Case Law[2024] ZASCA 129South Africa
Minmetals Logistics Zhejiang Co Ltd v The Owners and Underwriters of the MV Smart and Another (573/2023) [2024] ZASCA 129; [2025] 1 All SA 60 (SCA); 2025 (1) SA 392 (SCA) (1 October 2024)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
1 October 2024
Headnotes
Summary: Maritime law – s 5(1) of the Admiralty Jurisdiction Regulation Act 105 of 1983 (the Act) – application to compel litigant to produce documents – documents arising from private arbitration in London between the litigant and a peregrinus third party – documents alleged to be confidential – whether third party has a direct and substantial interest in application to compel – whether third party should be joined to application to compel – whether an Admiralty Court has the power in terms of s 5(1) of the Act to join peregrinus third party – whether order for joinder of third party granted pursuant to such power appealable.
Judgment
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## Minmetals Logistics Zhejiang Co Ltd v The Owners and Underwriters of the MV Smart and Another (573/2023) [2024] ZASCA 129; [2025] 1 All SA 60 (SCA); 2025 (1) SA 392 (SCA) (1 October 2024)
Minmetals Logistics Zhejiang Co Ltd v The Owners and Underwriters of the MV Smart and Another (573/2023) [2024] ZASCA 129; [2025] 1 All SA 60 (SCA); 2025 (1) SA 392 (SCA) (1 October 2024)
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sino date 1 October 2024
FLYNOTES:
SHIPPING – Joinder –
Peregrinus
third party
–
Proceedings
arising from sinking of fully laden bulk carrier –
Application to compel litigant to produce documents –
Documents arising from private arbitration in London between
litigant and peregrinus third party – High Court correctly
joining peregrinus as party to application to compel –
Joinder order facilitating proper ventilation of issues for
application to compel – Order of High Court not appealable –
Admiralty Jurisdiction Regulation Act 105 of 1983,
s 5(1).
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case
no: 573/2023
Name
of Ship:
MV ‘
SMART’
In
the matter between:
MINMETALS
LOGISTICS ZHEJIANG CO LTD
APPELLANT
and
THE
OWNERS AND UNDERWRITERS OF THE
MV
‘SMART’
FIRST
RESPONDENT
THE
NATIONAL PORTS AUTHORITY, A DIVISION
OF
TRANSNET (SOC) LTD
SECOND
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Minmetals Logistics Zhejiang
Co Ltd v The Owners and Underwriters of the MV ‘Smart’
and Another
(573/2023)
[2024] ZASCA 129
(1 October 2024)
Coram:
PONNAN, DAMBUZA, MOCUMIE and NICHOLLS JJA and KOEN AJA
Heard
:
9 September 2024
Delivered
:
This judgment was handed down electronically by
circulation to the parties’ legal representatives by email
publication on
the Supreme Court of Appeal website and release to
SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 11h00 on 1
October 2024.
Summary:
Maritime law –
s
5(1)
of the Admiralty Jurisdiction Regulation Act 105 of 1983 (the Act) –
application to compel litigant to produce documents
– documents
arising from private arbitration in London between the litigant and a
peregrinus
third
party – documents alleged to be confidential – whether
third party has a direct and substantial interest in application
to
compel – whether third party should be joined to application to
compel – whether an Admiralty Court has the power
in terms of s
5(1) of the Act to join
peregrinus
third party – whether order for joinder of
third party granted pursuant to such power appealable.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
KwaZulu-Natal Division of the High Court, Durban
(Lopes J, sitting as a court of first instance exercising admiralty
jurisdiction):
1 The appeal is
struck from the roll;
2 The appellant is
directed to pay the costs of the first and second respondents, such
costs to include the costs of two
counsel where employed.
JUDGMENT
Koen
AJA (Ponnan, Dambuza, Mocumie and Nicholls JJA concurring):
Introduction
[1]
On 29 July 2022, the
KwaZulu-Natal Division of the High Court, Durban (per Lopes J) (the
high court), exercising its admiralty jurisdiction
and relying
on
the
provisions
of
s
5(1) of the Admiralty Jurisdiction Regulation Act 105 of 1983 (the
Act),
[1]
granted an order joining
the
appellant,
Minmetals Logistics Zhejiang Co Ltd (Minmetals)
,
as a party to a
n
application to compel. The application to compel was brought by
the
second respondent, the National Ports Authority, a division of
Transnet (SOC) Ltd (Transnet), against the first respondent,
the
Owners and Underwriters of the MV ‘
Smart
’
(the
owners), in respect of an action pending between them. Transnet seeks
to compel the owners to produce certain documents arising
from an
arbitration between the owners and Minmetals in London. Minmetals is
a
peregrinus
.
[2]
[2]
The appeal is against the granting of the joinder order, with the
leave of the high court. The questions required to be
answered in the
appeal are whether the high court had jurisdiction to grant such an
order, and if so, whether its decision to grant
the order, is
appealable.
Background
[3]
On 19 August 2013, the fully laden bulk carrier, the
MV ‘Smart’
,
time chartered by Minmetals, ran aground in the vicinity of the
Richard Bay harbour entrance when departing from the port, causing
it
to break up and sink. This incident has given rise to various legal
proceedings, including: (a) arbitration proceedings by the
owners
against Minmetals in London, alleging a breach of a safe port
warranty; (b) Minmetals, in turn, suing Transnet in delict,
based on
its control of the Richards Bay harbour, for an indemnification
should it be held liable to the owners in the London arbitration;
and, (c) the owners suing Transnet in delict in the high court (the
action), based on an alleged breach of various legal and statutory
duties owed to them, for the value of the lost cargo, hull, bunkers
and other losses. The order for the joinder of Minmetals, which
is
the subject of this appeal, arose in respect of the last-mentioned
action by the owners against Transnet.
[4]
Underpinning the arbitration and the action, are allegations that
Transnet failed to provide a safe port. In its award
handed down on
12 June 2020, the London arbitration tribunal however found that
although there were some shortcomings in the running
of the port, it
was the Master’s negligent navigation of the vessel, which
caused the ‘
Smart’
to ground, and that such
negligence constituted a
novus actus interveniens
which broke
the chain of causation, including the alleged lack of safety of the
port. On 28 October 2020, Minmetals, in view of
these findings,
withdrew its indemnity action against Transnet. The owners’
action against Transnet continues. It is defended
on the basis,
inter
alia,
as found in the arbitration, that the loss or damage
suffered by the owners was as a result of the negligence of the
Master and
crew.
[5]
In the action between the owners and Transnet, the owners asserted
privilege in respect of various discovered documents
relating to the
arbitration. In addition, on 15 September 2020, Transnet served
a notice in terms of rule 35(3) on the owners
requesting further
documents which had featured in the arbitration. Transnet seeks to
compel the disclosure of these documents.
The owners have resisted
producing the documents, claiming that they are privileged from
disclosure, as they were subject to an
implied contractual
undertaking of confidentiality between it and Minmetals, and that
some are irrelevant. That stance notwithstanding,
the owners are
willing to waive their privilege in respect of the documents, subject
to certain timing constraints. They, however,
cannot unilaterally
waive confidentiality, and any privilege as may attach to the
documents, without the concurrence of Minmetals.
[6]
Minmetals refuses to agree to the disclosure of the documents: it is
of the view that the documents are confidential/private;
that it is
not obliged to consent to the release of the documents and will not
do so; that it did not require nor wish to be joined
to any
application to compel production; but, that it might consider not
objecting to the disclosure if the owners were ordered
by a court to
produce the documents and the owners produced the documents pursuant
to such an order. The owners accordingly accept
that they are
precluded from making disclosure of the documents in the absence of a
court order.
[7]
On 4 May 2021, Transnet launched an application against the owners to
compel the production of the documents. The issue
pertinently raised
in the application is whether the documents are confidential and
privileged from disclosure. The owners reiterated
their willingness
to disclose the documents, but that they cannot do so while Minmetals
is not prepared to accede to any disclosure,
whether qualified or
unqualified. That, the owners maintain, would leave them in an
invidious position if a South African court
were to order disclosure
of the documents in the absence of Minmetals as a party to the
application to compel, and the documents
were found by an English
court or tribunal to be privileged and prohibited from disclosure.
They will then find themselves subject
to two competing, conflicting
and inconsistent orders, and that might result in damaging sanctions,
because if a South African
court should order disclosure, and the
order was not complied with because of a conflicting English order,
then it could result
in the dismissal of their South African action.
They might also face alternative sanctions before the English courts.
That would
be the result unless Minmetals consents to not pursuing
any relief in London in relation to the claim for production of the
documents,
which it has refused to do.
[8]
To avoid such conflicting results, a multiplicity of actions,
possible conflicting orders, incompatible outcomes and potential
prejudice, the owners settled on seeking the joinder of Minmetals as
the only appropriate solution. Minmetals could then elect
to take
whatever further steps it may deem fit, but it could not resist its
joinder to keep open its option to seek relief in England
to counter
the effect of an order, which might be granted in this country. On 10
June 2021, the owners, relying on the provisions
of s 5(1) of the
Act, moved for the joinder of Minmetals to the application to compel
so Minmetals could assert its position, if
so advised, but
regardless, be bound by an order of a South African court as to
whether the documents should be disclosed.
[9]
Transnet did not oppose the joinder application. Its attitude was
that there was no need for Minmetals to be joined as
the documents
sought were in the possession of the owners and should simply be
produced. That however would ignore the claims to
confidentiality. It
participated in the joinder application and also in this appeal
simply to dispute Minmetals’ allegation
that Transnet has no
right to the disclosure of the documents because they are privileged
or otherwise immune from production.
[10]
Minmetals opposed the application for joinder, maintaining its stance
that the documents could never be disclosed without
its consent. It
also did not abandon the possibility of proceeding before the
arbitration tribunal, or an English court, for an
order restraining
the owners from producing the documentation. Indeed, it implicitly
reserved the right to do so by maintaining
that it was the United
Kingdom courts which would have the jurisdiction to rule on the issue
of the confidentiality of the documents.
In
the high court
[11]
On 29 July 2022, the high
court, relying on the provisions of s 5(1) joined Minmetals as a
party to the application to compel.
[3]
The high court reasoned
that Minmetals would be bound by the findings in the application to
compel, whatever those may be, and accordingly,
that it would be in
the interest of justice for it to be joined, to require it to argue
its claim to confidentiality in the application
to compel, also as
this may be relevant to any further proceedings instituted in an
English court or arbitration. The joinder would
effectively compel
Minmetals to decide whether to waive any right which might prevent
the owners from disclosing the documents,
or to justify why the
documents should not be disclosed.
[12]
The high court’s order expressly confined Minmetals’
joinder to the ‘application to compel discovery
brought by the
Transnet . . .’ It further granted Minmetals leave to file
answering affidavits, if any, in the application
to compel and
directed Minmetals to pay the owners’ costs of the application,
such costs to include the costs consequent
upon the employment of two
counsel.
[13]
The high court concluded
that it was not required of the owners to establish a
prima
facie
case
against Minmetals, because they were not seeking to enforce a claim,
but to achieve a procedural remedy, simply to protect
themselves
against possible claims. It held further, that even if the owners
were required to establish any
prima
facie
right
against Minmetals, that they had done so, as the English law, which
Minmetals submitted applies, recognises exceptions to
the implied
privilege rule, including that disclosure of the documents may be
ordered where it would be in the interests of justice.
Whether
disclosure should indeed be ordered, will however ultimately only be
determined by the court hearing the application to
compel.
[4]
The
need for joinder
[14]
In
City
of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality v Blue Moonlight Properties
39 (Pty) Ltd and Another,
[5]
the Constitutional Court
held that:
‘
Generally, a party
must be joined in proceedings if it has a direct and substantial
interest in any order the court might make,
or when an order cannot
be effected without prejudicing it.’
A
direct and substantial interest means an interest in the
subject-matter of the litigation, not a mere financial or academic
interest.
If a party has a direct and substantial interest, it is a
necessary party
[6]
and should be joined
unless the court is satisfied that it has waived the right to be
joined.
[7]
[15]
On the facts of this matter, whether the documents should be produced
is a disputed question, the resolution of which
will arise in the
application to compel. The application to compel is incidental to the
court exercising its jurisdiction in the
action. The joinder of
Minmetals as a party to the application to compel, is simply a
necessary interlocutory procedure to achieve
a proper and full
ventilation of an issue relating to the action and the application to
compel. If the court hearing the application
to compel was to order
disclosure of the documents, its order will certainly affect the
legal rights of Minmetals. Whether disclosure
of the documents should
be ordered in the pending action would unquestionably be binding on
Minmetals.
Giving
effect to the need for joinder
[16]
Accepting that Minmetals should be joined, the next enquiry is how
that could be achieved. In the ordinary course it
would not be
competent for a South African court to join a foreign entity over
which it does not have jurisdiction, to local proceedings.
[8]
In admiralty matters
joinder can be achieved, as in other high court litigation, in terms
of the common law and rule 10,
[9]
which applies in
admiralty matters by virtue of the provisions of Admiralty rule 24,
and, in addition, also in terms of s 5(1) of
the Act.
[10]
The high court based its
order on s 5(1). Minmetals maintained that s 5(1) did not permit its
joinder. The preliminary issue to
be addressed is whether the high
court had the jurisdiction, in principle, to direct the joinder of a
third party, like Minmetals,
in terms of s 5(1).
[17]
Section 5(1) provides as follows:
‘
A court may in the
exercise of its admiralty jurisdiction permit the joinder in
proceedings in terms of this Act of any person against
whom any party
to those proceedings has a claim, whether jointly with, or separately
from, any party to those proceedings, or from
whom any party to those
proceedings is entitled to claim a contribution or an
indemnification, or in respect of whom any question
or issue in the
action is substantially the same as a question or issue which has
arisen or will arise between the party and the
person to be joined
and which should be determined in such a manner as to bind that
person, whether or not the claim against the
latter is a maritime
claim and notwithstanding the fact that he is not otherwise amenable
to the jurisdiction of the court, whether
by reason of the absence of
attachment of his property or otherwise.’
[18]
The section provides extended powers, in the interests of justice and
convenience, that would otherwise not be available
to a high court
when not exercising its admiralty jurisdiction, to join peregrine
‘not otherwise amenable to the jurisdiction
of the court . .
.by reason of the absence of attachment of his property
[11]
or otherwise.’
[12]
It is however a power
which can only be exercised provided the requirements of the
provision are satisfied. Whether Minmetals could
be made ‘amenable
to the jurisdiction of the high court’ therefore turns on a
proper interpretation of s 5(1).
[19]
Following
Cool
Ideas 1186 CC v Hubbard and Another
[13]
and
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
,
[14]
the words employed in s
5(1) must be given their ordinary grammatical meaning, unless to do
so would result in an absurdity, but
interpreted purposively,
properly contextualised, and consistent with the Constitution.
Statutory interpretation is an objective
process. The words in the
statute must be given their ordinary general meaning,
[15]
that will apply to all
cases falling within the ambit of the statute,
[16]
unless to do so would
result in an absurdity.
[20]
Recently the Constitutional Court reiterated this approach in
AmaBhungane
Centre for Investigative Journalism NPC v President of the Republic
of South Africa
[17]
as follows:
‘
. . .one must
start with the words, affording them their ordinary meaning, bearing
in mind that statutory provisions should always
be interpreted
purposively, be properly contextualised and must be construed
consistently with the Constitution. This is a unitary
exercise. The
context may be determined by considering other subsections, sections
or the chapter in which the keyword, provision
or expression to be
interpreted is located. Context may also be determined from the
statutory instrument as a whole. A sensible
interpretation should be
preferred to one that is absurd or leads to an unbusinesslike
outcome.’
This
injunction means that there must be compelling reasons why, if the
legislature used the word ‘or’, that it should
be read as
‘and’. The words must be given their ordinary meaning
unless the context shows or furnishes very strong
grounds for
presuming that the legislature really intended that the word not used
is the correct one.
[18]
[21]
Following the above approach to interpretation, s 5(1) properly
construed, contemplates three possible categories, spatially
separated by the word ‘or’ where a joinder may be
ordered, namely:
(a) where any party
to the proceedings has a claim, whether jointly with, or separately
from, any other party to those proceedings,
against the party to be
joined; or
(b) where any party
to the proceedings is entitled to claim a contribution or an
indemnification against the party to be joined;
or
(c) a person in
respect of whom any question or issue in the proceedings is
substantially the same as a question or issue
which has arisen or
will arise between the party and the person to be joined and should
be determined in such a manner as to bind
that person.
The
high court concluded that the third category conferred the power to
join a party in the position of Minmetals.
[22]
Clearly, the present is neither an instance where (a) nor (b) finds
application. Minmetals argued that (c) did not establish
a separate
category of persons for joinder, but qualified (a) and (b). It relies
on the view of Hofmeyr
[19]
that the word ‘or’
in ‘or . . . in respect of whom,’ immediately preceding
(c) above, must be interpreted
to read ‘and.’ This, it is
argued, is necessary to give effect to the legislature’s
intention, and to avoid,
as Hofmeyr contends, a situation where in a
claim based on carriage, a foreign party could be joined in South
African litigation
in respect of a completely unrelated non-maritime
claim, such as goods sold and delivered. Such an eventuality,
Minmetals submits,
demonstrates the absurdity and unreasonableness of
interpreting s 5(1) in the manner contended for by the owners, and
accepted
by the high court.
[23]
Hofmeyr’s reasoning is not underpinned by any authority. The
example of the goods sold and delivered claim, if
not involving
substantially the same issue or question which has arisen or will
arise between the party to the action and the third
party to be
joined, would not be within the contemplation of the provision in any
event. If it does, then the joinder would satisfy,
what Hofmeyr
[20]
himself recognises, as
‘considerations of convenience,’ so that the same issue,
arising between a number of persons,
can be decided in one action,
rather than in a multiplicity of proceedings. That would be the
antithesis of absurdity. But, even
if some inconvenience is caused,
inconvenience does not equate to absurdity. And further, any such
alleged ‘absurdity’
is expressly contemplated in s 5(1)
permitting joinder ‘whether or not the claim . . . is a
maritime claim and notwithstanding
the fact that [the party to be
joined] is not otherwise amenable to the jurisdiction of the court.’
The alleged ‘absurdity’
is not only not an absurdity, but
a deliberate feature of s 5(1).
[24]
There are no compelling reasons to read the provision conjunctively
and the second ‘or’ as meaning ‘and’,
contrary to the plain meaning thereof. The three categories should be
read disjunctively. The choice of ‘or’ was deliberate.
As, has been said,
[21]
‘
[a]lthough much
depends on the context and the subject matter . . . it seems to me
that there must be compelling reasons why the
words used by the
legislature should be replaced;
in
casu
why “and”
should be read to mean “or”, or vice versa. Words are
given their ordinary meaning ‘. .
. unless the context shows or
furnishes very strong grounds for presuming that the legislature
really intended ‘that the
word not used is the correct one.’
[25]
It is significant that (c) provides for the joinder of a person in
respect of ‘whom any question . . . has arisen.’
What
follows thereafter is fairly broad and almost limitless. It
contemplates a joinder in respect of ‘any question or issue’,
‘which has [already] arisen’ in the past or ‘will
arise’ in the future. A disjunctive interpretation
is
also consistent with the purpose of s 5(1) to broaden the scope for
joinder in maritime matters, otherwise, there would have
been little,
or no need to provide for joinder beyond rule 10 and the common law.
[26]
The reasoning of the high court was not flawed. On the contrary, it
is supported by the ordinary canons of statutory
interpretation, and
authorities, such as Shaw
[22]
and Hare.
[23]
Section 5(1) is a
‘powerful measure’
[24]
and a ‘very
far-reaching power’.
[25]
That does not mean that
effect should not be given to the clear wording thereof. As was said
in
MY
Summit One Farocean Marine (Pty) Ltd v Malacca Holdings Ltd and
Another
:
[26]
‘
Admittedly, the
powers of joinder in terms of the section so construed are
far-reaching. But the object of the legislature was clearly
to permit
all the parties to a dispute to be joined in the action. The absence
of such a provision could well result in the undesirable
situation of
courts in different countries having to adjudicate on the same or
substantially the same issues arising out of the
same incident or set
of facts.’
The
avoidance of courts in different countries having to adjudicate on
the same or substantially the same issues arising out of
the same
incident or set of facts, is the very mischief that the owners seek
to avoid. The purpose and context of s 5(1) is plainly
underpinned by
considerations of convenience so that if the same issue arises
between a number of persons, that issue should be
decided in one
action rather than in multiple proceedings.
[27]
The importance of the
section is to avoid a multiplicity of actions, with the real danger
of conflicting judgments in different
countries.
[28]
[27]
Accordingly, (c) applies. Accepting that the high court had the
necessary authority to join a third party in the position
of
Minmetals, the question then becomes whether it should have directed
its joinder. However, a consideration of that question
need only
occupy our attention if the high court’s decision to direct the
joinder is appealable. It is to that issue that
I then turn.
Is
the order of the high court appealable?
[28]
When the owners opposed the application for leave to appeal before
the high court, they had argued that the joinder order
was not
appealable. The high court however concluded that its order had final
effect, in the sense that in joining Minmetals, it
rendered it
susceptible to the jurisdiction of the court, and that this order was
definitive of the rights of Minmetals. It accordingly
considered its
order to be appealable. In doing so, the high court, with respect,
conflated the issues whether it had the jurisdiction
and could order
the joinder of a
peregrinus
in the position of Minmetals under
s 5(1), and whether it should have ordered the joinder of MInmetals.
The parties were accordingly
requested in advance of the appeal
hearing to be prepared to address this Court as to whether the order
was appealable.
The
test for appealability
[29]
Zweni v
Minister of Law and Order of the Republic of South Africa (Zweni)
[29]
held that for a court
order to be appealable, it had to have three attributes: the order
should be final in effect and not susceptible
to alteration by the
court of first instance; it should be definitive of the rights of the
parties, that is, it must grant definitive
and distinct relief; and,
it must have the effect of disposing of at least a substantial
portion of the relief claimed in the main
proceedings. With the
passage of time, the test for appealability has become more flexible
in accordance with the dictates of what
is ‘in the interest of
justice’. The interest of justice criterion is now paramount in
deciding whether orders,
[30]
including interlocutory
orders
[31]
are appealable. As to
what is in the interest of justice, requires a careful weighing up of
all germane circumstances.
[30]
These developments in our jurisprudence have been summarised by the
Constitutional Court as follows in
Tshwane
City v Afriforum
:
[32]
‘
Unlike before,
appealability no longer depends largely on whether the interim order
appealed against has final effect or is dispositive
of a substantial
portion of the relief claimed in the main application. All this is
now subsumed under the constitutional interest
of justice standard.
The over-arching role of interests of justice considerations has
relativised the final effect of the order
or the disposition of the
substantial portion of what is pending before the review court, in
determining appealability . . . If
appealability or the grant of
leave to appeal would best serve the interests of justice, then the
appeal should be proceeded with
no matter what the pre—Constitution
common law impediments might suggest . . .’
[31]
The interests of justice test has been explained further by the
Constitutional Court, for example in
United
Democratic Movement and Another v Lebashe Investment Group (Pty) Ltd
and Others (UDM)
[33]
as follows:
‘
Whether this Court
should grant leave turns on what the interests of justice require.
Whether it is in the interests of justice
to hear and determine the
matter involves a careful balancing and weighing-up of all relevant
factors. However, there is no
concrete and succinct definition
of the phrase “interests of justice” and what it really
entails. What is in the interests
of justice will depend on a careful
evaluation of all the relevant factors in a particular case . . .It
would not be in the interests
of justice that the issues in this
matter are determined in a piecemeal fashion. Moreover, the issues in
this matter are of such
a nature that the decision sought will have a
practical effect if the application for leave to appeal is granted.
This matter raises
issues that are of a constitutional nature and
arguable points of law of general public importance . . . The public
interest will
be best served by their prompt resolution. Such
resolution will help to correct the wrong decision before it has
further consequences,
on the one hand, and to avoid delay and
inconvenience resulting from the failure of this Court to hear the
appeal . . .’.
[32]
The
Zweni
triad of attributes for
an order to be an appealable order, is therefore no longer cast in
stone,
[34]
nor exhaustive.
[35]
But those attributes have
also not become irrelevant or supplanted by the development in our
jurisprudence.
[36]
This Court has remarked
that, ‘the interests of justice should now be approached with
the gravitational pull of
Zweni
.’
[37]
If one of the attributes
in Zweni is lacking, an order will probably not be appealable, unless
there are circumstances which in
the interests of justice, render it
appealable. The emphasis has moved from an enquiry focused on the
nature of the order, to one
more as to the nature and effect of the
order, having regard to what is in the interests of justice.
[38]
What the interests of
justice require depends on the facts of a particular case. This
standard applies both to appealability and
the grant of leave to
appeal, no matter what pre-Constitution common law impediments might
exist.
[39]
[33]
As regards the interests of justice, generally:
‘
[T]he high court
should bring finality to the matter before it, in the sense laid down
in
Zweni
.
Only then should the matter be capable of being appealed to this
Court. It allows for the orderly use of the capacity of this
Court to
hear appeals that warrant its attention. It prevents piecemeal
appeals that are often costly and delay the resolution
of matters
before the high court. It reinforces the duty of the high court to
bring matters to an expeditious, and final, conclusion.’
[40]
It
is not in the interest of justice to have a piecemeal adjudication of
litigation, with unnecessary delays resulting from appeals
on issues
which would not finally dispose of the litigation. As the
Constitutional Court has held, albeit in a different context
,
[41]
it is undesirable to
fragment a case by bringing appeals on individual aspects of the case
prior to the proper resolution of the
matter in the court of first
instance, and an appellate court will only interfere in pending
proceedings in the lower courts in
cases of great rarity –
where grave injustice threatens, and, intervention is necessary to
attain justice.
Discussion
[34]
This Court in
Government
of the Republic of South Africa and Others v Von Abo,
[42]
held that there is no
checklist of requirements to be weighed up to determine whether a
decision is appealable. Several considerations
need to be weighed up,
including: whether the relief granted was final in its effect,
whether the relief was definitive of the
rights of the parties;
whether it disposed of a substantial portion of the relief claimed;
whether it is convenient that an appeal
be entertained; what delays
will be occasioned; considerations of expedience; what prejudice
might ensue; whether it will avoid
piecemeal appeals; and, whether it
will contribute to the attainment of justice.
[35]
As regards the triad of attributes listed in
Zweni,
the
parties are agreed that it is only the third requirement, that is
whether the joinder of Minmetals would have the effect of
disposing
of a substantial portion of the relief claimed, which is implicated
in this appeal. The ‘relief claimed’
required to be
disposed of, is not the relief forming the subject of the application
to which it relates, that is the joinder of
Minmetals, otherwise
every interlocutory application will meet that requirement, and be
appealable. The relief is the substantive
relief the parties seek to
secure in the action, or at the very least, the relief claimed in the
application to which the joinder
order relates, namely the relief
claimed in the application to compel. The joinder of Minmetals has
not finally disposed of any
such relief. The application to compel,
may require identifying which system of law will determine whether
the documents are to
be produced. The joinder order simply
facilitates a full and proper ventilation of all the issues material
to the determination
of the application to compel, but it has not
disposed of any part of any of the relief sought. On a strict
application of the
Zweni
test, the order of the high court is
not appealable.
[36]
The question becomes whether there are any further considerations
which dictate that the joinder order should nevertheless
be
appealable in the interests of justice. Minmetals has not pointed to
any considerations which persuade me that it is ‘in
the
interests of justice’ that the joinder decision should be
appealable.
[37]
On the contrary, a survey of some of the possible relevant
considerations which might apply, point in the opposite direction:
allowing an appeal would simply cause further delay in the litigation
involving the demise of the ‘
Smart
’, which now
occurred some eleven years ago; an appeal will not in any way
contribute to achieving finality as soon as possible,
in the
interests of the parties and the general administration of justice;
an appeal against the joinder order will simply fragment
the appeal
process and further deplete scarce judicial resources; an appeal
against the joinder will be largely academic if the
application to
compel is ultimately dismissed; any appeal in respect of
interlocutory applications, specifically where interlocutory
(to
join) to another interlocutory application (to compel), should
generally be discouraged.
[38]
The joinder application was an interlocutory application, not
disposing of any substantial part of any final relief claimed,
but a
mere procedural step in relation to another interlocutory
application, namely the application to compel, which is interlocutory
to the owners’ main claim pending in the high court. A court
still has to decide, as a matter of law, whether the resistance
to
disclosure of the documents based on confidentiality, should prevail,
and whether the owners should be compelled to produce
the
documents.
[43]
It remains open to
Minmetals to oppose the application to compel, or to abide the
relief. There are no considerations which make
an appeal imperative.
[39]
Minmetals’ fear that its joinder could expose it to relief
sought against it by the owners or Transnet, is misplaced.
It was
specifically ‘joined in the main application to compel
discovery brought by the Transnet National Ports Authority
. . .’.
Transnet is not pursuing any claim against Minmetals. The owners’
claim against Minmetals was dismissed in
the charterparty
arbitration. Neither the owners nor Transnet has given notice of any
further claims. Having regard to the time
that has elapsed since the
grounding of the ‘
Smart’
on 19 August 2013 any
further potential claims would, by now, probably have long
prescribed.
Conclusion
[40]
Insofar as Minmetals disputed the power of the high court in terms of
s 5(1), to order its joinder and thus render it
subject to its
jurisdiction, its contentions were misplaced and without merit. The
high court correctly concluded that s 5(1) confers
such a power.
Having concluded that the high court could grant such an order, the
sole issue was whether it should have granted
the order joining
Minmetals to the application to compel. An appeal lies against the
order of a court, not its reasons. As the
relief granted by the high
court is not appealable, the appropriate order to be granted is that
the appeal is struck from the roll.
[41]
As between Minmetals and the owners, the costs should follow the
result. As regards the costs of Transnet, the high court
found that
its submissions were helpful, but that it was in effect a neutral
party with regard to the joinder. It made no order
for costs with
regard to its involvement in the proceedings before the high court.
There is no basis to interfere in that order.
As regards the interest
of Transnet in the appeal, if this court was to have entertained the
appeal and concluded that the owners
had to establish a
prima
facie
case for the documents to be produced, but that no
prima
facie
case for the production of the documents had been
established, then this could have impacted, as a finding of this
Court, on Transnet’s
application to compel in the high court. I
am accordingly of the view that it was reasonable and appropriate for
Transnet to have
participated in the appeal to protect its rights.
[42]
Minmetals is accordingly directed to pay the costs of the owners and
Transnet in this Court. All the parties employed
two counsel and in
asking for the relief they respectively claimed, sought costs,
including the costs of two counsel where employed.
Such an order is
appropriate.
Order
[43]
The following order is issued:
1 The appeal is
struck from the roll;
2 The appellant is
directed to pay the costs of the first and second respondents, such
costs to include the costs of two
counsel where employed.
P
A KOEN
ACTING
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
the appellant:
Instructed
by:
Honey
Attorneys, Bloemfontein.
M
J Fitzgerald SC and D J Cooke
Edward
Nathan Sonnenbergs Inc, Umhlanga Rocks
For
the first respondent:
Instructed
by:
Matsepes
Attorneys, Bloemfontein.
S
R Mullins SC and P J Wallis SC
Shepstone
& Wylie Attorneys, Umhlanga Rocks
For
the second respondent:
Instructed
by:
McIntyre
Van Der Post, Bloemfontein.
M
Wragge SC and J D Mackenzie
Webber
Wentzel, Cape Town
[1]
All
references to sections hereinafter are to the provisions of the Act,
unless stated otherwise.
[2]
Minmetals
is
a
Chinese company.
[3]
Paragraph
(a) of the order of the high court is in the following express
terms:
‘
(a)
Minmetals Logistics Zhejiang Co Ltd, the charterers of the mv
‘Smart’, are, in terms of s 5(1) of the Admiralty
Jurisdiction Regulation Act, 1983,
joined
in the main application to compel discovery
brought
by Transnet National Ports Authority (‘the TNPA’).
(Emphasis added.)
[4]
Ali
Shipping Corporation v Shipyard Trogir
[1998]
1 Lloyd’s Rep 643 at 105, 107 and 129.
[5]
City
of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality v Blue Moonlight
Properties 39 (Pty) Ltd and Another
[2011]
ZACC 33
;
2012 (2) BCLR 150
(CC);
2012 (2) SA 104
(CC) para 44.
[6]
This
court said in
Judicial
Service Commission and Another v Cape Bar Council and Another
[2012]
ZASCA 115
;
2012 (11) BCLR 1239
(SCA);
2013 (1) SA 170
(SCA);
[2013]
1 All SA 40
(SCA) para 12, that ‘. . . [J]oinder of a party is
only required as a matter of necessity - as opposed to a matter of
convenience
- if that party has a direct and substantial interest
which may be affected prejudicially by the judgement of the court in
the
proceedings concerned.'
[7]
D R Harms Civil
Procedure in the Superior Courts (2022) Vol 1, B-103 at B10.2.
[8]
Section
21(2)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
.
[9]
Rule
10
however cannot confer substantive rights. It regulates procedural
matters.
[10]
The
owners relied on
rule 10
as well before the high court and this
Court. The high court found that it had no application. That finding
was correct –
see
J
Hare
Shipping
Law and Admiralty Jurisdiction in South Africa
2 ed
(2009) at 136
.
The owners have again relied on the provisions of
rule 10
before
this Court. Whether
rule 10
could have applied will not be
considered further as the high court did not order the joinder of
Minmetals based on
rule 10
, and because this judgment concludes that
the joinder of Minmetals was validly achieved based on a proper
interpretation of
s 5(1).
[11]
Following
Simon
NO v Air Operations of Europe AB and Others
[1998]
ZASCA 79
;
1999 (1) SA 217
(SCA);
[1998] 4 All SA 573
(A) at 231B-C,
no attachment would in any event have been required, as no relief is
claimed against Minmetals, and the nature
of the relief sought in
the application to compel does not sound in money.
[12]
In
Jamieson v Sabingo
[2002] ZASCA 20
;
[2002] 3 All SA 392
(A) paras
21-22, it was held that ordinarily, in matters other than maritime
matters, where the party to be joined is a
peregrinus
against
whom relief
ad
pecuniam
solvendam
(sounding
in money) is to be claimed, then an attachment, at least
ad
confirmandum jurisdictionem
(to
confirm the jurisdiction where the
ratione
jurisdictionis
–
reason
for jurisdiction- for example a delict, occurred within the
territorial jurisdiction of the court) or
ad
fundandum jurisdictionem
(to
found jurisdiction) where it did not.
[13]
Cool
Ideas 1186 CC v Hubbard and Another
[2014]
ZACC 16
;
2014 (4) SA 474
(CC) (
Cool
Ideas
):
2014 (8) BCLR 869
(CC) at para 28.
[14]
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality (Endumeni)
[2012]
ZASCA 13
;
[2012] 2 All SA 262
(SCA);
2012 (4) SA 593
(SCA) para 17.
[15]
Op
cit
Cool
Ideas
para
28; Op cit
Endumeni
.
’
[16]
Kubyana
v Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd
[2014]
ZACC 1
;
2014 (3) SA 56
(CC);
2014 (4) BCLR 400
(CC) para 78; See
also
Endumeni
para
18.
[17]
AmaBhungane
Centre for Investigative Journalism NPC v President of the Republic
of South Africa
[2022]
ZACC 31
;
2023 (2) SA 1
(CC);
2023 (5) BCLR 499
(CC) para 36.
[18]
See
the interpretation of ‘or’ as ‘and’ in
Ngcobo
and Others v Salimba CC; Ngcobo and Others v Van Rensburg
[1999]
ZASCA 22
;
[1999] 2 All SA 491
(A);
1999
(2) SA 1057
(SCA) 1068A-C; See also
South
African Transport and Allied Workers Union and Another v Garvas and
Others
[2012]
ZACC 13
;
2012 (8) BCLR 840
(CC);
[2012] 10 BLLR 959
(CC); (2012) 33
ILJ 1593 (CC);
2013
(1) SA 83
(CC) para 143 (minority judgment of Jafta J).
[19]
G
Hofmeyr
Admiralty
Jurisdiction Law and Practice in South Africa
2 ed
(2012) at 212.
[20]
Hofmeyr
at 212.
[21]
Op
cit fn 18 para 11.
[22]
D J
Shaw
Admiralty
Jurisdiction and Practice in South Africa
(1987)
at 9 page. Although Shaw considered
s 5(1)
prior to its amendment,
the material portions thereof have not changed.
[23]
Hare
at 136 described
s 5(1)
as ‘a wide open door’ and
reinforced the use of a disjunctive ‘or.’
[24]
Hare
at 138.
[25]
Shaw
at 9.
[26]
MY
Summit One Farocean Marine (Pty) Ltd v Malacca Holdings Ltd and
Another
[2004]
ZASCA 58
;
[2004] 3 All SA 279
(SCA);
2005
(1) SA 428
(SCA) para 17.
[27]
Hofmeyr
at 212.
[28]
Op
cit
fn
26 para 17.
[29]
Zweni
v Minister of Law and Order
[1992]
ZASCA 197
;
[1993] 1 All SA 365
(A);
1993 (1) SA 523
(A) at
532I-533A.
[30]
Philani-Ma-Afrika
v Mailula
[2009]
ZASCA 115
;
2010 (2) SA 573
(SCA);
[2010] 1 All SA 459
(SCA) para 20;
See also
S
v Western Areas
[2005]
ZASCA 31
;
[2005] 3 All SA 541
(SCA);
2005 (5) SA 214
(SCA);
2005
(1) SACR 441
(SCA);
2005 (12) BCLR 1269
(SCA) para 25 and 26;
Khumalo
v Holomisa
[2002]
ZACC 12
;
2002 (5) SA 401
(CC);
2002 (8) BCLR 771
para 8.
[31]
National
Treasury and Others v Opposition to Urban Tolling
Alliance
and Others
[2012]
ZACC 18
;
2012
(6) SA 223
(CC);
2012 (11) BCLR 1148
(CC) at paras 23-25. See also
MEC
for Health, KwaZulu Natal v Premier, Kwazulu Natal: In re
Minister of Health v Treatment Action Campaign
[2002]
ZACC 14
;
2002 (5) SA 717
(CC);
2002 (10) BCLR 1028
at para 6;
Cape
Metropolitan Council v Minister of Provincial Affairs and
Constitutional Development
[1999]
ZACC 12
(CC);
1999 (12) BCLR 1353
(CC) at para 12.
[32]
City
of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality v Afriforum and Another
[2016]
ZACC 19
;
2016 (6) SA 279
(CC);
2016 (9) BCLR
1133
(CC) at para 40 – 41.
[33]
United
Democratic Movement and Another v Lebashe Investment Group (Pty) Ltd
and Others
[2022]
ZACC 34
;
2022 (12) BCLR 1521
(CC);
2023 (1) SA 353
(CC) at para 34
to 37 (footnotes omitted).
[34]
Griekwaland
Wes Korporatief Beperk t/a Vaalrivier Diensstasie v Desert Oil
(Pty) Ltd
[2024]
ZANCHC para 14. The application of the broader ‘interests of
justice test’ might however provide compelling
justification
for an appeal against an order which otherwise would not be final in
effect, whether on a question of law or otherwise.
[35]
Cyril
and Another v Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service
[2024]
ZASCA 32
; 2024 JDR 1335 (SCA) para 7.
[36]
TWK
Agriculture Holdings (Pty) Ltd v Hoogveld Boerderybeleggings (Pty)
Ltd and Others (TWK)
[2023]
ZASCA 63; 2023 (5) SA 163 (SCA).
[37]
Ibid
TWK
para
30.
[38]
In
Jacobs
and Others v Baumann NO and Others
[2012]
JOL 23549
(SCA) at 7 it was said that‘[t]herefore, a court
determining whether or not an order is final considers not only its
form
but also, and predominantly, its effect.’
[39]
National
Commissioner of Police and Another v Gun Owners of South Africa
[2020]
ZASCA 88
;
[2020] All SA 1
(SCA);
2020 (6) SA 69
(SCA);
2021 (1) SACR
44
para 15.
[40]
Op
cit
TWK
para
21.
[41]
Cloete
and Another v S; Sekgala v Nedbank Limited
[2019]
ZACC 6
;
2019 (5) BCLR 544
(CC); 2019 (4) 268 (CC);
2019 (2) SACR 130
(CC) para 57-58.
[42]
Government
of the Republic of South Africa and Others v Von Abo
[2011]
ZASCA 65
;
2011 (5) SA 262
(SCA);
[2011] 3 All SA 261
(SCA) para 17.
[43]
The
owners refer to
Transnet
v MV Alina II [
2013]
ZAWCHC 124
;
2013 (6) SA 556
(WCC) para 45 as authority that a South
African Court may direct the disclosure of arbitration documents in
a foreign arbitration
between one litigious party and another third
party, but acknowledge that the issue when to override the principle
of confidentiality
is a vexed one.
sino noindex
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