Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 509South Africa
Van Der Merwe and Associates Incorporated v Premax Trading 2 CC [2023] ZAGPPHC 509; 25368-2021 (5 June 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
5 June 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Van Der Merwe and Associates Incorporated v Premax Trading 2 CC [2023] ZAGPPHC 509; 25368-2021 (5 June 2023)
Van Der Merwe and Associates Incorporated v Premax Trading 2 CC [2023] ZAGPPHC 509; 25368-2021 (5 June 2023)
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sino date 5 June 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
Case
No.: 25368-2021
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
SIGNATURE:
DATE:
05/06/23
In
the matter between:
VAN
DER MERWE & ASSOCIATES INCORPORATED
Applicant
and
PREMAX
TRADING 2
CC
Respondent
This
Judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ and or parties representatives by email and by
being
uploaded to CaseLines. The date for the hand down is deemed to be ….
June 2023.
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
BAQWA
J
:
Introduction
[1]
This is an application by the
Applicant for the provisional winding-up of the Respondent in terms
of Section 344(f) read with sections
345(1) (a) and (c) of the
Companies Act, 61 of 1973.
[2]
The Applicant was mandated to
provide legal services to the Respondent by pursuing an action
against Dumarto Civils and Plant Hire
CC during 2013.
[3]
On 14 April 2018 the Applicant
rendered an account to the Respondent in the total amount of
R472 562,49.
[4]
The account rendered was an itemised
account claiming payment for the services rendered from 2013.
[5]
The legal action which the Applicant
pursued on behalf of the Respondent resulted in the liquidation of
Dumarto Civils and Plant
Hire CC.
[6]
The Applicant was thereafter
instructed to conduct an insolvency enquiry on behalf of the
Respondent as a result of which the Respondent
was awarded a dividend
of R200 000,00 from the estate of Dumarto.
[7]
When the Applicant rendered its Bill
of Costs to the Respondent, the latter refused and/ or failed to pay.
[8]
The Bill of Costs, which was
eventually presented to the Legal Practice Council was settled by a
consultant representing the Respondent
in the sum of R250 000,00
in full and final settlement.
[9]
A demand for payment was sent in
writing on 18 April 2021 to the Respondent. After failing to elicit a
meaningful response from
either the Respondent or its attorneys, the
Applicant reached the conclusion that the Respondent was unable to
pay its debts.
[10]
On a company search conducted by the
Applicant, it appeared that the Respondent had ceased to do business.
Records at the CIPC reflected
the Respondent to be in a
deregistration process.
[11]
The Respondent opposes the
winding-up application and its main defence is that the Applicant’s
claim has become extinguished
by prescription in terms of
section
10(1)
of the
Prescription Act 68 of 1969
.
[12]
The Respondent submits further that
the Applicant is accordingly not a creditor of the Respondent and has
no
locus standi
to institute these proceedings for purposes of the Section 345 of the
Companies Act.
Condonation
[13]
Before dealing with the merits of
the main application I propose to deal with the issue of condonation
summarily. The Respondent
served its notice of intention to oppose on
17 June 2021 but only filed its answering affidavit a year later on
14 June 2022.
[14]
Also, on 14 June 2022, a business
rescue application was launched regarding the Respondent. As a result
thereof the Applicant only
filed its replying affidavit on 15
September 2022. The business rescue application was withdrawn on 22
September 2022.
[15]
The replying affidavit was met with
a Rule 30(2) (b) Notice by the Respondent. On 28 September 2022 the
Applicant explained by letter
why the replying affidavit was only
filed in September, and requested consent for the late filing.
Consent was refused by the Respondent’s
attorneys and the
Applicant was compelled to launch a substantive condonation
application.
[16]
It is trite that the Business Rescue
proceedings suspended the liquidation proceedings and that the filing
of the replying affidavit
was under the circumstances not late. The
Rule 30(2) (b) Notice and the failure to give consent was not
justifiable. The filing
of the replying affidavit is therefore
condoned and the costs thereof ought to be awarded against the
Respondent and its attorneys
in this regard on a punitive scale.
[17]
It is common cause that the
Respondent filed an answering affidavit a year later than it ought to
have done – and that there
was no application for condonation
in that regard.
[18]
I find it quite deplorable and
petulant for the Respondent to argue that “insofar as
condonation of the late filing of the
relevant affidavits are
concerned, it is now established, that the rules are there for the
Court and not the Court for the rules,
and in instances where (such
in the present matter) the late delivery of an affidavit or
supplementation does not cause any prejudice
to the other litigant,
same should be permitted without further ado.”
[19]
The quoted submission by the
Respondent is made in circumstances where its answering affidavit was
filed virtually on the eve of
the Applicant proceeding with its
application on the basis that it was not being opposed. The answering
affidavit was clearly
filed in order to derail the application.
To suggest in those circumstances that there was no prejudice to the
Applicant is meritless.
[20]
Be that as it may, it is so that
instead of the Applicant filing an objection in terms of Rule 30(2)
(b) to signify that the late
filing of the answering affidavit
without an application for condonation was an irregular step, the
Applicant filed its replying
affidavit thus condoning the omission by
the Respondent. Whilst I find the absence of deference by the
Respondent to the Uniform
Rules of the Court regrettable, to say the
least, I do not say more in that regard.
On the merits
[21]
The Respondent takes the stance that
the Applicant is not entitled to either a final or provisional
winding-up order of the Respondent
as it is not a creditor of the
Respondent for the purposes of section 345(1) (a) and (c) as the
application was launched on 21
May 2021, whereas its claim had
prescribed on 13 April 2021, being three years after the account was
rendered to the Respondent.
It submits that the Applicant lacks
locus standi
.
The Respondent also submits that the Applicant has not proved that
the Respondent in unable to pay its debts.
[22]
It
is trite as between attorney and client, that a mandatory claim for
payment ordinarily becomes due upon termination of the relationship
or when the work is completed. See
Benson
and Another v Walters and others
.
[1]
Ordinarily, prescription begins to run when the mandate of an
attorney is terminated.
[2]
[23]
In the present matter, prescription
was made conditional upon the quantum thereof being determined by
agreement or taxation subsequent
to the letter dated 15 April 2019
and
section 12(3)
of the
Prescription Act 68 of 1969
provides “a
debt shall not be deemed to be due until the creditor has knowledge .
. . of the facts from which the debt arises
. . .”
In the present
application, that knowledge would only arise after taxation.
[24]
The amount contained in the original
account was disputed by the Respondent and the condition for making
payment raised by the Respondent’s
attorney was the
presentation of the account for taxation. The amount payable,
therefore, became uncertain and could be due once
it was ascertained
through taxation.
[25]
A
similar situation was dealt with in
Santam
Ltd v Ethwar
[3]
where debt was conditional upon the quantum thereof being determined
by agreement or taxation.
[26]
The amount due was agreed upon and
fixed on 13 April 2021 by an attorney instructed on behalf of the
Respondent. The Respondent
accepted liability on the basis of the
taxed Bill of Costs. The Applicant also became aware of the amount
which was due to him
on that date, namely 13 April 2021 and
prescription had become interrupted and would become effective on 12
April 2024.
[27]
It does not behove the Respondent,
so the Applicant argued, to refuse to make payment until the amount
is quantified on taxation
and after such taxation, to raise
prescription when further legal processes were kept in abeyance until
such taxation.
Prima facie case
for provisional winding-up
[28]
After the taxation of the Bill of
Costs and the amount was fixed at R250 000,00. The debt was no
longer in dispute. In a situation
where factual disputes are raised,
the question to be answered is whether with regard to the evidence
tendered in all the affidavits,
a prima facie case has been
established on a balance of probabilities.
[29]
The question whether the applicant
had proved the inability to pay its debts by the Respondent can be
answered as follows:
“
A
company is unable to pay its debts when it is unable to meet its
current demand on it, or its day to day liabilities in the ordinary
course of business, in other words, when it is commercially
insolvent. The test is therefore not whether the company’s
liabilities
exceed its assets, for a company can be at the same time
commercially insolvent and factually solvent, even wealthy. The
primary
question is whether the company has liquid assets or readily
realisable assets available to meet its liabilities as they fall due,
and to be met in the ordinary course of business and thereafter the
company will be in a position to carry normal trading, in other
words
whether the company can meet the demands on it and remain
buoyant.”
[4]
[30]
“
Liquid Assets” are
assets which are available to the company for the purpose of meeting
its obligations, when, for whatever
reason, a company is unable to
access any liquid assets, it is illiquid and unable to pay its debts
as they fall due.
[31]
The Respondent, acting through its
attorneys, undertook to settle is debt to the Applicant after
taxation of the Bill of Costs.
After taxation it could still not pay.
It meets the LAWSA definition of commercial insolvency referred to
above.
[32]
A
creditor has a right,
ex
debito justitiae
,
to a winding-up order against a respondent company that has failed to
discharge its debt. The discretion of a court to refuse
to grant a
provisional winding-up order, when an unpaid creditor applies
therefor, is a “very narrow one”, which is
rarely
exercised and then in special or unusual circumstances only.
[5]
[33]
I am satisfied that the Applicant
has proved its case on a balance of probabilities and that the
following order should ensue:
Order
33.1
The late filing of the replying affidavit
by the Applicant is condoned.
33.2
The Respondent and Morné Coetzee
Attorneys are ordered to pay the Applicant’s costs for the
condonation application
jointly and severally on a scale as between
attorney and client.
33.3
The Respondent be provisionally wound up
and a provisional order is issued with a return date being: 4
September 2023 in terms whereof
any person may approach the Court on
the return date to give reasons why the Respondent should not be
liquidated;
33.4
That the costs of the main application be
costs in the liquidation of the Respondent, same to be taxed on a
scale between attorney
and client.
SELBY BAQWA
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
HEARD
ON:
5 June
2023
DECIDED
ON:
5 June
2023
For the
Applicant:
Adv H P
Wessels
Instructed
by van der Merwe & Associates
For the Respondent:
Adv A P Ellis
Instructed
by Morné Coetzee Attorneys
[1]
1981
(4) SA 42
(C) at 48G
[2]
Benson
at 50C
[3]
1999
(2) SA 244 (SCA)
[4]
LAWSA
4(3) LAWSA 2 ED (2014), paragraph 74
[5]
See
Afgri
Operations Limited v Hamba Fleet (Pty) Ltd
2022 (1) SA 91
(SCA) at para 12
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