Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 419South Africa
Preference Capital (Pty) Ltd v Nomageba Trading CC and Others (2024/031809) [2024] ZAGPPHC 419 (8 May 2024)
Headnotes
the nature of the relief sought renders the application urgent.
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 419
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Preference Capital (Pty) Ltd v Nomageba Trading CC and Others (2024/031809) [2024] ZAGPPHC 419 (8 May 2024)
Preference Capital (Pty) Ltd v Nomageba Trading CC and Others (2024/031809) [2024] ZAGPPHC 419 (8 May 2024)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPPHC/Data/2024_419.html
sino date 8 May 2024
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO:
2024/031809
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES/
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/
NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
8/5/2024
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
PREFERENCE
CAPITAL (PTY)
LTD
Applicant
and
NOMAGEBA
TRADING CC
(in business
rescue)
First Respondent
(Registration
Number: 2005/028915/23)
NOMATHAMSANQA
ZULU
Second Respondent
(Identity
Number: 7[...])
JERIFANOS
MASHAMBA
NO
Third Respondent
(In
his capacity as business rescue practitioner
of
the First Respondent)
ID
NO: 7[...])
COMPANIES
AND INTELLECTUAL PROPERTIES
COMMISSION
Fourth Respondent
TURN
AROUND MANAGEMENT ASSOCIATION
SOUTHERN
AFRICA CHAPTER
Fifth Respondent
(Registration
number: 2005/033371/08)
JUDGMENT
LABUSCHAGNE
AJ
[1]
On 9 April 2024 the applicant applied in the urgent court
for an
order:
“
2.
That the resolution adopted by the board of directors of the first
respondent
on 1 March 2024 to voluntarily begin business rescue
proceedings and place the first respondent under supervision be set
aside
in terms of section 130(1)(a) and/or
section 130(5)(a)
of the
Companies Act, 71 of 2008
.
3.
That the first respondent be placed under provisional winding-up in
the hands of the Master of the High Court in terms of
section
130(5)(c)(i)
of the
Companies Act, 71 of 2008
.
4.
That a rule nisi be issued calling upon all affected parties to show
cause on a date to be arranged with the Registrar why the first
respondent should not be finally wound up.”
[2]
As an alternative to the above relief and in the event
of the court
finding that there are not sufficient grounds for setting aside the
aforesaid resolution, the applicant applied for
an order in the
following terms:
“
5.
That the appointment of the third respondent as the nominated
business rescue practitioner
of the first
respondent be set aside in terms of
section 130(1)(b)
of the
Companies Act, 71 of 2008
.
6.
That this court appoint an alternate business rescue practitioner in
terms of
section 130(6)(a)
of the
Companies Act, 71 of 2008
to be
nominated by the fifth respondent.
7.
That the business rescue practitioner appointed in terms of
section
130(5)(b)
of the
Companies Act, 71 of 2008
be afforded sufficient
time to form an opinion whether or not the first respondent is, or
appears to be financially distressed
or has a reasonable prospect of
being rescued.
8.
That the second and third respondents be ordered to pay the costs of
the application on the scale
applicable between attorney and client.”
[3]
The matter initially stood down to enable the third respondent
to be
in court. Counsel then appeared for the first to third
respondents but contended that he did not have enough time to
obtain
proper instructions. There was no formal request for a
postponement.
[4]
The applicant and the first respondent had concluded
a loan agreement
on 15 October 2021, in terms of which the applicant would make
available a loan facility of R2 million available
to the first
respondent. Repayments would be made in terms of the loan
schedule by way of monthly debit orders. As
security for the
repayment obligations the first respondent pledged and ceded any
proceeds standing to the credit of any bank account,
together with
all receivables due and owing to the applicant.
[5]
The applicant advanced the aforesaid amount to the first
respondent
and on 15 October 2022 the applicant and the first respondent
concluded a written cession agreement giving effect to
the aforesaid
security agreement.
[6]
The first respondent breached these obligations under
the loan
agreement by failing to make timeous payments to the applicant in
terms of the agreement. The first respondent is
therefore
indebted to the applicant in a balance of R1 695 250.00.
Against the backdrop the first respondent’s
directing mind, the
second respondent, passed a resolution in terms of
section 129(1)(a)
placing the first respondent in business rescue.
[7]
The facts of this matter demonstrate a degree of urgency
that
warrants the matter being heard on the basis thereof. If the
first to third respondents were to successfully commence
business
rescue proceedings, it would provide a temporary moratorium on the
rights of claimants against the company or in respect
of property in
its possession. It is because of this moratorium imposed when a
company enters into business rescue, that
the court in
Climax
Concrete Products CC v Evening Flame Trading 449 (Pty) Ltd
2012
(JDR) 1053 (ECP) held that the nature of the relief sought renders
the application urgent.
[8]
Business rescue initiated by a resolution may provide
an undeserved
moratorium “
by a stroke of the company pen by passing and
filing a
section 129(1)
resolution”
(
Climax Concrete
supra
at par [38]). The potential for abuse needs to be
guarded against as it would adversely affect the interests of
creditors.
[9]
The applicant contends that it and other creditors have
already
suffered significant financial losses at the hands of the first
respondent and that such losses can only be diminished
by the control
of the first respondent vesting in a liquidator.
[10]
In respect of urgency, it is necessary to determine whether the
applicant
would obtain substantial redress in due course or not.
[11]
In
East Rock Trading 7 (Pty) Ltd and Another v Eagle Valley
Granite (Pty) Ltd and Others
[2011] ZAGPJHC 196 (23 September
2011) the court stated at paragraph [7]:
“
It is important
to note that the rules require absence of substantial redress.
This is not equivalent to the irreparable harm
that is required
before the granting of interim relief. It is something less.
He may still obtain redress in an application
in due course, but it
may not be substantial. Whether an applicant will not be able
to obtain substantial redress in an application
in due course will be
determined by the facts of each case. An applicant must make
out his case in that regard.”
[12]
The continuation of business rescue poses the risk of diminishing the
return dividend of creditors where liquidation is unavoidable.
On this score the applicant will not obtain substantial redress
in
due course unless the application is heard as urgent.
[13]
Section 130(1)(a)
of the
Companies Act provides
that a resolution
placing a company into business rescue may be set aside on the
grounds that there is no reasonable prospect for
rescuing the company
(section 130(1)(a))
or that the company has failed to satisfy the
procedural requirements set out in
section 129.
[14]
An applicant must satisfy the court that any of the grounds listed in
section 130(1)(a)
is present and that it is just and equitable to set
the resolution aside
(section 130(5)(a)(ii)).
[15]
The Supreme Court of Appeal in
Panamo Properties (Pty) Ltd and
Another v Nel NO and Others
2015(5) SA 63 (SCA) at paragraph [32]
held:
“
Insofar as it
may be suggested that the use of the word ‘otherwise’ in
s 130(5)(a)(ii)
points in favour of this furnishing a separate
substantive ground for setting aside the resolution, I do not agree.
In my
view the word is used in this context to convey that, over and
above establishing one or more of the grounds set out in
s 130(1)(a)
,
the court needs to be satisfied that in the light of all the facts
that it is just and equitable to set the resolution aside and
terminate the business rescue. It is not being used in
contradistinction to the statutory grounds, but as additional
thereto.
This is consistent with the meaning ‘with regard
to other points’ given in the Oxford English Dictionary.”
[16]
The applicant needs to establish therefore that, on the facts, there
does not exist a possibility based on reasonable objective grounds
that the first respondent can be rescued and that it is just
and
equitable for the resolution to be set aside.
[17]
Judgments have been taken against the first respondent as follows:
17.1
R8 954 198.30 on 12 February 2024 in favour of SARS under case number
328/24
in this Division;
17.2
R26 077.42 on 25 January 2024 in favour of Standard Bank under case
number
118149/23 out of the Gauteng Local Division, Johannesburg;
17.3
R1 895 052.80 on 1 November 2023 in favour of Standard Bank under
case number
74852/23 out of the Gauteng Local Division, Johannesburg;
17.4
R4 591 654.60 on 6 September 2023 in favour of Nedbank under case
number 57223/23
in this Division;
17.5
R767 519.35 on 10 December 2023 in favour of Bid Food (Pty) Ltd under
case
number 2692/22 out of the Gauteng Local Division, Johannesburg;
17.6
R309 000.00 on 24 May 2023 in favour of the Food and Beverages
Manufacturing
Sector Education and Authority under case number
49351/22 out of the Johannesburg High Court;
17.7
R76 129.43 on 31 October 2022 in favour of Cessna Meat Suppliers CC
under case
number 21988/22 out of the Randburg Magistrate’s
Court;
17.8
R2 968 755.40 on 21 September 2021 in favour of SARS in respect of
VAT under
case number 43714/21 out of the Gauteng Local Division,
Johannesburg.
[18]
In addition, the credit report reflecting the aforesaid judgments
confirms
that the first respondent is in respect with the payment of
its lease as at 24 January 2024 in the amount of R24 015.50.
[19]
In addition to the aforesaid the first respondent is liable to the
applicant
for the balance of the loan, being R1 695 250.00.
[20]
A further procedural requirement of
section 129
is that a sworn
statement of facts relevant to the grounds on which the board
resolution was founded must be included in the notice
of the
resolutions. The sworn statement provided in this matter does
not provide any relevant grounds on which the first
respondent’s
resolution was founded.
[21]
The sworn statement states
inter alia
that the first
respondent will recover debts from its debtor. The first
respondent has however ceded all of its book debts
to the applicant.
[22]
The sworn statement by the first respondent does not comply with the
requirements of
section 129(3)(a).
[23]
The first respondent has judgment debts against it totalling R19 612
402.30, of which an amount of R11 922 953.20 is for judgments
obtained by SARS. The first respondent is in addition indebted
to the applicant in a secured amount of R1 695 250.00, the applicant
having taken cession of the first respondent’s debtors.
Whatever recoveries may therefore be made from debtors of the first
respondent, would accrue to the applicant based on its cession
of
book debts.
[24]
The board of a company may only pass a resolution voluntarily placing
the company into business rescue if the board has reasonable grounds
to believe that there appears to be a reasonable prospect
of rescuing
the company
(section 129(1)).
On the facts of this matter,
there could be no reasonable subjective belief that the first
respondent could be rescued.
[25]
The minutes of the board meeting does not disclose any grounds for a
belief that the company may be rescued.
[26]
The fact that such a decision was taken by the second respondent in
the
face of the crippling debt of the first respondent and its bleak
prospects of recouping outstanding debts is a cause for concern.
I am satisfied that the decision to place the company into business
rescue was to avoid an inevitable liquidation. There
are no
objectively reasonable grounds for believing that the first
respondent could be saved or that a better dividend would be
obtained
by means of business rescue. Business rescue will merely delay
the inevitable and whittle away what is available
for a dividend upon
liquidation.
[27]
As the above facts already establish a basis for setting aside the
resolution,
it is not necessary to deal with the suitability of the
third respondent as business rescue practitioner.
[28]
I am satisfied that:
28.1
There was as at 1 March 2024 no reasonable prospect for rescuing the
first
respondent;
28.2
In passing a resolution on 1 March 2024 placing the close corporation
into
business rescue the “board” of the first respondent
(the second respondent) failed to satisfy the procedural requirements
as set out in
section 129
of the
Companies Act, as
there were no
reasonable grounds for a belief that the company could be rescued;
28.3
I am further satisfied that it is just and equitable for the
resolution to
be set aside.
[29]
The applicant has established its
locus standi
to apply for
the liquidation of the first respondent by means of the aforesaid
debt. The first respondent is clearly unable
to pay its debts
(section 344(f)
read with section 345(1)(c) of the Companies Act, 61
of 1973). The statutory formalities have been complied with.
[30]
I am further satisfied that:
30.1
The first respondent has not and cannot pay its creditors;
30.2
The first respondent cannot recover any further debt because of the
cession
of book debts;
30.3
The first respondent owes SARS the amount of R11 922 593.70 in terms
of judgments;
30.4
The first respondent is using business rescue for purposes of
delaying an inevitable
liquidation.
[31]
I am therefore satisfied that it is just and equitable to wind-up the
first respondent.
[32]
I therefore make the following order:
1.
The matter is heard on the basis of urgency.
2.
The resolution adopted by the directing mind
of the first respondent
on 1 March 2024, placing the first respondent under voluntary
supervision and business rescue is set aside.
3.
The first respondent is placed in provisional
winding-up.
4.
A rule nisi is issued calling upon all interested
parties to advance
reasons why the court should not order the final winding-up of the
respondent on 13 June 2024.
5.
A copy of the order is to be served upon the
first respondent at its
registered address.
6.
A copy of the order is to be served upon the
first respondent’s
employees by affixing the order on a notice board within its
premises.
7.
This order is to be served on the third respondent
at his place of
employment.
8.
A copy of the order is to be delivered to
the South African Revenue
Service.
9.
A copy of this order is to be published in
the Government Gazette and
in the Citizen Newspaper.
10.
A copy of this order is to be delivered to each known creditor
by
email.
11.
The costs of this application are to be paid by the directing
mind of
the first respondent, namely the second respondent.
LABUSCHAGNE
AJ
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
W Capital Finance (Pty) Ltd and Another v GP Venter Attorneys Inc and Another (79444/2019) [2024] ZAGPPHC 223 (11 March 2024)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 223High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)98% similar
PKX Capital (Pty) Ltd v Isago at N12 Development (Pty) Ltd (87615/2019) [2023] ZAGPPHC 646 (7 August 2023)
[2023] ZAGPPHC 646High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)98% similar
PKX Capital (Pty) Ltd v Isago at N12 Development (Pty) Ltd (87615/2019) [2022] ZAGPPHC 175 (24 March 2022)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 175High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)98% similar
South African Legal Practice Council v Mabena and Another (B306/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 593 (13 May 2024)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 593High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)98% similar
Spesnet Proprietary Limited v South African Nursing Council (057110/2024) [2025] ZAGPPHC 1168 (3 November 2025)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 1168High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)98% similar