Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 284South Africa
Cossadianos and Others v Nel and Others (2024-104634) [2025] ZAGPPHC 284 (17 March 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
17 March 2025
Headnotes
in the second to sixth respondents to eventually facilitate the sale of the shares in the second to sixth respondents in any one of several alternative scenarios.
Judgment
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## Cossadianos and Others v Nel and Others (2024-104634) [2025] ZAGPPHC 284 (17 March 2025)
Cossadianos and Others v Nel and Others (2024-104634) [2025] ZAGPPHC 284 (17 March 2025)
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sino date 17 March 2025
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO.: 2024-104634
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2) OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
Date: 17 March 2025
E van der Schyff
In
the matter between:
DEMETRIOS
COSSADIANOS
First Applicant
DEMCO
INVESTMENTS GROUP (PTY) LTD
Second Applicant
AFRIQBRAND
(PTY) LTD
Third Applicant
and
STEPHANUS
JACOBUS NEL
First Respondent
SJ
DRILLING IMPALA COVER (PTY) LTD
Second Respondent
SJ
DRILLING IMPALA DEVELOPMENT (PTY) LTD
Third Respondent
CHEMICK
(PTY) LTD
Fourth Respondent
SHESHA
QUICK LOANS (PTY) LTD
Fifth Respondent
NCM
AFRICA (PTY) LTD
Sixth Respondent
THE
COMPANIES INTELLECTUAL
PROPERTY
COMMISSION
Seventh Respondent
SJ
DRILLING (PTY) LTD
Eighth Respondent
PROSPECT
MINE (PTY) LTD
Ninth Respondent
SHJAELL
NEL
Tenth Respondent
HLABANG
JONAS MOHLALA
Eleventh Respondent
TERRY
JUNKIE PEHTLA
Twelfth Respondent
GLOBAL
MINING SUPPLIES (PTY) LTD
Thirteenth Respondent
ABSA
BANK
LTD
Fourteenth Respondent
JUDGMENT
Van der Schyff J
Introduction
[1]
In this application, the applicants seek relief in terms
of section
163 of the Companies Act 71 of 2008 (2008
Companies Act),
alternatively
the common law. The first, eighth, and thirteenth
respondents (collectively referred to as the respondents) oppose the
application.
Although the respondents agree that the relationship
between the first applicant, Mr. Cossadianos, and the first
respondent, Mr.
Nel, has irretrievably broken down and that there is
no trust relationship between them, the respondents deny that the
applicants
have established that the conduct complained of falls
within the ambit of section 163 of the 2008
Companies Act.
[2
]
The applicants approached the urgent court for relief.
The CaseLine
record reflects that the matter was struck due to non-appearance. The
matter was subsequently enrolled as a third
court motion.
Relief sought
[3]
A point of contention exists regarding whether
the relief
sought by the applicants is final or interim relief. If regard is had
to the notice of motion filed, the following stands
out:
i.
The applicants seek the appointment of an independent director to
effectively
displace Messrs. Nel and Cossadianos as directors of the
second to sixth respondents as far as the payment of expenses,
disbursements,
and debts of the second to sixth respondents are
concerned;
ii.
The independent director is to constitute the board of the second to
sixth
respondents together with the existing directors;
iii.
The independent director must have the sole and exclusive right to
administer
and make payments from the banking accounts that the
second to sixth respondents have with ABSA Bank Ltd, the fourteenth
respondent;
iv.
The thirteenth respondent must implement, execute and give full force
to any direction given to it by the independent director;
v.
The eighth respondent should be interdicted and restrained from
utilising,
the vendor registration number that the eighth respondent
has with Impala Platinum Limited in connection with possible future
dealings
with customers and clients of the second and third
respondents;
vi.
The first to sixth respondents and the eighth to thirteen respondents
are to be interdicted from preventing the applicants from enjoying
the rights, privileges, and arrangements the applicants had with
the
second to sixth respondents as at 28 July 2024, or to restrict the
applicants’ access to business premises of any of
the
respondents and to the books and records of the second to sixth
respondents.
[4]
The applicants further state in the notice of motion
that the relief
sought set out above, shall apply as interim relief pending the
appointment of a valuer to undertake the valuation
of shares and loan
accounts held in the second to sixth respondents to eventually
facilitate the sale of the shares in the second
to sixth respondents
in any one of several alternative scenarios.
[5]
The use of the phrase ‘interim relief pending…’
does not have any magical quality to turn an order that has final
effect into an interim order. I agree with the respondents’
counsel that the applicants, in essence, seek a final order. They
want to facilitate a clean break between Mr. Nel and Mr. Cossadianos
and the respective entities wherein they have interests. The
appointment of the independent director is not sought as interim
relief pending further legal proceedings where a dispute will finally
be adjudicated. It is sought as a protective measure to safeguard
the
applicants’ interests pending the valuation of the shares and
loan accounts and the sale of shares in the second to sixth
respondents.
Shareholding and
directorship in the respective companies cited in the application
[6]
To understand the factual matrix, it is necessary to
have regard to
the directorship and shareholding of the companies cited in this
application.
[7]
Mr. Cossadianos is the sole director of the second applicant
(“Demco”). He is also the sole director of the third
applicant (“Afriqbrand”). Demco is the sole shareholder
in Afriqbrand.
[8]
Mr. Cossadianos and Mr. Nel are the directors of the
second
respondent (“Impala Cover”). The shareholding in Impala
Cover is as follows: The eighth respondent (“SJ
Drilling”)
holds 50% of the shares, Demco holds 24% of the shares, and
Afriqbrand holds 26% of the shares.
[9]
Mr. Cossadianos and Mr. Nel are the directors of the
third respondent
(“Impala Development”). The shareholding of Impala
Development is as follows: SJ Drilling holds 50%,
Demco holds 24% of
the shares, and Afriqbrand holds 26% of the shares.
[10]
Mr. Cossadianos and Mr. Nel are the directors of the fourth
respondent (“Chemick”).
The ninth respondent (“Prospect”)
holds 50% of the shares and Afriqbrand holds 50%.
[11]
Mr. Cossadianos and Mr. Nel are the directors of the fifth respondent
(“Shesha”).
Prospect holds 50% of the shares, and
Afriqbrand holds 50%.
[12]
Mr. Cossadianos, Mr. Nel, and the tenth, eleventh, and twelfth
respondents
are directors of the sixth respondent (“NCM
Africa”). The shareholding in NCM Africa is as follows- SJ
Drilling holds
42% of the shares, Demco holds 24% of the shares, the
tenth respondent holds 4% of the shares, the eleventh respondent
holds 15%
of the shares and the twelfth respondent holds 15% of the
shares.
[13]
Mr. Nel is a director of SJ Drilling, the eighth respondent. Prospect
holds
49% of shares in SJ Drilling, and an unrelated company, Boleng
Mining (Pty) Ltd, holds the remaining 51%.
[14]
Mr. Cossadianos holds no interest in the thirteenth respondent,
Global Mining
Supplies (Pty) Ltd (“GMS”). GMS’s
interest in this litigation is that its premises were used for the
administration
of all the relevant corporate entities cited herein as
respondents wherein Mr. Cossadianos had an interest, whether directly
as
a director or through his shareholding in Demco and Afriqbrand.
Factual context
[15]
Mr.
Nel confirms in the answering affidavit that Mr. Cossadianos was a
director of Impala Cover, Impala Development, Chemick, Shesha
and NCM
Africa, collectively referred to as the jointly owned companies.
[1]
jointly owned companies. These are companies in which Mr. Nel and Mr.
Cossadianos had interests, albeit through other companies.
Mr.
Cossadianos became a shareholder of the jointly owned companies
through Demco and Afriqbrand.
[16]
Mr. Cossadianos fulfilled the functions of an executive director and
Chief
Financial Officer in the second to sixth respondents. Mr. Nel
explains in his answering affidavit that since the end of 2018, Mr.
Cossadianos was responsible for performing the restructuring of the
companies, tax, company secretarial, and financial-related
services
to all the members of the SJ Group of companies. This included but
was not limited to, the design and implementation of
financial
systems, the keeping of up-to-date compliant financial records, the
preparation of monthly budgets, the compilation and
audit of
financial statements, and the submission of VAT and income tax
returns to SARS.
[17]
He
obtained financial benefits from his involvement with the second to
sixth respondents,
[2]
had
unrestricted access to the bank accounts and internet-banking
applications, and freely visited the premises of Global Mining
Supplies, the thirteenth respondent, from where the administration of
the other respondents’ business was conducted. Global
Mining
Supplies is described in the answering affidavit as the ‘nerve
centre’ of the entire Group of companies. All
the member
companies in the Group outsourced their administrative and financial
functions to Global Mining Supplies, and the latter
would, among
others, attend to the member companies’ payroll, accounting,
tax, PAYE, and supplier payments.
[18]
It is common cause that:
i.
Mr. Cossadianos’s access to any information regarding the
second
to sixth respondent entities has been unilaterally terminated
by Mr. Nel around August 2024;
ii.
Mr. Cossadianos was refused access to Global Mining Supplies’
premises
from where the entities are managed on a daily basis;
iii.
On 30 August 2024, Mr. Nel depleted Impala Cover and Impala
Development’s
bank accounts and transferred the money in the
respective accounts to an unknown bank account;
iv.
Since 30 August 2024, Mr. Cossadianos’s access to the internet
banking
platforms of Impala Cover and Impala Development was
unilaterally terminated, and his access has since been denied;
v.
Mr. Cossadianos’s access to unilaterally effect and authorise
payments
from the bank accounts of the jointly owned companies and
the member companies has been stopped;
vi.
Despite Mr. Cossadianos’s repeated requests, no directors’
meeting was held for the second to fifth respondents subsequent to
Mr. Nel’s unilateral actions. One meeting was arranged,
but Mr.
Nel failed to attend without prior notice.
[19]
The common cause facts indicate that Mr. Nel unilaterally excluded
Mr. Cossadianos
from the companies where he was a director and had
interests in through Demco and Afriqbrand. Mr. Cossadianos was
refused access
to financial information, refused access to the
premises from which the entities are managed, and prevented from
fulfilling his
fiduciary duties as director and Chief Financial
Officer, and he did not receive any continued financial benefit from
the companies.
Mr. Cossadianos was effectively excluded and sidelined
from the business without any legal process being followed.
[20]
Mr. Nel justifies his conduct. He claims that Mr. Cossadianos, among
others
–
i.
fraudulently misrepresented material facts to SJ Drilling and
himself,
which led him to conclude certain oral agreements with Mr.
Cossadianos, pursuant to which Mr. Cossadianos obtained the
directorship
and interests in the respective companies;
ii.
breached his obligations under the oral agreements by falsifying and
manipulating
accounting records and by defrauding SARS and the member
companies of the SJ Drilling Group of companies;
iii.
breached his fiduciary duties as director of the jointly owned
companies
and prescribed officer of the member companies;
iv.
misappropriated funds in substantial amounts;
v.
was the sole cause of the breakdown of the relationship between the
respective
parties, and caused the problems that have arisen in the
jointly owned companies.
[21]
Mr. Nel claims that since Mr. Cossadianos’s involvement in the
business
affairs of the second to sixths respondents, he has
appropriated tens of millions of rands, fraudulently transferred
millions of
rands to his family and friends and brought the companies
to the brink of corruption. As a result of this alleged fraud
perpetrated
by Mr. Cossadianos against Mr. Nel and SJ Drilling, they
elected to void and cancel the oral agreements concluded in 2018 in
terms
whereof the applicants were granted shares. Mr. Nel contends
that the applicants are no longer shareholders and denies that they
have the requisite
locus standi
to any of the relief sought by
them. Mr. Nel effectively justifies his unilateral conduct by
defining it as an emergency measure
in order to stop Mr. Cossadianos
from plundering the companies’ resources.
[22]
I pause to note that although it is not contained in any of the
papers before
the court, counsel for the respective parties submitted
during oral argument that, to date, Mr. Nel has not instituted any
civil
action against Mr. Cossadianos, nor were any criminal
proceedings to date instituted against him.
Discussion
The
locus standi
issue
[23]
The record reflects that the notice of motion was served on the
respondents
on 16 September 2024. In the answering affidavit, Mr. Nel
states that he communicated the decision to void the agreement with
the
applicants in terms of which they obtained interests in the
respective affected companies, in a letter dated 17 September 2024.
[24]
The
locus
standi
point was not argued with conviction when the matter was heard, and
rightly so. It is trite that the
s 163
remedy is aimed at achieving
the balancing of the interests of all shareholders and directors,
[3]
and that
s 163
must be construed in a manner that will advance the
remedy it provides rather than limit it.
[4]
It would defeat the purpose for which the legislature crafted the
s
163
remedies if an aggrieved director or shareholder’s locus
standi can be challenged because of the
ex
post facto
[5]
termination of its directorship or unilateral cancellation of the
agreement in terms of which shareholding in the company was obtained.
[25]
Mr. Cossadianos took issue with Mr. Nel and SJ Drilling’s
decision to
cancel or render the agreement under which he acquired
shares in the respective companies void. He highlights that
shareholders’
agreements were concluded, a fact attested to by
Mr. Nel claiming that the shareholders' agreements make provision for
the existence
of a shareholder. He describes this decision as an
attempt to try to appropriate his shares without due process.
[26]
In these circumstances, Mr. Nel and SJ Drilling could not
unilaterally rescind
the agreement in terms of which Mr. Cossadianos
acquired interests in the respective companies. Mr. Cossadianos was,
in any event,
not removed as a director of the companies in which he
holds a directorship. In these circumstances, I find no merit in the
submission
that the applicants lack
locus standi
to claim
relief under
s 163.
Dispute of facts
[27]
In the replying affidavit, Mr. Cossadianos vehemently denied the
allegations
of fraud. He explained that both directors of the company
earned a monthly income. It was, however, not a fixed monthly income,
but determined on a month-to-month basis, depending on the
performance of the company. For reasons that will become more
apparent
below, I don’t deem it necessary to deal with Mr.
Cossadianos’s reply to each of the allegations made by Mr. Nel.
[28]
The dispute of fact that does exist relates not to Mr. Nel’s
unilateral
exclusion of Mr. Cossadianos from the companies’
business, but to the alleged fraudulent conduct of Mr. Cossadianos.
As is
apparent from the discussion below, even if it is accepted that
a dispute of fact exists in this regard, it is not a dispute that
renders the application incapable of being considered on the papers
filed.
[29]
Mr.
Cossadianos also disputes Mr. Nel and SJ Drilling’s right to
unilaterally rescind the agreement in terms of which he acquired
interests in the second to sixth respondents. The authors of the
well-known work
Christie’s
Law of Contract in South Africa,
[6]
explained
that where the right to rescind an agreement allegedly induced by
fraud is challenged, as it is in this matter, the ‘innocent
party’ should utilise legal process and claim cancellation or
rescission of the contract
[30]
The dispute that exists regarding Mr. Nel and SJ Drilling’s
entitlement
to rescind or cancel the agreement unilaterally is not an
obstacle to determining the application on the papers before the
court,
although it is taken into account in determining just and
equitable relief.
Section 163
[31]
The question that needs to be answered is whether when Mr. Nel
exercised his
power as a director in the second to sixth respondents
and took matters into his own hands by unilaterally excluding Mr.
Cossadianos
from the respective companies' business in the manner he
concedes he did, he exercised the power in a manner that was
oppressive
or unfairly prejudicial to the applicants and in
particular to Mr. Cossadianos, or that unfairly disregarded the
applicants, an
particularly Mr. Cossadianos’s interests.
[32]
It
is trite that the question of whether the affairs of a company are
being conducted in a manner that is oppressive to part of
the
members, is a question of fact.
[7]
The same principle applies in determining whether a director
exercised its power in a manner that is oppressive, unfairly
prejudicial
to, or unfairly disregards the interests of the
applicant.
[33]
There is no doubt about the fact that Mr. Nel reverted to self-help
when he
excluded Mr. Cossadionos from the business affairs of the
respective companies in the manner that he concedes he did. He
attempts
to justify his actions by claiming that Mr. Cossadionos
defrauded him and SJ Drilling and misappropriated large amounts from
the
respective companies.
[34]
One
of the founding values of the Republic of South Africa is the
supremacy of the constitution and the rule of law.
[8]
Self-help violates section 1(c) of the Constitution. Mokgoro J
explained in
Chief
Lesapo v North West Agricultural Bank and Another
[9]
that the rule against self-help is necessary for the protection of
the individual against arbitrary and subjective decisions and
conduct
of an adversary.
[35]
Section 34 of the Constitution guarantees the right to have any
dispute that
can be resolved by the application of law decided in a
fair public hearing before a court or, where appropriate, another
independent
and impartial tribunal or forum. The right to have
justiciable issues adjudicated by a court of law is foundational to
the stability
of an orderly society. Resorting to self-help
undermines the very foundation of the rule of law.
[36]
In the circumstances of this matter, Mr. Nel and SJ Drilling’s
actions
caused Mr. Cossadianos to suffer financial loss without
providing him with an opportunity to answer to allegations leveled at
him.
It excluded him from the business affairs of companies wherein
he had specific functions to fulfill, functions that he fulfilled
as
director of the said companies before he was excluded. Whether there
is any merit in the allegations of fraud raised by Mr.
Nell is of no
concern; no person is entitled to take the law into their own hands.
[37]
The
ex post facto
report obtained without Mr. Cossadianos’s
input or comments is likewise irrelevant. The bottom line is that Mr.
Nel, and
through him also SJ Drilling, arrogated to themselves the
rights reserved for a court of law. Through reverting to self-help
Mr.
Nel exercised the powers of a director in a manner that is
oppressive – in that Mr. Cossadianos, as co-director, had to
turn
to a court of law for assistance; he exercised the power of a
director in a manner that was unfairly prejudicial to Mr Cossadianos
in more than one way, but among other by denying him
audi
and
keeping him in the dark regarding the companies’ business
affairs. There is no legal basis that justifies Mr. Nel’s
conduct as it was not authorised in terms of a court order. The
applicants succeeded in bringing this application within the ambit
of
s 163.
[38]
This leaves the issue of appropriate relief. On the papers, it is
common cause
that there is a deadlock as far as the second to fifth
companies are concerned. Mr. Cossadianos has been kept in the dark
about
the companies’ respective dealings since his exclusion.
His fear that a situation might have been orchestrated through which
the eighth respondent essentially ‘took over’ the
business previously conducted by the entities in which he has an
interest is not unfounded. The facts that preceded the institution of
the application illustrate that Mr. Nel indirectly exercised
control
over the juristic persons concerned and has the ability to materially
influence the policy of the said juristic persons.
It is clear that
Mr. Nel and Mr. Cossadianos need to part ways, and due to their
vested interests and hands-on management of the
companies, it is
justified to provide for a clean break, even though there is no
deadlock as far as the sixth respondent is concerned.
Appropriate remedy
[39]
I requested the parties to file supplementary heads dealing with the
issue
of the relief to be granted, and specifically considering the
question as to whether the granting of a winding-up order would be
an
appropriate remedy under s 163 in the event of a finding that the
jurisdictional requirements of s 163 have been met. I have
considered
the submissions made therein and am convinced that it is not
competent relief to be granted in the circumstances.
[40]
In the circumstances of this matter the appointment of an independent
director
is justified. The independent director should, however, act
together with the existing directors.
[41]
The
court can also not merely disregard the averment that Mr. Nel and SJ
Drilling seek to rescind the agreement in terms of which
Mr.
Cossadianos acquired interests in the respective and applicable
corporate entities. Any order granted must provide for the
possibility of legal process being instituted in this regard.
[10]
The companies, however, need to be able to function pending the
finalisation of such legal process, and the respective parties’
interests must be protected.
ORDER
In the result, the
following order is granted:
1.
Mr JZH Muller of Tshwane Trust or his nominee, is
appointed as an
independent director of the Second to Sixth Respondents (“the
independent director”).
2.
The independent director may not be removed as a
director, save by an
order of this court having jurisdiction.
3.
The independent director shall constitute the board
of the
aforementioned companies, together with such directors as have
already been appointed for the aforementioned companies.
4.
The board shall have the sole and exclusive right
to administer and
make payment from the banking facilities and banking accounts which
the aforementioned companies have at Absa
Bank Ltd (“the
Fourteenth Respondent”) and the Fourteenth Respondent is hereby
directed and ordered to create or establish
the required platform or
function, in substitution of the existing platforms and/or functions
utilized by the aforementioned companies
by means of which the board
will be entitled to make exclusive payment on behalf of the
aforementioned companies, of the payments
required to be made, from
that platform or via that function created by Absa Bank Limited.
5.
The Thirteenth Respondent, Global Mining Supplies
(Pty) Ltd is hereby
ordered to implement, execute and otherwise give full force and
effect to whatever directions are given to
the Thirteenth Respondent
by the board in relation to the administration of the financial
affairs and finances of the aforementioned
companies.
6.
The First Respondent is interdicted and restrained
from instructing
or otherwise orchestrating that the Thirteenth Respondent, Global
Mining Supplies (Pty) Ltd, would not attend
to the administrative
functions and duties which the Thirteenth Respondent had in the past
executed on behalf of the aforementioned
companies.
7.
The Eighth Respondent is interdicted and restrained
from utilising,
in connection with possible future dealings with existing customers
and/or clients of the Second and Third Respondents,
the vendor
registration number which the Eighth Respondent has with Impala
Platinum Limited.
8.
It is declared that the Applicants shall have in
all respects the
rights, functions and authorities with reference to the Second to
Sixth Respondents, which the Applicants have
had prior to 28 July
2024, subject to the powers ascribed to the independent director.
9.
Subject to the powers ascribed to the independent
director, the First
to Sixth Respondents and the Eighth to Thirteenth Respondents are
interdicted and restrained from:
9.1.
Preventing and otherwise obstructing
the Applicants to enjoy in all
respects the rights, privileges and arrangements which the Applicants
have had with the Second to
Sixth Respondents as at 28 July 2024.
9.2.
Without derogating from the
generality of the aforegoing, the First
to Sixth Respondents and the Eighth to Thirteenth Respondents are
interdicted and restrained
from obstructing and/or preventing the
Applicants from gaining access to any business premises of any of the
Respondents, and to
allow the Applicants full and unrestricted access
of and to the books and financial affairs of the Second to Sixth
Respondents.
10.
The independent director is to receive such reasonable remuneration
as determined by the Head of the Legal Department at Price Waterhouse
Coopers.
11.
The relief in prayers 1 up to and including 10 above, shall apply
pending the finalisation and implementation of the remainder of the
terms of the order:
11.1.
Mr Johan Ferreira, a qualified chartered accountant
of J Ferreira
Incorporated,
alternatively
another appropriate valuator (“the
valuer”) appointed by this court shall undertake a valuation of
the shares and/or
loan accounts held in or against the Second to
Sixth Respondents in accordance with the directions contained in
prayers 11.2 to
12.11 below.
11.2.
Fair value of the shares and/or loan account shall
be determined with
regard to the financial condition of the Second to Sixth Respondents
as at 28 July 2024.
11.3.
The valuer is to make the determination in respect
of the fair value
of the shares and loan accounts envisaged above within a period of 60
days from date of this order and within
45 days from being appointed,
and shall deliver to the parties a written notice indicating the fair
value of the shares and loan
accounts as determined of the Second and
Third Applicants in the Second to Sixth Respondents.
11.4.
The costs of the valuer are to be borne by the respective
Respondents
in respect of their respective valuations.
11.5.
In determining the aforesaid value, the valuer shall
act as an expert
and not an arbitrator.
11.6.
The fair value of the shares and loan accounts in respect
of the
Second to Sixth Respondent shall be determined with regard to the
financial position of the respective Respondents as at
28 July 2024,
being the day before the date that the SJ Drilling Group of companies
excluded the First Applicant from the business
of the Second to Sixth
Respondents.
11.7.
The value of the shares shall be determined
pro rata
the total
issued share capital of the Second to Sixth Respondents, that is
without any discount for the shares representing the
minority or
majority shareholding and without any discount on account of any
contractual restrictions that may or might have been
agreed upon
between the shareholders or provided for in the Memorandum of
Incorporation or any shareholders’ agreement on
the disposal of
the shares other than between the existing shareholders.
11.8.
Any cost borne by the First Respondent, in respect
of this
application, shall be excluded from the valuer’s determination
and the purchase price of the shares in respect of
the Second to
Sixth Respondents are to be determined as if such costs had not been
borne by him.
11.9.
Each party to this application shall fully and timeously
cooperate
with the valuer and furnish all relevant information, appropriately
vouched and all documentation required by the valuer
to undertake the
valuation and determination, failing which the valuer is authorised
to make application to this court for directions.
12.
The valuer shall have the following further powers:
12.1.
The right to conduct all investigations necessary and,
in particular,
to obtain from the parties or any third party or entity all
information and documentation considered by the valuer,
reasonably
necessary for the valuer’s determination; and
12.2.
The right to obtain information regarding the financial
affairs from
any bank, financial institution or other entity where monies have
been invested or to which/who monies may be owed
by any of the
entities relevant to the determination; and
12.3.
The right to obtain and call for balance sheets or
income statements
in respect of any of the entity or business entity or business
relevant to the determination; and
12.4.
The right to inspect books of account in respect of
any company or
entity, including but not limited to bank statements, pay checks,
deposit books and personal statement of affairs
and liabilities,
which the valuer considers relevant for the determination; and
12.5.
The right to make physical inspection of assets and
take inventories;
and
12.6.
The right to question any person or party and obtain
explanations
deemed necessary for the purpose of making the determination; and
12.7.
To do anything or to take any such steps as may be
reasonable be
considered by the valuer to be relevant to the valuer’s
determination, including the appointment of an expert
valuer to value
assets (including commercial properties or immovable properties or
movable properties) of any one of the Respondents;
and
12.8.
Be entitled to apply to this court for any further
direction that the
valuer shall or may consider necessary in order to perform his
determination; and
12.9.
To take into account any matter which the valuer considers
relevant
to determining what the valuer considers to be fair value as at the
date of the issuing of this application; and
12.10.
The Applicants and the First Respondent shall be entitled to forward
any
documents or representations to the valuer and shall be entitled
to copies of any documents or representations made available by
the
other party and in respect of which the other party is entitled to
comment to the valuer; and
12.11.
The determination of the valuer shall be final and binding on the
parties
and shall be made available within 45 days from date of being
appointed.
13.
The valuer shall determine the value of the Applicants’ shares
as envisaged above.
14.
In the event that the second and/or eighth respondents intend to
commence with legal process regarding the rescission of the agreement
in terms of which Mr. Cossadianos acquired interests in the
second to
sixth respondents, such legal process, to have an impact on the
proceedings currently before the court, must commence
within 30 days
of this order being granted, the steps set out below will be subject
to the outcome of such legal process and timelines
will be amended
accordingly.
15.
In the event of no legal process being instituted within the period
stipulated in paragraph 14,
supra
, then within 14 (fourteen)
days after the aforementioned valuation has been made, the First to
Sixth and Eighth to Twelfth Respondents
are hereby afforded an
opportunity to purchase from the Applicants the shares and/or loan
accounts held against the aforementioned
companies.
16.
In the event of legal process being commenced with and if the outcome
of such legal process is in Mr. Cossadianos’ favour, within 14
(fourteen) days after the final outcome of such legal process
in Mr.
Cossadianos’s favour, the First to Sixth and Eighth to Twelfth
Respondents are hereby afforded an opportunity to purchase
from the
Applicants the shares and/or loan accounts held against the
aforementioned companies.
17.
In the event that the aforementioned Respondents, as envisaged in
prayers 15-16 above, do not acquire the aforementioned shares and/or
loan accounts as envisaged in prayer 15 - 16 above, within
the
respective time period in prayer 15-16 above,
alternatively
if
the Applicants and the prospective purchasing Respondents are unable
to agree to the contractual terms under which the aforementioned
Respondents would acquire the aforementioned shares, then and in that
event and as from a period calculated from 15 days after
the
valuation of the independent valuer had been furnished to the
parties,
alternatively
the periods specified in paragraphs
15-16
supra,
then the independent valuer shall have the right
to sell and dispose of all of the shares and/or loan accounts in the
Second to
Sixth Respondents, to any person or entity interested in
purchasing same for the best possible price and on such terms as may
be
determined in the sole discretion of the valuator. The
relief in this paragraph is subject thereto that (i) no legal process
commenced against the applicants or (ii) legal process commenced with
were conducted in favour of the applicant.
18.
In the event that the aforementioned valuer fails to procure, within
40 (forty) days after he acquired the right to sell as provided for
in prayer 15 and 16 respectively, a suitable buyer for a suitable
price, then and in that event the Applicants shall be entitled to
amplify the papers and re-enrol the application for the procurement
of an order for the final winding-up of the Second to Sixth
Respondents.
19.
The First, Eighth and Thirteenth Respondents, jointly and
severally, the one paying the other to be absolved, are ordered to
pay
the costs of this application, costs to include the costs
consequent upon the employment of two counsel of which one is a
senior
on scale C and a junior on scale B.
E van der Schyff
Judge of the High Court
Delivered: This
judgment is handed down electronically by uploading it to the
electronic file of this matter on CaseLines.
For
the applicants:
Adv.
M.P. van der Merwe SC
With:
Adv.
J. Eastes
Instructed
by:
Tim du
Toit & Co.
For
the first, eighth and thirteenth respondents:
Adv.
J. Vorster SC
With:
Adv.
S.N. Davis
Instructed
by:
SEG
Attorneys Inc.
Date
of the hearing:
20
February 2025
Date
of judgment:
17
March 2025
[1]
Mr. Nel includes a company Specialised Mining Operations (Pty) Ltd
in the group of jointly owned companies, but this company
is not
cited as a party to these proceedings.
[2]
Mr. Cossadianos claims that in exchange for his services and also
because of his directorship and shareholding he received payments
of
about R1 083 750.00 from the respective entities as a monthly
salary. Mr. Nel denies that any form of salary or director’s
remuneration was ever agreed to but admits that Mr. Cossadianos
received large amounts, although he claims that Mr. Cossadianos
‘recently appropriated significant large amounts. Since Mr.
Nel has the bank statements at hand, it was possible to prove
whether Mr. Cossadianos received the said amounts on a monthly basis
and the attempt to indicate that the amounts were only recently
appropriated is not supported by a factual basis.
[3]
Parry
v Dunn-Blatch and Others
(394/2022)
[2024] ZASCA 19
(28 February 2024) at para [32].
[4]
Grancy
Property Ltd v Manala
2015
(3) SA 313 (SCA).
[5]
See
Briers
and Another v Dr J Bruwer and Assoc no 78 Inc.
(19726/2023)
[2024] ZAWCHC 76
(30 May 2024).
[6]
Christie, R. updated by Bradfield, GB. 200,2 8
th
ed, 353.
[7]
Benjamin
v Elysium Investments (Pty) Ltd
1960 (3) SA 467
(E) at 476H.
[8]
Section 1(c) of The Constitution of the Republic of South Africa,
1996.
[9]
[1999] ZACC 16
;
2000 (1) SA 409
(CC) at para
[18]
.
[10]
The term ‘legal process’ used herein, refers either to
litigation or any alternative dispute resolution mechanism
that
might find application or be agreed to.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
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