Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 985South Africa
Industrial Development Corporation of South Africa LTD v Mahomed :In re: Industrial Development Corporation of Southern Africa LTD v Ledwaba and Others (18477/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 985 (9 December 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
9 December 2022
Headnotes
liable, qua practitioner, in cases other than those envisaged in section 140 (3) (c) (ii).
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Industrial Development Corporation of South Africa LTD v Mahomed :In re: Industrial Development Corporation of Southern Africa LTD v Ledwaba and Others (18477/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 985 (9 December 2022)
Industrial Development Corporation of South Africa LTD v Mahomed :In re: Industrial Development Corporation of Southern Africa LTD v Ledwaba and Others (18477/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 985 (9 December 2022)
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sino date 9 December 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
number: 18477/2020
Date
of hearing: 14 November 2022
Date
delivered: 9 December 2022
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHERS JUDGES: NO
REVISED
9/12/2022
In
the matter between:
MAHOMED
MAHIER TAYOB
Excipient/Third Defendant
and
INDUSTRIAL
DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION
OF
SOUTH AFRICA LTD
Respondent/Plaintiff
In
re:
INDUSTRIAL
DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION
OF
SOUTHERN AFRICA LTD
Plaintiff
and
RIA
IVY LEDWABA
First Defendant
DAN
ORBACH
Second Defendant
MAHOMED
MAHIER TAYOB
Third Defendant
MAHOMED
MAHIER TAYOB N.O.
Fourth Defendant
JUDGMENT
SWANEPOEL
J
:
[1]
Respondent has issued summons against the excipient (third
defendant), the erstwhile
business rescue practitioner of Ifihlile
Aircon Corporation (Pty) Ltd (“the company”), claiming
damages of R 50 135 120.22.
Respondent bases its claim on
the following allegations (I paraphrase):
[1.1] The company is
indebted to respondent in the sum of R 50 135 120.22, for
which sum respondent has obtained
a judgment under Gauteng High Court
Pretoria case number 62832/17;
[1.2] The company
was placed in voluntary business rescue on 12 November 2012 and third
defendant was appointed as business
rescue practitioner;
[1.3] Respondent
lodged a claim with the excipient, who recognized the claim and
included it in the business rescue plan, which
was approved by
affected persons on 17 April 2013;
[1.4] The excipient
had a statutory duty arising from section 140 (d) (ii) of the
Companies Act, 2008 (“the Act”)
to implement the plan and
to pay the debt owed to the respondent;
[1.5] The excipient
had the statutory duty to perform his functions as business rescue
practitioner in terms of sections 140
(3) (d) and 76 (3) (a) and (b)
of the Act in good faith, for a proper purpose and with the degree of
care and skill that may reasonably
be expected of a person carrying
out the functions of a business rescue practitioner with the general
skill, knowledge and experience
of the excipient;
[1.6] The excipient
wrongfully, negligently and in breach of his statutory duties failed
to make payment to the respondent, alternatively,
the excipient
intentionally contrived not to pay the plaintiff;
[1.7] The excipient
settled the claims of other creditors contrary to the approved
business rescue plan;
[1.8] As a result
respondent has suffered damages;
[1.9] By virtue of the
provisions of section 218 (2) of the Act, the excipient is personally
liable to respondent for the damages
suffered.
[2]
The excipient raises two exceptions against the particulars of claim:
[2.1] Firstly, that the
excipient’s statutory and fiduciary duties were solely owed to
the company, that the latter is a separate
entity from the directors
(and by extension the business rescue practitioner), and that as a
shareholder or a creditor would not
have a claim against a director,
similarly a creditor cannot have a claim against the business rescue
practitioner. The excipient
says that, consequently, the respondent
does not have
locus standi
against the excipient.
[2.2] Secondly, that the
excipient did not owe any legal duty towards the respondent, and that
its omission to pay respondent cannot,
therefore, found a claim in
delict. On that basis, the excipient says, there is no cause of
action.
[3]
Two issues have to be determined. The first is whether the excipient
had a statutory
duty towards the company creditors, such that if he
were to implement the business plan in a manner other than that
approved, he
would incur personal liability. The second is whether
the excipient had a legal duty towards creditors which would found a
claim
in delict; in other words, was the conduct attributed to the
excipient in breach of a legal duty to act, and thus wrongful.
[4]
The excipient raised an argument that it would be convenient to
dispose of at the
outset. The excipient argued that respondent does
not have
locus
standi
.
It is argued that the claim is a reflective claim which properly is
that of the company, and that the respondent as creditor may
not
bring the claim. A reflective claim is one where the company has a
cause of action against, for instance a director, for breach
of a
fiduciary duty, but the claim is brought, for example, by a
shareholder for the diminution in the value of his shares. The
authorities
[1]
are all to the
effect that such a claim is improper, and the so-called rule against
reflective claims is now part of South African
Law. In this case the
company has no claim against the practitioner, and the claim is not a
reflective one.
DID THE EXCIPIENT
OWE A STATUTORY DUTY TO THE RESPONDENT?
[5]
Section 140 (1) (a) and (d) read as follows:
“
140
General powers and duties of practitioners
(1)
During a company’s business rescue
proceedings, the practitioner, in addition to any other powers and
duties set out in this
Chapter-
(a)has
full management control of the company in substitution for its board
and pre-existing management;
(b)
…
.
(c)
…
.
(d)Is
responsible to-
(i)
develop a business rescue plan to be
considered by affected persons in accordance with Part D of this
Chapter; and
(ii)
implement any business rescue plan that has
been adopted in accordance with Part D of this Chapter.”
[6]
Section 140 (3) (b) provides that during business rescue proceedings
the practitioner
has the responsibilities, duties and liabilities of
a director of the company. He steps into the shoes of the board of
directors.
Section 140 (3) (c) (ii) creates liability for a
practitioner for any act or omission which arises from gross
negligence in the
performance of his duties. Section 140 does not
provide for a practitioner to be held liable,
qua
practitioner,
in cases other than those envisaged in section 140 (3) (c) (ii).
[7]
Respondent alleges that the above subsections should be read in
conjunction with subsections
76 (3) (a) and (c), which read:
“
(3)
Subject to subsections (4) and (5), a director of a
company, when acting in that capacity, must exercise the powers
and
perform the functions of director-
(a)in
good faith and for a proper purpose;
(b)in
the best interests of the company;
(c)
with the degree of care, skill and
diligence that may reasonably be expected of a person-
(i)
carrying out the same functions in relation
to the company as those carried out by that director; and
(ii) having the general
knowledge, skill and experience of that director.”
[8]
Section 76 sets the standards required of a director. It does not
create liability
where a director does not fulfil those obligations.
Section 77 provides for liability of a director in cases where there
is a breach
of a fiduciary duty, but only for loss or damage
sustained by the company. Section 77 does not create liability for a
director,
(and by extension to this case, for a practitioner),
towards third parties.
[9]
Respondent also relies on the provisions of section 218 (2) of the
Act which reads:
“
Any
person who contravenes any provision of this Act is liable to any
other person for any loss or damage suffered by that person
as a
result of that contravention.”
[10]
In
Hlumisa
(supra)
[2]
the Supreme Court of Appeal quoted a passage from the judgment of the
Court a quo with approval:
“
Section
218 (2) is worded widely in respect of individuals who fall within
its ambit; however, it is restricted in its application
and only
applies to ‘damage suffered by that person as a result of that
contravention’. This restriction requires a
particular person
to have suffered damage as a result of a particular contravention.
What this means is that the particular person
who has suffered damage
must be a person who is able to invoke a claim for damages as a
result of a particular contravention of
the
Companies Act.”
>
[11]
Section 218
(2) thus does not in itself create a further cause of
action. It is dependent on the existence of a contravention of one or
more
of the provisions of the Act. I have already found that the
alleged contraventions may be the basis of a claim against a director
for loss or damage to the company, but not to creditors.
DID THE EXCIPIENT
OWE A COMMON LAW DUTY TO THE RESPONDENT?
[12]
The respondent has also argued that it has a claim in delict against
the excipient, for pure
economic loss. The allegation is that the
excipient had a duty of care towards the respondent, which he
wrongfully and negligently
breached, causing the respondent to suffer
economic loss.
[13]
In
Carmichele
v The Minister of Safety and Security and Another
[3]
the Court quoted the Supreme Court of Appeal with approval where it
said:
“
The
appropriate test for determining the wrongfulness of omissions in
delictual actions for damages in our law has been settled
in a number
of decisions of the Court such as Minister van Polisie v Ewels
1975
(3) SA 590
(A) at 597 A – C; Minister of Law and Order v Kadir
[1994] ZASCA 138
;
1995 (1) SA 303
(A) at 317 C – 318 I; Knop v Johannesburg City
Council
1995 (2) SA 1
(A) at 276 G – I and Government of the
Republic of South Africa v Basdeo and Another
1996 (1) SA 355
(A) at
367 E – H. The existence of the legal duty to avoid or prevent
loss is a conclusion of law depending upon a consideration
of all the
circumstances of each particular case and on the interplay of many
factors which have to be considered, The issue, in
essence, is one of
reasonableness, determined with reference to the legal perceptions of
the community as assessed by the Court.”
[14]
In
Kadir
(supra)
the
Court said
[4]
that what must be
weighed is the interests of the parties, but also the conflicting
interests of the community, so that a balance
is struck in accordance
as to what the Court believes justice demands. The Court quoted a
lecture by MM Corbett where he said:
[5]
“
As
the judgments in the cases referred to earlier demonstrate,
conclusions as to the existence of a legal duty in cases for which
there is no precedent entail policy decisions and value judgments
which ’shape and, at times refashion the common law [and]
must
reflect the wishes, often unspoken, and the perceptions, often dimly
discerned, of the people.”
[15]
In
Country
Cloud Trading CC v MEC, Department of Infrastructure Development
[6]
the
Court explained:
“
Wrongfulness
is generally uncontentious in cases of positive conduct that harms
the person or property of another. However, in cases
of pure economic
loss – that is to say, where financial loss is sustained by a
plaintiff with no accompanying physical harm
to her person or
property – the criterion of wrongfulness assumes special
importance. In contrast to cases of physical harm,
conduct causing
pure economic loss is not prima facie wrongful. Our law of delict
protects rights and, in cases of non-physical
invasion, the
infringement of rights may not be as clearly apparent as in direct
physical infringement. There is no general right
not to be caused
pure economic loss.”
[16]
In
DE
Bruyn v Steinhoff International Holdings NV and Others
[7]
Unterhalter J wrote that the enquiry into wrongfulness in cases of
pure economic loss is “one of policy and the legal convictions
of the community”. The learned Judge explained that a director
(and by analogy in this case the practitioner) has a fiduciary
duty
to the company. He may also have a fiduciary duty to a shareholder,
but that would require a special factual relationship
between the
director and the shareholder.
[17]
In this case the only allegation upon which the respondent bases its
case, is the bald statement
that the excipient had a legal duty of
care to the respondent, simply by virtue of his appointment as
business rescue practitioner
and by virtue of the business rescue
plan having been approved. In my view, given the absence of any
special relationship between
the parties, the excipient is not liable
to the respondent for pure economic loss. I find no policy reason for
imposing such a
duty of care upon the excipient.
[18]
The principles to be applied on exception have been restated on
numerous occasions. The averments
made by the plaintiff must be taken
as correct.
[8]
I must be
convinced that on any reasonable interpretation of the pleadings no
cause of action is disclosed.
[9]
Only where the excipient makes out a clear and strong case should the
exception be upheld.
[10]
[19]
In my view the respondent has not disclosed a cause of action to hold
the excipient liable for
its loss. Consequently, the exception must
succeed.
[20]
I make the following order:
[20.1]
The second ground of exception is upheld;
[20.2]
Paragraphs 26 to 35 of the particulars of claim are struck
out;
[20.3]
Respondent may amend its particulars of claim within 20
(twenty) days
hereof.
[20.4]
Respondent shall pay the costs of the exception.
SWANEPOEL
J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION OF THE HIGH COURT, JOHANNESBURG
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 9 December 2022.
COUNSEL
FOR EXCIPIENT:
Adv. P.F. Louw SC
ATTORNEY
FOR EXCIPIENT:
A Mothilal Attorneys Inc.
COUNSEL
FOR RESPONDENT:
Adv. Y. Alli
ATTORNEYS
FOR RESPONDENT:
Shaheem
Samsodien Attorneys
DATE
HEARD:
14 November 2022
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
9 December 2022
[1]
Foss
v Harbottle(1843)
[1843] EngR 478
;
2 Hare 461
(67 ER 189)
; Prudential Assurance Ltd v
Newman Industries Ltd and Others (No 2)
[1982] 1 ALL ER 354
; Hlumisa
Investment Holdings RF and Another v Kirkinis and Others
2020 (5) SA
419
(SCA);Itzikowitz v ABSA Bank Ltd 2016 (4) SA 432 (SCA)
[2]
At
para 12
[3]
2001
ZACC 22 (CC); 2001 (4) SA 938 (CC)
[4]
At
318 E
[5]
Aspects
of the Role of Policy in the Evolution of the Common Law
(1987) SALJ
52
at 67
[6]
2015
(1) SA 1
(CC) at para 22
[7]
2022
(1) SA 442 (GJ)
[8]
Gallagher
Group Ltd and Another v IO Tech Manufacturing (Pty) Ltd
2014 (2) SA
157
at 161
[9]
Francis
v Sharp
2004 (3) SA 230
(C) at 237 D;
[10]
Colonial
Industries Ltd v Provincial Insurance Co Ltd
1920 CPD 627
at 630
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