Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 507South Africa
Chauchard and Others v Fire Ring Trading 15 (Pty) Ltd (19/17910) [2023] ZAGPJHC 507 (18 May 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
31 July 2018
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Chauchard and Others v Fire Ring Trading 15 (Pty) Ltd (19/17910) [2023] ZAGPJHC 507 (18 May 2023)
Chauchard and Others v Fire Ring Trading 15 (Pty) Ltd (19/17910) [2023] ZAGPJHC 507 (18 May 2023)
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sino date 18 May 2023
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REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 19/17910
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES
REVISED
In the matter between:
CHAUCHARD,
LUCIEN NORBERT
First
Applicant
CHAUCHARD,
CALARIA GAY
Second
Applicant
HARBOUR TOWN
HOMEOWNERS ASSOCIATION NPC
Third
Applicant
VAALMARINA
BOATLOCKERS BODY CORPORATE
Fourth
Applicant
And
FIRE
RING TRADING 15 (PTY) LTD
Respondent
Lucien
Norbert Guy Chauchard, Calaria Gay Chauchard, Harbour Town Homeowners
Association NPC, Vaalmarina Boatlockers Body Corporate
v Fire Ring
Trading 15 (Pty) Ltd
(Case No:
2019/4339) [2023] ZAGPJHC 507 (18 March 2023)
JUDGMENT
THOMPSON
AJ
Introduction
[1]
This is the return day in respect of a
provisional liquidation order granted by my learned sister Keightley
on 8 March 2023.
The provisional order was granted by Keightley
J on the basis that “[t]
here
remained a possibility (albeit in my view no more than an outside
chance) of the rescission order being finalized in the first
respondent’s favour without undue delay. Out of an
abundance of caution, I elected to keep the door open for such
eventuality by granting the order in provisional form
.”
Prior to dealing with the consequeces of the aforesaid, it is
appropriate to, ever so briefly, deal with the protracted
history of
the matter.
[2]
On 3 September 2012, the applicants
obtained default judgment, granted by the registrar, against the
respondent for payment of the
sum of R2 715 000,00.
In seeking judgment, the applicants relied thereon that there was due
and proper service
of the combined summons and particulars of claim
(“
the action”
)
on the respondent at its chosen
domicilium
citandi et executandi
address at […],
Paulshof Ext,40 (“
the domicilium
address
’). As no appearance
to defend was entered in respect of the action, the applicants
applied for and was granted default
judgment.
[3]
A first rescission of judgment application
was launched by the respondent during or about 5 July 2013. This
first rescission application
was initially an opposed application
with an answering affidavit and replying affidavit being filed.
As a matter of fact,
on 15 May 2016, the applicant’s indicated
that they are “
prepared to permit
[the respondent]
to
rescind the judgment
”. No
indication was given on what basis this concession was made.
Despite this concession, the respondent did
not prosecute the first
rescission application to finality.
[4]
For no clear nor cogent reason, a second
rescission of judgment application was launched by the respondent on
25 July 2016.
This second rescission application was also
initially opposed, however on 17 August 2016, the applicants formally
withdrew their
opposition and defence to the second rescission
application. Despite this withdrawal by the applicants, the
also did not
prosecute the second rescission application to finality.
[5]
Again, for no clear nor cogent reason, a
third rescission of judgment application was launched by the
respondent on 2 July 2018.
This third rescission application is
opposed by the applicants and remain opposed by the applicants.
Subject to what is stated
below, this third rescission application
has also not been prosecuted to finality by the respondent. It
behoves to mention
that the answering affidavit to the third
rescission application was delivered on 31 July 2018.
[6]
No doubt discontent with the failure of the
respondent to prosecute to finality any of the rescission
applications, the applicants
launched this application for the
winding up of the respondent on 21 May 2019. The winding up of
the respondent is opposed
and has been opposed since June 2019 when
the respondent delivered its answering affidavit. At the
forefront of the respondent’s
opposition to the winding up
application is the reliance on the fact that the judgment debt upon
which the application for winding
up is premised is to be set aside
in terms of the rescission application(s) and, once so set aside, the
applicants will have no
locus standi
to seek the winding up of the respondent. Despite this defence,
and again subject to what is set out below, none of the rescission
applications were prosecuted to finality. In other words, the
since the delivery of the answering affidavit in June 2019,
the
respondent has not caused the rescission application(s) to be
finalized for a further period of 2 years and 9 months.
[7]
Voluminous
papers have been filed in this liquidation application.
However, as correctly pointed out by both counsel appearing
before
me, the provisional order by Keightley J has overtaken events.
The granting of the provisional order kicked Section
359(1) of the
Companies Act
[1]
into
operation. As such, the civil proceedings by way of the
rescission application(s) became suspended and could not be
proceeded
with. This had the effect that the third rescission
application, which was set down for the week of 1 May 2023
on the
opposed motion court roll was removed from the roll on 2 May 2023 by
Smit AJ.
[8]
Mr Miller
,
appearing for the respondent, commenced his argument by rightly
indicating, in my view, that due to the provisional order having
overtaken events, the matter now turns on one simple point.
Although differently formulated by
Mr
Miller
, the one simple point the matter
now turns on is whether I am inclined to exercise my residual
discretion to refuse the final winding
up of the respondent having
regard to the fact that if the rescission application proceeded, it
would have been successful.
Mr
Miller
indicated that unless I exercise
my discretion in favour of the respondent, the doors of the court
will finally be shut to the
respondent as the rescission
application(s) will not be proceeded with. To this end I have
been informed by both counsel
that the provisional liquidators have
already indicated that they do not intend to seek an extension of
their powers in order to
prosecute the rescission application(s). It
seems to be the parties also envisage that the likelihood of the
final liquidators
prosecuting the rescission application(s) is slim.
[9]
It
is trite that the discretion to refuse a winding up order where a
proper case has been made out by a creditor is “
narrow”
.
[2]
The extent of this narrow discretion was not debated before me.
Despite the extent of the narrow discretion not being
debated before
me, I have had regard to what was said in the judgment by Montzinger
AJ in the matter of
Firstrand
Bank Limited v DLX Properties (Pty) Ltd
[3]
with reference to
Orestisolve
(
Pty
)
Ltd
t/a Essa Investments v NDFT Investment Holdings
(
Pty
)
Ltd
and another
.
[4]
In my view, the learned acting judge over-complicated the issue
pertaining to what constitutes the narrow discretion referred
to.
[10]
A
narrow discretion is nothing more than a true discretion.
[5]
A discretion in the true sense is one where the court has an election
which option it will apply and neither option can ever
be said to be
wrong as each is entirely permissible. The discretion must, however,
be exercised judicially, not be influenced by
wrong principles or a
misdirection on the facts. Nor should it be a decision which
could not reasonably have been made by
the court if the court
properly directed itself to all the relevant facts and
principles.
[6]
[11]
Within the context of a winding up
application, the reference to a narrow discretion means nothing more,
in my view, than the exercise
of a true discretion on a stricter
basis. The starting point, inevitably, in the exercise of the
narrow discretion is to
accept that the creditor, upon having shown
an entitlement to a winding up order, should be entitled to such an
order. This
does not mean, as stated in the authorities, that
the court is to “
sit under a palm
tree
” and without more just grant
the winding up order. Otherwise stated, the court should not
adopt a lackadaisical approach
and just grant a winding up order
because the creditor is entitled to such an order. The court
must, where called upon to
exercise this discretion, interrogate the
facts relied upon and determine whether such facts are sufficient in
nature to move from
the position that the creditor is entitled to the
winding up order.
[12]
As a reliance on the discretion to be
exercised by the court is sought to move away from an order the
creditor is entitled to, the
facts upon which the discretion is based
should be compelling. Neither flimsy nor speculative reasons
advanced will suffice
to clear the hurdle of compelling facts
necessary to invoke the court’s discretion to refuse a winding
up order. It
would be unwise to even attempt to set out what
would constitute compelling reasons, for to do so would seek to set
rules or fetter
the unfettered discretion of a court in the exercise
of a discretion. Each case must be measured on its particular
facts
and what may be compelling reasons in one case may not be
compelling reasons in another case, having regard to the overall
conspectus
of all relevant facts to a matter.
[13]
Ultimately, the court must, for
compelling reasons which are carefully weighed, come to the
conclusion that it would be substantially
proper and reasonable
having regard to all the relevant facts of the matter to move away
from granting a winding up order in the
exercise of this narrow
discretion.
[14]
With this in mind I now turn to
the facts of this matter. At the time that the matter was
argued before me it was common
cause that the applicant had satisfied
the requirements to be obtain to a winding up order. As
Mr
Miller
stated, the provisional order
created an insurmountable obstacle for the respondent as the
rescission application(s) can now never
be heard. The only hope
for the respondent is to call upon the court to exercise its narrow
discretion in its favour.
In this regard
Mr
Miller
stated that if the court is
with him on the exercise of the discretion, the provisional order
should be discharged. In similar
vein,
Mr
Miller
conceded that if the court is
against him in respect of the exercise of the discretion, a final
order must follow.
[15]
In essence, the respondent sought to
argue the grounds upon which the court would have, so the submission
goes, have granted the
rescission if the rescission application was
heard. Otherwise stated, the respondent sought to argue the
rescission application
as a defence to the winding up application.
This approach creates, in my view, an unsatisfactory conundrum.
Although
Mr Miller
contends that my finding on the grounds upon which the rescission
would be sought will not be binding on a court finally hearing
the
rescission, I will have to deal with the probable degree of success
of such grounds in this application. I would have
to do so due
to my earlier finding that the reason(s) upon which I can exercise my
discretion should be compelling and that it
should be substantially
proper and reasonable to divert away from the applicants’ right
to have the respondent wound up.
Ultimately, in order to amount
to compelling reasons, I would have to find that the rescission
application would have been successful
on the grounds advanced by the
respondent. To find that there is a possibility that the
rescission grounds have a measure
of success would, in my view, be
insufficient to muster compelling reasons.
[16]
The respondent’s attempt to argue
the rescission in the winding up application, in light of the delay
of more than 10-years
in seeking to prosecute the first rescission
application and the delay of almost three years in respect of the
third rescission
application, is in my view improper. The
argument that a final winding up order will finally close the door on
the respondent
whilst a refusal of a final winding up order will not
have the same effect on the applicant is, in the circumstances of
this case,
opportunistic and, in actual fact, a self-created state
affairs. At the very least, since the winding up application
has
begun to hang over the head of the respondent like a sword of
Decamoles, the respondent did not seek to act with any haste or real
interest in seeking to have the rescission application set down and
argued in order to, as the respondent contends it would, rid
the
applicants of their
locus standi
.
[17]
To
borrow, in a paraphrased manner from the
locus
classicus
relating to condonation applications,
[7]
the respondent should provide a full and detailed explanation for its
recalcitrance in having, at the very least, the third rescission
application finally dealt with, which explanation should cover the
entire period of delay. Above all, the explanation should
be
reasonable.
[18]
Very little of an explanation is given
why the rescission application was not proceeded with. What is
known is that the third
rescission application was enrolled, prior to
it being opposed, on the unopposed roll for during August 2019.
Thereafter
the third rescission application has not again been set
down, save as earlier mentioned at the eleventh hour.
[19]
A proper reading of the first
supplementary answering affidavit by the respondent, in my view,
provides the answer why the third
rescission application was not
prosecuted to finality. The respondent states that due to the
fact that the replying affidavit
in this application was not filed by
24 June 2019, when it was due, and has not been delivered at the time
the first supplementary
affidavit was deposed to on 24 August 2022,
the respondent adopted the assumptive impression that the liquidation
application is
not being proceeded with. Whether the
liquidation was being proceeded with or not is, in my view,
irrelevant. The judgment
on which the applicants rely for the
winding up of the respondent and the judgment on which the applicants
relied in seeking execution
remains extant. The failure to
prosecute the liquidation application does not rid the respondent of
this glaring danger of
a valid, final and binding judgment existing.
The practical effect of the failure by the respondent to prosecute
the rescission
application(s), is that each time the liquidation
application is proceeded with or new execution steps are to be taken,
the respondent
will rely on the existence of the rescission
application(s) to ward same off.
[20]
The existence of the rescission
application(s) is/are ultimately being used as a shield to, from
time-to-time, ward off any attempts
to recover that which is due to
the applications in terms of the judgment which they have in their
favour. As the applicants
had already executed against various
assets of the respondent, it seriously boggles the mind (and calls
into question the
bona fides
of the respondent) why the respondent has not prosecuted any of the
rescission applications to finality and sought to claim back,
at the
very least the monetary value, from the applicants which they have
received in terms of the execution steps. The rescission
application(s) is/are, in my view, nothing more than an attempt to
keep a defence alive for when the shoe pinches each time the
applications seek to enforce their judgment.
[21]
The
inordinate delay by the respondent to rid itself of the troublesome
judgment is, in my view, fatal to the respondent’s
call to this
court to exercise its discretion in its favour. It is a trite
principle of law that court orders, subject only
to certain
exceptional circumstances, none of which are applicable, are and
remain valid until set aside. The judgment in
this matter has
now been in existence in excess of 10-years and any dispute relating
to its enforcement must eventually be finalised.
The principle
of finality to litigation has been endorsed by the Constitutional
Court, who pointed out that there must be an end
to litigation.
[8]
In my view, this end to litigation is not limited to launching an
application, but also to prosecute same to finality with
due
expedition, and not to leave it hanging in the air to be used as a
shield as and when may be necessary in order to delay the
finalisation of litigation.
[22]
The respondent has submitted that
nothing prevented the applicants from causing the rescission
application(s) to be dealt with.
Although the applicants could
have set the rescission application(s) down for hearing, they were
under no duty to do so.
As a matter of fact, nothing compelled
them to do so as they were armed with a final, valid and binding
judgment. The respondent
was
dominus
litis
in the rescission
application(s). The respondent needed to rid itself of the
judgment. To seek to pass the blame to
the applicant is, in my
view, demonstrative of the respondent’s lack of
bona
fides
.
[23]
I
am of the view that the respondent is the author of its own
(mis)fortune. As much as
Mr
Miller
strenuously
and with some vigour advanced a proper and well-structured argument
on why the third rescission application would be
successful, the
prospects thereof, to again borrow from condonation authority,
[9]
pale into significance having regard to the inordinate delay and the
absence of a reasonable explanation why the rescission application(s)
have not been prosecuted to finality. As the prospects pale
into significance, coupled with my view that it would be improper
to
deal with the grounds advanced for the reasons already stated, I am
of the view no compelling reasons exist to deviate from
the starting
point that the applicants are entitled to a final winding up order.
I add, that even if it would not be improper
for me to deal with the
grounds advanced on which a rescission would be granted, I am still
of the view that such grounds pale
into significance once the
inordinate delay and the absence of a reasonable explanation comes
into play and, as a result, it is
unnecessary to deal therewith.
I am therefore disinclined to acquiesce to the respondent’s
request to exercise my discretion
in its favour.
[24]
There are no reasons to deviate from the
usual costs order in respect of winding up orders.
[25]
In the premises I make the following
order:
1.
The provisional order for the winding up
of the respondent granted on 8 March 2023 by Keightley J is confirmed
and made final and
the respondent is placed under final winding up
and in the hands of the Master.
2.
The costs of the application, including
the costs occasioned by all supplementary affidavits and
supplementary heads of argument,
are costs in the winding up of the
respondent.
C THOMPSON
ACTING JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG LOCAL DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
COUNSEL
FOR THE APPLICANT:
ADV P van der BERG
APPLICANT’S
ATTORNEYS:
TLI ATTORNEYS INC
COUNSEL
FOR THE RESPONDENTS:
ADV S MILLER
RESPONDENTS
ATTORNEYS:
COX
YEATS ATTORNEYS
DATE OF HEARING:
16 MAY 2023
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
18 MAY 2023
[1]
61
of 1973
[2]
Afgri
Operations Limited v Hamba Fleet (Pty) Ltd
(542/2016)
[2017] ZASCA 24
;
2022 (1) SA 91
(SCA) (24 March
2017) at para [12]
“
Notwithstanding
its awareness of the fact that its discretion must be exercised
judicially, the court a quo did not keep in view
the specific
principle that, generally speaking, an unpaid creditor has a
right,
ex
debito justitiae
,
to a winding-up order against the respondent company that has not
discharged that debt. Different considerations may apply
where
business rescue proceedings are being considered in terms of Part A
of chapter six of the new
Companies
Act 71 of 2008
.
Those considerations are not relevant to these proceedings. The
court a quo also did not heed the principle that, in practice,
the
discretion of a court to refuse to grant a winding-up order where an
unpaid creditor applies therefor is a ‘very narrow
one’
that is rarely exercised and in special or unusual circumstances
only.”
[3]
(17096/2020)
[2022] ZAWCHC 29
(24 February 2022)
[4]
2015 (4) SA 449 (WCC)
[5]
Tafeni
v S
(A282/15)
[2015] ZAWCHC 150
;
2016 (2) SACR 720
(WCC) (16 October 2015)
at para [3]
[6]
Trencon
Construction (Pty) Ltd v Industrial Development Corporation of South
Africa Ltd and Another
2015
(5) SA 245
(CC)
at para [83] – [88]
[7]
Van
Wyk v Unitas Hospital & Another
[2007] ZACC 24
;
2008
(2) SA 472
(CC) at para
[22]
[8]
Minister
of Justice v Ntuli
i
[1997] ZACC 7
;
1997
(3) SA 772
(CC) at para
[29]
[9]
Van
Wyk
,
supra
at
para [33]
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