Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 190South Africa
Mahomed N.O and Others v Al-Al Shaik N.O and Others (2023/007716) [2024] ZAGPJHC 190 (4 March 2024)
Headnotes
Summary: Civil procedure – Uniform Rule of Court 7(1) – authority of attorneys acting on behalf of respondents disputed by applicants – validity and authenticity of Proxy Form, appointing Proxy, disputed – Uniform Rule of Court 63, relating to authentication of documents, discussed – rule 63(4) applied – court accepts as sufficiently authenticated the Proxy – document shown to the satisfaction of court to have actually been signed by the respondents – authority challenge and dispute fail and is dismissed.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Mahomed N.O and Others v Al-Al Shaik N.O and Others (2023/007716) [2024] ZAGPJHC 190 (4 March 2024)
Mahomed N.O and Others v Al-Al Shaik N.O and Others (2023/007716) [2024] ZAGPJHC 190 (4 March 2024)
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sino date 4 March 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO
:
2023-007716
DATE
:
4
th
march 2024
In the matter between:
MAHOMED
,
GOOLAM YOUSUF N O
First Applicant
SURTEE
,
YUSUF N
O
Second Applicant
LAHER
,
ABDOOL RAHMAN ISMAIL N O
Third
Applicant
SEEDAT
,
MOHAMMED ALI YUSUF N O
Fourth Applicant
and
AL-AL
SHAIK
, H E SALEH A AZIZ MOHAMMED
N O
First Respondent
MOALLA
,
FAISAL HAMAD AHMED N O
Second Respondent
AL-LHEEDAN
,
ABDAILAH F, N O
Third Respondent
ALARIFI
,
MOHAMMED ABDULWAHED A. N O
Fourth Respondent
OTAIBI
,
FAHAD FALEH MEGWAL AL N O
Fifth Respondent
Neutral
Citation
:
Mahomed N O and Others v Al-Al Shaik N O and
Others (2023/007716)
[2024] ZAGPJHC ---
(4 March 2024)
Coram:
Adams J
Heard
on
: 27 February 2024 – ‘virtually’
as a videoconference on
Microsoft Teams
.
Delivered:
4 March 2024 – This judgment was handed down electronically
by circulation to the parties' representatives by email, by being
uploaded to
CaseLines
and by release to SAFLII. The date and
time for hand-down is deemed to be 10:30 on 4 March 2024.
Summary:
Civil procedure – Uniform Rule of Court
7(1) – authority of attorneys acting on behalf of respondents
disputed by applicants
– validity and authenticity of Proxy
Form, appointing Proxy, disputed – Uniform Rule of Court 63,
relating to authentication
of documents, discussed – rule 63(4)
applied – court accepts as sufficiently authenticated the Proxy
– document
shown to the satisfaction of court to have actually
been signed by the respondents – authority challenge and
dispute fail
and is dismissed.
ORDER
(1)
The first to fifth respondents’
response to the applicants’ notice in terms of Uniform Rule of
Court 7(1), dated 25
March 2023, is declared to be adequate as
satisfying this Court that the respondents’ attorneys of record
have the requisite
authority to represent them in these proceedings.
(2)
The applicants’ dispute of and
challenge to the respondents’ attorneys’ authority to act
on behalf of the respondents
are declared to be without merit and is
dismissed.
(3)
The ‘Joint Proxy Form’, dated 9
April 2023, by the first to fifth respondents, appointing Royal
Embassy of Saudi Arabia
Ambassador Sultan Al Angari as their proxy to
represent them in these proceedings and to instruct their attorneys
of record on
their behalf, is declared to be valid and of full force
and effect.
(4)
The first, second, third and fourth
applicants, jointly and severally, the one paying the other to be
absolved, shall pay the first
to the fifth respondents’ costs
of this application relating to the rule 7(1) authority challenge.
JUDGMENT
Adams J:
[1].
This
is an interlocutory application by the first to fourth applicants
(the applicants) in the main application against the first
to the
fifth respondents (the respondents) in terms of Uniform Rule of Court
7(1). The applicants challenge the authority of Shaheem
Samsodien
Attorneys (‘the respondents’ attorneys’) to act on
behalf of the respondents in the main application,
in which the
applicants apply for an order that the King Fahad Islamic Centre
Trust (the King Fahad Trust or simply ‘the
Trust’) be
terminated or dissolved in terms of s 13 of the Trust Property
Control Act
[1]
(TPCA).
Pursuant to the termination of the Trust, the applicants also pray
for an order that all of its trust property be transferred
to the
Houghton Muslim Jamaat Trust (the Houghton Muslim Trust). In the
alternative, the applicants pray for an order that the
respondents be
removed as Trustees of the King Fahad Trust in terms of section 20(1)
of the TPCA.
[2].
The King Fahad
Trust was created, and the Deed of Trust registered during 2006. The
applicants (referred to by the parties as the
South African Trustees)
and the respondents (referred to as the Saudi Trustees) are all
Trustees of the King Fahad Trust. The main
application was issued on
behalf of the applicants on or about 31 January 2023 and was
ironically served by email on the ‘respondents’
attorneys’ shortly thereafter. The respondents delivered notice
of intention to oppose the main application and on 1 March
2023 they
gave notice of their intention to counter apply
inter
alia
for
an order declaring ‘void and of no force and effect’ and
setting aside certain decisions made by the applicants
during the
existence of the Trust, for example: (a) the decision to appoint the
Imam and the stipulation of his duties; (b) the
decision of naming
the Mosque the ‘Houghton Mosque’, and (c) the decision to
call the Islamic Centre the ‘Houghton
Jumma Masjid, West
Street’. The respondents also applied for an order directing
the applicants to account to them ‘for
all decisions taken by
[the applicants] in relation to the trust assets, and the trust
affairs from inception to date’ and
to provide the audited
financial statements of the King Fahad Trust for the years ending
2014 to 2022.
[3].
On 25 March
2023, the applicants attorneys delivered a notice in terms of Uniform
Rule of Court 7(1), challenging the authority
of Shaheem Samsodien
Attorneys to act on behalf of the respondents. The rule 7(1) notice
reads in the relevant part as follows:
-
‘
Kindly
take notice that the first to fourth applicants dispute the authority
of the first to fifth respondents' attorneys to act
on behalf of the
first to fifth respondents in these proceedings (i.e. in the main
application and in the counter-application).
Take
further notice that the first to fourth applicants require the first
to fifth respondents' attorneys to produce to the Registrar,
and to
deliver a copy thereof to the first to fourth applicants' attorneys,
proof of their authority to act on behalf of the first
to fifth
respondents, including (but not necessarily limited to) a power of
attorney.’
[4].
The
respondents’ response to the said notice was to deliver a
‘Joint Proxy Form’ and an Updated ‘Joint Proxy
Form’, signed by all five respondents, in terms of which they
‘appoint the Royal Embassy of Saudi Arabia Ambassador
Sultan Al
Angari as [their] proxy, to vote for [them] and act on [their] behalf
at any of the meetings … … of the
Trust that are
convened at any time during [their] absence from the Republic of
South Africa’. Importantly, the updated proxy
goes on to
provide as follows: -
‘
More
particularly, Ambassador Sultan AI Angari is authorised to represent
and defend the action instituted against the Trustees
recorded herein
by the applicants, Messrs Mahomed, Surtee, Laher and Seedat under
case number 7716/2023, as well as launch a counter
application
against the abovementioned applicants under the aforesaid case number
and to engage Shaheem Samsodien Attorneys to
conduct the litigation
to its end and generally for effecting the purposes aforesaid to do
or cause to be done whatsoever shall
be requisite as fully and
effectively to all intents and purposes as we might or could do if
personally present and acting therein.
…
…’
.
[5].
As already
indicated, the proxy is signed by all of the respondents. The third
respondent, Abdullah F Al-Lheedan, attached his signature
on 9 April
2023, as did the fourth respondent, Mohammed Abdulwahed A Alarifi.
The other three respondents did not date their signatures.
[6].
The
respondents also delivered, as part of their rule 7(1) response, a
Power of Attorney, signed by Ambassador Sultan Al Angari
on 16 August
2023, nominating and appointing Shaheem Samsodien Attorneys as the
respondents’ attorneys. In the respondents’
answering
affidavit in the main application, the Ambassador also confirms under
oath that he is duly authorised by the joint proxy
to act on behalf
of the respondents in the matter.
[7].
On the face of
it, the respondents’ attorneys are duly authorised to act in
these proceedings on behalf of the respondents.
The applicants,
however, disagree. They persist with their authority challenge for
the reasons elaborated upon later on in the
judgment. The authority
challenge and the arguments for and against it were heard by me as an
interlocutory application on 27 February
2024. The issue to be
decided by me in this interlocutory application is simply whether
Shaheem Samsodien Attorneys are authorised
to act in the main
application and the counter-application on behalf of the respondents.
Crystalised further, the issue to be considered
by me is the validity
and the effectiveness of the joint Proxy by the respondents in favour
of the Ambassador.
[8].
Uniform Rule
of Court 7(1) provides as follows: -
‘
7
Power of Attorney
(1)
Subject to the
provisions of subrules (2) and (3) a power of attorney to act need
not be filed,
but
the authority of anyone acting on behalf of a party may, within 10
days after it has come to the notice of a party that such
person is
so acting, or with the leave of the court on good cause shown at any
time before judgment, be disputed
,
whereafter such person may no longer act unless he satisfied the
court that he is authorised so to act, and to enable him to do
so the
court may postpone the hearing of the action or application.’
(Emphasis added).
[9].
As already
indicated
supra
,
the applicants do not accept that Shaheem Samsodien Attorneys are
duly authorised by the respondents to act on their behalf in
the main
application. The challenge is primarily directed at the veracity and
the authenticity of the updated joint proxy. The
respondents contend
that there is no indication
ex
facie
the
document that it was in fact signed by the respondents. It does not
indicate where it was signed by the individual respondents,
nor are
the signatures by at least three of the respondents dated. Moreover,
so it is contended by the applicants, the proxy and
the signatures
thereon by the respondents have not been authenticated and there is
no way of telling whether indeed these are the
signatures of the
respondents. This ground of objection is therefore one relating to
form.
[10].
Closely
related to the aforegoing arguments is the applicants’
contention that there has not been compliance with the provisions
of
Uniform Rule of Court 63, which provides as follows:
’
63
Authentication of documents executed outside the Republic for use
within the Republic –
(1)
In this rule, unless inconsistent with the context
–
“
document”
means any deed, contract,
power of
attorney
, affidavit or other writing,
but does not include an affidavit or solemn or attested declaration
purporting to have been made before
an officer prescribed by section
eight of the Justices of the Peace and Commissioners of Oaths Act,
1963 (Act 16 of 1963);
“
authentication”
means, when applied to a document, the verification of any signature
thereon.
(2)
Any document
executed in any place outside the Republic shall be deemed to be
sufficiently authenticated for the purpose of use
in the Republic if
it be duly authenticated at such foreign place by the signature and
seal of office –
(a)
of the head of
a South African diplomatic or consular mission or a person in the
administrative or professional division of the
public service serving
at a South African diplomatic, consular or trade office abroad; or
(b)
of a
consul-general, consul, vice-consul or consular agent of the United
Kingdom or any other person acting in any of the aforementioned
capacities or a pro-consul of the United Kingdom;
(c)
of any
Government authority of such foreign place charged with the
authentication of documents under the law of that foreign country;
or
(d)
of any person
in such foreign place who shall be shown by a certificate of any
person referred to in paragraph (a), (b) or (c) or
of any diplomatic
or consular officer of such foreign country in the Republic to be
duly authorised to authenticate such document
under the law of that
foreign country; or
(e)
… … …
(2A)
Notwithstanding anything in this rule contained, any document
authenticated in accordance with the
provisions of the Hague
Convention Abolishing the Requirement of Legalisation for Foreign
Public Documents shall be deemed to be
sufficiently authenticated for
the purpose of use in the Republic where such document emanates from
a country that is a party to
the Convention.
(3)
… … …
(4)
Notwithstanding
anything in this rule contained, any court of law or public office
may accept as sufficiently authenticated any
document which is shown
to the satisfaction of such court or the officer in charge of such
public office, to have been actually
signed by the person purporting
to have signed such document.
(5)
… … …’
.
[11].
On the
assumption that the proxy was indeed signed outside of South Africa
by the respondents, it can safely be said that there
has not been
compliance with the provisions of rule 63(2) in that the said
instrument was not sufficiently authenticated as required
by the said
rule. This is, however, not the end of the matter. In terms of
subrule 63(4), a court is entitled to accept as sufficiently
authenticated a document which is shown to the satisfaction of the
court to actually have been by the person purporting to have
signed
such document.
[12].
As a matter of
fact, I am satisfied that the proxy was indeed actually signed by the
individual respondents. That is so because
there is just no evidence
to suggest otherwise. What is more is that the South African
Ambassador to the Royal Embassy of the Kingdom
of Saudi Arabia –
a very senior government official in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia –
confirms under oath that he is
authorised by the respondents to act
on their behalf by the joint proxy. This implies that he confirms the
signatures of the respondents
on the updated joint proxy. By not
accepting that the signatures on the proxy are those of the
respondents, I would be saying that
the ambassador is lying and
misleading the court. That is a conclusion that I cannot possibly
reach if regard is had to all of
the circumstances in the matter.
[13].
The same line
of reasoning applies to Shaheem Samsodien Attorneys, who confirms
that they are authorised by the ambassador to act
on behalf of the
respondents by virtue of the joint proxy. Not accepting that claim by
Shaheem Samsodien Attorneys implies that
they are lying and
misleading the court, which, again, is a proposition which cannot
possibly be reconciled with the facts in the
matter, especially the
fact that the applicants’ attorneys themselves have accepted,
without more, that the said attorneys
represent the respondents. Why
else would they have served the application on them as the
‘respondents’ attorneys’.
[14].
The simple
point is that, on the evidence presently before the court, there are
two possible postulations – and only two –
in relation to
the signatures on the joint proxy and the authenticity thereof. The
one is that the signatures were actually attached
to the document by
the respondents and that the respondents had appointed the ambassador
as their proxy. The other postulation
is that the signatures on the
proxy is a fraud and a forgery and that the respondents never
executed the said instrument. The implication
of the latter possible
scenario is that the ambassador and Shaheem Samsodien Attorneys are
complicit in a serious fabrication and
a forgery. As I said before, I
cannot possibly come to that conclusion, which means that I accept,
as a fact, that the joint proxy
was in fact signed by the
respondents. This, in turn, means that, as envisaged by rule 63(4), I
accept as sufficiently authenticated
the updated joint Proxy by the
respondents in favour of the Ambassador. That then takes care of the
first ground of the authority
challenge by the applicants.
[15].
The second
ground of the authority challenge by the applicants is based on a
provision of the Deed of Trust of the King Fahad Trust,
which
provides as follows: -
‘
6.
Absence of a Trustee
A
trustee who is temporarily absent from the address from where the
trust transacts its business, shall have the right to nominate
a
co-trustee by means of a written proxy to act on his behalf. If all
the serving trustees are to be absent in this way, they shall
have
the right by way of a joint proxy to nominate a person or persons to
act as trustees for the duration of their absence.’
[16].
The applicants
contend that the aforegoing provision specifically caters for the
circumstances under which a Trustee may appoint
a proxy and the
manner in which such a proxy may be appointed. These circumstances
are not present
in
casu
, and
therefore, so the argument on behalf of the applicants goes, the
appointment of a proxy by the respondents to represent them
in the
litigation is invalid.
[17].
I disagree
with this contention on behalf of the applicants. A contextual and
purposive interpretation of the said clause leads
me to the
conclusion that the clause relates only to those instances in which a
trustee acts in the process of transacting the
business of the Trust.
That is not the case in this litigation. Far from it – the
litigation
in
casu
relates to whether or not the respondents can and should continue
acting on behalf of the Trust. The said clause 6 accordingly
does
not, in my view, assist the applicants in their authority challenge.
[18].
Accordingly, I
conclude that the applicants’ challenge to the authority of
Shaheem Samsodien Attorneys to act on behalf of
the respondents has
no merit and should fail.
Costs
[19].
The
general rule in matters of costs is that the successful party should
be given his costs, and this rule should not be departed
from except
where there are good grounds for doing so, such as misconduct on the
part of the successful party or other exceptional
circumstances. See:
Myers
v Abramson
[2]
.
[20].
I can think of no reason why I should
deviate from this general rule.
[21].
I am therefore of the view that the
applicants should pay the first to the fifth respondents’ costs
of this application.
Order
[22].
Accordingly, I make the following order: -
(1)
The first to fifth respondents’
response to the applicants’ notice in terms of Uniform Rule of
Court 7(1), dated 25
March 2023, is declared to be adequate as
satisfying this Court that the respondents’ attorneys of record
have the requisite
authority to represent them in these proceedings.
(2)
The applicants’ dispute of and
challenge to the respondents’ attorneys’ authority to act
on behalf of the respondents
are declared to be without merit and is
dismissed.
(3)
The ‘Joint Proxy Form’, dated 9
April 2023, by the first to fifth respondents, appointing Royal
Embassy of Saudi Arabia
Ambassador Sultan Al Angari as their proxy to
represent them in these proceedings and to instruct their attorneys
of record on
their behalf, is declared to be valid and of full force
and effect.
(4)
The first, second, third and fourth
applicants, jointly and severally, the one paying the other to be
absolved, shall pay the first
to the fifth respondents’ costs
of this application relating to the rule 7(1) authority challenge.
_________________________________
L R ADAMS
Judge of the High
Court
Gauteng Division,
Johannesburg
HEARD ON:
27
th
February 2024
JUDGMENT DATE:
4
th
March
2024
FOR THE FIRST, SECOND,
THIRD AND FOURTH APPLICANTS:
Advocate Suhail
Mohammed
INSTRUCTED BY:
Koor Attorneys,
Houghton Estate, Johannesburg
FOR THE FIRST TO THE
FIFTH RESPONDENTS:
Adv A Vorster
INSTRUCTED BY:
Shaheem
Samsodien Attorneys, Sandown, Sandton
[1]
Trust
Property Control Act, Act 57 of 1988.
[2]
Myers
v Abramson
1951(3)
SA 438 (C) at 455.
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