Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1467South Africa
Pamodzi Group Proprietary Limited and Another v National Empowerment Fund and Another (115576/2023) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1467 (15 December 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
15 December 2023
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
>>
2023
>>
[2023] ZAGPJHC 1467
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Pamodzi Group Proprietary Limited and Another v National Empowerment Fund and Another (115576/2023) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1467 (15 December 2023)
Pamodzi Group Proprietary Limited and Another v National Empowerment Fund and Another (115576/2023) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1467 (15 December 2023)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2023_1467.html
sino date 15 December 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Case No: 115576/2023
(1) REPORTABLE:
NO
(2) OF INTEREST
TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3) REVISED: NO
DATE 15 December 2023
In the application for
leave to appeal between
PAMODZI GROUP PROPRIETARY
LIMITED First
Applicant
NDABA ALLAN
NTSELE Second
Applicant
And
NATIONAL EMPOWERMENT
FUND First
Respondent
SINDISWE DLAMINI
NO Second
Respondent
In re: the matter between
NATIONAL EMPOWERMENT
FUND First
Applicant
SINDISWE DLAMINI
NO Second
Applicant
And
PAMODZI GROUP PROPRIETARY
LIMITED First
Respondent
NDABA ALLAN
NTSELE Second
Respondent
PAMODZI UNIQUE
ENGINEERING PROPRIETARY LIMITED Third
Respondent
SIBUSISO
PHANGELA Fourth
Respondent
SABELO
MKHWANAZI Fifth
Respondent
## JUDGMENT IN APPLICATION
FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL
JUDGMENT IN APPLICATION
FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL
PEARSE AJ:
1.
This is an application for leave to appeal
against my order of 04 December 2023 and reasons of 08 December 2023.
The applicants
in this application – the first and second
respondents in the main application – are referred to as PG and
Mr Ntsele.
The respondents in this application – the applicants
in the main application – are referred to as the NEF and Ms
Dlamini.
The reader of this judgment is taken to be familiar with the
order and reasons.
2.
I heard the main application on Friday 01
December 2023 and granted the order on Monday 04 December 2023. On
the following day PG
and Mr Ntsele requested reasons for and applied
for leave to appeal against the order. I delivered my reasons on
Friday 08 December
2023 and PG and Mr Ntsele supplemented their
grounds of appeal on Wednesday 13 December 2023. Both parties were
represented at
a virtual hearing before me at 14:30 yesterday
afternoon.
3.
An
immediate difficulty for this application is that an interim order is
seldom appealable. PG and Mr Ntsele invoke
Lebashe
[1]
in preference to
TWK
[2]
in support of the submission that it is in the interests of justice
that the order and reasons be reconsidered on appeal. That
invocation
is however to be found in a letter as opposed to their notices
outlining the grounds on which leave to appeal is sought.
In
addition, why the interests of justice are said to be engaged by the
facts of this case is not a matter to which PG or Mr Ntsele
devotes
attention
[3]
and there is no
assertion of any basis why the parties should not proceed to have
their disputes determined whilst the holding
position provided for in
the order is in place. I am therefore of the view that the order and
reasons are not appealable and it
is only out of caution that I
continue to assess the merits of this application.
4.
I should add that a misdirection at the
heart of this application is that the grounds of appeal for which PG
and Mr Ntsele contend
take issue with aspects of the reasons for the
order rather than attacking the exercise of discretion in the grant
of the (interim)
order or striking at the terms of the order itself.
There is no focused challenge to any aspect of the order; only
generalised
criticisms of certain of the building blocks contained in
the reasons. Whilst the application should fail for this reason too,
I proceed briefly to address each of PG’s and Mr Ntsele’s
purported grounds of appeal.
5.
The
first ground of appeal is that this court erred in finding that the
NEF and Ms Dlamini had satisfied the requirements of urgency
in terms
of rule 6(12)(a) in circumstances where the application papers were
voluminous and presented complex issues not readily
determinable on
an urgent basis.
[4]
6.
The
circumstances in which I granted condonation for procedural
non-compliance are set out in paragraph 15 read with paragraphs
18,
19 and 20 of the reasons and I do not consider there to be a
reasonable prospect that an appeal court would interfere with
that
exercise of discretion.
[5]
The
expedited basis on which PG and Mr Ntsele have requested reasons
for and applied for leave to appeal against the order
is supportive
of my judgement that the matter is to be dealt with without delay.
7.
The
second ground of appeal is that this court “
erred
in ignoring the glaring evidence pointing at dispute of facts which
are so serious that the court ought to have applied the
Plascon Evans
Rule and find in favour of the Appellants
.”
[6]
8.
It
is notable that the application for leave to appeal identifies no
such dispute of fact.
[7]
A
proper reading of the papers in this matter confirms that matters of
fact are largely common cause between or not pertinently
contested by
the parties. The primary disputes between the parties are matters of
legal interpretation of provisions of the SLFA,
the SHA, the MOI and
the Act. In any event, given that this court was minded to grant only
interim relief on an urgent basis, the
test of application to matters
of fact is that established in
Webster
v Mitchell
[8]
rather
than in
Plascon-Evans
.
[9]
There
is therefore little if any force to this ground of appeal.
9.
The
third ground of appeal is to the effect that this court failed to
strike a fair balance between the parties’ respective
arguments.
[10]
10.
This ground of appeal is vacuous inasmuch
as it fails to identify any argument for the NEF and Ms Dlamini to
which undue weight
was accorded or for PG and Mr Ntsele to which
inadequate weight was accorded. The allegation of an absence of
even-handedness is
unarticulated let alone substantiated. The order
is interim in nature – affording PG and Mr Ntsele a fresh
opportunity to
persuade an arbitrator or judge of their factual and
legal position – and the core arguments for and against each
side to
the litigation are traversed in the reasons. I do not believe
there to be a reasonable prospect that an appeal court would find
there to have been unfairness in the manner in which the urgent
application was heard and decided by this court.
11.
The
fourth ground of appeal is that this court “
erred
in failing to decide the non-joinder argument which was raised by the
appellants as a point of Limine
.”
[11]
12.
As explained in paragraph 16 of the
reasons, I did not consider it necessary – for purposes of
granting urgent interim relief
– to decide the non-joinder
preliminary point and deemed it preferable to postpone the point such
that both sides may address
it more fully, to the extent considered
appropriate, in arbitration or ordinary-course judicial proceedings.
In my judgement, the
non-citation of the share trusts was not fatal
to an application for interim relief on an urgent basis. Notably, it
is not suggested
by PG or Mr Ntsele that the interests of the trusts
were or are in any way prejudiced by the terms of the order. The
point is purely
dilatory in nature. I do not regard there to be a
reasonable prospect that an appeal court would differ with my
inclination to
maintain the
status quo
ante
on the substance of the parties’
disputes pending their determination in further proceedings.
13.
The
fifth ground of appeal is to the effect that this court erred in
suspending and provisionally reversing the impugned conduct
insofar
as it related to Ms Dlamini “
on
[the basis] that there was no board resolution and/or the second
respondent was not given an opportunity to make representation
as to
why she should not be suspended
.”
[12]
14.
This
ground of appeal – which challenges the first element of
interim interdictory relief in respect of Ms Dlamini –
fails to
have meaningful regard to the full content of paragraph 17.2 of the
reasons, criticising only a single component of my
reasoning. Even
then, PG and Mr Ntsele do not say why, in their submission, the
impugned conduct was lawful in circumstances in
which PG appears to
have asserted an entitlement to discipline an employee of PUE and/or
to remove Ms Dlamini from the board without
evidence of compliance
with section 71 of the Act.
[13]
Having
regard to the full content of paragraph 17.2 of the reasons, I am
unpersuaded of any reasonable prospect that an appeal court
would
find a
prima
facie
right not to have been established in respect of Ms Dlamini.
15.
A
related sixth ground of appeal is that this court “
erred
in finding that the appellant did not set out facts, and
circumstances underpinning the allegations of financial malfeacence
on the part of second respondent notwithstanding the fact that it was
made clear in the answering affidavit that it was a precautionary
suspension pending the finalization of the investigation and the
investigation and the subsequent disciplinary action
.”
[14]
16.
Whilst
it was for Ms Dlamini to demonstrate a
prima
facie
right to the suspension and provisional reversal of the impugned
conduct
vis-à-vis
her, PG’s and Mr Ntsele’s apparent reliance on a need to
act immediately and unilaterally in suspending (and thereafter
terminating) Ms Dlamini as director and CEO (employee) of PUE
required, in my view, a degree of particularisation and/or
substantiation
that went beyond a mere assertion of “
serious
allegations of financial malfeasance
”.
[15]
I regard it as insufficient for PG and Mr Ntsele to assert that the
exigencies of the matter were such as to entitle them to act
without
due process whilst contending that the nature and/or extent of such
exigencies would form the subject matter of an investigation
to be
conducted in due course. I reiterate the conclusion to paragraph 14
above.
17.
The
seventh ground of appeal is that this court “
erred
in finding that [I] was not persuaded that the National Empowerment
Fund has ceased to be a shareholder for the reasons advanced
in the
answering affidavit and in argument
.”
[16]
18.
Again,
this ground of appeal is devoid of content in that PG and Mr Ntsele
do not identify any respect in which this court erred
in being
unpersuaded that they are right in contending that the NEF has
relinquished its 39% equity interest in PUE. This application
discloses no meaningful engagement with the court’s reasoning
detailed in paragraph 17.1 of the reasons
[17]
and I do not consider that there is a reasonable prospect that an
appeal court would find that a
prima
facie
right to the suspension and provisional reversal of the impugned
conduct was not established in respect of the NEF.
19.
The
eighth ground of appeal is that I misdirected myself in finding that
“
there
was no dispute of facts which warranted the referral of the matter
for oral evidence to determine the different versions of
the parties,
in so far as it relates, to the shareholding of Pamodzi Unique
Engineering
.”
[18]
20.
Neither side to the litigation requested
that there be a referral of the matter to trial or evidence on any
issue. Nor was such
a referral necessary in respect of the interim
relief granted by this court. I am therefore of the view that this
final ground
of appeal provides no sound basis for the grant of this
application.
21.
In
my view, therefore, none of the eight grounds of appeal exposes any
material error in the order or even the reasons such that
it would
have reasonable prospects of success on appeal.
[19]
Nor
do PG and Mr Ntsele contend for any other compelling circumstances
that warrant the attention of an appeal court.
[20]
22.
This application for leave to appeal was
initiated before the furnishing of reasons for the order and
persisted with after the furnishing
of reasons for the order without
any discernible effort to engage with the court’s order or
reasons. Its motivation appears
to be to suspend the operation of the
order rather than to correct any error in the order.
23.
In the result, the application is dismissed
with costs, on the attorney and client scale, to be borne by PG and
Mr Ntsele, jointly
and severally, the one paying the other to be
absolved.
24.
Towards the end of the hearing of this
application, I was invited by Mr Tshetlo to include in my order a
clarification of the effect
of a dismissal of this application on the
operation or suspension of my order of 04 December 2023. The
invitation was aimed at
forestalling envisaged further disputes
regarding the interpretation and application of the provisions of
section 18 of the SCA.
I am not persuaded that it would be competent
or appropriate for this court to provide what amounts to advice on
the proper construction
of that section. In the circumstances, I
confine myself to the order set out in paragraph 23 above.
PEARSE AJ
This judgment, which is
unsigned due to the circumstances in which the application was head
and decided, 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 15 December 2023.
Counsel for PG and Mr
Ntsele: Advocate
Ndlovu
Instructed
By: Peter
Zwane Attorneys
Counsel for the NEF and
Ms Dlamini: Advocate R Tshetlo
Instructed By:
Norton
Rose Fulbright South Africa Inc
Date of
Hearing: 14
December 2023
Date of
Judgment: 15
December 2023
[1]
United
Democratic Movement and Another v Lebashe Investment Group (Pty) Ltd
and Others
2022
(12) BCLR 1521
(CC)
[2]
TWK
Agriculture Holdings (Pty) Ltd v Hoogveld Boerderybeleggings (Pty)
Ltd and Others
2023
(5) SA 163 (SCA)
[3]
Mr Ndlovu,
who appeared for PG and Mr Ntsele, submitted that it would
be
inappropriate for Ms Dlamini to retain a position of power and
influence whilst undergoing investigation (a state of affairs
that
has passed) but could not explain why, in the circumstances of the
case, an appointee or nominee of his clients could not
remain in her
position, under the scrutiny of the board, pending the outcome of
further proceedings
.
He was not able to dispel this court’s impression that
Lebashe
is
distinguishable on the facts.
[4]
Paragraphs 1
to 3 of application for leave to appeal dated 05 December
2023
[5]
Whilst Mr
Ndlovu submitted that the exercise of discretion had not been
judicial, he was not able to articulate why hearing and deciding the
matter without delay was a misdirection by the court.
[6]
Paragraph 4
of application for leave to appeal dated 05 December 2023
[7]
Although Mr
Ndlovu alluded to disputes of fact in the course of his argument,
none was identified in his submissions.
[8]
Webster
v Mitchell
1948
(1) SA 1186
(W) 1189;
Simon
NO v Air Operations of Europe AB and Others
[1998] ZASCA 79
;
1999
(1) SA 217
(SCA) 189F-I
[9]
Plascon-Evans
Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984 (3) SA 623
(A) 634E-635D;
Stellenbosch
Farmers’ Winery Ltd v Stellenvale Winery (Pty) Ltd
1957 (4) SA 234
(C) 235E-G
[10]
Paragraph 5 of
application for leave to appeal dated 05 December 2023
[11]
Paragraph 1 of
supplementary grounds of appeal dated 13 December 2023
[12]
Paragraph 2 of
supplementary grounds of appeal dated 13 December 2023
[13]
The submission by Mr
Ndlovu that PUE is a division of PG is inconsistent with what
is
alleged in paragraphs 6, 10 and 12 of the founding affidavit and
noted (not denied) in paragraph 15 of the answering affidavit.
Mr
Ndlovu could not point to a contractual or other basis for the
proposition that PG was entitled either to discipline an employee
of
PUE or to remove Ms Dlamini from the board without compliance with
section 71 of the Act. And counsel for the parties were
agreed that
the papers contain no evidence of any PUE board resolution to such
effect.
[14]
Paragraph 3 of
supplementary grounds of appeal dated 13 December 2023
[15]
Mr Ndlovu and Mr Tshetlo,
who appeared for the NEF and Ms Dlamini, confirmed at the
hearing of
this application that the papers before court did not offer any such
particularisation and/or substantiation.
[16]
Paragraph 4 of
supplementary grounds of appeal dated 13 December 2023
[17]
Mr Ndlovu accepted that
there is no contractual provision before court that states
that the
NEF’s shareholding in PUE would be converted, repurchased,
transferred or otherwise extinguished on repayment
of the loan under
the SLFA
.
He could place his submission no higher than that that would be a
commercially logical bargain for the parties to have struck.
In
rebuttal, Mr Tshetlo pointed to provisions of the SHA that regulate
the terms of any proposed exit by the NEF, at market value,
from its
investment in PUE.
[18]
Paragraph 5 of
supplementary grounds of appeal dated 13 December 2023
[19]
Section
17(1)(a)(i)
of
the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013 (“
the
SCA”
)
[20]
Section
17(1)(a)(ii)
of
the SCA
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Mudzusi Molobela Attorneys and Another v Mokhoantle and Others (040016/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 372 (14 March 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 372High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)98% similar
Mpumalanga Society of Advocates and Another v Judicial Service Commission and Others (2021/55663) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1267 (26 August 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 1267High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)98% similar
Sibanda v Road Accident Fund (38498/2017) [2023] ZAGPJHC 287 (24 March 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 287High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)98% similar
Sibanda v Road Accident Fund (38498/2017) [2023] ZAGPJHC 614 (1 June 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 614High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)98% similar
Sibanda v Affinity Health Insurance and Another (046976/2023) [2024] ZAGPJHC 778 (15 August 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 778High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)98% similar