Case Law[2025] ZASCA 113South Africa
E.D.M.A v Meintjes and Meintjes Rekenmeesters CC and Another (632/2023) [2025] ZASCA 113 (29 July 2025)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
29 July 2025
Headnotes
Summary: Section 17(2)(f) of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013 – Referral by the President of the Supreme Court of Appeal – Reconsideration of refusal of a petition by the Supreme Court of Appeal – exceptional circumstances not established – matter struck from the roll.
Judgment
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## E.D.M.A v Meintjes and Meintjes Rekenmeesters CC and Another (632/2023) [2025] ZASCA 113 (29 July 2025)
E.D.M.A v Meintjes and Meintjes Rekenmeesters CC and Another (632/2023) [2025] ZASCA 113 (29 July 2025)
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sino date 29 July 2025
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Not Reportable
Case no: 632/2023
In
the matter between:
E[...]
D[...] M[...]
A[...]
APPLICANT
and
MEINTJES
AND MEINTJES REKENMEESTERS CC
FIRST RESPONDENT
OLD
MUTUAL TRUST (PTY) LTD
t/a
OLD MUTUAL
TRUST
SECOND RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
A[...] v
Meintjes and Meintjes Rekenmeesters CC and Another
(632/2023)
[2025] ZASCA 113
(29 July 2025)
Coram:
MOCUMIE, KEIGHTLEY JJA and PHATSHOANE AJA
Heard:
8 May 2025
Delivered
:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ representatives by email,
publication on the Supreme
Court of Appeal website and released to SAFLII. The date and time for
the hand-down of the judgment
is deemed to be 11h00 on 29 July 2025.
Summary:
Section 17(2)
(f)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
– Referral by the
President of the Supreme Court of Appeal – Reconsideration of
refusal of a petition by the Supreme
Court of Appeal –
exceptional circumstances not established – matter struck from
the roll.
ORDER
On
application for reconsideration:
referred
in terms of
s 17(2)
(f)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
:
1
The matter is struck from the roll.
2
The applicant is to pay the costs of the application for
reconsideration.
JUDGMENT
Phatshoane
AJA (Mocumie, Keightley JJA
concurring):
[1]
This is an application for the
reconsideration of a refusal by two judges of this Court to grant
special leave to appeal on petition
against a majority judgment and
order of the full court of the Gauteng Division of the High Court,
Pretoria (the full court). The
application is pursuant to a referral
by the President of this Court under
s 17(2)(
f
)
of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013 (the
Superior Courts Act).
[2]
The first respondent, Meintjes and Meintjes
Rekenmeesters CC (the practice), launched an application in the high
court for an order:
that its income and expenses for the period 1
June 2015 to 14 July 2017 be investigated, calculated and reported on
by an auditor
to be appointed by the chairperson of the South African
Institute of Chartered Accountants within ten business days from date
of
the order; that the applicant, Ms E[...] D[...] M[...] A[...]
(Ms A[...]), provide the said auditor with any or all the financial
information and documents as may be requested for purposes of the
execution of the auditor’s mandate; and that two-thirds
of the
practice’s income for the specified period, after deduction of
expenses and any income already paid to it by Ms A[...],
be
reimbursed by Ms A[...] to the practice within ten business days of
the auditor’s report.
[3]
The sole member of the practice, Mr
Johannes Hendrick Meintjes, an accountant and auditor, passed away on
27 April 2015. Old Mutual
Trust (Pty) Ltd t/a Old Mutual Trust (the
trust) is the executor of the estate of the late Mr Meintjes, whose
sole beneficiary
is his spouse, Ms Heila Antoinette Meintjes (Ms
Meintjes), the deponent to the founding affidavit in the high court.
On 20 May
2015, Ms Meintjes sought and was granted permission by the
trust to continue with the accounting practice. She indemnified the
trust against any loss suffered and claims which may be made against
the trust or the estate, and costs arising from the continuation
of
the accounting practice. Ms Meintjes is not an accountant.
[4]
Ms A[...] is an accountant and a registered
tax practitioner with 20 years of professional experience, currently
self-employed through
EA Financial Services. It is common cause that
during June 2015 an oral agreement was concluded between Ms
A[...]
and the practice in terms of which Ms A[...] would render accounting
services to the clients of the practice. The exact terms
of the
agreement were contested in the high court. Ms Meintjes’
version, on the one hand, was to the effect that Ms A[...]
would
perform the necessary professional work for the practice as a
sub-contractor and oversee and submit the work done by the
practice’s
employees. She would be entitled to one-third of the net profit of
the practice as compensation after the deduction
of the business
expenses, whereas two-thirds would be allocated to the practice. Ms
A[...], on the other hand, contended that the
agreement was that she
would take over the entire practice, which at that stage, she
claimed, was effectively defunct, in exchange
for concluding the
outstanding professional work for the practice’s several
clients to the value of R218 000.
[5]
Ms A[...] discharged her obligations to the
practice from June 2015 until 14 July 2017 reporting for duty at
the practice’s
office, situated in Pretoria North, twice per
week. Ms Meintjes averred that, on 13 July 2017, she discovered that
Ms A[...] had
transferred the practice’s trust account into her
own name and accepted payments from the practice’s clients
directly
into that account over which Ms Meintjes had no control or
insight. She also discovered that Ms A[...] had created a new
E-filing
profile on behalf of the practice to which Ms Meintjes had
no access. In addition, she averred that she became aware that the
practice
had accumulated a net profit of R3 166 158 during the period
of Ms A[...]’s engagement and that Ms A[...] had failed to pay
the practice R2 110 772 which was due and payable. Ms A[...] disputed
these averments.
[6]
An exchange of correspondence between the
parties’ respective attorneys followed from 19 September 2017
to 9 October 2017
in terms of which the practice proposed that an
independent auditor be appointed to determine the amount due to the
practice. Ms
A[...] was averse to the proposals insisting instead
that each party appoint its own auditor to determine any amounts due.
This
precipitated the launching of the application in the high court,
which was initially argued on 12 June 2018, before Collis J.
On
20 November 2018 Collis J ruled that there was a real, genuine and
bona fide
dispute of fact on the nature of the agreement which could only be
determined with the aid of oral evidence. Accordingly, the high
court
referred the dispute for the hearing of oral evidence on this limited
core aspect. Having heard the evidence, the high court
had no
difficulties in accepting the evidence adduced by three witnesses
called by the practice because, so reasoned the high court,
they gave
an honest account and corroborated each other. The high court
rejected Ms A[...]’s evidence as improbable and granted
the
practice the relief sought in its notice of motion.
[7]
In the wake of the
order granted by the high court, Ms A[...] applied for leave to
appeal, which was refused. On 22 July 2020 this
Court granted leave
to appeal to the full court. The appeal was considered by Neukircher
and Sardiwalla JJ concurring and Malungana
AJ dissenting. The
majority of the full court accepted the high court’s
credibility findings. It reassessed the evidence
and listed the
following improbabilities in Ms A[...]’s version:
‘
(a)
on her version she [agreed] to take over [the] existing clients and
do all the outstanding
work (valued at R218 000) without receiving
one cent of that amount which, on the evidence has already been paid
to the [practice];
– this was in any event only discovered
after the agreement in June 2015 and thus it is not probable that
this was mooted
at the initial meeting …. or would have formed
a basis for the agreement contended for by Ms A[...];
(b)
no client had ever received an email informing them that she had
taken over their
portfolio and giving them the option of either
moving their business to her (or to another accountant) or remaining
with the [practice]
– thus clients would have thought she was
working for the [practice];
(c)
on her version, she agreed that [the] fees received would be
allocated one-third to
expenses, one-third to salaries and one-third
to her – but if she is taking over the client base and the
clients pay her,
the money is hers to do with as she pleases and it
makes no sense that she would explain to her employees how the money
earned
would be allocated;
(d)
why she agreed to operate out of the Pretoria North Office [Meintjes
& Meintjes
office]? She has offices in Centurion. She is now
saddled with extra unnecessary expenses of R10 000 office hire (and
she was only
there [two] times a week), staff salaries, insurance for
office furniture and equipment which she says became hers and yet
when
she left, she did not take with;
(e)
there is no evidence that Mrs Meintjes conducted negotiations –
all the evidence
points to Mrs Koen conducting them on behalf of Mrs
Meintjes;
(f)
there are no e-mails or documents pointing to any formal or informal
employment
contracts with Mrs Koen or Mrs Van Taak [the employees
that worked for the practice prior to Ms A[...]’s
engagement]
and they testified that they did not have one with her.’
[8]
The majority of the full court
found
that the high court correctly rejected Ms A[...]’s evidence as
improbable and appropriately granted the relief sought.
Accordingly,
on 28 February 2023, the majority dismissed the appeal. Ms A[...]
sought special leave to this Court on 06 April 2023
to appeal against
the judgment and order of the full court.
Ms A[...]’s grounds of appeal, when she sought special leave,
were in broad outline: that the high court and the majority
of the
full court erred in rejecting her version of the terms of the
agreement when there had been undisputed financial records
which
provided corroboration. She argued that the high court and the full
court had erred in accepting the practice’s version
which was
contradictory. She therefore contended that there were reasonable
prospects of success on appeal. Additionally, she argued,
special
circumstances and compelling reasons were extant for the hearing of
the appeal by this Court because the full court delivered
a split
decision.
[9]
In
Cook
v Morrison
and
Another
,
[1]
this
Court said:
‘
The
existence of reasonable prospects of success is a necessary but
insufficient precondition for the granting of special leave.
Something more, by way of special circumstances, is needed. These may
include that the appeal raises a substantial point of law;
or that
the prospects of success are so strong that a refusal of leave would
result in a manifest denial of justice; or that the
matter is of very
great importance to the parties or to the public. This is not a
closed list (
Westinghouse
Brake & Equipment (Pty) Ltd v Bilger Engineering (Pty) Ltd
1986 (2) SA 555
(A) at 564H–565E;
Director
of Public Prosecutions, Gauteng Division, Pretoria v Moabi
[2017] ZASCA 85
;
2017 (2) SACR 384
(SCA) para 21).’
[2]
Two judges of this Court
dismissed Ms A[...]’s petition because in their view the
requirements for special leave were not
satisfied.
[10]
Ms A[...] subsequently applied to the
President of this Court in terms of
s 17(2)(
f
)
of the
Superior Courts Act, contending
that exceptional circumstances
were present which justified granting the reconsideration of her
special leave to appeal. On 27 February
2024, the President
referred the decision dismissing Ms A[...]’s application for
special leave to appeal to the Court for
reconsideration and, if
necessary, variation. The parties were directed to be prepared, if
called upon to do so, to address the
Court on the merits of the
appeal. When the referral was made,
s 17(2)
(f)
of the
Superior Courts Act provided
:
‘
The
decision of the majority of the judges considering an application
referred to in paragraph
(b)
,
or the decision of the court, as the case may be, to grant or refuse
the application shall be final: Provided that the President
of the
Supreme Court of Appeal may in
exceptional
circumstances
,
whether of his or her own accord or on application filed within one
month of the decision, refer the decision to the court for
reconsideration and, if necessary, variation.’
[3]
(Emphasis
added.)
[11]
The
enquiry into what constitutes ‘exceptional circumstances’
is a factual one to be evaluated on a case-by-case basis.
[4]
‘
What
is ordinarily contemplated by the words ‘‘exceptional
circumstances’’ is something out of the ordinary
and of
an unusual nature; something which is excepted in the sense that the
general rule does not apply to it; something uncommon,
rare or
different; ‘‘besonder’’, ‘‘seldsaam’’,
‘‘uitsonderlik’’,
or ‘‘in hoë
mate ongewoon’’.’
[5]
[12]
In
Avnit
v First Rand Bank Ltd
,
[6]
Mpati
P underscored the import of
s 17(2)(
f
)
as follows:
‘
In
the context of
s 17(2)(
f
)
the President will need to be satisfied that the circumstances are
truly exceptional before referring the considered view of two
judges
of this court to the court for reconsideration. I emphasise that the
section is not intended
to
afford disappointed litigants a further attempt to procure relief
that has already been refused. It is intended to enable the
President
of this Court to deal with a situation where otherwise injustice
might result. An application that merely rehearses the
arguments that
have already been made, considered and rejected will not succeed,
unless it is strongly arguable that justice will
be denied unless the
possibility of an appeal can be pursued. A case such as
Van
der Walt
[7]
may,
but not necessarily will, warrant the exercise of the power. In such
a case the President may hold the view that the grant
of leave to
appeal in the other case was inappropriate.
A
useful guide is provided by the established jurisprudence of this
court in regard to the grant of special leave to appeal. Prospects
of
success alone do not constitute exceptional circumstances. The case
must truly raise a substantial point of law, or be of great
public
importance or demonstrate that without leave a grave injustice may
result. Such cases will be likely to be few and far between
because
the judges who deal with the original application will readily
identify cases of that ilk. But the power under
section
17(2)
(f)
is
one that can be exercised even when special leave has been refused,
so ‘‘exceptional circumstances’’
must involve
more than satisfying the requirements for special leave to appeal.
The power is likely to be exercised only when the
President believes
that some matter of importance has possibly been overlooked or grave
injustice will otherwise result.’
[8]
[13]
T
he
ambit of this appeal is circumscribed. The crisp question is whether
there are exceptional circumstances that establish the necessary
jurisdiction for this Court to reconsider the decision on petition to
refuse special leave. If we should find that there are no
exceptional
circumstances, that would be the end of the reconsideration of the
appeal.
[14]
To
demonstrate that
exceptional
circumstances were present Ms A[...] submitted that she is a divorced
mother of two teenagers. The acrimonious divorce
left her family life
in ‘tatters’. If this Court does not afford her the
opportunity to reverse the decision of the
high court, her family,
her two employees and their families stand to suffer irreparable
harm, which would offend against the principle
of ‘ubuntu’.
[9]
This,
she argued, would ruin her livelihood and those of the families she
supports as they are dependent on the income she provides.
The effect
of the execution of the high court’s judgment, she contended,
would require paying an amount in excess of two
years’ of
living expenses, effectively destroying her accounting practice,
which had teetered on the brink of collapse during
the Covid-19
pandemic and was currently recovering.
[15]
The attack on her credibility by the
high court, if upheld, Ms A[...] argued, would have a grave impact on
her reputation as an
accountant and end her practice. This, she
argued, ought to be resolved by this Court so that her credibility is
restored. She
lamented that the high court and the majority of the
full court ignored ‘common cause documentary evidence’.
Ms A[...]
also regurgitated the averments contained in her
application for special leave concerning the contradiction in the
practice’s
account which, it bears repeating, two judges of
this Court have already considered.
[16]
In an attempt to further show the
presence of exceptional circumstances, counsel for Ms A[...]
contended, without more, that:
‘‘‘
Substantial
points of law’’ are also raised in this matter, as
amplified by the split judgment of the full court…
. This is
however an exceptional circumstance of great public importance, since
one of the central issues in this case is whether
a court can merely
ignore or fail to give due weight to undisputed documentary evidence
– which directly impacts upon commercial
certainty in business,
and that agreements reached should be enforced.’
[17]
Counsel conceded that a split decision of
the full court on its own would not constitute an exceptional
circumstance. While the
appeal may be important to the parties
personally, the case raises nothing of public importance that would
warrant the special
attention of this Court on appeal. There is great
diversity in the personal circumstances of litigants who approach the
courts
for relief. Without trivialising the personal impact that the
outcome of litigation may have on an individual litigant, in
determining
the existence of exceptional circumstances, the C
ourt
should properly direct itself to the relevant facts and principles at
hand. The personal circumstances advanced by Ms A[...]
are unique to
her and do not create exceptional circumstances. Ordinarily, in the
application of substantive issues of law, to
come to a conclusion on
the disputed issues, a court must make findings on,
inter
alia
, the
credibility of the various factual witnesses. The fact that certain
adverse credibility findings were made against Ms A[...]
in the high
court does not merit any interference by this Court on appeal.
[18]
Much
was made by counsel for Ms A[...] that the high court and the full
court failed to attach weight to the documentary evidence
presented
and therefore erred in accepting the practice’s version of the
agreement. How the high court and full court applied
the substantive
issues of law and fact, and assessed the probabilities, is not an
exceptional circumstance. This Court has held
that
s 17(2)
(f)
is
not intended to afford dissatisfied litigants a further opportunity
to secure relief that has already been refused.
[10]
An
application that merely rehearses the arguments that have already
been made,
considered
and rejected, as this one does, will not succeed,
[11]
unless
it is strongly arguable that justice will be denied without the
possibility of an appeal.
No
cogent argument has been advanced, nor could I find any grounds for
concluding that this would be the case here.
[19]
While
the
prospects of success alone do not constitute an exceptional
circumstance, to the extent that they are relevant, I address them
briefly.
The
high court and the full court correctly determined that the parties’
versions on the terms of the oral agreement were
mutually
destructive. They invoked the principles in
Stellenbosch
Farmers’ Winery Group Ltd and Another v Martell et Cie and
Others
[12]
in
the evaluation of the evidence and considered the credibility of the
various factual witnesses; their reliability; and the
probabilities.
[13]
There
were immaterial contradictions in the practice’s version, but
overall, as observed by both the high court and the full
court, the
witnesses corroborated each other and were truthful. There is nothing
to indicate any misdirection by the high court
and the majority of
the full court in accepting the practice’s version. In stark
contrast, as amply demonstrated by the transcript
of the proceedings,
Ms A[...]’s evidence was replete with contradictions and
obvious improbabilities.
[20]
Accordingly,
I conclude that exceptional circumstances are non-existent in this
case. It follows that in the absence of this jurisdictional
fact, the
application must be struck from the roll. Costs are to follow the
result.
[21]
In the result, the following order is made:
1
The matter is struck from the roll.
2
The applicant is to pay the costs of the
application for reconsideration.
M V PHATSHOANE
ACTING JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
the applicant:
G
V Meijers
Instructed
by:
Dawes
Law, Sandton
Claude
Reid Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For
the first respondent:
M
Snyman SC
Instructed
by:
ML
Schoeman Attorneys, Pretoria
Honey
Attorneys Inc., Bloemfontein.
[1]
Cook
v Morrison and Another
[2019]
ZASCA 8; [2019] 3 All SA 673 (SCA); 2019 (5) SA 51 (SCA).
[2]
Ibid
para 8.
[3]
The
section was amended by s 28 of the Judicial Matters Amendment
Act
15 of 2023, which came into effect on 3 April 2024
.
It now reads as follows:
‘
The
decision of the majority of the judges considering an application
referred to in paragraph
(b)
, or the decision of the court,
as the case may be, to grant or refuse the application shall be
final: Provided that the President
of the Supreme Court of Appeal
may,
in circumstances where a grave failure of justice would
otherwise result or the administration of justice may be brought
into
disrepute
, whether of his or her own accord or on
application filed within one month of the decision, refer the
decision to the court for
reconsideration and, if necessary,
variation.’ (Emphasis added.)
[4]
Liesching
and Others v S and Another
[2016] ZACC 41
;
2017 (4) BCLR 454
(CC);
2017
(2) SACR 193
(CC)
(
Liesching
I
)
para 55;
Ekurhuleni
Metropolitan Municipality v Business Connexion (Pty) Ltd
[2025] ZASCA 41
; 2025 JDR 1488 (SCA);
[2025] JOL 68853
(SCA) para 3.
[5]
MV
Ais
Mamas Seatrans Maritime v Owners, MV Ais Mamas, and Another
2002
(6) SA 150
(C) at 156H-157C. See also
Ntlemeza
v Helen Suzman Foundation and Another
[2017]
ZASCA 93
;
[2017] 3 All SA 589
(SCA);
2017 (5) SA 402
(SCA) para 37.
[6]
Avnit
v First Rand Bank Ltd
[2014]
ZASCA 132
;
2014
JDR 2014 (SCA);
[2014] JOL 32336
(SCA)
(
Avnit
).
[7]
Van
der Walt v Metcash Trading
Ltd
[2002] ZACC 4; 2002 (4) SA 317 (CC); 2002 (5) BCLR 454
(CC).
[8]
Avnit
paras
6-7.
[9]
The
principle was explained in
S
v Makwanyane and Another
[1995] ZACC 3
;
1995
(6) BCLR 665
;
1995 (3) SA 391
(CC);
[1996] 2 CHRLD 164
;
1995 (2)
SACR 1
para 307 as ‘[g]enerally,
ubuntu
translates
as
humaneness
.
In its most fundamental sense it translates as
personhood
and
morality
.
Metaphorically, it expresses itself in
umuntu
ngumuntu ngabantu
,
describing the significance of group solidarity on survival issues
so central to the survival of communities. While it envelops
the key
values of group solidarity, compassion, respect, human dignity,
conformity to basic norms and collective unity, in its
fundamental
sense it denotes humanity and morality.’ (Emphasis in original
quote.)
[10]
Avnit
para
6;
See
also
Liesching
and Others v S
[2018] ZACC 25
;
2018 (11) BCLR 1349
(CC);
2019 (1) SACR 178
(CC);
2019 (4) SA 219
(CC) (
Liesching
II
)
para 139;
Nel v S
2025 JDR 2552 (SCA) (
Nel
)
para 7
.
[11]
Avnit
para
6. See also
Motsoeneng
v South African Broadcasting Corporation SOC Ltd and Others
[2024]
ZASCA 80
;
2025
(4) SA 122
(SCA)
para 18;
Nel
para
22
;
Minister of Police and another v Ramabanta
[2025] JOL 69177
(SCA) para 13.
[12]
Stellenbosch
Farmers' Winery Group Ltd and Another v Martell et Cie and Others
2003
(1) SA 11 (SCA).
[13]
Ibid
para 5.
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