Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 390South Africa
De Wet and Another in re Olive Trading Company (Pty) Ltd v Kuyanda Commodities 34 CC t/a Bafana Petroleum (2024/024546) [2025] ZAGPPHC 390 (23 April 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
23 April 2025
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## De Wet and Another in re Olive Trading Company (Pty) Ltd v Kuyanda Commodities 34 CC t/a Bafana Petroleum (2024/024546) [2025] ZAGPPHC 390 (23 April 2025)
De Wet and Another in re Olive Trading Company (Pty) Ltd v Kuyanda Commodities 34 CC t/a Bafana Petroleum (2024/024546) [2025] ZAGPPHC 390 (23 April 2025)
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sino date 23 April 2025
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Case
No. 2024/024546
(1) REPORTABLE: NO
(2) OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: YES
DATE: 23 April 2025
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
NICOLAAS
JOHANNES DE WET
MARIA
CATHRINA ORIANI-AMBROSINI
In
re:
OLIVE
TRADING COMPANY (PTY) LTD
and
KUYANDA
COMMODITIES 34 CC t/a BAFANA
PETROLEUM
(Registration
number: CK2001/086230/23)
First
Intervening Applicant
Second
Intervening Applicant
Applicant
Respondent
JUDGMENT
NEUKIRCHER, J
[1]
The Winkelhaak Verspreiders Bafana Group of
Entities (the Group) conducts business as a wholesaler of fuel. The
various close corporations
and companies within the Group have been
supplying over 20 million litres of fuel for over twenty years to its
approximately 2000
clients mainly in the agriculture and mining
sectors, but to general businesses as well. During/about 2019 the
Group operated approximately
22 petroleum depots in Mpumalanga,
Gauteng, Limpopo and North West Province.
[2]
As things stand, Engen Petroleum Ltd
(Engen) launched a liquidation application against four of these and
provisional liquidation
orders were granted against them on 26 July
2024 – these orders were granted in the Middelburg Division of
the Mpumalanga
High Court. All these are opposed by the present
Intervening Applicants who hold (together) 50% of the member’s
interest
of the various entities in provisional liquidation. They
also allege that they are creditors in each entity. None of the
provisional orders were granted in respect of the present respondent
– a close corporation known as Kuyanda Commodities 34
CC t/a
Bafana Petroleum (Kuyanda).
[3]
However, during April 2024, Q4 Fuel Pty
(Ltd) (Q4) launched liquidation applications against two more close
corporations in the
Group of which Kuyanda is one. These applications
are pending in the Mpumalanga High Court and both are opposed by the
present
Intervening Applicants.
[4]
On 4 August 2024 and 6 September 2024, the
present Intervening Applicants launched applications to commence
business rescue proceedings
in respect of the five provisionally
liquidated entities. A sixth business rescue application was launched
in respect of Kuyanda.
[5]
It
was not argued, nor even suggested by the present applicant (Olive),
that the provisions of s131(1) and/or s131(2) of the
Companies
Act 71 of 2008
[1]
(the 2008 Act) had not been complied with.
[6]
At present it is alleged that:
“
2.19
An application has been launched to the Judge President of the
Mpumalanga High Court, Middelburg seat, for case
management to
commence in terms of the practice directives of that court, the
applications to be considered collectively in relation
to all of the
entities by the same Presiding Judge. The Applicants applied for a
collective hearing in terms of their application;
2.20 The application to
the Presiding President in terms of the practice directives, includes
that the pending liquidation applications
be case managed together
with the business rescue applications, in order to ensure compliance
with the provisions of section 131
in relation to the interaction
between business rescue proceedings being adjudicated upon first (in
terms of section 131(2)), and
the outcome thereof being determinative
of the pending liquidation applications envisaged in section 131(2);”
[7]
On 7 November 2024 Olive issued out summons
against Kuyanda. The action is defended and a plea and counterclaim
was filed on 20
February 2025. Although I will return to the issue
later in this judgment, in the counterclaim the very agreement which
founds
the basis of Olive’s assertion that it is a creditor in
terms of s345(1)(a) of the Companies Act 61 of 1973 (the 1973 Act),
is disputed by Kuyanda.
[8]
On
5 March 2024 Olive launched the present liquidation application
against Kuyanda in this Division
[2]
.
The application is opposed by Kuyanda. There is also an application
for leave to intervene in the liquidation application by the
two
minority members of Kuyanda (the Intervening Applicants). In
response, Olive filed a Notice in terms of Rule 6(5)(b)(iii)
[3]
(sic) – no answering affidavit was filed.
[9]
Thus, at the adjudication of this matter on
10 March 2025, the following issues were argued:
a)
whether the application for leave to
intervene should be granted;
b)
whether the business rescue proceedings in
Mpumalanga suspended the present liquidation application in terms of
the provisions of
s131(6) of the 2008 Act;
c)
whether the liquidation application should
be transferred to the Mpumalanga High Court, to be heard with the
other liquidation applications
brought by Engen and Q4 and/or the
business rescue application.
This liquidation
application
[10]
The facts upon which Olive relies are not
complex. It alleges that:
a)
Olive and Kuyanda entered into a written
Murabaha Fuel Trade Agreement (the Agreement) on 24 February 2022. At
the time, Kuyanda
was represented by a Mr Diedericks who purported to
be the “owner and director” of Kuyanda;
b)
Olive
would make an amount of money
[4]
available to Kuyanda on certain terms and conditions and subject to a
certain limit;
c)
Olive
would then, through Kuyanda, purchase goods from a vendor at cost
price and would sell those back to Kuyanda at cost plus
profit on
deferred payment terms
[5]
pursuant to the execution of a Transaction Request and an Offer
letter;
d)
Kuyanda would then be invoiced and was
obliged to pay the amount due on each deferred payment date.
[11]
Olive
alleges that it complied with the terms of this written agreement -
unfortunately Kuyanda did not. As a result, and after
several
demands, Olive served a formal s345 demand
[6]
on Kuyanda. In this, it demanded payment of the amount of
R9 209 967-91 from Kuyanda within the statutory three-week
period, but Kuyanda failed to pay.
[12]
Olive states that Kuyanda's failure to pay
the amount demanded “leads to the only reasonable inference,
namely that the respondent
is unable to pay its debts within the
meaning of the 1973 Companies Act”, that Kuyanda “is
accordingly deemed and demonstrated
to be unable to pay its debts”
and that Kuyanda should be wound up on this basis.
The Answering
Affidavit
[13]
The answering affidavit was filed on 3 June
2024. It is deposed to by one Adriaan Evert Prakke (Prakke), a
forensic chartered accountant
who was instructed by the Intervening
Applicants to investigate the affairs of several entities within the
Group. The Intervening
Applicants have both provided confirmatory
affidavits.
[14]
The background is that the Group was
established in the early 2000’s by Mr. John Peter De Wet (De
Wet). De Wet managed Kuyanda
and several other entities together with
Pieter Blignaut Diedericks (Diedericks) each of whom had a 50%
interest.
[15]
After De Wet passed away it was agreed
that, given his experience and involvement in the operations and
administration of the Group,
Diedericks would continue in this role
and would retain his 50% interest. The remaining 50% interest would
be equally shared between
the Intervening Applicants.
[16]
According to the Intervening Applicants,
they invested approximately R43 million in cash in the Group. The
agreement between them
and Diedericks was that they would be paid a
dividend on this amount in the sum of R2 million each per year.
[17]
However, during 2014 the wheels came off
and Diedericks terminated his communications with the minority
members and “practically
excluded them from the operations of
the entire business enterprise”, including that of Kuyanda.
[18]
The allegation is made that by 2020/2021
there was tangible evidence that Diederick was enriching himself “at
a large scale".
The investigation by Mr Prakke revealed that,
inter alia
,
the company profile indicates that the Group is “privately
owned by the main shareholder” ie Diedericks. This is incorrect
as:
a)
De Wet passed away on 12 November 2010 and
according to his last will and testament his estate was inherited in
equal shares by
each of the Intervening Applicants;
b)
Mr J de Wet (ie first Intervening
Applicant) was registered as a member of Kuyanda on 13 November 2004;
c)
Ms Ambrosini (ie second Intervening
Applicant) was registered as a member of Kuyanda on 5 February 2013.
[19]
Effectively, what this means is that when
the Agreement was signed on 24 February 2022, both Intervening
Applicants were existing
minority members of Kuyanda.
[20]
Further “evidence” of
Diedericks’ alleged unlawful conduct was that:
a)
he applied for a loan of R4 million as a
credit facility from Porta Plant (Pty) Ltd t/a Porta Verspreiders
(Porta Plant) on 29 July
2020; the funds were advanced to Kuyanda but
not repaid to Porta Plant, and as a result, Porta Plant is taking
legal action against
Kuyanda;
b)
he cashed in and received the proceeds of
all endowment policies that were intended to secure repayment of
investments in the Group
to the members, including Kuyanda;
c)
he took out endowment policies with
Discovery without the knowledge of the Intervening Applicants in the
name of “Kuyanda
Commodities 34 CC” - these were paid out
without the Intervening Applicants knowledge and co-operation;
d)
he received remuneration greatly in excess
of agreed dividends;
e)
he failed to properly (or at all) consult
(or consult with) the Intervening Applicants on agreements or
payments or receipt of monies
which would either directly profit him
or encumber Kuyanda or pose a negative direct financial obligation on
either Kuyanda and/or
the Intervening Applicants;
f)
he breached his fiduciary duty towards
Kuyanda and the Intervening Applicants by failing to disclose
financial benefits he personally
received from transactions he
entered into without consulting and obtaining consent of the majority
of members;
g)
he withheld information material to the
affairs of the company and effectively shut the Intervening
Applicants out of any decision-making
process and that his conduct
was such that it constitutes a fraudulent non-disclosure.
[21]
One such transaction, according to the
Intervening Applicants, is the Agreement. The Intervening Applicants
argue that there was
no meeting held between them and Diedericks and
there is no resolution adopted authorising him to enter into that
Agreement. As
stated, the Agreement states that Diedericks is “the
owner and director" of Kuyanda – a fact not borne out by
the CIPC records and is, in fact, untrue.
[22]
In fact, it is alleged that the Agreement
itself contains a condition precedent: that there be compliance in
accordance with schedule
1 which requires that a resolution be
obtained from the three members of Kuyanda, together with documentary
proof of compliance
that Kuyanda committed itself to the terms of the
Agreement in a resolution which was legally adopted by the members.
[23]
The
Intervening Applicants also allege that the payment of R9 million is
also not reflected in Kuyanda’s bank account and
that there is
not, nor was there, any unanimous resolution taken by all three of
Kuyanda’s members authorising Kuyanda’s
further
encumbrance. The allegation is also made that, as result of
Diederick’s conduct, s75(3)
[7]
of the 2008 Act was breached and the Agreement is void
ab
initio
.
[24]
As much as Olive denies that this was a
requirement, and argues that “Diedericks possessed the
requisite authority”,
it is not in a position to make that
denial as it does not possess knowledge of the arrangements or
agreement between Kuyanda’s
members regarding the day-to-day
running of the entity or its financial arrangements.
[25]
Olive
is, however, in possession of a suretyship signed by Diedericks to
secure the debt of Kuyanda. It was argued by the Intervening
Applicants that Olive is not without recourse as Diedericks he is
personally liable to Olive in terms of s77
[8]
of the 2008 Act, as well as the suretyship he signed. As this is not
an issue that I am required to determine, nothing more need
be said.
The application for
leave to Intervene
[26]
On 12 February 2025, not one month before
this hearing, the Intervening Applicants launched their application.
The Notice of Motion
seeks the following relief:
“
1.
That leave be granted to the Intervening Applicants to launch this
interlocutory application in the current
and pending liquidation
application of the Applicant in the Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
under the above case number;
2.
That an order be granted that the liquidation application of the
Applicant, is hereby suspended
in terms of
section 131(6)
of the
Companies Act No. 71 of 2008
until the Mpumalanga High Court has
adjudicated upon the pending business rescue by the Intervening
Applicants’ application
of the Respondent in the Mpumalanga
High Court, the Middelburg Seat, under case number *3927/2024;
3.
That an order be granted in terms of
section 27
of the
Superior
Courts Act No. 10 of 2013
in terms of which this court orders that
the application for liquidation by the Applicant, Olive Trading
Company (Pty) Ltd, of
the Respondent Kuyanda Commodities 34 CC, be
removed to the Mpumalanga High Court, Middelburg seat, to be
adjudicated upon in that
court;
4.
That the costs of this interlocutory application, be costs in the
liquidation application.”
[27]
Although paragraph 1 of the Notice of Motion is, in my view, somewhat
inelegantly worded. it
is clear from the papers, the heads of
argument and the (limited) argument on Prayer 1 that what both
Intervening Applicants sought
was their joinder under
Rule 12
as
respondents to the liquidation application, as well as leave to
launch the interlocutory application set out in Prayers 2 and
3 of
their Notice of Motion.
[28]
It appears that one of the main reasons for the request for leave to
intervene is that Prakke
[9]
unexpectedly passed away on 14 September 2024.
[29]
As stated supra, it is common cause that the Intervening Applicants
are owners of 25% each (ie
a total of 50%) of the membership interest
in all the entities in respect of which business rescue applications
were launched,
including Kuyanda. There was also no argument
presented that any of the business rescue applications had not been
properly commenced
nor that the requirements set out in s131 of the
2008 Act, met.
[30]
The Intervening Applicants allege that they have locus standi based
on:
a)
their members interest;
b)
that
they are creditors of Kuyanda and therefore have an interest in the
proceedings, their agreed dividends of R2,5 million per
annum
[10]
has remained unpaid since 2014
[11]
;
c)
that they thus each have claims against the
entities for the dividends accrued to them but not paid.
[31]
Rule 12 states:
“
Any
person entitled to join as a plaintiff of liable to be joined as a
defendant in any action may, on notice to all parties, at
any stage
of the proceedings apply for leave to intervene as a plaintiff or a
defendant. The court may upon such application make
such order
including any order as to costs, and to give directions as to further
procedure in the action as to it may may seem
meet.”
[32]
In
SA
Riding for the Disabled Association v Regional Land Claims
Commissioner
[12]
the Constitutional Court re-stated the test to be applied:
“
[9] It
is now settled that an applicant for intervention must meet the
direct and substantial interest test in order
to succeed. What
constitutes direct and substantial interest is the legal interest in
the subject-matter of the case which
could be prejudicially affected
by the order of the Court. This means that the applicant must
show that it has a right adversely
affected or likely to be affected
by the order sought. But the applicant does not have to satisfy the
court at the stage of intervention
that it will succeed. It is
sufficient for such applicant to make allegations which, if proved,
would entitle it to relief.
[10] If the
applicant shows that it has some right which is affected by the order
issued, permission to intervene must be granted.
For it is a
basic principle of our law that no order should be granted against a
party without affording such party a pre decision
hearing.
This is so fundamental that an order is generally taken to be binding
on parties to the litigation.”
[33]
The Intervening Applicants allege that they have a direct and
substantial interest in the subject-matter
of the present dispute as
they are minority members of Kuyanda and creditors of Kuyanda.
[34]
In
Levay
and Another v Van Den Heever and Others NNO
[13]
the court stated:
“
[20] In
my view the conclusion in
Regal
[14]
should
not be confined to sole shareholders or majority shareholders. A
share in a company consists of a bundle, or conglomerate,
of personal
rights entitling the holder thereof to a certain interest in the
company, its assets and dividends. Those rights include
the right to
attend and vote at meetings of shareholders. For this reason a
minority shareholder does in my opinion have a sufficient
legal
interest to intervene in a winding-up application in order to oppose
it and does not have to show an additional interest.
This is
consistent with
Regal
where
the court questioned the proposition that a shareholder must show an
interest in addition to his shareholding in order to
be allowed to
intervene.”
[15]
[35]
In response to the application, Olive filed a notice in terms
of rule 6(5)(d)(iii) in which it takes the following points:
a)
that the Intervening Applicants have not established any substantial
interest in terms where they should
be or maybe joined to the
proceedings;
b)
that the fact that they have conceded that Kuyanda carries on
business within the court’s
jurisdiction means that they raise
no cognizable claim, even though all the other applications are
presently pending in Mpumalanga;
c)
no proper case is made out to suggest that it is not convenient for
this court to exercise its jurisdiction
over the application for
liquidation and that removal of the application to Mpumalanga at this
late stage hampers the efficient
exercise of justice;
d)
that only a liquidator has the authority to set aside any impeachable
dispositions, and insofar as the
allegations exist that these exist,
any business rescue practitioner (BRP) would have no power to deal
with this at all. Thus liquidation
is the more expedient and
justifiable course of action;
e)
Kuyanda conducts business, hold its assets, and has its employees at
its Pretoria main place of business
within the jurisdiction of this
court and therefore it is convenient that the application for
liquidation be heard within this
court jurisdiction;
f)
s131(6) of the 2008 Act does not automatically suspend this
liquidation application.
Is Olive’s
liquidation application suspended?
[36]
This question flows from the provisions of s131(6) of the 2008 Act:
“
(6)
If liquidation proceedings have already been commenced by or against
the company at the time an application is made in terms
of subsection
(1), the application will suspend those liquidation proceedings
until-
(a)
the court has adjudicated upon the application; or
(b)
the business rescue proceedings end, if the court makes the order
applied for.”
[37]
Olive does not argue that the business rescue proceedings in
Mpumalanga were not properly commenced
[16]
- its argument is that that application does not automatically
suspend this liquidation application.
[38]
The argument is that s131(6) distinguishes between a business rescue
application and liquidation
proceedings
.
It argues that in
Absa
Bank Ltd v Summer Lodge (Pty) Ltd
[17]
(
Summer
Lodge
)
Makhoba J aligned himself with the view of Van Der Byl AJ in
First
Rand Bank Ltd v Imperial Crown Trading 143 (Pty) Ltd
[18]
(
Imperial
Crown
)
where the court stated that for purposes of s131(6), liquidation
proceedings only commence by the granting of a liquidation order,
whether provisional or final and that the provisions of s131(6) do
not suspend any liquidation proceedings prior to the granting
of a
provisional or final order.
[39]
However, in
Standard
Bank of South Africa v A-Team Trading CC
[19]
(A-Team)
Ploos van Amstel J stated:
“
[12]
I regret to say that I find the reasoning of both judges in
Summer
Lodge
unpersuasive. They seem to
have overlooked the fact that liquidation proceedings are commenced
by the launching of an application,
and that subsection (6) refers to
liquidation proceedings ‘by or against‘ the company. If a
liquidation application
is dismissed the proceedings come to an end.
That does not mean that the application did not constitute
liquidation proceedings.
If a liquidation order is granted the
company is, in terms of section 348 of the Companies Act of 1973,
deemed to have been placed
in liquidation when the application was
launched. And the liquidation proceedings continue until the
order is discharged
or the company is deregistered on completion of
the liquidation process. I think with respect that Van Der Byl AJ
misread section
348. It is not the liquidation proceedings which are
deemed to have commenced when the application was presented - it is
the winding
up of the company. The reliance by Makgoba J on the
dictionary definition of the words ‘liquidation’ and
‘proceeding’
is not helpful. The words are used together
in section 131(6) and they must be understood in the proper context.
By way of analogy,
eviction proceedings in every day practice
commence with an application for an eviction order and include the
process of serving
the eviction order and ejecting the unlawful
occupant. I do not see why it should be different in the case of
liquidation proceedings.”
[40]
Olive’s argument is that, as Makhoba J’s judgment
emanates from this Division, this
court is bound by it in accordance
with the principle of
stare decisis
: a court is bound and must
abide by and consistently apply its prior decisions and those of
courts of an equal or higher status
unless they are patently flawed.
[41]
In
Director
of Public Prosecutions, KwaZulu-Natal v Ndlovu
[20]
,
the SCA explained the principle thus:
“
[24]
Therefore, it is necessary to say something about the fundamental
importance of precedent and the doctrine of
stare
decisis
. In
S
v Cock
;
S
v Manuel
, Pickering J, who penned the
unanimous judgment of the court, was cognisant of the intrinsic value
of precedent when he rightly
noted that:
'a
deviation from a Supreme Court of Appeal decision can only be
justified on one of three possible grounds. Firstly, where the
case
before the Judge is on the facts so distinguishable that the
rationes
decidendi
of the Supreme Court of
Appeal does not find application, however this requires a careful
factual analysis and [is] a ground that
must be ventured into
carefully so as not [to] undermine the principle of stare decisis on
perceived differences that are more
contrived than real. Secondly a
decision of the Supreme Court of Appeal can be deviated from if it is
rendered per incuriam. Per
incuriam does not refer to an instance
where a lower court deems the Supreme Court of Appeal to have
erroneously interpreted the
law. It refers to the situation where the
Supreme Court of Appeal overlooked legislation governing the case.
Thirdly, a decision
of the Supreme Court of Appeal is rendered
nugatory or obsolete due [to] subsequent legislative development.'
[25] And the
Constitutional Court unambiguously tells us in
Camps Bay
Ratepayers' and Residents' Association & another v Harrison and
another
that:
'Observance
of the doctrine has been insisted upon, both by this court and by the
Supreme Court of Appeal. And I believe rightly
so. The doctrine of
precedent not only binds lower courts, but also binds courts of final
jurisdiction to their own decisions.
These courts can depart from a
previous decision of their own only when satisfied that that decision
is clearly wrong.
Stare decisis
is
therefore not simply a matter of respect for courts of higher
authority. It is a manifestation of the rule of law itself, which
in
turn is a founding value of our Constitution. To deviate from this
rule is to invite legal chaos.’”
[42]
I am of the view, for the reasons set out in
A-Team
– with which I respectfully agree - that
Summer
Lodge
and
Imperial
Crown
were
incorrectly decided. But even were this view to be flawed, the SCA
has put this issue to bed in
Richter
v ABSA Bank
[21]
(Richter)
where it stated:
“
[17]
There is no sensible justification for drawing the proverbial ‘line
in the sand’ between pre and post final liquidation
in
circumstances where the prospects of success of business rescue
exist. The legislature did not do so and to restrict business
rescue
to those cases in which a final winding up order has not been granted
is inimical to the Act.”
[43]
In my view, it is clear that, as the decision of
Richter
was
decided after
Summer Lodge
and
Imperial Crown
, it has
overruled them.
[44]
The main thrust of the argument centered around whether or not this
liquidation application was
automatically suspended in terms of
s131(6) – in my view, it is. The fact is also that the entire
basis upon which Olive
relies to found its liquidation application is
in dispute and forms the subject matter of a pending action, which
also means that
a court would eventually decide whether Olive is a
creditor or not.
[45]
A brief overview of the thrust of the business rescue application
pending in Mpumalanga demonstrates
the following
prima facie
facts:
a)
the application is one of six presently pending in that court in
which it is alleged that there
are prospects of success to turn
around the financially parlous state of Kuyanda;
b)
the Intervening Applicants rely on the provisions of s163(1)(a) to
(c), as read with s163(2)(c)
of the 2008 Act
[22]
to found their complaint that, as minority members, they were
subjected to oppressive conduct by Diedericks, that they are thus
entitled to seek the remedy of business rescue, especially as it is
admitted that Kuyanda is in financial distress
[23]
;
c)
that the Group has assets of approximately R180 million, four gully
operational depots (including
that of Kuyanda) and that Kuyanda has
assets recently valued at R40 million;
d)
thus there are prospects of success in the business rescue
proceedings via-a-vis Kuyanda.
[46]
Although the business rescue application had been filed on CaseLines,
the parties informed me
that it was unnecessary to read it, and that
the papers were incomplete. I accept that the respondent and
Intervening Applicants
version in respect of the business rescue
application – as set out in the application before me - is not
so untenable or
far-fetched
[24]
that their version should be rejected. In my view, they have thus
demonstrated that there are prospects of success in the business
rescue proceedings and the liquidation proceedings should thus be
suspended in terms of the provisions of s131(6) of the 2008 Act.
Removal to Mpumalanga
[47]
Olive argues that this Court has the jurisdiction to entertain the
liquidation as the principal
place of business of Kuyanda is within
this Court's jurisdiction, as are its assets – this is admitted
by Kuyanda. It argues
that the court is seized with the matter and
should not, at the eleventh hour have to hear argument to remove the
matter –
the removal would simply result in a waste of judicial
resources and time in an already strained court.
[48]
In
Goode,
Durrant and Murray (SA) Ltd and Another v Lawrence
[25]
(Lawrence)
the respondent applied for a transfer of the matter to the Durban and
Coast Local Division alleging that it would be more equitable
and
convenient for that Division to hear the matter as:
a)
the issues to be enquired into ie voidable
dispositions had occurred in that court's jurisdiction;
b)
the respondent, his wife and other
witnesses resided there;
c)
it was only the two applicants, apparently
the remaining creditors of the respondent, who resided out of the
jurisdiction of that
court, where there was also certain other
properties of the respondent.
[49]
In granting the removal, the court stated that the question of
convenience is decided with reference
to what happens after the order
is granted and that:
“
It
follows the moment that an order for sequestration is granted, that
the Court granting the order is vested with jurisdiction
in regard to
everything that follows upon the order; all applications to Court and
the Master’s control of that estate is
absolute and even
rehabilitation must be in that forum. On a consideration of the
present facts, I must look to the case made out
by the applicant, not
that made out by the respondent, because I must look to the
convenience in the event of an order being granted
and not in the
event of an order being refused. I think that the convenience is
overwhelming in favour of the Durban and Coast
Local Division. The
matters to be enquired into occurred in the jurisdiction of that
Court; the respondent and his wife who will
have to be examined,
reside there; their witnesses reside there; and on the other hand,
the two applicants, apparently the only
remaining creditors of the
respondent, reside out of the jurisdiction of that court, and it is
said that their convenience is of
importance because they will have
to give instructions to the trustee. No doubt the affairs of Windsor
Motors will have to be enquired
into and the records of those affairs
are within this jurisdiction, but that I did not find inconvenient.
In practice one knows
from experience that creditors have very little
to do with what happens after an order of sequestration has been
granted; they
give verbal or written instructions to the trustee and
he proceeds to carry on with the investigation. The records of the
liquidation
of Windsor Motors can easily be transmitted to the other
Court, I have come to the conclusion that everything paints to it
being
equitable and convenient that not this Court but the Durban and
Coast Local Division should hear the matter.”
[50]
Olive argues that the
Lawrence
judgment as authority that "if
there was competition between the jurisdiction of two provinces and
in the one province there
was little or no assets, and in the other
large assets, the court would certainly refuse sequestration in the
Province where the
smaller assets were to be found…”
[51]
In my view, were it not for the fact that the Mpumalanga High Court
were seized with multiple
liquidation applications and multiple
business rescue applications, all based on either the same or similar
facts, where all those
parties are already before that court and that
court’s jurisdiction engaged on multiple levels
[26]
,
I may have agreed that the issue of convenience should be decided in
favour of this court’s jurisdiction – but I do
not. In my
view, given everything that is presently pending, the present
application should be decided by the Mpumalanga High Court.
[52]
In my view, the matter in casu is distinguishable on the facts from
the
Lawrence
matter exactly because there are pending
proceedings against several entities within the Group, as well as
against Kuyanda in Mpumalanga.
The Mpumalanga court is seized with
all these applications and the facts germane to each, which all
appear to be intertwined –
certainly the facts pertaining to
the two Kuyanda applications are. Were this application to be
transferred, the Mpumalanga court
can hear both applications
pari
passu
and may decide (if it dismisses the business rescue
application) to grant a liquidation order - it can only do so if both
applications
serve before it.
[53]
Were Olive’s objection to transfer to be upheld it would also
mean that, if Kuyanda's business
rescue application is unsuccessful,
Olive would have to apply for a date of hearing in this Division and
wait its turn in the queue
and a judge (unfamiliar with all the facts
of all the matters) would have to consider the application. That is
not conducive to
the efficient and effective disposal of litigation.
It unnecessarily encumbers scarce judicial resources and enforces a
piece-meal
disposal of litigation which is undesirable.
[54]
As a judge has been appointed to case-manage all the pending
applications in Mpumalanga, it is
my view that Olive’s
liquidation application would be both more conveniently, expediently
and appropriately heard and determined
in the Mpumalanga High Court,
Middelburg in terms of
s27(1)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of
2013
[27]
.
Costs
[55]
The Intervening Applicants have not sought costs in the in the event
they are successful. They
seek an order that the cost of the
interlocutory application be costs in the liquidation application.
The Order
[56]
The order I grant is the following:
1.
The Intervening Applicants are granted
leave to intervene and are granted leave to launch the interlocutory
application in the pending
liquidation application launched by Olive
Trading Company (Pty) Ltd against Kuyanda Commodities 34 CC t/a
Bafana Petroleum (GP
case no. 2024/024546).
2.
The liquidation application of the
applicant is hereby suspended in terms of
s131(6)
of the
Companies
Act 71 of 2008
until the Mpumalanga High Court has adjudicated upon
the pending business rescue application launched by the Intervening
Applicants
against Kuyanda Commodities 34 CC t/a Bafana Petroleum
(case no. 3927/2024).
3.
The application for liquidation of Olive
Trading Company (Pty) Ltd vs Kuyanda Commodities 34 CC t/a
Bafana Petroleum (GP case
number: 2024/024546) is removed to the
Mpumalanga High Court, Middelburg in terms of
s27
of the
Superior
Courts Act 10 of 2013
, to be determined by that court.
4.
The costs of the interlocutory application
shall be costs in the liquidation application.
B NEUKIRCHER
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
This judgment was
prepared and authored by the judge whose name is reflected, and is
handed down electronically by circulation to
the parties/their legal
representatives by email and by uploading it to the electronic file
of this matter on CaseLines.
The date for hand-down is deemed
to be 23 April 2025.
For
the applicant
:
Adv M Desai
Instructed
by
:
Govender Patel Dladla Inc
For
the respondent and
Intervening
Applicants
:
Adv MA
Badenhorst SC
Instructed
by
: Eastes Inc
Matter
heard on
:
12 March
2025
Judgment
date
: 23
April 2025
[1]
(1)
Unless a company has adopted a resolution contemplated in
section
129
, an affected person may apply to a court at any time for an
order placing the company under supervision and commencing business
rescue proceedings.
(2) An applicant in
terms of subsection (1) must-
(a) serve a copy of the
application on the company and the Commission; and
(b) notify each affected
person of the application in the prescribed manner.
Lutchman
NO and Others v African Global Holdings Pty (Ltd) and Others
2022 (4) SA 529
(SCA) paragraph 28
[2]
This
is because Olive argues that the principle place of business and
chosen
domicilium
are situated in Gauteng. It is common cause that Kuyanda’s
registration address is in Mpumalanga at the Farm Platrond,
district
Standerton
[3]
It
is clear that what Olive intended to do was file a notice in terms
of
Rule 6(5)(d)(iii)
as the rule it cited does not exist
[4]
Which the Agreement calls “the Investment”
[5]
Which was 30 days
[6]
In
terms of the Companies Act, 1973 (the 1973 Act)
[7]
75(3)
If a person is the only director of a company, but does not hold all
of the beneficial interests of all of the issued securities
of the
company, that person may not—
(a) approve or enter
into any agreement in which the person or a related person has a
personal financial interest; or
(b) as a director,
determine any other matter in which the person or a related person
has a personal financial interest, unless
the agreement or
determination is approved by an ordinary resolution of the
shareholders after the director has disclosed the
nature and extent
of that interest to the shareholders.
[8]
Which
prescribes the liability of directors and prescribed officers
[9]
Who has deposed to several affidavits, including the main answering
affidavit before this court, and other liquidation applications,
as
well as the Business Rescue application.
[10]
Being interest on their investment of R43 million
[11]
Which they allege has been established by a forensic accountant
appointed by them
[12]
2017 (5) SA 1 (CC)
[13]
2018 (4) SA 473 (GJ)
[14]
Registrar
of Banks v Regal Treasury Private Bank Ltd (under Curatorship) and
Another (Regal Treasury Holdings Ltd Intervening)
2004 (3) SA 560 (W)
[15]
Also:
Shapiro
v South African Recording Rights Association Ltd (Galeta
Intervening)
2008 (4) SA 145 (W)
[16]
Engen
Petroleum
Ltd v Multi Waste (Pty) Ltd and Others
2012 (5) SA 596
(GSJ)
[17]
[2013] ZAGPPHC 554 paragraph 9-15
[18]
2012 (4) SA 266 (KZD)
[19]
2016 (1) SA 503 (KZP)
[20]
2024 (1) SACR 561
(SCA) para 24-26
[21]
2015 (5) SA 57 (SCA)
[22]
163.
(1) A shareholder or a director of a company may apply to a court
for relief if—
(a) any act or omission
of the company, or a related person, has had a result that is
oppressive or unfairly prejudicial to, or
that unfairly disregards
the interests of, the applicant; … or
(c) the powers of a
director or prescribed officer of the company, or a person related
to the company, are being or have been
exercised in a manner that is
oppressive or unfairly prejudicial to, or that unfairly disregards
the interests of, the applicant.
(2) Upon considering an
application in terms of subsection (1), the court may make any
interim or final order it considers fit,
including—
…
(c)
an order placing the company under supervision and commencing
business rescue proceedings in terms of Chapter 6, if the court
is
satisfied that the circumstances set out in section 131(4)(a) apply;
[23]
Section
163 as read with s131(4)(a)(i) of the 2008 Act
[24]
Plascon-Evans
Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
1984 (3) SA 623 (A)
[25]
1961 (4) SA 319
(W) at 330G
[26]
Including
that the registered address is in Mpumalanga
[27]
If any proceedings have been instituted in a Division or at a seat
of a Division, and it appears to the court that such proceedings-
(a)
should
have been instituted in another Division or at another seat of that
Division; or
(b)
would
be more conveniently or more appropriately heard or determined-
(i)
at
another seat of that Division; or
(ii) by
another Division,
that
court may, upon application by any party thereto and after hearing
all other parties thereto, order such proceedings to be
removed to
that other Division or seat, as the case may be.
sino noindex
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