Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 810South Africa
Lovely v Starbuck N.O and Others (42820/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 810 (13 August 2024)
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as follows:[4]
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Lovely v Starbuck N.O and Others (42820/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 810 (13 August 2024)
Lovely v Starbuck N.O and Others (42820/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 810 (13 August 2024)
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sino date 13 August 2024
SAFLII
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Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO: 42820 / 2023
1.
REPORTABLE: NO
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
3.
REVISED: YES
DATE:
13 August 2024
SIGNATURE
OF JUDGE:
In
the matter between:
TIMANA
LOVELY
Applicant
and
CONRAD
ALEXANDER STARBUCK N.O.
First Respondent
AMANDA
KANYISA BIKANI N.O.
Second Respondent
MASTER
OF THE HIGH COURT
Third Respondent
NEDBANK
LIMITED
Fourth Respondent
PREVANCE
CAPITAL (PTY) LTD
Sixth Respondent
MBOMBELA
CROCODILE HOLIDAY RESORT
AND
SPA (PTY) LTD
Seventh Respondent
JUDGMENT
Woodrow, AJ:
Introduction:
[1]
Timana Properties (Pty) Ltd (“
Timana Properties
”)
was placed in final liquidation on 16 September 2019, the fourth
respondent (“
Nedbank
”) being the petitioning
creditor.
[2]
The first and second respondents were appointed as the liquidators of
Timana Properties.
[3]
The applicant, the sole shareholder of Timana Properties, issued the
present
application in May 2023 seeking an order in the following
terms:
1.
That TIMANA PROPERTIES (PTY) LIMITED (In Liquidation) with
registration number 2013/159336/07
("the Company") be
discharged from liquidation.
2.
That the First and Second Respondents, in their capacities as Joint
Liquidator of
Timana Properties (Pty) Ltd (in liquidation) under
Master Reference Number: T2719/17, are divested of their statutory
powers, and
subject to the conclusion of the process envisaged in 4
and 5 below.
3.
That the affairs, assets and management of the Company to re-vest in
the hands of
the Third Respondent (the Master of the High Court),
until the finalisation of the process envisaged in 5 and 6 below.
4.
That the affairs, assets and management of TIMANA PROPERTIES (PTY)
LIMITED (In Liquidation)
with registration number 2013/159336/07
("the Company") be restored and re-vest in the hands of the
Directors of the
Company, subject to the condition in 4 and 5 below.
5.
That the First and Second Respondents, in their capacities as Joint
Liquidator of
Timana Properties (Pty) Ltd (in liquidation) under
Master Reference Number: T2719/17, submit their Final Report to the
Master of
the High Court, Pretoria within
30 (Thirty) days
of
the date of this Court Order.
6.
The effect and/or implementation of Order 4 above is to take effect
from the date
of acceptance and/or approval of Final Report
(envisaged in 5 above) by the Master of the High Court, Pretoria.
7.
That the costs of this application be costs in the liquidated estate
of TIMANA PROPERTIES
(PTY) LIMITED (In Liquidation) under Master
Reference Number: T2719/17], alternatively, that the Applicant pay
the costs of this
application, apart from any costs of opposition
which will be sought against the opposing party or person;
8.
Granting such further and/or alternative relief as this Honourable
Court may consider
appropriate.
[4]
The liquidators opposed the application and filed an answering
affidavit. No replying
affidavit or heads of argument were filed on
behalf of the applicant. On the day of the hearing, counsel appeared
on behalf of
the applicant and indicated that he had been briefed at
a late stage. A request for the matter to stand down to Thursday 8
August
2024 was declined by me for the reasons given by me in open
court. The applicant and the liquidators then proceeded to argue
their
respective cases.
The
application:
[5]
The
liquidators contend that the relief sought by the applicant in her
notice of motion is incompetent – they argue that the
applicant
seeks an order that Timana Properties “
be
discharged from liquidation
”
[1]
but does not seek an order rescinding the liquidation order (granted
in 2019). Further, the liquidators state that there is no
case made
out for the aforesaid or for the further relief sought.
[6]
In my view, there is merit in the aforesaid opposition of the
liquidators. The applicant
has not made out a case for the relief
that she seeks.
[7]
At the
hearing of the matter counsel for the applicant indicated that the
applicant proceeds only in respect of prayer 1 of the
notice of
motion
[2]
and on the basis of
section 354 (of the Companies Act, Act 61 of 1973 (the “
Companies
Act, 1973
”)).
I shall return to this later in this judgment.
[8]
At the hearing, I raised the issue of service of the application.
Pursuant thereto,
a return of service was handed up in respect of
service on 5 June 2023 of the application on Nedbank. In support of
service on
the Master, I was referred to the stamp on the notice of
motion at CaseLines 001-8. This does not prove service on the Master
–
the stamp is that of the Registrar of the High Court and not
that of the Master. The applicant has failed to demonstrate proper
service of the application.
[9]
The liquidators further take the point that the applicant has failed
to join all creditors
and has failed to serve the application on all
creditors. The application papers are wholly unhelpful in regard to
identifying
all creditors of Timana Properties. The applicant in its
founding papers refers to two secured creditors, namely Nedbank and
the
sixth respondent, Prevance Capital (Pty) Ltd (“
Prevance
”).
The answering papers of the liquidators are also of not much
assistance in this regard, possibly due in part to the defective
founding papers. There is an indication in the second and final
liquidation, distribution and contribution account that the South
African Receiver of Revenue (“
SARS
”) is owed
amounts. There are also
inter alia
various other references in
the second and final liquidation, distribution and contribution
account regarding various other “
payment[s] to be made
”
and costs payable, none of which is dealt with by the applicant. The
applicant has failed to properly address all relevant
facts in the
founding affidavit.
[10]
Even if one is to adopt a benevolent approach and to accept that
prayer 1 of the notice
of motion is an ineloquently worded prayer in
terms of section 354 of the Companies Act, 1973, and that the failure
to properly
serve the application can be overlooked, the application
stands to be dismissed on a more fundamental basis, namely that the
applicant
has failed to make out a case for the relief that she
seeks.
[11]
Section 354 of the Companies Act, 1973, provides as follows:
354. Court
may stay or set aside winding-up.
—
(1)
The Court may at any time after the commencement of a winding-up, on
the application
of any liquidator, creditor or member, and on proof
to the satisfaction of the Court that all proceedings in relation to
the winding-up
ought to be stayed or set aside, make an order staying
or setting aside the proceedings or for the continuance of any
voluntary
winding-up on such terms and conditions as the Court may
deem fit.
(2)
The Court may, as to all matters relating to a winding-up, have
regard to the wishes
of the creditors or members as proved to it by
any sufficient evidence.
[12]
By virtue
of Item 9 of Schedule 5 to the Companies
Act, Act 71 of 2008, section
354 of the (repealed) Companies
Act, 1973, remains in force
until a date to be determined.
[13]
These
provisions accord to the Court a discretion to set aside a winding-up
order on the basis (
a
)
that the institution of the winding-up should not have occurred at
all and (
b
)
consequent upon events which have happened subsequent to such
institution of the winding-up. In
Ward v Smit:
In re Gurr v Zambia Airways Corporation Ltd
,
[3]
the SCA held as follows:
[4]
The language of the
section is wide enough to afford the Court a discretion to set aside
a winding-up order both on the basis that
it ought not to have been
granted at all and on the basis that it falls to be set aside by
reason of subsequent events. …
[14]
The application is not brought on the basis that the liquidation
order should not
have been granted in the first place. No case is
made out for such relief.
[15]
In the context of a case brought in terms of section 354 based on
subsequent events, the
question arises as to what is contemplated by
“…
proof to the satisfaction of the Court that all
proceedings in relation to the winding-up ought to be … set
aside …
”.
[16]
In
Commissioner,
South African Revenue Service v Nyhonyha and Others
,
[5]
the SCA,
[6]
quite recently
held:
[7]
(my emphasis)
I agree with the authors
of Henochsberg on the Companies Act 61 of 1973 5 ed at
748 that where, as is the case here,
the setting aside of a
winding-up is sought on the basis of subsequent events,
the
test is whether the facts show that the continuance of the winding-up
would be unnecessary or undesirable
.
In Ex parte Strip Mining (Pty) Ltd: In re Natal Coal Exploration
Co Ltd (In liquidation) (Kangra Group (Pty) Ltd and Another
intervening)
1999
(1) SA 1086
(SCA) at 1091I, this court stated that the
expression ‘proof to the satisfaction of the Court’
refers to ‘the
normal standard of proof of the facts which are
to lead the Court to hold that the winding-up “ought” to
be set aside’.
Thus,
the
test for setting aside a winding-up under s 354 on the basis of
subsequent events, is whether the applicant has proved facts
that
show that it is unnecessary or undesirable for the winding-up to
continue.
This does not involve a choice between permissible alternatives. The
test is either satisfied or it is not.
[17]
The
onus
is on the applicant to prove facts to show that it is
unnecessary or undesirable for the winding-up to continue.
[18]
The court
in
Klass
v Contract Interiors CC (in liquidation) and others
,
[8]
dealt with the discretion of the court in setting aside the
proceedings for the winding-up of a close corporation. At paragraph
65, the court held as follows:
[65]
In summary, based upon the above cases, it is my opinion that the
following principles apply to the
exercise of the court's discretion
to set aside a winding-up proceeding under s 354 of the Companies
Act:
[65.1] The
court's discretion is practically unlimited, although it must take
into account surrounding circumstances
and the wishes of parties in
interest, such as the liquidator, creditors and members.
[65.2] The
court should ordinarily not set aside a winding-up where creditors or
the liquidators remain unpaid or inadequate
provision has been made
for the payment of their claims.
[65.3] Where
the claims of the liquidator and all creditors have been satisfied,
the court should have regard to the
wishes of the members, unless
those members have bound themselves not to object to the
setting-aside order, or the member concerned
will receive no less as
a result of the order sought than would be the case if the company
remained in liquidation.
[65.4] In
deciding whether or not to grant a setting-aside order, the court
should, where appropriate, have regard to
issues of 'commercial
morality', 'the public interest' and whether the continuation of the
winding-up proceedings would be a 'contrivance'
or render the
winding-up 'the instrument of injustice'.
[19]
In the present matter, the applicant has failed to show on the facts
that the continuance
of the winding-up would be unnecessary or
undesirable. The founding affidavit, a 13 page document, does not
state very much at
all. In fact, the portion of the entire founding
affidavit that may conceivably deal with the merits of the matter
comprises approximately
7 pages (the remainder being devoted to
citation of parties, the commissioning section
et cetera
).
[20]
The bald allegations of the applicant in support of the application
include the following:
18. I hastily state
that the Company has now been released from the major financial
obligations and this, following the settlement
and/or payment of
various financial obligations the Company had undertaken previously.
The assets of the Company now exceed its
liabilities and is solvent.
…
26. Notwithstanding the
transfer of the Mpumalanga Property to Mbombela, the value of the
assets of the Company exceed its liabilities
and is accordingly,
solvent.
27. Whether or not the
Mpumalanga Property is transferred to Mbombela, there is no longer
any need for the Company to be liquidated
as there are no further
benefits to creditors.
…
29. I hastily state
that the Joint Liquidators have delayed the finalisation of the
winding up of the affairs of the Company
and necessitating the need
to bring this application.
…
31. Accordingly, the
Joint Liquidators have failed in their duties and responsibilities
and have failed to act with the necessary
degree of care and skill
during the administration of the affairs of the Company. There is
certainly, no basis for the Company
to continue being in liquidation.
…
[21]
Simply put, the allegations in the founding affidavit do not make out
a case for the relief
sought by the applicant.
[22]
The applicant fails to indicate whether there are any other creditors
of Timana Properties
apart from the two secured creditors referred to
in the founding papers (and as reflected in the second and final
liquidation,
distribution and contribution account), namely Nedbank
and Prevance.
[23]
Even in
respect of Nedbank, the founding affidavit falls woefully short. The
applicant states that at the time of the liquidation
application,
[9]
a certain close corporation, namely Khukhanya Marketing CC and Timana
Properties “
were
indebted to Nedbank in respect of various amounts
”
recorded in a settlement agreement (“
LM4
”)
which was made an order of court (“
LM5
”).
A perusal of the settlement agreement reflects an indebtedness on the
part of Timana Properties (jointly and severally
with other parties
to the settlement) in the following sums (plus interest and ancillary
fees and costs) in respect of various
agreements referred to therein:
a.
the sum of
R2,683,725.00
in respect of a current account;
b.
the sum of
R367,873.30
in respect of an instalment sale
agreement with number 2[...];
c.
the sum of
R147,137.43
in respect of an instalment sale
agreement with number 2[...];
d.
the sum of
R490,694.03
in respect of an instalment sale
agreement with number 2[...];
e.
the sum of
R446,739.99
in respect of an instalment sale
agreement with number 2[...];
f.
the sum of
R1,003,586.80
in respect of a mortgage bond
agreement with number 1[...];
g.
the sum of
R921,363.70
in respect of a mortgage bond agreement
with number 1[...].
[24]
The settlement agreement includes various further terms, including
inter alia
that should payments not be made on due dates that
the full amounts shall become immediately due and payable, for costs,
for consents
to judgment
et cetera
. Be this as it may, the
applicant in her founding affidavit confirms an indebtedness on the
part of Timana Properties to Nedbank
at the time of the liquidation
in the sum (in respect of capital alone) in excess of R6,000,000.
[25]
The applicant attaches a letter from Nedbank dated 8 October 2020 in
support of the
fact that the liquidators have paid the full mortgage
bond account with number 1[...] (“
LM7
”) to
Nedbank. As set out above, the settlement agreement refers to a
capital amount in this regard in the sum of R1,003,586.80.
In fact,
the applicant states in paragraph 30.7 of the founding affidavit that
Nedbank “…
were paid only R927 107, 00 …
”.
There is no explanation furnished by the applicant regarding the
balance of the amount that the applicant alleges was due
to Nedbank –
a difference of some R5 million.
[26]
I am
cognisant of the statement by the liquidators noting “…
that
Nedbank's debt was settled.
”
However, this must be read in the context of the paragraphs which are
being responded to, as well as the fact that the paragraph
in the
answering affidavit containing the aforesaid statement is prefaced by
a denial. Further, the second and final liquidation,
distribution and
contribution account evidence the fact that Nedbank has not been paid
in full, a deficiency in the sum of R3,462,652.57
being recoded
therein. The judgment of Her Ladyship Justice Teffo dated 11 November
2020 at CaseLines 005-97 further confirms that
Nedbank was not
settled in full.
[10]
[27]
In respect of Prevance Capital, the applicant relies on various
agreements that she alleges were
concluded including a sale agreement
dated March 2021 of a property, portion 5[…] of the farm
Schagen (“
Farm Schagen
”) between Timana Properties
(represented by the liquidators) as seller and the seventh respondent
(“
Mbombela
”) as purchaser, and Prevance as the
bondholder (the “
sale agreement
”), a cession
agreement between Timana Properties and Prevance (the “
cession
agreement
”), and a loan agreement between Prevance and
Mbombela (the “
loan agreement
”).
[28]
There are various issues that are problematic in respect of the sale
agreement attached to the
founding affidavit – for example: it
does not contain the signatures of all of the parties to the sale
agreement, it contains
suspensive conditions which the applicant does
not allege were fulfilled. The loan agreement attached by the
applicant to the founding
papers is not signed by any of the parties
to the aforesaid agreement
et cetera
.
[29]
Despite the sale agreement being entered into in March 2021, the Farm
Schagen has not been
transferred to Mbombela to date.
[30]
The cession agreement attached to the founding affidavit provides
that Timana Properties
is indebted to Prevance “
in an amount
exceeding R9 500 000.00
”. The (unsigned) loan
agreement attached to the founding affidavit (“
LM10
”)
provides that Timana Properties is indebted to Prevance “
in
an amount of R14.500.000.
” The sale agreement between
Timana Properties and Mbombela provides for a purchase price of
R9,500,000.00 (none of which
will be received by Timana Properties,
if the cession is enforced). Despite an allegation to the contrary on
the part of the applicant,
on the applicant’s own version,
Timana Properties is insolvent. The liquidators confirm also that
Timana Properties is insolvent.
[31]
The second and final liquidation and distribution account reflects
inter alia
:
a.
an indebtedness to Nedbank in the sum of R3,462,652.57, and a
deficiency in respect
of Nedbank in the same amount;
b.
an indebtedness to Prevance in the sum of R21,426,297.31, and a
deficiency in respect
of Prevance in the sum of R13,340,064.62
[32]
The applicant states nothing about any assets of Timana Properties
but for two immovable
properties. One of the properties has been sold
and transferred by the liquidators. The other, the Farm Schagen, is
the subject
of the sale agreement in which the Farm Schagen is to be
transferred to Mbombela. The applicant makes no mention of any other
assets
or property of Timana Properties. In circumstances where it
appears that Timana Properties is insolvent, where the liquidators of
the company are still in the process of dealing with the sale of the
Farm Schagen (which appears to be the only asset of Timana
Properties), and where the applicant provides no facts in support of
an allegation that the continuance of the winding-up would
be
unnecessary or undesirable, there is no case made out by the
applicant in terms of section 354 of the Companies Act, 1973.
[33]
In addition
to the aforesaid, the applicant fails to deal at all with the
position of the liquidators. No provision has been made
by the
applicant for the payment of the expenses of the liquidators nor for
sufficiently securing payment. The argument advanced
by counsel on
behalf of the applicant, including that all that is left in respect
of the winding up proceedings is the section
89 costs, being a fight
between the liquidators and Prevance, and submissions to the effect
that absent prior written authorisation
of the creditors as
contemplated by section 73 of the Insolvency Act,
[11]
the liquidators are not entitled to have incurred costs in respect of
certain litigation, misses the point. These arguments do
not serve to
meet the
onus
that the applicant bears in her application in terms of section 354
of the Companies Act, 1973. Further, this is not the case that
the
applicant brought in her founding affidavit. The liquidators who
stand to lose control of the assets by reason of a setting
aside of
the winding up ought normally to be properly safeguarded in relation
to their expenses. This the applicant has failed
to do at all.
[34]
A further factor militating against a finding that the continuation
of the liquidation
proceedings be set aside is that Timana Properties
has been in final liquidation for almost five years now. The grant of
the application
sought by the applicant will likely lead to many
practical difficulties, and further disputes. (
cf.
Aubrey M
Cramer Ltd v Wells NO
1965 (4) SA 304
(W) at 305)
[35]
In all the circumstances of the case, no proper case for the relief
sought has been made
out by the applicant. The application stands to
be dismissed.
[36]
Counsel for the liquidators submitted in heads of argument that I
ought to grant costs
on a punitive basis based on “…
the
failure to make provision for the payment of all fees …
”.
In submissions in court, the submission was that the applicant ought
to have been aware that the application had no merit
when the
answering affidavit was filed and for such reason the applicant ought
to pay costs on an attorney and client scale (as
the application was
meritless). Further reliance was placed on the conduct of the
applicant in the present proceedings, not filing
a replying affidavit
or heads of argument, and what was referred to as a lackadaisical
approach in the conduct of the litigation.
In my view, such facts do
not go far enough to justify costs on a punitive scale.
[37]
Considering
inter
alia
the following factors - the complexity of the present matter and the
importance of the relief sought,
[12]
- my view is that costs on scale B constitutes the appropriate scale.
ORDER
[38]
Accordingly, I make the following order:
1.
The application is dismissed with costs.
2.
The applicant is directed to pay the costs
of the application on scale B.
WOODROW
AJ
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
This
Judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the parties
and or parties’ representatives by e-mail and by
being uploaded
to CaseLines. The date and time for the hand down is deemed to be
10h00 on this 13
TH
day of August 2024
.
Appearances
Counsel
for the Applicant:
N
Riley
instructed
by:
Ndobe
Incorporated
Counsel
for the First and Second Respondents:
SJ
van Rensburg SC
instructed
by:
NJ De
Beer Attorneys
Date
of Hearing:
5
August 2024
Date
of Judgment:
13
August 2024
[1]
The
use of the word ‘discharge’ is more appropriately used
in circumstances
where
a company is in provisional liquidation in terms of a
rule
nisi
operating
as a provisional winding-up order - the termination of the
liquidation is obtained simply by means of the ‘discharge’
by the court of such rule
nisi
.
In
casu
,
Timana Properties is in final liquidation.
[2]
This
was indicated in counsel’s argument in reply.
[3]
1998 (3) SA 175 (SCA)
[4]
at
p 180
[5]
2023
(6) SA 145 (SCA)
[6]
Whilst dealing with the question whether the setting aside of a
winding-up under section 354 of the Companies Act, 1973, constitutes
the exercise of a discretion in the strict sense.
[7]
At
par [22]
[8]
2010 (5) SA 40 (WLD) at paras 65 – 66
[9]
The
applicant alleges that “…
.
the [liquidation] application (sans annexures) is attached [to the
founding affidavit] marked “
LM3
”.
”
However, a perusal of “
LM3
”
reveals that this is in fact a copy of a sequestration application
launched by Nedbank against the applicant and her husband
out of
this court under case number 664/20.
[10]
For
example, par [47] of the judgment: “
There
is therefore, no doubt that the debt to Nedbank against Timana
Properties is not paid in full. The defence raised can therefore
not
stand.
”
[11]
Section 73(1) of the Insolvency Act provides that:
“
73.
Trustee may obtain legal assistance
(1)
Subject to the provisions of this section and section 53(4), the
trustee of an insolvent estate may
with the prior written
authorisation of the creditors engage the services of any attorney
or counsel to perform the legal work
specified in the authorisation
on behalf of the estate: Provided that the trustee—
(a)
if he or she is unable to obtain the prior written authorisation of
the creditors due to the urgency
of the matter or the number of
creditors involved, may with the prior written authorisation of the
Master engage the services
of any attorney or counsel to perform the
legal work specified in the authorisation on behalf of the estate;
or
(b)
if it is not likely that there will be any surplus after the
distribution of the estate, may at any time
before the submission of
his or her accounts obtain written authorisation from the creditors
for any legal work performed by
any attorney or counsel,
and
all costs incurred by the trustee, including any costs awarded
against the estate in legal proceedings instituted on behalf
of or
against the estate, in so far as such costs result from any steps
taken by the trustee under this subsection, shall be
included in the
cost of the sequestration of the estate
”
[12]
Rule 67A read with Rule 69 of the uniform rules of court.
sino noindex
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