Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 956South Africa
SB Ngento Attorneys v Mbiza obo Mbiza (082843/2024) [2024] ZAGPJHC 956 (20 September 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
20 September 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## SB Ngento Attorneys v Mbiza obo Mbiza (082843/2024) [2024] ZAGPJHC 956 (20 September 2024)
SB Ngento Attorneys v Mbiza obo Mbiza (082843/2024) [2024] ZAGPJHC 956 (20 September 2024)
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sino date 20 September 2024
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO
: 082843/2024
DATE
:
14-08-2024
(1) REPORTABLE: NO.
(2) OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO.
(3) REVISED.
In
the matter between
SB NGENTO
ATTORNEYS
Applicant
and
DORIS
MBIZA OBO MULISA MBIZA
Respondents
JUDGMENT
YACOOB,
J
: The First Respondent in this
application obtained an order on an urgent,
ex
parte
basis on 31 July 2024 from this
Court, which froze the bank accounts of the Applicant today before
me. Specifically, the order
froze the trust account of the Second
Applicant which was identified by its account number. The order also
stated that any account
in the name of the First and Second
Respondents are to be frozen pending the finalisation of the matter.
The
First and Second Applicants have now approached this Court for a
reconsideration of the order as is their right. However, it
must be
noted that the order granted on 31 July was an interim order in a
form of rule nisi with a return date of 7 September.
The Applicant
before me today would then have to demonstrate that he could not
await the return date, that he was entitled to anticipate
it and that
he has shown cause why the
rule nisi
should not be confirmed.
The
now Respondent before me today does not ask for the confirmation of
the
rule nisi
but simply asks for the dismissal of the application for
reconsideration, firstly on the basis that it is not urgent, and,
secondly,
that it does not in fact respond to the application which
was brought
ex-parte
.
The affidavit on which the application today is founded casts itself
as a founding affidavit and does not include any specific
responses
to the contents of the founding affidavit on which the order was
sought and obtained. It therefore does not comprise
an answer to that
application.
It
also contains certain allegations which are not supported by the
annexures to the application. For example, it contends that
the order
that was granted freezes the First Applicant's personal bank accounts
as well as the bank accounts of the Second Applicant
(the law firm).
However, there is no evidence before me that the personal bank
account of the first applicant has been frozen.
The only evidence
demonstrating the freezing of an account is a letter from the
Standard Bank which refers to two accounts in the
name of the firm,
one of which is a current account and the other is the trust account.
The
second complaint in support of urgency and which asks for
reconsideration is that the First Applicant's ability to provide for
his family and pay bills has been affected because his personal
account has been frozen. There is no evidence of this.
In
addition, the First Applicant contends that the order suspends him
from practice and precludes the firm from conducting its business.
This is not what the order does. The order simply removes the
Applicant's ability to deal with the bank accounts and requires that
the legal practice council deals with the bank accounts on his behalf
or appoints a curator to do so.
Mr
Masweneng who appeared on behalf of the Applicants placed a great
deal of emphasis on the word “curator”, saying
that it
means that the First Applicant's ability to function at all has been
compromised by the appointment of a curator but that
is obviously not
what the word “curator” in this context means. In this
context the only function of the curator is
to administer the bank
account in the ordinary course of business on the Applicant's behalf.
There is nothing to prevent him from
carrying out his legal practice
and the curator or the legal practice council is supposed to
co-operate with him in administering
the account in accordance with
the requirements of the business. If they have not done so or are
being unreasonable his recourse
would have been against them rather
than the Respondent that he has brought to court today.
Taking
into account that the Applicants have not placed before this Court a
proper response to the affidavit on the basis of which
the
ex
parte
order was sought and that there
is no evidence of real hardship being experienced by the Respondents,
I am not satisfied that urgency
has been established and I am not
satisfied that it is appropriate to anticipate the return date in
this way. In any event in my
view, it would prejudice the Applicant
were I to consider this affidavit as his answer to the affidavit on
which the
ex parte
order was obtained because it is simply not an answer. By not
considering it an answer it means he is still entitled to answer
to
that affidavit.
The
application is hopelessly flawed, does not contain the basic evidence
that it ought to have contained and is premised on a misconstruction
of the order that was obtained. I see no reason why the Applicants
should not bear the Respondent's costs. For these reasons the
application is struck from the roll and the Applicants are to pay the
Respondent's costs on an attorney and client scale jointly
and
severally.
YACOOB, J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
DATE
:
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