Du Preez and Another v Hantle Infra Planning (Pty) Ltd and Others (1214/2021;1303/2021) [2023] ZAECQBHC 22 (4 April 2023)

80 Reportability

Brief Summary

Companies — Enquiry into affairs of company — Challenge to ex parte order authorising enquiry — Applicants, former directors of Retro Reflective (Pty) Ltd, sought to set aside order based on alleged non-disclosure of material facts and oppressive terms of the order — Court held that applicants lacked locus standi to challenge the order as they were not parties to the original proceedings and had no right to be joined — Application dismissed.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


The matter comprised two related applications heard together in the Eastern Cape Division, Gqeberha. Both applications arose from prior liquidation-related litigation concerning an enquiry into the affairs of Retro Reflective (Pty) Ltd (“the company”) convened under sections 417 and 418 of the Companies Act 61 of 1973.


In case no. 1214/2021, the applicants (Messrs Du Preez and Swanepoel, former directors of the company) sought the re-enrolment of an earlier ex parte application (case no. 3000/2020) and an order declaring the section 417/418 enquiry authorisation order granted on 8 December 2020 to be unlawful and void ab initio, and to have it set aside. Although the challenge was initially framed on two broad bases (alleged non-disclosure and overbroad powers conferred on the commissioner), following an interlocutory ruling by Goosen J refusing access to the underlying papers, the applicants persisted only with the challenge directed at the terms of the order itself.


In case no. 1303/2021, the applicants (Mr and Mrs Pretorius, together with Mr Du Preez and Mr Swanepoel, but expressly not the same Du Preez and Swanepoel as in 1214/2021) had initially sought urgent relief to stay subpoenas and postpone the same enquiry insofar as it related to them. By the time the application was pursued, however, the enquiry had already been postponed due to their non-attendance, rendering the substantive relief moot. The only issue remaining for determination in that application was therefore costs.


The general subject-matter of the dispute concerned the extent to which persons subpoenaed (or prospective examinees) under a liquidation enquiry authorised under sections 417 and 418 may challenge the authorising order itself, as distinct from challenging a subpoena or other steps taken in the conduct of the enquiry, and the consequent costs consequences of launching ill-suited proceedings.


2. Material Facts


The undisputed background facts accepted by the court were that the applicants in case no. 1214/2021 were the founding directors of the company. They resigned at the end of June 2018 when the company was sold to Phumla Cynthia Mkhontwana. At the time of the sale, the company was indebted to Hantle Infra Planning (Pty) Ltd (“Hantle”), and that indebtedness was secured by personal suretyships signed by those applicants.


The company was placed into voluntary liquidation in November 2018, and the second and third respondents were appointed as the joint liquidators. During July 2020, Hantle brought an Anton Piller application under case no. 1354/2020 against various parties including the company and the persons who are applicants in the present applications; that Anton Piller order, initially obtained ex parte, was later challenged and set aside on 10 December 2020.


Running in parallel, on 8 December 2020 Hantle obtained an ex parte order under case no. 3000/2020 authorising an enquiry in terms of sections 417 and 418. The fourth respondent was appointed as the commissioner, and her powers were circumscribed by the terms of the court order.


In executing her functions, the commissioner issued subpoenas duces tecum to the relevant individuals, requiring attendance at the enquiry scheduled for 17–19 May 2021. After service of the subpoenas, the applicants in case no. 1214/2021 requested a postponement because they intended to seek to set aside the ex parte authorisation order. When that undertaking was not forthcoming, they launched their application in two parts, seeking interim relief in part A (including a stay and access to papers) and final relief in part B (re-enrolment and setting aside of the authorisation order).


On 14 May 2021, Makaula J granted an order staying the subpoenas and postponing the enquiry only in respect of the applicants in case no. 1214/2021, pending determination of the relief sought in part B.


The applicants in case no. 1303/2021 then sought a similar postponement for themselves, contending they would otherwise be subjected to interrogation under an ex parte order which might later be set aside. That request was refused. They appeared at the enquiry on 17 May 2021 and applied for a postponement; the commissioner refused it in a ruling circulated at 16h50 that day. They then refused to attend for examination on 18 May 2021 and, at approximately 16h00, launched the application under case no. 1303/2021 seeking a stay and postponement pending the outcome of part B in case no. 1214/2021.


A further undisputed fact central to the costs issue was that, at the time case no. 1303/2021 was launched, the commissioner had already postponed the enquiry due to non-attendance, with the result that the substantive relief sought became moot, a circumstance the applicants only learned from the answering papers.


As to procedural history material to the issues later decided, Goosen J dismissed the applicants’ request for access to the papers filed in support of the ex parte authorisation order (part A relief) on 14 April 2022, and leave to appeal was refused on 16 May 2022. Consequently, the later challenge in case no. 1214/2021 proceeded only on the question whether the applicants could attack the authorisation order on the basis of its terms, and whether they had the standing to do so.


3. Legal Issues


The primary legal issue in case no. 1214/2021 was whether the applicants, as former directors and subpoenaed/prospective examinees, had the requisite locus standi to seek an order re-enrolling an ex parte application and setting aside the section 417/418 enquiry authorisation order in its entirety, including a declaration that it was void ab initio.


A related issue was the scope of permissible challenges open to a subpoenaed examinee in this context, including whether such a person may challenge the authorising order itself, or whether their remedies are confined to resisting or setting aside a subpoena (for example on grounds of oppression or hardship), or opposing the authorisation only if the proceedings come to their attention before the order is granted.


Ancillary legal issues concerned whether the procedural mechanisms relied upon by the applicants could apply to their position, specifically the applicability of Uniform Rule 6(12)(c) (reconsideration of urgent orders granted in absence) and Uniform Rule 6(4)(b) (leave to oppose an ex parte application by an interested person who becomes aware of it before it is heard).


In case no. 1303/2021, the legal issue was confined to costs, including whether the costs should follow the outcome in case no. 1214/2021 and whether the application was properly conceived given that the enquiry was already postponed and the commissioner had already issued a ruling refusing postponement which had not been set aside.


These issues involved a combination of legal questions (standing; applicability of procedural rules; scope and purpose of sections 417 and 418) and the application of those legal principles to the procedural posture and established facts, together with a discretionary/value component in relation to costs (including the reasonableness of employing two counsel).


4. Court’s Reasoning


In approaching locus standi and the nature of sections 417 and 418, the court placed reliance on the Supreme Court of Appeal’s recent discussion in Smith N O and Others v Master of the High Court, Free State Division, Bloemfontein and Another [2023] ZASCA 21 (8 March 2023), which in turn endorsed Constitutional Court authority emphasising the public utility and enabling purpose of liquidation enquiries. The judgment treated the enquiry as a mechanism intended primarily to assist liquidators to determine the company’s assets and liabilities, recover assets, and discharge duties in a manner serving creditors and the public interest.


The court accepted as correct that a prospective examinee generally has no right to prior notice of an application to authorise an enquiry under sections 417 and 418, and therefore does not enjoy the full protection usually associated with audi alteram partem at the authorisation stage. In that regard, the court relied on Friedland and Others v The Master and Others 1992 (2) SA 370 (WLD), which was cited for the proposition that the right to be heard is limited in this context and ordinarily arises only if the prospective examinee learns of the application before the power is exercised.


From that premise, the court reasoned that where a potential witness becomes aware of an intended authorisation application in advance, such a person may have standing to oppose it, but the grounds to resist are narrow, extending to issues such as jurisdiction, hardship or oppression, or unusual or exceptional circumstances justifying the court’s intervention. The judgment further endorsed the proposition (with reference to authority including Botha v Strydom and Others 1992 (2) SA 155 (N)) that once a witness is subpoenaed, the appropriate challenge typically lies against the subpoena itself, including on the basis that compulsion to attend and be examined may cause undue hardship or oppression.


Applying those principles, the court found that the applicants in case no. 1214/2021 were not parties to the ex parte authorisation proceedings and had no right to be joined at the time the order was sought. They were, at best, persons who might possess information relevant to the winding-up. In that posture, the court was not satisfied that they had established the necessary standing to pursue relief directed at setting aside the authorisation order ut totum, including a declaration of invalidity ab initio.


The court also addressed and rejected the applicants’ reliance on Power N.O. v Bieber and Others 1995 (1) SA 497 (WLD) as a basis for their entitlement to set aside the authorisation order. It held that Power was decided on different facts (involving abuse of process by a liquidator) and did not stand for the proposition that a subpoenaed witness has standing to set aside an enquiry authorisation order in its entirety. To the extent that Power contained obiter remarks about an aggrieved examinee opposing an examination, the court regarded those remarks as qualified and directed to opposition in relation to that witness, rather than a challenge to the proceedings as a whole.


On the procedural rules invoked, the court drew a clear distinction between the applicants’ position and the situation contemplated by Uniform Rule 6(12)(c). That rule allows reconsideration of an urgent order granted in a party’s absence to a person against whom the urgent order was granted. The court held that this did not fit the present circumstances because the applicants were neither parties to the ex parte authorisation proceedings nor persons against whom that order had been granted in the manner contemplated by Rule 6(12)(c). The court likewise held that Uniform Rule 6(4)(b) did not avail the applicants because it is directed at a person who becomes aware of an ex parte application before it is heard and seeks leave to oppose at the same hearing. On the facts, the authorisation had already been granted, and the rule was therefore inapplicable.


Given the finding on standing, the court considered it unnecessary to engage with the substance of the challenge to the commissioner’s powers under the authorisation order.


In relation to costs in case no. 1214/2021, the court applied the ordinary approach that costs follow the result, finding no reason to depart from it. It nevertheless held that the employment of two counsel was not warranted.


Turning to case no. 1303/2021, the court rejected the submission that costs should follow the result in case no. 1214/2021 in a manner beneficial to those applicants, noting that the outcome in 1214/2021 was adverse to the challenge. Independently, the court found that the relief sought in 1303/2021 was ill-conceived because, at the time it was launched, the commissioner had already ruled on the postponement request, and that ruling remained effective with legal consequences unless and until set aside. With reliance on Oudekraal Estates (Pty) Ltd v City of Cape Town and Others 2004 (6) SA 622 (SCA), the court treated the commissioner’s ruling as existing in fact and producing legal consequences that could not be ignored. The appropriate remedy, had the applicants wished to challenge that ruling, was review and setting aside, which they had not pursued.


Accordingly, the court held there was no basis to depart from the ordinary costs approach in case no. 1303/2021, and reiterated that two counsel were not justified.


5. Outcome and Relief


In case no. 1214/2021, the court dismissed the relief sought in part B of the notice of motion and ordered the applicants to pay costs, without allowing costs on the scale of two counsel.


In case no. 1303/2021, the court ordered the applicants to pay the costs of the application jointly and severally, the one paying the other to be absolved, again not endorsing the need for costs of two counsel.


Cases Cited


Smith N O and Others v Master of the High Court, Free State Division, Bloemfontein and Another (1221/2021) [2023] ZASCA 21 (8 March 2023).


Ferreira v Levin NO and Others; Vryenhoek v Powell NO and Others (as referenced in the judgment through Smith).


Bernstein and Others v Bester and Others NNO (as referenced in the judgment through Smith).


Friedland and Others v The Master and Others 1992 (2) SA 370 (WLD).


Ex Parte Liquidators Ismail Suliman & Co. (Pty.) Ltd 1941 WLD 33.


Botha v Strydom and Others 1992 (2) SA 155 (N).


Power N.O. v Bieber and Others 1995 (1) SA 497 (WLD).


Oudekraal Estates (Pty) Ltd v City of Cape Town and Others 2004 (6) SA 622 (SCA).


Legislation Cited


Companies Act 61 of 1973, sections 417 and 418.


Rules of Court Cited


Uniform Rules of Court, Rule 6(12)(c).


Uniform Rules of Court, Rule 6(4)(b).


Held


The court held that the applicants in case no. 1214/2021, as former directors and subpoenaed/prospective examinees, did not establish the necessary locus standi to seek to re-enrol and set aside the ex parte order authorising a sections 417 and 418 enquiry in its entirety, including a declaration that the order was void ab initio. The procedural rules relied upon for reconsideration or intervention were found to be inapplicable on the facts.


The court further held, in case no. 1303/2021, that the costs should be borne by the applicants because the substantive relief sought had become moot and, in any event, the application was ill-conceived given the existence of the commissioner’s postponement ruling, which remained effective unless set aside on review.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


A section 417/418 liquidation enquiry is an enabling mechanism designed to assist liquidators in fulfilling their statutory duties, including identifying assets and liabilities and serving the interests of creditors and the public.


A prospective examinee generally has no right to prior notice of an application to authorise a section 417/418 enquiry; a right to be heard may arise only if the intended examinee becomes aware of the application before the authorisation is granted.


Where a prospective examinee does have an opportunity to oppose authorisation, the permissible grounds of opposition are narrow, including challenges based on jurisdiction, hardship or oppression, or unusual or exceptional circumstances.


A subpoenaed witness’s remedies typically lie in challenging the subpoena or the conduct of the enquiry as it affects that witness, rather than seeking to set aside the authorising order in its entirety.


Uniform Rule 6(12)(c) applies to reconsideration of urgent orders granted in a party’s absence where the order was granted against that person; it does not apply where the applicant is not a party against whom the order was granted in the relevant sense.


Uniform Rule 6(4)(b) is directed at intervention to oppose an ex parte application that comes to an interested party’s attention before it is heard; it does not provide a mechanism to undo an ex parte order once granted.


A decision or ruling (including within the context of an enquiry) exists in fact and carries legal consequences unless and until set aside by a competent process; the proper remedy to challenge such a ruling is to seek its review and setting aside, consistent with the principle articulated in Oudekraal Estates (Pty) Ltd v City of Cape Town and Others 2004 (6) SA 622 (SCA).

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[2023] ZAECQBHC 22
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Du Preez and Another v Hantle Infra Planning (Pty) Ltd and Others (1214/2021;1303/2021) [2023] ZAECQBHC 22 (4 April 2023)

IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(EASTERN
CAPE DIVISION, GQEBERHA)
Case
No. 1214/2021
In the matter between:-
CAREL
FREDERICK BENJAMIN DU PREEZ
First Applicant
ANDRE
SWANEPOEL
Second Applicant
and
HANTLE
INFRA PLANNING (PTY) LTD
First Respondent
ANDRE
VAN HEERDEN N.O.
Second Respondent
SUNE
SMIT N.O.
Third Respondent
RENE
BEKKER N.O.
Fourth
Respondent
MASTER
OF THE HIGH COURT PORT ELIZABETH
Fifth Respondent
Case
No. 1303/2021
In the matter
between:-
PIETER
PRETORIUS
First Applicant
RIANA
PRETORIUS
Second Applicant
CAREL
FREDERICK BENJAMIN DU PREEZ
Third Applicant
ANDRE
SWANEPOEL
Fourth Applicant
and
HANTLE
INFRA PLANNING (PTY) LTD
First Respondent
ANDRE
VAN HEERDEN N.O.
Second Respondent
SUNE
SMIT N.O.
Third Respondent
RENE
BEKKER N.O.
Fourth Respondent
MASTER
OF THE HIGH COURT PORT ELIZABETH
Fifth Respondent
JUDGMENT
BANDS
AJ:
[1]
Two applications serve before me.
[2]
Both applications have their genesis in an order of this
court,
granted
ex parte
, on 8 December 2020, under case number
3000/2020, authorising an enquiry into the affairs of Retro
Reflective (Pty) Ltd (“
the company
”) in terms of
section 417 and 418 of the Companies Act 61 of 1973 (“
the
Act
”).
[3]
The applicants, in the application under case number
1214/2021, seek
an order that the application under case number 3000/2020 be
re-enrolled; and that the order granted on 8 December
2020 be
declared unlawful and void
ab initio
and be set aside.
The only issue which remains for determination in the application
under case number 1303/2021, to which
I return later in this
judgment, is that of costs.
[4]
A summary of the litigation between the parties relevant
to the
applications before me is set out succinctly in the judgment of
Goosen J, who was called upon to determine an issue relevant
to part
A of the application, under case number 1214/2021, which I have had
the benefit of reading.  To facilitate the narrative
of the
respective judgments herein, I shall give a recount of the common
cause facts leading up to the present disputes.
Background
to the litigation between the parties
[5]
It is perhaps prudent at this stage to record that the
applicants
under case number 1214/2021, whilst sharing the names of the third
and fourth applicants under case number 1303/2021,
are not the same
litigants.
[6]
The applicants under case number 1214/2021 were the founding

directors of the company.  They resigned as directors at the end
of June 2018, when the company was sold to one Phumla Cynthia

Mkhontwana.  At the time of the sale, the company was indebted
to Hantle Infra Planning Pty Ltd (the first respondent in both

applications, herein after referred to as “
Hantle
”),
which indebtedness was secured by way of personal suretyship
agreements signed by the said applicants.  The company
went into
voluntary liquidation in November 2018.  The second and third
respondents, in both applications, were appointed
as the joint
liquidators of the company.
[7]
During July 2020, Hantle brought an Anton Pillar application,
under
case number 1354/2020, against
inter alia,
the company; the
respective applicants, in the applications before me; and various
other parties.  The order obtained
ex parte
was
ultimately challenged and set aside on 10 December 2020.
[8]
Running parallel to those proceedings, Hantle, on 8 December
2020,
approached the court under case number 3000/2020, for leave to hold
an enquiry in terms of section 417 and 418 of the Act,
to which I
have referred.  In terms of the order, the fourth respondent in
the applications before me (to whom I shall refer
as “
the
fourth respondent
”) was appointed as the commissioner, her
powers having been circumscribed by the court.
[9]
The fourth respondent, in the exercise of her duties,
issued
subpoenas
duces tecum
, which were served on the respective
applicants, requiring their attendance at the enquiry scheduled for
17, 18 and 19 May 2021.
Following service of the subpoenas, the
applicants under case number 1214/2021 requested that the enquiry be
postponed on the basis
that they would be seeking to set aside the
ex
parte
order, authorising the enquiry.  I return to the basis
for their challenge, which forms the subject matter of the
application
before me, under case number 1214/2021.  When the
undertaking was not forthcoming, the application was issued on 10 May
2021,
seeking relief in two parts, part A and part B.
[10]
In part A of the notice of motion, the applicants sought interim
relief,
pending the outcome of part B, staying the subpoenas, and
postponing the enquiry
sine die.
They also sought an
order for access to the papers filed in support of the
ex parte
order granted on 8 December 2020.  It was this latter
aspect, which Goosen J was called upon to determine.  In part B
of the notice of motion, with which I am currently seized, and to
which I have intimated, the applicants sought the re-enrolment
of the
proceedings under case number 3000/2020 and the setting aside of the
order granted therein.
[11]
On 14 May 2021, the application under case number 1214/2021 served
before
Makaula J and an order was granted,
inter alia
, staying
the subpoenas and postponing the enquiry, in respect of those
applicants only, pending the outcome of the relief sought
in part B.
[12]
The applicants, under case number 1303/2021, having become aware of
the
proceedings under case number 1214/2021, and the subsequent order
granted by Makaula J on 14 May 2021, similarly sought a postponement

of the enquiry insofar as it pertained to them, the rationale being
that they would be “
subjected to an interrogation by virtue
of the Ex Parte order
”, which may subsequently be set
aside, and that in such circumstances, they would “
have no
recourse for [their] rights being infringed by virtue of an
unlawfully convened enquiry.
”  The request was denied.
[13]
On Monday, 17 May 2021, the applicants, under case number 1303/2021,
presented themselves at the enquiry and, through their legal
representative, made an application for the postponement of the
proceedings.
At 16h50 on the same day, the fourth respondent
circulated her ruling to the parties in which she refused the
application.
Notwithstanding the ruling, the applicants, under
case number 1303/2021 refused to present themselves at the enquiry on
18 May
2021 for the purposes of their examination.  Instead, the
applicants launched the proceedings under case number 1303/2021 at

approximately 16h00 on 18 May 2021, seeking an order staying the
subpoenas issued against them and postponing the enquiry, in so
far
as it pertained to them,
sine die
, pending the outcome of the
relief sought in part B of the application under case number
1214/2021
.
[14]
At the time that the application had been issued, the fourth
respondent
had already postponed the enquiry, given the
non-attendance of the applicants under case number 1303/2021,
rendering the application
moot.  This the applicants only became
aware of upon the filing of the respondents’ answering
affidavit.  Accordingly,
it is only the costs of the application
which fall to be determined by me.  I return to the adequacy of
the relief sought
under case number 1303/2021 later in this judgment.
[15]
After the filing of further papers, and the hearing of oral argument
on behalf of the parties, the relief sought in part A of the
application, under case number 1214/2021, insofar as the applicants

sought access to the papers filed in the proceedings, under case
number 3000/2020, was dismissed by Goosen J, on 14 April 2022.

The applicants thereafter sought leave to appeal the order, which
application was refused on 16 May 2022.  Accordingly, such
order
stands.
[16]
I now turn to consider the applications before me.
Application
under case number 1214/2021
[17]
The applicants challenge to the order authorising the enquiry,
granted
on 8 December 2020, was initially based on two broad
grounds.
[18]
Firstly, the applicants believed that Hantle, as the applicant under
case number 3000/2020, may have failed to disclose material facts,
which if disclosed, would have influenced the granting of the
order.
Secondly, that the powers conferred upon the fourth respondent, by
the order, are extra-ordinarily wide, all-encompassing,
potentially
oppressive and are open to abuse.
[19]
In light of the order granted by Goosen J, in respect of the
non-disclosure
challenge, the applicants, in the present proceedings,
persist only with their challenge regarding the terms of the order
itself.
[20]
I do not intend dealing with the terms of the order because it is not

necessary on account of the view that I take of the matter.
[21]
It was submitted in argument, on behalf of the applicants, that two
questions
fell to be determined by me.  Firstly, whether the
applicants had the necessary
locus standi
to challenge the
order of court; and secondly, should I find in favour of the first
question; that I consider the merits of the
applicants’
challenge to the content of the order itself.
[22]
The Supreme
Court of Appeal, in
Smith
N O and Others v Master of the High Court, Free State Division,
Bloemfontein and Another
[1]
recently had an occasion to examine the text of sections 417 and 418
of the Act.  The court, at paragraph [14] of the judgment,

stated as follows, regarding the purpose of the provisions:

An examination
of the text of the section demonstrates its enabling nature. Its
context and history were considered by the Constitutional
Court
in Ferreira v Levin NO and Others; Vryenhoek v Powell NO and
Others and Berstein and Others v Bester and Others
NNO
(Bernstein). These decisions stress the importance, public utility
and purpose of the provisions. Dealing with this purpose,
the Court
in Bernstein emphasised that:

The
enquiry under sections 417 and 418 has many objectives.
(a)
It is undoubtedly meant to assist liquidators in discharging these
abovementioned duties so that they can determine the most

advantageous course to adopt in regard to the liquidation of the
company.
(b)
In particular it is aimed at achieving the primary goal of
liquidators, namely to determine what the assets and liabilities
of
the company are, to recover the assets and to pay the liabilities and
to do so in a way which will best serve the interests
of the
company’s creditors.
(c)
Liquidators have a duty to enquire into the company’s affairs.
.
. .
(g)
. . . In these circumstances it is in the interest of creditors and
the public generally to compel such persons to assist.’

[23]
The second and third respondent liquidators, make common cause with
the
first respondent herein, and oppose the relief sought by the
applicants.
[24]
The applicants, as former directors of the company, accept that at
the
time that the application was made by Hantle, they were at best,
prospective witnesses possessed of knowledge or information, which

may be required for the proper winding-up of the company.  At
that stage, they had no right to be joined in the proceedings,
unless
such proceedings had come to their attention fortuitously.
[25]
As stated
in
Friedland
and Others v The Master and Others
:
[2]
“…
the
prospective examinee has no right to receive prior notice of the fact
that the liquidator is to approach the Master (or the
Court) to
exercise the discretionary power to order an examination or enquiry
under ss 417 and 418, and to summon, or to authorise
a commissioner
to summon, the prospective examinee to attend.  It is only if
the prospective examinee should happen to hear
in advance, before
that power has been exercised by the Master (or the Court), that he
can claim any sort of right to be heard.
That serious
limitation indicates that the situation of the prospective examinee
is not one in which he enjoys the full extent
of the rights usually
understood as being accorded when the maxim audi alteram partem
applies.

[26]
Accordingly,
a potential witness who becomes aware of an application for an
enquiry,
prior
to the granting of the order, has
locus
standi
to
oppose such application.  Having said that, the grounds upon
which he or she may validly seek to resist such an order, the
effect
of which will be to subject him or her to examination under sections
417 and 418 of the Act, are narrow and extend to questions
of
jurisdiction; hardship or oppression; or possibly to unusual or
exceptional circumstances, which it may seem appropriate to

entertain.
[3]
[27]
As
correctly emphasised by Goosen J, a prospective witness has a limited
interest in the legal proceedings, in terms of which such
an enquiry
is to be authorised.  However, where a witness has been summoned
to appear at an enquiry, it is open to such witness
to challenge the
subpoena, on the basis that the compulsion to appear and be subjected
to interrogation will cause undue hardship
or oppression.
[4]
[28]
Reliance by
the applicants on the dictum of Blackwell J in
Power
N.O. v Bieber and Others
[5]
,
as authority for the granting of the relief sought in part B, is of
no assistance.  In
Power
N.O.
,
the court, in an application brought by the
liquidator
,
on facts dissimilar to the present proceedings, set aside an order
authorising an enquiry on the ground that it constituted an
abuse of
the process of the court.
Power
N.O.
is
not authority for the proposition that a witness, who has been
summoned to be examined at an enquiry, has the necessary
locus
standi
to seek that an order authorising such enquiry be set aside
ut
totum
.
Insofar as Blackwell J suggested,
obiter
,
with reference to
Ex Parte Liquidators
Ismail Suliman & Co. (Pty.) Ltd
(supra)
,
that an aggrieved examinee could be heard to oppose the examination,
such comment was qualified.  The opposition envisaged
was in
relation to such witness only, and not in relation to the proceedings
as a whole.
[29]
I am accordingly not satisfied that the applicants have established
the
necessary
locus standi
to seek an order declaring the
order issued on 8 December 2020, under case number 3000/2020,
unlawful and void
ab initio
.
[30]
Two further aspects, which arose in argument, require comment.
[31]
The applicants, having had no right to be joined in the proceedings
under
case number 3000/2020, are not parties to the proceedings which
they seek to re-enrol, nor are they parties against whom the order

was granted,
ex parte
.  In argument, the proceedings
under part B were likened to an application for reconsideration in
terms of Rule 6(12)(c) of
the Uniform Rules of Court, akin to those
which served before Van Zyl DJP in the Anton Pillar application.
I disagree.
In terms of Rule 6(12)(c) of the Uniform Rules of
Court, a person
against whom an order was granted
in his
absence in an urgent application may by notice set down the matter
for reconsideration of the order.  This is distinguishable
from
the facts at hand.  Rule 6(12)(c) finds no application in the
present proceedings.
[32]
Reliance was further placed on Rule 6(4)(b), which provides that any
person having an interest which may be effected by a decision on an
application being brought
ex parte,
may deliver notice of an
application by him for leave to oppose, supported by an affidavit
setting forth the nature of such interest
and the ground upon which
he desires to be heard, whereupon the registrar shall set such
application down for hearing at the same
time as the application
first mentioned.  Put differently, this sub-rule caters for a
situation where an
ex parte
application comes to the attention
of an interested party, fortuitously, prior to it being heard, and
grants such a party the right
to seek leave to intervene in the
proceedings.  By the time that the applicants launched the
present proceedings, the proverbial
horse had already bolted.
[33]
In light of what I have set out above, the application, insofar as it

concerns the relief set out in part B of the notice of motion, under
case number 1214/2021, must fail.  I see no reason why
costs
should not follow the result.  I however do not agree that the
costs of two counsel were warranted in this case.
Application
under case number 1303/2021
[34]
It was submitted on behalf of the applicants that the costs of the
application,
under case number 1303/2021, ought to follow the result
in the application under case number 1214/2021; alternatively, that
the
costs should be significantly influenced by the outcome of the
latter proceedings.
[35]
In light of my finding, dismissing the relief sought in part B of the

application under case number 1214/2021, I am in agreement with Mr
Buchanan SC.
[36]
I am in any
event of the view that the relief sought in the application, under
case number 1303/2021, was ill conceived from the
outset.  As
previously stated, at the time that the application was launched, the
fourth respondent, who had been seized with
an application for the
postponement of the enquiry, had already delivered her ruling
refusing such request.  In the absence
of an order setting aside
the fourth respondent’s ruling, it exists in fact and has legal
consequences that cannot be overlooked.
[6]
[37]
Accordingly, the remedy available to the applicants at that stage,
had
they wished to challenge the ruling of the fourth respondent, was
to bring an application to have it reviewed and set aside, which
the
applicants failed to do.
[38]
Similarly, there is no reason to depart from the usual cost order
herein.
I refer to my previous comment in respect of the costs
of two counsel, which comment is equally applicable herein.
[39]
In the result, the following orders shall issue:
Application
under case number: 1214/2021
The relief sought in part
B of the application is dismissed with costs.
Application under case
number: 1303/2021
The applicants are
ordered to pay the costs of the application, jointly and severally,
the one paying, the other to be absolved.
I
BANDS
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
Appearances
(in respect of both applications):
For
the Applicants:
Adv.
R.G. Buchanan SC
Instructed
by:
RHK
Attorneys
For
the first respondent:
Mr
Van Zyl, together with Adv P du Toit
Instructed
by:
Van
Zyl Rudd Inc. Attorneys
For
the second and third respondents:
Mr
Bester
Instructed
by:
Bester
Attorneys
Coram:
Bands
AJ
Date
heard:
1
December 2022
Delivered:
4
April 2023
[1]
(1221/2021)
[2023] ZASCA 21
(8 March 2023).
[2]
1992 (2) SA 370
(WLD) at 376C-E.
[3]
Friedland
and Others v The Master and Others
(supra)
at page 379.
See
also:
Ex Parte Liquidators Ismail Suliman & Co. (Pty.) Ltd
1941 WLD 33.
[4]
Botha v
Strydom and Others
1992 (2) SA 155
(N) 160C-H.
[5]
1995 (1) SA 497 (WLD).
[6]
Oudekraal
Estates (Pty) Ltd v City of Cape Town & Others
2004
(6) SA 622
SCA.