Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 235South Africa
Vantage Mezzanine Fund II Partnership and Another v Hopeson and Others (2022-045978) [2024] ZAGPJHC 235 (8 March 2024)
Headnotes
there was no such prerequisite, and the matter could be decided by the court hearing the matter as a special plea as it was in OUTA.[2] [4] The third defendant argues that I erred because I did not follow the SCA decision in REDISA, which overturned the decision I, and the court in OUTA had followed.[3] It is correct that in the appeal of REDISA, the SCA overturned the court a quo’s decision, as I noted in my
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Vantage Mezzanine Fund II Partnership and Another v Hopeson and Others (2022-045978) [2024] ZAGPJHC 235 (8 March 2024)
Vantage Mezzanine Fund II Partnership and Another v Hopeson and Others (2022-045978) [2024] ZAGPJHC 235 (8 March 2024)
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sino date 8 March 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO:
2022/045978
1.
REPORTABLE:
YES/NO
2.
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/NO
3.
REVISED:
YES/NO
8 March 2024
In
the matter between:
VANTAGE
MEZZANINE FUND II PARTNERSHIP
First
Applicant
VANTAGE MEZZANINE FUND
II (PTY) LTD
Second
Applicant
and
NOMVETE
SANDILE HOPESON
First
Respondent
MRIGA
JABULANI VINCENT
Second Respondent
MAGWAZA
JOHANNES BHEKUMUZI
Third
Respondent
COMPANIES
AND INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY Fourth
Respondent
COMMISSION
LEAVE
TO APPEAL - JUDGMENT
Manoim J
[1]
This is an application for leave to appeal a decision I gave on 24
November 2023. What I was called upon to decide was an application
by
the plaintiffs for leave to appeal their particulars of claim. The
third defendant (“now the applicant in the leave to
appeal”)
opposed the application on the grounds that it was excipiable.
[1]
[2]
In brief the plaintiffs are creditors of a company in which the third
respondent,
inter alia
, served as a director. The plaintiffs
seek to rely on section 162(2) of the Companies Act 71, 2008 (“the
Act”) to declare
all the defendants in the matter, including
the third, delinquent directors. Although that section of the Act
does not expressly
give a creditor standing to make such an
application, the plaintiffs sought to rely on section 157(1)(d) of
the Act which in general
terms gives extended standing to apply for
relief in terms of the Act, to a “…
person acting in
the public interest with the leave of the court.”
[3]
In opposing the application for amendment the third defendant raised
a number of points by way of exception. One of them principally
is
what I have termed the sequencing issue. On his interpretation of
section 157(1)(d), “
leave
of the court”
means that the plaintiffs required leave of the court before they
issued summons. I decided this point against the third defendant
reasoning that the Act makes out no such requirement. Rather,
following two other previous decision on this point (
REDISA
and
OUTA
)
I held that there was no such prerequisite, and the matter could be
decided by the court hearing the matter as a special plea
as it was
in
OUTA
.
[2]
[4]
The third defendant argues that I erred because I did not follow the
SCA decision in
REDISA
,
which overturned the decision I, and the court in
OUTA
had followed.
[3]
It is correct
that in the appeal of
REDISA,
the SCA overturned the court a quo’s decision, as I noted in my
judgment; but it did not opine on this point. In the application
for
leave to appeal Mr Broster, who appeared for the third defendant,
sought reliance on several passages from the majority and
minority
judgment, to try and persuade me that it had. With respect I cannot
read those passages to deal with the sequencing point.
The closest he
could get to the point was this paragraph from the majority in the
SCA
REDISA
decision.
“
In
my view both applications should have failed at the ex parte stage of
the proceedings because the Minister had not established
the right to
obtain this remedy- the provisional liquidation order — in the
public interest.”
[4]
[5]
But I do not read this paragraph as one deciding the sequencing
issue. Rather this states the Minister had to establish the right
to
the remedy in the public interest. I have not decided anything to the
contrary. I have not decided by allowing the amendment
that the
plaintiffs have established they are acting in the public interest.
That is a factual enquiry to be determined later as
I made clear in
the decision.
[6]
The next exception point was that a creditor does not have standing
in terms of the Act to seek disqualification. I decided that
this was
a question of fact and that a creditor could bring such relief. But I
did not determine that the plaintiffs had established
this fact at
this stage. The argument now being made by the third defendant is
that I have decided a point of substantive law on
standing and hence
my decision on this point is final and hence appealable.
[7]
The plaintiffs argue that the entire appeal is misplaced because the
order I have given is not final on any of the issues. They
argued
that it may well be that the court that gets to decide the issue on
the facts, may conclude that the plaintiffs do not have
standing.
[8]
The plaintiffs are correct. A court might still conclude that the
plaintiffs are not entitled to this remedy because they are not
acting in the public interest. For my decision to be final it would
require a finding that a creditor could never seek such a remedy,
and
hence, any finding, that it still may, is final.
[9]
But in
Zweni,
which both parties agree is the leading decision
on this point, the question of whether an order if is final, in the
sense that
is appealable, rests on whether it has the following three
attributes:
(i)
the decision must be final in effect and not susceptible to
alteration by the Court of first instance;
(ii)
it must be definitive of the rights of the parties; and
(iii)
it must have the effect of disposing of at least a substantial
portion of the relief claimed in the main proceedings.
[5]
[10]
The plaintiffs argue correctly that my order has none of these three
attributes. The issue raised in this litigation which is of
final
effect is whether the plaintiffs can seek the disqualification
relief. I have not decided this relief.
[11]
The other objection to granting leave to appeal at this stage is that
it invites piecemeal litigation. Even if a court on appeal
were to
uphold my decision, the matter could still come back at a second
stage, if the trial court were to decide that the creditor
had
established public interest standing. Then there might be another
appeal. If that failed then there might be a further appeal
on
whether the court had correctly or not granted relief in terms of
section 162(2) which sets out a further test. It is not difficult
to
see how the matter will never get to final determination if it was
broken up into pieces like this. Whilst later cases suggest
that the
Zweni
trilogy might not always constitute the definitive test,
because despite this test leave could be granted it if it was “in
the interests of justice”, no such case is made out here. There
has been no new case law on this point that either side has
drawn to
my attention since I heard the matter in November last year.
[12]
Leave to appeal should not be granted lightly especially when it
would prolong, not curtail litigation. As Coleman J observed in
Swartzberg v Barclays National Bank Ltd
1975 (3) SA 515
(W)
“…
what
has to be considered in an application for leave to appeal against
the grant of provisional sentence, is whether the appeal
- if leave
were given - would lead to a just and reasonably prompt resolution of
the real issue between the parties. If it will
not do that,but will
merely be concerned with procedural matters and possibly costs
incurred in relation to such matters, that,
so the authorities say,
is a ground for refusing leave to appeal.”
[13]
I consider that the order I have granted is not final and hence not
appealable. But even if I am wrong on this point an appeal
court
would have to consider the law point – whether a creditor of a
company can seek disqualification of a director, on
the pleadings
only, without the benefit of a record. In short having to decide a
law point in abstract. That would not be in in
the interests of
justice. Thus, to the extent that post
Zweni
case law adds
this factor into consideration of whether an order is final and hence
appealable, I consider that this interest also
forms another basis to
refuse leave to appeal.
[14]
The application for leave to appeal is dismissed. Both parties made
the services of two counsel, so I consider it uncontroversial
to
order costs to include the services of two counsel.
ORDER: -
[15]
In the result the following order is made:
`
1. The application for leave to appeal
is dismissed.
N.
MANOIM
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION
JOHNANNESBURG
Date
of hearing:
07
March 2024
Date
of judgment:
08 March 2024
Appearances:
Applicants’
Counsel:
GW Amm
(Respondent
in the leave to appeal):
SG
Dos Santos
Instructed
by:
Cliffe Dekker Hofmeyr Inc.
Third
Respondent’s Counsel:
LB Broster SC
(Applicant
in the leave to appeal):
J
P
Broster
Instructed
by:
Bruce Rist Inc.
[1]
The other two defendants did not oppose the application to amend.
[2]
The Minister of Environmental Affairs v Recycling and Economic
Development Initiative of South Africa NPC
2018 (3) SA 604
(WCC).(REDISA 1) and Organisation Undoing Tax Abuse and Another v
Myeni and Others (15996/2017) [2019] ZAGPPHC 957 (12 December
2019)
https://www.saflii.org/za/cases/ZAGPPHC/2019/957.html.(
OUTA)
[3]
Recycling
and Economic Development Initiative of South Africa NPC v Minister
of Environmental Affairs
2019 (3) SA 251 (SCA).
[4]
Supra, paragraph 136.
[5]
Zweni
v Minister of Law and Order
1993 (1) SA 523
(A).
sino noindex
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