Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 897South Africa
Visage v Intalian Fresh Produce (Pty) Ltd and Another (083584/2024) [2024] ZAGPPHC 897 (6 September 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
6 September 2024
Headnotes
judgment application that is pending under case number 10850/2023 in the Polokwane High Court.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Visage v Intalian Fresh Produce (Pty) Ltd and Another (083584/2024) [2024] ZAGPPHC 897 (6 September 2024)
Visage v Intalian Fresh Produce (Pty) Ltd and Another (083584/2024) [2024] ZAGPPHC 897 (6 September 2024)
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sino date 6 September 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE NO: 083584/2024
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
6 September 2024
SIGNATURE:
In
the matter between:
STANDARD
BANK OF SOUTH AFRICA
INTERVENING
APPLICANT
In
re:
BENJAMIN
CHARLES JOSEPH VISAGE
APPLICANT
and
INTALIAN
FRESH PRODUCE (PTY) LTD
FIRST RESPONDENT
COMPANIES
AND INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY SECOND RESPONDENT
COMMSSION
JUDGMENT
MKHABELA AJ
Introduction
[1]
The applicant, Benjamin Charles Joseph Visagie (“Visagie”),
brought
an urgent application to place the first respondent, Italian
Fresh Produce (Pty) Ltd under business rescue as envisaged by Section
131 of the Companies Act 71 of 2008(the Companies Act).
[2]
The application was predicated on the assertion that Mr Visagie is a
Managing
Consultant whom the first respondent owed him money in the
form of unpaid invoices as a Managing Consultant and therefore was a
creditor of the first respondent.
[3]
The application was brought on an urgent basis. When the matter was
called,
Mr Constant Leon van der Merwe (“Van der Merwe”)
who is the counsel for the applicant addressed the Court on the
question
of urgency.
[4]
Mr Van der Merwe contended that applications to place a company under
business
rescue are inherently urgent.
[5]
Before I allowed him to develop his argument on the question of
urgency, I then
enquired from counsel for the first respondent, Mr WP
Venter as to whether the first respondent was opposed to the
application.
I did so because the first respondent had filed a notice
to abide and I was not expecting any legal representation from the
first
respondent.
[6]
Counsel for the first respondent conceded that the application was
urgent and
further that the first respondent was not opposing the
relief that the applicant was seeking and was in fact in agreement
that
the first respondent should be placed under business rescue.
[7]
In the absence of opposition from the first respondent, I then
granted the application
on the strength of the averments that the
applicant was a creditor of the first respondent concomitant with the
lack of opposition
from the first respondent.
[8]
According to the service affidavit deposed to by the applicant’s
attorney
of record, Mr Wouter Stefanus Badenhorst (“Badenhorst”),
service was effected to the Companies and Intellectual Property
Commission, being the second respondent.
[9]
Furthermore, Mr Badenhorst confirms in his affidavit that service was
effected
to all known creditors and attached annexure WSB4 as proof
thereof. Annexure WSB4 contains approximately 6 emails sent to
various
creditors. The intervening or affected party is not one of
the recipients of those emails attached as annexure WSB4.
[10] Unbeknown
to the Court that the intervening party was a creditor of the first
respondent, the Court
granted the application placing the first
respondent under business rescue.
[11] However,
on the 23
rd
of August 2024, the intervening or affected
party filed a notice in terms of Rule 6(12)(c) of the Uniform Rules
of Court for the
reconsideration of the order that the Court granted
on 20 August 2024.
[12] The
notice for the reconsideration of the order that the Court granted on
20 August 2024 was accompanied
by the sworn affidavit by Yonder
du Preez (“Du Preez”).
[13] Mr Du
Preez asserted that he was an attorney of record for the affected
party, being Standard Bank
South Africa (Pty) Ltd (“Bank”),
and as such the Bank is an affected party as defined in terms of
Section 128(1)
of the
Companies Act of 2008
and ought to have been
given notice of the application to place the first respondent under
business rescue as envisaged by
Section 131(2)
of the
Companies Act.
[14
] Moreover,
Mr Du Preez asserted that the Bank is currently involved in a pending
litigation in the Limpopo
Division of the High Court, Polokwane
(Polokwane High Court) to have the first respondent liquidated. He
cited case number 0131219/2024.
[15] The
affidavit also reveals that there is also a summary judgment
application that is pending under
case number 10850/2023 in the
Polokwane High Court.
Awareness
that the Bank was a creditor of the first respondent
[16] It is not
in dispute that the deponent to the founding affidavit, who is
coincidentally the applicant
in the application to place the first
respondent under business rescue was or is the Managing Consultant of
the first respondent.
[17] Now, as
the managing agent of the first respondent, it is improbable on the
evidence before this Court
that the applicant was not aware that
there was a pending litigation between the Bank and the first
respondent.
[18] On the
contrary there is evidence that the applicant was aware of the
pending litigation in the Polokwane
High Court. This conclusion is
fortified by the fact that on 21 August 2024, a day after this Court
granted the application to
place the first respondent under business
rescue, Werner Cawood (“Cawood”), the appointed business
rescue practitioner,
wrote to the Bank’s attorneys of record.
[19] In his
correspondence with the Bank’s attorneys of record, Mr Cawood
requested that the summary
judgment that was due to be heard on 22
August 2022 be postponed in the light of his appointment as a
business rescue practitioner
as per Court order dated 20 August 2024.
[20] It is
therefore not in dispute that Mr Visagie as the applicant in the
application to place the first
respondent under business rescue, must
have known that the Bank was an interested party as envisaged by
Section 128(1)
of the
Companies Act, and
ought to have been
given notice of the application as contemplated by
section 131(2)(b)
of the
Companies Act.
The
issue
[21] The only
issue that arises crisply for determination is whether based on the
evidence gathered from
the Bank’s affidavit, the application
placing the first respondent under business rescue falls to be
recalled and revoked
on the ground of the failure to give notice to
the Bank as an affected party.
[22] Apart
from the failure to notify the Bank, the order ought to be recalled
based on the overarching
principle of justice.
The
law
[23]
Section
128
of the
Companies Act defines
affected parties and there is no
doubt that the Bank is one such affected party by virtue of the
pending litigation in the Polokwane
High Court and as the secured
creditor of the first respondent.
[24]
Section
131(3)
of the
Companies Act is
unequivocal that each affected party
has a right to participate in the hearing of an application for
placing a company under business
rescue.
Opposition to the notice for
reconsideration in terms of
Rule 6(2)(c)
of the Rules
[25] Mr Van
der Merwe, on behalf of the applicant, urged me to dismiss the notice
to have the order granted
on 20 August 2024 reconsidered on the
basis that the Bank is not a party against whom an order was granted.
[26] The fact
of the matter is that the Bank is an affected party who was not given
notice of the application
to place the first respondent under
business rescue.
[27] In this
context the Bank was denied its
audi alteram partem
right to
participate. Accordingly, the overarching interests of justice
dictate that the order ought to be set aside on this basis
alone.
[28] It is
therefore not strictly necessary for the Court to pronounce
authoritatively whether the Bank
was a party whom an order was
granted for purposes of setting aside the order.
[29] In
addition, the Court is entitled in terms of
Rule 42
to mero motu
rescind its order if it was erroneously granted.
[30] For all
these reasons the order is susceptible to be recalled and set aside
because of the failure
by the applicant to give the Bank notice as
envisaged by
Section 131(1)
read with
Section 128(1)
of the
Companies
Act. Concomitant
with the fact that the Bank was denied its
audi
alteram partem.
Order
[31] In the
result, I make the following order:
1.
The order granted by the Court on Tuesday, 20 August 2024, is
recalled
and set aside.
2.
The affected party shall file its answering affidavit within ten (10)
Court days from the date of this order.
3.
All actions or steps taken by the appointed business rescue
practitioner
pursuant to the order granted on Tuesday, 20 August
2024, is hereby set aside and declared as void and of no legal
effect.
4.
The costs are reserved to be determined by the Court hearing the main
application to place
the first respondent under business rescue.
R
B MKHABELA
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Electronically
submitted therefore unsigned
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by the Acting Judge whose
name is reflected and is handed down electronically
by circulation to
the Parties / their legal representatives by email and by uploading
it to the electronic file of this matter
on CaseLines. The date of
the judgment is deemed to be
6 September 2024
.
APPEARANCES
For the Affected
Party:
Mr L W de Beer
Mr H Marais
Instructed by
Vezi & De Beer
Inc
For the Applicant:
L K van der Merwe
Instructed by
For the First
Respondent:
Stefan Badenhorst
Attorneys
W P Venter
Instructed by
Lacante
Inc Attorneys
Date of Hearing:
23 August 2024
Date of Judgment:
6 September 2024
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