Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 649South Africa
Association for Advancement of Black Account of South Africa NPC v Gidini and Others (2023/117011) [2025] ZAGPJHC 649 (25 March 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
25 March 2025
Headnotes
on 2 December 2021 in terms of its MOI, at which various individuals were appointed as directors of the applicant: Ms Maqomo as president; Mr Gidini, the first respondent, as vice-president, Ms Jojo, the second respondent, as treasurer general and Mr Abbey as secretary general. Pursuant to the resignation of Mr Abby on 23 May 2023, a purported board meeting was held between Mr Gidini and Ms Jojo in the absence of Ms Maqomo, at which it was resolved to nominate Mr Mkwanazi, the third respondent, as director and secretary general.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Association for Advancement of Black Account of South Africa NPC v Gidini and Others (2023/117011) [2025] ZAGPJHC 649 (25 March 2025)
Association for Advancement of Black Account of South Africa NPC v Gidini and Others (2023/117011) [2025] ZAGPJHC 649 (25 March 2025)
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sino date 25 March 2025
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NUMBER:
2023-117011
1.REPORTABLE:
NO
2.OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
3.REVISED:
NO
25
March 2025
Judge
Dippenaar
In
the matter between:
ASSOCIATION
FOR THE ADVANCEMENT
APPLICANT
OF BLACK ACCOUNTANTS
OF
SOUTH AFRICA NPC
And
MZUKISI
LUYANDA GIDINI
FIRST RESPONDENT
SPOKAZI
JOJO MAQOMA
SECOND RESPONDENT
BANELE
BEDNOCK MKWANAZI
THIRD RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to
the parties’ legal representatives by e-mail. The date and time
for hand-down is deemed to be 10h00 on the 25
th
of MARCH
2025.
DIPPENAAR
J
:
[1]
This is an opposed application concerning
the board of directors and the management of the applicant. The
applicant is the Association
for the Advancement of Black Accountants
of Southern Africa NPC (‘ABASA’), a non-profit company,
duly incorporated
and registered as such. The applicant was
established in 1985 to promote the professional interests of black
persons engaged in
the accounting profession. In terms of its
memorandum of incorporation (‘MOI’) it was incorporated
with effect from
18 August 2016 as a non-profit company.
[2]
The first, second and third respondents, Mr
Gidini, Ms Jojo and Mr Mkwanazi are individuals who are members and
office bearers of
the applicant. The nub of the dispute relates
to their suspension and the termination of their membership and
directorship
of the applicant at the behest of the applicant’s
National Council. The chairperson of the National Council, Mr Phillip
Rakgwale,
is the deponent to the applicant’s affidavits.
[3]
The background facts are shortly the
following. An elective annual general meeting of the applicant was
held on 2 December 2021
in terms of its MOI, at which various
individuals were appointed as directors of the applicant: Ms Maqomo
as president; Mr Gidini,
the first respondent, as vice-president, Ms
Jojo, the second respondent, as treasurer general and Mr Abbey as
secretary general.
Pursuant to the resignation of Mr Abby on 23 May
2023, a purported board meeting was held between Mr Gidini and Ms
Jojo in the
absence of Ms Maqomo, at which it was resolved to
nominate Mr Mkwanazi, the third respondent, as director and secretary
general.
[4]
The applicant’s case in sum is that
from July 2022, the respondents embarked on a stratagem to unlawfully
seize control of
the applicant and performed a series of unlawful
acts. Pursuant to a preliminary investigation, that resulted in the
suspension
of their membership on 31 August 2023 by way of a letter
dated 1 August 2023. The respondents did not appeal their suspension
in
terms of the applicant’s code of conduct but adopted the
stance that their suspension was unlawful. They continued with their
unlawful actions, including attempting to unlawfully remove Ms Maqoma
as president and seize control of the board. The respondents
further
effected changes to the registered directors of the applicant by
removing Ms Maqoma as director on the applicant’s
CIPC profile
without authority and gained control of the applicant’s bank
account at Standard Bank.
[5]
That
resulted in their membership being terminated by way of notice on 3
November 2023 at the instance of the president of the applicant’s
National Council, following alleged violation of the conditions of
their suspension. The National Council had invoked clause
5.10(3)(b)
[1]
of the MOI and
further relied on a resolution of a Special General Meeting
resolution of 28 August 2023 to take over the control
of the
applicant on an interim basis. According to the applicant it has an
undeniable clear right to have its affairs properly
controlled in
accordance with its MOI and Companies Act free of unlawful
interference. It was contended that the respondents’
membership
had been lawfully terminated and they have no right to retain office
bearer functions, as they forfeited the functions
and benefits of
their membership by their conduct which warranted the termination of
their membership. The respondents did not
cease their unlawful
activities and continued to conduct themselves as directors of the
applicant.
[6]
The respondent’s primary defence was
to challenge the lawfulness of their suspension and removal as
members and directors
of the applicant, contending that the
provisions of the
Companies Act 2008
pertaining to the removal of
directors were not complied with. They further challenged the
authority of the National Council, contending
that the applicant
relied on an incorrect interpretation of the MOI. They contended that
as appointed directors, they bear a fiduciary
duty to the applicant
and the proper utilisation of its assets including monies held in its
bank account, until they are lawfully
removed from office. The
respondents further challenged the authority of Mr Rakgwale, the
deponent to represent the applicant and
disputed the applicant’s
response to its r 7 notice.
[7]
Two opposed applications were launched
under the above case number. The first, an urgent application dated 9
November 2023, launched
by the applicant seeking interdictory and
related relief against the respondents (‘the interdict
proceedings’). No
order was granted and the matter was removed
from the roll on 21 November 2023. The second, a separate application
dated 14 June
2024 launched by the respondents.
[8]
The applicants sought interdictory relief:
(a) restraining the respondents from disrupting the smooth running
and general proper
administration of the applicant; (b) holding
themselves out to be office bearers of the applicant or acting in any
manner that
represented to third parties that they have authority to
represent to applicant or communicate in public about internal and
administrative
matters relating to the applicant; (c) unlawfully
using the name, corporeal and incorporeal assets of the applicant
including the
applicant’s Glue up platform to send
communication to the applicant’s members and stakeholders; and
(d) interfering
with the financial administration of the applicant or
purporting to act on behalf of the applicant to the applicant’s
bank
or otherwise to financial institutions. In addition, orders were
sought (e) directing the respondents to forthwith restore to their
previous state, the applicant’s Standard Bank banking platform
and its Companies and Intellectual Property Commission (CIPC)
profile
in relation to the members of the applicant; and (f) authorising the
Sheriff and, if necessary the South African Police
Service to take
all reasonable steps to enforce and execute the orders granted in the
event of the respondents failing to comply
therewith, together with
ancillary relief. In addition, the applicant sought declaratory
relief that the applicant’s termination
of the respondent’s
membership to it in terms of the notices of immediate termination of
membership was valid. At the hearing,
the applicants sought final
interdicts as the interim relief sought had become academic due to
the effluxion of time.
[9]
The respondents in turn sought declaratory
orders:
(1) that all decisions and
actions taken by Mr Rakgwale and/or Ms Maqoma and/or interim board
and/or any member of the applicant’s
National Council since
on/or about 1 August 2023, in respect of the Applicant and its
members, stakeholders and/or third parties,
is declared null and void
ab initio and is set aside. (2) Any contracts and/or binding
agreements entered into in the period in
paragraph 1 above shall be
subject to review and/or ratification by the board of directors of
the Applicant’
, together with
ancillary relief.
[10]
At
the hearing, this court, with reference to
Morudi
[2]
raised the issue of non-joinder of the various parties who have a
direct and substantial interest in the relief sought by the
respondents. It was self-evident that there were numerous parties who
would be affected by the relief sought, as conceded by the
respondents.
[11]
In addition, the applicants’ newly
appointed attorney of record was not aware that the respondents’
application had
been opposed and had not had sight of all the
application papers. The opposing papers had also not been uploaded
onto the electronic
platform and had not been brought to the court’s
attention.
[12]
After discussion between the parties, they
agreed to postpone the respondents’ application
sine
die
, with costs reserved. It was
submitted that the respondents’ application was self- standing
and should be dealt with in due
course. On that basis the
respondents’ application was postponed. The parties did not
however agree to a postponement of
the applicant’s application,
but insisted that it be dealt with. The present proceedings thus
concern the relief sought by
the applicant in the interdict
proceedings.
[13]
Prior to the hearing, this court had
further invited the parties to make supplementary submissions on the
issue whether any of the
issues raised in the applications had become
of academic interest only or, put differently, had become moot. The
applicant delivered
submissions. whilst the respondents elected not
to. None of the parties took the court into their confidence by
seeking to deliver
supplementary affidavits regarding what had
transpired since the last supplementary affidavits were delivered by
the respective
parties during January and March 2024.
[14]
In its supplementary heads of argument, the
applicant submitted that the crux of the interdict sought had become
moot through the
effluxion of time as the term of office of the
respondents had come to an end on 3 December 2024. It submitted that
the court’s
intervention was still required to restore control
over the applicant’s bank account to ‘duly appointed
office bearers’,
as it remained under the control of the
respondents. The respondents on the other hand contended that the
issues had not become
moot.
[15]
The
issue of mootness can arise at any time. It is apposite to refer to
Akani
Retirement Fund,
wherein the Supreme Court of Appeal held
:
:
[3]
‘
[30]…This
Court did not say that mootness should always be raised formally in
the affidavits, as the full court seemed to
suggest. Indeed, it may
not always be possible to raise the question on affidavit,
particularly where the issues raised for consideration
have been
overtaken by subsequent events that either arise after the filing of,
or are not foreshadowed in, the earlier affidavits.
There can be no
absolute procedural bar (as the full court seemed to perceive) to
mootness
being raised for the first time in the heads of argument filed on
appeal. If anything, it has come, not infrequently to
be raised mero
motu by courts.’
[31] Here the facts
were undisputed. The fact of Akani’s removal and its
replacement with Momentum as CINPF’s provider
of administration
services, and the death of
Messrs Dangazele and Sema, are
common cause.
Insistence on affidavits, not only placed form above substance, but
also put the parties, the full court and in turn
this Court to the
unnecessary trouble and expense of having to consider issues that on
any reckoning are academic…’
[16]
Similar considerations arise in the present
instance. The relevant facts were similarly undisputed. The fact of
the respondents’
suspension and removal as members is common
cause. Whether their removal as directors was valid is an issue that
has become of
academic interest only for purposes of the interdictory
relief, given that their term of office came to an end on 3 December
2024.
The applicant’s contention that the respondents’
term of office expired on 3 December 2024, was not disputed, and was
conceded by the respondents in argument.
[17]
There is thus no live controversy at
present as to whether the respondents are directors of the applicant
and no cause of action
to consider at the time the court was asked to
make a pronouncement on the issue. Factually, the respondents are no
longer directors
of the applicant as their term of office has come to
an end. Consequently, they do not have any entitlement to perform the
management
functions of the applicant’s affairs, including
exercising control over its bank account and must relinquish such
control.
They should have done so when their term of office came to
an end.
[18]
The
applicant’s MOI
[4]
clearly
specifies the steps which must be taken to appoint directors and to
replace the directors’ whose terms of office
have expired. It
is regrettable that none of the parties considered it prudent to
provide the court with supplementary affidavits
providing updated
information regarding the current state of affairs and what steps
have been taken. The submissions made in argument
amount to
presenting evidence from the bar and cannot be accepted. A court
cannot be left to speculate as to the current state
of affairs of the
applicant.
[19]
Having had the benefit of considering a
full set of the papers in the respondents’ application after
the hearing, it appears
clear that both applications are intertwined.
The respondents’ counter application is centrally predicated on
the making
of certain factual findings in the applicant’s
interdict application. As such the agreement between the parties to
the postponement
of only the respondents’ application and to
have the two applications dealt with in separate hearings was
ill-conceived.
[20]
The applicant at the hearing properly
conceded that the interdictory relief sought was no longer a live
controversy. Ultimately,
the issues pertaining to the respondents’
suspension and the termination of their membership of the applicant
remain relevant
only insofar as the respondents’ counter
application is concerned. Although cast as a self-standing
application, the respondents’
application is in essence a
counter application. To avoid a piecemeal hearing, it would be
apposite to consider the declaratory
relief sought by the applicant
that the termination of the respondents’ membership of the
applicant was valid, together with
the respondents’
application, if the applicant elects to persist with such relief.
[21]
As
the interdictory relief sought by the applicant is no longer a live
controversy, no order will be made in relation thereto. Had
that been
the only relief sought, the application would have been struck from
the roll.
[5]
The declaratory
relief sought by the applicant is to be postponed
sine
die.
Given the relevant facts, it would be just that the respective
parties be held liable for their own costs.
[22]
In the result, the following order is
granted:
[1] The application for
declaratory relief is postponed sine die, to be enrolled for hearing
on the same date before the same judge
as the application launched by
the respondents under case number 2023-117011;
[2] The applicant and the
respondents are liable for their own costs.
EF
DIPPENAAR
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT JOHANNESBURG
APPEARANCES
DATE
OF HEARING
:
04 FEBRUARY 2025
DATE
OF JUDGMENT
:
25 MARCH 2025
APPLICANT’S
COUNSEL
: Ms
DM Mangadi (attorney)
APPLICANT’S
ATTORNEYS
: Mangadi Masego Attorneys
RESPONDENT’S
COUNSEL
: Adv. L. Peter
RESPONDENT’S
ATTORNEYS
: Lowndes Dlamini Attorneys
[1]
Authorising it to ‘
temporarily
assume the powers and functions of the Board if most of the Board
Members resign or are removed and are not replaced
in accordance
with the provisions of the Memorandum of Incorporation until such
time as a new Board can be appointed.’
[2]
Morudi
and Others v NP Housing Services and Development Co Ltd and Others
[2018]
ZACC 32
;
2019 (2) BCLR 261(CC)
(25 September 2018) paras 29-31.
[3]
Akani
Retirement Fund Administrators (Pty) Limited and Others v Moropa and
Others
(1125/2022
and 1129/2022)
[2025] ZASCA 13
(21 February 2025) paras 30-31.
[4]
In clauses 4 and 5.
[5]
MEC
for Health, Gauteng v Dr Regan Solomons
(1089/2023)
[2024] ZASCA 184
(30 December 2024)
para
36.
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