Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 691South Africa
Lexshell 824 Investments Proprietary Limited v Wiese (8603/2021) [2024] ZAGPPHC 691 (19 July 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
19 July 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Lexshell 824 Investments Proprietary Limited v Wiese (8603/2021) [2024] ZAGPPHC 691 (19 July 2024)
Lexshell 824 Investments Proprietary Limited v Wiese (8603/2021) [2024] ZAGPPHC 691 (19 July 2024)
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sino date 19 July 2024
FLYNOTES:
INSOLVENCY
– Sequestration –
Advantage
to creditors
–
Respondent
indebted to applicant pursuant to money judgment – Currently
employed – Made payment arrangements with
most creditors –
Significant risk that most creditors including applicant will not
recoup any of their claims –
Sequestration may realize risk
of respondent being removed as registered chartered accountant –
No advantage to creditors
– Application dismissed –
Insolvency Act 24 of 1936
.
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO: 8603/2021
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES/
NO
(2) OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
(3)
REVISED:
NO
Date: 19 July 2024
JA Kok
In
the matter between:
Lexshell
824 Investments Proprietary Limited
APPLICANT
and
Wiese,
Pieter Jacobus
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
Kok
AJ
Introduction
[1]
The applicant applied for the provisional
sequestration of the respondent. The respondent is married out
of community of property.
No relief is sought against the
respondent's wife.
[2]
The applicant asserted that (a) the respondent
is
heavily indebted to the applicant pursuant to a money judgment, and
accordingly the applicant is a creditor of the respondent,
in a
liquidated amount exceeding a sum of US$12 million; (b) the
respondent is in fact insolvent as envisaged in
section 9(3)(a)(v)
of
the
Insolvency Act 24 of 1936
, alternatively, the respondent has
committed an act of insolvency in the manner contemplated in section
8(a) of the Insolvency
Act; and (c) the sequestration of the
respondent’s estate would be to the advantage of his creditors.
[3]
The respondent put in issue that the sequestration
would not be to the advantage of his creditors. This is the
only issue
that I am called upon to adjudicate.
[4]
At the start of proceedings, I allowed both
parties to submit further affidavits, in my discretion, on the basis
that the
matter should be adjudicated
upon all the facts relevant to the issues in dispute. The
parties did not oppose their respective
applications for leave to
file further affidavits.
[5]
I am indebted to both parties' counsel for their
comprehensive heads of argument. Where appropriate I relied on their
heads in crafting
this judgment.
The applicant's case
[6]
The applicant made the following submissions in
its written heads of arguments.
[7]
There is reason to believe that it will be to the
advantage of creditors if the estate of the respondent is
sequestrated for
inter alia
the following reasons: (1) the respondent has been
involved in businesses both as a director and member over a
substantial period
in his life to reasonably have acquired assets,
including both movable and immovable assets; and (2) upon
sequestration of the
respondent’s estate, the insolvency
mechanism will allow the appointed trustee to take charge of the
respondent's estate,
conduct an investigation and inquiry into the
respondent's financial position and the respondent’s actions
regarding his
estate with the view of reporting to the respondent’s
creditors, taking any appropriate action.
[8]
In the present case, the known facts concerning
the indebtedness of the respondent and his extensive business
dealings provides
the basis for concluding that there is a reasonable
prospect that there will be an advantage to creditors, even if the
extent of
the pecuniary advantage is not capable of being positively
determined. There is, therefore, reason to believe that there may be
a further advantage to creditors resulting from the inquiry to follow
in the sense that further assets may be revealed.
[9]
Through paragraph 5.3.1 and 5.3.2 of the Schedule
to the 2017 English Consent Order, the respondent and the other
defendants acknowledged
that they in July 2017 owned all of the
shares in the share capital of two international companies: (i)
CallAll, and (ii) Sao Tome
Investments. The litigation that led to
the 2017 English Consent Order emanated from the defendants having
secured proceeds from
a multimillion US Dollar transaction (US$120
million) and failing to honour their contractual commitments to,
inter alia
,
pay over a portion of those proceeds to the applicant.
[10]
The extent of the business affairs of the
respondent and the existence of assets acquired by and/or disposed of
by the respondent,
can be investigated by a trustee. In particular, a
trustee can investigate how someone like the respondent who clearly
had massive
financial investments in mining operations throughout his
professional career has been unable to satisfy any part of the 2017
English
Consent Order since July 2017.
[11]
It does not appear that there exists a means for
the applicant (and any other creditors of the respondent) to obtain
payment other
than through sequestration, given the respondent’s
silence about the extent of his assets and whether or not he is
gainfully
employed currently.
[12]
The facts of this case bear a striking resemblance
to those adjudicated in
ABSA Bank Ltd v
Rhebokskloof (Pty) Ltd
1993 (4) SA 436
(C). There, the court had to rule whether the estate of a heavily
indebted individual who had been ‘sketchy’ in presenting
the extent of his assets and liabilities in a sequestration
application pursued by a financial institution against his estate was
a candidate for provisional sequestration.
[13]
During the hearing, the applicant's counsel
fleshed out the written heads to make the case that the respondent
had been economical
with the truth and had not taken the court into
his confidence. The respondent is a chartered accountant, not
the typical
indigent litigant. The applicant alleges that he
and his family will be prejudiced if he is sequestrated, but he does
not
set out his family's financial position. The respondent did
not provide his bank statements to show how he is generating a
monthly income. He did not provide any information on his
wife's financial position and her contribution to the income of
the
family. The respondent had been involved in financial
transactions involving millions of rands. He is quiet on
whether and in which amounts he received proceeds from these
transactions. The respondent's debt on the home loan that he
obtained in 2007 is still at a significant level (R2.4 million) and
he does not explain why this debt is still at this level.
The
respondent does not explain how he was able to raise the short-term
debts listed in his liabilities. No property evaluation
of his
residential home was provided. The respondent did not file an
affidavit from his employer to confirm that he will
no longer be
employed if he loses his membership of the
South African
Institute of Chartered Accountants (see paragraphs 28-30 below).
He did not provide his contract of employment.
The respondent's case
[14]
The respondent made the following submissions.
[15]
The respondent's full financial affairs have already been placed
before this
Honourable Court under oath. Further investigations
into the affairs of the respondent will not reveal a reasonable
prospect
that some pecuniary benefit will result to his creditors.
[16]
In terms of
Body Corporate of Empire Gardens v Sithole
2017
(4) SA 161
(SCA), the applicant must prove that the sequestration of
the respondent's estate would be a benefit to the creditors of the
respondent
as a whole and not to the benefit of a single creditor.
[17]
The applicant submitted that none of the defendants to the English
Consent
Order, which includes the respondent, has fulfilled their
payment obligations to the applicant. The respondent does do not know
the financial circumstances of the fourth and fifth judgment debtor,
being Mr van Niekerk and the Avalon Trust. The other judgment
debtors
are Mikakor and Mr Christo Floris Wiese.
[18]
The respondent is the
sole director of Mikakor, the first judgment debtor of the English
Consent Order. Mikakor's
only
potential
income
is
a
loan
to
the
respondent
of R964 000.00.
Mikakor is currently indebted to SARS for R3 034 405.68. Mikakor does
not hold shares and/or interests in
any third party and is currently
not trading.
[1]
Mikakor does not
have the necessary assets to satisfy any portion of the English
Consent Order. The respondent's father, Mr Christo
Floris Wiese and
the third judgment debtor of the English Consent Order, had been
sequestrated.
[19]
The approximate value of the respondent's personal effects (movable
property)
is R300 000.00. The respondent is the owner of an immovable
property with an estimated force sale value of R3 300 000.00. ABSA
Bank Limited has two registered bonds in their favour over the
respondent's immovable property, to the cumulative value of
approximately
R2 450 000.00. The bond agreements commenced on
March 2007 and will continue for a period of 20 years. The
respondent's combined
total assets amount to approximately R3 850
000.00.
[20]
The respondent's approximate liabilities are as follows:
Applicant's
claim
R303 694 607.53
ABSA
home loan
R2 879 932
Mikakor
loan
R964 000
Standard
Bank vehicle finance
R192 307
Afrikaans
Hoër Seunskool
R85 080
City
of Tshwane municipal account
R33 242
ABSA
credit card
R63 542
FNB
credit card
R121 485
FNB
revolving loan
R37 126
SARS
R470 470.56
[21]
The respondent is actively negotiating with ABSA Bank Limited on a
repayment
plan of his home loan debts pursuant to summons being
issued by the bank. He has current monthly payment arrangements in
place
with a number of creditors:
SARS
R5 000
Standard
Bank vehicle finance R6 799.34
Afrikaans
Hoër Seunskool
R7 500
ABSA
credit card
R2 869
FNB
credit card
R7 485.30
FNB
revolving loan
R1 500
[22]
There is no evidence before the court as to the value of payments
made by the
other judgment debtors to the applicant since the filing
of the applicant's heads of argument, nor any evidence to suggest
that
the applicant is attempting to enforce the judgment award
against Mr van Niekerk and the Avalon Trust. Therefore, given the
uncertainly
in this regard, together with the knowledge that Mikakor
has not made any payments towards the judgment debt and the
assumption
that Mr Wiese's estate has not made any contributions
either, the respondent has for calculation purposes, took the value
of the
entire English Consent Order into account when calculating the
potential dividends.
[23]
Having regard to the respondent's assets and liabilities, if the
respondent
is sequestrated, the concurrent creditors would at best
receive a dividend of less than one cent to the rand.
[24]
A provisional or final sequestration order may realise the risk of
having the
respondent removed as a registered chartered accountant
from the South African Institute of Chartered Accountants and if that
happens
his employment will be terminated.
[25]
The respondent is a chartered accountant by trade, registered with
the South
African Institute of Chartered Accountants. Being a member
of the South African Institute of Chartered Accountants, he is bound
by the By-Laws and Appendices of the South African Institute of
Chartered Accountants. The relevant part of these rules provides
that:
"26. Cancellation of
membership
26.3 A member whose
estate has been provisionally or finally sequestrated, subsequent to
admission to membership, shall within 21(twenty
one) days, satisfy
PCC that there were either exceptional or legitimate business related
circumstances regarding the sequestration
which would justify the PCC
not to exercise its discretion to order the cancellation of his/her
membership.
26.6 When the membership
of a person is cancelled in terms of By-law 26.1, 26.2 or 26.3 the
Board shall remove his or her name from
the register immediately,
advising the Regional Councils of the action taken and demand from
the ex-member the return of his certificate".
[26]
The respondent is currently employed as a chartered accountant at
Precious
Metals Tshwane. If the respondent is provisionally
sequestrated, he may be removed as a registered chartered accountant
from the
South African Institute of Chartered Accountants and if that
happens, the respondent's employment will be terminated.
[27]
If the respondent is provisionally sequestrated and thus ultimately
dismissed,
he would not be able to keep up with his monthly
obligations to his creditors which would be to the determinant of the
creditors
as a whole.
[28]
The sequestration will furthermore be prejudicial to ABSA Bank as it
would
bring about the end of the bond agreements between the
respondent and ABSA Bank, which would have the effect of depriving
ABSA
Bank Limited of the accrued interest on the bonded amount for
the duration of the bond agreements.
[29]
The sequestration will also prejudice the creditors as it would bring
about the
end of the repayment agreements in place with them. This in
turn will have the effect that instead of having been paid in full in
a short period of time, those identified creditors will only receive
a pittance of the amounts owed to them, if anything at all,
and only
after a lengthy sequestration process. Furthermore, and assuming the
said creditors lodge a claim against the insolvent
estate, they would
bear the risk that they may be liable to contribute to the
administration costs incurred as there will not be
sufficient residue
to cover the costs of sequestration and administration of the
insolvent estate.
[30]
In addition to the authorities referred to above,
both parties relied on
Meskin v Friedman
1948 (2) SA 555
(W) and
Stratford
v Investec Bank Limited
2015 (3) SA 1
(CC) in support of their submissions.
Analysis
[31]
As I read
Meskin v
Friedman
1948 (2) SA 555
(W) 559, the
"advantage to creditors" criterion is not met by only
asserting that sequestration will allow for the inquisitory
powers in
the
Insolvency Act to
take its full effect. There has to a case
made for some pecuniary benefit for the creditors.
Stratford
v Investec Bank Limited
2015 (3) SA 1
(CC) para 44 held that the "advantage" criterion and the
"not-negligible pecuniary benefit" that flows from
this
advantage, are broad concepts that should not be rigidified.
[32]
The
benefit to creditors does not have to exist as an immediate financial
benefit - there must be a not too remote prospect that
as a result of
the inquiry process in terms of the
Insolvency Act, some
assets will
be uncovered.
[2]
[33]
As I interpret the caselaw on this point, the
papers have to lay the basis for this "not too remote"
prospect. I
mention a few applicable cases. In
Stratford
(para 46), the applicant detailed
potentially impeachable transactions of R37 million. In
Hawker
Air Services
para 30, the papers
showed that the partnership what was sequestrated was involved in a
suspicious transaction when an aircraft
of which it was the
beneficial owner was transferred to a new partnership for new
discernible return.
Lynn &
Main Inc v Naidoo and another
2006
(1) SA 59
(N) para 36, on the papers and the respondents' financial
statements, involved suspicious transactions with a family trust
controlled
by the respondents.
Dunlop
Tyres (Pty) Ltd v Brewitt
1999 (2)
SA 580
(W) 584-585 likewise on the papers showed various dubious
transactions involving two companies and a children's trust,
sufficient
for the court to conclude that the respondent had
something to hide.
[34]
Lotzof v Raubenheimer
1959 (1) SA 90
(O) 94A-B is explicit about this requirement - a
reasonable case must be made out on the papers for an inquiry into
the debtor's
finances which may be of benefit to the creditors.
[35]
The applicant submitted that
ABSA
Bank Ltd v Rhebokskloof (Pty) Ltd
1993
(4) SA 436
(C) is comparable to the current matter. On my
reading of
Rhebokskloof
,
it is distinguishable. The judge in
Rhebokskloof
referred to the "muddy" and "murky"
picture of the respondent's assets and liabilities presented on the
papers.
The papers also contained a
prima
facie
indication of serious
irregularities of the respondent in relation to certain commercial
transactions. In
Rhebokskloof
the facts therefore indicated that there was a
prospect that an investigation by the trustee of the insolvent estate
would uncover
assets. In the present matter, the respondent
listed his assets and liabilities. On the papers there is no
suggestion
of irregular or dubious financial transactions or
impeachable transactions other than the assertion that based on the
size of previous
commercial transactions that the respondent had been
involved in, there must be assets available somewhere.
[36]
Body Corporate of Empire Gardens v Sithole
2017 (4) SA 161
(SCA) does not create new law. The SCA helpfully restates the
current South African insolvency law in para 10 of the judgment:
The phrase 'advantage to
creditors' is not defined in the
Insolvency Act, but
if the principle
of concursus creditorum is taken into account, it means that there
should be a reasonable prospect of some pecuniary
benefit to the
general body of creditors as a whole. (See
Lynn
& Main Inc v Naidoo and Another
2006
(1) SA 59 (N)
paras
33-35;
Ex
parte Bouwer and Similar Applications
2009
(6) SA 382
(GNP)
para
13.) This requirement is fulfilled where it is established that there
is reason to believe that there will be advantage to
a 'substantial
proportion' or the majority of the creditors reckoned by value. (See
Fesi and
Another v Absa Bank Ltd
2000
(1) SA 499
(C)
at
505-506;
Trust
Wholesalers and Woollens (Pty) Ltd v Mackan
1954
(2) SA 109 (N)
;
Samsudin
v De Villiers
Berrange
NO
[2006]
SCA 79 (RSA).) Although advantage to creditors is not a rigid concept
(
Stratford
and Others v Investec Bank Ltd and Others
2015
(3) SA 1
(CC)
para
44), it requires proof of a tangible benefit to the general body of
creditors.
[37]
Hillhouse v Stott; Freban Investments (Pty)
Ltd v Itzkin; Botha v Botha
1990 (4)
SA 580
(W) 586, all matters concerning sequestration applications
where it was clear that there were no further assets, held that a
very
small dividend in the rand amounts to a negligible benefit to
creditors.
Stratford
para
44, referencing Meskin, seems to hold that any payment to creditors,
however small it may be, will suffice, "
unless
some other means of dealing with the debtor's predicament is likely
to yield a larger such payment".
[38]
As I read the papers, the respondent was involved
in commercial transactions that went disastrously wrong for him and
the other
judgment debtors in the dealings that lead to the applicant
obtaining the 2017 English Consent Order. It is telling that
the applicant has not pursued enforcement of the Consent Order
against the other judgment debtors.
[39]
There is a considerable risk that no dividend will
be realised and that debtors who proved their claims will be obliged
to contribute
to the sequestration costs.
[40]
The respondent puts it too strongly when he
asserts that should he be sequestrated, that he "will" lose
his employment.
In terms of the
By-Laws and Appendices
of the South African Institute of Chartered Accountants that he
relies on, on sequestration the respondent
will have to make a case
to the relevant governing body why he should not be removed from the
register of chartered accountants.
It is in the governing
body's discretion to keep him on the register or not. The
respondent did not attach an affidavit from
this employer as to why
he "will" of necessity lose his employment if he is removed
from the register of chartered accountants.
[41]
The respondent has made repayment arrangements
with most of his creditors. He is in salaried employment and there is
a reasonable
prospect that he will continue to make these
repayments. If he is sequestrated, there is a significant risk
that most of
the creditors, including the applicant, will not recoup
any of their claims. The respondent's creditors have the usual
debt
enforcement mechanisms at their disposal, which will likely lead
to a larger payment to them than having the respondent sequestrated.
ORDER
In
the result, the following order is granted:
1.
The application is dismissed.
2.
Each party to bear its own costs.
JA Kok
Acting 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 applicant:
TR
Seroto
Instructed by:
Fasken incorporated
in South Africa as Bell
Dewar Inc
For the respondent:
DP Viller
Instructed by:
Julian Knight &
Associates Inc
Date of the
hearing:
21 February 2024
Date of judgment:
19 July 2024
[1]
In
his oral argument, counsel for the applicant argued that the terms
and the circumstances in which the loan was made, was not
explained
by the respondent.
[2]
Commissioner,
South African Revenue Services v Hawker Air Services (Pty) Ltd;
Commissioner, South African Revenue Service v Hawker
Aviation
Partnership and others
[2006] ZASCA 51
;
2006
(4) SA 292
(SCA) para 29.
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