Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 115South Africa
Topfix (Pty) Ltd v Go Business (Pty) Ltd and Another (020590/2024) [2025] ZAGPPHC 115 (30 January 2025)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Topfix (Pty) Ltd v Go Business (Pty) Ltd and Another (020590/2024) [2025] ZAGPPHC 115 (30 January 2025)
Topfix (Pty) Ltd v Go Business (Pty) Ltd and Another (020590/2024) [2025] ZAGPPHC 115 (30 January 2025)
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sino date 30 January 2025
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SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA)
Case
No: 020590/2024
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES/
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/
NO
(3)
REVISED. YES
DATE: 30/01/2025
SIGNATURE
In the matter between:
TOPFIX
(PTY) LTD
Applicant
(Registration Number:
2001/016597/07)
and
GO BUSINESS (PTY) LTD
(Registration
Number: 2018/257899/07)
Respondent
JODY
GABRIELSEN
Intervening Party
(For
the provisional winding-up of the Respondent)
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down electronically by
circulation to the parties’ representatives by email. The
date for the
handing down of the judgment shall be deemed to be 30
January 2025.
JUDGMENT
LG
KILMARTIN, AJ:
A.
INTRODUCTION
:
[1]
This is an application brought by Topfix
(Pty) Ltd (“the Applicant”) for the provisional
winding-up of Go Business (Pty)
Ltd (“the Respondent”).
[2]
The Applicant seeks the winding-up of the
Respondent on the basis that the Respondent is unable to pay its
debts as and when they
become due and payable, as envisaged in
section 344(f), read with section 345(1)(a) of the Companies Act, 61
of 1973 (“the
Act”), as well as on the basis that it
would be just and equitable for the Respondent to be wound up in
terms of section
344(h) of the Act.
[3]
The matter was heard in the opposed motion
Court on 26 November 2024.
[4]
On 25 November 2024, a day before the
hearing, Jody Gabrielsen (referred to below as “Mr Gabrielsen”
or “the
Intervening Party”), applied for leave to
intervene in these proceedings and also sought a postponement of the
winding-up
application, pending the adjudication of a business rescue
application to be instituted within 30 days of the date of the order,
failing which, the main application could be set down for hearing.
The Intervening Party was represented by Mr Vorster.
[5]
Mr Gabrielsen’s application was dealt
with at the commencement of the hearing and an
ex
tempore
judgment was delivered in
respect thereof. Orders were also made on 26 November 2025: (i)
dismissing the postponement application;
and (ii) granting Mr
Gabrielsen leave to intervene. No order as to costs was made in
the postponement application for reasons
explained in the
ex
tempore
judgment.
[6]
After Mr Gabrielsen’s application was
dealt with, argument was presented on behalf of the Applicant
(represented by Mr de
Leeuw), and the Respondent (represented by Mr
Scheepers), regarding the merits of the main application.
[7]
As
we are dealing with an application for a provisional winding-up
order, it is only necessary for the Applicant to make out a
prima
facie
case for such an order.
[1]
[8]
Before canvassing the arguments raised by
the Applicant and the Respondent and explaining the Court’s
reasons for the orders
made below, it is necessary to deal with the
relevant background facts (most of which are common cause or cannot
genuinely be disputed
by the Respondent) and the relevant provisions
and authorities pertaining to applications of this nature.
B.
RELEVANT BACKGROUND FACTS
:
[9]
The
Respondent is a company which forms part of the XBS Group of
Companies (“the XBS Group”).
[10]
On 12 May 2023, the XBS Group, represented
by Arnold Steynberg (“Mr Steynberg”), concluded a written
loan agreement
with the Applicant (“the agreement”).
[11]
The relevant portions of the agreement read
as follows:
“
LOAN
AGREEMENT
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT OF
DEBT
Entered between:
Top Fix (Pty) Ltd Reg
Nr: 2001/016597/07
(“the Lender”)
And Arnold Steynberg
ID: 6[...] REPRESENTING THE FOLLOWING ENTITIES (“XPS GROUP
COMPANIES”):
CRW TRADING
(PROPRIETARY) LIMITED
(Registration Number
2013/188471/07) (the “Borrower”)
BORDER BULK SERVICES
(PROPRIETARY) LIMITED
(Registration Number
2017/199732/07) (the “Borrower”)
ECO-ENVIROLITE
CONCRETE (PROPRIETARY) LIMITED
(Registration Number
2017/031712/07) (the “Borrower”)
GO BUSINESS
(PROPRIETARY) LIMITED
(Registration Number
2018/257899/07) (the “Borrower”)
TALA LIGHT WEIGHT
CONSTRUCTION (PROPRIETARY) LIMITED
(Registration Number
2016/472029/07) (the “Borrower”)
XBS ADMINISTRATION
(PROPRIETARY) LIMITED
(Registration Number
2013/041309/07) (the “Borrower”)
XBS GROUP
(PROPRIETARY) LIMITED
(Registration Number
2012/089305/07) (the “Borrower”)
SAHARA FREIGHT SOUTH
(PROPRIETARY) LIMITED
(Registration Number
2014/277473/07) (the “Borrower”)
LOUBSER BULK SERVICES
(PROPRIETARY) LIMITED
(Registration Number
2007/005283/07) (the “Borrower”)
1
Amount of loan
The Lender hereby
agrees to lend the sum of R4,500,000 to the Borrower on the terms set
out here in under.
2
Payment of loan to Borrower
It is agreed that the
purpose of the loan is to settle an outstanding account which the XBS
group company has with Thusanyo Investments
(Pty) Ltd. The
lender agrees that the loan will be paid out directly to Thusanyo
Investments (Pty) Ltd in settlement of the
account of the XBS Group
companies.
The borrower further
agrees and gives instructions to Thusanyo Investments (Pty) Ltd to
remit payment of any amount directly to
Top Fix (Pty) Ltd as
repayment of the loan, on any and all payments made on behalf of XBS
Group (Pty) Ltd.
3
Period of loan
This loan shall endure
from 12 May 2023 to 16 May 2023. It is further agreed that the
loan does not fall within the limitation
of the National Credit Act
and the national credit act will not be applicable to this
agreement.
4
Interest
It is agreed that the
loan is interest free.
5
Place and time of repayment
Repayment will be made
by EFT into the elected bank account of the lender. XBS Group
of companies agrees that Top Fix (Pty)
Ltd should pay Thusanyo
Investments on behalf of XBS Group of companies.
7
Acceleration clause
If the Borrower fails
to pay any instalment on due date the Lender shall be entitled but
not obliged to claim the full balance of
the loan together with the
interest up to the date of payment.
…
10
Breach of terms
If
the Borrower fails to make payment of any instalment or payment on
the due date and the Lender decides to enforce the acceleration
clause, he shall give written notice to the Borrower calling upon him
or her to make payment within 24 hours, failing which the
Lender
shall be entitled to claim payment of whatever is due in terms of
this agreement.
…
12
The whole contract
The
parties confirm that this contract contains the full terms of their
agreement and that no addition to or variation of the contract
shall
be of any force unless done in writing and signed by both parties.
”
(sic).
[12]
It is
inter
alia
clear from the express terms of
the agreement that: (i) the Applicant agreed to loan an amount of R4,
500, 000.00 to the XBS Group
(which includes the Respondent); (ii)
the purpose of the loan was to enable the XBS Group to extinguish its
indebtedness to Thusanyo
Investments (Pty) Ltd (“Thusanyo”);
(iii)
the loan would “
endure
from 12 May 2023 to 16 May 2023
”;
and (iv) that the provisions of the
National Credit Act, 35 of 2005
would not apply to the agreement.
[13]
In the founding affidavit deposed to by the
Managing Director of the Applicant, Micheal Stopforth (“Mr
Stopforth”),
he confirmed that the R4, 500, 000.00 had
been duly advanced as provided for in the agreement (i.e. to
Thusanyo). The
Respondent criticised the Applicant for failing
to attach proof of payment of the loan amount to the founding
affidavit.
However, Mr Stopworth did confirm under oath that,
as Managing Director of the Applicant, he did have control over the
books and
records relating to the matter which would have shown
payment of the money. In any event, as part of the replying
papers,
the Applicant provided proof of two payments made by it to
Thusanyo, namely: (i) R3, 377, 097.56 on 12 May 2023; and (i)
R2, 248, 489.79
on 15 May 2023. Both payments were
made during the loan period and, although much was made of the fact
that the total of
the two payments exceeded the loan amount, in my
view, nothing turns on this as it is clear that more than the loan
amount was
advanced by the Applicant to Thusanyo during the loan
period. Hence, I am satisfied that the Applicant complied with
its
obligation to make payment of the loan amount in accordance with
the agreement.
[14]
According
to the Respondent, “
the
loan agreement did not include any repayment terms or the date upon
which the loan was due and payable, save for payments made
by the XBS
Group (Pty) Ltd to Thusanyo….”
.
The Respondent even went as far as to argue that no there was no
evidence that the “
elected
bank account of the lender
”
into which payments would be made were provided. The Applicant,
in turn, argued that t
he
only reasonable interpretation of the agreement would be that the
entire loan amount would have become due and payable after
the
duration period expired, i.e. after 16 May 2023. I agree with
the Applicant as the Respondent’s suggestion that
it was open
to it to repay the loan at its own leisure and as and when it pleases
does not sit cheek by jowl with the express wording
of the agreement
and, in particular, the fact that it was expressly stated that it
would only be in place until 16 May 2023.
I also agree with the
Applicant that the Respondent’s interpretation of the
agreement, as far as repayment terms is concerned,
is insensible and
unbusinesslike.
[2]
The Court is of the view that the remaining balance of the loan
amount (which for reasons explained below was less than the
total
amount) became due and payable after the agreement terminated on 16
May 2023.
[15]
As
the XBS Group (including the Respondent) failed to repay the loan
amount by 16 May 2023, the Applicant’s attorneys sent
a notice
to the XBS Group in terms of section 345(1)(a) of the Act (“the
section 345 demand”) via email to Mr Steynberg’s
email
address,
a[...]
on 11
September 2023 at 09h35, demanding payment of R4,500,000.00, within
three weeks of the date of service of the notice and
it was expressly
stated that:
“
For
purposes of the above payment we confirm that our trust banking
details are as follows:
HN ATTORNEYS
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
ACC NO: 6[...]
Branch Code: 2[...]
REFERENCE
NUMBER: TF56 XBS GROUP
”
.
[16]
There could accordingly have been no doubt
after the section 345 demand was sent, which bank account the
outstanding balance of
the loan should be paid into.
[17]
It appears that the section 345 demand was
also served at the registered address of the Respondent.
[18]
Significantly, at 11h25 on 11 September
2023, less than two hours after the section 345 demand was emailed to
Mr Steynberg, he responded
to the Applicant’s attorney via
email (with an email signature describing him as the Managing
Director of XBSGLOBAL), stating
the following:
“
SUBJECT:
RE: TF56 LETTER OF DEMAND – TOP FIX (PTY) LTD // XBS GROUP
Good morning Kim,
We
are willing to pay R500 000.00 per month from 30 September 2023 until
this debt is redeemed
.
Kindly revert back,
Regards,
Arrie
”
[19]
The above email unequivocally demonstrates
that Mr Steynberg and the Respondent were well aware that the loan
amount was due and
payable and Mr Steynberg’s proposal flies in
the face of the arguments which were advanced on the Respondent’s
behalf
in this regard in the answering affidavit and at the hearing
and demonstrates that they are contrived.
[20]
The repayment proposal in Mr Steynberg’s
email was accepted by the Applicant and, on 13 September 2023, the
Applicant’s
attorneys sent a draft acknowledgement of debt
(“AOD”) to Mr Steynberg. Clause 4.1 of the AOD
refers to payment
of monthly instalments of no less than R500,000.00
per month commencing on or before 30 September 2023.
[21]
In the answering affidavit, the Respondent
pointed out that the amount of indebtedness in the AOD was recorded
as R1,636,644.25
(“the remaining balance”). It was
accepted by the Applicant in the replying affidavit that the
reference in the
founding papers to the total loan amount of R4, 500,
00.00 being outstanding was a
bona fide
an error and that the remaining balance referred to in the AOD was
correct.
[22]
Mr Steynberg failed to respond to the email
attaching the draft AOD or to sign the AOD on behalf of the XBS Group
(including the
Respondent).
[23]
On 27 September 2023 the Applicant’s
attorneys sent an email requesting an urgent response and reminding
Mr Steynberg that
the first instalment was due and payable on 30
September 2023.
[24]
As no response or payment was received by
30 September 2023, on 3 October 2023, the Applicant’s attorneys
sent a further letter
requesting that the signed AOD together with
proof of payment of the first instalment be sent by close of business
that day.
[25]
Mr Steynberg also confirmed in the
answering affidavit that he obtained a copy of the AOD from James
Hills (“Mr Hills”),
the Head of Finance & Business
Development at Thusanyo, via email, on 11 October 2023, and was
requested to sign it. A copy
of the email correspondence between Mr
Hills and Mr Steynberg (which was attached to the answering affidavit
deposed to by Mr Steynberg)
confirms that Mr Steynberg actually
requested the assistance of Mr Hills to structure the payments to be
made to the Applicant.
[26]
No response was ever forthcoming to the
demands and no instalments were received despite Mr Steynberg’s
written proposal to
pay off the debt. It accordingly became
clear to the Applicant that the Respondent was unable to honour its
obligations and
unable to pay its debts. This led to this
application being brought.
C.
RELEVANT LEGAL PROVISIONS AND
AUTHORITIES
:
[27]
Sections 344(f) and 344(h) of the Act
provide that:
“
A
company may be wound up by the Court if-
…
(f)
the company is unable to pay its debts as described in section 345
…
…
(h)
it appears to the Court that it is just and equitable that the
company should be wound up.
”
[28]
Section 345 of the Act provides as follows:
“
345
When company deemed unable to pay its debts
(1)
A company or body corporate shall be deemed to be unable to pay its
debts if-
(a)
a creditor, by cession or otherwise, to whom the company is indebted
in a sum not less than one hundred rand
then due-
(i)
has served on the company, by leaving the same at its registered
office, a demand requiring the company
to pay the sum so due; or
(ii)
in the case of any body corporate not incorporated under this Act,
has served such demand by leaving it at
its main office or delivering
it to the secretary or some director, manager or principal officer of
such body corporate or in such
other manner as the Court may direct,
and the company or body corporate has for
three weeks thereafter neglected to pay the sum, or to secure or
compound for it to the
reasonable satisfaction of the creditor; or
(b)
any process issued on a judgment, decree or order of any court in
favour of a creditor of the company is returned
by the sheriff or the
messenger with an endorsement that he has not found sufficient
disposable property to satisfy the judgment,
decree or order or that
any disposable property found did not upon sale satisfy such process;
or
(c)
it is proved to the satisfaction of the Court that the company is
unable to pay its debts.
(2)
In determining for the purpose of subsection (1) whether
a company is unable to pay its debts, the Court shall
also take into
account the contingent and prospective liabilities of the company.
”
[29]
In
Absa
Bank Limited v Rhebokskloof (Pty) Limited & Others,
[3]
the following was stated:
“
Turning to the
merits of the matter, Mr Gauntlett contended that ABSA was
entitled to a final winding-up order on the
basis that
Rhebokskloof was 'commercially insolvent'.
The
concept of commercial insolvency as a ground for winding up a company
is eminently practical and commercially sensible. The
primary
question which a Court is called upon to answer in deciding whether
or not a company carrying on business should be wound
up as
commercially insolvent is whether or not it has liquid assets or
readily realisable assets available to meet its liabilities
as they
fall due to be met in the ordinary course of business and
thereafter to be in a position to carry on normal
trading - in other
words, can the company meet current demands on it and remain buoyant?
It matters not that the company's assets,
fairly valued, far exceed
its liabilities: once the Court finds that it cannot do this, it
follows that it is entitled to, and
should, hold that the company is
unable to pay its debts within the meaning of s 345(1)(c) as
read with s 344(f) of the
Companies Act 61 of 1973 and is
accordingly liable to be wound up
.
As Caney J said in Rosenbach & Co (Pty) Ltd v Singh's Bazaar
(Pty) Ltd
1962
(4) SA 593
(D)
at
597E-F:
'If the company is in
fact solvent, in the sense of its assets exceeding its liabilities,
this may or may not, depending upon the
circumstances, lead
to a refusal of a winding-up order; the circumstances particularly to
be taken into consideration
against the making of an order are such
as show that there are liquid assets or readily realisable assets
available out of which,
or the proceeds of which, the company is in
fact able to pay its debts.'
Notwithstanding
this the Court has a discretion to refuse a winding-up order in these
circumstances but it is one which is limited
where a creditor
has a debt which the company cannot pay; in such a case the creditor
is entitled, ex debito justitiae,
to a winding-up order
(see Henochsberg
on the Companies Act 4th ed vol 2 at 586; Sammel and Others
v President Brand Gold Mining Co Ltd
1969
(3) SA 629 (A)
at 662F).”
(Emphasis added).
[30]
In
Murray
and Others NNO v African Global Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others
[4]
the Supreme Court of Appeal dealt with the test for commercial
insolvency and stated
inter
alia
the
following:
“
The
argument about timing misconceived the nature of commercial
insolvency. It is not something to be measured at a single point
in
time by asking whether all debts that are due up to that day have
been or are going to be paid. The test is whether the company
“is
able to meet its current liabilities, including contingent and
prospective liabilities as they come due”…
Determining
commercial insolvency requires an examination of the financial
position of the company at present and in the immediate
future to
determine whether it will be able in the ordinary course to pay its
debts, existing as well as contingent and prospective,
and continue
trading.
[31]
It is clear from the provisions of the Act
that for a creditor to have
locus
standi
, it must have a liquid claim of
at least R100.00 that is due and payable to it by the Respondent it
wishes to have wound up.
[32]
Where
an Applicant has established
prima
facie
that it has a claim against the Respondent of at least R100.00, which
is due and owing, the onus shifts to the Respondent to show
that its
indebtedness to the Applicant is
bona
fide
disputed
on reasonable grounds.
[5]
[33]
The
principle that a Respondent is required to dispute the entire debt
bona
fide
and upon reasonable grounds has become known as the “
Badenhorst
rule”
(being a reference to the case from which it emanates, namely
Badenhorst
v Northern Construction Enterprises (Pty) Ltd
[6]
)
The Badenhorst rule was also recognised by the Appellate Division (as
it was then known) in
Kalil
v Decotex (Pty) Ltd & Another.
[7]
[34]
In
Wightman
t/a JW Construction v Headfour
[8]
the following was stated about real,
bona
fide
and genuine disputes of fact:
“
A
real, genuine and
bona
fide
dispute of fact can exist
only where the
court is
satisfied that the party who purports to raise the dispute has in his
affidavit seriously and unambiguously addressed the
facts said to be
disputed
. There will of course
be instances where a bare denial meets the requirement because there
is no other way open to the disputing
party and nothing more can
therefore be expected of him.
But
even that may not be sufficient if the fact averred lies purely
within the knowledge of the averring party and no basis is laid
for
disputing the veracity or accuracy of the averment. When the facts
averred are such that the disputing party must necessarily
possess
knowledge of them and be able to provide an answer (or countervailing
evidence) if they be not true or accurate but, instead
of doing so,
rests his case on a bare or ambiguous denial the court will generally
have difficulty in finding that the test is
satisfied
.
I say 'generally' because factual averments seldom stand apart from a
broader matrix of circumstances all of which needs to be
borne in
mind when arriving at a decision.
A
litigant may not necessarily recognise or understand the nuances of a
bare or general denial as against a real attempt to grapple
with all
relevant factual allegations made by the other party. But when he
signs the answering affidavit, he commits himself to
its contents,
inadequate as they may be, and will only in exceptional circumstances
be permitted to disallow them. There is thus
a serious duty imposed
upon a legal adviser who settles an answering affidavit to ascertain
and engage with facts which his client
disputes and to reflect such
disputes fully and accurately in the answering affidavit. If that
does not happen it should come as
no surprise that the court takes a
robust view of the matter
.”
(Emphasis added).
D.
DISCUSSION OF THE MERITS
(a)
Locus standi
and liquidated debt
[35]
In my view, the
Applicant has illustrated
prima
facie
that
it has a liquidated claim of at least R100.00 against the Respondent,
and that the remaining balance was due and payable after
the loan
term expired and, despite demand, payment has to date not been made.
The Applicant therefore has
locus
standi
to
bring this application.
[36]
As far as the onus
then shifts to the Respondent to demonstrate that the entire debt is
disputed on
bona
fide
and
reasonable grounds, it has failed to seriously and unambiguously
address the facts and has not made any real attempt to grapple
with
the relevant factual allegations. In fact, the Respondent’s
responses are mostly evasive and constitute bare denials.
[37]
In
order to successfully oppose a winding-up, the Respondent must
dispute the existence of the debt.
[9]
[38]
In this regard: (i)
there is no dispute that the agreement was concluded and that the
Respondent was a party to it; (ii) there is
evidence that more than
R4, 500 000.00 was advanced by the Applicant to Thusanyo; (iii)
Mr Steynberg’s proposal to repay
the outstanding amount in
instalments of R500, 000.00 from the end of September 2023 in
response to the section 345 demand constitutes
a clear concession
that a debt of at least R100.00 was due and payable to the XBS Group
(which includes the Respondent); and (iv)
Mr Steynberg asked Mr Hills
on 12 September 2023 to assist in structuring the payments to the
Applicant.
[39]
The version in the
answering affidavit is: (i) completely at odds with Mr Steynberg’s
proposal on 11 September 2023 and request
for Mr Hills’
assistance with structuring payments; and is (ii) highly improbable.
[40]
In the answering
affidavit, without disputing its indebtedness in any meaningful
sense, the Respondent makes the bald assertion
that the Respondent
disputes the amount claimed as the amount in the AOD is less than
what is referred to in the section 345 demand.
[41]
However, the
Respondent fails to take the Court into its confidence to show what
portion of the remaining balance is disputed; what
amount it avers is
outstanding; and instead seeks to hide behind bare and
unsubstantiated denials and technical arguments
based on an
interpretation of the agreement which cannot pass muster,
particularly in light of the common cause facts and conduct
of Mr
Steynberg.
[42]
It is also significant that, up until the
receipt of the answering affidavit, the Respondent never averred that
the debt was not
due and payable, and instead (correctly) accepted
that it is indebted to the Applicant. Why else would one offer
to pay the
debt off in instalments and seek to “
structure
”
the repayments? The sudden
volte
face
in the answering papers in this
regard demonstrates that the Respondent is not
bona
fide
in disputing the indebtedness to
the Applicant on reasonable grounds.
(b)
Commercial insolvency
[43]
As far as commercial insolvency is
concerned:
[43.1]
the section 345 demand was served by the
Sheriff on the Respondent’s registered address on 13 September
2023 and was sent
by email to Mr Steynberg on 11 September 2023;
[43.2]
the section 345 demand came to
Respondent’s knowledge as Mr Steynberg responded to the demand
the same day he received it
and made a proposal to repay the debt in
instalments of R500 000.00 per month from the end of September 2023;
[43.3]
notwithstanding the express proposal to
pay the debt off in instalments of R500 000.00 from 30 September
2023, the Respondent has
failed to make any payment to date;
[43.4]
despite the lapse of 21 days from the
date of sending the section 345 notice, the Respondent neglected and
/ or failed to pay, secure
or compound the indebted amount.
[44]
In
Body
Corporate of Fish Eagle v Group Twelve Investments
[10]
the following was stated regarding the deeming provision of section
345(1)(a) of the Act:
“
The
deeming provision of s 345(1)(a) of the Companies Act creates a
rebuttable presumption to the effect that the Respondent is
unable to
pay its debts (Ter Beek's case supra at 331F).
”
[45]
In the light of the
above, the Respondent had an evidentiary burden to satisfy the Court
that it is able to pay its debts and is
not commercially insolvent.
[46]
In its attempt to
discharge the evidentiary burden on it, the Respondent
provided its audited
financial statements for the period ending February 2023. On the
basis of these statements, the Respondent
argued that, as its assets
by far exceed its liabilities, the Court should find it to be
commercially solvent, particularly as
it claims to have had a profit
in excess of R2, 000, 000.00 for the financial year of 2023.
[47]
A thorough analysis
of the financial statements demonstrates that they are not only
unreliable but that the Respondent does not
have cash at hand to pay
the Applicant. In this regard, it was pointed out by the Applicant’s
counsel that:
[47.1]
the financial
statements were reviewed by the auditors based on information
provided by the directors of the Respondent;
[47.2]
the auditors who
reviewed the financial statements did not prepare them;
[47.3]
the review was not
done with full disclosure of all books; and
[47.4]
the financial
statements show that the actual cash at hand is a total amount of
R201, 014.00, which is substantially less than the
amount due to the
Applicant and is even less than the monthly payment proposed by the
Respondent.
[48]
The Court also notes
that in the Report of the Independent Reviewer it is
inter
alia
stated that:
“
The
procedures performed in a review are substantially less than those
performed in an audit conducted in accordance with International
Standards on Auditing. Accordingly, we do not express an audit
opinion on these financial statements.”
[49]
As
far as the Respondent attempted to argue that it is factually solvent
since its assets exceed its liabilities, the Applicant
contended that
this was also incorrect. The mere fact that the value of a company's
assets may exceed the amount of its liabilities
does not preclude a
finding that the company is unable to pay its debts.
[11]
[50]
Put
differently, the fact that a company is factually insolvent (in the
sense that the value of its assets is exceeded by its liabilities)
is
not
per
se
a ground upon which it can be wound up.
[12]
[51]
In
Boschpoort
Ondernemings (Pty) Ltd v Absa Bank Limited
[13]
the
Supreme Court of Appeal (“the SCA”) stated the following
in this regard:
“
For
decades our law has recognised two forms of insolvency: factual
insolvency (where a company’s liabilities exceed its assets)
and commercial insolvency (a position in which a company is in such a
state of illiquidity that it is unable to pay its debts,
even though
its assets may exceed its liabilities). See, for example, Johnson v
Hirotec (Pty) Ltd;[4] Ex parte De Villiers &
another NNO: In re
Carbon Developments (Pty) Ltd (in Liquidation);[5] Rosenbach & Co
(Pty) Ltd v Singh’s Bazaars (Pty)
Ltd.
That
a company’s commercial insolvency is a ground that will justify
an order for its liquidation has been a reality of law
which has
served us well through the passage of time. The reasons are not hard
to find: the valuation of assets, other than cash,
is a notoriously
elastic and often highly subjective one; the liquidity of assets is
often more viscous than recalcitrant debtors
would have a court
believe; more often than not, creditors do not have knowledge of the
assets of a company that owes them money
- and cannot be expected to
have; and courts are more comfortable with readily determinable and
objective tests such as whether
a company is able to meet its current
liabilities than with abstruse economic exercises as to the valuation
of a company’s
assets. Were the test for solvency in
liquidation proceedings to be whether assets exceed liabilities, this
would undermine there
being a predictable and therefore effective
legal environment for the adjudication of the liquidation of
companies: one of the
purposes of the new Act, set out in s 7(1)
thereof.
”
[52]
It was also pointed out by the Applicant’s
counsel that, if the Respondent is in such a strong financial
position as it claims
to be, this does not explain why the Respondent
was unable to pay its debts towards Thusanyo, which it previously
relied on a loan
from the Applicant to satisfy, and which
necessitated it to conclude an AOD in terms of which it acknowledges
indebtedness to Thusanyo
in an amount of R3, 518, 547.87. The
Respondent also reneged on that acknowledgment of debt and it was
confirmed in the replying
affidavit that Thusanyo is instituting
legal action for the recovery of this debt.
[53]
Having considered all of the evidence, I am
of the view that it appears that the Respondent is commercially
insolvent and cannot
pay its debts as and when they become due and
payable.
(c)
Just and
equitable ground and discretion
[54]
In addition to the
above, the Applicant contends that the Respondent should be wound-up
on the basis that it is just and equitable
to do so as envisaged in
section 344(h) of the Companies Act.
[55]
Section
344(h) “
postulates
not facts but only a broad conclusion of law, justice and equity, as
a ground for winding-up
.”
It confers upon the Court a wide discretionary power which must, of
course, be exercised judicially, taking into account
all relevant
circumstances. The justice and equity are those between the competing
interests of all concerned.
[14]
[56]
In
Afgri
Operations Limited v Hamba Fleet (Pty) Limited
[15]
the following was stated about the ambit of the Court’s
discretion in matters of this nature where unpaid creditors are
concerned:
“
Notwithstanding
its awareness of the fact that its discretion must be exercised
judicially, the court a quo did not keep in view
the specific
principle that, generally speaking, an unpaid creditor has a right,
ex debito justitiae, to a winding-up order against
the Respondent
company that has not discharged that debt.
[57]
In light of the above, this Court’s
discretion is limited as we are dealing with an unpaid creditor.
[58]
On a conspectus of all the evidence, I am
of the view that the Applicant has succeeded in demonstrating a
prima
facie
case that the Respondent should
be provisionally wound up on the grounds relied upon.
[59]
As far as costs are concerned, the matter
is of importance to the parties concerned and is somewhat complex,
hence, costs are awarded
on scale B.
E.
ORDER
[60]
I accordingly grant
the following order (which includes the orders granted pursuant to
the
ex
tempore
judgment handed down on 26 November 2024):
1.
Jody Gabrielsen (“the Intervening Party) was granted leave to
intervene in the
winding-up proceedings instituted by Topfix (Pty)
Ltd, the creditor, against Go Business (Pty) Ltd, the debtor, in the
above Honourable
Court under case number 2024-020590 on 26 November
2024;
2.
The application for postponement by the Intervening Party was refused
on 26 November
2024;
3.
No order as to costs was made in relation to the application for
postponement;
4.
The Respondent is hereby placed under provisional winding-up;
5.
The Respondent, the Intervening Party and any other party with a
legitimate interest
is called upon to show cause why this Court
should not order the final winding-up of the Respondent on the return
day of 5 May
2025 at 10h00 or so soon thereafter as the matter may be
heard;
6.
A copy of this order shall be forthwith served on the Respondent at
its
registered address and upon the employees and their registered
trade unions, if any, by service at the registered address and on
the
attorneys representing the Respondent and the Intervening Party;
7.
A copy of this order shall be published in the Government Gazette and
in a local
circulating Newspaper;
8.
A copy of this order shall be served on the South African Revenue
Services and
the Master of the High Court;
9.
Costs of this application are costs in the winding-up of the
Respondent, including
the costs of counsel on scale B.
LG KILMARTIN
ACTING
Judge of the High Court
Pretoria
Dates
of hearing:
26
November 2024
Date
of judgment:
30
January 2025
For
the Applicant:
Adv
R de Leeuw
Instructed
by:
Hattingh
& Ndzabandzaba Attorneys
For
the Respondent:
Adv
JJ Scheepers
Instructed
by:
Bennecke
Thom Incorporated
For
the Intervening Party:
Adv
A Vorster
Instructed
by:
Herman
Esterhuizen Smalman Attorneys
[1]
Kalil
v Decotex (Pty) Ltd and Another
1988(1) SA 943 (A) at 945 B-C and 978 D–E.
[2]
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
2012
(4) SA 593
(SCA), para [18].
[3]
1993
(4) SA 436
(C) at 440 E/F - 441 A.
[4]
2020
(2) SA 93
(SCA), para [31].
[5]
Kalil
v Decotex (Pty) Ltd
1988
(1) SA (T) at 980 B – D.
[6]
1956
(2) SA 346
(2) at 347 H – 348 B.
[7]
1988
(1) SA 943
(AD) at 980C – G.
[8]
[2008] ZASCA 6
;
2008
(3) SA 371
(SCA), para [13] at 375 F/G – 376 C.
[9]
[9]
Imobrite
(Pty) Ltd v DTL Boerdery CC
[2002]
ZASCA 67
(13 May 2022), para [14].
[10]
2003
(5) SA 414
(W) at 423 B-C.
[11]
ABSA
Bank Ltd v Rhebokskloof (Pty) Ltd and Others
1993 (4) SA 436
(C) at 440 A-441A.
[12]
Sunny
South Canners (Pty) Ltd v Mbangxa
[2001] 1 All SA 474
(SCA) at 481.
[13]
2014 (2) SA 518
(SCA), paras [16] and
[17].
[14]
Moosa
NO v Mavjee Bhawan (Pty) Ltd
1967
(3) SA 131
(T) at 136 G/H.
[15]
2022 (1) SA 91
(SCA) at para [12].
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