Case Law[2023] ZAWCHC 300South Africa
KTRPT Investments (Pty) Ltd v Edge Investments (Pty) Ltd and Others (9978/2019) [2023] ZAWCHC 300 (27 November 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
27 November 2023
Headnotes
by the Ropet Trust (IT1[…]) (“the Trust”) to Investments during 2004 and/or 2005. The applicant is the cessionary of the Trust’s claim, and an order is sought declaring that share transfer to be void.
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## KTRPT Investments (Pty) Ltd v Edge Investments (Pty) Ltd and Others (9978/2019) [2023] ZAWCHC 300 (27 November 2023)
KTRPT Investments (Pty) Ltd v Edge Investments (Pty) Ltd and Others (9978/2019) [2023] ZAWCHC 300 (27 November 2023)
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sino date 27 November 2023
SAFLII
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Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
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SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case
No:
9978/2019
In
the matter between:
KTRPT
INVESTMENTS (PTY) LTD
Applicant
And
EDGE
INVESTMENTS (PTY) LTD
First
Respondent
HERMAN
JOHAN VILJOEN
Second
Respondent
EDGE
HOLDING COMPANY (PTY) LTD
Third
Respondent
In
re:
KTRPT
INVESTMENTS (PTY) LTD
Plaintiff
And
EDGE
INVESTMENTS (PTY) LTD
First
Defendant
HERMAN
JOHAN VILJOEN
Second
Defendant
Coram:
Justice J Cloete
Heard:
24 October 2023
Delivered
electronically:
27 November 2023
JUDGMENT
CLOETE
J
:
Introduction
[1]
This is an application for the joinder of the third respondent
(“Holdings”) as third defendant in the pending action
between the parties under the above case number. The application
is
opposed by all three respondents. For convenience I refer to the
first respondent as “Investments” and the second
respondent as “Viljoen”.
[2]
As currently pleaded the action concerns the validity
of a purported
transfer of shares held by the Ropet Trust (IT1[…]) (“the
Trust”) to Investments during 2004
and/or 2005. The applicant
is the cessionary of the Trust’s claim, and an order is sought
declaring that share transfer to
be void.
[3]
Holdings is a company which is associated with Investments
although
the precise nature of that association is one of the issues which
will need to be determined at trial should Holdings
be joined. The
applicant seeks to join Holdings to advance its claim
in the
alternative
in the event it is found that Investments does not
hold the shares. Clearly therefore the main issue at trial will
depend upon
the determination of substantially the same question of
law or fact and falls squarely within uniform rule 10(3).
[4]
The respondents oppose the application on the following
principal
grounds: (a) the applicant has failed to show that joinder would
be convenient; (b) it is an abuse of the court
process; (c) the
claim the applicant seeks to enforce against Holdings ‘
as
currently pleaded’
arose after the issue of summons;
(d) the proposed amended particulars of claim contain averments
contrary to the version
in the founding affidavit and which are
unsustainable ‘
on the evidence’
; and (e) in
the circumstances the proposed amendment is excipiable. Grounds (d)
to (e) overlap to a degree. On that basis
I deal with each of the
grounds in turn.
Joinder
of convenience versus joinder of necessity
[5]
The applicant’s
case for joinder is founded on necessity, not convenience as the
respondents misinterpret it. The distinction
is succinctly summarised
in Erasmus: Superior Court Practice
[1]
as follows:
‘
It is, however,
important to distinguish between necessary joinder, where the failure
to join a party amounted to a non-joinder,
on the one hand, and
joinder as a matter of convenience, where the joinder of the party
was permissible and would not give rise
to misjoinder, on the other
hand. In cases of joinder of necessity a court could, even on appeal,
mero
motu
raise
the question of joinder to safeguard the interests of third parties
and decline to hear a matter until such joinder had been
effected or
the court was satisfied that the third parties had consented to be
bound by the judgment or waived their right to be
joined.
[2]
A court of
appeal has held
[3]
in
circumstances where a party had not been joined and it would be
inappropriate to make inferences as to its rights without giving
such
party an opportunity of being heard, that the appeal should be
postponed in order to afford such party the opportunity of
stating
its position.
The fact that the two
parties before court desire the case to proceed in the absence of a
third party cannot relieve the court from
inquiring into the question
whether the order it is asked to make may affect the third party.’
[4]
[6]
As pointed out by counsel for the applicant the respondents
have
conflated the two. In the present matter the joinder sought is indeed
one of necessity since a third party (Holdings) may
have a direct and
substantial interest in any order the trial court might make.
Accordingly failure by the applicant to join Holdings
would amount to
a non-joinder. There is thus no merit in the respondents’
submission in the answering affidavit that ‘
the joinder
application proposes to inflict a material inconvenience, both
procedural and substantive, on the respondents individually
and
collectively’.
Abuse
of the court process
[7]
The respondents contend that the explanation proffered
in the
founding affidavit for the joinder sought, namely that ‘…
it
appears… the Applicant may have erroneously instituted
proceedings against the incorrect party, as annexure FA5 indicates
the Trust in fact held shares in the Third Respondent’
is
an abuse of process since the annexure referred to was discovered by
the applicant itself. The crux of the complaint is that
‘
a
simple, albeit diligent and responsible, perusal of the documents
concluded
(sic)
in its own discovery would have revealed that
the applicant had no claim whatsoever against
[Investments]
,
even on its own pleaded case’.
The applicant is accused of
inattentiveness, lack of diligence, recklessness and of trying to
conceal this “fact”.
[8]
Annexure FA5 is one of the items in Investments’
discovery. It
is the company register of Holdings. If one has regard to it along
with other documents discovered by Investments
it is evident that:
(a) on 1 October 1999 Investments transferred some of its
shares to Holdings; (b) during 2003
Holdings held certain shares
in the Trust; and (c) on 28 February 2006 Holdings
reacquired some shares from Investments
under a return of allotment
of shares issued by the Registrar of Companies.
[9]
The deponent to the founding affidavit, Mr H, who is
a trustee of the
Trust, stated that Investments and Holdings ‘…
are
closely associated with one another and have been for several years
since I was actively involved in these companies’.
The
deponent to the answering affidavit, Mr K, did not deny this and
simply noted the averment made. From the company records
annexed to
the papers it is clear that Viljoen was appointed a director of
Investments on 1 March 2003 and was still a director
on 11 April
2007. In the existing particulars of claim annexed to the founding
affidavit the applicant alleges that it was
Viljoen who procured H’s
signature on the share transfer form during 2004 at a time when the
latter had suffered a mental
breakdown and the transfer was not
authorised by the Trust. That it was Viljoen who did so is denied in
the plea. However Viljoen
did not depose to a confirmatory affidavit
in this application.
[10]
It might be so that the applicant was not diligent enough when
scrutinising
Investments’ discovery. It might similarly be the
case in regard to the applicant’s own discovery which the
respondents
maintain included the share register for Holdings, but to
my mind this is not the point. There is enough prima facie extraneous
evidence to indicate that various share transfers occurred between
Investments and Holdings both preceding and subsequent to the
purported share transfer which the applicant in the action seeks to
have declared void.
[11]
It is not for this court in an application of this nature to delve
into evidence
and draw conclusions. That is a matter for the trial
court in due course. The respondents will no doubt have a full
opportunity
to cross-examine the applicant’s witnesses. In the
circumstances the contention that the joinder application is an abuse
of process is premature.
The
claim against Holdings arose after the issue of summons
[12]
Summons was issued during the first half of 2019. Prior thereto on
20 August
2018 the applicant took cession of the Trust’s
claim in the action. After the information concerning Holdings came
to light
the Trust ceded its (potential) claim to the applicant on 28
June 2021. The joinder application was launched on 29 October
2021. The second cession, so the respondents contend, has the effect
that any claim against Holdings
arose
after summons was
issued.
[13]
Again, as pointed out by counsel for the applicant, the respondents
misconstrue
the position. The potential quasi-vindicatory claim
against Holdings is not a new cause of action arising after summons
but one
which, if proven, existed before the applicant instituted
action, i.e. it was a potentially existing one subsequently
discovered.
The cession concluded on 28 June 2021 pertains to locus
standi and nothing more.
[14]
To this it should be added that in their current plea Investments and
Viljoen
do not assert what they (and Holdings) do now, namely that
the applicant has no locus standi vis-à-vis Holdings since
‘…
the right to claim a declarator of shareholding
vests only in the shareholder. Until the underlying shareholding has
been transferred,
the
[applicant]
simply does not hold any
shareholding… and it cannot advance a claim which vests only
in the shareholder’.
[15]
The respondents
lose sight of the fact that the abstract theory of ownership applies
in our law. As stated in
Legator
McKenna
:
[5]
‘
In accordance
with the abstract theory the requirements for the passing of
ownership are twofold, namely delivery… coupled
with a
so-called real agreement… The essential elements of the real
agreement are an intention on the part of the transferor
to transfer
ownership and the intention of the transferee to become the owner of
the property… Although the abstract theory
does not require a
valid underlying contract, e.g. sale, ownership will not pass –
despite registration of transfer –
if there is a defect in the
real agreement…’
The
proposed amended particulars of claim contradict the evidence in the
founding affidavit and renders that proposed amendment
excipiable
[16]
The respondents’
contention that a
proposed
amendment of the
applicant’s particulars of claim, if the joinder is granted, is
not consistent with H’s evidence in
the founding affidavit
overlooks two fundamental points. First, courts do not consider
whether a pleading is excipiable against
evidence. It is trite that
an exception is a
legal
objection to an
opponent’s pleading. No facts outside those stated in the
pleading can be brought into issue, except in the
case of an
inconsistency or contradiction in the pleading itself,
[6]
and no reference can be made to any other document.
[7]
[17]
Second, the parties are nowhere near the exception stage at present.
As is
clear from its notice of motion all the applicant seeks at this
point is the joinder of Holdings and an order directing it to deliver
‘…
a notice of intention to amend its particulars of
claim to include the formulation of its claim’
against
Holdings within 10 days of the court’s order. The
respondents will thus not be deprived of their opportunity
to object
to the applicant’s rule 28(1) notice on the ground that
whatever amendment is sought therein will render the pleading
excipiable. In adopting their stance they have put the proverbial
cart before the horse.
Concluding
remarks
[18]
It follows that the joinder application must succeed. The applicant
sought
costs in the cause of the action in the event of there being
no opposition. However, given the opposition, they seek costs against
the respondents. There is no reason why costs should not follow the
result.
[19]
The following order is made:
1.
The third respondent is joined as the third defendant in the
action instituted by the applicant against the first and second
respondents
under case number 9978/2019;
2.
The applicant is to deliver a notice of its intention to amend its
particulars of claim to include the formulation of its claim against
the third defendant within 10 (ten) days of date of this order; and
3.
The respondents shall pay the costs of this application on the
party and party scale, jointly and severally, the one paying the
other to be absolved, and including the costs of one senior counsel.
J
I CLOETE
On
behalf of applicant
:
Adv
A G South SC
Instructed
by
:
Y
Ebrahim Attorneys (Mr Mamahlodi-Sofe)
For
respondents
:
Adv
G Walters and Adv J Van Aswegen
Instructed
by
:
Webber
Wentzel (Ms K Rew)
[1]
2ed, vol 2 at D1-126 to 127.
[2]
Rosebank
Mall (Pty) Ltd v Cradock Heights (Pty) Ltd
2004
(2) SA 353
(W) at 366B-D.
[3]
Pretorius
v Slabbert
2000
(4) SA 935
(SCA) at 939E.
[4]
Amalgamated
Engineering Union v Minister of Labour
1949 (3) SA 637
(A) at 649;
Klep
Valves (Pty) Ltd v Saunders Valve Co Ltd.
1987
(2) SA 1
(A) at 39I-40A.
[5]
Legator
McKenna Inc and Another v Shea and Others
2010
(1) SA 35
(SCA) at para [22].
[6]
Soma
v Morulane NO
1975
(3) SA 53 (T).
[7]
See the long line of cases at fn 5 of Erasmus: Superior
Court Practice 2ed, vol 2 at D1-295 to 296.
sino noindex
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