 October
2023. The Second Respondent filed his notice
to oppose on 2 October
2023. The Second Respondent filed his answering affidavit and a
counterapplication on 20 November 2023.
The Applicant filed a notice
to oppose the counterapplication dated 22 November 2023. On 28
November 2023, the Applicant applied
for security of costs in terms
of Rule 47. The Applicant required that the Second Respondent pay
R850 000 into court or provide
an attorney’s undertaking
for the amount. On 23 January 2024, the Second Respondent filed a
security bond of R140 000.
On the same date, the Second
Respondent made a successful chamber book application to have the
Applicant file his replying affidavit
to the main application and his
answering affidavit to the counterapplication. The application was
granted on 20 March 2024 with
costs against the Applicant. The
Applicant filed his replying affidavit and his answer to the
counterapplication on 2 April 2024.
The matter was removed from the
roll on 2 May 2024. On the 25 August 2024, the matter was postponed
to 4 October 2024. On 4 October
2024, the matter was again removed
from the roll. The application was set down for hearing on Wednesday,
23 October 2024. On Monday,
21 October 2024, the Second Respondent
withdrew his counterapplication and tendered the wasted costs
occasioned by the withdrawal.
12.
The Second Respondent filed a lengthy answering affidavit. The Court
will focus on the answers pertinent to the adjudication
of this
application. The Second Respondent confirms that he resides in
London. The Second Respondent raised a point of non-joinder
on the
basis that one ranking machine and one harvester belonged to Origins
UK and prayed that the application be stayed until
Origins UK had
been joined. The Second Respondent abandoned this point when his
written argument was filed.
13.
The Second Respondent honed down on the Applicant’s cause of
action. As the Applicant claimed ownership of the equipment,
he would
be entitled to reclaim possession of the property with the
rei
vindicatio
. The Second Respondent states that the central issue
in this application is whether the Applicant has proven he is the
owner of
the equipment. He submits that the Applicant has failed to
discharge that onus. The Applicant did not claim that he had
purchased
the equipment.
14.
Counsel for
the Second Respondent argued that the onus to prove ownership lies on
the Applicant.
[3]
The
rei
vindicatio
is premised on the notion that an owner may not be deprived of his
property against his will and is entitled to recover property
from
any person who retains possession without his consent.
[4]
Registration of the tractors in the Applicant's name is not proof of
ownership. Ownership for the
National Road Traffic Act, 93 of 1996
,
is confined only to that Act and does not prove common law
ownership.
[5]
Proof of ownership
acquisition depends upon five requirements. They are delivery, in the
form that the law allows, by a person
entitled to pass ownership,
that the person passing ownership should have intended to pass
ownership, and that the person
acquiring ownership should intend
to receive ownership.
[6]
The
requirements apply to the acquisition of the equipment identified by
the Applicant. The Second Respondent submitted that the
Applicant had
not met any requirements for acquiring ownership and had not produced
any evidence to discharge the onus.
15.
Delivery
(
traditio
),
as an element of the transfer of ownership, is the transfer of
physical control of a moveable to the transferee to enable him
to
exercise control of the movable with the intention to be the owner
(
animus
domini
).
This had to do primarily with the principle of publicity in that the
physical control, in the context of a transfer of ownership,
indicates that the transferee receives the movable with the intention
of acquiring ownership of the movable.
[7]
The development of common law allowed for cases where less publicity
is attached to the act of transfer, thereby permitting physical
delivery and delivery where there is a lack of a real or clear act of
transfer, such as in fictional or constructive delivery (
traditio
ficta
).
16.
The Applicant alleged that he and the Second Respondent agreed to
procure two tractors to assist with the harvesting.
The two tractors
were registered in the Applicant's name on or about 15 April 2021 and
21 April 2021. Both were procured in Potchesfroom.
Procuring the
tractors was the Second Respondent’s contribution to the joint
venture in return for the oil delivered by the
Applicant to the
Second Respondent. In 2020 and 2021, the harvester and ranking
machine arrived in South Africa from Türkiye.
The Applicant
alleges that he paid about R100 000 to import the equipment. In
the latter instance, the Second Respondent partially
contributed to
the equipment used in the joint venture.
17.
The Second Respondent denied agreeing to procure two tractors to
assist with the harvesting. As advised and represented
by him, Trend
Global Corporation Limited, registered in the British Virgin
Islands and referred to as ‘Trend’
thus far,
unilaterally decided to purchase two tractors to use in other farming
ventures. The Second Respondent diverted them for
the Applicant’s
use. The Second Respondent decided, as he was not based in South
Africa and had, up until 2022,
had a good relationship with
the Applicant, it would be expedient to register the tractors in the
Applicant’s name to comply
with the
National Road Traffic Act.
The
Second Respondent denied that the purchase of the tractors was
his contribution to the joint venture. The joint venture had been
dormant for six years when the tractors were purchased. The Applicant
had benefited from using the equipment while he explored
other
ventures where the equipment would be used.
18.
The Applicant’s reply to the Second Respondent’s answer
concerning the equipment ownership elicited the response
that it was
‘an absolute blatant lie’. The Applicant then made
scurrilous claims against the Second Respondent, accusing
him of
using Trend as a money laundering entity and asking rhetorically why
the cash-flush Trend disappeared. He volunteers the
answer, alleging
that the Second Respondent had to close it down to erase its trading
history and financial records.
19.
The sole cause of action identified in the Applicant’s founding
affidavit was that he owned the equipment and sought
its
vindication. There is no indication in his founding affidavit that he
relied upon spoliation or a breach of contract or sought
a declarator
of ownership to substantiate the orders he sought in his notice of
motion. He alleges that he became the equipment
owner as it was the
Second Respondent’s contribution to the joint venture. The
Applicant does not allege that there was an
agreement or that he
could rely upon the conduct of the Second Respondent to claim
ownership of the equipment. Neither does the
Applicant allege
co-ownership of the equipment.
20.
The test of
whether the Applicant has discharged the onus of proving his
ownership of movable property, which is not in his possession,
is
whether, in the result, the probabilities are balanced in his favour.
The strength of the evidence that he has to produce to
succeed
depends upon the circumstances of the particular case.
[8]
Once the Applicant has established acquisition of ownership on a
balance of probabilities, a rebuttable presumption that he is
still
the owner arises. In the case of movable property, the onus of proof
is much heavier since there is a presumption that the
person in
physical control of the thing is also the owner. To satisfy the onus
of proof, the Applicant must rebut this presumption.
[9]
21.
The Applicant did not specify any of the requirements that would have
entitled him to acquisition of ownership of the
equipment. Whilst the
physical delivery of the equipment to the Applicant, and perhaps his
intention to receive the equipment as
its owner, could be inferred
from his allegations, the other requirements were not easily
discernible. It could be argued that
the Applicant had accepted the
ownership obligations by registering, insuring, licensing, and
servicing the equipment. He falls
short on the requirement that the
Second Respondent intended to transfer ownership when he alleges that
the equipment formed the
Second Respondent’s contribution to
the joint venture. Even in making the latter allegation, the
Applicant fails to equate
a contribution to the joint venture to mean
the conferral of ownership of the things to him. He may have proved
that the Second
Respondent, as a representative of the owners, could
have transferred the equipment to him, but he disavowed any knowledge
or interaction
with Trend and doubted whether Origins UK could afford
the equipment. By consenting to remove the equipment, the Applicant
had
effectively jettisoned any reliance on a spoliation order or
vindicatory relief.
22.
The Second Respondent has not alleged that he clarified the ownership
of the equipment with the Applicant during the two
years that the
Applicant had used it. However, the Second Respondent has provided
sufficient information to dispel the Applicant’s
claim of
equipment ownership. The failure of the Applicant to prove ownership
of the equipment would have been the end of the application
but for
the further developments that require the Court to traverse the
affidavits further.
23.
An action
based on the
rei
vindicatio
is available to an owner who has been deprived of his or her property
without consent or in an unlawful way and wishes to recover
it from
the one who retains possession. To succeed with any vindicatory
action, generally, in addition to ownership, the applicant
must prove
that the property was in the respondent’s possession when the
proceedings commenced, it still exists, and
is identifiable.
[10]
An owner will not succeed with the
rei
vindicatio
if the person in control of the thing can prove that he is in lawful
control of it.
24.
The Applicant alleges that on 23 February 2022, the Second Respondent
requested that the equipment be moved to Velddrift
to harvest melon
seeds. The equipment would be returned in time for the Applicant’s
harvest. The Applicant agreed. The equipment
was moved but not
returned even though the Applicant asked the Second Respondent to do
so. The Second Respondent alleged that the
equipment was moved to
Velddrift on his instructions. He was the authorised representative
of the equipment owners and, therefore,
entitled to move the
equipment. He arranged and paid for the equipment to be moved. He did
not agree that the equipment would be
returned to the Applicant, nor
does the Applicant have a right to demand their return. The Second
Respondent alleged that he had
identified several opportunities in
the Western Cape and had moved the equipment to be stored with the
First Respondent until he
could recover the remaining equipment held
by the Applicant. The recovery of the remaining equipment was the
subject of the counterapplication.
The equipment is sitting idle on
the First Respondent’s farm.
25.
The circumstances relating to moving equipment to the First
Respondent’s farm are troublesome. The Applicant agreed
to its
removal from his farm on the understanding that it would be used for
harvesting melon seeds in Velddrift and returned to
him in time for
the harvest in the North West province. The Second Respondent avoided
answering this specific allegation. The question
arises as to whether
the Applicant would have consented to the removal of the equipment if
he had known that the Second Respondent
did not intend to return it.
It is highly unlikely that the Applicant would have agreed to service
the equipment and agree to its
removal from his farm if he did not
expect the equipment to be returned to him in time for the harvest.
It would, therefore, seem
that the Second Respondent had removed the
equipment on a false pretext. The Second Respondent’s
Counsel did not see
anything untoward in this form of self-help. The
Applicant alleged that removing the equipment under false pretences
was unlawful,
but the case he relied upon did not exploit this issue.
26.
The Second Respondent admitted the jurisdiction of this Court to hear
the application. He has been involved with two companies,
namely
Origins UK and Trend. Trend had given him a power of attorney to act
on their behalf and explore investments in the South
African
agricultural sector. Trend had no interest in the Kalahari melon seed
oil project for the cosmetic market. Their interest
centred around
food commodities with innovative value-added potential.
27.
On 2 April 2021, Trend purchased an automatic pumpkin seed harvester
and ranking apparatus from Türkiye, which cost
US$ 27,000.
Trend intended to acquire ownership; the Turkish company invoiced
Trend, and it paid the purchase price. The harvester
and ranking
machine were shipped to the Durban port and transported to the
Applicant’s farm by road. It was used to harvest
the
melons but remained Trend's property. One of the two
tractors was purchased for US$29545.21. The tractor was transported
to the Applicant’s farm. Applicant used the tractor with
the Second Respondent’s permission, acting as the authorised
representative for Trend.
28.
As the Second Respondent was not based in South Africa, he decided
that it would be expedient to register the tractor
in the Applicant’s
name. The Second Respondent referred to other equipment owned by
Trend, which was in the Applicant’s
possession. The Second
Respondent supported these contentions with documentary proof. The
Second Respondent alleged that the Applicant
refused to sign a
storage agreement and to allow Trend’s equipment to be removed
from his farm. Trend decided to cease its
business activities. It was
necessary to transfer ownership of, among other goods, the equipment
to him. Trend and the Second Respondent
agreed on the assignment
of rights. The documentary proof of the concluded agreement was
provided. The Second Respondent contended
that he became the
equipment owner through the assignment of rights. The Second
Respondent also provided proof of purchasing an
automatic pumpkin
harvester and ranking machine from Türkiye for US$17 750. The
latter equipment belonged to Origins
UK.
29.
The equipment referred to by the Applicant is part of a much larger
stock of vehicles and equipment the Applicant holds.
Although the
Applicant used them to harvest and process Kalahari melon seed oil,
Trend had intended to use them in other ventures
as they had broad
application. They were intended for use in developing herbs,
ferments, certain fruits like dates, olive or castor
oil, and
alternative proteins as byproducts of soya, castor, and sunflower
oil. Kalahari melon seed oil could not be considered
a commodity seed
oil. The market volume was too small.
30.
The Second Respondent stated that African Origin Oils JV had been a
dormant company since about 2016, awaiting de-registration
due to
failure to comply with its annual returns. Proof that the company
awaits final deregistration was provided. Four persons
had
incorporated the company, including the Applicant and the Second
Respondent. As the communication and collaboration with the
two other
participants were not working, all company activities were halted
after one year of its inception. There was no joint
venture, as the
company had been dormant for about seven years. The Second Respondent
subsequently incorporated Origins UK. He
had independently built up a
network of suppliers and international buyers and aimed to trade in
cosmetic oils.
31.
The Second Respondent had identified and sourced the Kalahari melon
seen oil from a farmer in the Free State. This arrangement
commenced
in 2016 and terminated in 2018 when the European customer he had
sourced to buy the oil discontinued the cosmetic range
that used the
oil. As the Applicant lacked the finances and equipment required to
produce the oil, the Second Respondent transferred
R523 397 from
2016 to 2018 to the Applicant. Until then, the Applicant had neither
contributed nor supplied him with oil.
The Second Respondent
asserted that he had developed this market and found a producer
independent from the Applicant.
32.
The Second Respondent advised the Applicant in May 2017 to register a
company to obtain an export permit so that he
could potentially
supply the same oil that the Second Respondent was buying from the
Free State farmer. The Applicant eventually
registered African
Origins Oil. The Applicant started producing oil in 2018 after
Origins UK purchased a small oil press from Germany
and delivered it
to the Applicant’s farm. He intended to help his uncle, who was
suffering the effects of a prolonged drought,
to “find his
feet” as a producer and supplier of Kalahari melon seed oil,
which was indigenous to his region and more
resistant to the extreme
weather than other popular local crops like maize, sunflower, and
peanuts. In 2019, the Second Respondent
obtained an industrial
research and innovation grant from the British Government to research
melon oil's industrialisation and
social impact potential. He
involved the Applicant in the project. The Applicant was compensated
for his participation in the project.
The Second Respondent explained
how the research funds were dispersed, the details of which need not
be reproduced here.
33.
The Second Respondent denied any joint venture between the Applicant
and him or that the Applicant was the operations
arm of the company
and he was the marketing agent. The Applicant did not achieve or do
anything to warrant such a status. The Second
Respondent contributed
significant time and money to the Applicant to establish a semblance
of operations on his farm. Only in
2022, when the Applicant had
millions of rands of equipment on his farm which did not belong
to him, did he begin making claims
of a joint venture between them.
The Second Respondent had to employ a consultant to assist the
Applicant with all work beyond
the planting and harvesting of the
oil, namely the general paperwork, certification, packaging,
deliveries, exports, and adherence
to regulations.
34.
The Second Respondent denied that he and the Applicant had agreed to
procure two tractors to assist with the harvesting.
Trend took the
unilateral decision after he advised them to procure it for other
farming projects. He denied that the two tractors
were his
contribution to the joint venture. The tractors were purchased after
the joint venture company had been dormant for at
least five years.
He allowed the Applicant to use the equipment while exploring
opportunities to use the equipment in other
ventures. He had
made it clear to the Applicant that they would sign some kind of
storage agreement to cover the equipment held
on his farm. The
Applicant was initially receptive to concluding the storage contract
but later reneged.
35.
The Second Respondent states that the first harvesting machine and
ranking apparatus bought by Origins UK arrived around
September 2019,
not 2022, as the Applicant alleged. He notes that the Applicant did
not provide proof that he had paid the alleged
sum of R100 000.
The Second Respondent paid the Applicant for the oil the Applicant
produced. The Applicant was not entitled
to the financial statements
for Origins UK. He disputed the Applicant’s allegations that
the latter had produced “vast”
amounts of oil. The Second
Respondent considered “vast” to mean at least 50-60
tonnes per year. He did not think the
Applicant had ever
exported more than ten tons over all the years.
36.
The Second Respondent admitted that his relationship with the
Applicant had strained. The Applicant’s farming practices
and
yields per rand spent were not commercial, and the continuation
thereof was in the balance. In April 2022, the Applicant declined
to
sign a storage agreement. The court notes that the equipment had been
removed from the Applicant’s farm, and the tentative
agreement
probably pertained to the other equipment retained by the Applicant.
Trend concluded a storage agreement with the First
Respondent in June
2022 for the storage of the equipment removed from the Applicant’s
farm.
37.
The Second Respondent denies that the Applicant holds all the permits
to produce melon seed oil in South Africa. He states
that there are
several other permit holders in South Africa. There are other
suppliers of melon seed oil from Namibia, Zimbabwe,
and Botswana that
do not require permits and who export the oil to international
markets. The second Respondent admits that he
cannot produce Kalahari
melon seed oil. He does not require a permit as he and his company do
not intend to produce the oil as
they buy it from registered
suppliers such as the Applicant and sell it internationally.
38.
The Second Respondent sought to introduce a “without prejudice”
communication between the Applicant’s
attorney and the Second
Respondent’s wife to prove that he owned the equipment. The
Second Respondent alleged that he could
rely on the letter's content
as it was addressed to his wife, Olga Van Vuuren. The letter could
not be considered as privileged.
The Second Respondent referred to a
confirmatory affidavit from his wife. The affidavit could not be
found in the court file. Communications
marked ‘without
prejudice’ are generally inadmissible in court proceedings.
There are exceptions to the rule, but they
find no application in
this instance. The Second Respondent conflates legal privilege with
‘without prejudice’ communications.
A client can waive
legal privilege. The Second Respondent’s wife was not the
client of the Applicant’s attorney, and
the Second Respondent
was not permitted to disclose the communication. The Court has not
relied on its content nor the allegations in
paragraphs 69 to 73
of the answering affidavit. The attachment, marked ‘AA 19’ and
those paragraphs are struck
from the record.
39.
The Second Respondent denies that any invoices from the Landini
dealership prove the Applicant’s ownership of the
equipment.
The invoice is not from the dealership where the tractors were
procured. He also denies that the payment of insurance
premiums, the
costs of licences, or the payment of servicing proves ownership. The
Second Respondent denies that he has committed
any crime. The
application was brought
ex parte
, not to alert the Second
Respondent to move the equipment as alleged but to deceive the
Court and steal a march on him by
obtaining an advantage before he
could respond to the application.
40.
The Court emphasises that the allegations attributed to the Second
Respondent and traversed thus far are entirely from
the Second
Respondent’s answering affidavit. The Court has ignored the
affidavits in the counterapplication or the relief
sought therein.
41.
In his reply to the Second Respondent’s answering affidavit,
the Applicant takes issue with the allegation made
by the Second
Respondent that he had not satisfied the requirements for a
rei
vindicatio
. He was advised that although the
rei vindicatio
is the mechanism utilised to reclaim possession of an asset, the act
itself is referred to as spoliation. He states that although
it might
be overly technical, the reason a
rei vindicatio
was sought
and not a
mandament van spolie
was because the spoliator was
hard to define, as it appears the First Respondent acted upon the
instructions of the Second Respondent
and an agent was used to move
the equipment. The burden of proof was exactly the same, i.e.,
peaceful, undisturbed possession,
deprivation of possession, and
deprivation occurring unlawfully without his agreement. Counsel
representing the Applicant distanced
herself from her Client’s
interpretation of the law equating spoliation to vindication and
denied any part in providing this
legal advice to her Client. The
Court shall merely state, largely for the Applicant's benefit, that
the two causes of action are
separate with different requirements and
leave it there.
42.
Counsel for
the Second Respondent was not inclined to ignore the Applicant’s
belated reliance on spoliation and the creative
manner wherein it was
introduced in the replying affidavit. In his written argument, he
stated that an applicant cannot merely
make out a
prima
facie
case for the order but must prove the facts necessary to justify
the order.
[11]
He stated there
was no reason to reject the Second Respondent’s version
and that it was not agreed that the equipment
would be returned
to the Applicant’s farm. The Second Respondent submitted that
it had always been the practice of the Courts
to strike out matters
in replying affidavits, which should have appeared in the founding
papers.
[12]
The Applicant’s
case in the founding affidavit is that the tractors are registered in
his name, and the equipment belonged
to him. The Applicant did
not allege in his founding affidavit that he had been wrongfully
deprived of possessing the equipment.
43.
The
Applicant states that the purpose of a replying affidavit is simply
to reaffirm submissions made in a founding affidavit or
waylay
submissions made in an answering affidavit and answer any new issues
raised. The Court reminds the Applicant that the purpose
of the
replying affidavit is to rebut issues raised by the Respondent in his
answering affidavit, if required, and does not constitute
an
opportunity to create a whole new cause of action. It has been held
that a party will not be allowed to canvass a case in its
founding
papers and then another in reply. Allowing this might prejudice the
opponent as it might not have a chance to respond
to the case made in
reply. In rare instances where this is countenanced, the set of
affidavits allowed in motion proceedings might
increase from three to
five.
[13]
44.
On the issue of non-joinder, the Applicant understood it to mean that
the Second Respondent did not want the application
to move forward
until Origins UK had been joined. The Applicant alleged that the
entity the Second Respondent did not wish him
to join no longer
existed. The Applicant also took issue with the Second Respondent’s
chamber book application to compel
him to file his replying and
answering affidavits. He alleged that the Second Respondent’s
power of attorney had expired
in December 2022. The Second Respondent
did not attach any affidavit from the directors of Trend to confirm
the allegations relating
to them or that the company incorporated in
the British Virgin Islands ever existed. If Trend no longer existed,
it would be the
task of the executors, trustees, or liquidators to
contact him to request the return of their assets. The Applicant
asked
that all references to Trend in the founding affidavit be
struck out.
45.
The Second Respondent’s allegations in the answering affidavit
were supported by candid and exhaustive replies to
the allegations in
the founding affidavit, and he provided sufficient documentary proof
where required. The replying affidavit
is an emotional outburst
containing intemperate language, hearsay information, and scandalous,
defamatory, and vexatious material.
As an example of a contradictory
matter introduced in the replying affidavit, the Applicant states
that he terminated the joint
venture in reply to allegations that the
entity was dormant. In contrast, he relies on the existence of the
joint venture in the
founding affidavit to prove the transfer of
ownership by agreement. The Applicant states in his replying
affidavit that he was
the
bona fide
owner and possessor in
terms of the joint venture agreement, and the equipment should be
returned.
46.
The Court does not intend to traverse the remaining allegations in
the replying affidavit. The Applicant has not established
any
semblance of ownership of the equipment nor made a case for
vindicatory relief in his founding affidavit. Neither is the relief
sought in the notice of motion in sync with the cause of action
pursued in the founding affidavit. The Applicant’s Counsel
was
hard-pressed to correlate the orders sought in the notice of motion
with the cause of action pursued in the founding affidavit.
47.
As alluded to, the Second Respondent filed his counterapplication and
answer to the founding affidavit. The second respondent
applied on 25
August 2023 to set down this application and the counterapplication
for a hearing. At that juncture, the Applicant
had not filed his
replying affidavit in the main application nor his answering
affidavit in the counterapplication. The Applicant
complied following
the order issued through a chamber book application. However, when
the Second Respondent filed his written
argument on 11 October
2024, he sought to postpone the hearing of the counterapplication but
insisted that the main application
be heard. The Second Respondent
alleged that the counterapplication was not ripe for hearing. The
explanation provided was that
the transfer of ownership of the
moveable property, which forms the subject of the counterapplication,
is regulated by the laws
of the British Virgin Islands. The Second
Respondent could not provide evidence of the legal position relevant
to the transfer
of the moveable property according to the laws of the
British Virgin Islands. There was no formal application for the
postponement
of the counterapplication.
48.
The Second Respondent sought to strike out certain material from the
Applicant’s replying affidavit. These are related
to
allegations of theft, perjury, fraud, and irrelevant material in the
replying affidavit. The Second Respondent indicated that
he had
abandoned the point on non-joinder of Origins UK, which allegedly
owned one of the harvesters. No explanation was offered
for why this
point raised
in limine
was ditched. The remainder of
the Second Respondent’s written argument concentrated on
the main application, relying
largely on the Applicant’s
failure to make out a case for ownership of the equipment and
vindicatory relief and the Applicant’s
belated reliance on
spoliation in the replying affidavit.
49.
The Applicant submitted in his written heads of argument that the
Second Respondent set the opposed application down prematurely
to the
prejudice of the Applicant. Despite being unable to proceed with the
counterapplication, the Second Respondent insisted
that the main
application was heard. The Second Respondent had delivered its
written argument, index, and practice note late. The
Applicant
submitted that his application for security for costs had not been
finalised. Counsel’s written argument was directed
more to the
Second Respondent’s intention to postpone the counterclaim and
the prejudice it would cause the Applicant rather
than addressing the
deficiencies in its founding or replying affidavits. The
Applicant did not seek to postpone the hearing
of the main
application in his written or oral argument. Had the Applicant done
so, the Court would have been receptive to the
request. The Court was
of the view that the Second Respondent had wrongfooted the Applicant
with the premature set down of the
application, his failure to comply
with the court rules, his subsequent desire to postpone the hearing
of the counterapplication,
and the withdrawal of the
counterapplication on the eve of the hearing.
50.
The Second Respondent tendered the Applicant’s wasted costs
occasioned by the withdrawal of the counterapplication.
The parties
did not seek the Court’s involvement in the withdrawal of the
application or in making it an order of the court.
51.
The Applicant submitted that claims and counterclaims should be heard
simultaneously. The
pari passu
rule in motion proceedings
relates to the principle that all parties should be treated equally
and without preference. The Latin
phrase “
pari passu
”
means “equal footing”. When it comes to
counterapplications, this rule ensures that counterapplications are
heard and decided on the same basis as the main application without
giving undue advantage to any party. If a Respondent files
a
counterapplication, it should comply with the same procedural rules
as the main application. The counterapplication should be
dealt with
pari passu
on equal footing with the main application.
52.
A situation
had arisen where the counterapplication was withdrawn before the
hearing. The Second Respondent insisted that the main
application be
heard. All the Applicant wanted was for the matter to be referred to
trial. It was alleged on behalf of the Applicant
in written argument,
which was repeated in oral argument, that it had become apparent that
the matter was no longer suitable for
motion proceedings. Subrule
6(5)(g) of the Uniform Rules of Court (“URC” ) pertains
to a prayer of this nature. As
a general rule, an application for the
hearing of oral evidence must be made
in
limine
,
not once it becomes clear that the Applicant is failing to convince
the Court on the papers.
[14]
The circumstances must be exceptional before a Court will permit an
Applicant to apply in the alternative for the matter to be
referred
to evidence should the main argument fail.
[15]
At the outset of the hearings, the applicant's counsel applied
for the matter to be referred to trial and handed up a draft
order.
53.
A court
will refer a matter to trial if the dispute of fact is incapable of
resolution on the papers and too wide-ranging for resolution
by
referring to oral evidence.
[16]
Suppose a dispute of fact is such that the provisions of Rule 6(5)
(g) regarding the hearing of oral evidence cannot properly be
invoked. In that case, the court will order the parties to trial so
that it may have an opportunity to see and hear the witnesses
before
coming to a conclusion.
[17]
When a question of mixed law and fact is involved, the matter will be
ordered to trial.
[18]
54.
Referral to
trial is an alternative to dismissing the application in such
circumstances. It is appropriate where the Applicant,
when launching
his application, could not reasonably have foreseen that a serious
dispute of fact, incapable of resolution on the
papers, was bound to
develop.
[19]
The Applicant
would be hard-pressed to allege that he did not foresee a serious
dispute arising on the facts material to this application
if regard
is had to the soured relationship between him and the Second
Respondent and the vile he vented in his replying affidavit.
The
Applicant’s Counsel submitted that the possibility of the
matter being referred to trial was first raised in the Applicant’s
application for security for costs against the Second Respondent, a
peregrinus of this Court. The Applicant submitted that as the
papers
currently stand, the ownership of movable property is at issue.
55.
Before a
dispute in motion proceedings can be referred to a hearing of oral
evidence, it must be clear that there is a real or genuine
dispute in
the affidavits.
[20]
It is
improper to bring applications to the Court on disputed issues
of fact and then to turn them into trial actions by invoking
the
provisions of the Rules in the hope of inducing the Court to apply
those rules to what is essentially the subject of an ordinary
trial.
[21]
By doing so,
Applicants obtain a considerable advantage over litigants who have
proceeded by way of action and may have to wait many
months to
get their cases before the Court. Such applications turning into
trials interpose themselves, occupy the time of judges
and delay the
hearing of legitimate trials.
[22]
A Court will refuse to order oral evidence when it is clear that oral
evidence would enable an applicant to amplify affidavits
with
additional evidence where the affidavits themselves, even if
accepted, do not make out a clear case but leave the case ambiguous,
uncertain, or fail to make out a cause of action at all.
[23]
56.
The Second
Respondent opposes the referral of this matter to trial. Counsel
for the Respondent submitted that the Applicant
did not make out a
case that he owned the equipment and wanted a second bite of the
cherry. If the Applicant’s case is dead,
it cannot be
resurrected. Unless concerned with interim relief, motion
proceedings resolve legal issues based on common cause
facts.
Unless the circumstances are special, they cannot be used to resolve
factual issues because they are not designed to determine
probabilities.
[24]
57.
It was apparent from the heads of argument that the Applicant did not
address the relief sought in the main application
and resisted the
invitation to address it in oral argument. The Applicant had focussed
entirely on technical issues regarding why
the main application
should not be heard but rather referred to trial. The
Applicant dealt with the Second Respondent’s
failure to comply
with the Court’s rules, the premature set down of the
application for hearing, the
pari passu
rule, and material in
the answering affidavit that should be struck out.
58.
It is trite
that an applicant must make out its case in its founding affidavit.
Due to the nature of applications, the affidavit
plays a dual role in
the application, forming both pleadings and the evidence upon which
the applicant relies.
[25]
An
applicant's pleadings contain the legal basis of the claim under
which an applicant has chosen to invoke the court's competence.
In
other words, the formal terminology of the notice of motion and the
supporting affidavits must be interpreted to establish the
legal
basis of the applicant's claim.
[26]
The applicant must establish sufficient facts in the founding
affidavit to disclose a cause of action; the founding affidavit must
be self-contained. The replying affidavit cannot augment the
applicant's case.
[27]
Permitting such will mean that the Respondent would not have had the
opportunity to address those issues sufficiently, which amounts
to
gross prejudice to the Respondent who would have filed the answer.
This will also transgress the Respondent's constitutional
rights.
[28]
59.
Applicant’s Counsel was not receptive to the suggestion that
defined aspects could be referred to oral evidence.
The Applicant’s
Counsel insisted that the matter be referred to trial. The
Applicant’s papers are replete with allegations
that go way
beyond the relief he initially sought. A referral to trial has the
risk of expanding those issues similarly. It would
be a travesty if
the Applicant used the opportunity to traverse issues relating to the
machinations of the joint venture, his alleged
fifty per cent profit
share, his rights to exploit the Kalahari melon seed oil, and whether
he was entitled to a share of the international
sales of the oil.
60.
The Court is not inclined to grant this request, as the Applicant has
failed to make a case for either ownership of the
equipment or
vindicatory relief in his papers. It would serve no purpose to
prolong this matter. Applicant’s Counsel stated
that the matter
had gotten out of hand and that a referral to trial would
resolve the issues. The Court cannot agree with
this submission. The
Applicant chose motion proceedings to litigate his case and failed to
prove the core issue identified in his
founding affidavit. Counsel
indicated that the Applicant would appeal this judgment if the matter
were not referred to trial. This
Court will not be deterred by the
latter submission in adjudicating this matter fairly and equitably.
61.
Counsel’s repeated reliance on the Second Respondent’s
failure to adhere to the rules is of no consequence,
given that the
Applicant declined to postpone the matter. The issue of security for
costs fell away once the counterapplication
was withdrawn. A tender
for costs accompanied the withdrawal of the counterapplication.
Counsel alleged that the Second Respondent’s
answering
affidavit constitutes a disguised counterapplication. That may be so,
but the counterapplication, in whichever form it
reappears, allows
the Applicant to take good counsel and mount a considered challenge
to it. The answering affidavit is what it
is. The Court could not
ignore it, and its content was informed by the allegations made in
the founding affidavit. Counsel’s
submission that the Applicant
was kept in the dark about Trend, the alleged equipment owner, is
hard to fathom. Counsel argued
finally that it would be in the
interests of justice to refer this matter to trial and a miscarriage
of justice if it was not.
The Court does not agree. Neither party
persisted with their applications to strike out matters from the
opponent’s papers.
62.
This is an inordinately lengthy judgment, considering that the issues
for determination had crystallised early on from
the allegations or
lack thereof, evident in the founding papers. A judgment is primarily
for the benefit of the parties. They should
be satisfied that the
issues raised have been addressed as fully as possible and the
adjudication thereof, even if it goes against
them, is not due to any
lack of effort on the part of the Court in discharging its duties.
The Court makes the orders that follow.
ORDER
63.
The application is dismissed with costs.
64.
Counsel’s fees, agreed or taxed, will be determined on the B
scale.
Ajay
Bhoopchand
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Western
Cape Division
Cape
Town
Judgment
was handed down and delivered to the parties by e-mail on Friday, 1
November 2024, at midday.
Applicant’s
Counsel: Advocate C J Mouton, Mossel Bay Chambers
Instructed
by JNS Attorneys, Randburg
Counsel
for the Respondents: Advocate Melt Kruger
Instructed
by Scholtz Attorneys, Roodepoort
[1]
From various sources
[2]
Civil Procedure, A practical Guide, Pete, Hulme, du Plessis,
Palmer, New Africa Books (Pty) Ltd, 2005, at pages 132-140
[3]
Goudini Chrome (Pty) Ltd v MCC Contracts (Pty) Ltd
[1992] ZASCA 208
;
1993 (1) SA 77
(A) at 82A, Ruskin NO v Thiergen
1962 (3) SA 737
(A) at 744 C
[4]
Chetty v Naidoo
1974 (3) SA 13
(A) at 20B
[5]
Ronel Noleen Smit v Kleinhans (case number 917/2020)
[2021] ZASCA
147
(18 October 2021) at para 11
[6]
ABSA Bank Ltd t/a as Bankfin v Jordashe Auto CC
2003 (1) SA 401
(SCA) at para 16
[7]
Introduction to the law of Property; Van Der Walt, Pienaar, 2
nd
ed, Juta 1997 at page 171
[8]
Ebrahim v Deputy Sheriff, Durban 1961 (D)
[9]
Law of Property (supra) at page 192
[10]
Van Der Merwe and Another v Taylor NO and Others (CCT 45/06)
[2007]
ZACC 16
;
2007 (11) BCLR 1167
(CC);
2008 (1) SA 1
(CC) (14 September
2007) at para 22, Law of Property (supra) at page 190
[11]
Erasmus, Superior Court Practice , D7-15, Nienaber v Stuckey 1946
AD 1049
[12]
Titty’s Bar and Bottle Store (Pty) Ltd v ABC Garage (Pty) Ltd
and Others
1974 (4) SA 362
(T) at 368H
[13]
Union Finance Holdings (Pty) Ltd [2001] JOL 7162 (W)
[14]
Law Society Northern Provinces v Mogami
2010 (1) SA 186
SCA at 195C
(para 23)
[15]
De
Reszke v Maras
[2005] 4 AllSA 440
,
2006 (1) SA 401
(C) at paras
32-33,
[16]
Room Hire Co (Pty) Ltd v Jeppe Street Mansions (Pty) Ltd
1949 (3)
SA 1155(T)
at 1162
[17]
Frank v Ohlsson’s Cape Breweries (Pty) Ltd
1924 AD 289
at
294, Petersen v Cuthbert & Co Ltd
1945 AD 420
at 428, Joubert v
Stemmet
1965 (3) SA 215
(O), Pautz v Horn
1976 (4) SA 572
(O), De
Villiers v Pyott 1947(1) SA 381 (C )at 387
[18]
Conradie
v Kleingeld 1950 (2) SA 594 (O)
[19]
Standard Bank of SA Ltd v Neugarten
1987 (3) SA 695
(W) at 699A
[20]
Wightman t/a JW Constructionv Headfour (Pty) Ltd
[2008] ZASCA 6
;
2008 (3) SA 371
(SCA) at 375, Van Wyk v Botha
[2005] AllSA 320
(C ) at 328, Room
Hire Co (Pty) Ltd v Jeppe Street Mansions (Pty) Ltd 1949(3) SA 1155
(T) at 1162-1163
[21]
Room Hire supra at 1162, Bhorat v Lalla 1974 (2) SA 336(RA)
[22]
Garment Workers Union v De Vries
1949 (1) SA 1110
(W) at 1133
[23]
Carr v Uzent
1948 (4) SA 383
(W) at 390, Liss Shoe Co (Pty) Ltd v
Moffet Building & Contracting (Pty) Ltd 1952 (3) SA 484 (O)
[24]
National Director of Public Prosecutions v Zuma
[2009]
ZASCA 1
[2009] ZASCA 1
; ;
2009
(2) SA 277
(SCA) at 290D-E
[25]
Transnet Ltd v Rubenstein
[2005]
3 All SA 425
(SCA), Kham and Others v Electoral Commission and Another
2016
(2) SA 338
(CC) par [46]
[26]
Gcaba v Minister for Safety and Security and Others
2010
(1) SA 238
(CC)
[27]
Airports Company of South Africa (SOC) Ltd v Tswelokgotso Trading
Enterprise CC[2022] ZAGPJHC 410 at para 9
[28]
Business Partners Ltd v World Focus 754 CC
2015 (5) SA 525
(KZD)
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