South Africa: High Courts - Gauteng Support SAFLII

You are here:  SAFLII >> Databases >> South Africa: High Courts - Gauteng >> 2007 >> [2007] ZAGPHC 98

| Noteup | LawCite

Maigret (Pty) Ltd v Buys NO and Others (40331/2006) [2007] ZAGPHC 98 (14 June 2007)

Download original files

PDF format

RTF format


6

Not reportable

DELIVERED: 14 JUNE 2007


IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA

(TRANSVAAL PROVINCIAL DIVISION)


CASE NO: 40331/2006



IN THE MATTER BETWEEN:


MAIGRET (PTY) APPLICANT



AND



JOHANNES HENDRICK BUYS N .O 1ST RESPONDENT



ATTORNEY MALAN MOHALE INCORPORATED . 2ND RESPONDENT



ADVOCATE JW LOUW SC 3RD RESPONDENT


ADVOCATE HJ FABRICIUS SC 4TH RESPONDENT


ADVOCATE JH DREYERS SC 5TH RESPONDENT


THE SHERIFF, JOHANESBURG 6TH RESPONDENT





JUDGMENT


MAVUNDLA, J.,


1. The applicant has brought an urgent application for an order setting aside the warrant of execution dated the 14 March 2007 (issued on the 7 May 2007, alternatively for an order staying the execution of the warrant of execution pending either the finalisation of the appeal to the General Council of the Bar against the decision of Advocate Maritz S.C, alternatively the reviewing of the decision of Advocate Marits S.C. which review is to be instituted by the applicant within 14 days of the order being granted and that the said order operate as an interim order pending the determination of either the appeal or review as set out herein above.



  1. The first and second respondents oppose the application on various grounds, including on urgency. In regard to the latter point, I have been referred to Syfrets Bank Ltd and Others v Sheriff of the Supreme Court1.


Background Facts.


  1. The first respondent was the plaintiff in this Court under case number 24223/2002. The matter was by agreement referred to arbitration before retired judge Mr. Justice van der Walt who dismissed the claim of with costs. The decision of Mr. Justice van der Walt, was then taken on appeal before three appeal arbiters, consisting of Advocates JW Louw SC, HJ Fabricius SC and JH Dreyer SC who on thee 30 November 2006 found that the decision of Mr. Justice van der Walt was wrong and they awarded the claimant (first respondent in casu) an amount of R500,000.00 with cost.

  1. The applicant in casu then brought on urgent basis under case number 40331/2006 an application for the stay of the award of the Arbitration Appellate Tribunal consisting of the aforesaid mentioned advocates, whom the applicant cited as the third to the fifth respondents respectively and interdicting the second respondent from paying the amount of R500,000.00 (together with the interest accrued thereon) which it held in trust to the third , fourth and fifth respondents pending the finalisation of review proceedings against the decision of the aforesaid Arbitration Appellate Tribunal.


  1. On 5 December 2006and by agreement the aforesaid application under case number 40331/2006 was settled, and the settlement was made an order of the Court by Mr. Justice Prinsloo, which order reads thus:


1. That without admitting that the applicant was entitled to bring an urgent application in terms of prayer A of the applicant’s notice of motion, the first and second respondents undertake not to execute the award by the arbitration tribunal dated the 30th of November 2006, pending the finalization of the application set out in B of the applicant’s notice of motion.


    1. That the applicant pay 50% of the arbitrators appeal costs, as agreed or as taxed by the Bar Counsel, as well as 50 % of the venue expenses, upon receipt of the said accounts, which payments are interim payments in terms of the arbitration proceedings and their final destiny is reserved fro decision at the finalization of the review applications and/ or further arbitration proceedings.


    1. That the costs of the urgent application on 5 December 2006 are reserved.”



  1. Subsequent thereto and in particular on the 16 March 2007 a warrant of execution was issued through the registrar of this Court to the Sheriff of Johannesburg North directing him to attach and take into execution the movable goods of the applicant herein and cause the same to be realized by public auction the sum “of R74 385.00 for 50% of the Arbitrator’s Costs which they recovered by judgment of this Court dated the 5 December 2006, in the above mentioned case and also all other costs and charges of the 1st and 2nd Respondents in the said case to be hereafter duly taxed according to law, besides all your costs herby included.”



AD URGENCY

  1. In order to make a case for urgency, it has been stated on behalf of the applicant that it has suffered the attachment of assets which it utilises on a day-to-day basis. It is further stated that the applicant cannot lawfully remove these assts from its premises and is being frustrated in the conduct of its lawful business. An undertaking was sought (from the second respondent per letter dated the18 May 2007), but was declined.2



  1. The effect of the attachment is to effect an arrest on the property of the applicant by a judicial order (pignus juciale), the consequences of which being that the control over such arrested property passes over from the hands of the applicant who is the judgment debtor to the hands of the sheriff while dominium over such attached property still vests with the applicant as the judgment debtor.3




  1. In a letter dated 18 May 2007 the applicant’s attorneys point out that a warrant of execution was served upon their client on 14 May 2007 and that the sheriff attached certain assets pursuant thereto. They further state that they understand that the sheriff has been instructed not to remove the items that are under attachment.4

  1. Although the second respondent per letter dated 18 May 2007 respondent by saying that its instructions are to proceed to with the removal of the attached goods and invited the applicant to launch its threatened application to set aside the writ of execution, which letter was remitted per fax on the very same day5, such removal as on the date of the launch of this application had not been effected, nor is there any allegation on the part of the applicant that it fears that such threat would be effected.


  1. The respondents further state that there is no allegation that the applicant intends to dispose of the assets that have been attached. It is also significant to note that whereas the attachment was a done on the 14 May 2007, the applicant only came to Court 22 days after such attachment.


  1. Taking the circumstances of this case I am of the view that the applicant has failed to persuade me that this matter is urgent.


  1. In the premises the matter is struck off the urgent roll with cost.












N.M. MAVUNDLA

JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT


HEARD ON THE: 06 / 06/2007

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 14 /06/ 2007

APPICANT`S ATT: Mr. STOLP

APPLICANT`S ADV: Mr.GR WYNNE.

RESPONDENT`S ATT: Mr L MALAN

RESPONDET’S ADV: Mr. T STRYDOM



1 1997 (1) SA 764 at 776E-778C-D.



2Paginated page 16 para 27 of founding affidavit.

3 Syfrets Bank Ltd and Others v Sheriff of the Supreme Court (supra) where Combrink J at 772D-E says: “An arrest effected on property in execution of a judgment creates a pignus praetorium or so to speak more correctly, a pignus judiciale ,over such property. The effect of such a judicial arrest is that the goods attached are thereby placed in the hands or custody of the officer of the Court. They pass out of the estate of the judgment debtor, so that in the event of the debtor’s insolvency the curator of the latter’s estate cannot claim to have the property attached delivered up to him to be dealt with in the distribution of the insolvent’s estate…. But although the effect of a pignus judiciale is that the control of the property arrested in execution passes from judgement debtor, and therefore on his insolvency supervening does not come under the administration of the curator of the insolvent estate, the dominium remains in the debtor, who can, up to the last moment before actual sale, redeem his attached property: that is to say, the property subject to the pignus judiciale, for while the pignus lasts he remains the owner of the pledge (dominus pignoris, Dig 20.5.12: Cod 4.24.9.)

4 Annexure DDV11 at paginated page33.

5 Annexure DDV12

6