Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 823South Africa
Dollar Rent A Car and Another v Moolla NO and Others (3536/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 823 (24 July 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
24 July 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Dollar Rent A Car and Another v Moolla NO and Others (3536/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 823 (24 July 2023)
Dollar Rent A Car and Another v Moolla NO and Others (3536/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 823 (24 July 2023)
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sino date 24 July 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
CASE NO: 3536/2022
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES
REVISED
24.07.23
In
the matter between
DOLLAR
RENT A CAR
FIRST
APPLICANT
THRIFTY
RENT-A-CAR SYSTEM INC
SECOND
APPLICANT
and
YUNUS
MOOLLA NO
FIRST
RESPONDENT
IMRAAN
MOOLLA NO
SECOND
APPLICANT
THE
TRUSTEES OF SAFY TRUST FOR THE TIME BEING
THIRD
APPLICANT
SPRINGS
CAR WHOLESALERS (PTY) LTD
FOURTH
APPLICANT
J U D G M E N T
(RULE 7 APPLICATION)
VAN
OOSTEN J:
Introduction
[1] A unique and probably
unprecedented situation has arisen in this case: the respondents’
Rule 7 application which was initiated
by a notice in terms of Rule 7
dated 4 February 2022, is now, after judgment has been delivered on
the merits of the main application,
being heard.
[2] A full set of
affidavits was filed in the Rule 7 application and the determination
thereof was reserved for hearing on the return
day, by Vally J. When
the hearing commenced before me, no attempt was made on behalf of the
respondents to refer to and argue the
rule 7 application. The hearing
of the main application proceeded and travelled a long and winding
road until final argument was
heard and judgment delivered.
[3] The respondents filed
an application for leave to appeal the judgment, which eventually,
after the filing of heads of argument
by both counsel, came up for
hearing before me. One of the grounds in support of the application
for leave to appeal was that no
findings had been made in the
judgment on the merits regarding the Rule 7 application.
[4] Counsel for the
respondents contended that he ‘was stopped’ from arguing
the Rule 7 application while presenting
argument on the merits of the
application and before judgment was delivered. The less said about
this submission the better. It
was the duty of counsel, as he was
driven to concede, to ensure that the Rule 7 was called and heard at
the opportune time. It
is not for the court to
mero motu
issue
directions as to when interlocutory applications should be heard.
Regarding the Rule 7 application, the respondents are
domini litis
and counsel for the respondents was in duty bound to refer to the
application and seek leave from the court to proceed with argument
thereon, or to obtain directions from the court as to the hearing of
the application. This counsel failed to do.
[5] The opportune time
for the adjudication of a Rule 7 application, in general, is as soon
as possible, which in the present case
was when the matter was called
for hearing on the return day, before me, and thus before the
continuation of the hearing of the
main application. The hearing of
the matter on the first day, in any event, stood down for the filing
of further affidavits, and
no reason has been proffered, nor is there
any, why the Rule 7 application was not called and continued with at
that time. The
reason for a speedy determination of the application
is immediately apparent from a reading of Rule 7: once authority is
challenged,
Rule 7 provides for the suspension of the hearing of the
matter until the court is satisfied that authority has been
established.
It would accordingly make no sense for a Rule 7
application to be heard at the final stage of the hearing, even less
so by raising
it as an argument as part of the arguments presented on
the merits of the application.
[6] I do not propose to
say anything more on the procedure as it may well impact on the costs
order eventually made in the Rule
7 application or this case. Suffice
to say, both counsel in argument conceded that in the circumstances
of this case, it would
be just and equitable to hear the Rule 7
application, despite judgment in the main application having been
delivered.
Application of Rule 7
[7] In argument before
me, I raised with counsel the question whether Rule 7 applies
regarding the issue requiring determination.
Once again heads of
argument were requested and both counsel complied. I am grateful to
counsel for the helpful arguments presented
on this novel point.
[8] Rule 7, under the
rubric, Power of Attorney, provides as follows:
‘
(1) Subject to the
provisions of subrules (2) and (3) the power of attorney to act need
not be filed, but the authority of anyone
acting on behalf of a party
may within 10 days after it has come to the notice of a party that
such a person is so acting, or with
leave of the court on good cause
shown at any time before judgment, be disputed whereafter such person
may no longer act unless
he satisfied the court that he is so
authorised to act, and to enable him to do so the court may postpone
the hearing of the action
or application.’
[9] Upon a strict
interpretation of Rule 7, it applies only to challenges relating to
the authority of anyone to act on behalf of
a party. Although the
Rule 7 application in this matter, addressed such authority, the
original grounds relied on in the notice
of motion, were abandoned,
and the
locus standi
challenge raised and pursued. I agree
with counsel for the respondents that the
locus standi
challenge was raised and ventilated in the Rule 7 application, and
for that reason, the ambit of Rule 7 should, on the facts of
this
matter, be extended to include the
locus standi
challenge.
THE RULE 7 CHALLENGE
[10] In the notice of
motion pertaining to the Rule 7 notice, the respondents dispute that
the applicants have the appropriate authority
to institute these
proceedings in terms of Rule 7, and the applicants are called upon to
demonstrate such authority with reference
to, first, resolutions of
directors of the first and second applicants duly authorising the
applicants to bring these proceedings,
second, resolutions of the
appropriate trustees and/or liquidators and/or voluntary bankruptcy
representatives who have been appointed
in the liquidation
proceedings, and third, such authority and/or powers of attorney
demonstrating the authority of Dentons Attorneys
to represent the
applicants in these proceedings.
[11] None of these were
persisted with at the hearing of the Rule 7 application. The goal
post shifted to the single point taken
that the second applicant,
cited as Thrifty Rent-a-Car System Incorporated, is the incorrect
party before court, does not exist
and therefore lacks
locus
standi
to claim the relief sought (the
locus standi
challenge), resulting in a ‘fatal non-joinder’.
[12] The
locus standi
challenge came to the fore in the affidavits filed in the Rule 7
application, in particular the respondents’ rebuttal affidavit.
The applicants filed a resolution and power of attorney by Thrifty
Rent-A-Car System Incorporated in the opposing affidavit in
the Rule
7 application, regarding the second applicant, cited in the founding
affidavit in the main application, as Thrifty Rent-A-Car
System
Incorporated, described as ‘an American company duly
incorporated in Tulsa Oklahoma, USA, with registration number
1900254253, and having its registered address at 5330 East 31 Street,
Tulsa, Oklahoma 74135, United States of America’, in
respect of
which the second applicant’s ‘certificate of
incorporation’ is attached. The ‘certificate of
incorporation’ attached to the founding affidavit, comprising
two certificates, reflect that Thrifty Rent-A-Car System LLC
has
filed in the office of the Oklahoma Secretary of State, ‘duly
authenticated evidence of a conversion, as provided for
by the laws
of the State of Oklahoma’. The certificate does not refer to
the name Thrifty Rent-A-Car System Incorporated
at all, nor that
Thrifty Rent-A-Car System Incorporated has been converted to Thrifty
Rent-A-Car System LLC. A number ‘1900254253’
appears
in-between two printed paragraphs on the second certificate, which
evidently was inserted by hand. No explanation exists
for the
presence of this number in manuscript, on the document.
[13] In response hereto,
the respondents’ attorney, in the rebuttal affidavit, states
that a search conducted on the official
website of Oklahoma
Corporation and Business Entity Search, produced the result of
showing three similar Thrifty entities, with
names, Thrifty
Rent-A-Car System Incorporated, with registration number 1900254253,
Status: Inactive; Thrifty Rent-A-Car System
LLC, with registration
number 3512563636, Status: In Use; and Thrifty Rent-A-Car with
registration number 1910250224, Status: Active.
Only the first name
and particulars reflect the details provided by the applicants
regarding the second applicant. The deponent
accordingly concluded
that the second applicant was and is inactive and non-existent.
[14] In response hereto,
the applicants filed a further resolution and power of attorney, this
time under the name Thrifty Rent-A-Car
System LLC, with registration
number 1900254253. The applicants’ explanation tendered is that
Thrifty Rent-A-Car System Incorporated
was converted to Thrifty
Rent-A-Car System LLC.
ANALYSIS
[15] The citation and
description of the second applicant, as well as the powers of
attorney and resolutions filed, leave a distorted
picture as to the
identity and existence of the second applicant, or its conversion to
Thrifty Rent-A-Car System LLC. The final
resolution and power of
attorney filed by the applicants reflect the name Thrifty Rent-A-Car
System LLC, but the registration number
is that of the second
applicant, as cited. The certificate of conversion bears a
handwritten number which is the registration number
of the second
applicant, while the website search, I have referred to, reveals the
registration number of Thrifty Rent-A-Car System
LLC as ‘3512563636’.
If a conversion of the second applicant to Thrifty Rent-A-Car System
LLC had in fact been affected,
the citation of Thrifty Rent-A-Car
System Incorporated, as the second applicant, appears to be
incorrect. In any event the second
applicant, as cited, is shown on
the website as inactive, and although this evidence may be considered
as hearsay evidence, I consider
it necessary, in the light of all the
other considerations I have mentioned, to allow the evidence until
proper proof of the identity
of the second applicant has been
presented.
CONCLUSION
[16] A dispute of fact
exists as to the identity and existence of the second applicant. Had
the Rule 7 application been heard at
the commencement of the hearing
of the return day, an order for referral of the
locus standi
challenge for the hearing of oral evidence, would have followed. Rule
7 clearly contemplates that when a challenge is made in terms
of any
party’s authority to act or institute proceedings, the court
may not proceed to hear the matter unless it is satisfied
that the
party before Court has the necessary authority to act, and provides
for the postponement of the matter to enable proof
of authority.
[17] I accordingly
propose to grant the applicants the opportunity by way of presenting
oral or documentary evidence, to prove the
locus standi
and
effect the proper citation of the second applicant.
ORDER
[18] In the result, I
make the following order:
1.
The respondents’ challenge relating the
locus standi
of the
second applicant, is referred for the hearing of oral and/or
documentary evidence before Van Oosten J, on a date to be arranged.
2.
The following directions shall apply to the
hearing contemplated in paragraph 1 above:
2.1
The applicants shall within 30 days of the date
of this order furnish the respondents with a list setting out the
full names of
the witnesses the applicants intend to call to testify,
and a description of all documents to be used at the hearing.
2.2
The respondents shall within 15 days
thereafter furnish the applicants with a list setting out the full
names of the witnesses the
respondents intend to call to testify and
a description of all documents to be used at the hearing
2.3
The applicants and respondents shall be entitled
to request copies of all such documents discovered in terms of
paragraphs 2.1 and
2.2 above.
2.4
The hearing will be conducted virtually by way of
a Teams link to be provided, once a date for the hearing has been
determined.
2.5
The parties are granted leave to approach this
court for such further directions as may become necessary.
3.
The further hearing of the application for leave
to appeal is suspended until after the final determination of the
locus standi
challenge.
4.
Costs are reserved.
FHD VAN OOSTEN
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
COUNSEL FOR APPLICANT:
ADV AJ JANSEN VAN VUUREN
APPLICANTS’
ATTORNEYS:
DENTONS
COUNSEL FOR
RESPONDENTS:
ADV GM AMEER SC
RESPONDENTS’
ATTORNEYS:
RAEES CHOTIA ATTORNEYS
DATE OF HEARING
10 MAY 2023
DATE OF JUDGMENT
24 JULY 2022
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