Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 534South Africa
Minister of Communications and Digital Technologies and Another v South African Post Office SOC Ltd and Others [2023] ZAGPPHC 534; 2023-051134 (10 July 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
10 July 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Minister of Communications and Digital Technologies and Another v South African Post Office SOC Ltd and Others [2023] ZAGPPHC 534; 2023-051134 (10 July 2023)
Minister of Communications and Digital Technologies and Another v South African Post Office SOC Ltd and Others [2023] ZAGPPHC 534; 2023-051134 (10 July 2023)
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sino date 10 July 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO: 2023-051134
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
Date: 10 July
2023
E van der Schyff
In
the matter between:
THE
MINISTER OF COMMUNICATIONS
AND
DIGITAL TECHNOLOGIES
FIRST APPLICANT
POST
OFFICE RETIREMENT FUND
INTERVENING
PARTY / SECOND
APPLICANT
and
SOUTH
AFRICAN POST OFFICE SOC LTD
FIRST RESPONDENT
(In
provisional liquidation)
ANTON
BRETT SHABAN N.O.
SECOND RESPONDENT
HLANGANI
JERRY MUSI N.O.
THIRD RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
Van
der Schyff J
Introduction
[1]
The applicant (the Minister) approached the
court on an urgent basis seeking an order to place the first
respondent (SAPO) under
supervision and in business rescue in terms
of s 131(1) of the Companies Act 71 of 2008 (the Act /
Companies
Act). SAPO
is currently under provisional liquidation, with the
return date for the liquidation application extended to 30 October
2023.
[2]
A case is made out for the application to
be heard on an urgent basis.
Miscellaneous Aspects
[3]
The application was not opposed. Notices to
abide were filed by the Municipal Employees Pension Fund and Chrisal
Investments (Pty)
Ltd, two of SAPO's creditors, and SAPO's
provisional liquidators, the second and third respondents (the
provisional liquidators).
Despite not opposing the business rescue
application, the provisional liquidators filed what they coined a
'reporting affidavit'.
This affidavit was delivered to inform the
court of the provisional liquidator's compromise suggestion, their
view on the prospects
of a successful business rescue, and SAPO's
current financial position. The provisional liquidators explained
that they could no
longer progress the compromise offer and therefore
abide by the outcome of the application. It is apposite to state that
the provisional
liquidator's position is brought about by the
Minister's unwavering stance that Government would only advance a
cash injection
of R 2.4 billion if SAPO is placed under business
rescue, the withdrawal of Postbank's initial support for the
compromise suggestion,
and the Post Office Retirement Fund's support
for the business rescue application. Postbank and the Post Office
Retirement Fund
(the Fund) are SAPO's largest creditors.
[4]
Four of SAPO's creditors, to wit, Fleet
Africa, Twin City Developments (Pty) Ltd, Manvest Proprietary
Limited, and Doornhoek Ontwikkelings
BK, filed affidavits in support
of the provisional liquidators' compromise suggestion. These parties,
however, did not enter the
fray. Although their views are noted, it
is, with respect, of no consequence considering the provisional
liquidators' position
regarding the compromise proposal as set out
above.
[5]
Although
the Municipal Employees Pension Fund and Chrisal Investments (Pty)
Ltd abide by the decision of the court, they proposed
the appointment
of two other individuals as interim business rescue practitioners.
Despite these entities having an interest in
the proceedings, and are
affected persons,
[1]
s 131(5)
provides that ‘the court may make a further order appointing as
interim practitioner a person who satisfies the requirements
of
s
138
,
and
who has been nominated by the affected person who applied in terms of
subsection (1)
…’ (my emphasis). Neither the Municipal Employees
Pension Fund nor Chrisal Investments (Pty) Ltd are cited as
applicants
in the business rescue application. No objection was
raised against the appointment of the interim business rescue
practitioners
proposed by the applicant in the event that the
application is successful. As a result, no reason exists to appoint
the interim
business rescue practitioners proposed by these two
entities if the business rescue application is successful.
[6]
The Fund sought leave to intervene as the
second applicant in this application. The Fund, one of SAPO's largest
creditors, supports
the Minister in the business rescue application.
There was no opposition to the intervention application, and the Fund
has a substantial
interest in the proceedings. As a result, it is
allowed to join the proceedings as a second applicant.
[7]
The
absence of any opposition to this application compelled me to
consider whether all affected and interested parties were
appropriately
informed of and aware of the proceedings - particularly
Postbank, a large creditor whose continued existence seems to be
intricately
intertwined with SAPO's fate, and who voiced its support
for a compromise solution slightly more than a month ago in the
liquidation
proceedings, and SAPO's employees and the relevant Trade
Unions. After having considered the service affidavits filed by both
the
Minister and the Fund, I am at ease that Postbank and other
affected and interested parties were suitably notified of the
application
and that their absence is the consequence of a deliberate
decision not to participate in the proceedings. The Supreme Court of
Appeal, in
Road
Accident Fund v Taylor,
[2]
restated the principle that the law constrains a court to decide only
the issues that the parties have raised for decision. Where
parties
refrain from entering the fray and raising issues, it is not for the
court to speculate about their reasons.
[8]
An aspect I
initially found somewhat disturbing is Government's unwavering
stance, as communicated through the Minister's affidavits,
that it is
only willing to provide capital if SAPO is placed in business rescue.
While emphasising the dire effect that final liquidation
will,
inter
alia,
have on the nation's international responsibilities and the role that
SAPO plays in the country's socio-economic structure, it
seems as if
Government wants to force the court's decision and the outcome of
this application by bluntly stating that the R 2.4
billion that has
already been earmarked to fund SAPO's turnaround, will now only be
available for business rescue proceedings.
SAPO is not empowered to
borrow money without the prior written approval of the Minister,
granted after consultation with the Minister
of Finance,
[3]
and thus unable to obtain capital from another source. The Minister
did not deem it necessary to engage with the provisional liquidators
to discuss the feasibility of their compromise proposal. The
compromise proposal, developed on the assumption that the earmarked
R2.4 billion would be available, envisages SAPO exiting provisional
liquidation intact. After that, the provisional liquidators
submitted, Government could pursue an operational restructuring of
SAPO, using the additional R3.8 billion, which the Government
is
allegedly willing to invest in SAPO. This begged the question as to
whether it would not be appropriate and in the public interest
to
postpone the business rescue application and request the Minister to
purposively engage with the provisional liquidators, and
file a
supplementary affidavit, whereafter the application could be finally
considered.
[9]
The Minister's concern regarding SAPO's future viability as an
institution,
if a financial bailout is provided without an
accompanying operational restructuring driven by independent business
rescue practitioners
who functions in a specific statutory fiduciary
matrix, is one of the main reasons for the Minister, and Government,
disposing
of a
s 155
compromise as a solution to SAPO's financial
predicament. The Minister's counsel emphasised that any solution that
solely focuses
on a compromise with SAPO's creditors, without
addressing SAPO's ability to increase its service offering and
decrease costs, is
not viable as it does not resolve the structural
problems SAPO faces. Since the Minister confirmed that a compromise
was considered
an option but discarded, I am of the view that a
postponement to allow for a discussion between the Minister and the
provisional
liquidators will only delay the proceedings and not bear
fruit.
Applicable
legal principles
[10]
The
threshold requirements for business rescue applications to succeed
are trite and will not be dealt with in detail.
Section 131
(4) of
the
Companies Act provides
the court with a discretion to place a
company under business rescue.
[4]
An applicant must satisfy the court of two factors. The first is that
the company is, factually, in a distressed financial position.
The
second is that there is a reasonable prospect of 'rescuing the
company'. Rescuing the company means achieving one of two objectives.
The primary objective is to restructure the company in a way that
maximizes the likelihood of its continued existence on a solvent
basis. If this is not possible, the secondary goal of business rescue
is to achieve a better return for creditors than the company's
immediate liquidation. A company may be placed in business rescue if
it achieves either of these objectives.
Discussion
[11]
Although the provisional liquidators did not formally oppose the
application, it is evident
from the content of their 'reporting
affidavit' that they hold the view that SAPO cannot be rescued
through business rescue proceedings.
It is almost paradoxical that
they propose that SAPO can survive provisional liquidation if their
compromise solution is accepted,
with the earmarked R 2.4 billion
being utilised for this purpose.
[12]
The Minister believes that there is a reasonable prospect that either
of the objects of
business rescue proceedings can be achieved. It is
gleaned from the Minister's papers, and no objective reason exists to
doubt
the correctness of the evidence provided under oath, that
Cabinet has not only pledged to provide SAPO with the initially
earmarked
R2.4 billion, but also indicated its intention to support
SAPO's application for an additional R3.8 billion in the October
budget.
The fact that there are conditions attached to the R2.4
billion is a consequence of SAPO being a state-owned entity. The
undertaking,
however, illustrates Government's commitment to
providing SAPO with capital and post-commencement finance to
facilitate the institution's
turnaround. Since I am of the view that
any possibility of SAPO being rescued depends mainly on the political
will to bring about
a turnaround, Government's communicated
commitment to support any business rescue proceedings by providing
capital weighs heavily
in support of the application.
[13]
Rogers J,
as he then was, held in
Tyre
Corporation Cape Town (Pty) and Others v GT Logistics (Pty) Ltd
(Esterhuizen and Another Intervening)
[5]
that a proposed business rescue plan may include elements of a
compromise with creditors. In dealing with this issue, Rogers J
explained:
[6]
'
In
the case of a
s 155
compromise, creditors vote according to classes.
The compromise must be approved by at least 75% in value of each
class. In the
case of business rescue, by contrast, the
only requirement for approval is that the plan is supported by
the holders of more
than 75% of the creditors' voting interests
actually voted and by at least 50% of the independent creditors'
voting interests actually
voted
(s 152(2)).'
[14]
The upshot of the principle set in
Tyre Corporation
in favour
of business rescue proceedings is that if the business rescue
practitioners ultimately opine that a compromise must be
negotiated,
the possibility of a compromise solution amidst business rescue
proceedings still exists.
[15]
The papers filed of record indicate that several reasons for SAPO's
dire financial situation
have been identified. The three interrelated
structural problems that the Minister's counsel highlighted are the
following:
i.
SAPO has been slow to modernise its service offering;
ii.
SAPO has neither reduced its operating costs, nor aligned them with
the requirement
of a modern post office;
iii.
SAPO has not been competitive in the courier and parcel market.
[16]
The Minister of Finance's letter, dated 26 June 2023, attached to the
Minister's replying
affidavit, points to yet another reason for
SAPO's predicament: financial misconduct. The first condition for
making available
the earmarked R2.4 billion that was appropriated to
support the SAPO's turnaround strategy, 'the Post Office of Tomorrow'
to be
used as part of the business rescue process, is that SAPO
submits to National Treasury and DCDT all the reports that have been
produced in relation to financial misconduct. SAPO is also to submit
reports from 1 April 2019 to 'Q3 2022/2023' on how the people
identified as responsible for such misconduct have been dealt with by
31 December 2023.
[17]
Although
not yet implemented, a turnaround strategy was recently developed.
The institution recognised the need for proactive action
because it
found itself in dire straits. The introduction of the South African
Post Office Amendment Bill (B11-2013) before Parliament
illustrates
that the Minister attempts to address the problem proactively.
[7]
This, coupled with the Minister of Finance's additional condition
that SAPO must explain why the previous turnaround plans have
failed
to be successfully implemented, might prove invaluable to business
rescue practitioners in devising a business rescue plan.
[18]
The
Minister pointed out that SAPO's most significant cost driver is its
employee-related costs, which outstrip its revenue. The
existing
turnaround plan, as contained in the strategy documents, seeks to
reduce SAPO's headcount while maintaining service delivery.
The plan
currently contemplates reducing SAPO's headcount by approximately
7000 persons, which, if achieved during the 23/24 financial
year,
will result in an R1.327 billion cost reduction during the 24/25
financial year. A business rescue plan can provide for retrenchments
if the business rescue practitioners hold the same view. It is widely
acknowledged that business rescue proceedings can allow a
financially
distressed SOE to exit solvent on the other side of the process, with
jobs (albeit rationalised) being preserved.
[8]
The harsh reality is that the facts point to it that SAPO's workforce
needs to be extensively curtailed for SAPO to survive, but
business
rescue proceedings are prone to have a less severe impact on the
workforce than final liquidation.
[19]
One of the few things that the Minister and the provisional
liquidators agree on is that
SAPO's final liquidation is undesirable.
The role that SAPO fulfils, or is supposed to fulfil, not only in the
national but also
international context, is, in my view, the factor
that lends credibility to Cabinet's reported undertaking to support
SAPO's application
for an additional R3.8 billion in the October
budget if business rescue proceedings commence.
[20]
Nationally,
SAPO, a vital government service platform, amongst others, renders an
essential service, particularly in rural and remote
areas, that
impacts the socio-economic well-being of the inhabitants of such
areas. In the international context, the interruption
of SAPO's
international obligations might have dire consequences for all South
Africans who utilise the postal services of other
countries. The
failure to provide free transit of postage items from countries that
are members of the Universal Postal Convention,
to which South Africa
is a signatory, entitles other member states to stop providing postal
services to South Africa. This illustrates
that the effects of
liquidating a state-owned company are not limited to the insolvent
company's and its creditors' private interests.
It has a domino
effect, and the economy as a whole may suffer.
[9]
To hold a view that the taxpayer's losses must be cut and that SAPO
must be finally liquidated is simplistic and does not account
for the
intricate relationships and responsibilities that exist.
[21]
In this
unique context, governments' undertaking to provide capital or
post-commencement finance, together with the existence of
a seemingly
plausible strategy and corporate plan directed at SAPO's
restructuring, and the reasons that led to the institution's
predicament to a great extent being identified, collectively provides
the objective basis on which an expectation, or reasonable
possibility,
[10]
is founded
that SAPO might indeed be rescued.
[22]
SAPO is a
state-owned entity (SOE) that is undeniably insolvent. This brings
unique challenges to business rescue proceedings. That
this process
will not be without challenges, is an aspect highlighted in a
qualitative study conducted by Kesieman and Thakhathi.
The aim of the
study was to obtain insights from professional business rescue
practitioners regarding the feasibility of making
use of business
rescue to assist South African state-owned enterprises in avoiding
them going into insolvency and indefinitely
stopping operations.
[11]
Thakhathi and Kesieman's study reveals that it is a common concern
among the study's participants that many state-owned enterprises'
financial information is not in order. This is an aspect that has
been highlighted by counsel representing the provisional liquidators,
who informed the court that SAPO's affairs are in such disarray that
the Auditor General has been unable to complete her audit
for the
2022 financial year and delivered a report that is replete with
concerns, criticisms, and qualifications. According to
the
provisional liquidators, any portrayal of SAPO's financial status at
present is a matter of some guesswork. The study conducted
by
Thakhathi indicates that although this reality creates challenges in
that it makes it more difficult for the business rescue
practitioner
to develop a clear and concise rescue plan in the shortest possible
time frame, it is not, without more, a bar to
business rescue
proceedings.
[12]
[23]
A critical
element of the business rescue process is that an independent
restructuring professional, the business rescue practitioner,
is
appointed and tasked with developing and implementing a business
rescue plan in the best interest of all affected parties.
[13]
Shareholders, in the case of SOE's, Government, have minimal
decision-making power in the process. Business rescue practitioners
of SOEs must balance their duties with the Public Finance Management
Act 1 of 1999 (the PFMA) and find a way to move within the
different
accountability and responsibility matrixes of the PFMA and the
Companies Act. Another
challenge the business rescue practitioners
might face is a tension between the need to retrench employees and
the Government's
objective to create and maintain employment.
[14]
[24]
In casu,
it will be for the appointed business rescue
practitioners to determine whether the expectation and reasonable
possibility that
business rescue proceedings may bear positive fruits
that this court found to exist, lends itself to developing a viable
business
rescue plan. As stated above, the success of any plan
depends predominantly on the political will to continue SAPO's
legacy. If
the business rescue practitioners conclude, after an
investigation of SAPO's affairs, business property, and financial
situation,
that SAPO has moved beyond the point of being successfully
rescued, business rescue proceedings enable them to meet the second
possibility of business rescue, i.e., to obtain a better return for
creditors than would be the case if the company was to be liquidated
summarily. This can be achieved through an orderly winding down of
operations. Considering South Africa's international obligations
in
terms of the Universal Postal Convention, the orderly winding down of
SAPO's operations may include putting the necessary measures
in place
to ensure that the country's international obligations are met.
The
provisional liquidators' belated request
[25]
It has been stated above that the provisional liquidators filed a
notice to abide and a
reporting affidavit. They did not indicate in
the notice to abide that they would seek any costs order in these
proceedings. In
a practice note subsequently filed, they indicate,
however, that in the event that the business rescue order is granted,
they will
seek the insertion of an additional paragraph to the order
that reads as follows:
'The provisional
liquidators shall be entitled to recover their fees and expenses in
their administration of SAPO from SAPO, as
being costs in the
business rescue of SAPO, which will include the costs associated with
their application to extend the rule nisi,
attending the hearing on 1
June 2023 to extend the Rule Nisi, and delivering the reporting
affidavit and attending the hearing
of this application, including
the costs of senior counsel, as well as their fees and costs, as
calculated in terms of Tariff B
of the
Insolvency Act 24 of 1936
, as
taxed or agreed.'
[26]
Counsel acting for the Minister submitted that the court should
refrain from dealing with
the provisional liquidators' request
relating to a costs order. He pointed out, and correctly so in my
view, that the applicant
was not granted the opportunity to address
the request. As a result, this issue needs to be determined at a
later stage.
[27]
However, I am pressed to indicate that I am of the view that the
provisional liquidators,
were correct to file the reporting affidavit
wherein they provided important context and information regarding
SAPO's financial
position. Their recognition of the undesirability to
finally liquidate SAPO is commendable, and their efforts to keep SAPO
operational
despite it being placed under provisional liquidation are
indicative of the exercise of a fiduciary responsibility.
ORDER
In
the result, the following order is granted:
1. The
applicant and intervening party's non-compliance with the Rules of
Court in respect of periods and manner
of service are condoned to the
extent that is necessary, and the main application and intervention
application are heard as urgent
applications and enrolled as such;
2.
Leave is granted to the intervening applicant, the Post Office
Retirement Fund, to intervene as the second
applicant in the main
application;
3. The
intervening applicant's founding affidavit in the intervention
application is considered as its founding
affidavit in the main
application;
4. The
first respondent, the South African Post Office Soc Ltd ('SAPO'), is
hereby placed under supervision and
in business rescue, and business
rescue proceedings are to commence with immediate effect;
5. Mr.
Anooshkumar Rooplal and Mr. Juanito Martin Damons are hereby
appointed as joint interim business rescue
practitioners in respect
of the business rescue proceedings contemplated in paragraph 4,
subject to –
5.1. The Registrar
of Financial Services approving the interim appointment to the extent
that it is necessary in terms of
section 38A(3)(b)
of the
Financial
Advisory and Intermediary Services Act, 37 of 2002
; and
5.2. Ratification by the
holders of a majority of the independent creditors' voting interest
in the business rescue proceedings
at the first meeting of SAPO's
creditors, as contemplated in
section 147
of the
Companies Act, 71 of
2008
.
6. The
costs of the main application and the intervention application are to
be costs in the business rescue proceedings.
E van der Schyff
Judge of the High Court
Delivered:
This judgement is handed down electronically by uploading it to the
electronic file of this matter on CaseLines.
As a courtesy gesture,
it will be emailed to the parties/their legal representatives.
For the first
applicant:
Adv. A.E. Bham SC
With:
Adv. M. Sibanda
Instructed by:
Norton Rose
Fulbright Inc.
For the intervening
applicant:
Adv. C. Vetter
Instructed by:
Cliff Dekker
Hofmeyr
For the second and
third respondents:
Adv. J. Blou SC
Instructed by:
Werkmans Attorneys
Date of the
hearing:
7 July 2023
Date of judgment:
10 July 2023
[1]
S
128(1)(a)
of the
Companies Act.
[2
]
[2023]
ZASCA 64
(8 May 2023) at par [31].
[3]
S
7(4)(a)
of the
South African Post Office Soc Ltd Act 22 of 2011
.
[4]
S
131
(4) of the Companies act.
[5]
2017
(3) SA 74 (WCC).
[6]
At
par [36].
[7]
I
took cognisance of the provisional liquidators’ concern that
the legislature must still pass the Bill, and that the Bill
is not
without its problems. The context of an SOE in financial distress
renders itself to unique challenges as stated in the
judgment, and
this is but one of those unique challenges that the business rescue
practitioners must consider when investigating
whether SAPO can be
rescued.
[8]
E.
Levenstein. ‘South Africa’s state-owned enterprises –
prime candidates for business rescue?’ (2018)
Without
Prejudice 6,8 at 8.
[9]
M.F.
Cassim. ‘South African Airways Makes an Emergency Landing into
Business Rescue: Some Burning Issues.’ 137(2)
South
African Law Journal
(2020), 201-214 at 201.
[10]
Propspec
Investment (Pty) Ltd v Pacific Coast Investments 97 Ltd and Another
2013
(1) SA 542
(FB) at par [11] as approved in
Oakdene
Square Properties (Pty) Ltd and Others v Farm Bothasfontein
(Kyalami) (Pty) Ltd and Other
2013
(4) SA 539 (SCA).
[11]
B.S.
Kesieman & A. Thakhathi. ‘Preserving State-Owned
Enterprises in South-Africa: Views and Insights from Business
Rescue
Practitioners’, in A. Thakhathi (ed), The Commercial Field of
Action’ in Transcendent Development: The Ethics
of Universal
Dignity Vol 25 Emerald Group Publishing, 2022, Chapter 4.
[12]
Thakhathi,
supra
,
par 4.1.2.
[13]
L.
Kahn, 2021.
‘
Business
rescue process proves problematic for South Africa’s
state-owned entities’
https://events.debtwire.com/emerging-market-restructuring-series/business-rescue-process-proves-problematic-for-south-africas-state-owned-entities
accessed on 7 July 2023.
[14]
Ibid.
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