Urgent
Application
MATHONSI
J:
This
is an urgent application in which the applicant seeks a provisional
order in the following terms:-
“(A)
TERMS
OF FINAL ORDER SOUGHT
That
you show cause to this Honourable Court why a final order should not
be made in the following terms:
1.
That the execution of the Arbitral Award in case number HC6251/11 by
the respondents be and is hereby permanently stayed.
2.
That there shall be no order as to costs of this application.
(B)
INTERIM
RELIEF GRANTED
Pending
confirmation or discharge of the provisional order the applicant is
granted the following relief:
(a)
That the execution of the Arbitral Award registered in case number
HC6251/11 be and is hereby stayed.
(b)
In the event of this application being heard after execution has been
carried out, that the applicant be restored to possession of its
movable property.”
On
24 May 2011 labour arbitrator L.M. Gabilo handed down an arbitral
award in an arbitration involving the parties in terms of which he
directed the applicant to pay the respondents a total sum of
US$24,103-00 as unpaid salaries and cash in lieu of notice.
It
does not appear from the papers as if the applicant did anything
about the award until recently.
The
arbitral award was registered with this Court following an
application made by the respondents in terms of s98(14) of the Labour
Act [Cap
28:01]
in case number HC6251/11 but not before that application was served
upon the applicant on 4 July 2011.
According
to the Deputy Sheriff's return of service the application was
served on an employee of the applicant Mrs Mudyawabikwa who is a
responsible person.
The
applicant did not see the wisdom of opposing the application and now
claims that the employee did not bring it to the attention of
management.
I
find it incredible that Mrs Mudyawabikwa could have appropriated the
application for herself especially as no affidavit has been elicited
from her explaining how this came about. In fact I reject the
argument that the applicant only got to know of the arbitral award at
the time of attachment.
Looking
at L.M. Gabilo's award, the arbitration costs were to be borne by
the parties at the ratio of 15% by the respondents and 85% by the
applicant. It is highly unlikely that the arbitrator would have
failed to send the award to the applicant when the bulk of his fees
were to come from the applicant.
I
therefore proceed from the premise that, aware of both the award and
its registration as an order of this Court, the applicant did nothing
about the matter until removal of its property on 12 January 2012.
This
is particularly so given that the applicant did not act even when
served with the notice of seizure and attachment on 6 September 2011
and with the notice of removal on 5 January 2012.
Following
registration of the award a writ of execution was issued and the
applicant's property attached and removed for sale in execution on
13 January 2012. It is that removal which jolted the applicant into
action as, prior to that, it had blissfully allowed the matter to
remain unattended.
The
applicant promptly filed an urgent application in this Court in case
no. HC289/12 seeking an order for a stay of execution pending the
hearing of a review application which it only filed in the Labour
Court on 13 January 2012 when its property was removed.
The
urgent application in HC289/12 was placed before my brother MUTEMA J
who refused it on 13 January 2012 on the basis that he lacked
jurisdiction as s89(6) of the Labour Act ousted the jurisdiction of
this Court, the determination of such application falling within the
exclusive purview of the Labour Court as well as the fact that no
urgency was demonstrated by the applicant it having waited until the
eleventh hour to bring the application.
It
would appear that after failing to get relief from this Court, the
applicant tried its luck at the Labour Court but it met with no joy
there either as Senior President G. Mhuri of that Court threw out the
application on 15 February 2012 “for want of jurisdiction”.
The
applicant then returned to this Court, again on an urgent basis,
seeking a stay of execution pending the determination of its review
application in the Labour Court. Significantly, the applicant filed
almost the same application rejected by MUTEMA J and did not attach
the review application in question.
More
importantly, the applicant did not disclose the fact that it had been
to this Court before and had had the same application dismissed.
Neither did it disclose that its property had been advertised by the
Deputy Sheriff and part of it sold by public auction on 4 February
2012.
If
I had not directed service of the application upon the respondents, I
would have determined the matter without knowledge of the existence
of a similar application dismissed by this Court or indeed the sale
of the property sought to be protected.
The
utmost good faith must be shown by litigants making applications of
this nature. They should place all material facts before the Court to
enable the Court to make an informed decision. See N
& R Agencies (Pvt) Ltd & Anor v
Ndlovu
& Anor HB198/11
and Graspeak
Investments v
Delta
Corporation (Pvt) Ltd
2001 (2) ZLR 551 (H) at 554 D where NDOU J stated, as he quoted with
approval, HERBESTEIN and VAN WINSEN, The
Civil Practice of the Supreme Courts of South Africa;
“The
utmost good faith must be observed by litigants making ex
parte
applications in placing material facts before the Court, so much so
that if an order has been made upon an ex
parte
application and it appears that material facts have been kept back,
whether wilfully or mala
fide
or negligently which might have influenced the decision of the Court
whether to make the order or not the Court has a discretion to set
the order aside with costs on the grounds of non-disclosure”.
At
p 555C the learned judge went on to say:-
“The
Courts should, in my view, discourage urgent applications, whether ex
parte
or not, which are characterised by material non-disclosures, mala
fides
or dishonesty. Depending on circumstances of the case, the Court may
make adverse or punitive orders as a seal of disapproval of mala
fides
or dishonesty on the part of litigants”.
I
find myself in total agreement with the sentiments expressed by the
learned judge.
Here
is a litigant that had approached this court a few weeks earlier and
had its case dismissed. Its property has already been sold in
execution, it was sold on 4 February 2012. The same litigant returns
to this Court on virtually the same facts but does not disclose the
history of the matter.
In
my view this is a very material non-disclosure and it borders on
dishonesty. The courts must always cast a dim view on litigants who
pull the wool over its eyes.
This
is not the only problem confronting the applicant in this matter.
The
other issue relates to urgency. I have already stated that MUTEMA J
rejected the same application for lack of urgency on 13 January 2012.
For
the applicant to approach the Court on the same facts more than a
month later is not only disingenuous in the extreme but a lamentable
abuse of court process.
Realising
this difficulty, Mr Machuvairi
for
the applicant tried to suggest that this matter came before me as a
referral from the Labour Court.
That
is not the case, as it is a stand alone application.
The
applicant was aware that the arbitral award was being registered for
purposes of execution in July 2011. It did not contest the
registration neither did it seek a stay of the execution. It waited
until the day of reckoning to approach the Court. This is not the
kind of urgency envisaged by the rules. As stated by CHATIKOBO J, a
pronouncement which I am in total agreement with, in Kuvarega
v
Registrar
General & Anor
1998 (1) ZLR 188 at 193 E-G:
“What
constitutes urgency is not only the imminent arrival of the day of
reckoning. A matter is urgent, if at the time the need to act arises,
the matter cannot wait. Urgency which stems from a deliberative or
careless abstention from action until the deadline draws near is not
the type of urgency contemplated by the rules”.
The
interim relief which the applicant seeks betrays its real intention.
The
applicant prays that in the event that execution has been carried out
the court must restore possession of the property to it.
How
can one do that?
The
property has already been sold and third parties have acquired rights
over such property. Applicant desires to reverse the execution and
not to stay it.
This
is a case calling for costs to be visited upon the applicant on a
higher scale in light of its lack of bona
fides
and what appears to be an abuse of court process.
It
should have been apparent to the applicant, especially with the
benefit of legal counsel, that the application has no prospects of
success.
In
the result the application is dismissed with costs on the legal
practitioner and client scale.
Manyurureni
& Company,
applicant's legal practitioners
Kajokoto
& Company,
1st
respondent's legal practitioners