Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 611South Africa
Divaris and Another v Master of the High Court Johannesburg and Others (046772/2023) [2023] ZAGPJHC 611 (1 June 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
1 June 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Divaris and Another v Master of the High Court Johannesburg and Others (046772/2023) [2023] ZAGPJHC 611 (1 June 2023)
Divaris and Another v Master of the High Court Johannesburg and Others (046772/2023) [2023] ZAGPJHC 611 (1 June 2023)
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sino date 1 June 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case Number:
046772/2023
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
REVISED
In
the matter between:
JUSTIN
NICHLAS DIVARIS
1
st
Applicant
DAYTONA
(PTY) LTD T/A ROLLS ROYCE MOTOR CARS JOHANNESBURG
2
nd
Applicant
And
THE
MASTER OF THE HIGH COURT JOHANNESBURG
1
st
Respondent
SAFFY,
LUKE BARNARD
N.O
2
nd
Respondent
DU
PLESSIS, JOHANNES HENDRICUS
N.O
3
rd
Respondent
KGATLE,
LOUISA SELINA
N.O
4
th
Respondent
NEUTRAL
CITATION:
Justin Nichlas Divaris & Another v The Master of
the High Court Johannesburg & Others
(Case No: 046772/2023)
[2023]
ZAGPJHC 611 (01 June 2023)
ORDER
1.
The summons issued in terms of
Section 152(2)
of
the
Insolvency Act of 1936
dated and issued by the First Respondent
on 18 April 2023 in the insolvent estate of Sheperd Huxley Bushiri
with Master Reference
Number G1230/2020 (“the insolvent
estate”) and directed at the Applicants, is set aside.
2.
The costs of the application are costs in the
administration of the insolvent estate.
JUDGMENT
Thompson AJ:
[1]
Effectively, the absence of the sum of R584,00 and
the inability of applying a practical and logical solution to a
simple error,
has given rise to extensive High Court litigation in
the urgent court.
[2]
The
controversy in this matter to be determined is whether the Summons in
terms of
Section 152
of the Insolvency Act
[1]
(“the Act”) is valid in the absence of a proper tender
for witness fees as allowed for in terms of the Tariff of Allowances
Payable to Witnesses in Civil Cases
[2]
(“the prescribed fees”). A similar issue is raised
in respect of the failure to tender the reasonable travelling
and
subsistence costs of the first respondent who is resident in Cape
Town. For the reasons to follow, I will only deal with
the
witness fees issue.
[3]
It is common cause that the witness fees tendered
in the summons are “
an allowance
equal to the actual amount of income which the Trustees may found be
forfeited by the witness as a result of the witness’s
attendance at this examination to a maximum of R1500,00 per day
.”
It is further common cause that the prescribed fees allow for a
maximum of R2 084,00.
[4]
In
terms of settled authority,
[3]
it was incumbent on the trustees of the insolvent estate to tender
the correct sum as per the prescribed fees. A tender of
the
incorrect or erroneous and lower sum as per the prescribed fees
renders the summons defective and, on this ground alone, may
be set
aside.
[4]
These
authorities are binding upon me and, unless I can find that they are
clearly wrongly decided or are distinguishable
on the facts, I am
bound to follow them.
[5]
Mr Riley
,
appearing on behalf of the second to fourth respondents, did not seek
to persuade me that the aforesaid authorities are clearly
wrong,
rather he contended that this matter is distinguishable on the
facts. The distinguishing feature he relied upon is
the fact
that in correspondences prior to the institution of the application,
no issue was raised in respect of the failure to
tender the correct
witness fees. In this regard it was very loosely and without
real vigour argued that the applicants waived
their rights to rely on
the failure to tender the correct witness fees.
[6]
Various
problems arise from this argument. I do not intend to deal with
all the problems and will only refer to two aspects.
Firstly,
waiver must be pertinently raised and pleaded.
[5]
Waiver has not been raised in the answering affidavit.
Secondly, even if waiver was raised, it would have been incumbent
on
the respondents to demonstrate that the applicants, with full
knowledge of the existence of the right alleged to be waived,
clearly
waived same. At least on one occasion the applicants’
attorneys stated during correspondences that no election
or waiver of
any nature whatsoever should be construed and that all rights are
reserved.
[7]
It was, as a back-up measure, advanced by the
second respondents during argument that the matter remains
distinguishable on the
facts to the
Swart
-matter
on the basis that the applicants’ tendered to give evidence at
the enquiry, provided that it is done by remote means
(also described
as virtual proceedings). The difficulty in this regard for the
second to fourth respondents is that the tender
to give evidence by
way of remote proceedings was subject thereto that if no agreement
relating thereto can be reached, the applicants
will seek to have the
summons set aside.
[8]
No agreement could be reached pertaining to the
giving of evidence by way of remote proceedings. It bears
mentioning that
the Master, after the application was launched,
issued a ruling that the first applicant may give evidence by way of
remote proceedings,
however the applicants must pay the costs of an
attorney to supervise the proceedings. Pertinent to this
ruling, the Master
indicated that if same is not acceptable to the
applicants, the second to fourth respondents are authorised to oppose
the application.
Although the applicants did not expressly
respond to the Master’s direction or the second to fourth
respondents’ attorney’s
correspondence consequent upon
the Master’s direction the applicants’ conduct made it
quite clear that the Master’s
direction was not acceptable as
they did not withdraw the application.
[9]
The tender relied upon by the second to fourth
respondents as causing this matter to be factually distinguishable
is, in my view,
nothing more than a practicable suggestion by the
applicants to resolve the
impasse
.
A more correct view of the attempt to distinguish this matter from
the
Swart
-judgment
is nothing more than an attempt to rely on waiver in a disguised
form. Accordingly, in my view this matter is not
distinguishable from the
Swart
-judgment
and I am bound thereby.
[10]
This brings me to the issue of costs. The
applicants seek an order
de bonis
propriis
against the second to fourth
respondents. The basis for the claim for costs
de
bonis propriis
is based thereon that
the second to fourth respondents “
elected
to oppose the application without any valid basis in law, and
disparagingly so, . . .
”
.
In my view, the second to fourth respondents were fully entitled to
oppose the application on the basis that the facts of
this matter is
distinguishable from the facts in the
Swart
-judgment.
The fact that they were wrong in that regard does not make their
opposition frivolous, unreasonable or negligent.
The fact there
was a more cost-effective manner for the second to fourth respondents
to have dealt with the matter, by merely causing
the summons to be
withdrawn, issuing a new one compliant with the law and serving same,
does not make their opposition,
per se
,
frivolous. One would expect them, in future, to act with
greater care since the estate of the insolvent has no funds
available.
To litigate in such circumstances does, however,
border on negligent conduct either by the trustees or negligent
advice by the
attorneys acting for the trustees. I am mindful
that I am unaware as to who this potential negligence can be
attributed to.
[11]
As to
the disparaging submission, it is my respectful view that the
applicant as well as the second to fourth respondents have acted
towards in a manner that is uncalled for in litigation. As mere
examples, the applicant sought to cast a speculative assertion
against the second to fourth respondents’ attorneys pertaining
to their independence as the attorneys previously acted for
the
applicant’s ex-wife during divorce proceedings. This
allegation took the applicant’s case no further and,
no doubt,
raised the ire of the second to fourth respondents’ attorney.
This was evident from the fact that at a later
stage the second to
fourth respondents’ attorney accused counsel appearing on
behalf of the applicant of misleading the court.
[6]
[12]
Simply put, all of the parties engaged in the
litigation before me, at some stage transgressed into the realms of
uncalled for conduct.
I see no reason why one party should
suffer a censure whilst the other, equally guilty of such conduct,
should emerge unscathed
by their conduct. However, to attempt
to determine the varying degrees of guilt to be attributed to both
parties would result
in nothing more than a waste of judicial
resources. As such, I am of the view in exercising my
discretion that although all
parties’ conduct, at times, were
uncalled for, nothing amounts to conduct that warrants an order
de
bonis propriis
.
[13]
Accordingly, I make the following order:
3.
The summons issued in terms of
Section 152(2)
of
the
Insolvency Act of 1936
dated and issued by the First Respondent
on 18 April 2023 in the insolvent estate of Sheperd Huxley Bushiri
with Master Reference
Number G1230/2020 (“the insolvent
estate”) and directed at the Applicants, is set aside.
4.
The costs of the application are costs in the
administration of the insolvent estate.
C E THOMPSON AJ
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
JOHANNESBURG
DATE
OF HEARING:
31 May 2023
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
01 June 2023
APPEARANCES
For
the Applicants:
Adv. HP Nieuwenhuizen
Instructed
by
:
Allan Allschwang &
Associates
For
the 2
nd
to
4
th
Respondents:
Adv. N. Riley
Instructed
by
:
Snaid
& Morris Incoroporated
[1]
24 of
2936
[2]
Published
under GN R394a in GG 30953 of 11 April 2008 as amended by GN R965 in
GG 41096 of 6 September 2017.
[3]
Swart
v Cronje NNO
1991
(4) SA 296
(T) as approved in
Mattheys
& Another v Coetzee & Another
[1997]
3 All SA 675 (W)
[4]
Swart
,
supra
at
298
“
Die
applikante was nie verplig om die ondervraging by te woon terwyl die
korrekte gelde nie aan hulle getender was nie en daar
inderdaad
foutiewe en laer gelde as geregtig is aan hulle getender was.
Op hierdie grond alleen kan die lasbriewe myns
insiens tersyde
gestel word
.”
[5]
Coppermoon
Trading 13 (Pty) Ltd v Governemtn of the Province of the Eastern
Cape & Another
(2949/05)
[2019] ZAECBHC 16;
2020 (3) SA 391
(ECB) (18 June 2019) at para [15]
[6]
For
clarity purposes, applicant’s counsel did not mislead the
court.
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