Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 376South Africa
Optimal Outcomes (Pty) Ltd v Go Canna Africa Ltd and Another (2021/1568) [2025] ZAGPPHC 376 (2 April 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
2 April 2025
Headnotes
accountable when he has created an impression in another's mind, even though he may not have intended to do so and even though the impression is in fact wrong. Where a principal is held liable because of the ostensible authority of an agent, agency by estoppel is said to arise. But the law stresses that the appearance, the representation, must have been created by the principal himself." (my emphasis) [14] The Court also explained that the representee must have acted reasonably in forming the impression that he/she did. What has to be established by a person relying on ostensible authority is the following[4]:
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Optimal Outcomes (Pty) Ltd v Go Canna Africa Ltd and Another (2021/1568) [2025] ZAGPPHC 376 (2 April 2025)
Optimal Outcomes (Pty) Ltd v Go Canna Africa Ltd and Another (2021/1568) [2025] ZAGPPHC 376 (2 April 2025)
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sino date 2 April 2025
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
numbers: 2021/1568
Date
of hearing: 26 and 27 March 2025
Date
delivered: 2 April 2025
(1)
REPORTABLE:
YES
/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO THE JUDGES:
YES
/NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
2/4/2025
SIGNATURE:
In
the matter between:
OPTIMAL
OUTCOMES (PTY) LTD
Plaintiff
and
GO
CANNA AFRICA LTD
First Defendant
CRYO-SAVE
SOUTH AFRICA (PTY) LTD
Second Defendant
This
order is made an order of court by the Judge whose name is reflected
herein, duly stamped by the Registrar of Court, and is
submitted to
the parties or their legal representative by email. This order is
further uploaded to the electronic file of Caselines
by the Judge or
his Registrar. The date of this order is deemed to be 2 April 2025.
JUDGMENT
SWANEPOEL
J:
[1]
This matter came before me as a commercial court case in terms of the
Commercial Court
Practice Directive of 6 October 2020. The plaintiff
claims an order that the first defendant shall take all steps
required to transfer
2% of its shares to the plaintiff, that the
first defendant be ordered to effect the necessary changes to its
company records to
reflect the plaintiff's shareholding, and to
provide plaintiff with a valid share certificate within 14 days.
[2]
The plaintiff claims payment of R 10 000 000 from the defendants
jointly and severally,
plus interest at the rate of 7.25%
a
tempore morae
. It also seeks costs on an attorney/client scale,
payable by defendants jointly and severally. The summons was served
on both defendants
at the same address. The first defendant did not
oppose the action, and it is only the second defendant that is before
me.
[3]
The facts of the case are uncontroversial. During approximately the
beginning of 2019
the plaintiff, who was represented by one Mr.
Gerhard Bester ("Mr. Bester"), was approached by Mr.
Gerhard Naude ("Naude").
Naude was seeking assistance with
transaction advisory services, with a view to developing the business
of the first defendant.
Mr. Bester came to know Naude as being a
representative of the first defendant. First Defendant shared
business premises with the
second defendant.
[4]
During September 2019 Naude approached Bester seeking assistance in
obtaining a R
1 m loan for the first defendant. Naude said that the
money was required to finance a joint venture between the first
defendant
and a company called House of Hemp. The plaintiff was
willing to put up the money, not as a loan, but as the purchase price
for
a 2% shareholding in the first defendant. The parties anticipated
that the first defendant would be listed on the South African
Stock
Exchange, and that it would achieve a market capitalization of not
less than R 500 m within one year. Nevertheless, the plaintiff
required some manner of guarantee for its investment.
[5]
Consequently, the plaintiff says, the first and second defendants,
duly represented
by Naude, entered into a written share purchase
agreement with the plaintiff with the following material terms:
[5.1] The plaintiff
undertook to pay R 1 m to the first defendant in exchange for 2% of
the shareholding in the first defendant;
[5.2] In the event that
the first defendant did not achieve a minimum market capitalization
of R 500 m within one year the first
defendant, and the second
defendant as guarantor, would pay the plaintiff the sum of R 10 m.
[6]
The agreement was signed by Naude, and by Mr. Bester. The agreement
reflects that
Naude signed the agreement twice on behalf of the first
defendant ("Seller"), and there is no signature on behalf
of
the guarantor, the second defendant. The plaintiff says that this
was an error common to the parties as a result of "cutting
and
pasting" whilst preparing the contract, and that Naude's one
signature was appended to the document on behalf of the guarantor.
The plaintiff seeks rectification of the agreement to correct the
allegedly incorrect description of both the first and second
defendants as "seller" instead of the first defendant as
'Seller' and the second defendant as 'guarantor'.
[7]
Having signed the agreement, the plaintiff duly transferred R 1m to
the first defendant.
The shares were never transferred to the
plaintiff, and the first defendant never achieved the minimum market
capitalization of
R 500 m. When the second defendant was called upon
to pay the R10 million to the plaintiff in terms of the guarantee, it
denied
being party to the agreement on the basis that Naude was not
authorized to represent it. It is not in dispute that, at the time,
Naude was an unrehabilitated insolvent, and was not a director of the
second defendant.
[8]
The crux of the matter is whether Naude had the authority to
represent the second
defendant. If he were authorized to act for the
second defendant, the main claim and the rectification claim is
clearly good in
law. If he was not, then the main claim and the
rectification claim must fail. There could then not have been an
error common to
the parties.
[9]
In addition to the authority defence, the second defendant raised a
new defence in
its responsive statement, to the effect that the
transaction upon which the plaintiff relies is a guarantee for
purposes of
section 45
of the
Companies Act, 2008
, and that, unless
there is a special resolution by the board of the second defendant,
which is adopted within the previous two
years, the agreement is
void. This defence was not raised in the second defendant's plea, an
issue that I will deal with hereunder.
[10]
At the commencement of the matter, counsel for the plaintiff, Mr.
Stevens, made it clear that
the plaintiff accepted that Naude was not
actually authorized to act for the second defendant. The plaintiff's
case is premised
on the contention that Naude had ostensible (or
apparent) authority to act for the second defendant.
[11]
In support of its case, the plaintiff filed an affidavit deposed to
by Mr. Bester. In terms of
the commercial rules, the affidavit is the
evidence in chief of the plaintiff, and the only oral evidence
allowed is cross-andre-examination
of the witness who deposed to
the affidavit. The second defendant delivered a statement that was
not commissioned. At the outset
I took up this issue with the second
defendant's counsel, Mr. Hoffman, who advised me that he intended to
call the deponent, who
could then confirm the affidavit under oath.
That seemed to me to be a solution to the non-commissioning issue,
and I allowed the
matter to proceed.
[12]
The plaintiff's sole witness was Mr. Bester. When Mr. Hoffman was
given an opportunity to cross-examine
Mr. Bester he declined to do
so. The plaintiff then closed its case, as did the second defendant,
without the latter leading any
witnesses. The result is that the only
evidence in the matter is that contained in the affidavit of Mr.
Bester.
[13]
Before I deal with the evidence presented by Mr. Bester, it is
perhaps appropriate that I set
out the principles applicable to
ostensible authority. In
NBS
Bank Ltd v Cape Produce Co (Ply) Ltd
[1]
,
and with reference to
Hely-Hutchinson
v Brayhead Ltd and Another
[2]
the court explained the basis for holding a party liable on the basis
of ostensible authority as follows:
[3]
"[25] As Denning MR
points out, ostensible authority flows from the
appearances
of
authority created by the principal. Actual authority may be
important, as it is in this case, in sketching the framework of
the
image presented, but the overall impression received by the viewer
from the principal may be much more detailed. Our law has
borrowed an
expression, estoppel, to describe a situation where a representor may
be held accountable when he has created an impression
in another's
mind, even though he may not have intended to do so and even though
the impression is in fact wrong. Where a principal
is held liable
because of the ostensible authority of an agent, agency by estoppel
is said to arise.
But the law stresses that the appearance, the
representation, must have been created by the principal himself
."
(my emphasis)
[14]
The Court also explained that the representee must have acted
reasonably in forming the impression
that he/she did. What has to be
established by a person relying on ostensible authority is the
following
[4]
:
[14.1] A
representation by word or conduct;
[14.2] made by the
principal (and not merely by the agent) sought to be held liable;
[14.3] in a form
that the representor would reasonably expect outsiders to act upon;
and,
[14.4] That the
representee actually relied upon the representation.
[14.5] That the
reliance on the representation was reasonable.
[14.6] That there
was prejudice to the person relying on the representation.
[15]
The facts in this matter are in substance the same as the facts in
Afrasia
Special Opportunities Fund (Pty) Ltd v Royal Anthem Investments 130
(Pty) Ltd
[5]
.
In that case the applicant launched an application claiming repayment
of a loan from seven respondents. The application was granted,
but
was followed by a rescission application by Royal Anthem (the sixth
respondent). The basis of the claim against Royal Anthem
was a
'limited guarantee' allegedly executed in the applicant's favour. As
security for the loan two immovable properties were
hypothecated.
[16]
Royal Anthem alleged that the person who was alleged to have
represented it in the transaction,
one Paget, had not been authorized
to do so. At the relevant time the company had two directors, Paget
being one of them. Paget
forged the other director's signature to a
purported shareholder's resolution authorizing the transaction.
Notwithstanding that
Paget was a director of the respondent, that he
had taken control of the affairs of the company, and that he
supported his claim
that he was authorized to act by producing a
resolution by shareholders authorizing the transaction, the Court
asked the question:
what evidence is there that the company clothed
Paget with apparent (ostensible) authority to bind it to the
transactions, or to
convey to third parties that the board had made a
decision to commit to the transactions.
[17]
The Court considered the evidence for the proposition that Paget had
ostensible authority, and
said
[6]
:
"[44] The
difficulty is that AfrAsia did not adduce any evidence in support of
the contention that Paget was clothed
with apparent authority by
Royal Anthem
either to bind it in the transactions, or to
convey a decision by its board to commit to the transactions; or that
it relied on
any such representation in entering into the
transactions…It was not sufficient for AfrAsia merely to point
to facts that
could notionally have been relied upon by it as
representations by Royal Anthem of Paget's authority to represent it;
it had to
establish representations upon which it
actually
did
rely."
[18]
What then does the evidence in this case show? On 23 August 2019
Naude, purporting to act for
the first defendant, entered into an
agreement with CAPIC, a company in which the plaintiff held a 49%
shareholding, and of which
Mr. Bester was managing director. In terms
of the agreement CAPIC would render certain financial advisory
services for and on behalf
of the first defendant. Naude was
described as being the "Group Founder". The discussions
between CAPIC and Naude were
all held at the offices of the first and
second defendants.
[19]
Naude held himself out to be the "effective owner" of the
second defendant. He said
that he had purchased a majority
shareholding in the second defendant, as Mr. Bester puts it, "with
his shares from a company
called Go Life". The exact meaning of
the latter sentence is unclear.
[20]
Naude introduced the idea of financing the House of Hemp transaction
through a R 1 m loan, and
he later agreed to the transfer of 2% of
the first defendant's shares. Various Whatsapp messages were
exchanged between Naude and
Mr. Bester, in which the share transfer
agreement was discussed, and eventually agreed upon. Naude signed the
agreement, ostensibly
on behalf of both defendants.
[21]
Some three months after the agreement was concluded, Naude's personal
assistant forwarded a completed
questionnaire to the plaintiff ("Know
your Client"), in which information relating to the first
defendant was provided.
The document listed Go Life International
("Go Life") as the first defendant's parent company, and it
said that Go Life
was situated in Mauritius. Both defendants were
listed as subsidiaries of Go Life, and Naude was designated as the
contact person
for all of the companies. Naude was referred to as the
Chief Executive Officer of the first defendant and its founder, but
he was
not a director, those being Messrs. Alt, Greenstreet and
Linde. At more or less the same time, a mandate was sent to the
plaintiff
in which Naude was authorized to act in all respects for
the first defendant.
[22]
Mr. Stevens, on behalf of the plaintiff, has urged me to take a
holistic view of the matter,
and to find that, in view of the fact
that Naude seemed to be in control of the parent company and to have
de facto control of
the defendants, that the second defendant had
represented that he was authorized to act on its behalf.
[23]
The difficulty with that proposition is that the information
disclosed in the Know your Client
document originated from Naude, and
not from the second defendant. Furthermore, it was only sent to the
plaintiff three months
after the contract was signed, and did not
result in the plaintiff concluding that Naude was authorized to act
for the second defendant.
[24]
The aforesaid is the total sum of the evidence presented by the
plaintiff. Quite properly, one
would ask; where is the evidence that
the second defendant made any representation by word or conduct that
Naude was authorized
to act on its behalf? There simply is none. The
fact of the matter is that in entering into the agreement the
plaintiff relied
entirely upon the disclosures made by Naude, and as
the authorities have made clear, the representation must be made by
the principal
and not by the agent himself.
[7]
The suggestion that the second defendant had, by allowing the
meetings between Mr. Bester and Naude to be held at its offices,
created the impression that Naude was authorized to act for it, is
without any merit.
[8]
The same
applies to the suggestion that the second defendant had, through its
conduct, attracted an onus to prove that Naude was
not authorized to
act on its behalf. The onus of proving ostensible authority rests on
the person seeking to rely on that ostensible
authority.
[9]
[25]
Even had there been some manner of representation by the second
defendant, the question must
be asked how reasonable it would have
been for Mr. Bester to assume that Naude was authorized to enter into
what was clearly not
a transaction in the normal course of the second
defendant's business. In my view, on the evidence before me, Mr.
Bester had no
reasonable grounds to assume that Naude was authorized
to enter into a guarantee agreement on behalf of the second
defendant.
[26]
That is really the end of the matter. I am, however, bound for the
sake of completeness, to deal
briefly with the issue raised by the
second defendant relating to the provisions of
section 45
of the
Companies Act, 2008
. The relevant portions of the section read as
follows:
"45
Financial assistance
(1)
In this section,
'financial assistance'
(a)
includes lending money, guaranteeing a loan or other obligation, and
securing any debt or
obligation;..
(2) Except to the extent
that the Memorandum of Incorporation of a company provides otherwise,
the board may authorize the company
to provide direct or indirect
financial assistance to a director or prescribed officer of the
company or of a related or inter-related
company, or to a related or
interrelated company or corporation, or to a member of a related
or inter-relater corporation,
or to a person related to any such
company, corporation, director, prescribed officer or member, subject
to subsections (3) and
(4).
(2A)......
(3)
Despite any provision of a company's Memorandum of Incorporation to
the contrary, the board
may not authorize any financial assistance
contemplated in subsection (2), unless-
(a)
the particular provision of financial assistance is -
(i)
pursuant to an employee share scheme that satisfies the requirements
of
section 97
; or
(ii)
pursuant to a special resolution of the shareholders, adopted within
the previous
two years, which approved such assistance either for the
specific recipient, or generally for a category of potential
recipients,
and the specific recipient falls within that category;
and,
(b)
the board is satisfied that -
(i)
immediately after providing the financial assistance, the company
would satisfy
the solvency and liquidity test; and
(ii)
the terms under which the financial assistance is proposed to be
given are fair and
reasonable to the company."
[27]
Subsection 45 (6) provides that any agreement that is inconsistent
with the provisions of
section 45
is void, to the extent of its
inconsistency.
[28]
The first question to be answered, is whether the second defendant is
entitled to rely on the
provisions of
section 45
as a defence, having
not raised the defence in its plea, but dealing with it squarely in
its responsive statement of case. I was
referred to the matter of
Transnet
SOC Ltd v Totalenergies Marketing South Africa (Pty) Ltd
[10]
,
a matter in which the Court heard a matter under the Commercial
Rules, and was faced with a similar situation as in this case.
There
the Court said that procedurally, the proper approach would have been
to require an amendment of the pleadings. However,
the matter was
being heard under rules aimed at determining a dispute "
quickly,
cheaply, fairly and with legal acuity
",
and that a Court should take a pragmatic approach.
[29]
I respectfully agree. In this matter the issue of section 45 was
raised properly and timeously
in the statement of defence. The
plaintiff had an opportunity to engage with the issue, and it could
have sought leave to supplement
its statement of case and/or its
affidavit. Such a request would hardly have been refused. In my view,
the issue was properly raised
and stands to be determined.
[30]
The plaintiff's answer to this defence is that there is no evidence
that the first defendant
is a related person as defined in section 2
of the Act. Section 2 (1) provides that a juristic person is related
to another juristic
person if either of them controls the other
directly or indirectly as determined by subsection 2 (2), if one is a
subsidiary of
the other, or if a person controls each of them as
determined in subsection 2 (2).
[31]
Subsection 2 (2) states that a person controls a juristic person if
the juristic person is a
subsidiary of the first person or, if the
first person controls either a majority of the voting rights in the
company or has the
right to appoint directors who control a majority
of the votes at a meeting of the board. One company is a subsidiary
of another
when the latter controls the majority of voting rights, or
has the right to appoint directors who control a majority of the
votes
at a meeting of the board.
[32]
I agree with Mr. Stevens for the plaintiff. On the admissible
evidence in this matter, there
is no basis to find that the first and
second defendants were related parties within the meaning of section
2. The provisions of
section 45 do not, therefore, apply.
[33]
Having held that the plaintiff has not proven ostensible authority,
the claim must fail as far
as the second defendant is concerned. As
far as the first defendant is concerned, the agreement does not need
to be rectified,
as Naude has signed on behalf of the 'seller' which
is correctly identified as being the first defendant. As far as costs
are concerned,
I have not been addressed on punitive costs, nor do I
believe that punitive costs are appropriate.
[34]
I make the following order:
AS AGAINST THE FIRST
DEFENDANT:
[34.1] The first
defendant is ordered to take all steps to transfer 2% of its
shareholding to the plaintiff, and to sign all documents
required to
effect the necessary changes to the first defendant's company records
to reflect the plaintiff's shareholding.
[34.2] The first
defendant is ordered to effect the share transfer, and to provide the
plaintiff with a share certificate reflecting
the plaintiff's
shareholding, within 14 days of this order.
[34.3] The first
defendant shall pay the plaintiff R 10 000 000 (ten million rand),
plus interest at the rate of 7.25% per annum
calculated from date of
judgment to date of payment.
[34.4] The first
defendant shall pay the costs of the action.
AS AGAINST THE SECOND
DEFENDANT:
[34.5] The claim is
dismissed with costs on Scale C.
SWANEPOEL
J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION PRETORIA
Counsel
for the plaintiff:
Adv. B Stevens
Instructed
by:
Meyers & Partners Attorneys Inc
Counsel
for the second defendant: Adv. J Hoffman
Instructed
by:
Assheton-Smith Ginsberg
Date
heard:
26
and 27 March 2025
Date
of judgment:
2 April 2025
[1]
NBS Bank Ltd Cape Produce Co (Pty) Ltd and Others 2002 (1) SA 396
(SCA)
[2]
Hely-Hutchinson v Brayhead Ltd and Another
[1968] 1 QB 549
(CA)
[3]
NBS Bank (
supra
)
at para [25]
[4]
NBS Bank (
supra
)
at para [26]
[5]
Afrasia Special Opportunities Fund (Pty) Ltd v Royal Anthem
Investments 130 (Pty) Ltd [2016] 4 ALL SA 16 (WCC)
[6]
Afrasia (supra) at para [44]
[7]
See also: Glofinco v ABSA Bank Ltd t/a United Bank 2002 (6) SA 470
(SCA)
[8]
Northern Metropolitan Local Council v Company Unique Finance (Pty)
Ltd 2012 (5) SA 323 (SCA)
[9]
Hosken Employees Benefits (Pty) Ltd v Slabe1992 (4) SA 183 (W) at
190 I
[10]
Transnet SOC Ltd v Totalenergies Marketing South Africa (Pty) Ltd
2024 JDR 1559
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