Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 872South Africa
Stanger N.O v Liebman (24227/2021) [2024] ZAGPPHC 872 (14 August 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
14 August 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Stanger N.O v Liebman (24227/2021) [2024] ZAGPPHC 872 (14 August 2024)
Stanger N.O v Liebman (24227/2021) [2024] ZAGPPHC 872 (14 August 2024)
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sino date 14 August 2024
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO.: 24227/2021
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2) OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
Date: 14 August
2024
E van der Schyff
In
the matter between:
Aaron
Stanger N.O.
Applicant
and
Bradley
Brett Liebman
Respondent
JUDGMENT
Van
der Schyff J
Introduction
[1]
In May 2021, Mr. Atholl David Victor Liebman, now
deceased, issued a sequestration application wherein he sought that a
provisional
sequestration order be granted against the respondent,
Mr. Brett Bradley Liebman, his son. Due to a family feud, no love was
lost
between the two parties. Mr. Stanger is the executor of the
applicant’s deceased estate. To avoid confusion due to the
shared
surname, the parties will be referred to as the applicant and
respondent.
[2]
The hearing of this application was preceded by an
application for security of costs, which was coincidentally
adjudicated by me
in December 2022. The remaining issue regarding the
security for costs was settled when this hearing commenced.
[3]
The main averments made by the applicant in
support of a provisional sequestration order being granted are the
following:
i.
He is a creditor of the
respondent with a liquidated claim of not less than R100.00;
ii.
The respondent is factually
insolvent;
iii.
The respondent has committed
an act of insolvency as defined in sections 8(b) and 8 (c) of the
Insolvency Act 24 of 1936 (the Act);
and
iv.
There is reason to believe
that the sequestration will be to the advantage of creditors.
[4]
The primary facts the applicant relies upon are
the following:
i.
The respondent owes a total
amount of R752 955.85 for taxed legal costs, which costs are due and
owing as a result of a court order
granted on 6 December 2019;
ii.
Warrants of execution were
issued for each bill of costs taxed. The sheriff attached a Chrysler
Grand Voyager, valued at R20 000.00,
but received a third claim for
the vehicle. The respondent was the registered owner of the vehicle
prior to February 2020 but sold
the vehicle to a juristic person of
which he is the sole director;
iii.
The vehicle was sold at
a time when the respondent knew of the cost orders in the applicant’s
favour;
iv.
The applicant holds no
security for his claim against the respondent;
v.
The respondent is also liable
to his attorney, JHS Attorneys, in excess of R1.4 million in respect
of unpaid legal fees;
vi.
On 18 February 2021 the
respondent addressed correspondence to the applicant’s attorney
of record, the executor of the deceased
estate, informing him, among
others, that –
‘
There
is absolutely nothing which belongs to me left at Villa Rivage of any
value to attach, so you will be wasting your time and
incurring
sheriff’s fees for nothing. You are well aware of this, so I
hope that you are not sending the sheriff merely to
harass me. That
is not to say that I do not have other assets elsewhere sufficient to
satisfy your writs.’
[5]
The applicant submits that the indirect,
non-pecuniary advantages of sequestrating the respondent’s
estate when utilising
the mechanisms afforded to a trustee in terms
of the Act in the proper investigation of the respondent’s
financial affairs,
include the possible discovery of assets for
disposal for the benefit of creditors, the certainty that the estate
cannot further
be diminished, the assurance that creditors will be
accorded the treatment prescribed by law, and the interrogation of
the respondent.
These measures underpin the reason to believe that
there would be advantages to creditors if the respondent’s
estate were
to be sequestrated.
[6]
In answer to the application, the respondent
raised, in addition to the issue regarding security of costs, a point
in limine,
contending
that the document signed by the applicant, purporting to be the
founding affidavit, is not commissioned correctly. The
respondent
essentially complained that the formalities laid down in the
regulations prescribed for South African commissioners
of oaths must
be adhered to and weren’t, even if the document was ostensibly
sworn to before a notary public in the United
States of America.
[7]
The respondent elaborated on the parties'
acrimonious history. He claims that he expects capital and income
distributions from a
number of property-owning trusts of which he is
a beneficiary, and stated that he is entitled to dividends from his
interests in
a number of companies. He provided a list of the trusts
and companies. The funds due to him exceed the value of the
applicant’s
claim against him. He claims that it is just a
question of time, and he will be able to settle the applicant’s
claim in full.
In the alternative, he indicated that he is willing to
unconditionally cede his claims from the trusts and companies to the
applicant,
limited to the value of the bills of costs plus interest
thereon.
[8]
The respondent claims that the sequestration
application is being used for ulterior motives, among others, to hide
a number of illegal
activities perpetrated by the applicant, to cause
his financial destruction, and terrorise him and his wife. He denies
being insolvent
as he holds the claims referred to above against
certain trusts and companies that he listed. He claims that the
winding up of
the trusts and companies is being delayed by Mr.
Stanger and the applicant and avers that the late Mr. Liebman and his
attorney
have already written to the liquidators of the companies in
liquidation informing them that they intend to attach the right,
title,
and interest of his claims against the companies. He informs
that all the movable assets in his home were attached and sold in
October 2019 after they were removed by Mr. Stanger, who used the
search and seizure provisions of the
Insolvency Act.
[9
]
The respondent obtained two costs orders against
the applicant, to the value of approximately R330 000.00. These
orders have not
been taxed when the application commenced.
[10]
The respondent denies that the sheriff’s
returns amount to
nulla bona
returns. He claims that he sold the vehicle a year
before the applicant executed the writ. The vehicle is valued at R20
000.00 and
was basically a heap of scrap metal.
[11]
In reply, the applicant pointed out that the
respondent’s rights in the trusts are contingent rights and not
vested rights.
They cannot be regarded as assets in his estate. The
applicant confirmed that it was common cause that the respondent owns
50%
of the member’s interest in O V H Unit 12 CC and 100% of
the issued shareholding in Emerald Haven (Pty) Ltd.
[12]
Mr. Stanger, who was substituted as the applicant
in his capacity as executor of the applicant’s deceased estate,
sought leave
to file a supplementary affidavit. He contends that the
respondent committed subsequent acts of insolvency since the
sequestration
application was issued.
[13]
Mr. Stanger claims that the respondent concluded
an agreement with his former attorney in terms of which he ceded his
right, title,
and interest in respect of certain cost orders he
obtained against the applicant to the attorney. He also ceded to Mr.
Stevens
in securitatem
debiti
his right, title, and interest in his member’s interest in OVH
Unit 12 CC. As a result, Mr Stevens, the attorney is
preferred above
other creditors.
[14]
The respondent objected to the filing of a
supplementary affidavit, but answered to the averments therein. I
allowed the supplementary
affidavit since the respondent answered to
the allegations made therein, and because of the lapse of time since
the founding papers
were filed. No party is prejudiced.
[15]
The respondent denies that he is preferring Mr.
Stevens above other creditors as the agreement was reached in
settling litigation
between them. In addition, he points out that the
cession is not an out-and-out cession but in
securitatem
debiti
.
Discussion
[16]
It
is trite that to succeed with a sequestration application, a creditor
must establish a claim against the debtor, that the respondent
is
insolvent or committed an act of insolvency, that there is reason to
believe that the sequestration will be to the advantage
of creditors
if the debtor's estate is sequestrated.
[1]
[17]
The court is cloaked with a discretionary power to
grant a provisional winding-up order, irrespective of the grounds
upon which
it is sought, and the discretion must be exercised on
judicial grounds.
[18]
In casu,
the
applicant avers without any substantiation that the respondent is
factually insolvent. The respondent answers and denies being
insolvent. He indicates that he holds interests in companies that are
sufficient to satisfy the judgment debt. The applicant acknowledges
that the applicant holds, at minimum, 50% of the member’s
interest in O V H Unit 12 CC and 100% of the issued shareholding
in
Emerald Haven (Pty) Ltd. The applicant does not elaborate on why he
decided, for instance, not to attach the respondent’s
shareholding in Emerald Haven (Pty) Ltd.
[19]
Despite
the fact that the respondent offers to cede his interests in the
trusts in which he is a beneficiary and the companies wherein
he
holds an interest to the limited value of the bills of costs plus
interests thereon, the applicant proceeded with the sequestration
application. While it makes business sense to negotiate the setting
off of the parties' respective claim for amounts due and owned
for
legal costs against each other and cede the respondent’s
interests in liquidated companies for the remainder of amounts
owed
plus interest, the applicant is determined to obtain the respondent’s
provisional sequestration at all costs. This court
has emphasized in
Waterkloof
Boulevard Homeowners Association (Association Incorporated under
Section 21)
v Yusuf and Another
[2]
the
principle stated by Didcott J in
Gardee
v Dhanmanta Holdings and Others:
[3]
‘
While
there may be no reason in principle why a debtor with only one
creditor should not have his estate sequestrated, the potential
advantages in that situation are inherently fewer, and the case for
it is correspondingly weaker. Then it is really no more than
an
elaborate means of execution, and because of its costs, an expensive
one too. That the applicant himself is convinced of its
benefits to
him is not decisive, even when he is the only creditor. It is for the
court to decide the question…. What is
more, he must
demonstrate some reasonable expectation that it will exceed the
likely proceeds of ordinary execution. Unless he
does that, the
laborious and substantially more expensive remedy of sequestration
can hardly be thought advantageous.'
[20]
The applicant relies on indirect, non-pecuniary
advantages that the respondent’s sequestration might have. The
allegations
boil down to unsubstantiated generalised statements.
Having regard to the proximity between the applicant and the
respondent, despite
their animosity towards each other, one expects
primary facts being averred to substantiate a finding that assets
will be recovered
that are currently stowed away in obscurity. No
case is made out for this court to find that it will be beneficial to
the respondent’s
body of creditors if a provisional
sequestration order is granted.
[21]
The sale of a vehicle valued at R20 000 can, in
the circumstances, hardly be seen as the dissipating of assets,
particularly if
regard is had to the fact that no allegations are
made that the respondent alienated the vehicle because he caught a
whiff of the
applicant’s intention to attach the vehicle. As
for the cession
in securitatem debiti,
the cession is conditional.
[22]
The
parties have been embroiled in acrimonious litigation for a very long
time. The distrust runs deep. One result of this sad reality
is that
people lose perspective. Sequestration proceedings have their place
in law, but should not be abused to settle family scores.
This is not
to say that an application for a family member’s sequestration
will not be considered. It will be considered
but only granted if it
is evident that the purpose of sequestration to provide a collective
debt-collecting process that will ensure
an orderly and fair
distribution of the debtor’s assets to the advantage of the
whole body of creditors in circumstances
where these assets are
insufficient to satisfy all the creditor’s claims,
[4]
will be achieved.
[23]
Having carefully considered the allegations
contained in the respective affidavits, the application stands to be
dismissed.
Miscellaneous
[24]
The
respondent took issue with the founding affidavit and alleged that it
was not commissioned correctly because the notary public
in the
United States of America did not comply with the regulations
prescribed for South African commissioners of oaths. There
is no
merit in this contention. Ramsbottom J held in
McLeod
v Gesade Holdings (Pty) Ltd
[5]
that:
‘
There
is nothing in the Union Oaths Act or in the regulations which affects
the validity of an affidavit made in accordance with
the law of a
foreign country.’
[25]
There is no averment that the document was not
commissioned in accordance with the law in the United States of
America. The founding
affidavit is regarded as an affidavit.
[26]
At the onset of the proceedings, the respondent
sought an order to stay the proceedings because the security of costs
had not been
provided as ordered previously. The issue was resolved,
although a costs order should follow. The respondent was successful
to
the extent that the parties reached an agreement regarding an
acceptable method of providing security for costs. It is just that
each party carries its own costs occasioned by the application. Both
parties’ legal representatives neglected to follow up
on the
issue timeously, and if there had been proper and timely
communication, the application could have been prevented.
Costs
[27]
The general rule is that costs follow success.
Having regard to the complexity of issues in dispute, it is fair to
all parties if
counsel’s costs are determined on Scale B.
ORDER
In
the result, the following order is granted:
1.
The application is dismissed, with costs, counsel’s costs on
Scale B.
E van der Schyff
Judge of the High Court
Delivered:
This judgment 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:
JL Kaplan
With:
E Dreyer
Instructed by:
Aaron Stanger &
Associates
For the respondent:
MD Silver
Instructed by:
David Kotzen
Attorneys
Date of the
hearing:
30 July 2024
Date of judgment:
14 August 2024
[1]
Bertelsman,
E
et
al
.
Mars: The Law of Insolvency in South Africa, JUTA, 9
th
ed,
134.
In
Meskin & Co v Friedman
1948 (2) SA 555
(W), the Court described
it at 559: ‘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 the creditors.’
[2]
(028945/2022)
[2023] ZAGPPHC 737 (28 August 2023).
[3]
1978
(1) SA 1066
(N)
1067.
[4]
J
J Pepler
Advantage
for creditors in South African insolvency law – a comparative
investigation
Unpublished
LLM-Thesis University of Pretoria 2014.
[5]
1958
(3) SA 672
(W).
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