Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 713South Africa
T.S.S and Another v First National Bank of SA Limited ta FNB and Another (2025/025807) [2025] ZAGPJHC 713 (8 March 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
8 March 2025
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## T.S.S and Another v First National Bank of SA Limited ta FNB and Another (2025/025807) [2025] ZAGPJHC 713 (8 March 2025)
T.S.S and Another v First National Bank of SA Limited ta FNB and Another (2025/025807) [2025] ZAGPJHC 713 (8 March 2025)
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sino date 8 March 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
HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
2025-025807
(1)
REPORTABLE: No
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: No
(3)
REVISED: Yes
8
March 2025
In
the matter between:
T[…]
S[…]
S[...]
First Applicant
N
AND C MAINTENANCE AND
Second Applicant
SPARES
(PTY) LTD
and
FIRST
NATIONAL BANK OF SA
First Respondent
LIMITED
t/a FNB
S[…]
S[...]
Second Respondent
JUDGMENT
DU PLESSIS J
# Introduction
Introduction
[1]
The first
applicant ("Ms S[...]") and second respondent ("Mr
S[...]") are in the process of divorce. They are
also
co-directors of the second applicant, […] and […] M[…]
and S[…] (Pty) Limited ("the company")
and
co-signatories of the company's bank accounts with the first
respondent, First National Bank (“FNB”), which Ms
S[...]
seeks to unfreeze. Ms S[...] (and the company) seek an order
declaring FNB's conduct in freezing the bank accounts
unlawful
and directing their immediate unfreezing.
[2]
Ms S[...] also seeks interdictory relief against Mr S[...],
prohibiting him from making false accusations and statements
to FNB
about the first applicant's dealings with the second applicant (a
so-called gagging order).
Urgency
[3]
Ms S[...] and the company assert that this matter is urgent. The
company must comply with its contractual obligations
towards service
providers, employees, and customers. The frozen accounts, they
submit, will lead to financial and reputational
ruin, which cannot be
undone later. Ms S[...] also cites household financial obligations
that require immediate attention.
[4]
FNB does not oppose the urgency of the matter and abides by this
Court's decision.
[5]
Mr S[...], however, submits that any urgency is self-created,
asserting that the Ms S[…] was aware of the account
freeze
from 4 February 2025 but only approached the Court on 22 February
2025.
[6]
Mr S[…] further contends that alternative funding sources were
available to the applicants, making the need for
urgent relief less
compelling. Part of the reason he sought to freeze the FNB account
was the fact that large sums of money were
transferred to an Investec
Bank account (which is not frozen), without Ms S[...] providing
substantive documentation for these
transactions. He thus claims that
Ms S[…] can use that money to make payments and that there is
no imminent crisis.
[7]
After launching this urgent application, Mr S[...]'s attorneys sent a
letter to the applicant's attorneys with a "with
prejudice"
proposal, proposing a solution to the problem of having to make
payments from a frozen account. That includes appointing
Mr S[...] as
a co-signatory to the bank accounts, as was agreed upon in a
Shareholders' Agreement in January 2025. Additionally,
both directors
must authorise transactions to ensure proper corporate governance and
prevent unilateral withdrawal of funds –
the reason for the
freezing of the accounts. Once this is in place, the parties can
approach the bank to uplift the freeze.
[8]
The
applicants made an application to have this letter struck out,
submitting that it is privileged
[1]
from disclosure even if the letter itself said "with prejudice"
and Mr S[...] indicated that it will be attached to the
answering
affidavit.
[9]
Ms S[...]'s
attempt to strike the respondent's "with prejudice" offer
from the record is misplaced. A "with prejudice"
offer is
not subject to the same restrictions as a "without prejudice"
communication, which is privileged and requires
the consent of both
parties for disclosure. By making the offer "with prejudice,"
Mr S[...] intentionally placed it on
record as an open and admissible
offer upon which he is entitled to rely. He is not disclosing an
offer from Ms S[...]; it is his
own offer. As was confirmed in
Agnew
v Union and South West Africa Insurance Co Ltd
,
[2]
a "with prejudice" offer is, by its very nature, an open
offer that the offeror allows to be referred to in proceedings.
The
letter will thus not be struck.
[10]
This offer also provides an alternative remedy, which undermines the
urgency of the application. The applicant has a
viable solution
outside of an urgent court order: implementing the agreed-upon
governance mechanisms and then approaching the bank
to unfreeze the
account. Urgency cannot be based solely on self-imposed limitations,
especially when the respondent has made a
good faith offer in line
with a previous agreement that removes the need for immediate court
intervention. The matter thus stands
to be struck from the roll for
lack of urgency.
[11]
I am compelled to address the applicant's contention that Mr S[...]
resigned from the company, because he sent an email
to that effect in
January, as this links to the issue of authorisation to deal with the
company's finances. His purported resignation
was not genuine and
unequivocal, as his subsequent actions indicate otherwise. Instead of
severing all ties with the organisation,
he continued to engage in
its affairs, maintain an active role in decision-making, and interact
with key stakeholders as though
still in office, with the knowledge
of Ms S[...]. His name is still on the company's stationary and used
in communications. This
conduct is inconsistent with a bona fide
resignation. Without a clear severance from the role and
responsibilities, Mr S[…]’s
claim to have resigned is
contrived and lacks legal effect.
[12]
Lastly, the
request for an interdict against Mr S[...] to prevent further alleged
defamatory statements is not legally sustainable.
While the right to
dignity and reputation is constitutionally protected, defamation is
ordinarily remedied through damages, not
an interdict.
[3]
Courts only grant prior restraint orders in exceptional cases where
the statements are clearly false, malicious, and likely to
cause
irreparable harm.
[4]
The applicant has not demonstrated such exceptional circumstances.
Absent clear, demonstrable falsehoods causing irreparable harm,
a
pre-emptive restriction on speech is unjustified.
[13]
Consequently, the interdict application thus stands to be struck from
the roll with costs for lack of urgency.
## Order
Order
[14]
The following order is made:
1. The application
to strike out is dismissed.
2. The matter is
struck from the roll for lack of urgency, with costs to be taxed on
scale B.
WJ
du Plessis
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Johannesburg
Date
of hearing:
4
March 2025
Date
of judgment:
8
March 2025
For
the applicants:
K
Kabinde instructed by Ndlovu Lindiwe Attorneys Inc
For
the first respondent:
Peterson
instructed by Glvoer Kannieappan Inc
For
the second respondent:
D
Goosen instructed by Scalco Attorneys
[1]
Absa
Bank Limited v Hammerle Group (Pty) Ltd
[2015] ZASCA 43
par 13.
[2]
1977 (1) SA 617
(A), see also
Van
Der Westhuizen v Akarana Homeowners' Association
[2023] ZAWCHC 220.
[3]
See Herbstein J, et al
The
Civil Practice of the High Courts and the Supreme Court of Appeal of
South Africa
.
5th ed. Juta; 2009 chapter 44 page 1475.
[4]
National
Media Ltd v Bogoshi
1998 (4) SA 1196
(SCA);
Midi
Television (Pty) Ltd v Director of Public Prosecutions (Western
Cape)
[2007] ZASCA 56
;
2007 (5) SA 540
(SCA).
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