Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1412South Africa
Mawere v Master Of The High Court Of South Africa and Another (123899/2023 ; 040602/2016) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1412 (5 November 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
5 November 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Mawere v Master Of The High Court Of South Africa and Another (123899/2023 ; 040602/2016) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1412 (5 November 2023)
Mawere v Master Of The High Court Of South Africa and Another (123899/2023 ; 040602/2016) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1412 (5 November 2023)
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sino date 5 November 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Case No: 123899/2023
In
the matter between
MUTAMWA DZIVA
MAWERE
Applicant
# And
And
# MASTER OF THE HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
MASTER OF THE HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
Respondent
# SMM HOLDINGS (PRIVATE)
LIMITED
SMM HOLDINGS (PRIVATE)
LIMITED
Intervening
Party
Case No: 040602/2016
In
re
SMM HOLDINGS
(PRIVATE) LIMITED
Applicant
# And
And
# MUTAMWA DZIVA MAWERE
MUTAMWA DZIVA MAWERE
Respondent
## JUDGMENT IN URGENT
APPLICATION
JUDGMENT IN URGENT
APPLICATION
PEARSE AJ:
1.
In this application, which was initiated and
sought to be conducted as one of extreme urgency, the applicant (Mr
Mawere) seeks an
order:
1.1.
declaring an order for his sequestration dated 08
May 2023 to be a legal nullity (NM prayer 2.4); and
1.2.
granting him wide-ranging and far-reaching
declaratory, interdictory and ancillary relief (NM prayers 2.1 to
2.3, 2.5 and 2.6).
2.
Since I am driven to conclude that this
application should be struck from the roll for want of urgency, I say
little of and express
no view on the merits of the matter.
3.
Mr Mawere deposed to a founding affidavit on 24
November 2023. He describes himself as a debtor in respect of an
order granted in
favour of “
a
litigant cited as SMM Holdings Private Limited, SMM, whose legal
standing as a company is at the core of the matter
”
(FA paragraph 6). The challenge is to the effect
that SMM lacked
locus standi
to secure a sequestration order since the rights
it asserted against Mr Mawere had been acquired pursuant to a
Zimbabwean law that
is inconsistent with section 2 of the South
African Constitution and public policy and thus invalid and of no
force or effect (FA
paragraphs 7, 8, 14, 30 and 37).
4.
The sequestration court is said to have been
defrauded and/or intentionally deceived by false statements and
misrepresentations
(FA paragraphs 22 to 26).
5.
No trustee appointed pursuant to the sequestration
order was cited as a party to or participated in the proceedings
before this
court.
6.
Nor was SMM cited as a party to these proceedings.
However, SMM noted an intention to oppose the application on the
afternoon of
28 November 2023 and delivered both an application for
leave to intervene and an answering affidavit on the morning of 30
November
2023.
7.
Given its apparent involvement in some two decades
of litigation between the parties, including as described in the
founding affidavit
itself, SMM should plainly have been cited as a
respondent in these proceedings and its application to be recognised
as such must
succeed. Leaving aside the position of any appointed
trustees, Mr Mawere was materially remiss in not citing SMM as a
party to
this application.
8.
For purposes of this judgment, I mention only one
allegation contained in the answering affidavit of SMM. According to
the deponent,
Rumbidzai Matambo of SMM’s Zimbabwean attorneys,
this court declared Mr Mawere to be a vexatious litigant, pursuant to
section
2(1)(b) of the Vexatious Proceedings Act 3 of 1956 (the Act),
by order of Van Nieuwenhuizen AJ granted on 11 May 2022 under case
number 16114/2022 (AA paragraphs 11.2 and 16 to 19).
9.
When the matter was called at 11:30 on 30 November
2023, I asked Mr Mawere whether he had been declared a vexatious
litigant as
alleged by SMM. He confirmed the declaration but claimed
that it had been challenged on review. When asked whether the
challenge
had been successful, Mr Mawere replied that the matter was
pending before court.
10.
At or about that time, Mr Bothma SC, who appeared
for SMM, stated that, as far as he was aware, having been involved in
litigation
between the parties for almost two decades, an application
for leave to appeal against the declaration had been dismissed with
costs and no review proceedings had been initiated or were pending
before court.
11.
I asked Mr Mawere whether he had sought and/or
been granted leave to initiate this application. He confirmed that he
had not done
so but submitted that leave was unnecessary given the
pending challenge to the declaration and, in any event, that the Act
itself
was in conflict with section 2 of the Constitution and thus
invalid and of no force or effect.
12.
I enquired whether there had been or was any
challenge to the constitutionality of the Act, to which Mr Mawere
replied that none
existed or was required given the supremacy of the
Constitution, in the face of which the Act could not stand.
13.
I explained to Mr Mawere my concern that his
launch and persistence with this application might be in
contravention of the declaration.
In particular, I disclosed to him
what I perceived to be a risk that, in the absence of a successful
challenge to the declaration
and/or the Act, a subsequent court
seized with contempt proceedings might view his presence in this
court as a factor when considering
whether he was guilty of contempt
of court and, if so, what sanction would be appropriate in the
circumstances of the case.
14.
I also required that Mr Mawere take time to
consider his position and reflect on whether his interests might be
better served by
not proceeding with his application before this
court.
15.
Mr Mawere was insistent on – even defiant in
– continuing to argue the application.
16.
I disclosed to Mr Mawere my inclination to grant
an order along the lines set out in paragraph 24 below
and
then afforded him an opportunity to make such submissions as he
deemed appropriate.
17.
He proceeded to do so, whereafter Mr Bothma SC
advanced answering submissions and Mr Mawere concluded in reply.
18.
The status of any competent and extant challenge
to the declaration is not known to or determinable by this court at
this time.
19.
As indicated at the outset of this judgment,
moreover, it is unnecessary for me to express any view on the merits
of the matter.
20.
In my view, this application, which purports to
challenge a sequestration order granted as far back as May 2023, is
plainly not
urgent and, in any event, provides no basis for the
extremely urgent and indeed prejudicial basis on which Mr Mawere
sought to
be heard in the final week of the final term of this
court’s year.
21.
Having been aware of that order for more than six
months, Mr Mawere should not have been surprised when, on undisclosed
dates, he
apparently learned of a trustee’s efforts to exercise
control over assets pursuant to the sequestration order (FA paragraph
36).
22.
In any event, what appears to be a second version
of the notice of motion was only uploaded on the afternoon of Monday
27 November
2023 and purported to set the matter down for hearing at
11:00 on Thursday 30 November 2023. In its terms, it afforded the
respondent
until 12:00 on Friday 24 November 2023 to note any
opposition to the application and until 14:00 on Monday 27 November
2023 to
prepare and deliver any answering affidavit. The timetable
imposed by Mr Mawere made no provision for any replying affidavit to
be delivered and offered no time for the papers to be properly
considered by this court.
23.
Nor did the founding papers mount any serious
argument in support of condoning this application’s
multi-faceted non-compliance
with the provisions of rule 6(12)(a),
chapter 9 of this court’s practice manual and the note to legal
practitioners of 04
October 2021.
24.
In the circumstances, I grant an order in the
following terms:
24.1.
The intervening party is granted leave to
intervene as the second respondent in the application under case
number 123899/2023, with
the costs of intervention to be paid by the
applicant on the attorney and client scale.
24.2.
The application under case number 123899/2023 is
struck from the roll with costs, on the attorney and client scale,
for want of
urgency.
24.3.
The applicant is directed to show cause on Monday
15 April 2024 why an order in the following terms should not be
granted:
24.3.1.
convicting the applicant of contempt of court on
account of any wilful contravention of the order of Van Nieuwenhuizen
AJ granted
on 11 May 2022 under case number 16114/2022; and
24.3.2.
in the event of such conviction, committing the
applicant to imprisonment for such period as the court may deem
appropriate
alternatively
imposing
on the applicant such fine as the court may deem appropriate.
24.4.
Pursuant to the relief contemplated in paragraph
24.3 above:
24.4.1.
the applicant is directed to deliver any
supplementary founding affidavit by 12:00 on Monday 19 February 2024;
24.4.2.
the second respondent is directed to deliver any
supplementary answering affidavit by 12:00 on Monday 04 March 2024;
24.4.3.
the applicant is directed to deliver any replying
affidavit by 12:00 on Monday 18 March 2024;
24.4.4.
the applicant and the second respondent are
directed to deliver any practice notes, heads of argument, lists of
authorities and
chronologies of material events by 12:00 on Monday 01
April 2024;
24.4.5.
the applicant is directed to take such steps as
may be necessary to ensure that the matter is duly set down for
hearing on Monday
15 April 2024; and
24.4.6.
in the event of any failure to do so on the part
of the applicant, the second respondent is empowered to take such
steps as may
be necessary to ensure that the matter is duly set down
for hearing on Monday 15 April 2024.
PEARSE AJ
This judgment is handed
down electronically by uploading it to the file of this matter on
Caselines. It will also be emailed to
the parties or their legal
representatives. The date of delivery of this judgment is deemed to
be 05 December 2023.
Applicant:
M Mawere
Instructed
By:
AG Mulaudzi Attorneys
Counsel for
Respondent:
N/A
Instructed By:
N/A
Counsel for
Intervening Party:
C Bothma SC
Instructed By:
DLA Piper South Africa
(RF) Inc
Date of Hearing:
30 November 2023
Date
of Judgment:
05
December 2023
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