Case Law[2023] ZAWCHC 334South Africa
Greycroft Ltd and Another v Silver Falcon Trading 544 (Pty) Ltd and Others (13863/2020) [2023] ZAWCHC 334 (20 December 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
20 December 2023
Headnotes
Mr Dolgoy in contempt, and granted ancillary relief to aid the Applicants to determine the true ownership of the Swirl shares so that they could, hopefully take transfer. My order read in full:
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
>>
2023
>>
[2023] ZAWCHC 334
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Greycroft Ltd and Another v Silver Falcon Trading 544 (Pty) Ltd and Others (13863/2020) [2023] ZAWCHC 334 (20 December 2023)
Greycroft Ltd and Another v Silver Falcon Trading 544 (Pty) Ltd and Others (13863/2020) [2023] ZAWCHC 334 (20 December 2023)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAWCHC/Data/2023_334.html
sino date 20 December 2023
SAFLII Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
CASE
NO: 13863/2020
# In the matter between:
In the matter between:
GREYCROFT
LTD
# ANTHONY
NEARY
ANTHONY
NEARY
# First
Plaintiff/Applicant
First
Plaintiff/Applicant
Second
Plaintiff/Applicant
#
And
SILVER
FALCON TRADING 544 (PTY) LTD
JONATHAN
FRANK DOLGOY
WALTER
JAMES CLARK
First
Defendant/Respondent
Second
Defendant/Respondent
Third
Defendant/Respondent
Coram:
Bishop, AJ
Date
of Hearing:
21
November 2023
Date
of Order:
21 November 2023
Date
of Judgment:
20 December 2023
JUDGMENT
BISHOP,
AJ
[1]
On 5 April 2022, this Court made a settlement agreement
between the Applicants and the Second Respondent (
Mr Dolgoy
),
an order of court. The order was amended on 13 October 2022 to
correct an error. The Order required Mr Dolgoy to pay the Applicants
R4 000 000 in terms of an agreed payment plan. In addition,
Mr Dolgoy pledged as security for his debt, the shares he
owned in a
company called Swirl Solutions (Pty) Ltd. The parties agreed that, if
Mr Dolgoy failed to make payments in terms of
the agreed payment
plan, he would transfer his Swirl shares to the Applicants.
[2]
Mr Dolgoy did not make his payments in terms of the Order. He
did not pay the Applicants a single cent. Nor did he transfer the
Swirl shares. The Applicants sought an order holding Mr Dolgoy in
contempt of the Order and directing him to comply by transferring
the
shares.
[3]
Mr Dolgoy denied that he ever agreed to the settlement
agreement underlying the Order, and sought its rescission. He also
claimed
he was not the owner of the Swirl shares. Ms Dolgoy’s
version is, as I explain below, best described as: not true.
[4]
On 21 November 2023, after hearing the Applicants’
counsel and Mr Dolgoy in person, I dismissed Mr Dolgoy’s
application
for rescission, held Mr Dolgoy in contempt, and granted
ancillary relief to aid the Applicants to determine the true
ownership
of the Swirl shares so that they could, hopefully take
transfer. My order read in full:
1.
The Second Respondent’s application to rescind the order
granted by the Honourable Justice Slingers dated 13 October 2022 is
dismissed.
2.
The
Second
Respondent is declared to be in contempt of the court
order
granted by the Honourable Justice Slingers dated 13 October 2022.
3.
The Second Respondent may purge his contempt by paying
R4 000 000 to the Applicants, or transferring all shares he
owns
in Swirl Solutions (Pty) Ltd (registration number 2020[…])
within one month of the date of this order.
4.
A rule nisi is issued calling upon the Second Respondent and
all interested persons who have a legitimate interest, to appear and
show cause, if any, on
2 February 2024
as
to why an order should not be made in the following terms:
4.1.
The Second Respondent is compelled to do all such things and
sign all such documentation as may be reasonably necessary to give
effect to the transfer of shares held by the Second Respondent and/or
the JFD Family Trust in Swirl Solutions (Pty) Ltd (registration
number 2020/[…]) in compliance with the order of Honourable
Justice Slingers dated 13 October 2022; and
4.2.
Should the Second Respondent fail to comply with the above
order within 5 (five) days of service thereof, the Sheriff of the
above
Honourable Court is authorised to do all such things and sign
all such documentation as may be reasonably necessary to give effect
to the transfer of shares held by the Second Respondent and/or the
JFD Family Trust in Swirl Solutions (Pty) Ltd.
5.
A copy of this order shall be served by the sheriff of this
court on:
5.1.
The trustees of the JFD Family Trust; and
5.2.
Swirl Solutions (Pty) Ltd (registration number 2020/[…]),
at its registered address.
6.
The Second Respondent shall pay the
costs of this application and the counter-application on an attorney
and client scale.
[5]
These are my reasons for granting that order.
### The Facts
The Facts
[6]
The dispute between the parties goes back
to October 2017. Greycroft Ltd lent Silver Falcon Trading 544 (Pty)
Ltd R2 245 000
to serve as a deposit for the purchase of
property in Kuruman. The property included stockpiled minerals and
resources. Silver
Falcon was required to repay the loan, as well as
pay Greycroft a 20% share of the profit from selling the stockpiled
resources
(amounting to at least R660 000), within 90 days. Mr
Dolgoy was, at the time, a director and shareholder of Silver Falcon.
At the same time, Silver Falcon – represented by Mr Dolgoy –
concluded a commission agreement with Mr Neary. It agreed
to pay Mr
Neary 5% of the net profits from selling the resources, and not less
than R165 000.
[7]
Silver Falcon did not honour either
agreement. It did not repay the loan, nor did it pay the profit share
or the commission. Mr
Dolgoy blames Cawood Attorneys – the
property owner’s business rescue practitioners – who he
alleges refused
to return the deposit. In this application, nothing
turns on who was ultimately to blame.
[8]
Just two weeks after the agreements were
concluded, Mr Dolgoy resigned as a director of Silver Falcon. The
applicants allege that
Mr Dolgoy knew at the time the agreements were
concluded that Silver Falcon would not be able to honour its
obligations. Making
commitments he would be unable to honour seems to
be a trend in Mr Dolgoy’s behaviour.
[9]
In September 2020, Greycroft and Mr Neary
sued Silver falcon, Mr Dolgoy and Mr Clark (another director of
Silver Falcon), under
the two agreements. None of the Defendants
entered appearances to defend.
[10]
In February 2021, Mr Neary and Mr Dolgoy
reached a settlement agreement under which Mr Dolgoy would pay the
Applicants R4 000 000.
This was confirmed in email
correspondence in March 2021. No payments were made. It was, as Mr
Neary describes it, “yet another
empty promise by Dolgoy”.
Mr Dolgoy made further promises to make payment in terms of this
settlement agreement, but never
did. The Plaintiffs then applied for
default judgment. That application was set down for hearing on 5
April 2022.
[11]
On 30 March 2022, the Applicants’
attorneys wrote to Mr Dolgoy to confirm that the application for
default judgment would
be heard on 5 April 2022, and to propose a
settlement agreement. It was, roughly, the same as the one agreed to
a year earlier
– Mr Dolgoy would pay R4 000 000 in
four monthly instalments of R1 000 000. The material difference
was that
Mr Dolgoy was also required to cede shares in a company as
security for payment of the debt. Mr Dolgoy could identify the
company.
[12]
The correspondence that followed, that
eventually led to the settlement, is vital. It shows that Mr Dolgoy
knew exactly what he
was agreeing to.
[12.1]
Mr Dolgoy replied to the letter of 30 March
2022 on 1 April 2022 asking why payment was only sought from him, and
not form Silver
Falcon or Mr Clark. The Applicants’ attorneys
responded the same day explaining why. Mr Dolgoy responded the same
day saying
“I would like to sign the settlement for you, but I
can not commit to that amount knowing I might not be able to pay a
portion
at any given time.”
[12.2]
Mr Dolgoy and Mr Neary spoke the next day –
2 April 2022 – and agreed that Mr Dolgoy could make fixed
payments on a
workable schedule. Mr Dolgoy wrote to the Applicants’
attorney that day stating that “I am committed to sorting out
and signing the settlement agreement” but asking “if we
could lengthen the time period of payments and lower the monthly
amount”.
[12.3]
On 4 April 2022, Mr Dolgoy sent a proposal
that he would pay R100 000 per month for six months and then
make two or three larger
payments. Mr Neary wrote back on the same
day confirming the terms of a settlement agreement that largely
reflects the ultimate
agreement reached. They also agreed that Mr
Dolgoy would pledge his shares in Swirl as security.
[12.4]
The same day the Applicants’
attorneys sent Mr Dolgoy the final settlement agreement, and he
attended their offices to sign
it. The Applicants’ attorneys
again wrote to him confirming that the order would be made an order
of court.
[12.5]
The settlement agreement was made an order
of court the next day. The Applicants’ attorneys wrote to Mr
Dolgoy on 20 April
2022 confirming this had occurred and providing a
copy of the court order.
[13]
The following emerges from this history: Mr
Dolgoy was actively involved in negotiating the settlement agreement.
He knew its terms.
He knew it applied to him personally and not to
anybody else. He proposed the payment plan and chose Swirl as a
company in which
he held shares. He knew it was going to be made an
order of court. He knew the agreement was made an order of court.
[14]
Despite all this, Mr Dolgoy failed to make
any of the monthly instalments. When the Applicants demanded that he
deliver the Swirl
share certificates, he did not do so. He provided
no explanation or excuse.
[15]
The Applicants then issued this
application. It sought, in the first place, an order compelling him
to comply with the Order by
transferring the Swirl shares, failing
which the Sheriff would be permitted to do so. In the alternative, it
sought an order holding
Mr Dolgoy in contempt, and committing him to
imprisonment for one month.
[16]
Given what Mr Dolgoy had already revealed
about his character, his response was as predictable as it was
brazenly contradictory.
First, he brought a counter-application to
rescind the Order that he had expressly agreed to. He claims that he
never agreed to
the settlement. Instead, he merely committed himself
“to assist in obtaining the refund from Cawood Attorneys
without ..
admitting any liability to stand in for such payment”
himself. His version of how his signature came to appear on the
settlement
agreement deserves quoting in full:
An appointment was then
arranged with the Applicants’ Attorneys which appointment I
attended and upon arrival at the Attorney’s
offices I was taken
into a boardroom where I was presented with certain documents and
instructed to sign at several instances.
I did not read the
document nor was I explained the contents of the document that I have
signed.
I, mistakenly so,
accepted that the document which I signed set out the relevant
background as to why Cawood Attorneys would be
responsible to refund
the deposit to the Applicants.
The first think that I
heard of this matter, only expecting to testify against Cawood
Attorneys was when I received the notice of
motion in this
application.
[17]
This version is patently false. It is
inconsistent with the string of correspondence between Mr Dolgoy, Mr
Neary, and the Applicants’
attorneys. That correspondence
explains why the Applicants are pursuing him, not Cawood Attorneys,
and shows that he knew he was
settling his liability, not assisting
the applicants to pursue claims against any other person.
[18]
Mr Dolgoy’s dishonesty had further
layers. He claims – for the first time after receiving the
contempt application –
that he is not the owner of the Swirl
shares he put up as security. In an email on 27 January 2023 he told
Mr Neary that “I
need to let you know I do not own any shares
in Swirl Solutions and only negotiated deals. I got reimbursed Comms
for that. I was
going to receive but did not get. I will explain this
to you in our discussion.”
[19]
But in his affidavit, his version changed.
He then claimed that the shares are owned by “the JFD Family
Trust” and he
is “therefore not in a position, nor
allowed, to consent to the transfer thereof.” Mr Dolgoy’s
initials are JFD.
He claims he never would have signed a settlement
agreeing to transfer those shares. This, too, is a bald-faced lie. It
was Mr
Dolgoy that identified the Swirl shares to serve as security.
He either lied when he concluded the settlement agreement by claiming
to own the shares, or he acted dishonestly later by moving them to
his family trust to avoid his obligation to transfer them.
[20]
Mr Dolgoy never pleaded that he lacked the
funds to have made payment under the Order. His version is that he
was unaware of any
obligation to make any payment, not that he was no
in a position to do so. Mr Dolgoy also continues to assert that he
should not
be held liable for the Applicants’ loss because it
was all the fault of Cawood Attorneys. That argument – if it
has
any merit – had to be pursued in defending the action
before he signed the settlement agreement. It wasn’t.
[21]
Dishonesty is not uncommon in litigation.
But I have seldom encountered a liar as prolific yet poor as Mr
Dolgoy. At every turn
he seeks to avoid his obligations and will lie
and lie and lie to achieve that end.
### Postponement
Postponement
[22]
Mr Dolgoy was initially represented by
attorneys. They assisted him to launch his counter-application for
rescission and prepare
his answering affidavit in the contempt
application. However, his attorneys withdrew as his attorneys of
record on 23 August 2023.
Interestingly, when they withdrew, the
email address they provided for Mr Dolgoy was
j[...]@swirlsolutions.co.za.
[23]
Mr Dolgoy appeared in person at the hearing
of the matter. He indicated that he would like a postponement in
order to obtain legal
representation. I refused the postponement. To
my mind, no purpose would have been served by postponing. Mr Dolgoy
had already
had the opportunity to put his version to the court,
assisted by attorneys. A postponement would merely delay the
inevitable, cause
further prejudice to the Applicants, and rack up
further legal costs that may ultimately have to be borne by Mr
Dolgoy.
[24]
The matter therefore proceeded and Mr
Dolgoy represented himself. He advanced submissions in defence of his
position. I explained
the legal position carefully to Mr Dolgoy
throughout and ensured he understood the nature of the proceedings,
and the nature of
the order that I granted.
### Rescission
Rescission
[25]
An
order of court incorporating a settlement agreement has exactly the
same effect as an order made without agreement between the
parties.
As was put in
Moraitis
:
“The fact that it was a consent order is neither her nor there.
Such an order has exactly the same standing and qualities
as any
other court order.”
[1]
As
an order by agreement between the parties is not an order granted by
default, the grounds for rescinding it are narrow –
fraud,
justus
error
or
common mistake.
[26]
Mr Dolgoy never directly alleges fraud. He
implies that he may have been misled. But he never contends that the
Applicants intentionally
deceived him about the content of the
summons, the application for default judgment, or the settlement
agreement. In light of the
correspondence detailed above, no such
claim would be credible. Nor was there any common mistake –
there is no doubt at all
the Applicants knew what they were signing.
[27]
What
of
justus
error
?
Mr Dolgoy must show, first, that he laboured under an error about the
settlement agreement. He must, second, establish that the
“
error
vitiated true consent and did not merely relate to motive or to the
merits of a dispute which it was the very purpose of the
parties to
compromise.”
[2]
Finally,
he must convince the Court that the Applicants knew he was labouring
under an error or should have known, or that his mistake
was
otherwise excusable.
[3]
[28]
Mr Dolgoy meets none of these requirements.
The evidence shows that, contrary to his claims, he knew exactly what
he was signing.
He negotiated the terms. His claim to the contrary is
simply false. His supposed error – that he did not think he
should
be liable – goes to the merits of the dispute and cannot
be a basis for rescission. And the Applicants could not have
anticipated
that, having negotiated an agreement with Mr Dolgoy, he
did not know what he was signing. His explanation for why he did not
understand
he was signing a settlement agreement is, in light of the
correspondence, an obvious fabrication.
[29]
The application for rescission must
therefore fail. I do not deem it necessary to consider whether there
was, in any event, good
cause to rescind. Mr Dolgoy would have needed
to establish good cause in addition to
justus
error
. As I have found he has
established neither, it is not necessary to consider whether there
was good cause.
### Contempt
Contempt
[30]
There
are four requirements for contempt: (a) an order of court; (b)
knowledge of the order; (c) non-compliance with the order;
and (d)
willfulness or bad faith.
[4]
The
Applicants must establish the first three.
[31]
There
was an order, and it was provided to Mr Dolgoy shortly after it was
granted. There is no debate that Mr Dolgoy has not complied
with the
order. First, he did not pay the amounts owing.
[5]
Second,
he did not transfer the Swirl shares.
[32]
Mr
Dolgoy bears the evidentiary burden to establish that his
non-compliance was not wilful or in bad faith.
[6]
Although
the Applicants initially proposed imprisonment, that was not pursued,
and I did not consider imprisonment at this stage.
The standard of
proof is therefore the ordinary one in civil proceedings – a
balance of probabilities.
[7]
[33]
Mr Dolgoy has hopelessly failed to meet
that standard. Mr Dolgoy never says he is unable to pay. His
explanation for his failure
to pay is that he was not aware he had an
obligation to do so, because he was not aware of the settlement
agreement or the court
order. That is a lie. He knew about the
settlement agreement. He knew what it required him to do. He knew it
had been made an order
of court. His attempt to wriggle out of his
obligations by lying about what he knew compounds his bad faith, it
does not excuse
it.
[34]
His explanation for his failure to transfer
the Swirl shares is different. He says he does not own them. But he
gives two different
versions. In his 27 January 2023 letter, he
claims that he negotiated deals for Swirl, and was going to receive
shares, but that
did not materialise. But in his affidavit, he
alleges the shares are held by a family trust. I do not see how both
versions can
be true – if he was earning shares through
commissions, why would they ever be owned by a family trust?
[35]
Assuming they are held by the family trust,
Mr Dolgoy never explains whether this was the case when he concluded
the settlement
agreement, or whether they were transferred to the
Trust only after the settlement was concluded, in order to avoid
compliance.
He provides no share certificates or member registers to
establish his claims. Nor did he provide any evidence about the
nature
of the Trust, his role in the Trust, or proof that it is a
true trust and not an alter ego.
[36]
Mr Dolgoy has failed to displace his
evidentiary burden to show that his failure to transfer the shares
was not wilful or in bad
faith. There are a number of possibilities.
He is lying, and he does in fact own the shares. He did own the
shares when the agreement
was concluded, but subsequently transferred
them to a trust. The Trust is his alter ego. Or, he never owned the
shares and lied
about his ownership to induce the agreement. It is
impossible to know which is true. Only the last might lead to a
finding he was
not in contempt, although it would mean he had
fraudulently induced the settlement agreement.
[37]
As the burden was on Mr Dolgoy to show that
his failure to perform was in good faith, or that performance was
impossible, and as
he has not provided sufficient evidence to
discharge that burden, I found he is in contempt on this score as
well.
[38]
I therefore made a declaration that Mr
Dolgoy was in contempt. I also afforded him an opportunity to purge
his contempt by complying
with his obligations. He could either pay
the money owing, or transfer his shares in Swirl within one month.
Either would purge
his contempt. As I made no punitive order, the
purging would have not other practical effect than to remove the
moral stain that
accompanies a civil declaration of contempt.
### The Remedy
The Remedy
[39]
While
I conclude that Mr Dolgoy failed to establish he did not act wilfully
or in bad faith, there is no clarity about who in fact
owns the Swirl
shares. An order compelling him to transfer the shares, without more,
might be a
brutum
fulmen
,
something courts must avoid.
[8]
[40]
For that reason, the Applicants suggested,
and I granted, a rule nisi. The rule requires that any interested
party show cause why
an order should not be made compelling Mr Dolgoy
to transfer all shares he and/or the Trust hold in Swirl to the
Applicants, and
authorizing the Sheriff to effect the transfer if he
fails to do so. The order must be served on Swirl and on the trustees
of the
Trust. Mr Dolgoy indicated in court that he would provide the
trustees’ details to the Applicants.
[41]
The purpose is, hopefully, to establish
with clarity who owns the Swirl shares, and whether it is possible
for them to be transferred
to the Applicants, as the Order requires.
If it is, the rule will be confirmed. If it is not, the Court
considering the matter
on the return date of the rule will have to
determine how to proceed. But should have better information about
who owns the Swirl
shares than I did.
[42]
Finally, I determined that Mr Dolgoy should
be liable for the costs of the application. Given his conduct both as
a contemnor, and
his patent dishonesty with the Court, I determined
that those costs should be paid on a punitive scale.
[43]
Those, then, are the reasons for my order
on 21 November 2023.
M
J BISHOP
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Counsel
for Applicants:
Adv
DM Robertson
Attorneys
for Applicants
STBB
Counsel
for Second Respondent:
In
person
[1]
Moraitis
Investments (Pty) Ltd & Others v Montic Dairy (Pty) Ltd
2017
(5) SA 508
(SCA) at para 10.
[2]
Gollach
& Gomperts (1967) (Pty) Ltd v Universal Mills & Produce Co
(Pty) Ltd & others
1978 (1) SA 914
(A) at
922H-923A,
quoted with approval in
Slabbert
v MEC for Health and Social Development of Gauteng Provincial
Government
[2016]
ZASCA 157
at para 8.
[3]
Gollach
(n 2
above).
[4]
Fakie
NO v CCII Systems (Pty) Ltd
[2006] ZASCA 52
;
2006
(4) SA 326
(SCA) at para 42.
[5]
Usually parties do not bother seeking contempt for the failure to
pay money in terms of court order. It is not constitutionally
permissible to imprison someone for the failure to pay (
Coetzee
v Government of the Republic of South Africa, Matiso and Others v
Commanding Officer Port Elizabeth Prison and Others
[1995] ZACC 7
;
1995 (10) BCLR 1382
(CC);
1995 (4) SA 631
(CC)), and
the ordinary remedies of execution are therefore far more effective
means to extract payment. But that does not mean
that the failure to
pay amounts owing – especially when the party agreed to do so
– cannot justify a declaration
that the person is in contempt.
[6]
Fakie
(n 4
above) at para 42.
[7]
Ibid.
[8]
Eke v
Parsons
[2015] ZACC 30
;
2015 (11) BCLR 1319
(CC);
2016 (3) SA 37
(CC).
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Gray v Ferrier and Another (Leave to Appeal) (25795/2024) [2025] ZAWCHC 600 (6 December 2025)
[2025] ZAWCHC 600High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)98% similar
Gray v Ferrier and Another (25795/2024) [2025] ZAWCHC 601 (26 August 2025)
[2025] ZAWCHC 601High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)98% similar
G.W.X. v Magistrate of Regional Division of Western Cape Blue Downs Mashala N.O and Another (17268/2024) [2025] ZAWCHC 142 (27 March 2025)
[2025] ZAWCHC 142High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)98% similar
Magill v Ipser and Another (Review) (2025/034097) [2026] ZAWCHC 18 (29 January 2026)
[2026] ZAWCHC 18High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)98% similar
GR Sutherland and Associates (Pty) Ltd v V & A Waterfront Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others (7471/2021) [2023] ZAWCHC 67 (11 April 2023)
[2023] ZAWCHC 67High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)98% similar