Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 837South Africa
Industrial Development Corporation of South Africa Limited v Bokone Group of Companies (Pty) Ltd (2022-027186) [2023] ZAGPJHC 837 (24 July 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
24 July 2023
Judgment
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## Industrial Development Corporation of South Africa Limited v Bokone Group of Companies (Pty) Ltd (2022-027186) [2023] ZAGPJHC 837 (24 July 2023)
Industrial Development Corporation of South Africa Limited v Bokone Group of Companies (Pty) Ltd (2022-027186) [2023] ZAGPJHC 837 (24 July 2023)
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sino date 24 July 2023
THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG HIGH COURT,
JOHANNESBURG
Case Number: 2022-027186
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
REVISED
24.07.23
In
the matter between:
THE
INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION OF SOUTH AFRICA LIMITED
(REGISTRATION
NUMBER: 1940/014201/06)
Applicant
And
BOKONE
GROUP OF COMPANIES (PTY) LTD
(REGISTRATION
NUMBER: 2017/027265/07)
Respondent
JUDGMENT
Delivered
:
This judgment is handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties' attorneys by email and uploading the electronic version
on
CaseLines.
KORF AJ:
# Introduction
Introduction
[1] This matter concerns
relief relating to a general notarial bond passed by the respondent
and registered in favour of the applicant.
As is often the case with
applications that are moved on an
ex parte
and urgent basis,
the granting of such relief later draws into question the duties of
an applicant to make full and correct disclosure
of all material
facts that may influence the judge hearing the
ex parte
application, and whether an applicant has obliged. This matter is no
different.
[2] On 4 October 2022,
the applicant approached this court urgently and
ex parte
. The
relief granted on that day comprised two main components. First, the
perfection of the Notarial Bond, authorising the applicant,
through
the Sheriff, to take possession of movables found at the respondent's
addresses (orders 4 and 4.1), which possession can
be obtained by
removal (order 4.2), compiling an inventory (order 4.2.1), affixing
an identifying mark/sticker (order 4.2.2), and
the Sheriff is
authorised to keep possession of the assets pending the finalisation
of the application on the return date (order
4.2.3). Second, the
court issued a rule
nisi
, returnable on 10 November 2022, for
final relief authorising the applicant to dispose of the movable
assets relevant to the notarial
bond and that costs be awarded to the
applicant (orders 2, 2.1 and 2.2). The order of 4 October 2022 shall
be referred to as the
"perfection order".
[3] On 5 October 2022,
under the first component of the perfection order, the Sheriff
attached (and thereby took possession of)
movable assets at the
respondent's premises, as listed or referred to in the Sheriff's
return. During the hearing, counsel for
both parties confirmed that
the Sheriff marked and identified the listed assets. These items were
not removed from the respondent's
premises.
[4] On or about 6 October
2022, the respondent delivered its notice of intention to oppose. The
respondent further delivered,
inter alia
, a notice of
reconsideration [in terms of Rule 6(12)(c)] of the perfection order
granted on 4 October 2022 and that the provisional
order be set aside
be struck from the roll for lack of urgency, the application be set
aside struck from the roll for lack of urgency,
costs, or
further/alternative relief.
[5] The rule
nisi
was extended to 11 April 2023, re-extended until the hearing of the
matter on 14 April 2023, and again until the date of this judgment.
# Parties
Parties
[6] The applicant is
INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION OF SOUTH AFRICA LIMITED,
REGISTRATION NUMBER: 1940/014201/06, established
in terms of section
2 of the Industrial Development Corporation Act, 22 of 1940 (as
amended) ("IDCA").
[7] As articulated in the
object of IDCA, the applicant's purpose is to promote the
establishment of new industries and industrial
undertakings and the
development of existing industries and industrial undertakings.
[8] The respondent is
BOKONE GROUP OF COMPANIES (PROPRIETARY) LIMITED, REGISTRATION NUMBER:
2017/027265/07. The respondent operates
in the mining sector, and its
business includes constructing plants and related amenities and
rendering services in the mining
sector.
[9] During or about June
2018, the respondent secured a contract with Palabora Copper (Pty)
Ltd, trading as "Palabora Mining
Company" ("PMC"),
to construct an oxygen supply plant and to supply oxygen to a furnace
involving coal combustion
and copper concentrates melting processes
(the "PMC contract").
[10] As had been
envisaged by IDCA, the applicant agreed to fund the respondent's
business operations. This assistance was given
effect in 2019 and in
the form of a written Loan Agreement, which provided that loans were
to be secured,
inter alia
, by registering a general notarial
bond over the respondent's movable assets.
# The perfection order of 4
October 2022
The perfection order of 4
October 2022
[11] The applicant
initially approached the court on Monday, 26 September 2022, on an
"extremely urgent basis". However,
the court struck the
matter from the roll because it lacked adequate urgency for the
matter to be heard on a day other than a Tuesday,
the day urgent
applications in this division are ordinarily enrolled.
[12] Having re-enrolled
the matter for Tuesday, 4 October 2022, and armed with a
supplementary founding affidavit, the applicant
moved for the relief
set out in the notice of motion on an urgent and
ex parte
basis, which succeeded.
[13] The relief granted
included the following orders:
"
1. That the
Applicant's non-compliance with the Rules of Court is hereby condoned
and directed that this matter be heard as one
of urgency in terms of
Rule 6(12) of the Uniform Rules of Court;
2. That a rule
nisi
is hereby issued calling on the Respondent to show cause,
if any, on
10 November 2022
at
10h00
or as soon thereafter
as the matter may be heard, why the
provisional orders in 2.1 and 2.2 below cannot be confirmed and made
final:
2.1. The
Applicant and its agents, employees or nominees, through the Sheriff,
be and is hereby authorised and empowered to
dispose of the assets
(or any of them), in terms of the General Notarial Bond
BN000024611/2019
in such manner and upon such terms as the
Applicant or its duly authorised agent determines and to confer valid
titles on the transferee
thereof;
2.2. That the
costs of this application shall be paid by the Respondent on a scale
as between attorney and client.
3. Directing
that the Attorney for the Applicant is hereby authorised to dispatch
this order and a copy of the application
to the Respondent via the
Sheriff per hand delivery, or facsimile and/or email;
4. Directing
that:-
4.1. the
Applicant and its agents, employees or nominees, through the Sheriff,
be authorised and empowered for the purpose
of perfecting its
security, in terms of the General Notarial Bond
BN000024611/2019
to enter the premises of the Respondent situated at: … and at
any other premises wheresoever the movable assets of the Respondent
may be found, and to take possession of and to hold in pledge all the
Respondent's movable property and effects, of whatever nature
and
description and wheresoever situate, both corporeal and incorporeal
and both such as the Respondent may now own or as it may
in the
future acquire, nothing accepted.
4.2. such
possession of the Respondent's assets described in 4.1 above, be
obtained in one or more of the following ways,
without necessarily
removing same from the Respondent's premises (but without limiting
the Applicant's right to remove same), by:
4.2.1. Compiling
of an inventory of the assets referred to;
4.2.2. Affixing
of such assets of a mark and/or sticker identifying same;
4.2.3. The
Sheriff to keep possession of such assets pending the finalisation of
this application on the return date.
5. That the orders in
4.1 and 4.2 above shall operate with immediate effect.
6. That in the event
of the Respondent choosing to oppose this application, then in that
event, the Respondent is entitled to anticipate
the return date on
24-Hour Notice to the Applicant's Attorneys.
".
[14] A meaningful
interpretation and application of the perfection order is
problematic, in any event, given the respondent's ensuing
opposition
and the proposed interpretation proffered by the applicant. I shall
revert to this aspect.
# The Loan Agreement
The Loan Agreement
[15]
On 28 March
2019 at Sandton, the applicant, as the lender, concluded a written
Loan Agreement with the respondent as the borrower,
which provided
for four loans by the applicant to the respondent.
[1]
In terms of clause 3, the aggregated loan amounted to R135,2 million
plus capitalised interest in the amount of R10,7 million,
of which
the applicant would make advances on the respondent's drawdown
requests from time to time.
[2]
Additionally, clauses 1.37 to 1.40 and 1.61 of the Loan Agreement
envisaged the simultaneous conclusion of a Subordinated Loan
Agreement for R 9 million.
[16]
Clauses 8.2
and 8.2.1-8.2.4 of the Loan Agreement provided that the loans would
each have been repaid within a specified period
(i.e., Loan 1 in 84
and Loan 3 in 48 equal monthly instalments) or, in the case of Loan 2
and Loan 4, upon the occurrence of a
specific event.
[3]
[17] Further, Clauses
1.55 and 1.55.4 provided that the Loans were to be secured,
inter
alia
, by a general notarial bond, to be registered for a minimum
amount of R155 million plus an additional sum of 30% for ancillary
costs and expenses.
# The General Notarial Bond
The General Notarial Bond
[18] As had been
foreshadowed by the Loan Agreement, a General Notarial Bond (BN
245611/2019) was registered in the applicant's
favour on 15 May 2019
at PRETORIA, which is the bond pertinent to this case (referred to
below as the "Notarial Bond").
[19] In its recital, the
Notarial Bond describes the security provision and subject assets
read as follows:
"…
AND
as a continuing covering security for every such present and/or
future indebtedness or obligation as aforesaid as well as all of
the
Mortgagor's obligations hereunder, the Appear on behalf of the
Mortgagor hereby declared to bind and hypothecated… ALL
OF THE
MORTGAGOR'S MOVABLE PROPERTY AND EFFECTS, OF WHATEVER NATURE AND
DESCRIPTION AND WHERESOEVER SITUATE, BOTH CORPORAL AND
IN CORPORAL
AND BOTH SUCH AS THE MORTGAGOR MAY NOW OWN OR AS IT MAY IN THE FUTURE
ACQUIRE, NOTHING ACCEPTED (hereinafter referred
to as the "Assets")…
"
[20] The bond provides
inter alia
as follows:
"
7.
EVENT
OF DEFAULT
An event of default
shall occur if-
7.1. The
Mortgagor refuses and/or neglects-
7.1.1. to carry out
the provisions of the Facility Agreement or if the Mortgage or commit
any act which constitutes a breach of
any of the provisions of the
Facility Agreement; or
7.1.2. to carry out,
or breaches of any of the other terms, conditions or stipulations of
this bond; or
7.1.3. to carry out,
or breaches any of the terms, conditions or stipulations of any
agreement between the Mortgagor and the Mortgagee
or any bond passed
by the Mortgagor in favour of the mortgagee which is collateral
hereto; or
7.2. The
Mortgagor-
…
7.2.3. Commits any
event which would be an act of insolvency under the
Insolvency Act,
No. 24 of 1936
or business rescue proceedings are commenced in
respect of the Mortgagor or any application is made to commence
business rescue
proceedings in respect of the Mortgagor, or a
resolution is processed or past for the entering into business rescue
proceedings
by the Mortgagor;…
7.2.6. Commit any
breach of any material contract binding upon it entitling the other
party to that contract to cancel the same
or to a separate
performance by the Mortgagor of any obligation due thereunder; …
8.
THE
MORTGAGEE'S RIGHT ON THE HAPPENING OF AN EVENT OF DEFAULT
Upon the happening of
an event of default referred to in 7 above, the Mortgagee shall,
without prejudice to any other rights which
it has in terms hereof or
at law, be entitled-
…
8.2. if the
Mortgagee has not already been placed in possession of the Assets, to
forthwith take possession and thereby perfect
its pledge of the
Assets;
8.4. to dispose
of the Assets or any of them by public auction, public tender or by
private treaty or otherwise in the Mortgagee's
sole discretion and on
such terms and conditions as the Mortgagee in its sole discretion may
deem fit and to convey good valid
and free title to the purchaser or
transferee thereof;
…
10.
RIGHTS TO
APPLY TO COURT AND JURISDICTION
10.1 Any
application to any competent Court to be brought by the Mortgagee in
terms of or arising from this bond and/or the
Facility Agreement, may
be brought, at the Mortgagee's election, either ex parte or on notice
to the Mortgagor…."
17.
COSTS
All fees, charges and
disbursements… in instituting or prosecuting any legal
proceedings… shall be borne and paid
on demand by the
Mortgagor on the scale as between Attorney and his own client whether
or not action has been or is instituted
by the Mortgagee against the
Mortgagor.
"
# The applicant's case
The applicant's case
[21] The applicant states
that under the Loan Agreement and advances thereunder, the parties
have restructured the Loans to defer
repayment for Loans 1 and 3 to 1
September 2022, which the respondent failed to meet. The Certificate
of Balanced dated 21 September
2022 confirms the total due by the
respondent to the applicant on 20 September 2022 amounted to
R173,863,744.72 plus interest calculated
at applicable rates from 21
September 2022 until the date of payment.
[22] The applicant
describes the respondent's financial position,
inter alia
, as
"
being in financial distress and thus in a precarious
position which is impacting on its ability to fulfil its obligations
to PMC
", "…
severe financial distress…
",
"…
not able to pay its debts…
",
"…
precarious financial position…
".
Further, Richline, the respondent's alleged landlord, refused to
release some assets because the respondent failed to pay
money due
and payable to it, including storage costs.
[23] Concerning the
project's status, as a general proposition, the project has been
delayed, for various reasons, since the applicant's
involvement in
2018. The delays caused costs to spiral out of control. According to
the applicant's assessments made during December
2021, the completion
costs amounted to R59 million, and commercial operations were
expected to commence in July 2022. The applicant
contends that the
respondent's inability to perform precariously impacts its ability to
meet its loan repayment obligations. The
applicant is not in a
position to invest any further funds where the project is not
generating income and where the respondent
is in arrears.
[24] On 2 September 2022,
PMC issued a notice to the respondent to suspend all construction
activities due to the sudden resignation
of the Subordinated Project
Engineer. On 16 September 2022, PMC informed the applicant that PMC
considered terminating the PMC
contract due to continued delays. On
30 September 2022, PMC issued a "Notice of Breach Letter"
in which it threatened
to cancel the PMC contract.
[25] All in all, the
applicant contends that there is a material risk that the respondent
may be wound up or placed under business
rescue, either voluntarily
or by its creditors (if they were to get wind of the respondent's
financial difficulties), or that its
immovable assets may be attached
pursuant to legal action by other creditors. Should any of these
risks materialise, so the applicant
contends, then the security
envisaged by the Notarial Bond may be relinquished in whole or in
part.
[26] The applicant
contends that the respondent has breached clauses 7.1, 7.2.3 and
7.2.6 of the Notarial Bond.
[27] Concerning the
reconsideration of urgency (order 1), the applicant contends that
urgency is a preliminary issue. It is a matter
of form and not
substance. A court considers the grounds for urgency before the
merits of the application. The applicant submits
that the court has
already considered and adjudicated the issue of urgency and that the
"posthumous" reconsideration
of urgency is irrational,
illogical and without legal basis.
[28] Regarding
reconsidering the perfection order, the applicant contends that
orders 3, 4 and 5 are final in nature and, accordingly,
res
iudicata
.
[29] Accordingly, the
applicant seeks that orders 2.1 and 2.2 be confirmed and made final
and that these should not be reconsidered
and set aside, as the
respondent contends they should.
[30] During oral
argument, counsel for the applicant submitted that even if the
founding and supplementary founding affidavits were
found to be
incorrect or incomplete, those deficiencies were not material and
relevant to the applicant's case. For this reason,
the perfection
order should not be set aside.
# The respondent's main
contentions
The respondent's main
contentions
[31] Respondent's
opposition was essentially three-pronged. First, it sought numerous
paragraphs of the founding affidavit and the
supplementary founding
affidavit to be struck out in terms of
Rule 6(15)
because the
contents of the relevant paragraphs constituted inadmissible hearsay
evidence. I shall revert to this aspect. Second,
the respondent
proffered facts and circumstances based on which it contended that
setting aside the perfection order is warranted
and that the
application was never urgent. Third, the respondent dealt with the
grounds on which the applicant relied to the extent
that the
perfection order was not set aside.
[32] The respondent
contends that when the applicant moved the application
ex parte
on 4 October 2022, the applicant provided an incomplete and
inaccurate account of the case's material facts. According to the
respondent, the materially incomplete or distorted picture painted by
the applicant engages and stands in contrast with the full
facts and
true state of affairs relevant to the respondent's financial affairs,
its financial ability to complete the project,
the respondent's
alleged indebtedness to the "landlord" (Richline) and its
refusal to release some assets, the status
of the project and that it
is near completion, the possibility of the respondent placing itself
in business rescue (which is not
even considered), the "Notice
of Breach Letter" of 30 September 2022. The respondent admits
not making payment by 1 September
2022 as it was obliged to do. It,
however, submits that its application for an extension of the
repayment terms (which the applicant
had approved before in
comparable circumstances), made prior to the launch of the perfection
application, was still under consideration
by the applicant. The
project was near completion (estimated at the time as latest, end of
April) and once attained, the respondent
will earn income from PMC by
rendering the envisaged oxygen supply services. The respondent
submitted further that the matter was
not urgent.
[33] In the event of the
perfection order not being reconsidered and set aside for the reasons
summarised above, the respondent
denies any default event as
contemplated by clauses 7.2.3 and 7.2.6 of the Notarial Bond.
# The abandoned application
to strike-out
The abandoned application
to strike-out
[34] As stated above, the
respondent delivered a notice of its application to strike out
specific paragraphs from the founding and
supplementary founding
affidavit deposed on behalf of the applicant. In respect of the
founding affidavit, the respondent contended
that the version offered
by the deponent was at odds with the progress of the project and what
occurred on the operational side
of the respondent's business, which
shows that the deponent to the founding affidavit did not have the
requisite personal knowledge
or that he did not identify the sources
of his information, which he believed to be true. Accordingly, the
deponent's relevant
allegations constitute inadmissible hearsay
evidence. The supplementary founding affidavit (deposed by the
applicant's attorney)
introduced PMC's "Notice of Breach Letter"
dated 30 September 2022. Furthermore, the applicant's attorney made
various
statements regarding the respondent's business affairs,
financial difficulties, inability to perform its obligations owed to
PMC,
and the project status. Respondent contended that the relevant
content constituted inadmissible hearsay evidence.
[35]
At the
hearing of the matter, in response to a question by this court,
counsel for the respondent indicated that the respondent
does not
persist with the strike-out application. I believe the abandonment of
the strike-out application was appropriate and justified.
I shall
briefly explain. As a general observation, the respondent's
contentions that the impugned allegations constituted hearsay
evidence are
prima
facie
meritorious. However, the admission of hearsay evidence is governed
by
section 3
of the
Law of Evidence Amendment Act, 45 of 1988
, which
gives the court a wide discretion on whether or not to admit hearsay
evidence.
[4]
[36] It is trite that
parties are afforded some latitude concerning the admission of the
hearsay evidence in urgent applications.
The applicant's application
is essentially one for specific performance and entails various
procedural considerations. To arrive
at conclusions and ultimately
decide the matter, this court must exercise its discretion and make
value judgements about various
aspects. I believe it is in the
interest of justice to arrive at discretionary findings and
conclusions by permitting all the parties'
allegations, even though
specific allegations constitute or may constitute hearsay evidence.
Permitting hearsay evidence in the
instant matter, however subject to
and taking into consideration the factors referred to in
section
3(1)(c)(i)
-(vii) of the said act. The supplementary founding
affidavit serves as an appropriate example. Save for introducing
PMC's letter
of 30 September 2022, the allegations and contentions
set out by the deponent to the supplementary founding affidavit carry
no
weight. For these reasons, albeit briefly stated, I believe the
respondent correctly abandoned the strike-out application.
# Interpretation of the
perfection order
Interpretation of the
perfection order
[37] Orders 1, 2.2 and 6
are not pertinent to this discussion and order 3 is of limited
relevance. The relevant provisions of the
perfection order for
present purposes comprise, on the one hand, the rule
nisi
in
terms of orders 2.1, authorising the sale of the assets in question,
returnable as indicated above, and on the other, the provisions
of
orders 3, 4 and 5 that provide for the taking the respondents assets
in possession to perfect the Notarial Bond.
[38] It is common
practice that urgent
ex parte
relief is granted by way of an
interim order pending the institution and finalisation of proceedings
for final relief or, where
circumstances justify it, a rule
nisi
,
subject to a return date upon which a respondent is to demonstrate
why the rule should not be made final.
[39] At first glance,
orders 3, 4 and 5 appear final. This is so,
inter alia
,
because on the express wording of order 2, "…
a rule
nisi is hereby issued calling on the Respondent to show cause, if
any, on [the return date] why the provisional orders into
point one
and 2.2 below cannot be confirmed and made final.
" Order 2
does not incorporate the remainder of the orders into the
rule
nisi
.
[40] In the applicant's
heads of argument, it is submitted that the perfection order was
twofold in that only order 2 (incorporating
orders 2.1 and 2.2) was a
provisional order with a return date and that orders 3, 4 and 5 were
final. The applicant was entitled,
ex contractu
and at its
election, to approach the court on an
ex parte
basis, and it
is further submitted that orders 3, 4 and 5 are final and are
res
iudicata
in that a competent court has adjudicated the same and
therefore may not be pursued further by the same parties.
[41] The first difficulty
with interpreting orders 3, 4 and 5 as final relief stems from the
wording of the perfection order itself.
Order 4 provides that the
applicant, through the Sheriff, is authorised to take possession of
the respondent's assets (thereby
perfecting the notarial bond) and
that such possession may be obtained through removal (order 4.2) or
by compiling an inventory
(order 4.2.1) and by affixing a
mark/sticker identifying same (order 4.2.2). Order 4.2.3 then states
that "…
the Sheriff
[is authorised]
to keep
possession of such assets
pending finalisation of this
application on the return date
…" [
emphasis
added
].
[42] As quoted above, I
cannot ignore the emphasised portion of order 4.2.3. On the express
wording of order 4.2.3, the Sheriff's
continued possession of the
assets (whether removed, inventoried or identified by a mark/sticker)
is conditional on the "
finalisation of this application
"
on the return date. The scope phrase "
finalisation of this
application
" is wider than what is envisaged to be confirmed
and made final under the rule
nisi
. If it was intended for
order 4.2.3 to be conditional upon the confirmation of the rule
nisi
,
it should have stated as much.
[43] Orders 4.1 and 4.2
should be read in the context of the remainder of the perfection
order, specifically order 5, which states
that "…
The
orders in 4.1 and 4.2 above shall operate with immediate effect.
"
If a court makes a final order, it is operative with immediate effect
unless the order provides otherwise. If it were true
that orders 4.1
and 4.2 were final, these orders would have operated with immediate
effect, and then there would have been no need
to state as much in
order 5.
[44] Accordingly, based
on the wording of the perfection order, I believe that it is subject
to the finalisation of the application
on the return date.
[45]
There is a
further and more important consideration. One needs not to be
reminded that the principle of
audi
alteram partem
(the right to be heard) is sacrosanct in the South African legal
system and that
section 34
[5]
of
the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996 (the
Constitution) warrants a person's access to court and the right
to a
fair hearing. These values must prevail save for exceptional
circumstances. Considering the nature of the application and
the
perfection order granted, there is no justification to treat this
matter as exceptional.
[46]
The
applicant relied on clause 10.1 of the Notarial Bond to have moved
the application to remove the respondent's movables without
notice to
the respondent. It is trite that where an application is brought
without notice to an affected party, the applicant must
explain why
notice has not been given, i.e., that the giving of notice may defeat
the purpose of the application
[6]
or where immediate relief is essential because harm is imminent.
[7]
An applicant's entitlement to approach a court
ex
parte
,
as of right, does not arise
ex
contractu
.
At best, a contractual provision to this effect may be a factor for a
court to consider hearing a matter
ex
parte
.
[47] Therefore, to arrive
at the applicant's proposed interpretation would mean that, in
interpreting the perfection order, one
must ignore the aforesaid
constitutional imperatives. This simply cannot be correct.
[48] Accordingly, the
perfection order, in its entirety, should be treated as a provisional
order.
# Common cause
Common cause
[49] On an analysis of
the parties' affidavits, the following main aspects are common cause:
49.1 The
description and
locus standi
of the parties;
49.2 The conclusion
of the Loan Agreement on 28 March 2019 for an aggregate amount of
R135,2 million plus R10,7 million for
further expenses and the
purpose of the loan;
49.3 As security
for the loans under the Loan Agreement, the respondent passed and
registered the Notarial Bond in the applicant's
favour;
49.4 The fact that
the respondent is indebted to the applicant and in arrears (although
the respondent denies the amount reflected
in the applicant's
Certificate of Balance); and,
49.5 In the event
of default referred to in clause 7 of the Notarial Bond, the
applicant shall have the remedies set out under
clause 8
(incorporating 8.1 to 8.7).
# The issues
The issues
[50] No Joint Practice
Note appears from the record, and the parties have different views on
defining the issues to be decided.
[51] According to the
applicant's Heads of Argument, "
[T]he only issue that stands
to be considered by the Honourable Court is the determination of the
rule nisi, wherein the Applicant
seeks an order confirming and making
final the provisional orders granted therein, namely order 2.1 and
2.2 of the Court Order
dated 04 October 2022
...". The
applicant contends that the aspect of urgency (order 1) proverbially
is water underneath the bridge, and orders 3,
4 and 5 are
res
iudicata
and not capable of reconsideration and set aside.
[52] The respondent
defines the (remaining) issues as: First, whether, in terms of the
reconsideration of the perfection order,
it should be set aside and
replaced with an order that the application be struck from the roll
for lack of urgency. More specifically,
whether the applicant, as an
ex parte
litigant, complied with its obligations of utmost
good faith. Second, if the perfection order is not set aside as
aforesaid, whether
paragraph 2 of the perfection order should be
confirmed or discharged.
[53] In my view, this
matter turns on the following main issues:
53.1 The powers of
a court concerning an order under reconsideration in terms of Rule
6(12)(c). More specifically,
in casu
and under this subrule,
whether the hearing of the matter as one of urgency, the
granting of the rule
nisi
in terms of orders 2.1 and 2.2, and
the granting of orders 3, 4 and 5 are capable of reconsideration,
amendment or set aside, and
whether these ought to be maintained,
amended or set aside, in whole or in part.
53.2 Regarding the
applicant's duty of disclosure in its
ex parte
application,
whether the applicant proffered an incomplete or incorrect statement
of material facts.
53.3 If there were
relevant and material nondisclosures, whether those were material and
relevant?
53.4 If so, what is
the applicable test for setting aside or maintaining a particular
order or finding, and applying the test
to the facts of the matter,
should any finding or order be set aside?
53.5 If the
perfection order falls to be set aside, in whole or in part, what
order should be granted in its place?
# Reconsideration under
Rule 6(12)(c)
Reconsideration under
Rule 6(12)(c)
[54] As stated above, the
applicant contends that order 1 (urgency), the granting of the rule
nisi
in orders 2, 2.1 and 2.2, and orders 3, 4 and 5 could not
be reconsidered. According to the applicant, the only aspect to be
considered
and decided is whether or not the rule
nisi
(orders
2, 2.1 and 2.2) should be confirmed and made final.
[55] Rule 6(12)(c) reads
as follows:
"
A person against
whom an order was granted in such person's absence in an urgent
application may by notice set down the matter for
reconsideration of
the order.
"
[56] Where an order has
been granted in the absence of a party, as in the instant case, rule
6(12)(c) provides a mechanism through
which the imbalance of hearing
only one side of the case can be corrected. It follows that the
audi
alteram partem
principle and the provisions of section 34 of the
Constitution form the bedrock of Rule 6(12)(c).
[57]
In
ISDN
Solutions (Pty) Ltd v CSDN Solutions CC and others
[8]
,
the court elaborated on and interpreted the rule as follows:
57.1 The rule has
been widely formulated. It permits an aggrieved person against whom
an order was granted in an urgent application
to reconsider that
order, provided only that it was granted in his absence. The
underlying pivot to which the exercise of power
is coupled is the
absence of the aggrieved party at the time of the grant of the order.
57.2 It affords an
aggrieved party a mechanism designed to redress imbalances in, and
injustices and oppression flowing from,
an order granted as urgent in
his absence.
57.3 The order in
question may be either interim or final in its operation.
Reconsideration may involve the deletion of the
order, either in
whole or part or the engraftment of additions.
57.4 The framers of
the rule have not sought to delineate the factors which might
legitimately be taken into reckoning in
determining whether any
particular order falls to be reconsidered. What is plain is that wide
discretion is intended. Each case
will turn on its facts and the
peculiarities inherent therein.
[58]
Considering
the extent of a court's discretion when reconsidering the matter,
there is, in my view, nothing that precludes a court
from
reconsidering and, where justified, amending or setting aside an
order granted against a respondent in his/her absence. A
respondent
need not even deliver an answering affidavit. In my view, it would be
competent for a court under this subrule to reconsider
the matter on
the applicant's founding papers and, after having had the benefit of
hearing the respondent's arguments, for example,
to set aside the
initial order and strike the matter from the roll for lack of urgency
or to dismiss the application because the
applicant failed to make
out a proper case in its founding affidavit.
[9]
[59]
A
respondent may opt to deliver an answering affidavit, which in many
instances, will be desirable.
[10]
When a court then reconsiders an order under this sub-rule, it would
do so with the benefit of considering affidavits filed by
all the
parties and hearing arguments on their behalf. This involves the
approach by the court as a comprehensive revisit of the
circumstances
as they present at the time of the reconsideration
[11]
and taking into account, e.g., facts relating to the execution of the
order.
[12]
The issues at the
reconsideration may differ from those the court had to deal with in
the original application. It has been held
that the subrule is wide
enough to permit the reconsideration of an order granted
ex
parte
.
[13]
[60] Having regard to the
above, therefore, I cannot see any reason why, in principle, it would
be incompetent for me, on the grounds
advanced by the respondent, to
reconsider the perfection order in its entirety and, to the extent
justified, to amend or set it
aside, in whole or in part.
# Legal principles relevant
to general notarial bonds
Legal principles relevant
to general notarial bonds
[61] The
Security by
Means of Movable Property Act
, 57 of 1993 ("SMMPA")
governs a notarial bond hypothecating corporeal movable property
specified and described in the
bond in a manner which renders it
readily recognisable is registered after the commencement of this Act
under the
Deeds Registries Act
, 47 of 1937.
[62] It appears from the
description of the "Assets", as quoted above that the
Notarial Bond is not a special notarial
bond and does not fall within
the purview of the SMMPA.
[63]
Development
Bank of Southern Africa Ltd v Van Rensburg
[14]
confirmed that in a general notarial bond, the mortgagor bound its
movable property as security for the repayment of all amounts
payable
in terms of the notarial bond. However, that did not constitute the
mortgagee a secured creditor. In order to qualify as
a secured
creditor, the mortgagee had to obtain possession of the hypothecated
property. Once the mortgagee obtained such possession,
it would have
been in the position of a pledgee, with all the security attached to
a pledge.
[64]
In
Contract
Forwarding (Pty) Ltd v Chesterfin (Pty) Ltd
,
[15]
the court granted a rule
nisi
perfecting the notarial bond, authorising the creditor, through the
Sheriff, to take possession of the debtor's movable assets
for as
long as the debtor's indebtedness existed, and pending the
institution of an action against the debtor within 30 days from
the
order. After the sheriff had executed the rule
nisi
by taking possession of the movable assets in question, but before
the return date, the respondent was provisionally wound up.
The court
held what had been laid down by the Supreme Court of Appeal in
Development
Bank of Southern Africa Ltd v Van Rensburg
as follows: "
The
fact that the order authorising the appellant to take possession of
the movables was provisional therefore does not detract
from the fact
that the moment the appellant obtained possession of the movable
property hypothecated in terms of the notarial bond
it was in the
position of a pledgee who had obtained possession of the movable
property before the commencement of the winding-up
of Serious
Mills.
"
[16]
[65] It follows from the
above that it is of pivotal importance for a creditor, where a debtor
is in arrears, to take possession
of the debtor's movable assets set
up as security in terms of a general notarial bond to become a
secured creditor.
# Legal principles relating
to utmost good faith inex parteapplications
Legal principles relating
to utmost good faith in
ex parte
applications
[66]
The failure
to make full disclosure of all known material facts (i.e., facts that
might reasonably influence a court to come to
a decision) may lead a
court to refuse the application or to set aside the rule nisi on that
ground alone, quite apart from considerations
of wilfulness or
mala
fides
.
In
Thint
(Pty) Ltd v National Director of Public Prosecutions
[17]
,
this principle was approved by the Constitutional Court in the
following terms:
"
It
is by now axiomatic that in an ex parte application, the
applicant is required to observe the uberrima fides (utmost
good faith) rule. This rule requires that all material facts which
might influence a court in coming to a decision must be disclosed.
This rule is stated in the following terms by Herbstein and Van
Winsen:
"Although,
on the one hand, the petitioner is entitled to embody in his petition
only sufficient allegations to establish his
right,
he must, on
the other, make full disclosure of all material facts which might
affect the granting or otherwise of an ex parte order
.
The
utmost good faith must be observed by litigants making ex
parte applications in placing material facts before the
Court;
so much so that if an order has been made upon an ex
parte application and
it
appears that material facts have been kept back, whether wilfully and
mala fide or negligently, which might have influenced the
decision of
the Court whether to make an order or not, the Court has a discretion
to set the order aside with costs on the ground
of nondisclosure
.
It should, however, be noticed that the Court has a discretion and is
not compelled, even if the nondisclosure was material, to
dismiss the
application or to set aside the proceedings. (Footnote omitted.)
"
[
Emphases added
]
[67]
In
Thint
,
the Constitutional Court furthermore stated that "…
[W]hat
these cases emphasise is the need for an applicant for an ex parte
order to set out fully the facts known to him or her which
might
influence the Court in coming to its decision. This includes facts
that are against the issuing of the search and seizure
warrant
."
[18]
[68]
In
National
Director of Public Prosecutions v Basson
[19]
the Supreme Court of Appeal expressly approved of
Schlesinger
v Schlesinger
[20]
,
in which the following was stated:
"
(1)
in ex parte applications, all material facts must be
disclosed which might influence a court in coming to
a
decision;
(2)
the nondisclosure or suppression of facts need not be wilful or mala
fide to incur the penalty of rescission;
(3)
the Court, apprised of the true facts, has a discretion to set aside
the former order or to preserve it.
"
[69]
In
Powell
NO and others v Van der Merwe and others
,
the Supreme Court of Appeal stated that the approach followed in
Schlesinger
should apply equally to the relief obtained on facts which are
incorrect because they have been misstated or inaccurately set out
in
the application for the order or, as in that case because they have
not been sufficiently investigated.
[21]
# Were
the facts presented by the applicant incomplete or incorrect?
Were
the facts presented by the applicant incomplete or incorrect?
[70] The founding
affidavit was deposed to by Mr Sean Renders, a Manager: Recoveries,
Business Rescue & Insolvencies Department
of the applicant, and
the supplementary affidavit, by the applicant's attorney of record.
These deponents,
inter alia
, made allegations regarding the
status of the project, the possible cancellation by PMC, the
(desperate) financial affairs of the
respondent, and that respondent
is in arrears with payments to its alleged landlord, Richline, who
refused to release certain assets.
[71] The grounds
proffered in respect of urgency relates to the respondent's alleged
severe financial distress, Richland's refusal
to release some of the
assets that were held in storage, PMC's consideration to cancel the
"gas supply contract", which
is the lifeline of the
respondent's existence, PMC's notice of suspension of all
construction activities due to the resignation
of the subordinate
project engineer, applicant's information from "trusted sources"
that the only reason why PMC has
not cancelled the said contract was
of the absence of a recommendation to this effect by a subordinate
project engineer (which
position was vacant at the time), if PMC were
to cancel the "gas supply contract" then applicant's
investment (funding)
of the project would be permanently lost, the
precarious financial position of the respondent and the risk of it
being placed in
business rescue, the risk of legal action by other
creditors and consequential attachment of the assets relevant to the
Notarial
Bond, the nature of the application itself, the absence of
prejudice on the part of the respondent flowing from an order
perfecting
the Notarial Bond, the submission that the grounds stated
hereinbefore are compelling that the applicant will not be afforded
regress
in the ordinary course, to protect the assets referred to in
the Notarial Bond from being attached or disposed, the application
has been brought promptly, and if the Notarial Bond is not perfected
then the applicant would be severely prejudiced as its security
may
be irretrievably lost.
[72] The respondent
contends that the applicant painted a distorted picture concerning
the urgency of the application.
[73] It is appropriate
first to assess whether the applicant failed to disclose a full and
correct picture when it moved for an
urgent
ex parte
order.
The outcome of this enquiry will then be applied to the order granted
on 4 October 2022.
The status of the
project
[74] It is common cause
that the project was not running on schedule in all regards. The
extent of these delays is, however, disputed
vehemently.
[75] In the founding
affidavit deposed on 22 September 2022, the applicant stated that the
respondent could not perform in terms
of the PMC contract. There have
been significant delays in the project since 2018. The respondent's
inability to perform impacts
its ability to meet its loan repayment
obligations and is in severe financial distress. The costs of the
project are spiralling
out of control. The PMC smelter is ready, but
the respondent cannot supply gas to PMC due to continued delays.
Since September
2022, PMC has issued notices to suspend the project
or threaten to cancel the PMC contract. These notices will be dealt
with under
a separate heading below.
[76] In the answering
affidavit, the respondent relied on a letter dated 31 May 2022 by the
respondent to the applicant, in which
the respondent had explained
the causes for delays of the project,
inter alia
, that late
payments by the applicant caused project delays. In a responding
letter dated 17 June 2022, the applicant stated that
it was
encouraged by all the progress and indicated its intention to
continue cooperating with the respondent and all other stakeholders
to ensure the project is commissioned. The applicant furthermore
acknowledged that payments by it were delayed due to the applicant's
internal processes and the Covid-19 pandemic.
[77] On 22 September 2022
(which date coincided with the date on which the applicant's founding
affidavit was deposed), a routine
project status meeting was held
between representatives of the applicant, the respondent and PMC,
which meeting was attended by
the deponent to the respondent's
answering affidavit. According to a transcription of the meeting
(which the applicant did in dispute
in reply), participants discussed
aspects of the project that were behind schedule and another aspect
that had been completed,
the rescheduling of works, discussing plans
for the weeks to follow, and the measures to be implemented to curb
excessive noise
levels. The meeting recognised delays caused by
Covid-19 and the belated shipment of equipment from China. The
meeting noted that
Mr Ripfumelo was appointed as an acting project
engineer (with Mr Laing noting that he should not be blamed if the
project were
to come to a standstill), that Mr Galante (PMC) will
oversee Mr Ripfumelo's work, and discussed the process and
qualifications
required for a full-time appointment. The meeting was
concluded with Mr Galate, PMC's representative, saying, "
All
right. Excellent. Thanks Rolland. All right guys. Ladies. Thank you
for today. I see we are progressing well although we are
slightly
behind our initial schedule. Keep up the good work. Maintain the
safety and we will be able to make sure that this is
a successful
project. Thank you guys. Thank you ladies. Bye bye.
"
[78] In reply, the
applicant did not deal with the discussions during this meeting, save
for stating that the respondent focuses
on irrelevant issues rather
than dealing with the real issue, i.e., that the respondent has
failed to meet its payment obligations.
[79] The applicant
further relied on an allegation that the smelter was ready but that
the respondent could not perform in terms
of the PMC contract by
supplying oxygen to the plant. The respondent explained that the
construction of the oxygen plant was only
a component of the
construction work in respect of the project as a whole and that the
smelter would only be ready towards the
latter part of 2023.
According to an email between Mr Laing and Mr Wei (both of PMC) dated
17 May 2022, the hot commissioning of
the DSB furnace (to which the
plant under construction by the respondent will supply oxygen) was
not a priority until the latter
part of 2023 or even 2024, and that
PMC should provide the respondent with a date for hot commissioning
that will suit the PMC
business plan.
[80] In its answering
affidavit, the respondent stated that the civil and structural works
on the project had been completed and
electrical works were well
advanced. All the equipment for the oxygen plant had been imported,
installation had already commenced,
and the project was nearing
completion. The respondent estimated that the oxygen plant would be
commissioned in April 2023 (at
the latest). In reply, the applicant
states that "
it is common cause that the respondent is far
behind schedule and as such, it is not in a position to supply oxygen
within the timeframe
as was envisaged by the agreement with PMC.
"
Possible cancellation
by PMC
[81] In its founding
papers, the applicant relied heavily on communications emanating from
PMC: The notice to suspend all construction
activities dated 2
September 2022, an alleged oral statement during the meeting of 16
September 2022 that PMC is considering terminating
the contract and
the "Notice of Breach Letter" of 30 September 2022 in which
it threatened to cancel the oxygen supply
contract.
[82] The respondent
stated that it had appointed an acting engineer and was seeking a
suitably qualified engineer for permanent
employment (which was
discussed at the meeting on 22 September 2022). The respondent
further pointed out that the "Notice
of Breach Letter" of
30 September 2022 complained (in vague terms) of the breach in
November 2019, which has not been remedied.
Respondent stated that
these breaches had been remedied to the applicant's knowledge, and on
14 October 2022, the respondent declared
a dispute regarding the
"Notice of Breach Letter" of 30 September 2022. The
applicant, in reply, further referred to
this "Notice of Breach
Letter" and stated that it is common cause between the parties
that the respondent was experiencing
financial distress to the extent
that it could not meet its Loan repayment obligations and had to seek
additional funding to progress
the current state of the project.
[83] In its replying
affidavit, the applicant incorporated a further "Notice of
Breach Letter" dated 18 November 2022,
addressed to the
respondent and applicant (referring to a letter dated 19 October 2022
for the further suspension of the project
because of respondent's
alleged failure concerning the appointment of an engineer) and
affording respondent 30 days to rectify
its breaches about the
appointment of an engineer, "…
failing which PMC will
exercise its legal rights, which may include a termination
…".
Respondent's financial
affairs
[84] In the founding
papers, the applicant stated that due to the respondent's inability
to perform in respect of the project and
delays in the completion of
the project, the applicant was in dire/severe financial distress and
was in arrears with the repayment
of Loan 1 and Loan 3 since 1
September 2022. It is in arrears with payments due to its "landlord",
Richline, who refused
to release certain assets (which I shall refer
to more fully below).
[85] The respondent
states in its answering affidavit that on 31 August 2021, prior to
the January 2022 amendment of the repayment
terms of Loan 4 to
commence on 1 March 2022, the respondent sent an email to the
applicant stating that SARS had started paying
VAT refunds and
requesting confirmation of the account into which VAT refunds must be
paid. The respondent has not received a response
to the email and
tenders to pay the VAT refunds received to date upon confirmation by
the applicant of its designated bank account.
In the replying
affidavit, the deponent states that he was unaware that the
respondent had sought confirmation of the applicant's
bank account.
[86] According to the
answering affidavit, in a letter dated 16 August 2022, the respondent
requested a further extension of the
loan repayment dates. The
respondent further stated that it could not commence repayment of
Loans 1 to 3 because the oxygen plant
was not yet operational, and
the applicant was previously prepared to extend the repayment terms
under those circumstances. In
the respondent's letter of 16 August
2022, the respondent explained that Covid 19 restrictions prevented
employees of a supplier
in China from travelling to South Africa.
This necessitated the new commissioning date of February 2023. On 16
August 2022, Mr
Patrick Khetani, employed by the applicant as Senior
Associate, emailed the respondent stating that "…
[t]he
request has been noted and I will attend to it
…"
[87] In the founding
papers, the applicant did not mention the respondent's extension of
the loan repayment dates, the fact that
the request was under
consideration by the applicant, or even that the request had been
declined. In respect of the request for
extended repayment terms, the
applicant states that "…
the reason given for the
Respondent's failure to commence repayment of Loan 3 is that on or
about 16 August 2022, the Respondent
had allegedly sent a request for
further Loan Repayment Dates Extension to the IDC, which it alleges
was not responded to...
ʺ Save for the implicit denial by
using the words "
allegedly
" and "
alleges
",
the applicant does not say why it suggests that the request had not
been received, why the applicant, by email, acknowledged
receipt of
the request and that it would be considered. Further, the applicant
does not even explain why it did not mention the
request in its
founding papers.
Richland
[88] In the founding
papers, the applicant relies on the respondent's alleged landlord
Richland, who allegedly "
refused to release some of the
assets it is holding in storage (on behalf of the respondent) as a
result of Respondent's failure
to pay it the money due and payable to
it, including storage costs
". No more details are given as
to who demanded the release of assets, when this occurred, what
assets were to be delivered,
and why Richland was obliged to
surrender the assets to whoever made the demand.
[89] The respondent
states that Richland is its electrical contractor and not its
landlord, that the storage facility was shared
between Richland and
the respondent, and that respondent was not indebted to Richland. In
the replying affidavit, the applicant
contends that the respondent
should have attached proof of the arrangement with Richline or that
it shared costs as alleged. The
applicant does not advance any
further facts to displace the respondent's version.
Conclusion
[90] The above analysis
reveals that the applicant has omitted or misstated facts of which
the applicant deponent(s) had actual
or constructive knowledge, that
the applicant presented allegations beyond the deponents' personal
knowledge and which the applicant
failed to investigate adequately or
at all. These include the following:
90.1 The applicant
failed to disclose the respondent's letter of 31 May 2022 concerning
delays, including delays caused by
the applicant's late payments and
the applicant's letter dated 17 June 2022, which recognises the
respondent's progress on the
project and the applicant's commitment
to support the respondent in future.
90.2 The applicant
failed to disclose that routine project status meetings were held and
that such a meeting was scheduled
for or held on 22 September 2022
and, in particular, the operational plans discussed thereat and the
applicant and PMC's overall
satisfaction with the respondent's
progress on the project whilst recognising certain delays.
90.3 The applicant
misstated the actual project progress by exaggerating prevailing
delays through sweeping and unsupported
statements and by failing to
state facts about the respondent's progress, such as that the civil
and structural works have been
completed and the electrical works are
well advanced. The applicant's portrayal of the project's status is a
world apart from that
which appears from the transcription of the
meeting of 22 September 2022.
90.4 The applicant
incorrectly stated that the smelter was ready to receive oxygen,
suggesting that the delays caused by the
respondent prevented the
smelter from operating. However, on 17 May 2022, Mr Laing and Mr Wei
of PMC expressed that the smelter's
commissioning was not a priority
until the latter part of 2023 or even 2024. The applicant should not
have relied on its version
without investigating and determining the
true state of affairs.
90.5 The applicant
failed to state that the respondent has requested confirmation of the
applicant's bank account for the
respondent to make payment of VAT
refunds and that applicant has not responded to this request. The
fact that the applicant's deponent
to the founding affidavit was
unaware of this state of affairs does not redeem the applicant.
90.6 The applicant
failed to disclose that on 16 August 2022, the respondent requested a
further extension of the loan repayment
dates, which the applicant
received and considered. The applicant should have disclosed this
fact and the status of its consideration
or outcome of the request.
90.7 The applicant
relied on scant, incorrect and unsupported allegations that the
respondent was in default regarding payments
due to Richland, which
was portrayed as the respondent's landlord, who the applicant stated
refused to release assets held in storage.
Richland was not the
respondent's landlord, they shared certain storage facilities, and
the respondent was not indebted.
[91] It follows that when
the applicant moved the application on an
ex parte
and urgent
basis, it relied on an incorrect and incomplete version of the state
of affairs, as alluded to above. Whether the applicant
wilfully or
negligently omitted or misstated the facts is immaterial.
[92] The next stage of
the enquiry concerns whether the incomplete and incorrect picture
portrayed by the applicant was material
and relevant to the relief
sought and granted urgently.
[93] For reasons that
will become apparent, I believe that concerning urgency, a
distinction ought to be drawn between orders, on
the one hand,
relating to the perfection of the notarial bond (excluding the order
authorising the removal of the assets) and on
the other hand, the
removal and the rule
nisi
providing for the sale of
respondent's movable assets.
# Orders relating to the
perfection of the notarial bond (excluding the order authorising the
removal of the assets)
Orders relating to the
perfection of the notarial bond (excluding the order authorising the
removal of the assets)
[94] As indicated above,
the question is whether the nondisclosures by the applicant were
material and relevant to the urgent application
for the perfection of
the notarial bond (excluding the order authorising the removal of the
assets). For clarity, where I refer
to orders 4.1 and 4.2 in this
discussion, such references shall notionally exclude those relevant
to the Sheriff taking possession
by physically removing the relevant
assets from the respondent's premises.
[95] As I have stated
above, the respondent's movable assets were attached by the Sheriff
on 5 October 2022 through inventorying
and affixing identifying
markers/stickers as envisaged by orders 4.2, 4.2.1 and 4.2.2. As
matters stand, the applicant's Notarial
Bond has thus been perfected.
[96]
Where there
is a failure to disclose all material facts, the court could exercise
its discretion to preserve the orders granted
in the
ex
parte
proceedings, provided there were very cogent practical reasons to do
so.
[22]
In exercising that
discretion, this court will also regard the extent of the
nondisclosure, whether a proper disclosure might have
influenced the
court that granted the perfection order, the reasons for
nondisclosure and the consequences of setting the provisional
order
aside.
[23]
The test is
objective.
[24]
[97]
It is
worthwhile to appreciate the following remark by Harms J in the
Contract
Forwarding
matter: "
The
right in question, a pledge, is a real right, which is established by
means of taking possession and not by means of an agreement
to
pledge. The bondholder who obtains possession first thereby
establishes a real right. If I may be permitted some more Latin:
vigilantibus
non dormientibus iura subveniunt
,
meaning that the laws aid those who are vigilant and not those who
sleep.
"
[25]
[98] This passage quoted
immediately above emphasises the inherent vulnerability of a notarial
bondholder. However, if an applicant
fails to make out a case in its
founding papers that it is entitled to have its notarial bond
perfected, or if the respondent demonstrates
that the applicant
failed to disclose facts that the applicant was not entitled to such
relief, then there would be no reason whatsoever
to find that the
application is urgent. I am therefore of the view that the nature of
the application, i.e., the perfection of
a notarial bond, and the
applicant's concomitant right to have an order to this effect
granted, are factors that a court can (and
should, in my view) take
into account when considering the issue of urgency in matters of this
nature.
[99]
The Supreme
Court of Appeal stated that a court, in the exercise of its
discretion, cannot refuse an order to an applicant who has
a right to
possession of a pledged article to take possession and the principles
relating to the limited discretion to refuse specific
performance do
not apply to the enforcement of any such right. In the absence of a
conflict with the Bill of Rights or a rule to
the contrary, a court
may not, under the guise of the exercise of discretion, have regard
to what is fair and equitable in that
particular court's view and so
dispossess someone of a substantive right.
[26]
A rule relevant to the perfection of a notarial bond can only be
discharged on grounds that go to the root of the creditor's
entitlement
to possession.
[27]
[100] I consider
the applicant's incorrect and incomplete statements, that the
applicant has not made any serious or plausible
attempt to explain
its nondisclosures, and that the applicant has not shied away from
making sweeping allegations of which it did
not have personal
knowledge and without investigating relevant aspects.
[101] It is,
however, common cause that the respondent was indebted to the
applicant and in breach of its repayment obligations.
The fact that
the respondent denies the amount reflected in the applicant's
Certificate of Balance makes no difference. These common
cause facts
entitled the applicant to perfect its security as is provided for in
clause 8.2 of the Notarial Bond. On the respondent's
version, it
sought a further indulgence for extended repayment terms. The denial
by the respondent of a breach of clauses 7.2.3
and 7.2.6 of the
Notarial Bond is of no assistance.
[102] Applying the
principles enunciated in the
Contract Forwarding
matter to
this application, I am of the view that the applicant's inadequate
and incorrect disclosures and the facts in its founding
papers, read
with the facts put up by the respondent in opposition, do not strike
at the heart of the applicant's right to perfect
its security and to
have approached the court by way of an urgent application for the
perfection of the notarial bond. Accordingly,
the applicant's
incorrect and incomplete disclosures were not material and relevant
to the applicant's urgent application for the
perfection of the
Notarial Bond through the attachment
in situ
.
[103] It follows
that the orders for the perfection of the applicant's Notarial Bond
through inventorying and affixing identifying
markers/stickers to the
items in question, as envisaged by orders 4.2, 4.2.1 and 4.2.2
(excluding the order authorising the removal
of the assets) ought to
be, confirmed and made final.
[104] Even if I
were wrong in arriving at this conclusion (that applicant's
nondisclosures were material and relevant to urgency),
I believe that
the relevant orders should not be set aside in any event.
[105]
In
Schlesinger
(
supra
), Le Roux J also
considered when a court would exercise its discretion in favour of a
party who has been remiss in its duty to
disclose rather than to set
aside the order obtained by it on incomplete facts. He concluded (at
350B–C):
"It
appears to me that unless there are very cogent practical reasons why
an order should not be rescinded
,
the Court will always frown on an
order obtained ex parte on incomplete information and will
set it aside even if relief
could be obtained in a subsequent
application by the same applicant."
[106]
The
Constitutional Court approved of the approach stated in
Schlesinger
quoted
immediately hereabove by stating that where there is a failure to
disclose all material facts, the Court would be able to
exercise its
discretion to preserve the orders granted in the
ex
parte
proceedings, provided there were very cogent practical reasons to do
so.
[28]
[107] On the one
hand, the attachment
in situ
of the respondent's movable
assets perfected the applicant's security. If the order were to be
set aside, it would leave the applicant
exposed as far as its
security is concerned, contrary to its entitlement to have its
security perfected as envisaged by the Notarial
Bond. On the other
hand, no facts have been advanced that the attachment of the
respondent's movable assets
in situ
has hampered or will
hamper its business operations and ability to complete the PMC
contract.
[108] I believe,
therefore, that these circumstances constitute cogent practical
reasons why the orders for the perfection
of the applicant's Notarial
Bond through inventorying and affixing identifying markers/stickers
to the items in question, as envisaged
by orders 4.2, 4.2.1 and 4.2.2
(excluding the order authorising the removal of the assets), should
not be set aside.
# The removal and sale of
the respondent's assets
The removal and sale of
the respondent's assets
[109] The next
enquiry is whether the applicant's nondisclosures were material and
relevant to the urgency of the relief sought
and granted for the
removal or sale (albeit provisionally) of the respondent's movable
assets.
[110] The applicant
failed to make full and correct disclosure to the court that
considered the application on 4 October 2022.
As more fully set out
above, these inadequacies, broadly stated, related to the status of
the project, the respondent's ability
and prospects to complete the
project, and the respondent's financial position and means.
[111] On the
applicant's version in the founding affidavit, the PMC contract is
the respondent's lifeline. Given that the
project commenced in 2019,
that the commissioning of the furnace was envisaged for July 2022 to
have been completed (on the applicant's
version), and on the
respondent's estimates of 7 November 2022 (on which date it deposed
to its answering affidavit), the project
would have been completed by
April 2023 at the latest. The transcript of the routine project
status meeting further reveals that
all the parties worked full steam
towards completing the project. The removal or sale of the
respondent's movable assets will undoubtedly
detrimentally impact the
respondent's business operations and is likely to affect the
respondent's ability to complete the project
in terms of the PMC
contract.
[112] In this
context, removing the respondent's movable assets (under attachment)
is a drastic remedy, considering that the
order was granted through
urgent and
ex parte
proceedings. One should also bear in mind
that the Notarial Bond provided for far less drastic and invasive
measures to perfect
the applicant's security than the removal of
respondent's movable assets, i.e., inventorying or affixing a
marker/sticker, as envisaged
by orders 4.2.1 and 4.2.2 respectively.
[113] Further, the
grounds proffered in support of the matter being heard on an urgent
basis do not set forth explicitly (as
is required by rule 6(12)(b))
why the relief for the removal of the respondent's assets (over and
above orders 4.2.1 and 4.2.2)
could not have been sought in the
ordinary course, especially considering the status of the project.
Put differently, the applicant
did not demonstrate why the attachment
of the respondent's movable assets through inventorying and affixing
of identifying markers/stickers
by the Sheriff would or may be
inadequate to perfect the Notarial Bond and why the granting of
relief authorising the removal of
the said assets was urgent.
[114] The same
reasoning applies to the order to sell the respondent's movable
assets (under attachment). The applicant similarly
did not
demonstrate any grounds why that relief (albeit in the form of a rule
nisi
) was urgent and why it could not have been sought in the
ordinary course, especially considering the status of the project.
[115] It follows
that the applicant's inaccurate and incomplete disclosures are
material and relevant to the urgent application
for the removal and
sale of the respondent's movable assets. In my view, the correct and
full facts might (and probably would)
have influenced that court in
its decision to hear the matter on an urgent basis for relief,
authorising the (immediate) removal
of the respondent's movable
assets and authorising the sale of the said assets, albeit in terms
of a rule
nisi
. The applicant's application inasmuch as it
relates to the removal or sale of the was not urgent.
[116] There are no
cogent practical considerations why the orders authorising the
removal and sale of the respondent's assets
(presently under
attachment as security under the Notarial Bond) should be maintained.
[117] The parts of
the perfection order providing for the removal or sale of the
respondent's movable assets as aforesaid
should be set aside.
# Conclusion
Conclusion
[118] When this
court asked counsel for both parties during the hearing whether the
work on the project was in progress, they
did not agree. The
project's present status and the respondent's financial and otherwise
affairs are unknown to this court.
[119] For the
reasons stated above, inasmuch as it relates to the orders for the
perfection of the applicant's Notarial Bond
through inventorying and
affixing identifying markers/stickers to the items in question, as
envisaged by orders 4.2, 4.2.1 and
4.2.2 (excluding the order
authorising the removal of the assets), the perfection order ought to
be confirmed and made final.
[120] Further, the
applicant's application for the relief authorising the removal of the
respondent's assets envisaged by
order 4.2 (excluding orders 4.2.1
and 4.2.2) or for the sale of those assets as envisaged by orders 2
and 2.1 are to be set aside.
If the Sheriff has removed any of the
respondent's movable assets referred to in the Sheriff's return
regarding the attachment
on 5 October 2022, those movable assets must
be returned whilst remaining under attachment
in situ
.
# Costs
Costs
[121]
Although
the issue of costs remains the discretion of the court, the
discretion cannot be exercised arbitrarily but judicially on
grounds
upon which a reasonable person could have arrived. The approach to
awarding costs is succinctly set out in
Ferreira
v Levin NO and Others, Vryenhoek and Others v Powell NO and
Others
[29]
in paragraph 3:
"
The Supreme
Court has, over the years, developed a flexible approach to costs
which proceeds from two basic principles, the first
being that the
award of costs, unless expressly otherwise enacted, is in the
discretion of the presiding judicial officer, and
the second that the
successful party should, as a general rule, have his or her costs.
Even this second principle is subject to
the first. The second
principle is subject to a large number of exceptions where the
successful party is deprived of his or her
costs. Without attempting
either comprehensiveness or complete analytical accuracy, depriving
successful parties of their costs
can depend on circumstances such
as, for example, the conduct of parties, the conduct of their legal
representatives, whether a
party achieves technical success only, the
nature of the litigants and the nature of the proceedings. I mention
these examples
to indicate that the principles which have been
developed in relation to the award of costs are by their nature
sufficiently flexible
and adaptable to meet new needs which may arise
in regard to constitutional litigation…
"
[122]
Recently,
in
Dhlamini
v Schumann, Van den Heever and Slabbert Inc and Others
[30]
,
the Supreme Court of Appeal dealt with a matter in which both parties
were partially successful. In that matter, the court ordered
each
party to pay its own costs.
[123] In this case,
both parties were partially successful.
[124]
However, in
Schlesinger
,
where there had been a material nondisclosure by an applicant in
ex
parte
proceedings, the court granted costs against the successful applicant
as a mark of the court's displeasure, and punitive costs
may even be
granted where the original application was with a reckless disregard
of a litigant's duty to a court in making a full
and frank disclosure
of all known facts which might influence the court in reaching a just
conclusion.
[31]
Even though
partially successful, an applicant may be ordered to pay the costs of
the application if he/she/it has negligently
failed to disclose
material facts.
[32]
[125] In making the
below cost order, I take into account that the applicant, when it
approached the initial court on an
ex parte
basis, made
material nondisclosures, incorrect and unsupported statements to the
extent set out above and the absence of any satisfactory
explanation
by the applicant for the same.
# Order
Order
The following order is
made:
1. The order made in this
matter on 4 October 2022 (the "initial order") is set aside
and substituted by the below order.
2. It is declared that
the applicant's security under General Notarial Bond BN000024611/2019
(the "Notarial Bond") was
perfected on 5 October 2022
through the Sheriff inventorying of or affixing identifying
marker/stickers to the respondent's movable
assets at 1 Copper Road,
Phalaborwa, as listed or referred to in the Sheriff's return at
Caselines 02-5 to 02-7.
3. Any movable assets of
the respondent removed by the Sheriff under the initial order shall
be returned to the respondent's address,
which shall not prejudice
the perfection of the applicant's security under the Notarial Bond.
4. Inasmuch as it relates
to the orders to remove or sell the respondent's movable assets, the
applicant's application
is struck from the roll
for lack of urgency.
5. The respondent's
movable assets at the respondent's address shall remain attached as
the applicant's security under the Notarial
Bond until released by
the applicant or removed or sold under an order authorising such
removal or sale.
6.
The applicant is ordered to pay the costs of the application,
including the respondent's costs of opposition and the
reconsideration
in terms of rule 6(12)(c) of the Uniform Rules of
Court.
C A C KORF
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
PLAINTIFF'S
ATTORNEY:
Shaheem
Samsodien Attorneys
PLAINTIFF'S
COUNSEL:
Adv
BF Gedeger (with Ms Relebogile Moabelo as instructing attorney)
DEFENDANT'S
ATTORNEY:
Adams
& Adams Attorneys
DEFENDANT'S
COUNSEL:
Adv
Hendrik Pretorius
[1]
Loan 1 as a plant and equipment loan in the amount of R 81 million
plus capitalised interest; Loan 2 as a bridging loan in the
amount
of R 38,6 million; Loan 3 as working capital in the amount of R 10
million and, Loan 4 as a VAT loan in the amount of
R5,6 million.
[2]
Loan Agreement, clause 7.
[3]
Loan 2, within 72 hours of receipt from the Department of Trade and
Industry (DTI) of the DTI bridging loan; and Loan 4, as soon
as the
refund is received from the South African Revenue Services.
[4]
Section 3
of the
Law of Evidence Amendment Act, 45 of 1988
provides
as follows,
inter
alia
:
“
3.
Hearsay evidence
(1)
Subject to the provisions of any other law, hearsay evidence
shall not be admitted as evidence at criminal or civil
proceedings,
unless—
…
(c)
the court, having regard to—
(i)
the nature of the proceedings;
(ii) the nature of the
evidence;
(iii) the purpose for which the evidence is
tendered;
(iv) the probative value of the evidence;
(v)
the reason why the evidence is not given by the person upon whose
credibility the probative value of such evidence depends;
(vi)
any prejudice to a party which the admission of such evidence might
entail; and
(vii) any other factor which should in the
opinion of the court be taken into account,
is of the opinion
that such evidence should be admitted in the interests of justice.
”.
[5]
“
34
Access to courts
Everyone
has the right to have any dispute that can be resolved by the
application of law decided in a fair public hearing before
a court
or, where appropriate, another independent and impartial tribunal or
forum.
”
[6]
Universal
City Studios Inc v Network Video (Pty) Ltd
[1986] ZASCA 3
;
1986 (2) SA 734
(A) 753C.
[7]
Turquoise
River incorporated v McMenamin
1992 (3) SA 653
(D) at 657D.
[8]
ISDN
Solutions (Pty) Ltd v CSDN Solutions CC and others
[1996] 4 All SA 58
(W) at 60-61.
[9]
Afgri
Grain Marketing (Pty) Ltd v Trustees for the Time Being of Copenship
Bulkers A/S (in liquidation) and others
[2019] 3 All SA 321
(SCA) at [12].
[10]
Ibid at [13].
[11]
South
African Airways SOC v BDFM Publishers (Pty) Ltd
2016 (2) SA 561
(GJ) at 565 I.
[12]
The
Reclamation Group (Pty) Ltd v Smit
2004 (1) SA 215
(SE) at 218 D-F.
[13]
Ibid at 218 D-G.
[14]
Development
Bank of Southern Africa Ltd. v Van Rensburg NO and Others
(490/2000)
[2002] ZASCA 39
;
[2002] 3 All SA 669
(SCA) at
[20]
.
[15]
Contract Forwarding (Pty) Ltd v Chesterfin (Pty) Ltd and Others
(17/2002) [2002] ZASCA 143; [2003] 1 All SA 267 (SCA).
[16]
Development
Bank of Southern Africa Ltd. v Van Rensburg NO and Others
(
supra
)
at par [22].
[17]
Thint
(Pty) Ltd v National Director of Public Prosecutions; Zuma v
National Director of Public Prosecutions
2009 (1) SA 1
(CC);
2008 (12) BCLR 1197
(CC) at [296].
[18]
Ibid at [301].
[19]
National
Director of Public Prosecutions v Basson
2002 (1) SA 419 (SCA)
[21];
[2002] 2 All SA 255
(A)].
[20]
Schlesinger
v Schlesinger
1979 (4) SA 342 (W)
at 348E–349B.
[21]
Powell
NO and others v Van der Merwe and others
[2005] 1 All SA 149
(SCA) at [75].
[22]
Thint
(Pty) Ltd v National Director
(
supra
)
at [117]
[23]
Phillips
and Others v National Director of Public Prosecutions
2003 (6) SA 447
at 455B-C.
[24]
Cometal-Momental
SARL v Corlana Enterprises (Pty) Ltd
1981 (2) SA 412
(W) at 414H.
[25]
Contract
Forwarding (Pty) Ltd v Chesterfin (Pty) Ltd and Others
(
supra
)
at [6].
[26]
Contract
Forwarding (Pty) Ltd v Chesterfin (Pty) Ltd and Others
(
supra
)
at [10].
[27]
Ibid at [8] and [10].
[28]
Thint
(Pty) Ltd v National Director
(
supra
)
at [117].
[29]
Ferreira
v Levin NO and Others, Vryenhoek and Others v Powell NO and Others
[1996] ZACC 27; 1996 (2) SA 621 (CC).
[30]
Dhlamini
v Schumann, Van den Heever and Slabbert Inc and Others
(505/2021)
[2023] ZASCA 79
(29 May 2023).
[31]
Schlesinger
(
supra
)
at 354D-E.
[32]
Van
Loggerenberg
,
ERASMUS SUPERIOR COURT PRACTICE, Second Edition at D1-62 and the
authorities referred to in footnote 4.
sino noindex
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