Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 588South Africa
S.A.T v G.J.T and Others (Application for Leave to Appeal) (2019/22224) [2025] ZAGPJHC 588 (12 June 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
12 June 2025
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 588
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## S.A.T v G.J.T and Others (Application for Leave to Appeal) (2019/22224) [2025] ZAGPJHC 588 (12 June 2025)
S.A.T v G.J.T and Others (Application for Leave to Appeal) (2019/22224) [2025] ZAGPJHC 588 (12 June 2025)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2025_588.html
sino date 12 June 2025
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO : 2019/22224
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES/ NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:YES/ NO
(3)
REVISED: YES / NO
12
June 2025
In
the matter of
T[…]
: S[...]
A[…]
Applicant
And
T[...]
: G[…]
J[…]
First Respondent
MATTHEW
MARTINO
Second Respondent
AMANDA
WOEST
Third Respondent
In
Re :
T[...]
: G[…]
J[…]
Plaintiff
And
T[...]
: S[...]
J[…]
First Defendant
T[...]
: G[…] J[…]
N.O.
Second Defendant
WETHERALL : STEVEN LEE
N.O.
Third Defendant
JUDGMENT – APPLICATION FOR
LEAVE TO APPEAL
Von
Ludwig, AJ
1.
Applicant brough an Application to Compel First Respondent’s
compliance with her R35(3) Notice in their divorce action.
In the
same application she cited Martino and Woest as Second and Third
Respondents and sought to compel them to comply with subpoenas
which
had been served on them to produce documents relevant to the divorce
action notwithstanding that they are not parties to
that action.
2.
I adjudicated Second and Third Respondents’ (herein, for
convenience, “the Respondents”) Application
in terms of
s30(1) to have the Application to Compel (and an Affidavit which
Applicant had filed in reply to Respondent’s
s30(2)(b) Notice)
set aside.
3.
I dismissed the Application and ordered the Respondents to pay
attorney client costs.
4.
The Respondents have sought leave to appeal the whole of my Judgment
and Order.
5.
The first point for consideration is that raised by the Applicant
that my Judgment and Order is not appealable because
it is an Order
which (being Interlocutory and/or Incidental) does not have a final
effect / does not dispose of the main issues
in the Application to
Compel.
6.
It is clear from my Judgment in the s30(1) Application that I was not
called upon to, and did not, deal with the actual
Application to
Compel which was the “main application” in this sub-set
of the litigation. I was not called on to, and
nor did I, adjudicate
on who could or should be compelled to disclose what and when. I was
simply called on to determine whether
it was an Irregular Step for
the Applicant to have used the same document (a short form Notice of
Motion at that, with which Respondents
also took issue) to bring all
three Respondents before Court to deal with their failure to comply
with the different documents
which had been served on each of them
(R35(3) in Respondent of T[...] and subpoenas in respect of the other
two) to produce documents,
some of which were called for from all and
some of which just from T[...].
7.
How any judgment or order dealing with that can be contended to be
dispositive of the main application I do not know. I
clearly
contemplated in my own Judgment which is the subject of this
Application for Leave to Appeal that there would still be
“the
Court which adjudicates on the eventual Application to Compel”.
8.
There can thus be no basis to contend that my Judgment and Order was
final and/or disposes of the main issues in the application
in
question (being the Application to Compel). As such, irrespective of
the fact that I did not, in such Judgment, consider it
necessary to
formally find whether the application before me was Interlocutory or
Incidental, it is clear that it did not deal
with, let alone dispose
of the main issues in the actual Application to Compel, and cannot be
considered to be “final”
in the way contemplated in
WK
Agricultural Holdings (Pty) Ltd v Hoogveld Boerderybeleggings (Pty)
Ltd
as cited by
Applicant in Heads of Argument at paragraph
16.
9.
The important principle enunciated in
WK Agricultural Holdings
is to “
prevent(s) piecemeal appeals that are often costly
and delay the resolution of matters…”.
To appeal my
Judgment and Order in this matter, when the court dealing with the
actual Application to Compel can and will address
all relevant
issues, would obviously lead to significant delays and increased
costs.
10.
For the Respondents to contend that my Judgment is “
definitive
of the Respondents’ rights to joinder
” (Respondents’
Heads of Argument paragraph 53) and this “
This compels their
participation in the main action
” (Heads paragraph 54) and
to speak in this context of the “trial court”, is a leap
too far. It is clear that
their involvement here has only to do with
the subpoenas which were served in them and the subsequent
application to compel compliance.
I thus reiterate and stand by what
I have said in 9 above.
11.
As such I am satisfied that, my Judgment and Order not being
dispositive of the merits of the Application to Compel, cannot
thus
be contended to be “final” and is thus not capable of
appeal.
12.
That in itself can and should dispose of this Application for Leave,
but for clarity and for costs I go on to address
the substantive
application.
13.
With regard to the Respondent’s various grounds of appeal I
have formed the, albeit humble and cautious, view that,
especially
given the “higher bar” that an appeal “
would”
have a reasonable prospect of success
”, that leave to
appeal should not be given.
14.
I disagree that an appeal is necessary because my judgment “conflicts
with the judgment of Goosen J in
Maqeda
” and this
conflict requires resolution. My statement in my Judgment that the
facts of
Maqeda
“
are so materially
distinguishable…that I find it of no bearing
”
explains why the
Maqeda
principle is not relevant or
applicable in this case and why the judgments of Goosen J and I do
not in fact conflict.
Maqeda
, as I said in my Judgment, dealt
with a wife herself trying, as Applicant, to join an interlocutory
application when she was not
a party to the main case. Here, as
Respondents, we have witnesses who have received, and apparently
ignored, subpoenas, being brought
by one of the litigants into an
Interlocutory Application in the main case, to procure their
adherence to documents served in the
main case. There is no “parity
of reasoning” by which, as Respondents contend, the Maqeda
principle can be applied
to the case in hand where the facts, and the
results to be achieved, are so materially distinguishable. The
judgments are thus
not “conflicting” and thus no need for
another court to resolved “conflicting” judgments.
15.
The Respondent’s ground of appeal that the Court did not apply
the ratio decidendi enunciated in
Maqeda
to this case is
baseless because it ought not to have been applied and could not be
applied as the facts herein are materially
distinguishable.
16.
Respondents’ ground of appeal would result in an entirely
separate application having to be launched, under a new
case number,
to deal with an isolated issue, in an existing main action, of
subpoenas issued under the main action case number.
This cumbersome
process cannot possibly be the result intended. It does not require
the Court to have made an express finding about
where the R30(1)
Application is Interlocutory or Incidental. No other Court would
perceive this as Respondent’s contend it
ought reasonably to be
perceived.
17.
The argument about “initiation” of proceedings and the
use of short or long form notice of motion, and whether
or not this
is an Interlocutory or Incidental Application, is all part of the
same contention that Applicant ought to have brought
a separate
application against the Respondents. If this is not found to have
been necessary, then the use of the short form document
likewise does
not support Respondent’s opposition to the application or their
application for leave to appeal.
18.
The Respondent’s ground of appeal based on R10(3) is not
entirely clear (which in itself would preclude another
Court from
coming to any conclusion based thereof), but is in any event
misplaced given that R10(3) applies to Defendants being
sued in a
action, where it is clear that this is an application, these are
witnesses (not defendants) and there is no attempt to
join them as
defendants since the relief sought in the main action is not against
them.
19.
Even if one were able to stretch the application of R10(3) which I do
not believe can be done in this matter, I am of
the view that the
nature of the application is materially the same against all three
Respondents namely to procure their compliance
with documents which
call on them to provide paperwork Applicant requires in her divorce,
all of which documents are relevant one
way or another to the
proprietary situation of her husband.
20.
The differences between subpoenas and a R35(3) Notice, and parties
who are or who are not parties to the litigation, can
all be dealt
with by the Court to be seized of the Application to Compel.
21.
The convoluted attempt at reasoning (my quoting) beginning with
“Maqueda must be applied” (which is incorrect)
and
leading to “but the Respondents could not be joined because
this breaches R10(3)” (which is also incorrect) fails
on both
legs and there can be no genuine submission that any other Court
would come to a different conclusion based on this defective
train of
argument.
22.
This disposes of grounds to appeal listed in paragraphs 6 and 7 of
the Application for Leave.
23.
In response to the ground in paragraph 8 no court could, and
certainly not would, disagree with the premise that however
the
application to compel came before Court, each party can and must deal
only with what that party has been required to provide,
and whether
that is done in the separate process contemplated by the Respondents
or in this process, what they would have to say
is what they would
say. Being part of the same application as has been brought against
the First Respondent does not require the
Second and Third
Respondents to deal with the allegations made and relief sought
against him.
24.
The issues about delays and confirmatory affidavits did not in any
event go to the root of the merits of the R30(1) application
and such
“findings” have no material effect on the basic Judgment
and Order. Even if this Court erred in these findings,
(and it is
submitted this Court was correct in its findings and another Court
would share these conclusions) they have little relevance
to the
material issues and thus little or no influence in any appeal.
25.
Insofar as this Court made a “finding” on the issues of
the “Reply” and what “ought”
to have been
done in respect thereof, this likewise had no effect on the substance
of the Judgment or Order and could and would
not cause any court to
come to a different conclusion on the substance of the matter.
26.
As the Applicant submits in Heads of Argument, it does not “pass
muster” for the Respondents to simply list
every aspect of the
Court’s findings/Judgment and simply content (my quotes) “this
was wrong”. It is for the
Respondents to substantively
illustrate why another Court would come to a different conclusion,
and with regard to the issues of
delay, filing of Confirmatory
Affidavits and the “Replies” this has not been done. As
such there is nothing herein
to support the Respondent’s
Application for Leave to Appeal.
27.
The Court set out clearly why the Respondent’s versions had not
only failed but had constituted obvious attempts
to delay and avoid
furnishing documents, using unfounded bases of law and
unsubstantiated procedural points. Describing this as
“unnecessarily
form over substance approach” does not mean that the Court did
not understand the ambit and meaning
and purpose of R30. The facts,
and lack of merit in the Respondents’ case, indicate that
another Court would not come to
a different finding as regards costs
and that a costs order on an attorney client basis was justified.
28.
The Respondents have made out no case that another Court would come
to a different conclusion on any of the grounds of
appeal raised by
them and that they have any reasonable prospects of success on
appeal. There is no conflict with the judgment
of Maqeda as the facts
are so distinguishable that the Maqeda principle cannot be contended
to apply herein and hence no reason
why an appeal should be heard.
Accordingly, the Application for Leave to Appeal is dismissed.
29.
Having regard to the manner in which the grounds of appeal have been
set out, namely with significant duplication, with
little clarity as
to the basis on which it is contended that the Court erred, and on
which it is submitted that another Court would
come to a different
conclusion, this application is not
bona fides
and appears to
be another strategy used by Respondents to further delay and avoid
any disclosure of documents. An appeal would
certainly do the exact
opposite of leading to any form of just or prompt resolution of any
of the issues between the parties to
the main divorce action or the
parties to this Application to Compel.
Order
30.
In my view there was this no basis for an Application for Leave to
Appeal to be brought, and no basis therefore for it
to be granted. As
such I award the costs of this application for leave to appeal
against the Respondents, jointly and severally,
on an attorney and
client scale.
C VON LUDWIG
ACTING JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
JOHANNESBURG
Date
of Hearing:
04 June 2025
Date
of Judgment:
12 June 2025
For
the Applicant:
Adv H Epstein SC and Adv K Naidoo
instructed by Douglas Smart
Attorneys
For
the Respondents: Mr M Nowitz
instructed by Nowitz Attorneys
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
S.A.T v G.J.T (2019/22224) [2025] ZAGPJHC 44 (24 January 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 44High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
SAT v GJT (22224/2019) [2022] ZAGPJHC 890 (4 November 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 890High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
S.A.H v S.B.H (2025/095199) [2025] ZAGPJHC 760 (23 July 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 760High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
T.A.S v I.S (2021/58750) [2025] ZAGPJHC 248 (11 March 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 248High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
T.S.N v J.K.M and Another (2023/120095) [2025] ZAGPJHC 215 (20 February 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 215High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar