Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 181South Africa
Trakman N.O. and Others v Wasilewsky and Others (2022-9016) [2023] ZAGPJHC 181 (28 February 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
28 February 2023
Headnotes
to this standard for compliance of delivery his defence documents so must the plaintiffs for their particulars of claim. Thus, following this approach, the defence documents should have been delivered by 5 May. Notice of bar was on 11 May. Effectively this was only four court days later. Wasilewsky’s attorney complains that the plaintiffs’ attorney did not do her the courtesy of writing to her to warn of the notice of bar before filing.
Judgment
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## Trakman N.O. and Others v Wasilewsky and Others (2022-9016) [2023] ZAGPJHC 181 (28 February 2023)
Trakman N.O. and Others v Wasilewsky and Others (2022-9016) [2023] ZAGPJHC 181 (28 February 2023)
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sino date 28 February 2023
REPUBLIC
OFSOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO:
2022-9016
(1)
REPORTABLE:
YES
/NO
(2) OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
YES
/NO
(3)
REVISED:
YES
/NO
DATE:
28/02/2023
In
the matter between:
SELWYN
TRAKMAN N.O. First
Plaintiff
CORNE
VAN DEN HEEVER N.O.
Second
Plaintiff
SOUTHLINK
INVETSMENTS SHARE BLOCK Third
Plaintiff
PROPRIETARY
LIMITED (IN LIQUIDATION)
(Registration
number: 1973/003283/07)
SELWYN
TRAKMAN N.O. Fourth
Plaintiff
DALLIE
VAN DER MERWE N.O. Fifth
Plaintiff
ASHBERN
MANSIONS SHARE BLOCK Sixth
Plaintiff
PROPRIETARY
LIMITED (IN LIQUIDATION)
(Registration
number: 1946/020618/07)
SELWYN
TRAKMAN N.O. Seventh
Plaintiff
JENNIFER
VAN AARDT-BESTER N.O. Eighth
Plaintiff
JOHN
CRAIG PROPERTIES SHARE BLOCK Ninth
Plaintiff
PROPRIETARY
LIMITED (IN LIQUIDATION)
(Registration
number: 197/006139/07)
SELWYN
TRAKMAN N.O. Tenth
Plaintiff
LAURETTE
VAN DER MERWE N.O. Eleventh
Plaintiff
and
GARY
WASILEWSKY First
Defendant
HILTON
WASILEWSKY Second
Defendant
KAREN
LAZARUS Third
Defendant
DAVID
COHEN Fourth
Defendant
SHARGER
LAZARUS Fifth
Defendant
JUDGMENT
MANOIM
J:
Introduction
[1]
This is an application brought by the first defendant to uplift a
bar. He applies for this relief in terms
of Rule 27 of the Uniform
Rules. Under that rule the first defendant has to show good cause for
the upliftment of the bar.
[2]
The first respondent, Gary Wasilewsky (“Wasilewsky”), is
an erstwhile director, and still a shareholder,
of four property
holding companies. In 2018 these companies were liquidated as solvent
companies in terms of
section 88
of the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
.
[3]
There are twelve plaintiffs. The large number of plaintiffs is
explicable by the fact that not only are all
the four companies in
liquidation plaintiffs, but each is in turn also represented by two
joint liquidators. The first plaintiff,
Selwyn Trakman, is the only
person who has been appointed as a joint liquidator of all four
companies. In October 2020 the plaintiffs
brought an application
against Wasilewsky in which they sought certain relief. For reasons
not pertinent to this decision the application
was withdrawn on 23
February 2022 and the liquidators tendered costs to the Wasilewsky.
Chronology
[4]
On 7 March 2022 the plaintiffs served a summons on Wasilewsky. Also
cited are four other defendants, all erstwhile
shareholders of the
companies and relatives of Wasilewsky but no relief is sought against
any of them. The relief sought and amounts
claimed from Wasilewsky in
the summons are the same as they were in the withdrawn application.
[5]
But the decision to proceed by way of action instead of motion was
not the end of the plaintiffs’ woes.
The particulars of claim
were served on Wasilewsky’s attorney electronically, but while
there was no issue about that, some
of the pages were missing.
Wasilewsky’s attorney wrote to the plaintiffs’ attorney
to advise her of this. On
14
th
March the plaintiffs’
attorney emailed the particulars of claim to Wasilewsky’s
attorney - this time with all the pages
of the particulars of claim
included. But not included were the many annexures attached to the
particulars of claim. The plaintiffs’
attorney was fully aware
of this because she says as much in her covering letter of the 14
th
March. Confirming that the particulars of claim were being served
without the annexures she says that the annexures would be downloaded
on to Caselines the following day.
[6]
Both parties accept that the annexures were downloaded on to
CaseLines the next day i.e., the 15
th
March. However
according to the Wasilewsky’ attorney, the full document i.e.,
the particulars of claim plus the annexures
were never served on her
at this time. This is why on 24
th
March Wasilewsky’s
attorney served a
rule 30A
notice on the plaintiffs’ attorney
claiming the summons was incomplete. The plaintiff’s attorneys
then had the sheriff
serve the full document (particulars of claim
plus all the annexures) on the Wasilewsky’s attorneys on 1
April 2022. According
to Wasilewsky it is only on this date that the
irregularity was cured.
[7]
On 11 May the plaintiffs’ attorney served a notice of bar on
Wasilewsky’s attorney. The notice
of bar required Wasilewsky to
file his plea within five days failing which he would be barred. Both
parties agree that the last
day for compliance was the 18 May 2022.
On that day Wasilewsky’s attorney served a plea, special plea,
and counterclaim on
the plaintiffs’ attorney. I will refer to
the three as the defence pleadings. But she did not file the defence
pleadings
on CaseLines. She only did so on the following day.
Wasilewsky’s attorney says she attempted to file on CaseLines
on the
same day, but the service was down and she was unable to do
so. It was only on the following day that she was able to do so.
[8]
It is common cause that in terms of the rules the defence pleadings
had to be delivered. Delivery means service
on the other party and
filing with the court. Filing on CaseLines suffices as filing with
the court. But because the filing took
place only on the 19
th
May not 18
th
May, delivery had not taken place within the
five days and hence Wasilewsky was barred.
[9]
Wasilewsky’s attorney then wrote to the plaintiffs’
attorney to explain the difficulty she had
with accessing CaseLines.
The plaintiffs attorney’s view was that there had not been
proper compliance with the rule on delivery
and that Wasilewsky was
thus barred. Wasilewsky’s attorney then brought this
application in terms of
Rule 27
for the bar to be lifted which
requires a showing of good cause.
Relevant
start date
[10]
As the law currently stands, the consideration of good cause requires
an accounting by the applicant wanting to uplift
the bar for its
default in two time periods. The first is the time period between the
delivery of the summons and the notice of
bar. The second is the time
period that elapsed after the applicant has become barred. In this
case there is a dispute over the
time that has elapsed in the first
period. This is because the parties do not agree when the plaintiffs
delivered a summons that
complied with the rules. This is why I
needed to give a detailed history of the filing chronology. At issue
is when the clock started
ticking for the applicant to file its plea.
[11]
There are three candidate start dates to consider. The plaintiffs
point out that Wasilewsky filed his notice of intention
to defend the
action proceedings on 8 March 2022. Ordinarily in terms of the rules
the plea should have been filed within 20 days
thereof. Hence the
first candidate date would be 12 April. In the alternative the
plaintiffs suggest that even if the summons was
treated as incomplete
at that time, then the relevant start date would be 15 March when the
full summons was loaded on to CaseLines
and thus accessible to the
first defendant’s attorney.
[12]
But Wasilewsky contends that the clock only started running when the
summons had been delivered in terms of the rules.
This meant not only
filling on CaseLines but also service on his attorney. Since the
latter only occurred on 1 April 2022 that
is the relevant start date
for the 20-day period to run. On that basis he should have delivered
his defence documents by 5 May.
[13]
In this case I have decided that the start date was 1 April 2022.
Only on that date had the plaintiffs properly complied
with the
delivery rule. If Wasilewsky is being held to this standard for
compliance of delivery his defence documents so must the
plaintiffs
for their particulars of claim. Thus, following this approach, the
defence documents should have been delivered by 5
May. Notice of bar
was on 11 May. Effectively this was only four court days later.
Wasilewsky’s attorney complains that the
plaintiffs’
attorney did not do her the courtesy of writing to her to warn of the
notice of bar before filing.
Legal
requirements for uplifting of the bar
[14]
Rule 27
requires a case for the upliftment of bar to be made out on
the standard of good cause shown. The case law has interpreted this
standard to have three requirements.
a.
The applicant must have a reasonable and acceptable explanation for
the
default;
b.
The applicant must be
bona fide;
and
c.
The
applicant must demonstrate a
bona
fide
defence which prima facie has some prospects of success.
[1]
[15]
Although the concept of bona fides is taken into account twice these
are conceptually different exercises.
[16]
The court is required to deal with each of these requirements in
turn. For convenience I deal with these issues in reverse
order.
Bona
fide defence
[17]
Wasilewsky was a shareholder along with other family members in four
property holding companies. The companies owned
properties in the
inner city from which they received rental income. During the
relevant period all the shareholders, bar one,
relocated overseas
including Wasilewsky. In March 2018 the companies were placed in
final liquidation as solvent companies in terms
of
section 81(d)(iii)
of the
Companies Act, 71 of 2008
.’
[18]
The present summons was first served on Wasilewsky on 11 March 2022.
In it the plaintiffs make out three claims against
Wasilewsky. The
first is a claim for breach of fiduciary duties. This claim has been
broken down into 37 separate amounts that
Wasilewsky is alleged to
have paid out from the companies accounts. These amount to
R3,387,022.16. The second claim is for R1,613,442.33.
The allegation
is that he is liable for these amounts for allegedly under invoicing
tenants of two of the properties. The third
claim is for R572,000.00,
in respect of amounts which Wasilewsky is said to have paid after the
companies were placed in liquidation.
In total these claims amount to
R6,331,419.08.
[19]
Wasilewsky raises a defence of prescription in respect of all three
claims. On the face of its all three claims are for
payments made
more than three years prior to the summons being issued, and hence,
according to the plea, have prescribed in terms
of section 12(1) of
the Prescription Act. The plaintiffs in their answering affidavit
claim that their knowledge of these claims
emerged only in the course
of an enquiry and hence they have a defence to the prescription
claim. That may be so, but this dispute
raises a triable fact around
prescription.
[20]
Wasilewsky also raises two other defences by way of special pleas;
non-joinder, and he contests the appointment of the
one of the
plaintiffs, Trakman as a liquidator. He alleges Trakman must be
removed as a liquidator because he induced his appointment
as such in
contravention of section 372 of the old
Companies Act. As
to the
merits he also raises in respect of the second claim (the rental
reduction claim) that he has a legitimate business reasons
for doing
so as he was, de facto, the sole director of the companies at the
time and this decision in respect of the rental reductions,
was a
business judgment call, not a breach of a fiduciary duty. This
defence also raises a triable issue over the judgment exercised
by
Wasilewsky.
[21]
In relation to claim three his alternate defence is that these
payments were made before the liquidators were appointed
and would
have had to be paid in any event by the liquidators. He also filed a
counterclaim along with his special plea and plea.
In his
counterclaim he asks for the removal of Trakman as a liquidator of
the various companies and for the liquidators to distribute
his
shareholding of the surplus assets of the companies (which he alleges
is 28%)
on confirmation of the final
liquidation and distribution account.
[22]
Whatever the merits or otherwise of the alternative defences they all
raise disputes of fact which make them triable
issues. In any event
the claim of prescription permeates all three claims and on its own
constitutes a triable issue on the current
papers. The test for a
bona fide defence in cases for the upliftment of a bar is the same as
for resisting summary judgment.
[2]
[23]
I consider then that Wasilewsky has raised a bona fide defence.
Bona
fides
[24]
Rogers J has explained how the concept of bona fides has come to be
understood in our law:
“
Bona fides have
to do with the belief on the part of the litigant as to the truth or
falsity of his factual statements; it is a
separate element relating
to the state of the defendant's mind (El-Naddaf at 784G —7858,
quoting from Breitenbach).
[3]
[25]
The plaintiffs argue that Wasilewsky is not bona fide in this matter.
Much reliance is placed on a statement by his attorney
that she had
only instructed counsel to draft the defence documents once Notice of
bar had been served. This might justify criticism
of the diligence of
the attorney, but it does not make Wasilewsky someone who does not
believe in the truth of his own claims.
Indeed, the admission is a
frank one. Contrast with the basis for the court rejecting the
litigant’s bona fides in
Ingosstrakh
where the court
found that the true motive of the litigant: “…
was a
disguised and contrived attempt to introduce prescription as a
defence to the action, a fact expressly conceded by Ingosstrakh’
s counsel.... This put paid to any suggestion by Ingosstrakh that the
application was pursued bona fide. Nothing more needs to
be said
about this.”
[26]
There is no basis to find that Wasilewsky is not acting bona fide in
the sense this term is used in the case law.
[27]
The more difficult issue and which is why I have turned to it last,
is whether Wasilewsky gives a reasonable and acceptable
explanation
for the default. In order to meet this standard Wasilewsky needs to
explain not only his default after the service
of notice of bar but
also his default prior to this. This is the finding in
Ingosstruckh
where the court explained it in this way:
“
With regard to
the explanation for the default, there are two periods of default
which Ingosstrakh must explain for its failure
to deliver a plea. The
first is before the notice of bar was served on it, and the second
relates to the period after the bar was
served. This is because the
notice of bar was served as a consequence of Ingosstrakh’ s
failure to file its plea.”
[4]
[28]
In this case Wasilewsky has not done that. It is clear from his
attorney’s answering affidavit that she believed
that the only
time period that required an explanation was the period after the
filing of notice of bar. However, that is not the
law since the
Ingosstrackh
decision. There was a belated attempt from the
bar to explain that the default during this period was due to the
prevalence of
public and religious holidays over the April period.
However, that explanation is not on the papers nor is it consistent
with attorney’s
statement that she had only instructed counsel
after receipt of notice of bar. It appears then that there is no
satisfactory explanation
for the period prior to the notice of bar
being served.
[29]
However even though
Ingosstrackh
requires one to consider both periods, it does not mean that they
need to be looked at as self-standing explanations taken in
isolation. The context of the one period might inform the context of
the other. The case law thus far emphasises that condonation
is a
question of fact in each case.
[5]
Nor is the negligence of an attorney fatal.
[6]
The fact is that the attorney was ready to deliver on the defence
documents on the final day. She served on the plaintiffs’
attorneys in time to meet the deadline. The only reason she could not
file on time was the problem with Caselines which was beyond
her
control. Had Caselines been working that afternoon, she would have
completed delivery and Wasilewsky would not have been barred.
There
was also an attempt by the plaintiffs’ attorneys to suggest
that even on 19 May, the plea was not properly delivered
as the
attorney had not signed the pleading. This defect was later remedied
but I suggest this objection was more opportunistic
than substantial
– an attempt to make the one day period relied on by Wasilewsky
seem less compelling.
[30]
Nor is the time period prior to the bar despite not being explained
excessive. It amounted to just over 20 days. In a
case with
stop-start history as this one with neither set of litigant’s
devoid of missteps perhaps the attorney was reluctant
to start
drafting a defence until the 11
th
hour. She may have
walked close to the edge of the cliff, but she would have made it in
time but for the technical glitch with
CaseLines. It would as her
counsel suggested, not be in the interests of justice to deprive
Wasilewsky of his defence in these
circumstances. I am satisfied then
that good cause has been shown for an upliftment of bar.
Costs
[31]
Although the applicant had initially sought costs
de bonis
propriis
against the liquidator plaintiffs, counsel for the
applicant fairly conceded at the hearing that this would not be
appropriate
and now seeks only that costs be costs in the action. I
am satisfied that this is the correct order.
ORDER:-
[32] In the result the
following order is made:
1.
That the bar in terms of
Rule 27
is hereby uplifted;
2.
That the special plea, plea, and counterclaim
as served on 18 May 2022 and filed on CaseLines 19 May 2022, serves
as the first defendant's
special plea, plea, and counterclaim;
3.
Costs of this application are to be costs in
the action.
N. MANOIM
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION
JOHNANNESBURG
Date of hearing:
17
February 2023
Date of judgment:
28 February 2023
Appearances:
Counsel
for the Applicant/First Defendant:
N
Strathern
Instructed by:
Karen
Shafer Attorneys
Counsel for the
Respondent/Plaintiff: J
Smit
Instructed
by:
Edward
Nathan Sonnenbergs
[1]
See
the recent case of
Ingosstrakh
v Global Aviation Investments (Pty) Ltd and Others
(934/2019) [2021]ZASCA 69 (4 June 2021) at paragraph 21.
[2]
Ford
v Groenewald
1977(4)
SA 224 (T) and
Breitenbach
v Fiat SA (Pty) Ltd
1976 (2) SA 226 (T).
[3]
Gap
Merchant Recycling CC v Goal Reach Trading 55 CC
2016
(I) SA 261 (WCC) at paragraph 23.
[4]
Ingosstrakh
supra,
paragraph 22.
[5]
See
Cairns
v Cairns
1912
AD 181
where Innes J held in explaining the futility of defining
good cause that: “
What
that something is must be decided upon the circumstances of each
particular application.”
[6]
See
Herbstein and Van Winsen: “
The
Civil Practice of the High Courts of South Africa”
.
Fifth Edition, page 733.
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