Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 128South Africa
Africor Auctioneers (Pty) Ltd v Blue Dot Properties 1875 CC and Another (6436/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 128 (15 February 2024)
Headnotes
more than 25% interest in the respondent and had not voted in favour of the sale of the respondent.
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
>>
2024
>>
[2024] ZAGPPHC 128
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Africor Auctioneers (Pty) Ltd v Blue Dot Properties 1875 CC and Another (6436/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 128 (15 February 2024)
Africor Auctioneers (Pty) Ltd v Blue Dot Properties 1875 CC and Another (6436/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 128 (15 February 2024)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPPHC/Data/2024_128.html
sino date 15 February 2024
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO:
6436/2022
(1)
REPORTABLE: Yes/ No
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: Yes/ No
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
15/02/2024
SIGNATURE
In the matter
between:
AFRICOR
AUCTIONEERS (PTY) LTD
Applicant
And
BLUE
DOT PROPERTIES 1875 CC
Respondent
and
ALLSCHWANG,
ALLAN LOUIS N.O.
Intervening party
JUDGMENT
MBONGWE,
J:
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This is the return date in the application for the final
winding up
of the respondent in terms of the provisions of sections 344(f),
346(1)(b) and 346 (3) and 346(4A) of the previous Companies
Act 63 of
1973 read with item 9 of Schedule 5 of the current
Companies Act 71
of 2008
. The applicant was previously granted an order for the
provisional winding up of the respondent on the ground that the
respondent
was unable to pay its debt as envisioned in section 345 of
the 1973
Companies Act. The
application for the final liquidation of
the respondent has become opposed by the Intervening Party who is the
executor of the
estate of the deceased which holds a 50% interest in
each of the respondent corporation and another company, Simply Fruit
CC, both
co-owned by the deceased and his brother, Tony.
BACKGROUND
FACTS
[2]
The respondent is a close corporation and registered
owner of the
immovable property situated at [...] F[...] Road, Spartan, Kempton
Park, Ekurhuleni Metropolitan. The property consists
of office space
and a production area occupied by Simply Fruit CC, the business
entity the brothers used for the manufacture of
fruit juices and
flavoured water, amongst other products.
[3]
Subsequent to his brother passing in December 2019, Tony
relocated to
Greece, having entrusted Mr Previliotis, a prospective buyer of
Simply Fruit CC, with the running of its business
operations and to
generally be in charge of the entire premises whose keys he kept in
his possession.
[4]
The intervening party was officially appointed as the
executor of the
estate of the deceased on 21 January 2020. He had not transferred the
deceased member’
s 50%
interest in the respondent to the
rightful heir when the discussions and agreements concerning the
disposal of the respondent and
its sister company occurred and he
still has not done so, nor was he party in the discussion and alleged
agreements.
[5]
The business of Simply Fruit CC deteriorated following
the passing of
the deceased, the relocation of
Tony and the lockdown restrictions resulting
from the
Covid-19 pandemic that ensued in March 2020. Simply Fruit CC ceased
trading
towards the end of 2020, at a
time it had accumulated extensive debts to its suppliers.
[6]
Tony and the heir to the estate of the deceased, Costa,
agreed on the
sale of Simply Fruit CC. In August 2021 Tony
requested Mr Basil Vardakos, an
auctioneer, to
assist him with the sale of Simply Fruit CC. Vardakos agreed, but, in
turn approached Ms Karen Keevy, an attorney
and director of the
Commonwealth Trust to assist with the preparation of relevant
documents ostensibly for the execution of Tony’s
mandate. Ms
Karen Keevy subsequently advised Tony and Costa to
rather place Simply Fruit CC in business rescue.
On 21 August 2021,
Tony and Costa gave Ms Karen Keevy a written mandate to place Simply
Fruit CC in business rescue.
[7]
Still in August 2021, Tony instructed Mr Previliotis
to hand over the
keys to the premises of the respondent to Mr Basil Vardakos. This
gave Vardakos control of the premises respondent.
It is to be noted
that at that stage, the premises had only be known to be housing
Simply Fruit CC, but it was in October 2021
discovered that the
premises were in fact owned by the respondent.
[8]
On 7 September 2021, Ms Karen Keevy advised Tony and
Costa that the
Commonwealth Trust had resolved to appoint Keevy and Keevy as the
business rescue practitioners to attend to the
rescuing of Simply
Fruit CC.
[9]
As a result of a concern that the premises on which Simply
Fruit CC
had traded were vulnerable to vandalism and looting. It was also
during the same month of October 2021 that it was discovered
that the
immovable property on which Simply Fruit CC is situated is in fact
owned by the respondent. The applicant provided the
necessary
security services from 12 October 2021 to protect the property. It is
the provision of this service that constituted
the source of the
respondent’s debt to the applicant leading to the present
proceedings.
[10]
On 25 October 2021 Ms Keevy informed the Intervening Party’s
consultant,
Ben, that Tony had advised her that the respondent was
owing a considerable amount in respect of rates and taxes and that
Tony
had instructed her to place the respondent in voluntary winding
up. The instruction by Tony was conveyed to Costa by Mr Vardakos
on 3
November 2021.
[11]
It is noted that Costa had agreed with initiatives taken by Tony
individually
and which Costa had conveyed to the Intervening
Party and also pointed out to him that the need may arise for the
Intervening
Party, as the executor of the deceased’s estate, to
co-operate with the other persons assisting with the sale or
liquidation
of the respondent and Simply Fruit CC.
[12]
The emergence of the Intervening Party in these proceedings appears
to
have been triggered by Costa’s advice about the ongoing
discussions of the sale or liquidation of Simply Fruit CC and the
respondent which will require his co-operation and authorisation. The
advice of a possible disposal of these assets which partially
formed
part of the deceased’s estate did not sit well with the
executor of the deceased’s estate.
[13]
On 20 December 2021, the applicant issued the letter of demand in
terms
of section 69 of the Close Corporation Act 69 of 1984, as
amended, read with sections 345(1)(a)(ii) of the Companies Act 61 of
1973, as amended, calling upon the respondent to pay the debt in the
sum of R157,206.82 for the rendering of security services on
the
premises of the respondent.
[14]
On 13 May 2022, Costa was advised that the auctioning of the
respondent
would be ready to go ahead within three weeks and again,
on 13 June 2022, that there was no need to consult the executor of
the
estate as Vardakos will sort out everything regarding the
proceeds of the auction on Tony’s behalf, with Costa. These
allegations,
contained in the Intervening Party’s answering
affidavit, para 46, are denied by the applicant.
[15]
On 22 June 2022, Costa sent an email to the executor, a copy of which
the latter had sent to Vardakos, and sought information from him
(Vardakos) about the source of his authority to auction or liquidate
the respondent and Simply Fruit CC. Costa had alleged in the email
that he had not been aware of the auction until advised thereof
by
Vardakos. It further appeared in the email that Tony had agreed and
gave permission for the sale of the respondent to the liquidator
and
the auctioneer. Costa stated in the email further that he had
informed Vardakos to contact the executor to enquire if his
authorisation would be required.
[16]
The executor had advised Vardakos that the sale of the major asset of
the respondent was unenforceable in the absence of a resolution taken
by 75% of the vote of the members of the respondent and that
the
deceased’s estate held more than 25% interest in the respondent
and had not voted in favour of the sale of the respondent.
INTERVENTION
[17]
At the hearing of the application for the final liquidation of the
respondent
on 22 June 2022, the Intervening Party was represented by
counsel in court and had filed a notice to oppose the application.
This
resulted in the court extending the rule nisi to 22 August 2022
and directing that the Intervening Party files it answering affidavit
within 15 days from the date of the order.
THE
DELAY
[18]
The intervening party failed to file his answering affidavit within
the
15-day period ordered by the court and only filed same on 28 July
2022, without filing an application in terms of rule 27(3) explaining
the delay and seeking condonation therefor.
BASIS
FOR OPPOSITION
[19]
The crux of the Intervening Party’s opposition to the granting
of the final order for the winding up of the respondent is the denial
that there was a contract concluded in terms of which the
applicant
had rendered the alleged security services to the respondent’s
premises. On the basis of this contention or the
absence of such
contract, the Intervening Party disputed that the respondent was
indebted to the applicant in the amount of R157 206,82
claimed.
[20]
The Intervening Party has referred to a confirmatory affidavit of
Costa,
which he alleged to be annexed to the answering affidavit. The
annexure concerned has, however, not been commissioned, despite it
having been stated in the answering affidavit that a commissioned
affidavit of Costa will be available at the hearing.
APPLICANT’S
REPLICATION AND ARGUMENT
POINTS
IN LIMINE
[21]
The applicant has contended that the present application ought to
proceed
unopposed on the grounds that, despite its compliance with
legal requirements,
inter alia
, the delivery of the letter of
demand dated 20 December 2021 by registered post
at the respondent’s
registered address
in terms of section 69 of the
Close Corporation Act 69
of 1984, as amended, read with section
345(1)(a)(ii) of the Companies Act of 1973, as amended, for payment
of the amount due and
owing;
21.1
the respondent has remained unable to pay the debt or to secure or
compound
the amount owing to the reasonable satisfaction of the
applicant and is, consequently, deemed to be incapable of paying its
debt
and liable to be wound up;
21.2
the Intervening Party’s denial that the respondent is indebted
to the
applicant in the amount of R157 206, 82 for services
rendered, is without any substantiation. The alleged affidavit of
Costa
purportedly confirming the contents of Costa’s email and
supporting the Intervening Party’s opposition is not
commissioned
and, consequently, has no legal effect as it does not
comply with the provisions of the Justices of the Peace and
Commissioners
of Oath Act 16 of 1963;
21.3
the Intervening Party, despite the filing of its answering affidavit
well outside
the period directed by the Court on 22 June 2022, has
failed to bring an application for condonation of the delay as
required in
rule 27(3).
ISSUES
FOR DETERMINATION
[22] The parties
have listed in their joint practice note the undermentioned issues
they seek to be determined by this court:
22.1
Whether there is a genuine factual dispute regarding the existence
of
the applicant’s claim;
22.2
Whether a contract existed for the applicant’s provision of
security
services to the respondent;
22.3
Whether the respondent is deemed unable to pay its debts in terms of
section
69 of the Close Corporation Act of 1984 and, therefore,
liable to be wound up in terms of section 68(c);
22.4
Whether there is a bona fide dispute of the alleged indebtedness of
the respondent
to the applicant;
22.5
Whether the sought liquidation is a sham.
ANALYSIS
[23]
The initial challenge in the determination of this matter lies not in
the sole considerations of the legal principles and laws governing
liquidations, but the scrutiny of whether the approach
that was
adopted from the early stages of the discussions relating to the
respondent and Simply Fruit CC was founded on sound legal
principles.
[24]
It is common cause that at the time Tony and Costa engaged in
discussions
with Vardakos and the applicant in connection with the
respondent and Simply Fruit CC, these two entities or 50% interest
therein
vested in the estate of the deceased. A curator of the estate
of the deceased had been appointed and his contact details could be
gathered from Tony or Costa. Vardakos and the applicant ought to have
known that Tony despite holding a 50% member’s interest
in
these entities, would have no authority individually to enter into
any agreement that would be binding on these entities or
at least the
other 50% interest therein. The participation of the Intervening
Party, as executor of the estate holding 50% interest
was necessary
and a sine qua non to the validity of any such agreement. The
applicant’s or Vardakos’s contention that
they received
instructions in some instances from Tony and Costa cannot legally
hold. Costa, while being the heir to the deceased
estate, had no
authority whatsoever to bind or contract on behalf of the assets of
the estate. Thus, any agreement, including the
mandates for the sale
and liquidation of the respondent and Simply Fruit CC and that for
the alleged provision of security services
to the premises of the
respondent is invalid.
[25]
A written demand for payment of a debt for purposes of the winding up
of a company must meet the requirements of the law, including the
manner of its delivery to the debtor. Importantly, the purpose
of the
written demand and the manner of its delivery is not only to make it
known to the debtor, but to also prove that the debtor
has been
notified that, unless payment of the debt is made within the
specified period, steps will be taken to wind it up.
[26]
Causing the delivery of the letter of demand at the registered
address
of the respondent was in line with the prescripts of the law,
but was, knowingly to Vardakos and the applicant, not going to serve
the desired purpose of alerting Tony or the executor of the
deceased’s estate who were neither present nor resident at that
address or premises which were under the control of Vardakos.
[27]
The deviant conduct of the applicant in this regard tainted the
entire
process of the winding up of the respondent, rendering it
rather an assimilation of the winding up of a company. Compliance
with
the rest of the requirements in the winding up of a company was
no longer of value in the circumstances. It is a fact that concerted
effort is made in assimilations to make the process appear seamlessly
compliant with legal requirements. The Intervening Party
is
justified, in my view, in disputing the premise of the purported
liquidation of the respondent. The liquidation of a company
is meant
to benefit its creditors.
[28]
Whether the liquidation of the respondent was, as it is supposed to
be,
for the benefit of its creditors, is, in my view, doubtful. It is
unfathomable how the applicant would have transferred ownership
of
the respondent and Simply Fruit CC without authorisation of the
disposal of at least the 50% member’s interest owned by
the
estate of the deceased. Thus, the purported winding up could only
have been for sinister purposes and an abuse of process by
the
applicant. In addition, the winding up were it to be granted in these
circumstances, would result in Costa unlawfully losing
his
inheritance.
[29]
Without
pouring cold water on the otherwise valid points in limine raised by
the applicant to the Intervening Party’s failure
to seek
condonation for his delayed filing of the answering affidavit and
other points raised, the interests of justice warrant
that the
shortcomings of the executor / intervening party be condoned in the
circumstances of this case.
[1]
In addition, the facts found to be correctly opposed by the
Intervening Party above, such as the absence of a contract for the
provision of security services and of the authority of the applicant
to sell the respondent by auction, constitute disputes that
preclude
the entertainment of these proceedings on motion.
CONCLUSION
[30]
The single answer, in my view, to all the issues raised by the
applicant
and the Intervening Party against each other’s case
and stated earlier, is that without exception, there was never a
valid
agreement with the applicant for the provision of security
services in respect of at least the 50% value of the respondent and
Simply Fruit CC. The application for the liquidation of the
respondent must, therefore, fail.
COSTS
[31]
There is no reason why the general rule that costs follow the outcome
should not hold in this case.
ORDER
[32]
Consequent to the findings in this judgment the following order is
made:
1. The
application for the liquidation of the respondent is dismissed.
2. The
applicant is ordered to pay the costs on the opposed scale.
MPN
MBONGWE
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Appearances:
For
the Applicant:
Adv
J Kamffer
Instructed
by:
Andrew
Venter Inc
For
the Respondent:
Adv
HP van Nieuwenhuizen
Instructed
by:
Allan
Allschwang and Associates
Date
of hearing:
16
August 2023
Date
of delivery:
15
February 2024
THIS
JUDGMENT WAS ELECTRONICALLY TRANSMITTED TO THE PARTIES’ LEGAL
REPRESENTETIVES AND UPLOADED ONTO CASELINES ON 15 FEBRUARY
2024.
[1]
Grootboom
v National Prosecution Authority & Another (
CCT
08/13)
[2013] ZACC 37
;
2014 (2) SA 68
(CC);
2014 (1) BCLR 65
(CC);
[2014] 1 BLLR 1
(CC); (2014) 35 ILJ 121 (CC) (21 October 2013)
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Africor Auctioneers (Pty) Ltd v Blue Dot Properties 1875 CC and Another (6436/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 996 (8 October 2024)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 996High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)100% similar
Bideasy Auctions (Pty) Ltd v Ringwood Investments 81 (Pty) Ltd and Another (Leave to Appeal) (69235/2018) [2024] ZAGPPHC 812 (22 August 2024)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 812High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar
Devco Auctioneers & Sales (Pty) Ltd and Another v Naude and Others (23467/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 301 (10 May 2022)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 301High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)98% similar
Afrirent (Pty) Ltd and Another v NNSI Group (Pty) Ltd and Others (018542/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1211 (19 November 2024)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 1211High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)98% similar
Van's Auctioneers Gauteng CC v Theron N.O and Others (34810/2016) [2025] ZAGPPHC 794 (30 July 2025)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 794High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)98% similar