Hyde v Hyde and Others (8509/2020) [2021] ZAWCHC 9 (3 February 2021)

80 Reportability
Administrative Law

Brief Summary

Access to Information — Promotion of Access to Information Act — Application for access to financial records — Applicant seeks annual financial statements of a private body for the years 2014 to 2020 — Respondents' failure to respond constitutes deemed refusal — Legal issue revolves around whether the records are required for the exercise or protection of rights — Court finds that the applicant has established the necessity for access to the records, thus compelling the respondents to provide the requested financial statements.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


This matter was an application brought in terms of the Promotion of Access to Information Act 2 of 2000 (PAIA). The applicant sought an order compelling access to and delivery of the annual financial statements of the second respondent for the financial years ending 2014 to 2020 inclusive.


The parties were Anthony James Hyde as the applicant, and Peter Allan Hyde as the first respondent. The second respondent was Jonkerberg Farm CC, a close corporation of which the first respondent was the sole member. The third respondent, Spence and Associates, was the second respondent’s firm of auditors responsible for preparing its annual financial statements. The first and second respondents opposed the application, while the third respondent abided the court’s decision.


The procedural history showed that the applicant delivered written requests under section 53 of PAIA to the second and third respondents in December 2019, and later delivered a further section 53 request to the first respondent in May 2020. No substantive decision was given by the first and second respondents, and the third respondent refused to provide the record without a court order. The present proceedings followed upon this non-response and refusal. The court recorded that the non-response constituted a deemed refusal under section 58 of PAIA.


The dispute concerned access to corporate financial statements within the context of a long-running commercial relationship between brothers, framed by the applicant as a dispute about information relating to a partnership asset and the applicant’s ability to exercise or protect partnership rights.


2. Material Facts


It was common cause that the applicant and the first respondent are brothers who were involved in a series of commercial partnerships over many years, and that there was a “fifth partnership” between them which had not been liquidated, wound up, or had its profits (if any) distributed. It was also common cause that the first respondent was the sole member of the second respondent, and that the third respondent acted as the second respondent’s auditors and prepared its annual financial statements.


The applicant’s PAIA requests were sent on 10 December 2019 to the second and third respondents. The third respondent replied on 11 December 2019 indicating that it would provide the record only once compelled by court order. The second respondent’s attorney responded on 17 December 2019 indicating that instructions were being taken. A further section 53 request was sent on 5 May 2020 to the first respondent, to which the first and second respondents’ attorney replied that he would revert, but no substantive decision followed. The court recorded that the failure by the first and second respondents to decide constituted a deemed refusal under section 58, and that the third respondent’s refusal did not comply with section 56, particularly section 56(3).


The applicant alleged, in detail, that the second respondent (and the farm it owned) was an asset within the fifth partnership. On the applicant’s version, a farm known as Uitsig was purchased pursuant to partnership activity, with an agreement that it would be registered in a close corporation with the first respondent as sole member, while remaining partnership property. The second respondent was registered on 3 July 2003, and Uitsig was transferred to it on 15 October 2003. The applicant alleged that Hyde Construction CC (of which he was the sole member) funded payments related to the acquisition and financing of Uitsig and the second respondent’s farming operations, including payments towards the purchase price and loan obligations. He also alleged that, over time, he was progressively denied access to information needed to perform administrative functions, culminating in the cancellation of his bank access towards the end of 2018.


The applicant further alleged that Uitsig was sold on 20 December 2018 for R30 million and transferred on 24 June 2019, and that he had not been accounted to in relation to the proceeds or other assets. He relied on bank statements he could access as indicating substantial flows of funds through the second respondent’s bank account during the relevant period. He also alleged that attempts to obtain information from the bank and the third respondent were blocked on the basis that instructions had been given not to provide him with information.


The first respondent denied that the second respondent formed part of the fifth partnership, but did not substantively engage with the applicant’s factual allegations supporting the applicant’s contrary contention. The first respondent asserted that disclosure obligations depended on a judicial finding in civil proceedings that the second respondent was part of the partnership, and he contended (in substance) that the applicant should pursue remedies in partnership litigation, using discovery or subpoena processes.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal question was whether the applicant met the threshold in section 50(1)(a) of PAIA, namely whether the requested annual financial statements were required for the exercise or protection of any rights. The first and second respondents accepted that the procedural requirements in section 50(1)(b) and the absence of any established ground of refusal under section 50(1)(c) were satisfied, leaving section 50(1)(a) as the decisive issue.


A subsidiary issue was whether the respondents had raised a real, genuine and bona fide dispute of fact concerning whether the second respondent formed part of the alleged partnership, and whether that dispute could preclude relief in motion proceedings. Closely related to this was the question of the correct legal standard the applicant had to meet in demonstrating the relevant “right” for purposes of section 50(1)(a), and whether the applicant had to prove that right on a balance of probabilities.


Another legal issue was the extent to which a section 50 request could be refused on the basis that it amounted to impermissible pre-litigation discovery, particularly where litigation might follow the disclosure of the record.


The issues largely concerned the application of law to facts, including the characterisation of the applicant’s asserted partnership right, and the evaluative assessment of whether the record would assist in exercising or protecting that right (rather than being sought merely to assess whether to institute proceedings).


4. Court’s Reasoning


The court proceeded from the common cause position that the first and second respondents’ non-response constituted a deemed refusal under section 58. It also accepted that the third respondent’s refusal did not comply with section 56, with specific reference to the requirements in section 56(3).


On the alleged dispute of fact, the court applied the principle that in motion proceedings a real dispute of fact exists only where the party purporting to raise it seriously and unambiguously addresses the facts said to be disputed. The first respondent’s approach—explicitly declining to engage with the applicant’s detailed partnership allegations while simultaneously asserting a dispute—was treated as inadequate to establish a genuine dispute on the papers. The court described it as extraordinary, particularly because the allegations concerned matters within the first respondent’s knowledge and which he was positioned to answer.


The court then addressed the parties’ shared assumption that the applicant had to obtain a definitive “judicial finding” in separate civil proceedings establishing that the second respondent formed part of the partnership before PAIA could operate. Relying on Claase v Information Officer, South African Airways (Pty) Ltd, the court held that the test in a section 50 application is not proof on a balance of probabilities. Instead, an applicant must put up facts which prima facie establish the existence of a right, even if open to some doubt, in a manner akin to the standard in applications for interim interdicts. Applying that approach, and for purposes of the PAIA enquiry (without making a definitive finding on the ultimate partnership dispute), the court accepted that the applicant had met the prima facie threshold to treat the second respondent as an asset of the fifth partnership and accepted that the record existed and was under the control of the first and third respondents.


In analysing whether the record was “required” under section 50(1)(a), the court applied Unitas Hospital v Van Wyk and Another, which emphasised that the meaning of “required” is context-specific, and also cautioned that pre-action discovery should remain the exception rather than the rule, available only where an “element of need” or “substantial advantage” is shown. The court further relied on the formulation endorsed in Cape Metropolitan Council v Metro Inspection Services (Western Cape) CC and Others, namely that an applicant must identify the right to be exercised or protected, identify the information sought, and explain how the information will assist in exercising or protecting the right.


The court accepted that the applicant had identified the right and the record sought, and focused on whether the record would assist the applicant in exercising or protecting his partnership rights. The court reasoned that a partner owes fiduciary duties to co-partners, including making full disclosure and rendering accurate accounts concerning partnership affairs under that partner’s control, and disclosing information affecting the partnership. Against that background, the court treated annual financial statements as an appropriate and direct means of providing the information to which the applicant claimed entitlement as a partner in relation to partnership assets.


The court rejected the characterisation of the request as impermissible pre-litigation discovery on the facts presented. It reasoned that the applicant’s primary purpose was framed as obtaining information to which he said he was entitled as a partner concerning the performance of an alleged partnership asset and the treatment of funding and proceeds, particularly given that his attempts to obtain information by other means had been blocked. While the court recognised that litigation might follow once the statements were received, it treated that as secondary to the stated primary purpose. The court distinguished this from a case where records are sought only to evaluate whether to institute proceedings, which it indicated would be impermissible, referring in this context to Mahaeeane v AngloGold Ashanti. The court also considered the content of the applicant’s section 53 requests as consistent with the applicant asserting an existing partnership right to profits and accounting rather than merely seeking material for contemplated litigation.


Finally, the court noted that the first respondent had claimed the second respondent was dormant and that the farm (said to be its only asset) had been sold, but had not explained what happened to the proceeds and had not suggested repayment of the alleged loan account. This supported the conclusion that the applicant’s asserted partnership entitlement to information was engaged, and that the record would assist in exercising or protecting that entitlement.


5. Outcome and Relief


The court granted relief reviewing and setting aside the refusals. It declared that the first and second respondents’ failure to respond to the section 53 request constituted a deemed refusal in terms of section 58 of PAIA, reviewed and set aside that deemed refusal, and also reviewed and set aside the third respondent’s refusal to provide the record.


The court directed that the respondents furnish the applicant with the annual financial statements of the second respondent for the years ending 2014 to 2020, or certified copies, within 15 days of the order.


On costs, the court ordered that the first respondent in his personal capacity pay the costs of the application on the party-and-party scale, including the costs of one senior junior counsel and the reasonable travel and accommodation costs of the applicant’s counsel for attendance at the hearing.


Cases Cited


Wightman t/a J W Construction v Headfour (Pty) Ltd and Another [2008] ZASCA 6; 2008 (3) SA 371 (SCA).


Claase v Information Officer, South African Airways (Pty) Ltd 2007 (5) SA 469 (SCA).


Unitas Hospital v Van Wyk and Another [2006] ZASCA 34; 2006 (4) SA 436 (SCA).


Cape Metropolitan Council v Metro Inspection Services (Western Cape) CC and Others 2001 (3) SA 1013 (SCA).


Mahaeeane v AngloGold Ashanti 2017 (6) SA 382 (SCA).


Legislation Cited


Promotion of Access to Information Act 2 of 2000 (sections 7(1)(a), 50(1), 53, 56(3), 58).


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were cited by name in the judgment. The judgment referred to discovery and subpoena duces tecum conceptually in argument, but did not rely on specific provisions of the Uniform Rules of Court.


Held


The court held that the applicant satisfied the requirements for access to records of a private body under section 50 of PAIA, with the decisive element being that the requested annual financial statements were required for the exercise or protection of the applicant’s asserted partnership rights. The court held that the applicant was not required to prove his right on a balance of probabilities, but only to establish it prima facie. It further held that the respondents had not raised a genuine dispute of fact on the papers sufficient to defeat motion proceedings, and that the request was not impermissible pre-action discovery on the facts because it was directed at exercising an asserted existing entitlement to partnership information and accounting. The refusals (including the deemed refusal) were reviewed and set aside, and production of the annual financial statements was ordered.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


PAIA section 50(1)(a) requires that an applicant show that the record sought is required for the exercise or protection of a right, and that requirement is assessed with reference to the facts and context of the specific case rather than in the abstract.


In a PAIA section 50 application, the applicant does not bear an onus to prove the asserted right on a balance of probabilities. The applicable standard is that the applicant must place facts before the court that prima facie establish the right relied upon, even if those facts may be open to some doubt, aligning the threshold with that applicable to interim interdictory relief.


A party opposing relief in motion proceedings cannot create a genuine dispute of fact merely by asserting a dispute while declining to engage with detailed factual allegations. A real, genuine, and bona fide dispute of fact requires that the disputing party seriously and unambiguously address the facts said to be disputed.


Pre-action access under section 50 is not automatically excluded because the information may later be obtainable through discovery once litigation is instituted. However, pre-action access should generally remain exceptional and is justified where the requester demonstrates an element of need or substantial advantage at the pre-action stage. An applicant must identify the right, identify the record, and explain how access to the record will assist in exercising or protecting the right.


Within a partnership context, the judgment proceeded from the principle that partners owe fiduciary duties to one another, including duties of full disclosure and rendering accurate accounts concerning partnership affairs under a partner’s control, and disclosing information affecting the partnership.

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[2021] ZAWCHC 9
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Hyde v Hyde and Others (8509/2020) [2021] ZAWCHC 9 (3 February 2021)

IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case No: 8509/2020
In
the matter between:
ANTHONY
JAMES HYDE
Applicant
and
PETER
ALLAN HYDE
First
Respondent
JONKERBERG
FARM CC
Second
Respondent
SPENCE
AND ASSOCIATES
Third
Respondent
Coram:
Justice J I Cloete
Heard:
23 November 2020
Delivered
electronically:
3 February 2021
JUDGMENT
CLOETE
J
:
[1]
This is an application in terms of the
Promotion of Access to Information Act 2 of 2000 (“PAIA”)
in which the applicant
seeks to compel the respondents to provide him
with the annual financial statements of the second respondent for the
years ending
2014 to 2020 inclusive (“the record”). The
applicant claims costs only against the first respondent.
[2]
The first and second respondents oppose the
relief sought whereas the third respondent abides the Court’s
decision.
[3]
The applicant and first respondent are
brothers who have been involved in a series of commercial
partnerships for many years. The
first respondent is the sole member
of the second respondent. The third respondent is the second
respondent’s firm of auditors
and as such is responsible for
the preparation of its annual financial statements.
[4]
On 10 December 2019 the applicant, through
his attorney, despatched written requests for the record to the
second and third respondents
in terms of s 53 of PAIA. On
11 December 2019 the third respondent replied that the record
would only be provided upon
receipt of an order compelling it to do
so. On 17 December 2019 the second respondent’s attorney
advised that he was
taking instructions and would revert in due
course.
[5]
This was followed by a further s 53
request from the applicant to the first respondent on 5 May 2020
to which the first
and second respondents’ attorney replied
that he would revert in due course. Other than this, no response was
received to
the applicant’s requests, resulting in the present
application.
[6]
There is no dispute that the first and
second respondents’ failure to give a decision on the
applicant’s request for
access constitutes a deemed refusal in
terms of s 58 of PAIA. Nor is there any dispute that the third
respondent’s refusal
on 11 December 2019 falls foul of the
requirements contained in s 56 thereof, and more particularly
s 56(3).
[7]
In addition the applicant and first and
second respondents are
ad idem
that the request for access pertains to what the applicant refers to
as the “fifth partnership” between himself and
the first
respondent, being their last commercial partnership. Their point of
departure is whether the second respondent forms
part of the fifth
partnership (which has not yet been liquidated, wound up or had its
profits, if any, distributed). The applicant
maintains that it does
whereas the first respondent denies this.
[8]
The applicant’s case in the founding
affidavit is based on s 50(1) of PAIA which reads as follows:

50
Right
of access to records of private bodies
(1)
A requester must be given access to
any record of a private body if---
(a)
that record is required for the
exercise or protection of any rights;
(b)
that person complies with the
procedural requirements in this Act relating to a request for access
to that record; and
(c)
access to that record is not refused
in terms of any ground for refusal contemplated in Chapter 4 of this
Part…’
[9]
The first and second respondents accept
that the requirements of s 50(1)(b) and (c) have been met, and
that the application
turns on a finding by the Court in respect of
s 50(1)(a), i.e. whether the record is required for the exercise
or protection
of any rights. There is no dispute that the onus lies
upon the applicant to show that he has met the s 50 threshold.
[10]
Two defences were raised in the answering
affidavit. The first was that the applicant is precluded from
obtaining the record since
s 7(1)(a) of PAIA provides that the
Act does not apply to a record requested for the purpose of criminal
or civil proceedings.
However this point was abandoned in heads of
argument filed on their behalf since no legal proceedings have been
instituted by
the applicant.
[11]
The second defence, which was raised in
respect of both the abandoned s 7(1)(a) point as well as the
applicant’s claim
in terms of s 50(1)(a), was that the
information required by the applicant ‘…
is
dependent upon a judicial finding in civil proceedings that the
second respondent was in fact (and in law) part of the fifth

partnership’.
[12]
The first respondent asserted that there is
a material dispute of fact between the brothers in this regard, and
that until such
time as a finding is made in the applicant’s
favour, he has no duty to make disclosure in respect of the second
respondent.
[13]
However in the same breath the first
respondent declined to deal with the applicant’s allegations
pertaining to the fifth
partnership – in fact he went so far as
to state that he deliberately did not answer them – purportedly
on the ground
that they are wholly unnecessary and irrelevant. Having
adopted this approach the sum total of his “challenge” to
the
applicant’s averments was that his failure to deal
therewith should not be construed as an admission thereof.
[14]
The first respondent further asserted that
the applicant had requested the record for the purpose of civil
proceedings against him
(and the second respondent, should the
applicant so deem fit). This assertion appears to have flowed from
the first respondent’s
view that the applicant’s remedy
lies in the
actio pro socio
,
and that during the course of that litigation (should the applicant
institute it), he is at liberty to obtain the record by way
of
discovery and/or subpoena
duces tecum.
[15]
In his founding affidavit the applicant set
out the history of the various commercial partnerships between
himself and the first
respondent, which commenced during 1991. At
times, they were joined by another brother, Mr Robert Hyde,
whose involvement
finally ceased in 2001. The applicant alleged that
the fifth partnership commenced in January 2002. At all material
times the applicant
has been the sole member of Hyde Construction CC,
which as far as can be gleaned from his affidavit, was regarded as a
partnership
asset and utilised as such. The partnerships focused on
building and development projects, eventually branching out into
farming.
The applicant set out in painstaking detail how the various
projects and the farming enterprise evolved, with Hyde Construction

CC playing an integral role in the financing thereof.
[16]
After commencement of the fifth
partnership, the first respondent suggested that they should purchase
the farm Uitsig (being remainder
portion 2 of the farm Jonkershoek no
220, in the Mossel Bay area). They agreed to sell a portion of
another farm acquired by the
fifth partnership and to purchase Uitsig
if the owners were willing to sell. The proceeds of that sold portion
of R1 440 135.85
were paid into the call account of Hyde
Construction CC on 23 November 2002.
[17]
On 1 June 2003 the first respondent,
representing the fifth partnership, made an offer to purchase Uitsig
for R2 million which
was accepted on 6 June 2003. According
to the applicant, he and the first respondent agreed that Uitsig
would be registered
in a close corporation of which the first
respondent would be the sole member. The second respondent was duly
registered on 3 July
2003 and Uitsig was transferred into the
name of the second respondent on 15 October 2003.
[18]
The applicant alleges that, although a
mortgage bond was registered over Uitsig in favour of Nedbank to
secure an approved loan
of R1 million, all payments in respect
of the purchase of Uitsig were made by Hyde Construction CC, namely
the deposit of
R200 000 on 11 June 2003, the balance of the
purchase price of R1.8 million on 16 October 2003 and
agent’s
commission of R102 600 on 17 October 2003. He
annexed documentary evidence in support of these averments.
[19]
In addition, according to the applicant,
between 1 November 2003 and 2 May 2013 Hyde Construction CC
paid to Nedbank R1 525 941.14
on account of the loan, a

loan settlement amount’
of R78 089.97, and a total of R64 204.28 during November
2012 to May 2013 for a centre pivot on the farm. He also avers
that
Hyde Construction CC continued to finance the second respondent’s
farming operation by purchasing livestock and implements
and funding
its day to day running costs. His founding affidavit is replete with
examples (including full details) thereof and
in general the amounts
expended are substantial.
[20]
The applicant asserted that the second
respondent owed its entire existence to the fifth partnership and
Hyde Construction CC in
particular. The latter was also responsible
for the second respondent’s administration, including the
filing of VAT returns
and the preparation of its management accounts.
[21]
In 2013, as a result of its financial
position, Hyde Construction CC ceased to operate and the
administrative functions of the second
respondent were undertaken by
the applicant personally. He maintains that the second respondent’s
co-operation (in the person
of the first respondent) in furnishing
him with the necessary information to perform these functions
thereafter diminished until
the only information available to him was
its bank statements. Sometime towards the end of 2018 the first
respondent cancelled
the applicant’s access to the second
respondent’s banking profile and instructed the bank not to
provide the applicant
with information. At that point he was no
longer able to calculate the VAT and file the VAT returns. The last
VAT return that he
filed for the second respondent was on 29 November
2018 (in respect of October 2018).
[22]
The applicant alleges that, unbeknown to
him, the first respondent sold Uitsig on 20 December 2018 for
R30 million, and
the farm was transferred to the purchaser
concerned on 24 June 2019. He attached the relevant deed of
transfer to his affidavit.
However, he does not know, so he alleges,
whether the livestock and/or implements have also been sold, nor has
the first respondent
accounted to him at all regarding the sale of
any of the assets acquired in the fifth partnership (including
Uitsig).
[23]
He avers that from a reading of those bank
statements which he has been able to obtain, between December 2018
and approximately
July 2019, payments were made into the second
respondent’s bank account totalling R672 377.77, in
addition to which
an amount of R14.25 million has flowed into
and out of the account along with various interest payments. The
relevant pages
of these bank statements were also annexed to his
affidavit.
[24]
On 20 November 2019 the applicant met
with representatives of the bank (Nedbank Business, George) where he
requested bank statements
and an explanation of the movement
concerning the sum of R14.25 million as well as the interest
payments. The representatives
left the interview room and, when they
returned, informed the applicant that they had been instructed not to
provide him with any
information. An informal request to the third
respondent on 26 November 2019 for the second respondent’s
annual financial
statements was met with the response that it had
been instructed not to release them to him. Attempts to resolve the
impasse with
the first respondent came to nought. However the
applicant, quite properly, disclosed what he understood to be the
first respondent’s
attitude in respect of the assets of the
fifth partnership and in particular Uitsig, and responded in detail
to each of the contentions
allegedly made by the first respondent.
[25]
In particular, the applicant alleged that
at all material times he and the first respondent were in agreement
that, irrespective
of who would be a sole member of a close
corporation in such partnership, the properties held in such close
corporations would
nonetheless constitute partnership property. The
same applied to those registered in individual’s names.
Similarly, equipment
obtained for projects, farming implements and
livestock would also be partnership property.
[26]
The applicant asserted that the record is
required ‘…
to exercise my
right to disclosure to be informed of how Jonkerberg has performed
and, amongst others, to be informed how Hyde Construction’s

loan account has been dealt with and, if necessary, to protect the
partnership assets and/or to share in the profits of Jonkerberg
that,
to my knowledge has stopped trading… apart from Mr Peter
Hyde’s duty as partner to render accurate accounts
concerning
Jonkerberg (which lies under his control) he is also obliged to
disclose to me all information affecting the partnership.
The sale of
Uitsig has yielded a substantial profit and I have been advised
further that I have a right to be informed thereon,
and should be
allowed to consider what attitude I take with regard to the profit
that was made on the sale of Jonkerberg and the
broader picture of
the Jonkerberg venture… It is submitted that the [record] will
inform me on how the partnership property
is used, and if necessary,
I will be able to take action to protect the partnership property…
it is consequently submitted
that the information contained in the
[record] will assist me to make a judgement on the question whether I
should take action
to protect the partnership assets…’.
[27]
Against the common cause fact of the
existence of a fifth partnership and the level of detail provided by
the applicant in support
of his averment that the second respondent
is one of its assets, it is quite extraordinary that the first
respondent, acting personally
and on behalf of the second respondent,
adopted the stance which he did in the answering affidavit.
[28]
Clearly, the matters raised by the
applicant fall squarely within the first respondent’s knowledge
and he is probably the
only individual who could meaningfully have
dealt with them. Not only that, but he had a duty to do so if he
wished to have any
prospect of this Court being in a position to
evaluate whether or not there is indeed a material dispute of fact.
[29]
It is settled law that
in motion proceedings a real, genuine and bona fide dispute of fact
can only exist where the Court is satisfied,
in circumstances such as
the present, that the party who purports to raise the dispute ‘…
has
in his affidavit seriously and unambiguously addressed the fact said
to be disputed… If that does not happen it should
come as no
surprise that the Court takes a robust view of the matter’.
[1]
[30]
In his replying affidavit the applicant
admitted the averment that the respondents’ duty to furnish the
record is dependent
upon him “establishing” that the
second respondent forms part of the fifth partnership.
[31]
In this regard the
parties have misunderstood the legal position. In
Claase
v Information Officer, South African Airways (Pty) Ltd
[2]
it was held that the test is not one of proof on a balance of
probabilities. All that an applicant in a s 50 application is
required
to do is put up facts which
prima
facie
(though maybe
open to some doubt) establish that he has a right, which in the
present case is a partnership right pertaining to
the second
respondent. In other words, the test is the same as in applications
for interim interdictory relief.
[32]
Not only have the first and second
respondents not even attempted to raise a material dispute of fact,
but the applicant has clearly
met the
Claase
threshold. For present purposes only (and without making any
definitive finding) I can thus accept that the second respondent is

one of the assets in the fifth partnership. I can also accept that
the record sought is under the control of the first and third

respondents. (During argument I was informed by counsel for the first
and second respondents that the record exists).
[33]
It is one of the fiduciary duties of a
partner to his other partner(s) to make full disclosure, including
the rendering of accurate
accounts concerning all partnership affairs
under his control, and to disclose all information to which he is
privy which affects
the partnership.
[34]
The question which now arises is whether
the applicant requires the record for the exercise or protection of
his right as partner
on the grounds contained in the founding
affidavit.
[35]
In
Unitas
Hospital v Van Wyk and Another
[3]
it was held that the meaning of “required” within the
context of s 50(1)(a) cannot be determined in the abstract,
and
that, generally speaking ‘…
the
question whether a particular record is “required” for
the exercise or protection of a particular right is inextricably

bound up with the facts of that matter…’.
[36]
The first and second respondents submit
that if the applicant is permitted access to the record, this would
have the effect of pre-litigation
discovery which, in matters such as
the present, is not permissible.
[37]
This submission must immediately be
qualified by what was stated in
Unitas
:

[22]  I hasten to add
that I am not suggesting that reliance on s 50 is automatically
precluded merely because the information
sought would eventually
become accessible under the rules of discovery, after proceedings
have been launched. What I do say is
that pre-action discovery under
s 50 must remain the exception rather than the rule; that it must be
available only to a requester
who has shown the “element of
need” or “substantial advantage of access to the
requested information…
at the pre-action stage.’
[38]
The Court also approved
the following formulation articulated in
Cape
Metropolitan Council v Metro Inspection Services (Western Cape) CC
and Others
[4]
:

Information can only be
required for the exercise or protection of a right if it will be of
assistance in the exercise or protection
of the right. It follows
that, in order to make out a case for access to information…
an applicant has to state what the
right is that he wishes to
exercise or protect, what the information is which is required, and
how that information would assist
him in exercising or protecting
that right.’
[39]
In the present case the applicant has
satisfied the first two elements. It is the third element which
requires scrutiny.
[40]
As stated, the applicant contends that the
record would assist him in exercising his right as partner in the
fifth partnership to
be informed how the second respondent has
performed; how Hyde Construction CC’s loan account has been
dealt with; and
if necessary
(my emphasis) to take steps to protect the partnership assets and/or
share in the profits of the second respondent.
[41]
Although the applicant speaks of Hyde
Construction’s loan account in the second respondent (which
gives the impression that
it might be a creditor of the second
respondent) there is nothing untoward in this, given the history of
the inter-entity loans
detailed in the founding affidavit. Put
differently there is no reason in principle why one partnership asset
cannot loan funds
to another. Moreover the first and second
respondents have not taken issue with the applicant’s averments
about the existence
of such a loan account.
[42]
The primary purpose of the applicant’s
request for access to the record is thus based squarely on his legal
entitlements as
partner in the fifth partnership to access
information concerning one of its assets, the second respondent. The
applicant’s
version that he has been blocked at every turn in
his attempts to obtain this information by other means is undisputed.
It is difficult
to conceive of a more appropriate manner to obtain
the information to which he is entitled than by being provided with
the second
respondent’s annual financial statements. The
applicant has thus met the threshold of “element of need”
and/or
“assistance”.
[43]
That litigation may
follow once the record is received and considered by the applicant is
secondary to the primary purpose. The
applicant therefore does not
say that he only requires the record to evaluate whether or not he
should institute legal proceedings.
This would render the request
impermissible.
[5]
[44]
This is borne out by the contents of the
s 53 requests themselves. Those addressed to the second and
third respondents are
identical in this respect and section G thereof
reads as follows:

1.
Indicate
which right is to be exercised or protected:
A commercial partnership exists
between the requester and Mr Peter Allan Hyde (the sole member of
Jonkerberg Farm CC). Any proceeds
emanating from the membership
interest and property of Jonkerberg Farm CC is subject to a 50/50
partnership claim of the requester.
Jonkerberg Farm CC, during the
course of 2018 – 2019 apparently sold all its assets without
accounting to the partnership
as aforementioned. The requester needs
to protect his right as partner to receive his profit emanating from
the sale of Jonkerberg
Farm CC’s assets and any declaration of
dividends to the member of Jonkerberg Farm CC.
2.
Explain why the record requested
is required for the exercise or protection of the aforementioned
right:
See above under G1.’
[45]
The s 53 request subsequently
addressed to the first respondent is also identical, save for the
addition of the following sentence:

The
requester as a partner has a right of access to the records of
accounting, including financial statements, of the partnership

against his co-partner Mr Peter Allan Hyde.’
[46]
In any event, given the stance of the first
and second respondents that the applicant’s access to the
record is dependent
upon a judicial finding that the second
respondent is part of the fifth partnership, they implicitly concede
that in the event
of such a “finding” (which, as stated,
is in the sense set out in
Claase
)
the applicant is entitled to the record. Indeed the first respondent
himself stated that ‘…
Until
such time that such a finding is made in the applicant’s
favour, I have no such duty towards him (in respect of the
second
respondent)’.
[47]
The first respondent alleges that the
second respondent is dormant, since the farm which was its only asset
(according to him) has
been sold. He has not taken the applicant, or
the Court, into his confidence about what happened to the proceeds of
the sale. He
has not even suggested that the loan account of Hyde
Construction CC has been repaid. Clearly the applicant is entitled to
this
information as a partner, and such information must surely be
contained in the record sought.
[48]
The following Order is made:
1.
It is declared that the failure by
the first and second respondents to respond at all to the applicant’s
request for access
to the annual financial statements of the second
respondent for the years ending 2014 to 2020 (“the record”)
in terms
of section 53 of the Promotion of Access to Information Act
2 of 2000 (“PAIA”) is a deemed refusal in terms of
section
58 thereof;
2.
The deemed refusal referred to in
paragraph 1 above is reviewed and set aside;
3.
The third respondent’s refusal
to furnish the applicant with the record pursuant to his section 53
request is reviewed and
set aside;
4.
The respondents are directed to
furnish the applicant with the record, or certified copies thereof,
within 15 (fifteen) days from
date of this Order; and
5.
The first respondent (in his
personal capacity) shall pay the costs of this application on the
scale as between party and party
as taxed or agreed, including the
costs of one senior junior counsel as well as the reasonable travel
and accommodation costs of
the applicant’s counsel for his
attendance at the hearing.
_________________
J
I CLOETE
[1]
Wightman t/a
J W Construction v Headfour (Pty) Ltd and Another
[2008] ZASCA 6
;
2008 (3) SA 371
(SCA) para [13].
[2]
2007 (5) SA 469
(SCA) para [8].
[3]
[2006] ZASCA 34
;
2006 (4) SA 436
(SCA) para [6].
[4]
2001 (3) SA 1013
(SCA) para [28] at
Unitas
para [16].
[5]
Mahaeeane v
AngloGold Ashanti
2017
(6) SA 382
(SCA) para [17].