Feed Chain Industries and Others v Technical Systems (Pty) Ltd (2025/140896) [2026] ZAWCHC 14 (23 January 2026)

70 Reportability
Civil Procedure

Brief Summary

Execution — Urgent application — Dismissal for lack of urgency — Applicants sought to suspend execution of a court order but failed to meet urgency requirements; Court found repeated applications constituted abuse of process.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


Introduction


This was an urgent motion application in the High Court of South Africa, Western Cape Division, Cape Town, in which the applicants sought the suspension (stay) of the operation and execution of an earlier High Court order granted after trial. The relief was sought pending the finalisation of an appeal process, including an application for condonation and reinstatement of the appeal.


The applicants were Feed Chain Industries (referred to collectively as FCI), comprising five parties: Feed Chain Industries (first applicant), Christiaan Arnoldus Kurtz (second applicant), C Quiptech (Pty) Ltd (third applicant), CGC Industries (Pty) Ltd (fourth applicant), and Carl William Richter (fifth applicant). The respondent was Technical Systems (Pty) Ltd. The parties operate in the same industry, namely the manufacture and sale of poultry feed chain products.


The procedural history was central to the decision. After a protracted trial, an order was granted against the applicants on 29 July 2024 (in case number 7235/2017), including relief requiring surrender of documents and components relating to the applicants’ feed chain manufacturing process. Although an appeal was noted (which initially suspended the operation of the order), the applicants failed to comply with appeal-prosecution requirements, with the consequence that the suspension of the trial court order lapsed. The applicants then launched multiple urgent applications to stay execution or suspend the order; the first two were struck from the urgent roll for lack of urgency, the most recent striking occurring on 25 November 2025. The present application, instituted on 2 December 2025 and heard on 5 December 2025, represented the applicants’ third attempt at obtaining urgent suspension relief on materially the same factual basis.


The dispute before the court in this application concerned whether the matter was properly urgent, whether the repeat enrolment of similar urgent applications amounted to an abuse of process, and how the procedural rules governing urgency and interlocutory applications applied. A further issue arose from the respondent’s attempt to pursue a contempt counterapplication within the urgent proceedings.


Material Facts


FCI and the respondent are competitors in poultry feed chain manufacture and sales. FCI operated two production lines: a McAuley-type feed chain line and a Roxell-type feed chain line. The second applicant managed the companies and the fifth applicant financed the business.


Following the trial court order of 29 July 2024, the applicants noted an appeal. However, it was undisputed that they failed to comply with key procedural steps to prosecute the appeal, including that they did not file their power of attorney, did not file the appeal record, and did not apply for a hearing date by 1 April 2025. As a result, the suspension of the trial court order that flowed from the noting of the appeal lapsed.


After the lapse, the respondent executed part of the trial court order and obtained surrender of certain documents and components of the production line. It was also accepted that the McAuley production line was halted through execution in June 2025, while FCI continued producing feed chain on the Roxell production line.


A fact treated by the court as common cause was that, during argument in the prior urgent stay application, FCI gave an undertaking to halt the Roxell production line. FCI relied on the consequences of that undertaking as the asserted basis for renewed urgency in the present application.


The court treated as material that the present application was brought “on the same papers” as the prior unsuccessful urgent suspension application, with urgency allegations augmented, and that the factual foundation across all three urgent applications was materially identical. The applicants attributed their failure to prosecute the appeal timeously to their attorney’s ignorance and counsel’s unavailability, and contended that execution of the trial court order threatened their commercial survival and employees’ livelihoods.


The respondent opposed urgency and characterised the litigation conduct as serial relitigation. The respondent also brought a counterapplication in contempt, framed as a “provisional” counterapplication, which it indicated it would only pursue if the court reached the merits of the suspension relief.


Legal Issues


The central legal questions were whether the applicants had established urgency warranting enrolment and determination on the urgent roll, and whether their repeat urgent applications on the same factual basis constituted an abuse of process justifying dismissal rather than another striking from the roll.


A further legal issue concerned the procedural interaction between Uniform Rule of Court 6(11) (interlocutory applications) and Uniform Rule of Court 6(12) (urgency), specifically whether an interlocutory application under Rule 6(11) could avoid the need to satisfy the requirements of urgency when enrolled on the urgent roll.


Although the application was determined on urgency and abuse-of-process grounds, the judgment also addressed the framework for Rule 45A (suspension of execution) and the extent of the inquiry required, including whether the court considers factors akin to interim interdict requirements such as prospects of success, irreparable harm, balance of convenience, and absence of alternative remedy. This aspect largely concerned the application of legal principles to the facts, albeit in a manner that did not ultimately determine the result given the urgency finding.


Finally, the court had to decide whether the respondent’s contempt proceedings could function as a threshold bar to the applicants pursuing Rule 45A-related relief, and whether the respondent’s “provisional counterapplication” was procedurally competent within the urgent proceedings.


Court’s Reasoning


The court’s analysis began with the contention that renewed urgency arose from the undertaking given in the previous urgent application to halt the Roxell production line. The court reasoned that an undertaking made during argument in the earlier urgent proceedings did not constitute a new fact capable of founding a fresh urgent application. The undertaking and its implications were already before the earlier court, and the applicants’ dissatisfaction with how that court dealt with it did not justify a re-enrolment before another judge. The court treated the applicants’ approach as an attempt to relitigate urgency by repackaging matters already presented.


The court accepted that a prior finding that a matter is not urgent is not strictly res judicata, but held that there are limited circumstances in which a litigant may properly re-enrol an urgent application. Those circumstances were identified as where new facts arise after the earlier hearing, where there is a material change in circumstances, or where the earlier court expressly granted leave to re-enrol. The court found that none of these conditions were satisfied. On the court’s assessment, the applicants’ commercial position and the factual basis for urgency were substantially the same as at the time the earlier application was struck for lack of urgency, and the undertaking was already part of what had been placed before the earlier urgent court.


On the question of repeated urgent proceedings, the court invoked the High Court’s inherent power to regulate its own process and prevent oppressive or vexatious use of court procedures. The repeated enrolment of materially identical urgent applications was treated as an abuse of process that burdens the court and prejudices the respondent. The court reasoned that, in these circumstances, it was not confined to striking the matter from the roll again; it could dismiss the application as an appropriate exercise of inherent jurisdiction where urgency requirements were not met and the urgent roll was being used for serial relitigation.


Although the urgency finding and abuse-of-process conclusion were dispositive, the court addressed the Rule 45A stay framework and indicated that, even if urgency had been established, the applicants’ prospects on the merits would have been poor. The court stated that under common law and Rule 45A, a suspension may be granted when real and substantial justice requires it, or where injustice would otherwise result. The court recorded the respondent’s submission that the relevant considerations correlate with interim interdict requirements, including prospects of success, irreparable harm, balance of convenience, and absence of alternative remedy. The court further reasoned that the applicants sought a stay after execution had occurred and long after the McAuley line was expected to be dismantled, and that the applicants had given an undertaking that halted their own income stream. The court expressed the view that it could not permit a litigant to create a crisis and then seek suspension as a rescue mechanism, and emphasised the prejudice to the respondent in delaying the benefit of a final judgment and potentially prolonging infringement and market harm.


On the procedural argument concerning Rules 6(11) and 6(12), the court rejected the notion that Rule 6(11) exempts interlocutory applications from satisfying urgency requirements when enrolled on the urgent roll. The court held that Rule 6(11) regulates form and does not confer urgency. A party approaching the urgent court must still establish urgency under Rule 6(12). The court also noted that the applicants had, in fact, attempted to motivate urgency in both the earlier and present applications, which undercut their contention that urgency did not need to be established.


Regarding contempt, the court held that contempt cannot operate as a jurisdictional bar or threshold impediment to Rule 45A relief, though it may be a factor influencing the court’s discretion. The court rejected the respondent’s approach insofar as it attempted to convert contempt into a gatekeeping mechanism to prevent enrolment of the suspension application. The court also held that the respondent’s contempt application, framed as a “provisional counterapplication,” was procedurally irregular, noting that the rules do not provide for “provisional” applications in this manner and that contempt proceedings require proper procedural safeguards and proof beyond reasonable doubt. In consequence, the contempt counterapplication was not determined on the merits but was struck from the roll.


Outcome and Relief


The court dismissed the applicants’ urgent application to suspend the order under case number 7235/2017 pending finalisation of the appeal process under case number A131/2025, holding that it constituted an abuse of process and that urgency was not established.


The applicants (including in relation to post-hearing notes) were ordered to pay the respondent’s costs on the attorney-and-client scale, including the costs of two counsel where employed.


The court further directed that no further urgent application based on the same facts would be entertained absent a demonstrable and material change in the applicants’ circumstances.


The respondent’s urgent counterapplication seeking to hold the applicants in contempt of the trial court order was struck from the roll with costs.


Cases Cited


Janse van Rensburg v Obiang and Another 2023 (3) SA 591 (WCC)


Van Rensburg and Another v Naidoo and Others 2011 (4) SA 149 (SCA)


Gois t/a Shakespeare’s Pub v Van Zyl and Others 2011 (1) SA 148 (LC)


Stoffberg NO and Another v Capital Harvest (Pty) Ltd 2012 JDR 1644 (WCC)


Mtshali NO v Buffalo Conservation 97 (Pty) Ltd (250/2017) [2017] ZASCA 127 (29 September 2017)


Fakie NO v CCII Systems (Pty) Ltd 2006 (4) SA 326 (SCA)


SS v VVS (CCT247/16) [2018] ZACC 5; 2018 (6) BCLR 671 (CC) (1 March 2018)


Legislation Cited


No legislation was cited in the judgment.


Rules of Court Cited


Uniform Rule of Court 6(11)


Uniform Rule of Court 6(12)


Uniform Rule of Court 45A


Held


The court held that the applicants’ third urgent attempt to obtain suspension of the prior trial court order was not supported by new facts or any material change in circumstances, and that the reliance on an undertaking given during argument in the prior urgent application did not create fresh urgency because it was already before the earlier court.


The court held that the repeated enrolment of materially identical urgent applications constituted an abuse of process, and that the court could, in the exercise of its inherent jurisdiction, dismiss the application rather than repeatedly striking it from the roll.


The court held that Uniform Rule of Court 6(11) does not remove the requirement to establish urgency under Uniform Rule of Court 6(12) when a matter is enrolled on the urgent roll; Rule 6(11) governs procedural form and does not confer entitlement to be heard urgently.


The court held that contempt proceedings cannot be used as a gatekeeping mechanism to bar the enrolment of a Rule 45A-type suspension application, although alleged contempt may remain relevant as a discretionary factor in an appropriate case. The respondent’s contempt counterapplication, framed as a “provisional counterapplication,” was struck from the roll.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


A party seeking to be heard on the urgent roll must satisfy the requirements of urgency under Uniform Rule of Court 6(12), even where the relief sought is characterised as interlocutory and Rule 6(11) is relied upon. Rule 6(11) regulates the procedure for interlocutory matters and does not, without more, establish urgency.


A prior determination that an application lacks urgency is not strictly res judicata, but a litigant is not permitted to re-enrol substantially the same urgent application unless new facts arise after the earlier hearing, there is a material change in circumstances, or the earlier court granted leave to re-enrol. Dissatisfaction with an earlier court’s reasoning does not justify relitigation of urgency through repeated urgent enrolments.


The High Court has an inherent jurisdiction to prevent abuse of its process. Where litigants repeatedly bring materially identical urgent applications on the same facts, the court may treat the conduct as an abuse of process and may dismiss the application rather than merely striking it from the urgent roll.


Under Uniform Rule of Court 45A and the common law, the suspension of an order may be granted where real and substantial justice requires it or where injustice would otherwise result. The judgment recorded the respondent’s contention that the considerations align with factors akin to those applicable to interim interdicts, including prospects of success, irreparable harm, balance of convenience, and absence of alternative remedy, and indicated that the court may consider prejudice to the successful litigant’s entitlement to the fruits of a final judgment.


Contempt proceedings do not operate as a jurisdictional bar preventing a party from approaching the court for Rule 45A-related relief, although alleged contempt may be relevant to the exercise of discretion. Contempt applications require appropriate procedural safeguards and cannot be collapsed into urgent interlocutory proceedings as a mechanism to control access to the urgent roll.

IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)

Case no:2025-140896

In the matter between:
FEED CHAIN INDUSTRIES FIRST APPLICANT
CHRISTIAAN ARNOLDUS KURTZ SECOND APPLICANT
C QUIPTECH (PTY) LTD THIRD APPLICANT
CGC INDUSTRIES (PTY) LTD FOURTH APPLICANT
CARL WILLIAM RICHTER FIFTH APPLICANT
and
TECHNICAL SYSTEMS (PTY)LTD RESPONDENT

Coram: BHOOPCHAND AJ
Heard: 5 December 2025,
Further submissions received: 12 December 2025
Bundle of documents received: 19 January 2026
Delivered: 23 January 2026
Summary: Urgent application usually struck from roll for lack of urgency.
Where Applicants attempt to relitigate urgency , it is within the inherent
jurisdiction of the Court to dismiss the application where the requirements for

urgency are not met and the application is an abuse of its process. A contempt
application cannot be construed as a gatekeeping mechanism to bar the
enrolment of a Rule 45A application.

ORDER

1 The urgent application to suspend the order of this Court under case
number 7235/2017 pending the finalisation of the appeal process
under case number A131/2025 is dismissed as an abuse of process.
2 The Applicants in the suspension application, including the post -
hearing notes are ordered to pay the Respondent’s costs on the
attorney‑and‑client scale, including the costs of two counsel where so
employed.
3 No further urgent application based on the same fact s will be
entertained by this Court absent a demonstrable and material chang e
in the Applicants’ circumstances.
4 The urgent counterapplication brought by the Respondent to hold the
Applicants in contempt of the order under case number 7235/2017 is
struck from the roll with costs.


JUDGMENT



Bhoopchand AJ:

[1] The Applicants and the Respondents are engaged in poultry feed chain
manufacture and sales. The Applicants ran a production line for the manufacture

of a Mc Auley type feed chain a nd a separate line manufacturing the Roxell
type of feed chain. The five Applicants shall collectively be referred to as Feed
Chain Industries (‘FCI’). The Second Applicant (Kurtz) manages the
companies, and the Fifth Applicant (Richter ) is the financier. This application
concerns the Applicants’ third attempt to obtain urgent relief . They initially
sought an urgent suspension of execution of the order granted on 29 July 2024
(‘order of the trial court’) and then an urgent suspension of the operation and
execution of the order of the trial court (‘the first suspension app lication’). The
first two urgent applications were struck from the roll for lack of urgency, the
latter being on 25 November 2025. The present application (‘the second
suspension application’) was instituted on 2 December 2025 and heard before
this Court on 5 December 2025 . The parties were granted leave to provide
further submissions on whether the Applicants , pursuant to a submission made
on their behalf, were obliged to first satisfy the requirements of urgency in an
application for a stay of execution of the order of the trial court under rule 6(12)
if an application was allegedly brought under Rule 6(11) of the uniform rules of
Court (URC).1

[2] The facts informing all three urgent applications are materially identical.
The Applicants contend ed that the execution of the order of the trial court had
rendered them incapable of manufacturing chicken feed chain and that their
commercial survival, as well as the livelihoods of their employees, is at risk.
They attributed their failure to prosecute their appeal timeously to the ignorance
of their attorney and the unavailability of counsel.

[3] The Respondent opposes the application and contends that the matter is
not urgent. The Respondent contends further t hat the Applicants are engaged in

1 The Applicants argued that they did not need to satisfy the requirements of urgency as their application

was an interlocutory one and Rule 6(11) applied despite them devoting a whole affidavit to why their
application was urgent.

serial relitigating, and that the present application constitutes an abuse of this
Court’s process.

BACKGROUND

[4] Following a protracted trial, judgment was granted against the Applicants
on 29 July 2024. They were ordered, among others, to surrender documents and
components of the ir feed chain manufacturing process to the Respondent . The
Applicants noted an appeal, which suspended the operation of the order.
However, they failed to comply with the rules governing the prosecution of
appeals. They did not file their power of attorney, did not file the appeal record,
and did not apply for a hearing date by 1 April 2025. The s uspension of the 29
July 2024 order therefore lapsed.

[5] The Respondent proceeded to execute part of the order and obtained the
surrender of documents and certain components of the production line . The
Applicants’ first urgent application to stay execution was heard after execution
had already occurred and was struck from the roll for lack of urgency. The
Applicants instituted irregular applications for reinstatement of the appeal
which elicited objections from the Respondent . A proper application for
reinstatement and condonation was eventually filed on 15 August 2025. There is
no assurance that an appeal court will grant the Applicants condonation or a
reinstatement of the appeal. The Respondent is intent on raising their
application to have the S econd and Fifth Applicants incarcerated and the
Applicants fined for contempt of court arising from alleged breaches of the
order of the trial court.

[6] The first suspension application was enrolled urgently for hearing in
September 2025. That application w as struck from the roll for lack of urgency
on 25 November 2025. The present application followed on the heels of the

judgment and on the same papers as the first suspension application except that
the Applicants augmented their grounds for urgency.

GROUNDS FOR URGENCY

[7] The Applicants Mc Auley feed chain production line was halted through
the execution of part of the order of the trial court in June 2025. The Applicants
continued producing feed chain on their Roxell production line. It is common
cause that during argument in the first suspension application , t he Applicants
gave an undertaking to halt the Roxell production line. The Applicants
submitted that the Court hearing the first suspension application failed to take
cognisance of the effect of this undertaking and erred in finding that the
Applicants were not facing imminent commercial death because the Roxell line
remained operational and generated income. The judgment confirms this.

[8] The Applicants allege and argue that because the Court hearing the first
suspension application allegedly failed to consider the consequences of the
undertaking, they are entitled to re ‑enrol th e matter on the same papers , as
supplemented by the Second Applicant’s affidavit on urgency before this Court.

DOES THE UNDERTAKING CREATE NEW URGENCY?

[9] The fact that the undertaking was given during argument does not convert
it into a new fact capable of founding a fresh urgent application. The
undertaking was before the Court hearing the first suspension application . Its
implications were capable of being argued. The Applicants’ failure to appreciate
or articulate those implications does not entitle them to relitigate urgency .
Dissatisfaction with the omission or reasoning of the earlier court is a matter for
appeal or reconsideration, not a basis to re‑enrol the same urgent application
before a different judge. Urgency cannot be revived by re ‑packaging facts that

were already before the earlier court, nor by asserting that the earlier court
failed to take cognisance of a point. To permit this would undermine the finality
of interlocutory decisions and encourage forum shopping.

[10] A finding that a matter is not urgent is not res judicata in the strict sense.
However, the circumstances in which a litigant may re ‑enrol an urgent
application are if new fac ts have arisen after the earlier hearing, or there has
been a material change in circumstances, or the earlier court expressly granted
leave to re ‑enrol. None of these conditions is present. The fact s placed before
the Court hearing the first suspension ap plication remain unchanged. The
Applicants’ commercial position is the same as it was on 25 November 2025.
The undertaking was already before the first urgent court. The fact that Roxell
has removed its production line does not change anything as the undertaking,
replete with its potential consequences had already been given when the first
suspension application was argued in September 2025. It is inconceivable that
the Applicants, advised by their seasoned Counsel, coul d have not known the
consequences that would arise from offering the undertaking even though they
claim it eventuated after the Court prompted them to make it.

ABUSE OF PROCESS

[11] The repeated enrolment of identical urgent applications constitutes an
abuse of process. The High Court has an inherent power to prevent its
procedures from being used oppressively or vexatiously. This is the Applicants’
third urgent application on the same facts. The urgent roll cannot be used as a
mechanism for serial relitigating. The Applicants’ conduct burdens the court,
prejudices the Respondent, and undermines the integrity of urgent motion
proceedings.

[12] In these circumstances, the Court is not obliged to strike the matter from
the roll yet again. Where a litigant repeatedly brings the same urgent application
on the same facts, dismissal is an appropriate exercise of the Court’s inherent
jurisdiction.

THE RULE 45A APPLICATION

[13] Under the common law and under Rule 45A, an order may be suspended
when real and substantial justice requires it , or put differently, where injustice
would otherwise result. The Applicants contend that the legal position
underlying their application to suspend the original court order pending their
application for condonation and the r einstatement of the appeal against the 29
July 2024 order is that a Court will grant a stay of execution under Rule 45A
where the underlying causa of the judgment debt is being disputed. They
contend that this is the sole enquiry and the Court does not con cern itself with
the merits of the underlying dispute.2

[14] The Respondent contends that Rule 45A and the Court’s inherent
jurisdiction permit suspension of an order only where ‘real and substantial
justice ‘so requires. 3 The factors for consideration correlate with the
requirements for an interim interdict, namely the prospects of success on appeal,
irreparable harm, balance of convenience, and absence of an alternative remedy.
The Respondent contends that FCI would have to show that their appeal as well
as the application for reinstatement of the appeal have reasonable prospects of
success. The Respondent contends that their reason for non-compliance is based
solely on their previous attorney’s conduct. FCI has not shown how its own

2 Janse van Rensburg v Obiang and Another 2023 (3) SA 591 (WCC) at paras 40-44, Van Rensburg and
Another v Naidoo and Others 2011(4) SA 149 (SCA), Gois t/a Shakespeare’s Pub v Van Zyl and
Others 2011 (1) SA 148 (LC) at para 37(e)
3 Stoffberg NO and Another v Capital Harvest (Pty) Ltd 2012 JDR 1644 (WCC)

conduct and delay is excusable. The Respondent concedes that in some cases, a
delay caused by an attorney may be a reasonable explanation.4

[15] Even if the Applicants were able to surmount the urgency requirement in
this application, their prospects of success in the Rule 45A application would
have been poor. The Applicants sought a stay of execution after the fact and
suspension of the order long after the McAuley line was supposed to be
dismantled. They gave an undertaking that shut down their own income stream.
This Court cannot allow a litigant to create a crisis and then demand suspension
as a rescue mechanism. The prejudice to the Respondent remains substantial.
Suspending the order would prolong infringement, undermine the Resp ondent’s
copyright, their rightful share of the market, and the benefit of a final judgment.
The Respondent has succeeded at the trial , and they are entitled to the fruits of
the judgment.

DOES AN APPLICATION UNDER RULE 6(11) CIRC UMVENT THE
NECESSITY TO S ATISFY URGENCY EVEN IF IT IS BROUGHT ON
THE URGENT ROLL?

[16] The Applicants lead Counsel argued that as this application was an
interlocutory application, Rule 6(11) of the URC applied. The Applicants were
not required to satisfy the requirements for urgency under Rule 6(12). On
further enquiry from the Court, Applicant’s Counsel conceded that the
Applicants had to satisfy the requirements if the application was brought on the
urgent roll. Respondent’s lead Counsel indicated that he wished to address this
aspect in a further submission . The Court made provision for both parties to do
so.


4 Mtshali NO v Buffalo Conservation 97 (Pty) Ltd (250/2017) [2017] ZASCA 127 (29 September 2017)

[17] The Respondent did not file a post -hearing note but submitted a response
to the note filed by the Applicants. The Applicants went beyond the Court’s
directive and impermissibly denied the concession made by its lead Counsel
during argument. From a brief perusal of the content of the notes, the Court’s
instinct on this point was correct. The Respondent’s initial contention that it did
not need to satisfy the urg ency requirements under Rule 6(12) in an application
brought on the urgent roll was incorrect.

[18] Rule 6(11) does not exempt interlocutory applications from the
requirements of Rule 6(12) when they are enrolled on the urgent roll. An urgent
Court cannot be forced to hear an interlocutory application at any time. Rule
6(11) regulates form, not urgency. A litigant who elects to approach the urgent
court must establish urgency under Rule 6(12). The Applicants’ contention that
they were not required to motiva te urgency is incorrect in law. The Applicants
motivated their applications as urgent in both the first suspension application as
well as in this application.

THE CONTEMPT APPLICATION

[19] The Respondent contended that the Applicants are and remain in breach
of the order of the trial court and are not entitled to apply for relief pertaining to
or associated with the order until they have purged themselves of their
contempt. The Respondent indicated that it re -enrolled its contempt application
as a counterapplication to the second suspension application. The set down of
the contempt application, they submitted, was conditional on the Court’s finding
that the suspension application is urgent, i .e., the Respondent only intends
persisting with the contempt application if the merits of the suspension
application are to be determined. The Respondents contend that a court is

obliged to raise and deal with non-compliance of a court order by FCI to protect
the judicial authority of the Court.5

[20] The Applicants contend ed that the ‘provisional counterapplication’
seeking to hold the Applicants in contempt of the trial court’s order is a
procedural anomaly. The rules do not make provision for a provisional
counterapplication. The Respondent was aware of the facts raised since 30 July
2025 but has done nothing to progress the counterapplication. The Applicants
contend that the relief sought by the Respondent is incompetent in law i.e., an
order compelling the applicants to unilaterally cancel contracts concluded with
third parties and to repay funds received from them. None of those parties were
joined to the proceedings.

[21] Contempt cannot be a jurisdictional bar or a threshold issue to Rule 45A
relief. It may be a factor that influence the court’s discretion . The Respondent’s
approach tries to convert contempt into a gatekeeping mechanism . This is not
supported by any authority. A Court cannot collapse a contempt enq uiry,
requiring proper notice, procedural safeguards and proof beyond reasonable
doubt, i nto an urgent interlocutory hearing . The Respondent has raised this
application for the second time. The proper order would be to strike it off the
roll with costs.

CONCLUSION

[22] The Applicants have failed to establish urgency. The present application
is a repetition of two earlier applications struck from the roll. No new facts have
arisen. The attempt to rely on the undertaking given during argument in the first

5 Fakie NO v CCII Systems (Pty) Ltd 2006 (4) SA 326 (SCA), SSv VVS(CCT247/16)[2018] ZACC 5;
2018 (6)BCLR 671 (CC) (1 March 2018)

urgent application is misconceived. The present application constitutes an abuse
of process. In the circumstances, the application falls to be dismissed.

[23] The Respondent filed a contempt application that is irregularly labelled as
a provisional counterappl ication. The Court Rules do not make provision for
‘provisional’ applications. The Applicants were required to answer the
application. This application falls to be struck off the roll.

[24] The Court has considered the draft orders filed as well as the parties’
submissions on costs. The appropriate order follows.

ORDER

1. The urgent application to suspend the order of this Court under case
number 7235/2017 pending the finalisation of the appeal process under
case number A131/2025 is dismissed as an abuse of process.
2. The Applicants in the suspension application , including the post -hearing
notes are ordered to pay the Respondent’s costs on the attorney‑and‑client
scale, including the costs of two counsel where so employed.
3. No further urgent application based on the same fact s will be entertained
by this Court absent a demonstrable and material change in the
Applicants’ circumstances.
4. The urgent counterapplication brought by the Respondent to hold the
Applicants in contempt of the order under case number 7235/2017 is
struck from the roll with costs.


_____________________________
BHOOPCHAND AJ
Acting judge

High Court
Western Cape Division

Judgment was handed down and delivered to the parties by e-mail on 23 January 2026

Applicant’s Counsel: G S Myburgh SC, R D E Gordon
Instructed by: Bossrs Inc
Respondent’s Counsel: JA Van der Merwe SC, MB de Wet
Instructed by: Nabal Attorneys