Case Law[2022] ZAKZDHC 18South Africa
Mtabalasi Transport CC v Shikani Trading CC and Others (7168/2017) [2022] ZAKZDHC 18 (25 April 2022)
High Court of South Africa (KwaZulu-Natal Division, Durban)
25 April 2022
Headnotes
by the Third Respondent, First National Bank. Moreover, the Applicant and First Respondent agreed that the latter would be entitled to R1 000 000 of the total profits generated from the entire project while the former would retain the larger profit share.
Judgment
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# South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
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## Mtabalasi Transport CC v Shikani Trading CC and Others (7168/2017) [2022] ZAKZDHC 18 (25 April 2022)
Mtabalasi Transport CC v Shikani Trading CC and Others (7168/2017) [2022] ZAKZDHC 18 (25 April 2022)
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sino date 25 April 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
KWAZULU-NATAL
LOCAL DIVISION, DURBAN
CASE
NO: 7168/2017
In
the matter between:
MTABALASI
TRANSPORT CC
APPLICANT
and
SHIKANI
TRADING CC
FIRST RESPONDENT
VUSIMUSI
MTHULISI MTHEMBU
SECOND
RESPONDENT
FIRST
NATIONAL BANK OF
SOUTH
AFRICA LTD
THIRD RESPONDENT
ORDER
Judgment
is granted in favour of the Applicant and it is ordered that:
1 Paragraphs 1.1, 1.2,
1.3 and 1.4 of the rule
nisi
issued by Radebe J on 29 June
2017 in the application instituted by the Applicant under notice of
motion dated 23 June 2017 ('the
main application') be and are hereby
confirmed;
2 The application
instituted by the First and Second Respondents under notice of motion
dated 18 March 2021 (‘the discharge
application’) is
dismissed; and
3 Premised on the delay
in prosecuting the main action, for which I believe both the
Applicant and the First and Second Respondents
bear responsibility,
each party is responsible for its own costs in the discharge
application.
JUDGMENT
REDDI
AJ
[1]
The genesis of this matter is a Joint Venture Agreement (hereafter
‘JVA’) entered into between the Applicant and
the First
Respondent on 6 February 2017. In terms of the agreement, the
Applicant would help the First Respondent fulfil its contractual
obligations to the Department of Transport by providing its
construction machinery and finances to enable the First Respondent
to
perform under the construction contract.
[2]
The main objective of the JVA was the completion of the construction
project awarded to the First Respondent, which responsibility
now
fell to the Applicant under the terms of the JVA. Under the
provisions of the agreement, the Applicant was responsible for
the
daily running of the project and the completion of the outstanding
work. The First Respondent was responsible for all communications,
including paperwork, with the Department of Transport.
[3]
As
quid pro quo
for its help to the First Respondent, the
parties to the JVA agreed that the Applicant would have control of
the bank account operated
by the First Respondent and held by the
Third Respondent, First National Bank. Moreover, the Applicant and
First Respondent agreed
that the latter would be entitled to
R1 000 000 of the total profits generated from the entire
project while the former
would retain the larger profit share.
[4]
On 22 May 2017, when the first leg of the construction project had
been completed, the Second Respondent, acting on behalf of
the First
Respondent, signed and submitted the relevant invoice to the
Department of Transport for payment. The total value of
the invoice
was R 895 103.58. The Department of Transport's certificate of
progress document indicated that the invoiced amount
would be paid
into the First Respondent's bank account on or before 30 June 2017.
[5]
On 29 May 2017, a week after the invoice had been submitted for
payment, the Applicant received an SMS notification from the
Third
Respondent indicating that the First Respondent's banking details had
been changed to deny the Applicant access to the bank
account. The
Third Respondent confirmed with the Applicant that the account
details had been changed at the behest of the Second
Respondent.
[6]
Arising from the denial of access to the bank account and a fear that
the First Respondent will dissipate the funds to be paid
into the
bank account by the Department of Transport, the Applicant sought and
was issued a rule
nisi
on 29 June 2017 granting an
interlocutory interdict for the preservation of half of the invoiced
funds to be paid by the Department
of Transport into the First
Respondent's bank account.
[7]
Flowing from the order above are the following two applications
before this court: (i) The Applicant seeks confirmation of the
rule
nisi
issued on 29 June 2017; and (ii) The First and Second
Respondents seek an order that the rule
nisi
be discharged.
Both applications were heard as a single application.
[8]
The issue I have to decide on is straightforward. Do I confirm or
discharge the rule
nisi
? My decision will depend on whether I
am satisfied that the Applicant had made a case for the confirmation
of the interim interdict.
At the risk of repeating what is now trite
in our law on interdicts, the requirements of an interim interdict
are:
(a)
a prima facie right;
(b)
a well-grounded apprehension of irreparable harm if the interim
relief is not granted, and the final relief is eventually granted;
(c)
the balance of convenience favouring the grant of the interim
interdict; and
(d)
no other satisfactory remedy available.
[1]
(See,
for instance, D Harms
Civil Procedure in the Superior Courts
at A-40, para A5.7 and the cases cited.)
[9]
The object and purpose of an interim interdict are, among others, to
protect the status quo and rights of the parties from imminent
harm,
danger or prejudice pending the outcome of legal proceedings. My
primary duty at the interim stage is to consider whether
the
Applicant has established a prima facie legal right to the relief
sought. Although such right may be open to some doubt, provided
the
balance of convenience favours the Applicant, I would be obliged to
confirm the interim interdict.
[10]
When dealing with the requirements of an interim interdict, the test
in
Webster v Mitchell
1948 (1) SA 1186
(W) at 1189 as modified
by Ogilvie Thompson J in
Gool v Minister of Justice
1955 (2)
SA 682
(C) at 688 has been followed in several cases including
Simon
NO v Air Operations of Europe AB
[1998] ZASCA 79
;
1999 (1) SA 217
(SCA) at 228G-H;
Msunduzi Municipality v Natal Joint Municipal Pension/Provident
Fund
2007 (1) SA 142
(N) at 152E-F; and
Camps Bay Residents
and Ratepayers Association v Augoustides
2009 (6) SA 190
(WCC) at
195E-196C.
[11]
Applying the test laid down in
Webster
, the proper approach
would be for the court to weigh the facts set out by the Applicant
against the indisputable facts established
by the First and Second
Respondents. Then, having regard to the inherent probabilities, the
court will have to determine if, on
those facts, the Applicant should
obtain final relief. If the Respondent, in contradiction, casts
serious doubt on the Applicant's
case, then interim relief should not
be confirmed. However, if there is some doubt, but the balance of
convenience favours the
Applicant, then temporary relief should be
confirmed pending the outcome of the action.
[12]
Counsel for the Applicant has correctly submitted that the disputes
of fact between the parties are not extensive, the main
dispute being
over the right of access to the funds totalling R447 551.79
currently frozen in the First Respondent's bank
account.
[13]
In support of the Applicant's right to the funds in question, Mr
Aldworth's submission is that the Applicant has a proprietary
right
to the funds based on the terms of the JVA. Furthermore, it is common
cause that the Applicant performed the work in terms
of the JVA. This
is evidenced by the invoice submitted by the First Respondent to the
Department of Transport on 22 May 2017 for
payment of the work
completed in the first leg of the project. The completion
of this work entitled the Applicant to
payment. Counsel for the
Applicant also submitted that the First Respondent's claim that the
Applicant had repudiated the JVA on
29 May 2017 was 'farfetched' and
based on hearsay evidence.
[14]
To support the claim of irreparable harm should the interim order be
discharged, Mr Aldworth referred to
National Council of Societies
for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals v Openshaw
[2008] ZASCA 78
;
2008 (5) SA
339
(SCA) at paragraph 21, and correctly submitted that the test is
objective, with the pivotal question being 'whether a reasonable
man,
confronted by the facts, would apprehend the possibility of harm'.
Counsel's submission on this issue was that the Second
Respondent's
conduct in removing the Applicant's access to the bank account led to
the sole inference that it sought to deprive
the Applicant of the
latter's portion of the contract price. Given the First Respondent's
admitted past financial problems and
its failure to produce any
evidence that it would be able to satisfy a judgment debt in favour
of the Applicant, the conclusion
was warranted that success in the
main proceedings would render a hollow victory to the Applicant.
[15]
Counsel for the First and Second Respondents submitted the following
four bases for the opposition to the interdict: (i) The
Applicant had
not met the requirements stipulated in
Knox D'Arcy and Others v
Jamieson and Others
[1996] ZASCA 58
;
1996 (4) SA 348
(A); (ii) The Applicant had
failed to assert that without the interdict, it would suffer
inescapable prejudice or a hollow judgment;
(iii) The delay by the
Applicant to prosecute its action should result in the court finding
against the Applicant; and (iv) Misjoinder
of the Second
Respondent.
[16]
In applying the test delineated in
Webster
, I am not convinced
that the facts set up by the First and Second Respondents have cast
serious doubt on the Applicant's chances
of success in the main
action. Nothing in the First and Second Respondents' submission has
dislodged or palpably ousted the prima
facie right established by the
Applicant of a well-founded contractual damages claim against the
First Respondent.
[17]
Furthermore, the evidence tendered by Counsel for the First and
Second Respondents, in support of the contention that a judgment
in
favour of the Applicant would not be a hollow judgment, is
unpersuasive. Counsel referred to income anticipated from the
Department
of Transport for work expected to have been completed in
2017 as proof of the First Respondent's ability to meet a judgment in
favour of the Applicant. This proof is untenable as no details have
been provided of the First Respondent's current financial viability.
[18]
The delay in prosecuting the main action has also been raised to
support the discharge application. The arguments submitted
to bolster
the claim of the First and Second Respondents being prejudiced by the
delay are unconvincing. In the context of the
South African
experience, of lengthy delays in the commencement of legal
proceedings, conjoined with the unprecedented complexities
faced by
the legal system since March 2020 in trying to operate in the
Covid-19 era, I do not consider the delay to be so egregious
as to be
influential in the outcome of this application. Moreover, it is yet
to be established whether the First Respondent is
the owner of the
funds in issue, so the claim of prejudice is dubious at best.
[19]
I am also unpersuaded that there is a misjoinder of the Second
Respondent in these proceedings. The Second Respondent has a
direct
and substantial interest in this matter as he has authority over the
bank account held by the First Respondent. Moreover,
it was at his
behest that the banking account details were changed to deny the
Applicant access to the First Respondent's bank
account.
[20]
Although open to some doubt, it would seem that the respective
parties' rights are not quite evenly balanced, the scales possibly
tipping slightly in favour of the Applicant. Therefore, the pivotal
factor in the application lies in the balance of convenience.
In
determining the balance of convenience, the court must consider the
consequences of an interim interdict being confirmed as
opposed to it
being discharged.
[21]
If the interim interdict is discharged and the Applicant is
successful at the trial, it may be a hollow victory if the funds
have, in the meantime, been wasted by the First and Second
Respondents. On the other hand, if the rule
nisi
is confirmed,
the funds remain safe in the bank account of the First Respondent,
who can continue to operate the bank account and
run its business but
without accessing the set aside amount.
[22]
I am, therefore, of the view that the balance of convenience favours
the confirmation of the rule
nisi
.
[23]
I accordingly make the following order:
4
Paragraphs 1.1, 1.2, 1.3 and 1.4 of the rule
nisi
issued by
Radebe J on 29 June 2017 in the application instituted by the
Applicant under notice of motion dated 23 June 2017 ('the
main
application') be and are hereby confirmed;
5
The application instituted by the First and Second Respondents under
notice of motion dated 18 March 2021 (‘the discharge
application’) is dismissed; and
6
Premised on the delay in prosecuting the main action, for which I
believe both the Applicant and the First and Second Respondents
bear
responsibility, each party is responsible for its own costs in the
discharge application.
______________
REDDI
AJ
[1]
Relying on
Knox
D’Arcy Ltd and Others v Jamieson and Others
[1996] ZASCA 58
;
1996 (4) SA 348
(A) at 373A-E, counsel for the Applicant has
correctly submitted that the fourth requirement does not arise in
this case because
of the
sui
generis
nature of this type of interdict.
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