Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 1049South Africa
Linteg Fibre (Pty) Ltd v Boleng Fibre (Pty) Ltd (42609/2021) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1049 (8 October 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Linteg Fibre (Pty) Ltd v Boleng Fibre (Pty) Ltd (42609/2021) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1049 (8 October 2024)
Linteg Fibre (Pty) Ltd v Boleng Fibre (Pty) Ltd (42609/2021) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1049 (8 October 2024)
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sino date 8 October 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 42609/2021
(1) REPORTABLE: YES/NO
(2) OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: YES/NO
(3) REVISED.
DATE:
08/10/2024
SIGNATURE:
N V
KHUMALO J
In
the matter between:
LINTEG
FIBRE (PTY) LTD
APPLICANT
and
BOLENG
FIBRE (PTY) LTD
1
ST
RESPONDENT
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ representatives by email. The date and time of
hand-down is deemed to be 08 October 2024.
JUDGMENT
Khumalo N V J
Introduction
[1]
The s
345
[1]
letter of demand plays a
pivotal role in the court’s initiated winding up process of
Companies, in that service thereof prior
to the institution of legal
proceedings to wind up is mandatory. This is to grant the debtor
Company an opportunity to rectify
its default, failing which it will
be deemed to be unable to pay its debts
as
they
fall due,
therefore insolvent, unless it
timeously
puts up
a
reasonable and
bona
fide
defence
to the alleged indebtedness
.
In a situation where the Co disputes its indebtedness, and the
factual allegation relating thereto or validity of the claim, what
is
key is whether the defence or dispute is reasonable and bona fide,
further if or is the deeming effect to be applicable and
if so
justifiable.
[2]
The Applicant in this matter, Linteg Fibre, is applying for the
final,
alternatively provisional liquidation of the Respondent
company, Boleng Fibre Pty Ltd. The application is predicated on an
alleged
outstanding debt for which the Applicant has issued the
statutory letter of demand and the Respondent has failed to comply
with.
Applicant therefore insists the Respondent must be deemed
unable to pay its debts as stipulated in section 345.
Parties
[3]
The Applicant, Linteng Fibre (Pty) Ltd, is a private company
registered
and incorporated in terms of the laws of the Republic of
South Africa, it describes itself as a turnkey solutions company that
specialises in the installations of fibre optic network for service
providers and also for internet usage, with its place of business
situated at Suttle Road, Midrand, Gauteng. It is in this Application
represented by its Chief Financial Officer, Charl Johannes
Potgieter,
who has declared under oath to have been duly authorised to launch
and pursue this Application.
[4]
The Respondent is Boleng Fibre (Pty) Ltd, also a private company
registered
and incorporated in terms of the laws of the Republic of
South Africa, with its place of business situated at 570 Fehrsen
Street,
Brooklyn Bridge, Pretoria, Gauteng. It is a sole propriety
company represented by Mr Albert Arthur Fitchet (“Fitchet”)
its sole director and Chief Executive Officer. The Respondents builds
optic fibre networks (OFN) which it then sells and or transfers
the
right to it to companies like the Applicant.
Background
Facts
[5]
On or about November 2020, the Applicant, represented by Mr Etienne
Knipe,
and the Respondent, represented by Mr Fitchet, reached a
verbal agreement in respect of the sale of optic fibre networks
(“Optic
Fibre Network agreement” or “the first
agreement”). The parties disagree as to some of the material
terms of
the contract. The following material terms were agreed
between the parties: that
[5.1]
The Respondent had a Grant of Rights (“GOR”) agreement in
its name thereby affording the
Respondent the exclusive rights to
install an optic fibre network in various complexes namely, Bergbries
Villas -76 Units, Waverly
Ridge -30 Units, Bergtuin -100 Units and
Bergview Villas-50 Units.
[5.2]
The Applicant would acquire all the optic fibre network and optic
fibre network points that are owned
by the Respondent in these
complexes which had already been installed per unit.
[5.3]
The Applicant would pay a certain amount (vat included) per point.
The parties initially disagreed
as to the price that was agreed upon.
The Respondent stated that the Applicant was to pay R4 000 per unit
whereas the Applicant,
firstly, stated that it was supposed to pay R3
600 and later agreed with the Respondent.
[5.4]
The Respondent would transfer the Grant of Rights (GOR) in its name
which rights would be ceded and
transferred to Linteg Funding, a
company nominated by the Applicant and the relevant Body Corporate,
or Developer in the Complex
would sign the relevant documents to
transfer such rights to the Applicant.
[5.5]
All the Developments already had optic fibre network installed the
Applicant would have sole ownership
of the network points.
[5.6]
The Applicant would acquire all the rights and the optic fibre
network in respect of the sites by
January 2021.
[5.7]
The Applicant shall pay the Respondent an overall amount of R920 000
for the optic fibre network
at the sites.
[5.7]
The pertinent Body Corporates, Developers or Homeowners’
Association and the Respondent would
transfer and cede the
Respondent's GOR rights that it had to Linteng Funding (RF) (Pty) Ltd
(A company in the group of companies
of the Applicant) by executing
necessary GOR agreements relating to communication infrastructure.
[6]
On 31 December 2020, the Respondent sent an invoice of R600 000
to the Applicant
for part payment for the sites as per the agreement.
By January 2021, the Applicant had not obtained the sites' rights and
the
optical fibre network. The reason, being that the Respondent owed
money to Reflex Solutions (Pty) Ltd (Reflex), a company in the
same
sector that also installs hardware on the site. The Applicant and
Respondent came to an agreement on or around January 2021,
that the
Applicant would pay Reflex directly the sum of R341 146.93 (which the
Respondent owed Reflex) and the amount was to be
set off against the
Respondent’s account.
[7]
Pursuant to settling the debt owed to Reflex, the Applicant received
the GOR in respect
of Waverly, Bergbries and Bergtuin from the
Respondent but not for Bergview Villa. Applicant alleges to have
subsequently received
Bergview Villa GOR document that was initialled
by Fitchet. Upon investigation he was informed by one Mr Lobser from
Bergview Villa
that the Respondent never owned any optic fibre
network inside Bergview Villa. It is instead owned by Eskom, and
outside the Development,
a fact that has not been disputed by the
Respondent.
[8]
The Applicant owned micro trenching machines. On February 2021, the
parties reached
another verbal agreement for the Applicant to provide
micro trenching services (“the Micro Trench Agreement” or
“second
agreement”) at the designated GBtel sites. The
terms of the agreement were as follows:
[8.1]
The Respondent will send the Applicant a purchase order in relation
to the rendering of the micro trenching services identified by GBtel
and/or the Respondent at the Pretoria sites.
[8.2]
Upon its completion of the rendering of the micro trenching work, the
Applicant will measure the distance and issue an invoice, which
invoice the Respondent would settle upon receipt. They had agreed
on
a form of billing.
[9]
According to the Applicant when all this was happening, it became
evident that the
Respondent defrauded it. As a result, on 8 April
2021 its attorneys wrote a letter to the Respondent recording the
fact that the
Respondent made a misrepresentation on the ownership of
the optic fibre network at Bergview Villa. As a result, the Applicant
paid
the R600 000 plus an additional R343 968 it paid to Reflex
amounting to R943 968, suffering damages in the amount of R331
564.19. It indicated that future damages are still to be calculated.
The Applicant issued an invoice to the Respondent for R331
564.19 and
demanded payment of the amount within 7 days.
[10]
On 28 April 2021 the Applicant issued an invoice to the Respondent
also on the micro trenching
agreement in the amount of R326 094, of
which the Respondent paid an amount of R269 727.73 on May 5,
2021. On 17 May 2021,
the Applicant rendered a further invoice to the
Respondent in respect of the micro trenching work that was done. In
response the
Respondent's attorneys at the time sent a letter to the
Applicant's attorneys on 25 May 2021, asking the Applicant to include
adequate
details and to explain the reasons why they are requesting a
payment. The Respondent claimed that it was the Applicant rather who
was indebted to the Respondent by virtue of the Applicant’s
failure to complete the work that the Respondent has paid for.
The
Respondent denied owing the Applicant the money that was stated on
the invoice. Instead pointed out that in so far as it was
concerned
due to the Applicant’s failure to complete the work already
paid for, ‘it had a counterclaim against the
Plaintiff which at
that point appeared to exceed any claim which the Plaintiff had which
it was in the process of quantifying.
The Applicant then included
measurements taken by Rousseau on 12 May 2021.The Respondent disputed
that any money was owing to the
Applicant.
[11]
The Applicants attorneys wrote a without prejudice letter to the
Respondents on 31 May 2021,
referring to the settlement of the sale
by the Respondent of the GRO’s it did not own. The fact that
the Applicant took up
work on behalf of the Respondent in a
Development in Waverley Pretoria which resulted in the additional
amount of R591 213.57 invoiced
to the Respondent, which it has failed
to pay in full. As a result of the Respondent’s failure to pay
it had to withdraw
from the site, having informed the Respondent some
time ago. It denied that any work was not completed as all work
invoiced for
had been attended to so no items outstanding.
[12]
The Applicant had also on 7 May 2021 wrote a letter to Respondent
outlining their interaction.
It pointed out that the Respondent was
always under financial constraints and desperate to sell the GOR’s
it had in the Complexes.
Knipe of the opinion that the Applicant was
helping the Respondent who had alleged to Knipe that Respondent had
all the GOR’s
for all these Complexes. It turned out that the
Respondent actually fraudulently sold the asset it never had with
Fletcher initialling
the Bergview Villa agreement pretending it had
Loubser, the Developer’s signature.
[13]
In addition, the Respondent was given notice that the Applicant will
be removing their teams
from Waverley until all the outstanding
monies from Bergtuin had been paid. The link between the Wonderboom
Complexes had to be
completed and a deposit of R250 000 paid for
further work in Waverley. Plaintiff warned that failure to do so a
liquidation order
would be sought and criminal proceedings instituted
against the Respondent. According to the Applicant no response was
received
from Respondent. There are letters though that were
exchanged between the parties after the demand letter.
[14]
On 20 May 2021/2020 the Applicant wrote the s 345 letter It recorded
that the Respondent is indebted
to it in the amount of R922 777.36
and demanded that the Respondent within a period of three weeks from
the date of receipt of
the letter, pay or secure or compound for
payment to the satisfaction of the Applicant, failing which the
Respondent would be deemed
to be unable to pay its debts and be
liable to be placed under compulsory liquidation by the order of the
High Court. The letter
was served by the Sheriff. According to the
Applicant no response was received and Respondent deemed to be unable
to pay its debts.
[15]
The Applicant further alleges that the Respondent is indebted to it
in the amount of R888 782,
94 notwithstanding the amount in the s 345
letter. That is R263 600 for Bergbries (Bergview Villa), R591
213.97 for Waverley
and R23 968.97 overpayment for Reflex. The
Applicant alleges that the Respondent is bound to be wound up on one
or more of the
following grounds:
[15.1] unable to
pay its debts as envisaged by s 345;
[15.2]
It is just and equitable as envisaged in s 344 (h) of the old Act
incorporated as aforesaid, that the Respondent be
wound up;
[15.3]
The Respondent is unable to pay its debts when its due
therefore at least commercially insolvent;
[15.4]
The Respondent does not have the ability or financial means to settle
its indebtedness to the Applicant.
[16]
The Applicant also acknowledged that it is required to serve this
Application not only on the
Respondent but also the trade union and
or the employees of the Respondent by affixing a copy of the
Application to any Notice
Board to which the Applicant and employees
have access inside the premises of the Respondent if there is no
access to the premises
by affixing a copy of the Application to the
front gate of the premises where applicable, failing which to the
front door of the
premises from which the Respondent conduct any
business at the time of the Application.
[17]
The Respondent in its response raised two points
in limine
challenging the authority of the CFO to bring these legal proceedings
without the resolution of the Company authorising him to
do so.
Further, the Applicant’s failure to join Fibre Funding, the
company to whom the rights to the GOR was transferred
or ceded by
Respondent.
[18]
Furthermore the court had to determine if:
[18.1] the
Applicant followed the proper procedure when instituting the
liquidation Application?
[18.2] there was a
ground for winding up the Respondent. With the Applicant having made
a case or proven any one or more of
the grounds raised in its
Founding Affidavit.
[18.3] Whether a
provisional or final liquidation order should be granted
Whether
the applicant has locus standi to launch this application?
Respondent’s
submission
[19]
In answering to the Applicant’s Application the Respondent
submits that no resolution is
attached to the founding affidavit
papers confirming that the deponent to an affidavit is authorised to
act on behalf of the applicant
and to appoint attorneys. The
Respondents state that in terms of Annexure OA2 and OA3,
[2]
Linteg Funding and the Applicant have more than one director. This
means that a resolution by the board of directors should be
filed
depicting that the deponent has authority to act. The Respondents
submit that this is because the directorial powers are
not conferred
on directors individually and individual directors may not as agents
bind the company, unless specifically so empowered
by the board of
directors’ resolution.
Applicant’s
submissions
[20]
The applicant submits that the Respondent’s submission that
because the Applicant has more
than one director, it means that
without the resolution of the board the deponent to the affidavit
does not have the required locus
standi, is incorrect.
Applicable law
[21]
In
Interboard
SA (Pty) Ltd v Van Den Berg
,
[3]
the Applicant applied for an order placing the Respondent under
provisional sequestration. The Respondent contested the Application
and raised
locus
standi
as a point
in
limine
.
The Respondent argued that the Financial Officer lacked authority to
depose to the affidavit for the reason that there was no
resolution
attached empowering him to act on behalf of the applicant. The
court upheld the point
in
limine
and dismissed the application. This was because there was no
resolution empowering the Financial Officer to act on behalf of the
Applicant. The resolution was filed late after the Respondent had
raised the objection on
locus
standi
.
The court held that late filing of the resolution would be
prejudicial to the Respondent.
[22]
Recent cases specifically in
Ganes
and Another v Telecom Namibia Ltd,
[4]
the court held that in determining the question of whether a person
has been authorised to institute and prosecute motion proceedings,
it
is irrelevant whether such person was
authorised to depose to the founding affidavit.
[5]
The deponent to an affidavit in motion proceeding
need not be authorised by the party concerned
to depose to the
affidavit
.
[6]
The
Supreme Court of Appeal in
Masako
v Masako and Another
,
[7]
recently held that an attorney requires the client’s
authorisation to bring the application on behalf of the client. It
should be noted that this principle does not apply in this case. This
is because the challenge is not about the attorney’s
locus
standi
but the applicant’s employee to launch the application.
However, of paramount importance is the court’s analysis
relying
on the
Ganes
decision
that;
"[i]t
stands to reason that a deponent to an affidavit is a witness who
states under oath facts that lie within her personal
knowledge. She
swears or affirms to the truthfulness of such statements. She is no
different from a witness who testifies orally,
on oath or
affirmation, regarding events within her knowledge. Thus, when Ms
Moduka deposed to the founding affidavit, she needed
no authorisation
from her client.”
[8]
[23]
Further, in
African
Bank Ltd v Theron and
another
,
[9]
the Respondents challenged the authority of the general manager
(Fourie) to depose to the affidavit on behalf of the African Bank.
The court rejected the respondent’s argument and
found
that respondents had not put up any factor which could lead to an
inference that Fourie did not have proper authority. The
court in
this case held that:
“
where
the challenge to an applicant’s authority to depose to the
founding affidavit was weak, a minimum of evidence was sufficient
to
justify the inference that the applicant was properly before the
court
.
One
of the general powers of management was the power to litigate and to
authorise litigation, a fortiori in the case
of a juristic
person. There was no need for the legislature to enumerate every
power of management when it divested one person
of all his managerial
powers and conferred those powers on another. There could be no
meaningful power to manage without the power
to exercise the legal
rights of the bank, if necessary, by recourse to the courts
.”
[10]
[24]
In the present matter, the authority of the Applicant’s
attorneys to take legal action
has not been challenged and is
accordingly not in issue. What is contested is the authority of the
deponent Charles Johannes Potgieter
to launch the Application against
the Respondent. Charles Johannes Potgieter stated that he is the
Chief Financial Officer employed
by the Applicant. He also indicated
that he is duly authorised to depose to the affidavit and the facts
are within his personal
knowledge. Indeed, without a resolution by
the board of directors of the Applicant that he is duly authorised to
embark on these
proceedings, he lacks authority locus standi to do
that
[25]
Relying on
Ganes
and
African
,
Bank decisions, the cases whose facts
case before this court,
it
is irrelevant whether Charles Johannes Potgieter is
or not authorised to depose to the founding affidavit. This
is because a deponent to an affidavit
in motion proceedings need not be authorised
by the party
concerned to depose to the affidavit. In addition, Chief
Financial officer holds management powers and
,
one of the general powers of management is the power to litigate and
to authorise litigation.
Whether
there is non-joinder of a party.
Respondent’s
submissions
[26]
The Respondent state that the Application should be dismissed because
the Applicant failed to
join Linteg Funding in this Application. The
Respondent submit that, the Applicant referred to a specific term of
the oral agreement
which is that the Respondent will transfer GOR’s
to Linteg Funding in respect of individual complexes mentioned above.
It
is alleged that the Respondent did not transfer a specific GOR
concerning Bergview Villa to Linteg Funding. Thus, the Respondent
says that because of this allegation Linteg Funding should be joined
in this application. In addition, the Respondent state that
Linteg
Funding and Linteg Fibre (Applicant) are two separate companies as
depicted in annexures “OA2 and OA3”. This
supports the
argument that there is a non-joinder of Linteg Funding in the
application.
Applicants
Submission
[27]
The Applicant submit that the Respondent concluded an agreement with
Linteg Fibre and not Linteg
Funding (RF) (Pty) Ltd. Linteg Funding
was solely the holder of GOR’s and not a party to the Sale of
Fibre Optic Network
deal. Hence the Applicant submits that Linteg has
no interest in the matter and is not seeking any relief as it did not
pay any
amount to the Respondent.
Applicable
Law
[28]
Joinder is a procedure by which multiple parties or multiple causes
of action are joined together
in a single action. There are two forms
of joinder of parties: joinder of convenience and joinder of
necessity. The joinder of
necessity requires proving that a party has
a direct and substantial interest in the subject matter of the
pending litigation.
[11]
A
party
is joined of convenience because there is a legal
tie between the party to be joined and the applicant,
which on
the ground of equity, the saving of costs, or the avoidance of
multiplicity of actions, the Court will deem it in the
interest of
justice that the matters should be heard together.
[12]
[29]
In
Judicial
Service Commission and Another v Cape Bar Council and another,
[13]
the
Court held that:
“
It has by now
become settled law that the joinder of a party is only required as a
matter of necessity – as opposed to a matter
of convenience –
if that party has a direct and substantial interest which may be
affected prejudicially by the judgment
of the court in the
proceedings concerned (see e.g. Bowring NO v Vrededorp Properties
CC
2007
(5) SA 391
(SCA)
para 21). The mere fact that a party may have an interest in the
outcome of the litigation does not warrant a non-joinder
plea. The
right of a party to validly raise the objection that other parties
should have been joined to the proceedings, has thus
been held to be
a limited one.”
[14]
[30]
In
DE
van Loggerenberg and E Bertelsmann Erasmus: Superior Court
Practice Erasmus
,
[15]
in the commentary on Uniform Rule 10, the issue of non-joinder is
discussed. The following is stated:
". . . the
question as to whether all necessary parties had been joined does not
depend upon the nature of the subject matter
of the suit, but upon
the manner in which, and the extent to which, the court's order may
affect the interests of third parties.
The test is whether or not a
party has a 'direct and substantial interest' in the subject matter
of the action, that is, a legal
interest in the subject matter of the
litigation which may be affected prejudicially by the judgment of the
court. A mere financial
interest is an indirect interest and may not
require joinder of a person having such interest . . . The rule is
that any person
is a necessary party and should be joined if such
person has a direct and substantial interest in any order the court
might make,
or if such an order cannot be sustained or carried into
effect without prejudicing that party, unless the court is satisfied
that
he has waived his right to be joined."
[16]
[31]
The word “interest” has been interpreted to mean a direct
and substantial interest
which a person is required to have in the
subject matter before he or she can be said to have
locus
standi
in
such a matter or before such a person may be joined or be allowed to
be joined in proceedings.
[17]
The Court in
Gordon v Department of Health
:
KwaZulu –Natal,
[18]
held that:
“
If
an order or judgment cannot be sustained without necessarily
prejudicing the interest of third parties that had not been joined,
then those third parties have a legal interest in the matter and must
be joined.”
[19]
[32]
In the
Minister
of Finance v Afri Business NCP,
[20]
the
court stated that:
“
A person is
regarded as having a direct and substantial interest in an order if
that order would directly affect that person’s
rights or
interests. The interest must generally be a legal interest in the
subject matter of the litigation and not merely a financial
interest.
”
[21]
[33]
Applying the above test, in the present matter, Linteg Funding was
not a party to either the
Micro Trenching agreement or the Sale of
Fibre Optic Network agreement. It is only involved in this case since
the Respondent was
supposed to transfer the GOR’s including the
Bergview Villa to Linteg Funding on the instructions of the
Applicant. It is
not in dispute that the said GORs were not
transferred. The Respondent's alleged subsequent failure to reimburse
the Applicant
or pay the debt allegedly owed to the Applicant’s
is the genesis for this Application. Linteg Funding and the Applicant
are
indeed two separate companies. The Respondent owes Linteg Funding
no money and the granting or refusal of final or provisional winding
up will not have an effect on Linteg Funding's business. Therefore,
in my view there is no reason for Linteg Funding to be joined
in this
Application. Consequently, this point
in limine
should also be
dismissed.
Whether
there is a ground for winding up the Respondent
Applicable
law
[34]
Section 344 of the Companies Act 61 of 1973, titled
circumstances
in which company may be wound up by the Court reads at 344 (f)
as follows:
“
A
company may be wound up by the Court if—
(a)
the company has by special resolution
resolved that it be wound up by the Court;
(b)
the company commenced business before
the Registrar certified that it was entitled to commence business;
(c)
the
company has not commenced its business within a year from its
incorporation, or has suspended its business for a whole year;
(d)
in the case of a public company, the
number of members has been reduced below seven;
(e)
seventy-five per cent of the issued
share capital of the company has been lost or has become useless for
the business of the company;
(f)
the company is unable to
pay its debts as described in section 345;
(g)
in the case of an external company,
that company is dissolved in the country in which it has been
incorporated, or has ceased to
carry on business or is carrying on
business only for the purpose of winding up its affairs;
(h)
it appears to the Court
that it is just and equitable that the company should be wound up.”
[35]
The main argument put forward by the Applicant in its Application for
final alternatively provisional
liquidation of the Respondent is that
the Respondent is not able to meet its obligations or pay its debts.
An explanation for the
possibility of a company being found not to be
able to repay its debts is given in section 345 of the Companies
Act.
[22]
The section reads as
follows:
(1)
“
A
company or body corporate shall be deemed to be unable to pay its
debts if
(a)
a creditor, by cession or otherwise,
to whom the company is indebted in a sum not less than one hundred
rand then due—
i.has
served on the company, by leaving the same at its registered office,
a demand requiring the company to pay the sum so due;
or
ii.in
the case of anybody corporate not incorporated under this Act, has
served such demand by leaving it at its main office or
delivering it
to the secretary or some director, manager, or principal officer of
such body corporate or in such other manner as
the Court may direct,
and
the company or body corporate has for three weeks thereafter
neglected to pay the sum, or to secure or compound for it to the
reasonable satisfaction of the creditor; or
(b)
any process issued on a judgment,
decree, or order of any court in favour of a creditor of the company
is returned by the sheriff
or the messenger with an endorsement that
he has not found sufficient disposable property to satisfy the
judgment, decree, or order
or that any disposable property found did
not upon sale satisfy such process; or
(c)
it
is proved to the satisfaction of the Court that the company is unable
to pay its debts.”
[36]
According to this section, looking at section 345 (1) (a) and (c)
relevant in this case, a company
is deemed unable to pay its debts
when a creditor who is owed at least R100 leaves a demand for payment
at the company's registered
office and the company fails to pay,
secure, or compromise the claim within three weeks of receiving the
demand. As mentioned in
Afric
Oil (Pty) Ltd vs Ramadaan CC
,
[23]
it is crucial to provide a letter of demand at the company's
registered office. If the creditor fails to deliver as required, the
application for liquidation fails. In
Afric
oil (Pty) Ltd
only the letter of demand was delivered to Ramadaan by fax from Afric
Oil. The letter was not sent to the registered address of
the
corporation. It was found that there were no service provided to the
corporation in accordance with the provisions of the section
despite
receiving the request. As a result, although the Afric Oil showed
that Ramadaan had not been able to meet its debts, it
could not rely
on the section for liquidation.
[37]
Sharrock, Van der Linde & Smith state that to prove section 345
(1) (c) the Court must take
account of the company's contingencies
and potential liabilities when deciding whether or not a company is
incapable of paying.
[24]
The
source of payment is immaterial.
[25]
In
Helderberg
Laboratories CC and Others v Sola Technologies (Pty) Ltd
,
[26]
the court stated that:
[16]
“…
the
ability of a company or close corporation to pay its debts may be
demonstrated by itself making payment or by its ability to
obtain the
necessary finance from an exterior source. In the latter instance the
creditworthiness of the debtor would normally
enable it to raise the
necessary funds. As submitted by Mr Brusser, the emphasis in
determining the ability of a company or close
corporation to pay its
debts, should be on the fact of payment and not on the source of the
payment
.”
[27]
[38]
In
Body
Corporate of Fish Eagle v Group Twelve Investments,
[28]
Milan J stated that:
“
The
deeming provision of s 345(1)(a) of the Companies Act creates a
rebuttable presumption to the effect that the respondent is
unable to pay its debts (Ter Beek's case supra at
331F). If the respondent admits a debt over R100, even though
the
respondent's indebtedness is less than the amount the applicant
demanded in terms of s 345(1)(a) of the Companies Act,
then on
the respondent's own version, the applicant is entitled to succeed in
its liquidation application and the conclusion of
law is that the
respondent is unable to pay its debts.
”
[39]
In addition, there are different sorts of insolvency that must be
taken into account when figuring
out the company's ability to pay.
The court has highlighted the existence of factual insolvency in
Johnson
v Hirotec Pty Ltd
.
[29]
The court said, as follows:
[6]
“
Factual
insolvency may, in an appropriate case, be indicative of the
company’s inability to pay its debts and, as Goldstone
JA
pointed out in Ex Parte De Villiers supra at 502E, it would clearly
be a relevant and material factor in deciding whether a
court should
exercise its discretion to grant a winding-up order. The significance
to be attached to a company’s factual
insolvency obviously
depends upon the circumstances of the particular case. There are many
variables, and it is not necessary,
or even possible, to list them
all. What is of importance in this case is the marked deterioration
of the respondent’s position
from the 1996 to the 1997
financial years, coupled with a lack of liquidity at the end of the
1997 financial year. At that stage,
the bank balance stood at a mere
R728, and current liabilities exceeded the amount due by debtors. The
respondent’s financial
statements, therefore, do not further
its case. On the contrary the position that is revealed supports the
view that the company,
apart from being factually insolvent, is
commercially insolvent as well.”
[30]
[40]
In
Standard
Bank of South Africa Limited v R-Bay Logistics CC,
[31]
the court set out the broad categories of insolvency. These are
actual\literal and commercial insolvency. These are different
methodologies for determining whether a company is unable to pay its
debts. The court held as follows:
[14]
“
It
has long been accepted that, in our law, a state of “insolvency”
has two different meanings. Actual or literal insolvency
involves a
comparative measurement of the value of a company’s assets and
its liabilities. If the total value of those liabilities
exceeds the
total value of the assets, the company is actually insolvent.
However, “commercial insolvency” recognises
that, whether
a company is actually insolvent or not, if it does not have
sufficient cash resources to make payment of its ongoing
obligations,
as and when they fall due, the company is commercially insolvent
[15]
The
two concepts (i.e., actual insolvency vs commercial insolvency) are
quite different. The former involves the mere assessment
of the value
of a company’s assets and liabilities. The latter involves an
assessment of the company’s cash flow, to
determine whether it
has the immediate wherewithal to pay its current expenses, as they
fall due.
[27]
There
has been judicial debate about whether, for the purposes of section
344(f) of the old Companies Act, it is possible for the
Court to
conclude, upon evidence of actual insolvency, that a company is
“unable to pay its debts”. Certainly, proof
of the actual
insolvency of a respondent company might well provide useful evidence
in reaching the conclusion that such company
is unable to pay its
debts, but that conclusion does not necessarily follow. On the other
hand, if there is evidence that the respondent
company is
commercially insolvent (i.e., cannot pay its debts when they fall
due) that is enough for a Court to find that the required
case under
section 344(f) has been proved. At that level, the possible actual
solvency of the respondent company is usually only
relevant to the
exercise of the Court’s residual discretion as to whether it
should grant a winding -up order or not, even
though the applicant
for such relief has established its case under section 344(f).”
[32]
Respondent’s
submission on the alleged debt.
[41]
The Respondent argues that the applicant is abusing the liquidation
procedure to force payment.
They point out that in the Founding
Affidavit
[33]
, the Applicant
indicates to have been aware of the disagreement regarding the
alleged debt before starting the liquidation procedure.
The
Respondent further claims that there are legitimate and valid reasons
to challenge the debt's existence. The Respondent claims
that the
Applicant fails to provide the methodology used to determine the
debt. They claim that the Applicant made numerous mistakes
about the
number of units and the names of the particular complexes.
[42]
The Respondent further contends that the Applicant is misinforming
the court when it claims that
there was no response to the letter of
demand, making reference to the letter dated 25 May 2020 attached as
Annexure CJP22 that
the Respondent's attorneys submitted in response
to the demand letter. Furthermore, The Respondent contends that
despite the Applicant
being fully aware of the Respondent's principal
place of business address, which the Applicant’s personnel used
to store
their equipment during the project of the second agreement,
the s 345 notice was sent to the Respondent’s registered
address
and delivered via fax. A client of the Respondent, GBitel was
the recipient of the email. The notice was merely attached and sent
through email to the Respondent, sheriff never delivered it. They
claim that this demonstrates the Applicant's ulterior intention,
which was to harm the Respondent's reputation.
[43]
Looking at the facts before this court, I believe that the facts of
this case do not show that
the Respondent is unable to pay, taking
into account the aforementioned criteria in section 345. This is due
to the fact that the
Respondent promptly filed a letter in response
to the Applicant's letter of demand. This response was within three
weeks after
having received the letter of demand. There is no
indication in the Respondent's reply indicating that the Respondent
acknowledges
the debt and is unable to pay. Instead, in the letter,
it was stated that because the Applicant rendered defective services
the
Respondent will not pay for such service. In my humble view, the
Respondent's letter sent to the Applicant in response of the letter
of demand and its refusal to pay do not constitute incapacity to pay
as defined by section 345. In addition, there are no financial
statements or balance sheets depicting the Respondent’s
financial position. Hence, the court cannot make a finding of factual
or commercial insolvency of the respondent.
Whether
the Applicant followed a proper procedure when instituting the
liquidation Application.
Applicant’s
submission
[44]
The Applicant submit that the sheriff was instructed to serve the
Application on the Respondent’s
employees in accordance with
the section 346 (3) and (4) of the Companies Act. According to the
Applicant the Application was properly
served by placing a copy of
the Application on the notice board where the Respondent conducts the
business. The Applicant further
submits that if the court finds that
there was no proper service of the Application, a provisional winding
order should be granted
coupled with the order that the Application
and court order be served on the employees and trade unions with a
return date as this
does not render the application fatal.
[45]
On contrary, the Respondent disputes the proper service of the
Application to the employees.
It is claimed that the Applicant did
not serve the application on the Respondent's workers in accordance
with the correct procedure.
According to the Respondent, it employs
eight people, some of whom are union members. Therefore, the service
of the Application
is crucial so that the employees can contact the
unions to which they belong. The Respondent further claims that it is
obvious
from the Sheriff's return that the notice was attached to a
notice board where the respondent is no longer in business.
Applicable law
[46]
Section 346 (3) and 4A of the Companies Act,
[34]
titled application for winding up of a company lists requirements to
complied with in an application for a winding up order. The
relevant
parts of the section reads as follows:
[3]
(a)Before an
application for the winding-up of a company is presented to the
Court, a copy of the application and of every affidavit
confirming
the facts stated therein shall be lodged with the Master, or, if
there is no Master at the seat of the Court, with an
officer in the
public service designated for that purpose by the Master by notice in
the Gazette.
(a)The Master or any
such officer may report to the Court any facts ascertained by him
which appear to him to justify the Court
in postponing the hearing or
dismissing the application and shall transmit a copy of that report
to the applicant or his agent
and to the company.
[4] (A)
(a) When an application is presented to the court in terms of this
section the applicant must furnish a copy of the
application—
i.to
every registered trade union that, as far as the applicant can
reasonably ascertain, represents any of the employees of the
company;
and
ii.to
the employees themselves—
(aa)
by affixing a copy of the application to any notice board to which
the applicant and the employees have access inside the premises
of
the company; or
(bb)
if there is no access to the premises by the applicant and the
employees, by affixing a copy of the application to the front
gate of
the premises, where applicable, failing which to the front door of
the premises from which the company conducted any business
at the
time of the application;
iii.to
the South African Revenue Service; and
iv.to
the company, unless the application is made by the company, or the
court, at its discretion, dispenses with the furnishing
of a copy
where the court is satisfied that it would be in the interests of the
company or of the creditors to dispense with
it.
(b)
The applicant must, before or during the hearing, file an affidavit
by the person who furnished
a copy of the application which sets out
the manner in which paragraph (a) was complied with.”
[47]
According to this section, the Application of the creditor requesting
winding up must, be accompanied
by a Master’s certificate
issued 10 days prior to the hearing, served to the Master and
furnished to all registered trade
unions, employees, the South
African Reserve Service, and the company. An affidavit must be filed
before court hearing to prove
compliance.
[35]
[48]
In
EB
Steam Company (Pty) Ltd v Eskom Holdings Soc Ltd
,
[36]
the court stated that
:
“
[15]
Section 346(4A)(b) is of considerable significance because it
reinforces the proposition that the papers
must be furnished to the
relevant persons only after the application has been lodged with the
Registrar. Additionally, it requires
the applicant to provide an
affidavit, which may be presented to the court at the hearing itself,
setting out the manner in which
paragraph (a) was complied with. It
necessarily follows that, if for any reason it has not been possible
to comply with those requirements,
or compliance has taken an unusual
form, the affidavit must spell this out. That raises the question of
the court’s powers
in the event of such non-compliance.
[16]
The type of problem posed in complying with the section neatly
emerges from the facts in one
of the cases to which we were referred,
namely Hendricks NO and others v Cape Kingdom (Pty) Ltd.
There the evidence
showed that none of the employees were still at
the premises of the company or any other premises where it had
carried on business.
Three employees had been served personally with
copies of the application papers. The point was then taken by the
company that
there had not been service at the places or in any of
the forms specified in section 346(4A)(a)(ii) and that
other
employees had not been served. The applicant then caused
another person to be personally served and in relation to three
employees
at a farm, who were not present when an attempt was made to
serve them, the application papers were left with another employee
who was present. The court held that the requirements of the section
had been satisfied. In my view, it was correct to do so. All
that
could reasonably have been done to make the application papers
available to the employees had been done.
[17]
The point has already been made that it is obligatory for the
applicant for a winding-up order
(or a sequestration order) to
furnish a copy of the application papers to the persons mentioned
in section 346(4A). When
dealing with employees the section
refers to three possible ways of doing this. The one is by placing
the papers on a notice board
at the premises where they work and to
which they have access. The second and third are by affixing a copy
of the application papers
to the front gate of the premises where the
employees work, if access to the premises cannot be obtained, or to
the front door
of the premises from which the business was conducted
at the time of the application. Manifestly none of these methods may
result
in the application papers actually coming to the attention of
the employees. If the business has closed down none of them may serve
to inform the employees of the application for winding-up. However,
there may be other means of doing so, as in Hendricks (supra),
where personal service on the employees was feasible. What this
suggests is that, whilst the obligation to furnish the application
papers to the employees is peremptory, the modes of doing so
indicated in the section are directory and alternative effective
means may be adopted. In other words, the methods for furnishing
employees with the application papers as set out
in section 346(4A)(a)(ii) are
no more than guides. If
other more effective means are adopted and reflected in the affidavit
filed in terms of section 346(4A)(b) then,
provided
the court is satisfied that the method adopted was reasonably likely
to make the application papers accessible to the
employees, there has
been compliance with the section.
[18]
It follows that when the court is satisfied that the method adopted
by the applicant to furnish
the application papers to the employees
is satisfactory and reasonably likely to make them accessible to the
employees, there is
no reason to refuse a winding-up order, whether
provisional or final, merely because they were not furnished to the
employees in
one of the ways indicated in section 346(4A)(a)(ii).
Nor should the court refuse an order merely because it is not
satisfied
that the application papers have come to the attention of
all employees. That is not what the section requires.
[23]
…The requirement that the application papers be furnished to
the persons specified in
section 346(4A) is peremptory. It is
not however peremptory, when furnishing them to the respondent’s
employees, that
this be done in any of the ways specified in
section 346(4A)(a)(ii). If those modes of service are impossible
or ineffectual
another mode of service that is reasonably likely to
make them accessible to the employees will satisfy the requirements
of the
section. If the applicant is unable to furnish the application
papers to employees in one of the methods specified in the section,
or those methods are ineffective to achieve that purpose and it has
not devised some other effective manner, the court should be
approached to give directions as to the manner in which this is to be
done. Throughout, the emphasis must be on achieving the statutory
purpose of as far as reasonably possible bringing the application to
the attention of the employees.”
[37]
[49]
In my view, the facts make it very evident that the Respondent's
employees were not properly
served. However, the devious conduct of
instructing service on the address were it is well known that the
employees of the Respondent
will not be found should be frowned upon
as it prejudices the rights of the employees. The Applicant simply
claims that it gave
the sheriff instructions to deliver the
Application to the Respondent's place of business; nonetheless, the
Application was delivered
to a location other than the Respondent's
principal place of business as shown by the Sherriff’s return
of service. As stated
in
EB Steam
Company (Pty) Ltd,
even
if the employees were not properly served, the Application should not
be dismissed on that basis.
Whether
a provisional or final liquidation order should be granted.
[50]
The Applicants submit that the Respondent is insolvent and unable to
pay the debt it owes the
Applicant. On the other hand, the
Respondent, asserts that there are factual disagreements covered by
rule (6)(5)(g) of the Uniform
Rules of Court. The Respondent claims
that the Applicant was made aware of the true factual issue by the
Respondent long before
the section 354 notice was delivered. In
essence, the Respondent's challenge to the winding up motion is a
factual disagreement;
the Respondent contends that this disagreement
should not be subject to oral testimony. According to the
Respondent, the
Application ought to be denied.
[51]
The Respondent further argues that the Applicant is abusing the
liquidation procedure to force
payment. In the Founding Affidavit
[38]
the Applicant indicates to have been aware of the disagreement
regarding the alleged debt before starting the liquidation procedure.
The Respondent further argues that there are legitimate and valid
reasons to challenge the debt's existence. The Respondent claims
that
the Applicant fails to provide the methodology used to determine the
debt. The Applicant made numerous mistakes about the
number of units
and the names of the particular complexes. Notably also the amounts
demanded were not the same.
Applicable
law
[52]
Rule 6 (5) (g) of the Uniform Rules of Court reads as follows:
“
Where
an application cannot properly be decided on affidavit the court may
dismiss the application or make such order as it deems
fit with a
view to ensuring a just and expeditious decision. In particular, but
without affecting the generality of the aforegoing,
it may direct
that oral evidence be heard on specified issues with a view to
resolving any dispute of fact and to that end may
order any deponent
to appear personally or grant leave for such deponent or any other
person to be subpoenaed to appear and be
examined and cross-examined
as a witness or it may refer the matter to trial with appropriate
directions as to pleadings or definition
of issues, or otherwise”.
[53]
In
Badenhorst
v Northern Construction Enterprises (Pty) Ltd,
[39]
the
court held that:
'A
winding up petition is not a legitimate means of seeking to enforce
payment of a debt which is bona fide disputed by the company.
A
petition presented ostensibly for a winding order but really to
exercise pressure will be dismissed and under circumstances may
be
stigmatised as a scandalous abuse of the process of the court. Some
years ago, petitions founded on disputed debts were directed
to stand
over till debt was established by action. If, however there was no
reason to believe that the debt it established would
not be paid the
petition was dismissed. The modern practise has been to dismiss such
petitions. But of course, if the debt is not
disputed on some
substantial ground the court may decide it on the petition and make
the order.”
[40]
[54]
As shown above, the present case presents factual disputes. These
disputes play a crucial role
in determination of whether or not to
grant the final alternatively provisional winding up of the
Respondent. The court in
Reynolds
No v Mecklenberg (Pty) Ltd,
[41]
held
that:
“
When
the application is opposed, and any of the allegations of fact relied
upon by the applicant are disputed, the Court may, in
its discretion,
grant a provisional winding-up order if it considers that the
requirements for a winding-up order have been established
on a
balance of probabilities. The question whether any bona
fide dispute of fact should be referred to evidence
is a
question that may be left over for decision on the return day before
any final winding-up order is issued.”
[42]
[55]
In situations where the company
bona
fide
and on reasonable grounds disputes its indebtedness to the creditor
the court will not ordinarily grant the provisional winding
up.
[43]
The court in
Kalil
v Decotex
,
[44]
stated as follows:
“
Consequently,
where the respondent shows on a balance of probability that its
indebtedness to the applicant is disputed on bona
fide and
reasonable grounds, the court will refuse a winding up order.
The onus on the respondent is not to show
that it is not
indebted to the applicant: it is merely to show that the indebtedness
is disputed on bona fide and reasonable
grounds. Though not
always formulated in exactly the same terms this rule appears from
decisions such as Badenhorst v Northern
Construction Enterprises
(Pty) Ltd 1956 (2) SA 346 (T), at p 347
H – 348 B.”
[45]
[56]
In this matter, there are a lot of factual disputes. The parties
disagree on essential facts
to determine whether to grant a final or
alternatively, provisional winding up. The requirements in section
344 (f) to wind up
a company have not been met. This is because it is
not clearly shown that the Respondent is indebted to the Applicant
and unable
to pay the debt. There was an existent dispute already
about the Respondent’s indebtedness prior to the insolvency
proceedings
being instituted. Evident that the dispute will have to
be first resolved by way of a legal action. Bearing also in mind that
the
fact that a Company might be struggling to pay its debts does not
preclude it from disputing or challenging what might be found
to be a
baseless and an unfounded claim of indebtedness which gives rise to a
genuine dispute on the alleged indebtedness.
[58]
The Respondent in this matter has also not been proven in line with
section 345 that it failed
to pay the alleged debt. In my view, it is
considerably more probable as the Respondent has alleged that the
Respondent is solvent
but refusing to pay because of the allegations
it has raised, however, there is no evidence provided before this
court such as
the financial statements to show the Respondent’s
financial position. Hence, in my view, due to the existence of a
factual
dispute and the absence of enough evidence to determine the
financial standing of the Respondent, the Application cannot succeed.
[59]
Under the circumstances the following order is made:
1.
The Application is dismissed with costs.
N
V Khumalo
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Pretoria
For
the Applicant:
W
F WANNEBERG
wwannenberg@mweb.co.za
Instructed
by:
Fourie
Van Pletzen Inc Attorneys
fourie@fvpinc.co.za
Ref:
F-Van Pletzen/eh/MAT7203
For
the Respondent:
J
PRINSLOO
Prinsloo
jm@clubchambers.net
Instructed
by:
HILLS
INC
jamestr@hillsinc.co.za
Ref:
J C THOM/aj/JT460/21
[1]
of Act 61 of 1973 read with Schedule 5, Item 9 of Act 71 of 2008.
[2]
Case lines 004-48 -004-57.
[3]
[1989] 4 All SA 762 (O).
[4]
2004 (3) SA 615
(SCA).
[5]
Ibid
para 19.
[6]
Ibid.
[7]
2022 (3) SA 403 (SCA).
[8]
Ibid
para
11.
[9]
1996 (4) All SA 156 (SE).
[10]
Ibid
at
159.
[11]
Ronnie
Dennison Agencies (Pty) Ltd t/a Water Africa SA v SABS Commercial
Soc Ltd
[2014] ZAGPPHC 998.
[12]
Rabinovich
and Others NNO v Med: Equity Insurance Co. Ltd
1980(3)
SA 415 (W) at 419 E.
[13]
2013 (1) SA 170
(SCA).
[14]
Ibid
at para 12.
[15]
(RS 19,
2022) at D1-124–D1-126.
[16]
Ibid.
[17]
Lebea v
Menye and Another
2023 (3) BCLR 257
(CC) para 30.
[18]
2008 (6) SA 522 (SCA).
[19]
Ibid
at para 9B.
[20]
2022 (4) SA 362 (CC).
[21]
Ibid
para 23.
[22]
Op cit note 1 above.
[23]
2004 (1) SA 35 (N).
[24]
Op cit note 1 above.
[25]
Ibid.
[26]
[2007] JOL 20684 (C).
[27]
Ibid
para
16.
[28]
2003 (5) SA 414
(W) at 428B-C.
[29]
[2000] JOL 7440 (A).
[30]
Ibid
para
6.
[31]
2013 (2) SA 295
(KZD).
[32]
Ibid
para
14-15 & 27.
[33]
in particular pages 004-62 and 004-63
[34]
Op cit note 21.
[35]
Op cit note 1 above at 251.
[36]
[2014] 1 All SA 294
(SCA).
[37]
Ibid
para
9-19, 15-18 & 23.
[38]
in particular pages 004-62 and 004-63
[39]
1956 (2) SA 346
(T) at 347H-348C.
[40]
Ibid.
[41]
1996 (1) SA 75 (W).
[42]
Ibid
at
81.
[43]
Op cit note 1 at 251.
[44]
[1988] 2 All SA 159 (A).
[45]
Ibid
at
181 (1).
sino noindex
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