Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 87South Africa
Chess South Africa and Others v Chess South Africa and Others (A5067/2019) [2022] ZAGPJHC 87 (16 February 2022)
Headnotes
to elect an Interim Committee which would govern Chess SA until elections could be held for a new Exbo, among others.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Chess South Africa and Others v Chess South Africa and Others (A5067/2019) [2022] ZAGPJHC 87 (16 February 2022)
Chess South Africa and Others v Chess South Africa and Others (A5067/2019) [2022] ZAGPJHC 87 (16 February 2022)
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sino date 16 February 2022
IN THE
HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
(1)
REPORTABLE:
YES
/ NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES:
YES
/NO
(3)
REVISED.
CASE NO:
A5067/2019
In the matter between:
CHESS
SOUTH AFRICA
First
Appellant
HENDRIK
DU TOIT
Second
Appellant
OMAR
ESAU
Third
Appellant
JUDY-MARIE
STEENKAMP
Fourth
Appellant
SHANKS
NAIDOO
Fifth
Appellant
YOLANDA
PRINSLOO
Sixth
Appellant
ANNE
HUISAMEN
Seventh
Appellant
DIVESH
SOOKDEO
Eighth
Appellant
and
CHESS
SOUTH AFRICA
First
Respondent
MAHLODI
JOHANNES MAHOMOLE
Second
Respondent
ERICK
TAKAWIRA
Third
Respondent
KEOBAKA
MATHLODI DIPALE
Fourth
Respondent
GERALDINE
ENGELMAN
Fifth
Respondent
LIEZEL
AHJUM
Sixth
Respondent
Delivered: This judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose
name is reflected and is handed down electronically by circulation
to
the Parties / their legal representatives by email and by uploading
it to the electronic file of this matter on CaseLines. The
date of
the judgment is deemed to be 16 February 2022.
## JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
MALINDI J:
Introduction
[1]
This is an appeal against the judgment and order
by the Court below (per
Yacoob J)
on 25 March 2019 (“the Yacoob J judgment”). In that
judgment, Yacoob J rescinded and set aside the
orders of this
Court under case number 44851/2018 and 45319/2018 (per Siwendu J)
(“the Siwendu J judgments”) granted
on 6 December 2018.
[2] In case number 44851/2018,
Gauteng Chess had approached the Court on an urgent basis, against
Chess South
Africa (Chess SA) and all other Chess SA Provincial
Affiliates, and obtained an order on 6 December 2018 to the
effect that
it is an affiliate in good standing in terms of Chess
SA’s constitution and disqualifying Chess SA’s other members as
follows:
“
5.4
The members of the First Respondent who according to the Report
of
the First Respondent dated 8 November 2018 are not in good
standing, save for the members of the First Respondent who are
in
good standing as declared by the court, shall not be entitled to
participate in the election of the office bearers of the Exbo.”
[3] Siwendu J
further ordered that Chess SA’s elective Annual General Meeting
(“AGM”)
be convened and conducted on 8 December 2018.
[4] The effect
of the Siwendu J order was that Gauteng Chess would be the only
constituent
member in good standing, to the exclusion of members who
were not in good standing by 8 November 2018, in terms of Chess
SA’s
report of the same date.
[5]
It is not necessary to set out the ancillary orders by Siwendu J.
[6] On
8 December 2018, the AGM proceeded in terms of the Siwendu J
order and
the appellants were elected without the participation of
the respondents, who had been disqualified by the Chess SA report on
8 November
2018 read with this order.
[7] On
1 February 2019, the appellants approached the Court below on an
urgent basis,
seeking an order that they are the legitimate Executive
Board (“Exbo”) of Chess SA as elected at the AGM of 8 December
2018.
The respondents counter-applied for an order rescinding the
Siwendu J order of 6 December 2018, which ordered the
continuation
of the AGM.
[8] The
Yacoob J order rescinded and set aside the Siwendu J
orders, thereby declaring
the Chess SAAGM invalid and rendering all
resolutions, elections and decisions taken thereat invalid and set
aside. It is unnecessary
to deal with the further orders directing
the further conduct of Chess SA business and affairs. These relate
essentially to the counter-application
of the respondents herein,
together with orders granted
mero moto
by the Court below in
order to bring a practical resolution to the future conduct of Chess
SA’s affairs.
Relief
sought
[9] The
appellants seek an order declaring that they are still the Exbo of
Chess SA, as
elected at the AGM of 8 December 2018, and that the
Yacoob J order of 25 March 2019 be reversed. In other
words, that
the Siwendu J order be reinstated.
[10] The respondents seek the
opposite, that is, that the appellants be interdicted from holding
themselves
out as the Exbo of Chess SA, and that they continue to be
the Interim Exbo until a new Exbo is elected in compliance with the
Yacoob J
order.
Background
Facts
[11] In the Court below, the
appellants and the respondents purported to be acting on behalf of
Chess SA.
In this appeal, both sides have dropped Chess SA as the
appellant or respondent.
[12] Gauteng Chess first brought
an application in the Western Cape High Court in August 2018. On
17 August
2018, it obtained an order ordering that a Special
General Meeting (“SGM”) be held to elect an Interim Committee
which would
govern Chess SA until elections could be held for a new
Exbo, among others.
[13] The respondents herein were
elected to the interim committee. For reasons, whose validity need
not be
evaluated at this stage, the AGM planned for 8 December
2018 was cancelled or postponed without setting a new date. The two
applications referred to in paragraph 1 above were brought in order
to compel the holding of the AGM as scheduled on 8 December
2018. This resulted in the Siwendu J order. The second
application is not important for now as it was brought by a special
member,
Players’ Commission of Chess South Africa and sought
essentially the same relief.
[14] The AGM proceeded with only
delegates from the Western Cape, Gauteng and the Players’
Commission in
attendance as a non-voting delegation.
[15] The members of the Interim
Committee did not attend the AGM as ordered by Siwendu J, on the
basis
of their view that the holding of the AGM was invalid on the
basis that since the constituent members remained not in good
standing
per the Chess SA report of 8 November 2018, the Chess
SA had no power to convene it and that elections could not be held as
a result.
Issues
for Determination
[16] The Court below correctly
identified the only issue as being who is entitled to run and
represent Chess
SA.
[1]
[17] The respondents contend
further that the orders taken on 6 December 2018 were taken in
their absence
and without notice, in particular the order excluding
members who were not in good standing as of 8 November 2018 in
terms of
paragraph 5.4 of the Siwendu J order. They contend that
had they known that such an order would be sought they would have
opposed
the application.
Analysis
[18] The respondents contend
that the Siwendu J order precluded the Interim Committee from
regularising
the standing of other members for the purposes of the
cancelled/postponed AGM. Linked to this is the assertion that the AGM
of 8 December
2018 lacked a 50% plus one quorum to constitute a
valid AGM.
[19] The respondents also
contend in their heads of argument that the amendment to the Notice
of Motion and
the Supplementary Founding Affidavit should have been
preceded by a Rule 28 Notice of Intention to Amend. This contention
can be
disposed of quickly because a Notice of Motion can be amended
at any stage without following Rule 28. Whilst it is true that
further
affidavits can only be filed with the leave of the Court,
such leave was sought by the appellants in paragraphs 20 and 22 of
the
Supplementary Founding Affidavit.
[20] In my consideration, once
Siwendu J held that the AGM should proceed on 8 December
2018, it
had to proceed in terms of the previously agreed to terms.
This included that constituent members of Chess SA who were not in
good
standing as of 8 November 2018 will have no standing at the
AGM, unless their standing had been regularised by 48 hours before
the AGM on 8 December 2018. Paragraph 5.4 of the order merely
confirmed this term. Therefore, when the respondents received
notice
of the order on 6 December 2018 compelling the holding of the
AGM on 8 December 2018, they knew or ought to have
known that
their exclusion from attending the AGM would flow therefrom. This is
more so that the amended Notice of Motion and Supplementary
Founding
Affidavit which set out further relief to be sought were served on
4 December 2018.
[21] Secondly, the respondents
do not allege that they did not receive notice that this order will
be sought.
They cite logistical difficulties that prevented them from
opposing the application before Siwendu J. It is in the nature
of
urgent proceedings that sometimes extremely short notice is given
to the respondents. If they cannot meaningfully respond in terms
of
the Rules, appearance on the day of hearing to seek further
indulgences is permitted.
[2]
The respondents did not do this. Their absence despite notice will be
considered accordingly.
[22] The Court below held that
the contentious order of the Siwendu J order were not
foreshadowed in
the Notice of Motion or Founding Affidavit
[3]
of the Gauteng Chess and Players’ Commission, nor in the
Supplementary Founding Affidavit and the Notice of Motion (as
amended).
[4]
[23] An amended Notice of Motion
and Supplementary Affidavit were served on the respondents on
4 December
2018. The application of 6 December 2018 sought
an order that Gauteng Chess be declared in good standing
notwithstanding the
Chess SA report of 8 November 2018 declaring
none of the members as in good standing. If Gauteng Chess succeeded
in being declared
in good standing and the AGM proceeded on
8 December 2018, it stood to reason that the other members would
not be in good standing
at the AGM unless they obtained similar
declarations or succeeded in opposing the continuation of the AGM.
[24] This matter then turns on
whether the Court below was correct in its finding. I hold the view
that it
erred for the following reasons.
[25] The appellants sought
further relief in their Supplementary Affidavit which made it
eminently clear that
elections will take place on 8 December
2018 and that members who were found not to be in good standing in
the report of 18 November
2018 would not qualify to vote thereat
unless so declared by the Court, or they had satisfied the Chess SA
to be declared in good
standing by the set deadline for such
declaration by or before the AGM on 8 December 2018.
[26] The amended Notice of
Motion was then couched in the terms according with the order granted
by Siwendu J.
No doubt was left to the effect that Chess SA will
conduct elections on 8 December 2018 and that only members in
good standing
will be entitled to vote for candidates that had been
nominated in terms of the proceedings of the Chess SA constitution
and as ordered
by the Interim Committee in preparation of the AGM.
[27] Whereas the appellants sought to be
declared a member in good standing and to be allowed to vote at the
AGM in the
original Notice of Motion and Founding Affidavit, in the
amended Notice of Motion and the relevant paragraphs 20 and 22 of the
Supplementary
Founding Affidavit they sought:
27.1. An elective AGM. There should have
been no doubt in the minds of the respondents that if this order were
granted
it would have the consequences that they now complain about.
27.2. In the
alternative, and in the event that the AGM has to stand adjourned on
8 December
2018, to hold an adjourned AGM in terms of the Chess
SA constitution within 15 days of 8 December 2018 but not
earlier than
5 days from 8 December 2018, read with paragraphs
23 to 25 of the Supplementary Founding Affidavit.
[28] As stated below, the
respondents decided deliberately not to oppose the
application.
[29]
The reasons for their absence before Siwendu J by the
respondents are
that:
“
69. I need to state that the inability
of the Applicants to resist and file papers in opposing to the
Supplementary Founding
Affidavit is due, amongst others, to:
69.1 The unreasonable short and
inordinate period of 48 hours required to respond;
69.2 The fact that all but one of
the Interim Executive Board are within the jurisdiction of this
honourable Court;
69.3 The members of the Interim
Executive Board are in full-time employment elsewhere and not
employed by or devoted
on full-time basis to the work of Chess SA;
69.4 The Interim Executive Board
lack financial means to hire legal representative to defend the
applications before
the Court on 6 December 2018. In this
regard, it is worthwhile to indicate that Chess SA incurred over two
hundred thousand
Rand (R200 000.00) in legal costs to defend an
application brought by Gauteng Chess against it in August 2018. Chess
SA is unable
to afford the costs of legal proceedings as a means to
resolve each and every dispute it may have with its members.”
[30] The respondents rely on
Uniform Rule 6(12)(c) of the Uniform Rules of Court which provides
that:
“
A
person against whom an order was granted in his absence in an urgent
application may by notice set down the matter for reconsideration
of
the order.”
[31] The appellants have
referred to
Freedom Stationery (Pty) Ltd &
Others v Hassam & Others
[5]
where it was held that a party who is aware of proceedings in which
an order may be taken against them and do not enter the fray
may not
come at a later stage and seek rescission of the order on the basis
that it was taken in their absence even if it is not
expressly stated
as low as it “can be anticipated in the light of the nature of the
proceedings, the relevant disputed issues and
the facts of the
matter”. In this case the amended Notice of Motion and
Supplementary Affidavit were explicit. Even if I am wrong
in this
regard, the part of the Siwendu J order that the respondents
object to could be anticipated. Although the
Freedom
Stationary
case was considered under Section
252 of the Companies Act and gives a wide discretion to the Court in
determining the relief to be
granted thereunder, the pivotal aspects
are that an absent party cannot come at a later stage when they were
aware of the proceedings
but refrained from entering opposition where
the relief sought is explicit or can be anticipated in the context of
the matter.
[32] In
Zuma v
Secretary of the Judicial Commission of Inquiry into Allegations of
State Capture, Corruption and Fraud in the Public Sector
including
Organs of State & Others
[6]
the Constitutional Court said:
“
[61]
The cases I have detailed above are markedly distinct from that which
is before us. We are not dealing with a litigant who was
excluded
from proceedings, or one who was not afforded a genuine opportunity
to participate on account of the proceedings being marred
by
procedural irregularities. Mr Zuma was given notice of the contempt
of court proceedings launched by the Commission against him.
He knew
of the relief the Commission sought. And he ought to have known that
that relief was well within the bounds of what this
Court was
competent to grant if the crime of contempt of court was established.
Mr Zuma, having the requisite notice and knowledge,
elected not to
participate. Frankly, that he took issue with the Commission and its
profile is of no moment to a rescission application.
Recourse along
other legal routes were available to him in respect of those issues,
as he himself acknowledges in his papers in this
application. Our
jurisprudence is clear: where a litigant, given notice of the case
against them and given sufficient opportunities
to participate,
elects to be absent, this absence does not fall within the scope of
the requirement of rule 42(1)(a). And, it certainly
cannot have the
effect of turning the order granted in absentia, into one erroneously
granted. I need say no more than this: Mr Zuma’s
litigious tactics
cannot render him “absent” in the sense envisaged by rule
42(1)(a).”
…
[63] It is simply not the case that the absence of
submissions from Mr Zuma, which may have been relevant at the time
this Court was
seized with the contempt proceedings, can render
erroneous the order granted on the basis that it was granted in the
absence of those
submissions. As was said in Lodhi 2:
‘
A court which grants a judgment by default like
the judgments we are presently concerned with, does not grant the
judgment on the
basis that the defendant does not have a defence: it
grants the judgment on the basis that the defendant has been notified
of the
plaintiff’s claim as required by the rules, that the
defendant, not having given notice of an intention to defend, is not
defending
the matter and that the plaintiff is in terms of the rules
entitled to the order sought. The existence or non-existence of a
defence
on the merits is an irrelevant consideration and, if
subsequently disclosed, cannot transform a validly obtained judgment
into an
erroneous one.’”
[33] The discretion exercised by
Yacoob J was based on the erroneous application of the jurisdictional
fact
that requires a party to have been absent when an order was
granted against them. As was stated in the
Zuma
case “
where a
litigant, given notice of the case against them and given sufficient
opportunities to participate, elects to be absent, this
absence does
not fall within the scope of the requirement of rule 42(1)(a)
.”
[7]
“Absence” in the context of Rule 6(12)(c) has to be construed as
defined in the context of Rule 42(1)(a).
[34] In addition to failing on
the submission of being absent, the respondents will fail also on the
peripheral
submission that the holding of the AGM was invalid on
account of the alleged fact that it would have or was not quorate.
This case
is not concerned with the defence of the unlawfulness or
illegality of the AGM. The appellants were entitled to take the order
of
6 December 2018 which the respondents had acquiesced to. In
any event, the Chess SA constitution dictates the process of dealing
with subsequent adjourned AGMs in the event that an AGM cannot
proceed when there is not a quorum.
Conclusion
[35] For the reasons stated
above I find that the Court below erred in
reconsidering
and rescinding the Siwendu J order. The respondents were not
absent from those proceedings as envisaged in Rule
6(12)(c) and the
disqualification of the constituent members of the Chess SA to attend
and/or vote at the AGM was not as a consequence
of the order. It was
as a consequence of the Chess SA report of 18 November 2018 and
the respondents’ failure to regularise
their standing 48 hours
before the holding of the AGM on 8 December 2018 as required in
para 3.2 of the Chess SA report.
[36]
Since the Siwendu J order has been implemented in that the AGM was
convened
and elections conducted, the appropriate relief is the one prayed for
by the appellants, save to delete the repetitive paragraph
4 in the
main application.
[37]
The following order is made:
1.
The appeal is upheld with costs, to be paid
jointly and severally, the one paying the others to be absolved.
2.
The counter-application is dismissed with costs,
to be paid jointly and severally, the one paying the others to be
absolved.
3.
The order of the Court below is set aside and
replaced with the following order:
3.1.
Declaring that the Executive Board of Chess SA
(the Exbo) is comprised of the persons elected on 8 December
2018, in accordance
with the orders of the above Honourable Court
dated 6 December 2018, under case number 2018/44851 and case
number 2018/45319,
being the second to seventh applicants.
3.2.
Interdicting the respondents from acting or
purporting to act as, or holding themselves to represent, in any
manner or form, Chess
SA or the Interim Executive Board/Management
Committee of Chess SA.
3.3.
Interdicting and restraining the respondents from
accessing, transacting or in any way dealing with the bank accounts
of Chess SA,
account number 62255807805, 58810045419, 62255809570,
62255808366, 62255808952 and 62255808118 held at FNB, Parow, Cape
Town branch
of the sixth respondent.
3.4.
Interdicting and restraining FNB from permitting
the respondents to access, transact or any way deal with the bank
accounts of Chess
SA, account number 62255807805, 58810045419,
62255809570, 62255808366, 62255808952 and 62255808118 held at FNB,
Parow, Cape Town
branch of the sixth respondent.
3.5.
Interdicting and restraining the respondents from
accessing, transacting or any way dealing with the bank accounts of
Chess SA, account
number 40-6356-7126 held at ABSA, Verdi Centre
branch of the seventh respondent.
3.6.
Interdicting and restraining ABSA from permitting
the respondents to access, transact or any way deal with the bank
accounts of Chess
SA, account number 40-6356-7126 held at ABSA, Verdi
Centre branch of the seventh respondent.
3.7.
The first to fifth respondents are to pay the
costs of this application on the attorney and client scale.
4.
The respondents are to pay the costs jointly and
severally, the one paying the others to be absolved.
G
MALINDI J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION
JOHANNESBURG
I agree.
M
VICTOR J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION
JOHANNESBURG
I agree.
R MATTHYS AJ
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION
JOHANNESBURG
FOR THE
PLAINTIFF:
C T Vetter
INSTRUCTED BY:
Rosseau Inc
COUNSEL FOR
FIRST TO SIXTH RESPONDENTS:
F Makhanya
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Floyd Makhanya Inc
DATE OF THE
HEARING:
17 January 2022
DATE OF
JUDGMENT:
16 February 2022
[1]
Judgment: 002-9 at [25].
[2]
Caledon Street Restaurants
CC v D’Aviera
[1998] JOL 1832
(SE)
at 7.
[3]
Judgment: 002-11 at [36];
002-12 at [39].
[4]
Judgment: 002-11 at [36];
002-12 at [39].
[5]
2019 (4) SA 459
(SCA) at [25]
and [32].
[6]
(CCT52/21) [2021] ZACC28;
2021
(11) CLR 1263
(CC) (17 September 2021) at [61] and [63].
[7]
At [61].
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