Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 382South Africa
Madi Investments (Pty) Ltd v African Tanacity (Pty) Ltd and Another (2023/071165) [2024] ZAGPPHC 382 (19 April 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
19 April 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Madi Investments (Pty) Ltd v African Tanacity (Pty) Ltd and Another (2023/071165) [2024] ZAGPPHC 382 (19 April 2024)
Madi Investments (Pty) Ltd v African Tanacity (Pty) Ltd and Another (2023/071165) [2024] ZAGPPHC 382 (19 April 2024)
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sino date 19 April 2024
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE NO:
2023/071165
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES/
NO
(2) OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/
NO
(3) REVISED.
SIGNATURE
DATE:
19/4/2024
In
the matter between:
MADI
INVESTMENTS (PTY)
LTD
Applicant
and
AFRICAN
TANACITY (PTY) LTD
First Respondent
MICHELLE
VAN
ZYL
Second Respondent
JUDGMENT
LABUSCHAGNE
AJ
[1]
The applicant instituted an application in terms of a
notice of
motion dated 18 June 2023 for payment of two claims. In the
first claim an amount of R540 416.66 is claimed
against the
first and second respondents jointly and severally, the one paying
the other to be absolved, together with interest
at the maximum
permissible rate per annum from 30 June 2023 to date of final
payment.
[2]
The second claim is only against the first respondent
and is for
repayment of an amount of R703 649.00 plus interest
a tempore
morae
at the maximum permissible rate. Both claims include
prayers for costs.
CLAIM
1
[3]
The applicant contends that negotiations took place in
November 2022
between the applicant and the first respondent, represented by the
second respondent concerning the possible acquisition
by the
applicant of a percentage of the issued share capital in the first
respondent.
[4]
The second respondent informed the applicant’s
representative,
Mr Madi, that the first respondent required funds in the form of
working capital to enable it to continue with
its business venture.
Pending the applicant’s decision on the acquisition of shares,
the applicant was prepared to
lend and advance the sum of R500 000.00
to the first respondent to be used as working capital.
[5]
This gave rise to the first oral agreement between the
applicant and
the first respondent, concluded at Centurion, alternatively
Bedfordview during November 2022, with the following
terms:
5.1
The applicant would lend and advance to the first respondent
the sum
of R500 000.00 as working capital;
5.2
The first respondent would be liable to pay interest in the
period
prior to acquisition by the applicant of any of the issued share
capital in the first respondent at the rate of prime plus
3%, which
interest was payable on the last day of each calendar month;
5.3
Only in the event of the applicant not electing to purchase
any of
the shares would the first respondent be obliged to make repayment of
the aforesaid R500 000.00 together with interest;
5.4
The first respondent would further be obliged to make the payment
to
the applicant within thirty days of demand for repayment.
[6]
The applicant advanced R500 000.00 to the first
respondent in
November 2022. On 24 November 2022 the second respondent signed
an acknowledgement of debt. In terms of the
acknowledgement of debt:
6.1
The second respondent acknowledged that she is indebted to
the
applicant in the aforesaid sum of R500 000.00, which had been
advanced to the applicant to the first respondent as working
capital;
6.2
The second respondent would be liable to pay interest to the
applicant during the period prior to acquisition of any share capital
by the applicant and the first respondent at the rate of
prime plus
3%, payable on the last day of each calendar month;
6.3
In the event that the applicant elected not to acquire any
of the
issued share capital of the first respondent, the second respondent
bound herself to pay the amount of R500 000.00
together with
interest within thirty days of demand.
[7]
On 30 May 2023 the applicant, represented by its attorneys,
transmitted a letter of demand to the respondents, recording:
7.1
That the applicant had elected not to proceed with the acquisition
of
any share capital of the first respondent;
7.2
The first and second respondents were afforded a period of
thirty
days to make repayment of the aforesaid amount of R500 000.00
together with interest calculated in the sum of R40 416.66.
[8]
The first and second respondents failed to respond to
the aforesaid
letter of demand. Consequently, the applicant claims payment
against the first and second respondents of the
amount of R540 416.66
jointly and severally.
[9]
In response to the aforesaid claim the first and second
respondents
contend as follows:
9.1
During November 2022 the parties and Nations Capital Projects
(Pty)(Ltd) (“NCP”) entered into negotiations for the
acquisition of shares in the first respondent. NPC and the
applicant indicated that they required time for the acquisition of
shares;
9.2
During December 2022 NCP and the applicant indicated that they
would
like to proceed with the transaction and the parties signed a
Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) on 8 December 2022;
9.3
The specific provisions pertaining to the aforesaid arrangements
are
contained in clause 2 and 3 of the MoU. The reference to “Nations”
is a reference to NCP. The reference to “Madinvest”
is a
reference to the applicant and “Afritan” to the first
respondent. Under the heading “THE AGREEMENT”
the
following is stated:
“
It is hereby understood and
accepted by the parties that:
·
Nations and Madinvest will purchase a 70% equity stake in Afritan
for the sum R8,4 million and that Nations and Madinvest will be
given
an exclusive period of three months to conclude the transaction.
·
In the meantime, Nations and Madinvest will raise the necessary
R8,3 million working capital required by Afritan within the next
three weeks from its funders in terms of a mandate agreement to be
signed by the two entities.
·
In the meantime, Nations will advance a loan of R500k to Afritan
which is required by Afritan to continue operations until the loan
of
R8,6 million is secured.
·
The R500k is advanced as a loan to secure exclusivity for Nations
and Madinvest, as the preferred acquirer of the 70% equity interest
from Michelle.
·
Nations will undertake a due diligence exercise of Afritan prior
to releasing the interim funding of R500k, which should take no
longer than three days.
·
Upon signing of the sale of shares agreement, Nations and
Madinvest will pay Michelle 50% of the asking price and the remaining
50% will be paid in three tranches at the end of each of the
following three years upon ensuring that the three-year profit
warranty
is attained or exceeded.
·
Should the three-year profit warranty not be attained the purchase
price will be adjusted to be in line with the profits attained
on a
proportional basis.
·
The procurement of the R8,3 million will render the sale of shares
transaction irrevocable pending successful raising of capital
by
Nations. (Two further bullet points are omitted as they are not
pertinent) …
3.
CONDITIONS PRECEDENT
The parties agree that the
successful conclusion of the transaction in section 2 above is
subject to the fulfilment of the following
president conditions:
(a)
The successful completion of a technical, legal and financial
due diligence on the business of Afritan.”
[10]
In clause 6(b) of the MoU the following is agreed:
“
(b)
Each party represents and warrants to the other that the execution
and performance
of this MoU does not and shall not violate any other
contract, obligation or instrument to which it is a party, or which
is binding
upon it, including terms relating to covenants not to
compete and confidentiality obligations.”
[11]
Clause 8 of the MoU contains an arbitration clause “
in the
event of any dispute arising in connection with this MoU.”
[12]
The MoU was signed on behalf of the first respondent, the applicant
and
Nations Capital Projects (Pty) Ltd at Centurion on 8 December
2022.
[13]
The respondents contend that the MoU concluded during December 2022
evidences
an election by the applicant to proceed with the
acquisition of shares in the first respondent. This, so is
contended, “
naturally as per the terms of the verbal
agreement and acknowledgement of debt meant that the monies were not
due and payable to
the applicant.”
[14]
In paragraph 18.3 of the answering affidavit the respondents
continues:
“
The parties further agreed that the
monies, being the R500 000.00, would be repurposed as the monies
paid for the exclusivity
as per clause 2 of the agreement ‘AA1’
(the MoU). Nations Capital Projects undertook to repay the
R500 000.00
to the applicant as the applicant’s monies
were being repurposed. This brought an end to the verbal
agreement and the
acknowledgement of debt that was entered into
between myself and the applicant.”
[15]
The respondents therefore contend that the MoU is an absolute defence
to the claim for repayment of R500 000.00 plus interest.
[16]
The respondents further contend that the applicant and NCP are in
breach
of the MoU in that the applicant and NCP failed to provide
personal financial information to Spartan Capital.
[17]
But based on the aforesaid contentions, the respondents raise a
dispute of fact which they contend was foreseeable. They seek the
dismissal of the claim.
CLAIM
2
[18]
In February 2023 and at Centurion a further oral agreement was
concluded
between the applicant and the first respondent in terms of
which the applicant would advance R1 000 000.00 to the
first
respondent in order to enable the first respondent to purchase
stock on an urgent basis.
[19]
The first respondent would be obliged to repay a total amount of
R1 220 000.00
to the applicant in respect of the funds
advanced and which amount the first respondent would repay to the
applicant at the rate
of R46 941.00 per week.
[20]
The amount of R1 000 000.00 was then advanced to the first
respondent. The first respondent however breached the oral
agreement by failing to make the weekly payments, and as at 30
May
2023 the first respondent only made payment to the applicant in the
amount of R516 351.00.
[21]
By virtue of the aforesaid breach the applicant elected to cancel the
agreement and advised the first respondent of such cancellation.
As a result, thereof, the second oral agreement was cancelled
and the
applicant has suffered liquidated damages in the amount of
R703 649.00, being the difference between the amount of
R1 220
000.00 that was due by the first respondent and the aforesaid amount
that had been paid, together with interest thereon
from 30 June 2023
to date of payment.
[22]
The respondents refer to a meeting of 29 April 2023 between the
second
respondent, Mr Koyana of NCP and the applicant, during which
Mr Koyana acknowledged that the delay in obtaining funds as per the
MoU is due to his failure to provide the required financial
statement. Due to this he suggested, as an attempt to show his
commitment to proceed with the agreement, that he would take
ownership of the loan and would proceed to make payment towards the
loan starting May 2023. This offer was accepted by all the
parties, contends the respondents. This is however disputed.
[23]
In answer to the aforesaid claim for repayment based on the second
oral
agreement, the first respondent relies on the aforesaid meeting
of 29 April 2023 for its contention that the parties had agreed
at
that meeting that NCP would repay the loan, starting in May 2023.
As a result, the second oral agreement, came to an end.
[24]
In reply to the aforesaid the applicant advances the following
contentions:
24.1
The second oral agreement was concluded during the currency of the
condition
precedent referred to in the MoU. Notwithstanding the
MoU, the first oral agreement, the acknowledgement of debt and second
oral agreement would remain intact in termc of clause 6(b) and would
only fall away in the event of the MoU becoming unconditional,
and
thereafter a sale of shares between the applicant, NCP and the first
respondent being concluded. If the MoU became null
and void,
the first oral agreement, the acknowledgement of debt and the second
oral agreement would remain intact;
24.2
The condition precedent had to be fulfilled within the three-month
period of
exclusivity for the conclusion of the sale of shares
agreement. This condition precedent was not fulfilled within
the three-month
period and the sale of shares agreement was also not
concluded within the aforesaid period. Accordingly, says the
applicant,
the MoU became null and void after three months, on or
about 8 March 2023;
24.3
The factual disputes referred to by the respondent are therefore not
real factual
disputes. As the MoU had become null and void, the
applicant contends that it did not have to refer thereto in the
founding
papers;
24.4
The applicant denies that there was a repurposing of the R500 000.00
advanced
in terms of the first oral agreement. Clause 2, bullet
point 3 of the MoU does not bear out this repurposing;
24.5
The applicant contends that, when the meeting of 29 April 2023 took
place,
the MoU had already ceased to be of any force and effect as it
had a three-month time limitation for the raising of funds for the
share acquisition that the parties envisaged;
24.6
The applicant further contends that reliance on the alleged agreement
on 29
April 2023 is misplaced by virtue of it being in conflict with
clause 15 of the MoU. Clause 15 reads:
“
15.
AMENDMENTS
Unless as otherwise expressly
provided in this MOU, a variation of any clause of this MOU is not
valid unless it is in writing and
signed by a duly authorised
representative of each party.”
24.7
Further, the first respondent made payment to the applicant in
respect of the
second oral agreement in the sum of R156 351.00.
The schedule of payments received in respect of the second oral
agreement
recorded payment by the first respondent on 3 May 2023 of
R46 941.00. This indicates that the alleged agreement on 29
April
2023 has not been established.
DISCUSSION
[25]
The respondents contend that the mere election by the applicant to
take
up shares in the first respondent, as evidenced by the MoU,
discharges the respondents from the liability to repay the
R500 000.00
that was advanced to the first respondent, and for
which the second respondent signed an acknowledgement of debt.
[26]
It is common cause that no acquisition of shares by the applicant in
the first respondent took place. Neither did NCP take up shares
in the first respondent.
[27]
By virtue of the provisions of clause 6(b) of the MoU, the oral
agreement
in respect of Claim 1 continued to exist independently of
the MoU. In terms of that clause the execution and performance
of the MoU “
does not and shall not violate any other
contract, obligation or instrument to which it is a party, or which
is binding upon it,
including terms relating to covenants not to
compete and confidentiality obligations.”
[28]
The respondents’ contention that the R500 000.00 advanced
in terms of the first oral agreement was repurposed to pay for a
three-month period of exclusivity in terms of the MoU is not a
contention that can be accepted. In terms of the MoU a separate
amount of R500 000.00 would be advanced “
as a
loan
to secure exclusivity for Nations and Madinvest, as the preferred
acquirer of the 70% equity interest from Michelle.”
28.1
This indicates that the payment of a further R500 000.00 would
in itself
secure exclusivity, but would be a loan.
28.2
The terms of the MoU and the non-variation clause in clause 15 render
the defence
of a repurposed R500 000.00 to discharge liability
for repayment of the loan made in terms of the first oral agreement,
a
defence that cannot be upheld. As a matter of interpretation
of the MoU, the defence that is pleaded is not a valid defence
and
therefore does not create a
bona fide
dispute of fact.
28.3
The three-month period of exclusivity for which the MoU provides
placed a time
limitation on the fulfilment of the condition
precedent. It too had to be fulfilled within the three-month
period envisaged.
As this condition precedent was not fulfilled
and as the conclusion of the transaction in section 2 was not
achieved within the
three-month period, the MoU lapsed and became
null and void.
[29]
I am therefore satisfied on the papers that Claim 1 must succeed,
despite
the attempts to create a dispute of fact.
[30]
Further, the reliance on the arbitration clause is misplaced.
The
first oral agreement continued in existence independently of the
MoU by virtue of clause 6(b). It is the repayment of that
loan
which is the subject of Claim 1. It is therefore not a dispute
in respect of the MoU. In any event, the alleged
repurposing of
the R500 000.00 is not borne out by the terms of the MoU and is
therefore also not a dispute in respect of
the MoU.
[31]
The second respondent is not a party to the MoU, and a defence of
arbitration
is not available to her. The defence of arbitration
therefore has not been established.
[32]
In the premises Claim 1 succeeds.
CLAIM
2
[33]
In respect of Claim 2 the first respondent relies upon a new
agreement
concluded on 29 April 2023 to supplant its obligations to
repay the R1 000 000.00 advanced in terms of the second
oral
agreement.
[34]
The first respondent bears an onus of establishing the second
agreement
that absolves her from the duty to pay (
Bowden v Fouche
and Another
1969 (4) SA 201
(NC) at p 207 C).
[35]
The reliance by the applicant on the non-variation clause in the MoU
as a reason why the 29 April 2023 agreement would be invalid cannot
be accepted. As the MoU had a three-month lifespan and
became
null and void on 8 March 2023, the non-variation clause in clause 15
was no longer operative when the alleged agreement
was concluded.
[36]
What however militates against such an agreement having been
concluded
is the conduct of the first respondent in making a further
payment on 3 May 2023 when the defence advanced was that NCP had
agreed
to take over the obligation to repay commencing in May 2023.
In the premises the defence of a new agreement concluded on 29
April
2023 cannot be accepted as being established on the papers. The
contention is so at odds with the first respondent’s
conduct
that I cannot accept it. It is therefore rejected.
[37]
Claim 2 therefore succeeds.
[38]
In the premises I make the following order:
Claim
1:
1.
The first and second respondents are directed,
jointly and severally,
the one paying the other to be absolved, to pay the applicant the
amount of R540 416.66 together with
interest thereon at the rate
of 11,25% per annum from 30 June 2023 to date of final payment.
2.
The first and second respondents are to pay
the costs of the
application jointly and severally, the one paying the other to be
absolved.
Claim
2:
1.
The first respondent is directed to pay the
applicant the amount of
R703 649.00 together with interest thereon at the rate of 11,25%
from 30 June 2023 to date of final
payment.
2.
The first respondent is directed to pay the
costs of the application
in respect of Claim 2.
LABUSCHAGNE
AJ
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
Appearances
For
the applicant
Adv
Pincus SC
Instructed
by
Mouyis
Cohen Inc Attorney
For
the first and second respondents
Adv
Liebenberg
Cavanagh
Richards Attorneys
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