Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 766South Africa
Redpath Africa Limited v Siyakhula Sonke Empowerment Corporation Proprietary Limited and Others (55896/2021,2023/007449) [2024] ZAGPJHC 766 (31 July 2024)
Headnotes
in July, SSC and Arendse indicated that they intended to persist in their application for security for costs;
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Redpath Africa Limited v Siyakhula Sonke Empowerment Corporation Proprietary Limited and Others (55896/2021,2023/007449) [2024] ZAGPJHC 766 (31 July 2024)
Redpath Africa Limited v Siyakhula Sonke Empowerment Corporation Proprietary Limited and Others (55896/2021,2023/007449) [2024] ZAGPJHC 766 (31 July 2024)
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sino date 31 July 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
Numbers:
55896/2021
2023-007449
1.
REPORTABLE: NO
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
3.
REVISED: NO
In
the matter between:
REDPATH
AFRICA LIMITED
Applicant
and
SIYAKHULA SONKE
EMPOWERMENT
CORPORATION
PROPRIETARY LIMITED
First
Respondent
FREDERICK SAM
ARENDSE
Second
Respondent
REDPATH MINING
(SOUTH AFRICA)
PROPRIETARY
LIMITED
Third
Respondent
JUDGMENT
(Security for costs)
SENYATSI,
J
[1]
The issue in this application is what scale
of costs the Court should award in favour of the respondent, Redpath
Africa Limited
(“RAL”) following the tender for security
made by it in favour of the applicants on 11 May 2023, the wasted
costs for
the application for security for costs against the
respondent, a
peregrinus
incorporated
and registered in Mauritius.
[2]
T
he
applicant RAL in the main application under the same case number,
seeks an order that it has validly cancelled the shareholders’
agreement in respect of Redpath Mining South Africa (Pty) Ltd
(“RMSA”), cited as the second respondent, alternatively
that the first respondent (“SSC”), the controlling mind
of which is the third respondent (“Arendse”), is
deemed
to have offered its entire shareholding in RMSA for sale to RAL in
terms of certain provisions of the shareholders’
agreement.
[3]
It is common cause that on 14 January 2022,
SSC and Arendse filed a notice in terms of rule 47(1) requesting
security for costs
from RAL. SSC and Arendse were not satisfied with
RAL’s response to the request and so launched this
interlocutory application.
They seek an order that RAL must furnish
them with security for costs in an amount of R 1 200 000. The
security for costs
application was launched on 2 March 2022.
[4]
On 28 March 2022, RAL filed its answering
affidavit. In that affidavit, RAL explained that:
a.
It was common cause that RAL was the majority shareholder in RMSA and
that its shareholding “constitutes an asset within
the
jurisdiction of this Court that would render its judgment effective
against [Redpath] notwithstanding its status as a peregrinus”.
b.
Furthermore, Redpath owned movable assets to the value of $3 577 365,
which were set out in a schedule annexed to the answering
affidavit.
It was also explained that, despite technically being movable
property, the assets constituted heavy mining equipment
and machinery
which could not easily be removed from the jurisdiction of the court
– those assets therefore constituted excellent
security.
c.
On 7 April 2022, SSC and Arendse filed their replying affidavit and
persisted in the application for security for costs. They justified
their refusal to accept that RAL owned adequate assets to satisfy any
costs order made against it (and certainly far exceeding
the R
1 200 000 sought in these proceedings) by raising the
following complaints:
i.
RAL “tenders none of the assets as security for the applicants’
costs”.
ii.
RAL failed to disclose if any of the assets are encumbered or pledged
“or the rights of third-parties in respect of these
assets”.
iii.
RAL was “deliberately vague in describing the assets”.
iv.
RAL admits that it is not in possession of the assets mentioned in
the answering affidavit.
[5]
On 11 May 2022, Werksmans Attorneys, RAL’s
attorneys of record, wrote to Cliffe Dekker Hofmeyr
(“CDH”),
the attorneys acting for SSC and Arendse. In
that letter, Werksmans recorded the following:
a.
The value of the assets far exceeded the
claim for security in the amount of R 1 200 000sought by SSC and
Arendse;
b.
The assets were not encumbered or pledged
to third parties;
c.
The tendered assets were situated at
Modikwa Mine;
d.
RAL would ensure that the tendered assets
remained within South Africa until the main application was heard;
e.
The tendered assets were under RAL’s
control.
[6]
RAL called upon SSC and Arendse immediately
to withdraw their application for security. No response was received
to this letter.
On 27 July 2022, Werksmans sent a further letter to
CDH. In short, the purpose of the letter was to record that:
a. No response had
been received to the 11 May 2022 letter;
b. At a
case-management meeting held in July, SSC and Arendse indicated that
they intended to persist in their application
for security for costs;
c.
CDH was called upon to explain why SSC and Arendse had refused and
d.
RAL’s tender in its 11 May 2022 letter and why they were
persisting in the security application.
[7]
RAL contends that no response was received
to this letter either – at least not at first. Instead, SSC and
Arendse filed their
heads of argument on 1 August 2022. In the heads
of argument, SSC and Arendse repeated, verbatim, the contentions
advanced in the
replying affidavit as if the letters sent above had
never been written.
[8]
It is common cause that on 8 August 2022,
CDH finally responded to the letter dated 27 July 2022. The letter
is, so contends RAL,
important to the ultimate order which RAL seeks
this Court to make.
a.
The letter begins by mapping out the
history of the engagement between the parties on the issue of
security – starting with
the rule 47(1) notice, then
Werksmans’s response to that notice (in a letter dated 28
February 2022), then the launching
of this interlocutory application
and then the filing of the parties of their answering and replying
affidavits respectively;
b.
The letter then says that RAL “now
wishes to introduce new facts by way of correspondence to address its
shortcomings and
demand that our client withdraws its application
without any tender for the costs of the application. Accordingly, the
approach
being adopted by your client is extremely inappropriate.
c.
The letter concludes by saying that SSC and
Arendse would only withdraw the application for security “based
on the undertaking
recorded in your letters dated 11 May 2022 and 27
July 2022, if your client tenders” the costs. RAL was warned
that, if it
did not do so, “our client will place the
correspondence before the court in support of a punitive costs order
against your
client”.
[9]
RAL has filed a supplementary affidavit in
which all of the above-mentioned facts have been set out. It has
accompanied that affidavit
with a notice of motion, seeking leave for
that affidavit to be admitted. RAL argues that it is in the interests
of justice for
the short supplementary affidavit to be admitted,
because the facts set out above are essential to the proper
determination of
this matter. For reasons that follow below, I agree
with the submission.
[10]
The letter in which SSC and Arendse
expressed a willingness to withdraw the application in exchange for
an undertaking by RAL to
pay their costs came after SSC and Arendse
filed their heads of argument. In the heads of argument, the
motivation for seeking
an order providing for security is based
solely on the repetition of the complaints set out in the replying
affidavit. No mention
was made of the tender.
[11]
RAL seeks a cost order from 11 May 2022 on
a punitive scale which is opposed by SSC and Arendse. RAL also
contends that up to 11
May 2022, each party should bear its own
costs.
[12]
In terms of Uniform Rule 47 and at common
law a peregrinus plaintiff (or applicant) who does not own immovable
property in the Republic
with sufficient unburdened margin to satisfy
costs that may arise, may be ordered to give security for the costs
of his action.
[13]
The
historical approach to the principle on security for costs was
expressed by
the
Supreme Court of Appeal in
Boost
Sports Africa
v
South
African Breweries (Pty) Ltd
,
[1]
as follows:
“
The general rule
of our law as laid down in
Witham v Venables
(1828) 1 Menz 291
is that an
incola
plaintiff cannot be compelled to furnish
security for costs. As explained in
Lumsden v Kaffrarian Bank
(1884 –
1885) 3 SC 366
no inhabitant of the Colony can be
compelled to give security for costs whether he be rich or poor,
solvent or insolvent, but a
peregrinus may be called upon to do so,
unless he can prove that he is possessed of immovable property within
the Colony of adequate
value (
Lombard v Lombardy Hotel Co Ltd (in
Liquidation)
1911 TPD 866).
”
[14]
Once
it is established that a plaintiff (or applicant) is a
peregrinus
and that they do not own unmortgaged immovable property in the
Republic, an
incola
defendant is entitled, subject only to the discretion of the Court,
to seek security for the costs of the action or as in this
instance
an opposition to the pending application.
[2]
The purpose of the rule is to ensure that if the peregrine plaintiff
is unsuccessful, payment of an
incola
defendant’s costs is secured.
[15]
The
Court has a discretion to exercise whether to absolve the
peregrinus
from
being ordered to provide security.
[3]
The Court will exercise its judicial discretion
⎯
“
by
having due regard to the particular circumstances of the case as well
as the consideration of equality and fairness to both the
incola and
the
peregrinus
to decide whether the latter should be compelled to furnish, or be
absolved from furnishing, security for costs. Nor is there any
justification for requiring the Court to exercise its discretion in
favour of a peregrinus only sparingly.”
[4]
[16]
In
Browns
The Diamond Store CC v Van Zyl
,
[5]
Kathree-Setiloane J embarked on a comprehensive consideration of the
law on security for cost and she said the following: -
“
An
incola defendant does not, however, have a
prima
facie
right to be furnished with security for costs by a peregrine
plaintiff. Whether or not the latter should furnish an incola with
security for its costs lies within the discretion of the court. In
exercising its discretion, the court must have regard to the
particular circumstances of the case as well as considerations of
equity and fairness to both the incola and the peregrine. Factors
that our courts have taken into account when deciding whether or not
to order a peregrine to provide security are his impecuniosity
and
whether an order compelling him to furnish security would deprive him
of the right to litigate against an incola; whether he
is
economically active within the jurisdiction of the court; and whether
execution of the court’s judgment is possible in
the
jurisdiction in which he resides. None of these factors are, however,
decisive.”
[17]
SSC
and Arendse argue that once it is established that the respondent is
a peregrinus, an appropriate security for costs order should
be made.
However, this argument misses the fact that indeed on 11 May 2022, a
tender was made to them on the security for costs.
The tender was
rejected on the basis that it was vague despite the fact that the
movable heavy equipment was identified as well
as its value which is
in excess of $ 3 500 000 and its location and the undertaking
that it would not be removed from its
location which is a mining
site.
[18]
The
offer was only accepted on 27 July 2022 and despite the acceptance,
when the heads of arguments were prepared 1 August 2022,
which is 5
days after the acceptance of the offer, on behalf of SSC and Arendse,
there was no reference to the acceptance of the
offer. In other
words, in the absence of any reference to the acceptance of the offer
for tender on security for costs, the heads
of arguments are
misleading to this Court as it no longer necessary to make an
appropriate order on the security for costs.
In
the light of the tender made by RAL on 11 May 2022, there is simply
no basis for this Court to make any order in this application.
On the
facts of this matter, it is quite clear that SSC and Arendse have
been given an adequate indication that any costs order
made in their
favour in the main application will be satisfied. This is now common
cause.
[19]
There is no suggestion that the letter of
11 May 2022 was not received – indeed, in their letter of 8
August, SSC and Arendse
implicitly accept that it was received. So,
the question before this Court now, when considering whether the
stance of SSC and
Arendse is an abuse of process, is: why did SSC and
Arendse not accept the tender and instead give the instruction to
persist in
the application and file heads of argument ignoring the
letter of 11 May 2022 entirely? I am of the view that by doing so,
SSC
and Arendse were abusing the Court process because there were no
justifiable reasons to persist with the application for security
for
costs post 11 May 2022. Consequently, and under the circumstances, an
appropriate punitive cost order from the 11 May 2022
to 29 July 2022
should be favourably considered.
Order
[20]
The
following order is made: -
a.
The application for security for costs is dismissed;
b.
The parties are ordered to pay their own costs up to 11 May 2022;
c.
SSC and Arendse are order to pay the costs on the scale as between
the Attorney and client from 11 May 2022 onwards.
ML
SENYATSI
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Delivered:
This Judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties/ their legal representatives by email and
by uploading to the
electronic file on Case Lines. The date for hand-down is deemed to be
31 July 2024.
Appearances:
For
the applicants:
Adv IV Maleka SC
Adv T Scott
Adv T Pooe
Instructed
by Cliffe Dekker Hofmeyer Inc
For the first
respondent:
Adv S Symon SC
Adv D Watson
Instructed
by Kampel Kaufmann Attorneys
For the second
respondent: Adv J Blou SC
Adv A Friedman
Instructed
by Werksmans Attorneys
Date
of Hearing: 06 November 2023
Date
of Judgment: 31 July 2024
[1]
2015 (5) SA 38
(SCA) par 5.
[2]
Brearley
v Faure, Van Eyk and Moore
(1905)
22 SC 2
;
Lowndes
v Rothschild
1908 TH 49
;
Kachelnik
v Afrimeric Distributors
(Pty) Ltd 1948 (4) SA 279 (C).
[3]
Magida
v Minister of Police
1987 (1) SA 1
(A) at 14E-G.
[4]
Magida
v Minister of Police
1987 (1) SA 1
(A) at 14E.
[5]
2017 JDR 0583 (GJ) at para 5.
sino noindex
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