Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 1226South Africa
Yandisa Corporate Holdings (Pty) Ltd v OAK Cap Closed Corporation and Another (2024-098631) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1226 (25 November 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
25 November 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Yandisa Corporate Holdings (Pty) Ltd v OAK Cap Closed Corporation and Another (2024-098631) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1226 (25 November 2024)
Yandisa Corporate Holdings (Pty) Ltd v OAK Cap Closed Corporation and Another (2024-098631) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1226 (25 November 2024)
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sino date 25 November 2024
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE NO:
2024-098631
In the urgent application between:
YANDISA CORPORATE HOLDINGS (PTY)
LTD
Applicant
and
OAK CAP CLOSED CORPORATION
First Respondent
COMPANIES AND INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
COMMISSION
(CIPC)
Second Respondent
JUDGMENT: REASONS
LABUSCHAGNE AJ
[1]
On 19 November 2024 I made an
order in terms of Rule 45A suspending
the court order of Neukircher J dated 30 October 2024, postponing
Part B sine die and ordering
that the costs of Part A be costs in the
cause in the Part B proceedings. In addition, the papers were
referred to the Legal Practice
Council to investigate allegations of
impropriety made against a legal practitioner, Werner Cawood. These
are the reasons for the
order.
[2]
In Part A proceedings
the applicant brought an urgent
application suspending a court order dated 31 October 2024 granted
under case number 2024-098631
pending finalisation of Part B
proceedings, in which the applicant seeks an order rescinding and
setting aside the aforesaid order.
[3]
On 31 October 2024 an order was
granted by Neukircher J in an
application by Oak Cap CC against Yandisa Corporate Holdings and the
CIPC. The court granted
an order that:
“
1.
The first respondent (Yandisa) is found and declared to be in default
of the terms
of the loan agreement entered between the parties at
Pretoria on 13 January 2023.
2.
The cession and pledge agreement entered between the applicant and
the first
respondent at Pretoria on 13 January 2023 is henceforth and
on the date of this order by the Honourable Court regarded as having
been perfected.
3.
The applicant (Oak Cap) is entitled to take over full right and title
in and
to the pledged rights, pledged loans and pledged shares in and
of the first respondent with immediate effect.
4.
The directors of the first respondent (Yandisa) is ordered to deliver
to the
applicant the following within ten (10) business days from the
date of this order pertaining to the first respondent:
4.1
The share certificate/s relating to the pledged shares.
4.2
Signed and completed share transfer forms, blank as to the identity
of the transferee and
number of shares transferred.
4.3
All other documents related to the pledged shares, pledged rights
and/or pledged loans which
the applicant may call for and which is
identified in the recordal attached to this order as
Annexure
AB
.
5.
The directors of the first respondent is (sic) ordered to, within ten
(10) days
of the date of this order, do everything that may be
required of them for the purposes of, and to give effect to the
cession and
pledge agreement and this order.
6.
Should the directors of the first respondent fail to comply with
paragraphs 4
and 5 above, the applicant and/or its nominees is
authorised, by this order of court, to give effect to and to do
whatever needs
to be done in order to give effect to the cession and
pledge agreement and this order of court which authorisation includes
but
not be limited to the following:
6.1
That the applicant and/or its appointed representatives is entitled
and authorised to complete
and/or sign any document on behalf of the
first respondent, including completion of share transfer forms and to
do anything else
which may be necessary to give effect to this order;
6.2
That the applicant and/or its appointed representatives are entitled
and authorised to,
from date of this order:
6.2.1
Exercise all or any of the rights, including voting rights attaching
to the pledged shares, pledged loans
and/or pledged rights;
6.2.2
Enforce all or any obligations attaching to the pledged shares,
pledged loans and/or ledged rights in such
manner and on such terms
as the applicant may deem fit in its sole discretion;
6.2.3
Receive payment for, take delivery of and/or receive performance in
respect of the pledged shares, pledged
loans and/or pledged rights;
6.2.4
That the applicant’s election:
6.2.4.1
Sell or otherwise realise the pledged shares, pledged loans and/or
pledged rights or any one of
them by public auction;
6.2.4.2
Sell or otherwise realise the pledged shares, pledged loans and/or
pledged rights by private treaty;
6.2.4.3
Take over the pledged shares, pledged loans and/or pledged rights at
an amount equal to the fair
value therefore less any indebtedness the
respondent has towards the applicant;
6.2.4.4
Institute any legal proceedings which the applicant may deem
necessary in connection with any sale
or other realisation or
transfer of any pledged shares, pledged loans and/or pledged rights
by the applicant;
6.2.4.5
Convey valid title in the pledged shares, pledged loans and/or
pledged rights to any purchaser thereof
(including itself) and/or to
take all such further and/or other steps as the applicant may deem
necessary to deal with the pledged
shares, pledged loans and/or
pledged rights;
6.3
That the applicant and/or its appointed representatives are
authorised to sign and execute:
6.3.1 Any proxy
in favour of the applicant to enable the applicant to exercise any
voting rights attaching to
the pledged shares, pledged loans and/or
pledged rights;
6.3.2
Such documents as may be necessary to give effect to the cession and
pledged agreement, and this order,
which includes any documents:
6.3.2.1
In order to render the pledged shares, pledged loans and/or pledged
rights negotiable including, without limitation,
the signature of
transfer declarations;
6.3.2.2
To enable the applicant to receive payment of the purchase price of
the pledged shares, pledged loans and/or
pledged rights;
6.3.2.3 To
enable the applicant to exercise any of its rights granted in terms
of the cession and pledge agreement and
this order;
7.
The first respondent is ordered to, on reasonable notice, make
available to the
applicant all books and records of the first
respondent insofar as they are related to any legal proceedings which
may be instituted
by the applicant for the enforcement of any of its
rights in terms of the cession and pledge agreement and this order.
8.
The applicant or its duly authorised nominee, as new shareholder, is
authorised
to appoint new and/or replace the existing directors of
the respondent within seven (7) days of the granting of this order.
9.
The second respondent is ordered to recall the transfer of the shares
in the
name of the applicant, together with any changes relating to
the identity of the directors of the respondent in terms of this
order
or otherwise sanctioned by this Honourable Court.
10.
That any party who opposes this application be ordered to pay the
cost of the application
on the scale as between attorney and own
client.
11.
No order as to costs.”
[4]
The applicant contends that it
was unaware of the proceedings that
resulted in the above order. The applicant was informed on 5
November 2024 at 16:31 that
a court order was obtained on 31 October
2024, which order had the effect of perfecting the cession and pledge
in respect of the
applicant’s issued shares. In terms
thereof the first respondent was entitled to appoint new directors to
the board
of the applicant within seven (7) days of the order and to
take cession and transfer of the shares after ten (10) days of the
order,
which include the authority to dispose and sell the shares by
private treaty or public auction.
[5]
The effect of the order was to
deprive the applicant’s
shareholders and directors of control of the applicant as a result of
the sale of shares and pledge
which have become perfected by the
court order.
[6]
The substance of the relief granted
and the timelines in the order
give the applicant limited time to avoid the assumption of voting
rights by the first respondent
and replacement of its board of
directors. This is sufficient to warrant a hearing of the matter as
an urgent application.
[7]
The address where the application
was served was inserted by Cawood
Attorneys in the cession and pledge agreement as the applicant’s
selected
domicilium
address. Mr Cawood, on whose address
the main application was served, is however also a director of the
applicant, who failed
to inform the other directors of the applicant
about the application. Mr Cawood had become a director of the
applicant on
the insistence of the first respondent. Further,
the applicant was asked for an undertaking on 6 November 2024 not to
proceed
in terms of the order, which undertaking was refused and this
led to the serving of this urgent application on the first
respondent’s
attorneys of record on 10 November 2024.
[8]
In Rule 45A proceedings, if the
court is satisfied that the order
granted is being challenged in rescission proceedings then
irreparable harm is presumed.
The Court need not enter into the
merits of the rescission proceedings.
[9]
In this application for the suspension
of the court order, the
applicant advances three defences against the perfecting of the
cession and pledge agreement.
[10]
The primary defence is that the applicant was not indebted
to the
first respondent at the time of the court order by virtue of a
delegation agreement signed in April 2024. The first
respondent
was a party and co-signatory to the agreement. The applicant
contends that its obligation to pay back a loan in
terms of loan
agreement to the first respondent was delegated in toto to a third
party, Indalo (Pty) Ltd.
[11]
The second defence is one of non-joinder. The
applicant
contends that the shares which the applicant seeks to take transfer
of are held by three shareholders, who are not cited
in the
application or in the court order. As those shareholders’
interests stand to be prejudiced substantially if
the shares were to
be attached under the cession and pledge agreement, those
shareholders have a substantial legal interest in
the matter and
should have been joined to the proceedings.
[12]
The third defence is that the cession and pledge agreement
is
ineffective against the applicant, since a company may not be the
holder of its own shares in terms of the Companies Act.
The
applicant has pledged its issued shares, which shares are not held by
the applicant but by its shareholders. The cession
and pledge
agreement relied upon is therefore in contravention of the Companies
Act and consequently of no effect against the applicant.
[13]
The applicant approached the court in terms of Rule
45A for an order
suspending the court order pending rescission thereof, contending
that a substantial injustice would be perpetrated
if the order were
not suspended. Usually it is sufficient to establish this requirement
if the order is challenged and rescission
proceedings are
pending and without going into the merits ( See Gois trading as
Shakespeare’s Pub v Van Zyl 2011(1) SA 148
(LC)).The court will
be guided by the principles applicable to interim interdicts, except
where the applicant is not asserting
a right, but seeking to avert an
injustice (Ibid).
[14]
In assessing the challenge, I do so from the vantage
point of
assessing whether a substantial injustice would be averted if the
order were suspended and whether such an injustice would
ensue if the
order were not suspended. This is relevant to the
reasonableness of an apprehension of irreparable harm, and
the
balance of convenience. If the rescission has no prospects of
success, that would imply that a suspension would not be justified.
There would not be a reasonable apprehension of irreparable harm.
This is a case by case issue and is not intended to extend the
ambit
of current case law.
[15]
In response to the primary defence, the first respondent
contends
that the delegation agreement did not divest the applicant of its
obligations in terms of the loan agreement secured by
the cession and
pledge agreement. Based on this premise, the existence of the
delegation agreement was not disclosed to the
court prior to granting
of the court order.
[16]
In the rescission proceedings, the applicant has the
onus of
establishing that its liability to Oak Cap CC was discharged by
delegation of the debt to Indalo (see
Desai v Inman & Co
1971
(1) SA 43
(N) at 51 B – E;
Tooth and Another v
Maingard and Mayer (Pty) Ltd
1960 (3) SA 127
(N) at page 135).
[17]
The first respondent places reliance on
Trust Bank of Africa Ltd v
Dhooma
1970 (3) SA 304
(N) for the contention that, in the
absence of an express novation, the delegation agreement did not
divest the applicant of its
obligations under the loan agreement.
[18]
In
Trust Bank of Africa Ltd v Dhooma
1970 (3) SA 304
(N) at
307 the court records that voluntary novation is the result of a
contract. In the absence of express terms to novate
the
intention to do so will be inferred:
(a)
Where the terms of the new arrangement are inconsistent with the
continued existence
of the original rights;
(b)
Where the admissible evidence as to the circumstances giving rise to
the new arrangement
lead to the necessary inference that the parties
intended their original right to be novated.
[19]
The cession assignment and delegation agreement is
Annexure YAN8
to the founding affidavit. The parties are the applicant
(referred to as “the assignor and delegator”), Indalo
Mining (Pty) Ltd (referred to as "the assignee and delegatee”)
and Oak Cap CC (“the first respondent”).
[20]
In the introduction reference is made to the loan facility
agreement
which forms the foundation of the order of the court. For
purposes of clarity, I quote clauses 1 to 4 of the agreement:
“
1.
INTRODUCTION
1.1
On or about 13 January 2023, the Assignor and Oak Cap entered
into Loan Facility Agreement (LFA) and inter alia agreed that Oak Cap
lend and advance money to the Assignor to assist with cite
establishment and various other financial obligations to start mining
activities at Rietvlei Mine (owned by Corobrik SA). These
monies (multiple payments and payment dates) paid to or paid on
behalf of the Assignor was agreed to, as the loan with agreed
interest obligations and repayment terms linked to the said loan,
as
per the terms of the LFA concluded between Oak Cap and the Assignor.
1.2
The Assignor wishes to cede, assign, delegate, transfer and
make over all of its rights and obligations that it has in the
abovementioned
loan, including all addendums and amendments to the
loan to the Assignee. See annexure A attached.
NOW THEREFORE it is agreed as
follows:
2. CESSION
ASSIGNMENT AND DELEGATION
2.1
In execution of the abovementioned agreement, the Assignor/Delegator
hereby assign, delegate,
ceded, make over and transfer to the
Assignee/Delegatee its rights, title and interest in the
abovementioned loan and delegate
to the Assignee/Delegatee all its
obligations in the said agreement as from date of signature of this
agreement.
2.2
The Assignee/Delegatee hereby accepts the cession, assignment and
delegation in respect
of the said agreement with all the rights and
obligations attached thereto.
3.
AUTHORITY
The Assignor/Delegator authorises
the Assignee/Delegatee to give all the parties to the Loan notice of
this agreement, in order
to ensure that all the parties will know and
understand that the Assignee/Delegatee is from now on the party who
has taken over
all the rights and obligations of the
Assignor/Delegator.
4.
ACCEPTANCE
The Assignee/Delegee accepts the
assignment cession and delegation upon and subject to the terms and
conditions of this agreement.”
[21]
The aforesaid delegation agreement records the intention
to transfer
all rights and obligations in the loan agreement to Indalo and
records the acceptance of the transfer of the rights
and obligations
on behalf of Indalo. The pledge agreement reflects both the transfer
and the acceptance of rights and obligations.
Consistent with
the abstract theory of transfer of rights, it is arguable that all
the rights in the loan agreement and all the
obligations in respect
thereof which vested in the applicant have been transferred and
delegated to Indalo.
[22]
The aforesaid delegation agreement was not disclosed
to the court.
Its impact was therefore not debated before that court and the court
could not consider its impact.
[23]
Counsel for the first respondent contended that the
applicant did not
deal specifically with all the elements of an interim interdict. That
is why the first respondent responded by
trying to demonstrate that
the disclosure of the delegation agreement would not affect the order
granted.
[24]
There is no replying affidavit, implying that factual
averments in
the answering affidavit, that have not been dealt with in the
founding affidavit, are admitted. The answering affidavit
however in
the main contains legal argument, which is not evidence. Nothing
therefore turns on the absence of an express denial
in a replying
affidavit.
[25]
The requirements for an interim interdict are self-evidently
established from the substantive provisions of the court order.
Unbeknown to the applicant, the applicant was found to be in default
of a loan agreement the liability for which, the applicant contends,
was extinguished by a consensual delegation agreement, which
was not
disclosed to the court. The application was served in a manner that
prevented the applicant from knowing of the proceedings
before
Neukircher J. The order facilitates the transfer of shares and
the exercise of voting rights in respect of the applicant’s
issued share capital and the replacement of the board of directors of
the applicant by those appointed by the first respondent.
[26]
A reasonable apprehension of irreparable harm is established.
The
consequences of the order will deprive the current directors of the
applicant of the capacity to restore the status quo. They
will be
replaced as directors and current shareholders will be powerless to
use their voting rights as such rights vest in the
first respondent.
A suspension pending rescission proceedings is the only effective
remedy that is available to the applicant.
[27]
As far as the allegations against Mr Cawood are concerned,
his role
in insertion of the
domicilium
address of the applicant into
the cession agreement and receiving service at the
domicilium
raises the spectre of an orchestrated strategy to steal a march on
the applicant. Mr Cawood has a fiduciary duty to the applicant
as a
director of the applicant.
[28]
His failure to advise his co-directors of the service
of the
application at the
domicilium
address, which was erroneously
disclosed to the sheriff as being the principal place of business of
the applicant, warrants an
explanation. The failure on the
applicant’s part to oppose the court proceedings was ostensibly
caused by the silence of
Mr Cawood after service at his address, also
the
domicilium
address. These facts require further
investigation into the conduct of Mr Cawood in his capacity as legal
practitioner and
business rescue practitioner, both of which require
fitness and propriety as minimum character qualities.
[29]
On balance I was persuaded to suspend the court order
and hence I
made the order referred to above.
LABUSCHAGNE AJ
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