Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 991South Africa
Van Der Merwe and Associates Incorporated v Muller N.O and Others (117119/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 991 (2 October 2024)
Headnotes
in trust by attorneys – Compensation pursuant to successful unfair dismissal claim – Claimant is a
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Van Der Merwe and Associates Incorporated v Muller N.O and Others (117119/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 991 (2 October 2024)
Van Der Merwe and Associates Incorporated v Muller N.O and Others (117119/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 991 (2 October 2024)
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sino date 2 October 2024
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
FLYNOTES:
COMPANY
– Winding up –
Recovery
of assets
–
Funds
held in trust by attorneys – Compensation pursuant to
successful unfair dismissal claim – Claimant is a
judgment
creditor of company in liquidation – Execution creditor has
no entitlement to attached property in execution
– Such
assets vest in insolvent company – Claimant has no legal
entitlement to funds held in trust – Rights
to lodge claim
as creditor of insolvent estate remain intact – Companies
Act 61 of 1973, s 391.
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 117119/2023
(1)
REPORTABLE:
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
(3)
REVISED:
NO
Date:
02 October 2024
Signature:
In
the matter between:
VAN
DER MERWE AND ASSOCIATES
INCORPORATED
Applicant
[Registration
No.;2006/0155908/21]
And
LIZANNE
CHANTAL MULLER N.O.
First Claimant
JOSHUA
MUTHANYI
N.O.
Second Claimant
MARYNA
ESTELLE SYMES N.O.
Third Claimant
(The
First to Third Claimants act in their capacity as the duly appointed
liquidators for the insolvent estate of Hencetrade 35
(Pty) Ltd t/a
Gemini Electrical [in liquidation])
ALBERT
JOHANNES
VILJOEN
Fourth Claimant
[Identity
No.: 8[…]]
JUDGMENT
NYATHI,
J
A.
INTRODUCTION
[1]
These are interpleader proceedings in terms
of Rule 58 of the uniform
rules of Court pursuant to a notice filed by the Applicant, Van der
Merwe Incorporated, a law firm, who
holds in its trust account funds
on which the four claimants herein have competing claims.
B.
BACKGROUND
[2]
The Fourth Claimant ("Mr Viljoen")
was an employee of
Hencetrade 35 (Pty) Ltd t/a Gemini Electrical (in liquidation) ("the
insolvent company") until his
dismissal in December 2018.
[3]
Subsequent to his dismissal, Mr Viljoen referred
an unfair dismissal
dispute to the Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration
("CCMA").
[4]
On 11 September 2020, the CCMA ruled in Mr
Viljoen's favour and
granted an award in terms of which the insolvent company was to pay
Mr Viljoen compensation in the sum of
R385,000.00.
[5]
On 30 September 2020, the insolvent company,
who was represented by
JC Uys Attorneys ("JC Uys") at the time, launched an
application in the Labour Court to have the
decision of the CCMA
reviewed.
[6]
On 24 October 2020, the insolvent company tendered security in terms
of
section 145(7) of the Labour Relations Act by depositing the sum
of R375,000.00 into the trust account of JC Uys.
[7]
On 29 November 2022, an application for the
winding-up of the
insolvent company was launched.
[8]
On 4 May 2023, the insolvent company was
finally liquidated.
[9]
On 7 September 2023, the First to Third Claimants
("the
liquidators"), after having resolved not to pursue the review
application, instructed Van der Merwe Inc, who was
representing the
liquidators at the time, to demand payment of the relevant funds from
JC Uys.
[10]
On 21 September 2023, JC Uys made payment of the funds into
Van der
Merwe Inc's trust account.
[11]
On 13 November 2023, Van der Merwe Inc delivered an interpleader
notice on the basis that Mr Viljoen and the liquidators have
competing claims to the R375,000.00.
C.
ISSUE FOR DETERMINATION BY THE COURT.
[12]
Whether the funds held in trust by the Applicant should be
paid to
the First to Third Claimants or to the Fourth Claimant.
The
liquidators’ claim:
[13]
The liquidators lay claim on the funds by relying, firstly,
on
Section 342(1) of the Companies Act, 61 of 1973 ("the 1973
Companies Act") which provides that:
"(1) ln every
winding-up of a company the assets shall be applied in payment of the
costs, charges and expenses incurred in
the winding-up and, subject
to the provisions of section 435(1)(b), the claims of creditors as
nearly as possible as they would
be applied in payment of the costs
of sequestration and the claims of creditors under the law relating
to insolvency and, unless
the memorandum or articles otherwise
provide, shall be distributed among the members according to their
rights and interests in
the company."
[14]
Secondly, Section 361(1) of the 1973 Companies Act provides
as
follows:
“
(1)
In any winding-up by the Court all the property of the company
concerned shall be deemed to be
in the custody and under the control
of the Master until a provisional liquidator has been appointed and
has assumed office."
[15]
Thirdly, section 391 of the 1973 Companies Act provides that:
"A liquidator in
any winding-up shall proceed forthwith to recover and reduce into
possession all the assets and property of
the company, movable and
immovable, shall apply the same so far as they extend in satisfaction
of the costs of the winding-up and
the claims of creditors, and shall
distribute the balance among those who are entitled thereto.
[16]
Mr Louw on behalf of the liquidators contended that the effect
of the
aforesaid provisions is that the liquidators are obliged to recover
and realise all the assets and property of the company
being wound
up, and to apply the proceeds of such realisation, first in discharge
of the costs of liquidation, and thereafter in
payment of the claims
of creditors in accordance with the relevant provisions of the law
relating to insolvency.
[17]
Mr Louw further submitted that the liquidators' duties must
be
discharged consistently with the position which they occupy in
relation to the members and creditors of the insolvent company,
and
it is of the utmost importance that the liquidators should, as
officers of the Court, maintain an even and impartial hand between
all the individuals whose interests are involved in the winding-up.
The liquidators cannot be seen to act for or against any individual
whatsoever. The liquidators owe a duty to the whole body of
shareholder and the whole body of creditors.
[18]
Lastly, liquidators are required to act in the best interest
of
creditors. Liquidators should also be wholly independent and should
regard equally the interests of all creditors.
[19]
Mr Louw concluded by submitting that Mr Viljoen merely has
a claim
against the insolvent company. He must submit a claim against the
insolvent company like all creditors are required to
do. It matters
not whether Mr Viljoen is a preferent or concurrent creditor. Even a
preferent creditor receives payment only after
the costs of
liquidation have been settled. It is exclusively the liquidators who
are empowered to make payment of whatever amount
Mr Viljoen is
entitled to.
[20]
Reference was made to the matter of
Liquidators Union and Rhodesia
Wholesale Ltd v Brown & Co
1922 AD 549
, where the Court held
that under the statutory provisions then in force, an execution
creditor enjoyed no preference over goods
of a company which had been
attached but which had not yet been sold when the company was
subsequently placed under a winding-up
order.
[21]
Mr Louw further
referenced the matter of
Liquidator,
Mr Spares (Pty) Ltd v Goldies Motor Supplies (Pty) Ltd
[1]
,
where
an execution creditor had received payment from the sheriff as a
consequence of a sale in execution of the assets of the judgment
debtor (a company). Because the company had been liquidated, after
judgment but before the sale in execution took place, the liquidator
claimed repayment of the amount paid to the judgment creditor. The
liquidator contended that the funds formed part of the assets
of the
company in liquidation, whilst the execution creditor argued that it
did not. Mr Louw argued that this dispute was similar
to the one in
this case.
[22]
Mr Louw then concluded that the funds that are held by the
applicant
herein, should be paid to the liquidators and Mr Viljoen be ordered
to pay the liquidators’ costs on a normal scale
as there is no
evidence that the liquidators acted recklessly in any way.
Mr
Viljoen’s claim:
[23]
Mr Lotter submitted that
whilst section 391 provides that the liquidators must collect
property of the company concerned for distribution
to the creditors
in accordance with the statutory ranking order, the liquidators
cannot collect property which does not belong
to the estate or was
ringfenced prior to the establishment of the
concursus
creditorum.
[2]
[24]
Relying on the matter of
Booi v
Wesley Pretorius & Associates,
[3]
Mr Lotter contended that
once the review application is dismissed by the Labour Court
or
abandoned
,
Mr Viljoen was entitled to have the security paid over to him within
fifteen days of the dismissal/abandonment of the review
application".
[4]
[emphasis
added].
[25]
Mr Lotter then dealt with the unfair dismissal being an injury
to the
personality of the employee and that the CCMA award falls within the
ambit of
contumelia.
[26]
Mr Lotter sought to rely
on the following cases as authority:
South
African Reserve Bank v Leathern,
[5]
State Bank of India v
Denel SOC Limited,
[6]
Agu v Krige &
Others
[7]
as well as Muller NO v
Community Medical Aid Scheme.
[8]
[27]
Mr Louw countered the utility or relevance of these matters
in his
reply. I am inclined to agree with him as they are not helpful in
this matter. The first deals with a review of blocking
orders issued
by the Reserve Bank in terms of applicable regulations, the second
case relates to irrevocable documentary guarantees,
the third case
deals with conveyancers’ trust accounts and whilst the fourth
case involves insolvency and their claim for
medical aid
contributions, that is how far the similarity between it and the
instant application before me.
[28]
Mr Lotter then submitted
that security by its nature cannot be an asset in the estate. He
referred to annexure “AJV 3”
[9]
as an irrevocable guarantee of payment and undertaking to the Labour
Court by the JC Uys Attorneys (who initially represented the
company
(in liquidation) in the event of the company losing the review, or
the review being abandoned, to pay the amount over to
Mr Viljoen.
[29]
Mr Lotter’s submitted conclusion was that the applicant
has an
obligation to pay over the funds held in the applicant’s trust
account to Mr Viljoen. The fourth claimant was not
persisting with
its original view that the liquidators be saddled with a punitive
cost order
de bonis propriis.
D.
DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS
[30]
Section 359(1) of the 1973 Companies Act provides that where
the
court has made an order winding-up a company, all civil proceedings
by or against the company concerned are suspended until
the
appointment of a liquidator, and any attachment or execution put in
force after the commencement of the winding-up shall be
void.
[31]
An example is that a sale
in execution of property attached prior to the commencement of the
winding-up is suspended in terms of
section 359(1)(a) until the
appointment of a liquidator. Thereafter, the liquidator, in light of
the provisions of sections 342(1)
and 391, is bound and entitled to
claim the property from the execution officer who must deliver it to
him.
[10]
[32]
“…
And if,
despite the institution of the winding-up, the execution creditor
causes the sale to proceed, the proceeds of such sale
must be
released to the liquidator by the execution officer if held by him
and must be repaid to the liquidator by the execution
creditor if
they were paid to him subject only to the preference enjoyed by the
execution creditor for costs of execution…”
[11]
[33]
This therefore contemplates a situation where in the Fourth
Claimant
having been paid the amount under discussion here, would be expected
to pay it on to the liquidators. It is beyond argument
by now that Mr
Viljoen is a judgment creditor of the company in liquidation.
[34]
The amount of money being
held in trust is, in my view, akin to property attached by the
Sheriff prior to the commencement of the
winding-up. The execution
creditor does not have the preference or
pignus
judiciale
to
which under the common law an attachment of property in execution
gives rise.
[12]
[35]
Margo J’s finding was therefore that an execution creditor
had
no entitlement to attached property in execution (apart from the
costs of execution) and that such assets vest in the insolvent
company.
[36]
Similarly, in the Strydom
NO v MGN
Construction
[13]
matter the Court held at
807H as follows:
"It is clear
that, in terms of s 391 of Act 61 of 1973, a liquidator is required
to recover and reduce into his possession
all the assets and property
of the company and then apply the same in satisfaction of the costs
of winding-up the claims of creditors
and to distribute the balance
amongst those who are entitled thereto. He is therefore under a duty
to claim from an execution officer
any property of the company still
in his hands at the time of winding-up. Section 342 of the Act
provides that in every winding-up
of a company its assets must be
applied in payment of the costs, charges and expenses incurred in the
winding-up."
[37]
The legal position therefore is that an execution creditor
does not
have an entitlement to assets which have been attached pursuant to a
judgment granted against a company which is subsequently
wound-up.
Such assets form part of the assets of the company in liquidation.
[38]
In the instant case, the
property/money is being held in trust, having been deposited by the
company in liquidation. There was at
no stage any transfer to the
possession or ownership. While the property remains in trust
(attached), it still forms part of the
debtor’s insolvent
estate.
[14]
[39]
The situation had been
elucidated much earlier in
Pols
v R Pols-Bouers en Ingenieurs (Edms) Bpk
[15]
as follows:
“
If the money is
still under attachment, the creditor is not entitled to it, but is
entitled only to a preference for his costs of
execution. But if the
money had passed to the creditor before winding up commenced, the
liquidator has no claim to it”
E.
CONCLUSION
[40]
On the weight of the authority referred to above, I am persuaded
that
the R375 000.00 forms part of the assets of the company (in
liquidation). The liquidators are by force of section 391
of the 1973
Companies Act required to recover same to be part of the insolvent
estate of the company.
[41]
Mr Viljoen has no legal entitlement to the funds held in trust
by Van
der Merwe Incorporated. His rights to lodge a claim as a creditor of
the insolvent estate remain intact.
[42]
Wherefore the following order is made:
(i)
The applicant is ordered and directed to pay to the First to
Third
Claimants the sum of R375 000,00 with interest on the
aforementioned sum
a tempore morae
on the prevailing rate of
interest as prescribed, from date of this order.
(ii)
The applicant is ordered to pay the First to Third respondents’
costs of suit on a party and party scale at level B.
(iii)
I make no order as to costs against the Fourth Claimant.
J.S.
NYATHI
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Pretoria
Date
of hearing: 11 August 2024
Date
of Judgment: 02 October 2024
On
behalf of the Applicant: Adv. HP Wessels
Duly
instructed by: Van Der Merwe & Associates Inc. Pretoria.
e-mail:
legal7@vdmass.co.za
On
behalf of the 1
st
to 3
rd
Claimants: Adv. NG
Louw
Duly
instructed by: Noordmans Attorneys, Bloemfontein
C/O
Manley Inc. Pretoria
e-mail:
david@manleylaw.co.za
or
gareth@manleylaw.co.za
or
andre@manleylaw.co.za
On
behalf of the 4
th
Claimant: Adv. GJ Lotter
Van
Dyk Oosthuizen Attorneys Incorporated.
C/O:
Lerize Van Den Westhuizen Attorneys; Pretoria.
e-mail:
vincent@vdwinc.co.za
Delivery
:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties' legal representatives by email and uploaded on the
CaseLines
electronic platform. The date for hand-down is deemed to be 02
October 2024.
[1]
1982
(4) SA 607
(W).
[2]
Fourth
claimant’s heads of argument para 2.8 and 2.9.
[3]
(
EL
1212/2020) [2021] ZAECELLC 19 at [26].
[4]
Fourth
claimant’s heads of argument (supra) para 2.12.
[5]
2021
(5) SA 543
(SCA).
[6]
2014
JDR 2586 (SCA).
[7]
2019
JOL 41840 (WCC).
[8]
2012
(2) SA 286 (SCA).
[9]
Filed
under caselines 03-27.
[10]
Strydom
NO v MGN Construction (Pty) Ltd and Another: In re Haljen (Pty) Ltd
(In Liquidation)
1983 (1) SA 799
(D); Henochsberg on the Companies
Act Vol. 1 (Service Issue 10 P.759.
[11]
Henochsberg
ibid
759
para 3.
[12]
Ibid
759 where reference is made to the matter of
Liquidators
Union & Rhodesia Wholesale Ltd v Brown & Co
1922
AD 549
at 558-559, 562-563.
[13]
Supra
footnote 6.
[14]
See
Simpson v Klein NO and Others 1987 (1) SA 405 (W).
[15]
1953
(3) SA 107
(T).
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