Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 284South Africa
White Oak Trade & Speciality Finance Cayman LLC v Santam Structured Insurance and Others (13311/2020) [2023] ZAGPJHC 284 (30 March 2023)
Headnotes
Summary: Application – appealability – to be decided on the basis of the interest of justice –
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## White Oak Trade & Speciality Finance Cayman LLC v Santam Structured Insurance and Others (13311/2020) [2023] ZAGPJHC 284 (30 March 2023)
White Oak Trade & Speciality Finance Cayman LLC v Santam Structured Insurance and Others (13311/2020) [2023] ZAGPJHC 284 (30 March 2023)
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sino date 30 March 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO
: 13311/2020
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES
REVISED
DATE
:
30
th
March
2023
In the matter between:
WHITE
OAK TRADE & SPECIALTY FINANCE CAYMAN LLC
Plaintiff
and
SANTAM
STRUCTURED INSURANCE LIMITED
First
Defendant
CREDIT
INNOVATION (PTY) LIMITED
Second
Defendant
HARPER
,
JANSEN
Third
Defendant
Coram:
Adams J
Heard
:
27 and 30 March 2023 – The ‘virtual hearing’ of the
Application for Leave to Appeal was conducted as a videoconference
on
Microsoft Teams
Delivered:
30 March 2023 – This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties' representatives by
email, being
uploaded to
CaseLines
and by release to SAFLII.
The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 15:00 on 30 March
2023.
Summary:
Application – appealability –
to be
decided on the basis of the interest of justice –
Section 17(1)(a)(i)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
– an appellant now faces
a higher and a more stringent threshold – application for leave
to appeal granted in part
–
ORDER
(1)
The first and second defendants are granted leave to appeal
against that portion of the judgment and order – paragraphs
[57](1)(a), (b) and (c), [57](2) and [57](3) – dated 22
February 2023, which relates to plaintiff’s application to
compel further and better discovery in terms of Uniform Rule of Court
35(7).
(2)
Leave to appeal is granted to the Full Court of this Division.
(3)
The costs of this application for leave to appeal shall be
costs in the appeal.
(4)
The first and second defendants’ application for leave
to appeal against that portion of the judgment and the order
–
paragraph [57](4) – dated 22 February 2023, which relates
to their (first and second applicants’) application
to compel
further and better discovery in terms of Uniform Rule of Court 35(7),
is dismissed with costs.
JUDGMENT
[APPLICANTION FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL]
Adams J:
[1].
I shall refer to the
parties as referred to in the main action. The first and second
defendants are the first and second applicants
in this application
for leave to appeal and the respondent herein is the plaintiff in the
action. The first and second defendants
apply
for leave to appeal against
the
whole of the judgment and the order, as well as the reasons therefor,
which I granted on 22 February 2023, in terms of which
I had granted
the plaintiff’s application to compel further and better
discovery and simultaneously dismissed a similar application
by the
first and second defendants’ against the plaintiff to compel
further and better discovery. I also granted costs orders
in both
applications against the first and second defendants in favour of the
plaintiff.
[2].
The application for
leave to appeal is mainly against by factual findings and legal
conclusions that, as regards the plaintiff’s
application to
compel, there exist no valid reason for the first and second
defendants not to discover the listed documents and
that such
documents are not privileged and/or relevant. In certain instances,
so the defendants contend, the orders
granted
by me are too wide, in addition to the court having disregarded
reasonable explanations given by the defendants for why
the documents
cannot and should not be produced. Moreover, so the contention on
behalf of the defendants go, as regards the so-called
‘insurance
documentation’, the ambit of the order went further than the
original
rule 35(3)
notice in that it included correspondence between
the defendants’ present attorneys of record and Marsh with the
principal
insurers, which was not foreshadowed in the papers and was
raised for the first time in the draft order handed up on the morning
of the second day of the hearing of the applications to compel.
[3].
The point iterated on behalf of the defendants was that, as regards
the insurance documents, litigation was contemplated by
the
defendants by about 20 August 2019, which means that all
documents after that date should be regarded as privileged.
[4].
As regards the ‘FAIS documents’, the contention by the
defendants is that the court
a quo
erred in not accepting their explanation that all the relevant
documents have been produced. I should not have gone behind the
affidavits on behalf of the defendants and I should not have
compelled them, so the defendants argued, to deliver any additional
documentation. The same arguments are raised relative the balance of
the documents which the defendants were compelled to produce.
[5].
As for the first and second defendants’ application to compel
further and better discovery, they contend that I erred
in not
compelling the plaintiff to produce the listed documents, in
particular the original ‘Guarantee Policy’. I should
have
compelled the plaintiff, so the defendants submitted, to give better
responses to the request to discover the listed documentations
than
the equivocal ones provided in the replying affidavits. Also, so the
defendants contend, the Court erred in accepting the
plaintiff’s
explanation that it is not is possession of the original policy.
[6].
Nothing new has been raised by the first and second defendants
in this application for leave to appeal. In my original judgment,
I
have dealt with most of the issues raised and it is not necessary to
repeat those in full.
Suffice to restate
what I said in my judgment, namely that, as regards plaintiff’s
application to compel further and better
discovery, a proper case was
made out on behalf of the plaintiff for the relief claimed and not so
as regards the first and second
defendants’ application to
compel.
I
remain of that view. However, that is not the criterion to be applied
in whether to grant leave to appeal.
[7].
The traditional test in deciding whether leave to appeal
should be granted was whether there is a reasonable prospect that
another
court may come to a different conclusion to that reached by
me in my judgment. This approach has now been codified in
s
17(1)(a)(i)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
, which came into
operation on the 23
rd
of August 2013, and which provides
that leave to appeal may only be given where the judge concerned is
of the opinion that ‘the
appeal would have a reasonable
prospect of success’.
[8].
In
Mont Chevaux Trust v Tina Goosen,
LCC 14R/2014
(unreported), the Land Claims Court held (in an
obiter dictum
)
that the wording of this subsection raised the bar of the test that
now has to be applied to the merits of the proposed appeal
before
leave should be granted. I agree with that view, which has also now
been endorsed by the SCA in an unreported judgment in
Notshokovu v
S,
case no: 157/2015
[2016] ZASCA 112
(7 September 2016). In that
matter the SCA remarked that an appellant now faces a higher and a
more stringent threshold, in terms
of the Superior Court Act 10 of
2013 compared to that under the provisions of the repealed Supreme
Court Act 59 of 1959. The applicable
legal principle as enunciated in
Mont Chevaux
has also now been endorsed by the Full Court of
the Gauteng Division of the High Court in Pretoria in
Acting
National Director of Public Prosecutions and Others v Democratic
Alliance In Re: Democratic Alliance v Acting National Director
of
Public Prosecutions and Others
(19577/09) [2016] ZAGPPHC 489 (24
June 2016).
[9].
As far as the order relating to the plaintiff’s application to
compel goes, I am persuaded that the issues raised by the
first and
second defendants in their application for leave to appeal are issues
in respect of which another court is likely to
reach conclusions
different to those reached by me. I am therefore of the view that
there are reasonable prospects of another court
coming to a different
conclusion to the one reached by me. The appeal against that portion
of my judgment does, in my view, have
a reasonable prospect of
success and should therefore succeed.
[10].
Not so, as far as the first and second defendants’
application to compel is concerned.
The
point about that application is that the plaintiff, in my view, has
responded more than adequately to the request for further
and better
discovery. I was not at liberty to go behind the affidavits of the
plaintiff in which it was averred
inter
alia
that
plaintiff is not is possession of any documents other than those
already discovered.
I am of the
view that the appeal against that portion of my judgment, which
relates to the defendants’ application to compel,
does not have
a reasonable prospect of success and should therefore be refused.
[11].
There
was a preliminary point raised on behalf of the plaintiff in
opposition to the application for leave to appeal and that relates
to
the appealability of my previous order. Relying on a number of case
authorities, Mr De Oliveira, who appeared on behalf of the
plaintiff,
contended that the order, being of an interlocutory nature, is not
appealable. I disagree. As was held by the Full Court
of this
Division (per Nichols AJ) in
Baard
v Allem
[1]
,
it is now trite that the test for appealability has been widened
since
Zweni
and
the critical consideration now is whether the granting leave to
appeal would be in the interests of justice. Appealability no
longer
depends largely on whether the interim order appealed against has
final effect or is dispositive of a substantial portion
of the relief
claimed in the main application
[2]
.
What is decisive in deciding the issue of appealability is the
interest of justice.
In
casu
,
the interest of justice dictates that my orders are appealable. If
not, the case may ultimately be adjudicated on the basis of
documents
and other evidentiary material which should not have been considered
in deciding the dispute between the parties.
[12].
For all of
these reasons, I intend granting leave to appeal in respect of the
one application and not in respect of the other.
Order
In
the circumstances the following order is made:
(1)
The first and second defendants are granted leave to appeal
against that portion of the judgment and order – paragraphs
[57](1)(a), (b) and (c), [57](2) and [57](3) – dated 22
February 2023, which relates to plaintiff’s application to
compel further and better discovery in terms of Uniform Rule of Court
35(7).
(2)
Leave to appeal is granted to the Full Court of this Division.
(3)
The costs of this application for leave to appeal shall be
costs in the appeal.
(4)
The first and second defendants’ application for leave
to appeal against that portion of the judgment and the order
–
paragraph [57](4) – dated 22 February 2023, which relates
to their (first and second applicants’) application
to compel
further and better discovery in terms of Uniform Rule of Court 35(7),
is dismissed with costs.
L R ADAMS
Judge of the High
Court
Gauteng Division,
Johannesburg
HEARD ON:
27
th
and
30
th
March 2023
JUDGMENT DATE:
30
th
March
2023 – handed down electronically
FOR THE PLAINTIFF:
Advocate M De Oliviera
INSTRUCTED BY:
Baker & McKenzie,
Sandton
FOR THE FIRST AND
SECOND DEFENDANTS:
Adv C Loxton SC
INSTRUCTED BY:
ENS Africa, Sandton
FOR THE THIRD
DEFENDANT:
No appearance
INSTRUCTED BY:
No appearance
[
1]
Baard
v Allem
2021
JDR 2521 (GJ);
[2]
Tshwane
City v Afriforum
2016
(6) SA 279
CC para 40;
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