Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 222South Africa
BTW and Associates (Pty) Ltd v Maragela Consulting Engineers (Pty) Ltd (9193/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 222 (19 March 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
19 March 2023
Headnotes
at 131B that “all that is thus required by the sub-section is that security must have been given before the matter is heard and that the certificate shall then accompany the application”.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## BTW and Associates (Pty) Ltd v Maragela Consulting Engineers (Pty) Ltd (9193/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 222 (19 March 2024)
BTW and Associates (Pty) Ltd v Maragela Consulting Engineers (Pty) Ltd (9193/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 222 (19 March 2024)
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sino date 19 March 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 9193/2022
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES /
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES /
NO
(3)
REVISED: YES /
NO
DATE:
19 March 2024
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
BTW
& ASSOCIATES (PTY)
LTD
Applicant
and
MARAGELA
CONSULTING ENGINEERS (PTY) LTD
Respondent
Coram:
Groenewald, RJ (AJ)
Heard
on:
12 March 2024
Delivered:
19 March 2023 - This judgment was
handed down electronically uploading to Caselines.
JUDGMENT
GROENEWALD
AJ
Introduction:
1.
This is an application in terms of which the
Applicant seeks the
winding-up of the Respondent company on the basis of:
1.1.
Section
345(1)(a)
[1]
of the Companies Act, 61 of 1973 (“the 1973 Companies Act”)
in that the Respondent has failed to satisfy a demand for
payment
within 21 days of being delivered at the Respondent’s
registered address; and/or
1.2.
Section 345(1)(c) of the 1973 Companies Act, in that it has been
proven
to the satisfaction of the court that the Respondent is unable
to pay its debts.
2.
It is not disputed between the parties that
the Section 345 notice
was served by the Sheriff at the registered address of the
Respondent. The application is one which
is primarily premised
upon an allegation that the Respondent is commercially insolvent.
3.
It is common cause that the Respondent appointed
the Applicant to
perform certain engineering services
inter alia
in respect of
the structural design of reservoirs, the associated design of
mechanical works on the project, the design co-ordination
of the
mechanical and electrical aspects and the supervision of the entire
task as set out in a letter of appointment, dated 9
May 2016.
4.
The appointment letter specifically provides,
in relevant part, that:
“
The fee for
item 1 – 5 is One Million and Five Hundred Rand Only –
(R1,500 000.00)
Vat Excl
which includes
all disbursements and any other expenses as stated above.
The schedule of
payment will be as per ECSA guidelines stages of Inception, Concept &
Viability, Design, Development, Construction,
Monitoring and
Close-out.
…
Payments to BTW &
Associates will be affected within 2 working days after Maragela
Consulting Engineers receipt of the payments
from Randfontein Local
Municipality
.”
(Own emphasis applied.)
5.
It was common cause in the argument that the
Respondent was appointed
as a contractor of the Randfontein Local Municipality and that
certain aspects of the work was in turn
sub-contracted by the
Respondent to the Applicant. The genesis of the dispute between
the parties primarily arises from an
interpretation of the above
quoted extract from the appointment letter and more specifically as
to when payment would be both due
and payable.
6.
The Applicant contends that it rendered services
in accordance with
the agreed fees and tariffs for the Respondent from 2016 until 2021.
The Applicant contends that the Respondent
is indebted to the
Applicant in the total amount of R576 227.80 in respect of services
rendered by the Applicant, plus interest,
in terms of the agreement
between the parties.
7.
The Applicant delivered statements and invoices
in respect of the
above services, but payment in full was not received from the
Respondent. The Applicant contends that the
Respondent made
payments on the account statement in respect of invoices 1 to 10, and
a partial payment on statement 11 in the
total amount of
R1 494 563.31. The Applicant further contends that an
amount remains outstanding of R576 227.80
which is a claim
comprised of invoices 11 to 17 which, the Applicant claims, was never
settled by the Respondent.
The
service of the section 345 demand:
8.
The Applicant further complains that the Respondent
ignored pertinent
correspondence directed to it in respect of the outstanding amount
and also failed to respond to the Section
345 (1973 Companies Act)
notice which was duly served at the Respondent’s registered
address. The facts that such correspondence
was sent, not
replied to and further that the Section 345 notice was duly served
and not replied to, was not denied. The
Respondent indicated
that the reason for failure to respond to the Section 345 notice was
that it did not receive it. The
Respondent did not elaborate
much further than that on this issue.
9.
In argument Ms Louis correctly conceded on
behalf of the Respondent
that the service of the Section 345 notice was proper.
10.
In respect of the further affidavits filed by the respective
parties,
both of the respective parties indicated that they had no objection
in respect of the admission of those affidavits and
consequently
leave was granted for the admission of such evidence.
The
crux
of the opposition to the application:
11.
The main thrust of the opposition to the application can be
summarised as follows:
11.1.
non-compliance with the provisions of the 1973 Companies Act;
11.2.
that the Respondent has presented a
bona fide
defence against
the Applicant’s claim; and
11.3.
that the application is an abuse of process, worthy of a punitive
cost order.
The
certificate of security:
12.
In the answering affidavit the Respondent contended that the
Applicant failed to comply with Section 346(3) of the 1973 Companies
Act by failing “
to issue its certificate of tendered
security and security bond
10 days prior to the date of the
application
as required in terms of Section 346(3) of the
“1973 Companies Act
”.
13.
A proper certificate of security was uploaded before the matter
was
heard by this court. Ms Louis on behalf of the Respondent
correctly abandoned the point. Such a concession was
rightly
made, taking note of the authority in
Court v Standard Bank of
SA Limited; Court v Bester N.O.
[1995] ZASCA 39
;
1995 (3) SA 123
(AD)
where
the then apex court held at
131B
that “
all
that is thus required by the sub-section is that security must have
been given before the matter is heard and that the certificate
shall
then accompany the application
”.
See also:
EB Steam Co (Pty) Ltd v Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd
2015 (2) SA 526
(SCA) at par 9.
Non-compliance
with the Companies Act:
14.
During argument two further issues were raised in respect of
non-compliance with the requisites of the 1973 Companies Act. The
first being that there was no proof of service on the Respondent
uploaded to Caselines. The Applicant’s counsel produced a
return of service which confirmed that such service did in
fact occur
and consequently that point was abandoned. In any event, the
Respondent could not be heard to suffer any prejudice
insofar as it
fully opposed the application, was quite clearly aware of the matter
and presented full argument on the merits of
the matter.
15.
Secondly,
that in respect of service on SARS by way of e-mail,
[2]
that the Practice Directives of this court require that the
compliance affidavit should also attach a copy of the read received
report. No such copy of the read receipt report was attached to
the compliance/service affidavit. There is however
a proper
affidavit dealing with service from the Applicant’s attorney
which states under oath that he was personal knowledge
of the content
of that affidavit and, in paragraph 3.2 thereof, confirms that
service of the application together with all of the
annexures
occurred on the office of the South African Revenue Service on 22
April 2022 as is evident from annexure “
JD2”
thereto. The affidavit attaches a copy of an e-mail sent to
SARS.
16.
Mr Louw, on
behalf of the Applicant submitted that there is therefore clear
evidence before the court of compliance, that such evidence
should be
accepted (implying that the non-compliance with the practice
directive can and should be condoned in the present circumstances)
and further, that any risk that SARS did not obtain knowledge of the
application could be remedied by way of a provisional order
also
dealing with service.
[3]
Be that as it may I am satisfied that the Applicant has
complied and that the non-compliance with the practice directive,
in
this case, should be condoned.
The
onus
and test whether the dispute of the claim is
bona
fide
:
17.
In
Gap Merchant Recycling CC v Goal Reach Trading 55 CC
2016
(1) SA 261
(WCC)
Rogers J comprehensively summarised the
legal test to be applied to establish if a claim is
bona fide
disputed on reasonable grounds at
267 to 271
as
follows:
“
The legal test
— disputed claims
[20] The rule that
winding-up proceedings should not be resorted to as a means of
enforcing payment of a debt, the existence of
which is bona fide
disputed on reasonable grounds, is part of the broader principle that
the court's processes should not be abused.
Liquidation proceedings
are not intended as a means of deciding claims which are genuinely
and reasonably disputed. The rule is
generally known as the
'Badenhorst rule', after one of the leading cases on the subject,
Badenhorst v Northern Construction Enterprises
(Pty) Ltd
1956 (2) SA
346
(T) at 347H – 348C. A distinction is thus drawn between
factual disputes relating to the respondent's liability to the
applicant
and disputes relating to the other requirements for
liquidation . At the provisional stage the other requirements must be
satisfied
on a balance of probabilities with reference to the
affidavits. In relation to the respondent's liability, on the other
hand, the
question is whether the applicant's claim is disputed on
reasonable and bona fide grounds; a court may reach this conclusion,
even
though on a balance of probabilities (based on the papers) the
applicant's claim has been made out (Payslip Investment Holdings
CC v
Y2K Tec Ltd
2001 (4) SA 781
(C) at 783G – I).
However, where
the applicant at the provisional stage shows that the debt prima
facie exists, the onus is on the company to show
that it is bona fide
disputed on reasonable grounds
(Hülse-Reutter and Another v
HEG Consulting Enterprises (Pty) Ltd (Lane and Fey NNO Intervening)
1998 (2) SA 208
(C) at 218D – 219C).
[21] There was some
debate before me as to how far a respondent need go in order to
discharge the burden of proving that a debt
which is prima facie due
and payable is bona fide disputed on reasonable grounds. Both parties
referred me to statements made by
Thring J in Hülse-Reutter
supra. It is desirable that I quote fully what the learned judge said
at 219F – 220C:
'I think that it is
important to bear in mind exactly what it is that the trustees have
to establish in order to resist this application
with success. Apart
from the fact that they dispute the applicants' claims, and do so
bona fide, which is now common cause, 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, in this
matter, 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 and their 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 a trial. This is not an application for
summary judgment in which,
in terms of Supreme Court Rule 32(3), 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 trustees in
the present application, as long as they do so bona fide, and I must
emphasise
again that their bona fides are not here disputed, to
allege facts which, if approved at a trial, would constitute a good
defence
to the claims made against the company
.
Where
such facts are not within their personal knowledge, it is enough, in
my view, for them to set out in the affidavit the basis
on which they
make such allegations of fact, provided that they do so not baldly,
but with adequate particularity. This being the
case, they may, in my
judgment, refer to documents and to statements made by other persons
without annexing to their affidavits
such documents or affidavits
deposed to by such persons, subject of course to the qualifications
which I have mentioned and, in
particular, to the Court being
satisfied, as it is in this case, of their bona fides.'
[22] As Mr Randall for
the applicant emphasised, Thring J made it clear in this
passage that bona fides was not in issue and
that what he was
discussing was the test for determining whether a respondent who has
bona fide disputed the applicant's claim
is doing so on reasonable
grounds.
Even in regard to reasonable grounds, the learned
judge warned that it would not suffice to make bald allegations
lacking in adequate
particularity
.
His reference to
hearsay evidence is not germane to the present case, because such
facts as are relevant to the respondent's defence
are within the
personal knowledge of its deponent Muller.
…
[26] I see no reason
for adopting a different approach when considering, in liquidation
proceedings, whether the applicant's claim
is bona fide disputed on
reasonable grounds. Bona fides relates to the respondent's subjective
state of mind, while reasonableness
has to do with whether,
objectively speaking, the facts alleged by the respondent constitute
in law a defence. The two elements
are nevertheless interrelated
because inadequacies in the statement of the facts underlying the
alleged defence may indicate that
the respondent is not bona fide in
asserting those facts.
As Hülse-Reutter makes clear, the
objective requirement of reasonable grounds for a defence is not met
by bald allegations
lacking in particularity; and, as appears from
Breitenbach and El-Naddaf, bald allegations lacking in particularity
are unlikely
to be sufficient to persuade a court that the respondent
is bona fide.
[27] The foregoing
discussion treats the Badenhorst rule as laying down a rigid legal
test: if the application is bona fide disputed
on reasonable grounds,
the application must as a rule of law be dismissed. That is far from
being settled in our law. In Kalil
v Decotex (Pty) Ltd and Another
1988 (1) SA 943
(A) Corbett JA, after listing a number of decisions
in which the rule in slightly varying formulations had been adopted,
said the
following (at 980F – I):
'This rule would tend
to cut across the general approach to applications for a provisional
order for winding-up which I have outlined
above as it is conceivable
that the situation might arise that the applicant could show a
balance of probabilities in his favour
on the affidavits, while at
the same time the respondent established that its indebtedness to the
applicant was disputed on bona
fide and reasonable grounds. Whether
the Badenhorst rule should be accepted then as an exception to the
general approach relating
specifically to the locus standi of the
applicant as a creditor, and the further question as to whether it
should be applied inflexibly
or only when it appears that the
applicant is in effect abusing the winding-up procedure by using it
as a means of putting pressure
on the company to pay a debt which is
bona fide disputed (see the English case of Mann and Another v
Goldstein and Another
[1968] 2 All ER 769
at 775C – D) need
not, however, be decided in this case. The point was not argued
before us and, as I shall show, it seems
to me that for various
reasons the Badenhorst rule should not be applied here.'
[28] In Absa Bank Ltd
v Erf 1252 Marine Drive (Pty) Ltd
[2012] ZAWCHC 43
, which concerned
the return day of a provisional liquidation, Binns-Ward J said the
following in para 14 (footnote omitted):
'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 self-standing
(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.'
The expression of
opinion in this passage, to the effect that the Badenhorst rule may
not go to standing and that it is rather a
self-standing and possibly
flexible principle, received support by the full bench in Nedbank Ltd
v Zonnekus Mansions (Pty) Ltd
[2013] ZAWCHC 6
para 43. A
flexible approach, particularly at the provisional stage, also seems
to have found favour with a full bench in
Gauteng in Total
Auctioneering Services and Sales CC t/a Consolidated Auctioneers v
Norfolk Freightways CC [2012] ZAGPJHC 211 paras
13 – 15.
”
The
defence to the claim:
18.
Ms Louis provided a spirited argument, the main thrust of which
can
be summarised as follows:
The Cap Argument:
19.
The letter of appointment places a cap on the amount which
would be
paid to the Applicant of R1.5 million. (referred to herein as “the
Cap Argument”) The Respondent contended
in its
supplementary affidavit that “
in terms of the company
records, there has not been any variation of the contract price and,
accordingly, the Applicant has been
paid the full R1.5 million they
were contracted to execute the works for
”.
20.
The Respondent further states that it effected payment to the
Applicant of the outstanding portion of the contract price in the
amount of R5 463.93 and attaches a proof of payment for
the
latter amount on 30 January 2023.
21.
The Argument is in fraught with certain challenges. The
Respondent’s initial version set out in the answering affidavit
stated that it disputes the outstanding amount based upon
the
provisions of the letter of appointment. The Respondent
explained this defence by pertinently stating in paragraphs 15
and 16
of the Founding Affidavit that:
“
15.
In light of the above, and as per the Letter of Appointment, the
outstanding amount will
become due and owing two (2) days after the
Respondent is paid by the Employer, Randfontein Local Municipality.
22.
It is submitted that the Employer has not effected payment of the
outstanding amount and accordingly the outstanding amount is not
due,
owing and payable by the Respondent
.”
16.
The allegation in paragraph 9 of the Founding Affidavit that
the
Respondent is indebted to the Applicant in the claimed amount was not
denied in the answering affidavit. The Respondent elected
to respond
to that allegation with the following:
“
The contents of
this paragraph are admitted insofar as the Applicant rendered
services for the Respondent
.”
17.
The allegation in paragraph 13 of the Founding Affidavit that
there
is still an amount outstanding which was never settled by the
Respondent is also not disputed. The Respondent curiously responds
as
follows thereto:
“
The contents of
this paragraph are admitted insofar as the fact that an amount is
still due to the Applicant in terms of the project
.”
18.
Where the allegations made in the Founding Affidavit have not
been
denied, those allegations are for the purposes of the application
accepted as correct. See:
Moosa v Knox
1949 (3) SA
327
(N); United Methodist Church of South Africa v Sokufundumala
1989
(4) SA 1055
(O) at 1059A; Ebrahim v Georgoulas
1992 (2) SA 151
(B) at
153D
. Ms Louis sought to contend that the Answering
Affidavit should be read as a whole and if this is done the admission
should
be disregarded. She was however constrained to concede
that it would be hard to marry the admission to the later denial.
19.
In
Wightman t/a JW Construction v Headfour (Pty) Ltd
[2008] ZASCA 6
;
2008 (3)
SA 371
(SCA)
at
375F–376B
held:
“
A real, genuine
and bona fide dispute of fact can exist only where the court is
satisfied that the party who purports to raise the
dispute has in his
affidavit seriously and unambiguously addressed the fact said to be
disputed. There will of course be instances
where a bare denial meets
the requirement because there is no other way open to the disputing
party and nothing more can therefore
be expected of him. But even
that may not be sufficient if the fact averred lies purely within the
knowledge of the averring party
and no basis is laid for disputing
the veracity or accuracy of the averment
. When the facts
averred are such that the disputing party must necessarily possess
knowledge of them and be able to provide an
answer (or countervailing
evidence) if they be not true or accurate but, instead of doing so,
rests his case on a bare or ambiguous
denial the court will generally
have difficulty in finding that the test is satisfied.
I
say “generally” because factual averments seldom stand
apart from a broader matrix of circumstances all of which
needs to be
borne in mind when arriving at a decision. A litigant may not
necessarily recognise or understand the nuances of a
bare or general
denial as against a real attempt to grapple with all relevant factual
allegations made by the other party.
But when he signs the
answering affidavit, he commits himself to its contents, inadequate
as they may be, and will only in exceptional
circumstances be
permitted to disavow them. There is thus a serious duty imposed upon
a legal adviser who settles an answering
affidavit to ascertain and
engage with facts which his client disputes and to reflect such
disputes fully and accurately in the
answering affidavit. If that
does not happen it should come as no surprise that the court takes a
robust view of the matter
.
”
(Own emphasis applied.)
20.
The admissions made by the Respondent initially, is at variance
with
the later denial by the Respondent that it is indebted at all to the
Applicant. It is rather difficult for the Respondent
to contend
first that the claimed amount has not become both due and payable,
then that the amount is not due at all and to later
to in the
supplementary affidavit that all that was owed, the so-called Cap
Argument, has been paid. There are also a several
allegations
which fall within the Respondent’s knowledge which is met with
a curt denial or not directly answered to.
21.
There is some merit in the submissions by Mr Louw that there
appears
to have been a metamorphosis of the Respondent’s version from
the initial answering affidavit to the version contained
in the
supplementary affidavit. The initial version was that the
amount would not be due and payable until the Respondent
was paid by
its employer. The concession was made that the Municipality had
now fully paid and that no further payments were
to be expected by
the Respondent from its employer. The Respondent states in the
supplementary answering affidavit, at paragraph
8, that:
“
The Respondent
is indebted to the Court and, following the reconciliation, it has
come to our attention that we have received payment
from the
Municipality. I
(sic)
respect of the Droogheuwel Project
.”
22.
Mr Louw in his argument progressed to embracing the position
that his
client would only be entitled to payment two days after payment
having been received by the Respondent from the Municipality.
Mr
Louw argued that it was now common cause that the Respondent had been
paid which would effectively mean that the dilatory
defence that the
amount was not due and payable, fell away.
23.
The Cap Argument holds an inherent flaw insofar as the argument
in
the answering and supplementary affidavits ignored that the so-called
Cap was not R1.5 million, but R1.5 million plus VAT. It
was
conceded on behalf of the Respondent that the Respondent would
therefore have to pay a total of the R1.5 million as well as
the VAT
thereon, respectively at 14% and 15% consequent upon the effective
increase in the VAT rate on 1 April 2018. Even
if calculated at
14% it would leave a difference of R210 000.00 which was not
paid. The so-called Cap Argument presents no
defence for this part of
the Applicant’s claim. When asked about this, the
Respondent’s counsel indicated that
the Respondent clearly,
with reference to the supplementary answering affidavit, presented
its contentions under the “
misapprehension
” that
the cap amount would be R1.5 million and disregarded the VAT which
must also be paid.
24.
The consequence is that the Cap Argument, insofar as it relates
to
the balance of the amount in respect of the full R1.5 million plus
VAT can at best only present a defence (if any) in respect
of a part
of the so-called outstanding amount claimed by the Applicant. It
still leaves and amount of at least R210 000.00.
It was
conceded that the balance was not paid.
The prescription
issue:
25.
The Respondent’s fallback position was that if the amounts
were
immediately due upon invoice, then the Applicant’s claims would
have prescribed. There is some merit in the contention
that
insolvency proceedings do not have the intention of enforcing a debt
as its primary object and therefore the launching of
an application
would not stay prescription.
26.
On the
facts of the matter the last invoice issued by the Applicant was
issued on the 28
th
of February 2020 for an amount of R156 403.45. Mr Louw
astutely pointed out that the answering affidavit, containing
the
admissions of the indebtedness, is dated 26 July 2022 which admission
would amount to an acknowledgement sufficient to interrupt
prescription. It is correct that
section 14
of the
Prescription
Act, 68 of 1969
provides for either an express or tacit acknowledgement of liability
by a debtor as grounds for interruption of prescription.
[4]
27.
This being so, the claim that the Applicant’s full claim
has
prescribed cannot succeed. This leaves the Respondent’s
purported defence in tatters, and it can be accepted that
the
Respondent is in fact indebted at least for R156 403.45 of the last
invoice. As such the true gap is the one in the Respondent’s
own version.
The
inability to pay:
28.
In terms of section 344(f) of the 1973 Companies Act, a company
may
be wound up if the company is unable to pay its debts as described in
section 345 of the act.
29.
Section 345(1) of the 1973 Companies Act provides that:
“
When company
deemed unable to pay its debts.(1) A company or body corporate shall
be deemed to be unable to pay its debts if
(a)
a creditor, by cession or otherwise, to whom the company is
indebted in a sum not less than one hundred rand then due
(i)
has served on the company, by leaving the same at its
registered office, a demand requiring the company to pay the sum so
due;
or
(ii)
in the case of any body corporate not incorporated under this
Act, has served such demand by leaving it at its main office or
delivering
it to the secretary or some director, manager or principal
officer of such body corporate or in such other manner as the Court
may direct, and the company or body corporate has for three weeks
thereafter neglected to pay the sum, or to secure or compound
for it
to the reasonable satisfaction of the creditor; or
(b)
any process issued on a judgment, decree or order of any
court in favour of a creditor of the company is returned by the
sheriff
or the messenger with an endorsement that he has not found
sufficient disposable property to satisfy the judgment, decree or
order
or that any disposable property found did not upon sale satisfy
such process; or
(c)
it is proved to the satisfaction of the Court that the company
is unable to pay its debts
.
” (Own
underlining.)
30.
A company's inability to pay its debts may be proved in any
manner.
Evidence that a company has failed on demand to pay a debt
payment of which is due is cogent
prima facie
proof of
inability to pay its debts:
"
for a concern
which is not in financial difficulties ought to be able to pay its
way from current revenue or readily available resources
"
See:
Rosenbach & Co (Pty) Ltd v Singh's Bazaars (Pty) Ltd
1962 (4) SA
593
(D) at 597 per Caney J
.
31.
The mere fact that the value of a company's assets may exceed
the
amount of its liabilities does not preclude a finding that the
company is unable to pay its debts: such a finding may be made
if
these assets are not readily realisable and the company has no funds
with which to meet current demands if, in other words,
the company is
"
commercially insolvent
"; in the
Rosenbach
case supra at 597
Caney J stated:
"
The proper
approach in deciding the question whether a company should be wound
up on this ground appears to me…to be that,
if it is
established that a company is unable to pay its debts, in the sense
of being unable to meet current demands upon it, its
day to day
liabilities in the ordinary course of its business, it is in a state
of commercial insolvency.
"
See also:
Absa Bank Ltd v Rhebokskloof (Pty) Ltd
1993 (4) SA 436
(C); Gap
Merchant Recycling CC v Goal Reach Trading 55 CC
2016 (1) SA 261
(WCC).
32.
The Respondent also does not comprehensively deal with its
own
financial position with the candour which would be expected from a
party against whom a winding-up order is being sought.
The
failure to make a full disclosure justifies a negative inference.
33.
In
Absa Bank Limited v Rhebokskloof (Pty) Ltd
1993
(4) SA 436
(C)
the Court held at
440F - 441A
thus:
“
Turning to the
merits of the matter, Mr Gauntlett contended that ABSA was entitled
to a final winding-up order on the basis that
Rhebokskloof was
'commercially insolvent'. The concept of commercial insolvency as a
ground for winding up a company is eminently
practical and
commercially sensible. The primary question which a Court is called
upon to answer in deciding whether or not a company
carrying on
business should be wound up as commercially insolvent is whether or
not it has liquid assets or readily realisable
assets available to
meet its liabilities as they fall due to be met in the ordinary
course of business and thereafter to
be in a position to carry on
normal trading - in other words, can the company meet current demands
on it and remain buoyant? It
matters not that the company's assets,
fairly valued, far exceed its liabilities: once the Court finds that
it cannot do this,
it follows that it is entitled to, and should,
hold that the company is unable to pay its debts within the meaning
of s 345(1)(c)
as read with s 344(f) of the Companies Act 61 of 1973
and is accordingly liable to be wound up. As Caney J said in
Rosenbach &
Co (Pty) Ltd v Singh's Bazaar (Pty) Ltd
1962 (4) SA
593
(D) at 597E-F:
'If the company is in
fact solvent, in the sense of its assets exceeding its liabilities,
this may or may not, depending upon the
circumstances, I
lead to a refusal of a winding-up order; the circumstances
particularly to be taken into consideration
against the making of an
order are such as show that there are liquid assets or readily
realisable assets available out of which,
or the proceeds of which,
the company is in fact able to pay its debts.'
Notwithstanding this
the Court has a discretion to refuse a winding-up order in these
circumstances but it is one which is limited
where a creditor
as
a debt which the company cannot pay; in such a case the creditor is
entitled, ex debito justitiae, to a winding-up order (see
Henochsberg
on the Companies Act 4th ed vol 2 at 586; Sammel and Others v
President Brand Gold Mining Co Ltd
1969 (3) SA 629
(A) at 662F).
34.
A company is deemed to be unable to pay its debts if it meets
the
conditions set down in section 345(1)(a). As stated by Bosielo JA in
the full bench decision of the Supreme Court of Appeal
in
Lamprecht
v Klipeiland (Pty) Limited All SA 279 (SCA) (19 September 2014) at
par 15
:
"
To meet the
threshold laid down in section 345(1)(a) it is essential that an
applicant prove three essential requirements. These
are, first, that
he or she is a creditor of the respondent for an amount not less than
R100, secondly, which must be due and payable.
In other words, the
debt must be liquid. Third, there must be proof that, notwithstanding
service of the section 345(1)(a) notice,
the debtor has neither paid
the amount claimed nor secured or compounded it to the reasonable
satisfaction of the creditor.
"
35.
The Applicant has proven the three essential requirements.
In
terms of section 345(1)(a), it is apparent that a creditor is
entitled to apply for winding up of a company even if it appears
to
be solvent, the creditor as such is entitled to apply for winding-up
and the company who has its own remedy that is, to pay
the debt and
if it persists in the non-payment, it may suggest inability to pay.
(See:
Werksmans Incorporated v Praxley Corporate
Solutions (Pty) Ltd
[2015] 4 All SA 525
(GJ) para 82.
)
Conclusion:
36.
The court is not satisfied that the Applicant has a
bona fide
defence against the claim. The way in which the Respondent has
set out its version creates the distinct impression that the
opposition to the application is contrived and disingenuous.
The Respondent’s versions are both fraught with contradictions
and discrepancies. In light of the above findings, and after
consideration of all the relevant facts, the Court finds that
the
Applicant has made out a case for the granting of a provisional
order.
37.
Insofar as there has been non-compliance with the practice
directive
relating to the attachment of the read receipt in respect of the
e-mail to SARS, such non-compliance is not material,
and such the
non-compliance is condoned.
38.
The interest of justice in the present matter militates in
favour of
the granting of a provisional winding-up order.
The
order:
39.
Consequently, the following order is made:
1.
The Respondent’s supplementary affidavit
is admitted.
2.
The late delivery of the Respondent’s
Answering Affidavit is
condoned.
3.
The Respondent is hereby placed under provisional
winding-up in the
hands of the Master of the High Court, Pretoria.
4.
That a
rule nisi
be issued, with return date
22 May 2024
at
10:00
or as soon thereafter as the matter may be heard,
calling upon all interested parties, to show cause, if any, why the
following
final order should not be made:-
39.4.1.
a final winding-up order is granted in respect of the Respondent; and
39.4.2.
the costs of this application are costs in the winding-up of the
Respondent.
5.
That service of this order is to be effected
as follows:-
5.1
by the Sheriff:
5.1.1
on the Respondent at its registered office;
5.1.2
on the employees of the Respondent; and
5.1.3
on every registered trade union that may be found
to represent any of
the employees of the respondent.
5.2
on the South African Revenue Service, Pretoria; and
5.3
by publication in The Citizen newspaper and in the Government
Gazette.
6
The costs of this application will be
costs in the liquidation of the
Respondent.
RJ GROENEWALD (AJ)
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Delivered: This
judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected and is handed down electronically
by circulation to the
parties/their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on
CaseLines. The date for
hand-down is deemed to be 19 March 2024.
For the Applicant:
Adv NG Louw
Instructed
by:
Dawie
Beyers Attorneys
For
the Respondents:
Adv C
Louis
Instructed
by:
C de
Villiers Attorneys
Matter
heard on:
12
March 2024 - Court 8F
Judgment
date:
19
March 2024
[1]
Which should be read with Item
9 of Schedule 5 to the
Companies
Act, 71 of 2008
.
[2]
It was
conceded in argument that at this stage SARS only accepts service
by
way of e-mail and no physical service is received by SARS.
[3]
There is some merit in this
submission when considering
EB
Steam Co (Pty) Ltd v Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd
2015 (2) SA 526
(SCA)
albeit that that case primarily dealt with notice to employees.
[4]
Pentz
v Government of the RSA
1983 (3) SA 584
(A); Aussenkehr Farms (Pty)
Ltd v Trio Transports CC
2002 (4) SA 483
(SCA)
.
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