Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 352South Africa
Howie v Daren N.O (A185/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 352 (8 April 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
8 April 2024
Headnotes
with costs.
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 352
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Howie v Daren N.O (A185/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 352 (8 April 2024)
Howie v Daren N.O (A185/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 352 (8 April 2024)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPPHC/Data/2024_352.html
sino date 8 April 2024
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
APPEAL CASE NO:
A185/2023
(1)
REPORTABLE:
YES
/ NO
(2) OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES /
NO
(3)
REVISED:
YES
/ NO
DATE: 8 April 2024
SIGNATURE
In the matter between: -
CRAIG
ALEXANDER HILTON
HOWIE
Appellant
VS
EILEEN
ROXANNE DAREN
N.O.
Respondent
Heard
on:
7 February
2024
Delivered:
8 April
2024 - This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties' representatives by email, by being uploaded to
the
CaseLines
system
of the Gauteng Division and by release to SAFLII. The date and time
for hand-down is deemed to be 10:00 on 8
April 2024.
ORDER
It is ordered: -
1.
The appeal is
upheld with costs.
2.
The
sequestration application is dismissed with costs.
JUDGMENT
MAZIBUKO
AJ (Kooverjie J and Mkhabela AJ concurring)
THE
APPEAL
[1]
In this appeal, the appellant seeks to set aside the judgment and
order of the court
a quo
in granting the final sequestration
order.
[2]
The two core grounds of appeal raised are that personal service of
the sequestration
proceedings on the appellant was irregular and that
a case for sequestration had not been made out.
[3]
More specifically, the contentions raised are that the provisional
order for sequestration
was granted without the appellant having
knowledge of the proceedings and that the appellant was solvent at
all relevant times.
It was pointed out that the appellant had paid
the undisputed part of the respondent’s claim and the remainder
of the respondent’s
claim into the appellant’s attorneys
of record trust account as security for the payment of the
respondent’s claim.
It was specifically contended that
the email of 7 July 2020 could in no way be envisaged to be an act of
insolvency.
[4]
It is trite that the scope for interference on appeal with the
exercise of “true
discretion” is limited. A court
of appeal may only interfere if there was a misdirection of fact or a
wrong principle
of law.
[1]
SERVICE
OF THE APPLICATION
[5]
The first issue for consideration is whether the court
a quo
was
correct in finding that the sequestration application was served on
the appellant before the provisional order was granted.
[6]
In my view, the court
a quo
correctly dealt with this aspect.
It was common cause that the sequestration application was served on
the appellant via email on
8 October 2020. However, it was alleged
that service was not effected at the proper address of the appellant
but that of “Quantibuild”.
The person, Nomsa Mbonyane, on
whom the application was served, was, in fact, an employee of
Quantibuild and not of the appellant.
[7]
The appellant argued that it had no relation to this entity. From the
papers, it appeared
that there was confusion regarding the location
of the correct address. The court
a quo
was apprised of all
these facts.
[8]
The appellant further argued that he was not informed of the hearing
date of the sequestration
application. In my view, this argument has
no merit. The purpose of the notice of motion is not to inform the
respondent of the
date on
which
the matter is to be enrolled, nor does it require including a date on
which the application should be heard. The rationale
behind
service is to give notice to the opposing party of the application
proceedings which has been instituted against it.
[2]
[9]
It is also common cause that the sheriff attempted service on the
residential address
of the appellant but was unsuccessful. For this
reason, the matter was removed from the roll for better service.
Thereafter, service
was attempted on the appellant’s
residential address on at least two occasions, and on each occasion,
the premises were found
to be locked. Again, the court
a
quo
was
apprised of these facts at the provisional sequestration stage.
The court was satisfied that the provisions of Section
11(2) of the
Insolvency Act
[3]
were
met.
[10]
The court
a quo
at paragraph [10] stated:
It
is evident that Raulinga J was apprised of the problems that the
sheriff had experienced in serving the application personally
on the
respondent. It considered all the arguments and was satisfied
with the facts. Even if the service was defective,
I am
satisfied that service was effected on the respondent.
Furthermore, the purpose of service, being that the defendant
or
respondent has been made aware of legal proceedings instituted
against him, had been achieved in that the respondent was before
the
court, having received notice of the provisional sequestration
order…”
[11]
Notably, even if service of the sequestration application was
defective, the court
a quo
, in the exercise of its discretion,
could condone same. In this instance, there is no doubt that the
appellant received notice
of the sequestration application before the
provisional sequestration order was granted. Furthermore, the
appellant has fully
participated in the ventilation of this matter.
Hence, no prejudice was suffered as a result of any shortcoming or
defective
service by the sheriff with respect to the sequestration
application.
[12]
Section 9 of the Insolvency Act empowers a court to dispense with
furnishing a copy of the application
where the court is satisfied
that it is in the interest of creditors. Section 9(4)(A)(a)(iv) of
the Act reads:
“
When
a petition is presented to the court, the petitioner must furnish a
copy of the petition to the debtor, unless a court, at
its
discretion, dispenses with the furnishing of a copy where the court
is satisfied that it would be in the interest of the debtor
or of the
creditors to dispense with it.”
[13]
The word ‘furnish” in Section 9 of the Act was considered
by our courts. The
Constitutional Court in
Stratford
&
Others v Investec Bank Ltd and Others
[4]
held
that “furnish” requires that applications be made
available in a manner reasonably likely to make them accessible.
In
Chiliza
v Govender
[5]
,
the Supreme Court of Appeal found that
the
word “service” is expansive and encompasses several forms
of notification which may not entail personal service.
FINAL
SEQUESTRATION
[14]
In order to succeed with a final sequestration order, the respondent
is required to prove, on
a balance of probabilities, that:
14.1
there is a claim against a debtor, entitling him to apply for a
sequestration of the debtor’s estate.
14.2
the debtor has committed an act of insolvency or is insolvent and
14.3
there is reason to believe that it will be to the advantage of
creditors if the debtor’s estate is
sequestrated.
(i)
The first requirement: the indebtedness
[15]
To succeed with an application for sequestration, the respondent only
needs to satisfy the court
that it has a claim of more than R100.00
against the appellant. It was common cause between the parties
that the respondent
advanced an amount of R350,000.00 to the
appellant, to which he currently remains partially indebted to the
respondent.
[16]
In this instance, the appellant prepared an acknowledgement of debt
and signed same on 17 December
2019. He further committed to a date
when the debt would be satisfied. Based on these facts, the
appellant cannot deny his
indebtedness to the respondent. The
acknowledgement of debt and the correspondence between the parties
established that the respondent
had a claim against the appellant.
The appellant undertook to effect payment until he could settle the
debt. Accordingly, the court
a quo
was correct in finding that
a claim against the appellant existed.
[17]
On the aspect of the appellant’s counterclaim, the court
a
quo
at paragraph [15] found:
“
There
are no allegations in the counterclaim of an agreement which have
been concluded by the parties and that invoices will be
remitted for
the services as claimed. This is also the case pertaining to
the invoices in respect of the accommodation allegedly
provided by
the respondent. I note that the invoices created by the
respondent are all payable to Inyanga Trading 32 (Pty)
Ltd and not to
the respondent in person.”
[18]
The appellant alleged that the respondent was indebted to him for
various services rendered and
items bought on behalf of the
respondent as per the invoices. It was alleged that the counterclaim
was premised on various oral
agreements entered with the respondent.
Such counterclaim was pursued by way of action proceedings.
[19]
In my view, the counterclaim cannot be a basis to resist a
sequestration order. Our courts have
held: “
T
he
existence of a counterclaim which, if established, may result in a
discharge by set-off of an applicant’s claim for a liquidation
order is not, in itself, a reason for refusing to grant an order for
the winding-up of the respondent but it may, however, be a
factor to
be taken into account in exercising the court’s discretion as
to whether to grant the order or not
.”
[6]
[20]
In
Afgri
Operations Ltd v Hamba Fleet Management (Pty) Ltd (Afgri
Operations)
[7]
,
the Supreme Court of Appeal, in respect of an alleged counterclaim,
had the following to say:
“
[13]
As mentioned above,
mere
recourse to a counterclaim will not, in itself, enable a respondent
successfully to resist an application for its winding-up
.
Moreover, as set out above, the discretion to refuse a winding-up
order where it is common cause that the respondent has not paid
an
admitted debt is, notwithstanding a counterclaim, a narrow and not a
broad one. In these respects, the Court a quo applied ‘the
wrong principle[s]’. There must be no room for any
misunderstanding:
the
onus is not discharged by the respondent merely by claiming the
existence of a counterclaim
.
The
principles of which the Court a quo lost sight are: (a) as set
out in
Badenhorst and Kalil,
once
the respondent’s indebtedness has prima facie been established,
the onus is on it to show that his indebtedness is disputed
on bona
fide
[8]
and and reasonable grounds and (b) the discretion of a court not to
grant a
winding-up
order upon the application of an unpaid creditor is narrow and not
wide
.”
[21]
The appellant further contended that the court
a quo
failed to
take into account the amount he paid to his attorneys’ trust
account pending the outcome of his counterclaim. An
amount of
R258,404.96 was paid to his attorneys as alleged security for the
respondent’s claim.
[22]
On this point, the respondent raised the following contentions:
22.1
This was not security paid for the claim of the respondent. Instead,
it was monies that the appellant had
placed in his attorneys’
trust account to be held on his behalf;
22.2
At the time the money was paid into the attorneys’ trust
account, the appellant was divested of his
estate as he was
provisionally sequestrated. Such monies are to be included in the
debtor’s insolvent estate. Consequently,
such payment
into the attorneys’ trust account constitutes an impeachable
transaction;
22.3
The appellant’s three months’ bank statements from June
2021 to September 2021 reflected a negative
balance.
[23]
Although the court
a quo
did not specifically pronounce on
this particular point, the appellant nevertheless had finances at his
disposal at the time. It
was alleged that the disputed amount was
placed in the attorneys’ trust account.
(ii)
The
second requirement: the act of insolvency
[24]
It was argued that
the email of 7
July 2020 constituted an act of insolvency. In such correspondence,
the appellant explained
that
all his sources of income were either stymied or delayed; his monthly
expenses exceeded his income; he was exploiting every
opportunity to
improve his income and would pay the respondent as soon as it was
possible to do so. The contents read:
“
I
have done everything in my power to assist you before this situation
and since, you seem to have a very short memory.
My
situation as many, many others has been severely impacted by
Covid-19. All sources of my income have been either stymied and/or
delayed, completely outside of my control. My monthly expenses at
this stage exceed my income by a factor of 3, despite this I
have
sweated to make it up and kept the building going so that you will
have a place to stay. I am doing everything in my power
to sort this
issue out and exploiting every opportunity to improve my income over
this period.
I
am under constant stress as you are, but you are not being fair at
all. You cannot say that I have not been there for you when
you
needed me, always at my own expenses.
I
have always paid back my debts, and I will pay you as soon as it is
humanly possible to do. (sic)”
[25]
The court
a quo
found
such
explanation
to be an act of
insolvency as contemplated in Section 8(g) of the
Insolvency
Act, where the debtor has given notice in writing to his creditors
that he is unable to pay his debt. Accordingly, the appellant’s
expenses exceeded his income and he was unable to pay his debts.
[26]
It is trite that for an act of insolvency to be seen as a notice of
one’s inability to
pay, the notice must be such that on its
receipt, any reasonable person or business would conclude that the
debtor was unable to
meet his obligations or that he would no longer
continue to pay his debts in the ordinary course or that he would be
unable to
carry on with the business unless the creditors granted him
some sort of concession.
[9]
[27]
However, the proposition that a debtor commits an act of insolvency
when he sends a letter to
creditors stating that he was unable to pay
at the time must, in my view, be considered with circumspection.
[28]
Our courts have endorsed the approach set out in
Barlow’s
(Eastern Province) Ltd v Bouwer
[10]
,
which states that the enquiry should be: How
the reasonable person in the position of the creditor receiving the notice wouldunderstand it. To such a reasonable person must be attributed the creditor's
knowledge at the time of the relevant circumstances.
[29]
In
Standard
Bank of SA Ltd v Court
[11]
,
the court adopted the aforesaid test and stated:
[133]
“
The letter, of course, does not say, in express terms, that
the respondent cannot pay. But a debtor who gives notice that he will
only be able to pay his debt in the future gives notice in effect
that he 'is unable' to pay. A request for time to pay a debt
which is
due and payable will, therefore, ordinarily give rise to an inference
that the debtor is unable to pay a debt, and such
a request contained
in writing will accordingly constitute an act of insolvency in terms
of s 8(g).…
Inability
to pay must be distinguished from unwillingness to pay. If the debtor
is merely saying that he is unwilling to pay, the
letter does not
constitute an act of insolvency.
Construing
the written notice involves deciding how the reasonable person in the
position of the creditor receiving the notice would
understand it.
If
a reasonable person in the position of the creditor to whom the
notice is addressed would understand the notice to mean that
while
the debtor was unwilling to pay his debt forthwith, he could
nonetheless do so if pressed, then the notice will not constitute
an
act of insolvency
[12]
.
(Barlow's (Eastern Province) Ltd v Bouwer.
In
each case, where there is a request for time, the inquiry, therefore,
is whether the content of the written statement, viewed
together with
the circumstances to which it may be permissible to have regard, is
such as to negative the inference arising from
the request for time
to pay and to justify the conclusion that the debtor would be able to
pay at once if pressed to do so. The
mere fact that the debtor's
assets may exceed his liabilities would not be sufficient (compare
Lipworth v Alexander and Barkhan
1927 TPD 785).
”
[30]
Later, the Supreme Court of Appeal, in
O'Shea
No v van Zyl and Others No
[13]
,
said: “[26]…
The
letter was unambiguous and must stand or fall as an act of Insolvency
on its own terms. It cannot be subject to interpretation
by reference
to events which occurred or knowledge which was obtained subsequent
to its writing. The proper approach to determining
whether a letter
contains a notice of inability to pay in terms of s 8(g) is to
consider how it would be understood by a reasonable
person in the
position of the creditor at the time he receives it, taking into
account that creditor's knowledge of the debtor's
circumstances:
FirstRand
Bank Ltd v Evans
.
[14]
[31]
On the facts before me, I accept the explanation that
the
appellant did not say he did not have the means to pay or refused to
finally pay. He advised that despite the change in his
circumstances,
he made up his income shortfall by continuing to renovate the
building.
It cannot be disputed that he undertook
to pay the respondent. In other words, it was not that he was unable
to pay but that he was unwilling to pay.
[32]
Upon receiving the said email, the respondent
was not only
aware of the appellant’s circumstances, she was a family
friend. The appellant became her advisor in her various
business
interests. She was also in the process of moving into a flat on his
premises that he had renovated for her. The respondent
was aware that
the appellant had assets which could satisfy her debt at the time.
Notably, in the
Standard Bank
matter, the court took
the following into account and stated: “
If, on the other
hand, the debtor has disposable assets which could readily be
converted to cash in an amount which is sufficient
to pay the debt,
or the debtor is the owner of unencumbered immovable property against
which funds could promptly be raised, these
facts could well serve to
rebut the inference that the debtor is unable to pay and indicate
that he is merely unwilling to do so.”
[33]
The email, therefore, cannot be construed in the eyes of any
reasonable man of business as illustrating
that the appellant was
unable to meet his financial obligations, that he would no longer
continue to pay his debts in the ordinary
course, or that he would be
unable to carry on business unless creditors granted him some
concession.
[34]
Our courts have reiterated that the notice must be one of inability
to pay as distinct from one
of unwillingness to pay, refusal to pay,
or intention to suspend payment. One is to have regard to not
only the language
of the notice but also the debtor's state of mind
and what was objectively known to the recipient.
[35]
Moreover, apart from the appellant having sufficient disposable
assets to meet the debt, he had,
in fact, paid the undisputed debt
and had placed the amounts equivalent to the disputed debt in the
trust account of his attorneys.
The information set out in his
“Statement of Debtor’s Affairs” was not disputed.
It reflected that he owned the
Tiegerpoort property valued at
R8 500 000. He has a shareholder’s loan in Noble
Aerospace (Pty) Ltd, Inyanga Trading
and Richland Consulting (Pty)
Ltd valued at R200 000, R950 000, and R450 000,
respectively. He had creditors to
the value of R4 370 709,93.
[36]
In
Barlows
(Eastern Province) v Bouwer
,
[15]
,
the court was required to consider a similar scenario, whether the
correspondence from the applicant constituted a deed of insolvency.
In this matter, the letter that the debtor had sent to the creditor
read as follows:
“
In
connection my account, I am so sorry in having disappointed you.
Unfortunately, I have been seriously ill in hospital in
Cape Town
since November last year. I have just arrived back now.
And I hope I can pump now and try out the pump and
engine. As
regards payment I am expecting pension money from the irrigation
department that I applied for a refund thereof.
I must get 20
years’ pension money. Secondly, I have raised a bond on
my farm. Tool money is granted, and all
necessary valuations,
etc., has been made, and soon after registration of bond, I will be
in a position to meet my liabilities.
So please have a little
patience and I am willing to pay interest at bank rates on my overdue
accounts.”
At
paragraph 391 E-F, the court’s view was:
The
letter is merely a proposal made by a solvent person. Not “desirous
of
crippling
himself, asking if the applicant is willing to wait and not a clear
statement that he cannot pay if the applicant refuses
to assist him
and demands payment in a specified time. No reasonable man
could understand from this letter that the respondent
had not the
means to pay or refuse finally to pay if the applicant insisted on
payment at once and did not intend to allow the
respondent to
conserve his assets and pay by the raising of the bond.”
At
391F to 392A, the court went on further:
“
What
has happened is that the debtor has not given notice that he is
unable to pay but that he is unwilling to pay. He has
repudiated the obligation to pay on demand but is unwilling to pay by
realising his assets and has given the creditor the right
to sue him
for good but not to make him insolvent under Section 8(g).”
At
392C, the court therefore concluded:
“
Hence,
the letter does not constitute an act of insolvency.”
[37]
In my view, similarly, this is not a case where the appellant was
unable to pay. If the appellant
was forced to pay, he would come up
with the funds. He was clearly unwilling to pay the disputed amount.
The respondent has, therefore,
failed to establish an act of
insolvency on the part of the appellant. Accordingly, the letter
could not serve as notice by the
appellant that he was unable to pay
his debts for the purposes of Section 8(g) of the Insolvency Act.
[38]
I do not deem it necessary to deal with the third requirement,
namely, whether creditors would
benefit from sequestrating the
appellant. The application for sequestration fails on the ground that
an act of insolvency has not
been established, and on this ground
alone, the application cannot succeed.
[39]
The court
a quo
erred in its findings. Consequently,
the appeal made against the sequestration order is upheld. The order
of the court
a quo
is replaced with the following order:
1.
The appeal is upheld with costs.
2.
The sequestration application is dismissed with costs.
N.
MAZIBUKO
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
I agree,
H. KOOVERJIE
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
I agree,
R.B. MKHABELA
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Appearances
:
Counsel
for the
appellants
:
Adv.
HM Barnardt
Instructed
by:
DLBM
Attorneys
Counsel
for the respondent:
Adv.
R de Leeuw
Instructed
by:
Daan
Beukes, Attorneys
Date
heard:
7
February 2024
Date
of Judgment:
8
April
2024
[1]
Florence
v Government of the Republic of South Africa
2014 (6) SA 456
(CC),
paragraph 114
[2]
Sacerdote
v Stromberg (34218/2018) [2019] ZAGPPHC 114 (27 February 2019),
paragraph 11
[3]
Section
11(2)
of
the
Insolvency Act
24
of 1936
reads: “If a debtor has been absent during the
period of twenty-one days from his or her usual place of residence
and of his or her business (if any) within the Republic, the court
may direct that it is sufficient service of that rule if a
copy
thereof is affixed to or near the outer door of the buildings where
the court sits and published in the Gazette, or may
direct some
other mode of service.”
[4]
2015
(3) SA 1
(CC) paragraph 40.
[5]
(20837/14)
[2016] ZASCA, paragraph 11.
[6]
LHF Woods Ltd
(1970) Ch 27
(CA);
[1969] 3 All ER 882
(CA); Ter Beek
v United Resources CC & Another
1997 (3) SA 315
(C) at 333H.
[7]
2022
(1) SA 91
(SCA), paragraph 13.
8
My underlining.
[9]
Lipworth v Alexander & Barkhan
1927 TPD 785
[10]
1950
(4) SA 385
(E), paragraph 390E-H.
[11]
1993(3) SA 286(C), paragraph 293,
[1993] 3 All SA 729
( C)
(Confirmed on appeal in Court v Standard Bank of SA Ltd; Court v
Bester NO and Others 1995 (3) SA paragraph 123 (AD) paragraph
133-134D-E
[12]
My
underlining
[13]
2012
(1) SA 90
(SCA), paragraph 26.
[14]
The
court in O’Shea referred to
FirstRand
Bank Ltd v Evans,
2011 (4) SA 597
(KZD) at paragraphs 14 and 15,
where it was held: “
[14]
The proper approach to adopt in determining whether a letter such as
this constitutes a notice of inability to pay in terms
of
s 8(g)
is
to consider how it would be understood by a reasonable person in the
position of the creditor receiving the letter. In construing
it, the
knowledge that the creditor would have of the debtor's circumstances
must be attributed to the reasonable reader…
[15]
In my view, Mr Kemp is correct. The Section is couched in the
present tense and is invoked
where the debtor gives notice to the
creditor of an inability to pay debts. Clearly, the notice must do
that when the creditor
receives it. The question is what it means to
the recipient at the time of its receipt. Otherwise, it is
conceivable that an
otherwise innocuous letter could take on a fresh
colour as a result of subsequent events, which could be highly
prejudicial to
the debtor. In my view, the authors of Insolvency Law
are correct in saying that 'a notice of inability to pay debts does
not
cease to be an act of insolvency as a result of circumstances
obtaining subsequently to the giving thereof'. This accords with
the
view of Horwitz J in Chenille Industries v Vorster 1953(2) SA 691
(O) at 696D - E, in rejecting a submission that subsequent
events
affected the meaning to be given to a notice alleged to fall under
s
8(g)
, that, 'if the act be unequivocal, it cannot be explained away
by circumstances arising subsequently.”
[15]
Number
10,
supra.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Dwane and Another v Minister of State Security Agency and Others (11889/2021) [2024] ZAGPPHC 102 (12 February 2024)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 102High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)98% similar
Dorfling N.O and Another v Engelbrecht N.O and Others (004697/2024) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1135 (7 November 2024)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 1135High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)98% similar
A.W.F v K.S.R (052216/2024) [2025] ZAGPPHC 503 (16 May 2025)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 503High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)98% similar
L.L v A.J.M and Others (014357/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 523; 2025 (1) SA 455 (GP) (7 June 2024)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 523High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)98% similar
I.B.F v A.D.K and Another (015928/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 296 (22 March 2024)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 296High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)98% similar