Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 6South Africa
Metbank Limited v ABSA Bank Limited and Another (59303/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 6 (4 January 2022)
Headnotes
in favour of the applicant:
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Metbank Limited v ABSA Bank Limited and Another (59303/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 6 (4 January 2022)
Metbank Limited v ABSA Bank Limited and Another (59303/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 6 (4 January 2022)
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sino date 4 January 2022
SAFLII
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Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
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SAFLII
Policy
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 59303/2021
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
4
January 2022
In
the matter between:
METBANK
LIMITED
Applicant
(Formerly
the Metropolitan Bank of Zimbabwe)
And
ABSA
BANK LIMITED
First Respondent
THE
LIQUIDATORS OF THE SMALL AND MEDIUM
Second Respondent
ENTERPRISES
BANK LTD
(In
liquidation)
(This
judgment is handed down electronically by circulation to the parties’
legal representatives by email and uploading it
to the electronic
file of this matter on CaseLines. The date for hand-down is
deemed to be 4 January 2021.)
JUDGMENT
MIA,
J
[1]
The
applicant brought an urgent application on 28 December 2021 seeking
the following relief:
“
1.
Dispensing with the forms and service as prescribed by the Rules of
Court and directing that this matter
be heard as one of urgency in
terms of Rule 6(12) of the Uniform Rules of Court;
2.
The first Respondent is ordered forthwith to unfreeze the following
bank accounts held in
favour of the applicant:
4.1USD Trading
Account-account number:[....]
4.2USD Collection
Account-account number [....]
4.3ZAR Trading
Account-account number [....]
4.4ZAR Collection
Account-account number [....]
3.
The first Respondent is ordered to forthwith release the following
payments as per instructions
received from the applicant as follows:
3.1
$70 000.00 USD from account number [....]
3.2
$750 000.00 USD from account number [....]
3.3
$2 100 000.00USD from account number [....]
3.4
$650 000.00 USD from account number [....]
4.
Alternatively setting aside the registration of foreign judgment
granted by the High Court
of Namibia on 29 October 2020, registered
with the Clerk of the Magistrate’s Court, Randburg, on 29
November 2021.
5.
Alternative to 4 above, the orders in paragraphs 2 and 3 above shall
operate as interim interdict or
order pending finalisation of the
application in terms of section 5 of the Enforcement of Foreign Civil
Judgment Act 32 of 1998
in the Magistrates Court, Randburg.
6.
Costs in the event of opposition.
7.
…”
The first and second
respondents opposed the application.
[2]
The applicant METBANK Limited is a commercial bank registered in
Zimbabwe with its
head office situated at Metropolitan House, 3
Central Avenue, Harare, Zimbabwe. The applicant has a registered
business address
in the Republic at 145 Second Street, Parkmore,
Sandton. The first respondent ABSA Bank Limited, a public company
registered and
incorporated in terms of the company laws of South
Africa. Its principal place of business is situated on the 7
th
Floor, ABSA Towers West, 15 Troye Street, Johannesburg. The second
respondents are the liquidators, Small and Medium Enterprise
Limited
(SME in liquidation), operating in Namibia. Webber Wentzel attorneys
represent the second respondents with offices at 90
Rivonia Road,
Sandton.
[3]
The applicant sought urgent relief as it could not transact on its
ABSA accounts,
and it had a concern for its clients need for funds
over the Christmas and New Year period for celebration necessities.
ABSA refused
to release funds based on a section 3(2) notice issued
in terms of the Enforcement of Foreign Civil Judgments Act 32 of 1988
(the
Act). The applicant averred the order was null because it was
not signed by the clerk of the court and was not accompanied by a
certificate indicating the interest rate and conversion of Namibian
currency to South African currency to properly reflect the
amount in
South African Rands and the correct interest rate. Furthermore, the
applicant contended that ABSA was not consistent
in its freezing of
the account when it permitted a transaction on 17 December 2021 and
allowed a payment to be released from one
of the applicants’
accounts held with ABSA. The applicant also contended that the second
respondent had knowledge of the
judgment granted in its favour in the
Namibia High Court since 29 October 2020 and only registered the
foreign judgment on 26 November
2021. The applicant has appealed the
judgment granted by the Court in Namibia. The appeal is pending. The
applicant contends it
was unnecessary to register the judgment as the
applicant has funds to satisfy the debt.
[4]
The issues before this court are to determine whether:
4.1 whether
the applicant made out a case for urgency;
4.2 if the
court is satisfied, there is urgency whether the applicant is
entitled to the relief set out in prayers
2,3, 5 and 6 of the notice
of motion.
[5]
Rule 6(12) provides for the enrolment of an urgent matter, and the
relevant part reads
follows:
(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 to it seems meet.
(b)
In every
affidavit or petition
filed in support of any application under
paragraph (a) of this subrule,
the applicant shall set forth
explicitly
the circumstances which he avers render the matter
urgent and
the reasons why he claims that he [she] could not be
afforded substantial redress at a hearing in due course
.
(emphasis provided)
[6]
The applicant alleged commercial urgency in that the Government of
Zimbabwe is a client
and requires access to the accounts to purchase
resources to address the Covid -19 pandemic, such as PPE and similar
resources.
Counsel for the applicant argued that the applicant’s
clients could not access their funds over the festive season and New
Year period to purchase necessities. This was the reason the
application was launched on 28 December 2021. The applicant has
simultaneously
applied to set aside the enforcement of the foreign
civil judgment in the Randburg Magistrates Court.
[7]
The first respondent noted that the applicant took a resolution on 9
December 2021.
The company secretary and legal counsel had sent a
letter of demand as late as 30 November 2021 regarding the issue of
the interdict.
Thus Counsel for the first respondent argued that the
application was not urgent as the applicant was aware of the s 8
interdict
as early as 26 November 2021. The applicant elected to
launch the application only on 23 December 2021 with severely
restricted
time limits. Counsel for the first respondent argued that
the applicant referred to their clients’ access to funds over
the
Christmas period as an aspect of urgency when the application was
being heard after Christmas. This indicated that there was no
urgency. Furthermore, counsel for the first respondent referred to
the application lodged in the Magistrates Court and argued that
this
was an instance where the applicant sought collateral relief with the
application pending in the Magistrates Court. In this
regard, Counsel
relied on the decision in
Oudekraal Estates (Pty) Ltd v City of
Cape Town and others
[2004] 3 All SA 1
SCA where the Court
held at paragraph [36] :
“
It
is important to bear in mind ( and in this regard we respectfully
differ from- the court a quo) that those cases in which the
validity
of an administrative act may be challenged collaterally a court has
no discretion to allow or disallow the raising of
that defence: the
right to challenge the validity of an administrative act collaterally
arises because the validity of the administrative
act constitutes the
essential prerequisite for the legal force of the action that follows
and
ex hypothesi
the subject may not then be precluded from challenging its validity.
On the other hand, a court that is asked to set aside an invalid
administrative act in proceedings for judicial review has a
discretion whether to grant or to withhold the remedy. It is that
discretion that accords to judicial review its essential and pivotal
role in administrative law, for it constitutes the indispensable
moderating tool for avoiding or minimising injustice when legality
and certainty collide. Each remedy thus has its separate application
to its appropriate circumstances and thus its separate application to
its appropriate circumstances and they ought not to be seen
as
interchangeable manifestations of a single remedy that arises
whenever an administrative act is invalid.”
[8]
The second respondent respondent similary in opposing urgency notes
the applicant’s
knowledge of the registration of the judgment
on the 26 November 2021 and the applicant’s failure to take any
action until
9 December 2021 when it took a resolution to engage
counsel for activation of the Metabank accounts and the reversal of
the registration
of the Namibian judgment. The applicant then
demanded on 13 December 2021 from the first respondent that the
accounts be unfrozen
despite the knowledge from 26 November 2021 that
the first respondent had received the notice in terms of s 3(2).
[9]
On the issue of urgency, it is clear that the applicant had been
aware of the s 3(2)
notice since 26 November 2021, almost a month. It
had proceeded to apply to the Randburg Magistrates Court to
deregister the Namibian
judgment. Despite their knowledge of the
matter from 26 November 2021 to date, the applicant's inaction does
not warrant any urgency,
even if they were engaging with the
respondents. The matter became urgent due to their inaction. The
first respondent had informed
the applicant about the s 3(2) notice.
The applicant did not take cognisance of the effect of the s 3(2)
notice and deal with it
timeously. It approached this Court
four weeks after it received the notice. Even if it were
corresponding, the demand was
made seventeen days after receiving the
notice.
[10]
There appears to be no urgency in the applicant’s conduct. The
submission that they were
entitled to negotiate on the issue detracts
from the urgency around securing funds in time for Christmas and the
issue of securing
funds to fight the Covid-19 pandemic. Moreover, as
submitted by counsel for the second respondent, there is no evidence
attached
to support the submission that the Government of Zimbabwe is
the client and required resources for the Covid-19 pandemic. The
suggestion
that the first respondent permitted a transaction on the
account on 17 December 2021 does not take the applicant’s case
further,
as the first respondent clarified that this was a
transaction that was specifically negotiated to permit the influx of
funds to
the account for onward payment as opposed to the release of
funds. This appears to be a matter of self-created urgency on the
facts
presented. In the circumstances, I am not satisfied that
the applicant has put forward grounds to indicate that this court
should intervene and dispense with the requirements of Rule 6.
[10]
The applicant has not presented facts that prove that any relief it
might obtain in the ordinary
course would not be substantial relief.
I have already alluded to the self-created urgency. The applicant
does not persist with
the relief sought in prayer four of the notice
of motion and counsel for the first and second respondents argued it
was because
the applicants clearly would be seeking the same relief
in the Randburg Magistrates Court. Be that as it may, the applicant
has
not made out a case for the urgent relief it seeks in terms of
Rule 6(12).
ORDER
[11]
In the result this matter is struck off the roll with costs.
S
C MIA
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION ,JOHANNESBURG
Appearances:
On
behalf of the applicant
:
Adv W.R Mokhare
SC
and Adv Mahlako
Instructed
by
: Marumoagae Attorneys
On
behalf of the first respondents
: Adv M Glazer
Instructed
by
: Lowndes Dlamini Inc
On
behalf of the second respondent :
Adv Heathcote and Adv M Cooke
Instructed
by
: Webber Wentzel Inc
Date
of hearing
: 28 December 2021
Date
of judgment
: 4 January 2022
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