Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1099South Africa
Siyakhulisa Trading Enterprise (Pty) Ltd v Glencore Operations South Africa (Pty) Ltd and Another (2023-038568) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1099 (2 October 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
2 October 2023
Headnotes
to a high, though not insurmountable threshold. This is so, in order to limit an abuse of the process and to ensure that deserving cases, are heard in an expedited manner.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Siyakhulisa Trading Enterprise (Pty) Ltd v Glencore Operations South Africa (Pty) Ltd and Another (2023-038568) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1099 (2 October 2023)
Siyakhulisa Trading Enterprise (Pty) Ltd v Glencore Operations South Africa (Pty) Ltd and Another (2023-038568) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1099 (2 October 2023)
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sino date 2 October 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case Number: 2023-038568
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
NOT REVISED
02.10.23
In
the matter between:
SIYAKHULISA TRADING
ENTERPRISE (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
GLENCORE
OPERATIONS SOUTH AFRICA (PTY) LTD
JABULA
PLANT HIRE (PTY) LTD
First
Respondent
Second
Respondent
JUDGMENT
FORD , AJ.
Introduction
[1] On 8 May 2023,
I handed down an
ex-tempore
judgment, striking the applicant’s
urgent application from the roll, for lack of urgency. Pursuant
thereto, the applicant
requested written reasons for that decision.
The request for reasons was unfortunately only brought to my
attention much later.
What follows, are the written reasons for my
decision.
[2] It bears noting
that, the striking of a matter from the urgent roll, for want of
urgency, does not by any means suggest,
that I have formed an opinion
on the merits. It simply means that the application, is not regarded
as urgent, and has to be enrolled
for hearing in the ordinary course.
[3]
Strydom J,
explained it as follows in
Roets
N.O. and Another v SB Guarantee Company (RF) (Pty) Ltd
and
Others
[1]
:
If a matter is struck
from the roll on urgency an applicant can simply set the matter down
again on proper notice in compliance
with the rules, as the only
finding which was made was that the matter was not properly on the
roll.
The issue of inherent
urgency
[4] The applicant
contends that its [alleged] spoliation by the first respondent, on
which its claim of urgency is based,
is inherently urgent, and as
such demands the urgent intervention of this court.
[5]
Recently,
Wilson J, in
Volvo
Financial Services Southern Africa (Pty) Ltd v Adamas Tkolose Trading
CC
[2]
dealt
with the issue of inherent urgency, as follows:
4. Sometimes, Parliament
sets out the circumstances in which a court ought to determine a
specific type of matter urgently (see,
for example
,
section
18 (4) (iii) of the
Superior
Courts Act 10 of 2013
and
section
5
of the Prevention of Illegal Eviction from, and Unlawful Occupation
of Land Act 19 of 1998). In all other cases, urgency is determined
not by the nature of the claim brought, but by the circumstances in
which the applicant seeks its adjudication. Uniform Rule 6
(12) says
that a matter is urgent if the applicant will not be able to obtain
“substantial redress at a hearing in due course”
without
at least some urgent relief.
5.
It follows that, whatever the nature of the claim, there must
be some reason why the applicant will not be able to protect or
advance
their legal rights later, unless they are given specific
relief now. Most of the time, the applicant requires no more than
temporary
protection from harm while the process of finally
determining their rights progresses. Sometimes, though, a final
determination
of rights is necessary on an urgent basis because those
rights will have little or no practical effect if the applicant has
to
wait weeks or months to vindicate them in the ordinary course.
6.
There is, accordingly, no class of proceeding that enjoys
inherent preference.
Counsel appearing in urgent court would, in
my view, do well to put the concept of “inherent urgency”
out of their
minds. There are, of course, some types of case[s] that
are more likely to be urgent than others. The nature of the prejudice
an
applicant will suffer if they are not afforded an urgent hearing
is often linked to the kind of right being pursued. Spoliation
is a
classic example of this type of claim. Provided that the person
spoliated acts promptly, the matter will nearly always be
urgent. The
urgency does not, though, arise from the nature of the case itself,
but from the need to put right a recent and unlawful
dispossession.
The applicant comes to court because they wish to restore the
ordinary state of affairs while a dispute about the
right to possess
a thing works itself out. Cases involving possible deprivations of
life and liberty, threats to health, the loss
of one’s home or
some other basic essential of daily life, such as water or
electricity, destruction of property, or even
crippling commercial
loss, are also likely to be urgent.
7.
It
is sometimes said that contempt of court proceedings are inherently
urgent (see, for example,
Rustenburg
Platinum Mines Limited v Lesojane
(UM44/2022)
[2022]
ZANWHC 36
(21
June 2022) at paragraph 7 and
Gauteng
Boxing Promotors Association v Wysoke
(22/6726) [2022] ZAGPJHC 18 (28 April 2022) paragraph 14). I do not
think that can be true as a general proposition. I accept that
the
enforcement of a court order may well qualify as urgent, in
situations where time is of the essence, but it seems to me that
contempt proceedings entail the exercise of powers which often demand
the kind of careful and lengthy consideration which is generally
incompatible with urgent proceedings. For example, it cannot be sound
judicial policy to commit someone to prison, even where the
committal
is suspended, or to impose a fine, on an urgent basis, simply because
that might be the only way to enforce a court order.
There must, in
addition, be some other feature of the case that renders it essential
that the court order be instantly enforced,
such that the penalties
associated with contempt require immediate
imposition.
8.
The fundamental point is that a matter is urgent because of
the imminence and depth of harm that the applicant will suffer if
relief
is not given, not because of the category of right the
applicant asserts.
[6]
There
are certain categories of disputes that have been regarded as
inherently urgent, i.e., contempt of court matters, cases related
to
minors and their wellbeing, business rescue proceedings (to name but
a few). Even if regarded as “
in
herently
urgent”
, urgency must still be
founded on a properly pleaded case for urgency. The fact that a
matter is inherently urgent, does not in
and of itself render matters
urgent for purposes of Rule 6(12) of this court.
[7]
The point
made above was expressed as follows in
Manamela
v Maite,
where the court held
[3]
:
The applicant’s
broad reliance on “contempt proceedings being inherently
urgent” is also misconceived. Simply
because an application
concerns contempt proceedings, that does not of itself justify the
enrolment of such application on the
urgent court’s roll. As in
every other urgent application, the issue of urgency must be
evaluated in the context of the specific
facts of the matter. There
must be exact compliance with the requirements of r 6(12)(b) and an
applicant must explicitly set out
the specific facts which render
such application urgent and why an applicant could not be afforded
substantial redress at a hearing
in due course.
[8] In handing down
my
ex-tempore
judgment, I explained that urgent applications,
allow litigants an opportunity to jump the proverbial queue, in
motion court matters.
[9] The intention
behind the formulation of Rule 6(12), both in its construct and
intention, was to single-out cases deserving
an urgent hearing, free
from, what some might say are, burdensome limitations that accompany
applications in the normal course.
[10] The relevant rule
provides as follows:
(12) (a) In urgent
applications the court or a judge may dispense with the forms and
service provided for in these Rules
and may dispose of such matter at
such time and place and in such manner and in accordance with such
procedure (which shall as
far as practicable be in terms of these
Rules) as it deems fit.
(b) In every
affidavit or petition filed in support of any application under
paragraph (a) of this subrule, the applicant
must set forth
explicitly the circumstances which is averred render the matter
urgent and the reasons why the applicant claims
that applicant could
not be afforded substantial redress at a hearing in due course.
[11] A party seeking the
indulgence to have a matter heard on an urgent basis, is held to a
high, though not insurmountable threshold.
This is so, in order to
limit an abuse of the process and to ensure that deserving cases, are
heard in an expedited manner.
[12] It is accordingly
important for a court to determine, firstly, whether the applicant
has met the threshold, and if so, to hear
the application on the
merits, and if not, to strike the matter from the roll, in order for
it to be heard in the ordinary course.
[13] The applicant in the
present proceedings claims, as a basis for approaching the court on
an urgent basis, that the first respondent
has spoliated its lawful
and undisturbed possession and resorted to self-help. It is not at
this stage necessary to consider the
merits of the claim pertaining
to spoliation.
[14] In so far as urgency
is concerned, the following facts are relevant:
14.1 On 29 June 2022, the
applicant and the first respondent concluded a Service Supply
Agreement;
14.2 The agreement would
run for 36 months, from 1 July 2022 to 30 June 2025;
14.3 On 31 March 2023,
the first respondent, as contended by the applicant, purportedly
terminated the agreement between the parties
in respect of the
Goedgevonden and Tweefontein sites;
14.4 On 5 April 2023, the
second respondent commenced rendering services at the Tweefontein and
Goedgevonden sites, replacing the
applicant;
14.5 On 6 and 11 April
2023, the applicant sent letters to the first respondent demanding
that the first respondent rectifies the
breach of the agreement;
14.6 Various letters were
exchanged between the parties, which for present purposes can be
summarised as the applicant seeking the
first respondent to correct
the breach, refrain from sabotage and poaching of employees;
14.7 The first respondent
in response to a threat by the applicant to institute interdict
proceedings, retorted that the approach
would be untenable as it
would constitute an abuse of process, and that the position of the
first respondent as stated in the letter
of termination, remains
unaltered.
[15] The applicant
explained in these proceedings, that it could not approach this court
for interim relief in circumstances where
it was obligated to first
explore internal remedies.
[16] At the heart of this
matter, lies two disputes, one dealing with the alleged spoliation,
and the other a contractual breach.
[17] It was contended on
behalf of the applicant, that it couldn’t approach the court in
the normal course, since the act
of spoliation had already taken
place. Further, that it was impermissible for the first respondent to
have resorted to self-help,
and that a party is entitled to seek
urgent intervention from a court for interim relief, pending an
arbitration where the main
dispute will be finally determined.
[18] The agreement
concluded between the parties, as correctly pointed out by the first
respondent’s counsel, does make provision
for expedited
arbitration. And it is not denied, by the applicant’s counsel,
that any dispute could also include a dispute
pertaining to
spoliation. I am not persuaded that spoliation, in the context as
pleaded by the applicant, can arise from the provisions
of the
agreement, nor is it contemplated.
[19] The applicant’s
pursuit of internal remedies, did not disentitle it from approaching
this court on an urgent basis, much
sooner than it elected to do.
[20] In the
circumstances, I concluded that the application is not urgent, and
that any urgency which may exist is by and large
self-created. Having
concluded thus, I expressed no view on the merits of the applicant’s
claim on spoliation.
[21] In the result, I
make the following order:
Order
1. The application is
struck from the roll for lack of urgency.
2. The applicant is
ordered to pay the first and second respondent’s costs on the
ordinary scale (party-and-party).
B. FORD
Acting Judge of the High
Court
Gauteng
Division of the High Court, Johannesburg
Delivered: This
judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected on 2 October 2023 and is handed down
electronically by
circulation to the parties/their legal representatives by e mail
and by uploading it to the electronic file
of this matter on
CaseLines. The date for hand-down is deemed to be 2 October
2023
Date of
ex-tempore
judgment: 8 May 2023
Date of written
judgment: 2 October 2023
Appearances:
For
the applicant:
Adv.
G. Shakoane SC
Instructed
by:
Nhubunga
Attorneys
For
the first respondent:
Adv.
D. Watson
Instructed
by:
Werksmans
Attorneys
For the second
respondent:
Adv. B.D. Hitchings
Instructed by:
Seneka Simmonds Inc
[1]
(36515/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 754 (6 October 2022) para 33
[2]
(2023/067290) [2023] ZAGPJHC 846 (1 August 2023)
[3]
(2023/055949) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1011 (6 September 2023) para 47
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