Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 15South Africa
Van Der Westhuizen v Van Der Westhuizen and Others (24614/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 15 (8 January 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
8 January 2024
Headnotes
liquidation in the event of a deadlock. Section 36 of the Close Corporations provides for the cessation of membership by order of court on application. This suggestion, without more, is in my view, meaningless. [22] The first respondent emphasized that the legacy of their father is very important to him. He concluded that the suggested relief is the best scenario for the court to exercise its discretion and dismiss the application and grant his counter application. [23] The “deadlock” principle was enunciated in the matter of In re Yenidje Tobacco Co Ltd [1916] 2 Ch 426 (CA); where the court held that this is
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Van Der Westhuizen v Van Der Westhuizen and Others (24614/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 15 (8 January 2024)
Van Der Westhuizen v Van Der Westhuizen and Others (24614/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 15 (8 January 2024)
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sino date 8 January 2024
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO.
24614/2022
(1)
REPORTABLE:
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
(3)
REVISED:
NO
(4)
Date:04 September 2023
Date:
08
January 2024
Signature:
In
the matter between:
LEONARD
FRANCOIS VAN DER WESTHUIZEN
Applicant
and
PIETER
FREDERIK VAN DER WESTHUIZEN
First Respondent
TRACKSTAR
TRADING 20 CC
Second
Respondent
HM
& H EIENDOMME CC
Third Respondent
COMPANIES
AND INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY COMMISSION
Fourth
Respondent
JUDGMENT
NYATHI J
A.
INTRODUCTION
[1]
These are two opposed applications for an
order winding up the respondents, on the grounds that it is just and
equitable, as contemplated
in section 81 (1) (d) (iii) of the
Companies Act 71 of 2008 (“the Act”)
[2]
The application is brought by the applicant
in his capacity as member of the respondents.
[3]
This application was originally brought on
an urgent basis on the 24 May 2022 but was removed from the roll at
the applicant’s
instance, occasioning wasted costs for the
respondents. The outcome will be dealt with at the appropriate time.
[4]
The
applications are heard simultaneously for convenience due to the
facts and surrounding circumstances being intrinsically linked.
[1]
[5]
The applicant and first respondent are
brothers. The second and third respondents are family-owned
businesses which the brothers
are running, having inherited them from
their deceased father.
[6]
The animosity and conduct as highlighted in
the affidavits filed of record has created substantial enmity and has
led to a deadlock
in respondents' affairs and a breakdown in the
confidence and trust between the directors and members. These
circumstances thus
impel the applicant to seek the winding up of the
corporate entities on the grounds aforesaid.
[7]
Section 81 of the Act makes the winding up
of solvent companies possible. In the current application the
entities are Close Corporations.
Section 81 of the Act thus finds
application by virtue of section 66 of the Close Corporations Act 69
of 1984 (“CC Act”).
The applicant accordingly alleges
that it is just and equitable to wind up the corporations as there is
a deadlock between the
management of the latter, being himself and
his brother.
[8]
Section 81 (1) (d) of the Act provides:
“
Winding
up of solvent companies by court order
(1)
A court may order a solvent company to be
wound up if –
(d) the company, or one
or more shareholders have applied to the court for an order to wind
up the company on the grounds that –
(i) the directors are
deadlocked in the management of the company, and the shareholders are
unable to break the deadlock, and –
(aa)
irreparable injury to the company is resulting, or may result, from
the deadlock;
or
(bb)
the company’s business cannot be conducted to the advantage of
the shareholders
generally, as a result of the deadlock;
(ii) the shareholders are
deadlocked in voting power, and have failed for a period that
includes at least two consecutive annual
general meeting dates, to
elect successors to directors whose terms have expired; or
(iii), it is otherwise
just and equitable for the company to be wound up;”
[9]
The applicant contends that HM en H
EIENDOMME CC (third respondent) equally falls to be wound up on the
just and equitable basis
since the same parties have interests
therein.
[10]
The application is opposed by the
applicant’s brother who asks the Court to dismiss the
application and grant relief as per
his counter application.
[11]
The applicant had raised several points in
limine, but his Counsel submitted that he was not persisting
therewith. The applicant
also sought condonation for the late filing
of its replying affidavit and heads of argument. This was not opposed
by the respondents
and condonation was accordingly granted. The court
further granted the application to hear both applications
simultaneously.
[12]
The
relationship between the two brothers is and has always been
discordant and fraught with difficulties that date back to their
late
father’s lifetime. This is common cause from both brothers’
versions.
[2]
[13]
The applicant alleges that the first
respondent is involved in “highly questionable” and/or
“fraudulent transactions”
which are not in the interest
of the applicant as a fellow director and shareholder or Trackstar
(second respondent) itself. The
specific complaint seems to revolve
around a property transaction in Khatu, which has become a massive
bone of contention. The
applicant alleges that he has been sidelined
and excluded from the impending sale of the property.
[14]
The applicant alleges that he has been
locked out of Trackster’s banking facilities since 2018. The
first respondent is in
the meantime misappropriating and wasting
Trackster’s assets to its detriment.
[15]
The
applicant’s founding affidavit is replete with allegations
detailing incidents evincing acrimony, obstructiveness and
autocratic
conduct on the part of the first respondent. The applicant
further details incidents where attempts at mediation
were made with
no success.
[3]
[16]
The applicant has annexed correspondence
detailing his attempts to break the deadlock with his brother.
[17]
The applicant alleges that there are no
factual disputes between him and the first respondent. To the extent
that there may be a
dispute, it may only be on what needs to be done
with the two entities, namely second and third respondents.
[18]
The first respondent contends that the
submission that the parties are deadlocked is qualified because
de
facto
there is an agreement between the
brothers.
[19]
In its counter application the first
respondent suggests that mediation in terms of the Close Corporation
Act is a possibility.
[20]
The first respondent acknowledges that
attempts at mediation were made but that a transfer of a member’s
interest never formally
materialized.
[21]
Adv. Kriel on behalf of the first
respondent submitted that
section 36
of the
Close Corporations Act
provides
alternatives to summary liquidation in the event of a
deadlock.
Section 36
of the Close Corporations provides for the
cessation of membership by order of court on application. This
suggestion, without more,
is in my view, meaningless.
[22]
The first respondent emphasized that the
legacy of their father is very important to him. He concluded that
the suggested relief
is the best scenario for the court to exercise
its discretion and dismiss the application and grant his counter
application.
[23]
The “deadlock” principle was
enunciated in the matter of
In re
Yenidje Tobacco Co Ltd
[1916] 2 Ch 426
(CA); where the court held that this is
"founded on the
analogy of partnership and is strictly confined to those small
domestic companies in which, because of some
arrangement, express,
tacit or implied, there exists between the members in regard to the
company's affairs a particular personal
relationship of confidence
and trust similar to that existing between partners in regard to the
partnership business. Usually that
relationship is such that it
requires the members to act reasonably and honestly towards one
another and with friendly cooperation
in running the company's
affairs. If by conduct which is either wrongful or not as
contemplated by the arrangement, one or more
of the members destroys
that relationship, the other member or members are entitled to claim
that it is just and equitable that
the company should be wound up, in
the same way as, if they were partners, they could claim dissolution
of the partnership"
. . . The destruction of the relationship
may result in literal deadlock, ie where the factions hold equal
voting power in general
meeting, in which event winding-up must
ordinarily inevitably ensue . . . but it is not necessary to
establish literal deadlock:
it suffices to show that as a result of
the particular conduct, there is no longer a reasonable possibility
of running the company
(through the majority vote) consistently with
the basic arrangement between the members . . .
[24]
In
Henochsberg
on the Companies Act 61 of 1973
deals
with a literal deadlock with reference to the
Yenidje
case where the following example of a deadlock is given:
“
(e.g.
constant quarrelling between the only two shareholders with voting
rights as such, who are also the only two directors, leading
to a
situation where they are not on speaking terms. . .)”
[4]
[25]
Thunder
Cats Investments 92 (Pty) Ltd and another v Nkonjane Economic
Prospecting & Investment (Pty) Ltd and others
[5]
dealt
with an application for the winding-up of a solvent company in terms
of s 81 of the 2008 Companies Act, on the grounds that
the directors
and/or shareholders were in a deadlock, and as an alternate ground
for the winding-up, that it was just and equitable
to do so.
[26]
The court also considered the requirements
for a deadlock to exist. In the court
a
quo
, Vermeulen AJ had founded his
judgment on the general breakdown of the relationship between the
shareholders, and in exercising
his discretion whether to liquidate,
said that the company was of the kind envisaged in
In
re Yenidje Tobacco Company Limited
,
that is, in substance, a partnership in the guise of a company. He
considered that the company had only four members, each having
the
right to appoint a director, and that there was accordingly no body
of shareholders distinct from the board. Each of the shareholders
had
the right to participate in the management of the company. The
Supreme Court of Appeal considered a definition of the words
‘just
and equitable’ as they appear in the Companies Act of 1973 as
well as the
Companies Act of 2008
.
[27]
In the final analysis, the SCA in
Thunder
Cats Investments
concluded that the
words “just and equitable’ were to be interpreted widely,
the effect being that there is no closed
list of what is meant by
‘just and equitable’, thus broadening the grounds of
winding up to include other cases of
deadlock. This accords with the
views of Ponnan JA who held in
Apco
Africa v Apco Worldwide Inc.
[2008] ZASCA 64
;
2008 (5)
SA 615
(SCA), that there is no limit to the words just and equitable,
and a court is afforded a wide judicial discretion.
[28]
In
Kanakia v
Ritzshelf 1004 CC t/a Passage to India and Another
2003
(2) SA 39
(D), the court dealt with an application for the winding-up
of a close corporation on the basis that a deadlock existed between
the members, and that it was just and equitable for the close
corporation to be wound-up. The court considered the provisions of
the then
section 68
of the
Close Corporations Act, and
the provisions
of
s 344(h)
of the 1973
Companies Act. It
concluded that the phrase
‘just and equitable’ involved ‘a conclusion of law
for the winding-up, namely justice
and equity’.
[29]
A
further ground for consideration is the “clean hands”
principle.
[6]
The Court is
enjoined to assess whether any of the parties contributed, and if so
to what extent, to the breakdown leading to the
deadlock. In
Thunder
Cats Investments,
the
SCA made it clear that “lack of clean hands was not an absolute
bar” to deter a court from granting a winding up
order. This
consideration may in fact spur the court on to eliminate the
paralysis and appoint a competent functionary in the person
of a
liquidator to address the question of where the best interests of the
company lie.
[7]
[30]
Considering the legal principles as set out
in the discussion above, the respondents have not proffered any
tangible defense of
legal substance to counter the application. There
is no doubt in my mind that the corporate entities that were
bequeathed to the
dueling brothers are not functioning as corporate
entities, or even partnerships with joint consensual decision-making
as intended
by the deceased testator.
[31]
As was the case in
Thunder
Cats Investments
, I am persuaded that
it is just and equitable to make the following order:
(a)
That the second respondent company
(Trackstar Trading 20 CC) be and is hereby placed under final winding
up.
(b)
That the third respondent company (HM &
H EIENDOMME CC) be and is hereby placed under final winding up.
(c)
That the costs of this application be costs
in the liquidation.
(d)
That the applicant is ordered to pay the
respondents’ costs for the wasted costs of 24 May 2022 on a
party and party scale.
J.S. NYATHI
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng Division,
Pretoria
Date
of hearing: 21 February 2023
Date
of Judgment: 08 January 2024
On
behalf of the Applicant:
Adv.
CJ Marneweck
Attorneys
for the Applicant:
Spies
Bester Potgieter Attorneys
E-mail:
litigation@sbplaw.co.za
On
behalf of the Respondents:
Adv.
ZF Kriel
Attorneys
for the Respondents:
Anton
van Staden Attorneys
Tel:
(012) 546 0487
E-mail:
avsprok@mweb.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
08
January 2024
.
[1]
Whilst
the respondent is of the view that the two applications be
consolidated, the applicant maintains the position that a
consolidation is not necessary, but that the matters may be
considered simultaneously.
[2]
Applicant’s
founding affidavit paras 6 to 11 set out a litany of complaints;
Respondent’s
opposing and founding (counterclaim) affidavit at Para 4.8 “Rightly
so, the disputes between the Applicant
and I run over several years
and at best for the Applicant since 2018.”
[3]
Founding
affidavit, para 8.22.
[4]
Henochsberg
On the
Companies Act, Service
Issue 10, 30 September 1999 a
t
703.
[5]
Thunder
Cats Investments 92 (Pty) Ltd and another v Nkonjane Economic
Prospecting & Investment (Pty) Ltd and others
2014 (5) SA 1
(SCA).
[6]
Also
known as the
par
delictum
rule as stated in
Jajbhay
v Cassim
1939 AD 537.
[7]
The
SCA in
Thunder
Cats Investments
declared after considering the Canadian judgment of
Ruut
v Head
(1996) 20 ASCR 160
at
162
cited with approval in
Pham
Thai Duc v Pts Australian Distributor (Pty) Ltd
[2005]
NSWSC 98
para
17.
sino noindex
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