Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 1043South Africa
Aqua Transport and Plant Hire (Pty) Ltd v TST Brokers (Pty) Ltd T/A Thamzin & Thamzin (21/12085) [2022] ZAGPJHC 1043 (21 November 2022)
Judgment
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## Aqua Transport and Plant Hire (Pty) Ltd v TST Brokers (Pty) Ltd T/A Thamzin & Thamzin (21/12085) [2022] ZAGPJHC 1043 (21 November 2022)
Aqua Transport and Plant Hire (Pty) Ltd v TST Brokers (Pty) Ltd T/A Thamzin & Thamzin (21/12085) [2022] ZAGPJHC 1043 (21 November 2022)
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sino date 21 November 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 21/12085
REPORTABLE:
YES
REVISED:NO
DATE:21
NOVEMBER 2022
In
the matter between:
AQUA
TRANSPORT AND PLANT HIRE (PTY) LTD
Applicant
And
TST
BROKERS (PTY) LTD T/A THAMZIN & THAMZIN
Respondent
JUDGMENT
VILJOEN AJ
[1]
This is an application for the winding-up
of the respondent on the basis that it is unable to pay its debts as
described in s 345
of the
Companies Act
,
1973.
# The facts
The facts
[2]
During the period April 2020 to August
2020, the respondent rented 20 refuse compactor trucks from the
applicant on a rate per hour
per truck basis subject to an agreed
minimum. Payment of the rental would be made no later than 30
days from invoice.
The terms of the rental agreement are not in
dispute.
[3]
The applicant rendered monthly invoices.
The respondent paid the invoices in respect of April and May 2020 in
full.
It paid all but one of the invoices in respect of June
2020, invoice ATP198927 in the amount of R430,672.12. Of the
invoices
in respect of July and August 2020, the respondent paid
nothing. The respondent’s payments are not in dispute.
[4]
On 2 December 2020, the applicant served a
notice in terms of s 345(1)(a) of the
Companies
Act
, 1973, demanding payment of the
aforesaid outstanding invoices within 3 weeks. The demand was
left at the registered office
of the respondent. The respondent
does not dispute the notice or its effectiveness.
[5]
The respondent did not pay the amount
demanded or secured or compounded for it. The respondent
responded to the demand on
22 January 2021. It denied any
liability to the applicant but did not motivate the denial.
[6]
The present application followed in March
2021.
[7]
In its answering affidavit, the respondent
admits to not paying invoice ATP198927 referred to above and those
that followed.
It denies liability for payment of the
outstanding invoices on the basis that:
“
[It]
has no knowledge of the existence of invoices bringing about the
alleged indebtedness.”
and
“
[It]
has no knowledge of any service having been rendered by the Applicant
for the period under review. It therefore follows
that the
Respondent [sic] no knowledge of the alleged indebtedness to the
Applicant.”
[8]
It transpires that the shares in the
respondent were the subject of a sale of shares agreement concluded
between the respondent’s
deponent and an entity by the name of
Camel Logs Trading and Projects (Pty) Ltd. It is alleged that
Camel Logs Trading and
Projects took over the management of the
respondent on 26 June 2020. The significance of this fact is not
disclosed in the answering
papers. The respondent, however,
attempts the amplification of these facts in its heads of argument,
as I shall point out.
# The respondent’s
opposition
The respondent’s
opposition
[9]
The respondent in opposing its winding-up
contends as follows:
9.1.
the applicant lacks
locus
standi
;
9.2.
the founding affidavit is irregular in that
the Commissioner of Oaths did not indicate whether the deponent
thereto is male or female;
9.3.
the applicant did not comply with the
service requirements of the application for winding-up; and
9.4.
the
debt upon which the applicant relies is disputed on
bona
fide
and
reasonable grounds, thus precluding an order winding the respondent
up.
[1]
# Locus standi
Locus standi
[10]
The respondent raises a preliminary in its
answering affidavit under the heading “
Point
in Limine 1 – Locus Standi
”.
The heading is perhaps somewhat deceptive. The respondent contends
that “
the Applicant lacks
authority to institute these proceedings against the Respondent
.”
In its heads of argument, the respondent refines its point
in
limine
to a challenge to the authority
of the applicant’s attorneys. The point thus does not
relate to the applicant’s
locus
standi
.
[11]
Be that as it may, the respondent’s
preliminary point is premised on the fact that the applicant is not
represented herein
by the same attorneys who are authorised in a
resolution attached to the founding affidavit
inter
alia
to launch and pursue this
application.
[12]
It
is well established that challenges to the authority of attorneys to
institute and prosecute proceedings on behalf of a client
ought to be
made in terms of the provisions of Rule 7.
[2]
This the respondent has not done.
[13]
Further, the replying affidavit is
accompanied by a resolution of the applicant confirming the authority
of its attorneys.
The second resolution, in my view, puts an
end to the enquiry. I am satisfied that the applicant’s
attorneys are authorised
to act on its behalf.
[14]
The first point
in
limine
is dismissed.
# Administration of the
oath
Administration of the
oath
[15]
The
respondent points out that the commissioner of oaths attesting to the
founding affidavit did not indicate in his certificate
whether the
applicant’s deponent is, in the words of the respondent’s
heads of argument “
a
he or she
”.
With reference to the judgment in
Absa
Bank Ltd v Botha NO and others,
[3]
the
respondent contends that this omission by the commissioner of oaths
renders the affidavit invalid.
[16]
There
is a significant body of evidence indicating that regulations
governing the attestation of affidavits
[4]
are directory and not peremptory.
[5]
Non-compliance with the regulation, therefore, is not
per
se
destructive
of the affidavit.
[6]
The
court has the discretion to refuse to accept an affidavit that is
attested not in accordance with the regulations, the
determining
factor being whether substantial compliance with the regulations has
been established.
[7]
[17]
The, with respect, quite formalistic
approach adopted in
Absa Bank
appears
to me somewhat at odds with the bulk of authorities on the directory
nature of the regulations and the court’s discretion.
The
judgment is the subject of some criticism.
[18]
In
Malan
v Minister of South African Police Services NO and others
,
[8]
the court remarked:
“
I
have some doubts about the correctness of the approach which was
adopted by the court in ABSA Bank matter because the approach
adopted
therein seems, with due respect, highly technical and based on
elevating form over substance.”
[19]
In
Goncalves
and another v Franchising to Africa (Pty) Ltd
,
[9]
the court found:
“
I
respectfully disagree with the judgment in Absa Bank Ltd v Botha NO &
Others
2013 (5} SA 563
(GNP). In practice, the "he/she"
reference in the oath section of affidavits is a frequent occurrence,
as is an incorrect
reference to gender. These are innocuous and
inadvertent errors in the main. I am of the respectful view that
judicial notice may
be taken of this established fact, and that one
should subordinate form to substance. It is plain from the body of
Evy's affidavit
that she is female and from the body of Pedro's
affidavit that he is male. The affidavits in casu substantially
complied with the
formalities prescribed by the Justice of the Peace
and Commissioner of Oaths Act 16 of 1963.”
[20]
The
judgment in
Christodoulos
v Jacobs
[10]
declines to enter the debate whether
Absa
Bank
was correctly decided. It distinguishes
Absa
Bank
on
the facts. In
Absa
Bank,
the
commissioner of oaths indicated the incorrect gender of the
deponent. In
Christodoulos,
the
commissioner of oaths failed to delete one or the other of the
pronouns “he/she”. The court found there to
have
been substantial compliance with the regulations.
[21]
I respectfully adopt the reasoning and
conclusion in
Christodoulos
.
Consequently, I dismiss the second point
in
limine
.
# Service of the
application
Service of the
application
[22]
In a supplementary practice note, the
respondent raised a third point
in
limine
. It contended that the
applicant had failed to comply with section 346(4A) of the
Companies
Act
, 1973.
[23]
Section 346(4A)(a) reads:
“
(a)
When an application is presented to the court in terms of this
section, the Applicant must furnish
a copy of the application-
(i)
to every registered trade union that, as
far as the applicant can reasonably ascertain, represents any of the
employees of the company;
and
(ii)
to the employees themselves-
(aa)
by affixing a copy of the application to any notice board to which
the applicant and the employees
have access inside the premises of
the company; or
(bb)
if there is no access to the premises by the applicant and the
employees, by affixing a copy
of the application to the front gate of
the premises, where applicable, failing which to the front door of
the premises from which
the company conducted any business at the
time of the application;
(iii)
to the South African Revenue Service; and
(iv)
to the company, unless the application is
made by the company, or the court, at its discretion, dispenses with
the furnishing of
a copy where the court is satisfied that it would
be in the interests of the company or of the creditors to dispense
with it.
[24]
S 346(4A)(b) requires that proof that the
application was furnished to the persons and entities mentioned in
subsection (a) be presented
by way of “
an
affidavit by the person who furnished a copy of the application which
sets out the manner in which paragraph (a) was complied
with
”.
[25]
When the matter was first called on 13
October 2022, the applicant had not uploaded a service affidavit.
Given that s 346(4A)(b)
provides for the filing of such a
service affidavit “
before or
during
” the hearing, I stood the
hearing down for the applicant to file an affidavit of service.
[26]
The applicant uploaded a service affidavit
by one Ben Cronjé on the afternoon of 13 October 2022. I
invited the parties
to address me on the admission of the service
affidavit and its content on 14 October 2022.
[27]
Mr Zwane, the respondent’s attorney
who argued the matter on 14 October 2022, submitted that the service
affidavit should
not be allowed. He submitted that if a service
affidavit is not handed up at the commencement of the hearing, there
should
be no further opportunity to present a service affidavit later
during the hearing.
[28]
Nothing in the text of s 346(4A)(b)
supports the respondent’s submission, however. A court is
empowered to accept further
papers at any time during a hearing,
subject obviously to any prejudice that the other party may suffer.
Mr Zwane fairly
conceded that the belated service affidavit
occasioned his client no prejudice. There is thus no reason to
disregard Cronjé’s
service affidavit or the content
thereof.
[29]
Cronjé’s service affidavit
confirms delivery of the application to the South African Revenue
Service, but it says nothing
of the application being furnished to
the respondent’s employees or their trade union.
[30]
The
respondent’s counsel submitted that in the absence of a service
affidavit addressing service on all the persons and entities
listed
in s 346(4A)(a) the application fell to be dismissed. He
referred me to the unreported judgment in
Bees
Winkel
(Pty)
Ltd v Mkhulu Tshukudu Holdings (Pty) Ltd.
[11]
This judgment, it was submitted, is authority for the proposition
that the requirement that an affidavit of service be filed
in terms
of s 346(4A)(b) before any order may be granted is absolute, and
that an affidavit is required even in the event
of the sheriff
purporting to furnish a copy of the application papers.
[31]
The
judgment in the
Bees
Winkel
matter
relies on two other judgments,
Pilot
Freight (Pty) Ltd v Von Landsberg Trading (Pty) Ltd
[12]
and
Cassim
NO v Ramagale Holdings (Pty) Ltd and others
.
[13]
Both these matters, in turn referred
inter
alia
to the judgment of the Supreme Court of Appeal in
E
B Steam Co (Pty) Ltd v Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd.
[14]
[32]
A
brief discussion of the judgment in
E
B Steam
is necessary. In that matter, the court
a
quo
granted
final orders of liquidation of E B Steam and 19 other companies.
E B Steam and the other companies appealed the order.
The
appellant companies’ sole defence to the winding-up
applications was that their employees had not been furnished with
the
applications as required by s 346(4A)(a).
[15]
From the judgment, it appears that the sheriff purported to serve the
applications on the appellants’ employees by
affixing a copy of
the application to the front door of the respondents’
registered offices all situated at the same address.
[16]
[33]
The
court found that compliance with s 346(4A) was peremptory before a
final
order
of liquidation could be granted.
[17]
However, the court found that a
provisional
winding-up order was possible even in the event of non-compliance
with s 346(4A);
[18]
that
provision “
is
not directed at providing a technical defence
”
to a respondent company.
[19]
The court did not spell out the circumstances in which a provisional
order might be granted in the event of noncompliance
with s 346(4A).
[34]
With
reference to service on the employees as required by s 346(4A)(a),
the court found that an applicant needs to no more than
make the
application available to employees in a manner that is reasonably
likely to bring it to their attention.
[20]
The method of service needed to effective;
[21]
the provisions of s 346(4A)(a)(ii)(aa) and (bb) are directory only.
[35]
The Supreme Court of Appeal found that the
court
a quo
ought
not to have been satisfied that there had been compliance with s
346(4A). Consequently, it upheld the appeal and replaced
the
final orders of liquidation granted by the court
a
quo
with provisional orders. The
court further, premised on the provisions of s 197B of the
Labour
Relations Act
, 1995, issued directions
to the appellants
inter alia
to
furnish their employees with copies of the applications.
[36]
In the
Pilot
Freight
judgment, the court, after
considering the conclusion in the
E B
Steam
judgment as to the purpose of
service on employees, found:
“
[31]
The requirement that the application for liquidation be furnished to
the employees is therefore to
enable the employees to protect their
interests and the provisions of s 346(4A) should therefore be
construed taking into account
this purpose.
[32]
Interpreting s 346(4A)(b) with this purpose in mind and bearing in
mind that a court may give
directions if it is not satisfied with
service on the employees, the court would require something more
detailed than the usual
cryptic return of service from a sheriff.
An affidavit in compliance with s 346(4A)(b) would have to set out
precisely what
the person who furnished the affidavit did when he
came to the place of employment of the employees, what circumstances
that person
found there, what steps were taken to bring the
application to the notice of the employees (if any) and what steps
were taken to
ascertain whether the employees belonged to any trade
union. The only person who would have personal knowledge of these
facts would
be the person who physically attended upon the premises.
The applicant and/or the attorney of record would not necessarily
have
personal knowledge, unless they were the person who physically
attended upon the premises and furnished the application to the
relevant parties as required by s 346(4A)”
[37]
In the
Cassim
matter, the court, also with reference
to the
E B Steam
judgment
found:
[15]
At first sight it seems as though the Supreme Court of Appeal gave
its blessing to the granting
of a provisional order under
circumstances where the application was not served in terms of
section 346(4A). In the context however
the judgment does not say
that noncompliance with section 346(4A)(b) may be condoned under
appropriate circumstances (such as extreme
urgency which is not the
case in the present matter) but only that it might appear from the
affidavit, for instance, that employees
could not have been furnished
with the application papers because even though it was affixed to the
main gate because all the employees
had left the premises. The
judgment says nothing about not requiring the affidavit.
…
[17]
The SCA judgment is authority for the
proposition that in urgent matters the court may consider the
affidavit by the person who furnished the application who did not
affix a copy of the application at the premises but who used
some
other, perhaps more efficient, means under the circumstances. In
cases of extreme urgency it may even be that a court could
condone
the failure to strictly comply with section 346(4A) but accept
substantial compliance when presented with a service affidavit
setting out the reasons for the failure to strictly comply. That is
not the case in the present matter the application is urgent
but more
than two weeks have elapsed since the application was initiated and
there was sufficient time to comply with section 346(4A)(b).
[38]
I find myself in respectful disagreement
with the conclusions in the judgments of
Pilot
Freight, Cassim
and
Bees
Winkel
insofar as those judgments
elevate a service affidavit to an indispensable requirement for the
granting of a provisional order.
I say this for four reasons:
38.1.
Firstly, in the
E
B Steam
matter, the Supreme Court of
Appeal considered whether a final order of liquidation had been
granted correctly. The court
considered the need for and the
required content of a service affidavit in the context of a final
order.
38.2.
Secondly, according to the exposition of
the facts found in the
E B Steam
judgment, the application papers
contained no information against which the efficacy of the service on
the employees could be judged
but for the sheriff’s return.
There is no mention of a service affidavit. Despite the
apparent absence of a service
affidavit, the court considered the
content of the return of service and found it insufficient to prove
that the application had
been furnished to employees. Although
there was no service affidavit and no compliance with s 346(4A)(a)(i)
and (ii),
the court granted a provisional order of winding up.
If this judgment is interpreted to require a service affidavit, and a
comprehensive one at that, as a prerequisite for a provisional order,
a disconnect between the court’s findings and the eventual
order follows. In my view, a judgment must be interpreted in
such a way as to preserve the integrity thereof.
38.3.
Thirdly,
the
E
B Steam
matter
distinguishes between “
service
”
in terms of the rules of court and the “
furnishing
”
of a copy of the application to employees. The court found the
methods of “
furnishing
”
set out in that section not to be peremptory. I do not read the
judgment as suggesting that “
service
”,
an endeavour aimed at achieving certainty of receipt beyond that
required by s 346(4A)(a), is unacceptable as means of
complying with
that section. “
Service
”
is proven by a sheriff's return.
[22]
Thus, the court was quite prepared, as I mentioned above, to
determine the matter of the furnishing of copies to employees
on the
evidence provided by the sheriff’s return in the absence of a
service affidavit by the sheriff or anybody else.
It stands to
reason that if the sheriff’s return is accepted as
prima
facie
evidence
of service for purposes of the institution of proceedings, a return
of service should in principle be acceptable proof
of service on
interested parties.
38.4.
Fourthly, an overly strict approach to
proof of service of the application on employees undermines the
caution expressed in the
E B Steam
judgment that s 346(4A) is not intended
to provide a respondent with technical defences. Its intention
is to provide employees
and their representatives adequate
opportunity to protect their interests in the event of the insolvency
of their employer.
This aim is effectively achieved by an order
in the terms of that granted by the Supreme Court of Appeal.
[39]
I thus conclude that the filing of a
service affidavit is not an absolute
sine
qua non
for a provisional order of
liquidation.
[40]
As I stated above, the applicant’s
service affidavit did not address service on the respondent’s
employees. Evidence
of such service was provided by a return of
service of the sheriff. The sheriff attempted service on the
employees at the
respondent’s registered office. He was,
according to his return of non-service, informed that the respondent
is unknown
at that address. It follows that the application for
the winding up of the respondent was neither made available to its
employees
nor came to their knowledge.
[41]
Mr Wannenburg, for the applicant, conceded
that the unsuccessful service on the employees of the respondent
precluded a final order
of liquidation. He submitted, however,
with reference to the
E B Steam
judgment
that an order placing the respondent in provisional liquidation
should be granted.
[42]
The papers reveal very little about the
respondent; it is not known where its places of business are, whether
it has any employee,
and, if so, how many employees there are.
I am, however, persuaded by the absence of any
prima
facie
defence to the applicant’s
claim that an order is warranted in the circumstances.
# Bona fide and reasonable
dispute
Bona fide and reasonable
dispute
[43]
I have set out the facts as they appear
from the papers above.
[44]
In his heads of argument, the respondent’s
counsel sought to introduce evidence of alleged malfeasance by and
collusion between
the applicant and Camel Logs Trading and Projects.
It need not be stated that this is not a proper way to introduce
evidence.
[45]
If
the “evidence” contained in the respondent’s heads
of argument is left out of the equation, the totality of
the
respondent’s case is a bare denial of liability premised upon a
lack of knowledge. A bare denial, in my view, does
not
establish on a balance of probability that the debt is disputed
bona
fide
and
on reasonable grounds.
[23]
[46]
My
discretion to refuse the winding-up order is limited in the
circumstances of the respondent’s inability to pay a debt that
is not disputed on
bona
fide
and
reasonable grounds.
[24]
# Conclusion
Conclusion
[47]
Given the complete lack of any cognisable
defence to the applicant’s claim, there is an overwhelming case
made for the winding-up
of the respondent. Refusing an order of
provisional winding-up in the circumstances will most likely only
delay the inevitable
to the potential detriment of the very persons
whose interests are at issue.
[48]
In the above premises, I make the following
order:
1.
The respondent, TST Brokers (Pty) Ltd, with
registration number: 2020/459476/07, is placed under provisional
liquidation;
2.
All persons who have a legitimate interest
are called upon to put forward their reasons why this court should
not order the final
winding up of the respondent on 16 January 2023
at 10:00 or so soon thereafter as the matter may be heard;
3.
A copy of this order must be served on the
respondent at its registered office;
4.
A copy of this order shall be published
forthwith once in the Government Gazette and a national newspaper;
5.
A copy of this order shall be forwarded to
each known creditor by prepaid post or by electronic mail;
6.
A copy of the order shall be served on the
South African Revenue Service;
7.
The respondent is directed by no later than
15 December 2022 to furnish to the employees of the company a copy of
the application
papers in that application and within one week
thereafter to deliver an affidavit setting out details of its
employees, and when
and in what manner it has complied with this
order;
8.
The costs of this application shall be
costs in the liquidation.
H M VILJOEN
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION OF THE HIGH COURT, JOHANNESBURG
Delivered:
This judgement was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected and is handed down electronically
by circulation to the
Parties/their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on
CaseLines. The date for
hand-down is deemed to be 21 November 2022.
Date of hearing: 12 and
14 October 2022
Date
of judgment: 21 November 2022
Appearances:
Attorneys for the
applicant: FOURIE VAN PLETZEN INC
Counsel
for the applicant: ADV W F WANNENBURG
Attorneys for the
respondent: PETER ZWANE ATTORNEYS
Counsel
for the respondent: ADV W B NDLOVU (ON 12 OCTOBER 2022);
ATTORNEY P ZWANE (ON 14 OCTOBER 2022)
[1]
Badenhorst
v Northern Construction Enterprises Ltd
1956 (2) SA 346
(T) at 348B
[2]
Unlawful
Occupiers, School Site v City of Johannesburg
2005
(4) SA 199
(SCA) at [14]
[3]
2013
(5) SA 563 (GNP)
[4]
Issued
in terms of the
Justices
of the Peace and Commissioners of Oaths Act,
1963
[5]
See
e.g.
S
v Munn
1973
(3) SA 734
(NC) at 737E
[6]
Cape
Sheet Metal Works (Pty) Ltd v JJ Calitz Builder
1981
(1) SA 697
(O) at 699B
[7]
S
v Munn
at
738B
[8]
2019
(2) SACR 469
(GJ) at [42]
[9]
[2016]
ZAGPPHC 960 (2 November 2016) at [28]
[10]
[2019]
ZAGPJHC 178 (11 March 2019)
[11]
[2021]
ZANWHC 13
(4 March 2021)
[12]
2015
(2) SA 550
(GJ) at [32]
[13]
[2020]
JOL 47600 (GJ)
[14]
2015
(2) SA 526 (SCA)
[15]
At
[2]
[16]
At
[3]
[17]
At
[12]
[18]
At
[12] and [25]
[19]
At
[8]
[20]
At
[14]
[21]
At
[17]
[22]
S
43(1)
of the
Superior
Courts Act,
2013
[23]
See
Badenhorst,
loc cit
[24]
Absa
Bank Ltd v Rhebokskloof (Pty) Ltd and others
1993
(4) SA 436
(C) at 440I to 441A
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