Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 489South Africa
U-Rent (SA) (Pty) Limited v NMP Trading Projects (Pty) Limited t/a NMP Holdings (2024/063820) [2025] ZAGPPHC 489 (14 May 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
14 May 2025
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## U-Rent (SA) (Pty) Limited v NMP Trading Projects (Pty) Limited t/a NMP Holdings (2024/063820) [2025] ZAGPPHC 489 (14 May 2025)
U-Rent (SA) (Pty) Limited v NMP Trading Projects (Pty) Limited t/a NMP Holdings (2024/063820) [2025] ZAGPPHC 489 (14 May 2025)
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sino date 14 May 2025
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
Number: 2024/063820
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
14
May 2025
In
the matters between:-
U-RENT
(SA) (PTY) LIMITED
Applicant
and
N
M P TRADING PROJECTS (PTY) LIMITED
Respondent
t/a
N M P Holdings
JUDGMENT
JACOBS
AJ
[1]
This is an application for the winding-up of the
respondent. The applicant relies on Section 345 of the Companies Act,
1973, in
conjunction with Section 344(f) thereof, by alleging and
presuming that the respondent is unable to pay its debts and should,
therefore,
be wound up.
[2]
The respondent delivered an answering affidavit,
to which the applicant replied on 17 October 2024. On 1 May 2025 (a
week before
the hearing), the respondent uploaded a further affidavit
titled “Answering affidavit to the Applicant’s replying
Affidavit.”
This affidavit seems to constitute a further
affidavit as contemplated by Rule 6(5)(e). I find no substantive
application for leave
to file the supplementary affidavit. No
submissions were made in this context during the argument on behalf
of the respondent.
I will, as will become clear presently, take the
contents of this affidavit into account.
[3]
The applicant’s statutory letter of demand
seeks payment of R9,869,139.83, which is allegedly due under a
Commercial Rental
Agreement concluded on 19 January 2022. In response
to this letter of demand, and in its answering affidavit, the
respondent denies
any alleged liability. Furthermore, the respondent
claims that the applicant breached the Commercial Rental Agreement
and states
that it has paid any debt it might owe to the applicant.
[4]
The letter of demand mentioned above was not the
first statutory demand served by the applicant. The first Section 345
letter of
demand was served on the respondents, as stated by the
applicant in paragraph 19 of its founding affidavit, on 28 November
2023.
In response thereto, the respondent acknowledged its indebness
on 28 November 2023 and provided a written undertaking to pay the
outstanding debt.
[5]
The acknowledgment of debt (annexure D to the
founding affidavit) records repayment terms. The respondent
states in the following
answer to paragraph 19 of the founding
affidavit in paragraph 4.10 of its answering papers:
“
4.10
Save to admit that an acknowledgement of debt was
entered into between the Applicant and the Respondent
and that the
Applicant paid three monthly instalments of R650 000 and a further
R100.000 to the Applicant, the remainder of the
allegations contained
in this paragraph are denied. In substantiation of its denial the
Respondent wishes to state that the Applicant
was at all material
times aware that the motor vehicles rented to the Respondent was
(sic) sub-contracted to Post Office and was
informed that Post Office
has decided to undergo business rescue and will not be paying the
Respondent in terms of the contract
between Post Office and the
Respondent. The Respondent then proposed that a new payment
arrangement be made in light of the new
development. The proposal was
that the Respondent pays R100 000 per month towards the Applicant and
the Respondent then made a
payment of R100 000 on the 10th of May
2024. The Applicant then refused this payment arrangement, this is
evident from the letter
supra marked annexure TT2.”
[1]
[6]
Against this background, the respondent alleges
that a material and
bona fide
dispute of fact exists, which was known to the applicant, and that it
should not have brought this application for liquidation,
thereby
indicating an alleged abuse of process that should fall do be
dismissed with costs on a punitive scale.
[7]
The existence of a dispute of fact in motion
proceedings has been comprehensively set out in
Namutomi
Boerdery (Pty) Ltd and Another v Afgri Poultry (Pty) Ltd trading as
Daybreak Farms
(case number
2023-091417), an unreported judgment dated 7 March 2025, at
paragraphs [8] – [11]. I do not repeat those principles
here.
It should also be noted that an interim order for liquidation is
sought as an alternative in these proceedings, and a further
challenge may arise when the final relief is considered. In my view,
the dispute raised by the respondent is not
bona
fide
and does not meet the requirements
set forth in the judgments of our Supreme Court of Appeal and
Constitutional Court mentioned
in Namutomi (
supra
).
Furthermore, I believe the challenge presented by the respondent is
insufficient, as it does not specify with the required measure
of
particularity the payments, if any, made by the Post Office regarding
the vehicle rental before, during, and since the deactivation
of the
vehicles through their immobilisation equipment. In my opinion, the
evidence of the applicant is not disputed with the necessary
veracity
and accuracy that would establish a material
bona
fide
dispute of fact, as contended by
the respondent.
[8]
It is in my view clear that the respondent can and did not make
payment of its contractual
payment obligations or its settlement
obligations recorded, acknowledged and agreed to on 28 November
2023. The respondent
blames the default of the Post Office (one
of its debtors) to perform its obligations towards the respondent as
the reason for
its default. That evidence confirms the
inability on the part of the respondent to pay its debts. The
respondent alleges
breach of contract by the applicant for its
predicament. The alleged breach is the deactivation by the
applicant of the rental
vehicles with the use of its built-it
immobilisation equipment of those vehicles the Post Office uses and
for which the applicant
does not receive payment from the
respondent. The applicant relies on the lease agreement for its
right to do so. I
do not interpret the contractual arrangement
between the applicant and respondent to be that the applicant is in
law obliged to
be content with it not receiving payment for its
vehicles which it leases and is obliged to sit and watch how its
vehicles are
used and subjected to wear and tear resulting from daily
use without any
quid pro quo
.
[9]
Under the circumstances, a provisional order for liquidation should
follow,
and I make the following order:
1.
The respondent is placed under provisional winding-up, returnable
on
25 August 2025; and
2.
The costs of this application shall be costs in the liquidation.
H
F JACOBS
ACTING
Judge of the High Court
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Heard
on
:
12
May 2025
For
the applicant:
Adv M
Patel
Email:
Muhammed.patel@rsabar.net
Instructed
by:
Fullard
Mayer Morrison
Email:
mayer@fullardmayer.co.za
For
the respondent:
Mr CE
Kgopane
Email:
kgapaneattorneys@gmail.com
Date
of Judgment
:
14
May 2025
[1]
See CaseLines: 02-64
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