Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 1301South Africa
LI Feng Textiles and Others v Bank of Taiwan Incorporated in Republic Of China (t/a as Bank of Taiwan South Africa Branch) and Another (A068332/2024) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1301 (24 December 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
24 December 2024
Headnotes
“[F]or an order to be appealable it must have as one of its features that the order is final in its effect, by which I mean that it is not susceptible to being revisited by the court that granted it …”[6] [13] Regarding what “final” means, the SCA explained that:
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## LI Feng Textiles and Others v Bank of Taiwan Incorporated in Republic Of China (t/a as Bank of Taiwan South Africa Branch) and Another (A068332/2024) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1301 (24 December 2024)
LI Feng Textiles and Others v Bank of Taiwan Incorporated in Republic Of China (t/a as Bank of Taiwan South Africa Branch) and Another (A068332/2024) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1301 (24 December 2024)
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sino date 24 December 2024
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
Number: A068332-2024
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: YES
DATE
SIGNATURE
In the matter between:
LI
FENG TEXTILES (PTY) LTD
First
Appellant
NAI-CHIANG
WANG
Second
Appellant
JUI
CHANG WANG
Third
Appellant
and
BANK
OF TAIWAN INCORPORATED IN
REPUBLIC
OF CHINA (T/A BANK OF TAIWAN
SOUTH
AFRICA BRANCH)
First
Respondent
INDUSTRIAL
DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION
OF
SOUTH AFRICA LTD
Second
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MAHOSI AJ (Twala J and
Raubenheimer AJ concurring)
Introduction
[1] The crisp issue
in this appeal is whether the judgment and order of Van Niewenhuizen
AJ sitting as a Court
a quo
declaring the mortgaged property,
being Erf 6[…] L[…] Ext 26, Township, Registration
Division J.Q. City of Johannesburg,
Gauteng, executable and ordering
the first to third appellants to pay R11 710 869.57 plus interest and
costs, is appealable. This
issue arises against the backdrop of an
order granted in an unopposed motion court in the presence of the
respondent's counsel,
in circumstances where an answering affidavit
was filed out of time without any application for condonation.
[2] The appellants
unsuccessfully sought leave to appeal from the Court
a quo
.
This appeal is with the leave of the Supreme Court of Appeal (“SCA”)
.
Only the first respondent opposed the appeal.
The parties
[3] The first
appellant, Li Feng Textiles (Pty) Ltd, is a company duly incorporated
in accordance with the company laws of
the Republic of South Africa.
The second appellant, Nai-Chiang Wang
,
is a director and
shareholder of the first appellant. The third appellant, Jui Chang
Wang, is the second appellant’s father.
Both the second and
third appellants bound themselves as sureties for the first
appellant’s debt in favour of the first respondent.
[4]
The first respondent, Bank of Taiwan Incorporated in the Republic of
China (t/a Bank of Taiwan South Africa Branch), is
a company
incorporated in the Republic of China and registered as an external
company in the Republic of South Africa. The second
respondent,
Industrial Development Corporation of South Africa Ltd (“IDC”),
is a state-owned development finance institution
incorporated in
terms of section 2 of the Industrial Development Corporation Act
[1]
and is cited as having an interest in the matter as a second mortgage
bondholder.
Background facts
[5]
The first respondent instituted motion proceedings against the first,
second and third appellants (“the appellants”)
for the
payment of R 11 710 869. 57 with interest and to declare the
mortgaged property under mortgage number B000009211/2014 executable.
The appellants opposed the relief and filed a notice in terms of Rule
6(5)(d)(iii)
[2]
challenging the
authority of the first respondent and Lynn Houh, the deponent of the
founding affidavit, to institute and prosecute
the aforementioned
proceedings.
[6] On 24 May 2023,
Opperman J issued an order, by agreement between the parties, in the
following terms:
“
1.
The points of law raised by the first to third respondents in their
Rule 6(5)(d)(iii), as amended on 27 January 2023, are
dismissed with
costs as between attorney and client.
2. The
hearing of the merits of the matter is postponed
sine die
.
3. The first
to third respondents are ordered to file their answering affidavit,
if any, by 12 June 2023.
4. The
applicants are to file their replying affidavits, if any, by 26 June
2023.
5. The
applicants shall file supplementary heads of arguments by 10 July
2023.
6. The first
to third respondents shall file supplementary heads of arguments by
24 July 2023.
7. Should the
first to third respondents fail to file an answering affidavit by 12
June 2023, the matter may be enrolled
on the unopposed motion roll.”
[7] The appellants
served the first respondent with an unsigned answering “affidavit”
on 12 June 2023 and a signed
and commissioned one three days later,
on 15 June 2023, in which they also sought condonation for its late
filing. In response,
the first respondent’s legal
representatives informed the appellants’ attorneys by email
that they were instructed
to enrol the main application on an
unopposed roll and served the notice of Set Down for 27 July 2023.
[8] Although the
appellants’ counsel was present at the hearing on 27 July 2023,
the Court
a quo
granted the order on an unopposed basis and
refused to condone the late filing of the answering affidavit. Upon
request for its
reasons, it stated:
“
[8]
On the 27 July 2023 the applicant’s legal representative
applied for judgment and, although the respondents
were out of time,
their representative appeared and made reference to the affidavit
filed in support of an application for condonation.
Given the fact
that there was no formal notice of application for condonation in
terms of Rule 6 of the Uniform Rules of Court,
I refused to grant
such condonation and granted judgment in favour of the applicant
against the first, second and third respondents,
jointly and
severally, the one paying the other to be absolved in the following
terms…”
[9] It is the above
ruling that the appellants seek to appeal and set aside.
Submissions
[10]
The appellants submitted that the Court
a
quo
erred in failing to consider their answering affidavit, treating it
as
pro
non scripto
and
finding that Rule 6(11)
[3]
of
the Uniform Rules required the condonation affidavit to be
accompanied by a formal notice. They argued that the Court
a
quo
elevated form over substance where there was no indication that the
first respondent suffered any prejudice as a result of the
late
filing of the answering affidavit.
[11] The first
respondent submitted that the Court
a quo
’s order was
not appealable. It denied that the Court elevated form over substance
and contended that it was entitled to enrol
the main application on
an unopposed roll as the appellants failed to file their answering
affidavit on the date ordered by Opperman
J. Further, the first
respondent asserted that the appellants were not denied an
opportunity to be heard as they failed to file
a notice of
condonation application and their counsel failed to move the
condonation application from the bar.
Legal framework and
analysis
[12]
Pitelli
v Everton Gardens Projects CC
[4]
(
Pitelli)
is authority for the proposition that a court order is only
appealable once it becomes final. Relying on
Zweni
v Minister of Law and Order
[5]
,
it held:
“
[F]or an order to
be appealable it must have as one of its features that the order is
final in its effect, by which I mean that
it is not susceptible to
being revisited by the court that granted it …”
[6]
[13]
Regarding what “final” means, the SCA explained that:
"An order is not
final, for the purposes of an appeal, merely because it takes effect
unless it is set aside. It is final when
the proceedings of the Court
of first instance are complete and that Court is not capable of
revisiting the order."
[7]
[14]
On whether the Court
a
quo’s
order was granted in default, the first respondent referred us to the
judgment in
Ferreiras
(Pty) Ltd v Naidoo and another
[8]
(Ferreiras),
which
had to determine a similar issue and followed
a
full court decision in
Rainbow
Farms (Pty) Ltd v Crockery Gladstone Farm
.
[9]
In the latter case, the full Court of the Limpopo Division was faced
with an appeal of a judgment in which the Court
a
quo,
per Muller J, dismissed an application to rescind a judgment that was
granted in default. The judgment sought to be rescinded was
granted
by Phatudi J after refusing an adjournment and granting judgment in
the absence of the answering affidavit. The full Court
had to
determine,
inter
alia,
whether the appellant was in default despite the attendance of its
counsel in Court when the judgment was granted and made out
a case
for rescission. On whether the appellant was in default, the full
Court held as follows:
“
[10]
The Court
a quo
decided that the judgment was not a judgment taken on default of
appearance by the appellant. It did so on the basis that the
Appellant's Counsel was present in Court when the order was made. The
Court
a quo
erred in this regard. This matter was an application and the presence
or absence of a party can only be determined by whether the
party has
submitted affidavits or not. The presence of the actual party and/or
Counsel in Court is irrelevant to that issue. In
the absence of any
affidavits (bearing in mind that there is no option available for the
party to testify at such a hearing) it
is logical to conclude that
the party is in default of appearance when the order was made
notwithstanding that, counsel may have
been in Court.
[11] In my view
where opposing papers have not been filed this is a “default”
even if the respondent in the matter
or his legal representative is
present in Court. See
Morris v Autoquip (Pty) Ltd
1985 (4) SA
398
(WLD);
First Nation Bank of SA v Myburg and Another
2002
(4) SA 176
(CPA).
[12] The question
of what is meant by “default” was considered in
Katritsis
v De Macedo
1966 (1) SA 613
(A). In this matter the Appellate
Division (as it was then) held that “default” which then
as is the case now is not
defined in the Rules or the Act, meant a
default in relation to filing the necessary documents required by the
rules in opposition
to the claim. In
casu
the judgment was
granted in the absence of an opposing affidavit by the appellant and
was therefore default judgement even if it
was not a default in a
sense of absence of the party."
[15]
The full Court set aside Phatudi J’s judgment and directed the
respondent to file its answering affidavit to the
main application.
On appeal to the SCA, the appeal suffered a similar fate. That Court
said:
“
On
the test articulated by this Court in
Zweni
v The Minister of Law and Order
1993
(1) SA 523
(A), the order is not appealable if it has the following
attributes (a) not final in effect and is open to alteration by the
court
below; (b) not definitive of the rights of the parties; and (c)
does not have the effect of disposing of a substantial portion of
the
relief claimed See also
SA
Informal Traders Forum v City of Johannesburg
2014
(4) SA 971 (CC).”
[10]
[16]
Before us, the first respondent's counsel conceded that
by
ignoring the answering affidavit, the Court
a
quo
did not consider the merits
concerning condonation. It refused to grant condonation because of a
technicality, there being “no
formal notice of application for
condonation in terms of Rule 6 of the Uniform Rules of Court”.
Consequently, an order was
granted only on the respondent's papers
without the appellants' version.
[17]
Although
the Court
a
quo
stated in its reasons for an order that it "refused"
to grant the condonation, no such order was recorded.
I
t
is, therefore, apparent that the Court
a quo
had no regard to
the answering affidavit the appellants sought to place before it.
In
light of the aforementioned authorities, Court
a
quo’
s order is not appealable.
Consequently,
the appeal must be dismissed
and
the costs must follow the result.
[18]
Accordingly, the following order is made:
Order
1. The appeal is
dismissed with costs on scale B.
D. MAHOSI J
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
Heard: 20 November 2024
Delivered: This judgment
was handed down electronically by circulation to the parties'
representatives through email. The date for
hand-down is deemed to be
24 December 2024.
Appearances
For
the appellants:
Instructed
by:
Advocate
M.D. Silver
Chen
& Lin Incorporated Attorneys
For
the first respondent:
Instructed
by:
Advocate
L. Meintjes
Rothman
Phahlamohlaka Incorporated Attorneys
[1]
Act
22 of 1940, as amended.
[2]
Rule 5(d) reads:
“
Any
person opposing the grant of an order sought in the notice of motion
must-
(iii)
if he or she intends to raise any question of law only, he or she
must deliver notice of his or her intention to do so,
within the
time stated in the preceding subparagraph, setting forth such
question.”
[3]
Rule 6(11) reads:
“
Notwithstanding
the aforegoing sub-rules, interlocutory and other applications
incidental to pending proceedings may be brought
on notice supported
by such affidavits as the case may require and set down at a time
assigned by the registrar or as directed
by a judge.”
[4]
2010
(5) SA 171 (SCA).
[5]
1993
(1) SA 523 (A).
[6]
Id
at [20].
[7]
Id
at [27].
[8]
2022
(1) SA 201 (GJ).
[9]
2017
JDR 1758 (LP).
[10]
Crockery
Gladstone Farm v Rainbow Farms (Pty) Ltd
[2019]
ZASCA 61
, at para 4.
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