Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 861South Africa
Stewart N.O. and Others v Govender and Another (58165/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 861 (31 October 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
31 October 2022
Headnotes
the right to an investigation by a trustee which follows upon a sequestration is not sufficient in itself to
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Stewart N.O. and Others v Govender and Another (58165/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 861 (31 October 2022)
Stewart N.O. and Others v Govender and Another (58165/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 861 (31 October 2022)
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sino date 31 October 2022
SAFLII
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 58165/2021
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
31
October 2022
In
the matter between:
STEWART
N.O., MICHAEL LAWRENCE
FIRST APPLICANT
BODIBE
N.O., PULENG FELICITY
SECOND APPLICANT
MASHAMBA
N.O., JERIFANOS
THIRD APPLICANT
(in
their capacity as the duly appointed
Joint
liquidators of Carmol Distributors
(Pty)
Limited (in liquidation))
And
GOVENDER,
DURAN
FIRST RESPONDENT
(Identity
No: [....])
(Date
of Birth: 06 April 1981)
(Married
in community of property to
Noeleen
Govender) (born Geanballey)
GOVENDER,
NOELEEN
SECOND RESPONDENT
(Identity
No: [....])
(Date
of Birth: 12 October 1985)
(Born
Geanballey)
(Married
in community of property to
Duran
Govender)
JUDGMENT
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by
the Judge whose name is reflected and is handed down electronically
by circulation to
Parties / their legal representatives by email and
by uploading it to the electronic file of this matter on Case Lines.
The date
of the judgment is deemed to be the 31
st
October 2022
TWALA
J
[1]
Before this Court is the return day for the application for the final
sequestration
of the joint estate of the respondents, who are married
in community of property, brought by the applicants in their capacity
as
the joint liquidators of Carmol Distributors (Pty) Ltd (in
liquidation) (“Carmol”) duly appointed as such in terms
of the letters of Authority issued by the Master of the High Court
Johannesburg on the 26
th
of July 2016 under the Master’s
reference number G 1023/2015 and as duly amended on the 10
th
of October 2017. The joint estate of the respondents was
provisionally sequestrated and placed in the hands of the Master on
the
17
th
of March 2022.
[2]
It is common cause that Carmol conducted and operated an illegal
scheme whose business
was the acceptance of deposits from
participants who are members of the public which deposits were
repayable to the participants
upon the expiry of 12 months following
the deposits being made. Furthermore, it is undisputed that Carmol
applied the deposits
received to effect payments to other
participants of the scheme, for the personal benefit of the
perpetrators of the scheme including
payments to their families and
friends. The respondents were such participants of the scheme for the
period 04 March 2013 to the
19
th
of November 2014 and
during this period they received excess return payments from Carmol
in the sum of R2 553 113. Carmol
was then placed under
provisional liquidation on the 1
st
of October 2015 and the
final winding up order was made on the 30
th
of November
2015.
[3]
On the 29
th
of August 2018 the applicants instituted
proceedings against the respondents for the setting aside and payment
of the repayments.
Given that the respondents failed to file their
discovery affidavit and to comply with the court order compelling
them to do so,
the applicants applied and obtained judgment against
the respondents on the 3
rd
of February 2021. On the 23
rd
of June 2021 the applicants caused a writ of execution to be issued
against the respondents and same was only served, after numerous
attempts by the sheriff, on both respondents personally on the 7
th
of October 2021 and the sheriff returned a nulla bona after the
respondents failed to make a payment to satisfy the judgment debt
and
could not indicate to the sheriff any disposable property sufficient
to satisfy the judgment debt.
[4]
It is trite that for a creditor to succeed in an application for the
sequestration
of the estate of a debtor, it needs to establish that
it has a claim in excess of R100 which the debtor is unable to
contest on
reasonable and bona fide grounds, that the debtor has
committed an act of insolvency and that there is reason to believe
that it
will be to the advantage of the creditors of the debtor if
his estate is sequestrated.
[5]
Section 12 of the Insolvency Act, 24 of 1936 (as amended) (“the
Act”)
provides as follows:
“
final
sequestration or dismissal of petition for sequestration
(1)
If at the hearing pursuant to the
aforesaid rule nisi the court is satisfied that –
(a)The petitioning
creditor has established against the debtor a claim such as is
mentioned in subsection (1) of section nine;
(b)The debtor has
committed an act of insolvency or is insolvent; and
(c)
There is reason to believe that it will be
to the advantage of creditors of the debtor if his estate is
sequestrated;
It may sequestrate the
estate of the debtor.
[6]
I do not understand the respondents to be contesting the claim of the
respondents
nor that they have committed an act of insolvency. The
respondents’ submission is that the applicants have failed to
establish
that it will be to the advantage of their creditors if
their joint estate is sequestrated and therefore are not entitled to
the
relief as prayed for. It was contended that the estate of the
respondents was provisionally sequestrated on the 17
th
of
March 2022 and a provisional trustee was appointed who should by now
have conducted a full investigation of the affairs of the
estate of
the respondents. It does not lie in the applicants to say that it
will be the trustee who is appointed after the final
sequestration
order is granted who will be in a better position to investigate the
estate of the respondents. The respondents,
so the argument went,
have testified under oath that they do not have any assets to satisfy
the judgment debt.
[7]
There is no merit in this argument. The act provides that the
creditor should have
reason to believe that it will be to the
advantage of creditors that the debtor’s estate be
sequestrated. It does not place
an onus on the creditor to prove that
it will be to the advantage of the creditors but requires a
reasonable belief that it will
be to the advantage of the debtors
that its estate be sequestrated. Given the circumstances of this case
that the respondents received
payment in excess of R2.5 million from
the scheme operated by Carmol, it is hardly surprising that the
applicants believe that
the trustee that will be appointed by the
Master after the final order of sequestration is granted may unearth
some assets belonging
to the respondents or dispositions which were
made by the respondents before the institution of these proceedings.
[8]
It is of no consequence that the provisional trustee should by now
have filed a report
of what he has discovered in his investigation
since his appointment. There is no duty on the provisional trustee to
submit such
a report nor does the act provide for the applicants to
make that report available when the matter comes before the Court. It
should
be recalled that Carmol operated a scheme wherein members of
the public at large deposited money into its account and those moneys
were paid and utilised by the perpetrators of the scheme for their
own benefit and that of their family members and friends. It
was an
interwoven scheme involving the public and requires a thorough
investigation to its affairs. I hold the view therefore that
it is
for the trustee to unscramble the egg.
[9]
In
Meskin & Co v Friedman
1948 (2) SA 555
(WLD) at 559
the
court held that the right to an investigation by a trustee which
follows upon a sequestration is not sufficient in itself to
constitute the ‘advantage’ contemplated in insolvency
legislation. The court stated the following:
“
In my opinion,
the facts put before the court must satisfy it that there is a
reasonable prospect – not necessarily a likelihood,
but a
prospect which is not too remote – that some pecuniary benefit
will result to thee creditors. It is not necessary to
prove that the
respondent has any assets. Even if there are none at all, but there
are reasons to believe that as a result of an
enquiry under the Act
some may be revealed or recovered for the benefit of creditors, that
is sufficient ….”
[10]
In
Dunlop Tyres (Pty) Ltd v Brewit
1999 (2) SA 580
(WLD)
the
Court referring to the Meskin decision quoted supra stated the
following:
“
It will be
sufficient if the creditor in an overall view of the papers can show,
for example, that there is reasonable ground for
coming to the
conclusion that upon a proper investigation by way of an enquiry
under section 65 of the Act a trustee may be able
to unearth assets
which might then be attached, sold and the proceeds disposed of for
distribution amongst creditors.”
[11]
It would be an absurdity to expect the applicants to investigate the
affairs and the estate of
the respondents and establish that it will
be to the advantage of the creditors of the respondents if their
estate was sequestrated
– hence the legislature requires merely
a reasonable belief. What is reasonable depends on the circumstances
of each case.
In casu, the fact that the respondents did not contest
the claim of the applicants and that the respondents received over
R2.5
million from such an interwoven scheme, in my view justifies the
applicants’ belief that maybe some assets may come to light
or
revealed when the trustee digs deeper in the affairs of the estate of
the respondents. It is not a remote possibility having
regard to the
amounts received by the respondents.
[12]
Although there is no onus upon the respondents to show that the
provisional order is resisted
on bona fide and reasonable grounds,
they bear the evidentiary burden do so. It follows ineluctably
therefore that the respondents’
resistance of the grant of the
final order of sequestration of their joint estate is not bona fide
and on reasonable grounds but
is meant to frustrate the applicants
from obtaining the relief they seek.
[13]
In the circumstances, the following order is made:
1.
The joint estate of the respondents is hereby finally sequestrated
and placed in the hand
of the Master of this Court,
2.
The costs of this application are to be costs in the sequestration of
the joint estate of
the respondents.
TWALA
M L
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION
Date
of Hearing:
24
th
of October 2022
Date
of Judgment:
31
st
of October 2022
For
the Applicant:
Advocate JH Groenewald
Instructed
by:
Brand Potgieter Incorporated
Tel: 011 781 0169
carlin@brandpotgieter.com
For
the Respondent:
Advocate NG Phambuka
Instructed
by:
SP Attorneys Incorporated
Tel: 010 020 7846
sumen@splaw.co.za
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