begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
>>
2025
>>
[2025] ZAGPPHC 154
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Wessels N.O and Others v Janse Van Rensburg N.O and Others (48555/2011)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 154 (13 February 2025)
Wessels N.O and Others v Janse Van Rensburg N.O and Others (48555/2011)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 154 (13 February 2025)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPPHC/Data/2025_154.html
sino date 13 February 2025
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
CASE
NO: 48555/2011
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO.
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
13 FEBRUARY 2025
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
JOHANNES
STEPHANUS WESSELS N.O.
First
Applicant
VERA
MARIA WESSELS N.O.
Second Applicant
JOHANNES
STEPHANUS WESSELS
Third Applicant
JOHANNES
STEPHANUS WESSELS N.O.
Fourth
Applicant
SEBASTIAAN
JACOBUS WESSELS N.O.
Fifth Applicant
JOSANDRA
PAUW N.O.
Sixth Applicant
CHANE
WESSELS N.O.
Seventh Applicant
BAREND
JACOBUS DU TOIT N.O.
Eighth Applicant
and
ESTATE
LATE ESIAS JOHANNES JANSE VAN
RENSBURG
N.O.
First
Respondent
FAROUK
SHARIEF N.O.
Second
respondent
THE
MASTER OF THE HIGH COURT, PRETORIA
Third
Respondent
ABSA
BANK LTD
Fourth
Respondent
RAND
MERCHANT BANK
Fifth
Respondent
MANDLA
PROFESSOR MADLALA N.O.
Sixth
Respondent
THE
COMPANIES AND INTELLECTUAL
PROPERTY
COMMISSION
Seventh
Respondent
MABALINGWE
SHAREBLOCK
Eighth
Respondent
Summary:
The principal applicants are the trustees of trusts who are
shareholders of a company in liquidation – they sought
relief
aimed at setting aside the final winding-up of the company –
the applicants alleged that all proven creditors have been paid
and
that a settlement had been reached with the only remaining creditor,
ABSA – however, there remained three principal aspects
relating
to the winding up still outstanding and in dispute – these were
whether the fees of the erstwhile liquidators had
been forfeited,
what the extent of the current liquidator’s fees were and
whether another creditor’s claim for levy
payments due to it,
constituted post-winding up expenses or not – Found: not
appropriate that these winding-up related issues
have to be litigated
upon after the termination of a winding-up process sought in terms of
section 354 of the Companies Act 61
of 1973, which remained operative
by virtue of Item 9 of Schedule 5 of the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
–
Application dismissed with an appropriate order for costs.
ORDER
The
application is dismissed with costs, such costs to include the
employment of senior counsel.
JUDGMENT
The
matter was heard in open court and the judgment was prepared and
authored by the judge whose name is reflected herein and is
handed
down electronically by circulation to the parties’ 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 13 February 2025
.
DAVIS,
J
Introduction
[1]
Boschpoort
Ondernemings (Pty) Ltd (in liquidation) (Boschpoort) has three
shareholders: the Hannes Wessels Family Trust, the Mabalingwe
Trust
and the Willem Wessels Trust. The principal applicants are the
trustees of these trusts. Johannes Stephanus Wessels
(Mr
Wessels) is an applicant in his personal capacity as well.
Relying on a settlement agreement reached with ABSA Bank Ltd
(ABSA),
which the applicants allege is the only remaining unpaid creditor,
they sought to have the winding-up proceedings set aside.
The
application was launched in terms of
section 354
of the
Companies
Act
[1
]. The alternative
relief for the placement of Boschpoort in business rescue, had been
jetissoned.
The
law relating to
section 354
[2]
Section 354(1)
provides that a court may, at any time after the commencement of a
winding-up, “…
on
proof to the satisfaction of the court that all proceedings in
relation to the winding-up ought to be … set aside …
”,
make an order staying or setting aside “the proceedings”.
[3]
A
court may act as aforesaid on an application by a member of the
company in liquidation and may have regard to the wishes of creditors
“…
as
proved to it by any sufficient evidence
”
[2]
.
[4]
What
are the factors that a court must consider when granting or refusing
an application for rescission of a winding-up process
in terms of
section 354?
The answer has been given by this court as follows
in
Klass
v Contract Interiors CC
(
in
liquidation
)
and others (
Klass
)
[3]
:
“
[65.2]
The court should ordinarily not set aside a winding-up where
creditors
or the liquidators remain unpaid or inadequate provision
has been made for the payment of their claims.
[65.3]
Where the claims of the liquidator and all creditors have
been
satisfied, the court should have regard to the wishes of the members,
unless those members have bound themselves not to object
to the
setting-aside order, or the member concerned will receive no less as
a result of the order sought than would be the case
if the company
remained in liquidation.
[65.4]
In
deciding whether or not to grant a setting-aside order, the
court
should, where appropriate, have regard to issues of ‘commercial
morality’, ‘the public interest’
and whether the
continuation of the winding-up proceedings would be a ‘contrivance’
or render the winding-up ‘the
instrument of injustice’.
”
[5]
Insofar
as Leenberg AJ in
Klass
had found that a court’s discretion “…
is
practically unlimited”,
the
Supreme Court of Appeal has held that the test for setting aside a
winding-up order on the basis of subsequent events, is “
whether
the applicant has proved facts that show that it is unnecessary or
undesirable for the winding-up to continue. This
does not
involve a choice between permissible alternatives [such as where a
true discretion is involved]. The test is either
satisfied or
it is not
”
[4]
.
[6]
In
Ex
parte Strip Mining (Pty) Ltd
:
In
re
Natal
Coal Exploration Company Ltd (In liquidation) (Kanga Group (Pty) Ltd
intervening)
[5]
,
the same court has held that the expression “
proof
to the satisfaction of the court”
refers
to “
the
normal standard of proof of the facts which are to lead the court to
hold that the winding-up ought to be set aside
”.
[7]
In
determining whether the requisite standard of proof has been attained
in motion proceedings where final relief is sought, which
is the case
here, the Plascon-Evans-principle
[6]
finds application where there are disputes of fact.
The
applicants’ case
[8]
For
present purposes it is not necessary to deal with issues of
locus
standi
and joinder, which have featured in previous skirmishes between the
parties
[7]
and it will suffice
to proceed on the basis that the principal applicants, representing
various trusts which are all shareholders
and therefore the “members”
of Boschpoort, have been entitled to launch the present application.
[9]
The applicants
alleged that all the creditors of Boschpoort at the time of
liquidation have either been paid or would be paid and
there is no
need for Boschpoort to be further wound up.
[10]
The applicants
alleged that, when the winding-up order had been granted, Boschpoort
only had two creditors, Rand Merchant Bank (or
a related entity in
the First Rand Group), in the amount of some R10 million and ABSA in
the amount of some 34 million. Up
to that time Boschpoort had
conducted the business of running lodges and nature reserves at
Mabalingwe, Bela Bela, Aldam and Hoedspruit.
[11]
The applicants
alleged that, during the course of their tenure, the respective
co-liquidators from time to time, have liquidated
some R54 million of
assets, which was more than enough to cover all Boschpoort’s
debts. On this proposition, all the
creditors could have been
paid.
[12]
The accounting
appeared to have not turned out as simple as this. Rand
Merchant Bank (also referred to by the applicants as
First Rand Bank)
only received with a dividend of R2 173 505, 94. It
is alleged that it has contented itself with
this rather paltry
repayment and did not oppose the current application, despite having
been cited as the fifth respondent.
[13]
In respect of
ABSA (being the liquidating creditor) who had been cited as the
fourth respondent, the applicants relied on a purported
settlement
agreement. The proposed settlement agreement, was intended to
be reached between the current remaining liquidator,
Mr Madlala, Mr
Wessels in his capacity as director of Boschpoort, the trustees of
the Hannes Wessels Family Trust, Absa and First
Bank Rand Ltd t/a FNB
(supposedly also being Rand Merchant Bank). The signed copy
annexed to the applicants’ founding
affidavit, however appears
to have only been signed on behalf of ABSA and by Mr Wessels, both in
his personal capacity and in his
capacity as trustee of his family
trust, together with Mrs Vera Maria Wessels. Neither the
remaining liquidator nor First
Rand Bank (or the fifth respondent)
has signed the agreement.
[14]
The settlement
agreement itself is an intricate affair. It recorded that ABSA
had proven 5 claims in the winding-up process,
totaling R36 765 987,
80 and that First Rand Bank (also trading as FNB) had proven two
claims, totaling R10 819 263,
21.
[15]
It lists as
“remaining claims”, those claims or costs “
to
be charged against the Company, and which to be best of the knowledge
of the parties are the only remaining claims against the
Company
”.
This appears to be quite a list. It reads as follows:
“
2.6.16.1
ABSA: A claim of R4 000 000.00 being a remaining secured
claim after having
received advance dividends of R33 436 245.05
on 5 proven secured claims i.o.r respectively:
2.6.16.1.1
an overdraft facility under account number 1[...];
2.6.16.1.2
a residential development loan under account umber 7[...] (paid in
full);
2.6.16.1.3
mortgage loan agreement under account number 8[...] (paid in full);
2.6.16.1.4
mortgage loan agreement under account number 8[...] (paid in full);
and
2.6.16.1.5
mortgage loan agreement under account number 8[...];
2.6.16.2
Mabalingwe: A claim of R3 278 222 for levies being a post
liquidation
administration cost;
2.6.16.3
Mabalingwe: A claim of R3 039 896 49.00 for levies being a
concurrent
claim;
2.6.16.4
Erstwhile Liquidators: A claim of R12 597 553.00 for
liquidator’s
fees being a post liquidation administration costs
in respect of:
2.6.16.4.1
Encumbered Asset Account number 1: R3 167 586.48;
2.6.16.4.2
Encumbered Asset Account number 2: R1 217 331.82;
2.6.16.4.3
Encumbered Asset Account number 3: R84 714.27;
2.6.16.4.4
Encumbered Asset Account
number 4: R474 553.74;
2.6.16.4.5
Encumbered Asset Account number 5: R1 661 111.41;
2.6.16.4.6
Encumbered Asset Account number 6: R1 565 161.10;
2.6.16.4.7
Encumbered Asset
Account number 7: R2 299 023.07;
2.6.16.4.8
Free Residue Account R2 128 067.11
”
.
The
claims listed in paras 2.6.16.2 and 2.6.16.3 were labelled “the
Mabalingwe claims”.
[16]
As “remaining
assets” in Boschpoort, only two items are listed, namely “Cash
Funds” meaning funds held by
the liquidators in the estate
account, estimated at R14,2 million and a costs order obtained
against Mr Wessels. There is
also a reference to a costs order
obtained by Mr Wessels against Boschpoort. Neither of these two
costs orders have been
quantified.
[17]
As a recordal,
the settlement agreement stated that the Master has disallowed fees
of the erstwhile liquidators in the amount of
R1 710 000,00
on 11 September 2017 and R12 597 533.00 on 11 April 2019.
In respect hereof, the agreement
states that the time periods for
review of these decisions had already lapsed.
[18]
The agreement
was made subject to the setting aside of the winding-up proceedings,
for which purpose the liquidator would supply
a supporting
affidavit. None has been supplied.
[19]
The settlement
mechanism envisaged in the agreement was formulated as follows:
“
5.1.1
Absa’s advanced dividends R33 436 246.05 is hereby
made final;
5.1.2
FNB’s advanced dividends of R2 173 505.94 is hereby
made final;
5.1.3
The Liquidator will distribute the Cash Funds by making the following
payments:
5.1.3.1
An amount of R4 000 000.00 to Absa into its nominated bank
account;
5.1.3.2
His fees as taxed by the Master and provided for in section 384 of
the Companies Act 61 of
1973 (or as agreed between the parties), into
his nominated bank account in respect of liquidation fees;
5.1.3.3
The balance of the cash in the estate shall be transferred to
Boschpoort Ondernemings (Pty)
Ltd, into it nominated bank account
after which the bank account will be closed
”
.
[20]
The settlement
agreement further envisaged that “the following aspects remain
in dispute” and that Boschpoort, Mr Wessels
and the Hannes
Wessels Family Trust, reserve their rights to further litigate these
“aspects”, namely: all the issued
A class shares in a
related company, Gorcum Farm Shareblock Ltd (with its principal place
of business at Mabalingwe), the costs
orders against Mr Wessels, the
disputed liquidator’s fees of R12 597 553.00, the
taxation of the liquidator’s
attorney’s fees, the
“Mabalingwe claims”, and “any other dispute between
the Company and the initial liquidators”
(the “Company”
is a reference to Boschpoort).
[21]
The settlement
agreement also recorded an extensive set of securities whereby ABSA’s
claims had been secured (called the “Boschpoort
securities).
These included covering mortgage bonds over units in the scheme known
as Mabalingwe 2 and over 3 other immovable
properties not related to
the Mabalingwe development. Other securities included notarial
bonds, a general claim relating
to 3[...] M[...] N[...] R[...] B[...]
[...] shares and suretyships furnished by the Mabalingwe Trust, the
Hannes Wessels Family
Trust and by Mr Wessels.
[22]
The crucial
term of the settlement agreement relating to these securities is
clause 7.2 thereof, which reads as follows: “
On
payment of the settlement amount of R4 000 000.00 to Absa,
Absa shall release all Boschpoort securities and sureties
of any
Boschpoort liabilities … on demand
”.
[23]
As is apparent
from the judgment of Retief J, when she dealt earlier during the
litigation process with the issue of non-joinder
of all the
shareholders of Boschpoort, the applicants have then already
jettisoned the alternative relief initially sought by them,
that is
for Boschpoort to be placed in business rescue.
The
opposition to the section 354 application
[24]
As
a starting point, the attorneys for the second respondent directly
disputed the allegation by Mr Wessels (repeated in the settlement
agreement) that the Master had disallowed the fees of the erstwhile
liquidators, which had been removed and of which one had passed
away,
leading to the executor in his deceased estate featuring as first
respondent. They also denied the allegation that
these fees had
been “forfeited”. This denial appears to be correct
and is substantiated by the Master’s
own comment on this issue
in its affidavit delivered in respect of an unsuccessful contempt of
court application launched by Mr
Wessels on 21 October 2021
[8]
.
Therein the Master stated the following: “
Wessels
also deals with the percentages the liquidators are allowed to claim
fees and the Wessels objection amounts to its own taxation
of the
liquidators’ fees and as stated in my ruling, the Master will
consider and tax a reasonable fee in accordance with
the prescribed
tariff B … the taxation of the account falls within the
exclusion jurisdiction of the Master … My
ruling on the
objection is that the liquidators; fees will be taxed in accordance
with tariff B
”.
[25]
It is common
cause that, to date this taxation had not yet taken place.
[26]
There appears
to also be dispute as to the fees of the current liquidator (the
sixth respondent).
[27]
In respect of
the eighth respondent’s claims for arrear levies owed to it by
Boschpoort, this has not been attacked by the
applicants insofar as
the actual amount thereof concerned, nor has there been any attack on
the actual basis thereof, i.e. the
fact that levies had been due and
payable. The only attack of any substance was the applicants’
contention that these
levies should not form part of the costs of the
administration of the winding-up process. Despite the
liquidators having
been running the business of Boschpoort during the
winding-up process, thereby becoming liable for the payment of
levies, the applicants
averred that this claim should (at least in
part) have been proven separately as a claim in the insolvent estate
and, since that
hasn’t been done, it has become unenforceable.
[28]
This court is
not called upon to settle the above dispute, it is enough to note
that even the applicants, in clauses 2.6.16.2, 2.6.16.3
and 5.2.1.6
of the proposed settlement agreement, acknowledged that the eighth
respondent’s claims would remain the subject
of further
litigation, should the winding-up be set aside.
[29]
In respect of
the claim of First Rand Bank (or Rand Merchant Bank), it is to be
noted that it had not signed the settlement agreement.
It has
(only) by way of a letter from its attorneys, annexed to the
applicants’ papers, withdrawn its objection to the first
liquidation and distribution account (in terms of which it was
awarded a divided of R2 13 505, 94). There is no evidence
of what its position was or would have been, had the first
liquidation and distribution account in fact been a final account.
In fact, it had expressly been stated by the then liquidators at the
time (including the second respondent) that “
this
is not a final plan of distribution, there being … further
assets … 1 x motor vehicle, section 1 of the Sectional
Title
Scheme known as Mabalingwe 10 …Gorcum shares … bills of
costs against Mr Hannes Wessels … dividends
from Boschpoort
Management (Pty) Ltd (in liquidation)
”.
There is also no proper explanation for the alternating
identification (or citation) of this creditor as either First
Rand
Bank or Rand Merchant Bank.
Evaluation
[30]
The applicants
allege that ABSA has already received payment of the capital amount
due to it and remains only an unpaid creditor
in respect of the
interest portion of its claim.
[31]
The
applicants concluded the founding affidavit delivered on their behalf
in respect of the subject of payment by alleging that,
once ABSA is
paid R8 million in respect of its claim for interest, then, of the
some R14 million in the estate account, there would
be R6 million
left “…
to
serve as security for the sixth respondent’s (i.e. the current
liquidator) claim for liquidator’s fees
”.
[9]
[32]
Despite clause
5.1.3.2 of the proposed settlement agreement making provision for the
payment
liquidator’s
fees, after taxation thereof by the Master, no provision has been
made for payment of the erstwhile liquidators
fees, as and when
taxed.
[33]
The
proposition of the applicants is therefore that the remaining funds
in the estate account be distributed to the liquidating
creditor and
the current liquidator and that all other claims (including the costs
order against Mr Wessels) either fall by the
wayside or become the
subject matter of further litigation.
[34]
Apart from the
questions remaining as to First Rand Bank’s acquiescence to
this, the settlement agreement envisages extensive
and diverse
litigation about claims exceeding millions of rands. One can
readily foresee extensive disputes looming about
locus
standi
,
prescription and the interaction between these claims and how they
fitted into the winding-up and taxation processes, with no
immediately discernable end to the ensuing litigation. If
anything, the current litigation and the numerous interlocutory
and
other skirmishes, resulting in voluminous papers through which the
court had to wade, only serve to confirm that this would
be the
position.
[35]
Should the
relief sought by the applicants be granted, it would result therein
that, despite the winding-up process being terminated,
outstanding
claims against (and by) Boschpoort would have to be “liquidated”
or determined by way of further litigation
and not by a winding-up
process. Should this be tolerated by a Court? I think
not.
[36]
The following
principle enunciated in
Klass
,
referred to by both parties and quoted in par 4 above, bears
repetition, namely that the court “…
should
ordinarily not set aside a winding-up where creditors or the
liquidators remain unpaid or inadequate provision had been made
for
the payment of their claims
”.
I find that that is the position here.
[37]
Insofar as the
applicants alleged that the claims of the erstwhile liquidators and
the eighth respondent are disputed, then one
should add a rider to
the abovementioned principle extracted from
Klass
to the effect that winding-up proceedings should not be set aside
until such time as all disputes regarding disputed claims (including
the taxation of fees) have been resolved, whether by litigation,
determination by the Master or otherwise.
[38]
In addition to
the above reasons for refusing the relief, until such time as the
disputes referred to above have been resolved,
a court can also not
properly determine other issues relating commercial morality or
public interest as referred to in
Klass
.
[39]
The
continuation of the current winding-up process would therefore not be
“unnecessary or undesirable”
[10]
.
Conclusion
[40]
In these
premises, I therefore find that the application should fail. I
find no grounds to deviate from the customary order
that costs should
follow the event.
Order
[41]
In the circumstances, the
following order is made.
The
application is dismissed with costs, such costs to include the
employment of senior counsel.
N DAVIS
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng Division,
Pretoria
Date
of Hearing: 1 November 2024
Judgment
delivered: 13 February 2025
APPEARANCES:
For the Applicant:
Adv F. G Janse van
Rensburg
Attorney for the
Applicant:
Haasbroek &
Boezaart Attorneys,
Pretoria.
For the Respondent:
Adv B. H Swart SC
Attorney for the
Respondent:
Jaco Roos
Attorneys, Pretoria
[1]
61 of 1973, which section is operative by virtue of Item 9 of
Schedule 5 of the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
.
[2]
Section 354
(2).
[3]
Klass v
Contract Interiors CC (In liquidation) and others
2010 (5) SA 40
(W), a decision on which both parties relied (
Klass
).
[4]
Commissioner,
South African Revenue Service v Nhonyka and others
2023 (6) SA 145 (SCA).
[5]
1999 (1) SA 1086 (SCA).
[6]
After
Plascon-Evans
Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
1984 (3)
S 623
(A) which, with reliance on
Stellenbosch
Farmer’s Winery Ltd v Stellenbosch Winery (Pty) Ltd
1957 (4) Sa 234
(C), dictates that an applicant can only succeed in
such circumstances if the facts stated by the respondent together
with those
facts stated by the applicant which have not been denied,
entities the applicant to the relief sought.
[7]
And which have resulted in judgments by Bokaka AJ and Retief J.
[8]
The application was for alleged contempt of the Master of an order
of Wanless AJ (as he then was) in case no 65015/2018 on 14
February
2020 whereby the Master was ordered to comply with certain
obligations, not relevant to the current dispute.
[9]
Par 4.17 of the founding affidavit.
[10]
CSARS v
Nyhonyha and
others
2023 (6) SA 145
(SCA) at [22] which, incidentally, overruled
Klass
insofar as the latter had held (in par 65.1) that the court had a
“practically unlimited” discretion.
sino noindex
make_database footer start