Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 333South Africa
Acting Sheriff of the High Court Mahikeng v Dada Motors Mahikeng CC and Others (43929/2015) [2024] ZAGPJHC 333 (27 March 2024)
Headnotes
PDF format RTF format
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
>>
2024
>>
[2024] ZAGPJHC 333
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Acting Sheriff of the High Court Mahikeng v Dada Motors Mahikeng CC and Others (43929/2015) [2024] ZAGPJHC 333 (27 March 2024)
Acting Sheriff of the High Court Mahikeng v Dada Motors Mahikeng CC and Others (43929/2015) [2024] ZAGPJHC 333 (27 March 2024)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
Links to summary
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2024_333.html
sino date 27 March 2024
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
FLYNOTES:
CIVIL PROCEDURE – Interpleader –
Expedited
procedure
–
Dispute
regarding ownership of motor vehicle – First claimant
claimed ownership of vehicle – Lengthy delay and
conduct in
prosecuting claim to vehicle – Resulted in first claimant
renouncing right to challenge validity of writ
– Parties are
to jointly approach Deputy-Judge President with request that
matter be dealt with regarding ownership
– Application to
rescind writ dismissed – Uniform Rule 58(6).
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 43929/2015
1.
Reportable: Yes
2.
Of Interest to other Judges: Yes
27
March 2024
In
the matter between:
Acting
Sheriff of the High Court Mahikeng
Applicant
and
Dada
Motors Mahikeng CC T/A Dada Motors
First Claimant
Peolwane
Properties (Pty) Ltd
Second Claimant
Lobelo,
Kagisho Lambert Execution Debtor
JUDGMENT
Vally
J
[1]
On 16 August 2018 the Acting Sheriff of the High Court, Mahikeng
(Sheriff), issued an interpleader notice in terms of
rule 58 of the
Uniform Rules of Court in relation to a dispute regarding the
ownership of a motor vehicle, a Bentley Continental
GT (vehicle). The
application results from the Sheriff attempting to perform his
statutory duties by executing a writ of execution,
issued by the
second claimant, pursuant to it having secured a monetary judgment
from this court against the execution debtor (writ).
The writ was
issued on 10 November 2017. Pursuant thereto, the Sheriff, on 13
November 2017, attached the vehicle. On 8 January
2018 the first
claimant served an affidavit on the Sheriff claiming that it, and not
the execution debtor, is the owner of the
vehicle. Why the
interpleader notice was only made on 16 August 2018 is not revealed
in the papers. In any event, it is in the
face of these competing,
mutually exclusive claims, that the interpleader notice was issued.
[2]
Having received the interpleader notice, both claimants needed to
file their respective particulars of claim (particulars
required of
them in terms of the provisions of sub-rule 58(5)). This took place
in September 2019 – more than a year after
the interpleader
notice was delivered. Their respective particulars are short, crisp
and clear. Read together, they reveal the
existence of a simple,
single-issue dispute between the two claimants. Expressed as a
question it is: who is the owner of the vehicle?
[3]
Upon filing their
respective particulars, the matter should have been placed before a
court.
[1]
This did not occur.
Had it occurred, the two claimants would have been required to appear
before the court. The court is empowered
to ‘then and there
adjudicate’ over their respective claims after hearing ‘such
evidence as it deems fit.’
This procedure favoured by sub-rule
58(6) is clearly designed to ensure expeditious finalisation of
matters. The parties’
respective evidences are to be presented
to the court and the court ought to ‘there and then’ make
its decision. This
is so, because, amongst others, competing claims
made on goods, money or immovable property attached by a Sheriff
interfere with
the Sheriff’s ability to discharge his duties.
Thus, the procedure does not envisage or expect the lengthy drawn-out
process
that is normally pursued in a trial action, involving all the
accompaniments of the pre-trial processes - such as discovery and
request for further particulars for purposes of trial preparation and
pre-trial conferences – necessary to get the matter
to be trial
ready.
[4]
Once the matter is presented before a judge the judge may:
a.
‘
order that any
claimant be made a defendant in any action already commenced …’
[2]
b.
‘
order that any
issue between the claimants be stated by way of a special case or
otherwise and tried, and for that purpose order
which claimant shall
be the plaintiff and which shall be the defendant.’
[3]
[5]
This, as mentioned, did not take place here. Instead, on 8 October
2019, the second claimant delivered its discovery affidavit,
but then
did nothing until 3 November 2020 when it delivered an application in
terms of rule 35 calling on the first claimant to
deliver its
discovery affidavit. On 20 November 2020 the first claimant filed its
discovery affidavit.
[6]
On 30 September 2022 the first claimant delivered what it styles a
‘supplementary affidavit’. The deponent
to the affidavit
is the same person that deposed to the affidavit on 8 January 2018 –
the one delivered in response to the
writ claiming ownership of the
vehicle. In this ‘supplementary affidavit’ he expands
upon his claim that the first
claimant is the owner of the vehicle.
There is, however, an important averment in this affidavit, which is
to the effect that the
vehicle was valued at R1 400 000.00
but has since, as a result of depreciation, diminished to
R550 000.00. It is
this kind of loss of value that an
interpleader proceeding, which is designed for expeditious resolution
of competing claims, could
easily prevent. It must at this stage be
emphasised that neither of the affidavits accompany a notice of
motion seeking particular
relief. However, as will be seen later, the
second claimant contends, which the first claimant does not deny,
that the first claimant
regards the affidavits to constitute its
evidence in support of an application to have the interpleader
determined by way of application.
[7]
On 2 February 2023, the second claimant served a notice in terms of
sub-rules 35(3) and (6) seeking information concerning
certain
documents and tape recordings. In particular, the second claimant
sought ‘copies of all statements of account in
respect of all
accounts held by the first claimant at any bank institution for the
period August 2011 to May 2012’ (bank
statements). This is the
period that the first claimant claims it received partial payment for
the sale of the vehicle. The next
day, on 3 February 2023, the first
claimant’s attorneys recorded in writing that the first
claimant would not furnish the
bank statements. They say in this
regard: ‘Your client’s desperate attempt to delay the
matter further with a request
for further discovery is rejected and
will be opposed.’
[8]
On 28 February 2023 the second claimant delivered what it called its
‘interpleader affidavit’. Its delivery
is, no doubt,
motivated by the filing of the two affidavits of the first claimant –
the one of 8 January 2018 and the one
of 30 September 2022 - and is
meant to be a response to these two affidavits. Without responding to
each and every averment in
the two affidavits, this ‘interpleader
affidavit’ does, however, present a diametrically opposite view
regarding the
ownership of the vehicle.
[9]
More importantly, the second claimant takes umbrage at the filing of
the two affidavits. It says:
‘
Uniform Rule 58
does not provide for the filing of affidavits in the interpleader
process prior to the Court making a determination
concerning how the
matter shall proceed in terms of subsection (6). Notwithstanding the
aforesaid, the first claimant has already
filed two affidavits in
this action.’
[10]
The second claimant is correct. Once the respective particulars have
been filed it is for the judge, and not the parties,
to determine how
the matter shall proceed. But this is not what happened, and to the
extent that there can be any blameworthiness
for this it would have
to lie with both claimants’ legal representatives. The second
claimant’s position is that the
matter should proceed to trial.
While the first claimant has filed two affidavits, it does not
explicitly aver in any of its affidavits
that the matter should be
determined by way of application proceedings. Nevertheless, that it
adopted this view becomes clearer
in time. Its position is recorded
in the next paragraph in the second claimant’s affidavit:
‘
The
second claimant has indicated to the first claimant that its position
is that the interpleader summons must proceed to trial
so that the
issues can be properly ventilated and the various witnesses evidence
tested by way of cross-examination and that it
objects to the matter
being determined on the affidavits.’
[11]
The objection to the matter being determined on the affidavits is
emphatically articulated by the second claimant in
the paragraphs
that follow.
[12]
On 10 March 2023 the second claimant filed its discovered documents,
and on 27 March 2023 the first claimant did the
same. On 30 March
2023 the second claimant filed its heads of arguments on the issue of
the ownership of the vehicle. The first
claimant did not file its
heads of argument. Instead, on 15 June 2023 - four and half months
after the interpleader affidavit was
delivered – it delivered a
notice of motion of ‘counterclaim’ together with an
affidavit which is designated
‘Replying Affidavit and Founding
Affidavit to Counterclaim.’
[13]
A few concerns arise with regard to this notice of motion and the
accompanying affidavit. They are:
a. The notice of
motion is not presented in accordance with Form 2A of the First
Schedule of the Uniform Rules of Court. The
second claimant is not
informed of the time period within which it should respond to
thereto.
b. It is designated
to be a ‘counterclaim’, but it is not clear what it is a
counterclaim to. The two parties
have already – a few years
before the filing of this notice of motion – filed their
respective particulars in the interpleader
proceedings in which they
both make a claim to the vehicle. Strictly speaking, there is no
claim and counter claim. There are simply
two competing claims.
c. no application
for condonation for the late filing of this ‘replying
affidavit’ has ever been made.
[14]
That said, the relief sought in this ‘counterclaim’ is
for the writ to be ‘rescinded’, and the
contents of
certain paragraphs in the second claimant’s ‘interpleader
affidavit’ be struck-off on the grounds
that they are
‘scandalous, vexatious and/or irrelevant.’ This
application is brought five years after the notice was
issued and six
years after the writ was issued.
[15]
The first claimant, after noting that, (i) the matter should be
processed in terms of the provisions of rule 58, (ii)
the two
claimants have already filed their respective particulars and (iii)
have also filed affidavits in the matter ‘in
which documents
discovered have been made available’, contends that the
‘affidavits have crystallized the matter’
allowing this
court ‘to adjudicate the claims by way of these affidavits’.
There are two problems with this contention,
namely:
a. The matter was
not placed before a judge in terms of sub-rule 58(6), and it had not
in all this time brought a formal application
to have the matter
determined on papers. Instead, it has only brought a ‘counterclaim’
in which it incorporates what
it says is its ‘replying
affidavit’ to the ‘answering affidavit’ of the
second claimant.
b. The first
claimant forgets that the second claimant complained that it (first
claimant) has refused to discover pertinent
documents and has issued
a sub-rule 35(3) notice to force it to discover these documents.
[16]
The first claimant contends that the writ should never have been
issued because the order it is founded upon is not one
for the
payment of money. It is in substance one that requires Mr Lobelo to
do something. The former order is normally referred
to as an
ad
pecunium solvendum
(to pay the money), and the latter as
ad
factum praestandum
(to perform or desist from performing the
deed).
[17]
On 18 December 2023 – six months after receipt of the ‘replying
affidavit’ incorporating a ‘counterclaim’
–
the second claimant delivered its answering affidavit to the
‘counterclaim’. No explanation is furnished as
to why it
was delivered late, and no condonation application was made. The
answering affidavit itself is relatively short, but
contains
annexures that make the entire affidavit voluminous. The annexures
include affidavits and sworn statements filed in matters
between
itself and Mr Lobelo, the execution debtor. Of particular importance
is a sworn statement made by Mr Lobelo on 13 November
2017 in support
of the claim by the first claimant that it is the owner of the
vehicle. The sworn statement is in manuscript form.
The full
statement reads:
‘
I
am not the registered owner of the Bentley Continental GT with
licence number H[…] 2[…] N[…] and vehicle
regist
number J[…] 7[…] N[…]. The vehicle’s
registered owner is Yusuf Dada of Dada Motors … The
vehicle
was given to me on loan.’
[18]
While Mr Lobelo claims that he is not the registered owner of the
vehicle, both claimants accept that he is the registered
owner. The
first claimant contends that while the vehicle is registered in Mr
Lobelo’s name (making him the registered owner),
it is the
actual owner. In addition, the first claimant claims that it is the
actual owner because, while the vehicle was sold
to Mr Lobelo, he has
yet to pay the full purchase price. On this version, the vehicle was
‘sold’, albeit not fully
paid for, to Mr Lobelo. On Mr
Lobelo’s version it was ‘given to [him] on loan’.
The two versions are not reconcilable.
[19]
On 18 December 2023 the second claimant delivered its answering
affidavit to the ‘counterclaim’. It resists
the
‘counterclaim’ on two grounds: (i) it is brought so late
in the day that it should not be entertained; and, (ii)
it is without
merit.
[20]
On 10 January 2024, the first claimant set the matter down for 12
February 2024 on the opposed motion roll. This is before
it had
delivered its replying affidavit in the ‘counterclaim’.
In fact, it delivered its heads of argument concerning
the issues
raised in the ‘counterclaim’ on 24 January 2024, and then
filed its replying affidavit in the ‘counterclaim’
two
days later on 26 January 2024. These heads are dated 6 October 2023.
[21]
The first claimant’s response to the contention that it should
not be allowed to challenge the validity of the
writ at this late
stage is that it only became aware of the defects in the writ when it
received the interpleader affidavit (which
it calls the answering
affidavit), and therefore it cannot be faulted for only instituting
the ‘counterclaim’ six years
after the writ was issued. I
explain below, why in my view, this explanation does not assist it.
[22]
The real issue between the parties has always been the ownership of
the vehicle. That is the issue the first claimant
sought to have
determined on the papers. The ‘counterclaim’ introduced
another, precursor issue: the validity of the
writ. When it set the
matter down, and when it filed its practice note, the first claimant
made it clear that it wished to have
both issues determined at once.
The validity of the writ should be determined first, and should it
lose on that issue, then the
second issue should be determined.
However, at the hearing, after the matter stood down for a day, it
changed its position. It
asked that only the first issue – the
validity of the writ - be determined by the court regardless of the
outcome on this
issue. The second claimant agreed with this approach.
[23]
The ‘counterclaim’ was brought more than six years after
the writ was issued. In the meantime, the first
claimant had filed
its particulars and three affidavits in the quest to make out its
case that it is the owner of the vehicle.
It has always accepted that
the writ was valid. It has by its actions renounced its right to
challenge the writ. It has to be remembered
that it has maintained
that it and the second claimant had already made discovery. While the
second claimant has complained that
the first claimant’s
discovery was inadequate, it (the first claimant) made no such
allegation against the second claimant.
Nothing prevented it from,
after exercising reasonable care, seeking any document or tape
recording it believed the second claimant
was withholding. On the
contrary, it was the party that had been accused of withholding
relevant documentation, such as its bank
statements showing that it
received payment for the vehicle from Mr Lobelo. It was all along
satisfied with the discovery made
by the second claimant. And, it
conducted no investigation of its own, which would, amongst others,
examine the papers before the
court that issued the monetary
judgment.
[24]
Its claim that it was unaware of the defects in the writ until the
‘interpleader affidavit’ was filed does
not assist it.
The ‘interpleader affidavit’ contains nothing that is
radically different from the claims of the second
claimant in its
particulars. As a reasonable claimant it should have had no
difficulty in acquiring all the information regarding
the writ from
the moment it filed its particulars. If it did not act then, it could
still have acquired it well before it filed
its first affidavit. It
simply did nothing to get the information it claims to have
inadvertently acquired. If indeed it did not
acquire the necessary
information soon after it was presented with the writ, it must bear
the consequence of that. It is, in other
words, the author of its own
misfortune.
[25]
It cannot go unnoticed that the challenge to the writ at this late
stage is severely prejudicial to the second claimant.
Given the
conduct of the first claimant, it was entitled to assume that there
was no issue regarding the validity of the writ.
[26]
It has been held as long
ago as 1878 that if a person seeking to set aside a writ has delayed
for a considerable time before bringing
the application she may have
renounced her right to object to the writ.
[4]
Even if it did not file its particulars and the affidavits that
followed, I would still hold that by delaying for six years the
first
claimant has renounced its right to challenge the validity of the
writ. Such a lengthy delay cannot under any circumstances
be condoned
regardless of how strong its case may be. A party that lacks the
necessary vigilance to properly prosecute its case,
as the first
claimant has in this case, should bear the consequence of its
inaction or lackadaisical attitude. It cannot be allowed
to frustrate
the course of justice by sitting on its hands. In my view, the sheer
length of delay on the part of the first claimant
results in it
losing its right to mount the challenge. It is by any standard
unjustifiable.
[27]
On this finding there is no need to say anything about whether the
writ is derived from an
ad pecunium solvendum
or
ad factum
praestendum
order.
[28]
Costs should follow the result.
[29]
I conclude therefore that the first claimant is to be barred from
challenging the validity of the writ.
[30]
In closing, it is necessary to record that the way this matter was
allowed to develop or evolve is nothing short of scandalous.
What was
meant to be a simple process in terms of rule 58 has turned out to be
a complicated, long drawn-out process consuming
valuable time, money
and judicial resources with no end in sight. The cause of this is the
decision by the parties to depart from
the process prescribed in
sub-rule 58(6). I have no doubt that had that process been adhered to
this matter would long have been
finalised. There is only one issue
between the parties: who is the owner of the vehicle? It could have
been resolved fairly quickly
if the parties had complied with the
provisions of sub-rule 58(6). They simply had to approach the
Deputy-Judge President to have
the matter placed before a court and
let the rest follow.
Order
[31]
The following order is made:
a. The application
to rescind the writ or to have it set aside is dismissed.
b. The parties are
to jointly approach the Deputy-Judge President with a request that
the matter be dealt with in accordance
with the provisions of
sub-rule 58(6) of the Uniform Rules of Court.
c. The first
claimant is to pay the costs of this application.
Vally
J
Gauteng
High Court, Johannesburg
Date
of hearing:
14 February
2024
Date
of judgment:
27 March 2024
For
the first claimant:
Y Alli
Instructed
by:
Erasmus Motaung Inc
For
the second claimant: A M van Niekerk
Instructed
by:
Padayachee Attorneys
[1]
Sub-rule 58(6)(a)
[2]
Sub-rule 58(6)(b)
[3]
Sub-rule 58(6)(c)
[4]
Wolstenholme
v Boyes
1878
Buch 175. See also:
MEC,
Department of Public Works v Ikamva Architects
2022 (6) SA 275
at [60]
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
South African Legal Practice Council v Louw (2023/068293) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1114; [2025] 1 All SA 744 (GJ) (1 November 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 1114High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
South Africa Municipal Workers Union v Mahlomoyane and Other (2023/014975) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1175 (12 November 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 1175High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
South African Securitisation Program (RF) Ltd v Complete Avionic Systems (Pty) Limited and Another (2022/045085) [2024] ZAGPJHC 522 (28 May 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 522High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
South African Board of Sheriffs v Cibe (000219/2023) [2024] ZAGPJHC 583 (21 June 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 583High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
South African Securitisation Programme (RF) Ltd v T.C Esterhuysen Primary School and Others (2024/076235) [2025] ZAGPJHC 1288 (4 December 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 1288High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar