Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 274South Africa
All Phone Solutions (Pty) Ltd and Another v Goldblatt (2022/049298) [2025] ZAGPJHC 274 (13 March 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
13 March 2025
Headnotes
of the issues requiring determination.
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
>>
2025
>>
[2025] ZAGPJHC 274
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## All Phone Solutions (Pty) Ltd and Another v Goldblatt (2022/049298) [2025] ZAGPJHC 274 (13 March 2025)
All Phone Solutions (Pty) Ltd and Another v Goldblatt (2022/049298) [2025] ZAGPJHC 274 (13 March 2025)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2025_274.html
sino date 13 March 2025
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
Number:
2022-049298
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
In
the matter between:
ALL
PHONE SOLUTIONS (PTY) LTD
First Applicant
COME
BACK CORP (PTY) LTD
Second Applicant
and
BRADLEY
GOLDBLATT
Respondent
JUDGMENT
This
judgment is handed down electronically by circulation to the parties’
legal representatives by email and by being uploaded
to CaseLines.
The date and time for hand down is deemed to be 13 March 2025.
DE OLIVEIRA, AJ
Introduction
[1]
On 6 December 2022, the applicants
obtained, on an urgent basis, an order in terms of which the estate
of the estate of the respondent
was placed under provisional
sequestration. For reasons that are not presently relevant, the
provisional sequestration order lapsed,
was revived and thereafter
extended from time to time, the most recent of which was on 29 July
2024, when the provisional sequestration
order was again extended and
the application was postponed for hearing before me on 10 March 2025.
[2]
When the application was heard before me,
Mr. Lazarus, who appeared on behalf of the respondent, submitted that
there are effectively
three issues that require determination in the
matter, namely:
(a)
Whether the applicants duly authorised the
institution and prosecution of the proceedings, including whether
their attorneys of
record were duly authorised to institute and
prosecute the sequestration proceedings on behalf of the applicant.
(b)
Whether the applicants have the requisite
locus standi in iudicio
in that they are said to be
not
the true creditors of the respondent (if the respondent is indeed the
true debtor).
(c)
Whether the respondent is the true debtor
or whether a company, of which the respondent is the sole director,
Cellular Data Invest
(Pty) Ltd (“CDI”), is the true
debtor.
[3]
Mr. Roux, who appeared before me on behalf
of the applicants, took no issue with Mr. Lazarus’ summary of
the issues requiring
determination.
The Applicants’
Case
[4]
The deponent to the founding and replying
affidavits is an individual by the name of Anthony Goodman. He was,
at the time of deposing
to the founding affidavit, the applicants’
general manager. He subsequently became the sole director of the
first applicant.
[5]
According to the applicants, the respondent
is indebted to them in the amount of approximately R760 000.00
arising out of certain
fraudulent misrepresentations made by the
respondent to the applicants, and the theft under false pretences by
the respondent of
the aforesaid sum. In particular, the indebtedness
is said to arise out of the following circumstances.
[6]
In or around March 2022, the applicants and
Mr. Goodman decided that it was necessary to appoint a professional
private investigator
to assist them in obtaining information and
documents that were required in a number of civil and criminal legal
matters in which
they were involved. It suffices for present purposes
to mention that these cases included a case instituted by the
applicants against
a well-known online retailer, a criminal matter
(which is still pending), wherein Mr. Goodman is the accused person,
and an action,
in which Mr. Goodman is the plaintiff and in which he
seeks damages against a large well-known insurer.
[7]
In order to determine whether any of the
parties in the aforesaid litigation had acted unlawfully, the
applicants engaged the respondent
and contracted with him to provide
professional private investigation services. In doing so, the
respondent, according to the applicants,
made various representations
pertaining to the services that he would provide, as well as to the
information and documentation
that he would obtain and present to the
applicants and Mr. Goodman. The applicants contend that they were
induced to contract with
the respondent as a result of the aforesaid
representations. The applicants contend further that the
representations were,
to the respondent’s knowledge, false and
fraudulent, in that,
inter alia
,
he never intended providing the applicants with usable, admissible,
authentic information and/ or documents, which would be of
assistance
to them in their various legal matters.
[8]
In due course, the respondent furnished Mr.
Goodman with various documents and information which suggested that
the criminal proceedings
against Mr. Goodman were being continued
despite a lack of evidence, and an intention on the part of the
National Prosecuting Authority
not to continue therewith because of
monies having illegally been paid to various persons, including but
not limited to the lead
prosecutor in the case, the deputy director
of public prosecutions and two investigating officers.
[9]
As a consequence of having received this
information and documentation, which appeared extremely convincing,
Mr. Goodman approached
the Hawks and requested them to consider the
“evidence” provided by the respondent, which they
undertook to do.
[10]
It later turned out that all of the
documentation and information furnished by the respondent to Mr.
Goodman were manufactured by
the respondent, with the intention of
misleading the applicants and Mr. Goodman into believing that they
were authentic so that
the respondent would continue being paid for
his “services”.
[11]
According to the applicants, the Hawks have
now shifted the focus of their investigation to the respondent, and
Mr. Goodman has
been advised that such investigation is ongoing.t
[12]
As part of the respondent’s
“investigations”, he introduced Mr. Goodman to a certain
Shaun Heneke, an individual
who, according to the respondent, worked
at Nedbank and who could provide the applicants with evidence of the
aforementioned bribes
having been made. In due course, however, Mr.
Heneke confessed to Mr. Goodman that all of the information and
documentation furnished
to him and the applicants by the respondent
were false and manufactured. Mr. Heneke also confessed to Mr. Goodman
that he (Mr.
Heneke) had received gratification from the respondent
in return for participating in the scheme, which participation
included
spending significant time with Mr. Goodman, telling him
about his and the respondent’s “investigations” and
the
discovery of the alleged conspiracy against Mr. Goodman.
[13]
After learning of the above, Mr. Goodman,
on 29 August 2022, confronted the respondent, who admitted to Mr.
Goodman that everything
he had told Mr. Goodman was a lie and that
all of the “evidence” he had gathered, of clandestine
activities against
the applicants and Mr. Goodman, was false. This
included manufacturing and falsifying alleged proofs of payment by
certain entities
to the persons mentioned above and who were
responsible for, and engaged in the prosecution against Mr. Goodman.
[14]
There was thus no cause for the payments to
be made by the applicants to the respondent, alternatively if there
was such cause,
it is void as a consequence of the misrepresentations
and has been treated as such by the applicants. They are accordingly
out
of pocket in an amount of more than R760 000.00.
[15]
Matters came to a head at the end of August
2022, when Mr. Goodman and Mr. Goldblatt exchanged various WhatsApp
messages. The extract
attached by the applicants to their founding
papers is not disputed by the respondent. In terms thereof, it
appears to me to be
undeniable that the respondent (i) acknowledged
his indebtedness and (ii) acknowledged that he was unable to pay his
debts. He
also sought further time to pay the applicants and
otherwise offered to make certain arrangements with them. According
to the applicants,
the WhatsApp exchange is undeniable proof that the
respondent has committed various acts of insolvency, namely:
(a)
in terms of section 8(c) of the Insolvency
Act 24 of 1936 (“the Act”) in that the respondent made or
has attempted to
make a disposition of his property which has or will
have the effect of prejudicing his creditors or preferring one
creditor above
another; and/or
(b)
in terms of section 8(e) of the Act in that
he has made or offered to make arrangements with his creditors to
release him wholly
or partially from his debts; and/or
(c)
in terms of section 8(g) of the Act in that
he has given notice in writing to one or more of his creditors that
he is unable to
pay his debts.
[16]
It is further submitted by the applicants
that the respondent is actually insolvent and that his estate falls
to be sequestrated
in order that his creditors can be dealt with
equitably, and so that no creditors are preferred above others.
[17]
As far as an advantage to creditors is
concerned, it is trite to state that the applicant has at least an
evidentiary burden to
show that the sequestration of the respondent’s
estate will be to the advantage of his creditors. In this regard, Mr.
Goodman
states that the respondent has, on numerous occasions,
advised him that he is not only employed part-time as a police
officer,
but that he is also self-employed and runs a number of
businesses. Accordingly, so say the applicants, the respondent must
earn
a substantial income from all of his business activities.
Furthermore, the applicants submit that, in view of the scheme
perpetrated
on the applicants by the respondent, it is likely that he
has perpetrated similar schemes on other unwitting parties and that
such
conduct requires further investigation by a trustee.
[18]
I should add, in concluding a summary of
the applicants’ case, that it is set out in the founding papers
in considerable detail,
supported by documentary evidence and
required of the respondent to engage meaningfully and comprehensively
with its contents.
The Respondent’s
Case
[19]
In what is a worryingly terse answering
affidavit, the respondent:
(a)
seeks condonation for the late filing
thereof;
(b)
disputes that Mr. Goodman lacks the
requisite
locus standi
because he is neither a director nor employee of either applicant;
(c)
further disputes that the applicants have
authorised the institution and prosecution of the proceedings;
(d)
asserts that the true creditor, if monies
are owed by the respondent at all, is Mr. Goodman; and
(e)
denies that he, the respondent, is the true
debtor, asserting that CDI is the true debtor view of the fact that,
according to the
respondent, it was CDI with which Mr. Goodman and
the applicants contracted for in regard to the services.
[20]
Remarkably,
whilst the respondent appears to concede that either he or CDI was
engaged to render the services in question, he denies
having
represented to Mr. Goodman that any documentation obtained would be
admissible in court proceedings because, and I quote
“…Anthony
Goodman was well aware that the documents which I would be able to
source would be obtained in an unlawful
manner.” According to
the respondent, therefore, the purpose of the documents and
information would be to intimidate State
witnesses and prosecutors in
the criminal proceedings against Mr. Goodman. The respondent himself
calls this an “unlawful
agreement”. He submits further
that, as a result, the agreement was void
ab
initio
and of no force or effect.
[1]
[21]
Furthermore, and as mentioned, the
respondent also disputes that, because no payments were made to him
directly, he is not the true
debtor. According to him, the true
debtor, if any, is CDI.
[22]
As far as the respondent’s alleged
insolvency is concerned, he does no more than to baldly deny it. He
did not, for example,
disclose his financial position to this Court
at all, let alone by furnishing documentary evidence in regard
thereto.
[23]
What is most concerning about the
respondent’s affidavit, however, is that he does not deal at
all with the serious allegations
made against him by the applicants,
nor does he deal with the WhatsApp exchange in any way whatsoever.
More about this later.
Analysis
[24]
The issue pertaining to authority can be
disposed of swiftly. Firstly, the respondent appears to have
conflated the separate issues
of authority, on the one hand, and
locus standi
on the other. As far as the former is concerned, on 1 March 2024, the
respondent’s attorneys delivered a notice in terms
of rule 7 of
the Uniform Rules of Court calling on the applicants to prove that
their attorneys, Mendelson Attorneys Inc., are
and were at all
material times authorised to represent the applicants, which must be
taken to dispute that such attorneys were
authorised to institute and
prosecute the proceedings on behalf of the applicants. In response
thereto, the applicants confirm
that, at all material times, Mr.
Goodman was and remains authorised to represent them in the
proceedings (notwithstanding that
this was not the respondent’s
true complaint in terms of its rule 7 notice) and that Mendelson
Attorneys are and were at
all material times duly authorised to
represent the applicants in these proceedings. In support thereof,
the applicants annex resolutions
by the first and second applicants
confirming the above, and to the extent required or necessary,
ratifying any step taken by the
applicants and/or Mendelson Attorneys
in the proceedings to date. There is no doubt, in my view, that
Mendelson Attorneys are duly
authorised to represent the applicants
in these proceedings and that they have been authorised and/or
ratified by the applicants.
[25]
As
far as Mr. Goodman is concerned, the complaint that he lacks
locus
standi
is
misplaced for the reason that he is not a litigant in these
proceedings; he is merely the deponent to the applicants’
affidavits. It is trite to state that there is no need for any
person, whether he or she is a witness, or someone who becomes
involved,
especially in the context of authority, to be authorised
other than the litigant’s attorneys. It is, for example,
irrelevant
whether a deponent to an affidavit is authorised to depose
thereto.
[2]
In any event, it is
evident from the applicants’ response to the respondent’s
rule 7 notice that Mr. Goodman is so
authorised.
[26]
As
far as the second ground of opposition is concerned, I do not
consider the respondent’s dispute in regard to the
locus
standi
of the applicants to be genuine and
bona
fide
.
In this regard, whilst it is trite to state that insolvency
proceedings should not be employed in the face of genuine and
bona
fide
disputes of fact,
[3]
the
operative phrase here is
bona
fide
.
So, for example, and in the first instance, whilst the respondent
disputes that the payments in question were made by the applicants
(on the basis that the proofs of payment reflect the payer as being
“Aedo Processing Solutions (Pty) Ltd”, as opposed
to the
first applicant), it appears from the CIPC search furnished to the
respondent in response to his rule 7 notice that, on
4 June 2018, the
first applicant changed its name from Aedo Processing Solutions to
that of the first applicant, namely All Phones
Solutions (Pty) Ltd.
[27]
The same can be said of the respondent’s
bald denial that the applicants are indeed the appropriate creditors.
Mr. Goodman
pertinently alleges that, at all material times, he was
acting for and on behalf of the applicants and it was they, the
applicants,
that made payments to the respondent and/or his
nominee/s. I do not consider the respondent’s dispute in this
regard to be
genuine and
bona fide
.
[28]
As far as the issue of the true debtor is
concerned, I likewise do not consider the respondent’s denials
in this regard to
be genuine and
bona
fide
. In the first instance, and as Mr.
Roux, who appeared before me on behalf of the applicants, pointed
out, in order for the respondent
to render services as a private
investigator, he had to do so and be registered as such in terms of
the Private Security Industry
Regulation Act 56 of 2001. The
respondent did not assert that he was registered in terms of this
Act.
[29]
Accordingly,
and in view of the fact that the three grounds of opposition are
unsustainable, and considering that the respondent
did not otherwise
take issue with the fact that a final sequestration will be to the
advantage of his creditors, or with the compliance
with statutory
formalities,
[4]
I am persuaded
that a proper case has been made out for a confirmation of the rule
nisi
and for an order placing the respondent’s estate under final
sequestration.
[30]
According I make the following order:
(a)
The rule
nisi
dated 6 December 2022, revived on 12 December 2023 and extended from
time to time, is hereby confirmed.
(b)
The estate of the respondent is placed
under final sequestration in the hands of the Master of this Court.
(c)
The costs of these proceedings shall be
costs in the administration of the respondent’s estate.
DE OLIVEIRA AJ
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
JOHANNESBURG
Counsel
for the Applicant:
C Roux
Intstructed
by:
Mendelson Attorneys Inc.
Counsel
for the First Claimant:
J Lazarus (Attorney)
Instructed
by:
Joshua Lazarus Attorneys
[1]
The
parties thus appear to be
ad
idem
that the underlying agreement was void, for one reason or another.
They all appear to have treated the agreement as such.
[2]
See
in the regard
Ganes
and Another v Telecom Namibia Ltd
2004 (3) SA 615
(SCA) at [19].
[3]
See
generally
Bardenhorst
v Northern Construction Enterprises (Pty) Ltd
1956 (2) SA 346 (T).
[4]
In
any event, I am satisfied that there has been due compliance with
section 9(4A) and 11(2A) of the Act.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Communication Genetics (Pty) Ltd v Schonenberger and Another (025959/2025) [2025] ZAGPJHC 338 (2 April 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 338High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
South African Securitisation Programme (Rf) (Pty) Ltd v Hakem Group (Pty) Ltd and Another (2023/009594) [2025] ZAGPJHC 230 (6 March 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 230High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
South African Reserve Bank v YWBN Mutual Bank (2025/059995) [2025] ZAGPJHC 518 (23 May 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 518High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
South African Roadies Association v National Arts Councils of South Africa and Others (2023/076030) [2024] ZAGPJHC 936 (20 September 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 936High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
South African Council for Architectural Profession v O'Reilly and Another (28641/2019) [2025] ZAGPJHC 559 (2 June 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 559High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar