Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 585South Africa
Smith and Others v Georgiou and Others (93417/2019) [2024] ZAGPPHC 585 (6 June 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
6 June 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Smith and Others v Georgiou and Others (93417/2019) [2024] ZAGPPHC 585 (6 June 2024)
Smith and Others v Georgiou and Others (93417/2019) [2024] ZAGPPHC 585 (6 June 2024)
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sino date 6 June 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case Number:
93417/2019
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2) OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: YES
DATE: 6 June 2024
SIGNATURE:
In
the matter between:
HENRY
ARDEN SMITH
First Applicant
ANDRE
HANEKOM
Second Applicant
CHRISTOFFEL
STEYN HOFFMANN
Third Applicant
DOREEN
BYRAM ABAN VAN DER
BERG
Fourth Applicant
ADRIAAN
DE KLERK STEYN
Fifth Applicant
JUDITH
ANNE
HUTCHINGS
Sixth Applicant
JACOBA
ELIZABETH STRAUSS
Seventh Applicant
THERESA
ALICE HODGETTS
Eight Applicant
ELIZABETH
CARYL HENRICO
Ninth Applicant
NICOLE
GURTSHMANN
Tenth Applicant
ESTHER
MARIE
ROUSSEAU
Eleventh Applicant
CHRISTINA
JACOBA HELENA LAUBSCHER
Twelfth Applicant
and
NICOLAS
GEORGIOU
First Respondent
MICHAEL
GEORGIOU
Second Respondent
GEORGE
NICOLAS GEORGIOU
Third Respondent
JOHANNES
FREDERICK KLOPPER N.O.
Fourth Respondent
JOHANNES
FREDERICK KLOPPER
Fifth Respondent
CORNELIUS
FOURIE MYBURGH
Sixth
Respondent
PANOGIOTIS
KLEOVOULOU
Seventh
Respondent
ZEPHAN
PROPERTIES (PTY) LTD
Eight Respondent
ORTHOTOUCH
LIMITED
Ninth Respondent
ORTHOTOUCH
(PTY) LIMITED
Tenth Respondent
NICOLAS
GEORGIOU N.O.
Eleventh Respondent
MAUREEN
LYNETTE GEORGIOU N.O
Twelfth Respondent
JOSEPH
CHEMALY N.O
.
Thirteenth Respondent
DEREK
PERDOE COHEN
Fourteenth Respondent
HIGHVELD
SYNDICATION NO 15 LIMITED
Fifteenth Respondent
HIGHVELD
SYNDICATION NO 16 LIMITED
Sixteenth Respondent
HIGHVELD
SYNDICATION NO 17 LIMITED
Seventeenth Respondent
HIGHVELD
SYNDICATION NO 18 LIMITED
Eighteenth Respondent
HIGHVELD
SYNDICATION NO 19 LIMITED
Nineteenth Respondent
HIGHVELD
SYNDICATION NO 20 LIMITED
Twentieth Respondent
HIGHVELD
SYNDICATION NO 21 LIMITED
Twenty-First Respondent
HIGHVELD
SYNDICATION NO 22 LIMITED
Twenty-Second Respondent
JUDGMENT
JANSE
VAN NIEUWENHUIZEN J
INTRODUCTION
[1] The
issue to be decided in this judgment is whether the issues pertaining
to the relief claimed
against Cohen, the fourteenth respondent,
should be separated from the remainder of the issues underlying the
relief claimed against
the other respondents. Cohen also contents
that a continuation of the proceedings against him will be an abuse
of process. In the
result a brief history of the matter will
suffice.
BACKGROUND
[2] The
application concerns the plight of thousands of investors, mostly
pensioners, who invested large
sums of money in an investment scheme,
known as the Highveld Syndication Scheme, from 2005 until 2009. The
scheme promised handsome
returns on the investments and more than
R4,6 billion in investments were received from investors. In reality
the scheme, however,
collapsed leaving the investors with little more
than empty promises.
[3] The
scheme entailed the creation of eight companies (the fifteenth to
twenty second respondents
“the HS companies”), which
companies would operate as property syndication companies. In terms
of the scheme investors
became shareholders in the HS companies.
[4] The
HS companies acquired commercial properties, which were let to
tenants and the income thus
received was supposed to result in
payments to the investors. The venture did not yield the necessary
returns and the HS companies
were placed in business rescue on or
about 7 September 2011. Klopper (the fourth respondent) was appointed
as the business rescue
practitioner of the companies. Klopper
prepared a business rescue plan which envisaged that Orthotouch (the
ninth respondent in
its capacity as a public company and the tenth
respondent in its capacity as a private company) would take transfer
of and grow
the investment portfolio of the HS companies. The plan
was formerly adopted on 14 December 2011.
[5] The
rescue plan did, however, not materialise. Orthotouch could not
perform in terms of the plan
and in order to rescue some form of
return for the investors, a Scheme of Arrangement was entered into
between Orthotouch, the
trade creditors and the investors. Cohen was
appointed as the receiver under the Scheme of Arrangements.
[6] The
Scheme of Arrangement proved to be another ill-fated attempt to
salvage the initial property
syndication scheme. On 9 November 2019
Orthotouch was also placed in business rescue.
[7] On
12 December 2019 the applicants, representing some 1800 disgruntled
investors launched the
present application. The applicants seek
inter
alia
leave to institute eight derivative actions on behalf of the
HS companies against Cohen and some of the other respondents. Leave
is also requested to institute eight separate class actions on behalf
of the investors against the HS companies.
[8] In
order to appreciate the relief claimed against Cohen, it is apposite
to give a brief overview
of the other role players. The first
respondent, Nicolas Georgiou (deceased) was the father of the second
and third respondents.
The applicants allege that the late Nicolas
Georgiou, through a company Pickvest Investment (Pty) Ltd, was the
mastermind behind
the property syndication scheme and a director of
various other companies that played a role in the ultimate demise of
the HS companies.
According to the applicants, the second and third
respondents were closely involved in the affairs of the
aforementioned companies.
[9]
Klopper is cited in his personal capacity as the fifth respondent.
Klopper is cited together with
the sixth and seven respondents as
directors of Orthotouch and it is alleged that they were intimately
involved in the affairs
of the company when the value of the HS
companies diminished by the day. The eight respondent, Zephan
Properties (Pty) Ltd and
the eleventeenth to thirteenth respondents,
in their capacities as trustees of the N Georgiou Trust, are cited as
securities and
co-principal debtors for the obligations of Orthotouch
under the business rescue plan.
[10] Although the
applicants have also launched a funding application against Cohen,
the relief sought in the
funding application will only become
relevant, should the relief in the main application be granted.
SEPARATION APPLICATION
MAIN APPLICATION
[11] The relief
claimed against Cohen in the main application is contained in Prayer
3 of the notice of motion,
and the relevant portions reads as
follows:
“
3.
That the applicants be granted leave under section 165(5) of the Act
to institute eight separate actions on behalf of, and in
the name of,
Fifteenth to Twenty-Second Respondents respectively (hereinafter “the
Highveld companies”) against Orthotouch
– and against
Eight Respondent (“Zephan”) and the N Georgiou Trust,
represented by Eleventh to Thirteenth Respondents,
as sureties and
co-principal debtors in respect of Orthotouch’s said
liabilities – for:
3.1
Payment of:
(a)
The purchase price of various properties sold to Orthotouch by the
respective Highveld Companies as set out in the Business
Rescue Plan
of Orthotouch
(sic)
I(“the
Plan”) as adopted on 14 December 2011; …
3.2
An order declaring that First to Third Respondents (Georgiou and his
sons) and the current and
erstwhile directors of Orthotouch (Being
Fifth, Sixth and Seventh Respondents)- herein after referred to as
“the directors
of Orthotouch” – and Fourteenth
Respondent
(“Cohen”)
,
are personally liable, jointly and severally, with Orthotouch for
payment to the Highveld companies of the aforementioned liability
(claim) referred to in paragraph 3.1 above, and for judgment against
them for payment thereof.
3.3
That it be declared, in terms of common law (alternatively in terms
of s 20(9) of the Act) that Orthotouch
shall be deemed not to be
juristic person in respect of any obligation by it towards the
Highveld company and the investors in
such companies – and
that, on that basis, the individuals referred to above be held
personally liable for the liabilities
of Orthotouch towards the
Highveld companies.”
[12] Further relief
is claimed in the alternative, which relief is not relevant for
present purposes.
[13] Factually, it
is common cause that Cohen only became involved in the HS companies
saga when he was appointed
as receiver in terms of the Scheme of
Arrangement that was concluded on 12 November 2014. Cohen resigned as
receiver during 2018.
[14] Upon a cursory
perusal of the factual averments made against Cohen in the founding
affidavit coupled with
the answers contained in Cohen’s
answering affidavit, I was of the view that there is at least a
prima
facie
case to be made for an order in terms of rule 33(4) or on
the abuse of process basis.
[15] Ms
Milovanovic-Bitter, counsel for Cohen, informed the court that Cohen
will, for purposes of this application,
not rely on any points in
limine
and both Ms Milovanovic-Bitter and Mr Maree, counsel
for the applicants addressed me at length on the merits of the
proposed claim
against Cohen.
[16] In preparing this judgment,
I had regard to the section relied upon by the applicants for the
relief claimed against
Cohen.
Section 165(5)
of the
Companies Act 71
of 2008
reads as follows:
“
(5) A
person who has made a demand in terms of subsection (2) may apply to
a court for leave to bring or continue proceedings in
the name and on
behalf of the company,
and the
court may grant leave only if—
(a) the
company—
(i) has
failed to take any particular step required by subsection (4);
(ii)
appointed an investigator or committee who was not independent and
impartial;
(iii)
accepted a report that was inadequate in its preparation, or was
irrational or unreasonable in its conclusions or recommendations;
(iv)
acted in a manner that was inconsistent with the reasonable report of
an independent, impartial investigator or committee;
or
(v)
has served a notice refusing to comply with the demand, as
contemplated
in
subsection (4)(b)(ii); and (b) the court is satisfied that—
(i)
the applicant is acting in good faith;
(ii)
the proposed or continuing proceedings involve the trial of a serious
question of material consequence to the company; and
(iii)
it is in the best interests of the company that the applicant be
granted leave to commence the proposed proceedings or continue
the
proceedings, as the case may be.”
(own
emphasis)
[17] On my reading of the
section, an application in terms of
section 165(5)
may only be
entertained by a court once the jurisdictional factors contained in
section 165(5)(a)
have been established.
[18] Neither counsel
addressed me on this point, most probably due to the fact that
Cohen did not rely on
any points
in limine
.
[19] The fact remains that
the application is brought in terms of
rule 165(5)(a)
, and the
jurisdictional requirements must first be satisfied before a court
may
entertain the merits of the application for leave to
bring the action against Cohen.
[20] The same issue also
arises in respect of the relief claimed against the other respondents
mentioned in prayer 3
and it will as a result, not be convenient to
separate the issues pertaining to the relief claimed against Cohen
from the remainder
of the issues pertaining to the relief claimed
against the other respondents. The same applies to the alternative
basis, to wit
whether the continuation of the proceedings against
Cohen is an abuse of process. Such finding can only be made, once the
merits
of the case against Cohen is considered.
[21] In view of the aforesaid
finding, it is premature to deal with the funding application.
COSTS
[22] Due to the fact
that the issue that informs the ruling in this judgment was not
canvassed by counsel, the
costs occasioned by the application in
terms of
rule 33(4)
will stand over to be adjudicated at the hearing
of the application.
Order:
1.
The application for a
separation of issues in terms of
rule 33(4)
is dismissed.
2.
Costs are reserved.
3.
The application against the
fourteenth respondent is postponed to 3 March 2025.
JANSE VAN NIEUWENHUIZEN, J
JUDGE OF THE HIGHT COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA
DATES HEARD:
13, 14 & 17 May 2024
DATE DELIVERED
6 June 2024
APPEARANCES
For the
Applicant’s:
Advocate Maree
Instructed
by:
Geyser
& Coetzee Attorneys
For
the 14
th
Respondent:
Advocate
Milovanovic-Bitter
Instructed
by:
Innes
R Steenekamp Attorneys
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