Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 422South Africa
Harmony Gold Mining Company Limited and Others v Capm Tau Mine (Pty) Ltd and Others (2023/067518) [2024] ZAGPJHC 422 (2 May 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
2 May 2024
Headnotes
between Harmony and/or AngloGold and Kopanang, Heaven Sent, CAPM Tau, CAPM, Tau Lekoa Gold Mining Company (Pty) Ltd and/or any of the Village Main Reef companies, including but not limited to Village Main Ref Gold Investment 01 (Pty) Ltd, Village Main Reef (Pty) Ltd and Village Main Reef Empowerment Company (Pty) Ltd in regard to the tailings storage facilities as provided for in the SLA;
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 422
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Harmony Gold Mining Company Limited and Others v Capm Tau Mine (Pty) Ltd and Others (2023/067518) [2024] ZAGPJHC 422 (2 May 2024)
Harmony Gold Mining Company Limited and Others v Capm Tau Mine (Pty) Ltd and Others (2023/067518) [2024] ZAGPJHC 422 (2 May 2024)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2024_422.html
sino date 2 May 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case number: 2023-067518
1. REPORTABLE: NO
2.OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO
3. REVISED: YES
2 May 2024
In
the matter between:
HARMONY
GOLD MINING COMPANY LIMITED
First
Applicant
HARMONY
MOAB KHOTSONG OPERATIONS (PTY) LTD
Second
Applicant
PETER
CORNELIS ERNST BIERMAN
Third
Applicant
NEIL
TERBLANCHE
Fourth
Applicant
ROLLET
MASONKONA
Fifth
Applicant
and
CAPM
TAU MINE (PTY)
LTD
First
Respondent
HEAVEN
SENT GOLD PROCESSING COMPANY
(PTY)
LTD
Second
Respondent
SCHALK
BURGER
N.O.
Third
Respondent
THE
CLERK OF THE RANDBURG MAGISTRATE'S COURT
Fourth
Respondent
JAMES
&
WAGENER
Fifth Respondent
JOHAN
LABUSCHAGNE
Sixth Respondent
RYNIER
SHIELDS
Seventh Respondent
JUDGMENT
PULLINGER
AJ
INTRODUCTION
[1]
The applicants apply for an order setting aside certain
subpoenas
duces tecum
(“
the Subpoenas
”) issued by the
fourth respondent in the private arbitration proceedings before Adv
Schalk Burger SC (“
the Arbitration
”).
[2]
The Arbitration concerns a dispute between the first and second
respondents, arising from a purchase and sale agreement
in of certain
shares concluded in April 2022.
[3]
The Subpoenas which are the subject of paragraph 1 of the
applicants' notice of motion, call upon Messrs Bierman,
Terblanche
and Masonkona to deliver certain documents to the fourth respondent.
Those documents are:
"1 The
following documentation for the period from 1 February 2018 until 30
June 2022 in respect of the written
service level agreement
concluded between AngloGold Ashanti Limited ("
AngloGold
")
and the Kopanang Gold Mining Company Proprietary Limited
("
Kopanang
"), in terms of which AngloGold agreed,
inter alia, to accept and store tailings produced from the processing
of ore from the
Mine at the West Gold Plant at one of AngloGold's
tailings storage facilities ("
the SLA
"):
1.1 The agreement
concluded between Harmony and AngloGold in terms of which Harmony
acquired the rights and obligations in and to
the SLA;
1.2 All and any
correspondence exchanged between Harmony and/or AngloGold and
Kopanang, Heaven Sent Gold Processing Company (Pty)
Ltd ("
Heaven
Sent
") , CAPM Tau Mine (Pty) Ltd ("
CAPM Tau
"),
CAPM African Precious Metals (Pty) Ltd ("
CAPM
"), Tau
Lekoa Gold Mining Company (Pty) Ltd and/or any of the Village Main
Reef companies, including but not limited to Village
Main Ref Gold
Investment 01 (Pty) Ltd, Village Main Reef (Pty) Ltd and Village Main
Reef Empowerment Company (Pty) Ltd in regard
to the tailings storage
facilities as provided for in the SLA, including but not limited to
any correspondence concerning whether
the tailings facilities had
become or would soon become unsuitable for or unavailable for use in
respect of tailings from the gold
ore processing facility operated by
West Gold Plant Proprietary Limited;
1.3 All and any
correspondence exchanged with experts appointed to inspect and
investigate the tailings storage facilities as provided
for in the
SLA;
1.4 All expert reports
prepared and provided to Harmony in respect of the tailings storage
facilities as provided for in the SLA;
1.5 Notices calling for
meetings, agenda's and minutes of meetings held between Harmony
and/or AngloGold and Kopanang, Heaven Sent,
CAPM Tau, CAPM, Tau Lekoa
Gold Mining Company (Pty) Ltd and/or any of the Village Main Reef
companies, including but not limited
to Village Main Ref Gold
Investment 01 (Pty) Ltd, Village Main Reef (Pty) Ltd and Village Main
Reef Empowerment Company (Pty) Ltd
in regard to the tailings storage
facilities as provided for in the SLA;
1.6 Any breach notices,
cancellation notices, force majeure notices and the like issued by
Harmony to Kopanang in terms of the SLA;
and/or
1.7 Any and all
documentation relevant to the SLA and exchanged between the parties
to the SLA and any third parties in regard to
the tailings storage
facilities as provided for in the SLA."
[4]
The Subpoenas which are the subject of paragraph 2 of the applicants'
notice of motion call upon Messrs Labuschagne and
Shields to deliver
the following documents to the fourth respondent:
"1. The
following documentation for the period from 1 February 2018 until 30
June 2022 in respect of the tailing storage
facilities of Harmony
Gold Mining Company Limited & Harmony Moab Khotsong Operations
Proprietary Limited ("
Harmony
"), including and not
limited to, West Complex - Compartment 2, West - Compartment 4 and
West Extension tailings storage facility
("
tailing
facilities
"). These tailings storage facilities are governed
by the written service level agreement concluded between AngloGold
Ashanti
Limited ("
AngloGold
") and the Kopanang Gold
Mining Company Proprietary Limited ("
Kopanang
"), in
terms of which AngloGold agreed, inter alia, to accept and store
tailings produced from the processing of ore from the
Mine at the
West Gold Plant at one of AngloGold's tailings storage facilities
("
the SLA
"). The rights and obligations in and to
the SLA were acquired by Harmony:
1.1 All and any
correspondence exchanged between Harmony, AngloGold, Kopanang, Heaven
Sent Gold Processing Company (Pty) Ltd ("
Heaven Sent
"),
CAPM Tau Mine (Pty) Ltd ("
CAPM Tau
"), CAPM African
Precious Metals (Pty) Ltd ("
CAPM
"), Tau Lekoa Mining
Company (Pty) Ltd ("
Tau Lekoa
"), and/or any of the
Village Main Reef companies, including but not limited to Village
Main Ref Gold Investment 01 (Pty) Ltd,
Village Main Reef (Pty) Ltd
and Village Main Reef Empowerment Company (Pty) Ltd in regard to the
tailings facilities, including
but not limited to any correspondence
concerning whether the tailings facilities had become or would soon
become unsuitable for
or unavailable for use in respect of tailings
from the gold ore processing facility operated by West Gold Plant
Proprietary Limited;
1.2 All reports prepared
and provided to Harmony and/or AngloGold in respect of the tailings
facilities;
1.3 Notices calling for
meetings, agenda's, notes, recordings and/or minutes of meetings held
between Jones and Wagener, CAPM, CAPM
Tau, Harmony, Heaven Sent, Tau
Lekoa, and/or any of the Village Main Reef companies, including but
not limited to Village Main
Ref Gold Investment 01 (Pty) Ltd, Village
Main Reef (Pty) Ltd and Village Main Reef Empowerment Company (Pty)
Ltd in regard to
the tailings facilities;
1.4 Notices calling for
meetings, agenda's, notes, recordings and/or minutes of internal
meetings of AngloGold, Harmony and/or Kopanang;
1.5 Any and all
documentation exchanged between Jones and Wagener, Harmony,
AngloGold, Kopanang, Heaven Sent, CAPM Tau, CAPM, Tau
Lekoa and/or
any of the Village Main Reef companies, including but not limited to
Village Main Reef Gold Investment 01 (Pty) Ltd,
Village Main Reef
(Pty) Ltd and Village Main Reef Empowerment Company (Pty) Ltd and any
third parties in regard to the tailings
storage facilities as
provided for in the SLA; and
1.6 Any and all
communications exchanged between the directors, shareholders or
employees of Kopanang, Heaven Sent, CAPM Tau, CAPM,
Tau Lekoa, and/or
any of the Village Main Reef companies, including but not limited to
Village Main Ref Gold Investment 01 (Pty)
Ltd, Village Main Reef
(Pty) Ltd and Village Main Reef Empowerment Company (Pty) Ltd,
AngloGold and Harmony in regard to the tailings
storage facilities as
provided for in the SLA."
[5]
It is the applicants' case that the Subpoenas fall to be set aside on
six grounds, being a lack of relevance to any issue
in the
arbitration proceedings, the documents being remote or far removed
from the dispute between the parties in the Arbitration,
the
documents to the extent that the first respondent is entitled to
them, can be obtained in terms of the relevant discovery processes
in
the arbitration proceedings, that the requests are too broad and
wide, constitute an abuse of process and the Subpoenas being
unnecessary.
[6]
Whilst six separate grounds are identified there is substantial
overlap.
[7]
The applicants rely on section 173 of the Constitution read with
section 36(5)
of the
Superior Courts Act, 2013
for the relief
claimed. There is no dispute about the Court's power to set aside the
subpoenas in appropriate circumstances.
[8]
At the outset, a brief analysis of the pleadings in the Arbitration
are necessary.
THE
PLEADINGS
[9]
The first respondent, as claimant in the Arbitration, seeks an award
for specific performance from the second respondent
(as respondent in
the arbitration) under the purchase and sale agreement to which I
referred above.
[10]
In terms of the purchase and sale agreement, the first respondent
sold the Share Equity (as defined) to the second respondent
for a
purchase price of R130,000,000.00.
[11]
The purchase price was to be paid in two tranches, the first payment
of R50,000,000.00 to be paid within five days from
signature date and
the balance of the purchase price (duly adjusted in terms of clause
20.2 of the agreement) was payable on or
before 31 July 2022.
[12]
Although the first respondent made payment of the first tranche, it
is alleged to have failed or refused to make payment
of the second
tranche, duly adjusted, and deliver certain documents to the
Department of Mineral Resources and Energy.
[13]
The first respondent pleads:
"22. The
Respondent breached the Agreement in that to date, it has failed,
neglected and/or refused to:
22.1 make payment
of the remaining Purchase Price to the Claimant;
22.2 deliver to
the Claimant the original financial provision guarantee that it plans
to submit to the DMRE; and
22.3 attend at the
offices of the DMRE with the Claimant's representatives for purposes
of uplifting the Seller Financial
Provision and replacing it with the
Purchaser Financial Provision.
23.1 As a result
of the Respondent's breach of the Agreement, the Claimant has
suffered damages in that:
23.1.1 the
remaining Purchase Price has not been paid to the Respondent and is
due and payable to it."
23.1.2 it was
required to maintain the Seller Financial Provision from 31 July 2022
to date. As at 20 February 2023, the
cost of maintenance thereof is
ZAR 938,502.00. The Claimant stands to suffer further damages
until finalisation of these arbitration
proceedings, and it
accordingly reserves the right to adjust the quantum of the damages
suffered accordingly."
[14]
The second respondent delivered a statement of defence and
counter claim.
[15]
The second respondent contends for a fraudulent non disclosure
on the part of the first respondent which entitles
it to rescind the
purchase and sale agreement. It pleads:
"13.
As between the claimant and the respondent, the subject matter
of the Agreement was the acquisition
by the respondent of the
claimant's shareholding in and claims against West Gold Plant
(Proprietary) Limited ("
WGP
"), which company was in
the business of operating and maintaining a gold ore processing
facility ("
the Plant
") within the municipal district
of Moqhaka, North West Province, South Africa.
14. At all material times
during the negotiation and up to the execution of the Agreement on
28 April 2022, the following
facts were known to the
claimant:
14.1 In
order to operate its business at all, it was essential to WGP that it
be able to deposit and store the
tailings produced from the
processing of ore at the Plant at a suitable tailings storage
facility or tailings dam.
14.2 It
was fundamentally important to the envisaged operation of the Plant
after the Agreement that the Plant
be able to use the tailings
storage facilities referred to in paragraph 7.4 above ("
the
Tailings Storage Facilities
").
14.3
The Tailings Storage Facilities were in such a condition that they
were not capable of use for the deposit
and storage of tailings from
the Plant at all, alternatively lawfully, effectively rendering it
impossible for the Tailings Storage
Facilities to be used for the
deposit and storage of tailings from the Plant ("
the
Defect
").
14.4
The respondent was unaware of the Defect.
14.5
Had the respondent been aware of the Defect, it would not have
concluded the Agreement.
15. The claimant failed
to disclose the Defect to the respondent with the intention of
deceiving the respondent in relation to the
presence of the Defect.
This non disclosure included a positive representation made
orally during the negotiation of the Agreement
by Mr Xining Xin,
on behalf of the claimant, to the respondent's representatives, that,
once certain relatively minor
repair maintenance work had been
completed on the Plant, the Plant would be capable of being fully
operated, such oral representation
having been made in the context of
a report, dated 6 April 2022, presented to the respondent
by the claimant, relating
to the repair and maintenance work required
to render the Plant operational, and a PowerPoint presentation by the
claimant to the
respondent dated 14 April 2022 …
16. The non disclosure
induced the respondent into concluding the Agreement.
17. Accordingly, the
respondent was entitled to resile from the Agreement."
[16]
In terms of the second respondent's counter claim it seeks
restitution of any performance rendered by it under the
Agreement.
[17]
The counter - claim is predicated upon the claimant's alleged failure
to disclose the defect (defined in paragraph 14.3
of its statement of
defence) which, so it is asserted, amounts to a fraudulent
misrepresentation as the non existence of the
defect and which
induced the second respondent to conclude the agreement.
[18]
It claims, further, payment of the reasonably incurred expenses it
incurred in maintaining the underlying assets of the
agreement, being
the plant, in an amount of R40,472,621.31. The second respondent
asserts that these costs where reasonably foreseeable
by the claimant
at the time it breached its obligation in respect of its alleged duty
in respect of the disclosure of the defect.
[19]
The first respondent delivered a replication in which it pleads:
"1.
Ad
paragraphs 2.1, 5, 9, 11, 14, 15, 17, 18 and 19
1.1 The claimant
specifically denies that the respondent was entitled to or did
validly rescind the Agreement either as alleged
or at all.
1.2 Without derogating
from the generality of the aforegoing denial, the claimant
specifically:
1.2.1 denies
the alleged defects;
1.2.2 denies
that the claimant had knowledge at any relevant time of such alleged
defects (which are denied);
1.2.3 avers
that prior to the respondent entering into the second addendum on 15
June 2022, the respondent had acquired
knowledge of what is contended
to have been defects, more particularly in that on or about 30/31 May
2022 respondent had received
and become aware presentation by Jones &
Wagener (engineering and environmental consultants) identifying what
are now alleged
to have been defects relied upon by the respondent;
1.2.4 avers
further that with full knowledge of such presentation and information
the respondent elected to enter into
the second addendum and not to
resile from the Agreement;
1.2.5 avers
further that the respondent is accordingly precluded from terminating
the Agreement, having so elected to
not resile from the Agreement,
but rather to enter into the second addendum on 15 June 2022.
1.3 Save as aforesaid the
claimant joins issue with and denies the further allegations in the
respondent's statement of defence,
save to the extent that the
respondent admits allegations in the claimant's statement of claim."
[20]
The case pleaded by the first respondent, is that
[20.1] it acquired,
inter alia
, the shareholding in West Gold Plant (Proprietary)
Limited (“
West Gold
”) on the basis of there being
tailings storage facilities that West Gold would be able to use (and
were capable of being
used), for the deposit and storage of tailings;
and
[20.2] to the
knowledge of the second respondent, the tailings facilities were not
in such condition that they could be used
for the purpose
contemplated;
[20.3] this
rendered the first respondent unable to operate West Gold's plant.
[21]
The retort is somewhat confusing in that it denies the fact of a
defect (as defined) but asserts, that the first respondent
bore
knowledge of these facts concerning the tailings facilities at the
time of the conclusion of the purchase and sale agreement.
[22]
Arbitration concerns, therefore, the nature of the "defect"
and the respective parties knowledge thereof and
the timing of the
second respondent’s knowledge thereof.
DISCUSSION
Legal
framework
[23]
This is not an application to review the decision of Adv Burger SC
and/or the fourth respondent to issue the subpoenas.
Rather, the
applicants invoke this Court’s inherent jurisdiction and the
provisions of the
Superior Courts Act, 2013
to found its relief.
[24]
Section 36(5)
of the
Superior Courts Act provides
:
“
When a subpoena is
issued to procure the attendance of any person as a witness or to
produce any book, paper or document in any
proceedings, and it
appears that-
(a)
he or she is unable to give any evidence or to produce any book,
paper or document which would be relevant to any issue in such
proceedings; or
(b)
such book, paper or document could properly be produced by some
other person; or
(c)
to
compel him or her to attend would be an abuse of the process of the
court,
any judge of the court
concerned may, notwithstanding anything contained in this section,
after reasonable notice by the Registrar
to the party who sued out
the subpoena and after hearing that party in chambers if he or she
appears, make an order cancelling
such subpoena.”
[25] Accordingly, a
court is empowered to cancel a subpoena where any evidence or
document is irrelevant to the proceedings
concerned, the evidence or
document may be obtained from some other person or his/ her
attendance at the hearing would be an abuse
of process.
[26]
It appears
to me that the
Superior Courts Act has
codified the common law
grounds upon which a subpoena may be set aside and granted the court
a statutory power to prevent abuses.
[1]
[27] The first
relevant ground upon which a court may exercise its power is an
absence of relevance.
[28] Relevance is
determined with reference to the pleadings. In the context of Uniform
Rule 35
, this court has said:
“
Rule 35(1)
and (2)
require a party to any action who has been requested thereto, to make
discovery of all documents and tape recordings 'relating
to any
matter in question in such action'. The discovery is done on
affidavit
'as
near as may be in accordance with Form 11 of the First Schedule
specifying separately –
(a)
such documents and tape recordings in his possession or that of
his agent other than documents and tape recordings mentioned in
para
(b)
;
(c)
such documents and tape recordings in respect of which he has a
valid objection to produce;
(d)
such documents and tape recordings which he or his agent had but
no longer has in his possession at the date of the affidavit.'
In terms of
Rule 35(3)
,
if a party believes that there are other documents or tape recordings
which may be relevant to any matter in question in the possession
of
any party,
'the
former may give notice to the latter requiring him to make the same
available for inspection in accordance with subrule (6),
or to state
under oath within ten days that such documents are not in his
possession. . .'.
The requirement of
relevance, embodied in both
Rule 35(1)
and
35
(3), has been considered
by the Courts on various occasions. The test for relevance, as laid
down by Brett LJ in Compagnie Financiere
et Commerciale du Pacifique
v Peruvian Guano Co
(1882) 11 QBD 55
, has often been accepted and
applied. See, for example, the Full Bench judgment in Rellams (Pty)
Ltd v James Brown & Hamer
Ltd
1983
(1) SA 556
(N) at 564A, where it was held that:
'After
remarking that it was desirable to give a wide interpretation to the
words ''a document relating to any matter in question
in the
action'', Brett LJ stated the principle as follows:
''It
seems to me that every document relates to the matter in question in
the action which, it is reasonable to suppose, contains
information
which may - not which must - either directly or indirectly enable the
party requiring the affidavit either to
advance his own case or
to damage the case of his adversary. I have put in the words 'either
directly or indirectly' because, as
it seems to me, a document can
properly be said to contain information which may enable the party
requiring the affidavit either
to advance his own case or to damage
the case of his adversary, if it is a document which may fairly lead
him to a train of enquiry
which may have either of these two
consequences.'' '
See also
Continental
Ore Construction v Highveld Steel & Vanadium Corporation Ltd
1971
(4) SA 589
(W) at 596H and
Carpede
v Choene NO and Another
1986
(3) SA 445
(O) at 452C--J.
Counsel for the
plaintiffs laid special emphasis on the indirect relevance a document
may have, that is a document which may
fairly lead him to a
chain of enquiry which may advance the plaintiffs' case or damage the
case of the first defendant. Reference
was made hereto as 'indirect
relevance' or 'secondary relevance'.
The broad meaning
ascribed to relevance is circumscribed by the requirement in both
subrules (1) and (3) of
Rule 35
that the document or tape recording
relates to (35(1)) or may be relevant to (35(3)) 'any matter in
question'. The 'matter
in question' is determined from the pleadings.
See in this regard SA Neon Advertising (Pty) Ltd v Claude
Neon Lights
(SA) Ltd
1968
(3) SA 381 (W)
at 385A--C; Schlesinger v Donaldson and
Another
1929 WLD 54
at 57, where Greenberg J held
'In
order to decide the question of relevancy, the issues raised by the
pleadings must be considered . . .',
and
Federal
Wine and Brandy Co Ltd v Kantor
1958
(4) SA 735 (E)
at 753D--G.”
[2]
[29]
The
approach of the court in
Swissborough
in relation to “relevance” for purposes of discovery in
High Court proceedings applies with equal effect to subpoenas
duces
tecum
.
[3]
[30]
The second relevant ground upon which a court may exercise its power
to cancel a subpoena is that the document/s may
be obtained from some
other person, presumably, a person that would be subject to the
ordinary rules of disclosure or discovery.
[31]
The court’s
power in terms of
section 36(5)(b)
of the
Superior Courts Act was
considered in
Mvelaphanda
.
[4]
[32]
In
Mvelaphanda
, the applicant sought to have subpoenas set
aside on grounds that:
"[13] …
(a) the documents sought in the subpoena are irrelevant to the
issues in the divorce action; (b)
the subpoena is unjustifiably wide
and vague; (c) the subpoena unduly infringes the rights to privacy
and the proprietary interests
of the company and its shareholders;
(d) the subpoena has been issued for an ulterior motive, to put
pressure on the trustees to
accede to Mrs S's financial demands; and
(e) the production of the documents will be inconvenient,
time-consuming and costly. In
an all encompassing submission, Mr
Malindi argues that the subpoena constitutes an abuse of process."
[33]
The issue of relevance having been conceded between the parties, the
learned acting judge interrogated whether the subpoenas
were
unjustifiably wide and vague and, relevant for purposes of this
discussion, the application and interpretation of
section 36(5)
of the
Superior Courts Act, 2013
. It held:
"[49] It is
not for the applicants to instruct Mrs S how she should go about
gathering evidence for trial. It is not
an answer to say that she
should have sought other (relevant) documents first. If the documents
sought in the subpoena are relevant
to the issues in the trial, they
must be produced, unless they are privileged from disclosure or the
subpoena constitutes an abuse
of process.
[50] I return to the
question whether Mr Steenkamp is a 'proper' person to have been
subpoenaed. The issue raised by
s 36(5)(b)
of the
Superior Courts Act
is
whether the documents could 'properly be produced by some other
person'. In my view
s 36(5)(b)
envisages a situation where the person
who has been subpoenaed is not one who 'properly' could produce the
documents. In such a
case a court would be empowered to cancel the
subpoena. However, where there are two or more people who could
'properly' have been
subpoenaed, no basis would exist for a court to
prefer the person, or persons, not subpoenaed."
[34]
The
aforegoing dictum is apposite in the instant case. The principle
which emerges is that it is not a valid objection to the issue
of a
subpoena
duces tecum
if there are in existence other documents that ought first to be
obtained and, where there are two or more people who could be
subpoenaed, there would be no basis for the Court to exercise its
statutory power to cancel the subpoena.
[5]
[35]
The
decision in
Mvelaphanda
was cited with approval in
Antonsson
[6]
where the approach adopted by the court in respect to relevance
accords with that in
Swissborough
.
[36]
The
applicant relies on the Supreme Court of Appeal's judgment in
Deltamune
.
[7]
In particular, it relies on the dictum in paragraphs [22] and [23]
thereof as support for the proposition that "…
if
the party issuing the subpoena(s) can prove its case without such
documents, it cannot be said that the document sought under
the
subpoenas are
absolutely
necessary
.
The corollary then, is that the party issuing the subpoena(s) must
demonstrate to the Court that they cannot prove their case
without
such documents.
"
[37]
The
proposition advanced by on behalf of the applicant intertwines two
distinct concepts being relevance and the duty to make out
a case.
Relevance, as set out above, relates to the pleaded issues. It
may be wider or narrower depending upon the formulation
of the
issues.
[8]
The duty to make out
a case is different. The party resisting compliance with the subpoena
duces
tecum
must
make out a case for setting aside the impugned subpoena.
[9]
[38]
The first
respondent contends that the starting point is the decision in
Sher
[10]
where Corbett J, as he then was, considered an application to have
subpoenas set aside in the context of matrimonial proceedings.
[39]
The
principle in
Sher
is "
[t]he
Court must be satisfied, before setting aside a proceeding, that it
is obviously unsustainable, and this must appear as a
matter
certainty and not merely on a ponderance of probability.
"
[11]
Accordingly, the learned judge held that the court "…
in
the exercise of [its] general [inherent] power [a court may] set
aside a subpoena where it is satisfied as a matter certainty
that the
witness who has been subpoenaed will be totally unable to be of any
assistance to the Court in the determination of the
issues raised at
the trial …
"
[12]
These principles are approved in
Deltamune
.
[13]
[40]
The first
respondent, further, cited
Antonsson
[14]
as authority for the proposition that a generous approach is taken
toward establishing relevance. This proposition appears to be
well
supported.
[15]
[41]
Deltamune
holds that the documents sought
via
a
subpoena
duces tecum
must pertain to the pleaded issues and
that those documents must be "absolutely necessary" in the
sense that they cannot
be obtained in the ordinary discovery process.
It is then that a subpoena
duces tecum
is necessary and
appropriate.
[42]
The applicants must, consequently, satisfy the court that, as a
matter of certainly, the documents which the first respondent
has
sought in the Subpoenas are irrelevant to the issues pleaded in the
Arbitration.
[43]
Accordingly, I am in disagreement with the proposition advanced by
Advocate South SC who appeared for the applicants,
that the first
respondent is obliged to demonstrate that the documents sought in the
subpoenas are "absolutely necessary".
This is not
consonant with the established principles.
Relevance
[44]
The applicants' case on relevance is that it is neither a party to
the Arbitration nor the purchase and sale agreement.
Similarly, it
contends that none of the first respondent, second respondent or West
Gold are parties to the service level agreement
between the first
applicant and Kopanang (“
the SLA
”). It contends,
that there are no rights or obligations accruing under the SLA to the
first and second respondents, that
the purchase and sale agreement
requires a cession of rights and that such cession has neither been
pleaded nor taken place.
[45]
It contends, thus, that the first applicant is a party remote from or
far removed from the dispute in the Arbitration.
[46]
The first respondent disputes these allegations and, with reference
to the terms of the SLA, states that:
"28. In light
of the terms of the SLA, the tailings storage facilities ("
TSF
")
would be made available to Kopanang for the storage of tailings
produced through the plant. Accordingly, the TSF's required
by WGP in
order for it to operate its Plant were provided through the terms of
the SLA, making this agreement and the performance
in its terms are
fundamental importance for the business of WGP and for this reason it
was described as one of the Material Contracts
in the Share Purchase
Agreement.
29. At the time of the
conclusion of the SLA, the Plant was owned by Kopanang and was not a
separate corporate entity but was an
asset of Kopanang. It was only
after the conclusion of the SLA that the Plant was housed in its own
company (WGP) with its own
registration number and was no longer an
asset with Kopanang. …
30.
The rights and obligations in and to the SLA were acquired by Harmony
from AngloGold, which is admitted by Harmony in its founding
affidavit …"
[47]
The first respondent points out, further, that Kopanang is a party to
the SLA and a subsidiary of the second respondent
- a party to the
Arbitration and the purchase and sale agreement at issue in the
Arbitration.
[48]
It concludes, in the circumstances, that correspondence exchanged
between Harmony and/or AngloGold and Kopanang concerning
the SLA and
relating to the tailings storage facility, is relevant to the issues
in the Arbitration because "…
it will indicate the
state of those facilities, and what each party to the correspondence
was aware of and/or communicating regarding
the state of those
facilities. These are central issues in the arbitration.
"
[49]
The applicants, in reply, contend that the first respondent has
deliberately mischaracterised its failure or refusal
to abide the
agreement. It contends that this mischaracterisation is a stratagem
by the first respondent to obtain private documents
belonging to
Harmony, service providers and customers.
[50]
The applicants rely on the first respondent's reference to a
force
majeure
notice delivered by second applicant to Kopanang (a
subsidiary of the second respondent) dated 14 June 2022.
The letter
records:
"2. In terms
of (i) the Service Level Agreement concluded between AngloGold
Ashanti Limited (hereinafter referred to
as "
AngloGold
")
and Kopanang Gold Mining Company (Pty) Limited formerly K2017449111
(South Africa) (Pty) Limited, (hereinafter referred
to as
"
Kopanang
"),
and
(ii) the Transitional
Services Agreement concluded between our client, AngloGold and
Kopanang; all rights and obligations of AngloGold
in terms of the
service level agreement were ceded to our client.
3. We have
been instructed by our client to provide Kopanang - as we hereby do -
with notice in terms of clause 20
of the service level agreement
that it is directly prevented from performing its obligations because
of ground instability in and
around the Tailings Storage Facilities.
4. In the
circumstances, and despite West Gold Plant being under care and
maintenance since January 2022, our client
is (i) relived from its
obligations in terms of the service level agreement until such time
as the ground surrounding the facilities
has become more stable to
enable our client to continue performing its obligations and (ii) not
liable for,
inter alia
, any delay or failure to perform in
terms of the service level agreement."
[51]
Thus, the applicants contend that notwithstanding the state of the
tailings storage facilities, the first respondent
would not be
entitled to store its tailings at the first applicant's tailings
storage facilities for want of any obligation on
the first applicant
to accept these tailings. It concludes:
"The state of
Harmony's tailings storage facilities is thus immaterial to [the
first respondent] storing its tailings there."
[52]
On this basis that the applicants persist in their contention that
the first respondent is not entitled to any reports,
correspondence,
minutes of meetings or other documents requested in the subpoenas
relating to the first applicant's tailings storage
facilities.
[53]
I do not agree with the applicants’ conclusion. The state
of the tailings storage facility is a central issue
in the
Arbitration. The second respondent has not pleaded any of the above
issues upon which the applicants seek to have the Subpoenas
set
aside.
[54]
I find, therefore, that as a general proposition, the documents
sought in the Subpoenas are relevant to the issues pleaded
in the
Arbitration.
The
terms of the Subpoenas
[55]
The
applicants complain that the use of the words "
any
and all
"
in relation to the exchanges between Harmony and Kopanang and the
inclusion of further third parties expand the scope of
the documents
beyond limitation. In this regard, the applicants' rely on the
judgment of Mohammed CJ, in the Supreme Court of Appeal’s
decision in
Beinash
.
[16]
[56]
The use of the words "
any and all
", without more,
would usually support an argument that a
subpoena duces tecum
is an abuse of process with the concomitant result that the impugned
subpoena set aside.
[57]
The point
made by Mr Snyckers, who appears with Mr Wild on behalf of
the first respondent, with reference to the Supreme
Court of Appeal's
decision in
Beinash
is that the documents sought in the impugned subpoenas do not relate
directly or indirectly to a large category of open ended matters.
He
referred, further, to
Moodley
[17]
in support of a proposition that the use of the word "all"
is not objectionable where there is a clear defining criteria.
[58]
In the instant case, there is a built in limitation both to the
nature of the documents required and the period
in which they were
exchanged or created.
[59]
Accordingly, the documents requested are not open ended. Nor are
they subject to the exercise of any discretion
on the part of the
party receiving the
subpoena duces tecum
to determine whether
or not they may (or may not) fall within the parameters of the
subpoena.
[60]
I cannot find, in the circumstances that the Subpoenas are too widely
couched.
Illegitimate
purpose
[61]
The applicants contend that the first respondent is using the
Subpoenas for an illegitimate purpose, in that, they are
being sought
for an purpose extraneous to the Arbitration.
[62]
The documents falling within this category are those described as
"private and confidential reports" by the
first applicant
James & Wagener and/or the first applicant's agents.
[63]
It is further contended that these documents are not “absolutely
necessary” because the first respondent
already has in its
possession a report from a firm of engineers that "undoubtedly"
sheds light on the condition of the
first applicant's tailings
storage facility at the time the purchase and sale agreement was
concluded.
[64]
The mere
assertion of confidentiality does not fall within the parameters of
section 36(5)
of the
Superior Courts Act as
a ground upon which
the court may set aside or cancel a subpoena. Nor is it, under the
rules pertaining to discovery, a ground
for refusing discovery.
[18]
To the extent that the common law rules concerning abuse of process
provides an additional remedy to an applicant, in position
of the
applicants herein, it must be made a proper case. This, it has not
done. The applicants' focus is on relevance.
[65]
I have
already discussed the concept of "relevance" for purposes
of subpoena
duces
tecum
and any issue of confidentiality is easily and pragmatically resolved
through the imposition of an appropriate confidentiality
regime.
There is ample precedent for such a regime in our law.
[19]
The applicants do not propose or tender the documents subject to an
appropriate redaction or the imposition of a confidentiality
regime.
[66]
The relevance of these documents is manifest from the first
respondent's statement of defence and pertain to a period
during
which the SLA was in operation.
[67]
It is pertinent that this ground of objection appears to lack in a
logical foundation. The mere fact that the first
respondent has
an experts report from which it was able to establish the defect in
the tailings storage facilities does not establish
the time at which
the second respondent obtained knowledge thereof or, indeed, the
ambit of the knowledge it had at the relevant
time.
[68]
There is no merit in this complaint.
Further
and better discovery from the second respondent
[69]
The
applicants’ complaint that the documents requested by the first
respondent may be obtained through the ordinary discovery
or further
and better discovery procedures does not find traction on the
strength of the principle in
Mvelaphanda.
[20]
CONCLUSION
[70] On a
conspectus of the applicants’ case, I am unable to find that it
has made out a case for the relief it seeks.
They were required to
overcome a high threshold in demonstrating an absence of relevance
with regard to the pleaded issues in the
Arbitration. It was also
required to adduce facts that would lead to a conclusion of an abuse
of process. The applicants have not
passed the threshold.
ORDER
[71] In the result,
I make the following order:
The application is
dismissed with costs, including the costs consequent upon the
employment of two counsel.
A
W PULLINGER
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ and/or parties’ representatives by email
and by
being uploaded to CaseLines. The date and time for hand-down is
deemed to be 10h00
on 2 May 2024.
DATE
OF HEARING: 7 SEPTEMBER
2023
DATE
OF JUDGMENT: 2 MAY 2024
APPEARANCES:
COUNSEL
FOR THE APPLICANTS:
A SOUTH SC
ATTORNEY
FOR THE APPLICANTS: EDWARD
NATHAN SONNENBERGS
COUNSEL
FOR THE FIRST RESPONDENT: F SNYKERS SC
D WILD
ATTORNEY
FOR THE FIRST RESPONDENT: CLIFFE DEKKER HOFMEYER INC
[1]
Consider:
Beinash
and Another v Ernst & Young and Others
1999 (2) SA 116
(CC) at [17] in the context of a vexatious litigant.
As appears from the High Court’s judgment, reported
sub
nom
Ernst
& Young and Others v Beinash and Others
1999 (1) SA 1114
(W), Beinash had caused three consecutive subpoenas
duces
tecum
to be served on Wixley requiring him to deliver a host of documents
to the Registrar. Each of these subpoenas were set aside
on grounds
of abuse of process and vexatiousness (at 1130 F
et
seq
);
Bernstein
and Another v Bester and Others NNO
[1996] ZACC 2
;
1996 (2) SA 751
(CC) at 783 D;
Price
Waterhouse Coopers Inc v National Potato Cooperative Ltd
2004 (6) SA 66
(SCA) at [50]
[2]
Swissborough
Diamond Mines (Pty) ltd and Others v Government of the Republic of
South Africa and Others
1999 (2) SA 279
(T) at 316 A to 317 B
[3]
Helen
Suzman Foundation v Judicial Service Commission
2018 (4) SA 1
(CC) at [26] read with
Deltamune
(Pty) Ltd and Others v Tiger Brands Ltd and Others
2022 (3) SA 339
(SCA) at [21] with the caveat that a “d
ifferent
threshold may apply
”.
[4]
Mvelaphanda
Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Another v JS and Others
2016 (2) SA 266 (GJ)
[5]
Compare:
Beinash
v Wixley
[1997] ZASCA 32
;
1997 (3) SA 721
(SCA) at 736 B - C
[6]
Antonsson
and Others v. Jackson and Others
2020
(3) SA 113 (WCC)
[7]
Supra
[8]
Consider:
Deltamune
at [34] to [42] and [61]
[9]
Quartermark
Investments (Pty) Ltd v Mkhwanazi and Another
2014 (3) SA 96
(SCA) at [13] and the authorities therein cited. This
appears consonant with the approach taken in
Antonsson
(
supra
)
at [51] and
South
African Coaters (Pty) Ltd v St Paul Insurance Co (SA) Ltd and Others
2007 (6) SA 628
(D & CLD) at [20] to [22]
[10]
Sher
and Others v Sadowitz
1970 (1) SA 193 (C)
[11]
At 195D
[12]
At 195D - E
[13]
At [62]
[14]
Antonsson
and Others v Jackson and Others
2020
(3) SA 113 (WCC)
[15]
Compagnie
Financiére du Pacifique v Peruvian Guano Co
(1882) 11 QBD 55
(CA);
Swissborough
Diamond Mines (Pty) Ltd and Others v Government of the Republic of
South Africa and Others
1999 (2) SA 272
(T) at 316G
[16]
Supra
at
fn
5
[17]
Moodley
N.O. and Others v Public Investment Corporation SOC Limited and
Others
[2023] ZAWCHC 49
at
[11]
[18]
SA
Neon Advertising (Pty) Ltd v Claude Neon Sign (SA) Ltd
1968 (3) SA 381
(W) at 385 A - C
[19]
Crown
Cork and Seal Co Inc and Another v Rheen South Africa (Pty) Ltd and
Others
1980 (3) SA 1093
(W) at 1097 C
et
seq
[20]
Supra
at
[49]
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Harmony Gold Mining Ltd and Another v Mbatha and Another (2023-0001343) [2023] ZAGPJHC 765 (5 July 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 765High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
Harmony Gold Mining Company Ltd and Another v Mbatha and Another (2023-0001343) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1107 (4 October 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 1107High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
Hariparsad v Hariparsad and Others (2025/27341) [2025] ZAGPJHC 320 (24 March 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 320High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)98% similar
Den Hartog N.O obo N.A.H v Road Accident Fund (24906/2021) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1196 (18 November 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 1196High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)98% similar
Haroun and Another v S (A49/2024) [2025] ZAGPJHC 791 (15 August 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 791High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)98% similar