Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 117South Africa
Lebashe Investment Group (Pty) Ltd and Another v Coral Lagoon Investments 194 (Pty) Ltd and Others (2022-060488) [2024] ZAGPJHC 117 (9 February 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
9 February 2024
Headnotes
Summary: This is an Application for the review and setting aside of an interim arbitral award in terms of S 33(1)(b) of the Arbitration Act 42 of 1965 (‘the Act’) and for a declaratory that in terms of S 3(2)(c) of the Act the arbitration agreement should cease to have effect.
Judgment
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## Lebashe Investment Group (Pty) Ltd and Another v Coral Lagoon Investments 194 (Pty) Ltd and Others (2022-060488) [2024] ZAGPJHC 117 (9 February 2024)
Lebashe Investment Group (Pty) Ltd and Another v Coral Lagoon Investments 194 (Pty) Ltd and Others (2022-060488) [2024] ZAGPJHC 117 (9 February 2024)
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sino date 9 February 2024
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NUMBER
: 2022-060488
DATE
:
09
th
February 2024
In the matter between:
LEBASHE
INVESTMENT GROUP (PTY) LTD
First
Applicant
TSHEPO
DAUN MAHLOELE
Second Applicant
And
CORAL
LAGOON INVESTMENTS 194 (PTY) LTD
First Respondent
ASHBROOK
INVESTMENTS 15 (PTY) LTD
Second Respondent
PHILLIP
BORUCHOWITZ N.O
Third Respondent
Neutral
Citation
:
Lebashe Investment Group (Pty) Ltd
and Another v Coral Lagoon Investments 194 (Pty) Ltd and Others
(2022-060488)
[2024] ZAGPJHC ---
(09 February 2024)
Coram
:
R. Strydom, J
Heard
:
11 August 2023
Delivered:
09 February 2024 – This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties' representatives
via
email, by being uploaded to
Court Online
and by release to
SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 14:00 on 09
February 2024.
Summary:
This is an Application for the review and setting aside of an interim
arbitral award in terms of S 33(1)(b) of the Arbitration
Act 42 of
1965 (‘the Act’) and for a declaratory that in terms of S
3(2)(c) of the Act the arbitration agreement should
cease to have
effect.
The
Applicant (‘Lebashe’) and the First Respondent (‘Coral’)
and Second Respondent (‘Ashbrook’)
entered into a
settlement agreement concerning a dispute about Capitec shares. The
settlement agreement contained an arbitration
clause to adjudicate
disputes. After the dispute was referred to arbitration the Court
confirmed a provisional restraining order
in favour of the National
Director of Public Prosecution pursuant to the provision of S 26 of
the Prevention of Organised Crimes
Act 121 of 1998 (‘POCA’)
and appointed a curator bonis (‘the curator’).
In
terms of the restraint order Coral and Ashbrook were prohibited from
“
dealing in
” restraint property pending the
proceedings in terms of Chapter 5 of POCA to preserve assets.
Pursuant
to a Special Plea filed by Lebashe in the arbitration, Lebashe, inter
alia, challenged the arbitrator’s jurisdiction
to continue with
the arbitration as this would constitute “
dealing in”
property, under restraint.
The
arbitrator made an interim award dismissing the Special Plea.
In
the review before Court it was found:
i.The
arbitrator could have decided upon his own jurisdiction;
ii.Lebashe
could have taken the arbitrator’s decision pertaining to his
jurisdiction on review at any stage, dispite the arbitrator’s
directive that the arbitration proceedings before him should
continue.
iii.In
the context of POCA the phrase “
dealing in
” should
be narrowly interpreted and would not include a determination of
Coral and Ashbrook’s rights to shares despite
the finding that
the claims would constitute property as envisaged in POCA.
iv.The
applicants failed to make out a case for the setting aside of the
arbitration agreement as required in S 3(2)(c) of the Act.
Lebashe’s
application was dismissed with costs.
ORDER
It is ordered that:
(1) The application is
dismissed with costs, such costs to include the costs of two counsel
JUDGMENT
STRYDOM, J:
Introduction
[1]
This
judgment pertains to Part B of an application emanating from an
interim award by the third respondent (the Arbitrator) in arbitration
proceedings instituted by the first and second respondents, Coral
Lagoon Investments 194 (Pty) Ltd and Ashbrook Investments 15
(Pty)
Ltd (collectively referred to as Coral) against the applicants, whom
I will refer to collectively as “Lebashe”.
The
award was in respect of the Lebashe’s special plea which sought
a stay of the arbitration proceedings pending the conclusion
of the
proceedings in terms of Chapter 5 of the Prevention of Organised
Crimes Act
[1]
(POCA),
alternatively pending a resolution by the High Court of any dispute
relating to the meaning and effect of the restraint
order; whether
the arbitral proceedings are lawful; and whether the curator has the
power or capacity to act herein.
[2]
Part A of the application, in which the
applicants sought the stay of the arbitration proceedings currently
pending before the Arbitrator
was dealt with in the urgent court
before Moultrie AJ and an order dismissing the application, with
costs, was handed down on 13
February 2023.
[3]
In
Part B, which is currently before this court for adjudication,
Lebashe seeks an order (i) setting aside the interim arbitration
award (the award) of 14 November 2022 in terms of section 33(1)(b) of
the Arbitration Act
[2]
(the
Act); and (ii) a declarator in terms of section 3(2)(c) of the Act
that the arbitration agreement between Lebashe and Coral
of 17 April
2018 shall cease to have effect with reference to the dispute
referred to arbitration by Coral on 18 March 2022.
The origins of the
dispute
[4]
In April 2015, Lebashe acquired 5,284,735
shares in Capitec Bank Holdings Limited. Coral claimed that it
had an indirect interest
in the acquisition of the Capitec shares and
commenced arbitration proceedings against Lebashe seeking a
disgorgement of profits
and the transfer of shares.
[5]
On 17 April 2018, the parties concluded a
written settlement agreement to resolve the arbitration proceedings.
Lebashe agreed to
transfer “13% of the Equity Economic Benefit
in the Ring-Fenced Portfolio” to Coral subject to the terms and
conditions
contained in the written settlement agreement, which was
made an award by the arbitrator, retired Judge Nugent.
[6]
A dispute subsequently arose between the
parties concerning the parties’ interpretation of the
settlement agreement, and,
in particular, the phrase “13% of
the Equity Economic Benefit in the Ring-Fenced Portfolio”.
On the one hand,
Coral interprets it to mean that Lebashe was, in
effect, required to transfer 687 016 of the Capitec shares to it.
Lebashe,
on the other hand, interprets it to mean that the
value Coral was entitled to receive equates to 8 157 shares, which it
has already
transferred to the curator. On 18 March 2022, Coral
initiated the arbitration proceedings against Lebashe. The
underlying
claim was instituted by Coral on the basis that the second
applicant (Mahloele) had breached his fiduciary duties to Coral; made
a secret profit for himself and for Lebashe; and had misappropriated
Coral's corporate opportunity. Coral's case was that Mahloele
had
caused Lebashe to purchase the warehoused Capitec shares at a
discount despite the entitlement to purchase these shares being,
to
Mahloele's knowledge, due to Coral.
The salient facts
[7]
Coral referred this dispute to arbitration
during or about March 2022. Before this on 18 November 2019,
this court granted
a provisional restraint order against inter alia,
Coral in terms of section 26 of the POCA. This
provisional restraining
order was for some period lifted, but on 3
May 2022, this court confirmed the provisional restraint order on
slightly amended terms
(the restraint order). Lebashe was initially
not aware of the restraint order but on or about 3 May 2022, it
became aware thereof.
Having learned of it, Lebashe immediately
contested the validity of the arbitral proceedings on 5 May 2022,
broadly on the
view it has taken that the effect of the order is to
place the restraint property beyond the control of the affected
parties into
the hands of the
curator
bonis
pending the outcome of the
criminal proceedings. Coral duly surrendered its claims in the
arbitration to the
curator
.
Lebashe was of the view that in terms of paragraph 5 of the restraint
order, Coral and any other person, including the arbitrator,
with
knowledge of the order, is prohibited from “
dealing
in any manner
” with the property,
except as required or permitted by the restraint order. It was
of the view that the restraint order
does not require or permit the
property to be dealt with in the arbitration.
[8]
The arbitrator was tasked with disposing of
the “jurisdiction issue” raised by Lebashe regarding the
lawfulness of the
arbitration proceedings and or whether he has
jurisdiction to continue to preside over the dispute regardless of
the effect of
the restraint order. It was agreed between Coral,
Lebashe, and the Arbitrator that the question of whether or not the
arbitration
could lawfully continue would be decided by the
arbitrator by way of a special plea. The circumstances under which
the special
plea and replication were brought and argued by the
parties before the arbitrator will be dealt with in more detail
hereinbelow.
[9]
The arbitrator dismissed the special plea
and found that he has jurisdiction to adjudicate the dispute, that
the proceedings would
not be unlawful and ordered the continuation of
the arbitration.
[10]
Dissatisfied with this decision, Lebashe
brought an urgent application in two parts – A and B. Part A
was for an interim stay
of the arbitration pending a decision of Part
B. Part B is opposed by Coral on the basis that the arbitrator’s
interim award
was correctly made and that Lebashe failed to make out
a case for the review of the arbitrator’s decision as required
in
terms of section 33(1)(b) of the Act. Further, a case has
not been made out for relief in terms of section 3(2)(c) of the
Act.
Coral argued that Lebashe’s application is an abuse of
process.
Issues to be
determined
[11]
Various questions arise pertaining to the
section 33 review instituted by Lebashe. The first is whether the
restraint order would
prohibit the arbitrator and the parties from
dealing with
the claims in the arbitration. Should the court find that the
restraint order did not prohibit continuation of the arbitration,
as
this would not infringe upon the restraint order which prohibits
“
dealing in any manner with any
property
” under restraint, the
review should be dismissed. If the court finds that the
continuation of the arbitration would
constitute “
dealing
in the property
” under restraint,
then the question would be whether the terms of the restraint order
clothed the curator with the authority
to grant the parties
permission to nevertheless proceed with the arbitration. If the
court finds that the continuation of
the arbitration would constitute
“
dealing in the property”
in contravention of the restraint order, then the jurisdiction of the
arbitrator to continue with the arbitration becomes questionable.
In
this context, the court will have to decide whether Lebashe submitted
itself to the jurisdiction of the arbitrator by
agreeing that he
could pronounce on his jurisdiction, as he in fact did.
[12]
The first step in deciding the jurisdiction
of the arbitrator is to consider how it came about that the
arbitrator was asked to
decide on his jurisdiction despite the
restraint order. The original referral of the disputed claims
to arbitration was done
pursuant to the settlement agreement between
the parties which was made an award by the previous arbitrator.
[13]
Clause 9 of the settlement agreement deals
with Dispute Resolution and, inter alia, the referral of disputes to
arbitration. Clause
9.6 determines that the arbitration shall
be conducted in accordance with the AFSA Commercial Rules. These
rules provide that an
arbitrator can pronounce on his or her
jurisdiction. Clause 9.7.10 provides that the arbitrator shall
have the power to decide
on the validity of his/her appointment and
the extent of his/her powers and such decision (once made) will not
go on review but
may be subject to appeal.
[14]
When Lebashe became aware of the restraint
order on or about 3 May 2022, it immediately started to consider the
lawfulness of the
continuation of the arbitrator to determine Coral’s
claims. Shortly after this Lebashe addressed a letter to
Coral’s
attorneys in which it was mentioned that the restraint
order would preclude Coral from seeking relief in the arbitration.
On 6 May 2022, a pre-arbitration meeting was held where nothing
specifically was minuted in relation to the restraint order. It
was
noted that only the final award of the arbitrator shall be subject to
a right of appeal by either party.
[15]
A power of attorney that was provided by
the curator to Coral to continue with the proceedings was attacked on
the basis that the
curator does not have the power or capacity to
represent Coral in pending proceedings and/or to continue with such
proceedings
against Lebashe. Lebashe concluded that the pending
proceedings cannot lawfully continue as Lebashe will be at risk for
their
costs should same be awarded to it.
[16]
It was further stated that the arbitrator
does not have the power to determine the questions of whether the
pending proceedings
are lawful and/or whether the curator has the
power or capacity to act therein. It was stated that this issue can
only be determined
by the High Court.
[17]
On 20 June 2022, a further pre-arbitration
meeting was held presided by the arbitrator. It was minuted that by
agreement between
the parties, the jurisdiction issue raised by
Lebashe will be dealt with by way of a pleaded case in accordance
with a timetable
that was set.
[18]
On or about 1 July 2022, Lebashe filed its
special plea averring that in terms of the restraint order, Coral was
ordered to surrender
all its property into the custody of the curator
bonis. This included Coral’s claims against Lebashe as
this constitutes
“
property”.
It was pleaded that Coral as well as Lebashe and the arbitrator are
prohibited from dealing with the claims and the arbitration
proceedings cannot lawfully continue. It was further averred
that the curator does not have the power or the capacity to
present
the claimants in the arbitral proceedings and/or to continue with
such proceedings. Further, that the purported power
of attorney
furnished on 24 May 2022 on behalf of the curator and Coral is
invalid and of no force and effect.
[19]
Despite pleading that the arbitrator did
not have the power or jurisdiction to determine any dispute in
relation to the meaning
and effect of the restraint order and/or the
questions of whether the pending proceedings are lawful and/or
whether the curator
has the power or capacity to act herein, Lebashe
participated in the proceedings before the arbitrator to decide these
issues.
[20]
The relief that was sought by way of the
special plea was for the staying of the arbitration proceedings
pending the conclusion
of the proceedings in terms of Chapter 5 of
the POCA against Coral and/or the determination of any dispute by the
High Court in
relation to the meaning and effect of the restraint
order and the questions of whether the pending proceedings are lawful
and/or
whether the curator has the power or capacity to act therein.
[21]
The anomaly of the procedure, that was
followed to decide these issues, is that Lebashe, being aware that
the arbitrator could adjudicate
upon his own jurisdiction,
participated in the proceedings to decide the special plea without
first applying to court to stay the
continuation of the arbitration.
Pursuant to the special plea, Coral filed a replication in which it
asked for the dismissal
of Lebashe’s special plea on the
grounds that the continuation of the arbitration would not be in
conflict with the restraint
order, and in any event, that the curator
provided Coral with a power of attorney, as it was entitled to do
pursuant to the restraint
order, to continue with the arbitration,
and in the alternative, reserving the issue raised in Lebashe’s
special plea for
determination by a court as a question of law upon
application by any of the parties.
[22]
The parties argued the special plea before
the arbitrator. On or about 14 November 2023, he delivered his
interim arbitration
award dismissing Lebashe’s special plea
which meant that the arbitration could continue.
[23]
After the interim arbitration award was
made, Lebashe asked Coral to agree to the stay of the proceedings
pending a review application.
This request was turned down and
this led to the current application in part A and part B. As
stated hereinabove, Part A
was considered and dismissed on the basis
that not even a
prima facie
case was made out for the relief sought. It is for this court now to
decide Part B of Lebashe’s application.
[24]
The arbitrator observed as follows in
paragraph 10 of the interim award:
“
As
is evident from the special plea, the jurisdictional challenge raised
is of a limited nature. It is confined to the question
whether I have
the competence to determine a dispute in relation to the meaning and
effect of the restraint order. And also, whether
I can enquire into
the lawfulness of the arbitration proceedings and whether the curator
has the power or capacity to act therein.”
[25]
And further, in paragraph 12:
“
It
was also argued by the defendants that any interpretation of the
restraint order would not be binding on any other party outside
of
the arbitration and would lead to uncertainty and complications. I
disagree. Any interpretation of the restraint order would
only
determine the rights and obligations as between the claimants and the
defendants. It would not have any binding effect on
persons who are
not parties to the arbitration and would not prejudicially affect
them.”
Discussion and
analysis
[26]
Lebashe maintains that the meaning and
effect of the restraint order, and the questions of whether the
arbitral proceedings are
lawful and whether the curator has the power
or capacity to act therein, are issues that only the High Court is
empowered to deal
with. Dissatisfied with the interim award,
Lebashe relies on section 33 of the Act to review the decision of the
arbitrator.
The relevant portion of section 33 reads as follows:
“
(1) Where –
(a) ...
(b) an arbitration
tribunal has committed any gross irregularity in the conduct of the
arbitration proceedings or has exceeded
his powers; or
(c) ... the court may,
on the application of any party to the reference after due notice to
the other party or parties, make an
order setting the award aside.”
[27]
The order reviewing and setting aside the
interim award is sought on two bases, namely: that the arbitrator
exceeded his powers
and committed a gross irregularity.
[28]
It
was argued that when an arbitrator enquires into the scope of his
jurisdiction, and even rule upon it, he does so at the risk
that he
might be wrong – in which case any award he makes will be
invalid. It was argued that the court would finally
determine
the jurisdiction of an arbitrator, and therefore an arbitrator’s
determination of a jurisdictional objection, is
provisional. For
this contention Lebashe relied on
Radon
Projects (Pty) Ltd v NV Properties (Pty) Ltd
[3]
,
and
Canton
Trading 17 (Pty) Ltd t/a Cube Architects v Fanti Bekker Hattingh
NO.
[4]
[29]
Lebashe submitted that the arbitrator did
not have the power and competence of jurisdiction to interpret the
restraint order for
the simple reason that the order operates
in
rem
whereas he acts in the narrow
confines of a private arbitration between Coral and Lebashe only and
he could not do so in the absence
of those who are also affected and
bound by the order, to wit, the other defendants and respondents to
the restraint order, being
the curator and the National Director of
Public Prosecutions (the NDPP). It would not be competent for an
arbitrator to interpret
an
in rem
order, i.e. the restraint order, affecting other parties who are not
parties to the arbitration.
[30]
This argument begs the question why
Lebashe participated in the proceedings to have the special plea
decided instead of first
approaching the court for relief. The
special plea raised the jurisdiction of the arbitrator considering
the restraint order.
The only way in which the arbitrator could
have considered his own jurisdiction was to consider whether the
restraint order,
properly interpreted, prohibited the continuation of
the arbitration. Certainly, if the arbitrator had found that
the restraint
order prohibited the continuation of the proceedings,
Lebashe would have been satisfied. Now that the interim
arbitral award
went against it, it wants to review the finding.
[31]
In my view, the arbitrator could have
decided what impact the restraint order could have on his
jurisdiction. Especially where
Lebashe submitted to the
jurisdiction of the arbitrator to decide his own jurisdiction, and
further, bearing in mind that the decision
made by the arbitrator
would only be binding on the parties before him.
[32]
A
clear distinction should be drawn between a consideration of the
jurisdiction to hear a matter and a consideration of the merits
of a
matter. If an award on the merits of a matter is made the
grounds for a review would be limited to whether a gross irregularity
was committed by the arbitrator or whether he exceeded his powers. A
decision may be wrong but not reviewable. When
the issue
relates to a decision made by an arbitrator concerning his own
jurisdiction such a finding, in my view, will always be
reviewable in
terms of section 33. The reason for this being that if an
arbitrator finds that he has jurisdiction whilst
he lacked
jurisdiction, he would inevitably be committing an irregularity and
exceed his powers by continuing with the arbitration.
Not by
considering the merits of the question around his jurisdiction but by
wrongly concluding that he had the necessary
jurisdiction. See,
Makanya
v University of Zululand
[5]
where it was found as follows:
“
The
first unsound proposition :
The court has no jurisdiction because
the claim is a bad claim
The
submissions that were made before us by counsel for the University,
when examined, came down to asserting that proposition.
That
submission was founded upon the allegations in the special plea that
the two claims (the claim in the CCMA and the claim in
the High
Court) were the same claim. In truth that is not correct, but I will
assume its correctness for present purposes. Upon
that supposition
counsel submitted that because the claim had been disposed of finally
by the CCMA the High Court had no jurisdiction
in the matter. Her
submission, in short, was that the court had no power in the matter
because the University had a good defence
to the claim.
I
have pointed out that the term ‘jurisdiction’, as it has
been used in this case, and in the related cases that I have
mentioned, describes the power of a court to consider and to either
uphold or dismiss a claim. And I have also pointed out that
it is
sometimes overlooked that to dismiss a claim (other than for lack of
jurisdiction) calls for the exercise of judicial power
as much as it
does to uphold the claim.
The
submission that was advanced by counsel invites the question how a
court would be capable of upholding the defence (and thus
dismissing
the claim) if it had no power in the matter at all. Counsel could
provide no answer – because there is none.
There
is no answer because the submission offends an immutable rule of
logic, which is that the power of a court to answer a question
(the
question whether a claim is good or bad) cannot be dependent upon the
answer to the question. To express it another way, its
power to
consider a claim cannot be dependent upon whether the claim is a good
claim or a bad claim. The Chief Justice, writing
for the minority in
Chirwa
,
expressed it as follows: ‘It seems to me axiomatic that the
substantive merits of a claim cannot determine whether a court
has
jurisdiction to hear it’.”
[6]
[33]
Before this court, it was argued that
Lebashe modelled its approach on the decision in
Radon
to first approach the arbitrator to consider his own jurisdiction. In
this decision, it was found that an arbitrator could pronounce
on his
own jurisdiction but that pronouncement would not affect the rights
of the parties to challenge that determination in court.
[34]
The question that remains is when the
dissatisfied party should challenge the interim award pertaining to
jurisdiction. At
any time or only after a final award?
Following the interim arbitration award the arbitrator directed that
the arbitration should
continue before him as he set a timetable for
further documents to be filed. In essence, what the arbitrator
directed determined
the course that the arbitration should follow.
That, in my view, did not preclude Lebashe from reviewing the award
pertaining to
jurisdiction. See, in this regard what was found
by Nugent JA in
Radon
at paragraphs 26 to 30:
“
There
is a further issue that I think I ought to deal with lest further
jurisdictional objections arise in the course of the proposed
arbitration.
When
confronted with the employer’s objection the arbitrator’s
response was that he was bound to enter upon the arbitration
nonetheless, and that the objection should properly be raised in the
pleadings and dealt with accordingly, but the matter was taken
out of
his hands, because it was said he had no power to ‘determine
his own jurisdiction’.
The
response of the arbitrator cannot be faulted. When confronted with a
jurisdictional objection an arbitrator is not obliged forthwith
to
throw up his hands and withdraw from the matter until a court has
clarified his jurisdiction. While an arbitrator is not competent
to
determine his own jurisdiction that means only that he has no power
to fix the scope of his jurisdiction. The scope of his jurisdiction
is fixed by his terms of reference and he has no power to alter its
scope by his own decision (in the absence of agreement to the
contrary).
But
that does not preclude him from enquiring into the scope of his
jurisdiction, and even ruling upon it, when a jurisdictional
objection is raised. He does so at the risk that he might be wrong –
in which case an award he makes will be invalid –
but in some
cases it might be convenient to enter upon the arbitration
nonetheless. As it is expressed in the fifth edition of
Keating on
Building Contracts (before the Arbitration Act 1996), in reliance on
Christopher
Brown Ltd v Genossenschaft Oesterreichischer
etc:
[7]
‘
If
the arbitrator's jurisdiction is challenged he should not refuse to
act until it has been determined by some court which has
power to
determine it finally. He should inquire into the merits of the issue
to satisfy himself as a preliminary matter whether
he ought to get
on with the arbitration or not, and if it becomes abundantly clear
to him that he has no jurisdiction then he
might well take the view
that he should not go on with the hearing at all.’
The
position was fully explained by Devlin J in that case as follows:
[8]
‘
I
think that the answer to the question becomes clear if one bears in
mind the fundamental principles which govern the acts of
arbitrators
in these matters. It is clear that at the beginning of any
arbitration one side or the other may challenge the jurisdiction
of
the arbitrator. It is not the law that arbitrators, if their
jurisdiction is challenged or questioned, are bound immediately
to
refuse to act until their jurisdiction has been determined by some
court which has power to determine it finally. Nor is it
the law
that they are bound to go on without investigating the merits of the
challenge and to determine the matter in dispute,
leaving the
question of their jurisdiction to be held over until it is
determined by some court which had power to determine
it. They might
then be merely wasting their time and everybody else's. They are not
obliged to take either of those courses. They
are entitled to
inquire into the merits of the issue whether they have jurisdiction
or not, not for the purpose of reaching any
conclusion which will be
binding upon the parties, because that they cannot do, but for the
purpose of satisfying themselves,
as a preliminary matter whether
they ought to go on with the arbitration or not. If it became
abundantly clear to them, that
they had no jurisdiction as, for
example, it would be if the submission which was produced was not
signed, or not properly executed,
or something of that sort, then
they might well decide not to proceed with the hearing. They are
entitled, in short, to make their
own inquiries in order to
determine their own course of action, but the result of that inquiry
has no effect whatsoever upon
the rights of the parties.’”
[35]
Clause 9.7.10 of the settlement agreement
between the parties provides that the arbitrator shall have the power
to decide on the
validity of his/her own appointment and the extent
of his/her own powers and such decision (once made) will not go on
review but
may be subject to appeal.
[36]
It was argued on behalf of Coral that
neither the fact that the arbitrator determined the question of his
own jurisdiction in circumstances
where his power to do so was not an
exclusive or final one; nor the fact that he may have done so
incorrectly; nor the fact that
this may be expected to lead to
uncertainty or inefficiency due to a potential need to relitigate the
same issues in a different
forum, if a court later reaches a
different conclusion in due course, constitute an excess of powers or
gross irregularity under
section 33(1)(b) of the Act.
[37]
I do not entirely agree with this
submission. A jurisdictional challenge can be decided by an
arbitrator, but, as was submitted
by Coral, it would not be final. If
it is subsequently found by a court to be incorrect the arbitral
award made whilst the arbitrator
had no jurisdiction would constitute
a nullity as the arbitrator would have exceeded his powers. A
legality review or review
in terms of section 33(1)(b) would be
competent. This would not constitute a review where a decision
was made on the merits
of the matter or where a discretion was
exercised which, in ordinary course, would limit the grounds and
scope of a review.
[38]
The question rather, is when such a
challenge should be launched by the party asserting that the interim
award pertaining to jurisdiction
was wrongly decided. I am
satisfied that such a challenge in the form of a review of the
interim award could be launched
at any stage, despite the effect of
the interim award being that the arbitration was not stayed.
[39]
There are unique circumstances in this
matter. This is to be found in the fact that Lebashe only
became aware of the restraint
order after referral to arbitration on
the merits of the matter. This is not a matter where an
arbitrator had to adjudicate
upon a dispute between parties and
whether this dispute was covered by the arbitration agreement when
the main dispute was initially
referred to arbitration. In my
view, Lebashe was entitled to follow the special plea procedure,
whereby the question of whether
the arbitration should be stayed on
the basis of the changed circumstances brought along by the restraint
order, prompting a consideration
of this issue by the arbitrator.
Lebashe thereby endeavoured to convince the arbitrator to stay
the arbitration pending the
outcome of a court application.
[40]
In my view, Lebashe was entitled to take
the interim award, which went against it on review, despite the terms
of clause 9.7.10
of the settlement agreement. Section 33 of the
Act provides such a right and, as was found in
Radon,
the parties’ rights were not
finally decided on the question of jurisdiction. Moreover, if
the effect of the restraint
order on the jurisdiction of the
arbitrator is not considered by a court this would lead to
unnecessary expense and a waste of
time if it is later to be found by
a court that the arbitrator had no jurisdiction pursuant to the
restraint order.
[41]
It should be pointed out that this right of
review at this stage relates to the question of jurisdiction of the
arbitrator and not
to the
locus standi
of Coral and/or the
curator
bonis,
nor the authority of the
directors of Coral to pursue the arbitration. The finding of
the arbitrator in this regard, in my
view, may be correct or
incorrect, but is not reviewable at this stage.
[42]
The review of the jurisdiction of the
arbitrator can be decided on the primary question of whether the
arbitration proceedings and
a subsequent award would constitute a
breach of the restraint court order as it would constitute
dealing
in property
in contravention of
paragraph 5 of the restraint order. Put differently, has the
restraint order caused the arbitrator to
be stripped of his
jurisdiction to deal with the claims of Coral?
[43]
In my view, the claims made by Coral in the
arbitration proceedings constitute property as defined in section 1
of POCA. Coral
asserts that it has a right for the transfer of
valuable Capitec shares and payment of certain profits. The
definition of
“
property”
in
POCA includes “
incorporeal things
and includes any right, privileges, claims and any securities and any
interest therein and all proceeds thereof”.
[44]
The question is rather whether Coral and
the arbitrator by way of the arbitration were “
dealing
in”
the property in contravention
of the restraint order by continuing with the arbitration. If
the answer to this question is
that Coral and the arbitrator are not
“
dealing in”
the
property by proceeding with the arbitration then the jurisdiction
challenge and the review should be dismissed.
[45]
The arbitrator decided this issue in favour
of Coral by finding that Coral was not dealing with the claims, which
he “
for present purposes”
accepted to constitute property, in
contravention of the restraint order. This was done by way of
contextual interpretation
of the wording of section 26(1) of POCA,
the aims of the Act, and the restraint order. He found that it was
settled law that the
purpose of a restraint order is to preserve the
defendant’s assets pending the ultimate determination of the
National Director
of Public Prosecution’s application for a
confiscation order in terms of section 18 of POCA.
[46]
He found in paragraph 24 of the interim
award that the “
obvious mischief
that the restraint is designed to prevent is conduct such as the
disposal, removal, sale, trading, encumbering,
transferring or
concealment of property.”
[47]
This
finding is in line with the decision of the Constitutional Court (CC)
in
Phillips
and others v National Director of Public Prosecutions
,
[9]
albeit there, the Constitutional Court only considered the powers of
a curator and not those of a party under restraint as is the
case in
this matter. It reasoned as follows:
“
In
this court, the applicants sought to argue that the problem could not
be resolved in the manner suggested by the SCA. In
making this
argument, they pointed to the terms of the restraint order itself
which prohibits any person from ‘dealing in’
the
properties subject to the restraint. In my view, although it
may be that the restraint order could be read in the wide
fashion
proposed by the applicants, it is capable of a narrower meaning which
would avoid disabling the curator in the manner contended
for by the
applicants. A narrower meaning of the restraint order is possible.
The prohibition on people dealing in the property
should be read to
refer to selling or encumbering the property. Such a meaning would
ensure that the purposes of the Act, which
include the need to
preserve property subject to a restraint order, are not defeated. If
such a meaning is adopted, then the powers
of the curator could be
amended as suggested by the SCA or in any other suitable manner to
ensure that the properties are used
in an appropriate manner to
guarantee income to cover maintenance and other costs of upkeep of
the properties. In the circumstances,
the applicants’ argument
that the powers of the curator bonis could not be amended must
fail.”
[10]
[48]
I am bound by this decision, which in any
event, is in line with the arbitrator’s reasoning and finding
that the restraint
order does not prohibit the continuation of the
arbitration. I endorse the arbitrator’s reasoning, with
reference to case
law contained in paragraphs 18 to 24 of his award
which I quote in full:
“
18.
The words "dealing" or "dealing in" have a wide
range of meanings. See S v Mhlungu & Others
[1995] ZACC 4
;
1995 (3) SA 867
(CC)
para 26; S v Sellem
[1992] ZASCA 48
;
1992 (2) SA 795
(A) at 800F-G and R v Gibbons
1956 (4) SA 494
(SR) B-F.
19.
It is a fundamental rule of statutory interpretation that the
intended meaning of a word or phrase in a particular statute is
to be
determined by the context in which it appears (see Jaga v Donges, N.
and Another 1950(4) SA 653(A) at 662- 664, referred
to with approval
in S v Makwanyane 1995 (3) SA. para 10. Also see S v Sellem supra at
800G).
- As
was stated by Viscount Simmonds In Attorney-General v HRH Prince
Ernest Augustus of Hanover[1957] AC 436at 461.“Words,
and particularly general words, cannot be read in isolation; their
colour and content are derived from their context.”
As
was stated by Viscount Simmonds In Attorney-General v HRH Prince
Ernest Augustus of Hanover
[1957] AC 436
at 461.
“
Words,
and particularly general words, cannot be read in isolation; their
colour and content are derived from their context.”
21.
It has been repeatedly emphasized that the meaning of a particular
word or phrase in a statutory enactment must be consistent
with its
purpose and the obvious mischief that the statute was designed to
prevent. (see Stellenbosch Farmers Winery Ltd v Distillers
Corporation (SA) Ltd
1962 (1) SA 458(A)
at 473F-G and 476E-F. The
purpose of the Act is the contextual scene in which the phrase
"dealing in any manner with the property"
is to be
considered
22.
It is settled law that the purpose of a restraint order is to
preserve the defendant's assets pending the ultimate determination
of
the National Direct of Public Prosecution's application for a
confiscation order in terms of s 18 of the Act. See Fraser v Absa
Bank Limited
[2006] ZACC 24
;
2007 (3) SA 484
(CC) para 58, and National Director of
Public Prosecutions v Kyrlacou
2004 (1) SA 379
(SCA) para 5.
23.
The effect of the restraint is to preserve the property so that it
may in due course be realised in satisfaction of a confiscation
order. It is to ensure that the properly concerned is not disposed of
or concealed in anticipation of such proceedings. (See National
Director of Public Prosecutions v Rebuzzi 2002 (2) SA (1)SCA para 4
and National Director of Public Prosecutions v Rautenbach
2005 (4) SA
603
(SCA) para 13.
24.
The obvious mischief that the restraint is designed to prevent is
conduct such as the disposal, removal, sale, trading, encumbering,
transferring or concealment of the property. A textual indication
that this the type of conduct aimed at is to be found in s 27
of the
Act, which reads:
“
In order to
prevent any realisable from being disposed of or removed contrary to
a restraint order, any police official may seize
any such property if
he or she has reasonable grounds to believe that such property will
bs so disposed of or removed”
[49]
By giving effect to the arbitration
agreement to decide whether Coral has a legitimate claim against
Lebashe is not to defeat the
prohibition against
dealing
in property
restraint. The aim is
rather to establish rights between contracting parties pertaining to
the Capitec shares and simultaneously
there is no interference with
the preservation of the incorporeal property. Any award will only be
binding as between the parties
to the arbitration agreement, but a
positive outcome for Coral would increase the value of is property
holding under restraint.
The aim of the restraint order to
preserve and maintain property is not undermined. The narrow
interpretation of
dealing in property
referred to in
Phillips
should
be applied in the circumstances of this case.
[50]
Coral already surrendered the rights to the
proceeds of the claim to the curator. All which can be achieved
by a final award
is to establish a right between the parties to the
arbitration pertaining to ownership of the Capitec shares. Neither
the
curator bonis
nor the NDPP will be bound by the decision. They may elect to
accept the outcome or reject same. It should be noted
that
these parties could have applied to intervene in this review
proceedings. They have not. On the contrary, the
curator
by executing the power of attorney which purported to appoint
attorneys to act on behalf of Coral is indicative of the
curator’s
support of the continuation of the arbitration.
[51]
After
the hearing of this matter when the judgment of this court was still
reserved, Lebashe filed supplementary heads of argument
to bring to
the court's attention the recent judgment of Vally J, in
Regiments
Fund Managers (Pty) Ltd and Others v Nel NO and Another
[11]
pronouncing on the effect
of the restraint order on the status and powers of directors of the
same companies which were the subject
matter of the decision in this
court.
[52]
In
Regiments
[12]
,
Vally
J found that the effect of the restraint Order—
“
[I]n
its entirety is the removal of all the power of the boards of the
applicants, and the transferring of that power to the curator
–
albeit with certain constraints being placed on the curator regarding
expenditures that he may wish or have to shoulder.
The power the
boards had prior to the Order is now bestowed upon the curator. Put
differently, the effect of the Order is to place
the applicants’
property beyond the control of the boards and place it into the hands
of the curator.”
Read
as a whole then, the phrase ‘dealing in’ can only mean
conducting the business of or engaging in the affairs of’
the
property. The applicants are thus prohibited from engaging in the
affairs of the property or conducting any business with or
on behalf
of the property.”
[53]
Coral submitted that this decision was
clearly wrong and that this court was not bound by it. Moreover, an
application for leave
to appeal was filed which suspended the
judgment and order. In my view, this judgment has to be
considered. Only execution
is suspended. The judgment is
not eradicated.
[54]
In
Regiments
the court did not refer to or dealt
with
Phillips.
As
stated hereinabove, this court is bound by the decision in the
Constitutional Court on the issue what will constitute
dealing
in
property in contravention of the
restraint order unless this judgment is to be distinguished from this
matter. It was argued
on behalf of Coral that the
Constitutional Court judgment is completely different “
as
questions of leasing, selling or encumbering immovable property
simply do not arise.”
It
was argued that the question was rather whether Coral could litigate
with property under the restraint order. The CC in
Phillips
dealt specifically with section 26 of
POCA and, in my view, is not distinguishable to the extent that it
does not provide authority
how the concept of
dealing
in
property should be applied in
context of a restraint order.
[55]
The
court was referred to the decision in
S
v Mhlungu
[13]
.
In my mind this decision is not authority for how the words
dealing
in
property
should be interpreted in context of section 26 of POCA. In
Mhlungu
the
phrase “
to
deal with”
was interpreted in general terms and certainly not in context of POCA
as was done in
Phillips
some
years later by the same court.
[56]
Vally J in
Regiments
found that the restraint order effectively denuded the directors of
Coral (and Ashbrook) of all power and control over their property.
This finding would be correct if the prosecution of the arbitration
proceedings would constitute
dealing in
restraint property. If not, this
would not have such a result.
[57]
I find that Coral and the arbitrator will
not be “
dealing in
”
the property in contravention of the restraint order by continuing
with the arbitration. The arbitrator has the required
jurisdiction to adjudicate upon the claim of Coral. The
arbitrator found that the arbitration proceedings do not amount to
dealing in
property in contravention of the prohibition contained in paragraph 5
of the restrain order. I agree with such conclusion.
The
restraint order did not strip the arbitrator from his jurisdiction to
decide the dispute. Consequently, the arbitrator
has not
committed any gross irregularity in the conduct of the arbitration
proceedings nor has he exceeded his powers as contemplated
in section
33(1)(b) of the Act.
[58]
Issues raised and decided in the
Regiments
decision pertaining to
locus
standi
and authority are issues which
fall outside the ambit of jurisdiction and was, or should be, dealt
with in the arbitration with
reference to the applicable rules
governing the arbitration. If Lebashe is dissatisfied with an
award in this regard it should
follow available remedies after the
final award.
The Power of Attorneys
signed by the Curator and Directors of Coral.
[59]
The arbitrator found these powers of
attorney to be valid and not unlawful as the arbitral proceedings
would not contravene the
prohibition against dealing with the
restraint property. I came to the same conclusion. I do
not intend to repeat in
this judgment all the sections in the Act and
the restraint order which were referred to by the arbitrator in his
award suffice
to refer to paragraph 17 of the restraint order which
specifically provides that the curator may, where it is expedient for
the
effective execution of the order, authorize any person who is
capable of acting on his behalf to exercise any powers, duties and
authority conferred upon him, and may engage such agents,
sub-contractors or service provider that he deems necessary, provided
that the expenditure incurred in this regard is subject to the
controls set out in Annexure B to the order.
[60]
Annexure B is aimed at establishing a
framework for the payment and curtailment of cost and other
implications of holding the property
and determine the most
appropriate management of each asset, including the cost of
administrating the asset and any possible depreciation
in the value.
[61]
Legal fees are pertinently dealt with in
paragraphs 19 and 20 of Annexure B. In paragraph 19 it is
provided that legal costs
for any person in relation to property
subject to curatorship could only be paid if ordered to do so by a
court or with the written
consent of the NDPP. Paragraph 20
deals with the taxation of such costs.
[62]
The curator was aware of this requirement
when he signed the power of attorney as it was specifically recorded
that any legal costs
incurred for purposes of the claim referred to
arbitration are subject to ratification in terms of paragraphs 19 and
20 of Annexure
B at a later stage.
[63]
In
Regiments,
the curator was cited as a respondent
in an application by,
inter alia
Coral, for an order authorising the curator to make intercompany
loans between the applicants in order to allow for the payment
of the
legal costs, “
subject to the
approval by the directors of the applicable applicants.”.
[64]
This
relief was not granted as the directors of Coral and other applicants
were, according to Vally J in his judgment, denuded of
“
effective
control over the
applicants.”
[14]
[65]
The court found that the directors of Coral
had no
locus standi
to
represent Coral in arbitral proceedings. This decision is in
contrast of what the arbitrator found and does not relate
to the
jurisdiction of the arbitrator. The award of the arbitrator was
to the effect that he had the requisite jurisdiction
to adjudicate
the matter as the continuation of the arbitration would not amount to
dealing in
the property in contravention of the restraint order. The
continuation of the arbitration would not perpetuate an illegality.
The arbitrator was satisfied that Coral had the necessary
locus
standi
to continue with the
arbitration. Authority of the directors of Coral was not at
issue. Importantly, the arbitrator
made it clear that only the
parties to the arbitration would be bound by any award made. I
concurred with this conclusion.
[66]
It is not for this court to make a finding
how the legal cost of the arbitration would be funded. More so,
as the court in
Regiments
pertinently
dealt with this issue. The payment of legal costs out of the
restraint property may or may not amount to
dealing
in
the restraint property. This
is an issue, in my view, which should be dealt with by the NDPP and
the curator
.
The relief under
section 3(2)(c) of the Arbitration Act
[67]
Lebashe seeks an order for a declaration
that the arbitration agreement shall cease to have effect with
reference to any dispute
referred. Good cause needs to be
shown. Lebashe argued in the main that the restraint order, and
Coral’s surrender
of its claim to the curator, means that the
resolution of the dispute is no longer confined to Coral and Lebashe
in the arbitration.
The NDPP, the NPA and the curator are now
involved in the arbitral process and have an interest in its outcome.
[68]
The
onus is on a party seeking to set aside an arbitral agreement. In
De
Lange v Presiding Bishop of the Methodist Church of Southern Africa
for the Time Being and
Another
[15]
,
Moseneke DCJ, as he then was, explained that the “onus to
demonstrate good cause is not easily met” and that “
[a]
discretion to set aside an existing arbitration agreement must be
exercised only where a persuasive case has been made out”.
[16]
[69]
Coral has not changed its legal status and
only its assets were restrained in terms of the restraint order.
The powers and
duties of Coral’s directors has only been
curtailed as far as the
dealing in
the assets under restraint are concerned. As was found
hereinabove, Coral will not be
dealing
in
the restraint assets by establishing
a right to the disputed shares in Capitec. In any event, the
restraint order is not a
final order and may be uplifted at any stage
or may culminate in a confiscation order.
[70]
It
seems to me that in such circumstances, the process of adjudicating
the dispute which was referred to arbitration should not
be halted
despite the claim being surrendered to the curator. Guidance on this
court’s enforcement of an arbitral award that
may be at odds
with a statutory prohibition can be gleaned from the Constitutional
Courts jurisprudence on the need to weigh the
importance of upholding
the prohibition against the significant goals of private arbitration
that the court has recognised. As
stated in the majority judgment in
Cool
Ideas 1186 CC v Hubbard and Another
[17]
,
while enforcing an arbitral award that contradicts a statutory
prohibition is often contrary to public policy, this is not always
the case. The majority put it thusly:
“
The
force of the prohibition must be weighed against the important goals
of private arbitration that this court has recognised.”
[18]
[71]
In such circumstances, in my view the
process of adjudicating the dispute which was referred to arbitration
should not be interfered
with. The claim, despite being
surrendered to the curator
,
needs
to be established as between the parties to the arbitration
agreement. Only the parties to the arbitration will be bound
by
the award, which in any event could be challenged by way of a review
or an appeal at the conclusion of the arbitral process.
[72]
Lebashe
complained about the breach of confidentiality undertakings. The
arbitration could proceed upholding confidentiality.
Further,
the award would be subject to the scrutiny of court as an arbitrator
has no power to compel a party to comply with the
terms of an award
which only a court of competent jurisdiction can do.
[19]
If Coral is successful in its claim, and if the shares are
transferred to Coral, it would then be prohibited from
dealing
in
the shares in contravention of the restraint order. That is the
effect of surrendering the claim. The curato
r
is
not a
curator
ad litem
with
the power to litigate in the name of Coral.
[73]
In my view, Lebashe has also not shown good
cause for setting aside the arbitration agreement. It is for these
reasons that Part
B of the application falls to be dismissed with
costs.
[74]
On behalf of Coral it was argued that this
application constituted an abuse of process as it was a delaying
tactic. A punitive cost
order was sought against Lebashe. In my view,
Lebashe was entitled to have the jurisdictional issue decided in
court. Lebashe has
not abused the court processes.
[75]
The following order is made:
Order
[76]
The application is dismissed with costs,
such costs to include the costs of two counsel.
R STRYDOM
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Heard
on:
11 August 2023
Delivered
on:
09 February 2024
Appearances:
For the
Applicants:
Adv. G.D. Wickins SC
Instructed
by:
KWA Attorneys
For the
Respondents:
Adv. A. Bham SC
Instructed by:
Tabacks Incorporated
[1]
121 of 1998.
[2]
42 of 1965.
[3]
Radon
Projects (Pty) Ltd v N V Properties (Pty) Ltd and Another
[2013]
ZASCA 83
;
2013 (6) SA 345
(SCA) at paras 28 – 30 (“
Radon
”).
[4]
Canton
Trading 17 (Pty) Ltd t/a Cube Architects v Fanti Bekker Hattingh N O
[2021]
ZASCA 163
;
2022 (4) SA 420
(SCA) at para 35 (“
Canton
”).
[5]
Makhanya
v University of Zululand
[2009]
ZASCA 69; 2010 (1) SA 62 (SCA).
[6]
Id at paras 51–54.
[7]
Christopher
Brown Ltd v Genossenschaft Oesterreichischer
etc
[1954] 1 QB 8.
[8]
At 12-13.
[9]
Phillips
and Others v National Director of Public Prosecutions
[2005]
ZACC 15
;
2006 (2) BCLR 274
(CC);
2006 (1) SA 505
(CC) (“
Phillips
”).
[10]
Id at para 54.
[11]
Regiments Fund Managers (Pty) Ltd and others v Eugene Nel N.O. and
another Case No 2022-007672; 1 December 2023 (
Regiments)
[12]
Id at paras 7-8.
[13]
S
v Mhlungu and Others
[1995]
ZACC 4
;
1995 (3) SA 867
;
1995 (7) BCLR 793
(CC) at para 26
(“
Mhlungu
”).
[14]
Regiments
above
n 9 at para 14.
[15]
De
Lange v Presiding Bishop of the Methodist Church of Southern Africa
for the Time Being and Another
[2015]
ZACC 35
;
2016 (1) BCLR 1
(CC);
2016 (2) SA 1
(CC) at para 36 (“
De
Lange
”).
[16]
Id at para 36.
[17]
Cool
Ideas 1186 CC v Hubbard and Another
[2014] ZACC 16
;
2014 (4) SA 474
(CC);
2014 (8) BCLR 869
(CC).
[18]
Id
at para 56. See also, in this regard,
Lufuno
Mphaphuli & Associates (Pty) Ltd v Andrews and Another
[2009]
ZACC 6
;
2009
(4) SA 529
(CC);
2009
(6) BCLR 527
(CC) at para 235.
[19]
Section 31 of the Arbitration Act.
sino noindex
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