Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 445South Africa
Wood v Transnet Second Defined Benefit Fund (21/21875) [2024] ZAGPJHC 445 (7 May 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
7 May 2024
Headnotes
judgment proceedings was in a position to positively swear to the facts, I do not think the difference is material. The complaint that all the source material has not been provided to the court has no weight when there is no real problem with the conclusions articulated, and that alone does not result in hearsay. If there were documents that Mr Wood required to properly defend himself from being sequestrated, which are not before the court, there are tools in the court Rules which can be used. It was his choice not to avail himself of that.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Wood v Transnet Second Defined Benefit Fund (21/21875) [2024] ZAGPJHC 445 (7 May 2024)
Wood v Transnet Second Defined Benefit Fund (21/21875) [2024] ZAGPJHC 445 (7 May 2024)
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sino date 7 May 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO: 21/21875
1. Reportable: No
2. Of interest to other
judges: No
3. Revised: No
7 May 2024
In
the matter between:
ERIC
ANTHONY
WOOD
Applicant
and
TRANSNET
SECOND DEFINED BENEFIT FUND
Respondent
In
re:
TRANSNET
SECOND DEFINED BENEFIT FUND
Applicant
and
ERIC
ANTHONY
WOOD
Respondent
JUDGMENT
ON LEAVE TO APPEAL
YACOOB
J
:
1.
The applicant for leave (“Mr Wood”)
was the respondent in the main application, in which the respondent
in the application
for leave (“the Fund”) was successful
in its application to sequestrate him.
2.
Mr Wood bases his application for leave on
a contention that the court has applied an incorrect test to whether
the Fund has discharged
its onus, and also on the submission that the
Fund’s case is built on documentary hearsay evidence which is
inadmissible.
3.
It
is submitted for Mr Wood that the Fund bears something that is called
a “full onus”, which is an onus more than on
a balance of
probabilities, but rather an onus that will not be disturbed if the
matter is referred to oral evidence and the evidence
tested by
cross-examination. It was submitted that the court did not deal with
this issue in the main judgment. The court did deal
with the issue,
having found that the authority relied upon,
Priest
v Collett
,
did not support the proposition.
[1]
I am not satisfied that another court will come to a different
conclusion on this ground.
4.
The second issue is the question of hearsay
evidence. It is submitted for Mr Wood that almost every single piece
of evidence before
this court is hearsay evidence, that these are not
civil proceedings and that hearsay evidence cannot be admitted
because the proceedings
are not civil proceedings.
5.
In
support of the submission that the proceedings are not civil
proceedings, reliance was placed on
Collet
v Priest
[2]
and King Pie
Holdings
(Pty) Limited v King Pie Pinetown (Pty) Limited
.
[3]
6.
The AD authority does not support the
contention. That case deals not with whether sequestration
proceedings are civil in nature,
but whether they are an “action
or a suit”. This was because the legislation granting appeal
jurisdiction to the Cape
Provincial Division referred to a “civil
action or suit”, and the AD found that sequestration
proceedings were not
an action or suit because one party was not
claiming a right from another. The finding was specific and does not
find broader application,
and certainly does not find relevance or
application here.
7.
The
King Pie
case dealt with whether winding up proceedings were “civil
proceedings’’ as contemplated in section 359(1)(a)
of the
old Companies Act, which were suspended by a voluntary winding-up.
Again, the question dealt with, and the pronouncement
made, was
specific to the circumstances and was not one of general application
to the nature of winding up or sequestration proceedings.
The court
was also careful to make this point.
8.
The importance of the submission that these
were not civil proceedings was that, then, the evidence relied on was
hearsay and because
these were not civil proceedings, hearsay
evidence could not be admitted in terms of
section 3(1)(c)
of the
Law
of Evidence Amendment Act 45 of 1988
.
9.
It was submitted for Mr Wood that the
evidence that was hearsay was so intimately bound with the rest of
the evidence, that it would
be impossible to unscramble the egg, and
that, therefore, none of the evidence before the court could have
been relied upon. His
failure to raise disputes on each and every
document, the argument continued, cannot dilute this proposition, as
he was obliged
to plead over and the hearsay point had to be
considered first and independently of his pleading.
10.
It was submitted for the Fund, on the other
hand, that the evidence relied on for the Court was not that tainted
by the hearsay
allegation, and that, in any event, there was no real
dispute of fact raised. The requirements for a final sequestration
were fulfilled
and the court was entitled to make the order it did.
11.
The
main basis of the hearsay point is that the documents on which the
deponent to the founding affidavit relies are not produced
by him,
and that the people who produced them and who had the knowledge which
allowed them to produce them do not attest to the
veracity of the
documents. Reliance was placed on
LA
Consortium & Vending CC t/a LA Enterprises v MTN Service Provider
(Pty) Ltd
,
[4]
but that reliance was misplaced. There the court was dealing with
whether the fact that a document was computer generated meant
it
automatically complied with the principles against hearsay, and found
that it did not. In that particular case there was human
intervention
in the generation of the data which meant that it had to be confirmed
by those people. The principle of hearsay was
not changed, and there
is no new principle to be applied in this matter.
12.
The
Fund relied on the approval of the SCA of the proposition that
first-hand knowledge of all the minutiae is not required, and
that
records in the company’s possession may be relied upon, in
Rees
and Another v Investec Bank Limited.
[5]
In
any event, the Fund pointed out, neither my judgment nor that of
Manoim J relied on any evidence which can properly
said to be
hearsay.
13.
Although the judgment in
Rees
dealt with whether a deponent to an
affidavit in summary judgment proceedings was in a position to
positively swear to the facts,
I do not think the difference is
material. The complaint that all the source material has not been
provided to the court has no
weight when there is no real problem
with the conclusions articulated, and that alone does not result in
hearsay. If there were
documents that Mr Wood required to properly
defend himself from being sequestrated, which are not before the
court, there are tools
in the court Rules which can be used. It was
his choice not to avail himself of that.
14.
Overall, the complaints raised by Mr Wood
appear now, as when the matter was being considered the first time,
to be technical devices
aimed at obscuring what is before the court,
with his own brand of smoke and mirrors. Now, as then, I am not
convinced.
15.
Having looked carefully at Mr Wood’s
arguments, I am not satisfied that another court may come to a
different conclusion
16.
For these reasons I make the following
order:
1.
The application for leave to appeal is
dismissed.
2.
Costs, including costs of two counsel, are
costs in the sequestration of the respondent’s estate.
S.
YACOOB
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Appearances
Counsel
for the applicant:
A E Bham SC and N Luthuli
Instructed
by:
ENS Africa
Counsel
for the respondent: E L Theron SC
Instructed
by:
Fairbridges Wertheim Becker
Date
of hearing:
11 April 2024
Date
of judgment:
07 May 2024
[1]
1930
372 CPD
[2]
1931
AD 2090
at 298-299
[3]
1998
(4) SA 1240
(D) at 1247 D-G and 1248 D-F
[4]
2011
(4) SA 577 (GSJ)
[5]
2014
(4) SA 220
(SCA)
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