Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 1137South Africa
Bidvest Bank Limited v Waste Partner Investments (Pty) Ltd (A24/048690) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1137 (11 November 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
11 November 2024
Headnotes
jointly and severally liable, and in the fact that Mr. Moeng is the sole shareholder of WPI.
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
>>
2024
>>
[2024] ZAGPJHC 1137
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Bidvest Bank Limited v Waste Partner Investments (Pty) Ltd (A24/048690) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1137 (11 November 2024)
Bidvest Bank Limited v Waste Partner Investments (Pty) Ltd (A24/048690) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1137 (11 November 2024)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2024_1137.html
sino date 11 November 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
11 November 2024
Case
No.
A24/048690
In
the matter between:
BIDVEST
BANK LIMITED
Appellant
and
WASTE
PARTNER INVESTMENTS (PTY) LTD
Respondent
CORAM: WINDELL J, WILSON
J AND MITCHELL AJ
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J (with whom WINDELL J and MITCHELL AJ agree):
1
The appellant, Bidvest, financed the sale of six vehicles to
the respondent, WPI, in terms of an instalment sale agreement. WPI’s
sole executive director, Mr. Moeng, stood as guarantor of WPI’s
performance under the agreement. WPI defaulted on the agreement
and,
on 15 March 2021, Bidvest obtained judgment against Mr. Moeng and
WPI, jointly and severally, for payment of the full amount
outstanding under the agreement, together with interest and costs.
2
Bidvest was, however, unable to obtain payment of the judgment
debt from either WPI or Mr. Moeng. Nor was Bidvest able to secure
the
return of the vehicles financed under the agreement. Accordingly,
Bidvest launched proceedings for WPI’s liquidation.
It also
sought Mr. Moeng’s sequestration.
3
It was ultimately unnecessary either to sequestrate Mr. Moeng
or to liquidate WPI, because the full debt owing under the instalment
sale agreement, including interest, was paid on 29 August 2022.
Bidvest nonetheless persisted in both the liquidation and
sequestration
applications for the sake of obtaining its costs. In
both applications, Bidvest sought costs on the attorney and client
scale.
A punitive order of this nature was said to be justified
because WPI and Mr. Moeng had conducted themselves frivolously and
vexatiously
in seeking to frustrate execution on the original
judgment debt, and in seeking to delay the hearing of the liquidation
and sequestration
applications, chiefly by taking points that were
transparently without merit.
4
On 5 September 2022, Bidvest’s attorneys offered to
withdraw the liquidation application provided that WPI tendered its
costs.
It is not clear whether Bidvest wanted its costs tendered on
the attorney and client scale, or the party and party scale, but
there
is in any event no evidence on the record of a response to its
offer to withdraw the liquidation application.
5
On 9 September 2022, the sequestration application came before
Mohamed AJ. Bidvest confirmed that it did not persist in the
sequestration
relief, but it sought and obtained an order against Mr.
Moeng for the costs of that application on the scale as between
attorney
and client.
6
Bidvest then pressed on with its liquidation application,
again purely for the purposes of obtaining its costs on the scale as
between
attorney and client.
The
hearing of the liquidation application
7
That application came before Vally J on 17 January 2023. On 23
April 2023, Vally J dismissed the liquidation application with costs.
The gravamen of his decision was that Bidvest had engaged in what
Vally J called “luxurious” litigation, by choosing
to
launch two separate applications – one for WPI’s
liquidation and one for Mr. Moeng’s sequestration. Vally
J
criticised this decision by pointing out that the motive behind both
applications was really to secure the payment of the judgment
debt.
That objective had been achieved shortly before the hearing of the
sequestration application. It was, in Vally J’s
view, neither
just nor fair to saddle WPI with the consequences of Bidvest’s
election to escalate costs by pursuing the two
applications
separately.
8
Bidvest then sought leave to appeal against Vally J’s
decision to order costs against it, and his refusal to award costs on
the attorney and client scale against WPI. It appears from the
judgment on the application for leave to appeal that Vally J’s
attention had not initially been drawn to a line of authority in this
division which holds that it is generally not competent to
join two
or more debtors in liquidation or sequestration proceedings. This is
because the respondents’ shareholders, assets
and creditors are
likely to be different, and because it is unfair and inappropriate to
drag creditors of one respondent into proceedings
for the liquidation
or sequestration of another (see, for example,
Ferela (Pty) Ltd v
Craigie
1980 (3) SA 167
(W), at 171B to 172F). Bidvest argued
that to seek sequestration and liquidation relief against WPI and Mr.
Moeng in the same proceedings
would have fallen foul of that rule. It
also pointed out that the statutory regimes applicable to liquidation
and sequestration
proceedings are different, which was an additional
reason not to proceed against WPI and Mr. Moeng in the same case.
9
However, in his judgment dismissing the application for leave
to appeal, Vally J pointed out that there is no hard and fast rule
against joinder of debtors and causes of action in sequestration and
liquidation proceedings. There are exceptions to the rule
in
instances where the respondents have agreed to be joined in one
application, or where there is an identity, or at least a substantial
coincidence, of interests between them (see
Breetveldt v Van Zyl
1972 (1) SA 304
(T) at 314F-G,
Business Partners Ltd v Vecto
Trade 87 (Pty) Ltd
a
2004 (5) SA 296
(SE) (“
Business
Partners
”), paragraph 34, and, generally,
Strufast (Pty)
Ltd v Uys
2017 (6) SA 491
(GJ) (“
Strufast
”)).
The question is accordingly whether there is a sufficient identity of
interests between the respondents sought to be
joined (see
Brack v
Front Runner Racks
2000 (Pty) Ltd 2011 JDR 0429 (GSJ), paragraph
22). The cases on joinder in liquidation and sequestration
proceedings do not seem
to explore what counts as an identity of
interests in much detail. There is also equivocation in the cases
about the extent to
which a set of debtors’ interests must
align before it is appropriate to join more than one of them in the
same proceedings
(compare, for example,
Business Partners
,
paragraph 34 with
Strufast
, paragraphs 12, 14 and 35).
10
Vally J nonetheless appears to me to have found an identity of
interests in the fact that both the liquidation and sequestration
proceedings in this case arose from the same judgment debt, for which
Mr. Moeng and WPI were held jointly and severally liable,
and in the
fact that Mr. Moeng is the sole shareholder of WPI.
11
Vally J went on to emphasise that there was really only one
reason to bring both the sequestration application and the
liquidation
application, which was to secure full payment of the
judgment debt. Given that this was achieved before the sequestration
application
was called before Mohamed AJ, who granted an attorney and
client costs order against Mr. Moeng, Vally J persisted in his view
that
it was inappropriate to proceed against WPI for a further
punitive costs order. It seems clear from both of Vally J’s
judgments
that he considered that Bidvest had already extracted what
he called its “pound of flesh” (see Vally J’s
judgment
on the main application, paragraph 4), and that the pursuit
of attorney and client costs in the liquidation application was
gratuitous.
The
appeal
12
Bidvest then approached the Supreme Court of Appeal, which
granted leave to appeal to this court against Vally J’s order.
We must, however, approach the appeal with caution. In ordering
Bidvest to pay WPI’s costs in the liquidation application,
Vally J exercised a discretion in the true sense. This means that we
are not at liberty to set Vally J’s order aside if,
and simply
because, we think it is wrong. We must rather be satisfied that a
higher standard of appellate review has been reached:
viz. that Vally
J’s order was not one
of the range of
reasonable and equally permissible options available to him in
exercising his discretion; or that Vally J’s
discretion was
exercised capriciously; or that it was tainted by a misconception of
fact; or that it was exercised under a mistake
of law (see
Trencon
Construction (Pty) Ltd v Industrial Development Corporation
2015 (5) SA 245
(CC), paragraphs 85 to 89 and
Hotz
v University of Cape Town
2018 (1) SA
369
(CC), paragraph 25).
13
It seems to me that we cannot be convinced
of this.
14
In the first place, I agree with Vally J
that the pursuit of attorney and client costs in the liquidation
application was gratuitous,
especially in circumstances where the
debt had been paid and Bidvest had obtained an attorney and client
costs order against Mr.
Moeng in the sequestration proceedings well
before the liquidation application was pressed to a hearing.
15
Moreover, although Vally J did not expressly say so, he
clearly thought that there was the substantial identity of interests
between
WPI and Mr. Moeng that the applicable case law requires.
Bidvest’s written and oral argument before us was notably bald
on
that point. Bidvest submitted in its written argument merely that
it was unable to make an assessment as to the relationship between
WPI’s and Mr. Moeng’s interests. Pitched at that level of
generality, the submission is obviously incorrect, since
Bidvest
clearly knew that Mr. Moeng and WPI were jointly and severally liable
for the judgment debt on which Bidvest founded its
liquidation and
sequestration applications. That seems to me to amount, at the very
least, to a substantial coincidence of interests.
16
Speaking for myself, I would not have
ordered Bidvest to pay WPI’s costs, because I think that
Bidvest was reasonable in issuing
separate applications for WPI’s
liquidation and for Mr. Moeng’s sequestration. The mere fact
that, as Vally J pointed
out, the applicable law left open the
possibility of joining the two causes of action against WPI and Mr.
Moeng in the same proceedings
does not, in my view, mean that Bidvest
should have to pay the costs of the liquidation proceedings.
Notwithstanding the apparent
proximity of interest between WPI and
Mr. Moeng, and the fact that both sets of proceedings sprang from the
same judgment debt,
Bidvest made its decision to pursue two separate
applications in the expectation that it would be criticised for
joining the two
respondents and the two causes of action in the same
proceedings. Even though it may have been competent to join the
sequestration
and liquidation proceedings, it seems harsh to me that
Bidvest should be punished for adopting a different but reasonable
course
of action.
17
However, the question is not how I would
have exercised the discretion that Vally J possessed. It is whether
Vally J’s particular
exercise of that discretion was reasonably
open to him, free of caprice, and untainted by material factual or
legal error. I believe
that it was. It would have been different if
there were a firm rule against joining different debtors or causes of
action in sequestration
or liquidation proceedings no matter what the
circumstances. But the applicable law is that such joinder is
competent either where
there is consent, or where there is an
identity, or near identity, of interests between the respondents.
Indeed, it has been held
that joinder of debtors and causes of action
is the more appropriate course to take where, as here, the debtors’
liability
for an underlying judgment debt is joint and several (see,
for example,
Kirkwood Garage (Pty) Lid v
Lategan
1961 (2) SA 75
(E), at
76G-77A).
18
The more fundamental point, though, is that Bidvest did
nothing before us to show why the facts Vally J found did not permit
him
to form the reasonable expectation that Bidvest would join its
causes of action against Mr. Moeng and WPI in the same proceedings,
on the basis that their interests were essentially identical. While I
would not myself have criticised Bidvest for failing to join
the
causes together, I cannot say that Vally J’s criticism was
unreasonable, or legally or factually misguided in any material
sense.
19
The appeal is dismissed with costs.
S
D J WILSON
Judge
of the High Court
This
judgment is handed down electronically by circulation to the parties
or their legal representatives by email, by uploading
it to the
electronic file of this matter on Caselines, and by publication of
the judgment to the South African Legal Information
Institute. The
date for hand-down is deemed to be 11 November 2024.
HEARD
ON:
30
October 2024
DECIDED
ON:
11
November 2024
For
the Applicant:
AAR
Marques
Instructed
by Du Toit Sanchez Moodley Inc
For
the Respondent:
RV
Mudau
Instructed
by Makuta Attorneys
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Bidvest Steiner (Pty) Ltd v Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration and Others (JR1849/2022) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1188 (21 October 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 1188High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
Bidvest Bank Limited v Surtee (2024/073198; 2024/073203) [2025] ZAGPJHC 1134 (10 November 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 1134High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
Bidvest Bank Limited v Waste Partner Investments (Pty) Ltd (55825/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1126 (5 October 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 1126High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
Bidvest Services (Pty) Ltd ta Bidvest Steiner v Urwin and Another (091828/2024) [2024] ZAGPJHC 876 (9 September 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 876High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
Bidvest Bank v E Q Emporium (2023/020892) [2024] ZAGPJHC 296 (26 March 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 296High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar