Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 366South Africa
Mercury Fittings CC v Doorware CC (00014/2023) [2023] ZAGPJHC 366 (24 April 2023)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Mercury Fittings CC v Doorware CC (00014/2023) [2023] ZAGPJHC 366 (24 April 2023)
Mercury Fittings CC v Doorware CC (00014/2023) [2023] ZAGPJHC 366 (24 April 2023)
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sino date 24 April 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NUMBER
:
00014/2023
NOT
REPORTABLE
NOT
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES
NOT
REVISED
24/04/23
In
the matter between:
MERCURY
FITTINGS CC
APPLICANT
AND
DOORWARE
CC
RESPONDENT
Neutral
Citation:
Mercury Fittings CC v
Doorware CC
(Case No: 00014/2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 366 (24 April 2023)
JUDGMENT
ON APPLICATION FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL
OOSTHUIZEN-SENEKAL
CSP AJ:
[1]
This is an application for leave to appeal
against my judgment delivered on 22 February 2023. The matter
came before me as
an urgent application. The applicant sought
final relief to interdict and restrain the respondent from breaching
the terms
of an agreement relating to the agreed geographical split
in South Africa with regards to the supply of certain ironmongery
products
known as QS Products.
[2]
After listening to the submissions by
counsel acting on behalf of the respective parties, this Court
granted an order in the following
terms:
1. The dispute
relating to the existence of an agreement between the parties, the
nature thereof and the authority
provided to Ms Rebecca
Humphry on 27 June 2013 is referred to oral evidence.
2.
It is ordered that the notice of motion
stand as simple summons and the answering affidavit as a notice of
intention to defend.
3.
The declaration shall be delivered within
15 days of this order and the Uniform Rules dealing with further
pleadings, discovery
and conduct of trials shall thereafter apply.
4.
Pending the outcome of the trial:
4.1 The respondent be and
hereby is interdicted and restrained from selling and/or offering to
sell and/or making available to sell
under fulfilling orders and/or
supplying, whether directly or indirectly, any product in the QS
Product range within the geographical
areas of:
4.1.1 The Province of
Western Cape,
4.1.2 The Province of
Eastern Cape, and
4.1.3 The Province of
Northern Cape.
4.2 The respondent be and
hereby is interdicted and restrained from selling and/or offering to
sell and/or making available to sell
and/or fulfilling orders and/or
supplying, whether directly or indirectly, any product in the QS
Product range to the entities,
as set out in Annexure “A”
hereto, in Namibia.
4.3 The respondent be and
hereby is interdicted and restrained from making contact with and/or
approaching any of the applicant’s
customers, whether directly
or indirectly, as listed in Annexure “B” hereto, within
the geographical areas as set out
in paragraph 4.1 hereof in respect
of any aspect relating to any product in the QS Product range.
4.4 The respondent be and
hereby is interdicted and restrained from selling and/or offering to
sell and/or making available to sell
and/or fulfilling orders and/or
supplying, whether directly or indirectly, any product in the QS
Product range from its office
opened in Cape Town, Western Cape,
currently situated at Unit C9, Boulevard Way, Capricorn Business
Park, Muizenberg.
4.5 The respondent be and
hereby is interdicted and restrained from opening offices within the
geographical areas set out in paragraph
4.1 hereof.
4.6
The respondent be and hereby is ordered, within 30 (thirty) days of
the granting of this order, to furnish to the applicant
with a list
of all customers or potential customers, including the names of the
relevant person(s) in authority and contact
details,
the respondent made contact with, within the geographical areas as
set out in paragraph 4.1 hereof in respect of any product
in the QS
Product range.
5.
Costs in the cause.
[3]
This order forms the subject matter of the
application for leave to appeal, which is opposed.
[4]
For convenience’s sake, I will refer
to the parties as they were referred to in the urgent application.
[5]
The consequential grounds for the
application for leave to appeal relied upon by the respondent are the
following;
1.
The referral of the matter for oral
evidence is not supported by the facts and legal position applicable
in the matter and the application
should have been dismissed.
2.
The applicant did not establish the first
requirement for final relief namely, a clear right, because the
application was based
on hearsay evidence of Mr Laubscher, the
executive officer and managing director of the applicant, who has no
knowledge of the
subsistence of the agreement concluded by the
parties. Furthermore, the sole member of the applicant, Mr
Andrew Osborne-Young
passed away on 7 July 2021 and therefore, in
referring the matter to trial is a futile exercise because Mr
Osborne-Young, the only
witness to testify on behalf of the applicant
is deceased.
3.
The Court failed to take into account that
granting an interim order would cause ongoing irreparable harm to the
respondent and
such would not be in the interests of justice.
[6]
At the onset of the hearing, the applicant
raised a point
in limine
,
which related to rule 4 of the Uniform Rules of Court. Mr
Thompson on behalf of the applicant argued that the application
for
leave to appeal was not served in terms of the rules and therefore
the application should be struck from the roll. The
applicant
based its objection on the contents of an email relating to this
application wherein the respondent’s attorney
of record
required an acknowledgment of receipt, which was not complied with by
the applicant.
[7]
Mr Jackson on behalf of the respondent
argued that the applicant had full knowledge of the application and
there was no reason for
the application not to proceed. He
further contended that the parties since the commencement of the
urgent application communicated
via email and no challenges were
experienced, as matter-of-fact communication channels were
sufficiently utilized throughout.
[8]
I agree with the contentions made by Mr
Jackson on behalf of the respondent. It was evident that Mr
Thompson was prepared
and ready to argue the matter. Both
parties conceded that no prejudice would be suffered if arguments
were heard. For
the reasons there is no need to ponder on this
point any further.
[9]
On the other hand, Mr Jackson referred to
the applicant’s conditional application for leave to appeal
filed in the matter.
The argument was raised that rule 49 made
no provision for the filing of a conditional application for leave to
appeal and the
respondent argued that the filing of such is an
irregular step.
[10]
Counsel for the applicant conceded that the
rules made no provision for filing a conditional application for
leave to appeal.
[11]
It is clear that the rules make no
provision for such and therefore I need not to consider this point
any further.
[12]
The application for leave to appeal is
opposed on the basis that the aforementioned order is not appealable
because it is a provisional
order. Secondly, the applicant
argued that leave to appeal in any event cannot be granted as
application does not comply
with the prescripts of section 17(1) of
the Superior Courts Act, Act 10 of 2013 in that another court would
not come to a different
decision.
[13]
The first question that needs to be
addressed, is whether the order granted by me on 22 February 2023 is
appealable or not.
[14]
Unlike an ordinary appeal, the respondent
is appealing an interim order. Interim orders are generally not
appealable. That
is settled law. But the bar to their
appealability is not absolute. However, the issue of
appealability of an interim
order is well traversed and its settled.
There is an array of decisions emanating from the Supreme Court of
Appeal and the
Constitutional Court regarding this issue.
[15]
In
the
City
of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality v Afriforum and Another
[1]
the Constitutional Court said:
“
[39]
The appealability of interim orders in terms of the common law
depends on whether they are final in effect. . .
[40]
The
common law test for appealability has since been denuded of its
somewhat inflexible nature. Unsurprisingly so because
the
common law is not on par with but subservient to the supreme law that
prescribes the interests of justice as the only requirement
to be met
for the grant of leave to appeal. Unlike before, 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. All this is now subsumed under the
constitutional interests of justice standard. The over-arching
role of interests of justice considerations has relativised
the final
effect of the order or the disposition of the substantial portion of
what is pending before the review court, in determining
appealability. The principle was set out in
OUTA
[2]
by
Moseneke DCJ in these terms:
‘
This
Court has granted leave to appeal in relation to interim orders
before. It has made it clear that the operative standard
is
‘the interests of justice’. To that end, it must
have regard to and weigh carefully all germane circumstances.
Whether an interim order has a final effect or disposes of a
substantial portion of the relief sought in a pending review is a
relevant and important consideration. Yet, it is not the only
or always decisive consideration. It is just as important
to
assess whether the temporary restraining order has an immediate and
substantial effect, including whether the harm that flows
from it is
serious, immediate, ongoing and irreparable.’
[3]
[16]
The
controversy as to whether an order was appealable or not was also
referred to in
International
Trade Administration Commission v SCAW South Africa (Pty) Ltd
,
[4]
and in that matter the Constitutional Court remarked that;
“
In
this sense, the jurisprudence of the Supreme Court of Appeal on
whether a “judgment or order” is appealable remains
an
important consideration in assessing where the interests of justice
lie. An authoritative restatement of the jurisprudence
is to be
found in
Zweni v Minister of Law and
Order
which has laid down that the
decision must be final in effect and not open to alteration by the
court of first instance; it must
be definitive of the rights of the
parties; and lastly, it must have the effect of disposing of at least
a substantial portion
of the relief claimed in the main proceedings.
On these general principles the Supreme Court of Appeal has
often held that
the grant of an interim interdict is not susceptible
to an appeal.
The “policy
considerations” that underlie these principles are
self-evident.
Courts are loath to encourage wasteful use of
judicial resources and of legal costs by allowing appeals against
interim orders that
have no final effect and that are susceptible to
reconsideration by a court a quo when final relief is determined.
Also allowing
appeals at an interlocutory stage would lead to
piecemeal adjudication and delay the final determination of
disputes.
” [my emphasis]
[17]
When deciding on the nature and
appealability of the order granted in the present matter, I have to
consider the circumstances that
led to the urgent application.
The applicant and respondent import, sell and distribute
stainless-steel ironmongery and door
controls from China in terms of
an oral agreement concluded as far back as 2010. Subsequent to
the passing of the sole member
of the applicant in 2021, the
respondent conducted business in the geographical areas of the
applicant. The conduct of the
respondent in this regard was the
basis for the relief sought by the applicant.
[18]
The sole purpose for the interim order was
to restore the
status quo
which existed for over a decade.
Furthermore, it was evident that a
bona
fide
dispute of fact was raised
regarding the existence and nature of the oral agreement concluded
and therefore the dispute was referred
to trial. There can be
no prejudice whatsoever if oral evidence is produced to enable the
court to determine what the true
intentions of the parties were at
the time of conclusion of the oral agreement. The fact that the
respondent might suffer
irreparable prejudice while the interim order
operated, do not cognisably derogate from its interlocutory
character. Furthermore,
the respondent still has the
opportunity to put its side before the trial court inline of the
audi
alterem partem
rule.
[19]
An important fact for consideration when
deciding whether the interest and justice necessitates the granting
of this application
due the prejudice suffered by the respondent, one
has to keep in mind that prior to January 2023 the respondent did not
conduct
business in the geographical areas of the applicant.
The respondent opened up office in Western Cape in January 2023 and
that was the sole reason for the applicant to launch the urgent
application. The question has to be raised, why would the
respondent be prejudiced, if one takes cognisance of the fact that it
prior to January 2023 never conducted business in the geographical
area of the applicant. The respondent is the author of its own
misfortune.
[20]
I am therefore of the view, that the
order does not have the effect of disposing at least a substantial
portion of the relief claimed
in the case. The order, because
of the material dispute of fact that exist, simply regulate what
steps needed to be taken
in order to assist the court to arrive at a
just decision. The order as it stands does not dispose of the
entire matter and
is a provisional order, which is not appealable.
[21]
In terms of the interim order, I have referred the
dispute relating to the nature and existence of the oral agreement
between the
parties for oral evidence as provided for in rule
6(5)(g).
[22]
In
Pfizer
Inc v South African Druggists Ltd
[5]
the
following was stated:
“
...
The Rule 6(5)(g) application was purely
interlocutory, and the order given is no more than a ruling.
It is true that the order is specific and contains elements of
finality. It is,
however, no less
interlocutory than many other orders of a like nature which are
frequently granted by our Courts
and by
the Court of the Commissioner of Patents
in
the course of a hearing and which have been held to be no more than
rulings and consequently to be unappealable
,
such as for instance an order directing a litigant to supply further
particulars (cf
Pretoria Garrison
Institutes v Danish Variety Products (Pty) Ltd
1948
(1) SA 839
(A)); a temporary interdict (cf
Frank
& Hirsch (Pty) Ltd v Rodi & Wienenberger Aktiengesellschaft
1958 (1) SA 1
(T) (1958 BP 399)); a commission
de
bene esse
(cf
Bell
v Bell
1908 TS 887
; or an order for
security for costs (
Zipotowski v Anglo
American Corporation of South Africa
1972
BP 374). [my emphasis]
[23]
In
Wallach
v Lew Geffen Estates CC
[6]
the
following was said:
“
It
is plain that the order referring the matter for the hearing of oral
evidence was an interlocutory order and that it was a simple
interlocutory order of the kind referred to in
Pretoria
Garrison Institutes v Danish Variety Products (Pty) Ltd 1948(1) SA
839 (A) at 870A
. Furthermore this
is not a case where
‘
...
the decision relates to a question of law or fact, which if decided
in a particular way would be decisive of the case as a whole
or of a
substantial portion of the relief claimed ...’
as
in
Van Streepen and Germs (Pty) Ltd v Transvaal Provincial
Administration 1987(4) 569 (A) at 585 F-G
. The ‘order’
given by Coetzee J did not decide the merits. It was merely a
direction that further evidence be
given before deciding on the
merits.
It was no more than a ruling
. This is
clear from a long line of cases decided in this Court and in the
provincial divisions.”
[24]
In
The
Civil Practice of the High Courts of South Africa
[7]
the following is stated:
“
The
question whether or not the court may
mero
motu
direct oral evidence to be heard
is one regarding which there was until fairly recently scant
authority. That this is possible
was laid down on appeal in
both the former Orange Free State and the former Transvaal. It
has, however, been held that, for
various reasons, it is a bold step
for a presiding judge in an opposed application to refer the matter
to evidence or trial
mero motu
.”
[25]
In
terms of rule 6(5)(g) of the Uniform Rules, a court has a wide
discretion with regard to referring matters to oral evidence where
application proceedings cannot be properly decided by way of
affidavit. In certain circumstances (and exceptional cases),
the court may decide that a matter should be referred to oral
evidence even where no application for such referral had been
made.
[8]
[26]
In this matter I was unable to decide the
application on paper. The argument was raised that the
application should have been
dismissed and not referred to oral
evidence. It is important to note that a court is required to
adopt a process that is
best calculated to ensure that justice is
done with the very least delay on the merits of the case. That
is what I considered
and as a result I was of the view that the
dispute relating to the agreement should be canvassed further.
[27]
I also considered whether in exercising my
discretion would it be in the interest of justice to refer the issue
to trial.
I found that in view of the duration of the agreement
between the parties and the fact that there was uncertainty as to the
nature
and existence of the agreement it would be in the interest of
both parties that the issue be brought to finality and that can only
be achieved by oral evidence after which a court can make a final
ruling on the matter. A final order would result in finality
of
the dispute between the parties and as such be in the interest of
justice.
[28]
Therefore, in my view referring the matter
to oral evidence would ensure a just and expeditious decision.
The issue to be
determined is simple and discrete. After
hearing oral evidence, the court will then be in a better position to
determine
whether or not an agreement exists.
[29]
An application for leave to appeal is regulated by
section
17(1)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
which provides:
“
(1)
Leave to appeal may only be given where the judge or judges concerned
are of the opinion that –
(a)
(i) the appeal would have a
reasonable prospect of success; or
(ii) there
is some other compelling reason why the appeal should be heard,
including conflicting judgments on the matter under
consideration;
(b)
the decision sought on appeal does not fall within the ambit of
section 16(2)
(a)
;
and
(c)
where the decision sought to be appealed does not dispose of all the
issues in the case, the appeal would lead to a just and prompt
resolution of the real issues between the parties.”
[30]
Hendricks
DJP (as he then was) in
Doorewaard
v S
[9]
explained the general principle for the granting leave to appeal as
following;
“
The
test to be applied is now higher than what it used to be. It is no
longer whether another court
may
(might) come to a different decision than what the trial court
arrived at. It is now whether another court, sitting as court of
appeal,
would
come
to a different decision.”
[31]
Furthermore, it is not desirable that the matter
be dealt with in a piecemeal manner. This matter should be
finalized and
either party who may not be happy with this court’s
decision after oral evidence has been lead, has the right to appeal.
To entertain an appeal at this juncture would be to do so in a
piecemeal fashion.
[32]
After considering all the facts in the
matter as well as the test provided for when an applicant for leave
to appeal is considered,
I conclude that there are no reasonable
prospects of success that another court will not come to a different
conclusion in the
matter.
[33]
As for the question of costs, the applicant argued
that the application for leave to appeal is an abuse of court process
and it
sought a cost on attorney and client scale. The
respondent on the other hand, argued that a litigant has the right to
appeal
a decision of any court and the respondent did not apply for
leave to appeal for any other reason than that.
[34]
It
is a trite principle of our law that a court considering an order of
costs exercises a discretion which must be exercised judicially.
[10]
The scale of attorney and client sought by the applicant
against the respondent is an extraordinary one which should be
reserved for cases where it can be found that a litigant conducted
itself in a clear and indubitably vexatious and reprehensible
manner.
[11]
[35]
Considering the facts of this matter and
its circumstances, I am of the view that the applicant is entitled to
costs, however I
can find no exceptional circumstances which justify
a punitive cost order.
[36]
I therefore make following order:
1.
Leave to appeal to either the Full Court of this
division or to the Supreme Court of Appeal is refused.
2.
The respondent is ordered to pay the costs
of this application for leave to appeal on the scale as between
party-and-party.
CSP
OOSTHUIZEN-SENEKAL
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ representatives by email, by being uploaded to
Case
Lines
and by release to SAFLII. The date and time for
hand-down is deemed to be 16h00 on 24 April 2023.
DATE OF HEARING: 21
April 2023
DATE JUDGMENT
DELIVERED: 24 April 2023
APPEARANCES
:
Counsel
for the Applicant:
Mr
Charles E Thompson
Cell
no: 084 460 7943
Email:
cethompson@live.co.za
Attorneys
for the Applicant:
NOFAL,
LAZARIDES, HARRISON INC
Block
C
100
West Street
Weirda
Valley
Sandton
Tel:
083 445 6075
Email:
irene@lazattorneys.com
Counsel
for the Respondent:
Mr
B Jackson
Cell
no: 082 449 5577
Email:
bradjack@law.co.za
Attorneys
for the Respondent:
TRICKER
INCORP ATED
Respondent's
Attorneys
92
7
th
Street
Parkhurst
Johannesburg,
2193
Tel:
083 312 7560 / (011)447 5802
Email:
susan@trickerinc.co.za
[1]
City
of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality v Afriforum and Another
[2016]
ZACC 19
, para [39] and [40].
[2]
National
Treasury v Opposition to Urban Tolling Alliance
[2012]
ZACC 18
;
2012 (6) SA 223
(CC);
2012 (11)
BCLR 1148
(CC) (
OUTA
)
[3]
Ibid
at para [25].
[4]
International
Trade Administration Commission v SCAW South Africa (Pty) Ltd
[2010]
ZACC 6
;
2010 (5) BCLR 457
(CC);
2012 (4) SA 618
(CC) -paras [49] and
[50].
[5]
1987
(1) SA 259
(t) at 263 F-H.
[6]
1993
(3) SA 258 (AD).
[7]
Fifth
Edition, Herbstein & Van Winsen edited by Cilliers, Loots &
Nel
[8]
Pahad
Shipping CC v Commissioner
,
SARS
[2010]
2 All SA 246
(SCA)
at para [20]; see also
Tryzone
Fourteen (Pty) Ltd v Batchelor N.O and Others
(3535/2013) [2016] ZAECPEHC 9 (4 March 2016) at para [38].
[9]
[2019]
ZANWHC 25.
[10]
Ferreira
v Levin NO and Others; Vreyenhoek and Others v Powell NO and Others
[1996] ZACC 27
;
1996
(2) SA 621
(CC);
Motaung
v Makubela and Another, NNO; Motaung v Mothiba NO
1975
(1) SA 618
(O) at 631A
.
[11]
Plastic
Converters Association of South Africa on behalf of members v
National Union of Metalworkers of SA
[2016]
37 2815 (LAC) at para [46].
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