Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 1016South Africa
Sir Isaac Newton School NPO v Hoek Plein Properties (Pty) Ltd and Others (2021/10445) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1016 (8 October 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
8 October 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Sir Isaac Newton School NPO v Hoek Plein Properties (Pty) Ltd and Others (2021/10445) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1016 (8 October 2024)
Sir Isaac Newton School NPO v Hoek Plein Properties (Pty) Ltd and Others (2021/10445) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1016 (8 October 2024)
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sino date 8 October 2024
THE
HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
(1)
REPORTABLE: Yes☐/ No ☒
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
Yes☐ / No ☒
(3)
REVISED: Yes ☐ / No ☒
8 October 2024
Case
2021/10445
In
the matter between:
SIR
ISAAC NEWTON SCHOOL NPO
Applicant
and
HOEK
PLEIN PROPERTIES (PTY) LTD
First
Respondent
SIR
ISAAC NEWTON SCHOOL (PTY) LTD
Second
Respondent
PRETTY
KANGAUSARU
Third
Respondent
FIRST
NATIONAL BANK
Fourth
Respondent
SHERIFF
OF THE COURT
Fifth
Respondent
Coram:
Du Plessis AJ
Heard
on:
13 August 2024
Decided
on:
8 October 2024
This
judgment has been delivered by uploading it to the CaseLines digital
database of the Gauteng Division of the High Court of
South Africa,
Johannesburg, and by e-mail to the attorneys of record of the
parties. The deemed date and time of the delivery is
10H00 on 8
October 2024.
JUDGMENT
DU
PLESSIS AJ
Introduction
[1]
The first respondent, Hoek Plein Properties (Pty) Ltd
(hereafter “Hoek Plein”), obtained judgment against the
second
respondent, Sir Issac Newton School Pty Ltd (hereafter “the
school”), the judgment debtor, which it is entitled to execute.
To this effect, Hoek Plein attached the bank account of “Isaac
Newton School” (hereafter the FNB bank account).
[2]
The applicant, Sir Isaac Newton School NPO (hereafter “the
NPO”), launched an urgent application to uplift the attachment
as it states that the bank account belongs to the NPO and not the
judgment debtor. Hoek Plein then launched a counter-application,
which it abandoned at the hearing. It merely seeks that the NPO’s
application be dismissed with costs because, they argue,
the NPO did
not show that it is the bank account owner. The crisp issue in this
case is thus who the owner of the FNB bank account
is.
[3]
To assess whether the NPO have proven their ownership of the
FNB bank account, it is necessary to set out the facts succulently.
[4]
The NPO alleges that it is a non-profit organisation
comprising an association of people for charitable causes. It states
it is
a separate entity from the school. It states that it is the
bank account holder. Since the judgment was against the school, Hoek
Plein could not attach the NPO’s bank account.
[5]
To demonstrate that it is the bank account holder, it states
that it opened the bank account and that this was done before the
school
was incorporated and came into existence. The NPO states that
the school was incorporated on 19 December 2012 by conversion from
a
closed corporation to a company.
[6]
However, Hoek Plein points out the following contradictions:
The bank account was opened on 29 August 2008, while the NPO was
registered
on 17 March 2009. This contradicts the NPO's argument that
they opened the bank account. Also, while the company was
incorporated
on 19 December 2012, the closed corporation was formed
in 2007, a year before the opening of the bank account.
[7]
As evidence that the NPO was the entity that opened the bank
account, the NPO states that it used its constitution to open the
bank
account in 2008. However, the constitution was signed on 15
November 2016. There is also no other evidence that the constitution
was lodged with the bank to open the account.
[8]
Furthermore, the NPO submitted an automatically generated
account confirmation letter confirming that “Sir Isaac Newton
School”
is the bank account holder to prove its ownership.
However, the letter does not specify if it is the NPO or the Pty
(Ltd), nor
does it indicate a registration number. This is
problematic since there are three similarly named companies at the
Companies and
Intellectual Property Commission (“CIPC”),
namely “Sir Isaac Newton College”, “Sir Isaac
Newton High
School”, and “Sir Isaac Newton School”
(an NPO and (Pty) Ltd), in some instance with the same people serving
as directors and members on various entities.
[9]
To complicate matters, the school’s registration
certificate is in the name of “Sir Isaac Newton School”
without
indicating if it is the NPO or CC. However, the certificate
shows that the school states “Sir Issac Newton High School
(Pvt)
Ltd” (sic) with the closed corporation’s
registration number. The school has always used “Sir Isaac
Newton High
School” as its trading name, although it uses the
name “Sir Isaac Newton College” with the FNB account
number
in the school application form. They used it on the lease the
school concluded with Hoek Plein, and, so says Hoek Plein, on the
bank account itself.
[10]
Mr Kangausaru is a signatory to the NPO’s resolution and
a signatory to the constitution document. He is also the deponent
of
the supplementary answering affidavit in the eviction application
(that pertains to the lease agreement in dispute). He stated
that he
is the acting principal of the school, which he describes as “Sir
Isaac Newton School (Pty) Ltd (registration number
2012/225786/07 and
non-profit registration number 067-489-NPO), a non-profit
organisation functioning as a low fee independent
school”,
after which he refers to the school’s registration with the
Department of Education as dealt with above. In
that same
application, he argues that the school is in a precarious financial
position. He attaches correspondence with donors
he signs as
“director” to that effect. He indicates that the school
is a close corporation, and where he provides the
FNB bank account
details for them to deposit monies into. He also applied for the
commercial lease of the property in question.
In this lease, the
entity is referred to as “Sir Isaac Newton School CC”,
with the FNB bank account details.
The
law
[11]
To
be successful in interdictory the relief it seeks, the NPO must show
as a first requirement that it is a clear or definite right
[1]
that it is the owner of the bank account. The reference to a clear or
definite right relates to the degree of proof required to
establish
the right. In other words, by providing evidence, the NPO must show
that the bank account belongs to them.
[12]
However, all the evidence points to the fact that there is, at
the very least, ambiguity as to who the owner is, which means that
the NPO did not discharge its onus of showing a clear or definite
right. However, the evidence submitted more likely indicates
that the
NPO is not the owner of the bank account. The correspondence of Mr
Kangausaru referring to a closed corporation and signing
as a
director, giving the FNB bank account, does not point to the NPO
being the account owner. The only constitution submitted
for the NPO
was signed in November 2016 – eight years after the opening of
the bank account. The sequence of events, the
closed corporation
incorporated in 2007 and the bank account opened in 2008, instead
supports the contention that it was the judgment
debtor’s bank
account.
[13]
If the NPO is indeed the owner of the bank account, nothing
prohibited the NPO from approaching the bank to get access to the
documents
used to open the bank account to show that the bank account
was opened using the NPO’s constitution and not the then-closed
corporation’s CIPC documents. It failed to do so.
[14]
For all these reasons, the application must fail because it
does not meet the first requirement for an interdict.
[15]
Hoek Plein asked for a punitive cost order, including the cost
of the urgent application in November 2023, as the NPO was untruthful
since they made contradictory remarks under oath and because they did
not address the ownership of the bank account. I was not
persuaded
that this warrants a punitive cost order. I am satisfied, however,
that in terms of Rule 67A costs on scale B is warranted.
Order
[16]
The following order is made:
1. The main
application instituted by the applicant, Sir Isaac Newton School NPO,
is dismissed.
2. The applicant,
Sir Isaac Newton School, is ordered to pay the costs of the
application on scale B, including the costs
reserved on 21 November
2023.
WJ
du Plessis
Acting
Judge of the High Court
For
the Applicants:
J
Stroebel
instructed
by Vermaak Marshall Wellbeloved
For
the Respondents:
I
Mureriwa
instructed
by Machingura Attorneys
[1]
Setlegelo
v Setlegelo
1914 AD at 227.
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