Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 558South Africa
Graham N.O and Others v Sailing Puppy (Pty) Ltd and Another (037099/2024) [2025] ZAGPPHC 558 (20 May 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
20 May 2025
Headnotes
of the events that constituted the status quo before the Trust made the Section 61 (3) demand:
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Graham N.O and Others v Sailing Puppy (Pty) Ltd and Another (037099/2024) [2025] ZAGPPHC 558 (20 May 2025)
Graham N.O and Others v Sailing Puppy (Pty) Ltd and Another (037099/2024) [2025] ZAGPPHC 558 (20 May 2025)
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sino date 20 May 2025
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
FLYNOTES:
COMPANY
– Shareholders meeting –
Compelling
to convene –
Removal
of director – Alleged misconduct and breaches of fiduciary
duty – Unjustified obstruction of meeting by
falsely
claiming sole ownership of company’s shares – Trust
confirmed sole shareholder status through documentary
evidence –
Exhausted alternative remedies – Director’s conduct
was prejudicial to company – Special
circumstances warranted
judicial intervention – Demand for meeting was bona fide –
Companies Act 71 of 2008
,
ss 61(3)
and (12).
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO: 037099/2024
(1)
REPORTABLE:
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
(3)
REVISED:
NO
(4)
Date: 20 May 2025
Signature:
In
the matter between:
WILLIAM
OLIVER GRAHAM N.O.
First Applicant
ANNAMEY
GRAHAM
N.O.
Second Applicant
HERMANUS
ALBERTUS DU TOIT N.O.
Third Applicant
And
SAILING
PUPPY (PTY) LTD
First Respondent
JACOBUS
CORNELIUS REYNEKE
Second Respondent
JUDGMENT
NYATHI
J
A.
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This is an application in which the applicants
seek an order of this Court to convene a shareholders’ meeting
under the provisions
of Section 61(12) of the Companies Act 71 of
2008 (“the
Companies Act&rdquo
;).
[2]
The application is made pursuant to a written
demand by the Trust for the holding of a shareholders’ meeting
made under
Section 61(3)
of the
Companies Act on
12 March 2024. This
demand has been frustrated by the first respondent.
B.
BACKGROUND
[3]
The first, second and third applicants are the
trustees of a Namibian registered Trust, namely the Rodzina Carbonile
Trust (“the
Trust”)
[4]
The Applicant Trust has since 15 October 2019 held
the entire issued share capital in the first respondent, Sailing
Puppy (Pty)
Ltd (“Sailing Puppy”), a South African
registered Company. The Trust enjoyed beneficial and undisturbed
ownership of
its shareholding in Sailing Puppy.
[5]
Sailing Puppy has two directors, namely, Mr
Jacobus Cornelius Reyneke who is cited as the second respondent (“Mr
Reyneke”)
and Mrs Maria Elizabeth van Straaten (“Mrs van
Straaten”).
[6]
On 12 March 2024, the Trust, as sole shareholder of Sailing Puppy,
made demand
on Sailing Puppy under the provisions of
section 61(3)
of
the
Companies Act, to
convene a shareholders' meeting to transact
business under
section 71(1)
of the
Companies Act for
purposes of
debating, and if deemed appropriate, resolving and passing a
resolution to remove Mr Reyneke as a co-director of Sailing
Puppy.
[7]
Following upon the
section 61(3)
demand being sent, Mrs van Straaten
set about attempting to convene the shareholders’ meeting so
demanded by the Trust. To
that end, Mrs van Straaten, on 12 March
2024 and at 22h28 addressed an email to Mr Reyneke:
1.
informing him of the
section 61(3)
demand and the request by the Trust that the board of Sailing Puppy
convene the shareholders’ meeting;
2.
requesting his co-operation to
agree to a date, time and venue for the holding of the shareholders
meeting and to that end proposing
a directors' meeting over MS Teams
on 14 March 2024 at 11h00 to attend to these matters;
3.
Mrs van Straaten also requested Mr
Reyneke to give consideration at the proposed board meeting on 14
March 2024, to the appointment
of an independent Chairperson to chair
the shareholders meeting to be held.
[8]
No response was forthcoming from Mr Reyneke in respect of the issues
raised
by Mrs van Straaten in her email. Mr Reyneke’s refusal
to co-operate with his co-director Mrs van Straaten to convene the
requested meeting is rooted in a claim by Mr Reyneke, which surfaced
just after the Trust made demand for the meeting. He alleged
that he,
and not the Trust, is the sole shareholder of Sailing Puppy.
[9]
Instead, and on 13 March 2024, Taljaard & De Oliveira Attorneys
("Taljaard"),
addressed a letter to Mrs van Straaten,
informing her that their firm had been instructed by Mr Reyneke to
respond to the
section 61(3)
demand and that they would do so in due
course.
[10]
Later, on 13 March 2024, Mr Reyneke (acting personally) addressed an
email to Mrs van Straaten in which
he recorded that the directors'
meeting that Mrs van Straaten had proposed (and scheduled for 11h00
on 14 March 2024), was
"premature"
, as he would be
consulting with his attorneys and would revert to Mrs van Straaten
after he had done so.
[11]
On 18 March 2024, Taljaard addressed a letter to Mrs van Straaten in
which it was amongst others recorded
that
"Both you and all
the trustees of the Trust who signed the aforesaid demand are acutely
aware that the Trust is not a shareholder
of Sailing Puppy (Pty) Ltd
("Sailing Puppy )" and that "Our client has always
been the sole shareholder of Sailing
Puppy".
[12]
The Trust upon coming to learn of this letter on the same day,
addressed correspondence to Taljaard
disputing the allegations
contained in the letter from Taljaard, it having become clear to the
Trust that Mr Reyneke was unlawfully
contending that he, as opposed
to the Trust, was the sole shareholder of Sailing Puppy.
C.
THE SHAREHOLDING IN CONTEXT
[13]
The context of the shareholding is best illustrated in a broad
summary of the events that constituted
the
status quo
before
the Trust made the
Section 61
(3) demand:
1.
Sailing Puppy was incorporated on
20 August 2019;
2.
WPR Financial Services CC (“WPR”)
incorporated Sailing Puppy;
3.
Mr Reyneke was from the date of
incorporation, recorded as the sole director of Sailing Puppy;
4.
On 30 January 2020, WPR’s Mr
Basch addressed an email to Mr Reyneke indicating that:
(i)
Sailing Puppy was ready for use; and
(ii)
Mr Reyneke was the only director; and
(iii)
that the first issue of 100 shares could be
“…
done
to whoever you wish.”
5.
On 4 February 2020, WPR's Mr
Basch addressed an email to Mr Reyneke to which he attached the
"...first share
certificate (issued in your name at incorporation date) and blank
CM42 (share transfer form) for signing
."
6.
On 6 February 2020, Mr
Reyneke addressed an email to Mr Basch asking
"Can
Pippa please amend the docs to transfer the shares to the attached
Namibian Trust. The date of transfer should be 15 October
2019."
It
is common cause that reference "Namibian Trust" is a
reference to the Trust;
7.
On 10
February 2020, Mr Basch responded to the earlier email of Mr Reyneke
of 6 February 2020 and stated as follows:
“
Hi
Jacques,
Attached
the draft docs as follows:
1.
Share Certificate # 1 issued in your name as the incorporator of the
company
2.
CM42 date 15 October 2019 where you transfer the 100 shares to the
Rodzina Carbonile Trust (PS you must sign just above the date)
3.
Share Certificate # 2 issued to the Trust date 15 October 2019 Note
that we need the address of the Trust in order to complete
the CM42
and Share Certificate properly, but that can also be written in by
hand.
Also
don't worry about the two lines for director and the one for
secretary in the share certificates. You are the only director
and
there is not an official company secretary registered with CIPC.
Let
me know If you have any questions?
Let
the puppy sail.”
8.
On the same day, 10 February 2020,
and within 14 minutes of receiving the information to in the
preceding subparagraph, Mr Reyneke
wrote to the second applicant’s
husband and Mr. Senekal and recorded that the shares were not issued
at incorporation but
would first vest in him and then only 15 October
will they vest onwards to (Rodzina) the Trust. He then advises them
to send him
the address of the Trust to enable him to complete the
CM42 and the share certificate.
9.
Following the address of the trust
being provided, Mr. Reyneke on 3 March 2020 addressed an email to Mr
Senekal (and copied Mr.
Graham), in which he recorded that:
"Hi Johan, Hier
is Sailing Puppy se aandelesertifikate. Die oorspronkllike (sic)
sertifikate is by die ouditeure in PTA."
10.
The certificate referred to in the
email was accompanied by a Securities Transfer Form signed by Mr
Reyneke on 15 October 2019 in
terms of which he transferred the 100
ordinary par value shares which had been registered in his name under
share certificate No.
1, to the Trust.
11.
A copy of Share Certificate No. 2
which Mr Reyneke signed on 15 October 2019 in his capacity as
director of Sailing Puppy, also
accompanied Mr Graham's email, which
reflects the Trust as the
"Registered Proprietor of
100 Ordinary Par Value Fully Paid Shares ..."
12.
Copies of the Securities Transfer
Form (Form CM42) signed by Mr Reyneke on 15 October 2019 as well as
Share Certificate No. 2 issued
to the Trust and bearing the date of
15 October 2019 also confirm the status of the
Trust as sole
shareholder of Sailing Puppy.
[emphasis
added].
[14]
It is first applicant (Mr. Graham’s) contention that since
then, the Trust has been and remains
the sole shareholder of Sailing
Puppy.
[15]
Matters came to a head when Mr Reyneke in his efforts to thwart Mrs.
Van Straaten and Mr Graham’s
efforts on behalf of the Trust to
have a shareholders’ meeting called, that Mr. Reyneke started
raising objections and making
allegations that he has always been and
remains the sole shareholder of Sailing Puppy. This much he contends
in his answering affidavit
filed in opposition to this application.
[16]
Mr. Reyneke contends that the No. 2 share certificate was issued as
part of a pledge, without providing
any coherent supporting evidence
thereto.
[17]
The Trust submits that Mr Reyneke’s version of that he is the
sole shareholder in Sailing Puppy
is contradicted by the clear facts
and circumstances which establish that the Trust has, since 15
October 2020 been the sole shareholder
of Sailing Puppy. Such facts
(which are borne out by the documents which Mr Reyneke admits) are
destructive of the version of Mr
Reyneke which is, on paper,
demonstrated to be palpably untrue meriting its rejection in motion
proceedings.
[18]
There are allegations
made by the first applicant in his founding affidavit that Mr.
Reyneke has in his capacity as a director of
Sailing Puppy, abused
his powers and authority, and acted so as to prejudice Sailing Puppy
and the Trust’s interests.
[1]
[19]
This type of conduct and
breach of fiduciary duties on the part of Mr. Reyneke is the main
reason which necessitates the bringing
of this application on an
urgent basis.
[2]
[20]
In the circumstances, no directors’ meeting was held, and no
shareholders’ meeting was
convened under the
section 61(3)
demand made by the Trust, Mr Reyneke for his part, refusing to attend
a directors’ meeting.
[21]
The Trust approached Mr Basch’s office in an attempt to secure
further corroborative evidence
in support of its shareholder status.
Mr Basch confirmed the following in a letter dated 27 March 2024 sent
to the directors of
Sailing Puppy:
1.
that his offices had been
instructed to register Sailing Puppy by Mr Reyneke in August 2019 and
that Sailing Puppy was incorporated
on 20 August 2019;
2.
that Mr Reyneke was at the date of
incorporation the sole initial director and holder of 100% of the
issued share capital of Sailing
Puppy;
3.
that Mr Basch's office had been
instructed by Mr Reyneke to prepare a securities transfer form (CM42)
as well as share certificate
number 2 of Sailing Puppy for the
transfer of 100% of the issued share capital to the Trust recording
further that he was in possession
of the signed electronic copies of
the CM42 and the share certificate in the name of the Trust;
4.
that his offices had also been
appointed to appoint Mrs van Straaten as a director of Sailing Puppy
with effect from 1 April 2022;
and
5.
that Sailing Puppy did not have an
appointed company secretary on record and that he had never
maintained a share register of Sailing
Puppy nor a minute book nor
did he have any minutes of any corporate actions on the part of the
company.
[22]
In light of the above, the Trust resolved that it had exhausted all
possible alternative avenues to
secure any additional corroborative
evidence of the factual position that it is the sole shareholder of
Sailing Puppy. The Trust
then approached the court on an urgent
basis seeking an order to convene a shareholders’ meeting under
section 61(12)
of the Act.
D.
THE PLEDGE
[23]
It is common cause that
Mrs van Straaten was appointed as a co-director with Mr Reyneke in
Sailing Puppy on 1 April 2022
[3]
,
and that he consented to the appointment in order to safeguard the
interests of the Trust. “…
because
it held the shares in pledge as security for the repayment of the
loans.”
[24]
This particular aspect of Mr Reyneke’s statement is vehemently
opposed by the applicants as being
fictional and an untruth under
oath. They submit that it is contradicted by all admitted documents
which make no reference whatsoever
to a pledge. They submit that it
is contrary to legal provisions because:
1.
When shares are pledged they are
not transferred by the pledgor to the pledgee. They are retained in
the name of the pledgor.
2.
A pledge of shares involves the
handing over of the share certificate reflecting the name of the
pledgor together with a signed
CM42 (in the case of certificated
shares as these are).
3.
It is only if there is a default
that the pledgee can, following due process, register the shares into
the pledgee's name.
E.
LEGAL PROVISIONS PERTAINING TO ORDER SOUGHT
[25]
Section 61(3)
of the
Companies Act reads
as follows:
”
(3)
Subject to subsection (5) and (6), the board of a company, or any
other person specified in the company's Memorandum of Incorporation
or rules, must call a shareholders meeting if one or more written and
signed demands for such a meeting are delivered to the company,
and-
(a) each
such demand describes the specific purpose for which the meeting is
proposed; …”
[26]
The courts have shown a
reluctance to call a meeting in terms of this section or its
equivalent in earlier versions of the
Companies Act. In
Yende
v Orlando Coal Distributors (Pty) Ltd
[4]
the Court refused to
order the holding of a meeting where despite disputes between the
shareholders of the company, there was nothing
preventing the calling
of a meeting.
Dowling
J
reasoning
that: “
In
general, the policy of the Courts has been not to interfere in the
internal domestic affairs of a company, where the company
ought to be
able to adjust its affairs itself by appropriate resolutions of a
majority of the shareholders.”
[5]
[27]
In
CDH
Invest NV v Petrotank South Africa (Pty) Ltd and Another
[6]
,
Van der Linde J held that Court intervention in the form of an order
in terms of
section 6(12)
is not there for the asking, as a Court
generally declines to interfere in the management of company affairs.
The learned Judge
stated that:
“
A court would
generally, unless special circumstances require otherwise, have to be
satisfied that calling a members’ meeting
was bona fide
intended, with a legitimate purpose, and in the best interests of the
company”
[7]
F.
DISCUSSION
[28]
The decisions referred to above display a stark reluctance by the
Courts to interfere in the management
of company affairs when invited
by applicants to do so. The exception that was clearly stated is when
special circumstances so
require, and when the court is satisfied
that the intentions for calling the members’ meeting were
bona
fide
and in the best interests of the company.
[29]
Mr Reyneke as can be seen above has not given his cooperation to the
Trust’s efforts to hold
a shareholders’ meeting in terms
of the
section 61(3)
demand. He provides no tenable reason for his
attitude.
[30]
This state of affairs establishes without equivocation that as at 12
March 2024 when the Trust made
demand upon Sailing Puppy that it
convene a shareholders’ meeting, the Trust enjoyed the
competence and entitlement to do
so as the sole shareholder of
Sailing Puppy.
[31]
Being a co-director of Sailing Puppy, Mr Reyneke’s conduct thus
far, is inimical to the interests
of Sailing Puppy. Mr Reyneke has,
despite warnings by Mrs van Straaten, caused Sailing Puppy losses in
value to the tune of N$
460 000.00 through his addendum scheme
wherein Sailing Puppy assumed obligations of another company, and in
so doing denuded
Sailing Puppy by that amount.
[32]
The applicants have demonstrated the special circumstances required
in
section 61(3).
When the court is satisfied that the intentions for
calling the members’ meeting are
bona fide
and in the
best interests of the company, it will eschew its general reluctance
and grant the order sought.
G.
THE ORDER
[33]
The following order is made:
1.
Condonation is granted for the
applicants’ non-compliance with the Uniform Rules of Court
pertaining to forms, time
periods and service, as well as the non- observance of Uniform Rule
of Court 41A and permitting the matter
to be heard as an urgent one
in accordance with Uniform Rule of Court 6(12).
2.
The first respondent, Sailing Puppy
(Pty) Ltd is directed to convene a shareholders meeting, as demanded
by the Rodzina Carbonile
Trust ("the Trust”) in terms of
Section 61(3)
of the
Companies Act, 71 of 2008
.
3.
The first respondent is ordered to:
4.
convene a shareholders’
meeting within 14 days of date of this order; and
5.
make suitable arrangements for the
shareholders meeting to take place at the 4
th
Floor Katherine & West
Building, 1[...] W[...] Street, Sandown.
6.
Advocate Darryl Williams (who has
confirmed his preparedness to act as an independent Chairperson in
the separate affidavit placed
before this Court) is appointed to act
as Chairperson of the shareholders meeting and to exercise all powers
as Chairperson of
the shareholders meeting and to keep and prepare a
minute of the meeting and cause such minute to be pasted in the
minute book
of Sailing Puppy.
7.
The second respondent is ordered to
pay the costs of this application including costs of senior counsel
on the scale as between
attorney and client. To be taxed on scale C.
J.S. NYATHI
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng Division,
Pretoria
Date
of hearing: 18/10/2024
Date
of Judgment: 20 May 2025
On
behalf of the Applicant: Mr. N. Konstantinides SC
Applicants’
attorneys: Van Hulsteyns Attorneys, Pretoria
Instructing
Attorney: Mr Andrew Legg
e-mail:
andrew@vhlaw.co.za
On
behalf of the First Respondent: Mr. A. Els SC
On
behalf of the Second Respondent: Mr Myburgh
Respondents’
attorneys: Taljaard & De Oliveira; Pretoria
Instructing
Attorney: Mr Taljaard
e-mail:
Jan@Riaanbosch.co.za
Delivery
:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties' legal representatives by email and uploaded on the
CaseLines
electronic platform. The date for hand-down is deemed to be 20 May
2025.
[1]
Founding
Affidavit para 127 to 130.
[2]
Founding affidavit: heading G and the paragraphs thereunder.
[3]
Mr
Reyneke Answering affidavit para 25.
[4]
1961
(3) SA 314 (W).
[5]
Ibid
at
p316.
[6]
2018
(3) SA 157
(GJ) confirmed on appeal on other grounds by the SCA as
CDH
Invest NV v Petrotank South Africa (Pty) Ltd and Another
2019
(4) SA 436 (SCA); [2019] ZASCA 53.
[7]
At
para 82.
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