Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 252South Africa
Mafoko Security Patrols Pty Ltd v Kheledi and Others (2023/036840; 2023/057409; 2023/085922; 2023/086107) [2025] ZAGPJHC 252 (7 March 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
7 March 2025
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Mafoko Security Patrols Pty Ltd v Kheledi and Others (2023/036840; 2023/057409; 2023/085922; 2023/086107) [2025] ZAGPJHC 252 (7 March 2025)
Mafoko Security Patrols Pty Ltd v Kheledi and Others (2023/036840; 2023/057409; 2023/085922; 2023/086107) [2025] ZAGPJHC 252 (7 March 2025)
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sino date 7 March 2025
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
Case
Number: 2023-036840
In
the matter between:
MAFOKO
SECURITY PATROLS (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
H
KHELEDI
First Respondent
PRIVATE
SECURITY SECTOR PROVIDENT FUND
Second Respondent
MA
LUKHAIMANE
N.O.
Third Respondent
SHERIFF
OF THE COURT
Fourth Respondent
Case
Number: 2023-057409
In
the matter between:
MAFOKO
SECURITY PATROLS (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
MT
MATJENA
First Respondent
PRIVATE
SECURITY SECTOR PROVIDENT FUND
Second Respondent
MA
LUKHAIMANE N.O.
Third Respondent
SHERIFF
OF THE COURT
Fourth Respondent
Case
Number: 2023-085922
In
the matter between:
MAFOKO
SECURITY PATROLS (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
MULALO
VIOLET MAFUNE
First Respondent
PRIVATE
SECURITY SECTOR PROVIDENT FUND
Second Respondent
MA
LUKHAIMANE N.O.
Third Respondent
SHERIFF
OF THE COURT
Fourth Respondent
Case Number: 2023-086107
In
the matter between:
MAFOKO
SECURITY PATROLS (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
MTHOKOZISI
JEROME MKHIZE
First Respondent
PRIVATE
SECURITY SECTOR PROVIDENT FUND
Second Respondent
MA
LUKHAIMANE
N.O.
Third Respondent
SHERIFF
OF THE COURT
Fourth Respondent
JUDGMENT
JM BERGER AJ:
[1]
In each of these four applications, which
were heard together, the applicant – Mafoko Security Patrols
(Pty) Ltd – seeks
substantive relief in three parts:
a.
First, an order reviewing and setting aside
a determination made by the third respondent, in her capacity as the
Pension Funds Adjudicator
(“PFA”), in terms of
section
30M
of the
Pension Funds Act 24 of 1956
;
b.
Second, an order reviewing and setting
aside the computation of arrear contributions made by the second
respondent, the Private
Security Sector Provident Fund, as directed
by the PFA in her impugned determination; and
c.
Third, an order directing that the dispute
“
between [the] Applicant and the
First and Second Respondent[s] be adjudicated de novo”
.
[2]
At the heart of each application was
Mafoko’s repeated failure, in some cases over years, to pay
contributions due on behalf
of an employee to the Fund. In each case,
the former employee in question had lodged a complaint with the PFA,
which was then sent
to Mafoko and the Fund, with the PFA giving them
a period within which to attempt to resolve the matter. In each case,
the complaint
remained unresolved, requiring an investigation and
subsequent determination by the PFA, which was made after requesting
the parties’
input. In each case, Mafoko simply ignored the
PFA.
[3]
In terms of
section 30O(1)
of the Act, a
determination of the PFA “
shall be deemed to be a
civil judgment of any court of law had the matter in question been
heard by such court, and shall be so
noted by the clerk or the
registrar of the court, as the case may be.”
In terms of
enforcement,
section 30O(2)
provides:
“
A writ or
warrant of execution may be issued by the clerk or the registrar of
the court in question and executed by the sheriff
of such court after
expiration of a period of six weeks after the date of the
determination, on condition that no application contemplated
in
section 30P
has been lodged.”
[4]
It
is common cause that no application contemplated in
section 30P
of
the Act was ever lodged in respect of any of the four determinations
at issue here. Subsection (1) of that provision empowers
any party
aggrieved by a determination of the PFA, “
within
six weeks after the date of the determination, [to] apply to the
division of the High Court which has jurisdiction, for relief”
.
In
Meyer
v ISCOR Pension Fund
,
the Supreme Court of Appeal made clear that what is contemplated by
section 30P
is not just an appeal (as opposed to a review), but “
an
appeal in the wide sense”
.
[1]
[5]
In
each case, once the relevant
determination
was filed with the Registrar of this Court, the former employee in
question sought and obtained a writ of execution.
It was at that
point, in each case, that Mafoko finally responded, approaching this
Court for urgent interdictory relief pending
the determination of
part B in each application. It is the part B relief in each
application that is currently before me, with
part A having
effectively been decided by Windell J on 13 February 2024 in
Mafoko
Security Patrols (Pty) Ltd v Moeketsi and Others
.
[2]
[6]
I
was advised by counsel for the applicant and the first respondent in
each case, Mr Mureriwa and Mr Mokwena respectively, that
the parties
agreed to be bound by the judgment in
Moeketsi
,
in which Windell J granted the following substantive order:
[3]
“
Pending
the determination of Part B, the first, second, third and fourth
respondents are hereby interdicted and restrained from
executing the
writ of execution issued out of the court on 18 September 2023.”
[7]
In that matter, the second to fourth
respondents, as is the case here, were the Fund, the PFA, and the
Sheriff respectively.
[8]
In oral argument, Mr Mureriwa clarified
that – contrary to the relief that is sought in prayer 1 of the
notice of motion in
each case – Mafoko’s primary concern
is not with the PFA’s determination in each case, but rather
with the Fund’s
calculations, and the manner in which such
calculations were made, in Mafoko’s absence. According to him,
Windell J’s
judgment makes it clear that these calculations are
incorrect.
[9]
It
may well be that Windell J’s finding
[4]
that “
[t]
he
amount reflected on the writ of execution [obtained by Moeketsi] is …
incorrect”
has
direct implications for the calculations made in respect of the
arrear contributions due in respect of each of the four first
respondents. That said, unless and until the writs at issue in the
four cases before me are set aside,
[5]
they remain in force and must be treated as valid.
[6]
[10]
In any event, Windell J’s order did
not set aside Mr Moeketsi’s writ of execution; it merely
interdicted its execution
pending the determination of part B. That
was the nature and extent of the relief sought by Mafoko in prayer 2
in part A of the
notice of motion in that case, and the very same
interim interdictory relief sought in the same prayer in the notices
of motion
in the four cases at issue here.
[11]
Mr
Mureriwa correctly conceded that the relief sought in respect of the
PFA’s determination cannot be granted. Leaving aside
the
question of whether such a determination could even be reviewed,
[7]
given its status as a deemed civil judgment of the High Court, the
review – if pursued – would have faced numerous
seemingly
insurmountable obstacles, such as non-compliance with
section 7(2)
of
the
Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000
.
[8]
More importantly, no case has been made out even to suggest that the
PFA acted in any way that would justify any of her four
determinations
being reviewed and set aside.
[12]
In so far as the Fund’s calculations
are concerned, Mafoko has not set out any basis upon which such
“decisions”
are reviewable. Two propositions were put to
Mr Mureriwa: first, that if the calculations are indeed wrong, that
may provide a
basis for the writs of execution to be set aside; and
second, that if the Fund did not conduct itself in accordance with
the PFA’s
determinations, then it could have been compelled to
act lawfully.
[13]
In respect of the second proposition, Mr
Mureriwa simply had no answer. In respect of the first, he sought to
rely on Windell J’s
judgment in
Moeketsi
,
going so far as to suggest – incorrectly I might add –
that a dismissal of this review would have no effect on the
“interdicted” writs of execution, because they will have
to be reissued. But because the alleged unlawfulness of those
writs
has yet to be considered in any court, let alone determined, they
must be treated as valid, and may still be relied upon.
[14]
If the relief in prayer 1 of part B of the
notices of motion cannot be granted, then it must follow that the
relief sought in prayer
2 – to direct the disputes between
Mafoko, the Fund, and each former employee to be adjudicated
de
novo
– also cannot be granted.
That leaves prayers 3 and 4, dealing with costs and “
further
and/or alternative relief”
, in
respect of which no concessions were made. I return to these shortly.
[15]
In the hearing, faced with the concerns I
had raised regarding the relief sought in the notices of motion, Mr
Mureriwa returned
to court after the lunch adjournment seeking to
withdraw the four cases. At this stage, he had been arguing for less
than 30 minutes,
having only arrived in court at 10h45, and having
failed to return at 12h00, when the hearing was scheduled to resume
after the
tea adjournment. (I had to attend to another matter at
11h30.) Mr Mureriwa only provided a reasonable excuse for his first
absence,
and apologised profusely for both.
[16]
Although I was unaware at the time,
Mafoko’s attorneys electronically delivered four notices of
withdrawal at about 14h15,
with each indicating that the reason for
the withdrawal was because “
the
Applicant intends to amend its papers.”
(None of the notices mentions costs.) What exactly this means was
therefore not put to counsel, and accordingly, cannot be taken
any
further. That said, Mr Mureriwa was clear that his instruction was
simply to withdraw the matters, and tender costs, and that
the
applicant committed to paying the arrear contributions in question to
the Fund.
[17]
When asked if his clients were willing to
consent to the cases being withdrawn, Mr Mokwena noted their
ambivalence, and was not
able to give an unequivocal answer. I
decided to proceed with the hearing so as not to waste time, and to
avoid any potential for
delay, reserving any decision on whether I
could still decide the matter on the merits. At that time, I formed
the view that given
how long it had taken for the matters to be
heard, I was dutybound – at the very least – to hear full
argument.
[18]
By
the end of the hearing, it was made clear to me by Mr Mokwena that
his clients did not consent to the matters being withdrawn.
Accordingly, for the purported withdrawals to come into effect, my
consent is required.
[9]
While
recognising that it is “
not
ordinarily the function of a court to force a party to proceed with
an action against its will or to investigate why the party
wishes to
abandon such action”
,
[10]
I am of the view that the following factors militate against the
grant of consent.
a.
The parties agreed that, as was the case in
Moeketsi
(before Windell J), these cases were to serve a similar purpose. If
these cases are simply withdrawn, many others will be left
unresolved. That would be to the former employees’ detriment,
and would result in this Court’s opposed motion roll
being
unnecessarily burdened with cases that could (and should) have been
speedily resolved.
b.
Each of the four cases before me was set
down by the first respondent’s attorneys, with the applicant in
each only delivering
heads of argument and a practice note once
directed to so by this Court. Just two weeks before the hearing, the
applicant had attempted,
without first securing the first
respondents’ consent, and without tendering costs, to remove
the matters from the roll.
Consent for the removals was not granted.
c.
Mafoko’s failure to participate in
the proceedings before the PFA, and its failure after securing
interim interdictory relief
to take any steps to get part B of each
review set down for hearing, strongly suggests that it is in no hurry
to have its former
employees’ complaints resolved. By allowing
it to withdraw the four cases before me, I would be making it more
difficult
for the systemic problems to be resolved.
[19]
In the circumstances, I cannot consent to
the four cases being withdrawn.
[20]
This then leaves the issues of costs, and
“
further and/or alternative
relief”
.
[21]
Although I am unhappy with how the
applicant has litigated these matters, including by taking up space
on the opposed motion roll
unnecessarily, effectively crowding out
other cases, I do not think that its conduct rises to the level
justifying the punitive
costs order sought by each of the first
respondents. If the tender of costs was indeed authorised, that would
provide another reason
not to grant such a costs order.
[22]
Regarding prayer 4, I cannot agree with Mr
Mureriwa that it provides me with the necessary jurisdiction to grant
relief that not
only was not expressly pleaded, but also not
contemplated in any of the applicant’s papers. Contrary to his
submissions,
this Court’s inherent jurisdiction to regulate its
own process cannot be used for the purpose sought – to resolve
the
underlying dispute without regard to the pleaded case.
ORDER
[23]
In the result, I make the following order
in respect of the applications brought under case numbers
2023-036840, 2023-057409, 2023-085922, and 2023-086107.
a.
The application is dismissed.
b.
The applicant is directed to pay the first
respondent’s costs, including the costs of counsel.
JM BERGER
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Dates:
Hearing:
5 March 2025
Judgment:
7 March 2025
Appearances:
For
the applicant in each case:
Mr I Mureriwa,
instructed by
Baloyi
Masango
Incorporated
For
the first respondent in each case: Mr I
Mokwena, instructed by Fisha
Attorneys
[1]
2003
(2) SA 715
(SCA) at para 8. See also,
St
Clair Moor and Another v Tongaat-Hulett Pension Fund and Others
2019 (3) SA 465
(SCA) at para 14.
[2]
[2024] ZAGPJHC 142
[3]
Para
2 of the order
[4]
At
paragraph 23 of her judgment
[5]
A
writ of execution may be challenged on the principle of legality.
See
Rand
West City Local Municipality v Quill Associates (Pty) Ltd and
Another
[2021]
ZASCA 150
at
para 6
[6]
MEC
for Health, Eastern Cape and Another v Kirland Investments (Pty) Ltd
t/a Eye & Lazer Institute
2014 (3) SA 481
(CC) at para 101, citing
Oudekraal
Estates (Pty) Ltd v City of Cape Town and Others
2004
(6) SA 222
(SCA) at para 26 with approval.
[7]
Not
only is there is no need for me to decide this question, but it
would be inappropriate to do so in the circumstances.
[8]
The
remedy in question, which is set out in section 230 of the Financial
Sector Regulation Act 9 of 2017, was
not
pursued; and Mafoko has not relied on section 7(2)(c) of PAJA
effectively to condone its failure to exhaust internal remedies.
[9]
Rule
41(1)(a)
[10]
Bondev
Midrand (Pty) Ltd v Puling and Another and a Similar Case
2017
(6) SA 373
(SCA)
at
para 8
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