Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 763South Africa
Caterpillar Financial Services South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Musor Consultants and Project CC (2025/023190) [2025] ZAGPJHC 763 (5 August 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
5 August 2025
Headnotes
regarding the urgency of reconsideration applications in terms of rule 6(12)(c) that:
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Caterpillar Financial Services South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Musor Consultants and Project CC (2025/023190) [2025] ZAGPJHC 763 (5 August 2025)
Caterpillar Financial Services South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Musor Consultants and Project CC (2025/023190) [2025] ZAGPJHC 763 (5 August 2025)
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sino date 5 August 2025
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
no: 2025-023190
1.
REPORTABLE: No
2.
OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES: No
3.
REVISED: No
In the matter between:
CATERPILLAR
FINANCIAL SERVICES
Applicant
SOUTH AFRICA (PTY) LTD
and
MUSOR
CONSULTANTS AND PROJECT CC
Respondent
JUDGMENT
Delivered
:
This judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected and is handed down electronically
by circulation to the
parties’ legal representatives by email and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on
Caselines. The date and
time for hand-down is deemed to be 5 August 2025 at 10h00. The
order was granted on 28 March
2025.
PRETORIUS
AJ:
# Introduction
Introduction
1.
The applicant (“
Catfin
”)
obtained an order
ex parte
on 25 February 2025 (“
the ex parte
order
”) pursuant to an urgent
application brought by it on 20 February 2025 (“
the
ex parte application
”). The
order was granted by Mahomed J pursuant to part A of the notice of
motion in the
ex parte
application. In terms of the
ex
parte
order:
“
2.
pending the final determination of part B of this application:
2.1. any
representative, employee or person acting under the instruction of
the respondent, who is in possession of the CAT
equipment, listed in
annexure “A” to this order (“CAT equipment”),
is to forthwith upon receipt of this
order, deliver/ make available
for collection/ permit the collection/ repossession of the CAT
equipment, by the applicant;
2.2
in the event that the applicant is unable
to secure possession of the CAT equipment pursuant to the relief
granted in paragraph
2.1 above, the sheriff, assisted by the South
African Police Services, if required, is authorised to take such
steps as may be
necessary to take possession of the CAT equipment,
wherever same may be found, and handing same over to the applicant
for safekeeping;
3. the respondent
and any other party having an interest in the relief granted may by
notice set down the matter for reconsideration,
in terms of Uniform
Rule 6(12)(c);
4. the applicant
is granted leave to supplement the founding affidavit, in
support of further relief, including the
relief sought in part B of
this application, if so required;
5. the cost
occasioned by part A of this application is reserved for
determination at the hearing of part B.”
2.
In part B of the
ex
parte
application, Catfin claims
payment of an amount of R2 879 243.07 from the respondent
(“
Musor
”),
which amount was alleged to be the full outstanding amount due under
a Master Instalment Sale Agreement concluded between
the parties.
3.
The application before me was an urgent
application which was brought by Musor for a reconsideration of the
ex parte
order in terms of rule 6(12)(c) (“
the
reconsideration application
”).
In terms of rule 6(12)(c):
“
A
person against whom an order was granted in such person’s
absence in an urgent application may by notice set down the matter
for reconsideration of the order.”
4.
The matter came before me on 27 March 2025
and on 28 March 2025 I made the following order:
“
1.
The respondent’s reconsideration application is struck from the
roll for a lack of urgency, with costs on scale C.”
5.
Musor requested reasons for the order.
These are the reasons.
#
# Urgency
Urgency
6.
It is required of an
applicant in an urgent application to set out unequivocally the
circumstances on which it relies to render
the matter urgent
and
the reason why it claims that it cannot be afforded substantial
relief at a hearing in due course.
7.
In
Sheriff
Pretoria North-East v Flink
[1]
it was held regarding the urgency of reconsideration applications in
terms of rule 6(12)(c) that:
“
Nothing
in rule 6(12)(c) suggests that such a respondent would be entitled to
enrol the matter for reconsideration again on an urgent
basis merely
because the order had been obtained on an urgent basis. A proper case
will have to be made out independently for the
urgency of
reconsideration of the order.”
8.
Securing
an urgent audience was accordingly not for the taking just because
the
ex
parte
order was obtained on an urgent basis. Instead, it was required
of Musor to demonstrate
that,
should the matter not be dealt with on an urgent basis, it would not
otherwise be afforded substantial redress at a hearing
in due
course,
[2]
as is required
in
terms of rule 6(12)(a), i.e. the same onus which was on Catfin when
it first sought the
ex
parte
order.
9.
In
Joint
Venture Comprising Gorogang Plant Razz Civils v Infiniti Insurance
Limited
[3]
it was held that:
“
An
application for reconsideration is not urgent for the purposes of
Rule 6(12) simply because an order was granted in the Urgent
Court. This means, that in the absence of demonstrable
prejudice in the time between when an application may be heard
before
an Urgent Court and in the ordinary course, a party seeking a
reconsideration must set out the prejudice that will ensue.
…
The threshold is the same whether in an application for
reconsideration or when approaching the Court under Rule 6(12)(a).
In
both instances, the parties seeking relief must set out in clear
terms facts duly supported that will pass the threshold of
“absence
of substantive relief” if the matter is not heard before the
Urgent Court.”
10.
The circumstances relied upon by Musor for
urgency are limited to the following:
10.1.
Musor will lose out on the contract it has
with its client (“
Mashele
”)
and will never be able to pay the amount claimed by Catfin in Part B
of its application.
10.2.
The supplier agreement between Musor and
Mashele is being extended by another twelve months and Mashele has
settled Musor’s
invoices. Musor is in the position to
settle Catfin, presumably as a result of the payment, but only upon
return of the equipment
to Musor.
10.3.
The potential loss of a contract with
Mashele will cause reputational damage to Musor’s business.
11.
Musor did not provide any documentary
support for any of these allegations. In respect of the first
reason, it is not explained
what is meant by “lose out”
but I assume it means that its client will either not perform in
terms of the contract,
i.e. make payment to Musor, or will cancel the
contract. However, it appears that Mashele was already in
default of making
payment to Musor since October 2024 and that
Mashele’s the non-payment was not caused by the repossession of
the equipment.
Turning to the second reason, Musor apparently
accepts that it is in arrears in respect of the MISA and that it
failed to make
payment to Catfin of the instalments as and when they
fell due. Its attempt to hold Catfin ransom by tendering payment only
when
the equipment is returned does not assist it with urgency.
Regarding the third reason, even if the repossession of the equipment
causes Musor to lose its contract with Mashele, which is doubted as
Mashele was already in default, and even if Musor suffers
reputational loss as a result, no explanation is tendered why such
loss cannot be recovered in the normal course.
12.
No
further circumstances are expressed to render the matter urgent or to
explain why substantial redress cannot be afforded in due
course.
This aspect was also not further addressed with any conviction in
Musor’s heads of argument. Instead,
Musor relied on
the
judgment of Joffe J in
Rhino
Hotel & Resort (Pty) Ltd v Forbes and Others
,
[4]
which
was overruled in
Oosthuizen
v Mijs
[5]
where Wepener AJ (as he then was) held after quoting from
Rhino
Hotel
that:
“
To
hold that the court is confined only to the original application
without reference to anything else is in conflict with
various
decisions on this point.”
[6]
13.
It
appears further that Musor delayed the bringing of its
reconsideration application in circumstances where the application
could
have been brought sooner. Musor
provided no convincing explanation for the period between the date of
becoming aware of the
ex
parte
order and the bringing of the application.
It
is well established that urgent applications must be brought as soon
as possible and that cogent reasons must be advanced to
the court for
any delay in bringing the application.
[7]
This principle extends to applications for reconsideration in terms
of rule 6(12)(c).
14.
Additionally,
Musor placed Catfin under immense and undue
pressure
to respond to the reconsideration application. Catfin contends
that Musor gained knowledge of the
ex
parte
order
on 4 March 2025. Musor was then granted access to CaseLines and
Court Online on the same day at 13h32. Musor however
brought
its reconsideration application only seven days later but afforded
Catfin only 2 hours to respond. In these
circumstances,
Musor did not take the required care to use all reasonable steps to
mitigate the truncation of time periods it sought
to impose on
Catfin.
[8]
15.
Musor
relied in its affidavit on a judgment of Marks AJ in
United
Medical Devices LLC v Blue Rock Capital Limited
[9]
in support of the proposition that reconsideration applications are
by its very nature urgent and should accordingly be heard and
dealt
with as such. To the extent that this is what was found in
United
Medical
,
I disagree.
[10]
16.
In
exercising my discretion,
[11]
I concluded that Musor has failed to
set
out sufficiently the circumstances which would render the matter
urgent or sufficient reasons why it cannot be afforded substantial
relief at a hearing in due course.
# Costs
Costs
17.
The normal principle is that costs follow
the result and there is no reason to deviate from this principle.
Musor, having been unsuccessful,
must pay the costs.
# The order
The order
18.
Accordingly, the following order was
granted on 28 March 2025:
1. The respondent’s
reconsideration application is struck from the roll for a lack of
urgency, with costs on scale C.
JF PRETORIUS
ACTING JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
DATE OF HEARING:
27 March 2025
DATE OF ORDER:
28 March 2025
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
5 August 2025
COUNSEL FOR THE
APPLICANT: Adv K
Meyer
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Senekal Simmonds Inc.
COUNSEL FOR THE
RESPONDENT: Adv MP Zwane
[1]
Sheriff
Pretoria North-East v Flink and another
[2005] 3 All SA 492
(T) at 497.
[2]
Luna
Meubel Vervaardigers (Edms) Bpk v Makin (t/a Makin’s Furniture
Manufacturers)
1977
(4) SA 135
(W)
at
137F;
East
Rock Trading 7 (Pty) Ltd v Eagle Valley Granite (Pty)
Ltd
(unreported,
GJ case no 11/33767 dated 23 September 2011) at para 6–9 and
other applicable authorities.
[3]
Joint
Venture Comprising Gorogang Plant Razz Civils and others v Infiniti
Insurance Limited and another
2024 JDR 4449 (GJ) at para 71.
[4]
2000
(1) SA 1180 (W) at 1182B-E.
[5]
2009
(6) SA 266
(W) at 267A-E.
[6]
Referring
to
inter
alia
ISDN
Solutions (Pty) Ltd v CSDN Solutions CC and Others
1996
(4) SA 484 (W) at 486H-487D,
National
Director of Public Prosecutions v Braun and Another
2007
(1) SA 189 (C) at 194A-E and
Lourenco
and Others v Ferela (Pty) Ltd and Others (No 1)
1998
(3) SA 281 (T) at 290E - H.
[7]
Dladla
v Ethekwini Municipality
2023
JDR 1067 (KZD)
at para 37;
Venter
v Els
2024
(4) SA 305
(WCC) at para 19.
[8]
South
African Airways SOC v BDFM Publishers (Pty) Ltd and Others
2016 (2) SA 561
(GJ) at para 24.
[9]
2016
JDR 0570 (KZD) at para 42.
[10]
Instead,
I approve of
Sheriff
Pretoria North-East v Flink and another
[2005] 3 All SA 492
(T) at 497 and
Joint
Venture Comprising Gorogang Plant Razz Civils and others v Infiniti
Insurance Limited and another
2024 JDR 4449 (GJ) at para 71.
[11]
Cornerstone
Logistics (Pty) Ltd v Zacpak Cape Town Depot (Pty) Ltd
[2022]
2 All SA 13
(SCA) at para 30.
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