Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 439South Africa
JM Busha Investment Group (PTY) Ltd v Huxley (38991/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 439 (1 July 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
1 July 2022
Headnotes
when an objection goes to the root of the entire claim or defence the proper procedure is exception whereas a motion to strike is usually appropriate when portion of a claim or defence is objected to. The Court does however have inherent jurisdiction to strike out a whole claim which is frivolous, improper or was instituted without sufficient grounds.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## JM Busha Investment Group (PTY) Ltd v Huxley (38991/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 439 (1 July 2022)
JM Busha Investment Group (PTY) Ltd v Huxley (38991/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 439 (1 July 2022)
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sino date 1 July 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 38991/2020
REPORTABLE: NO
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
1 July 2022
In the matter between:
JM
BUSHA INVESTMENT GROUP (PTY) LTD
Applicant
And
BUSHIRI
SHEPHERD HUXLEY
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MAKUME,
J
:
[1] This
is an application for the final sequestration of the Respondent’s
estate. A
Rule Nisi
was issued following an ex parte
application in the Urgent Court on the 20
th
November 2020.
BACKGROUND
[2] In
order to contextualise the dispute it is necessary to provide a short
chronology of salient
events leading up to the proceedings of the
20
th
November 2020.
[3] The
Respondent and his wife are well known in the Gauteng area and
operated a church with a large
following. On the 23
rd
March 2020 the Respondent consented to an order under case number
39782/2019 in this Court, in terms of which he together with
his wife
and a company called Shepherd Bushiri Investment Group (Pty) Ltd
admitted being liable to the Applicant in the amount
of
R203 544 945.81 together with interest.
[4] It
was a term of the order that the Respondent would settle his
indebtedness to the Applicant
in the following manner:
i)
That
the Applicant could dispose of various immovable properties of the
Respondent.
ii)
That
the Applicant could perfect its pledge of various movable assets that
were subject to the general Notarial Bonds.
[5] It
was further ordered that execution of the order stated in (4) above
be suspended on condition
that the Respondents thereto jointly and
severally paid:
i)
The
arrear interest on or before 31 March 2020;
ii)
The
sum of R100million on or before 20 April 2020;
iii)
The
sum of R103 544 845.95 on or before 10 May 2020;
iv)
Costs
of the application on the scale as between attorney and client.
[6] It
is common cause that the Respondent nor any of the co-Respondents
made any payment.
[7]
Having received no payment the Applicant’s attorneys sent a
letter of demand to the Respondent
threatening attachment and
execution in terms of the order.
[8] On
the 10
th
July 2020 the Respondent failed in an urgent
application to prevent execution. Similarly, the second such
application failed on
the 6
th
August 2020.
[9] In
the meantime Respondent had launched an application to rescind the
consent order granted on
the 23
rd
March 2020 which
rescission application was dismissed on the 11
th
November
2021.
[10] During or about
October 2020 the Respondent and his wife were arrested on charges of
amongst others money
laundering and fraud. They appeared in Court in
Pretoria on the 4
th
November 2020 and were released on
bail subject to stringent conditions.
[11] On the 9
th
November 2020 Mr Joseph Makamba Busha a director of the Applicant
telephoned the Respondent to make enquiries about non-payment.
The
Respondent told him that payment in full will be made on Monday the
16
th
November 2020.
[12] On Friday the
13
th
November 2020 Respondent and his wife fled the
country back to their country of origin Malawi. Their bail has been
estreated. Application
for their extradition back to South Africa is
still pending. Pastor Bushiri and his wife a he is known has
categorically indicated
that he has no intention of returning to
South Africa to face the charges.
[13] The Applicant
received no payment as promised on the 16
th
November 2020.
The Applicant then approached Court on an urgent basis and was
granted an order on the 20
th
November 2020 provisionally
sequestrating the estate of the Respondent and appointed Mr Jeritanos
Mashamba and Louisa Selina Kgatle
as joint Trustees to the estate of
the Respondent.
[14] On the 4
th
November 2021 almost a year after the granting of the provisional
order the Respondent who I shall henceforth refer to as Bushiri
entered appearance to oppose the final granting of the order of
sequestration and subsequently filed his answering affidavit on
the
merits as well as taking points in
limine
to the application.
[15] On the 26
th
November 2021 Bushiri uploaded and filed his answering affidavit.
[16] On the 01
st
March 2022 the Applicant filed heads of argument and then only on the
14
th
March 2022 filed their replying affidavit.
[17] On the 14
th
March 2022 Bushiri filed a notice in terms of Rule 30(2) (b) stating
that the Applicant’s filing of their Replying affidavit
after
having filed heads of argument was an irregular step it having been
filed four months out of time with no application to
condone the late
filing.
[18] On the 5
th
April 2022 the Applicants filed their application for condonation for
the late filing of their Replying affidavit. Mr Clifford
Levin,
Bushiri’s Attorneys attested to an affidavit opposing the
granting of condonation.
[19] On the 14
th
April 2022 the joint trustees filed an interim report for the
attention of the Court about the state of affairs of the Estate of
Bushiri.
[20] On the 20
th
April 2022 Bushiri filed an application seeking an order that the
undated Trustees report be struck from the record and be regarded
as
pro-non scripto for purposes of the main application.
[21] On the 3
rd
May 2022 Bushiri filed a power of attorney nominating and appointing
Mr Clifford Brian Levin as his attorney in the matter. This
was in
response to a Rule 7 notice that the Applicant had filed.
[22] There was
accordingly before me on the 4
th
May 2022 besides the main
application the following interlocutories:
i)
The
application to strike the undated report by the Trustees.
ii)
The
Irregular step application in terms of Rule 30 (2) (b).
iii)
The
condonation application to condone the late filing of the Applicant’s
replying affidavit.
[23] Over and above
this I also had to simultaneously deal with the following points in
limine
raised by Bushiri they are as follows:
i)
Lack
of jurisdiction Bushiri maintains that this Court has no jurisdiction
to hear this matter “as the Respondents do not
reside within
the geographical area over which this Court exercises jurisdiction.”
ii)
Non-compliance
with the provisions of the Matrimonial Property Act. Bushiri
maintains that since he and his wife are married in
Community of
Property his wife should have been joined in the application as
prescribed by Section 17(4) (b) of the Matrimonial
Property Act.
THE STRIKING APPLICATION
[24] I propose to
deal first with the interlocutory application. The striking off
application was filed on the
28
th
April 2022 some four
days before the hearing of the main application. The affidavit is
deposed to by Mr Clifford Brian Levin Bushiri’s
attorneys of
record. The Trustees had only one day to answer to the
voluminous affidavit filed by Mr Levine.
[25] The affidavit
by Mr Levin is largely hearsay and the averments therein have not
been confirmed by Bushiri
who must have also seen it.
[26] One blatant and
scandalous statement made is that Bushiri only came to know about the
sequestration one year
after the provisional order had been granted.
This is obviously not true because in a letter addressed to the
Trustees attorneys
by Mathopo Attorneys who acted for Bushiri dated
the 12
th
January 2021 it was stated as follows:
“
We discussed
the contents of your letter with Mr SH Bushiri. Our client had no
knowledge of the legal proceedings instituted against
him which
resulted in the provisional sequestration order of his estate on 24
th
November 2020.”
[27] During argument
Counsel for Bushiri could not proffer a response to this
contradiction.
[28] The issues in
this matter is not so much what the report contains it is firstly
whether there is a valid
objection to it being filed by the Trustees.
[29] In Salzmann v
Holmes
1914 AD 152
and Stephens v De Wet 1920 AD it was held that
when an objection goes to the root of the entire claim or defence the
proper procedure
is exception whereas a motion to strike is usually
appropriate when portion of a claim or defence is objected to. The
Court does
however have inherent jurisdiction to strike out a whole
claim which is frivolous, improper or was instituted without
sufficient
grounds.
[30] The application
to strike out by Bushiri is not directed at a particular portion,
what Bushiri ask is that
this Court treats the report as being
pro-non scripto. This is strictly speaking not an application to
strike a pleading as the
Trustees report is not a pleading and it has
not been incorporated by the Applicant as such into its pleadings.
The Application
by Bushiri can best be described as an application to
not consider the report in this application.
[31] It is trite law
that the function of a provisional trustee is essentially to take
physical control and to
superintend administration of the property
and affairs of the estate pending the appointment of trustees. It is
accordingly only
fair competent and in the interest of justice and
protection of creditors that provisional trustees place before a
Court on the
return day of the order evidence concerning the result
of his investigation of the Respondent affairs subject to affording
Respondent
an opportunity to answer such. (See
Smith and Walton
(SA) (Pty) Ltd v Holt
1961 (4) SA 157
D at 16
;
Van Aswegen vs
Pienaar
1967 (1) SA 571
(O) at 572 – 573
;
Shepherd v
Mitchell Cott Seafright (SA) (Pty) Ltd
1984 (3) SA 202
(T) at page
206
.
[32] The Court in
Smith (supra) expressed itself as follows at page 161 H – 162
A:
“
Mr Meskin
submitted that the provisional trustee was not under any duty to
report to the Court on any investigation which he might
have
undertaken after the grant of the order provisionally sequestrating
the estate in question, and that his report in the form
of an
affidavit filed by the Applicant in these proceedings should
therefore be struck out. In my opinion however, if a provisional
trustee obtained information which has a bearing upon the various
matters arising for determination on the return day there can
be no
objection to that information being placed before the Court in proper
form merely because he is not under any statutory duty
to carry out
an investigation in connection with those matters and to report
thereon to the Court.”
[33] In this matter
the Trustees have placed before this Court vital information
regarding the refusal by Bushiri
to comply with statutory
requirements. His attorney Mr Levin has in fact confirmed that
Bushiri is not prepared to comply and complete
a statement of his
financial affairs. This attitude by Bushiri can only be described as
being contemptous of a Court order.
[34] The application
to strike is in my view misguided. The aim of Bushiri is to keep out
damning information
from the Court. He has put before this Court a
version which is transparently false.
[35] In the result
the application to strike is dismissed with costs. I am not inclined
to grant a punitive costs
order against Mr Levin he is only carrying
out instruction. The costs shall be costs in the sequestration on an
attorney and client
scale.
THE IRREGULAR STEP AND CONDONATION
APPLICATION
[36] It is common
cause that the Applicant filed its Replying Affidavit some four
months after the filing of the
Answering Affidavit. It is also
correct that at the time of such filing the Applicant did not file an
application for condonation.
It did so on the 5
th
April
2022 being the same day on which the Respondent Bushiri filed his
notice to declare the Replying Affidavit an irregular step
in the
proceedings and that same be struck from the record.
[37] Mr Rowan Jaraad
Furman in his affidavit in support of the Condonation application
informed the Court that
during October 2021 he was involved in a
serious aircraft accident and spent time in hospital from 30 October
2021 until 31
st
December 2021. He advised that on the 5
th
April 2022 when he deposed to the affidavit he had not fully
recovered and has not fully commenced work at the office. He
concluded
by saying that the late filing of the Replying Affidavit
has not in any manner prejudiced the Respondent in the conduct of the
matter.
[38] When the
Respondent Bushiri filed heads of argument on the 16
th
March 2022 he was already in possession of the Replying Affidavit.
The Respondent in paragraph 3 of his heads says that: “The
Respondent reserves in full its right to supplement these heads in
the event that condonation is granted in respect of the reply.”
[39] In the heads of
argument Bushiri deals at paragraph 4 and 13 with the two points in
limine
which he had raised in his Answering Affidavit to which
the Applicant replied to. The long and short of this is despite the
late
filing of the Replying Affidavit Bushiri was able to deal with
the Applicants Affidavit in Replying in his heads of argument.
[40] The Court in
SA
Instrumentation (Pty) Ltd v Smithchem (Pty) Ltd
1977 (3) SA 703
(D)
held that rule 30(3) provides that if at the hearing of such an
application the Court is of the opinion that the step was improper
or
irregular it may set it aside or make any such order as it seems
meet. The honourable Judge concluded as follows:
“
It is I
think beyond doubt that in considering such a case the Court has a
discretion to be exercised judicially upon consideration
of the
circumstances to do what was fair to both sides.”
[41] In other
decisions on this aspect it has been demonstrated that the attitude
generally adopted by the courts
is that it is entitled to overlook in
proper cases any irregularity in procedure which does not work any
substantial prejudice
(See:
National Union of SA Student vs Meyer
Curtis
1973 (1) SA 363
b(T) at 367 E-G
).
[42] The Respondent
has failed to demonstrate any prejudice and has in fact been able to
deal with all the Applicants
averments stated in the Replying
Affidavit in his heads of argument. Classen J in National Union of SA
Students (supra) concluded
as follows:
“
Even if I am
wrong in my conclusion and the Defendants procedural step was
irregular this court has a discretion to condone in terms
of Rule
27(3) the step and refuse to strike out the documents. It is not
intended that a breach of the Rule should necessarily
be visited with
a nullity.”
[43] In the result
the application in terms of Rule 30 (2) (b) to strike out the
Applicant’s Replying Affidavit
as an irregular step is
dismissed with costs. Condonation for the late filing of the Replying
Affidavit is hereby granted with
costs.
[44] Having disposed
of the interlocutory application I now move on to deal with the two
points in
limine
raised by the Respondent.
FIRST POINT IN
LIMINE
–
LACK OF JURISDICTION
[45] A point in
limine
is typically a question of law raised at the beginning
of the hearing of a matter, before any evidence is led which point
may if
successful dispose of the dispute or bring the proceedings
instituted to a conclusion (See
Allen & Others NNO v Gibbs and
Others
1977 (3) SA 212
(SE
). This is what the Respondent wants to
achieve by submitting that this Court does not have jurisdiction.
[46] Bushiri
maintains that because he and his family permanently left the
Republic of South Africa on the 13
th
November 2020 with no
intention of returning this puts them out of the jurisdiction of this
Court. He assets that Applicant by
stating in paragraphs 3 and 15 of
the Founding Affidavit that he Bushiri previously resided at 8
th
Floor, Greenpark Corner, 3 Lower Sandton and left on 13 November
2020, clearly indicates that the Court has no jurisdiction. Bushiri
says that he and his wife were not resident in the Republic of South
Africa when these proceedings were initiated.
[47] The Respondent
is clearly being technical and avoids reading Section 149(1)(a) and
(b) in its right context.
Section 149 (1)(a) of the Insolvency Act
confers jurisdiction over every debtor who on the date of application
is domiciled or
owns or is entitled to property in the jurisdiction
of the Court and (b) at any time within 12 months immediately
preceding the
lodging of the petition ordinarily resided or carried
on business within the jurisdiction of the Honourable Court.
[48] It is common
cause that Bushiri owes the Applicant a substantial amount of money
he is therefore a debtor
within the meaning of the section, secondly
he until the 13 November 2020 resided within the jurisdiction of this
Court and lastly
he owns property within the jurisdiction of this
Court.
[49] I accordingly
have no hesitation in dismissing this point in
limine
with
costs.
THE SECOND POINT IN LIMINE –
FAILURE TO JOIN MRS BUSHIRI AS A RESPONDENT
[50] The Respondent
relies on the provisions of Section 17(4) (b) of the Matrimonial
Property Act which requires
that “an application for the
sequestration of a joint estate should be made against both spouses
provided that no application
for the sequestration of the Estate of a
debtor shall be dismissed on the ground that such debtor’s
estate is a joint estate
if the Applicant satisfies the Court that
despite reasonable steps taken by him he was unable to establish
whether the debtor is
married in Community of Property or the name
and address of the spouse or debtor.
[51] The first
question to be answered is whether on the face of the marriage
certificate it can be inferred that
Bushiri and his wife are married
in Community of Property and if so whether the Applicant knows about
that.
[52] Bushiri and his
wife are Malawian Nationals. They married in Malawi in terms of the
Laws of that country.
The marriage certificate annexed to Bushiri’s
Answering Affidavit is silent as to whether it was in or out of
Community of
Property. Bushiri has not placed anything before this
Court to prove that in terms of the Laws of Malawi a marriage
concluded in
terms of “The African Marriage (Christian Rights)
Registration Act Cap 25.02” is a marriage in Community of
Property.
[53] The marriage
was conducted by a minister in the same church which is owned by
Bushiri. His name is not on
the document what appeares is a scribbled
signature. So it is only the word of Bushiri. This Court has no other
evidence to support
Bushiri’s version. I have difficulty in
believing a person who is a fugitive from justice. His wife has also
not filed any
confirmatory affidavit although I would still regard
her evidence with the same suspicion as that of her husband Bushiri.
[54] The proviso to
Section 17(4) (b) must be read in the context and against the
background of all the evidence.
The proviso reads that “no
application for the sequestration of the estate of a debtor shall be
dismissed on the ground that
such debtor’s estate is a joint
estate if the Applicant satisfied the Court that despite reasonable
steps taken by him he
was unable to establish whether the debtor is
married in Community of Property or the name and address of the
spouse or debtor.”
[55] Mrs Bushiri
herself has become aware of the application and has not made use of
the opportunity to intervene
and protect her estate if any. There can
only be one explanation for her silence that is that she knows that
she is not a partner
in Community of Property.
[56] I am justified
that the Applicant had no other way of establishing the real position
as regard the marital
status of Bushiri outside what appears on the
marriage certificate attached to the Answering Affidavit. The
Applicant has in my
view taken reasonable steps to establish the
marital status of Bushiri and his wife. I in the result dismiss the
second point in
limine
.
MERITS OF THE APPLICATION
[57] It is trite law
that on the return date of the provisional order a Court has a
discretion finally to sequestrate
the Respondent’s estate
provided it is satisfied as to three essential elements namely:
i)
That
the Applicant has established a claim against the Respondent.
ii)
That
the Respondent has committed an act of insolvency or is actually
insolvent.
iii)
That
there is reason to believe that it will be to the advantage of
creditors if the debtors estate is sequestrated.
[58] A Respondent
who opposes the final granting of an order must in his Answering
Affidavit place facts before
the Court to rebut the prima facie case
established against him in the Founding Affidavit.
[59] The Applicant’s
reason for seeking the final sequestration of Bushiri is based on the
provisions of
Section 8(a) & (d) of the Insolvency Act number 24
of 1936 which reads as follows:
“
A debtor
commits an act of insolvency-
a)
If
he leaves the Republic or being out of the Republic remains absent
therefrom, or departs from his dwelling or otherwise absents
himself
with intent by so doing to evade or delay payment of his debts.
d) if he removes on
attempts to remove any of his property with intent to prejudice his
creditors or to prefer one creditor
above another.”
[60] The Respondent
disputes being indebted to the Applicant even though judgment had
been obtained against him
by consent and he has failed to have the
judgement rescinded. There is no appeal pending before any Court. The
Applicant has in
my view satisfied the first requirement in terms of
Section 12 of the Act.
[61] It is the
second requirement being the Act of Insolvency that is in issue. The
Applicant says that
Bushiri and his family have left the Republic of
South Africa with the sole intent of evading to pay his creditors
amongst them
the Applicant. Bushiri disputes this and says that he
had been planning since 2018 to relocate to Malawi. His sudden
departure
from the country is as a result of fear for his life and
the safety of his family. He does not give details of acts of
violence
perpetrated against him or when or by whom those were made.
[62] One would have
expected that Bushiri being a prominent figure within the religious
sector in Gauteng to have
reported such incidents of intimidation and
threat to the authorities he has failed to do so.
[63] The debt which
forms the subject matter of this application was incurred in 2019,
judgment was granted because
Bushiri defaulted with arrangements. In
the final event he on the 9
th
November 2020 makes a verbal
promise to pay on the16 November 2020 well knowing that he shall by
then have left the country permanently.
[64] Bushiri is a
sophisticated person he has attorneys who act on his behalf in this
country if he is not insolvent
why has he not made the necessary
funds to his attorneys to settle his debts. I am accordingly
satisfied that he left the country
in order to evade and delay
payment of his debt.
[65] The question
that remains is whether in fact Bushiri is insolvent or not. On the
24 March 2022 Bushiri’s
Attorneys Mr Levin addressed a letter
to the Trustee attorney in which he states that Mr Bushiri was “not
prepared to complete
the statement of affairs and/or questionair
forwarded by your office on the basis that he considers the
sequestration application
brought under case number 38991/202 an
abuse of process.”
[66] Further to the
above in his answering affidavit at paragraph 84.3 Mr Bushiri states
the following:
“
I fail to
see how the appointment of a trustee would prevent me from
dissipating assets especially if the Applicant does not know
what
assets I have to tell the trustees what to protect.”
[67] It is as a
result of Bushiri’s failure to divulge any information
regarding the true state of his financial
affairs which he in any
case has to do statutorily. There are no facts to support his claim
to solvency. He has placed nothing
before this Court to prove that he
is solvent. It is therefore safe to conclude that he is insolvent and
left this country with
the sole purpose to evade his creditors. He
has no intention to return to the country voluntarily as he is a
fugitive from justice.
[68] In
Nedbank
Ltd v Johan Hendrick Potgieter 2013 GDR 2290 (GJS) at para 19 and 20
the Court held as follows:
[193]
If the debtor is to persuade the court to exercise its discretion in
his or her favour,
he or she must place evidence before that Court
that clearly establishes that the debts will be paid if the
sequestration order
is not granted. If that contention is based on a
claim that the debtor is in fact solvent then that should be shown by
acceptable
evidence.
[69] In the result I
am persuaded that the Respondent Mr Shepherd Huxley Bushiri is
insolvent and that it will
be to the advantage of his creditors that
his estate be administered by trustees. I accordingly make the
following order:
ORDER
i)
The
Provisional Sequestration order granted on the 20
th
November 2020 is hereby confirmed.
ii)
The
estate of Bushiri Shepherd Huxley is placed in the hands of the
Trustees for administration.
iii)
The
costs of this application shall be the costs in the sequestration.
Dated
at Johannesburg on this 1st day of July 2022
M
A MAKUME
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
DATE OF HEARING
: 04 MAY 2022
DATE OF JUDGMENT
: JULY 2022
FOR APPLICANT
:
Adv N Riley
FOR RESPONDENT
: Adv CA Campbell
FOR TRUSTEES
:
Adv Marc Leathern
WITH
: Adv Coetzee
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