Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 781South Africa
Akani Building Solutions (Pty) Limited v Lebo Tebo Trading and Projects CC (2024-033125) [2025] ZAGPPHC 781 (1 August 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
1 August 2025
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Akani Building Solutions (Pty) Limited v Lebo Tebo Trading and Projects CC (2024-033125) [2025] ZAGPPHC 781 (1 August 2025)
Akani Building Solutions (Pty) Limited v Lebo Tebo Trading and Projects CC (2024-033125) [2025] ZAGPPHC 781 (1 August 2025)
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sino date 1 August 2025
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Case
Number: 2024 – 033125
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: YES
DATE
1 August 2025
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
AKANI
BUILDING SOLUTIONS (PTY) LIMITED
Applicant
and
LEBO
TEBO TRADING AND PROJECTS CC
Respondent
[
Registration number: 2008/237123/23 ]
[
For its liquidation ]
JUDGMENT
J Vorster, AJ.
[1]
The applicant seeks an order for the respondent’s liquidation.
It relies on the provisions
of
section 69
of the
Close Corporations
Act, 69 of 1984
, read with Schedule 3 to the
Companies Act, 71 of
2008
, and section 344 of the Companies Act, 61 of 1973.
[2]
The relationship between the parties is contractual in nature. It is
common cause that the respondent
was appointed by the Department of
Education in the Limpopo Province to render services at the Mosesane
Baloyi Primary School,
and that it appointed the applicant as its
sub-contractor in terms of a written appointment letter dated 14
October 2022, for the
provision of sanitation facilities. The
contract value was R1,959,222.32 (incl. VAT), and works were expected
to be completed by
31 January 2023.
[3]
According to the applicant, the works assigned to it were completed,
but the respondent failed
to pay an amount of R759,249.76.
[1]
[4]
When the application was argued, I raised a concern about the fact
that the Certificate of Tendered
Security was issued on 30 April
2025, a date more than 10 days before the application came before me.
In this regard, section 346(3),
in relevant part, provides:
“
every
application to the Court referred to in subsection (1), …
shall be accompanied by a certificate by the Master, issued
not more
than ten days before the date of the application, to the effect that
sufficient security has been given for the payment
of all fees and
charges necessary for the prosecution of all winding-up proceedings
and of all costs of administering the company
in liquidation until a
provisional liquidator has been appointed, or, if no provisional
liquidator is appointed, of all fees and
charges necessary for the
discharge of the company from the winding-up.
”
[5]
However, having considered the judgments in
De
Wet NO v Mandelie (Edms) Bpk
,
[2]
and
Mafeking
Creamery Bpk v Mamba Boerdery (Edms) Bpk
,
[3]
I conclude that: (i.) the date of the application is the date on
which the application is issued; and (ii.) it is not essential
that
the certificate be dated before the date of the application. In fact,
it need not, at that date, actually exist. All that
is required is
that security must have been given before the matter is heard and
that the security certificate must accompany the
application when it
is heard.
[4]
[6]
Turning to the merits of the application, the case advanced in the
applicant’s founding
affidavit, where all the essential
evidence to support its case must appear,
[5]
is fairly straightforward. It alleges that subsequent to its common
cause appointment as the respondent’s sub-contractor,
it
completed the works and issued two invoices respectively dated 5 and
13 June 2023, which remain unpaid. It further claims that
evidence of
its completion of the sub-contracted works is to be found in: (i.) a
certificate of practical completion issued by
the Limpopo Provincial
Department of Education on 3 May 2023; (ii.) a progress report dated
10 May 2023; and (ii.) email correspondence
from the project manager,
Mr Khuzwayo of TKQ Consulting, dated 2 November 2023, which
inter
alia
refers to the fact that the works were completed.
[7]
In its answering affidavit, the respondent admits its contractual
relationship with the applicant,
but denies that the applicant
completed the works. The respondent explains that the applicant
failed to complete the works, or
abandoned the works. The result was
that the respondent had to appoint other sub-contractors to complete
the works. The answering
affidavit specifically refers to the
appointment of the following sub-contractors who, according to the
respondent, had to complete
work for which the applicant was
responsible: (i.) Dusta General Services; (ii.) Rand Industrial and
Mining Supplies; (iii.) Mapitsana
Logistics and Projects; (iv.) BWT;
and (v.) Dominium Safety.
[8]
Further, the respondent concedes that the project achieved practical
completion, but it says that
it was as a result of work performed by
other sub-contractors, and not due to the applicant’s efforts.
It refers to a snag
list of outstanding work that the applicant
failed to complete, and to an email addressed to the funder of the
project, the Development
Bank of Southern Africa, dated 2 November
2023, in which it made mention of the applicant’s failure.
[9]
In reply, the applicant contends that the work undertaken by the
sub-contractors referred to in
paragraph [7] above had nothing to do
with the work contractually assigned to it. It also refers to the
so-called snag list and
claims, with reference to colour photos, that
the work on the snag list was completed.
[10] In
respect of the scope of the work to be undertaken, in its replying
affidavit the applicant impermissibly
attempts to broaden the ambit
of its claim. Whereas in the founding affidavit the applicant simply
relied on the terms of the appointment
letter, the replying affidavit
suggests that the scope of work was extended “
through site
instructions
”. Paragraph 12 of the replying affidavit
explains the position as follows:
“
As
it would appear clearer below, the applicant was given several site
instructions to carry out while it was performing in terms
of the
contract on site. These instructions are indicated as such on page 7
of the progress report attached as annexure ‘’A3’’
to the applicant’s founding affidavit. I will attach further
written confirmation of these instructions later in this affidavit.
Resultantly, it is the carrying out of these site instructions that
accounts for the total amount that the respondent is indebted
to the
applicant.”
[11]
First, this is not the case the respondent was called to meet when it
filed its answering affidavit. The
founding affidavit contains no
express reference to site instructions or an increase to the value of
the contract.
[12]
Second, to the extent that the progress report, which is an annexure
to the founding affidavit, refers to
site instructions, the founding
affidavit itself makes no mention of these site instructions. The
stated purpose for which the
progress report was annexed to the
founding affidavit was to confirm that the works had been completed.
In this regard, the court
in
Swissborough
Diamond Mines (Pty) Ltd and Others v Government of the Republic of
South Africa and Others
,
[6]
made the following apposite remarks concerning annexures to an
affidavit:
“
Regard
being had to the function of affidavits, it is not open to an
applicant or a respondent to simply annex to its affidavit
documentation and to request the Court to have regard to it. What is
required is the identification of the portions thereon on
which
reliance is placed and an indication of the case which is sought to
be made out on the strength thereof. If this were not
so the essence
of our established practice would be destroyed. A party would not
know which case must be met.”
[13]
Similarly, in
Lipschitz
and Schwartz NNO v Markowitz
,
[7]
the court made the following comment concerning this issue:
“
A
litigant cannot, as it were, throw a mass of material contained in
the record of an enquiry at the Court and his opponent, and
merely
invite them to read it so as to discover for themselves some cause of
action which might lurk therein, without identifying
it. If this were
permissible, the essence of our established practice which is
designed and which still evolves as a means of accurately
identifying
issues and conflicts so that the Court and the litigants should be
properly apprised of the relevant conflicts, would
be destroyed.”
[14] I
align myself with the quoted findings, and conclude that the attempt
to rely on the progress report to
broaden the scope of the
applicant’s claim is in my view impermissible.
[15]
When asked during argument whether the applicant could have dealt
with the issues raised in its replying
affidavit, in its founding
affidavit (so as to afford the respondent an opportunity to engage
with the issues), Mr Shongwe, who
appeared for the applicant,
submitted that the issues were unforeseen when the founding affidavit
was prepared. Although this submission
may be correct in respect of
the appointment of other contractors (on which I express no firm
view), it is not correct in respect
of the site instructions as the
applicant was clearly aware that its claim was, at least in part,
based on additional work.
[16] In
argument the applicant urged me to “go deeper” and to
critically evaluate the defences advanced
by the respondent. It
further suggested that the defences were unreasonable.
[17] It
is, however, not open for me to critically interrogate the
respondent’s defence. The respondent
simply had to allege facts
which, if proved at a trial would constitute a good defence to the
claims made against the company.
[18]
I am in all the circumstances satisfied that the respondent succeeded
in establishing that its indebtedness
to the applicant is disputed on
bona
fide
and reasonable grounds. In
Freshvest
Investments (Pty) Ltd v Marabeng (Pty) Ltd
,
[8]
the Supreme Court of Appeal found:
‘
This
is an appeal, with the leave of the court a quo, against the
dismissal of an application for the winding-up of the respondent,
Marabeng (Pty) Ltd. in essence, the matter serves as a stark reminder
that winding-up proceedings are not designed for the enforcement
of a
debt that the debtor-company disputes on bona fide and reasonable
grounds. This has become known as the “Badenhorst
rule”
after Badenhorst v Northern Construction Enterprises (Pty) Ltd
1956
(2) SA 346
(T) at 347-348. See also Kalil v Decotex (Pty) Ltd and
another
1998 (1) SA 943
(A) at 980B-D, as well as the authorities
referred to in Kalil at 980D-F. A collection of more recent
authorities on the application
of the Badenhorst rule is found in PM
Meskin et el Henochsberg on the Companies Act 5 ed Vol 1 at 693—694.’
[19]
I further respectfully agree with the below passage in
ABSA
Bank Ltd v Erf 1252 Marine Drive (Pty) Ltd
.
[9]
There, Binns-Ward J, said the following:
“
I
am hesitant to accept the notion that the Badenhorst rule goes to
standing. After all, as Corbett JA observed in Kalil v Decotex
supra,
at 980, it is conceivable that a creditor could establish on a
balance of probabilities that it had a claim against the
respondent
company in winding-up proceedings, while the respondent at the same
time was able to establish that the claim was disputed
on bona fide
and reasonable grounds. The applicant in such a case would have
established its standing, while the respondent would
have
established, irrespective of the merits of the claim or its defence
to it, that the remedy sought by the applicant should
not be granted.
The Badenhorst rule would thus seem to constitute a selfstanding (and
possibly flexible) principle that winding-up
proceedings are not an
appropriate procedure for a creditor to use when the debt is bona
fide disputed. Availment of the procedure
in circumstances in which
the Badenhorst rule applies can be an abuse of process. It is so,
however, only when the creditor knew,
or should reasonably have
foreseen that the debt was disputed on bona fide and reasonable
grounds at the time of the institution
of the proceedings.
”
[20]
In
Hülse
- Reutter and Another v HEG Consulting Enterprises (Pty) Ltd (Lane
and Fey NNO Intervening)
,
[10]
Thring, J. said the following with regard to what a respondent must
show to demonstrate in winding-up proceedings that a
creditor-applicant’s
claim is reasonably disputed:
“
Apart
from the fact that they dispute the applicant’s claims, and do
so bona fide, ... what they must establish is no more
and no less
than that the grounds on which they do so are reasonable. They do not
have to establish, even on the probabilities,
that the company, under
their direction, will, as a matter of fact, succeed in any action
which might be brought against it by
the applicants to enforce their
disputed claims. They do not ... have to prove the company’s
defence in any such proceedings.
All they have to satisfy me of is
that the grounds which they advance for their claims and the
company’s disputing these
claims are not unreasonable. To do
that, I do not think that it is necessary for them to adduce on
affidavit, or otherwise, the
actual evidence on which they would rely
at such trial. This is not an application for summary judgment in
which ... a defendant
who resists such an application by delivering
an affidavit or affidavits must not only satisfy the Court that he
has a bona fide
defence to the action, but in terms of the Rule must
also disclose fully in his affidavit or affidavits “the
material facts
relied upon therefor”... It seems to me to be
sufficient for the [respondents] in the present application, as long
as they
do so bona fide, ... to allege facts which, if proved at a
trial would constitute a good defence to the claims made against the
company.
”
[21]
A lack of
bona
fides
is not readily inferred (see:
Robsen
v Wax Works (Pty) Ltd and Others
[11]
),
and there is nothing on the papers which leads me to conclude that
the respondent does not genuinely dispute the applicant’s
claim. It raised the disputes it is now relying on in November 2023,
long before the liquidation application was issued. The respondent
has satisfied me that the grounds which they advance for disputing
the applicant’s claim are not unreasonable. It has alleged
facts which, if proved at a trial, would constitute a good defence to
the claim made against it. My conclusion that the respondent
has
succeeded in establishing that its indebtedness to the association is
disputed on
bona
fide
and reasonable grounds, renders it unnecessary to decide the question
whether the respondent is able to pay its debts.
[22]
What remains to consider is the question of liability for costs. The
usual order is that the successful party
is awarded its costs. I find
no reason to deviate from the usual order.
[23]
The respondent employed two counsel and during argument it was
submitted that the costs of two counsel were
reasonably incurred. I
agree. The respondent faced an order for its liquidation. Such an
order has far-reaching commercial consequences
and under the
prevailing circumstances the employment of two counsel cannot be said
to have been overcautious or
luxurious.
It was a wise and reasonable precaution on the part of the
respondent.
[12]
[24] As
a result, the following order is made:
[24.1]
The liquidation application is dismissed.
[24.2]
The applicant is ordered to pay the costs occasioned by the
application on scale C, such
costs to include those occasioned by the
employment of two counsel (where so employed).
J VORSTER, AJ
Acting Judge of the High
Court
Date
heard:
28 July 2025.
Judgment
date: 1 August 2025.
Appearances
:
For
the applicant
:
Counsel:
C Shongwe
Instructed
by: Mashiane,
Moodley & Minama Attorneys (Sandton)
For
the respondent
:
Counsel:
E Mokutu SC
(heads
of argument by E Mokutu SC and M Moflogelwa)
Instructed
by: Kotzé Low
Swanepoel Attorneys (Vryburg)
[1]
In
the founding affidavit the claim was said to be R790,272.95. In
reply, the applicant stated that it had made a mathematical
mistake
when adding the value of two outstanding invoice together, and
reduced its claim to R759,249.76.
[2]
1983
(1) SA 544
(T) at 545 - 546
[3]
1980
(2) SA 776
(NC) at 782.
[4]
Court
v Standard Bank of SA Ltd; Court v Bester NO and Others
[1995] ZASCA 39
;
1995
(3) SA 123
(A) at 131B - C.
[5]
Director
of Hospital Services v Mistry
1979 (1) SA 626 (A) at 653H - 636B;
Botha
v Smuts
2025 (1) SA 345
(CC) at [58].
[6]
1992
(2) SA 279
(T) at 324F-H.
[7]
1976
(3) SA 772
(W) at 117H – 776A.
[8]
(1030/2015)
[2016] ZASCA 168
(24 November 2016), para. 1
.
[9]
[2012]
ZAWCHC 43
(15 May 2012) para. 25.
[10]
1998 (2) SA 208
(C) at
219F-220A
.
[11]
2001 (3) SA 1117
(C) at
para. 15
.
[12]
Pride
Milling Co (Pty) Ltd v Bekker NO and Another
2022
(2) SA 410
(SCA) at 424 [40].
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