Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 980South Africa
Single Destination Engineering (Pty) Ltd Another v Van Heever NO and Others (42818/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 980 (31 August 2023)
Headnotes
an application ordering them to provide security for costs. The parties are referred to herein as they appeared in the application for security for costs. The respondents’ appeal is based on the court having erred both in fact and in law. The grounds of appeal were set out extensively in a long list and will not be repeated. The applicants opposed the application.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Single Destination Engineering (Pty) Ltd Another v Van Heever NO and Others (42818/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 980 (31 August 2023)
Single Destination Engineering (Pty) Ltd Another v Van Heever NO and Others (42818/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 980 (31 August 2023)
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sino date 31 August 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case Number:
42818/2021
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
31.08.23
In
the intervention application between:
JOHANNES
JACOBUS HENDRIK STEYN
First
Applicant
GUNTER
DONALD FREYER
Second
Applicant
In
re
SINGLE
DESTINATION ENGINEERING (PTY) LTD
First
Applicant
GUARDIAN
INTEGRATED SYSTEMS CC
Second
Applicant
And
THEO
VAN DEN HEEVER N.O.
First
Respondent
NURJEHAN
ABDOOL GAFAAR OMAR N.O.
Second
Respondent
THEA
CHRISTINA LOURENS N.O.
Third
Respondent
in
their capacity as the joint liquidators
of
Skincon Calibrate (Pty) (Ltd) (in liquidation)
JUDGMENT
MIA, J
[1]
The respondents in the application for
security for costs are applicants in an intervention application.
They appealed against the
judgment and order delivered on 12 April
2023 by this court that upheld an application ordering them to
provide security for costs.
The parties are referred to herein as
they appeared in the application for security for costs. The
respondents’ appeal is
based on the court having erred both in
fact and in law. The grounds of appeal were set out extensively in a
long list and will
not be repeated. The applicants opposed the
application.
[2] Counsel filed
heads of argument and I am indebted to counsel in view of the heads
of argument having been of assistance
herein.
[3]
Counsel appearing for the respondents argued that the court exercised
a strict and narrow discretion in determining the
security for costs.
He argued essentially that primarily there were two factors which the
court over-emphasised whilst not having
regard to other factors which
ought to have and which did not carry significant weight with the
court. In furtherance of this submission,
it was argued that the
court considered and placed more weight on the respondents' positions
as
peregrini
and that they have funds available to cover the security for costs.
Furthermore, counsel continued the court did not have regard
to the
application to intervene where the respondents raised factual
disputes.
[4] In the
application to intervene the respondents averred that the applicants
misled the court regarding the urgency and
the reasons for seeking
the information. They declared they required documents to prove their
claims at a meeting of creditors
when this was not the position. They
also indicated that they required the information urgently whilst
this was not so. They
did not seek the information for
themselves but for a different litigant proceeding against the
company in liquidation. In that
application, the issues were to be
determined in favour of the respondents if they were granted leave to
join and they would be
the respondents in the application. Counsel
thus argued that it would not be appropriate in the present matter to
grant costs against
them as the respondents.
[5]
A further oversight that counsel raised was that the applicant relied
on the decision in
Den
Norske Bank ASA v MV Ocean King, Her Owners and all Other
Parties interested in her(Sheriff) for the District of the Cape
and
Others Intervening) ( No 1)
[1]
,
which
counsel argued was relevant and appeared not to have been considered
by the court because it was not mentioned in the judgment
and was not
distinguished by the court as not being applicable.
It
was also argued that the court did not agree with the
MV
Ocean King
decision where the facts were similar to the present matter. Counsel
argued that in that matter the court found that the court
in the
MV
Ocean
case did not require the respondents to file security for costs as
they were respondents in the intervention application. Counsel
did
point out that both parties were foreign litigants in the
MV
Ocean King
case. Counsel submitted, however, that if the court were not
persuaded on the legal issue then leave was sought that the appeal
to
be determined by a Full Court of this Division
[6] On the facts,
it was argued that it appeared that the court assumed there was a
judgment against the respondents and there
may have been confusion
regarding the identity of the litigants. The respondents, the
directors, were to be distinguished from
the company Skincon
Calibrate (Pty) (Ltd) (in liquidation). The judgment against the
company in liquidation was in any event obtained
in error it was
argued. The identities of the company in liquidation and the
respondents who have the funds to cover any
costs ordered against
them are to be differentiated. The two identities ought not to be
conflated. The factors mentioned in paragraph
16 of the court’s
judgment namely the domicile of the respondents should not have been
accorded as much weight as appears
to have been accorded, counsel
submitted.
[7]
A further ground raised by counsel was based on
Mystic
River Investments 45 (Pty) Ltd & Another v Zayeed Paruk Inc &
Others
[2]
.
Counsel placed reliance on the
Mystic
decision
as authority for their view that the applicants
were
not as a matter of course entitled to security for costs in view of
the Supreme Court of Appeal’s finding in
Mystic
River
.
The Supreme Court of Appeal’s decision in
Mystic
River
,
it was argued was the authority for this court to exercise its
discretion to grant an order for security for costs after an
investigation
into the circumstances where the equity and fairness to
both litigants dictate that such an order be made. The Court in
Mystic
River
held that each case must be decided upon consideration of all
relevant circumstances and particularly as was the respondents’
concern without adopting a predisposition either in favour or against
granting security for costs.
[8]
This counsel submitted did not imply that a court would exercise its
discretion in favour of peregrine sparingly which
he argued the court
did in the present matter. In
Shepstone
& Wylie
the court noted that:
“
a
Court should not fetter its own discretion in any manner and
particularly not by adopting an approach which brooks of no departure
except in special circumstances, it must decide each case upon a
consideration of all the relevant features, without adopting a
predisposition either in favour of or against granting security
”
[9] It was
submitted that this court held a predisposition favouring security
for costs and the applicants were not entitled
to such security for
costs. Counsel argued that the law did not support the applicant
being granted security for costs.
[10] A further
ground was raised in relation to the court’s acceptance of the
applicant’s version of the that
the respondents fled to
Australia before the project commenced. It was argued that the
court’s displeasure was evident in
that it granted a fixed
amount for security for costs whilst there was no agreement in
respect of the amount. Counsel submitted
that the fixed amount could
only be made an order of court if there was consensus. He argued
there was no consensus in the present
matter and it was appropriate
for the registrar to determine the security. This it was argued
supported the view that there was
an overemphasis of certain factors
in comparison to others. In view thereof, it was submitted that this
deserved the attention
of the Supreme Court of Appeal.
[11]
In response, counsel for the applicants disputed that there was an
absence of consensus. He argued that the respondents'
response to the
first Rule 47 notice on 17 January 2022 reflected that they contested
liability or obligation to furnish security
for costs. Whilst the
rule permitted the respondents to contest liability and quantum, they
only contested their liability and
not the quantum. Thus counsel
submitted, the respondents under oath and on their own version, did
not contest the quantum where
the amount was stated as fair and
reasonable and the computation was set out by the applicants.
Moreover, the submission continued
that, the respondents are the
applicants in the application for intervention. They cannot be
considered as respondents until they
are joined in the intervention
application, thus the submission that they are respondents and should
be treated as respondents
is clearly incorrect it was argued.
[12]
In response to the submission relating to the court’s
predisposition, counsel for the applicants submitted that
having
regard to
Mystic River
the consideration is whether the respondents will fail in the
intervention application where they are the applicants and seek leave
to intervene. Whilst they may have funds those funds are in
Australia, and it is effectively impossible and prohibitively
expensive
to pursue a cost order in Australia. The test according to
Mystic River
he reiterated, was that the decision was in the court’s
discretion after investigating the facts. Counsel submitted a proper
interpretation of
Mystic River
having regard to
Shepstone & Wylie
demonstrated that there was no change in the test and the principles
applicable had not been departed from. The SCA indicated in
Mystic
River
that it did not disagree with the
previous decisions namely
Shepstone &
Wylie, Exploitatie
and
Magida.
[13]
He continued to argue that the balancing of factors exercise that
required a discretion did not mean that the court was
not permitted
to place more emphasis on one factor when all the factors had been
considered. In the exercise of the discretion,
it was not a simple
exercise of adding factors on either side of a scale so as to tip the
scale but required a consideration of
the factors in the exercise of
the discretion. The suggestion that a factor could not enjoy greater
consideration was untenable.
Moreover, he
argued that this court should consider and compare the view expressed
in
Exploitatie
where
at para 18 the Court indicated:
“
The appellants
sought to avoid the general rule of practice that a
peregrinus
should
provide security for an
incola
's costs by relying on the
judgment in this court in
Magida v Minister of Police
, in
which an impecunious
peregrinus
was excused from
providing security, and making the bald and unsubstantiated averment
that the appellants —
'. . . will be unable to
furnish security for costs, due to the (respondent)failing to honour
his debts towards them the (appellants)
are hardly in a position to
finance their own costs . . .'.
[14] Additionally,
counsel submitted that
Mystic River
restated the principles
applicable that a
peregrine
pay security for the costs of an
incola
after considering the relevant facts. He argued that
this court did consider all relevant facts. He argued that this court
did
not display a predisposition or bias as suggested by the
respondents and argued that bias should lightly be attributed to a
court.
[15]
Regarding the suggested bias, he referred to the decision in
Benert
v ABSA Bank Ltd
[3]
, where the Constitutional
Court found that where bias was alleged ‘there is a presumption
of impartiality which is implicit
and that judges have taken an oath
office to administer justice impartially without fear, favour or
prejudice in accordance with
the law and the Constitution’.
Moreover, ‘judicial officers through their training have the
ability to disabuse their
minds of any irrelevant personal beliefs
and predispositions’. Where the counsel for the
respondents suggests that
the court was biased in its application of
its discretion counsel for the applicant submitted that it was
incorrect.
[16]
Counsel for the applicants argued furthermore, that the respondents
were wrong in arguing that the
Plascon
Evans
Rule
[4]
was applicable in the
interlocutory application for security for costs which did not apply
to the facts. Whilst it may have
been applicable in the
intervention application, the facts that were deposed to in that
application could not determine the outcome
of the application for
security for costs. Moreover, that application was not before this
court for determination and the factual
disputes in the intervention
application cannot be determined by this court. The allegations that
were purported to be false are
in the main application and have
nothing to do with the application for security for costs that the
present applicants seek. To
the extent that the
Plascon
Evans
Rule applies to factual disputes, it was submitted the court could
only consider the application for security for costs as the
court was
not determining the application for intervention. The respondents
have not been joined and are not respondents in the
main application.
[17]
The respondents may be granted leave to appeal where they have
satisfied the court that the appeal would have reasonable
prospects
of success or there is some other compelling reason why the appeal
should be heard including conflicting judgments on
the matter under
consideration in terms of
section 17(1)(a)(i)
of the
Superior Courts
Act, 10 of 2013
.
[5]
In
considering whether the respondents have met the standard I have
regard to the
submissions
above.
[18] The
application for intervention is not before this court for
determination and whilst this court is aware of the application
and
its contents, the determination has not been made and there has been
no intervention granted as yet. It is premature to argue
that the
respondents before this court in the application for security are
respondents in the main application which has not been
determined and
on the respondents' version has factual disputes. I do not venture
into the main application to determine it and
consider its contents
applicable only to the extent it may be applicable with regard to the
security for costs.
[19] I have had
regard to the Supreme Court of Appeal’s application of what are
the relevant facts for consideration
in
Mystic River.
The
Court in its analysis in
Mystic River
referred to the test in
Shepstone & Wylie
and had regard to the balancing exercise
pertaining to the convenience of recovering costs from a litigant in
a foreign jurisdiction
and the inconvenience, delay and additional
costs it would entail.
[20]
The
Court in
Mystic
River
clarified that it indicated in
Exploitatie
Beleggingsmaatschappij Argonauten 11BV and another v Honig
[6]
that
a peregrine should provide security for an incola’s costs,
however it did not intend to depart from the settled principles
in
Magida
v Minister of Police
[7]
and
Shepstone
& Wylie and Others v Geyser NO
[8]
.
At paragraph [12] of
Mystic
River
the
Court said:
“
The
court in
Shepstone & Wylie
left
open the question as to how a discretion to order security for costs
should be classified. This question has since been
settled by the
Constitutional Court in
Giddey NO v
JC Barnard & Partners (Giddey NO
),where
it set out the following guidelines to determine the extent of the
appellate court's power to substitute its own determination
for that
of the High Court
.
The
court held that:
'[The court of first
instance] is best placed to make an assessment of the relevant facts
and correct legal principles, and it would
not be appropriate for an
appellate court to interfere with that decision as long as it is
judicially made on the basis of the
correct facts and legal
principles. If the court takes into account irrelevant considerations
or bases the exercise of its discretion
on wrong legal principles,
its judgment may be overturned on appeal. Beyond that, however, the
decision of the court of first instance
will be unassailable.'”
[21]
In
Exploitatie
[9]
the Court held:
“
if
their financial status was relevant to the question of security it
was incumbent upon them to take the court into their confidence
and
make sufficient disclosure of their assets and liabilities to enable
the court to make a proper assessment thereof in the exercise
of its
discretion. That was not done. In any event, the fact that the
respondent would have to proceed against the appellants abroad
if he
obtained a costs order in his favour with the associated uncertainty
and inconvenience that would entail, was one of the
fundamental
reasons a peregrinus should provide securit
y”
[22]
The principles set out in
Shepstone
and Wylie
indicate the court preferred the
approach
in
Keary
Developments Ltd v Tarmac Construction Ltd and Another
[10]
where
the Court said:
'The court must carry out
a balancing exercise. On the one hand it must weigh the injustice to
the plaintiff if prevented from pursuing
a proper claim by an order
for security. Against that, it must weigh the injustice to the
defendant if no security is ordered and
at the trial the plaintiff's
claim fails and the defendant finds himself unable to recover from
the plaintiff the costs which have
been incurred by him in his
defence of the claim.’
[23]
When the ratio in
Shepstone & Wylie
is applied to the present matter the
respondents do not complain that they are able to pay the costs. They
indicate they have sufficient
funds, albeit in Australia. In
considering the factors, namely the applicants having to recover
costs from the respondents seeking
to intervene who reside in a
foreign jurisdiction, the inconvenience, delay and additional costs
it would entail, the aforementioned
factors which I considered are
all referenced in
Shepstone & Wylie.
The court indicates in
Mystic
River
that “
Fairness
and equity dictate that the second appellant should be ordered to
provide security for costs, as he involved himself in
the matter in
his personal capacity so that when the moneys due to Mystic River are
returned to it, he could claim his 50% share
of the profit. He could
have simply withdrawn from the matter in order to defeat the
application for security if he was indeed
litigating solely for the
benefit of Mystic River.”
The
facts in the application for security for costs before me are not
distinguishable from
Mystic River
in
this aspect. On the contrary, in the present matter where the
respondents seek leave to intervene, they mirror the facts
in
Mystic
River
where they similarly seek to join
the proceedings. Similarly fairness and equity dictate that they be
ordered to pay security for
costs when applying the principle in
Sheptstone & Wylie
.
[24] The
respondents have not demonstrated that this court has taken account
of irrelevant considerations or bases or determined
the matter on the
wrong legal principles such that it may be overturned on appeal.
[25] I turn to the
issue of costs. The applicants sought the costs of two counsel. The
respondents argued that it was not
necessary. Whilst a junior counsel
argued the matter initially, I am of the view that senior counsel was
required in this matter.
[26] For the
reasons above I grant the following order:
1. The application
for leave to appeal is dismissed with costs which shall include the
costs of two counsel.
SC MIA
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
JOHANNESBURG
For
the Applicant:
Adv
M.P Van Der Merwe SC
Instructed
by Tim Du Toit & Co Inc
For
the Respondent:
Adv.
N.G.D Maritz SC & Adv W.K.C Pretsch
Instructed
by Primerio Law Inc
Heard:
14 August 2023
Delivered:
31 August 2023
[1]
Den
Norske Bank ASA v MV Ocean King, Her Owners and all Other
Parties interested in her(Sheriff) for the District of the
Cape and
Others Intervening) ( No 1)
1997(4)
SA 345 ( C)
[2]
Mystic
River Investments 45 (Pty) Ltd & Another v Zayeed Paruk Inc &
Others
2023(4) SA 500 (SCA)
[3]
Benert
v ABSA Bank Ltd
2011(3)
SA 92( CC)
[4]
Plascon.-Evans
Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
1984 (3) SA 523
A at 634H-635B
[5]
Section 17
[6]
Exploitatie
Beleggingsmaatschappij Argonauten 11BV and another v Honig
[2012]
2 All SA 22
SCA
[7]
Magida
v Minister of Police
1987(1) SA 1 (A)
[8]
Shepstone
& Wylie and Others v Geyser NO
1998
(3) SA 1036 (SCA)
[9]
Exploitatieen
Beleggingsmaatschppij Argonauten 11BV and another v Honig
[2012] 2 All SA 22
SCA
[10]
[1995]
3 All ER 534
(CA) at 540
a
-
b
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