Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 153South Africa
Sheriff African Board of Sheriff v Cibe and Others (30169/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 153 (17 March 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
17 March 2022
Headnotes
with Nedbank, the second Respondent, being account number [....].
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Sheriff African Board of Sheriff v Cibe and Others (30169/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 153 (17 March 2022)
Sheriff African Board of Sheriff v Cibe and Others (30169/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 153 (17 March 2022)
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sino date 17 March 2022
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REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO: 30169/2021
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
REVISED.
16/3/2022
In the matter between:
THE
SHERIFF AFRICAN BOARD OF SHERIFF
Applicant
And
MAUREEN
NOZINDABA CIBE
First Respondent
NEDBANK
LIMITED
Second Respondent
MARTHA
CORNELIA MAGDELINE
Third Respondent
VAN
DER MERWE
NO
Fourth Respondent
JUDGMENT
MAKUME,
J
:
[1]
This judgment is about whether the Applicant is entitled to freeze
the business bank
account of the first Respondent held with Nedbank,
the second Respondent, being account number [....].
[2]
The Applicant says that the purpose of the order being sought above
is to enable the
Applicant firstly, to investigate the first
Respondent’s failure to distribute proceedings of a Sale in
Execution in respect
of certain immovable property and secondly to
add such failure as a further charge in a pending disciplinary action
against the
first Respondent.
[3]
It is necessary to set out a brief narrative of certain facts and
circumstances that
gave rise to this litigation which bears on the
question to be decided by me.
COMMON
CAUSE ISSUE
[4]
The Applicant is the South African Board of Sheriffs a statutory body
established
in terms of Section 7 of the Sheriffs Act No 90 of 1986
its function is to regulate the activities of persons appointed as
Sheriff.
It has disciplinary powers over the activities of such
persons relating to their business.
[5]
On the 2
nd
October 2018 in this Court Millar AJ granted an
order at the instance of the Applicant in terms of which the third
Respondent who
like the first Respondent is a Sheriff was appointed
as a
curator
bonis
to manage and control the first
Respondent’s Trust Account pending the outcome of a
disciplinary enquiry instituted against
the first Respondent.
[6]
When the order by Millar AJ was granted it was on the basis the first
Respondent had
made herself the subject matter of an investigation
into improper conduct in terms of Section 43 of the Sheriffs Act. In
the judgment
by Millar AJ it is only the administration and control
of the first Respondent’s Trust Account that was placed in the
care
of the third Respondent as
curator bonis
. The first
Respondent was allowed to retain her Fidelity Fund Certificate
entitling her to continue practicing as a Sheriff. It
was further
ordered that the interim order directing the Minister of Justice to
suspend the first Respondent be discharged. That
judgment stands and
was never appealed against.
[7]
The disciplinary action was postponed on two occasions at the
instance of the first
Respondent and by the year 2020 Covid
Regulations dealt it a further blow especially in December 2020 when
at a hearing the chair-person
had to recuse himself on noticing that
he knows the first Respondent after she had unmasked.
[8]
During or about April/May2021 the first Respondent in her capacity as
the Sheriff
for Soweto attended to a Sale in Execution in respect of
a property situated at Protea Glen Extension 1, Soweto (Case No
9330/2019).
The proceeds of the sale were paid into the first
Respondent’s business account and not the Trust account as it
should have
been in accordance with the Rule 46 (13) of the Uniform
rules of Court.
[9]
On the 10
th
June 2021 the third Respondent addressed a
letter to the Applicant in the following words:
“
Attached
hereto a letter from Glover Kannieapan Inc that is self-explanatory
as well as proof of payment of the deposit and balance
of purchase
price. Kindly note that both amounts were paid into Mrs Cibe’s
business account during 2020. I am not in possession
of the R410
000.00 to pay the proceeds of the registered property. Kindly request
Mrs Cibe to pay the R410 000.00 into the Trust
Account to enable me
to proceed with payment.”
[10]
The attorney’s Glover Kannieapan were the attorneys of the
Judgment Creditor First Rand
Bank in the matter and they addressed a
letter to the Applicant’s attorneys Messrs Macrobert Attorneys
on the 15
th
June 2021 informing them that they informed
the first Respondent by letter dated the 16
th
April 2021
that transfer had taken place on the 12
th
April 2021 and
asked for her distribution account in terms of Rule 46 (14) which
they have not as yet received.
[11]
On the 29
th
June 2021 Mabesele J in the urgent Court
granted an ex-parte order against the Respondent in the following
terms:
11.1 An interim
order was granted with immediate effect returnable on the 24
th
August 2021 at 10h00 or as soon thereafter as the legal
representative of the Applicant may be heard when reasons may be
advanced
as to why this order should not be made final:
a)
That
leave be granted to bring this application ex-parte.
b)
That
the second Respondent (Nedbank Limited) immediately upon service of
this order “freeze” the first Respondent’s
bank
account with account number [....].
c)
The
bank account mentioned above be frozen until notification from
Nedbank.
d)
The
third Respondent be appointed
curator
bonis
to administer and control the first Respondent’s bank account
namely [....].
e)
The
third Respondent shall have the same duties and powers in respect of
aforesaid bank account that were granted by Millar AJ on
21 November
2018 under case number 35570/2018.
f)
That
the first Respondent be prohibited from handing or operating on the
bank account held with Nedbank with account number [....].
g)
Prayers
(d) (e) (f) be of effect pending finalisation of the disciplinary
enquiry instituted against the first Respondent.
h)
That
this order be served on the Respondents.
i)
That
the affidavit and annexures of the Applicant be served on the
Respondents and that they be informed of their right to apply
to have
the interim order anticipated or reconsidered, subject to the
provisions of Rule 6 of the Uniform Rules of Court.
[12]
On the 29
th
June 2021 the first Respondent anticipated the
return date and filed her opposing affidavit and the matter served
before me on
the 9
th
July 2021 when I gave an order
discharging the ex-parte order by Mabesele J dated the 29
th
June 2021 and directed that the Second Respondent Nedbank unfreeze
the first Respondent’s business bank account being account
number [....]. Further that the Applicant pay the first Respondent’s
party and party costs. What follows is my reason for
that order.
[13]
It needs be recorded that this was not the first time that the same
Applicant had approached
this Court on an urgent ex-parte basis. It
did so on the 2
nd
October 2018 under case number
35570/2018. In that matter the Applicant sought an order suspending
the first Respondent, withdrawing
her Fidelity Fund Certificate and
placing her Sheriffs Trust Account under curatorship. The orders
sought were granted and a Rule
Nisi was issued calling upon the first
Respondent to show cause why these should not be made final on the
29
th
November 2018.
[14]
Millar AJ in a well-reasoned judgment discharged the Rule Nisi and
substituted it with an order
placing the trust account of the first
Respondent under the control and supervision of the third Respondent.
In that order the
Court granted the first Respondent access to and
entitlement to all such records as may be necessary for the discharge
of her functions
as a Sheriff and matters ancillary thereto.
[15]
It is common cause and not disputed that after the third Respondent
had been placed in control
of the Trust Account of the Sheriff for
Soweto West being the first Respondent there were problems with the
bank. For example,
on the 7
th
October 2020 Mrs Cibe the
First Respondent addressed an email to the third Respondent as
follows:”
“
As
per the telephone conversation kindly confirm that the Trust Account
is working as tomorrow we have auction for immovable property.”
[16]
This situation was like that since 2018 when the order was granted in
respect of the Trust Account.
The question is how was the first
Respondent expected to conduct her business when the Trust Account
was not operating.
[17]
This issue about difficulties in the operation of the trust account
was not mentioned in the
Applicant’s founding affidavit. It is
trite law that when a litigant approaches Court on an ex-parte basis
it is like making
application for a default judgment which therefore
requires the applicant to make full disclosure of all relevant facts.
[18]
The Applicant’s failure to make mention of the difficulties
with the trust account was
in my view disingenuous hence the
speculative inference that the Applicant relies on.
[19]
The Court in
Lamont v Lamont 1933(2) PH B35 (W)
held that the
Applicant in
ex-parte
applications must set forth concisely
the nature and extent of the claim, the grounds upon which it is
based and upon which the
Court has jurisdiction to entertain the
claim. And in
Schlesinger v Schlesinger
1979 (4) SA 342
(W)
348C-354A
it was held that the Applicant must observe the utmost
good faith in placing material facts before the Court.
[20]
In this matter the Applicant failed to place before the Court that
the Trust account which was
under the control of the third Respondent
had been closed when there was unconfirmed rumour that the first
Respondent had passed
away. This only surfaced in reply which process
is not permitted as an Applicant in motion proceedings must make out
his or her
case in the Founding Affidavit.
[21]
In paragraph 3.1 of its Founding Affidavit the Applicant sets out
what it aims to achieve by
this application namely:
a)
to
protect the interest of attorneys and members of the community by
preventing the first Respondent from transacting on her business
account number [....].
b)
to
ask the Court to approve the third Respondent as
curator
bonis
of the business account mentioned above.
[22]
As a basis for the above the Applicant says it is because the first
Respondent has made herself
the subject matter of an investigation
into improper conduct in terms of Section 43 of the Sheriffs Act
inter alia
due to trust fund irregularities. Hence the
requirements to freeze the business account.
[23]
For the Applicant to amongst others succeeds in this application it
must set out the jurisdictional
facts embodied in Section 43 of the
Sheriffs Act which jurisdictional facts amounts to improper conduct.
[24]
Section 43 must be read together with Section 24 of the Sheriffs Act
which reads as follows:
“
24(1)
If in the opinion of a competent Court sound reasons exist for
doing
so that Court may upon application of the Board or any person having
a direct financial interest in an account mentioned
in Section 22 (1)
or (2) prohibit the Sheriff concerned from dealing with the said
account in any manner.”
[25]
It is common cause that the accounts mention in Section 22 (1) or (2)
is the trust account not
the business account and in particular
Section 22 (2) has reference to “an investment or other
interest bearing account.”
There is nowhere that mention is
made of a business account.
[26]
It is not disputed that on the 4
th
November 2020 Attorneys
C Mabunda acting on instruction of a purchaser Mr Moeketsi deposited
proceeds of a Sale in Execution that
was conducted by the first
Respondent into the first Respondent’s business account and on
the 29
th
June 2021 when this application was launched the
first Respondent paid that amount into the Trust Account controlled
by the third
Respondent. That should have brought an end to the
application. Notwithstanding that the Applicant persisted with the
application
on spurious and ill-founded grounds.
[27]
It was therefore not surprising that on the same day that the
Rule
Nisi
as granted the first Respondent took step in terms of Rule 6
(8) which reads as follows:
“
Any
person against whom an order has been granted
ex-parte
may anticipate the return day upon delivery of not less than
twenty-four-hour notice.”
[28]
The first Respondent has raised three points in
limine
namely
that the application was not urgent secondly that it was not
necessary to have brought this application by way of an
ex parte
.
Lastly failure to cite the first Respondent in her representative
capacity. It is interesting to note that Millar AJ in the previous
application, lamented and criticised the Applicant and found that the
Applicant conducted itself in a contrived manner by approaching
the
Court on an
ex parte
basis.
[29]
The whole application was never urgent and was based on speculation
and rumours. It has not been
set out what will happen if the business
account is not frozen on an urgent basis. The Applicant has not set
out why it believes
it will not get relief in the normal motion
court.
[30]
As far as it concerns the third point in
limine
I am satisfied
that in the founding affidavit the first Respondent is correctly
cited in her representative capacity as the Sheriff
for Soweto West.
[31]
The first Respondent’s business account is not regulated by the
Sheriffs Act there is accordingly
no right or authority which
empowers the Applicant to exercise control of that account. The
Applicant’s control is confined
to the trust account as set out
in Section 22 (1) & (2) read together with Section 43. This
should bring an end to the litigation.
The Applicant lacks the
necessary
locus standi
.
[32]
The Applicant in its own words at paragraph 3.4 of the founding
affidavit speaks about trust
fund irregularities which amount to
improper conduct in terms of Section 43 of the Sheriffs Act. There is
no mention of any other
account to justify the Applicant’s
claim to have jurisdiction over the business account.
[33]
Even if it could be argued that the amount when it was paid into the
business account was in
fact trust money that still does not clothe
the Applicant with authority at must the Applicant seeks to rely on
“a real possibility”
and that “attorneys and or
members of the public may be severely prejudiced by the first
Respondent’s conduct”.
[34]
The Applicant does not say how attorneys and or members of the public
may be prejudiced if the
business account is not frozen. The use of
the word may clearly indicate speculation. There are no facts to
support that suspicion.
[35]
The facts upon which this application is predicated vis-a-vis the
particular monies in question
relating to the Sale in Execution such
have been transferred into the trust account and there is accordingly
no reason to freeze
the first Respondent business account and hand
same over to the third Respondent. The matter has become moot.
[36]
The Applicant seeks interdictory relief and must therefore satisfy
all requirements for such
relief being a clear or
prima facie
right, apprehension of irreparable harm, balance of convenience and
lastly no satisfactory or alternative relief. The relief that
the
Applicant seeks has an element of final relief in that its uplifting
depends on occurrence over which the first Respondent
has no control.
This is evidence by the fact that since the Trust account has been
placed in the control of third Respondent it
is now almost four years
and the issues are nowhere near finality.
[37]
PRIMA FACIE RIGHT
It is trite law that an
Applicant for an interdict must show a right which is being infringed
or which he apprehends will be infringed
and if he does not do so the
application must fail (See
Coolair Ventilation Co. (SA) (Pty) Ltd
vs Liebenberg and Another
1967 (1) SA 686
(W)
). In this matter
the Applicant being a creature of statute is not clothed with the
right to seek relief concerning the first Respondent’s
business
account.
[38]
APPREHENSION OF IRREPARABLE HARM
(i)
As
regards this requirement the Applicant has to show that it is
reasonable to apprehend that injury will result.
(ii)
The
first Respondent paid the amount into the trust account. It is
therefore inconceivable to still argue if irreparable harm when
the
subject matter has been resolved. The application also fails on this
aspect.
[39]
BALANCE OF CONVENIENCE
In the matter of
Minnaar
vs Oberholzer Liquor Licencing Board and Another
1955 (1) SA 681
(T)
at 684 A- B
it was held that a Court must weigh the prejudice the
Applicant will suffer if the interim interdict is not granted against
the
prejudice to the Respondent if it is. If there is greater
possible prejudice to the Respondent, an interim interdict will be
refused.
[40]
The first Respondent conducts business through her business account
it is used to pay salaries
as well as office overheads. The balance
of convenience clearly favours the first Respondent.
[41]
SATISFACTORY ALTERNATIVE RELIEF
(i)
It
is trite law that in every case of an application for an interdict
pendente
lite
the Court has a discretion whether or not to grant the application.
It exercises their discretion upon a consideration of all
circumstances and particularly upon consideration of the
probabilities of success of the Applicant in the action.
(ii)
In
this matter the Applicant and or the third Respondent made no effort
to consult with the Respondent to resolve the issue they
chose to run
to Court on an urgent
ex
parte
basis when there was no need for such hurried procedure. The first
Respondent has expressed her view that there is a conspiracy
to rid
her of that position.
[42]
CONCLUSION
(i)
The
Applicant has failed to prove its entitlement to the relief it seeks
and must accordingly fail.
(ii)
The
order granted on the 9
th
July 2021 by me is hereby confirmed.
Dated
at Johannesburg on this 16 day of March 2022
M
A MAKUME
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Appearances:
DATE
OF HEARING
:
09
TH
JULY 2021
DATE
OF JUDGMENT :
17
TH
MARCH 2022
FOR
APPLICANT
:
ADV
INSTRUCTED
BY
:
MESSRS
FOR
RESPONDENT
:
ADV
INSTRUCTED
BY
:
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