Vlok and Others v Georgiou and Others (80811/14) [2017] ZAGPPHC 412 (7 April 2017)

78 Reportability
Class Actions

Brief Summary

Class Actions — Certification of class action — Applicants seeking certification of class action for investors in Highveld Syndication Companies — Applicants withdrew certification application without notice to former attorneys or other investors — Legal issue of whether applicants acted in representative capacity prior to court certification — Court held that applicants were nominal representatives of a wider group and could not unilaterally withdraw the certification application, as it compromised the rights of the class they purported to represent.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


Introduction


The matter concerned two interlocutory applications arising from pending proceedings to certify a proposed class action. The original proceedings were launched by the applicants in October 2014 as an application seeking certification of certain classes of litigants comprising investors in four public companies referred to collectively as the Highveld Syndication Companies, together with leave for the named applicants to act as representatives of those classes and to institute class action litigation on their behalf.


The parties included the original four applicants (Vlok, Lampbrecht, Jordaan, and Papandonis) and a large group of respondents headed by Mr Nicolas Georgiou and entities and individuals associated with him (including, among others, Zephan Properties (Pty) Ltd and certain trustees cited in their representative capacities). The interlocutory relief was sought by Theron & Partners (the former attorneys of record for the applicants in the certification application), supported by the Highveld Syndicate Action Group (HSAG), and by additional persons seeking to be joined as applicants to the certification application.


The procedural history was central to the dispute. On 31 October 2014, the certification application was instituted. On 16 November 2016, the original applicants filed a notice substituting their attorneys of record from Theron & Partners to Jeff Denenberg & Company, and also filed a notice withdrawing the certification application. Theron & Partners responded on 30 November 2016 with a notice under Uniform Rule 30(2)(b) alleging that the substitution and withdrawal constituted irregular steps. On 20 December 2016, Theron launched a semi-urgent Rule 30 application to set aside both notices. On 20 January 2017, Mr Brian Waxham and four others launched an application to be joined as applicants in the certification application. Both interlocutory applications were heard together (heard 3 February 2017, judgment delivered 7 April 2017).


The general subject-matter of the dispute was the procedural and ethical integrity of a proposed class action certification process, specifically whether the named applicants could, after settling with a key respondent, withdraw the certification application and replace attorneys in a manner that effectively undermined the interests of the wider group of investors who had funded and supported the certification litigation.


Material Facts


It was common cause that the original applicants formed part of a larger group of approximately 6 688 aggrieved individuals, the Highveld Syndicate Action Group (HSAG). The HSAG had mandated Theron & Partners to launch and conduct the certification application intended to benefit HSAG members and a wider class of investors who had allegedly lost the value of their investments in Highveld Syndication property-related schemes. The original applicants were located in different parts of the country and were not personally connected to each other beyond their role as co-applicants.


The court accepted as material that the certification litigation was funded not by the original applicants personally, but by contributions from HSAG members. The litigation was directed by Theron & Partners and a steering committee selected from among investors. The original applicants were selected from among the same investor group as the nominal applicants in the certification application, with an understanding that the litigation was being pursued for the benefit of a broader group.


A key undisputed factual development was that Mr Georgiou concluded settlement agreements with each of the original applicants on undisclosed terms, and that these settlements were conditional upon the original applicants withdrawing the certification application. The court recorded that it had not been denied that the applicants were required to withdraw the certification application, and that this occurred without prior warning to Theron & Partners or the HSAG.


Following these settlements, the original applicants jointly instructed new attorneys (Jeff Denenberg & Company). Without prior notice to Theron & Partners, Denenberg filed both a notice of substitution as attorneys of record and a notice of withdrawal of the certification application on behalf of the original applicants.


The material disputes of fact were not directed at whether the substitution and withdrawal occurred, but rather at their character and legal significance. Mr Georgiou contended that the original applicants were acting only as independent litigants in their personal capacities until a court certified the class and authorised representation; on that view, they were entitled to substitute attorneys and withdraw under the rules. Theron & Partners contended that the original applicants were in substance acting as representative or nominal applicants, and that withdrawing the certification application pursuant to settlements amounted to collusion designed to scupper the class action to the prejudice of the broader investor group.


Legal Issues


The central legal question was whether applicants who bring a certification application can be regarded as acting in a representative capacity (or subject to representative obligations) before a court formally certifies the class and authorises them to represent the class in the contemplated class action.


Closely connected to that was whether, in the circumstances of this matter, the filing of a notice of substitution of attorneys and a notice of withdrawal of the certification application constituted irregular or improper steps that could be set aside under Uniform Rule 30, or alternatively controlled through the court’s inherent jurisdiction to prevent abuse of process.


Further issues included whether Theron & Partners had the necessary authority or standing to bring the interlocutory Rule 30 application after the original applicants purported to terminate their mandate through substitution, whether the matter warranted being heard on a moderate degree of urgency, and whether the proposed intervening applicants (Waxham and others) should be joined as applicants in the certification application.


The dispute concerned a mixture of legal characterisation (the nature of a certification applicant’s role prior to certification), the application of legal principles to largely common-cause facts (whether the steps taken were an abuse or irregularity), and a degree of evaluative judgment regarding ethical duties, conflicts of interest, and the protection of the court’s process.


Court’s Reasoning


The court began by addressing the preliminary conceptual question about the nature of class action certification. It treated certification as a preliminary matter that must be resolved before a class action may be instituted, because certification involves identification of a class and the court’s satisfaction that proposed representatives are suitable, and because certification functions as a mechanism through which the court controls the procedural aspects of class litigation. The court accepted that, generally, absent certification, representatives do not yet have the authorisation to litigate a class action in the full sense.


However, the court rejected the respondents’ submission that, until certification, the applicants could only be acting in their personal capacity with no meaningful legal or ethical consequences for the class. Relying on the approach endorsed by Wallis JA in Children’s Resource Centre Trust and Others v Pioneer Food (Pty) Ltd and Others 2013 (2) SA 213 (SCA), the court emphasised that in the absence of comprehensive legislation governing class actions, courts must adopt a robust approach and may invoke their inherent power to regulate process and develop the common law in the interests of justice (with reference to section 173 of the Constitution).


On the facts, the court found that the original applicants were, in substance, nominal representative applicants, having regard to their understanding that they were representing the HSAG and the nature and purpose of a certification application. It was not persuaded that the class only comes into existence after certification through opt-in or opt-out mechanisms; instead, it held that the class already exists and that the certification process defines the ambit of that class. The court further reasoned that a certification application can have legal consequences for persons falling within the proposed class, giving as an example that the certification application interrupts prescription on behalf of the class.


From these premises, the court concluded that applicants for certification act in a quasi-fiduciary capacity and are ethically obliged to act bona fide in the best interests of the members of the class, even prior to certification. It held that without recognition of such obligations, respondents could easily undermine class actions by settling with and inducing withdrawal by nominal representatives, to the prejudice of class members.


Turning to the procedural steps, the court considered Uniform Rule 30(3), which empowers a court to set aside an irregular or improper step. It accepted the general principle that courts will not permit their rules or processes to be used for an ulterior or improper motive, and that courts are entitled (and obliged) to prevent and remedy abuse of process. Drawing on authorities addressing abuse of process, it treated the concept as fact-sensitive and not susceptible to a single exhaustive definition, but generally involving the use of procedural mechanisms for purposes extraneous to the administration of justice.


Applying these principles to the facts, the court found that the original applicants and Mr Georgiou colluded in a manner constituting an abuse of process. The withdrawal and substitution steps were characterised as having been used to defeat the broader group’s interests and to compromise the certification process, leaving class members who had funded the litigation without protection. The court accepted that the original applicants could have withdrawn as parties on bona fide grounds without undermining the class’s contingent rights, but held that withdrawing the certification application itself in pursuit of their personal settlements was improper and created (and failed to avoid) a conflict between personal interests and the interests of those they sought to represent. The court viewed it as aggravating that the conduct was orchestrated by persons against whom the class action was aimed.


On Theron & Partners’ authority to bring the interlocutory application, the court rejected the contention that the substitution and withdrawal deprived Theron of standing. It reasoned that Theron, as an attorney and officer of the court, had authority to bring proceedings to protect class members from the abuse despite the purported termination of the mandate. It further held that the HSAG remained the true or beneficial litigant on whose behalf the nominal litigants had been cited. In any event, it held that any potential standing issue was cured by granting the joinder application.


The court accepted that the interlocutory applications were brought with a moderate degree of urgency and found the urgency justified. It considered that irregular steps had been taken to defeat the claims of numerous claimants (described as mostly elderly and impecunious) and that urgent intervention was appropriate to end the impropriety and avoid confusion among investors about the status of the certification application.


On costs, the court held that the respondents opposing the interlocutory applications should bear the costs, and it accepted that the unusual issues justified the employment of senior counsel.


Outcome and Relief


The court granted the joinder application, joining Mr B Waxham, C Nel, H Pinshaw, F Strauss, and L M Meyer as applicants in the main certification application under case number 80811/14.


The court set aside both the Notice of Withdrawal of Application dated 10 November 2016 and the Notice of Substitution as Attorneys of Record dated 10 November 2016, declaring each to constitute an irregular step.


The court declared that the certification application issued on 31 October 2014 under case number 80811/14 was not withdrawn and had never been withdrawn.


The court ordered that the respondents opposing the interlocutory applications pay the costs jointly and severally, including the costs of two counsel and senior counsel.


Cases Cited


Children’s Resource Centre Trust and Others v Pioneer Food (Pty) Ltd and Others 2013 (2) SA 213 (SCA).


Beinash v Wixley [1997] ZASCA 32; 1997 (3) SA 721 (SCA).


Hudson v Hudson and Another 1927 AD 259.


Standard Credit Corporation Ltd v Bester and Others 1987 (1) SA 812 (W).


Legislation Cited


Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996, section 173.


Rules of Court Cited


Uniform Rules of Court, Rule 16(2)(a).


Uniform Rules of Court, Rule 30(2)(b) and Rule 30(3).


Uniform Rules of Court, Rule 41(1)(a).


Held


The court held that applicants who bring a class action certification application may, in substance, be nominal or representative applicants even before certification is granted, because the class exists prior to certification and the certification process defines its ambit and can have consequences for class members.


It held that such applicants act in a quasi-fiduciary capacity and must act bona fide in the best interests of the class, including by avoiding conflicts between their personal interests and the interests of those they seek to represent.


It held further that the substitution of attorneys and the withdrawal of the certification application in the circumstances of this case constituted an abuse of process and therefore irregular steps capable of being set aside under Rule 30 and/or under the court’s inherent power to regulate and protect its own processes.


It held that Theron & Partners had sufficient authority to bring the interlocutory application to protect the class from abuse, and that the joinder of additional applicants was appropriate and in any event cured any potential difficulty concerning authority or standing.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


A court may employ Uniform Rule 30 to set aside steps that are irregular or improper, and may prevent litigants from using procedural mechanisms for an ulterior purpose amounting to an abuse of process. What constitutes abuse is context-specific, but generally involves deploying the court’s procedures for ends extraneous to the proper administration of justice.


In class action litigation, and particularly in the absence of comprehensive legislative regulation, courts may use their inherent jurisdiction (including as recognised in section 173 of the Constitution) to regulate procedure and protect the integrity of the process in the interests of justice, adopting a robust approach when necessary.


Applicants seeking certification of a class action may bear representative obligations prior to certification, and may be regarded as acting in a quasi-fiduciary capacity toward the members of the proposed class. This entails a duty to act bona fide in the class’s interests and to avoid conduct that prejudices the class or creates unmanaged conflicts of interest, particularly where withdrawal or settlement by nominal representatives could undermine the class’s access to justice.

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[2017] ZAGPPHC 412
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Vlok and Others v Georgiou and Others (80811/14) [2017] ZAGPPHC 412 (7 April 2017)

IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
No: 80811/14
In
the matter between:
SHARON
ANN
VLOK
First
Applicant
DANIEL
EARNEST
LAMPBRECHT
Second
Applicant
CHARLENE
ESMAY
JORDAAN
Third
Applicant
JEAN
PAPANDONIS
Fourth
Applicant
and
NICOLAS
GEORGIOU
First
Respondent
ZEPHAN
PROPERTIES (PTY)
LTD
Second
Respondent
NICOLAS
GEORGIOU
N.O.
Third
Respondent
MAUREEN
LYNETTE GEORGIOU
N.O.
Fourth
Respondent
JOSEPH
CHEMALY
N.O.
Fifth
Respondent
GEORGE
NICOLAS
GEORGIOU
Sixth
Respondent
MICHAEL
NICOLAS
GEORGIOU
Seventh
Respondent
HENDRIK
JACOBUS
MYBURGH
Eighth
Respondent
BOSMAN
& VISSER (PTY)
LTD
Ninth
Respondent
PICKVEST
(PTY)
LTD
Tenth
Respondent
HEINRICH
PIETER
MOLLER
Eleventh
Respondent
WILLEM
MORKEL
STEYN
Twelfth
Respondent
BAREND
STEFANUS VAN DER
LINDE
Thirteenth
Respondent
FREDERICK
JULIUS
REICHEL
Fourteenth
Respondent
EUGENE
KRUGER
INC.
Fifteenth
Respondent
E
G COOPER & SONS
INC.
Sixteenth
Respondent
HANS
KLOPPER
Seventeenth
Respondent
ORTHOTOUCH
LTD
Eighteenth
Respondent
HIGHVELD
SYNDICATION NO 19
LTD
Nineteenth
Respondent
HIGHVELD
SYNDICATION NO 20
LTD
Twentieth
Respondent
HIGHVELD
SYNDICATION NO 21 LTD
Twenty
First Respondent
HIGHVELD
SYNDICATION NO 22 LTD
Twenty
Second Respondent
JUDGMENT
Murphy
J
1.
The applicants on 31 October 2014 instituted an application in which
they applied for an order certifying the existence of certain
classes
of litigants (comprising investors in four public companies jointly
referred to as the Highveld Syndication Companies)
and granting them
leave to act as representatives of the classes so certified and
granting them leave to institute class actions
on behalf of the
members of the identified classes - "the certification
application".
2.
On 16 November 2016 the applicants in the certification application
filed a notice of substitution as attorneys of record, substituting

their former attorneys, Theron & Partners, ("Theron
Attorneys") with new attorneys, Jeff Denenberg & Company

("Donenberg'') and filed a notice of withdrawal in respect of
the pending certification application. In response, on 30 November

2016, Theron Attorneys, filed a notice in terms of rule 30(2)(b)
averring that both the notice of substitution and the notice of

withdrawal of the certification application, constitute irregular
steps. The rule 30(2)(b) notice was supported on affidavit by
Mr.
Jacques Theron, a director of Theron Attorneys.
3.
On 20 December 2016, Theron launched the present interlocutory
application as matter of semi-urgency, relying on the provisions
of
rule 30, in which he sought orders setting aside the notice of
substitution and the notice of withdrawal, and declaring the

certification application not to have been withdrawn ("the rule
30 application"). This application was followed by an

application filed on 20 January 2017 by Mr. Brian Waxham on behalf of
himself and four other applicants for an order joining them
as
applicants to the certification application ("the application
for joinder"). Both applications are the subject of
this
judgment.
4.
The first to fifth, and the eighteenth, respondents oppose both
applications on the merits as well as on the issue of urgency.
5.
The applicants were part of a group of some 6688 aggrieved
individuals, the Highveld Syndicate Action Group ("HSAG"),

who mandated Theron Attorneys to launch the application for the
certification of a class action both for their benefit and for
the
benefit of a wider group of investors in the Highveld Syndication
property who had lost the value of their investments ("the

investors"). Each of the applicants hails from a different part
of the country. They are not known to each other save as co­

applicants.
6.
The members of the HSAG contributed financially to the costs of the
certification application. The litigation was directed by
Theron
Attorneys and a steering committee selected from amongst the
investors. The applicants were selected from amongst the same

investors as nominal applicants in the certification application as
representatives of the class envisaged in the application.
They were
aware that the costs of the certification application were being
funded not by them but by the contributions of the HSAG.
7.
The first respondent, Georgiou, unbeknown to the investors or Theron
Attorneys, reached settlement agreements with each of the
applicants
on undisclosed terms conditional upon the applicants withdrawing the
certification application. It has not been denied
that the applicants
were required to withdraw the certification application without prior
warning to Theron Attorneys or the HSAG.
8.
The applicants then jointly instructed Denenberg who, as mentioned,
simultaneously, and without prior notice to Theron Attorneys,
filed a
notice substituting himself as attorney of record and a notice
withdrawing the certification application on behalf of the

applicants.
9.
Theron acting on behalf of the HSAG has brought this interlocutory
application to safeguard the certification application. The
premise
of the rule 30 application is that the certification application was
not the applicants' to settle, given their status
in substance as
nominal and representative applicants. The court is asked to protect
the interests of the HSAG in its endeavour
to launch the class
action. Theron alleges that Georgiou did not merely set out to settle
the individual claims of each of the
applicants, but also by
requiring the withdrawal of the certification application contrived
to compromise the certification application.
10.
Georgiou contended that the applicants for certification of the class
action were acting as independent litigants and not as
nominal
applicants representing a wider group. The settlements reached with
the applicants, he submitted, were concluded in the
normal course and
without impropriety or ulterior motive. The applicants, he argued,
did not act in a representative capacity in
the certification
application. They sought relief in their personal capacity, inter
alia for an order authorising them to act as
representatives and were
thus free to act as litigants in their own right. The certification
application was still pending and
the court had not yet certified the
existence of any classes of litigants or granted leave to the
erstwhile applicants to act as
representatives of any classes of
litigants. At the date of their withdrawal of the certification
application the applicants had
not yet acquired the right to act in a
representative capacity on behalf of other persons. If the
certification application had
proceeded to a successful outcome, the
applicants would have obtained the relief sought, including a costs
order in their personal
favour. Until such time as this right is
acquired, the applicants could not have litigated in any capacity
other than personally.
11.
In the premises, the respondents argued, the applicants were fully
entitled, as persons litigating in their personal capacity,
to
exercise their rights in terms of rule 16(2)(a), which provides that:

Any party represented by an
attorney in any proceedings may at any time.... terminate such
attorney's authority to act for him,
and thereafter act in person or
appoint another attorney to act for him therein, whereupon he shall
forthwith give notice to the
Registrar and to all other parties of
the termination of his former attorneys' authority and if he has
appointed a further authority
so to act for him, of the latter's name
and address."
12.
Similarly, it was submitted that the applicants were not prevented
from withdrawing the proceedings as contemplated in rule
41(1)(a},
which provides:

A person instituting any
proceedings may at any time before the matter has been set down and
thereafter by consent of the parties
or leave of a court withdraw
such proceedings, in any of which events he shall deliver a notice of
withdrawal and may embody in
such notice a consent to pay costs; and
the taxing master shall tax such costs on the request of the other
party."
13.
Theron submitted that if the applicants were not mere nominal
applicants representing a much wider group, there would have been
no
purpose for them to pursue a class action at all. They would each
individually simply have issued summons against the respondents
in
order to pursue their claims. The very fact that they opted instead
to apply for the certification of a class action casts them
in the
role of applicants acting not only to vindicate their own rights, but
as representatives of the identified class and in
whose interests
they launched and pursued the certification application. Georgiou on
his own version did not merely settle the
individual claims but also
purported to settle the application for certification itself. The
applicants went to the same attorney
and instructed him to place
himself on record and lodge notices of withdrawal of the
certification application, without prior notice
to Theron or to the
thousands of litigants whom they represented.
14.
Theron contended that the applicants were not at liberty to collude
with one another and with Georgiou (and the entities he
represents)
in this calculated effort to scupper the proposed class action as a
whole. Such conduct prejudiced the rights of the
thousands of
litigants in concert with whom and for whose benefit the
certification application was brought, and, hence, he submitted,
the
delivery of the notices of substitution and withdrawal in the
circumstances of this case are an abuse of the process of the
court
and thus irregular.
15.
The preliminary issue for determination is whether applicants in a
certification application can be said to act in a representative

capacity prior to a court certifying the existence of a class and
authorising the institution of class action proceedings on behalf
of
the members of such a class. The certification of an action as a
class action involves the identification of some common claim
or
issue by members of a class and the court being satisfied that a
chosen representative is suitable to represent the members
of the
class in the proposed litigation. It is trite that in order for a
class action to be instituted, and in order for litigants
to be
authorised to represent others in a class action, a court first has
to certify that a class exists and approve of the representative

litigants. The parties seeking to represent a class must first apply
to court for the authority to do so. Certification is therefore
a
preliminary matter requiring resolution before a class action may be
instituted. In the absence of certification, the representative
has
no right to proceed, unlike litigation brought in a person's own
interests. Certification provides the authority for a representative

to act on behalf a class and enables the court to control the
procedural aspects of the proceedings.
16.
As pointed out by Wallis JA in
Children's Resource Centre
Trust and Others v Pioneer Food (Pty) Ltd and Others
[1]
until such time as
Parliament legislates for the conduct of class actions, the courts
are obliged to prescribe appropriate rules
and procedures to enable
litigants to pursue claims by this means. Courts must adopt a robust
approach and resort to their inherent
power to protect and regulate
their own processes and to develop the common law in the interests of
justice.
[2]
This would include in my opinion determining the duties upon
applicants seeking certification in relation to other members of the

class.
17.
The applicants were in
substance nominal, representative applicants, by virtue of their
understanding that they were representing
the HSAG and by necessary
implication, having regard to the very nature of the class action
procedure. It is incorrect that, prior
to certification being
granted, the applicants in a certification application can only act
in their personal capacity (and that
their application has no
consequences for the class of persons involved). It is also not
correct, as seemingly contended by Georgiou,
that the relevant class
only comes into existence once members opt in (or do not opt out)
after certification. The class already
exists; the certification
process defines its ambit. Moreover, a certification application has
legal consequences for persons falling
within the class sought to be
certified. For instance, a certification application interrupts
prescription on behalf of the whole
class of persons involved.
[3]
There is accordingly little doubt in my mind that applicants for the
certification of a class act in a quasi-fiduciary capacity
and are
thus ethically obliged to act
bona
fide
in the best interests
of the members of the class, even prior to certification. Otherwise,
as witnessed in the present matter, it
will be easy for respondents
in such actions to scupper a class action to the prejudice of members
of the class.
18.
Rule 30(3) permits a court to
set aside a proceeding or step it considers to be irregular or
improper and to make any such order
as to it seems meet in the
circumstances. A court will not allow either its rules or its
processes to be used for an ulterior,
improper motive. Every court is
entitled to protect itself and others against an abuse of its
processes. Where a court is satisfied
that conduct in litigation
constitutes an abuse it is entitled to set it aside.
[4]
When a court finds an attempt made to use for ulterior purposes
machinery devised for the better administration of justice, it
is
duty bound to prevent such abuse. What constitutes an abuse of the
process of the court is a matter determined by the circumstances
of
each case. There can be no all-encompassing definition of the concept
of abuse of process. In general terms, an abuse of process
takes
place where the procedures permitted by the rules of court to
facilitate the pursuit of the truth are used for a purpose
extraneous
to that objective.
[5]
Unethical behaviour by parties in the conduct of litigation may
constitute an abuse, impropriety or irregularity entitling the
court
to reverse such behaviour under rule 30 or the common law. It follows
that the rules permitting substitution of an attorney
of record and
an applicant to withdraw motion proceedings may not be invoked for
improper, irregular or unethical purposes.
19.
Therefore, whether we choose to deal with the merits of this
application pursuant to rule 30, or pursuant to the inherent
jurisdiction
of the court to control its own processes in order to do
justice, the result is the same. The applicants and Georgiou colluded
with one other in a manner that can only be described as an abuse of
the court process. They have left the other members of the
class
seeking certification of the class action high and dry. Had the
applicants wanted to withdraw from the application on
bona fide
grounds they were at liberty to do so provided they did not do so
in a manner compromising the rights and contingent rights of those

they sought to represent. As representatives of the class seeking
certification, they had a duty to act in the best interests of
the
class. If they wished to be free of the quasi­ fiduciary duty
they undertook, they should have withdrawn as parties and
allowed
Theron to join other parties. It was improper and potentially
prejudicial to the other members of the class to withdraw
the
application in pursuit of their personal interests. The applicants
had a duty to prevent a conflict of interest from arising
between
their personal interests and the interests of the members of the
class they sought to represent. The facts show that their
conduct
improperly prejudiced the people who had funded the litigation and in
whose interest it was brought. To make matters worse,
their conduct
was orchestrated by the persons at whom the class action is aimed.
20.
There has been some question about Theron's right to bring this
interlocutory application. Georgiou seeks to benefit from the

irregular step by contending that the notices delivered by Donenberg
firstly deprived Theron of his mandate to institute these

interlocutory proceedings in the name of the members of the class and
secondly put an end to the certification application. I am
satisfied
that Theron as an attorney and officer of the court has authority to
bring these interlocutory proceedings to protect
the members of the
class from the abuse, despite his mandate seemingly having been
terminated by the applicants. The HSAG remains
the true or beneficial
litigant on behalf of whom the nominal litigants (the applicants)
were cited. In any event, the problem,
if any, is cured by granting
the application for joinder. The right and interest of the
intervening applicants to be joined in
the certification application
is beyond dispute, especially in view of my finding that its
withdrawal was an abuse.
21.
The two interlocutory applications were brought on the basis of a
moderate degree of urgency. The grounds advanced for urgency
are both
cogent and compelling. Improper and irregular steps have been taken
in order to defeat the claims of numerous mostly elderly
and
impecunious claimants. It is fitting that the court should act
urgently to put an end to the impropriety and to avoid any confusion

amongst the investors about the status of the certification
application.
22.
The costs should be borne by the respondents opposing the
interlocutory applications. The unusual nature of the issues
justifies
the employment of senior counsel.
23.
The following orders are made:
23.1 The applicants in the joinder
application (B Waxham, C Nel, H Pinshaw, F Strauss and L M Meyer) are
joined as applicants in
the main (certification) application, case
number 80811/14, seeking leave to institute a class action.
23.2 It is declared that the Notice of
Withdrawal of Application dated 10 November 2016 constitutes an
irregular step and is hereby
set aside.
23.3 It is declared that the Notice of
Substitution as Attorneys of Record dated 10 November 2016
constitutes an irregular step
and is hereby set aside.
23.4 It is declared that the
application issued on 31 October 2014 under case number 80811/14, is
not withdrawn and has never been
withdrawn.
23.5 The respondents opposing these
applications shall pay the costs of the applications, jointly and
severally, such costs to include
the costs of two counsel and senior
counsel.
JR
MURPHY
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
Counsel
for Theron: Adv.C Watt-Pringle SC
CHJ
Maree
Instructed
by: Theron Attorneys
Counsel
for First to Fifth Respondent: Adv PF Rossouw SC
Adv
M Mostert
Instructed
by: Kyriacou Incorporated
Counsel
for Eighteenth Respondent: Adv JG Smit
Instructed
by: Natalie Lubbe and Associates
Date
Heard: 3 February 2017
Date
of Judgment: 7 April 2017
[1]
2013 (2) SA 213
(SCA) at para 21
[2]
Ibid para 17 and section 173 of the Constitution
[3]
Children's Resource Centre Trust v Pioneer Food (Ply) Ltd
2013 (2)
SA 213
(SCA) at par 89
[4]
Beinash v Wixley
[1997] ZASCA 32
;
1997 (3) SA 721
(SCA) at 734F - 735A
[5]
Hudson v Hudson and Another
1927 AD 259
at 268; and Standard Credit
Corporation Ltd v Bester and Others
1987 (1) SA 812
(W) at 820A--B