Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 1348South Africa
Barak Fund SPC Limited obo Barak Structured Trade Finance Segregated Portfolio v Business Venture Investments and Others (Leave to Appeal) (36125/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1348 (20 December 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
20 December 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Barak Fund SPC Limited obo Barak Structured Trade Finance Segregated Portfolio v Business Venture Investments and Others (Leave to Appeal) (36125/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1348 (20 December 2024)
Barak Fund SPC Limited obo Barak Structured Trade Finance Segregated Portfolio v Business Venture Investments and Others (Leave to Appeal) (36125/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1348 (20 December 2024)
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sino date 20 December 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE
NO.: 36125/2022
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: [N]
(3)
REVISED: [Y]
(4)
Signature:
Date:
20/12/24
In
the matter between:
BARAK
FUND SPC LIMITED ON BEHALF OF BARAK
STRUCTURED
TRADE FINANCE SEGREGATED PORTFOLIO
Applicant
and
BUSINESS
VENTURE INVESTMENTS
First Respondent
JUSTINE
COLLING
Second Respondent
GILIAN
HOPE MILLER
Third Respondent
BUILDMAX
LIMITED
F
ourth
Respondent
BASICALLY
SQUARED (PTY) LIMITED
Fifth
Respondent
LEAVE
TO APPEAL JUDGMENT
Kumalo
J
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This is an application for leave to appeal
by the First to the Fourth Respondent a judgment of this court handed
down on 24 August
2023. For convenience, the First to the Fourth
Respondents shall be referred to jointly as the Respondents.
[2]
The Respondents leave to appeal is premised
on certain findings of fact and/or law that the Respondents submit
that the court erred
and misdirected itself on. I do not intend to
regurgitate the said list as it would be tantamount to repeat the
judgment that is
under attack but address the salient features that I
regard as determinative of the outcomes of the leave to appeal.
[3]
Respondents submitted that this court erred
with its recording of the citation of the Applicant as Barak Fund SPC
Limited or Barack
Fund SPC Limited (on behalf of the Barak Structured
Trade Finance Segregated Portfolio) as the Applicant in paragraph 6
of the
founding affidavit is described as Barak Fund SPC Limited
without the suffix: “(on behalf of the Barak Structured Trade
Finance
Segregated Portfolio)”.
[4]
It is further submitted on behalf of the
Respondents that this court erred by not, since in the founding
affidavit, the deponent
consistently refers to only Barak Fund SPC
Limited, and not to Barak Fund SPC Limited (on behalf of the Barak
Structured Trade
Finance Segregated Portfolio) as the entity which
concluded the Facility Agreement and other agreements.
[5]
Respondents further argued that this court
erred in that it omitted to adjudicate the question whether Barak
Fund SPC Limited or
Barak Fund SPC Limited (on behalf of the Barak
Structured Trade Finance Segregated Portfolio) concluded the Facility
Agreement.
[6]
Section 17(1)(a) of the Superior Courts Act
makes provision that leave to appeal may only be given where the
judge or judges concerned
are of the opinion that (i) the appeal
would have a reasonable prospect of success; or (ii) there is some
other compelling reason
why the appeal should be heard, including
conflicting judgments on the matter under consideration.
[7]
Rule
49(1)(b) of the Uniform Rules of Court provides that when leave to
appeal is required, the grounds thereof shall be furnished
within
fifteen days after the date of the order appealed against. The
grounds must be clearly and succinctly set out in clear and
unambiguous terms to enable the court and the respondent to be fully
and properly informed of the case which the applicant seeks
to make
out and which the respondent is to meet in opposing the application
for leave to appeal
[1]
.
[8]
The Applicant argued correctly in my view,
that the present application does not contend for any compelling
reason why the appeal
should be heard as contemplated in section
17(1)(a)(ii) of the Superior Courts Act. All the Respondent did was
to list a series
of findings that it contends the Court erred and
misdirected itself. The Respondent is therefore confined to the
assertion that
the appeal would have a reasonable prospect of success
as contemplated in section 17(1)(a)(i) of the Act.
[9]
The above is also clear from the First to
Third Respondents’ heads of argument that they are relying on
the reasonable prospects
of success on all the issues raised.
[10]
Section
17 has elevated the test to be applied for granting of leave to
appeal. In
MEC
Health, Eastern Cape v Mkhitha
[2]
,
the Supreme Court of Appeals stated that a mere possibility of
success , an arguable case or one that is not hopeless, is not
enough. There must be a sound, rational basis to conclude that there
is a reasonable prospect of success in the appeal.
[11]
The premise of the application for leave to
appeal rest mainly on three issues, namely the finding that the
Applicant is Barak Fund
SPC Limited (on behalf of the Barak
Structured Trade Finance Segregated Portfolio). The second issue that
the Respondents described
as ‘the heart of the dispute, is the
question whether the various agreements, and more specifically the
facility agreement,
were concluded between Barak Fund SPC Limited or
Barak Fund SPC Limited (on behalf of the Barak Structured Trade
Finance Segregated
Portfolio) and the First Respondent.
[12]
Lastly whether the suretyship alleged to
have been signed by Second and Third respondents were indeed so
signed.
[13]
The Applicant is cited as Barack fund SPC
Limited on behalf of Barak Structured Trade Finance Segregated
Portfolio. Barack Fund
SPC Limited, a registered company in terms of
the Caymen Islands Companies Laws as required by the company laws of
the Cayman Islands.
[14]
The Respondents in the main hearing argued
that the inclusion of the words “on behalf of” denoted
the existence of an
agent and a principal relationship. They
contended that it is not possible to determine who the plaintiff is,
a party cannot act
as its own agent and the conclusion of a contract
by a person who intends to act as an agent, in circumstances where
the principal
does not exist, dos not result in a contract with the
agent.
[15]
The reasons for the use of the words “on
behalf of” were fully canvassed before this court and explained
in the Applicant’s
founding affidavit. It is a requirement for
such entities namely the ‘segregated portfolio companies
registered as such under
the company laws of the Cayman Islands. It
does not denote an agency relationship.
[16]
In the main judgment, I made the conclusion
that the Applicant being Barak Fund SPC Limited was the entity that
had entered into
the facility agreement with the First Respondent.
The laws of the Cayman Island required it to identify the assets
forming part
of the ring-fenced portfolio assets and this is a
legislative framework in the Cayman Islands.
[17]
More importantly, section 216(2) of the
Cayman Companies Law stipulates that a segregated portfolio of or
within a segregated portfolio
company shall not constitute a legal
entity separate from the segregated portfolio company.
[18]
In my understanding, the Applicant created
a single segregated company which in the course of its business with
the First Respondent,
created a segregated portfolio which would have
required that it ring-fence the assets of that segregated portfolio.
This did not
create constitute a legal entity separate from the
Applicant.
[19]
The Respondents do not deny that they
entered into facility loan agreement worth approximately R30 million
at the time.
[20]
The Applicant’s cause of action
against the First Respondent is for the repayment of the loan granted
based on the agreements
referred to above. The action against the
Second and Third Respondents is based on the suretyship agreements
allegedly signed by
them wherein they bound themselves
in
solidum
with the First Respondent in
favour of the Applicant.
[21]
The Respondents argued that the Applicant
(Barak Fund SPC Limited) was not a party to the suretyship.
Ex
facie
the document, the party described
as the Lender is Barak Fund SPC Limited acting on behalf of Barak
Structured Trade Financed Segregated
Portfolio and that is the entity
entitled to enforce the suretyship. It is argued that based on the
above, the third issue also
enjoys a reasonable prospect of success.
[22]
I am unable to agree with the Respondent’s
submissions as it appears that the case for the leave to appeal is
somewhat different
from the case that was argued in the main.
[23]
The case argued on their behalf of
suretyship was that they had no recollection of having signed the
suretyship and challenged the
correct chronological sequence of the
pages. Two pages were marked page 8 and the second page 8 thereof did
not follow the correct
chronological sequence and pages 9 and 10
thereof did not contain the Second and Third Respondents signatures.
The Second and Third
Respondents initialled every page of the
suretyship except page 10. They did not deny that their signatures
appear on the second
page 8.
[24]
The issue now raised in this application
for leave to appeal that the suretyship only referred Barak Fund SPC
Limited on behalf
of Barak Structured Trade Finance Segregated
Portfolio was never raised in the main hearing. What Respondents
raised was that they
did not recall signing the suretyship agreement
though they did not specifically dispute their initials and
signatures on the document.
[25]
Based on all the above, I am of the view
that there are no reasonable prospects of success in the appeal.
[26]
In the premises, the following order is
made:
1.
The application for leave to appeal is
dismissed; and
2.
The First, Second and Third Respondent are
to pay the cost of this application on scale C.
MP Kumalo
Judge of the High
Court
Delivered:
This judgment is handed down electronically by uploading it to the
electronic file of this matter on CaseLines.
For the applicant:
Adv D Mahon
Instructed by:
Schindlers
Attorneys
For the
respondents:
Adv C Acker
Instructed by:
Pagel Schulenburg
Inc
[1]
See
Songono v Minister of Law and Order
1996 (4) SA 384
( E ) at 385 I-J
[2]
(1221/15)
[2016] ZASCA 176
(25 November 2016) para 17
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