Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 17South Africa
Monnakgotla v Rankgaka and Others (2022-43794) [2023] ZAGPJHC 17 (16 January 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
16 January 2023
Headnotes
at Nedbank Limited (Account
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Monnakgotla v Rankgaka and Others (2022-43794) [2023] ZAGPJHC 17 (16 January 2023)
Monnakgotla v Rankgaka and Others (2022-43794) [2023] ZAGPJHC 17 (16 January 2023)
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sino date 16 January 2023
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 2022-43794
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED
16
JANUARY 2023
In
the matter of:
TSHEPO
BEN MONNAKGOTLA Applicant
And
KALEB
VICTOR RANGAKA
First
Respondent
OUPA
ORIA RANGAKA
Second
Respondent
VITSOU
TRADING CC
Third
Respondent
ABSA
BANK LIMITED
Fourth
Respondent
NEDBANK
LIMITED
Fifth
Respondent
JUDGMENT
BESTER
AJ
# Introduction
Introduction
[1]
The respondents seek the reconsideration
of an
ex parte
order obtained by the applicant on 15 November 2022. The order,
granted by Maier-Frawley J, provides as follows:
“
IT
IS ORDERED THAT, PENDING RESOLUTION OF PART B OF THIS APPLICATION:
1.
the bank accounts in the name of Vitsou
Trading CC (the Third Respondent) held at Nedbank Limited (Account
Number: [....]) and Absa Bank Limited (Account Number: [....]) be
handed over to be operated by a chartered accountant with no
less
than 5 (five) years of experience, appointed by the Chairman for the
time being of the South African Institute of Chartered
Accountants
(the "Trustee") within 10 (ten) days of the date of this
Order.
2.
ABSA Bank Limited and Nedbank Limited (the
Fourth and Fifth Respondents) grant unrestricted access to
the
Trustee mentioned in paragraph 1. above, to the exclusion of all
other persons, pending resolution of Part B of this application.
3.
Kaleb Victor Rangaka and Oupa Oria Rangaka
(the First and Second Respondents) are interdicted and restrained
from opening or operating any other bank account(s) in the name of
the Third Respondent pending conclusion of Part B of this
application.
4.
the First and Second Respondents are
prohibited from, and/or forthwith cease with the encumbrance,
transfer and/or alienation of any movable or immovable assets,
including intangible assets of the Third Respondent to any other
third party without the written consent of the Trustee, pending
conclusion of Part B of this application.
5.
the First and Second Respondents are
prohibited from, and/or forthwith cease with the conclusion of
any
contracts in the names of the Third Respondent, inclusive of leases
and hire-purchase agreements, without the prior written
consent of
the Trustee pending conclusion of Part B of this application.
6.
The Respondents may bring an application for
reconsideration of this Order as provided for in Rule 6(8)
of this
Honourable Court's Uniform Rules.
7.
That costs in Part A shall be the costs in
the main application.”
[2]
The nub of the respondents’ case
for reconsideration, is that the applicant materially misrepresented
facts before Maier-Frawley
J, and that on the true facts no order
should have been granted.
# The applicant’s
evidence in support of theex parteorder
The applicant’s
evidence in support of the
ex parte
order
[3]
The essence of the case placed before
Maier-Frawley J, was this:
a)
The applicant and the first and second
respondents are the members of a close corporation, the third
respondent, which operates
two restaurants.
b)
The first and second respondents have
caused substantial funds to be transferred from the third
respondent’s bank accounts
in favour of a separate legal
entity, MeatnChill (Pty) Ltd, which also operates a restaurant, under
the same name as used by the
third respondent, and in competition
with it.
c)
The first respondent surreptitiously
moved ownership of the trademark name under which the restaurants
trade to a separate legal
entity.
d)
The first and second respondents are
acting to the detriment of the applicant as a member of the third
respondent.
[4]
The applicant thus sought control of the
bank accounts to be placed in the hands of an independent party,
pending a forensic inquiry,
which he proposed to seek in the ordinary
course under part B of the application.
# The facts as they emerged
on reconsideration
The facts as they emerged
on reconsideration
[5]
The reality is somewhat different.
The first respondent explains, and the applicant concedes in reply,
that:
a)
The applicant, the first respondent and
the second respondent are the shareholders of MeatnChill and are its
directors. They
have set it up and operate it as a restaurant
utilising the same brand name and the same formula as the two
restaurants operated
by the third respondent.
b)
The applicant on the one hand and the
first and second respondents on the other, do not see eye to eye on
how to continue the restaurant
businesses. The applicant had sought
to be bought out of MeatnChill, but this has not transpired.
[6]
There are disputes of fact on (i) the
details of the disagreements between the business partners, (ii) the
details of how the restaurants
are operated and managed, (iii) the
level of the applicant’s involvement and (iv) what has been
agreed between them in respect
of the future of their venture.
However, these issues have no impact on this application.
# Analysis
Analysis
[7]
The
ex
parte
order was expressly obtained
on the basis that the third respondent’s funds were diverted
surreptitiously by the first and
second respondents to a competing
entity, which the applicant said he had nothing to do with. He
explained that his only interaction
with MeatnChill was when he made
a payment on its behalf for R35 000,00. The context of this
payment remains unexplained.
[8]
The applicant testified that he was
reflected as a director in the records of the Companies and
Intellectual Property Commissioners
Records against his will and
knowledge and contended that this was done to create a veneer of
legitimacy in the affairs of MeatnChill.
He expressly relied on
the third respondent being prejudiced on the basis that its funds
were depleted in favour of a competing
entity.
[9]
In truth, MeatnChill was simply another
vehicle for the restaurant business conducted by the applicant and
the first and second
respondents. The applicant raised several
points of no consequence to support his denial that the third
respondent and MeatnChill
were the start of a ‘group of
companies’ as claimed by the first and second respondents.
His hair-splitting does
not change the facts - rather than an
unrelated competitor, MeatnChill is part and parcel of the business
affairs of the applicant
and the first and second respondents.
The applicant’s signature appears on documents such as
MeatnChill’s liquor
licence application and the assignment of
the trademark to a separate legal entity.
[10]
Caught out with the true facts, the
applicant sought to recast his case in reply. In his heads of
argument Mr Phukubje, who
appeared for the applicant, formulated the
applicant’s revised case as follows:
“
The
respondents miss the important point that it not about whether
MeatnChill is a competitor or not, it is about the financial
resources of the close corporation being diverted, without consensus,
to finance a business that is clearly not doing well.”
[11]
This
is not the case presented by the applicant in his
ex
parte
application. An applicant will only be allowed to make out his case
in reply in exceptional circumstances.0F
[1]
This is not one of those instances – quite the contrary. The
withholding or suppression of material facts in an
ex
parte
application by itself entitles a court to set aside an order, even if
the nondisclosure was not wilful or
mala
fide
.1F
[2]
The Court exercises its discretion in such circumstances and will
have regard to factors such as2F
[3]
(i) the extent of the nondisclosure; (ii) whether the Court might
have been influenced by proper disclosure; (iii) the reasons
for the
nondisclosure and (iv) the consequences of setting the provisional
order aside.
[12]
There were material omissions of
pertinent facts in the founding affidavit. The substratum on which
the application was based is
a fabrication. The very basis upon which
the order was granted is false. Even if there is substance to the
applicant’s complaints
that the first and second respondents
are acting to his detriment in the affairs of the third respondent
(on which I express no
view), that is not to be decided here. It is
an issue which the applicant intends to pursue under part B of the
application. It
is not a basis to let the order stand in the face of
the misleading case in the founding papers.
[13]
Taking all the factors into account, I
conclude that this is appropriate to set aside the order obtained
based on material nondisclosures.
# Conclusion
Conclusion
[14]
In the result, I make the following
order:
(1)
The order granted by Maier-Frawley J on
15 November 2022 is set aside.
(2)
The applicant shall pay the costs of
Part A of the application, including the costs pertaining to the
reconsideration of the
ex parte
order and including the wasted costs of Wednesday, 11 January 2023.
A
Bester
Acting
Judge of the High Court of South Africa
Gauteng
Division, Johannesburg
Heard: 13
January 2023
Judgment: 16
January 2023
Counsel
for the Applicant: Adv
M Phukubje
Instructed
by: BA
Ramdass Attorneys
Counsel
for the First & Second
Respondents:
Mr
RJN Brits from VR Law Incorporated
No
appearance for the Third to Fifth Respondents
[1]
Betlane
v Shelly Court CC
2011
(1) SA 388
(CC) in [29].
[2]
National
Director of Prosecutions v Basson
[2002] 2 All SA 225
(SCA) in [21].
[3]
Phillips
and Others v National Director of Public Prosecutions
2003 (6) SA 447
(SCA) in [29];
Recycling
and Economic Development Initiative of South African NPC v Minister
of Environmental Affairs
2019
(2) 251 (SCA) in [52].
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