Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 455South Africa
Turner Morris One (Pty) Ltd v Steyn (2024/018423) [2025] ZAGPJHC 455 (12 May 2025)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Turner Morris One (Pty) Ltd v Steyn (2024/018423) [2025] ZAGPJHC 455 (12 May 2025)
Turner Morris One (Pty) Ltd v Steyn (2024/018423) [2025] ZAGPJHC 455 (12 May 2025)
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sino date 12 May 2025
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
Number:
:
2024/018423
(1)
REPORTABLE:
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
(3)
REVISED:
In the matter between:
#
# TURNER
MORRIS ONE (PTY) LTDPlaintiff
TURNER
MORRIS ONE (PTY) LTD
Plaintiff
and
WILLEM
HENDRIK
STEYN
Defendant
Coram
:
Sawma AJ
Heard
:
24 April 2025
Delivered
:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to
the parties’ legal representatives
by
email. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 10h00 on 12
May 2025.
JUDGMENT
Introduction
[1]
In this matter the applicant, who describes
itself as Turner Morris One (Pty) Ltd, applies for the provisional,
alternatively, final
sequestration of the respondent, Mr Willem
Hendrick Steyn. The application is opposed by the respondent
principally on the basis
that the debt relied upon by the applicant
is disputed.
[2]
the
founding papers the applicant asserts that it concluded an oral
agreement of loan with the respondent on the 3
rd
March 2023 in terms of which the applicant would loan to the
respondent the sum R1 120 000.00 to be utilised for the development
of property and that on the same day the respondent signed an
acknowledgement of debt acknowledging liability for that amount.
[3]
The
applicant relies upon Section 8 (g) of the Insolvency Act
[1]
for the order that it seeks, alleging that the respondent gave
written notice of his inability to discharge this debt to the
applicant.
Citation Issues
[4]
From the outset something needs to be said
concerning the citation of the applicant, the citation of the
respondent and the reference
to his marital status. In so far as the
citation of the applicant is concerned, in both the notice of motion
and the founding affidavit
the identity in the captions describe the
applicant as “Turner Morris One (Pty) Ltd (Registration number
2022/349116/07)”.
It is common cause between the parties that
the entity bearing that registration number is the entity Turner
Morris (Pty) Ltd.
The entity Turner Morris One (Pty) Ltd bears
registration number 2016/176260/07. In the founding papers the
citation of the applicant
occurs
sans
any reference to its registration
number. It is identified merely by way of reference to its name
“Turner Morris One (Pty)
Ltd”.
[5]
The applicant, however, explains in its
reply that the reference to the registration number of Turner Morris
(Pty) Ltd (as opposed
to Turner Morris One (Pty) Ltd) was in error.
In as much as the acknowledgement of debt and written demand both
identified the
creditor at issue as “Turner Morris One (Pty)
Ltd”, for the purpose of this judgement I will assume in favour
of the
applicant that it is in fact Turner Morris One (Pty) Ltd that
was intended to be the applicant in these proceedings and that it
is
in fact that entity that is before Court.
[6]
As to the respondent’s citation, it
is common cause that his given identity number is incorrect. This was
conceded by the
applicant in reply. In as much as the respondent has
in fact been brought before Court, nothing further need be said on
this score.
[7]
It
is trite that an applicant is required to make out his/her or its
case in the founding affidavit. Section 9 (3) (a) (ii) read
with (9)
(3) (c) of the Insolvency Act
[2]
requires the applicant to
inter
alia
set
out the marital status of the respondent and if he is married the
full names and date of birth of his spouse, and if an identity
number
has been assigned to the spouse, the identity number of such spouse.
If the applicant is unable to provide these details
the applicant is
required to explain why. The particulars required include, if the
respondent is married, whether he is married
in or out of community
of property
[3]
. As observed by
Leveson J
[4]
“…
the
question, then, is whether Courts can overcome that problem. In my
opinion, if the provision is peremptory, it is the business
of the
applicant to lay all relevant facts before the Court. A situation
ought not to be allowed to develop where a Court might,
for want of
averments, grant an order against a joint estate where only one
spouse has been cited. If the statute enjoins that
the order must be
made against both spouses, that, and nothing else, is what must be
done. On that basis it will become the duty
of the applicant to
inform the Court fully…”.
[8]
Whilst it is common cause between the
parties that the respondent is married, as already observed, the
founding papers shed no light
on the marital regimen. It is, of
course, notionally open to a Court to consider, if a proper case for
winding up has been made
out, issuing a provisional order coupled
with an appropriate order requiring the marital regimen of the
respondent to be confirmed
prior to the return day. I accordingly
turn to consider whether a case has been made for an order of
sequestration. That issue
must in turn be adjudicated in light of the
dispute concerning the existence of the debt itself.
Is the Debt Disputed
On Bona Fide Reasonable Grounds
[9]
The
test to be applied in determining the central issue in this matter is
trite, and it is whether the claim has been disputed on
bona
fide
reasonable
grounds.
[5]
Whilst
bona
fides
relate
to the respondent’s subjective state of mind, reasonableness
speaks to whether, objectively, the facts alleged by the
respondent
in law constitute a defense
[6]
.
[10]
The debt relied upon by the applicant is
said in the founding affidavit to be premised on an oral agreement of
loan concluded between
the applicant and the respondent on the 3
rd
March 2023 in terms of which the applicant was to loan the sum of R1
120 000.00 to be utilised for development of property. The
applicant
asserts that, on the same day (3 March 2023) the respondent signed an
acknowledgement of debt, thereby acknowledging
liability for this
sum.
[11]
The respondent does not dispute having
signed the acknowledgement of debt but takes strident issue with the
proposition that he
has ever been indebted to the applicant or that
he concluded a loan agreement with the applicant on the 3
rd
of March 2023. The respondent pertinently challenges the applicant to
adduce evidence (in reply) demonstrating the advance of money
under
the alleged loan, a challenge to which the applicant did not rise.
[12]
The respondent explains that during or
about August of 2017 he and one Fritz Reilling (“Mr Reilling”)
were co-directors
in certain entities and that, from time to time,
the applicant’s deponent one Mr Cooke, together with his wife,
Mrs Cooke,
advanced loans to such entities, or at least certain of
them. The respondent avers that historically one of the loans
advanced
by Mr & Mrs Cooke was to an entity Villa Fantasia (Pty)
Ltd (“Villa Fantasia”), the latter in turn represented by
Mr Reilling. Mr Reilling, I should mention, has deposed an affidavit
confirming the content of the answering affidavit in so far
as it
relates to him. In the answering affidavit the respondent provides
details concerning the transaction and adduces emails
and related
documentation in corroboration thereof. That includes the details
that follow.
[13]
A business plan had been prepared
concerning the development of low-cost housing and it was presented
to Mr & Mrs Cooke at their
business premises (at the time located
in City Deep). Later the same day, subsequent to the presentation,
Mrs Cooke communicated
that the loan, which was to have no fixed term
of repayment but would attract interest at the prime rate calculated
monthly, would
be advanced. The amount lent and advanced was the sum
of R3 000 000,00 and it was to be used toward the purchase
price
of an immovable property known as Farm Vogelstruisfontein 231
IQ (lake lease extent Ext 5) situated in Florida, Roodepoort Gauteng.
The R3 000 000,00 loan was paid by an entity Coastal Two
Higher (Pty) Ltd to the trust account of attorneys V S and B
who were
the conveyancing attorneys appointed to attend to the registration of
transfer of the property from the seller to Villa
Fantasia. The loan
was reduced by, inter alia, a payment in 2018 in the amount of
R2 000 000,00. As of August 2021,
there was a capital
balance of R1 000 000,00 still outstanding.
[14]
The respondent avers that, in respect of
the R2 000 000,00 payment referenced above, in discussing
the application for
his sequestration with Mr Reilling, he was
appraised of the fact that payment in reduction of the loan to Villa
Fantasia in the
sum of R2 000 000,00 had been made by QS
Bureau Quantity Surveyors, a partnership between the respondent and
Mr Reilling,
this payment having been effected on the 10
th
July 2018 as evidenced by the email trail referred to below.
[15]
Corroboration for this version was provided
by way of an email with attachments, and which email was transmitted
by Mr Cooke to
the respondent on the 8
th
of August 2021. The email speaks to a then outstanding debt, the
subject line of which records “Loan John and Brenda”
(being the first names of Mr and Mrs Cooke) and addresses repayment.
Attached to that email is an interest calculation and a check
requisition form dated 10
th
July 2018, the amount being R2 000 000,00 and the
motivation being recorded as “John Harcourt Cooke Loan”,
together with an Absa proof of payment dated 10 July 2018, reflecting
that payment was made in the sum of R2 000 000,00.
Also
attached is a string of communications between Mr Cooke on the one
hand and Mr Reilling on the other (either directly or represented
by
one Amanda Botha) speaking to the outstanding loan, a compromise in
full and final settlement between the parties and payment
of a
specified amount (R900 000.00) to achieve that end, all this between
August and November of 2021. I mention that although
the e-mail
speaks to an amount owing by the respondent and Mr Reilling, the
respondent’s version concerning who made the
loan and to whom,
was not seriously challenged, an issue addressed in more detail
below.
[16]
In so far as the signing of the
acknowledgement of debt is concerned, the respondent alleges that he
was contacted by Mr Cooke who
asserted that an amount remained
outstanding in respect of the loan to Villa Fantasia and that this
occurred at a time that certain
buildings in Jeppestown had been
hijacked and he was, at the time, then looking to raise funds by
liquidating assets so as to pay
what Mr Cooke alleged to be owing in
respect of the loan to Villa Fantasia. Against this background the
respondent says that when
the acknowledgement of debt was provisioned
to him, Mr Cooke had explained that he required some form of
acknowledgement relating
to the outstanding sum lent and advanced to
Villa Fantasia.
[17]
It is in this context that I consider the
respondents assertion that the application is premised on false and
misleading facts,
and that the acknowledgement of debt was presented
pursuant to a misrepresentation. That is because the indebtedness (if
it remained
extant) was not an indebtedness to the applicant, did not
arise from any loan in March 2023, and was not a loan made to the
respondent.
The respondent also asserts that he considers the conduct
of Mr Cooke in his presentation of the acknowledgement of debt in the
above circumstances to be fraudulent and thus not binding on him. The
respondent also alleges that based on Mr Cooke’s wrongful
conduct he elected to and has in fact cancelled the acknowledgement
of debt.
[18]
Objectively speaking, the facts asserted by
the respondent constitute a defense in law and sufficient
particularity has been provided
to preclude a finding that the
version is not
bona fide.
It
is not premised on bald allegation absent particularity.
[19]
That alone would justify dismissing this
application. What compels that outcome is that the applicant, in
reply, does not deal with
the substance of the allegations advanced,
this purportedly because it seeks to avoid prolixity. As already
stated, despite the
challenge made inviting the applicant to adduce
proof of the loan said to have been made on the 3
rd
of March 2023 and forming the substance of the recordal in the
acknowledgement of debt, the applicant simply says it vehemently
denies the content of the answering affidavit and the averments so
made. As to the detailed version of the 2017 loan, the applicant
(incorrectly in my view) adopts the stance in the replying affidavit
that these allegations do not raise a
bona
fide
dispute of fact. The allegations
otherwise remain unaddressed.
Conclusion
[20]
I
accordingly find that there is genuine and
bona
fide
dispute
as to whether the respondent is indebted to the applicant. In the
result the appropriate order is to dismiss the application.
[7]
[21]
That leaves the issue of costs to be dealt
with. The joint practice note prepared by the parties drew to my
attention that the applicant
had filed its heads of argument,
practice note and chronology on the 26
th
of October 2024 but, despite demands made on the respondent, it
failed to reciprocate. The respondents’ heads were due on
or
before the 12
th
November 2024. On the 13
th
of November 2024, a letter was sent to the respondent requesting that
it deliver the requisite documents within a period of five
days but
to which no response was received. This resulted in the applicant
bringing an application to compel the production thereof
on the 13
th
February 2025.
[22]
On the 18
th
of February 2025 and in response to the application to compel, the
respondent’s attorneys of record requested that the application
be pended for ten days in anticipation of receiving the respondent’s
documentation and which request the applicant acceded
to so as to
avoid incurring further unnecessary costs.
[23]
Despite the lapse of the ten days requested
the respondent still failed to deliver its heads of argument and
related documentation.
That in turn left the applicant with
insufficient time to enroll the application to compel before the
allocated date for the hearing
of this matter. The joint practice
note pertinently recorded the applicant’s prejudice that arose
from this conduct. When
this matter was allocated, I caused the file
content to be downloaded from caselines in order to prepare for the
hearing. At that
time there were still no heads of argument filed on
behalf of the respondent.
[24]
The
respondent’s persistent failure to timeously comply with its
obligation cannot go unchecked. The revised Consolidated
Practice
Directive 1 of 2024, currently applicable to this division, contains
repeated references to a party’s lack of co-operation
attracting punitive cost orders by the Court
[8]
.
Practice Directive 25.14 applies specifically to the enrollment of
opposed motions and provides in part that a delinquent party
risks an
award of a punitive costs order (and the legal practitioner an
interdict against charging the client a fee) where the
prescripts
relating to opposed motions are not complied with through the
delinquency of one party.
[25]
With these facts in mind, it is appropriate
in this matter that the outcome of this application does not carry
with it the usual
order for costs.
The Order
[26]
In the result I make an order in the
following terms;
1.
The application for the sequestration of
the respondent is dismissed;
2.
Each party is to bear its own costs;
#
# AG SAWMA AJ
AG SAWMA AJ
# JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
JOHANNESBURG
For the
Applicant:
Advocate T Mirtle
Instructed
By:
Lori Wiskin
Schultz
Wiskin Incorporated
For the
Respondent:
Advocate CB Garvey
Instructed
By:
Otto Krause Inc
[1]
Act
24 of 1936
[2]
Act
24 of 1936
[3]
By
virtue of the provisions of Section 17 (4) (b) read with
Section 11
of the
Matrimonial Property Act 88 of 1984
[4]
Detkor
(Pty) Ltd v Pienaar
1991 (3) SA 409
W at 410 H-I
[5]
See
Exploitatie-en Beleggingsmaatschappij Argonauten 11 BV and Another V
Honig
2012 (1) SA 247
(SCA) at 251 H -252 A [11], reaffirming the
principle that the Badenhorst Rule adopted in the matter of
Badenhorst V Northern
Construction Enterprises Limited
1956 (2) SA
346
(T) at 347 and reaffirmed in Kalil v Decotex (pty) ltd and
another (1) SA 943 (A) at 980 (B), is of equal application to both
winding up and sequestration proceedings
[6]
Gap
V Gold Reach Trading
2016 (1) SA 261
(WCC) at 269 [26]
[7]
Exploitatie-en
Beleggingsmaatschappij Argonauten 11 BV and Another V Honig supra at
251 J [11]
[8]
see
for example Practice
Rule 19.2
,
25.14
,
25
,
19
,
27.16
,
29.16
, just by
way of example
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