Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 319South Africa
Single Destination Engineering (Pty) Ltd and Another v Heever N.O and Others (42818/2012) [2023] ZAGPJHC 319 (12 April 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
12 April 2023
Headnotes
in trust by Skincon. The funds were allegedly utilised by Skincon and not paid to subcontractors. The subcontractors sued Skincon and obtained
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Single Destination Engineering (Pty) Ltd and Another v Heever N.O and Others (42818/2012) [2023] ZAGPJHC 319 (12 April 2023)
Single Destination Engineering (Pty) Ltd and Another v Heever N.O and Others (42818/2012) [2023] ZAGPJHC 319 (12 April 2023)
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sino date 12 April 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case Number: 42818/2012
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
In the matter between:
In the intervention
application between:
JOHANNES
JACOBUS HENDRIK STEYN
First
Applicant
GUNTER
DONALD FREYER
Second
Applicant
In
re
SINGLE
DESTINATION ENGINEERING (PTY) LTD
First
Respondent/First Applicant
GUARDIAN
INTEGRATED SYSTEMS CC
Second
Respondent/Second Applicant
And
THEO
VAN DEN HEEVER N.O.
Third Respondent /
First Respondent
NURJEHAN
ABDOOL GAFAAR OMAR N.O.
Fourth Respondent
/Second Respondent
THEA CHRISTINA
LOURENS N.O.
in
their capacity as the joint liquidators
of
Skincon Calibrate (Pty) (Ltd) (in liquidation)
Fifth
Respondent /Third Respondent
JUDGMENT
MIA, J
Introduction
[1] The application is
for security for costs. I have had insight into the two related
applications namely an application for inspection
and an application
to intervene, to determine the application for security for costs.
The application is opposed.
[2] The first applicant
is Single Destination Engineering (Pty) Ltd (SDE), a company with
limited liability incorporated in terms
of the
Companies Act, 71 of
2008
, with its registered office at 29 Galaxy Avenue, Linbro Business
Park, Sandton, Johannesburg Gauteng. The second applicant is Guardian
Integrated Systems CC (GIS), a company with limited liability,
incorporated in terms of the Close Corporation Act, 69 of 1984,
with
its registered office at 62 Turaco Street, Norscot, Fourways,
Gauteng. The first respondent, also the first applicant in the
intervention application, is Johannes Hendrik Jacobus Steyn, an adult
male, the former director of Skincon Calibrated (Pty) Ltd.,
(in
liquidation) (Skincon), currently residing in Australia. The second
respondent is also the second applicant in the intervention
application, Gunter Donald Freyer, an adult male and former director
of Skincon Calibrated (Pty) Ltd., (in liquidation), currently
residing in Australia. The third, fourth and fifth respondents (the
liquidators) are the joint liquidators in the application to
liquidate Skincon. They are not represented and are not opposing the
application.
Background
[3] A background to the
present application is necessary. SDE, GIS and Skincon entered into a
consortium agreement and undertook
a construction project for FNB.
Skincon was the principal contractor and responsible for managing the
financing and implementation
of the project. SDE was the engineer.
Skincon received payments into its own bank account. Skincon paid SDE
and other subcontractors.
Skincon retained payments until contracts
were complete. The funds were intended to be held in trust by
Skincon. The funds were
allegedly utilised by Skincon and not paid to
subcontractors. The subcontractors sued Skincon and obtained
judgments for amounts
in excess of R20 million. Before the orders
were executed Skincon placed the company in liquidation. The
directors of Skincon lived
in Australia. When Skincon was liquidated
an application to
inspect Skincon’s
records followed. The directors applied to intervene in the
application to inspect the records as they did
not approve the
inspection of its books by anyone who was not a creditor. They
alleged SDE was not a creditor. SDE and GIS
now seek security
from the respondents who are the directors of Skincon as they do not
reside in South Africa.
Issues
for Determination
[4] The parties agreed
the issues for determination are whether:
a.
The defences proposed by the intervening
applicants are vexatious;
b.
There is a reasonable prospect that the applicants
may not be able to recoup from the intervening applicants;
c.
Considering the totality of the circumstances in
the matter, the intervening applicant should be required to put up
security for
costs.
[5] The applicants, SDE
and GIS, bring the application in terms of Rule 47(3) of the Uniform
Rules of the High Court. They seek
an order that Mr. Steyn and Mr.
Freyer,(the respondents) be ordered to provide security for the
costs of the application
to intervene. There are two grounds proposed
for this. The first ground indicated is that they are
peregrini
before this court and they do not have assets in the country which
can serve as security. The second ground is that their intervention
application and opposition to the inspection application is vexatious
and amounts to an abuse of the court’s process and
has little
prospect of success.
[6]
Rule 47(3) provides: “
I
f
the party from whom security is demanded contests his liability to
give security or if he fails or refuses to furnish security
in the
amount demanded or the amount fixed by the registrar within ten days
of the demand or the registrar’s decision, the
other party may
apply to court on notice for an order that such security be given and
that the proceedings be stayed until such
order is complied with
”
.
The respondents refused to furnish security and opposed the
application.
[7]
Rule 47.14
[1]
provides that
peregrine plaintiffs or applicants are obliged to provide security
for costs for litigation they are pursuing. Incolae
do not have this
obligation although this is not always the position. The rule is
ultimately aimed at protecting incola litigants.
The court determines
whether security should be incurred in a case or not. The court
making the determination has regard to the
residential circumstances
or domicile of the foreigner and whether there is a fixed address. A
foreign litigant without a
fixed address and country of
domicile poses more of a risk and an order for security becomes more
appropriate under those circumstances.
[2]
[8] Counsel for the
applicant submitted that the court should consider the respondent’s
indication that they have the means
to pay for a costs order if they
are unsuccessful in the intervention application. He continued that
they are at this point applicants
in the intervention application and
not yet respondents in the liquidation. It is thus crucial to ensure
their accountability as
peregrine
litigants, especially as
they of their own admission indicate they can afford the costs if it
is ordered to do so. Thus counsel
submitted it would not be an
inconvenience for them to be ordered to put up security and they
would not be non-suited if they were
ordered to pay security for
costs. It will place them in no worse a position if they are ordered
to pay security for costs, however,
if there was no order that they
pay security for costs, SDE and GIS will have great difficulty in
recovering costs if a costs order
were made against the respondents
and they had to pursue the respondents abroad. This is especially as
they are in a precarious
position financially having not received
payment from Skincon, and one of them are in business rescue at
present.
[9]
Moreover, counsel for the applicant, submitted it was appropriate for
this court to do so considering that the respondents/applicants
seeking to intervene do not own any assets in South Africa. They are
the directors of Skincon and their company has been liquidated.
Their attempt to intervene, it was submitted was vexatious and was an
attempt to withhold information from creditors. This they
would
accomplish by stepping into the shoes of the liquidators, to prevent
creditors from inspecting documents. Moreover, Counsel
argued that
they have not put up a viable defence to the intervention
application. If they are successful in keeping the creditors
from
inspecting the books, the injustice will be palpable and take the
matter no closer to resolving the issues and tracking where
the funds
went to in order to pay the creditors and contractors who completed
work on the project. Counsel pointed out that this
court
should consider the merits of the main proceedings only to the extent
that the claim or the defence is
bona
fide.
In
the present matter, counsel argued that if the directors were
transparent and were not hiding information, it was not necessary
to
bring the application to inspect. It was evident, counsel submitted
that their conduct is vexatious where their defences were
not known.
He referred to
Zietsman
v Electronic Media and Others
[3]
,
where the Court held:
“
In
deciding whether the appeal should be upheld, the Court was
influenced largely by the fact that the respondents had not disclosed
a defence. It deemed it unreasonable to order a plaintiff incola to
provide security for the costs of an action instituted by him,
at the
behest of a defendant who may not even have a defence worthy of
consideration.”
[10] Counsel
compared this application to the facts in
Lurco Group South Africa
(Pty) Limited v Knoop NO and Others (Oakbay Investments (Pty) Ltd
Intervening)
(38647/2019) [2020] ZAGPJHC 74 (5 March 2020), and
submitted that similarly a
foreign
company sought to intervene in proceedings where they had departed
from the country and were not residing in South Africa.
The court in
that matter ordered that the foreign intervening party pay R500 000
as security for costs of the business rescue
practitioners. The
courts view is encapsulated as follows:
“
It
follows that the court has to weigh up the injustice caused to the
defendant if no security for cost order is made, against the
possible
injustice that the plaintiff would suffer if he is prevented from
instituting a claim based on a security for costs order.
The court
must have regard to the nature of the claim, the financial status of
the incola and the incola's probable financial status,
should it fail
in the matter. The applicant for security for costs must also satisfy
the court that the main action is vexatious,
reckless or otherwise
amounts to abuse”
[11] Thus it was
argued that the respondents as
peregrinus
who live in
Australia and admit they have means to pay, should pay. In the
present matter there is no cooperation from the
respondents in
resolving issues with their partners in the consortium and their
attorneys have not been of assistance in this regard
either. They
have not indicated their impecuniosity and they have the financial
ability to pay a cost order if they fail in the
intervention
application.
[12]
Counsel for the respondent submitted that this court should consider
the purpose behind the main application before ordering
the
respondent to pay security for costs. Having regard to the main
application and the reply, it is evident in the main application
[4]
that the applicants state they require the documents to prove their
claims. However, this is not so as the first meeting of creditors
was
scheduled for 21 July 2021
[5]
.
At that meeting on 21 July 2021, the claims were proved. Moreover,
counsel submitted that they do however have sufficient information
to
complete their claim form as their claim form was submitted as is
evident from their completed claim form attached to
the papers.
[6]
Furthermore, counsel submitted it is also evident that they proved
their claims at the meeting of creditors at the Magistrates
Court,
Cullinan and there was no indication that their claims were not
accepted. If the claim was not proved at the second claim
meeting he
submitted it was not proved intentionally, because they did not wish
to contribute towards the costs.
[13] Counsel for
the respondent, argued further that the applicant’s insistence
to proceed with the request for documents
is not for a legitimate
purpose and is pursued for their own purpose. It cannot be to prove a
claim as the claims were already
proved before the Magistrate
Cullinan. SDE was the only claimant who did not prove its case and it
follows that SDE is not a creditor
of Skincon. He argued that the
rules of court may be utilised to issue a
subpoena duces tecum.
In the present circumstances, he continued that the claims that were
proved before the Magistrate Cullinan are not contested by
Skincon.
There are in fact judgments taken against the respondent which is
evident from the papers. It is also not true, counsel
submitted that
the consortium requires information. He continued that it was a
different litigant, a Mr. Gaffner, who is engaging
in litigation with
the directors who attested to the affidavit. Mr. Gaffner is seeking
information. The application is therefore
undertaken to assist some
other litigant who is being sued. He argued moreover that the
litigation will have no prospects of success.
The respondents in the
present matter will be respondents in the application to inspect once
they are granted leave to intervene
and it would not be appropriate
to grant security for costs against the respondents.
[14] Counsel for
the respondents submitted that the request for security was an abuse
by the applicants who sought to dictate
the pace of litigation and to
keep the respondents out of the main application. They lodged a Rule
47(1) application withdrew it
and launched the present application
later. The respondents’ position was misrepresented where they
were portrayed as respondents
leaving with the funds. The true
position is that they relocated to Australia prior to the project
commencing and travelled frequently
to the country. The company was
placed in liquidation due to the product failing.
[15]
Having considered the submissions of both counsel, as well as the
authorities and the decision in
Exploitatieen
Beleggingsmaatschppij Argonauten 11BV and another v Honig
[7]
where
the Court held:
“
if
their financial status was relevant to the question of security it
was incumbent upon them to take the court into their confidence
and
make sufficient disclosure of their assets and liabilities to enable
the court to make a proper assessment thereof in the exercise
of its
discretion. That was not done. In any event, the fact that the
respondent would have to proceed against the appellants abroad
if he
obtained a costs order in his favour with the associated uncertainty
and inconvenience that would entail, was one of the
fundamental
reasons a peregrinus should provide securit
y”
[16] In the present
matter, the factors which I have considered are that respondents are
peregrine and indicate that they
are in a position to litigate and
have no difficulty paying a costs order if one were ultimately
ordered. In contrast the applicants,
SDE and GIS one of whom are in
the process of business rescue, would experience great difficulty in
pursuing their costs if they
were to pursue the respondents in
another country. It is evident that the applicants will have
difficulty if they are to
recoup their costs in another country.
These two factors support the applicant’s case in favour of the
granting security
for costs where the primary consideration in
deciding whether to grant security for costs is the domicile of the
respondents.
[17] The
consideration whether they are entering an opposition is vexatious
cannot be fully ascertained at this stage. There
are disputes about
whether SDE is a creditor or not. That SDE’s claim was not
proved and is not a creditor is a red herring.
According to counsel
for the respondent, it was only because they cannot or will not pay
the costs that their claim was not proved.
As counsel for the
respondent argued, it did not indicate that SDE’s claim was not
good or that it would not be accepted,
it just indicated that they
had an issue with covering the costs and did not accept this. This
highlights the very issue of costs
and why the respondents who say
they can pay the costs should pay security for costs. The
determination about the vexatious
element of the respondent merely
clouds the issue at this point and I do not deem it necessary to
determine the issue of security
for costs. For the present
application where the respondents seek to intervene and are peregrine
it is appropriate that they be
ordered to pay security costs.
[18] The
respondents in the matter have not yet been permitted to intervene in
the inspection matter at the time the matter
appeared before me.
Their circumstances are that they are not residing or domiciled in
the country and
peregrini
are usually required to provide
security. The factors usually considered are the character of the
peregrine
. In these circumstances the
peregrine
directors placed the company in liquidation and have not been candid
with their partners in the consortium. Skincon was responsible
for
the retentions of funds on behalf of subcontractors. It is not clear
what has happened to the funds that was kept in retention
for the
contractors. The application to inspect and the application to
intervene are pending. The respondents as peregrine have
relocated
prior to the project commencing and have no assets in this country
and it will be difficult for the applicants to recover
costs against
them in another country. I have considered that they may be
respondents in the application to inspect. There are
no circumstances
indicated that suggested it is not appropriate and unjust or
inequitable that they be ordered to provide security
in the present
circumstances.
[19]
The rule 47(3) provides that security be provided in the amount
demanded or an amount fixed by the Registrar within 10
days of demand
or when application is made to this court for an order that such
security be given and the proceedings be stayed
until
such order is complied with.
[20]
The are no reasons why there should be any deviation from the usual
cost order in this application.
[21]
For the reasons above I hereby grant the following order:
Order
1. That the respondents
be ordered to provide security to the applicants in the amount of
R169 042,50 within 10 (TEN) of this order.
2. That the
proceedings of the intervention application be stayed pending
compliance with prayer 1 (above).
3. Cost of the
application.
SC MIA
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
JOHANNESBURG
For
the Applicant:
Adv
W.K.C Pretsch
Instructed
by
Primerio
International
For
the Respondent:
Adv
M.P Van Der Merwe SC
instructed
by
Tim
Du Toit & Co Inc
Date
of Hearing:
31
January 2023
Date
of Judgment
12
April 2023
[1]
Harms
Civil
Practice in the Superior Court
[2]
Harms
Civil
Practice in the Superior Court
[3]
Zietsman
v Electronic Media and Others
[2008]
All SA 523
SCA
[4]
Caseline 01-12 para 18.5
[5]
Caselines
01-14
para 21
[6]
Caselines
01-73 completed claim form
[7]
Exploitatieen
Beleggingsmaatschppij Argonauten 11BV and another v Honig
[2012] 2 All SA 22
SCA
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