Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 621South Africa
GloSee Chemicals CC v Hulley (A3097/2022 ; 1595/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 621 (5 June 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
5 June 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Appeal – reconsideration of ex parte attachment –
Judgment
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## GloSee Chemicals CC v Hulley (A3097/2022 ; 1595/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 621 (5 June 2023)
GloSee Chemicals CC v Hulley (A3097/2022 ; 1595/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 621 (5 June 2023)
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REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
APPEAL
CASE NO
:
A3097/2022
COURT
A QUO
CASE NO
:
1595/2021
DATE
:
5
th
June 2023
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
In the matter between:
GLO-SEE
CHEMICALS CC
Appellant
and
HULLEY
,
RUSSEL
Respondent
Neutral Citation
:
Glo-See Chemicals v Hulley (A5046/2022)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 621
(5 June 2023)
Coram:
Adams J
et
Turner AJ
Heard
: 26
January 2023
Delivered:
5 June
2023 – This judgment was handed down electronically by
circulation to the parties' representatives
via
email, by
being uploaded to
CaseLines
and by release to SAFLII. The date
and time for hand-down is deemed to be 10:30 on 5 June 2023.
Summary:
Appeal
– reconsideration of
ex parte
attachment –
Appeal –
condonation – relevance of transcript of argument delaying
appeal.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
The
Magistrates Court for the district of Ekurhuleni South East, Benoni
(Additional Magistrate Nana sitting as Court of first instance):
(1)
The appellant’s application for
condonation is dismissed.
(2)
The appellant’s appeal is dismissed.
(3)
The appellant is required to comply with
the order of the Learned Magistrate dated 25 August 2021 and to
return the two containers
to the respondent and to restore them to
the same condition they were in prior to removal by the Sheriff, at
the cost of the appellant.
(4)
The appellant shall pay the respondent’s
costs in the application for condonation and his costs in the appeal.
JUDGMENT
Turner AJ (Adams J
concurring):
[1]
The appellant appeals against a decision of
Additional Magistrate Nana sitting at the Ekurhuleni South
Magistrate's Court, Benoni,
in which the Learned Magistrate
discharged the
rule nisi
that
had been obtained by the appellant (as applicant) on an
ex
parte
basis against the respondent.
[2]
During 2017, the respondent resided on a
property belonging to the appellant. While he was staying there, he
and the appellant agreed
that the respondent would work for the
appellant and that payment for that work would be in a form of two
shipping containers.
On the affidavits exchanged, there is a dispute
between the parties as to what work the respondent was obliged to do
in exchange
for the shipping containers and consequently, whether the
work was done.
[3]
The respondent left the appellant’s
premises in November 2017 and took the two shipping containers with
him to his own property.
From October 2018 to January 2021, the
respondent was in Zambia. It appears that there was no dispute
between the parties over
the containers between November 2017 and
October 2018 and, although not stated expressly, it appears that the
containers remained
on the respondent’s property in South
Africa while he was away.
[4]
After the respondent returned to South
Africa, Mr Menezes of the appellant sent the respondent a long
WhatsApp
message on 7 April 2021, recording what appear to be several
contentious matters between them. I quote the full message as it is
relevant to the procedure that was followed by the appellant after it
was sent.
‘
Hi
Russel,
Sorry to be an
inconvenience. I had some time to think and felt that I have been
treated unfairly. We had made a deal that you would
help me build
three container homes (myself, Zayne and Clarice) in exchange for 2
containers. You stayed here a year to complete
it but upon your
choice you uplifted the containers and went to your plot without
completing the container homes. I have asked
you to please come help
me complete the homes to honour our agreement, but instead you used
this opportunity to break our verbal
contract by bringing up Jan's
wheelchair lift to this equation, which had nothing to do with our
original deal. And you also did
work for my parents and handed it
over to Kyle to complete on your behalf when you went to Zambia, but
Kyle abandoned the job because
of issues between himself and Jaylene
sleeping over in Leo's flat and my mom walking in on them and chasing
Jaylene out, resulting
in Kyle abandoning the job. The job was not
completed. A loan of R2000 was given to Kyle by my parents at the
time, therefore my
parents didn't pay for the rest of job because it
was not completed. You should go speak to my parents regarding the
incompletion
of the job and the non-payment. I don't see how I am
suddenly responsible for their projects and payments and it is quite
sad that
I had to choose between option 1 and 2. I didn't know our
friendship was worth money. I plead and demand for the return of my
containers
due to your failure to complete your obligation. I would
like to give you an opportunity to come clean and give me what
belongs
to me.
Thank you.’
[5]
When the appellant did not receive an
answer to this
WhatsApp
message, he launched an application in the Magistrate's Court, on an
ex parte
basis.
The relief claimed in the Notice of Motion was the following:
‘
(a)
That an Order be granted authorising and directing the Sheriff of the
Magistrate's Court to search, attach, seize and hand over
to the
appellant certain 2 (two) containers belonging to the applicant,
being: -
Make: Shipping container
Colour: Green
Serial/identification No:
MOTU0306000 and
Make: Shipping container
Colour: Green
Serial/identification No:
MOTU0328761
at present in the
possession of the Respondent or wherever it may be found.
(b) That the
Respondent be called upon to show cause to this Honourable Court on
this the 23 day of June 2021 at 09:00 or
so soon thereafter as the
matter may be heard as to why this Order shall not be made final;
alternatively
(c) Payment in the
sum of R98,382.50 … in respect of the two containers.
(d) That prayer (a)
above shall act as interim order with immediate effect.’
[6]
An order was granted in these terms
ex
parte
on 13 May 2021.
[7]
The respondent first received notice of
this Order on 25 or 26 May 2021 when the Sheriff executed the order.
In his answering affidavit,
the respondent records that the Sheriff
entered his property, removed assets from the containers, damaged the
fixtures and fittings
connected to the containers and removed the
containers. The damage complained of included damage to fittings
supplying water and
electricity to the containers, which had been cut
away from the containers with a grinder.
[8]
On 4 June 2021, the respondent delivered an
affidavit opposing and responding to the urgent
ex
parte
application and anticipating the
return date. By the time that the answering affidavit was
delivered, the containers had been
removed from the respondent’s
premises by the Sheriff and had been placed in the custody of the
appellant.
[9]
In the answering affidavit, the respondent
set out various points
in limine
and also addressed the merits of the applicant’s
case. In doing so, he set out a strong challenge to the
applicant’s
conduct in bringing the application on an urgent
and
ex parte
basis,
setting out facts and arguments why there was no justification for
the appellant having done so. He also set out facts which
he contends
ought to have been brought to the attention of the Court in the
founding papers if the applicant had acted
bona
fide
in bringing the application on an
ex parte
basis.
[10]
In dealing with the merits of the dispute,
the respondent recorded what he contended was the true agreement
between the parties.
He denied that there was an agreement that he
would convert three containers into residential units. Rather, he
alleged that he
undertook to convert one silver aluminium shipping
container into a residential unit, that he did this work and was paid
with one
green shipping container. He says that after he had
completed the silver container, he agreed to perform further general
construction
and engineering services for the appellant and that, in
return for rendering those services, he was compensated with the
transfer
of the second container.
[11]
Having set out the contractual basis on
which he had received the containers as payment for his services, the
respondent asserted
that the appellant had transferred ownership of
the containers to him and that from 2017, he was the lawful owner of
the containers.
He emphasised that, by the time the application was
brought, he had been in possession of the containers for more than
three years,
during which time his ownership was not disputed by the
applicant.
[12]
The matter was heard by the Court
a
quo
on 23 June 2021 and judgment was
delivered on 25 August 2021. In that judgment, the Court found
inter
alia
that the appellant had not
justified the
ex parte
basis
of the application and, in particular, had not established that the
giving of notice to the respondent would have defeated
the purpose of
the application. The Court also held that the degree of urgency with
which the applicant had proceeded was not justified.
Where the
appellant had waited more than three years to lodge a claim and
where, even if the containers were sold, the appellant
would be
content to receive payment of damages in lieu of the containers,
there was no justification for the appellant having brought
the
application urgently and without notice.
[13]
The Court
a
quo
also found that there was a dispute
of fact over the rights to the two containers, that the respondent
had shown good cause to
support an argument that he was in fact the
owner of the containers, including the fact that he had been in
undisturbed possession
of those containers for more than three years.
[14]
In the circumstances, the Court discharged
the
ex parte
order
that had been made on 13 May 2021 and ordered that the two containers
be returned to the respondent and be restored in the
same condition
in which they were found, at the cost of the applicant. The Court did
not make a final decision on any of the merits
of the application,
finding merely that the interim order that had been granted on an
ex
parte
basis should be discharged.
# Appeal and Condonation
Appeal and Condonation
[15]
The appellant delivered a notice of appeal
on 30 August 2021, within a week after the judgment
a
quo
was handed down. However, the
record was only lodged and an appeal date applied for in July 2022,
almost 11 months later.
[16]
It is common cause that the 60-day period
allowed for prosecuting the appeal expired on 30 November 2021.
Consequently, the appellant
required condonation to resuscitate the
appeal.
[17]
An application for condonation was
delivered on 15 July 2022 when the appellant delivered its
application for a hearing date. The
respondent opposed the
application.
[18]
To succeed in obtaining condonation, the
appellant must establish ‘good cause’ to excuse and
condone the non-compliance.
There is no exhaustive definition
of what constitutes
‘
good cause’
,
but the key factors informing the exercising of a court’s
discretion in evaluating an application for condonation include:
18.1
The appellant must furnish an explanation
of its default which is sufficiently full to enable the Court to
understand how the delay
came about and to assess the applicant’s
conduct and motives, having regard to those facts. A full and
reasonable explanation,
which covers the entire period of the delay,
must be given. The application must be
bona
fide
and not made with the intention of
delay.
18.2
The appellant for condonation must also
satisfy the court that it has
bona fide
prospects of success in pursuing the matter. In an appeal such as the
current one, the papers before the Court should reveal
prima
facie
that the appellant has prospects
of success.
18.3
In any matter, additional factors may be
considered, such as prejudice to the parties that cannot be
compensated by costs.
18.4
In all respects, the court must undertake a
broad assessment of whether it is in the interests of justice to
grant condonation and
the importance of the matter is a relevant
factor in determining the interests of justice.
(
Ferris
v FirstRand Bank Ltd
[1]
,
Van
Wyk v Unitas Hospital
[2]
).
[19]
In the condonation application, the
appellant explains that the primary reason for the delay was that the
transcript of the proceedings
before the Magistrate was not available
in time. The appellant requested the audio recording from the
stenographers on 7 September
2021 and followed up multiple times
between September 2021 and March 2022. On 30 March 2022, the
transcribing company requested
payment of a deposit to commence with
transcription of the record, indicating that the audio recording had
been found. The appellant
made payment of that deposit on 5 April
2022 and paid the final amount on 13 April 2022. The transcript was
received on 19 April
2022.
[20]
As we discuss below, no justification has
been given for the appellant waiting for the transcript of
proceedings. However, even
if the transcript were relevant, I would
expect a reasonable appellant to have prepared all other parts of the
record while
waiting for the transcript. However, it was only on 25
April 2022 that the appellant enlisted the services of Legal
Documents Services
(LDS) to assist with the preparation of the appeal
record. It received a draft version of the record from LDS on 16 May
2022.
[21]
In trying to explain the delay from April
to July 2022, the appellant relies on letters it wrote to the
respondent requesting the
respondent to comment on the index to the
record and consent to condonation being granted. It wrote those
letters on 12,
18 and 23 May 2022. In response, the respondent record
that he would not confirm whether he would oppose an application for
condonation
until the condonation application had been delivered.
This clearly put the appellant on notice that it should deliver the
appeal
record and prosecute the appeal.
[22]
On 4 July 2022, when he had heard nothing
from the appellant, the respondent wrote, accusing the appellant of
intentionally delaying
the resolution of the appeal and he demanded
that the appellant take all necessary steps within ten days, failing
which the respondent
will apply to strike out the appeal. The
appellant then delivered its application for condonation and its
application for an appeal
date on 15 July 2022.
[23]
It appears that the sole reason relied upon
by the appellant for the delay between April 2022 (when it received
the transcript)
and 15 July 2022 is an allegation that the respondent
did not comment on the index to the draft appeal record. It suggests
that
the respondent’s failure to comment on the index justifies
its delay in prosecuting the appeal.
[24]
In my view, the explanation is
unsatisfactory. First, the appellant has not explained why the
transcript was necessary in the first
place. The proceedings before
the Learned Magistrate were motion proceedings. Consequently, all of
the relevant evidence was recorded
in affidavits and the oral hearing
of the matter involved only counsel’s submissions. In some
cases, it may be necessary
for the transcript of argument to be
provided to the Appeal Court; for example, if there is a dispute over
whether a concession
was made in argument. However, the appellant’s
condonation application does not identify any particular aspect in
the transcript
which was required for purposes of prosecuting the
appeal. All that is stated is that ‘the transcript in the
proceedings
is particularly germane to the issues raised in the
appeal and therefore essential for the record. This includes the
admissibility
of certain evidence’. Such a vague and
unspecified statement provides no factual basis to motivate for the
inclusion of the
transcribed argument.
[25]
Second, the overwhelming impression created
by the delay after April 2022 is that the appellant was intent on
retaining possession
of the containers and delaying the prosecution
of the appeal.
[26]
In my view, the delay between receiving the
transcript in mid-April 2022 and prosecuting the appeal on 15 July
2022 is unexplained
and consequently, the appellant has not crossed
the necessary threshold to succeed in its application for
condonation.
[27]
Further, insofar as the merits of the
appeal are concerned, it does not appear to me that the appellant had
any prospect of success
on appeal either. First, even though
the respondent did not take the point, it appears doubtful whether
the Magistrate’s
decision was appealable at all. Second, in
light of the long delay between November 2017 and April 2021 and the
various disputes
that were anticipated in the long
WhatsApp
message quoted above, there does not appear to be any justification
for the applicant to have approached the Court on an
ex
parte
basis.
[28]
An
ex parte
application is an extraordinary procedure, particularly when it is
used to affect the rights of another party, as it employs the
machinery of Court to affect the rights of that party without
affording that party the right to be heard before his rights are
affected – undermining a fundamental principle of natural
justice. The limited circumstances in which an
ex
parte
application may be employed are
usefully summarised as follows in
Erasmus
,
Superior Court Practice
RS20 D1-59 to 61:
‘
An
ex parte
application
is used: (i) when the appellant is the only person who is
interested in the relief which is being claimed; (ii) where
the
relief sought is a preliminary step in the proceedings, eg
applications to sue by edictal citation, for substituted service,
to
attach or confound or confirm jurisdiction; (iii) where the
nature of the relief sought is such that the giving of notice
may
defeat the purpose of the application, eg an Anton Piller type order;
(iv) where immediate relief, even though it may
be temporary in
nature, is essential because harm is imminent. In such cases the
appellant will often seek a rule nisi, the application
then being in
the nature of an
ex parte
application in terms of the sub-rule; (v) where
certain kinds of applications are customarily brought
ex
parte
… … …
Good
faith is a
sine qua non
in
ex parte
applications.
It extends also to legal representatives.
If any
material facts are not disclosed, whether they be wilfully suppressed
or negligently omitted, the court may on that ground
alone dismiss an
ex parte
application.’
(See the cases referred
to in
Erasmus
).
[29]
In the current matter, the appellant did
not bring itself within any of the above categories or meet the
requirements for an
ex parte
order: (i) This was not a matter where the
appellant was the only person interested in the relief claimed, the
respondent’s
interests were directly and negatively affected;
(ii) The relief sought was not a preliminary step in the
proceedings, it
meted out substantial impact on the respondent by
depriving him of the containers and breaking off the fixtures and
fittings; (iii) There
was no evidence to support a conclusion
that the giving of notice to the defendant and permitting him to
defend the application
would defeat the purpose of the application.
The containers had remained in place at his premises for more than
three years and
there was no indication that he would spirit them
away when the application was served. (iv) There was no evidence
to support
a conclusion that harm was imminent and therefore
immediate relief was essential. Not only was there no evidence that
the containers
would be removed but the damages claimed in the
alternative shows that there was nothing essential or unique in
securing those
particular containers. (v) An invasive attachment
and removal of assets is not the kind of application that is
customarily
brought
ex parte.
The order ought not to have been sought or granted
ex parte
.
[30]
On a review of the answering and replying
affidavits, it is abundantly clear that the respondent had been given
possession of the
containers and had removed them from the
appellant’s premises in November 2017 with the consent of the
appellant. It is also
clear that before he launched the application
the applicant knew the respondent disputed his version of events or,
at least, he
ought to have anticipated that the respondent disputed
his version. In the circumstances, the necessary inference to be
drawn is
that the appellant intentionally abused the
ex
parte
process to secure an unjustified
and unlawful advantage, using it to take possession of the containers
without having to address
and overcome the defences that it expected
the respondent would raise.
[31]
The appellant has argued that the matter is
one of significant importance to it as a small business, and
therefore it is in the
interests of justice to grant condonation.
However, the available evidence does not support this submission.
The appellant
did not act to recover the containers for three years
after they were removed in November 2017, this shows that they were
not an
important part of its business. In addition, the
appellant has instituted action proceedings in which the fate of the
containers
will be decided and so a result in its favour in the
current matter is not decisive of the parties’ rights.
# Conclusion
Conclusion
[32]
In the circumstances, the appellant has not
met the threshold for condonation to be granted. Not only has the
appellant failed to
provide a satisfactory explanation for the
extended delay but it has also failed to show prospects of success on
appeal. It is
not in the interests of justice for condonation to be
granted.
[33]
For all of these reasons, the appellant’s
application for condonation of its failure to timeously prosecute its
appeal should
fail and the order of the court
a
quo
should be confirmed. It follows
that the appeal should be dismissed.
[34]
As
for the costs of the appeal, it is so that the general rule is that
the successful party should be given his costs, and this
rule should
not be departed from except where there are good grounds for doing
so. See:
Myers
v Abramson
[3]
.
There
are no grounds in this case to depart from the ordinary rule that
costs should follow the result. I therefore intend granting
costs
against the appellant in favour of the respondent.
Order
[35]
In the result, the following order is made:
-
(1)
The appellant’s application for
condonation is dismissed.
(2)
The appellant’s appeal is dismissed.
(3)
The appellant is required to comply with
the order of the Learned Magistrate dated 25 August 2021 and to
return the two containers
to the respondent and to restore them to
the same condition they were in prior to removal by the Sheriff, at
the cost of the appellant.
(4)
The appellant shall pay the respondent’s
costs in the application for condonation and his costs in the appeal.
D TURNER
Judge of the High
Court
Gauteng
Division, Johannesburg
HEARD ON:
26
th
January 2023
JUDGMENT DATE:
5
th
June
2023 – judgment handed down electronically
FOR THE APPELLANT:
Adv J C Viljoen
INSTRUCTED BY:
J J R Botha Attorneys,
Edleen, Kempton Park
FOR THE RESPONDENT:
Adv Fundile Sangoni
INSTRUCTED BY:
Malherbe Rigg &
Ranwell Inc, Boksburg
[1]
Ferris
v FirstRand Bank Ltd
2014
(3) SA 39 (CC);
[2]
Van
Wyk v Unitas Hospital
[2007] ZACC 24
;
2008
(2) SA 472
(CC) at 477 E-G;
[3]
Myers
v Abramson
,1951(3)
SA 438 (C) at 455
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