Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 386South Africa
CADAC Pension Fund and Others v Nash and Others (43585/2019) [2025] ZAGPJHC 386 (16 April 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
16 April 2025
Headnotes
to seek permission to sue for the interdict in the same notice of motion as the one in which Mr. Nash prayed for the interdict itself. It appears that Francis J took the view that the interdict application was not properly before him for that reason, and that the intervention applications had to fail as a result.
Judgment
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## CADAC Pension Fund and Others v Nash and Others (43585/2019) [2025] ZAGPJHC 386 (16 April 2025)
CADAC Pension Fund and Others v Nash and Others (43585/2019) [2025] ZAGPJHC 386 (16 April 2025)
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sino date 16 April 2025
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
16 April 2025
Case No. 43585/2019
In the matter between:
THE
CADAC PENSION FUND
First
Applicant
ANTONY
LOUIS MOSTERT NO
Second
Applicant
JOHANNES
ESTERHUIZEN NO
Third
Applicant
KAREN
KEEVY NO
Fourth
Applicant
and
SIMON
JOHN NASH
First Respondent
CADAC
(PTY) LTD
Second
Respondent
ANTOINETTE
CRONJE
Third Respondent
IRIS
SCHOEMAN
Fourth
Respondent
SAMANTHA
MAYS
Fifth
Respondent
NMG
ADMINISTRATORS (PTY) LTD
Sixth Respondent
INTEGRITY RETIREMENT
FUND
ADMINISTRATORS
(PTY) LTD
Seventh
Respondent
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J
:
1
The question in this case
concerns the circumstances under which an interim interdict granted
to maintain the
status quo
pending the outcome of an
application for final relief may be discharged. I find that such an
interdict will rarely be capable
of discharge unless there is no
longer a live issue between the parties in the application for final
relief. In my view, there
remains a live issue between the parties in
this case, and the interim interdict sought to be discharged must
remain in place.
The litigation in this case has taken on a high
degree of procedural complexity. Accordingly, before explaining my
reasons for
the conclusion I have reached, I must first set out some
of this complexity.
The
Fund and its operations
2
The first applicant, the Fund, is a pension fund in
curatorship. The second, third and fourth applicants are its
curators. The second
respondent, CADAC, is a company, which, until
2022, employed all of the Fund’s members. CADAC’s
business has since
been sold to another company, Hudaco, which now
employs those who worked for CADAC at the time of its sale. In
October 2022, after
Hudaco’s purchase of CADAC’s
business, CADAC apparently changed its name to EFN Investments (Pty)
Ltd. However, following
the convention adopted by the parties to this
litigation, and by the other Judges of this division who have been
seized with litigation
involving the Fund since 2022, I shall
continue to refer to the second respondent as “CADAC”.
3
On 1 March 2003, the Fund formally closed to new members and
became paid up. However, for reasons that are not necessary to set
out, the Fund’s erstwhile trustees continued to operate the
Fund as if it had not been closed. The Fund accepted new members,
and
purported to accord them the pension benefits defined in its rules.
At least some of this was done with the approval of the
Registrar of
Pension Funds.
4
In 2010, the Fund was placed in curatorship, but it continued
to accept contributions from members who had joined the Fund after
1
March 2003. In November 2018, the first respondent, Mr. Nash, applied
to withdraw his pension benefits from the Fund. In addition
to being
a putative member of the Fund, Mr. Nash is a director of CADAC and
was a trustee of the Fund before it was placed under
curatorship. The
Fund believes Mr. Nash to be responsible for substantial wrongdoing
in this role, including the misappropriation
of surpluses the Fund
accumulated while it was under his control.
5
The Fund refused to pay the benefits Mr. Nash claimed. It
apparently took the view, based on the wrongdoing it imputed to him,
that
Mr. Nash may be liable for deductions to his pension fund
benefits allowed under
section 37D
of the
Pension Funds Act 24 of
1956
. On 6 December 2019, Mr. Nash instituted proceedings seeking a
declaration that he is entitled to his full pension fund benefits,
and that the decision to withhold his benefits until his liability
under
section 37D
had been determined was unlawful.
6
The curators of the Fund then took the view that the Fund had
been allowed to operate irregularly for a lengthy period; that
individuals
who had been permitted to join the Fund since 1 March
2003, and who had been treated as members of the Fund despite joining
after
that date, including Mr. Nash, should not have been so treated;
that those individuals should be refunded the contributions they
had
made plus interest; and that the Fund should cease to accept any
further payments from CADAC or its employees. For this reason,
too,
the curators resisted Mr. Nash’s application for declaratory
relief.
7
The curators communicated their decision to the Fund’s
putative members in a letter dated 25 March 2020. The effect of the
decision was that a large number of people, including Mr. Nash, who
had thought they were members of a pension fund, and entitled
to all
the benefits associated with such membership, were suddenly told that
they were not, after all, members of the Fund and
were not entitled
to such benefits. They were instead, so the curators decided,
entitled only to the reimbursement of their contributions
plus
interest.
Mr.
Nash’s interdict application
8
Mr. Nash then brought an application in this court to restrain
the Fund from giving effect to the curators’ decision pending
the outcome of his application for declaratory relief. The third,
fourth and fifth respondents, Ms. Cronje, Ms. Schoeman and Ms.
Mays,
all of whom were, or until 25 March 2020 thought they were, members
of the Fund, applied for leave to intervene in Mr. Nash’s
application.
9
The papers disclose a long history of acrimony between Mr.
Nash and the curators, particularly Mr. Mostert. In one of the
skirmishes
arising from this acrimony, Mr. Nash was placed under
restraint from instituting further litigation against the Fund and
its curators
without the leave of the court. It followed that, in his
application to restrain the implementation of the 25 March 2020
decision,
Mr. Nash also had to seek leave to institute that
application.
10
On 14 May 2020, Francis J
dismissed the application for an interdict and the applications for
leave to intervene. He did so primarily
on the basis that Mr. Nash
ought to have sought and obtained leave to bring his interdict
application before instituting it. In
other words, Mr. Nash was not
entitled, so Francis J held, to seek permission to sue for the
interdict in the same notice of motion
as the one in which Mr. Nash
prayed for the interdict itself. It appears that Francis J took the
view that the interdict application
was not properly before him for
that reason, and that the intervention applications had to fail as a
result.
11
However, on 17 May 2021, the Supreme Court of Appeal reversed
Francis J’s decision. It granted Mr. Nash leave to bring his
interdict application. The Supreme Court of Appeal also granted Ms.
Cronje, Ms. Schoeman and Ms. Mays leave to intervene in it.
The
Supreme Court of Appeal furthermore granted an interim interdict
restraining the Fund from refusing to accept further contributions
from CADAC or the Fund’s putative members, and it restrained
the Fund from refunding any of the contributions it had already
received (see
Nash v Cadac Pension Fund
[2021] ZASCA 144
(11 October 2021) (“
Nash
”)).
The
second intervention application
12
Since the Supreme Court of Appeal granted the interim
interdict, several more putative members of the Fund have applied for
leave
to intervene in Mr. Nash’s application. They also seek to
broaden the relief sought in that application. In essence, they
seek
to review and set aside the curators’ decision to treat the
Fund as paid up, and to force a change in the Fund’s
rules
which would retroactively condone the irregular operation of the Fund
for several years. In other words, they seek to restore
their status
as members of a pension fund, rather than as individuals with a right
to be reimbursed their contributions, which
is how the curators
currently wish to treat them. All but one of them was unsuccessful in
seeking leave to intervene at first instance,
but this court upheld
their appeal against that decision in
Cronje v CADAC Pension
Fund
(case no. A2023-125604, 14 April 2025). The review relief
will now be pursued in tandem with the declaratory order Mr. Nash
seeks
in the main application.
The
application to discharge the interim interdict
13
The Fund now seeks to discharge part of the interim interdict
the Supreme Court of Appeal granted. The Fund says that circumstances
have so altered since the interim interdict was granted that it no
longer serves any real purpose. In particular, the Fund seeks
the
discharge of the restraint on it refunding any of its putative
members’ contributions in line with the curators’
25
March 2020 decision. The Fund says that most if not all of its
putative members have tired of the litigation about the status
and
benefits associated with their contributions. They want to take
whatever money they can, and get out of the fight. In at least
a few
cases, the Fund’s putative members are of fairly advanced age,
and are, the Fund says, in urgent need of their money.
The Fund says
it seeks no more than the right to give these members a choice: wait
until the status of the Fund is resolved, or
take the curators’
25 March 2020 offer. In restraining the Fund from “refunding
any contributions from or on behalf”
of those putative members
(see
Nash
, paragraph 23), the Supreme Court of Appeal has
ruled out that possibility until Mr. Nash’s application for
declaratory relief
is finally determined.
14
CADAC opposes the application to discharge the interdict. I
have no doubt that Mr. Nash, and his long-running animus toward the
curators, lurks behind that opposition. However, the question before
me has little to do with the motive for which Mr. Nash, or
anyone
else, might oppose the application. It is rather concerned with
whether, objectively, there is a basis in fact and in law
to
discharge the interdict.
Jurisdiction
15
It was initially argued that I have no jurisdiction to
interfere with the interdict, because it was granted by the Supreme
Court
of Appeal. However, at the outset of oral argument, Mr. Tsele,
who appeared for CADAC, abandoned that contention. The concession
was
a wise one. Unless a court of appeal specifically elects to retain
jurisdiction over a matter – for example by granting
and
administering a structural or a supervisory order – an order
granted on appeal becomes the order of the court of first
instance
(see in this respect
General Accident Versekeringsmaatskappy
Suid-Afrika Bpk v Bailey NO
1988 (4) SA 353
(A) at 358H and
Occupiers of Saratoga Avenue v City of Johannesburg Metropolitan
Municipality
2012 (9) BCLR 951
(CC) at paragraphs 7 to 9).
16
It follows that, where a court of appeal substitutes the order
of a lower court with an interim interdict, the interim interdict
becomes the order of the lower court. The execution, variation or
discharge of that order is a matter for the lower court, not
for the
court of appeal. In other words, only this court has the jurisdiction
to vary or discharge the interim interdict the Supreme
Court of
Appeal granted in this case. The Supreme Court of Appeal released the
matter from its jurisdiction when it substituted
Francis J’s
order with the interim interdict.
No
case for discharge made out
17
The question is accordingly whether, on the ordinary
principles applicable, I should discharge the interim interdict. It
is uncontentious
that a court has the power to vary or discharge its
own interim order (see
Bell v Bell
1908 TS 887)
, but the test
for doing so is an exacting one (see
Meyer v Meyer
1948 (1) SA
484
(T) at 490). Generally speaking, there must be a material change
in the circumstances that necessitated the interim order which
deprives the order of its original purpose.
18
The purpose of the interim interdict granted on appeal in this
case was to preserve the
status quo
until Mr. Nash’s
application for final relief is determined. It seems to me that a
court will rarely revisit such an interdict
unless the facts have so
altered as to render the application for final relief moot. While the
primary purpose of an interdict
pendente lite
is to protect
the parties’ rights, it also preserves the effectiveness of the
court’s jurisdiction to finally determine
the dispute in due
course. It is hard to think of circumstances under which a court
would set aside an interdict
pendent lite
, so long as the
parties still wish the court to resolve a dispute by making an order
that would have some practical effect.
19
In this matter, Mr. Nash’s application for final relief
seems very much alive. At the centre of that case is the issue of
whether Mr. Nash, and the other putative members, are entitled to the
full range of pension benefits afforded to members of the
Fund under
the Fund’s rules, or merely to the return of their
contributions plus interest. On the face of things, the resolution
of
this dispute would plainly have practical effect. It would first
determine what the putative members of the Fund are really
entitled
to – a range of pension fund benefits, or merely the refund of
their contributions plus interest. Second, the resolution
of the main
case would entail a final pronouncement on whether the 25 March 2020
decision was open to the curators as a matter
of law.
20
The Fund says that there is no material difference between the
value of the contributions it intends to return plus interest and
the
payouts that the putative members would be entitled to as members of
the Fund. However, I do not think that has been established.
The tax
implications of the Fund’s refund proposals are far from clear.
The Fund points to a non-binding private opinion
issued by the South
African Revenue Service (SARS) under
section 75
of the
Tax
Administration Act 28 of 2011
which states that those who accept the
refunds the curators propose will be “deemed to be members of
the Fund for income
tax purposes”. But the problem with the
directive is precisely that it is not binding (see, in this respect,
the legal position
spelt out in
section 88
of the
Tax Administration
Act). However
remote the likelihood that SARS would resile from a
non-binding private opinion, the fact remains that, legally speaking,
the putative
members who accept refunds are exposed to the risk of
tax liability that person receiving a pension fund benefit properly
so-called
is not.
21
However, even if there was no difference between the value of
the reimbursement the curators propose and the value of the pension
benefits the putative members could expect to receive if they or Mr.
Nash are successful in the application for final relief, there
would
still, in my view, be a live controversy between the parties. This is
because there is an underlying point of legality at
stake in the
application for final relief. Mr. Wasserman conceded in argument that
the curators’ refund scheme would not
be permissible if the
Fund could not lawfully be treated as closed and paid up since 1
March 2003. It follows that if Mr. Nash
ultimately defeats the Fund’s
contention that he is not entitled to his pension benefits because he
was never a member of
the Fund, or if the putative members ultimately
succeed in reversing the curators’ decision to treat the Fund
as fully paid
up and closed, then there would be no semblance of
legality to the curators’ 25 March 2020 decision.
22
It was clear in argument that the Fund considers the
possibility of this outcome to be very remote, but it seems to me
that Mr.
Nash’s prospects of success in the main application
have become no better or worse since the interim interdict was
granted.
There is, accordingly, no change in the strength of the case
to be argued in the main application that might justify the discharge
of the interim interdict.
23
In sum, it seems to me that, insofar as the interim interdict
was intended “to preserve the
status quo
” (see
Nash
, paragraph 21), it has retained its purpose in the years
since it was granted.
The
putative members who wish to be reimbursed of their contributions
24
The real difficulty in this case is that the interdict binds
parties that were not before the Supreme Court of Appeal when it was
granted. It was not just the parties to the appeal who could not be
refunded. It was any putative member of the Fund who had not
accepted
a refund at the time the Supreme Court of Appeal made its order. The
restraint on refunding contributions to putative
members of the Fund
was granted without hearing from those who, the Fund says, now wish
to accept their refunds. Those individuals
must sit on the side-lines
while Mr. Nash’s application is brought to finality, together
with the review application brought
by the putative members joined to
the case on 14 April 2025.
25
Mr. Wasserman, who appeared for the Fund, argued that Mr. Nash
and a few other putative members may still be interested in the
application
for final relief, but the circumstances are now that most
putative members of the Fund are no longer interested. However, none
of the putative members who wish to accept the refunds are before me.
The Fund did not join them to its application, and I have
precious
little admissible evidence of what their attitude really is.
Accepting for a moment the Fund’s case at its highest,
it seems
to me that what the Fund really asks me to do is pave the way to make
the putative members an offer they can no longer
refuse, because this
litigation has stretched out for so long that they are now desperate
to get whatever they can. To permit the
Fund to offer such a “choice”
in these circumstances would seem to me to negate the very purpose
for which the interim
interdict was granted.
26
I am sympathetic to those who may feel that they have been
tangled up in litigation over which they have no control, and who
wish
to walk away from it. I am also open to the possibility that the
Fund will prevail in the main case, and the refund scheme embodied
in
the 25 March 2020 decision will ultimately be implemented. But
neither of these misgivings entitles me to discharge the interim
interdict. The only question before me is whether, on the facts, the
interim interdict serves the purpose that for which it was
originally
granted: to preserve the
status quo
pending the application
for final relief. For the reasons I have given, the interim interdict
clearly retains the purpose for which
it was granted, and must
accordingly be left in place.
27
The surest way to resolve the problem for all concerned is to
bring the main application to a hearing as soon as possible. It seems
to me that none of the parties has done what they should to achieve
that outcome. The record in this case is littered with interlocutory
skirmishes (which have necessitated at least two appeals), proposals
to accelerate or settle the litigation which have been stymied
by
excessive formalism and point-taking, and a large measure of delay.
That must stop. The Fund can best serve the interests of
those it
says it sought to help in this application by bringing the main case
to a prompt conclusion.
Costs
28
Mr. Wasserman accepted that, if the application to discharge
the interim order failed, the costs of the application should follow
the outcome of the main case. I heard no real argument to the
contrary from Mr. Tsele.
Order
29
Accordingly, the application is dismissed, with costs to be
costs in the cause.
S
D J WILSON
Judge
of the High Court
This
judgment is handed down electronically by circulation to the parties
or their legal representatives by email, by uploading
to Caselines,
and by publication of the judgment to the South African Legal
Information Institute. The date for hand-down is deemed
to be 16
April 2025.
HEARD
ON: 26 March 2025
DECIDED
ON:16 April 2025
For
the Applicants JG Wasserman SC
Instructed
by Assheton Smith Ginsburg Inc
For the Second
Respondent: M Tsele
(Heads of argument drawn
by GD Wickins SC and M Tsele)
Instructed by KWA
Attorneys
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