Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 1112South Africa
Dlamini and Others v Imbokodv Lemabalabala Holdings Limited and Others (2022/051081) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1112 (31 October 2024)
Headnotes
Summary: Application for leave to appeal – s 17(1)(a)(i) of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013 – an applicant now faces a higher and a more stringent threshold – leave to appeal granted –
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Dlamini and Others v Imbokodv Lemabalabala Holdings Limited and Others (2022/051081) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1112 (31 October 2024)
Dlamini and Others v Imbokodv Lemabalabala Holdings Limited and Others (2022/051081) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1112 (31 October 2024)
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sino date 31 October 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
case
NO
:
2022-051081
DATE
:
31
October
2024
In the matter between:
DLAMINI
,
PRINCE MAKHOSONKE CAMBRIDGE
First Applicant
EMBHULENI
TRADITIONAL AUTHORITY
Second Applicant
NKOSI
,
ACTING CHIEF NDUMISO
Third Applicant
EDLAMBHEDLWINI
TRIBAL AUTHORITY
Fourth Applicant
and
IMBOKODVO
LEMABALABALA HOLDINGS LIMITED
First Respondent
IMBOKODVO
LEMABALABALA FORESTRY (PTY) LTD
Second
Respondent
THE UNLAWFUL BOARD OF
IMBOKODVO
LEMABALABALA FORESTRY (PTY) LTD
Third
Respondent
THE TRADITIONAL
AUTHORITY INVESTMENT
HOLDINGS
COMPANY (‘TAIHC’)
Fourth Respondent
KOTI
INVESTMENTS (PTY) LTD
Fifth Respondent
COMMISSION FOR
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
AND
COMPANIES
Sixth
Respondent
SIYAQHUBEKA
FOREST (PTY) LIMITED
Seventh Respondent
SOUTH
AFRICAN FOREST COMPANY LIMITED
Eighth Respondent
Neutral Citation
:
Prince Dlamini & Other v Imbokodvo Lemabalaba Holdings and
Others (051081/2022)
[2024] ZAGPJHC ---
(31 October 2024)
Coram:
Adams J
Heard
:
31 October 2024
Delivered:
31 October 2024 – This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties' representatives by
email, by
being uploaded to
CaseLines
and by release to
SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 12:30 on 31
October 2024.
Summary:
Application for leave to appeal –
s 17(1)(a)(i)
of the
Superior
Courts Act 10 of 2013
– an applicant now faces a higher and a
more stringent threshold – leave to appeal granted –
Uniform Rule of Court
42(1)(b) – issues not dealt with in main judge, which should
have been dealt with – patent error
– corrected in
application for leave to appeal judgement – order granted to
give effect to true intention of court
a quo
.
ORDER
(1)
In terms of Uniform Rule of Court
42(1)(b), the order of the court dated 16 July 2024 is corrected
and varied by the addition
of the following two orders after prayer
(2): -
‘
(3)
The first, second, third and fifth respondents shall pay the
applicants’ costs relating to the
first, second, third and
fifth respondents’ interlocutory application (dated 31 March
2023) to strike out certain portions
of the applicants’
replying affidavit, which application was formally withdrawn by the
respondents at the hearing of the
main application on 31 January
2024;
(4)
In the related application under case
number 2020-28813, each party shall bear its own costs incurred after
25 August 2020.’
(2)
The applicants’ application for
leave to appeal succeeds.
(3)
The applicants are granted leave to
appeal to the Full Court of this Division.
(4)
The costs of this application for leave
to appeal shall be costs in the appeal.
JUDGMENT [APPLICATION
FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL]
Adams J:
[1].
I shall refer
to the parties as referred to in the original application by the
first to fourth applicants (‘applicants’)
for declaratory
orders which, if granted, would have had the effect of ‘reinstating’
the first applicant as a director
of the second respondent (‘ILF’),
as well as acknowledging the applicants’ interest in that
company. The applicants
are the applicants in this application for
leave to appeal and the first, second, third and fifth respondents
(‘respondents’)
are the respondents in this application.
On 16 July 2024 I dismissed with costs the applicants’
application.
[2].
The applicants
apply for leave to appeal the
whole of my judgment dated 16 July 2024, as well as my reasons
therefor, in terms of which I had dismissed
their application with
costs.
[3].
The application for leave to
appeal is mainly against my factual findings, based on the findings
by the arbitrator in an arbitral
award, that
factually
the first respondent (ILH) is and was, at all times material hereto,
the 100% shareholder of ILF. The first applicant
(Mr Dlamini), so I
found, was never a shareholder in ILF, and he could accordingly not
be removed as such from the said company.
Furthermore, as regards the
decision to have him removed as a director of ILF, that was a
decision of the shareholder of ILF, that
being ILH, who acted fully
within their rights to have a director of their subsidiary removed.
[4].
In their notice of application
for leave to appeal, the applicants allege numerous grounds for the
said application. Importantly,
they contend that the court
a
quo
erred
in
finding that once a resolution had been taken by the shareholders of
a company to remove a director it is not reviewable. This
finding, so
the applicants contend, is bad in law and is not supported by any
case law. I also erred, so the applicants contend,
in my finding that
ILH has been acting as its direct shareholders through TAICHC, being
nine communities that are spread over the
territorial area of Limpopo
and Mpumalanga. It is also contended by the applicants that I erred
in failing to declare the ‘draft
shareholders agreement’
null and void and in conflict with the Shareholder agreement signed
in 1999. I should have found,
so the contention goes, that the
Shareholder's agreement signed in 1999 is the true and authentic
agreement governing the relationship
of the of the shareholders in
the ILH Group.
[5].
There are a
number of further grounds on the basis of which, according to the
applicants, leave to appeal should be granted. In
sum, the applicants
contend that most, if not all, of my factual findings were
misdirections. So, for example, the applicants aver
that I should
have declared that the ILH board was not properly constituted on 17
September 2022 and I should therefore have nullified
the resolution
taken on that day.
[6].
Moreover, the
applicants contend that the court
a
quo
, in
its assessment of the facts, incorrectly applied the
Plascon
Evans
principle, by accepting the evidence contained in the answering
affidavit filed by the respondents notwithstanding its glaring
weakness, and rejecting the case made out by the applicants which was
supported by the facts and the law.
[7].
Nothing new has been raised by the applicants in this
application for leave to appeal. In my original written judgment, I
have dealt
with most, if not all of the issues raised by the
applicants in this application for leave to appeal and it is not
necessary for
me to repeat those in full.
Suffice to restate what I say in the judgment, namely that, o
n
the basis of the findings in the arbitral award, the relief sought by
the applicants in the main application should fail. The
arbitrator
found that the shareholders’ agreements regulated the
relationship between the interested parties. ILH has a shareholders'
agreement which is extant and valid, and it is ironic that Mr Dlamini
is in fact the person who signed the said agreement on behalf
of ILH.
[8].
The traditional test in deciding whether leave to
appeal should be granted was whether there is a reasonable prospect
that another
court may come to a different conclusion to that reached
by me in my judgment. This approach has now been codified in
s
17(1)(a)(i)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
, which came into
operation on the 23
rd
of August 2013, and which provides
that leave to appeal may only be given where the judge concerned is
of the opinion that ‘the
appeal would have a reasonable
prospect of success’.
[9].
In
Ramakatsa
and Others v African National Congress and Another
[1]
,
the SCA held that the test of reasonable prospects of success
postulates a dispassionate decision, based on the facts and the
law
that a court of appeal ‘could’ reasonably arrive at a
conclusion different to that of the trial court. These prospects
of
success must not be remote, but there must exist a reasonable chance
of succeeding. An applicant who applies for leave to appeal
must show
that there is a sound and rational basis for the conclusion that
there are prospects of success.
[10].
The ratio in
Ramakatsa
simply followed
S
v Smith
2012 (1) SACR 567
(SCA),
[2011] ZASCA 15
, in which Plasket AJA
(Cloete JA and Maya JA concurring), held as follows at para 7:
‘
What
the test of reasonable prospects of success postulates is a
dispassionate decision, based on the facts and the law that the
Court
of Appeal could reasonably arrive at a conclusion different to that
of the trial court. In order to succeed, therefore, the
appellant
must convince this Court on proper grounds that he has prospects of
success on appeal and that those prospects are not
remote, but have a
realistic chance of succeeding. More is required to be established
than that there is a mere possibility of
success. That the case is
arguable on appeal or that the case cannot be categorised as
hopeless. There must, in other words, be
a sound, rational basis for
the conclusion that there are prospects of success on appeal.’
[11].
In
Mont
Chevaux Trust v Tina Goosen
[2]
,
the Land Claims Court held (in an
obiter
dictum
)
that the wording of this subsection raised the bar of the test that
now has to be applied to the merits of the proposed appeal
before
leave should be granted. I agree with that view, which has also now
been endorsed by the SCA in an unreported judgment in
Notshokovu
v S
[3]
.
In that matter the SCA remarked that an appellant now faces a higher
and a more stringent threshold, in terms of the Superior
Court Act 10
of 2013 compared to that under the provisions of the repealed Supreme
Court Act 59 of 1959. The applicable legal principle
as enunciated in
Mont
Chevaux
has also now been endorsed by the Full Court of the Gauteng Division
of the High Court in Pretoria in
Acting
National Director of Public Prosecutions and Others v Democratic
Alliance In Re: Democratic Alliance v Acting National Director
of
Public Prosecutions and Others
[4]
.
[12].
I am persuaded that the issues
raised by the applicants in their application for leave to appeal are
issues in respect of which
another court is likely to reach
conclusions different to those reached by me. I am therefore of the
view that there are reasonable
prospects of another court making
factual findings and coming to legal conclusions at variance with my
factual findings and legal
conclusions. The appeal, therefore, in my
view, does have a reasonable prospect of success.
[13].
There is one
last issue which I need to deal with and that relates to two matters
which, according to the applicants, were before
me in the main
application and which I was required to adjudicate on in my judgment,
but which were not dealt with in the judgment
at all. And those are:
(a) An interlocutory application by the respondents to strike out
certain paragraphs in applicants’
replying affidavit; and (b) A
related application under case number 2020-18813, in which ILH
applied, on an urgent basis, for interdictory
relief against
inter
alia
ILF,
Mr Dlamini, the seventh respondent (SQF) and other interested
parties. That application was struck off the urgent court roll
due to
lack of urgency, but, according to the applicants, part B thereof is
still pending and, by direction of the Honourable DJP,
was supposed
to have been dealt with by me. The respondents contend that there was
an agreement between the parties that the issues
raised in that
application were referred to arbitration and were in fact the subject
of the arbitral award referred to above. ILH
therefore has no
intention of pursuing that application any further. It was stated in
as many words on behalf of the respondents.
[14].
My omission to
deal with these issues is quite clearly a patent error. The intention
was always that those issues be dealt with
in the main judgment and
that I issue orders, at least costs order, in both those
applications. The issue in both these applications
are
straightforward and uncomplicated.
[15].
At the
commencement of the hearing of the application on 31 January 2024,
the parties informed the court that the respondents do
not intend
pursuing the interlocutory application. This was confirmed by Mr
Cohen, who appeared on behalf of the respondents with
Mr Ascar, and
who stated unequivocally that the respondents were ‘abandoning’
the said application. I interpret these
advices from the respondents’
Counsel as a formal withdrawal of the said application. It follows
that the respondents should
be ordered to pay the costs of that
application.
[16].
As for the
second application, neither of the parties took any further steps to
have the matter heard. In any event, the issues
in that application
were overtaken by the present application and the arbitration, which,
according to the respondents, was as
a result of the parties
referring the issues in the urgent application to arbitration. All
the same, ILF has no intention of pursuing
that application further.
The costs incurred subsequent to the matter being struck off the roll
are negligible. In the exercise
of my discretion, I would order the
parties to bear their own costs incurred after the costs order of
Twala J on 15 August 2020.
[17].
I therefore
intend granting an order in terms of Uniform Rule of Court 42(1)(b),
correcting the aforesaid patent error, which is
such that it had
resulted in an order being granted which did not reflect my real
intention when I pronounced the order. The error
is clearly
attributable to the court itself, and I may therefore
mero
motu
correct what is undoubtedly a error in my order so as to give effect
to my true intention.
[18].
As for the application for leave
to appeal, as indicated above, leave should be granted.
Order
[19].
In the circumstances, the
following order is made:
(1)
In terms of Uniform Rule of Court
42(1)(b), the order of the court dated 16 July 2024 is corrected and
varied by the addition of
the following two orders after prayer (2):
-
‘
(3)
The first, second, third and fifth respondents shall pay the
applicants’ costs relating to the first,
second, third and
fifth respondents’ interlocutory application (dated 31 March
2023) to strike out certain portions
of the applicants’
replying affidavit, which application was formally withdrawn by the
respondents at the hearing of the
main application on 31 January
2024;
(4)
In the related application under case
number 2020-28813, each party shall bear its own costs incurred after
25 August 2020.’
(2)
The applicants’ application for
leave to appeal succeeds.
(3)
The applicants are granted leave to
appeal to the Full Court of this Division.
(4)
The costs of this application for leave
to appeal shall be costs in the appeal.
_________________________________
L R ADAMS
Judge of the High
Court
Gauteng Division,
Johannesburg
HEARD ON:
31
st
October 2024
JUDGMENT DATE:
31
st
October 2024 – Judgment handed down electronically
FOR THE APPLICANTS:
Adv M E Mathaphuna
INSTRUCTED BY:
Sibisi & Partners
Attorneys, Mbombela
FOR THE FIRST, SECOND,
THIRD AND FIFTH RESPONDENTS:
Advocate Sam Cohen,
together with Advocate Clint Ascar and
Advocate Abongile Mabensela
INSTRUCTED BY:
Molepo Incorporated
Attorneys, Germiston
FOR THE FOURTH
RESPONDENT:
No appearance
INSTRUCTED BY:
Ramushu Mashile Twala
Incorporated, Strathavon, Sandton
FOR THE SIXTH, SEVENTH
AND EIGHTH RESPONDENTS:
No appearance
INSTRUCTED BY:
No appearance
[1]
Ramakatsa
and Others v African National Congress and Another
(724/2019)
[2021] ZASCA 31
(31 March 2021);
[2]
Mont
Chevaux Trust v Tina Goosen,
LCC 14R/2014 (unreported).
[3]
Notshokovu
v S,
case
no: 157/2015
[2016] ZASCA 112
(7 September 2016).
[4]
Acting
National Director of Public Prosecutions and Others v Democratic
Alliance In Re: Democratic Alliance v Acting National
Director of
Public Prosecutions and Others
(19577/09) [2016] ZAGPPHC 489 (24 June 2016).
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