Case Law[2022] ZASCA 48South Africa
Kwinana and Others v Ngonyama and Others (103/2021) [2022] ZASCA 48 (8 April 2022)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
8 April 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Civil procedure – application for intervention on appeal – no legal interest in subject matter of litigation – application for rescission of default judgment – sole ground relied upon had been raised in replying affidavit that was rightly not admitted.
Judgment
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## Kwinana and Others v Ngonyama and Others (103/2021) [2022] ZASCA 48 (8 April 2022)
Kwinana and Others v Ngonyama and Others (103/2021) [2022] ZASCA 48 (8 April 2022)
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sino date 8 April 2022
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Not Reportable
Case no: 103/2021
In
the matter between:
THABO
SINDISA KWINANA
FIRST
APPELLANT
DALIKHAYA
RAIN ZIHLANGU NO
SECOND APPELLANT
UNATHI
MDODA NO
THIRD
APPELLANT
and
LULAMA
SMUTS NGONYAMA
FIRST RESPONDENT
NOKWAZI
NOKWAZELELA
NGONYAMA
NO
SECOND
RESPONDENT
KHANYA
MALUNGELO
NGONYAMA
NO THIRD
RESPONDENT
QHAWE
HLOMELO
NGONYAMA
NO FOURTH
RESPONDENT
and
EYABANTU
CAPITAL
CONSORTIUM
(PTY) LTD FIRST
INTERVENING PARTY
EYABANTU
CAPITAL
(PTY)
LTD
SECOND
INTERVENING PARTY
Neutral citation:
Thabo
Sindisa Kwinana and Others v Lulama Smuts Ngonyama and Others
(Case
no 103/2021)
[2022] ZASCA 48
(8 April 2022)
Coram:
VAN DER MERWE, NICHOLLS and CARELSE
JJA and TSOKA and MATOJANE AJJA
Heard
:
24 FEBRUARY 2022
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 10h00 on 8 April 2022.
Summary:
Civil procedure – application for
intervention on appeal – no legal interest in subject matter of
litigation – application for
rescission of default judgment –
sole ground relied upon had been raised in replying affidavit that
was rightly not admitted.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng
Division of the High Court, Johannesburg, (Grenfell AJ sitting as
court of first instance):
The
appeal is dismissed with costs, including the costs of two counsel.
JUDGMENT
Matojane AJA (Van der Merwe, Nicholls and Carelse JJA
and Tsoka AJA concurring)
[1]
The appellants in this
matter are Mr Thabo Sindisa Kwinana and the (substituted) trustees of
the Eyabantu Development Trust (the Eyabantu
Trust). For convenience,
I refer to the appellants collectively as the Kwinana parties. They
were the unsuccessful applicants in
a rescission application before
Grenfell AJ in the Gauteng Division of the High Court, Johannesburg
(high court), and appealed against
its decision refusing to rescind
and set aside two default judgments previously granted by Dosio AJ in
favour of the respondents.
They are Mr Lulama Smuts Ngonyama and the
trustees of the Khululekile Family Trust (the Khululekile Trust),
collectively referred
to as the Ngonyama parties.
Background
[2]
During 2018, the
Ngonyama parties instituted action in the high court against the
Kwinana parties. Their particulars of claim essentially
alleged the
following: during or about 2005, the Ngonyama parties entered into an
oral agreement with Mr Kwinana (the 2005 agreement),
in terms of
which the latter would act as agent and attorney for the Ngonyama
parties in order to procure a 6,5% shareholding in
Eyabantu Capital
Consortium (Pty) Ltd (Eyabantu Consortium). In the execution of his
obligations in terms of the 2005 agreement,
Mr Kwinana advised that
the shareholding should be held for the Khululekile Trust by another
trust. Mr Kwinana thus caused the Eyabantu
Trust to hold 6,5%
shareholding in Eyabantu Consortium as the agent and for the benefit
of the Khululekile Trust. At the time, Mr
Kwinana was one of the
trustees of the Eyabantu Trust. The Eyabantu Trust also held a
further 6,5% shareholding in Eyabantu Consortium.
[3] Pursuant hereto, so it was
alleged, the Eyabantu Trust orally agreed with the Khululekile Trust
during
November 2006 that the former would transfer 50% of all income
derived from its 13% shareholding in Eyabantu Consortium to the
Khululekile
Trust (the 2006 agreement). The particulars of claim also
alleged that as agents for the Ngonyama parties, the Kwinana parties
owed
the former a duty to fully account for all income that accrued
to them pursuant to the 2006 agreement. On the back of these
allegations,
the Ngonyama parties claimed that the Kwinana parties
render an account for debatement ‘in respect of their shareholding
interest’
in Eyabantu Consortium, and the Khululekile Trust claimed
transfer of the said 6,5% holding to it from the Eyabantu Trust.
[4] The Kwinana parties filed a
notice of intention to oppose the action on 11 January 2019. Despite
a notice
of bar filed on 21 January 2019, they failed to file a plea
within the period provided for in the notice of bar. Dosio AJ granted
default judgment in terms of the particulars of claim on 15 April
2019 against the first and second appellants and on 17 April 2019
against the third appellant. The Eyabantu Trust took a decision ‘not
to contest the default judgment’ but to seek to resolve
the matter
amicably through dialogue. No doubt the same applied to Mr Kwinana.
Six months later, however, the Kwinana parties launched
the
rescission application against the Dosio AJ orders. As I have said,
the application failed, hence the appeal.
[5] Two parties filed an
application in this Court to be joined as parties in the appeal (the
intervening
parties). They were Eyabantu Consortium and Eyabantu
Capital (Pty) Ltd (Eyabantu Capital). Eyabantu Capital holds 46,56%
shareholding
in Eyabantu Consortium. The Ngonyama parties opposed the
application. After hearing counsel on 24 February 2022, we dismissed
the
application for intervention with costs, including the costs of
two counsel. We indicated that reasons for this order would be
furnished
in due course. In what follows, I firstly give reasons for
the dismissal of the intervention application and thereafter consider
the appeal.
Intervention application
[6] The intervening parties
principally averred that in terms of the written shareholders
agreement between
Eyabantu Consortium and its shareholders, including
the Eyabantu Trust, Eyabantu Capital held a right of pre-emption in
respect of
the shares in question and Eyabantu Consortium had an
obligation to see to the enforcement of that right. This constituted
direct
and substantial interests, so it was contended, that afforded
the intervening parties the right to be joined and to seek relief in
the appeal.
[7]
In
Pheko and Others
v Ekurhuleni City
[1]
,
Nkabinde J set out the test for joinder as follows:
‘The
test for joinder requires that a litigant have a direct and
substantial interest in the subject-matter of the litigation, that
is, a legal interest in the subject matter of the litigation which
may be affected by the decision of the Court. This view of what
constitutes a direct and substantial interest has been explained and
endorsed in a number of decisions by our courts.’
[2]
These
decisions include
Amalgamated
Engineering Union v Minister of Labour,
[3]
Aquataur (Pty) Ltd v Sack and
Others
[4]
and
Bowring NO v
Vrededorp Properties CC and Another.
[5]
[8] Therefore, the intervening
parties had to show a legal interest in the subject matter of the
appeal that
could be prejudiced by the order on appeal. The subject
matter of the appeal was whether the Kwinana parties had made a case
for
the rescission of the Dosio AJ orders in the court a quo. The
intervening parties had no legal interest therein. They only had an
indirect interest, in the sense that for the appeal of the Kwinana
parties to succeed would suit their interests.
[9] What the intervening parties
sought to do, was to obtain a rescission of the Dosio AJ orders at
their
own instance and on their own grounds, without ever having
applied for that relief. That constituted an impermissible attempt to
have this Court determine a matter as court of first instance. The
remedy of the intervening parties was to institute proceedings
for
the rescission of these orders, in which the reasons for their delay
and their grounds for the rescission would be ventilated
and the
Ngonyama parties would be afforded a proper opportunity to respond
thereto. For these reasons, we dismissed the application
for
intervention with costs, including the costs of two counsel.
The appeal
[10]
I turn to the consideration of the appeal. The sole submission of the
Kwinana parties before us was that the Dosio
AJ orders should have
been set aside under Uniform rule 42(1)
(a)
,
on the basis that the particulars of claim did not disclose a cause
of action against any of them.
Rule
42(1)
(a)
provides:
‘(1) The
court may, in addition to any other powers it may have,
mero
motu
or upon the application of any party affected, rescind
or vary:
(a)
an
order or judgment erroneously sought or erroneously granted in the
absence of any party affected thereby.’
In
Lodhi 2 Properties Investments CC v Bondev
Developments (Pty) Ltd
[6]
this Court held that where a plaintiff is procedurally entitled to a
judgment in the absence of the defendant, that judgment cannot
be
said to have been granted erroneously in the light of the
subsequently disclosed defence. The existence or non-existence of a
defence on the merits was found to be an irrelevant consideration
and, if subsequently disclosed, cannot transform a validly obtained
judgment into an erroneous judgment.
[7]
[11]
Mr Kwinana argued that the particulars of claim did not disclose a
legal basis upon which he could be ordered to
account or to transfer
the shares. The Eyabantu Trust contended that
ex facie
the
registration number of the Khululekile Trust as reflected in the
particulars of claim, it was only registered during 2007, that
is,
after the 2005 and 2006 agreements had been entered into.
[12]
None of this, however, was raised in the founding affidavit in the
rescission application. The Kwinana parties only
purported to do so
in their replying affidavit, which the court a quo refused to admit,
for sound reasons. The replying affidavit
was filed seven months out
of time. The Kwinana parties ignored a notice under Uniform rule 30
to have the replying affidavit set
aside, and also failed to submit
an application for condonation for the late filing of the replying
affidavit. Moreover, it contained
what the court a quo aptly termed
‘an entirely new rescission application’, to the prejudice of the
Ngonyama parties. There is
no basis to interfere with the exercise of
the discretion of the court a quo in this regard. It follows that it
was not permissible
to raise the rule 42(1)
(a)
argument on
appeal.
[13]
In the result, the appeal is dismissed with costs, including the
costs of two counsel.
K E MATOJANE
ACTING
JUDGE OF APPEAL
APPEARANCES
For the First Appellants:
D J Combrink
Instructed
by:
Du Toit Attorneys
Webbers Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For the Second and Third Appellants:
E van Vuuren SC
Instructed
by:
Erasmus de Klerk Incorporated
Webbers Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For
the Respondent:
L J Morrison SC and T Scott
Instructed
by:
Knowles Husain Lindsay Inc
Claud
Reid Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For
the Intervening Parties:
R Stockwell SC
Instructed
by:
Erasmus de Klerk Incorporated
Webbers Attorneys, Bloemfontein
[1]
Pheko and Others v Ekurhuleni Metropolitan
Municipality
(Socio-Economic
Rights Institute of South Africa as Amicus Curiae)
[2015]
ZACC 10;
2015 (5) SA 600 (CC); 2015 (6) BCLR 711 (CC).
[2]
Ibid para 56.
[3]
Amalgamated Engineering Union v Minister of
Labour
1949 (3) SA 637
(A) at 659.
[4]
Aquataur (Pty) Ltd. v Sack and Others
[1988]
ZASCA 86
;
1989 (1) SA 56
(A) at 62.
[5]
Bowring NO v Vredendorp Properties CC
[2007] ZASCA 80.
[6]
Lodhi 2 Properties Investments CC v Bondev
Developments (Pty) Ltd
[2007] ZASCA
85
;
2007 (6) SA 87
(SCA)
(
Lodhi
)
.
[7]
Lodhi
paras 25 and 27. See also
Freedom
Stationery (Pty) Limited and Others v Hassam and Others
[2018] ZASCA 170
;
2019 (4) SA 459
(SCA) para 18
.
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