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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Van Zyl and Others v NTC Global Trade Fund (Pty) Ltd and Others (129789/23)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 68 (30 January 2024)
Van Zyl and Others v NTC Global Trade Fund (Pty) Ltd and Others (129789/23)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 68 (30 January 2024)
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sino date 30 January 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
No. 129789/23
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
DATE:
30 January 2024
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
MARCHAND
VAN ZYL
First Applicant
KOBUS
STEYN
Second Applicant
ELMARIE
DE BRUIN
Third Applicant
ALETTA
THERON
Fourth Applicant
GERDA
BECKER
Fifth Applicant
DANIEL
LE ROUX VAN ZYL
Sixth Applicant
WILNA
DE JAGER
Seventh Applicant
SIMON
HARDING BOSMAN
Eight Applicant
LOUIS
STEPHANUS VAN DER WALT
Ninth Applicant
HEINRICH
DUVENHAGE
Tenth Applicant
CATHARINA
ELIZABETH DUVENHAGE
Eleventh Applicant
AMANDA
VAN ZYL
Twelve Applicant
ZACHARIAS
BLOMERUS GROVE
Thirteenth Applicant
HENCO
BURGER
Fourteenth Applicant
JOHANRÉ
TERBLANCHE
fifteenth Applicant
CHESLYN
CAMERON KRISHNA
Sixteenth Applicant
INDIRA
KRISHNA
Seventeenth Applicant
TERRICK
PAUL VORSTER
Eighteenth Applicant
MARCHELLE
VAN ZYL
Nineteenth Applicant
HENDRIK
JACOBUS VISSER
Twentieth Applicant
KERNKERK
NPC
Twenty-first Applicant
And
NTC
GLOBAL TRADE FUND (PTY) LTD
First Respondent
FINANCIAL
SECTOR CONDUCT AUTHORITY
Second Respondent
THE
SOUTH AFRICAN RESERVE BANK
Third Respondent
THE
NATIONAL PROSECUTING AUTHORITY
Fourth Respondent
EX
TEMPORE
JUDGMENT
Leso
AJ,
INTRODUCTION
1.
The applicant brought an urgent
application seeking an order that the first respondent be
provisionally liquidated with the
rule
nisi
to be determined by the court
and the costs of the application be in the administration of the
first respondent. The second to
the fourth respondents are joined in
the proceedings as the interested parties and the third respondent
has filed notice to abide.
The applicants do not seek a cost order
against these respondents. In the motion, the applicant prays that
the court should condone
non-compliance with the uniform rules in
respect of forms and services provided in Rule 6(
5
)
of the Uniform Rules and to hear this matter on an urgent basis in
terms of Rule 6(12) of the Uniform Rules.
On
Condonation
2.
I will first deal with the applicants’
motion for condonation for non-compliance with the rules. The motion
was filed on 07
December 2023 and the first respondent was to file
the opposition on 08 December 2023 at 16h00 and to file the answering
affidavit
on 12 December 2023, the respondents had practically less
than a day to file the opposing notice and four days to answer a 229
pages founding affidavit prepared by the applicants. At the beginning
of the oral submission, the first respondent counsel contended
that
the application ought to be struck off due to non-compliance with
section 346A of the Companies
Act
61 of 1973 (the old Act)
that
requires service to every registered trade union as far as the
applicant can reasonably ascertain represents any of the employees.
Counsel argued that the return of service is defective because it was
completed by the applicant's attorney and not by the sheriff.
3.
The first respondent argued that the
applicant's non-compliance with the Uniform Rules had disadvantaged
the first applicant because
it could not properly deal with the
allegations and the issues raised by the applicants in their
application.
4.
This court will then deal with the
grounds of urgency on this matter and the applicant’s attorney
argued as follows:
4.1
that the application for liquidation or
sequestration is inherently urgent;
4.2
that there is a potential harm to be
suffered by the creditors because the respondent is still opening
bank accounts and the funds
will be dissipated;
4.3
that there were still unlawful
activities that might persist if this court order is not granted.
5.
The applicants address urgency in
paragraph
87 of the founding affidavit where they aver that
the application is currently urgent because the business of the first
respondent
must be prevented without delay, secondly, that the funds
held in the first respondent's account be preserved so that it can
eventually
be distributed among the general body of the creditors of
the first respondent. The applicants indicated that the first
respondent
will have an opportunity to advance reasons why it should
not be finally wound-up. During oral submissions counsel for the
applicants
submitted that the applicants will suffer because the hold
on the account shows that the applicants will not be afforded
substantial
redress at the hearing in due course. The counsel argued
further that no indication is given by the first respondent when the
investigation
will be finalized and the applicant will suffer
irreparable harm waiting indefinitely, that the applicant requires
access to the
fund for their ordinary day-to-day business activities,
that every day, week and month that passes place additional and
unnecessary
strain on the activities of the first to twenty-seventh
applicants.
6.
The first respondent urged that the
application is not urgent and it stands to be dismissed because the
grounds of urgency are based
on the fear that the funds will be
dissipated and secondly, that the first respondent will open the
other bank accounts.
7.
The applicants aver that on 08 November
2023 the first respondent had placed a hold on the applicants'
account and on 09 November
the account was still on hold despite the
undertaking by the first respondent to release the applicants'
monies. The applicants
further stated that on 09 November 2023 the
applicants became aware that the first respondent committed
fraudulent activities on
the accounts.
8.
The applicants indicated that an
application in terms of POCA was brought against the first respondent
and the accounts to which
the applicants seek to place in the hands
of the master are now restrained in terms of the Court Order of 13
December 2023.
Merits
9.
During arguments the parties took the
liberty to address me on the case.
It became clear during
submission that the case should proceed on merits, in any event, it
was impossible to separate the condonation
application from the
merits of the case. I am of the view that both must be allowed an
opportunity to be heard on the merits. I
will later summarise the
merits of the case after I have summarised common cause facts as
follows:
9.1
the
applicants are all investors in this first respondent.
9.2
the application relates to the general
body of creditors of the applicants.
9.3
FNB
has frozen the bank accounts of the first respondent and the reserve
bank has placed a hold on the said accounts.
9.4
the
first respondent together with the first applicant and other
investors.
9.5
as
of the end of November 2024 the respondent has not paid the
creditors.
9.6
on 7 December 2023 the applicants
launched an urgent application before the court and on 13 December
2023 the NPA lodged an
ex parte
application and obtained a preservation order against the first
respondent.
9.7
the applicants are aware of the
preservation order as it was served on their attorney of record.
The merits are summarised as
follows:
10.
The applicant submits that the
application is brought in terms of section 344(f) read with section
34
5
(1)(c) of the Companies Act, 61 of
1973 on the basis that the first respondent is unable to pay its
debt. The counsel for the first
respondent argued that the company
accepted deposits, pulled those deposits and made investments and
trades for the applicants.
The applicants stated that they were
innocent investors who were ignorant of the fact that the first
respondent was trading illegally
because the company has not
registered with any entity and it trades in contravention of the
legislation and regulation. The applicants
submitted that they know
that the NPA has since launched an application in terms of POCA and
obtained an order to freeze some of
the first respondents' accounts
and there is no indication that the first respondent is going to stop
trading
albeit
non-compliance with the laws. According to the applicants the only
way that the first respondent is going to stop trading is the
provisional order for its winding up.
14.
At the end of the submission, the counsel referred to the authority
of
Afgri
Operations Ltd v Hamba Fleet Management (Pty) Ltd
2017
ZASCA
which, according to the counsel states that a creditor who is not
paid is entitled to its liquidation. The counsel submitted that
this
authority supports its case because the first applicant is unable to
pay the creditors from the end of November. The counsel
argued that
there would be no protection for the applicants and other creditors
if the order is not granted immediately because
nothing is preventing
the first respondent from withdrawing all funds that are in the bank
accounts to the maximum amount and the
first respondent must be
immediately provisionally for a provisional liquidator to investigate
the affairs of this company and
the property of the respondent be
placed in the hands of the master because there is nothing physically
preventing the first respondent
from conducting business fraudulently
until order is granted.
11.
On the other end the first respondent
stated that the first applicant encountered difficulties with the
withdrawal request by the
applicant because FNB and SARB had placed a
hold on the account. According to the first respondent, the
applicant’s claims
do not exceed 9 million whilst the balance
of the first respondent as of 21 November 2023 on the business
account is the amount
of R
5
7 46
5 908.
6
5. Another
R
58 548 243 was available in the call account and
was not placed on hold by the FNB.
12.
The
respondent denies that its inability
to pay its creditors is caused by lack of funds but the hold in the
accounts. The first respondent
argued that the first respondent along
with all other applicants sought to force FNB to release those
accounts held with FNB however,
the first applicant did not proceed
with that application and it was eventually from the roll. The
respondent alleges that it gave
the investors full information
regarding the application involving FNB and in a letter addressed to
the applicants' attorney, advised
the applicants that their
application was premature because there were pending proceedings
dealing with the assets of the first
respondents in terms of POCA and
the accounts to which he seeks the order are now restrained in terms
of the court order of 13
December 2023. In closing, the first
respondent argued that the urgent application brought by the
applicants while they were well
aware that the accounts were on hold
was an abuse of process.
Analysis
13.
The first respondent's contention that
the application ought to be struck off due to non-compliance with
section 346A of the Companies
Act
61 of 1973 is just technical and not applicable in this case because
it is clear from the first respondents' submissions that
the
respondent has no employees.
14.
It is worth noting that the applicants
became suspicious of the activities and the non-compliance on 09
November 2023 and the applicants
only filed the application on 07
December 2023 which was then set down to 19 December 2023.
T
he
fact that the applicants only approach the court after the first
respondent withdrew the urgent application against FNB and not
when
it become aware of alleged criminal activities, non-compliance and
the fact that the first respondent cannot pay its debts
casts doubt
in the court's mind on what the real intention of the plaintiff is
with the order they sought. During the oral arguments,
it turned out
that the application for liquidation was triggered by the first
respondent's withdrawal of an urgent application
against FNB to
release the accounts that FNB had put on hold otherwise the applicant
could have approached the court in November
when the applicants could
not withdraw funds from the accounts.
15.
When the court enquired from the
applicant's counsel when they did the applicant realize that the
respondent was a Ponzi scheme
or was conducting fraudulent activities
and not complying with the laws, the counsel's response was "
shortly
before the application
". The
counsel's answer is open to many interpretations which the court is
at no liberty to interrogate because of the nature
of the proceeding.
16.
The approach to urgent motions is set
out in
Luna Meubel Vervaardigers (Edms) Bpk v Makin and
Another (t/a Makin’s Furniture Manufacturers)
1977(4) SA 135(W)
at 137F
and
Rule 6(12) Uniform Rules. The rule requires the applicant to set
forth explicitly the circumstances that render the application
urgent
and the reasons why the applicant claims that he could not be
afforded substantial redress at the hearing in due course.
In
this case the applicants have a substantial redress is POCA
proceedings which is not finalised. The preservation order
was
specific in that the first respondent, Edwin Letopa, and other 37
companies and clients represented by Willem Potgieter Babinski
Incorporated and other interested parties are to be allowed to oppose
the application for an order declaring the property forfeited
to the
state or to apply for an order excluding his or her interest form the
forfeiture order in respect of the property. Having
stated the above,
I am of the view that t
he applicants are entitled to apply for
an order to wind-up the first respondent under the new Act
alternately the Old Act irrespective
of whatever other causes of
action may be available to it in due course.
Accordingly,
i
t is of no consequence that these other causes of action have
not been invoked to date.
17.
It is common cause that the first
respondent entered an appearance to defend followed by answering
after it was served with the
application, albeit it was late. The
first respondent is opposing the application and both the applicants
and the first respondent's
legal representative are before the court.
The court was at pains to find where in the affidavit have the
applicants dealt with
the condonation as expected in practice. I have
however in the interest of justice, considered the degree of
lateness, the nature
of the application before me and the fact that
the first respondent got an opportunity to present its case
albeit
the time constraints. Having stated the above, I am of the view that
this matter does deserve the court's attention on an urgent
basis.
Consequently, the court condones
non-compliance with the forms of service provided in the rules.
18.
On
merits, the facts presented by the applicants in support of the
liquidation of the applicants are valid except that the applicants.
The fact that the respondent is indebted to the creditors is not in
dispute. Similar to the case of Afgri, the SCA found, with
reference
to the principles set out in
Badenhorst
v Northern Construction Enterprises (Pty) Ltd
1956
(2) SA 346
(T)
at 347-348 and
Kalil
v Decotex (Pty) Ltd & another
1988
(1) SA 943
(A)
at 980D
that
o
nce
the respondent’s indebtedness has prima facie has been
established, the onus is on it to show that this indebtedness is
disputed on bona fide and reasonable grounds and the discretion of a
court not to grant a winding-up order upon the application
of an
unpaid creditor is narrow and not wide. In this case, the first
respondent does not dispute indebtedness however it provides
a sound
explanation why the creditors cannot be paid.
19.
In
the
Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service v Nyhonyha and
Others
(1150/2021)
[2023] ZASCA 69
(18 May 2023) the SCA had to determine whether the
setting aside of the winding-up order under section 354 of the
Companies Act
constitutes the exercise of a true discretion by the
court
a
quo
and
whether, based on the available facts, Regiments was commercially
solvent at the time of the hearing in the court
a
quo
.
In this case the National Department of Public Prosecutions (NDPP)
obtained a provisional restraint order under the Prevention
of
Organised Crime Act 121 of 1998 (POCA) which related to Regiments’
assets. In terms of the restraint order, Regiments
was interdicted
from participating in an unbundling transaction in respect of the
shares it held in Capitec Bank Holdings Limited.
Regiments was placed
in final liquidation at the instance of an unpaid creditor before the
restraint order was discharged.
20.
This
court relied on the principle that was applied
in
Nyhonyha and Others
to
consider on the available facts, whether the first respondent was
commercially solvent at the time of the hearing.
In their submission the applicants stated that they do not know
whether the first respondent is factually or commercially solvent
while on the other hand the first respondent indicated the
applicant’s claims do not exceed 9 million whilst the balance
of the first respondent as of 21 November 2023 on the business
account is the amount of R
5
7 46
5 908.
6
5
and another
R
58 548 243
was available in the call account which was not placed on hold by the
FNB. The first respondent submitted bank
statements reflecting the
above amounts although not confirmed under oath. Different from
Regiments case, I cannot find from the
above facts, that the first
respondent is commercially or factually insolvent.
21.
Section
26(1) of POCA provides that the NDPP may by way of an
ex
parte
application
apply to a competent High Court for an order prohibiting any person,
subject to such conditions and exceptions
as may be specified in the
order, from dealing in any manner with any property to which the
order relates.
In this matter,
I
considered the fact that there is a preservation order that has not
been discharged and the assets of the first respondent are
still
restrained. The fact that the accounts of the respondent has been
restrained in terms of POCA should be simple logic to the
applicants
that their accounts or monies cannot be put in the hands of the
master.
22.
This
court must protect all other investors who are unaware of the
situation of the first respondent and who are at the risk of
losing
their monies if the allegations against the first respondents are
true more so because the first respondent is still operating.
I am
however of the view that the fact that the first respondent is not
insolvent should outweigh all the other allegations and
the
probability of irreparable harm befalling the unsuspecting creditors.
23.
The applicant made allegations of fraud,
pleaded ignorance in the operation of the investment and stated that
he does not know whether
the respondent was either factually or
commercially solvent while the respondent denied that it was either
factually or commercially
solvent or being a Ponzi scheme. While this
court has a duty to protect the members of the public who might be
ignorant, I can
not order provisional liquidation of the respondent
based on allegations and speculations which the first respondent
vehemently
denied. Consequently, the order for winding-up of the
first respondent
is unnecessary
or undesirable
CONCLUSION
24.
It is trite that insolvency matters are inherently urgent,
consequently, this matter is heard on an urgent basis in terms of
Rule
6(12) of the Uniform Rules of Court and
there
is no case made out for a provisional liquidation of the first
respondent.
25.
I do not accept that the urgent order
for provisional liquidation sought by the applicants is justifiable
considering the circumstances
of this case.
26.
On the issue of costs, the
Constitutional Court has held in various cases, that the costs should
follow the results in this case
the applicants did not succeed in its
application and it follows that they must pay the costs. On
hindsight, the application contained
more than 229 pages, with almost
178 pages dealing with the operations of the first respondent despite
the court's directives relating
to the proceedings in the urgent
court. The oral submission by the first respondent's counsel took
quite a considerable time dealing
with the allegations of fraud and
the operations of the first respondent.
Under paragraph
10 of the Implementation of the Judge President’s Practice
Directive dated 11 June 2021 for the Urgent court
of 17th December
2021 (16h00 to 24th December 2021, where the following directive
stands noted: “ ..
urgent court is not intended to hear
complex factual and/or legal issues scattered over hundreds of pages
and which may take a long
time to consider and finalize…Such
complex cases may be removed from the roll and the parties may be
referred to the Deputy
Judge President to be allocated to a special
court at some time in the future
…"
ORDER
Consequently, the
following order be made:
1.
The application is dismissed.
2 Plaintiff
to pay costs on attorney and client scale.
J.T
LESO
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
DATE
OF THE HEARING:
21 December 2023
APPEARANCES
ON
BEHALF OF THE APPLICANT:
ADV
RAUBERHEIMER
ON
BEHALF OF THE RESPONDENT:
ADV
BRITS
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