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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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[2024] ZAGPPHC 479
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## Nedbank Ltd v Masiza (072949-2023)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 479 (15 May 2024)
Nedbank Ltd v Masiza (072949-2023)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 479 (15 May 2024)
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sino date 15 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
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
number: 072949-2023
Date
of hearing: 29 April 2024
Date
delivered: 15 May 2024
(1)
REPORTABLE:
YES
/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHERS JUDGES:
YES
/NO
(3)
REVISED
DATE:
15/5/24
SIGNATURE
In
the matter of:
NEDBANK
LTD
Applicant
and
MASIZA
MASIZA
Respondent
JUDGMENT
SWANEPOEL
J:
[1]
The applicant seeks to place the respondent under provisional
sequestration. The applicant
is a creditor of the respondent by
virtue of a deed of settlement dated 18 October 2010, in terms of
which the respondent acknowledged
his indebtedness to the applicant,
together with Unkonka Security Services and Consultancy (KZN) (Pty)
Ltd ("Unkonka"),
a company of which the respondent was then
a director. The deed of settlement was made an order of court on 1
April 2011.
[2]
Unkonka was wound up finally on 8 June 2015. Pursuant to the winding
up, the company
liquidators sold an immovable property belonging to
the company, from which sale the applicant received a dividend. The
applicant
says that as at 8 September 2016, after the deduction of
the amount received pursuant to the sale of the property, the sum of
R
2 518 037.56 was still due to it.
[3]
The sale of the immovable property was conducted by public auction. A
company of which
the respondent was then a director, Masiza Capital
(Pty) Ltd ("Masiza") made a successful bid for the property
at a purchase
price of R 2 380 000, excluding VAT. The purchase was
apparently funded through a loan by one Gerhard Bester. When Masiza
was unable
to repay the loan, the property was sold to one Claasen at
a purchase price of R 2 200 000. The respondent remained a director
of Masiza until 2023 when he resigned. He is still employed by
Masiza, allegedly as a Business Development Manager.
[4]
On 28 September 2016 a writ of execution was served at the
respondent's home. No assets
could be attached. On 24 November 2016
the applicant launched an application for the respondent's
sequestration. The respondent
raised the defence that the order of
court had become superannuated. The argument was upheld and the
application was dismissed.
The order was later revived by an order
granted on 29 April 2019. A new writ of execution was issued on 3
October 2019. On 16 October
2019 the writ could not be executed as
the Sheriff was not able to obtain access to the respondent's
property, and it could not
be confirmed that the respondent resided
at the given address, namely 3[...] L[...] P[...], Waterkloof,
Pretoria.
[5]
The property is registered in the name of Olova Technologies (Pty)
Ltd ("Olova"),
a company of which the respondent was a
director from 1 June 2008 to 1 October 2021, when he resigned. It is
common cause that
although the respondent has resigned as a director
of Olova, he is still residing at the Waterkloof property.
[6]
On 27 January 2020 the applicant again tried to execute the writ, and
this time an
attachment could not be made at the Waterkloof address.
No access could be obtained to the property and the respondent could
not
be found. On 28 July 2020 the writ could again not be executed as
one Nokubonga Sodlulashe alleged that that he was renting the
property from the respondent. A copy of the writ was served on
Sodlulashe in the respondent's temporary absence. No movable property
belonging to the respondent could be found.
[7]
On 7 February 2022 the Sheriff obtained the assistance of the
respondent's neighbour
to open the house. The Sheriff recorded that
the house was almost empty, and that there was obviously only one
person living in
the house as there was only one bed in a bedroom. In
a conversation between the respondent and the Sheriff the respondent
alleged
that the house did not belong to him, but he did not divulge
the name of the owner. The respondent also said that the house was
being renovated.
[8]
A few minor movables were attached, and a silver BMW motor vehicle.
During the aforesaid
conversation the respondent said that the
vehicle belonged to his son. The respondent's son then launched an
interpleader alleging
that all the attached goods belonged to him,
and that he was storing them at the respondent's home. The attachment
was uplifted.
[9]
An attempt was then made to attach the respondent's shareholding in
Olova. On 11 May
2021 the Sheriff rendered a return which stated that
the writ was being returned as the defendant could not be found at
the Waterkloof
address. The Sheriff also sought information on the
alleged shareholding, and he asked where the share certificates could
be found.
Ultimately the Sheriff refused to execute the writ because
he did not have proof that the shares were indeed held by the
respondent.
Enquiries to the auditors of Olova as reflected on a CIPC
search were fruitless. The auditors denied that they had been
appointed
as auditors of Olova, and they had no knowledge of the
existence of a share register for the company.
[10]
In short, the applicant has made a number of attempts to recover the
monies owed to it. A vehicle
search shows that the respondent is
linked to two vehicles, a Land Rover L320 SP and a Suzuki. None of
the attempts at attachment
of property bore any success, and a Deeds
Office search has revealed that the respondent owns no immovable
property.
[11]
The applicant alleged that the respondent is an active director or
member of eleven different
companies or close corporations. He had
also been linked to a number of other companies or close
corporations, but had resigned
as director or member.
[12]
The respondent says that he indeed resides at 3[...] L[...] P[...],
Waterkloof, the property
belonging to Olova, and which address is in
fact Olova and Masiza's registered address. Although the respondent
alleges that he
is not a shareholder in Olova, he does not say who
the shareholders are. He does not explain what the basis is of his
occupation
of a property that belongs to Olova. The respondent
alleges that he is a Business Development manager for Masiza. He does
not explain
why he resigned as a director of the latter company. He
alleges that he earns approximately R 50 000 per month in commission,
but
he does not provide any evidence to support his allegation.
[13]
Under section 10 of the Insolvency Act, 24 of 1936 ("the
Insolvency Act"
;) a provisional sequestration order may be
granted if the petitioning creditor has established that it has a
claim in excess of
£ 50 against the respondent, that the
respondent has committed an act of insolvency or is factually
insolvent, and if there
is reason to believe that it would be to the
advantage of creditors if his estate is sequestrated.
[14]
The applicant has produced a certificate of balance that reflects the
outstanding debt as being
R 4 084 511.64 as at 3 July 2023. In terms
of clause 4.1 of the deed of settlement, the certificate of balance
is
prima facie
evidence of the contents thereof. The
certificate of balance was also accompanied by a statement of account
for the period April
2009 to July 2023.
[15]
The respondent has attacked the correctness of the certificate
without providing any factual
basis for his challenge. The averment
that the certificate is incorrect must be rejected. There is no real
dispute that the applicant
is a creditor of the respondent and that
it has locus standi to bring this application.
[16]
The respondent denies that he is factually insolvent, but he does not
deny the indebtedness (save
to admit the extent thereof), and he does
not deny that he has been unable to satisfy any of the writs issued
by the applicant.
The respondent says that all of the movable
property at 3[...] L[...] Road belongs to his son, but he does not
say what his assets
are, and where they may be found.
[17]
Furthermore, the respondent says that all of the companies in which
he has an interest are dormant
and do not actively trade. In support
of that contention, the respondent has provided a letter by "my"
auditors (as he
termed the auditors), Khumalo & Mabuya. The
letter records that the auditing firm was appointed by Masiza Masiza,
and it confirms
that all of the entities in which the respondent held
a directorship have been either deregistered or are dormant. The
letter is
not confirmed in a confirmatory affidavit, and its
evidentiary value is questionable. Respondent says he does not
own
shares in either Olova or Masiza, the latter allegedly being the
only company still trading.
[18]
The respondent's denial that he is factually insolvent cannot exist
alongside the respondent's
averment that he only owns an old Land
Rover which he purchased in cash. He denies owning any shares in any
of the many companies
with which he is linked. He says that all of
the movable property that was found at his home belongs to his son.
The respondent's
averment that he is not factually insolvent is
belied by the facts. In my view the applicant has made out a proper
case that the
respondent is factually insolvent. Once that fact has
been established by inference, then the respondent attracts an
evidentiary
burden to rebut the inference drawn. The respondent has
been extremely evasive regarding his financial affairs, and
specifically
regarding his relationship with Olova (in whose house he
resides) and Masiza, in which he relinquished his directorship to
take
up the role of an employee. Not only has the respondent not
rebutted the inference that he is insolvent, it seems to me that on
the respondent's own version, he is clearly factually insolvent.
[19]
Finally, the respondent says that it would not be to his creditors'
advantage were he to be sequestrated.
In arms-length sequestrations,
such as this, an applicant would seldom have intimate knowledge of a
respondent's assets and liabilities,
and it would often be impossible
to calculate mathematically whether there will be an advantage to
creditors. Under
section 10
of the
Insolvency Act, this
Court only
has to find on a
prima facie
basis that there is reason to
believe that the sequestration of the respondent's estate would be to
the advantage of creditors
in order to grant a provisional
sequestration order.
[20]
The applicant has argued that the advantage to creditors in this case
lies in the power of trustees
to investigate the respondent's
finanacial affairs. In
Awerbuch,
Brown & Co v Le Grange
[1]
it was suggested that the
power of a trustee to investigate the insolvent in itself constitutes
an advantage to creditors. However,
in
Meskin
& Co v Friedman
[2]
the Court said:
"The right of
investigation is given, as it seems to me, not as an advantage in
itself, but as a possible means of securing
ultimate material benefit
for the creditors in the form, for example, of the recovery of
property disposed of by the insolvent
or the disallowance of doubtful
or collusive claims. In my opinion the facts put before the Court
must satisfy it that there is
a reasonable prospect, not necessarily
a likelihood, but a prospect which is not too remote - that some
pecuniary benefit will
result to creditors."
[21]
In
London
Estates (Pty) Ltd v Nair
[3]
the test was formulated as follows:
"Facts indicative of
a prospect which is not too remote, that some pecuniary benefit will
result to the creditors, may include
the fact that a substantial
estate exists (cf. Hill & Co. and Others v Gane,
1925 CPD 242
at
245). If no substantial estate is shown to exist, circumstances may
yet establish a reasonable prospect, a prospect that is
not too
remote, that concealed assets will be found or others recovered."
[22]
In this matter there are a number of unexplained issues. Firstly,
upon the winding up of Unkonka,
a company of which the respondent had
been a long-standing director, the respondent devised a plan to
retain Unkonka's property
by purchasing the property on the name of
Masiza. The loan which funded the deal, which was advanced by an
individual for R 2 380
000 was in itself unusual and is not explained
by the respondent.
[23]
Secondly, the home in which the respondent resides was purchased by
Morula Communications (now
Olova) in 2007 at a purchase price of R 3
000 000. The relationship between the respondent and Olova is
unexplained. He was a director
of the company until 1 October 2021,
when he resigned. The respondent does not explain why he resigned as
director of Olova. He
denies that he is a shareholder of the company,
but he does not say who the shareholders might be. If it were so that
the respondent
has no interest in Olova, then why would Olova allow
the respondent to reside in its property? Does the respondent pay
rent for
the use of the property or is the property at his disposal
free of charge? If the latter is the case, then why would Olova allow
the respondent to reside there free of charge? Strangely, on 29
October 2021 certain changes to Olova's details were registered
with
the CIPC. The respondent's resignation as director was registered,
but at the same time Olova's business address was changed
to 3[...]
L[...] P[...] Waterkloof, and the email address was changed to
M[...]@yahoo.co.uk. One Olwethu Uviwe Masiza was added
as a director
of the company, as was Nokubonga Sodlulashe. One wonders why, when
the respondent had just resigned as a director,
his address would
suddenly reflect as Olova's business address, and why 3[...] L[...]
P[...] address would remain the company's
registered address after
his resignation?
[24]
Thirdly, the respondent is silent on his employment with Masiza. He
resigned as a director on
9 March 2023, and he took up a position as
a manager. Allegedly, he does not share in the profits of the
company, receiving only
commissions. The respondent did not explain
why he would resign as director of a company of which he had been the
sole director
for some seven years, and allow two new directors to be
appointed, one on exactly the same date as respondent's resignation,
and
one six days later. One wonders what the rationale might have
been for such a transaction? Moreover, if the respondent is only a
manager in the company, then why is his residential address the
registered address of the company? Furthermore, in denying that
he is
a shareholder in Masiza, one would have expected the respondent to
say who the shareholders in fact are.
[25]
The respondent has reported to the Sheriff that the immovable
property found in his home belongs
to his son. Where then are the
respondent's household effects? The respondent says that he only
earns R 50 000 on average per month
and that his expenses account for
all of that income. How then, did the respondent manage to pay R 72
600 in cash for a motor vehicle
on 10 March 2022 when he purchased
the Land Rover from We Buy Cars (Pty) Ltd?
[26]
The respondent has made a bald allegation regarding his income. Had
the respondent been truthful,
one would have expected him to provide
proof of his income and of his expenses. The fact that he has not
done so, and that he has
been so secretive in explaining his
financial affairs gives one pause for thought. A further concern is
that although the respondent
alleges that the companies in which he
holds active directorships are dormant or deregistered, that
allegation is not bolstered
by any facts. One questions why the
companies have become dormant and when that happened?
[27]
I have gained the distinct impression that the respondent has not
played open cards with the
Court, and that he has been trying to
obfuscate. He has not been a man of few means; he has been an
entrepreneur for many years
and a director of many companies. His
plea of poverty is difficult to swallow. In my view there is
sufficient evidence from which
one can find that there is, prima
facie, a likelihood that an investigation may uncover hidden assets
or additional income from
which the debt may be settled.
[28]
In the circumstances I make the following order:
[28.1]
The estate of the respondent is placed under provisional
sequestration in the hands of the Master of the High Court.
[28.2]
The respondent, and any person having an interest in the matter, may
show cause at 10h00 on 3 July 2024 why this order should
not be made
final.
[28.3]
This order shall be published once in the Government Gazette and in
the Citizen newspaper.
[28.4]
Costs shall be costs in the sequestration.
SWANEPOEL
J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION PRETORIA
COUNSEL FOR THE
APPLICANT:
Adv. M.P. Van
der Merwe SC
ATTORNEY FOR THE
APPLICANT:
Weavind &
Weavind
COUNSEL FOR THE
RESPONDENT:
Adv R. Bouwer
ATTORNEY FOR
RESPONDENT:
Leslie Cohen &
Associates
DATE HEARD:
29 April 2024
DATE OF
JUDGMENT:
15 May 2024
[1]
1939 OPD 20
[2]
1948 (2) SA 555
(W) at 559
[3]
1957 (3) SA 591
(D)
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