Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 646South Africa
Merchant West (Pty) Ltd v Molyneux-Killik and Others (23833/2022) [2024] ZAGPJHC 646 (25 June 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
25 June 2024
Headnotes
the applicants liable under suretyship agreements to pay, jointly and severally, the one paying the other to be absolved, the balance of R10,258,794.53 due and payable in terms of a master instalment sale agreement (“instalment sale agreement”), to the respondent, together with interest and costs. Leave to appeal is sought to a Full Bench of this Division, alternatively, to the Supreme Court of Appeal. [2] The applicants advance numerous grounds in support of their application, all of which sought to motivate the argument that there are reasonable prospects of success on appeal.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Merchant West (Pty) Ltd v Molyneux-Killik and Others (23833/2022) [2024] ZAGPJHC 646 (25 June 2024)
Merchant West (Pty) Ltd v Molyneux-Killik and Others (23833/2022) [2024] ZAGPJHC 646 (25 June 2024)
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sino date 25 June 2024
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
1.
REPORTABLE: NO
2.
F INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
3.
REVISED. YES
25
June 2024
CASE
NO:
23833/2022
In
the matter between:
MERCHANT
WEST (PTY) LTD
Respondent/Applicant
and
JONATHAN
MICHAEL MOLYNEUX-KILLIK
First Applicant/Respondent
ANTON
EUGENE VAN DEN HEEVER
Second Applicant/Respondent
FLIGHTSHARE
MAINTENANCE
COMPANY
(PTY) LTD
Third Applicant/Respondent
FLIGHTSHARE
(PTY) LTD
Fourth Applicant/Respondent
JUDGMENT
(APPLICATION
FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL)
STAIS
AJ:
This
judgment is handed down electronically by circulating it to the
parties’ representatives by email and by uploading on
CaseLines.
Introduction
[1]
This is an application for leave to appeal against my judgment handed
down on 14 December 2023 under the above case number,
in which I
refused to refer the matter to trial and held the applicants liable
under suretyship agreements to pay, jointly and
severally, the one
paying the other to be absolved, the balance of R10,258,794.53 due
and payable in terms of a master instalment
sale agreement
(“instalment sale agreement”), to the respondent,
together with interest and costs. Leave to appeal
is sought to a Full
Bench of this Division, alternatively, to the Supreme Court of
Appeal.
[2]
The applicants advance numerous grounds in support of their
application, all of which sought to motivate the argument
that there
are reasonable prospects of success on appeal.
Test
to be applied
[3]
In terms of
section 17(1)
of the
Superior Courts Act, 2013
leave to
appeal may only be given in the event I am of the opinion that the
appeal would have a reasonable prospect of success
or if there is
some other compelling reason why the appeal should be heard. The
applicants rely only on the former basis for their
appeal.
[4]
Prior to
the coming into effect of the
Superior Courts Act, the
test to be
applied in an application for leave to appeal was whether there were
reasonable prospects that another court may come
to a different
conclusion.
[1]
However, the
position has changed in that
section 17(1)(a)(i)
provides for leave
to appeal to be given only where the judge is of the opinion that the
appeal would have a reasonable prospect
of success.
[5]
The court
in
Mont
Chevaux Trust v Tim Goosen and 18 Others
[2]
held that the threshold for granting leave to appeal has been raised
and that the use of the word “
would
”
in the new statute indicates a measure of certainty that another
court will differ from the court whose judgment is sought
to be
appealed against.
[6]
The Supreme
Court of Appeal held in S v
Smith
[3]
that an appellant now faces a higher and more stringent threshold.
More is required to be established than that there is a mere
possibility of success or that the case is arguable on appeal or that
the case cannot be categorised as hopeless. There must be
a sound and
rational basis for the conclusion that there are prospects of success
on appeal. This finding in S v
Smith
was
recently confirmed by the Supreme Court of Appeal in
Four
Wheel Drive Accessory Distributors CC v Rattan N.O.
[4]
Grounds
of appeal
[7]
I do not propose to rehearse the content of the application for leave
to appeal or the arguments that served before me,
nor to repeat what
was set out in my judgment. I am mindful that an appeal is supposed
to be aimed at an order of the court and
not its reasoning.
[8]
In any event, in argument before me Mr Dyke SC abandoned several of
the grounds of appeal (
inter alia
those which sought to
introduce a new case not previously argued and not factually grounded
in the applicants’ affidavits)
and confined his argument to the
single question whether there was a meeting of the minds of the
parties to the instalment sale
agreement
[9]
The issue that was pertinently raised in the answering affidavit,
turned on what the parties’ intended when they
concluded a
‘loan facility’. The applicant’s case is that the
instalment sale agreement is a “
simulated agreement
”
that was induced by “
deceit
” or “
error
”
(whether mutual or unilateral was not explained) or “
unfair
treatment
”, and “
cancelled
”.
Essentially, the argument was that the true intention with the ‘loan
facility’ was that the respondent would
make available a
shareholders’ loan which could be accessed as a revolving
credit facility as and when funds were required.
Such an agreement is
clearly at odds with the terms of the instalment sale agreement.
[10]
Before me, Mr Dyke SC appropriately conceded that the instalment sale
agreement was a commercial transaction in the nature
of both a ‘loan’
and a ‘facility’. At least in that sense then there was a
meeting of the minds between
the parties thereto, i.e., the
respondent and the principal debtor (the fourth applicant). The first
to third respondents, who
are liable as sureties, did not challenge
the suretyship agreements and are not parties to the instalment sale
agreement.
[11]
As Mr Stockwell SC (who appeared with Mr Venter) pointed out, an
array of sequential documents, by their terms duly considered
in
context and for purpose, speak to the conclusion of the instalment
sale agreement – including the shareholders’
agreement;
the respondent’s ‘facility letter’ which refers
specifically to the instalment sale agreement “
to be signed
”
between the respondent and the principal debtor; and a board
resolution specifically authorising the first applicant to
sign the
instalment sale agreement on behalf of the principal debtor. It is
not in dispute that the first applicant duly signed
the instalment
sale agreement on behalf of the principal debtor, and that the
parties then conducted themselves in accordance with
its terms and
gave effect thereto by the principal debtor paying some R10m in terms
of the instalment sale agreement by means of
an agreed monthly debit
order for aircraft received by it, before defaulting on the balance.
It cannot assist the applicants to
rely on a version that the first
applicant, who acted as the principal debtor’s duly authorised
agent when concluding the
instalment sale agreement, did not know or
agree with what he was doing.
[12]
My reasoning
inter alia
held that either of the
caveat
subscriptor
or parol evidence rules are destructive of the
applicants’ defence to the claim. Significantly, the
applicants’ grounds
of appeal do not engage with the relevant
principles, nor do they challenge the authorities that support my
findings. Mr Dyke,
at my invitation and having accepted that the
legal principles are well-established by the authorities I referred
to, was hard
pressed to argue this point. Ultimately, he was unable
to persuade me that I had erred in this regard.
[13]
In the result, I am unable to find that an appeal would have a
reasonable prospect of success.
Order
[14]
The following order is made:
1. The application
for leave to appeal is dismissed with costs, such costs to be on the
scale as between attorney and client
(which shall not be less than
scale C) and shall include the costs of two counsel, where so
employed.
P
STAIS SC
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Johannesburg
APPEARANCES
:
Applicants:
Adv B Dyke SC
Instructed
by: Barter
McKellar Attorneys
Respondents:
Advv R Stockwell SC and AJ Venter
Instructed
by: Uys Matyeka
Schwartz Attorneys
Date
of hearing: 25 June 2024
Date
of judgment: 25 June 2024
[1]
Section 20 of the Supreme Court Act, 1959
[2]
2014 JDR 2325 (LCC). Approved by the Full Bench of the
Gauteng Division, Pretoria in
Acting
National Director of Public Prosecutions v Democratic Alliance
2016
JDR 1211 (GP)
[3]
2012 (1) SACR 567 (SCA)
[4]
2019 (3) SA 451
(SCA)
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