Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 156South Africa
TUHF Urban Finance (RF) Ltd v House of Tandoor and Others (2021/55306) [2022] ZAGPJHC 156 (4 March 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
4 March 2022
Headnotes
that, upon a proper construction of s 17(2)(f), the President will need to be satisfied that the circumstances are 'truly exceptional' before referring a matter for reconsideration.
Judgment
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## TUHF Urban Finance (RF) Ltd v House of Tandoor and Others (2021/55306) [2022] ZAGPJHC 156 (4 March 2022)
TUHF Urban Finance (RF) Ltd v House of Tandoor and Others (2021/55306) [2022] ZAGPJHC 156 (4 March 2022)
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sino date 4 March 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO:
2021/55306
REPORTABLE: No
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: Yes
04 March 2022
In
the matter between
:-
TUHF
URBAN FINANCE (RF)
LTD
APPLICANT
and
THE
HOUSE OF TANDOOR
1
ST
RESPONDENT
ERIC
MTUYEDWA
MPOBOLA
2
ND
RESPONDENT
MAHLOKO
SIMON
MOKHEMA
3
RD
RESPONDENT
GLORIA
DINAR
MOKEMA
4
TH
RESPONDENT
BUYISILE
MRADU
5
TH
RESPONDENT
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down electronically by being uploaded to
caselines and by circulation to the parties’
legal
representatives via e-mail. The date and time for hand-down is deemed
to be 10h00 on 4 March 2022.
JUDGMENT
SUTHERLAND
DJP:
Introduction
and background
[1]
This matter consists of
two applications relating to an order granted by Monama J in the
urgent motion court on 7 December 2021
in favour of the applicant,
TUHF Urban Finance (RF) Ltd (the bank), against the respondents, who
are The House of Tandoor CC (Tandoor)
and four individuals who are
members of Tandoor and sureties for its indebtedness to the bank. The
respondents seek leave to appeal.
The bank seeks an order in terms of
section 18
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
, to put the order of
Monama J into operation pending the outcome of the appeal process.
Monama J granted the order only and was
to give reasons later.
Lamentably, before he could so, he passed away. Under those
circumstances these two applications came before
me.
[2]
The matter that came
before Monama J was an application for an interdict. The background
must be sketched first to give coherence
to the account of the
litigation. The bank and Tandoor concluded an agreement in 2010 in
terms of which money was lent to Tandoor
to enable it to purchase a
building situated at erf 44 Bellevue, Johannesburg. The sole business
of Tandoor is the letting of the
building which consists of shops and
flats. After some years, the bank invoked clause 14 of the bond
agreement which entitled it,
upon default of paying what was due, to
intercept the revenue being derived from the letting of the building.
Between February
2020 and August 2021, an agent of the bank duly
collected the rentals as they fell due without demur. From August
2021 onwards,
the four individual respondents have been taking the
rentals and the revenue to which the bank claims an entitlement was
diverted.
Demands to cease were made, and on two occasions the
attorney then acting for Tandoor, gave written undertakings that this
conduct
would cease. However, the conduct persisted. This is the
conduct which precipitated the urgent application for an interdict
which
was granted by Monama J.
[3]
However, in parallel
with these events, the bank had had already in 2020, instituted
proceedings under case number 2020/42518. This
was a claim to obtain
payment of arrear sums due, to foreclose on the bond and seek leave
to execute on the property. This matter
was heard on 19 November
2021by Tupaatlase AJ. Judgment was reserved and at the date of this
hearing had not yet been delivered.
The urgent application for the
interdict was launched on 23 November 2021, three days after that
hearing.
The
application for leave to appeal
[4]
An appeal lies against
an order, not the reasons given for the decision. However, in a case
where no reasons can
,
ex post facto
to an
order that was given, be given, such as in this case, an aggrieved
litigant has nothing with which to engage in order to
critique the
order. This did not inhibit the respondents in this case, who filed a
lengthy notice of application to appeal without
the benefit of
reasons. I am of the view that it is inappropriate for a judge in the
position in which I have become seized of
the matter, to interrogate
the order and the supposed reasons that might have been offered to
support it. Such an exercise treads
onto terrain that belongs
exclusively to a court of appeal.
[5]
In my view, the
appropriate course of action in a case where no judgment is or can be
forthcoming to substantiate the order given,
is to grant leave to
appeal. There was a philosophical acquiescence in this approach by
counsel for the bank, which in the circumstances
was appropriate and
honourable. Accordingly, leave to appeal is granted. Plainly the
nature of the controversy marks it as appropriate
to be heard by a
Full court of the Division.
The
section 18
application
[6]
The test is now well
established. In
University
of the Free state Afriforum
2018 (3) SA 428
(SCA
)
Burton Fourie AJA summed up the approach to be applied:
“
[9]
In embarking upon an analysis of the requirements of
s 18
, it is
firstly necessary to consider whether, and, if so, to what extent,
the legislature has interfered with the common-law principles
articulated in South Cape Corporation, and the now repealed Uniform
Rule 49(11).
What is immediately discernible upon perusing
s 18(1)
and (3) is that the legislature has proceeded from the
well-established premise of the common law that the granting of
relief
of this nature constitutes an extraordinary deviation from the
norm that, pending an appeal, a judgment and its attendant orders
are
suspended.
Section 18(1)
thus states that an order implementing a
judgment pending appeal shall only be granted 'under exceptional
circumstances'. The exceptionality
of an order to this effect is
underscored by
s 18(4)
, which provides that a court granting the
order must immediately record its reasons; that the aggrieved party
has an automatic
right of appeal; that the appeal must be dealt with
as a matter of extreme urgency; and that pending the outcome of the
appeal
the order is automatically suspended.
[10] It is further
apparent that the requirements introduced by
s 18(1)
and (3) are more
onerous than those of the common law. Apart from the requirement of
'exceptional circumstances' in
s 18(1)
,
s 18(3)
requires the
applicant 'in addition' to prove on a balance of probabilities that
he or she 'will' suffer irreparable harm if the
order is not made,
and that the other party 'will not' suffer irreparable harm if the
order is made. The application of
rule 49(11)
required a weighing-up
of the potentiality of irreparable harm or prejudice being sustained
by the respective parties and, where
there was a potentiality of harm
or prejudice to both of the parties, a weighing-up of the balance of
hardship or convenience,
as the case may be, was required.
Section
18(3)
, however, has introduced a higher threshold, namely proof on a
balance of probabilities that the applicant will suffer irreparable
harm if the order is not granted, and conversely that the respondent
will not if the order is granted.
[11] In Incubeta Holdings
supra [8] para 24 Sutherland J aptly commented as follows on
s 18(3):
'A hierarchy of
entitlement has been created, absent from the South Cape
[Corporation] test. Two distinct findings of fact must
now be made,
rather than a weighing-up to discern a preponderance of equities.'
DE van Loggerenberg &
E Bertelsmann Erasmus: Superior Court Practice vol I 2 ed (service
issue 2) correctly conclude that
s 18(3)
'is a novel provision and
places a heavy onus on the applicant'. On a proper construction of
s
18
, it is clear that it does not merely purport to codify the
common-law practice, but rather to introduce more onerous
requirements.
As submitted on behalf of the UFS, had the legislature
intended the section to merely codify the common law, it would have
followed
the authoritative formulation by Corbett JA in South Cape
Corporation.
[12] The concept of
'exceptional circumstances' introduced by
s 18(1)
was considered by
Mpati P in Avnit v First Rand Bank Ltd
[2014] ZASCA 132
, in the
context of
s 17(2)(f)
of the Act, which provides that in 'exceptional
circumstances' the President of this court may refer a decision on an
application
for leave to appeal to the court for reconsideration.
Mpati P held that, upon a proper construction of
s 17(2)(f)
, the
President will need to be satisfied that the circumstances are 'truly
exceptional' before referring a matter for reconsideration.
[13] Whether or not
'exceptional circumstances' for the purposes of
s 18(1)
are present
must necessarily depend on the peculiar facts of each case. In
Incubeta Holdings supra [8] para 22 Sutherland J put
it as follows:
'Necessarily, in my view,
exceptionality must be fact-specific. The circumstances which are or
may be exceptional must be derived
from the actual predicaments in
which the given litigants find themselves.'
I agree. Furthermore, I
think, in evaluating the circumstances relied upon by an applicant, a
court should bear in mind that what
is sought is an extraordinary
deviation from the norm, which, in turn, requires the existence of
truly exceptional circumstances
to justify the deviation.
[14] A question that
arises in the context of an application under
s 18
is whether the
prospects of success in the pending appeal should play a role in this
analysis. In Incubeta Holdings Sutherland
J was of the view that the
prospects of success in the appeal played no role at all. In Liviero
Wilge Joint Venture supra [8] [para
30] Satchwell J, Moshidi J
concurring, was of the same view. However, in Justice Alliance supra
[8] para 27 Binns-Ward J (Fortuin
and Boqwana JJ concurring) was of a
different view, namely that the prospects of success in the appeal
remain a relevant factor
and therefore —
'the
less sanguine a court seized of an application in terms of
s 18(3)
is
about the prospects of the judgment at first instance being upheld on
appeal, the less inclined it will be to grant the exceptional
remedy
of execution of that judgment pending the appeal. The same quite
obviously applies in respect of a court dealing with an
appeal
against an order granted in terms of
s 18(3).'
[15] I am in agreement
with the approach of Binns-Ward J. In fact, Justice Alliance serves
as a prime example why the prospects
of success in the appeal are
relevant in deciding whether or not to grant the exceptional relief.
Binns-Ward J concluded that the
prospects of success on appeal were
so poor that they ought to have precluded a finding of a sufficient
degree of exceptionality
to justify an order in terms of
s 18
of the
Act. This conclusion was subsequently proven to be justified when
this court upheld the main appeal in Justice Alliance.
However, in
the present appeal, the appeal record in the review application was
not before us. The prospects of success shall therefore
not feature
in our consideration whether or not the order of the Full Court
should be upheld.”
[7]
A peculiarity of this
particular application is that the requirement that the prospects of
success are a relevant factor presents
a conundrum. In the absence of
a judgment how might that assessment be made? When a pragmatic order
to grant leave is a
fait
accompli
can the
prospects be measured without a
de
facto
re-hearing of
the entire initial matter? In
Afriforum
where the court did not have before the necessary material to
consider prospects of success, it candidly acknowledged that the
prospects of success played no role in the decision. Plainly, it must
follow that although a
relevant
factor to consider, prospects of success is not a
necessary
factor.
The
merits
[8]
The enquiry into
exceptional circumstances is the primary exercise and, in that
context, the factual question of whether proof has
been adduced of
irreparable harm to one or other party can be determined.
[9]
The argument was
advanced on the part of the respondents that the predicament in which
the bank finds itself is not exceptional.
As a professional creditor
and lender of money, the risk of bad debt is an occupational hazzard.
Thus, runs the argument, if it
cannot receive the current rental
revenue stream, it does not face insolvency. It was also suggested in
an affidavit filed on the
morning of the hearing (and thus with no
opportunity by the bank to reply) that the bank is insured against
such a loss of rental
revenue, a claim baldly made and, so I was told
from the bar by counsel for the respondents, was alleged on the basis
that, from
a reading of the accounts of the bank which reflect a
premium paid monthly to Bryte Insurance, such cover exists. This was
an opportunistic
allegation. The entry in the accounts that refers to
Bryte Insurance does no more than record that there is insurance on
the property,
not cover for a failure to recover the rental revenue.
[10]
The foundation for
irreparable harm to the bank, advanced by it, is more nuanced than
merely that of a creditor seeking to enforce
payment, as the
respondents would have it. The essence of its case is that, based on
a contractual right to the revenue from the
rentals, what revenue
they do not succeed in collecting is totally irrecoverable later on,
because the four individual respondents,
who are alleged to be
pocketing the money, are men of straw. The impecuniosity of these
respondents is backed up by, inter alia,
the hearsay evidence from a
tenant who says he was told to pay over the rental to a respondent to
fund the litigation, from which
an inference could be drawn that they
need to scratch for their pennies. As to other surrounding
circumstances pertinent to this
point, the respondents’ papers
are bereft of an allegation that they have a revenue stream other the
rentals from Erf 44,
or that they have the means to pay over the
money taken, if their appeal fails. Moreover, the City’s
accounts reflect that
no payments of any current amounts due have
been paid for a very long time, an objective indicator of inability
to meet creditors
entitlements.
[11]
It is plain, therefore,
that the proposition that no revenue taken by the respondents is
capable of recovery from them in due course
is well established. Does
the fact that the respondents are indeed men of straw, constitute a
valid foundation for the bank’s
case that it shall suffer
irreparable harm, in the sense contemplated by
section 18?
[12]
The right of the bank
that is being thwarted is the right to collect the rentals. This is a
part of its security for the loan, along
with the mortgage bond.
Conceptually, the right to collect rentals could be understood as a
form of security, in similar mould
to the function performed by a
notarial bond over goods. Where a notarial bind holder seeks to
perfect its security by attachment,
the bank, in this case,
appropriates the revenue from the lessees. A bondholder can forfeit
the benefit of the security if it dallies
to perfect the bond where
the debtor dissipates or misappropriates the goods. In similar vein,
the bank’s entitlement to
seize the rental revenue is fraught
with fragility.
[13]
However, the correct
question is pose is whether there is irreparable harm, not to
specific benefits that flow from an exercise
of the specific thwarted
right, but, rather, to the person of the litigant alleging the
irreparable harm. Not all litigants are
equal for the purposes of
this exercise; more especially when the harm is purely financial.
[14]
A significant dimension
of the conspectus of facts that require scrutiny, in this case, is
whether the aggrieved litigant can overcome
the harm being suffered
by the stay of the order in its favour. If it can, the conclusion
cannot be reached that the harm is irreparable.
In my view this is
such a case.
[15]
I have already referred
to the parallel proceedings by the bank to recover the debt. If the
consequences of being prevented from
receiving the rental revenue,
pending the outcome of an order sought in the other proceedings, is
considered, it does not follow
that, ultimately, it cannot recover
its investment, wholly or mainly, through execution on the mortgaged
property. This remains
so even if the appeal process is protracted.
[16]
The enquiry need,
therefore, go no further. The circumstances are not exceptional. It
shall have to wait for what is due to it.
It may not recover 100% of
what is due. The bank shall not suffer irreparable harm if the
ordinary rule applies to stay the order
pending the appeal process.
In due course it will obtain relief.
The
Orders
[1]
In the application for
leave to appeal:
(i)
leave is granted to the
Full Court of the Gauteng Division, Johannesburg.
(ii)
Costs shall be costs in
the appeal.
[2]
In the application to
put the order of Monama J into operation pending the appeal process:
(i)
The application is
dismissed.
(ii)
Costs shall be costs in
the appeal.
ROLAND
SUTHERLAND
DEPUTY
JUDGE PRESIDENT
GAUTENG
LDIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Heard:
3 March 2022.
Judgment:
4 March 2022
For
The Applicant:
Adv
M Cooke,
Instructed
by Schindlers Attorneys.
For
Respondents:
Adv
M Mapetha,
Instructed
by Mohanoe Inc. attorneys.
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