Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 461South Africa
Machingwane v National African Federated Chamber of Commerce and Industry and Another (25906/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 461 (11 July 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
11 July 2022
Headnotes
was not lawfully convened in terms of its constitution and that point is now before the Supreme Court of Appeals.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Machingwane v National African Federated Chamber of Commerce and Industry and Another (25906/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 461 (11 July 2022)
Machingwane v National African Federated Chamber of Commerce and Industry and Another (25906/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 461 (11 July 2022)
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sino date 11 July 2022
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case No. 25906/2020
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
REVISED:
11/07/2022
In
the leave to appeal application between
MACHINGWANE,
SABELO VUSUMZI
Applicant
and
NATIONAL
AFRICAN FEDERATED CHAMBER OF
COMMERCE
AND INDUSTRY
First Respondent
MOSENA,
SEKWAMO GILBERT
Second Respondent
JUDGMENT
MAHOMED,
AJ
I
granted an interim order on 19 April 2022, in terms of which the
applicant was ordered to cease acting and posing as the president
of
the first respondent and to desist from making any media statements
or appear in public as its president, pending the decision
of the
Supreme Court of Appeal. The applicant seeks leave, to the Full Bench
of the High Court alternatively the Supreme Court
of Appeals, to
appeal that order. The application is opposed.
The
applicant in casu appeals in terms of
s17
(1) (a) (i) and (ii) of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
, which provides that leave to appeal
may only be given where the court is of the opinion that, (i) the
appeal would have a reasonable
prospect of success or (ii) there is
some compelling reason why the appeal should be heard, including
conflicting judgments on
the matter under consideration.
My
judgment sets out the requirements for an interim interdict and the
facts which supported each of the requirements in detail.
Only the
basic points are repeated, herein.
1.
The main facts I considered were:
1.1.
that the first respondent’s members, voted in the second
respondent as the president of the first
respondent NAFCOC, a body
which is established to promote and support Black business interests.
The point in dispute here is that
the meeting held was not lawfully
convened in terms of its constitution and that point is now before
the Supreme Court of Appeals.
1.1.1.
I heard no evidence on this point and therefore I did not
determine
that point.
1.1.2.
The respondents supported their application for an interim
interdict
by reference to minutes, confirmatory affidavits, and correspondences
by the leadership of NAFCOC. Those facts confirmed
their prima facie
right, although open to some doubt.
1.2.
The
evidence was that respondents demanded that the applicant desist from
continuing with his behaviour. He refused to do so, as
evidenced by
correspondences between the attorneys and he did not deny that he
posed as president at public meetings, media statements
as its
president and the like. He stated he would not accede to their demand
and thereby implied that he would continue with his
conduct. This
established the reasonable apprehension of harm amongst other
facts.
[1]
1.3. The first respondent
is NAFCOC, a body established to promote the business interests of
Black business.
1.3.1.
The balance of convenience favours that the order be granted
in its
favour to preserve its position and continue with its work until
final determination by the SCA on the legality of the meeting
and the
outcome of the elections.
1.3.2.
The applicant has a right to a hearing and is going to be
heard.
However, the applicant failed to demonstrate that he suffered any
real prejudice or that the order would interfere with
the continued
working of the organisation or in any way prejudice the organisation.
1.4. The requirement of
no other remedy was established on the evidence that the respondents
have on two occasions demanded that
the applicant desist from the
offending conduct, and he has unequivocally refused to do so.
2.
A court has
a wide discretion in determining the granting of an interim order. In
R v
BALOYI
,
[2]
the court held that there must be some substance to the argument
advanced by the applicant. The applicant persists with his argument
that the “status quo remains,” but he has a different
understanding of the status quo, that is, ignoring the outcome
of an
election and vote of no confidence, by members of NAFCOC. He advances
no argument as to how the order granted prejudices
him or the NAFCOC,
nor presents any evidence to this court.
3.
The applicant in casu, attacks all of the
judgment, inter alia, that
the respondents’ failed to prove all requirements for an
interim interdict, that he heard of the
Oudekraal principle and its
application to voluntary associations as set out in the Cathcart
judgment for the first time at the
hearing of the matter, that the
court should not have admitted hearsay evidence, the court made
findings on issues not before it,
the court failed to consider the
parties failure to mediate the dispute, and so continued the grounds
for leave to appeal. My reasons
appear in the judgment and need not
be repeated.
4.
The applicant must satisfy the test for leave
to appeal as set out in
s17
(1) of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
.
5.
His argument must demonstrate that another
court, bearing in mind
what I already set out in the paragraphs above and my judgment,
“would” arrive at a different
finding, and that the
interim order should not have been granted. The threshold is higher
than in the previous Act and the applicant
must show that there is
more of a certainty that another court would arrive at a different
decision. The order I granted does not
have the effect of a final
order and the approach in the Cipla judgement has application.
6.
CIPLA
AGRIMED (PTY) LTD v MERCK SHARP DHOME CORPORATION
[3]
,
the court held that the order must be definitive of the issue and not
susceptible of alteration by court of first instance: interim
interdict in form and effect, not appealable. I made no definite
finding on the parties’ dispute, I considered whether the
applicant satisfied the requirements for an interim interdict and
applied my discretion in the circumstances that the parties find
themselves in.
7.
I am of the view that on the basic facts set
out above, my judgment
explains more fully, that the respondents have satisfied the
requirements for the interim order. The applicant
has failed to
counter the basic facts set out above.
8.
Mr Kwinda
argued that I made a finding in paragraph 62 of the judgment. He
argues incorrectly, in that the paragraph is simply a
restatement of
“Farber AJ’s finding,” which if read together with
the paragraphs 63-64, I set out the context
which justified the grant
of the interim order.
[4]
8.1.
It is not my finding. I did not hear evidence on the legality of the
meeting and made no finding on
the point.
9.
Mr Kwinda alleged he heard new evidence for
the first time with
reference to the Oudekraal principle and its application to voluntary
associations as held in the Cathcart
Resident’s Association
judgment.
9.1.
The
applicant is incorrect as the founding papers stated that the Mosena
“
remains
president until a court decides otherwise
.”
[5]
10.
The applicant repeats his attack on the admission of hearsay
evidence.
This point is fully addressed in the judgment. It must be
noted that even if the reference to the statements and appearances
were
excluded, the applicant’s failure to deny the statements
or public appearances itself is an admission. The hearsay evidence
is
of no real consequence. The respondents did not address the content
of those statements but merely referred to them. I
exercised my
discretion in allowing the evidence, particularly in that it was not
denied, and the applicant was clear in his attorney’s
correspondence that he would continue with his conduct.
10.1.
The
evidence was that the respondents’ attorneys wrote to
applicant’s attorneys and demanded that he desist from posing
as its president. The applicant did not deny that he was so acting
and furthermore through his attorneys “
refused
to accede to your
(respondents)
clients’
demands.
”
[6]
11.
Advocate Korf argued that the application is an abuse of process,
and
an appeal is pending on the point which is likely to be heard in
September or October 2022, when the main issue would be determined.
This application would only be heard in 2023, when the issue would
become academic. He argued the application should never have
been
brought and must be dismissed with costs.
12.
Furthermore, it was argued that if the applicant feels as strongly,
he is at liberty to call another meeting of the members to hold
another vote, which he has failed to do.
13.
Mr Kork argued that the applicant has not alleged and proved any
prejudice he suffers. It is the organisation that suffers
reputational harm.
14.
The applicant acknowledged that no appeal lies in respect of an
interim order and in his notice of appeal advised that the appeal of
this interim order is based on the interest of justice.
14.1.
The notice
for leave to appeal reads, “
the
basis of the appeal of the interim orders and/or judgment of
Honourable Madam Justice Mahomed AJ, is based on the interest of
justice.”
[7]
15.
Mr Kwinda
relied
on
CITY OF TSHWANE METROPOLITAN MUNICIPALITY v AFRIFORUM & ANOTHER
[8]
, where the court stated that
an interim order is appealable based on the interest of justice,
however counsel failed to set out
the full principle in that
judgment.
15.1.
The
principle, quoted as in the OUTA judgment by Moseneke DCJ, as he was
then, states:
[9]
“
the court has
granted leave to appeal in interim orders before. It has made it
clear that the operative standard is “the interest
of justice.”
To that end, it must have regard to and weigh carefully all germane
circumstances.
Whether an interim order has final effect or
disposes of a substantial portion of the relief sought in a pending
review is a relevant
and important consideration
. Yet, it is not
the only or always decisive consideration. It is just as important to
assess whether the temporary restraining
order has an immediate and
substantial effect, including whether the harm that flows from it is
serious, immediate, ongoing, and
irreparable.”
16.
This court has considered the conspectus of the evidence and noted
that the applicant has not provided any evidence of any irreparable
harm or prejudice he or NAFCOC may suffer because of this interim
order. It in the interest of justice that the management of the
organisation continue to function, until the issue is fully
ventilated
before the Supreme Court of Appeals.
17.
I am not persuaded that another court would arrive at a different
conclusion as to whether the respondents have met the requirements
for an interim order.
18.
The applicant argued that the court ought to have considered that
the
parties failed to mediate the dispute and therefor costs ought not be
awarded against him. I considered this in my judgment
when Mr Korf
submitted that the parties in casu have been in a strained
relationship for a long while, a mediation would not have
assisted
them.
19.
I am of the view that the applicant ought not to have brought this
application and he incurred unnecessary legal costs.
Accordingly,
I make the following order
1.
The application for leave is refused.
2.
The applicant shall pay the costs of the application on an attorney
client scale.
MAHOMED
AJ
This
judgment was prepared and authored by Acting Judge Mahomed. It is
handed down electronically by circulation to the parties
or their
legal representatives by email and by uploading it to the it to the
electronic file of this matter on Caselines. The date
for hand-down
is deemed to be 11 July 2022.
Date
of hearing: 13 June 2022
Date
of Delivery: 11 July 2022
Appearances:
For
Applicant
:
Advocate
Kwinda
Instructed
by: Tube A Attorneys
Tel:
012 023 0736
For
respondents
Advocate
CAC Korf
Instructed
by VFV Attorneys
Tel
012 460 8704
[1]
Caselines P10 -11 par 29 to 35
[2]
1949 (1) SA 523
AD at 524
[3]
(972/16) ZASCA 134 (29 September 2017) headnoteSA 223 CC
[4]
Caselines P17 -18
[5]
Caselines P25 at 32
[6]
Caselines A183 par 2
[7]
Caseline X2
[8]
2016 (6) SA 279
(CC) at 34
[9]
2016 (6) SA 279
(cc) at par 40,
[2012] ZACC 18
; 2012 (6)
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