Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 368South Africa
Tak and Another v Blue Dart Properties and Another (01361/2023) [2023] ZAGPJHC 368 (20 April 2023)
Headnotes
Summary: Anti-dissipation interdict – share of profits due to applicants in terms of joint venture agreement – applicants seeking interim order preserving further payment to be received on behalf of joint venture – applicants entitled to interim interdict.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Tak and Another v Blue Dart Properties and Another (01361/2023) [2023] ZAGPJHC 368 (20 April 2023)
Tak and Another v Blue Dart Properties and Another (01361/2023) [2023] ZAGPJHC 368 (20 April 2023)
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sino date 20 April 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO
: 01361/2023
DATE
:
20
TH
April
2023
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES
REVISED
In the matter between:
TAK
,
PEARL
First
Applicant
VENKATRAMAN
,
MERVIN
Second
Applicant
and
BLUE
DART PROPERTIES (PTY) LIMITED
First
Respondent
TAK
,
VISHAL
Second
Respondent
Neutral Citation
:
Tak and Another v Blue Dart Properties and Another (01361/2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 368 (20 April 2023)
Coram
: Adams
J
Heard
: 19 April
2023
Delivered:
20
April 2023 – This judgment was handed down electronically by
circulation to the parties' representatives by email, by being
uploaded to
CaseLines
and by release to SAFLII. The date and
time for hand-down is deemed to be 10:00 on 20 April 2023.
Summary:
Anti-dissipation interdict – share of
profits due to applicants in terms of joint venture agreement –
applicants seeking
interim order preserving further payment to be
received on behalf of joint venture – applicants entitled to
interim interdict
.
ORDER
(1)
The first and second applicants’ application
is urgent.
(2)
The second respondent be and is hereby directed to
disclose to the first and second applicants, on or before 13:00 on
Friday, 21
April 2023, full particulars and the identity of the bank
or the financial institution making payments to the first respondent
pursuant to and in terms of clause 6 of the Building Contract between
the first respondent and Miantha Roux and Michael Roux, dated
24
January 2022 (‘the building contract’).
(3)
A
rule nisi
be and is hereby issued calling upon first and
second respondents and any other interested party to show cause
before this Honourable
Court, on Tuesday, 25 April 2023, at 10:00 or
so soon thereafter as the matter may be heard, why an order should
not be granted
in the following terms:
(a)
The bank or financial institution so identified as
per prayer (2) above is joined to these proceedings as the third
respondent.
(b)
Pending an
actio pro
socio
, alternatively, an
actio
communi dividendo
to be instituted by
the applicants against the first and second respondents, the bank or
financial institution so identified as
per prayer (2) above of this
order, be and is hereby interdicted from making any further payments
to the first and second respondents
in terms of clause 6 of the
Building Contract.
(c)
Any further payments payable to the first and
second respondents in terms of clause 6 of the Building Contract are
to be paid into
an Attorney’s trust account, to be held in
trust, pending institution and the finalisation of the
actio
pro socio
, alternatively, the
actio
communi dividendo
referred to in (b)
above.
(d)
The second respondent be and is directed to,
within ten days from date of this order, render an account of his
management of the
joint venture business between the first respondent
and the first and second applicants, for the period from 26 April
2021
to 18 April 2023.
(e)
The first and second respondents, jointly and
severally, the one paying the other to be absolved, shall pay the
first and the second
applicants’ costs of this application on
the scale as between attorney and client.
JUDGMENT
Adams J:
[1].
During or about March 2021, the first and second
applicants and the first respondent concluded a joint venture
agreement in terms
of which they, as a joint venture partnership,
were to acquire a property, develop it by the erection thereon of a
residence and
other outbuildings, and then to resell the property at
a profit to be shared and divided equally between them. Each of the
three
joint venture partners were required to and in fact paid an
amount of R450 000 towards the joint venture project. The second
respondent, as the controlling mind of the first respondent, was
responsible for the day to day running of the project. During
the
early part of 2022 the property was acquired by the first respondent
and subsequently sold and transferred to a Mr and Mrs
Roux during May
2022, whereafter the first respondent, on behalf of the joint
venture, commenced building on the property pursuant
to and in terms
of a written Building Contract, which had been concluded between
first respondent and the Roux’s.
[2].
Despite the fact that the building of the
residence has since May 2022 progressed almost to completion, the
first and second respondents
have to date not accounted to the first
and second applicants as they were required to do in terms of the
joint venture agreement.
The applicants have been kept completely in
the dark as regards the finances of the joint venture, despite the
fact that, by all
accounts, substantial sums had been received from
the Roux’s by either the first respondent or the second
respondent. The
second respondent flatly refuses to account to the
applicants for the monies received by the first respondent on behalf
of the
joint venture. And the first and the second respondents are
concerned that they will never receive from the first and second
respondents
what is due to them, unless they obtain an order
preserving any further proceeds due to the joint venture.
[3].
In this urgent application, the applicants apply
for interim anti-dissipatory relief to preserve the assets of the
joint venture
pending an action aimed at recovering their dues
pursuant to and in terms of the joint venture agreement. Before that,
the applicants
seek an order, compelling the first and second
respondents to disclose the details of the financial institution or
institutions
responsible for making payment to the first respondent
in terms of the building contract. They obviously need these
particulars
so as to have preserved whatever is left of the profits
of the joint venture.
[4].
It was
the first part of the application which served before me in the
Urgent Court during the week of 17 April 2023. A decision
relating to
that part does however require me to also consider whether there is
merit in the balance of the application in which
the preservation is
applied for. The second part of the application, which, according to
the applicants, is the main application,
relates to the interim
anti-dissipatory relief, which claim is based in the main on the
principles enunciated in
Knox
D'Arcy Ltd and Others v Jamieson and Others
[1]
,
referred to with approval by this Court in
SR
v DR
[2]
.
In
Knox
D'Arcy
the
Appellate Division explained the nature and effect of an
anti-dissipation interdict and held that the applicant is required:
‘…
to
show a certain state of mind of the respondent, ie that the debtor is
getting rid of funds or is likely to do so, with the intention
of
defeating the claims of creditors and that the interdict is sought by
“by the petitioners … to prevent the respondents
from
concealing their assets. The petitioners do not claim any proprietary
or quasi-proprietary right in these assets ... It is
not the usual
case where its purpose is to preserve an asset which is in issue
between the parties. Here the petitioners lay no
claim to the assets
in question’’.’
[5].
The point is that in this opposed urgent
application, the first and second applicants apply for a preservation
order of sorts in
respect of the proceeds of the joint venture
project, with a view to securing payment of their share of the
profits. The second
respondent has indicated in no uncertain terms
that he has no intention to abide by his obligations in terms of the
joint venture
agreement. The applicants therefore have, in my view,
no option but to approach this court for the interim relief.
[6].
The second respondent disputes the existence of
the joint venture agreement. He denies on rather spurious grounds
that the said
agreement was concluded by the parties. His denial
flies in the face of the facts in the matter, notably the fact that
payment
was made by the first and second applicants pursuant to the
said agreement. The respondents do not proffer an explanation for why
the applicants made these payments. Moreover, the existence of the
joint venture is confirmed by the correspondence between the
parties.
The first and second respondents’ version in that regard –
far-fetched and untenable as it has been demonstrated
to be –
and their denial, which ring hollow, should therefore be rejected out
of hand.
[7].
The applicants also allege that this application
is urgent as the completion of the building and the final payments in
terms of
the building contract are imminent. The applicants fear
that, if the last few payments due to the joint venture are paid out
to
the first respondent and/or the second respondent, they will not
utilise any of that money to pay them (the first and second
applicants)
what is due to them as their shares of the profits of the
joint venture. The fears of the applicants are, in my view,
well-founded
and their application is urgent. The point is that the
second respondent is singularly reluctant to make a commitment to the
applicants
that he will make a payment from the further proceeds to
the applicants. What is more is that the second respondent, by his
own
admission, has a gambling problem, which is a further reason why
the applicants should be granted the interim interdictory relief
on
an urgent basis. There is a real probability that the applicants will
not only lose their share of the profits of the joint
venture, but
also those fairly substantial sums which they have invested in the
JV.
[8].
The applicants, in my judgment, have established a
prima facie
right
to the payments to be received from the building operation of the
first respondent. These proceeds are probably the only means
by which
the first and second respondents would be able to effectively settle
the joint venture’s indebtedness to the applicants.
The
applicants have a right to an order compelling the respondents to
account to them for the finances of the joint venture. Until
such
time as the exact amount due to them is calculated, the applicants
are entitled to an order preserving the funds effectively
earned by
the joint venture.
[9].
In my view, the applicants have established that
they have a
prima facie
case
that they are entitled to the proceeds from the building project,
which the first respondent executed on behalf of the joint
venture.
If not, they are likely to suffer irreparable harm since the first
respondent does not own any other assets. The applicants
also have no
other satisfactory remedy against the first respondent, who has made
it clear, via the second respondent, that they
do not regard as
priority payment of the applicants’ share of the profits of the
joint venture. Without an order interdicting
the proceeds from the
building operation, the applicants will be left with little tangible
options to protect their rights and
interests. The balance of
convenience therefore favours the applicants.
[10].
In the circumstances I find that the applicants
have set out a
prima facie
case that further payments to the first respondent
should, in the interim, be interdicted until their claim has been
finalised.
It therefore follows that the applicants are entitled to
an order compelling the first and second respondents to provide
particulars
of the bank which will be paying out the last building
progress payments, coupled with a rule nisi relating to the
anti-dissipation
order.
Order
[11].
Accordingly, I make the following order: -
(1)
The first and second applicants’ application
is urgent.
(2)
The second respondent be and is hereby directed to
disclose to the first and second applicants, on or before 13:00 on
Friday, 21
April 2023, full particulars and the identity of the bank
or the financial institution making payments to the first respondent
pursuant to and in terms of clause 6 of the Building Contract between
the first respondent and Miantha Roux and Michael Roux, dated
24
January 2022 (‘the building contract’).
(3)
A
rule nisi
be and is hereby issued calling upon first and
second respondents and any other interested party to show cause
before this Honourable
Court, on Tuesday, 25 April 2023, at 10:00 or
so soon thereafter as the matter may be heard, why an order should
not be granted
in the following terms:
(a)
The bank or financial institution so identified as
per prayer (2) above is joined to these proceedings as the third
respondent.
(b)
Pending an
actio pro
socio
, alternatively, an
actio
communi dividendo
to be instituted by
the applicants against the first and second respondents, the bank or
financial institution so identified as
per prayer (2) above of this
order, be and is hereby interdicted from making any further payments
to the first and second respondents
in terms of clause 6 of the
Building Contract.
(c)
Any further payments payable to the first and
second respondents in terms of clause 6 of the Building Contract are
to be paid into
an Attorney’s trust account, to be held in
trust, pending institution and the finalisation of the
actio
pro socio
, alternatively, the
actio
communi dividendo
referred to in (b)
above.
(d)
The second respondent be and is directed to,
within ten days from date of this order, render an account of his
management of the
joint venture business between the first respondent
and the first and second applicants, for the period from 26 April
2021
to 18 April 2023.
(e)
The first and second respondents, jointly and
severally, the one paying the other to be absolved, shall pay the
first and the second
applicants’ costs of this application on
the scale as between attorney and client.
L R ADAMS
Judge of the High
Court of South Africa
Gauteng
Division, Johannesburg
HEARD ON:
19
th
April
2023
JUDGMENT DATE:
20
th
April
2023 – handed down electronically
FOR THE FIRST AND
SECOND APPLICANTS:
Advocate Tlotlego
Tsagae
INSTRUCTED BY:
SP Attorneys
Incorporated, Rivonia, Sandton
FOR THE FIRST AND
SECOND RESPONDENTS:
Advocate I Mureriwa
INSTRUCTED BY:
Malherbe Roos
Attorneys, Bryanston
[1]
Knox
D'Arcy Ltd and Others v Jamieson and Others
[1996] ZASCA 58
;
1996
(4) SA 348
(A);
[2]
SR
v DR
(2980/2007)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 172 (22 March 2022) at para 10;
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