Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 385South Africa
Botha v 4D Health (Pty) Ltd (18976/2019) [2024] ZAGPPHC 385 (26 April 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
26 April 2024
Headnotes
in Gillis-Mason Construction Co (Pty) v Overvaal Crushers (Pty) Ltd[4] that it follows that an applicant who has a valid claim against a company for damages for breach of contract is a contingent creditor,
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Botha v 4D Health (Pty) Ltd (18976/2019) [2024] ZAGPPHC 385 (26 April 2024)
Botha v 4D Health (Pty) Ltd (18976/2019) [2024] ZAGPPHC 385 (26 April 2024)
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sino date 26 April 2024
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO: 18976/2019
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
Date:
26 April 2024
E
van der Schyff
In
the matter between:
JOHANNA
MAGRIETA SUSANNA BOTHA
APPLICANT
and
4D
HEALTH (PTY) LTD
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
Van
der Schyff J
Introduction
[1]
In this matter, the applicant, Ms. Botha,
seeks the winding-up of the respondent, 4D Health (Pty) Ltd (4D
Health), a solvent company,
in terms of
section 81
of the
Companies
Act 71 of 2008
. The question to be decided is whether Ms. Botha
has
locus standi
to bring this application. Ms. Botha is neither a director nor a
shareholder of the company. It is common cause that if Ms. Botha
qualifies as a person with
locus standi
,
it can only be on the ground that she was ‘a creditor’ of
4D Health when the application was issued. Ms. Botha alleges
that she
was such a creditor, but this is disputed by the respondents.
[2]
I pause to note that although the
respondent disputes Ms. Botha’s status as a contingent
creditor, it did not submit that
the meaning of the term creditor, as
it is used in
sections 79
and
81
of the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
,
should not be read expansively to exclude contingent creditors. I
will thus confine the discussion to the question as to whether
Ms.
Botha made out a case on a balance of probabilities that she is
indeed a contingent creditor of 4D Health.
[3]
Before I turn to the facts of this case, I
deem it necessary to consider the requirements a legal entity needs
to meet to be regarded
as a contingent creditor with the necessary
locus standi
to apply for the winding up of a respondent company.
The law
[4]
The
context within which meaning is to be attributed to the term
‘contingent creditor’ is that it is well established
that
winding-up proceedings should not be resorted to as a means to
enforce the payment of a debt whose existence is
bona
fide
disputed by the company concerned. The winding-up procedure is not
designed to resolve disputes about the existence or non-existence
of
a debt.
[1]
Where an alleged debt
is genuinely disputed on reasonable grounds, our courts hold that it
would be wrong to allow such a dispute
to be resolved by utilising
the machinery designed for winding-up proceedings rather than
ordinary litigation.
[2]
[5]
Defining the term ‘contingent
creditor’ is in itself difficult. Having regard to the variety
of contingent claims that
may properly be the subject of proof, an
attempt to formulate a universally applicable definition of a
contingent creditor is difficult,
and even undesirable. The
determination need to be made on the totality of unique facts in each
individual case.
[6]
It
is well established that a contingent creditor is one which is linked
to the company concerned by a
vinculum
iuris
,
which may ripen into an enforceable debt on the happening of some
event on some future date.
[3]
Trengrove J held in
Gillis-Mason
Construction Co (Pty) v Overvaal Crushers (Pty) Ltd
[4]
that it follows that an applicant who has a valid claim against a
company for damages for breach of contract is a contingent creditor,
irrespective of the fact that the claim is unliquidated. In
Du
Plessis v Protea Inryteater (Edms) Beperk,
[5]
the
court held that it would be absurd to hold that the question of
whether anyone would at some future date qualify as a creditor
were
to be dependent solely on the happening of some future event which,
by itself and for no other reason, would bring into being
a
vinculum
juris
not previously existing. Before a person can qualify as a contingent
creditor with
locus
to apply to wind up a company, his claim must be more than a mere
‘spes’ depending on a third person’s unfettered
discretion.
[7]
In
Gillis-Mason
(
supra
),
it was not disputed that a breach of contract occurred. What was
disputed, was whether the applicant suffered damages as a result
thereof.
[6]
Trengrove J held
that he was not satisfied that the applicant’s claim to have
suffered damages is being disputed on
bona
fide
and substantial grounds, and found the applicant to be a contingent
creditor. The conceded breach of contract constituted the
vinculum
iuris
that created a right enforceable in a court of law.
[8]
Having regard to the principle enunciated
and contextualized by the decisions in
Du
Plessis and
Gillis-Mason,
an applicant contending that it is a
contingent creditor with the necessary locus to apply for the winding
up of a respondent company,
must prove on a balance of probabilities
that the company has a presently existing obligation to pay it a sum
of money, which need
not be ascertained, on the happening of a
contingent event. The contingent event cannot give rise to the
existing obligation or
vinculum iuris
,
the latter must be pre-existing. A person who has merely commenced
litigation against a company should not be deemed a contingent
creditor of the company on the basis of the pending litigation. To
put it differently, the contingent liability is premised on
the
independent existing obligation, and the mere institution of action
proceedings is not proof,
prima facie
or on a balance of probabilities, of the existence of a
vinculum
iuris.
[9]
Ms. Botha contends that the existence of a
vinculum iuris
is clearly demonstrated, by the facts averred in the founding
affidavit. The respondent, 4D Health, at all times disputed Ms.
Botha’s
locus standi
to bring the liquidation application. Counsel for 4D Health submits
that the amended particulars of claim do not constitute evidence
of
an underlying monetary claim in Ms. Botha’s hands that is
required to endowe her with the necessary
locus
standi
.
Plascon-Evance
principle
[10]
The lengthy affidavits reveal material
disputes of fact on the issue of Ms. Botha’s
locus
standi
. The well-established approach,
where disputes of fact arise in motion proceedings, is that final
relief will be granted if the
facts averred in the applicant’s
affidavits that have been admitted by the respondent, together with
the facts alleged by
the respondent, justify such an order.
[11]
It is common cause that the parties
requested the issue of Ms. Botha’s
locus
standi
to be considered separately. 4D
Health subsequently filed an application requesting that the
locus
standi
issue be referred to oral
evidence. This application is premised on an obiter remark made by me
in a judgment dealing with the
issue as to whether Ms. Botha could
file a supplementary affidavit to supplement the liquidation
application with the recently
amended particulars of claim in case
number 80758/2018.
[12]
Particulars of claim in case number
80758/2018 was previously annexed to the founding affidavit of the
liquidation application.
The particulars of claim were, however,
amended several times with the final amendment thereof effected on 24
February 2022. Ms.
Botha wanted to introduce the final amended
particulars of claim as new evidence to the winding-up application.
4D Health opposed
the application, but on 21 August 2023, leave was
granted to Ms. Botha to file a supplementary affidavit with the
amended particulars
of claim as an annexure. The respondent, 4D
Health, was granted leave to file a response to the supplementary
affidavit, which
it did, and Ms. Botha then filed a reply. In the
judgment allowing filing of a supplementary affidavit with the
amended particulrs
of claim, I remarked:
‘
As
for the submission that the new evidence that the Applicant wants to
introduce did not exist when the liquidation application
was
instituted, I am of the view that the question is not whether the
particulars of claim existed at the time the liquidation
application
was instituted, but whether the cause of action, that renders the
Applicant a contingent or prospective creditor of
the Respondent,
existed. The particulars of claim are nothing more and nothing less
than an exposition of the Applicant’s
claim against the
Respondent. The first set of particulars of claim might have fallen
short because it did not make out a case
against the Respondent, but
the Respondent was cited as Defendant. The intention to include the
Defendant as a defendant is clear
although the execution of the
intention was defective. This is, seemingly, now rectified.’
[7]
[13]
4D Health submits that permitting the
filing of the amended particulars of claim and remarking that Ms.
Botha seemingly cured the
defect that existed in the previous
pleading, albeit obiter, indicates that I was assured that the
introduction of the amended
particulars of claim would bolster Ms.
Botha’s
locus standi
.
[14]
I clearly stated in the paragraph cited
above from the written judgment handed down on 21 August 2023, that
the particulars of claim
are nothing more and nothing less than an
exposition of the applicant’s claim against the respondent.
Where the applicant
did not, in the previous particulars of the
claim, lay a basis in the action proceedings for a claim against 4D
Health, the position
was now amended in that she introduced the basis
for a monetary claim against 4D Health in the particulars of the
claim. Whether
that claim is excipiable was of no concern in deciding
whether to allow Ms. Botha to supplement her papers by adding the
most recent
amended particulars of the claim.
[15]
The introduction of the amended particulars
of claim did not afford any magical evidentiary benefit to Ms. Botha.
The summons and
amended particulars of claim are evidence that an
action was instituted by Ms. Botha against 4D Health. The action is,
however,
a separate legal procedure, and the summons and amended
particulars of claim are, at most, evidence of pending legal
proceedings.
The court accepted from the commencement of the
proceedings that litigation was instituted in which 4D Health was
cited as a defendant.
The question is whether Ms. Botha placed
sufficient facts before the court in this liquidation application to
prove the existence
of a
vinculum iuris
,
that transcends a mere ‘spes’ that a court may in future
find that 4D Health is liable to her on the basis of breach
of
contract. In considering the issue of the applicant’s
locus
standi
, regard is to be had to the case
made out under oath on the papers before the court in this
application. Since a final determination
needs to be made on the
papers filed of record, the Plascon-Evans principle applies.
[16]
It becomes necessary then to consider the
nature of Ms. Botha’s claim, and whether on the facts set out
in the affidavits,
she has the necessary
locus
standi
to bring an application for the
winding up of 4D Health.
Is a case made out on
the papers for the applicant’s
locus standi
?
The parties’
contentions
[17]
Ms. Botha, claims that she has
locus
standi
to seek 4D Health’s
winding-up pursuant to the provisions of section 79 of the 2008
Companies Act in
her capacity as a prospective alternatively
contingent creditor of 4D Health. She avers that her
locus
standi
as a contingent or prospective
creditor emanates from a claim, alternatively, a prospective claim
for damages against 4D Health,
which may become an enforceable debt
in the future.
[18]
Ms. Botha avers in the founding affidavit
that Messrs Lombard and Van Rooyen, acting in their capacity as
directors of 4D Health,
made material misrepresentations to her
regarding (i) the true value of her shareholding in 4D Health, (ii)
the misappropriation
of company funds channeled to ‘sister
companies’ for tax evasion purposes and (iii) the manipulation
and redirection
of company profits to avoid having to pay any share
dividend income with the minority shareholders of the 4D Health, the
latter
being herself and Mr. Williams, the third respondent in this
application and the third defendant in the action. She states that
Messrs. Van Rooyen and Lombard adopted a management style that kept
the minority shareholders ignorant of the company’s financial
position, which ultimately led to her shareholding in the company
being undervalued.
[19]
Ms. Botha elaborates that she was an
employee and shareholder of 4D Health, employed as human resources
officer and corporate account
manager since 4D Health’s
inception in 1999 until her resignation in 2018. She initially held
11.11% shareholding until Messrs
Van Rooyen and Lombard “
forced”
her in 2009 to relinquish 2.81% of her shareholding to Mr. Williams,
purportedly as part of 4D Health’s Broad-Based Black
Economic
Empowerment initiative. Messrs. Lombard and Van Rooyen each sold
11.14% of their shareholding to Mr. Williams. This resulted
in Mr.
Williams acquiring the minimum empowerment threshold of 25.1%
shareholding in 4D Health.
[20]
In terms of the Sale of Shares Agreement
entered into by and between herself, Messrs. Lombard, Van Rooyen and
Williams, the purchase
consideration in respect of Mr. Williams’
s
25.1%
shareholding was R 3 765 000.00 payable by Mr. Williams to the
sellers by way of dividend income on the purchased shares and through
such other means as Mr. Williams may have available from time to
time. The agreement further provided that the outstanding amount
due
by Mr. Williams would be interest-free for a period of three years.
Accordingly, Williams was indebted to Ms. Botha for an
initial amount
of R417 915.00 and to Messrs. Lombard and Van Rooyen for an initial
amount of R1 673 542.50.
[21]
Because it was evident to all parties that
Mr. Williams did not have the resources to purchase the subject
shares unless he received
financial assistance from the existing
shareholders, Messrs. Lombard and Van Rooyen demanded that the
transaction be structured
on the basis that the current shareholders
rendered such financial assistance pro-rate to their shareholding.
Ms. Botha avers that
she was led to believe by Messrs. Lombard and
Van Rooyen that repayment of the purchase consideration would be
effected by Mr.
Williams within a period between 3 and 5 years as the
projected dividend income would be enough to cover the purchase
consideration,
including interest. She was further given the
assurance by Messrs. Lombard and Van Rooyen that a dividend policy
would be adopted
with immediate effect to ensure maximum dividend
income during the period of three to five years to ensure that the
ownership entitlement
of 4D Health’s BBBEE initiative through a
sale of shares achieved maximum recognition in accordance with the
Code Series
100 of the Code of Good Practice. Ms. Botha contends that
she agreed to participate in the initiative for the greater good of
the
company, 4D Health, on the mistaken belief that Messrs. Lombard
and Van Rooyen would honour their agreement relating to the dividend
policy to be adopted.
[22]
Since the effective date of the agreement
Mr. Williams only managed to affect seven payments towards the
purchase consideration.
Messrs. Lombard and Van Rooyen failed to
provide a reasonable explanation as to why 4D Health failed to
achieve the financial returns
as presented to Ms. Botha at the time
the agreement was concluded. Ms. Botha contends that it later became
apparent that Messrs.
Lombard and Van Rooyen applied different
formulas for purposes of evaluating 4D Health’s shares,
depending on whether they
were buying or selling shares.
[23]
During March 2016, a material breach of
trust occurred between Ms. Botha and Messrs. Lombard and Van Rooyen
because of their decision
to grant her a salary increase of only
5.96% despite her outstanding performance. This caused her to conduct
her own investigation
into 4D Health’s financial affairs to
determine the cause of the low profit margin. Ms. Botha alleges that
she discovered
that Messrs. Lombard and Van Rooyen devised a scheme
redirecting 4D Health’s profits to,
inter
alia
, the ‘sister company’
Dumont Healthcare. Ms. Botha subsequently resigned on 7 September
2016 without selling her shares
in 4D Health. She no longer trusted
Messers. Lombard and Van Rooyen and realised that they were engaged
in irregular and reckless
conduct relating to the financial affairs
of the Respondent to the detriment of all the shareholders and the
employees of the company.
[24]
Messrs. Lombard and Van Rooyen approached
her and requested her to reconsider her resignation. They offered to
buy the remaining
shareholding and undertook to instruct the auditors
to conduct an objective valuation of her shareholding to ensure that
they offer
her a fair market related price for shares. She agreed to
the arrangement in the
bona fide
belief that the auditors of the company would be objective in valuing
the shareholding. Messrs. Lombard and Van Rooyen purchased
Ms.
Botha’s remaining 8.3% shareholding for R850 000.00. She later
discovered that Messrs. Lombard and Van Rooyen undervalued
her shares
by at least 50%, and she consequently instituted action against them
under case number 80758/18. The case is still pending.
[25]
Ms. Botha retracted her resignation. During
October 2017, Mr. Williams approached Ms. Botha and disclosed his
discomfort with certain
suspicious transactions conducted by Messrs.
Lombard and Van Rooyen on behalf of 4D Health. Ms. Botha was denied
access to 4D Health’s
financial statements and information
regarding transactions concluded between 4D Health and her ‘sister
companies’.
Ms. Botha again resigned on 25 January 2018.
[26]
Ms. Botha appointed Dr. WAA Gouws and Mr.
Justice Van Wyk to conduct forensic audits into the financial affairs
of 4D Health. She
attached Mr. Van Wyk’s report and
confirmatory affidavit. Mr. Van Wyk reported,
inter
alia,
that (i) Dumont Health is merely
a vehicle that was required for tax purposes and it is not feasible
if the administration fees
from 4D Health are discarded, (ii) the
movement of the administration fees from 4D Health to Dumont reduced
the profit of 4D Health
leaving inadequate funds for the declaration
of dividends, (iii) the valuation of Ms. Botha’s shares and in
particular the
valuation of the shares sold to Messrs. Lombard and
Van Rooyen during October 2016 appears to be incorrect.
[27]
Ms. Botha contends that Messrs. Lombard and
Van Rooyen, in their capacity as directors of 4D Health, conducted 4D
Health’s
affairs recklessly and fraudulently for their own
financial benefit to the detriment of herself, Mr. Williams, and 4D
Health. Messrs.
Lombard and Van Rooyen, in their capacity as
directors of 4D Health, are also in contravention of the provisions
of
section 22(1)
and sections 76(2) and 76(3) of the 2008-Companies
Act. This conduct resulted in severe financial losses to 4D Health
and the minority
shareholders. Ms. Botha submits that in accordance
with sections 77(3) and 218 of the 2008-Companies Act, Messrs.
Lombard and Van
Rooyen may also be held responsible towards 4D Health
and any other person for any loss or damages suffered as a result of
their
fraudulent and reckless conduct. She avers that fraudulent
conduct on the part of 4D Health, through either its directors or
staff
members, constitutes sufficient grounds for 4D Health’s
winding up on the basis that it is just and equitable to do so.
[28]
An answering affidavit deposed to by Mr.
van Rooyen was filed on behalf of 4D Health. Mr. Van Rooyen denies
that 4D Health is either
commercially or factually insolvent, that it
would be just and equitable for 4D Health to be wound up and that Ms.
Botha has the
requisite
locus standi
in this application.
[29]
Mr. Van Rooyen submits that Ms. Botha
relies on the High Court action instituted under case number 80758/18
as affording her
locus standi
in the liquidation application. He contends, however, that the High
Court action is “problematic, tenuous and in all probability
devoid of any merit”. He avers that the respondents already
alluded Ms. Botha to errors and incorrect assumptions contained
in
Dr. Gouw’s report. He states that Ms. Botha, after being
informed of these errors, amended the particulars of claim in
the
High Court action. She then obtained Mr. Van Wyk’s report to
the liquidation application. The respondents, in turn, and
in answer
thereto, filed their own expert report by Guillarmod-MacPhail.
[30]
Mr. Van Rooyen states that Ms. Botha’s
claim, as set out in the founding affidavit consists of three parts:
(i) an unpaid
portion of a sale of shares to Mr. Williams; (ii)
dividends not paid due to transfer of administration fees and (iii)
variance
in the amount paid for shares in terms of a written
agreement and the value placed on those shares by the applicant after
having
received full payment of the purchase price. The first claim
is a contractual claim against Williams and not against 4D Health.
In
addition, the sale of shares agreement provides for any dispute
between the parties thereto to be referred to arbitration. As
for the
second claim, being dividends not paid due to the alleged transfer of
administration fees, Mr. Van Rooyen contends the
claim is
ill-conceived. In law, a shareholder is only entitled to a
distribution after it has been declared by a board of directors
and
then only to the extent that it has been declared. Mr. Van Rooyen
denies that he, or Mr. Lombard made any representations with
a view
of inducing her to enter into any sale of shares. She at all times
had access to 4D Health’s financial systems –
as she
herself states in an affidavit filed by her in CCMA proceedings
instituted by her. Mr. Van Rooyen attached a letter
written by
Ms. Botha to the answering affidavit. In this letter, dated 7
September 2016, she herself placed a value of R1.2 million
on her
8.3% shareholding in the respondent, and the agreed price of R850
000.00 was a result of negotiations. He contends
that minority
shares are not valued in the same manner as the total shareholding of
a company for BEE or any other purpose, among
others, because
shareholders with minority shares have no actual control over the
company and the marketability of a minority shareholding
in a private
company is generally poor.
[31]
Mr. Van Rooyen claims that Ms. Botha has
not come to court with clean hands ‘but instead has devised a
stratagem and arranged
her affairs in a calculated way to obtain as
much benefit as she possibly could from the respondent, whilst in
reality conniving
with her current employer and competitor of the
respondent.’ He claims that Ms. Botha was the corporate
consultant on 4D
Health’s two largest accounts, UP and NMMU.
She was earmarked to play a strategic role had the NMMU tender been
awarded again
to 4D Health, but she tendered her resignation three
days after the tender closed. During the meeting where Ms. Botha
continued
to demand a salary increase, she was asked what would make
her withdraw her resignation. She informed Mr. Van Rooyen that they
should buy out her shares. He undertook to discuss this with Mr.
Lombard but reiterated that they would not be able to increase
her
salary.
[32]
Just after 4D Health was informed that it
made the shortlist on the NMMU tender, on 7 September 2016, Ms. Botha
again requested
a meeting with Mr Van Rooyen. She presented him with
a signed letter indicating her desire to sell her shares in 4D Health
for
R1.2 million, and an unsigned letter of resignation. She also
confirmed that she intended to join Securitas Health Care, a
competitor
in the industry. Mr. Van Rooyen informed her that he and
Mr. Lombard would not consider buying out her shares if she persisted
with her intention to resign. She withdrew the resignation. It was,
however, discovered after she left in January 2018 that she
communicated with the CEO of Securitas Health Care during August and
September 2016, November 2017 and December 2017, and January
2018.
She provided Securitas with a copy of her salary advice and 4D
Health’s Memorandum of Incorporation.
[33]
After Ms. Botha withdrew her resignation,
Messrs. Lombard and Van Rooyen agreed to buy her shares and the sale
of shares agreement
was concluded. After Ms. Botha received the final
instalment for her shares, she requested a meeting with Messrs.
Lombard, Van
Rooyen and Williams regarding the outstanding amount due
by Mr. Williams. She requested that Messrs. Lombard and Van Rooyen
should
assist Mr. Williams to pay off her portion of the outstanding
amount due to her. They were not amendable to the proposal as they
were owed substantially more, but would consider assisting Mr.
Williams depending on the outcome of the UP tender. On 5 December
2017, UP informed 4D Health that its tender was unsuccessful and that
its contract with 4D Health would terminate on 31 March 2018.
[34]
The respondents submit that it is ‘a
very undesirable position where the pleadings in a pending action is
used as a basis
for a prospective claim. The court should not be
asked to rule on a matter where a
bona
fide
and clear factual dispute exists
and where the outcome of the action has profound implications for the
respondent’s case.’
The ‘debt’ on which Ms.
Botha relies is
bona fide
disputed on reasonable grounds. Mr. Van Rooyen denied the allegations
of fraud and that a ‘tax evasion strategy’ existed.
Explained the service rendered by Dumont. He denied any wrongdoing in
the dealings between 4D Health and Dumont and referred to
the content
of the Guillarmod-MacPhail report.
[35]
In reply, Ms. Botha avers that it is clear
that ‘on a balance of probabilities’ she is a prospective
creditor as a consequence
of which she has the necessary
locus
standi
to bring the liquidation
application.
The amended
particulars of claim
[36]
Since much is made of the amended
particulars of claim in case number 80758/2018, it is necessary to
have regard to Ms. Botha’s
claim against 4D Health as set out
therein.
[37]
The summons was originally issued on 6
November 2018. The action comprises two claims. Claim 1 is based on
an Agreement of Sale
of Shares concluded between Ms. Botha and
Messrs. Lombard and Van Rooyen cited as the first and second
defendants in the action,
respectively. Messrs. Lombard and Van
Rooyen are directors of 4D Health and hold 74.9% of 4D Health’s
shares. The agreement
was concluded on 4 October 2016.
[38]
Ms. Botha was a shareholder who held 8.3%
shares in 4D Health. She wanted to sell her shares. She avers that
during the course of
negotiations, Messrs. Lombard and Van Rooyen
represented to her that the value of the company, 4D Health, and, as
such, the total
issued shares, amounted to R10 246 964.00. This
brought the value of her 83 ordinary shares to R850 000.00. However,
this representation,
she avers, made with the object of inducing her
to enter into the Sale of Shares Agreement with Messrs. Lombard and
Van Rooyen
to sell her shares for R850 000, was false. When the
agreement was concluded, the true value of 4D Health was R23 120
577.00. The
first and second defendants were allegedly aware of the
falsity of their representation when the agreement was concluded. As
a
result, Ms. Botha claims that she suffered damages in the amount of
R1 069 007.89.
[39]
Claim 2 relates to a Sale of Shares
Agreement concluded on or about 1 July 2009 in terms whereof Mr.
Williams, the third defendant
in the action, bought 25.1% of 4D
Health’s shareholding from Ms. Botha, and Messrs. Lombard and
Van Rooyen. The shares were
sold for R3 765 000.00. In the amended
particulars of claim, Ms. Botha introduces a claim against 4D Health.
Ms. Botha avers, among
others:
‘
[10.1]
On or about 1 July 2009, the parties concluded a Sale of Shares
Agreement in terms of
which Third Defendant purchased 25.1% of the
Company’s shareholding from Plaintiff, First and Second
Defendants,
[10.2]
The purchase consideration in respect of the 25.1% shares amounted R3
765 000.00. A
copy of the Agreement is annexed hereto marked annexure
‘B’.
[10.3]
The Sale of Shares Agreement entered by and between the parties as
referred to in paragraph
10.1 above was concluded at the special
instance and request of Fourth Defendant [4D Health], duly
represented by First and Second
Defendants, for the primary purpose
of enhancing Fourth Defendant’s broad-based economic
empowerment status to maximise anticipated
economic benefits
emanating from Fourth Defendant’s purported ownership
participation in Broad-Based Black Economic Empowerment.
[10.4]
Plaintiff [Ms. Botha] and First and Second Defendants [Messrs.
Lombard
and Van Rooyen] sold the 25.1% of the Company’s [4D
Health] issued shares to the Third Defendant [Mr. Williams] pro rata
to their respective percentage shareholding in Fourth Defendant.
[10.5]
Fourth Defendant’s persistence and representation in respect of
the financial
benefits in favour of the Company, induced Plaintiff to
enter into the Sale of Shares Agreement referred to in paragraph 10.1
above.
[10.6]
Accordingly, Plaintiff and First and Second Defendant sold the
following percentages
of their respective shareholding in Fourth
Defendant to Third Defendant:
Plaintiff:
2.81%
First
Defendant: 11.14%
Second
Defendant: 11,14%.
[10.7]
At Fourth Defendant’s special instance and request, the payment
of the purchase
consideration for the sale of shares by Plaintiff and
First and Second Defendants to Third Defendant, was specifically
structured
to afford Fourth Defendant’s immediate recognition
as a Broad-Based Black Economic Empowerment Company having 25.1% of
its
ownership in the hands of a black person, as defined in the Broad
Based Black Economic Empowerment Act, 53 of 2003 (as amended),
by
affecting transfer of the subject shares in favour of Third Defendant
prior to payment of the purchase consideration by Third
Defendant.
[10.8]
At all relevant times, it was within the parties’ contemplation
that Third
Defendant did not have the financial means to perform in
terms of the Sale of Shares Agreement, without financial assistance
from
Fourth Defendant.
[10.9]
Premised on parties’ contemplation referred to in paragraph
10.6 above, and at
the special instance and request of Fourth
Defendant, duly represented by First and Second Defendants, the
parties agreed to payment
of the purchase consideration by Third
Defendant to Plaintiff and First and Second Defendants by way of
dividend income to be derived
from the subject shares.
[10.10]
Fourth Defendant duly represented by First and Second Defendants
further represented to Plaintiff
that repayment through dividend
income as referred to in paragraph 10.9 above, would be affected
within the pursuing three years
calculated from the effective date of
sale of the shares to Third Defendant.
[10.11]
The representation referred to in paragraph 10.10 above, induced
Plaintiff to agree to an interest
free period of three years on the
outstanding balance from time to time as set out in clause 4.2 of the
agreement.
[10.12]
During negotiations of the Sale of Shares Agreement referred to in
paragraph 10.1 above, Fourth
Defendant, duly represented by First and
Second Defendants, agreed to adopt and implement a dividend policy,
which allows for maximum
dividends to be declared during each
relevant financial year following the Sale of Shares Agreement until
payment of the purchase
consideration, have been paid by Third
Defendant in full.
[10.13] – [10.14] …
[40]
The respondents submit that Claim 1 is a
claim against two directors of 4D Health and not against 4D Health
and that Claim 2 is
excipiable in that the claim is not competent in
law. They submit that the agreement relied upon by Ms. Botha, to wit
that the
respondent agreed to adopt and implement a dividend policy,
which allows for maximum dividends to be declared during each
relevant
financial year following the sale of shares agreement, until
payment of the purchase consideration has been paid by the third
defendant
in full, is
contra bonos
mores
. The agreement is also void as it
is contrary to the provisions of the company’s Memorandum of
Incorporation. The respondents,
in any event, dispute the existence
of the debt, and submit that Ms. Botha has to prove the agreement
relied on by her in paragraph
10.12 of the amended particulars of
claim before the liquidation application could be adjudicated. The
respondents deny the alleged
agreement.
Discussion
[41]
In the affidavits filed by her in this
application, Ms. Botha does not present the court with evidence from
which it can be inferred
that 4D Health was either a party to the
Sales of Share Agreement or an agreement that was a precursor to the
Sales of Share Agreement,
that the said agreement was concluded at
the special instance and request of 4D Health, or that any
representation whatsoever was
persistently made by 4D Health. Ms.
Botha was a minority shareholder of 4D Health at the time that the
Sales of Shares Agreement
was concluded. She would have been apprised
of the fact whether a company decision was taken authorising the
directors to amend
the MOI. This aspect is not addressed in any of
the affidavits filed by her, and its absence is relevant in light of
the fact that
the respondent contends that the provisions of 4D
Health’s MOI militate against the case pleaded in the amended
particulars
of claim.
[42]
Ms. Botha’s case, as set out under
oath in the affidavits filed, is that Messrs. Lombard and Van Rooyen,
in their capacity
as directors, made material misrepresentations to
her. She takes issue with Messrs. Lombard and Van Rooyen’s
conduct in their
capacity as directors and claim that they conducted
4D Health’s affairs in reckless and fraudulent fashion for
their own
financial benefit. She claims that their conduct, in their
capacity as directors, is in breach of their fiduciary duties towards
4D Health, which includes, amongst others, the duty not to act
illegally or
ultra vires
,
the duty to disclose to 4D Health secret profits made and their duty
not to compete with 4D Health.
[43]
Ms. Botha states in the founding affidavit:
‘
It
is further respectfully submitted that at all relevant times and in
particular during the period 2014 to 2017, it was within
the
contemplation of Lombard and Van Rooyen that any fraudulent
and/reckless and/or unauthorized conduct by any of them in their
capacity as directors of the Respondent will undoubtedly result in
sever financial loss to the Respondent and its minority
shareholders.’
She goes on to state that
she was advised that Messrs. Lombard and Van Rooyen, the directors of
4D Health, may be held liable towards
4D Health and other persons for
any loss or damage suffered as a result of their fraudulent and/or
reckless conduct.
[44]
Ms. Botha’s case, as made out in the
founding papers, does not correspond with, or support Claim 2 of the
amended particulars
of claim. On the one hand, she claims that
Messrs. Lombard and Van Rooyen, in their capacity as directors, acted
ultra vires
to the detriment of the company; on the other hand, she claims that
actions were undertaken at the company's request and insistence.
Ms.
Botha might have the necessary evidence to prove that Messrs. Lombard
and Van Rooyen were not (only) delinquent directors
acting
fraudulently and recklessly but, in fact, acted at the insistence of
the company, but such evidence, if it exists, is not
currently before
the court.
Conclusion
[45]
In summary, Ms. Botha purports to rely on a
claim against 4D Health as an unliquidated claim for the damages for
breach of contract.
I use the term ‘purports’ because, as
indicated, this is the basis of a claim in the action instituted
against 4D Health
and its directors under case number 80758/2018 in
pending litigation. Ms. Botha did not present any evidence in the
affidavits
before this court that any agreement was concluded between
herself and 4D Health at 4D Health’s insistence that was
breached
by 4D Health. The case, as it materialised in the founding
affidavit, is that the two directors of 4D Health acted fraudulently
to the detriment of herself and 4D Health. The belated amendment of
the particulars of claim under case number 80758/2018
does not
establish on a balance of probabilities, or even
prima
facie
, that a contract was concluded to
which 4D Health was a party, or at 4D Health’s insistence,
which contract was subsequently
breached by 4D Health.
[46]
The question as to whether an agreement was
concluded between Ms. Botha and 4D Health and subsequently breached,
is disputed. This
matter is clearly distinguishable from
Gillis-Mason
Construction Co (Pty)
Ltd
(supra), where it was common cause that a breach of contract occurred
that established the
vinculum iuris
or ‘existing obligation’ between the parties.
[47]
A
bona fide
dispute of fact exists as to whether
any agreement, whether at 4D Health’s insistence or otherwise,
was concluded that preceded
the Sale of Shares Agreement entered into
between Ms. Botha and Messrs. Lombard, Van Wyk, and Williams. 4D
Health also contests
the validity of an agreement of this nature. If
it existed as a valid agreement, such an agreement would have
constituted a
vinculum iuris
between Ms. Botha and 4D Health.
[48]
Despite the amended particulars of claim
indicating that Ms. Botha instituted legal action against 4D Health,
Ms. Botha did not
provide sufficient facts in the affidavits
supporting this application, establishing that a
vinculum
iuris
exists between herself and 4D
Health. The existence of the relied-upon agreement is contested on
bona fide
grounds.
[49]
Corbet
JA explained in
Kalil
v Decotex (Pty) Ltd and Another
[8]
that where a respondent shows on a balance of probability that its
indebtedness to the applicant is disputed on
bona
fide
and reasonable grounds, the court will refuse the winding-up order.
The onus on the respondent is not to show that it is not indebted
to
the applicant; it is merely to show that the indebtedness is disputed
on
bona
fide
and
reasonable grounds.
[50]
That a court has the discretion to refer a
liquidation application to trial on, among others, the issue of
locus
standi
, if a dispute of facts exists,
was affirmed in
Kalil v Decotex.
In
casu
, the
contentious issue is already a point of contention in pending
litigation. It would be an unnecessary duplication of proceedings
if
an issue that must be determine by the trial court in pending action
proceedings, be referred to oral evidence. In addition,
the parties
have already indicated that, if the liquidation application proceeds,
another issue, namely whether Messrs. Lombard
and Van Rooyen indeed
made fraudulent or negligent representations regarding, amongst
others, the value of Ms. Botha’s shares
when it was sold, need
to be referred to oral evidence. It is not desirable to determine
issues between parties in piecemeal fashion,
even more so when the
parties, or one of the parties, seems to be set on having the same
issues be decided in both action and motion
proceedings.
[51]
Ms. Botha decided to approach the court for
the winding up of the respondent company on the basis that she is a
contingent creditor.
4D Health disputed her
locus
standi
from the commencement of the
application. Having regard to the nature of Ms. Botha’s claim
against 4D Health she did not
make out a case on a balance of
probabilities that she is to be regarded as a contingent creditor of
4D Health for the purpose
of winding up 4D Health on the basis that
it is just and equitable to do so. As a result, she does not have the
necessary
locus
to apply for 4D Health’s winding-up. In the event that a trial
court does find that a valid agreement existed that was breached
by
4D Health, the existing of a
vinculum
iuris
will be establishend on a balance
of probabilities and she will be able to approach the court again, if
she was inclined to do
so.
Costs
[52]
The principle that costs follow success
applies.
ORDER
In
the result, the following order is granted:
1.
The application is dismissed with costs, including costs
reserved in prior hearings.
E van der Schyff
Judge of the High Court
Delivered:
This judgement is handed down electronically by uploading it to the
electronic file of this matter on CaseLines.
As a courtesy gesture,
it will be emailed to the parties/their legal representatives.
For the applicant:
Adv. EC Labuschagne
SC
With:
Adv. NC Maritz
Instructed by:
Van der Merwe &
Bester Inc.
For the respondent:
Adv. JA Klopper
Instructed by:
Cavanagh &
Richards Attorneys
Date of the
hearing:
29 February 2024
Date of judgment:
26 April 2024
[1]
Badenhorst
v Northern Construction Enterprises (Pty) Ltd
1956
(2) SA 345 (T).
[2]
Kalil
v Decotex (Pty) ltd and Another
1988
(1) SA 943
(A).
[3]
Gille-Mason
Construction Co (Pty) v Overvaal Crushers (Pty) Ltd
1971
(1) SA 524
(T),
Choice
Holdings Ltd and Others v Yabeng Investment Holding Company Ltd
2001
(3) SA 1350
(W) at para [21].
[4]
1971
(1) SA 524 (T)
[5]
1965
(3) SA 319
at 320.
[6]
At
525E – ‘The respondent’s attitude is … and
it contends that even though there has been a breach of
contract,
the applicant will not suffer any damages whatsoever, as a result
thereof.’
[7]
See
para [12] of the written judgment.
[8]
1988
(1) SA 943
(A).
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