Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 485South Africa
Engen Petroleum Limited v Jai Hind EMCC t/a Emmarentia Convenience Centre and Another (2022/034996) [2025] ZAGPJHC 485 (21 May 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
25 October 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Engen Petroleum Limited v Jai Hind EMCC t/a Emmarentia Convenience Centre and Another (2022/034996) [2025] ZAGPJHC 485 (21 May 2025)
Engen Petroleum Limited v Jai Hind EMCC t/a Emmarentia Convenience Centre and Another (2022/034996) [2025] ZAGPJHC 485 (21 May 2025)
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sino date 21 May 2025
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
No: 2022-034996
(1)
REPORTABLE: No
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: No
In
the matter between:
ENGEN PETROLEUM
LIMITED
Applicant
and
JAI
HIND EMCC t/a
EMMARENTIA
CONVENIENCE CENTRE
First Respondent
DUKHI
,
AVISHKAR HARILALL
Second Respondent
JUDGMENT
This
judgment is deemed to be handed down upon uploading by the Registrar
to the electronic court files.
Gilbert
AJ:
1.
The second respondent applies for leave to appeal to the full court
of this Division against the judgment and order that
I handed down on
25 October 2024.
2.
The application for leave to appeal was launched on 19 March 2025,
which is outside the period provided for in Uniform
Rule 49(1)(b).
Alive to this, the second respondent by way of a separate application
applied for condonation for the late filing
of his application for
leave to appeal. On 25 April 2025, the applicant delivered
an answering affidavit opposing the
application for condonation.
3.
In the meanwhile, on 23 April 2025, the applicant launched an
application in terms of
section 18(3)
of the
Superior Courts Act,
2013
seeking
inter alia
leave to execute on my decision
notwithstanding the present application for leave to appeal and any
subsequent applications for
leave to appeal and/or appeals initiated
by the second respondent. On 5 May 2025, the second respondent filed
a notice in terms
of
Rule 30
contending for an irregularity in that
the applicant’s notice of motion in the
section 18(3)
application did not stipulate a period in which he was to deliver an
answering affidavit.
4.
At the request of the parties through the Office of the Judge
President, dates were agreed for the hearing of the application
for
leave to appeal.
5.
On 19 May 2025, the day before the hearing of the application for
leave to appeal, the second respondent launched an application
for a
postponement of both his application for leave to appeal and the
applicant’s application in terms of
section 18(3)
, with a
tender of costs.
6.
I afforded the parties’ counsel an opportunity to address me on
the application for postponement and whether it should
be granted. I
refused the application for a postponement of the application for
leave to appeal with costs, including the costs
of counsel on scale C
and gave my
ex tempore
reasons.
7.
In refusing the postponement, I rejected the second respondent’s
central proposition as advanced both in his supporting
affidavit and
by his counsel that because the application for leave to appeal and
the
section 18(3)
application are to be heard simultaneously, it
follows that both must be postponed as the
section 18(3)
application
was not ripe for hearing. That the
section 18(3)
application was not
be ripe for hearing did not necessarily mean the application for
leave to appeal cannot proceed.
8.
The second respondent’s counsel also advanced from the bar that
the second respondent preferred that his counsel
previously briefed
in the matter argue the applications but who was unavailable (no
reasons were given for this unavailability)
and so that the
applications also be postponed for that reason. This is not an
acceptable basis for a postponement. The date for
the hearing of the
application for leave to appeal on 20 May 2025 was by way of
agreement.
9.
When agreeing dates for the application for leave to appeal through
the registrar, the
section 18(3)
application was not ripe for
hearing. When informing the parties through the registrar that the
hearing would be on 20 May 2025,
I stated that it was the application
for leave to appeal that would be heard. The applicant’s
application in terms of
section 18(3)
was therefore not before me.
There was no need for me to make a decision in relation to the
postponement of an application that
was not before me, and I did not
do so.
10.
Ms Ngidi who appeared for the second respondent informed the court
that she had no instructions to argue the application
for leave to
appeal and the related condonation application. Having taken
instructions from her attorney, she requested that the
application
for leave to appeal and condonation application stand down until the
afternoon so that alternate counsel could be briefed
to argue the
matter. I declined the request. The second respondent was aware that
the application for leave to appeal had been
set down for hearing
before me at 09h00 that day, and this was by agreement. The second
respondent had instructed counsel to appear
on his behalf that
morning. The second respondent’s decision not to furnish that
counsel with instructions to argue the application
for leave to
appeal (and to deliberately curtail counsel’s instructions) and
instead seek to delay the hearing of his application
for leave to
appeal (in which he is the
dominus
) upon his postponement
application being refused was one made at his peril. Ms Ngidi then
excused herself.
11.
The application for leave to appeal together with condonation then
proceeded without any appearance on behalf of the second
respondent
as the applicant in those matters.
12.
Mr Aucamp, who appeared for Engen as the respondent in the
application for leave to appeal and the related condonation
application stated that the applicant would not persist with opposing
condonation for the late filing of the application for leave
to
appeal but would instead proceed to argue on the merits why the
application for leave to appeal should be refused.
13.
Mr Aucamp then proceeded to do so.
14.
The primary reason why the second respondent asserts in his
application for leave to appeal that I erred is because there
were
foreseeable factual disputes and this precluded me from granting
relief in favour of the applicant by way of the usual principles,
such as set out in
National Director of Public Prosecutions v Zuma
[2009] ZASCA 1
;
2009 (2) SA 277
(SCA). The second respondent reasons that because
there were factual disputes in relation to the amounts that he
contended had
been set off against the indebtedness owing by the
principal debtor, and accordingly by him a surety, I was precluded
from granting
relief, and should dismissed the application, or
referred the matter to trial. This is especially so, the second
respondent reasons,
because I had found in my judgment that such
factual disputes exist.
15.
As I have explained in my judgment in some detail, the second
respondent elected to defend the matter on the basis of
set off.
Accordingly, it was for him to demonstrate that the debts he
contended had been set off satisfied the requirements of
set off,
including that they were liquidated and were legally cognisable. The
approach that recommended itself to me is set out
and reasoned in
paragraphs 49 to 59 of my judgment.
16.
Other than in relation to the amounts of R500 000 and R7 629.43,
I adopted the position that having regard only to
the second
respondent’s factual version (i.e. without regard to the
applicant’s countervailing factual version in its
replying
affidavit), whether the amounts that the second respondent contended
had been set off were sufficiently capable of prompt
ascertainment so
as to be liquidated and otherwise sustainable on the second
respondent’s own version.
17.
I found on the stand-alone factual version of the second respondent
the requirements of set off had not been established
in relation to
those amounts. It therefore mattered not that upon consideration of
the applicant’s countervailing factual
version there were
factual disputes in relation to those amounts.
18. In relation to
the amounts of R500 000 and R7 629.43, I did have regard to the
applicant’s countervailing evidence,
as appears from paragraphs
82 to 86 of my judgment, which evidence proves that these amounts had
already been deducted from the
indebtedness. Such dispute in
relation thereto raised by the second respondent was far-fetched and
fanciful, and rejected.
19. The second
respondent also contends that I erred in granting what he describes
as a punitive costs order in that I granted
costs on an attorney and
client scale. But I did so not because those costs were punitive but
because the applicant was entitled
to costs by way of agreement, the
parties having agreed to the scale of attorney and own client and the
applicant seeking a lesser
scale of attorney and client.
20.
I have dealt comprehensively in my judgment with such other grounds
as may be raised in the application for leave to appeal.
21.
The second
respondent has not established “
a
sound rational basis for the conclusion that there are prospects of
success
”
[1]
on appeal.
22.
The second respondent does not assert that there is some or other
compelling reason why the appeal should be heard.
23.
The applicant’s costs in relation to the second respondent’s
application for leave to appeal on an attorney
and client scale are
to be granted for the reasons set out in paragraph 19 above.
24.
An order is made that:
24.1. The second
respondent’s application for condonation for the late filing of
his application for leave to appeal
is granted, with no order as to
costs.
24.2. The second
respondent’s application for leave to appeal is dismissed.
24.3. The second
respondent is to pay the applicant’s costs in the application
for leave to appeal on an attorney and
client scale, including the
costs of counsel.
B M GILBERT
Acting Judge of the High
Court
Gauteng
Division, Johannesburg
Date of
hearing:
20 May 2025
Date of
judgment:
21 May 2025
Counsel for the
applicant:
S Aucamp
Instructed
by:
DM5 Incorporated
Sandton
Counsel for the second
respondent: Initially Ms Ngidi, then no appearance.
Instructed
by:
Des Naidoo & Associates
Sandton
[1]
Ramakatsa
v African National Congress
2021
ZASCA 31
at para 10.
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