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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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[2024] ZAGPPHC 410
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## Babtista N.O and Others v Quickstep 684 (Pty) Ltd and Others (38204/2022)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 410 (2 May 2024)
Babtista N.O and Others v Quickstep 684 (Pty) Ltd and Others (38204/2022)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 410 (2 May 2024)
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sino date 2 May 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE NO: 38204/2022
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
Date: 2 May
2024
E van der Schyff
In
the matter between:
Jose
Luis Rodrigues Babtista
N.O.
1
st
Applicant
Jaco
van Rooyen
N.O.
2
nd
Applicant
Jorge
Mendoca Velosa N.O.
(Of
the Best Trust Company (JHB) (Pty)
Ltd)
3
rd
Applicant
and
Quickstep
684 (Pty)
Ltd
1
st
Respondent
Edward
Eduman
Milne
2
nd
Respondent
Paul
Heslop
3
rd
Respondent
Adriaan
Combrinck
4
th
Respondent
Christopher
Riley
5
th
Respondent
Gillian
Claire
Milne
6
th
Respondent
Sarah
Heslop
7
th
Respondent
Wellness
Property Company (Pty)
Ltd
8
th
Respondent
Recem
Trust
9
th
Respondent
J
Calitz
10
th
Respondent
Peter
Errol
Bouwer
11
th
Respondent
J
Ginder
12
th
Respondent
Martie
Kuhn
N.O.
13
th
Respondent
Proplan
Holding
14
th
Respondent
Martin
Van
Achterbergh
15
th
Respondent
Eric
Truebody
16
th
Respondent
Norman
Nicholson
17
th
Respondent
Renee
Hawkridge
18
th
Respondent
Environmental
Management CC
19
th
Respondent
Misty
Lake Trade and Investment
69
20
th
Respondent
40/50
Investments
CC
21
st
Respondent
Charmaine
Phillip
22
nd
Respondent
Lynn
Hardy
23
rd
Respondent
Dion
Barnard
Holding
24
th
Respondent
Jacobus
Phillipus de
Villiers
25
th
Respondent
Argontoula
Pleaner
Holding
26
th
Respondent
Willem
Christoffel Van Wijk N.O.
and
27
th
Respondent
Petronella
Jacoba van Wijk
N.O.
Robjohn
CC
28
th
Respondent
Rainer
Schuerger
29
th
Respondent
Jimoto
Bushvel
Investments
30
th
Respondent
Willem
du
Preez
31
st
Respondent
Jackie
Howard
32
nd
Respondent
Hillary
Oats
33
rd
Respondent
Nich
Rosenberg
34
th
Respondent
Margaret
Ann Callen and E
Callen
35
th
Respondent
Pamela
Ann
Bouwer
36
th
Respondent
Bruno
de
Castro
37
th
Respondent
Toney
Vey Family
Trust
38
th
Respondent
Istermar
Game Farm
CC
39
th
Respondent
Ian
Lawrence Peach
N.O.
40
th
Respondent
Ivan
James Roodt
N.O.
41
st
Respondent
Jonathan
Peach
42
nd
Respondent
Anna-Mare
Peacj
N.O.
43
th
Respondent
JVH
Krȕger
N.O.
44
th
Respondent
Ivan
James Emmett
N.O.
45
th
Respondent
Combrinck
Incorporated
46
th
Respondent
JUDGMENT
Van
der Schyff J
Introduction
[1]
The applicants are the trustees of the LLL
One Trust (the Trust), a shareholder of the first respondent,
Quickstep 684 (Pty) Ltd
(Quickstep 684). The applicant seeks an order
declaring a shareholders' meeting of Quickstep 684, which took place
on 24 May 2022,
unlawful and invalid and declaring the resolutions
adopted at the meeting of no force and effect.
Background
[2]
The application has a protracted history.
The Trust issued an urgent application in July 2022. The answering
papers were voluminous,
and the Deputy Judge President referred the
application to be heard as a special motion. The Trust initially
cited only the first
to fifth respondents as respondents in the
application, and when the special motion was heard on 28 February
2023, the second to
fifth respondents raised non-joinder as a
point
in limine
. The Trust contended that the
application was fatally defective because the Trust failed to join
all the shareholders who were
present or represented at the impugned
shareholders’ meeting of 24 May 2022 (the meeting) and all the
directors appointed
at said meeting.
[3]
I upheld the point
in
limine
and ordered that all the
shareholders and purported shareholders of Quickstep 684 and the
directors purportedly elected at the
meeting of 24 May 2022 who were
not cited as respondents had to be joined as respondents to the
application. All papers of record
were to be served upon said
shareholders, purported shareholders, and directors. In the event
that these parties wanted to oppose
the litigation, they had to file
notices of intention to defend.
[4]
The Trust’s attorney of record
subsequently filed an affidavit setting out how the interested and
affected persons were traced,
and the application and court order
were served on them. Without going into detail regarding the content
of this affidavit, it
suffices to say that it is evident that the
Trust went to lengths to trace the shareholders, purported
shareholders, and elected
directors.
[5]
The second to fifth respondents
subsequently issued an application in terms of Rule 30, taking issue
with the manner in which the
joinder of the ‘new’ parties
was effected. The application was dismissed, and a written judgment
was handed down. After
considering the modes of service and the
respective returns of service, I am satisfied that notice of these
proceedings would have
come to the knowledge of all interested and
affected parties. The papers were effectively served. One person
could not be traced.
His purported ignorance of the proceedings is
not material in light of the relief sought.
[6]
None of the parties joined elected to
participate in the proceedings.
Issues for
determination
[7]
The issue to be determined is whether the
shareholders' meeting that occurred on 24 May 2022 was properly
called and convened and
whether proper notice was given. The
applicants accept that a factual dispute exists regarding the
validity of sale of shares agreements
but submit that resolving these
factual disputes is unnecessary. They limit their challenge to the
impugned meeting and, subsequently,
the resolutions taken at the
meeting, to two bases: (i) the impugned shareholders meeting,
although purported to be a shareholders
meeting, was invalid as it
was not convened by Quickstep’s board of directors, or
shareholders, and (ii) on the assumption
that there had been proper
notice of the meeting in the terms contemplated in the
Companies Act,
2008
, there was a short notice of the meeting. As a result, the
failure to properly convene the shareholders' meeting invalidates it.
[8]
I pause to note that the company's
administration seems to be in turmoil. The signatories to the notice
of the shareholders' meeting,
Messrs. Combrinck, Riley, Heslop, and
Milne, were directors of the company but, with the exception of Mr.
Riley, were removed as
directors at a meeting on 6 April 2022. The
validity of the April meeting is questioned, although no legal
proceedings were instituted
to set aside the meeting and the
resolutions taken.
[9]
The main issues for consideration in this
matter as it emanates from the founding affidavit are:
i.
Whether Quickstep 684’s shareholders
could call and convene a shareholders’ meeting;
ii.
Whether the notice of the shareholders
meeting dispatched to shareholders on 3 May 2022 is invalid for being
delivered one day short;
iii.
Whether the second to fifth respondents are
shareholders of Quickstep 684 and were thus empowered to call a
shareholders’
meeting;
Could Quickstep 684’s
shareholders call and convene a shareholders meeting?
[10]
Section 61 of the Companie Act 71 of 2008
(the Act) provides that a shareholders meeting may be called by the
board of a company
or any other person specified in the company’s
Memorandum of Incorporation (MOI). Clause 4.6 of Quickstep 684’s
MOI
authorizes the Board and any shareholder of the company to call a
Shareholders’ meeting.
[11]
To differentiate between a meeting being
called and a meeting being convened is to split hairs. In the context
of the MOI, the words
are synonyms. There is no merit in declaring
the shareholders' meeting invalid on this ground.
Is the notice of the
shareholders' meeting dispatched to shareholders on 3 May 2022
invalid because it was delivered one day short?
[12]
The
meeting, called for on 3 May 2022, was a meeting of the shareholders
of Quickstep 684. The applicants contend that the notice
was one day
short. They claim that a 3-week notice period is required in terms of
the Rametsi Shareholders Agreement. The meeting
was scheduled for 24
May 2022. The second to fifth respondents agreed that the notice was
one day short but submitted that the
short notice is irrelevant and
is a matter of form over substance. They rely on
David
Garth Millar v Natmed Defence (Pty) Ltd.
[1]
In this case, the court stated as follows:
[2]
‘
Though
short of what is statutorily required, the notice period did not
prejudice the Applicant to warrant the setting aside [of]
the
shareholders’ decision in exercising a statutory right that
they possess. Nothing in section 71 deprives the Applicant
of the
right he may have at common law or otherwise to claim damages for of
office as a director for non-compliance with the required
notice
period.’
[13]
In
accordance with the
stare
decisis
principle, I am bound to adhere to precedents from this Division when
making decisions unless I am of the view that the precedent
is wrong.
In my view, the principle flowing from
Millar
v Natmed
is wrong. In
Van
Zyl v Nuco Chrome Bophuthatswana (Pty) Ltd and Others
[3]
Mathopo J stated:
‘
In
my view, unless a shareholders meeting was properly convened, in the
absence of waiver or ratification by all the shareholders,
the
notices are a nullity. This is especially so because of the general
rule that an irregularity in regard to the convening of
or
proceedings at a general meeting will render invalid resolutions
passed at that meeting.’
[14]
The legislature acknowledged that short
notice may occur and provided for conducting a valid meeting despite
notice of a shareholders
meeting being short in section 62(2A) of the
Act. ‘The absence of an allegation as to prejudice suffered’
is not mentioned
in this section as a reason to condone short notice.
The legislature explicitly provided:
‘
A
company may call a meeting with less notice than required by
subsection (1) or by its Memorandum of Incorporation, but such a
meeting may proceed only if every person who is entitled to exercise
voting rights in respect of any item on the meeting agenda-
(a)
Is present at the meeting; and
(b)
Votes to waive the required minimum notice
of the meeting.’
[15]
To the extent that the time period required
for notice of meetings as set out in the Rametsi Shareholders
Agreement, as contended
by the applicants and conceded by the
respondents, applies, this is the end of the matter.
The remaining issue
[16]
In dealing with the final issue raised for
the sake of completeness, it suffices to state that either the
factual dispute relating
to the validity of the sales of share
agreements or the ‘less than ideal record-keeping’
resulted in the failure to
amend or update Quickstep 684’s
shares register. As a result, a cloud of uncertainty covers the
entitlement of Mr. Combrinck,
Mr. Milne, and Mr. Heslop to act on
behalf of any ‘shareholder’. The term ‘shareholder’
is defined to denote
the holder of shares who is entered as such in
the securities register. Combrinck Incorporated and Recem Trust
alienated their
shares and are no longer holding shares despite still
being contained in the shares register. These entities do not meet
the first
requirement for being registered as a shareholder. In any
event, Mr. Riley indicates that he signed the notice as Istemar’s
representative. He adds, as an afterthought, alternatively as
representative of Recem Trust. It is evident, however, from the gist
of the answering affidavit that he opined that Recem Trust sold its
shares – he did not, when signing, purport to act on
behalf of
Recem Trust.
[17]
Neither
Wellness
Property Company (Pty) Ltd nor Portion 7 Alsef
(Pty)
Ltd is registered in the shares register. These entities do not meet
the second requirement for meeting the definition of
a
shareholder.
[4]
The Act provides
the necessary mechanism to address this situation, and the holders of
shares would be remiss not to utilse these
mechanisms. Istemar Game
Farm CC (Istemar) is the only shareholder registered in the
shares register who also holds shares.
[18]
The company’s MOI was placed before
the court. While clause 4.6 authorises any shareholder to call a
shareholder’s meeting,
clause 4.7 states that the MOI does not
specify a lower percentage of voting rights than the percentage
specified in section 61(3)
of the Act required for the requisitioning
by shareholders of a shareholder’s meeting. Section 61(3)
requires 10% of the
voting rights. Istemar holds 16 shares out of a
possible 1000.
ORDER
In
the result, the following order is granted:
1.
The shareholders’ meeting of 24 May 2022 is declared
unlawful and invalid;
2.
The resolutions adopted at the shareholders’ meeting of
24 May 2022 are declared to be of no force and effect and set aside;
3.
The second to fifth respondents are ordered to pay the costs
of the application jointly and severally, one to pay the other to be
absolved.
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 applicants:
Adv. ARG Mundell
SC
Instructed by:
AC Schmidt Inc.
For the second to
fifth respondents:
Adv. AN Kruger
Instructed by:
Frese Gurovich
Attorneys
Date of the
hearing:
19 February 2024
Date of judgment:
2 May 2024
[1]
2022
(2) SA 554 (GJ).
[2]
Ap
para [41].
[3]
(43825/2012)
[2013] ZAGPJHC 40 (13 March 2013).
[4]
Section 37(9)(a) of the Act is clear that a person acquires rights
associated with any particular securities of a company when
that
person’s name is entered in the company’s securities
register.
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