Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 109South Africa
Main Street 1613 (RF) and Others v Solar Capital Orange (RF) Proprietary Limited and Others (56709/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 109 (25 January 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
25 January 2023
Headnotes
as follows:
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Main Street 1613 (RF) and Others v Solar Capital Orange (RF) Proprietary Limited and Others (56709/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 109 (25 January 2023)
Main Street 1613 (RF) and Others v Solar Capital Orange (RF) Proprietary Limited and Others (56709/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 109 (25 January 2023)
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sino date 25 January 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
CASE
NO: 56709/2021
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
DATE:
25 JANUARY 2023
In
the matter between:
MAIN
STREET 1613 (RF)
First
Applicant
THE STANDARD BANK OF
SOUTH
AFRICA LIMITED
Second
Applicant
THE DEVELOPMENT BANK
OF
SOUTHERN
AFRICA LTD
Third
Applicant
And
SOLAR CAPITAL ORANGE
(RF)
PROPRIETARY LIMITED
First
Respondent
PHELAN,
PASCHAL
Second
Respondent
TENYANE,
JOSEPH MOSEDI
Third
Respondent
JANSE VAN RENSBURG
JACQUES
Fourth
Respondent
Delivered:
By transmission to the parties via email and
uploading onto Case Lines The reasons are deemed to be delivered. The
date for hand-down
is deemed to be 25 January 2023.
REASONS
SENYATSI
J:
[1]
On 8 March 2020 I granted Part A of the order in an application for
execution of a judgment in perfection
of the General Notarial
Covering Bond Numbers 26793/2018 registered with the Registrar of
Deeds, Cape Town and General Notarial
Covering Bond No 1401/2018
registered with the Registrar of Deeds, Kimberly. The execution of
the order was pending leave to appeal
in terms of section 18 of the
Superior Courts Act, No: 10 of 2013 (“The Act”).
[2]
The order was to the following effect:
2.1.
The application is enrolled as an urgent
application and insofar as may be necessary, the forms, time period
and service provided
for by the Rules of this Court are dispensed
with and this application is heard as one of urgency under Rule 6(12)
of the Uniform
Rules of Court;
2.2.
The first respondent's (''
SCO's
")
application for leave to appeal the whole court order handed down by
Windell J on 7 February 2022 ("7 February Order")
does not
suspend the operation and execution of the 7 February Order;
2.3.
SCO is in breach of the 7 February Order;
2.4.
SCO is ordered to cease acting in
contravention of the 7 February Order immediately;
2.5.
SCO is ordered forthwith to:
2.5.1.
allow the first applicant, without any
hindrance or obstruction whatsoever, acting through its duly
authorised representative (as
the case may be), or with the
assistance of the Sheriff of this Court or his/her Deputy with the
appropriate jurisdiction, for
the purposes of perfecting, effecting
and protecting its security in terms of the general notarial bond,
which was registered with
the Registrar of Deeds Cape Town on 29
November 2018 under Bond No. 26793/2018 and with the Registrar
of Deeds Kimberley on
29 November 2018 under Bond No. 1401/2018,
to enter into and secure and take possession of:
2.5.1.1.
the Project Site at
Farm
Narosies no 228, Hantam Municipality, Calvinia in the Northern Cape;
and
2.5.2.
SCO's
head office at
47 Main Road,
Green Point, Cape Town 8001; or wherever the described property and
effects may be found and there to attach, take
control of and secure
all of SCO's movable property and effects (of whatever description)
without exception, including, but not
limited to:
2.5.2.1.
all the plant, equipment, machinery, office
furniture, fixtures and fittings, stock-in-trade and motor vehicles
of SCO, nothing
excepted;
2.5.2.2.
every claim and indebtedness of whatever
kind or nature owing to SCO;
2.5.2.3.
all the rights of SCO to quotas, permits,
licences and the like;
2.5.2.4.
all the contractual rights of SCO of
whatsoever nature including without limitation, rights in respect of
insurance policies taken
out by or in favour of SCO, franchise rights
and rights under agency agreements or other agreements of a like
nature and rights
as lessee or lessor;
2.5.2.5.
all the goodwill of the business of SCO and
all its rights to trademarks and trade names;
2.6.
allow the first applicant acting through
its duly authorised representative (as the case may be), or assisted
by the Sheriff or
his/her Deputy, without any hindrance or
obstruction whatsoever, to attach, take control of and secure all of
SCO's movable property
and effects found to exist as described above,
to the value of R70,814,199.39, together with interest in terms of
the provisions
of the relevant agreements (being the Senior Facility
Agreement, the 2002 ISDA Master Agreement and the Common Terms
Agreement),
in one or more of the following ways, without removing
same from the Project Site and Cape Town office:
2.6.1.
compiling an inventory of the assets
referred to above;
2.6.2.
where applicable, affixing to such assets a
mark and/or sticker identifying same as being an asset subject to
this Order;
2.6.3.
serving upon the Plant General Manager and
the Site Security Provider, a copy of this Order; and
2.6.4.
taking photographs of all assets attached
as aforesaid.
2.7.
allow the applicants or their agents,
without any hindrance or obstruction whatsoever, to conduct an asset
inspection to confirm
and verify the details and descriptions of the
assets (which assets are owned by SCO, and which are not subject to
any reservation
of ownership by any other party) and to appoint a
third-party valuer who will value the assets which are subject to the
special
notarial bond;
2.8.
allow the applicants, or any of their duly
authorised agents or representatives (including any Technical Adviser
which the applicants
may appoint) unfettered access, without
obstruction, at all times, and without any notice to SCO to:
2.8.1.
the Project Site for the purposes of
inspecting the Project itself, the Project Facilities and any and all
records of the Project
(including all drawings and specifications)
and any movable property and effects on the Project Site, and
confirming their continued
existence on the Project Site;
2.8.2.
the Cape Town Office for the purposes of
inspecting any movable property and effects at the Cape Town Office,
and confirming their
continued existence at the Cape Town Office;
2.8.3.
SCO is ordered to pay the costs of this
application on an attorney and own client basis.
[3]
The controversy in this application was whether the 7 February Order
could be executed pending the application
for leave to appeal. The
answer provided by this court was an emphatic “YES”.
[4]
The reasons for the order are as set below. The power of the court to
permit the execution of a judgment pending
the appeal the application
for leave to appeal is regulated by section 18 (3) of the Superior
Courts Act No 10 of 2013 (“the
Act”) which states as
follows:
“
(3) A
court may only order otherwise as contemplated in subsection (1) or
(2), if the party who applied to the court to order
otherwise, in
addition proves on the balance of probabilities that he or she will
suffer irreparable harm if the court does not
so order and that the
other party will not suffer irreparable harm if the court so order.”
[5]
This section has been a subject of significant attention by our
courts with regards to the requirements to
be met.
[6]
In
Ntlemeza
v Helen Suzman Foundation
[1]
it was held as follows:
“
[32]
There can be no doubt that an application by HSF and FUL for leave to
execute, had there been one earlier, could
have been brought and
would have been competent after the application for leave to appeal
was filed in this court. Court must be
guardians of their own process
and be slow to avoid a to-ing and fro-ing of litigants.
[2]
[7]
In
Incubeta
Holdings & Another v Ellis and Another
[3]
,
the court said the following about section 18:
“
It seems to me
that there is indeed a new dimension introduced to the test by the
provisions of s18. The test is twofold. The requirements
are:
First, whether or not
‘exceptional circumstances’ exist; and
Second, proof on the
balance of probabilities by the applicant of
The presence of
irreparable harm to the applicant/victor, who wants to put into
operation and execute the order; and
The absence of
irreparable harm to the respondent/loser, who seeks leave to appeal.”
[8]
As to what would constitute exceptional circumstances, the court in
Incubeta
[4]
,
looked for guidance to an earlier decision on Admiralty law, namely,
MV Ais
Mamas Seatrans Maritime v Owners MV Ais Mamas & Another
[5]
,
where it was recognised that it was not possible to lay down precise
rules as to what circumstances are to be regarded as exceptional
and
that each case has to be decided on its own facts.
[9]
In
UFS v
Afriforum and Another
[6]
it was held by court that it was immediately discernible from
sections 18(1) and (3) that the Legislature proceeded from the
well-established
premise of the common law, that the granting of
relief of this nature constituted an extraordinary deviation from the
norm that,
pending an appeal, a judgment and its attendant orders are
suspended. It noted that the exceptionality is further underscored by
the requirements of section 18(4)(i).
[7]
[10]
The 7 February Order is interlocutory in nature as only Part A
thereof was granted pending the determination of Part
B. The
exceptional circumstances that were found were that preparing an
inventory of the assets to give effect to the General Notarial
Bond
was essential to ensure that no harm was occasioned to the applicant
in that application the event of winding up of the respondent.
I say
so because if that were to happen, the two general notarial covering
bonds registered as security to cover the R70 million
rand facility
will not be worth the paper it is written on. This is because the
claim by the applicants in so far as movables are
concerned will
become concurrent and not secured. The 7 February Order is evidence
that the construction of the solar power project
should not be
interfered with by the perfection.
[11]
Furthermore, the respondent will not suffer any harm because the
recording of the inventory to give effect to the general
notarial
bond without removing any asset will not adversely affect the
respondents.
[12]
Accordingly, I stand by the order I granted.
ML
SENYATSI
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
DATE
OF APPLICATION
:
08 March 2022
DATE
REASONS DELIVERED
: 25 January 2023
APPEARANCES
Counsel
for the Applicant: Adv A
Botha SC
Instructed
by: Webberwentzel
Counsel
for the
Respondents:
Adv
CHJ Badenhorst SC
Adv
A Vorster
Instructed
by: Andersen
Attorneys
[1]
2017
(5) SA 402
(SCA) at para 32
[2]
See
Copthall Stores Ltd v Willoughby’s Consolidated Co Ltd (1)
1913 AD 305
at 308; See also Fismer v Thornton
1929 AD 17
at 19
[3]
2014
(3) SA 189
(GJ) para 16
[4]
Supra
para [7]
[5]
2002
(6) SA 150 (C)
[6]
[2016]
ZASCA 165
(17 November 2016)
[7]
Section
4 (i) provides that:
“
If
a court orders otherwise, as contemplated in subsection (1) –
(i)the
court must immediately record its reasons for doing so.”
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