Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 297South Africa
Elite Group and Others v Kajee and Another (2023/092274) [2024] ZAGPPHC 297 (8 April 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
8 April 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Elite Group and Others v Kajee and Another (2023/092274) [2024] ZAGPPHC 297 (8 April 2024)
Elite Group and Others v Kajee and Another (2023/092274) [2024] ZAGPPHC 297 (8 April 2024)
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sino date 8 April 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
1.
REPORTABLE: No
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: No
3.
REVISED.
8
April 2024
Case
No.
2023-092274
In the matter between:
ELITE GROUP AND 20
FURTHER CREDITORS OF
THE HABIB OVERSEAS
BANK LIMITED LISTED IN
ANNEXURE
“A” TO THE NOTICE OF MOTION
Applicants
and
ZEENATH
KAJEE NO
First Respondent
HABIB
OVERSEAS BANK LIMITED
Second Respondent
#####
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J
:
1
The applicants, to whom I
shall refer as “the depositors”, all have accounts in
credit with the second respondent, Habib
Overseas Bank (“Habib
Bank”). The first respondent, Ms. Kajee, is cited in her
official capacity as Habib Bank’s
liquidator.
2
Habib Bank was placed in
final liquidation under an order of this court, made by Kholong AJ on
26 February 2024. The depositors
are creditors of the bank. They
claim standing under section 360 (1) of the Companies Act 61 of 1973.
That provision entitles a
creditor of “any company unable to
pay its debts and being wound up by the Court” to “a
pply
to the Court for an order authorising him to inspect any or all of
the books and papers of that company, whether in possession
of the
company or the liquidator”. If a court decides to grant a
creditor or member such authority, the court “may
impose any
condition it thinks fit” on the exercise of that authority.
3
The
depositors are interested in preserving Habib Bank as a going
concern. They have been seeking out potential purchasers of the
bank
who would maintain the bank’s operations. Their interest in
doing so is obvious. They are more likely to recover the
value of
their deposits if the bank is maintained as a going concern than if
the bank ceases trading and its assets are sold-off.
4
The
depositors say that there are at least three potential purchasers who
are likely to maintain the bank as a going concern. However,
before
those purchasers will so much as express an interest to Ms. Kajee in
buying the bank, they want to see the bank’s
books of account.
The depositors now seek an order from me directing that information
from those books be provided to them for
inspection. Their intent is
to send the information on to the three prospective purchasers
identified in their founding papers,
and to anyone else who the
depositors think might be keen on opening negotiations to purchase
the bank.
5
Section
360 (1) sets three jurisdictional requirements to be met before a
court can grant authority to inspect a company’s
books of
account. First, the application for such authority must be brought by
a member or a creditor of the company. Second, the
company concerned
must be unable to pay its debts and be in the process of being
wound-up, either by the court or by its creditors.
6
In my
view, these two jurisdictional requirements have plainly been met.
Mr. Smit, who appeared for the respondents, argued that
the
depositors have not established that Habib Bank is “unable to
pay its debts” in the required sense that its assets
exceed its
liabilities. However, even though there is no engagement with the
bank’s financial situation in the depositors’
founding
papers, it is clear from the unchallenged findings of Kholong AJ in
his 26 February judgment that the bank is in fact
insolvent in that
sense. Paragraph 63 of the judgment makes clear that the bank is
unable to pay its debts because it has a negative
net asset value. In
other words, the bank’s liabilities exceed its assets. It would
be naïve to ignore these unchallenged
findings merely because
they were not set out in the depositors’ founding papers. I
need only be satisfied by way of admissible
evidence that the bank is
unable to pay its debts. Kholong AJ’s unchallenged conclusions
are such evidence. They clearly
demonstrate that Habib Bank is unable
to pay its debts in the required sense.
7
I
cannot accept, however, that the third jurisdictional requirement of
section 360 (1) has been met. That requirement is that the
purpose of
the application must be for the member or creditor themselves to
inspect the information they apply to see. I do not
think that
section 360 (1) was meant to facilitate a company’s creditors
acting as conduits for the flow of financial information
about a
liquidated company to third party prospective purchasers in the
manner the depositors envisage. This is clear from the
use of the
words “for an order authorising
him
to inspect” in section 360 (1) (my emphasis). The scope of the
court’s power is to authorise the member or the creditor
themselves to inspect “any or all of the books and papers of
that company”. It is beyond the scope of that power to
give the
member or creditor access to the information for the sole purpose of
passing it on to someone else.
8
I think
that this limit on a court’s power was recognised in
Anchor
Holdings Ltd v Cox
1964 (2) SA 405
(W)
(“
Cox
”).
In that case, Boschoff J, albeit dealing with a similar provision of
an earlier iteration of the Companies Act, refused
an application to
inspect a company’s books on the basis that the creditor making
the application “itself ha[d] no
interest in the inspection of
the books and papers” of the company being wound-up in that
case (see
Cox
,
page 412).
9
A great
deal of argument was addressed to me on whether the decision in
Cox
applies to the facts before me. Ultimately, though, I do not think
that matters. It is clear from the text of section 360 (1) itself
that a court has no power to make an order where the creditors or
members making the application are not themselves interested
in
inspecting the books of account.
10
Mr.
Nel, who appeared together with Mr. Spiller for the depositors, urged
me to find that the depositors do not wish merely to pass
the
information they seek on to prospective purchasers. Mr. Nel submitted
that they wish also to compile a body of information
about Habib Bank
which will allow them to assist Ms. Kajee in finding a purchaser for
the bank. As carefully and as amiably as
Mr. Nel advanced this
submission, I think the argument relies on far too optimistic an
interpretation of the depositors’
affidavits. It is clear from
those papers that the depositors do not seek to compile a prospectus
or some other brochure of information
that might interest a
prospective purchaser. They seek possession of the information for
the sole purpose of passing it on –
in its raw form – to
anyone who they think might be interested in buying the bank. That,
as I have said, is beyond the scope
of section 360 (1).
11
Even if
that sort of scheme were not beyond the scope of the section, I would
still have exercised my discretion against allowing
the inspection
the depositors seek in this case. The authorities make clear that an
order for the inspection of an insolvent company’s
books and
papers under section 360 (1) must foreseeably benefit the winding-up
process in some way (see
RAM Transport
(Pty) Ltd v Replication Technology Group (Pty) Ltd (In Liquidation)
2011 (1) SA 223
(GSJ), paragraph 10 and the cases cited there). I
fail to see how it would benefit the winding-up process to give the
depositors
access to “any or all” of the bank’s
“books and papers” for the sole purpose of passing them
on to
third parties they think might be interested in purchasing the
bank.
12
Mr. Nel
invited me to narrow the scope of the information to which the
depositors will be given access, but I think that misses
the point.
The purpose for which the depositors seek the inspection of any of
the information they seek is fundamentally disruptive
of Ms. Kajee’s
powers and functions. It is, after all, she who has the primary duty
to deal with the bank’s assets,
whether by sale of the bank as
a going concern or otherwise. I do not see how it could benefit the
winding-up process to compel
Ms. Kajee to tolerate the supply of any
of the bank’s books and papers via the depositors to whichever
third-party prospective
purchasers the depositors might think are
worth encouraging. That would fundamentally undermine the control Ms.
Kajee is entitled
to exercise over the bank in the performance of her
functions.
13
Finally,
the depositors have given no good reason why a prospective purchaser
they might identify ought not simply to approach Ms.
Kajee with any
requests for further information they may have. Mr. Nel emphasised
how skittish a prospective purchaser might be,
but there is nothing
to suggest that Ms. Kajee would not treat any approach in confidence,
or that she would not supply a potential
purchaser with the
information that they may reasonably need to consider before making a
bid for the bank.
14
For all
these reasons, the application must be refused. Costs will follow
that result. The application was originally enrolled on
an urgent
basis before Mkhabela AJ on 19 September 2023, when the bank was
still under provisional liquidation. It was then removed
from the
urgent roll by agreement, with costs reserved, before being specially
allocated to me. The respondents sought, and are
entitled to, the
costs reserved by Mkhabela AJ.
15
The
application is dismissed with costs, including the costs reserved in
the order of Mkhabela AJ dated 19 September 2023.
S
D J WILSON
Judge
of the High Court
This
judgment is handed down electronically by circulation to the parties
or their legal representatives by email, by uploading
to Caselines,
and by publication of the judgment to the South African Legal
Information Institute. The date for hand-down is deemed
to be 8 April
2024.
HEARD
ON:
22 March 2024
DECIDED
ON:
8 April 2024
For
the Applicants: G Nel
SC
L Spiller
Instructed by Larson
Falconer Hassan Parsee Inc
For
the Respondents: JE Smit
Instructed
by Edward Nathan Sonnenbergs Inc
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