Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 432South Africa
Chance and Luna (Pty) Ltd and Others v Killarney Country Club (2022/018731) [2024] ZAGPJHC 432 (2 April 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
2 April 2024
Judgment
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## Chance and Luna (Pty) Ltd and Others v Killarney Country Club (2022/018731) [2024] ZAGPJHC 432 (2 April 2024)
Chance and Luna (Pty) Ltd and Others v Killarney Country Club (2022/018731) [2024] ZAGPJHC 432 (2 April 2024)
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sino date 2 April 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
Case
no: 2022/018731
1.
REPORTABLE: NO
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
3.
REVISED: NO
2
April 2024
In the matter between:
CHANCE
AND LUNA (PTY) LTD
trading as
La
Vie en Rose
First Applicant
MULLER
,
RONY
Second Applicant
EZERZER
,
MOMY
Third Applicant
EZERZER
,
LIOR
Fourth Applicant
CITY
OF JOHANNESBURG PROPERTY COMPANY SOC LTD
Fifth
Applicant
CITY
OF JOHANNESBURG METROPOLITAN MUNICIPALITY
Sixth
Applicant
and
KILLARNEY
COUNTRY CLUB
Respondent
JUDGMENT
(LEAVE TO APPEAL)
This
judgment is handed down electronically by circulation to the parties’
legal representatives by e-mail and publication
on CaseLines.
MOULTRIE
AJ
[1]
When this opposed application for leave to appeal was called for
hearing, the applicants were represented by Mr Lusenga,
their
attorney. Mr Spiller appeared on behalf of Killarney Country Club.
[2]
Mr Lusenga commenced his address by referring to the unavailability
of Mr Khaba, the applicants’ preferred counsel
and proceeded to
request that the application be heard at 09h00 on either 23 April
2024 or 30 April 2024.
[3]
In response to my enquiries regarding this request, Mr Lusenga (i)
confirmed that the parties had not taken advantage
of the opportunity
provided (undoubtedly for the convenience of counsel) in paragraph
11.3 of the Practice Manual to agree on three
alternative dates for
the hearing of the application, and that the date had therefore been
duly determined unilaterally by the
Court in accordance with the
Practice Manual and directives; (ii) indicated that the applicants
had not sought KCC’s agreement
to either of the now-proposed
alternative dates for the hearing; and (iii) that no formal
application for a postponement had been
delivered.
THE
POSTPONEMENT APPLICATION
[4]
Mr Lusenga then proceeded to move an application for a postponement
from the bar, noting that the applicants tendered
KCC’s costs
in the event that it was granted. After hearing both representatives,
I dismissed the application with costs
and indicated that I would
include the reasons for this in this judgment.
[5]
The principles applicable to such applications are well-established.
They are usefully summarised in paragraph 28 of
McCarthy Retail
Ltd v Shortdistance Carriers CC
2001 (3) SA 482
(SCA), the facts
of which were remarkably similar to those in the current matter. The
postponement of a matter set down for hearing
on a particular date
cannot be claimed as of right and is an indulgence that lies in the
discretion of the Court. A party opposing
the postponement has a
procedural right that the application (or appeal) should proceed on
the appointed day. It is also in the
public interest that there
should be an end to litigation and a postponement cannot be secured
by mere agreement between the parties.
The applicant must show good
cause for the postponement, taking into account a number of factors
including: (i) whether the application
has been timeously made; (ii)
whether the explanation given by the applicant for postponement is
“full and satisfactory”
(i.e. whether there is “good
and strong reason” for the postponement); and (iii) whether
there is prejudice to any
of the parties. In addition to good cause,
the Court must also be satisfied that the postponement is in the
interests of justice,
even if the application is unopposed.
[6]
Notwithstanding the absence of any affidavits, a number of facts
relevant to the determination of the postponement application
emerge
from the correspondence addressed by the parties’ attorneys to
the Court late in the week prior to the hearing and
were either
accepted as common cause by the parties’ representatives or are
incapable of being disputed. As will appear below,
the notable
exception in this regard are the facts relevant to the issue of
prejudice.
[7]
The
applicants served and uploaded the application for leave to appeal to
Caselines on 22 December 2023. KCC’s attorneys served
a notice
of intention to oppose on 11 January 2024, filed it on Court Online
the following day and uploaded it to Caselines on
19 January 2024.
They then made various attempts to secure a date for the hearing,
including attending at the registrar’s
offices on 22 January
2024 to enquire about the allocation of a date and assisting the
applicants’ attorneys on 9 February
2024 to upload the
application to Court Online, which the parties had been advised was a
pre-requisite for the allocation of a
date. KCC’s attorneys
attended at, made telephone calls to, and addressed correspondence to
the office of the Registrar seeking
the allocation of a date on
numerous occasions between 15 February and 12 March 2024.
[1]
For their part, the applicants state that a “date requisition
form” was uploaded, though they do not say when this
was done,
or by which party. I could not locate it on Caselines.
[8]
On 13 March 2024, I was requested to allocate a date for the hearing.
I did so on the same day, directing that (since
I was not aware of
any attempt by the parties to propose or agree three convenient
alternative dates for the hearing of the leave
to appeal application)
I had unilaterally determined that the application would be heard via
MS Teams at 09h30 on Monday, 25 March
2024. As noted above, there is
no dispute that this was in accordance with the relevant provisions
of the Practice Manual and directives.
The registrar’s office
immediately communicated my direction to the parties by means of an
email at 10h45 on 13 March 2024,
and by uploading it as a
“widely-shared note” on Caselines.
[9]
Mr Lusenga stated from the bar that upon receiving this notification
on 13 March 2024, he advised his clients of the date
of the hearing
and requested them to place him in funds. On the same day, he also
contacted Mr Khaba, the counsel who had represented
the applicants in
the stay and eviction applications. Mr Khaba informed Mr Lusenga that
he was owed outstanding fees and would
not accept any further
instructions until acceptable payment arrangements were put in place.
[10]
Significantly, Mr Lusenga informed the Court that he made no specific
enquiries with Mr Khaba at this time as to the
latter’s
availability to argue the leave to appeal application on 25 March
2024 should the necessary payment arrangements
be made. Mr Lusenga
thus recognised that, as early as 13 March 2024, there was a risk Mr
Khaba might not be available to argue
the leave to appeal application
– even if the issue of his fees could be resolved. Mr Lusenga
stated that despite being aware
of this risk, he made no attempt to
brief alternative counsel for the hearing.
[11]
Mr Lusenga advised his clients of the position and indicated that he
was not able to instruct Mr Khaba unless acceptable
payment
arrangements were put in place. On 19 March 2024, Mr Lusenga informed
Mr Khaba that payment arrangements had been made
and, for the first
time, enquired whether he would be available to argue the
application. Mr Khaba advised that he was unavailable
for the hearing
as he was involved in an arbitration hearing in Namibia.
[12]
Mr Lusenga informed the Court that although he considered delivering
a formal postponement application (and indeed had
worked on one,
although he did not state when), he had decided not to deliver such
an application, and instead had resolved to
“come and plead
with the court” to hear the application on a date when Mr Khaba
was available.
[13]
Two days later, on the afternoon of Thursday, 21 March 2024 (a public
holiday), and without any prior notice to KCC’s
attorneys, Mr
Lusenga irregularly addressed a letter to me via an email sent to the
office of the registrar. The letter set out
the unavailability of Mr
Khaba and the difficulties experienced in obtaining “financial
instructions”, as a result
of which it had been “impossible
to proceed … as instructed by our clients and secure Counsel”.
The letter requested
the Court to hear the application on one of
three dates when counsel would be available in May or June 2024, some
2 to 3 months
hence. KCC’s attorneys were copied, “to
confirm” their availability on the suggested dates. The letter
contained
no tender of costs or any reference to the issue of
prejudice.
[14]
KCC’s attorneys responded on Friday, 21 March 2024 at 15h07.
They (i) contended that since it was “inconceivable”
that
the applicants’ counsel was not available on any date prior to
the proposed dates for a virtual hearing the application,
the
inference could be drawn that the real purpose of the request was an
attempt “to use their counsel’s lack of availability
as
an excuse to further delay their eviction from the property”;
(ii) stated that their client were prejudiced by the delays
in
prosecuting the application; (iii) explained the steps that they had
taken to secure a date for the hearing; (iv) contended
that the
applicants had had more than adequate time since the date for the
hearing had been communicated on 13 March 2024 to brief
alternative
counsel and for such counsel to prepare; (v) observed that if the
applicants’ attorneys had indeed not been timeously
placed in
funds to prosecute the application for leave to appeal, they ought to
have withdrawn immediately, rather than remain
on record; and (vi)
emphasised that no agreement had been reached regarding alternative
dates.
[15]
When these letters were brought to my attention at 16h35 on Friday,
22 March 2024, I indicated to the registrar’s
office that I
would hear the parties’ respective submissions at the scheduled
hearing.
[16]
Apart from the tender of costs, in advancing argument in support of
the postponement, Mr Lusenga contented himself with
elucidating the
contents of his letter of 21 March 2024 regarding the difficulties
experienced in obtaining payment from his clients
and the
circumstances under which it had emerged that the applicants’
chosen counsel was unavailable for the hearing. Despite
the content
of KCC’s attorneys’ letter, he made no attempt at that
stage to address the issue of prejudice.
[17]
In opposing the application, although Mr Spiller emphasised that
there was no sworn evidence before me that would justify
a
postponement, he argued the matter on the basis of the factual
allegations set out in the applicants’ letter, as further
elucidated in Mr Lusenga’s address. In my view, this was
appropriate as it seems unlikely that KCC would be in a position
to
gainsay any of the factual allegations made by the applicants up to
that point.
[18]
While I decline to make a definitive finding that the true reason for
the postponement application was an attempt to
delay the eviction (as
opposed to the purported reasons therefore), the applicants failed to
show good cause upon which I could
exercise a discretion to allow a
postponement in the face of KCC’s procedural right that the
matter should proceed on the
duly appointed date. Indeed, it is clear
that the reasons advanced for the postponement were entirely of the
applicants’
own making.
[19]
In the first place not only did the applicants fail to make a
postponement applicant timeously, that failure appears
to have been a
conscious one. Although he contemplated doing so, Mr Lusenga chose
not to deliver a formal postponement application
as soon as possible
after becoming aware of Mr Khaba’s unavailability. Instead, he
delayed two further days until the metaphorical
eleventh hour on the
afternoon of a public holiday and only one clear court day before the
hearing before requesting the postponement
by means of correspondence
addressed to the Court, confidently proposing three alternative dates
many months in the future for
the hearing and expecting KCC’s
representatives simply to confirm availability. As noted above, a
postponement involves seeking
an indulgence from the Court, and
cannot be claimed as of right, nor be obtained by agreement. It was
only when this unorthodox
approach failed to bear fruit that the
applicants eventually sought, on the day of the hearing itself and
from the bar, to apply
for a postponement.
[20]
Secondly, in my view Mr Spiller correctly argued that the financial
difficulties experienced by the applicants in paying
their legal fees
and the unavailability of their preferred counsel in the
circumstances described by Mr Lusenga do not constitute
a
satisfactory explanation. It is evident that the applicants’
attorneys declined the opportunity afforded by the Practice
Manual to
seek to agree upon dates for the hearing that would be convenient for
their chosen counsel. As such, they would have
been aware that the
matter might be set down at any time without regard to his
availability. The Court is also left entirely unenlightened
as to the
applicants’ actual financial position and in particular whether
their failure to put their representatives in funds
was the result of
impecuniosity or mere recalcitrance. The applicants and their
attorneys would have been aware that funds would
be required to
prosecute the application for leave to appeal at the time that it was
delivered on 22 December 2023. No information
has been given as
whether any steps were taken to secure (or even request) funds in the
extended period that then elapsed between
that date and 13 March
2024.
[21]
Even once the payment issue had been sorted out and Mr Lusenga had
established on 19 March 2024 that Mr Khaba was not
available (a risk
that he had consciously assumed on 13 March 2024 when he failed to
enquire about counsel’s availability),
there was still
sufficient time to have briefed alternative counsel. He consciously
elected not to do so.
[22]
I also agree with Mr Spiller that the explanation given for the
applicant’s predicament is deficient in that no
information was
given as to whether Mr Khaba had made any attempt to secure a later
start of his arbitration hearing on the morning
of 25 March 2024 so
that he could argue the leave to appeal application on MS Teams,
bearing in mind that such applications should
ordinarily be disposed
of in 30 minutes.
[23]
Finally, as to the issue of prejudice to KCC, this is neither common
cause nor undisputed. The applicant’s letter
contained no
averment that KCC would not be prejudiced by a postponement. Even
though KCC cried prejudice in its letter of 22 March
2024, this
important issue was then also ignored by Mr Lusenga in the oral
argument he advanced in support of the application.
It was only in
reply that he deigned to address the issue for the first time from
the bar. There is no scope, in such circumstances,
for a factual
finding that the applicants have established that KCC would not be
prejudiced by the postponement.
[24]
For the reasons set out above, the postponement application fell
woefully short of what was required in every respect,
and it fell to
be dismissed with costs.
THE
APPLICATION FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL
[25]
In
Dexgroup
(Pty) Ltd v Trustco Group International (Pty)
Ltd and Others
2013 (6) SA 520
(SCA)
para 24
, Wallis JA observed on behalf of
the Supreme Court of Appeal that “the need to obtain leave to
appeal is a valuable tool
in ensuring that scarce judicial resources
are not spent on appeals that lack merit”. In
Metropol
Consulting (Pty) Ltd v City of Jhb Metropolitan Municipality
[2020]
ZAGPJHC 207 para 2
, Opperman J held that this
dictum
means that “a court should not grant leave to appeal, and
indeed is under a duty not to do so, where the threshold which
warrants such leave has not been cleared by the applicant”.
[26]
The relevant threshold applicable to this matter is laid down in
section 17(1)(a)(i)
of the
Superior Courts Act, 10 of 2013
, which
provides that this Court may only grant leave to appeal if it is of
the opinion that an appeal would have a reasonable prospect
of
success. Neither an “arguable case” on appeal nor a “mere
possibility of success” is sufficient (
Mothuloe Inc
Attorneys v Law Society of the Northern Provinces
[2017] ZASCA 17
para 18). Although paragraph 11 of the application contends that “it
is in the best interest of justice that leave to appeal
be granted”,
this is not a recognised threshold for the grant of leave to appeal
in
section 17(1).
Furthermore, as Mr Spiller noted during argument,
the application contains nothing that could be understood as
advancing the contention
that “there is some other compelling
reason why the appeal should be heard, including conflicting
judgments on the matter
under consideration” as envisaged in
section 17(1)(a)(ii)
, and this assertion was not challenged by Mr
Lusenga in reply, rightly in my view. There is also no suggestion
(nor could there
be) that subsections 17(1)(b) or (c) are of
application.
[27]
The
application for leave to appeal impugns a range of specific findings
of fact and conclusions of law made in the judgment.
[2]
However, the bulk of these findings and conclusions are baldly
disputed without explaining either why it is contended that they
are
not adequately supported by the reasons set out in the judgment or on
what basis another court might come to different findings
or
conclusions. There is thus no basis for me to conclude that these
grounds of appeal have any prospect of success. Mr Lusenga
did,
however, elucidate on three aspects in his oral submissions.
[28]
The first of these, which Mr Lusenga identified in argument as the
applicants’ “main point”, is the
contention that I
“erred by not considering that the Property is currently in the
control of the City of Johannesburg and
the property will be
advertised to either [KCC] or the [applicants] to bid on an open
tender”. The applicants’ contention
is that there is a
reasonable prospect that another court would hold that it is in the
interests of justice to grant the stay application
on the basis of
this alleged fact.
[29]
In
considering this ground of appeal, it must be borne in mind, as Mr
Spiller pointed out and as was recognised by the Constitutional
Court
itself in
Mokone
v Tassos Properties
2017
(5) SA 456
(CC) para 72, that the determination of the stay
application involved the exercise of a “wide” discretion
(also referred
to as a discretion in the “strict“ or
“true” sense).
[3]
An
appellate court would thus not consider whether the decision to
dismiss the stay application was correct, but would “only
interfere in limited circumstances; for example, if it is shown that
the discretion has not been exercised judicially or has been
exercised based on a wrong appreciation of the facts or wrong
principles of law.”
[30]
While it does appear from the formulation of this ground of appeal
(i.e. an alleged failure to consider a relevant alleged
fact) that
the applicants are alive to the higher standard applicable on appeal,
paragraphs 17 to 19 of the judgment demonstrate
that I did indeed
properly consider this issue on the basis of the factual allegations
and legal arguments advanced before me.
[31]
Furthermore, even if it were open to an appeal court to make the
finding of fact contended for, the new argument advanced
for the
first time during the leave to appeal hearing as to the potential
basis of such a finding is unsustainable. Mr Lusenga
sought to
persuade me that paragraph 2.5 of the City of Johannesburg’s
affidavit can only be understood to mean that a tender
process for a
lease will in fact be undertaken. He argued that this is because the
City is obliged to follow such a process in
terms of applicable
procurement precepts (he referred to section 217 of the Constitution
and the Municipal Management Finance Act,
56 of 2003). Mr Lusenga was
however constrained to concede that if the City succeeded with its
eviction application, it would be
entitled to elect not to conclude a
lease at all but rather to use the land including the restaurant
premises for some other purpose
altogether. There is thus no reason
to think that an appeal court might find that the property will in
fact inevitably be advertised
for lease on an open tender.
[32]
The second ground argued by Mr Lusenga was that I incorrectly held
that the conclusion of La Vie’s sublease in
breach of clause 15
of KCC’s notarial lease merely rendered it voidable, and not
void
ab initio
.
[33]
The basis for this holding is contained in paragraph 29 of the
judgment. Mr Lusenga did not refer me to any authorities
contrary to
those cited or identify any fault in the reasoning in that paragraph.
Indeed, the application for leave to appeal itself
states that KCC’s
notarial lease was “terminated” by the City of
Johannesburg, and also that KCC “ceased
to be a sub-lessor or
exercise powers on the date of cancellation”, both of which
statements are inconsistent with the contention
that La Vie’s
sublease was void
ab initio
.
[34]
The final
argument advanced by Mr Lusenga (albeit not contained in the
application for leave to appeal) was that the current matter
is
distinguishable from
Mighty
Solutions CC v Engen Petroleum Ltd
2016 (1) SA 621
(CC) because La Vie’s sublease was a “verbal”
one,
[4]
whereas the sublease
(the operating lease) at issue in
Mighty
Solutions
was a written one that contained express provisions requiring the
sub-lessee (Mighty Solutions) to vacate the premises in the event
that the sub-lessor’s (Engen’s) own lease was terminated.
[35]
This argument is not sustainable. As appears from paragraphs 47 and
48 of the Constitutional Court’s judgment,
the sublease in
question only contained express provisions dealing with its
termination, and in paragraph 49 the Court specifically
observed that
“[i]n none of these events was it expressly provided in the
operating lease that Mighty Solutions would vacate
the premises and
restore vacant possession to Engen”. But the Court held that
this was unnecessary because “the implied
terms of the contract
obliged Mighty Solutions to do so, and entitled Engen to enforce
those terms by way of eviction proceedings”.
I was referred to
no authority suggesting that such implied terms only arise in
terminated written leases and not in unwritten
leases, and I can
think of no possible reason why that would be the case. Mr Spiller
referred me to
Cox v Horn
[2022] ZAGPJHC 524 paras 24 –
26 in which the rule in
Mighty Solutions
was found to apply to
an oral lease.
[36]
In the circumstances, the applicants have failed to persuade me that
an appeal would have any reasonable prospect of
success.
[37]
The application for leave to appeal is dismissed with costs.
RJ MOULTRIE AJ
Acting Judge of the High
Court
Gauteng
Local Division, Johannesburg
DATE
HEARD:
25 March 2024
JUDGMENT:
2 April 2024
APPEARANCES
For the
applicants:
S Lusenga of Lusenga Attorneys Inc.
For
the respondent:
LM Spiller instructed by J Weinberg of Telfer Inc.
[1]
I should record that, contrary to what is suggested in the timeline
attached to KCC’s letter, I was not requested by the
Registrar’s office to allocate a date for the hearing at any
point during this period.
[2]
In two instances (paragraphs 4 and 6), findings not made in the
judgment are purportedly impugned.
[3]
S
v Basson
2007
(3) SA 582
(CC) para 111.
This
kind of discretion has somewhat confusingly also been referred to as
“
a
discretion
in the
narrow sense
”
(
Fusion
Properties 233 CC v Stellenbosch Municipality
2021 JDR 0094 (SCA) para 29, fn 16, referring to
Media
Workers Association of South Africa and Others v Press Corporation
of South Africa Ltd ('Perskor')
[1992] ZASCA 149
;
1992 (4) SA 791
(A) at 800G-H). This should not be understood to
mean a “narrow discretion” – quite the contrary.
[4]
It appears to me that it was common cause that La Vie’s
sublease was a tacit one (judgment, para 7).
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