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 488
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Commissioner for the South African Revenue Services v Drs Mkhabele and Indunah Diagnostic Radiologists Inc and Others (2024-036576)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 488 (30 May 2024)
Commissioner for the South African Revenue Services v Drs Mkhabele and Indunah Diagnostic Radiologists Inc and Others (2024-036576)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 488 (30 May 2024)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPPHC/Data/2024_488.html
sino date 30 May 2024
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Case
Number: 2024-036576
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
DATE
SIGNATURE
In the matter between:
THE COMMISSIONER FOR
THE SOUTH AFRICAN
REVENUE
SERVICES
Applicant
and
DRS MKHABELE &
INDUNAH DIAGNOSTIC
RADIOLOGISTS
INC AND THREE OTHERS
1
st
to 3
rd
Respondents
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and
authored by the Judge whose name is reflected and is handed down
electronically by circulation to
the parties/their legal
representatives by e-mail and by uploading it to the electronic file
of this matter on Caselines. The date
for hand-down is deemed to be
10: 00 am on 30 May 2024.
Summary: Urgent
application. Delay in launching an application – the claimed
urgency weans away. The Business Practitioner
not implementing a
rejected business plan. No palpable harm where the Business
Practitioner is not acting unlawfully but only paying
creditors of an
entity under business rescue. Thus, no urgent relief is necessary.
Preliminary objections for non-compliance with
section 133(1) and
145(1)(a) of the Companies Act not upheld. The application having
been prompted by miscommunication which could
have been corrected to
obviate it, the appropriate order as to costs is that of each party
is liable for its own costs. Held: (1)
The application is struck off
the roll due to lack of urgency. Held: (2) Each party to pay its own
costs.
JUDGMENT
MOSHOANA, J
Introduction
[1]
Drs Mkhabele & Indunah Diagnostic
Radiologists Inc (Mkhabele) is an entity under business rescue. Mr
Ralph Farrel Lutchmann
(BRP) is the appointed business rescue
practitioner. A business plan (BP) was prepared and presented by the
BRP. The Commissioner
for South African Revenue Services (CSARS), the
applicant before me, is a creditor holding 65% voting power. In terms
of section
152(2)(a) of the Companies Act, 2008 (CA) a BP will be
approved on a preliminary basis if it was supported by the holders of
more
than 75% of the creditors’ voting interests that were
voted. In
casu
,
the CSARS voted against the approval of the BP.
[2]
Such voting prompted the BRP to invoke the
provisions of section 153(1)(a)(ii) of the CA. BRP launched an
application contemplated
in the section. It is axiomatic that should
this Court set aside the result of voting on the grounds of
inappropriateness, certain
consequences may follow. Having said that,
what serves before me is an urgent application mainly seeking to
interdict the BRP from
implementing the rejected BP.
[3]
Correspondences exchanged between the
parties and allegations and counter-allegations made by the deponents
created an impression
that the BRP was implementing the rejected BP.
Since the misconception was not cleared, the present application was
begotten. In
the present proceedings, it became apparent that the BRP
disavowed any implementation of the rejected BP and contends that the
process engaged in is for the payment of creditors and the CSARS is
one of the creditors of Mkhabele.
[4]
The present application is duly opposed by
Mkhabele and BRP. In opposing the application, Mkhabele and BRP
raised three preliminary
objections to the application. The first
relates to the failure to give notice to all affected parties as
contemplated in section
145(1)(a) of the CA. The second relates to
non-compliance with the provisions of section 133 of the CA. The
third relates to lack
of urgency.
Background facts
pertinent to the application
[5]
As indicated earlier, Mkhabele has been
placed under business rescue. As a consequence of that a meeting of
creditors took place
on 14 April 2023. It was at this meeting that
the BRP presented a BP for approval. All the creditors present
barring the CSARS
voted in favour of the BP. Resultantly, the BRP on
2 May 2023 launched proceedings contemplated in section 153 under
case number
2023-064733 (the main application). The main application
pends the decision of this Court.
[6]
Mkhabele is indebted to the CSARS in the
order of R62 million. The basis for CSARS objecting to the BP is that
it omitted certain
liabilities, which at the ultimate end will
prejudice the huge debt owed to the CSARS. For the purposes of this
judgment, it is
obsolete to consider in any details all the reasons
advanced by the CSARS in support of the objection to the BP.
[7]
On or about 1 August 2023, the BRP
testified that in order not to cause any creditors or employees any
prejudice, he started implementing
and making payments in terms of
the revised business rescue plan. He further testified that any
payments due to CSARS as a creditor
was paid into a trust account of
his attorneys, owing to the objection to the BP. Despite this
testimony, which vaguely suggests
that the BRP is busy implementing
the rejected revised BP, CSARS laid supine.
[8]
On 26 February 2024, attorneys for the BRP
reminded CSARS of its awareness that the BRP has started implementing
the BP and a certain
amount was payable to CSARS. On 05 March 2024,
the CSARS, through its attorneys of record, restated that the BRP was
implementing
the BP despite its objection. It rejected the amount
offered to it by the BRP. On 13 March 2024, in reply, the BRP stated
that
it was making payments for historical debts, since Mkhabele was
in a financial position to do so. The BRP categorically stated that
there was no prohibition from the CA for it to make such payments.
[9]
The CSARS, in its letter of 5 March 2024,
had taken a view that the implementation was unlawful and the BRP
should provide an undertaking
before end of business of 11 March 2024
not to continue implementing, failing which an interdict shall be
launched. No such undertaking
was provided by 11 March 2024, and no
application for an interdict was launched. The CSARS interpreted a
statement by the BRP to
say that payment of historical debts is not
prohibited by the CA to mean that implementation of the rejected BP
is not prohibited
by the CA.
[10]
In response to the testimony delivered by
the BP in August 2023, the CSARS restated its position that the
implementation of the
BP was unlawful. However, since then, for
reasons that are not apparent anywhere, the CSARS
assumed
that the BRP accepted its position that the implementation is
unlawful and shall not proceed with it. On its version, the
assumption
was contradicted by the conduct of the BRP on 26 February
2024. That notwithstanding, it took CSARS the whole month thereafter
to launch the present urgent proceedings.
[11]
From 26 February 2024 barring the request
for an undertaking and a threat with an interdict on 5 March 2024,
there is nothing to
demonstrate that the CSARS was engaged in any
settlement discussions. The correspondence exchanged in that period
demonstrates
nothing but alleged prevarications between the CSARS and
the BRP. Having launched the application on or about 4 April 2024,
for
some inexplicable reasons, the CSARS appointed a date which is a
month and couple of days away; namely; 28 May 2024.
Analysis
[12]
This Court takes a view that the issue of
lack of urgency is dispositive of the present application. As a
result, it will be purely
academic for this Court to decide the other
two preliminary objections. Rule 6(12) of the Uniform Rules requires
that a party seeking
an urgent relief must (a) set forth explicitly
the circumstances which is averred render the matter urgent and (b)
the reasons
why the applicant claims that the applicant could not be
afforded a substantial redress at a hearing in due course.
[13]
This application is premised on a wrong
basis that the BRP is busy implementing the BP. An interdict is a
special remedy available
for an unlawful conduct. Counsel for
Mkhabele and the BRP conceded that a rejected BP cannot be
implemented in law. The reality
of the situation is that the BRP is
not implementing the BP. His testimony in August 2023 and the
correspondence of February 2024
created an impression that he was
implementing the BP.
[14]
If indeed the present application was truly
urgent, the unlawfulness which can be remedied by a special remedy of
an interdict manifested
itself in August 2023. Other than stating
that the CSARS in opposition testified that the BRP acted unlawfully,
the CSARS provides
no explanation why it did not launch an
application then. The CSARS, could even have launched a
counter-application instead of
simply testifying that the BRP was
acting unlawfully. In the present proceedings, the CSARS explicitly
states that the matter is
now urgent because it assumed that its say
so that the BRP is acting unlawfully by implementing would
instantaneously lead to a
stop on the part of the BRP. Sadly, this is
far from being a convincing basis for urgency.
[15]
On
the contrary, it serves as evidence that indeed the application was
never urgent. Even if the matter was urgent in August 2023,
the fact
that the CSARS waited for a period of about eight months before
seeking an urgent relief, leads to the claimed urgency
weaning away.
Self-created urgency is nothing but an urgency claimed at convenient
times. Clearly, from August 2023, the CSARS
laid supine due to the
undeclared and unconfirmed assumption that the BRP will magically
stop, without an interdict, the declared
implementation. Self-created
urgency is not the urgency contemplated in rule 6(12). A Court must
refuse to hear an application
predicated on self-created urgency.
[1]
[16]
Nevertheless, in this Court’s view,
the BRP on 13 March 2024 was explicit when he stated the following:
“
That
after careful consideration of the business’s finances my
client (BRP)
was satisfied that the
company could afford to make payment of its historical debts
.
There is
no provision in the Act
prohibiting him from doing so
. It is to
the benefit of the company to settle creditors
when
it is in the financial position to do so to stop accruing further
interest.”
[17]
It cannot be clearer that the BRP was
making payments of historical debts because the financial position
was allowing and such will
be beneficial to Mkhabele. Curiously, the
CSARS did not respond to this missive. Instead it laid supine until 5
April 2024 when
it launched the present application only to be heard
weeks later. Accordingly, this Court is not satisfied that the first
requirement
in rule 6(12) has been met.
[18]
Turning to the second requirement, the
CSARS sparsely and tersely deal with this requirement in its founding
papers. This requirement
is not to be conflated with an irreparable
harm requirement of an interdict. What is required are factual
reasons as opposed to
argument why an applicant claims that the
applicant could not be, as opposed to surmising, afforded substantial
redress at a hearing
in due course. Instead of the CSARS considering
the explicit response of 13 March 2024 in order to observe that the
BRP was not
in fact implementing the BP, the CSARS opted to seek a
legal opinion on the contents of an explicit response. It would not
have
hurt the CSARS to once more seek confirmation from the BRP as to
whether he is implementing the rejected BP before conceiving the
present application.
[19]
Not having taken such an elementary step,
the CSARS, in my view, was manifestly reckless in conceiving the
present application seeking
to interdict nothingness. On proper
consideration of the letter, it is crystal clear that the BRP in
making payments, he was clearing
historical debts and as correctly
contended, there is nothing in the Act to prohibit such an action. In
terms of section 140(1)(a)
of the CA, the BRP has full management
control of the company. Paying historical debts is part and parcel of
full control of the
company. There is no basis demonstrated why
despite this clear letter did the CSARS proceed with this
application. This in my view
evinces nothing but recklessness.
[20]
In the Court’s view, it is not
sufficient, in an attempt to satisfy the second requirement in rule
6(12) for a party to tersely
testify as follows:
“
113
For reasons fully set out hereinabove, SARS will not be able to
obtain substantial redress in a hearing in
the ordinary course.”
[21]
In motion proceedings, a party stands and
fall by a case made in its founding papers. In the founding
affidavit, under the heading
“urgency”, in the 14
paragraphs, this Court scoured through those paragraphs and was
unable to find reasons why a substantial
redress at the hearing in
due course may not be available. Even if the CSARS was correct in its
contention that the BRP was implementing
the BP, at the hearing of
the main application, the CSARS would obtain a substantial redress
when its vote against the BP is not
found to be inappropriate.
[22]
Having failed to meet the requirements of
rule 6(12) it must follow that this application must be struck off
the roll due to lack
of urgency. What then remains is the issue of
costs, which issue I now turn to.
The issue of costs
[23]
In
the ordinary course, since the BRP and Mkhabele has achieved success,
on application of the ordinary rule of costs following
the results,
they will be entitled to their costs. Although this Court chose not
to fully deal with the other two preliminary objections,
on the
binding authorities of
Kransfontein
Belegings (Pty) Ltd v Corlink Twenty Five (Pty) Ltd
[2]
and
Timasani
(Pty) Ltd (in business rescue) and another v Afrimat Iron Ore (Pty)
Ltd
[3]
those objections are bad in law. To that extend, CSARS achieved some
success in rebuffing those objections. On application of the
success
rule, both parties were successful.
[24]
However, in my view, the BRP is not
completely innocent for the reckless launching manifested in this
application. His letters and
evidence created an impression that he
is implementing the BP and not simply paying historical debts. It was
within the powers
of the BRP to make himself clear, particularly in
an instance where the CSARS stated in unambiguous terms that it is
acting unlawfully
by implementing the BP, that he is not implementing
the BP. Inasmuch as this Court takes a view that the CSARS was
reckless in
dealing with the contents of the letter of 13 March 2024,
the actions of the BRP are not completely innocuous for the launching
of this unnecessary application.
[25]
For all the above reasons, the appropriate
order to make in relation to costs is one where each party is liable
for its own costs.
[26]
For all the above reasons, I make the
following order:
Order
1.
The application is struck off the roll for
want of urgency
2.
Each party is liable for its own costs.
GN MOSHOANA
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
APPEARANCES:
For
Applicant:
Mr
J Motepe SC and Ms K Mogano
Instructed by:
Tshaya Mashabela
Attorneys
For Respondent:
M Snyman SC and Ms A
Mare
Instructed by:
Magda Kets Attorneys
Date
of the hearing:
28
May 2024
Date
of judgment:
30
May 2024
[1]
See
MM
v NM and others
(15133/23P)
[2023] ZAKZPHC 122 (18 October 2023).
[2]
2017 JDR 1577 (SCA) at para 18
[3]
(91/2020)
[2021] ZASCA 43
(13 April 2021) at paras 17, 19, 25 and 29
sino noindex
make_database footer start