Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 393South Africa
Zahos and Others v Anastassopoulos and Others (22/1012) [2022] ZAGPJHC 393 (29 April 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
29 April 2022
Judgment
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## Zahos and Others v Anastassopoulos and Others (22/1012) [2022] ZAGPJHC 393 (29 April 2022)
Zahos and Others v Anastassopoulos and Others (22/1012) [2022] ZAGPJHC 393 (29 April 2022)
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sino date 29 April 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 22/1012
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED
In
the matter between:
DIMITRIOS
ZAHOS
First Applicant
ALL
STARS SPORTS BETTING
TEMBISA
(PTY) LTD
Second Applicant
SHOCK
PROOF INVESTMENTS 96 (PTY) LTD
Third Applicant
and
PHILLIPA
ANASTASSOPOULOS
First Respondent
MARC
PLAXTON HARRIS
Second Respondent
I
SLOTS SUPASLOTS (PTY) LTD
Third Respondent
MASEGO
MATSHITLHO JOSEPHINE ITUMELENG
Fourth Respondent
CBA
COMPANY (PTY) LTD
Fifth Respondent
SABALI
ENTERPRISE (PTY) LTD
Sixth Respondent
PORTAPA
(PTY) LTD
Seventh Respondent
MICHEZO
GAMING (PTY) LTD
Eighth Respondent
INTELLIGENT
GAMING (PTY) LTD
Ninth Respondent
INKAMBO
PROJECTS & DEVELOPMENTS (PTY) LTD
Tenth Respondent
JUDGMENT
WINDELL
J:
INTRODUCTION
[1]
On 11 February 2022, this court granted an interim order against the
respondents. The application was brought on an urgent ex
parte basis.
A rule
nisi
was issued calling upon the respondents to show
cause why the order should not be made final. This is the return date
of the rule
nisi
.
[2]
In terms of paragraphs 3.1 and 3.2 (read with paragraph 4) of the
interim order the first respondent was interdicted, until
the return
date, from assaulting the first applicant and from coming within 100
metres of the first applicant. The first respondent
consented to the
confirmation of the order in paragraph 3.2 of the rule
nisi
and
had undertaken not to assault the first applicant.
[3]
The first, second, seventh and ninth respondents oppose the
confirmation of the interim order (“
the opposing
respondents
”). It is submitted that no case whatsoever was
made out for the granting of paragraph 3.3 of the order (read with
paragraph
4) against any of the opposing respondents and, as a
result, they seek the discharge of the rule with costs on a punitive
scale.
[4]
On the return date the applicants applied for a postponement of the
matter and the extension of the rule
nisi.
After hearing the
parties, this court refused the application for a postponement. As a
result, the only issue that needs to be
considered is whether the
facts as contained in the founding affidavit (and its annexures) make
out a proper case for the relief
that was granted on 11 February
2022.
PARAGRAPH
3.3
[5]
In terms of paragraph 3.3 of the order (read with paragraph 4), the
opposing respondents were interdicted, until the return
date, from
“
interfering
” with the first, second and third
applicants’ “
business operations”
that
emanate “
from and in respect of the business relationships
and agreements that are in place at the time of this order between
those parties
or any of them, amongst others...
”. The ninth
respondent was further restrained and interdicted from terminating
the software and services it provides to the
second applicant.
[6]
The opposing respondents submit that the interim order in paragraph
3.3 ought not to have been granted at all because the applicants,
(a)
failed to make out any case for urgency in respect thereof; (b)
failed to make out a case to justify the granting of such interim
order in the opposing respondents’ absence; and (c) failed, in
any event, to make out a case as a matter of fact or as a
matter of
law, to support such interim order.
[7]
For purposes of this judgment, I will only deal with the last point
raised by the opposing respondents, as it will, in my view,
dispose
of the matter.
FACTS
ALLEGED IN THE FOUNDING AFFIDAVIT
[8]
Firstly, the first applicant alleged that his relationship with the
first respondent was “in a state of disrepair”
and that
he feared for his life. As a result, so it is alleged, the second
applicant’s rights would also be infringed should
the (interim)
relief not be granted. It is clear from the founding affidavit that
the “disrepair” to which the first
applicant refers,
relates solely and exclusively to the physical abuse and assault
perpetrated by the first respondent against
him personally. On a
closer reading of the affidavit it is nowhere disclosed how the first
respondent’s threats of assault
infringe any rights of the
second or third applicants. In other words, no
facta probantia
were placed before the court in support of this conclusion and there
is no
causa
alleged in the founding papers between the first
respondent’s alleged assault (which the first applicant says
occurred more
than two years ago in September 2019) and the
infringement of any rights of the second or third applicants.
[9]
Secondly, the applicants state, under the heading “Locus
Standi”, that they are parties “
engaged in business
relationships with the Respondents....and additionally the First
Applicant has been the subject of assault and
threats of violence at
the hands of the First Respondent
”. The applicants fail to
explain why either the existence of these “business
relationships” or the alleged assault
and threats of violence
by the first respondent justify the granting of an urgent
ex parte
interdict against
all
of the opposing respondents. There is,
therefore, no justification in law or in fact, in linking the first
respondent’s threats
of assault to the relief sought in terms
of paragraph 3.3 of the order.
[10]
Thirdly, the interim relief granted in paragraph 3.3 of the order
restrains and interdicts
all
of the opposing respondents from
“
interfering
” with those “
business
operations
” of the three applicants that “
emanate
from and in respect of the business relationships and agreements that
are in place......between those parties or any of
them, amongst
others....
”. For example, it is alleged that the first
respondent “
.....has the influence and the means to exact
interference with the conducting of the Second Applicant’s
business as a means
of punishment via the Second and Ninth
Respondents
.” Despite this averment, there is, however, no
evidence set out in the founding affidavit explaining what precisely
is meant
with the word “interfering”.
[11]
In
Quartermark
Investments (Pty) Ltd v Mkhwanazi and Another
[1]
,
the
Supreme Court of Appeal emphasized the principle that affidavits in
motion proceedings fulfil the
dual
role of pleadings and evidence and that “
they
serve to define not only the issues between the parties but also to
place the essential evidence before the court.”
They must therefore contain the factual averments that are sufficient
to support the cause of action or defence sought to be made
out.
In
Die
Dros (Pty) Ltd and Another v Telefon Beverages CC and Others,
[2]
Van Reenen J expanded on the difference between primary and secondary
facts. He explained as follows:
“
[28]
.....
Primary
facts are those capable of being used for the drawing of inferences
as to the existence or non-existence of other facts.
Such
further facts, in relation to primary facts, are called secondary
facts. (See Willcox and Others v Commissioner for Inland
Revenue
1960
(4) SA 599 (A)
at
602A; Reynolds NO v Mecklenberg (Pty) Ltd
1996
(1) SA 75
(W)
at
78I.) Secondary facts, in the absence of the primary facts on which
they are based, are nothing more than a deponent's own
conclusions (see Radebe and Others v Eastern Transvaal
Development Board
1988
(2) SA 785 (A)
at
793C - E) and accordingly do not constitute evidential material
capable of supporting a cause of action.”
[11] The applicants
baldly stated that they fear that the opposing respondents will
interfere with the business operations (secondary
facts), but there
is no evidence (primary facts) explaining why the applicants
reasonably fear such (undefined) interference by
the opposing
respondents. There is also no evidence as to whether the opposing
respondents have in actual fact “interfered”
or
threatened to “interfere”. If regard is had to the
averments that the applicants made in their founding affidavit,
there
is therefore a total absence of primary facts in support of such
fear. As stated in
Die
Dros supra
,
‘evidence’ of secondary facts is “
.......nothing
more than a deponent’s own conclusions and, accordingly, did
not constitute evidential material capable of
supporting a cause of
action
”
[3]
I agree with the respondent’s counsel, Adv Both SC, that the
failure to place any primary facts before the court goes to
the very
foundation of the interdict. It renders the order unenforceable and
void for vagueness. The opposing respondents are left
in the dark as
to what it is that they are interdicted from doing and the factual
and legal basis therefor. Such an order, if left
standing, would be
impossible to enforce.
[12]
Fourthly, the applicants intend to seek an order against the opposing
respondents interdicting them pending “
the outcome of the
hearing of the dispute
” described in clause 5 of each of
the three nomination agreements.
[13]
The “disputes” that fall within the ambit of those
clauses are limited to disputes that “arise out of the
provisions” of the nomination agreements. In their founding
affidavit the applicants had not identified or described, a dispute
or disputes that fall within the ambit of the clauses in question and
in respect of which the ‘expert’ will have jurisdiction.
[14]
In their founding affidavit, the applicants repeatedly state that
they wish the expert to ‘dissolve’ the business
relationship between them and the respondents. The ‘business
relationships’ in question arise, according to the applicants,
from the three nomination agreements. There are three issues with
this averment: One, nowhere in their founding papers do the
applicants explain how the expert is to ‘dissolve’ the
business relationships. Two, nowhere do they state, even baldly,
what
order or award or ‘ruling’ they will require the expert
to make, and three, the business relationships cannot
be ‘dissolved’
without terminating those agreements. The expert will clearly not
have the power or jurisdiction to
terminate the agreements.
[15]
The applicants were obliged to place facts before the court showing,
at least
prima facie,
that the dispute falls within the ambit
of the relevant clauses of the three agreements and that it is a
dispute in respect of which
the expert will have jurisdiction. This
they failed to do. The result is that the “hearing”,
foreshadowed in paragraph
3.3 of the order, is a non-event, because
no “dispute” has been disclosed that can be the
subject-matter of such a
hearing.
[16]
Fifthly, there is no cause of action against the ninth respondent.
The ninth respondent, Intelligent Gaming (Pty) Ltd, is a
software
provider. It provides software to,
inter alia
, the second
applicant.
[17]
The order the applicants intend to seek on the return date in terms
of paragraph 3.3 of the rule
nisi
is to operate pending the
outcome of a hearing to be conducted before an expert in terms of the
three nomination agreements referred
to in 3.3.1, 3.3.2 and 3.3.3 of
the interim order. It is common cause that the ninth respondent was
not a party to any of the nomination
agreements. Neither was the
second applicant. The ninth respondent is therefore not bound to the
dispute resolution provisions
contained in the agreements. No
‘expert’ appointed in terms of any of the three
agreements will have jurisdiction over
the ninth respondent. The
ninth respondent has no right or obligation to participate in any
“hearing” before such an
expert. Any possible dispute
between the second applicant and the ninth respondent will therefore
have to be adjudicated by way
of court proceedings.
[18]
In addition, the interim interdict granted against the ninth
respondent restrained it from ‘
terminating the software and
services it presently provides to the Second Applicant
’,
pending the return date. There is no basis in fact or in law to
restrain and interdict the ninth respondent from lawfully
terminating
its supply agreement with the second applicant. I agree with the
respondents that to the extent that this was intended
to apply in
respect of possible acts of
unlawful
termination of services,
i.e. possible acts of spoliation pending the return date, such order
would in principle have been competent
had such a case been made out.
However, no facts whatsoever were placed before the court to justify
a finding that,
prima facie
, the ninth respondent had
threatened to unlawfully terminate the supply or a finding that the
applicants had demonstrated, at least
prima facie
, a
reasonable fear or apprehension that the ninth respondent would do
so.
CONCLUSION
[19]
For the reasons set out above, the rule
nisi
should be
discharged (save for the relief relating to the assault on the first
applicant by the first respondent) with costs.
[20]
In the result the following order is made:
1.
Paragraphs 3.1 and 3.2 of the interim order dated 11 February 2022 in
respect of the first respondent
are confirmed.
2.
Paragraph 3.3 of the interim order is discharged in its entirety.
3.
Costs of the unopposed urgent application, to be paid by the first
respondent.
4.
Costs of the opposed application, including the hearing on 12 April
and 13 April 2022 to be paid
by the applicants.
L.
WINDELL
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
(
Electronically
submitted therefore unsigned)
Delivered:
This judgement 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 for
hand-down is deemed to be 29 April 2022.
APPEARANCES
Counsel
for the applicants:
Adv. N. Jagga
Instructed
by:
Vardakos Attorneys
Counsel
for the respondent:
Adv. J. Both SC
Instructed
by:
Matthew Kerr-Phillips
Date
of hearing:
12 and 13 April 2022
Date
of judgment:
29 April 2022
[1]
2014
(3) SA 96
(SCA).
[2]
2003
(4) SA 207 (C).
[3]
At [28]. See also
President
of the Republic of SA & Others v M&G Media Ltd
2011(2) SA 1 (SCA) at [37] and
Ex
parte WH & Others
2011 (6) SA 514
(GNP) at [74].
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