Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 872South Africa
Chase Willow Financial Services (PTY) Ltd v Debt Rescue (PTY) Ltd and Others (55941/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 872 (7 November 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
7 November 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Chase Willow Financial Services (PTY) Ltd v Debt Rescue (PTY) Ltd and Others (55941/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 872 (7 November 2022)
Chase Willow Financial Services (PTY) Ltd v Debt Rescue (PTY) Ltd and Others (55941/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 872 (7 November 2022)
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sino date 7 November 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
Number:
55941/2021
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
11/7/2022
In the matter between:
CHASE
WILLOW FINANCIAL SERVICES (PTY) LTD
Applicant
And,
DEBT
RESCUE (PTY) LTD
First Respondent
NEIL
FRANS ROETS
Second Respondent
NEIL
FRANS ROETS
N.O
Third Respondent
MELT
UYS RAUTENBACH
N.O
Fourth Respondent
DIHAN
DU PLESSIS
Fifth Respondent
STEPHAN
VAN DER HOVEN
Sixth Respondent
FRANSIE
VAN DER HOVEN
Seventh Respondent
JUDGMENT
FISHER J:
Introduction
[1]
This application
concerns the interpretation of provisions of the Memorandum
of
Incorporation (MOI) of the first respondent (Debt Rescue/the company)
which relate to matters reserved for shareholder approval.
[2]
The applicant holds
49.89 % of the shares in the company and the Neil Roets
Share Trust
(the Trust) holds the balance of 50.11%.
[3]
Mr Niel Roets, the
second respondent is a Trustee in his eponymous Trust.
[4]
The applicant and
the Trust have the right respectively to nominate two and
three
directors each to the Board. The fifth, sixth and seventh respondents
are the current directors nominated by the Trust. Mr
Mervin Muller,
the deponent to the founding affidavit and Mr Lufuno Makhari are the
directors nominated by the applicant.
[5]
Mr Niel Roets is the
CEO of the company. Payments made to him as increased
salary and
award of a bonus are at the centre of the dispute.
[6]
The applicant seeks
to impugn the resolutions of the Board approving such payments.
It
argues that, in terms of the MOI, these payments are matters reserved
for shareholder approval by special resolution. The applicant
seeks a
number of declarations relating to these salary and bonus payments.
It goes further and seeks a general declaration as
to what
constitutes a reserved matter.
Factual
background
[7]
Debt Rescue was
established in 2006 as a provider of debt counselling services.
The
applicant is a company of venture capitalists in the United Kingdom.
[8]
On 23 April 2018 Mr
Roets concluded a written employment agreement with Debt
Rescue in
terms of which he was appointed as its CEO.
[9]
In terms of the
employment agreement:
· Mr Roets would receive
a net monthly salary of R220 000 ( R2 640 000 per
annum);
· the salary would
be reviewed on a semi-annual basis;
· it was recorded
that he ‘may be eligible to participate in any executive bonus
schemes by the Company
from time to time…’;
· it was recorded
that the payment of such bonus would be in the sole discretion of the
company;
· It was recorded
that, if the Board determined that he was entitled to a bonus, the
amount payable would be
linked to certain key performance indicators
(“KPI's”) of the company which were said to be set out in
annexure A to
the agreement and which would be set, from time to
time, by the Board and provided to the Executive.
[10]
On 24 March 2021 Mr Roets sought to
increase his annual salary and that of certain other executives.
His
salary was thus increased from R5 500 822.20 to R5 940 888 - an
8% rise.
[11]
Initially, there was no formal board
approval of this raise. The applicant and its appointed
directors
complained that this salary increase was a reserved matter. The Trust
and its appointed directors disputed this. They
contended the
reservation as to salary in the MOI did not apply to existing
employees. In essence the argument is to the effect
that the
reservations are not retroactive. The dispute grumbled on for some
months. The dispute as to whether a bonus for Mr Roets
would fall
within the reservation was also raised.
[12]
On 28 October 2021 there was a meeting
of the Board. On the agenda was the ratification/approval
of the
salary increases including that of Mr Roets and a substantial bonus
for Mr Roets.
[13]
The night before the Board meeting Mr
Roets resigned as CEO whereupon the Trust nominated the
seventh
respondent, Mrs van der Hoven, the wife of the sixth respondent in
his stead. Mr Roets and the van der Hoven’s are
close family
friends. It seems that Mr Roet’s has subsequently taken up his
position as executive of the company again in
that he describes
himself as the CEO in his confirmatory affidavit.
[14]
On 28 October 2021 the Trust-appointed
directors (now including Mrs van den Hoven in the stead
of Mr Roets)
adopted a resolution in terms of which they approved or ratified the
salary increase of Mr Roets and other executives
and awarded a bonus
to Mr Roets in the amount of R1 293 544.
[15]
The applicant contends that the
resignation of Mr Roets was contrived. It replaced him for a
vote
which he was not able to participate in because of his conflict of
interest.
[16]
I now deal with the relevant terms of
the MOI.
The
MOI
[17]
Article 33 of the MOI deals with
reserved matters which are the shareholders sole preserve,
to be
approved in writing by shareholders holding not less than 75% of the
issued shares or by a special resolution. Such matters
include:
· The entering into by
the company of any agreement, transaction or project which is
‘material’ or which
is ‘not in the normal and
ordinary course of business of the Company.’
· The ‘remuneration’
of Directors.
[18]
Article 33.3.3 provides that a
transaction is "material" if the Company is obliged
to make
or render or entitled to receive payments and/or other performance
having an aggregate value in excess of R100 000.00;
The
disputes
[19]
The respondents argues in relation to
the salary increase that the reservation as to salary
does not apply
to directors, such as Mr Roets, who were incumbent at the
implementation date of the MOI.
[20]
In relation to the award of the bonus
they argue that a bonus does not, on a literal reading
of the text,
constitute remuneration.
[21]
The applicant argues that, even if it
were to be found that a bonus is not remuneration (which
it denies)
the bonus transaction is hit by the materiality requirement in that
it has an aggregate value of R100 000.
[22]
Thus the interpretative questions to
be decided are as follows:
· Does
the reservation as to directors’ salaries only apply to new
positions?
· Does
a bonus constitute remuneration?
· In
any event, is the award of the bonus hit by the materiality
provision.
[23]
As to the non-specific declarations
sought, the respondents argue that such a declaration is
inappropriate in that it fails to allow for the contextual analysis
which is necessary in the interpretation exercise.
[24]
I will deal with each of these
arguments with reference to the legal principles applicable to
interpretation.
The
approach to interpreting the MOI
[25] It
is well settled that interpretation is the process of attributing
meaning to the words used
in a document. It is a unitary exercise
which requires reference to text, purpose and context.[1]
Consideration must be given to
the language used in the light of the
ordinary rules of grammar and syntax.[2] The process always
starts with the text. Where
more than one meaning is possible each
possibility must be weighed in the light of all these factors.
I
will deal with each of the arguments with reference to these
principles.
Does
the reservation in respect to directors’ salaries exclude
directors who were incumbent at the date of implementation?
[26]
It is not denied that the purpose of
the reserved matters was to allow the applicant, as minority
shareholder, control over the expenditure of the company in relation
to larger defined items of such expenditure. It is acknowledged
that
this occurred in a context which Mr Roets describes as ‘differing
philosophies’ between the shareholders as to
expenditure.
[27]
One such item so reserved is
directors’ remuneration. Control over the executive’s
remuneration would not be served by excluding existing directors from
the limitation and thus giving Mr Roets and his co- Directors
appointed by the Trust free rein over their own remuneration.
[28]
To my mind, the purpose of the
reservation provision as to remuneration was to curtail salary
raises
by the high earners including the executive directors. Mr Roets was
responsible for negotiating the reservation. Had there
been an
intention to limit the reservation on the existing directors’
remuneration going forward this would have been done
expressly.
[29]
There is, to my mind, no basis on
which the term can be construed to mean that Directors who
were
incumbent at the time of the execution of the MOI would be immune to
the reservations and limitations in the MOI. In relation
to the
context and purpose of these provisions such an interpretation would
be counter-intuitive.
Is
a bonus ‘remuneration’?
[30]
The respondents argue that as a
‘bonus’ is not a quid pro quo for service, as is
a
salary, it is not remuneration per se.
[31]
‘Remunerate’ according to
the Shorter Oxford Dictionary can mean ‘to give
a reward’.
Mr Roets’ employment agreement expressly provides for bonuses
to be earned with reference to the performance
of the company. In
terms thereof the discretion of the Board as to the granting of a
bonus and the determination of the amount
thereof is limited with
reference to a ‘bonus scheme’ linked to the performance
indicators of the company which were
to be set out in annexure A to
the agreement. This annexure A is not part of the papers and there is
no indication that any indicators
were employed in the calculation of
the bonus amount. The point is however that, on these intended
criteria, the bonus contemplated
is to be earned in the context of
the performance of the company. Such performance would obviously
relate to the success of its
executive management. It is not purely
gratuitous.
[32]
On this basis the respondents’
characterisation of a bonus is incorrect. The bonus is
meant a reward
for a particular kind of performance of the terms of employment. It
would thus be covered by the use of the word
remuneration.
[33]
From a purposive and contextual
perspective, it is unlikely that controls over the salary would
be
put in place which could be circumvented by the payment of lump sums
as bonus.
Is
the award of the bonus hit by the materiality provision?
[34]
In any event, the applicant argues
that the award of the bonus would be hit by the R100 000
threshold reservation.
[35]
The respondents argue that the
application of this reservation would lead to absurdity in that
it
would require too much hands-on attention by shareholders.
[36]
It is common cause that the purpose of
the reserved matters in the MOI is to introduce shareholder
control
over certain day to day expenditure by the company. It is relevant in
this context that there are two shareholders who
have different
approaches and interests in the manner in which the company’s
business is run. It is relevant also that both
shareholders have
agreed that there is to be a significant and perhaps unusual amount
of shareholder input into the conduct of
the business.
[37]
The applicant denies that this
shareholder intervention involves so cumbersome a process as
to the
carrying out of relatively small or everyday transactions that it
would lead to absurdity. It argues that the monitoring
of the
relevant expenditure can be done by way of round robin. It points to
numerous occasions where this has been done.
[38]
It is important that this alleged
unworkable or absurd result contended for is not directly
relevant to
the dispute at hand. What this Court is dealing with implicates only
the salary increase and bonus in issue. The nature
of these matters
is such that they do not entail repeated resort to the shareholders.
Once a salary increase has been approved
this would continue in force
until it came to the next increase by special resolution of the
shareholders. The respondents’
suggestion that there would have
to be a monthly approval is without foundation.
[39]
The approach of the respondents
appears to be that this court should find that because the R100 000
reservation is unclear as to its application in relation to certain
expenditure, the whole reservation structure in the MOI should
fall.
[40]
This is not a cogent argument. Whilst
the MOI must be looked at as a whole, the fact that there
may be a
lack of clarity in one part of an agreement does not damn the entire
agreement to that finding.
[41]
The point is that the transactions
which are being dealt with are the salary increase and bonus.
The
provision is workable in its application to these items of
expenditure. It is unhelpful to suggest applications where it might
not be workable – we do not have to do with such applications
of the reservation here.
[42]
Thus there is no answer to an argument
to the effect that even if a bonus was not hit by the
reservation of
directors’ remuneration, it would be hit by the R100 000
limitation. Thus the bonus transaction seen
in context would fail on
either reservation.
[43]
To my mind the award of a large bonus
to a director who has involvement in one of the shareholders
under
circumstances where such award was not in terms of the approved
scheme would not only be material but would also fall outside
of the
normal course of business.
[44]
Thus, to my mind, the impugned
resolutions are invalid for want of compliance with the MOI and
fall
to be set aside.
The
scope of the declaratory relief
[45]
The applicant seeks also that this
Court declare that ‘any decisions to be taken by the
applicant's board of directors regarding the entering into by the
applicant of any agreement, transaction or project, having an
aggregate annual value in excess of R100 000.00, shall constitute a
reserved matter in terms of Article 33.2.4.3of the MOI’.
There
are also a number of superfluous declarators sought in relation to
the resolutions at hand.
[46]
The applicant casts it net widely as
far as the declaratory relief is concerned. It asks that
I exercise
my discretion on the basis of the facts of the matter and declare:
· That the annual salary
increase which the second respondent awarded to himself during March
2021 constitutes remuneration
as contemplated in article 33.2.5.4 of
the MOI
· that neither the second
respondent nor the board of the first respondent had the power or
authority to approve the award
of the annual salary increase.
· that the award of an annual
bonus to the second respondent in his capacity as the Chief Executive
Officer of the first
respondent for the year ended 28 February 2021
constitutes remuneration as contemplated in article 33.2.5.4of the
MOI.
· that the board of the first
respondent did not have the power or authority to approve the award
of the annual bonus.
· that the award of the annual
salary increase and annual bonus constituted a reserved matter and
had to be approved by the
shareholders in terms of article 33.4 of
the MOI.
· that the decisions of the
second respondent and/or the board to award the annual salary
increase and the annual bonus are
set aside;
· that any decisions to be
taken by the first respondent's board of directors regarding the
entering into by the first respondent
of any agreement, transaction
or project, having an aggregate annual value in excess of R100
000.00, shall constitute a reserved
matter in terms of Article
33.2.4.3of the MOI.
[47]
This is a ‘scatter-gun’
approach. The point is made by the respondents that, on
the facts
before the Court, the true dispute is whether the decisions relating
to the increase in salary and award of bonus are
reserved matters
under the MOI. I agree. There is no actual dispute as to the other
matters in respect of which declarations are
sought. A determination
of what the MOI means beyond the real dispute at hand is superfluous.
[48]
In light of the unitary approach to
interpretation which takes into account language and purpose
it would
be imprudent to offer my interpretation of these other articles in a
vacuum.
[49]
The applicant seeks also repayment to
the company of the amounts paid to Mr Roets under the
invalid
resolutions. I turn now to deal with this claim.
The
claim for repayment
[50]
Notwithstanding the objections of the
applicant and its appointed directors the increased salary
and bonus
was paid to Mr Roets.
[51]
The question to be answered is whether
the applicant has the locus standi to press for such
payment.
[52]
The respondents correctly raise that
the applicant's claim is for a derivative action.
[53]
The only source of a court's
jurisdiction to entertain a derivative action is
section 165
of the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
.
Section 165(1)
provides:
“
Any right at common law of a
person other than a company to bring or prosecute any legal
proceedings on behalf of that company is
abolished, and the rights in
this section are in substitution for any such abolished right”.
[54]
Section 165(2)
requires service of a
demand on a company by a category of persons including shareholders
to commence or continue legal proceedings.
Since the applicant did
not comply with the provisions of
section 165
, the monetary orders it
seeks are not competent.
Conclusion
[55]
The MOI, properly construed, precludes
the approval and implementation of the impugned resolutions.
[56]
The broader declaratory relief sought
should not be granted in that it is, to my mind, not sufficiently
founded in fact.
[57]
The money judgment sought is
derivative and not competent because of the peremptory requirements
of section 165 of the 2008
Companies Act.
Costs
[58]
The thrust of this application was
against the award of the salary increase and bonus to Mr
Roets. The
applicant has to my mind enjoyed substantial success such as should
entitle it to costs. It would not serve justice
for the company to be
mulcted in costs for the irregular resolutions in issue. The dispute
in this matter has arisen as a result
of the machinations of the
Trust and its appointed directors, especially Mr Roets.
Order
[59]
I thus order as follows:
1.
The resolutions regarding the increase in Mr Roets’ salary and
the award
to him of the bonus in issue are set aside for being
unauthorised in terms of the MOI.
2.
The further relief sought is dismissed.
3.
The second, third, fourth, fifth, sixth and seventh respondents are
to pay the
costs of this application jointly and severally, the one
paying the others to be absolved.
FISHER
J
HIGH
COURT JUDGE
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Date
of hearing:
12 October 2022.
Judgment
delivered
: 7 November 2022.
APPEARANCES:
For
the Applicant:
Adv M M Antonie SC.
Instructed
by
:
Werksmans Attorneys.
For
the Respondents:
Adv H A Van der Merwe.
Adv H Van der Vyver.
Instructed
by
:
Senekal Simmonds Inc.
[1]
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality (‘Endumeni’)
2012
(4) 593 (SCA) at p604 C-D.
[2]
Endumeni
at
p614 A-B.
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