Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 877South Africa
Zelbree Investments (PTY) Limited and Others v Theunissen (A3034/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 877 (15 November 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
15 November 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Appeal – company – director’s entitlement to remuneration and the amount thereof – director not as of right entitled to same — Companies Act 71 of 2008, s 66(9) – remuneration may be paid only in accordance with a special resolution approved by the shareholders.
Judgment
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## Zelbree Investments (PTY) Limited and Others v Theunissen (A3034/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 877 (15 November 2022)
Zelbree Investments (PTY) Limited and Others v Theunissen (A3034/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 877 (15 November 2022)
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sino date 15 November 2022
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO
:
A3034/2020
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
REVISED:
15
th
November 2022
In the matter between:
ZELBREE
INVESTMENTS (PTY) LIMITED
First Appellant
OUTSPAN
PLACE (PTY) LIMITED
Second Appellant
EMZED
PROPERTIES (PTY) LIMITED
Third Appellant
ZELRICH
INVESTMENTS (PTY) LIMITED
Fourth Appellant
M
RICH PROPERTIES (PTY) LIMITED
Fifth Appellant
And
THEUNISSEN
,
ROBIN
NEILL
Respondent
Coram:
Adams J
et
Van Aswegen AJ
Heard
:
28 July 2022 – The ‘virtual hearing’ of the
Full
Bench Appeal was conducted as a videoconference on
Microsoft
Teams
.
Delivered:
15 November 2022 – This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties' representatives
via
email, by being uploaded to
CaseLines
and by release to
SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 14:30 on 15
November 2022.
Summary:
Appeal – company – director’s
entitlement to remuneration and the amount thereof – director
not as of right
entitled to same —
Companies Act 71 of 2008
,
s
66(9)
– remuneration may be paid only in accordance with a
special resolution approved by the shareholders.
Special
plea – non-compliance with
s 66(9)
– should have been
upheld.
Appeal
succeeds and upheld.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
The
Johannesburg Regional Court (Regional Magistrate Dosio sitting as
Court of first instance):
(1)
The first to fifth appellants’ appeal
against the order of the court
a quo
,
relating their second special plea, is upheld with costs.
(2)
The order of the court
a
quo
is set aside and in its place is
substituted the following: -
‘
(a)
The first to fifth defendants' first special plea is dismissed, with
costs.
(b)
The first to fifth defendants' second
special plea is upheld, with costs.
(c)
The plaintiff's claim for remuneration for
services rendered by him in his capacity as a director of the first
to fifth defendants,
as formulated in his particulars of claim, is
dismissed with costs.’
(3)
The respondent shall pay the first to fifth
appellants’ costs of the appeal, such costs to include the
costs consequent upon
the employment of Senior Counsel.
JUDGMENT
Adams J (Van Aswegen AJ
concurring):
[1]
On
18 April 2012, the respondent
[1]
(‘Mr Theunissen’), who is qualified and practising as a
Charted Accountant, accepted an appointment as a co-director
–
together with a Ms Selma Rich (‘Ms Rich’) – of all
five of the appellants
[2]
, which
are related companies in that they are all owned by two trusts,
namely ‘the Emzed Trust – Sharon’ and
‘the
Emzed Trust – Stephen’. The appointment of and the
acceptance by Mr Theunissen of such appointment were
pursuant to and
in terms of a Consent Order of this Court (per Willis J) of 22 March
2012.
[2]
Soon after his
appointment, Mr Theunissen was to realise that he had landed himself
something of a hot potato. He described what
he found at the
companies as ‘a mess’, with interested parties and their
legal representatives openly antagonistic
towards him and towards
each other. Matters came to a head on 5 July 2015, when, at the
instance of the appellants, Mr Theunissen
was removed by an Order of
this Court (per Victor J) as a co-director of the said companies.
[3]
In an action in the
Regional Court, Mr Theunissen claimed from the appellants an amount
of R475 586.34, which he alleged was
in respect of his
professional fees relating to the duties he performed from 13 April
2012 to 5 July 2015 ‘as a director
of each the companies’
and services he rendered to them ‘as required in terms of the
[Willis J Order], the applicable
law, the rules of his profession’.
From the aforegoing it appears that there are two bases on which Mr
Theunissen claimed
the said amount, one being that the total or a
portion thereof represents or relates to his director’s fees.
The second basis
on which the amount is claimed relates to his
reasonable fees for professional services rendered at the special
instance and request
of the appellants, pursuant to and in terms of
an entirely independent ‘partly written and partly oral
agreement, alternatively
a tacit agreement’. In that regard, in
his particulars of claim, Mr Theunissen pleaded his case as follows:
-
‘
15.1
On or about the 17
th
day of April 2012 and at Johannesburg, the plaintiff [Mr Theunissen]
and the companies [the appellants] concluded a partly written
and
partly oral agreement, alternatively, a tacit agreement (“the
agreement”) that the plaintiff be paid remuneration
at an
hourly rate of R2 309 for his professional services rendered to
the companies from 1 April 2012, and to be rendered
to the companies,
plus VAT, or such subsequent hourly rate agreed to by the South
African Institute of Chartered Accountants (“SAICA”)
and
the Auditor-General of South Africa (“AGSA”) from time to
time for work performed by chartered accountants on behalf
of AGSA,
alternatively, that the plaintiff be paid a fair and reasonable
compensation for his professional services rendered from
1 April
2012, and to be rendered to the companies, plus VAT.’
[4]
In response to Mr
Theunissen’s claim for payment of Director’s fees, the
appellants raised a special plea – based
on the provisions of
section 66(9)
of the
Companies Act, Act
71 of 2008 (‘the
Companies Act&rsquo
;) – to the effect that Mr Theunissen
is not entitled to claim director’s fees as there had not been
compliance
with the requirement that the shareholders should have
passed a special resolution authorising and approving the amount or
amounts
of his director’s fees.
Section 66(9)
, so the
appellants contended, precludes a director of a company from being
paid any remuneration unless that remuneration has been
approved by a
special shareholders' resolution within the previous two years.
[5]
Mr Theunissen
disputed the appellants’ special plea. In a nutshell, his case
in the Regional Court on this legal point was
to the effect that
s
66(8)
and (9) does not find application in this matter, as, so the
argument went, the claim by him was not just for his Director’s
fees, but also for his professional services not
qua
director. The parties proceeded to trial on this special plea, as
well as on another special plea of prescription, which is not
relevant for present purposes. And on 28 April 2020, the Regional
Court dismissed the appellants’ first special plea, as
well as
their second special plea, with costs. It is that portion of the
order relating to the second special plea, which the court
a
quo
dismissed, which the appellants appeal to this Full Bench of the
Division.
[6]
In issue in this
appeal is whether the Regional Court was correct in not upholding the
second special plea. Crystalized further,
the question to be
considered is whether, in light of the common cause fact that no
special resolution was passed by the shareholders
of the appellants,
approving the amount or amounts of Mr Theunissen’s director’s
fees or, for that matter, his entitlement
to such remuneration, the
prohibition in
s 66(9)
kicks in. That issue is to be decided against
the factual backdrop, to be gleaned from the evidence led during the
trial, and which
can by and large be regarded as common cause. Mr
Theunissen was the only witness called during the hearing of the
appellants’
special plea and the common cause facts arise form
a number of material concessions made by him especially during
cross-examination.
[7]
I interpose here to
briefly mention that, as regards the first special plea of
prescription raised by the appellants relative to
the claim by Mr
Theunissen in respect of professional services rendered not
qua
director, there was a dispute between the parties as to whether the
Regional Court ought to have considered and decided that special
plea. The appellants contend that, after the evidence in the trial
court was completed, it was clearly indicated by them that,
for
reasons which are not important for purposes of this judgment, that
special plea was not being persisted with. It was therefore
not
competent for the court
a
quo
to in
any way deal with the said special plea, which was nevertheless
dismissed with costs. All the same, during the hearing of
the appeal
before us, Mr Mundell SC, who appeared on behalf of the appellants,
indicated that the appellants accept that the first
special plea was
correctly dismissed by the Regional Court and there is no need for us
to interfere in any way with that part of
the court
a
quo’s
order. We intend doing exactly that.
[8]
As already indicated,
Mr Theunissen’s claims against the appellants have its genesis
in an order granted by this Court (per
Willis J) on 22 March 2012,
which directed that the Chief Executive Officer for the time being of
the Independent Regulatory Board
of Auditors ('IRBA") be
requested, as a matter of urgency, to nominate a qualified person to
accept an appointment to act
– with Ms Selma Rich as
co-director – of the first to fifth appellants. That person was
Mr Theunissen.
[9]
At that time, the
shareholders in equal shares in each of the five appellant companies
were the Emzed Trust – Sharon (‘the
Sharon Trust’)
and the Emzed Trust – Stephen (‘the Stephen Trust’),
each holding fifty percent shareholding
in each of the said
companies, whose sole director was Ms Rich. Disputes had arisen
between the Sharon Trust and the Stephen Trust,
in their capacities
as co-shareholders in the five appellant companies, regarding the
management of the businesses of those companies
by Ms Rich. The
appellant companies held certain investments with Discovery Life
Investments Services (Pty) Ltd ('Discovery Life’)
and Ms Rich,
so it was alleged by the Stephen Trust, sought to utilise the
proceeds of those investments for her benefit and that
of her
husband, Mr Rich. The dispute that served before Mr Justice Willis
was, essentially, an application by the appellants for
leave to
effectively ‘cash-in’ the Discovery Life investments.
This is the context in which Willis J, seeking to ensure
the
continued and efficient conduct of the business of the appellant
companies by the introduction of an independent director to
assist Ms
Rich in their management and administration and, primarily, to
determine what reasonable monthly sums would be withdrawn
from the
Discovery Life investments for the maintenance of Mr and Mrs Rich,
granted the order of 22 March 2012.
[10]
The purpose of Mr
Theunissen’s appointment as a co-director of the appellants was
to give effect to the provisions of the
said order. On 16 April 2012
Mr Theunissen accepted his appointment as a director of each of the
five appellants. He did so in
writing in a letter dated 17 April
2012, in which he also quoted his hourly rate ‘for services to
be rendered as a director’.
On 5 July 2015, as alluded to
above, Mr Theunissen was removed from his position as a director of
the five appellants by order
of this Court.
[11]
In his particulars of
claim, Mr Theunissen pleads that, over the period from 13 April 2012
to 5 July 2015, he performed his duties
as a director of each of the
five appellant companies as required by the order of Willis J.
Moreover, so it is pleaded by Mr Theunissen,
the services for which
he has claimed payment all took place in accordance with the said
court order. The special plea raised by
the appellants was
specifically directed against the Mr Theunissen’s claim for
director's remuneration pursuant to the Willis
J order, paragraph 5
of which reads as follows: -
‘
(5)
The new director will, following on his appointment, be remunerated
by the companies at a reasonable hourly
rate consistent with his
qualifications. To the extent required by
section 66(9)
of the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
the trustees of the Emzed Trust - Sharon and
the Emzed Trust – Stephen will, within ten days of having been
called upon to
do so by the new director, furnish approval by those
trusts of special resolutions, authorising the requisite
remuneration.’
[12]
The requirement for
the special resolution referred to in paragraph 5 of the Willis J
order arises from the provisions of
section 66(9)
of the
Companies
Act. That
sub-section precludes a director of a company from being
paid any remuneration unless that remuneration has been approved by a
special shareholders' resolution within the previous two years. It
may be apposite at this juncture to cite in full the provisions
of
s
66(8)
and (9) of the
Companies Act, Act
71 of 2008, which reads as
follows: -
‘
(8)
Except to the extent that the Memorandum of
Incorporation of a company provides otherwise, the company may pay
remuneration to its directors for their service as directors, subject
to subsection (9).
(9)
Remuneration contemplated in subsection (8) may be
paid only in accordance with a special resolution approved
by the
shareholders within the previous two years.’
[13]
If regard is had to
the evidence led during the hearing of the special plea before the
Regional Court, it has to be accepted as
common cause between the
parties that no special resolution as contemplated in
section 66(9)
of the
Companies Act was
ever passed by the Sharon Trust and the
Stephen Trust in their capacities as shareholders of the five
appellant companies. This
follows a concession made by Mr Theunissen
when he gave evidence in the court
a
quo
. In
that regard, the extract from the record of the proceedings in the
Regional Court reads as follows in the relevant parts: -
‘
Mr
Mundell: Sorry, it is bundle B, page 15. Will you agree with me,
reading through that document, Mr Theunissen, that there is
no
resolution by that trust or party of the special resolution
authorising any payment to be made to you?
Mr
Theunissen: I do agree with you.
Mr
Mundell: Let me ask perhaps a simpler question, Mr Theunissen. Did
you ever receive a response to your letter dated 25 September
which
appears at B26 from the trusts, authorising you to receive director’s
emoluments and at the particular rate?
Mr
Theunissen: No.’
[14]
It bears emphasising
that at no point was a special resolution passed by the shareholders
of the appellant companies, in terms of
which director’s fees
payable to Mr Theunissen were approved or the amount thereof
authorised. At first blush, therefore,
the provision of
s 66(9)
was
not complied with. This much was conceded by Mr Theunissen’s
Counsel, Mr Van Wyk, at the hearing in the Regional Court
as well as
during the hearing of the appeal before us.
[15]
In that regard, Mr
Van Wyk submitted in his written Heads of Argument that Mr Theunissen
does not rely on a special resolution approved
by the shareholders
for the approval of his remuneration. Also, so it is submitted, the
provisions of
section 66(9)
of the
Companies Act, 2008
, are not
relevant to the remuneration claimed by Mr Theunissen, as it is not
claimed as director's remuneration for services as
a director. His
claim, so the submission continues, is for services rendered to the
appellants, which they have failed to pay.
[16]
Therefore, the only
question remaining is, in my view, whether it makes any difference
that in terms of the Willis J order, Mr Theunissen
following on his
appointment, was to be ‘remunerated by the companies at a
reasonable hourly rate consistent with his qualifications’.
I
think not. On the contrary, this is precisely why the Willis J order
further directed the shareholders to pass a special resolution,
authorising the requisite remuneration.
[17]
Moreover, as
correctly submitted by Mr Mundell, a director
qua
director is not an employee of a company and is not entitled to the
standard rights flowing from an employment contract. It follows
that
a director is not entitled to be remunerated for his services as a
director simply because he holds that position. In the
event that a
director concludes an employment contract with a company he will be
entitled to the rights that flow from the employment
contract as he
would then stand in the position of both an employee and a director
in relation to the company. As a director, however,
he is not
automatically entitled to be remunerated for his services in that
capacity.
[18]
The point about
s
66(9)
is that, as a matter of policy, the decision of whether or not
a director is to be remunerated is placed exclusively in the hands
of
the shareholders of the appellant companies and not in the hands of
the board of directors or any other party. The rationale
for this
requirement is to encourage good corporate governance and to curtail
excessive remuneration of directors. This point remains
despite the
fact that Mr Theunissen’s appointment as a director of the
appellant companies was pursuant a court order.
[19]
What is more is that
Mr Theunissen was aware of and appreciated the requirement that, for
the purposes of him obtaining remuneration
as a director, the written
approval (in the form of a special resolution) of the shareholders of
the appellants was to be obtained.
This is evidenced by the fact that
on a number of occasions he himself requested such written approval,
which was not forthcoming.
So, for example, Mr Theunissen, on the day
following his acceptance of the appointment, in a letter dated 17
April 2012 in which
he confirmed his appointment as co-director of
the five appellant companies, set out his ‘hourly rate for
services to be
rendered
as
a director
’
(emphasis added). One day later, in a letter dated 18 April 2012 to
the legal representatives of the shareholders, he sought
confirmation
that the necessary shareholders' resolution would be passed
appointing him as a director of the five companies. Even
more telling
is a further letter dated 25 September 2013 addressed to the Sharon
Trust and the Stephen Trusts, in which he sought
written confirmation
from the trusts – as shareholders – of the hourly rate at
which he (the new director) would be
remunerated by the companies,
which request accorded with the request for a special resolution
referred to in the Willis J order.
[20]
In sum, I conclude
that there was merit in the second special plea raised by the
appellants to the effect that, in the absence of
a special resolution
by the Sharon Trust and the Stephen Trust, Mr Theunissen was not
entitled to be remunerated for the duties
he performed as a director
of the appellants. As rightly submitted by Mr Mundell, the proper
course to have been adopted by Mr Theunissen
should have been to
demand from the shareholders that they provide him with the necessary
shareholders’ resolutions appointing
him as a director and
approving his remuneration for the duties to be performed by him in
his capacity as a director of the said
companies. The recourse
available to him was to refuse to render any services as a director
of the five appellant companies until
the shareholders in those
companies had complied with the terms of the Willis J order –
and s 66(9) – and passed the
necessary special resolution.
[21]
All of the aforegoing
translate into not only the appellant’s special plea having to
be upheld, but also Mr Theunissen’s
claim for director’s
fees not succeeding. The special plea is well taken and the evidence
supports a conclusion that the
claim based on that cause of action
should be dismissed.
[22]
Where would that then
leave Mr Theunissen’s case? As already indicated, in his
particulars of claim, he pleads a cause of
action based on a separate
and an independent agreement concluded directly with the five
appellant companies in terms of which
he was to provide professional
services at an agreed hourly rate. That claim, in my view, is still
alive and remains unaffected
by the issue which the Regional Court
and this Appeal Court were required to consider in relation to the
second special plea.
[23]
In all of these
circumstances, I am of the view that the learned Magistrate should
have upheld the appellants' second special plea
and that Mr
Theunissen’s claim for director's remuneration should have been
dismissed with costs.
[24]
Finally, there are
two issues raised on behalf of Mr Theunissen, albeit rather belatedly
in ‘supplementary Heads of Argument’,
which were filed on
2 August 2022, that is after the date of the hearing of the appeal on
28 July 2022. I now turn my attention
to deal briefly with those
issues.
[25]
Firstly, Mr Van Wyk
submits in these supplementary Heads of Argument that the order
dismissing the second special plea is not appealable.
[26]
Secondly, it is
contended by Mr Van Wyk, on behalf of Mr Theunissen, that the order
proposed by the appellants in their written
Heads of Argument, to the
effect that, in addition to the special plea being upheld, the court
should also order a dismissal of
Mr Theunissen’s claim for
director’s fees, is incompetent because it is not the order
sought in the court
a
quo
, where
the appellants, in their special plea, asked also for a dismissal of
Mr Theunissen’s claim in its entirety. Additionally,
so it is
contended by Mr Van Wyk, the order sought in this appeal, which is a
declaratory order, which cannot competently be granted
by the
Regional Court, is rendered unnecessary by Mr Theunissen’s
allegation in his replication that the services rendered
by him to
the appellant companies were not subject to the provisions of
subsections 66(8) and 66(9) of the
Companies Act.
[27
]
There is no merit in
any of these submission. The proposed order, in terms of which Mr
Theunissen’s claim for remuneration
for duties performed by him
as a director of the appellants, would be dismissed, cannot possibly
be said to be a declaratory order.
It is an order dismissing a claim
by a plaintiff. It is also of no moment that the order sought in the
appeal is at variance with
the order sought in the special plea.
Importantly, the order sought on appeal is ‘less’ than
the order sought in the
special plea, which means that there cannot
be any possible prejudice to Mr Theunissen if such an order is
granted as against
the one prayed for in the special plea. As regards
the point that the order sought is rendered unnecessary by the case
pleaded
in the replication to the effect that s 66(8) and (9) does
not find application, this point is defeated by the allegation in the
particulars of claim that Mr Theunissen performed ‘his duties
as a director’, which means that the claim for director’s
fees, which, as indicated
supra
is bad in law, is still very much alive and should have been dealt
with by the Regional Court.
[28]
The second point is
therefore not sustainable and stands to be rejected.
[29]
As regards, the
appealability of the court
a
quo’s
order, it is submitted by Mr Van Wyk that the said order is not a
judgment or an order as contemplated in s 48 of the Magistrates
Court
Act, as it is not an order having final effect. There is no merit in
this submission. The order has the effect of finally
disposing of
that aspect of the case relating to the appellants’ liability
for Mr Theunissen’s charges for professional
fees rendered in
his capacity as a director. How then can it be suggested that that
order is not final in effect?
[30]
For all of these reasons, the appeal of the
appellants should succeed.
Costs
of Appeal
[31]
The
general rule in matters of costs is that the successful party should
be given his costs, and this rule should not be departed
from except
where there are good grounds for doing so. See
Myers
v Abramson
[3]
.
[32]
I can think of no reason to deviate from
the general rule. The respondent should therefore pay the appellants
costs of the appeal.
Order
[33]
In the result, the following order is made:
-
(1)
The first to fifth appellants’ appeal
against the order of the court
a quo
,
dismissing their second special plea, is upheld with costs.
(2)
The order of the court
a
quo
is set aside and in its place is
substituted the following: -
‘
(a)
The first to fifth defendants' first special plea is dismissed, with
costs.
(b)
The first to fifth defendants' second
special plea is upheld, with costs.
(c)
The plaintiff's claim for remuneration for
services rendered by him in his capacity as a director of the first
to fifth defendants,
as formulated in his particulars of claim, is
dismissed with costs.’
(3)
The respondent shall pay the first to fifth
appellants’ costs of the appeal, such costs to include the
costs consequent upon
the employment of Senior Counsel.
L R ADAMS
Judge of the High
Court
Gauteng
Local Division, Johannesburg
HEARD
ON:
28
th
July 2022 – in a ‘virtual
hearing’ during a
videoconference
on
Microsoft Teams
.
JUDGMENT
DATE:
15
th
November 2022 – judgment handed down
electronically
FOR THE FIRST TO
FIFTH APPELLANTS:
Advocate
A R G Mundell SC
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Marie-Lou Bester Incorporated,
Saxonwold, Johannesburg
FOR
THE RESPONDENT:
Adv A M Van Wyk
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Dreyer & Nieuwoudt Attorneys,
Linden Extension,
Randburg
[1]
The
plaintiff in the court
a
quo
;
[2]
The
first, second, third, fourth and fifth defendants in the court
a
quo
;
[3]
Myers
v Abramson
,1951(3)
SA 438 (C) at 455
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