Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 647South Africa
Ex Parte: Van Der Merwe v Kingdom Vet (Pty) Ltd and Others (010457/2023) [2023] ZAGPPHC 647 (31 July 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
31 July 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Ex Parte: Van Der Merwe v Kingdom Vet (Pty) Ltd and Others (010457/2023) [2023] ZAGPPHC 647 (31 July 2023)
Ex Parte: Van Der Merwe v Kingdom Vet (Pty) Ltd and Others (010457/2023) [2023] ZAGPPHC 647 (31 July 2023)
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# IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
# (GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA)
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA)
CASE
NUMBER: 010457/2023
1.
REPORTABLE: YES / NO
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES / NO
3.
REVISED.
DATE:
31 July 2023
In
the
ex parte
matter between:
# DOLF VAN DER
MERWE APPLICANT
DOLF VAN DER
MERWE APPLICANT
and
KINGDOM
VET (PTY) LTD FIRST
RESPONDENT
LEANDRI
CLOETE SECOND
RESPONDENT
JACOBUS
CONRAD CLOETE THIRD
RESPONDENT
KINGDOM
INVESTMENTS INCORPORATED
FOURTH
RESPONDENT
#
# NEDBANK
LTD FIFTH
RESPONDENT
NEDBANK
LTD FIFTH
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 31 July 2023
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
#
N
V KHUMALO J
## Introduction
Introduction
[1]
This is an Application in terms of uniform
rule 6 (12) (c) for reconsideration of the order that was granted on
an
ex parte
Application
by Collis J on 8 February 2023 at the instance of the Applicant (“Mr
Dolf Van der Merwe) against the Respondents.
The Applicant brought
the Application on the ground of extreme urgency. The papers were
filed with the Registrar, uploaded on case
line and set down to be
heard on the same day at 14h00.
[2]
The order granted was in the following
terms:
2.1
Granting leave to the Applicant to apply
for the liquidation of the 1st
Respondent’s
liquidation on the basis of
s 81
(1) (e) (i) of the
Companies Act 71
of 2008
within 30 days of the granting of this order;
2.2
Pending the appointment of a Liquidator,
the banking accounts of the 4th
Respondent,
and any banking accounts linked thereto, are frozen with immediate
effect;
2.3
The 2nd
and
the 3rd
Respondent
are ordered to pay the costs occasioned by this Application on the
scale as between attorney and own client.
2.4
That part B is postponed sine die
[3]
The Respondents are seeking reconsideration
of the matter and for the order granted to the Applicant to be set
aside and replaced
with an order dismissing the Applicant’s
application with costs on the scale as between attorney and client.
The matter was
also brought on an urgent basis.
## The ex parte Urgent
Application
The ex parte Urgent
Application
[4]
The Respondents pointed out the peculiar
circumstances under which the order was obtained in the urgent court.
The most significant
peculiar circumstance that should have signaled
red flags to the court is the bringing of the Application ex parte, a
process that
our courts had issued a directive that
it should be discouraged or avoided,
requiring rather service of the application on a party/ies sued or
whose interest will be negatively
affected, especially inter alia, on
urgent matters and or whereupon an order for liquidation or
sequestration is sought, seeing
that the repercussions can be very
dire. An order granted
ex parte
is
as a result provisional.
[5]
Moreover, the Practice Note filed by Ms
Nortje, Counsel for the Applicant
in
the
ex
parte
Application
made
no
reference
to
an
ex
parte
application.
Instead Counsel indicated that the note was served upon the
Respondents, the facts and certain issues that included
the history
of the matter and the citation of the parties were common cause.
Further, Counsel stated in her note that the Respondent’s
counsel is unknown, that the parties are however in agreement that
the matter should be disposed of in the urgent open court, estimating
the hearing duration to be 30 minutes.
[6]
Furthermore,
notwithstanding that the Applicant had in his Affidavit stated that
he was going to serve the Application on the employees,
master’s
office and SARS, no such service had taken place at the time the
Application was heard. The application was neither
served on the
Respondents nor was any of them made aware of it at any relevant
time.
[1]
The
contents of the Practice Note and Founding Affidavit were therefore
misleading. The Respondents pointed this out indicating
that such
representation could lead to confusion that might sway a court to
grant an order in the belief that the Respondents and
their attorneys
were aware of the application. An assumption that cannot be made out
due to absence of reasons for granting the
condonation and the order,
without directing service to take place.
[7]
The
court’s duty is to
give
effect to the constitutional principles and requirements of equality,
impartiality and fairness. It is as a result expected
of a court in
appropriate circumstances to require that an
ex
parte
application
be served
or
published,
alternatively
a
court
will
issue
such
directions
as
are
necessary
to safeguard the fairness of its processes, if it is of the view that
a party not before it may suffer prejudice.
[2]
[8]
The rules of procedure nevertheless provide
for reconsideration of a matter where an order was obtained in the
absence of the other
party. Rule
6(12) (c)
of the High Court Rules provides that:
“
a
person against whom an order was granted in his absence in an urgent
application may by notice set down the matter for reconsideration
of
the order.”
[9]
This
procedure affords an aggrieved party a simple mechanism in
terms
of which an order granted
ex
parte
,
may be reconsidered by a Court.
[3]
More than any other reason, it is logical and in the interest of
justice, that
there
be reconsideration, that being the essence of an
audi
alteram parte
rule,
that both parties be heard for a fair adjudication to take place. The
principle is sacrosanct in our legal system
[4]
.
In this matter obvious exploitation of the process occurred, intended
or unintended. Consequently, looking at the ominous effect
of the
orders granted, reconsideration is inescapable and properly before
court.
## Procedure
Procedure
[10]
Rule 6 (12) (c) is couched in wide terms
allowing a party bringing the application to adopt a strategy that
best advances his case
in the most effective manner. The Respondents
have elected to oppose the Application
by
filing an Answering Affidavit, rather than arguing the
reconsideration on the Applicant’s papers, seeking a dismissal
of the Application. The issue to be determined is whether in
reconsidering the matter, the Applicant’s Application should
still be granted.
## Background Facts
Background Facts
[11]
The Applicant, is a businessman and an
investor, and the holder of a 50% share in a private company called,
Kingdom Vet (Pty) Ltd.
He and the 2nd Respondent, Leandri Cloete,
formed and registered Kingdom Vet in July
2022. Cloete, who is a veterinarian holds
the remaining 50% shares in Kingdom Vet. On 22 August 2022 Kingdom
Vet (cited and hereinafter
referred to as the 1st
Respondent) purchased an immovable property
situated at Greenhills on Kameels Street
(“the property”)
by securing a bond for R1 300
000.00.
The previous owner of the property also a veterinarian, conducted a
veterinary/animal clinic business from the premises.
The business was
taken over by Kingdom Investments Incorporated, a separate entity run
by the 2nd Respondent as its principal veterinarian,
sole shareholder
and director. The incorporated company is cited as the 4th
Respondent. At its formation it was
initially intended for the Applicant and the 2nd
Respondent to be the directors but the
Applicant shortly resigned due to the fact that he was not a
veterinarian.
[12]
The 4th
Respondent is the holder of the Standard
Bank business account that has been frozen as per the ex parte order.
Standard Bank is
for purpose of convenience cited as the 5th
Respondent. No cost order is sought against
it. Mr Jakobus Conrad Cloete, who is married to the 2nd
Respondent, is cited as the 3rd
Respondent.
## Application
Application
[13]
The Applicant brought this Application as
an urgent spoliation application, allegedly due to certain conduct of
the 2nd
and 3rd
Respondent on the basis of which he sought
the freezing of the 4th
Respondent
bank account, pending the appointment of a liquidator and leave to
apply for the liquidation
of
the 1st
Respondent.
He alleged to have
locus standi
to
seek the order against the 4th
Respondent
as he loaned an amount of R800 000 to the 4th Respondent. He argued
that as the 4th
Respondent’s
creditor, his investment was put at risk by the conduct of the 2nd
and 3rd
Respondent.
[14]
According to the Applicant he made the loan
of the amount of R800
000
to the 4th Respondent between June and December 2022 as a start- up
capital investment for the veterinary/animal clinic business
and as
an equity loan. The agreed terms were that he was to remain on the
board of the 4th Respondent not only as an equity investor,
that
funded the start-up capital
and
negotiated the sale of the property to the 1st
Respondent at a greatly reduced value for
the benefit of the 4th Respondent, but also as an administrative
manager whose duties
involved the day to day running of the 4th
Respondent’
veterinary
business.
The
duties
included
book
keeping
services, debtors and creditors
allocations, payments and maintenance of the property, cash up,
balances and security for the property.
[15]
The 4th
Respondent opened its doors in December
2022 and made a great profit, due to all his mentioned efforts and
management. Suddenly,
starting from 10 January 2023, the 2nd
and 3rd
Respondent put him under pressure to resign
from the 1st
Respondent.
The two offered to pay him back his R800 000.00, in undecided
instalments so that they can access and solely own the
property
vested in the 1st
Respondent,
which would then exclusively be to the benefit of the 4th
Respondent. He refused to resign, and the
2nd
and 3rd
Respondent persisted to interfere and
prevented him access to the property, stopping him from exercising
his managerial duties notwithstanding
having asked the 3rd
Respondent to refrain from meddling in the
business of the 1st
and
4th
Respondent.
[16]
He subsequently became aware of the 2nd
and 3rd
Respondent’s intention to plunder the
1st
Respondent ‘s
reserves and overrule his managerial performance by appointing
without his knowledge and authority, the 2nd
Respondent’s friends as locums at a
very exorbitant fee. Ignoring his highlighting that the 4th
Respondent still new business and required
to preserve its reserves. The 2nd
Respondent continued in a reckless and
irresponsible behaviour to also appoint plumbers and electricians to
undertake repairs and
improvements at the property and telling them
not to tell him of their activities.
[17]
On 6 February 2023, he discovered that he
has been blocked from accessing the 4th
Respondent’s on line banking system
on the instruction of the 2nd
Respondent,
thus spoliated from his duties and legitimate interest in the 4th
Respondent. His demand to be reinstated was
ignored. He also
alleged
that by refusing him access to the premises, undertaking unauthorised
improvements to the property at great costs, the 2nd
and 3rd
Respondent hijacked the 4th
Respondent. They did all this to run the
company dry so as to force him to negotiate on their own terms the
selling of his 50% share
in the
1st
Respondent at a great loss.
[18]
As a result he no longer has means to
prohibit the exhaustion of the capital interest of the 4th
Respondent by the 2nd
and 3rd
Respondents. He also has no doubt that they
have no intention of repaying the equity and the capital invested by
him in the 4th
Respondent,
but intend to plunder the capital funds held in the 4th
Respondent by their conduct of appointing
locums at grave expense of the 4th
Respondent
,
alternatively to destabilise the 4th
Respondent to such an extent that his 50%
in the 1st
Respondent
is at risk.
[19]
He as a result sought the freezing of the
bank account of the 4th Respondent and any other banking accounts
that might be linked
to it, as he has a well -grounded apprehension
due to their malicious conduct, that the 2nd and 3rd
Respondent will attempt to conceal or
dispose of the funds of the 4th Respondent and that of the 1st
Respondent to his detriment, hence his
failure to
give
notice.
Also
due
to
real
apprehension
of
imminent
and
irremediable
harm of losing his equity in the 1st
and 4th
Respondent, he had asked for an order
freezing the banking accounts.
[20]
The Applicant’s submission on the
liquidation of the 1st
Respondent,
whether or not the order sought should be granted it’s a matter
that does not have to be decided as yet. Although
Applicant reckons
it will result in the liquidator taking charge of the 1st
Respondent and ensuring that all its
creditors are protected. He argued that given the conduct of the 2nd
and 3rd Respondent the only reasonable
conclusion that one can arrive at is that the 1st
Respondent in the hands of the 2nd
and the 3rd
Respondent is the very real and imminent
danger to the public. It will accordingly be just and equitable
that the 1st
Respondent not be allowed to continue to do
business and it be wound up as soon as possible.
[21]
The liquidation Application of the 1st
Respondent was to be brought as part B of
the Application on the basis that it is just and equitable under s 8
(1)
© (ii) and 8 (1) (d) (iii) and 8
(1) (e (1) in that the persons in control of the company are acting
in a manner that is fraudulent
and illegal. The Applicant further
sought costs on attorney and client scale alleging to have been
justified to have approached the court on
an extreme urgency due to the fact that the 2nd
and 3rd
Respondent may squander the funds in the
4th Respondent.
## Respondents answer
Respondents answer
##
[22]
The 2nd
Respondent confirmed that she conducts the
veterinary practice which is the 4th
Respondent’s business from the 1st
Respondent’s property paying rent to
the 1st
Respondent
by paying off the monthly instalment on the mortgage bond and also
rates and taxes. She but disputed that the Applicant
has any interest
in the 4th
Respondent
and that there is any agreement to that effect. In terms of the
Veterinary Rules and Para-Veterinary Professions Act
19 of 1982, as
amended (the Act) the Applicant who is not a veterinarian may not
have an interest in or enter into a partnership
with a veterinary
practice. A fact that the 2nd
Respondent
alleges the Applicant is duly aware of.
[23]
The 2nd
Respondent disputes that the Applicant
invested the amount of R800 000.00 in the 4th
Respondent but allege that it was a
contribution by the Applicant to the 1st
Respondent. The 2nd
Respondent also denies that the Applicant
was an employee of the 4th
Respondent
nor a manager to protect his interest of R800 000 as he alleges, as
the money was for the 1st Respondent not for the
4th
Respondent. The amount was paid into the
Standard bank account of the 1st
Respondent
and used for upgrading the property. She alleged that Applicant even
cannily asked for the same salary
as
hers, which could not be done as they were not in a partnership,
making the situation untenable.
[24]
She further ‘’pointed out that
the contentions made in the Applicant’s founding affidavit do
not amount to a spoliation.
The only reference to spoliation
is
that
the
Applicant
was
blocked
from
the
4th
Respondent`s
bank
account. The
Applicant has not applied for the relief that would have been
available to him in that instance if he was the shareholder
of the
4th Respondent.
[25]
The allegation by the Applicant of
plundering of the 4th Respondent’s assets is solely premised on
the 2nd
Respondent`s
appointment of a
locum
without
his consent and the appointment of contractors to improve the
premises of the 1st
Respondent.
According to 2nd
Respondent
she has full authority to conduct her practice and to appoint locums
to assist her so that the practice can run smoothly
and generate
income and profit as she could
not
operate it alone on a full time basis. The appointments can therefore
not be the squandering of money.
[26]
With regard to the freezing of the 4th Respondent’s banking
account pending the liquidation of the 1st Respondent,
the 2nd
Respondent denied that the Applicant is a corporate investor or has
acquired an interest in the 4th Respondent. She pointed
out that the
1st Respondent does not utilize the account of the 4th Respondent,
neither is it entitled to do so nor does the 1st
Respondent have any
interest in respect thereof. The 1st Respondent just happens to be
the owner of the property that is rented
and utilized by the 4th
Respondent. The 4th Respondent commenced its operations on the 1st
Respondent’s property on an agreement
that it will be liable to
service the 1st Respondent’s bond by way of payment of rental
for the premises and the municipality
utility bills. The bond amount
payable in monthly instalments is approximately R15 000.00.
[27]
According to the 2nd
Respondent it is the Applicant that
unilaterally asked for the 1st
Respondent
to pay him back the money as a loan due to the Applicant having no
interest in the 4th
Respondent.
Further, the Applicant obtained a 50% undivided share in the property
with the prospects of future passive rental income,
without a vesting
contribution, risk free. It is for that reason that there was no
agreement entered into prior the receipt of
the money into the 1st
Respondent’s account. Her personal
contribution in the 1st Respondent vis a vis Applicant’s R750
000 + R50- 000 was
to take sole responsibility for the bond by
signing surety for it. Applicant believed that due to his R800 000
contribution he
did not need to sign for surety. She as a result
carries the full risk of the property whilst the Applicant receives
repayments
of his loan from her through the funds she generates
through the 4th
Respondent.
The 1st
Respondent
does not generate any income. Her suretyship therefore provides ample
security of any risk in respect of the Applicant’s
contribution, who has left her under no doubt that if he does not
receive payment of his loan the 1st
Respondent will be liquidated. The
liquidation will have a negative impact on the business of the 4th
Respondent as they will have to look for
new premises and again go through the registration process with the
South African Veterinary
Council (SAVC).
[28]
She pointed out that the 1st
Respondent indeed used the R800 000 for
renovations of the property, including painting, plumbing, cleaning
and electricity, transfer
fees and duties. She however denied that
any of the
money
was
used
as a
start-
up
of
the
veterinary
business,
buying
stock
and
other things, as alleged by the Applicant.
According to her, the business had acquired a 30- day payment plan
from the suppliers,
whilst all costs, salaries, startup expenses were
paid from the income generated from the 4th Respondent. There were
existing systems
and clients in place from the previous veterinary
business therefore easier to generate an income. Also it was as a
result of nearby
businesses not working during the December 2022
period when she worked herself very hard.
[29]
Furthermore, the accounting is not done by
the Applicant’s company but by a different company. Security is
through the ordinary
monitoring system provider as per ordinary
agreement with security providers. The maintenance is done by the 3rd
Respondent for free, like fixing the
geyser, that has never interfered with the administrative duties of
Kabili.
[30]
She denied that there was an agreement to
appoint the Applicant as a manager at 4th
Respondent but confirmed the existence of a
verbal
agreement
due to Applicant having offered and she accepted that the Applicant
render his services as an experienced representative
in the medical
field by assisting with the pay roll, HR management and sourcing of
stock. It was agreed the 4th
Respondent
was to be invoiced for Applicant’s services through his
company, Kabili International Trading (Kabili). However,
the entity’s
asking of R57 000 per month for such services, when seeing that the
4th
Respondent
was doing well, without performing any of the administrative duties
properly or at all, charging also for travelling
and cellphone, which
costs
were
supposed
to
be
part
of
the
invoice,
plus
for
profit
sharing
on
the
gross profit
which she refused, led to the termination of Kabili services. It is
this existing conflict that caused the present
breakdown between
them. She also alleged that Kabili did not sufficiently render the
services it was supposed to perform, with
Applicant attending the
premises once or twice a week, 2 to 3 hours at a time. She decided on
termination of its expensive services.
[31]
The Applicant had access to the 4th
Respondent’s bank account due to
Kabili’s administrative duties. The access was then withdrawn.
The Applicant did not
appreciate the termination and demanded a
profit share he was not entitled to. The Applicant threatened to make
her miserable by
applying for liquidation, even though she tried to
settle the matter and offered him his
R800
000 if he wished to leave the 1st
Respondent. She denied threatening the
Applicant or requesting the Applicant to resign from the 1st
Respondent
but
instead had offered him his R800 000 to settle the dispute.
[32]
The Respondent pointed out that it was
clear that both parties tried to settle the matter and agreed in
principle to the valuation
of the 1st Respondent’s assets.
There is therefore no basis for which the Applicant can allege to
have been spoliated. She
points out that the Applicant does not ask
that his access to the banking account be restored nor does he
require to be granted
access to the premises but instead requested a
relief that could not
be
granted.
[33]
She confirms that the Applicant wanted to
be part of the veterinary business that is how the 1st
Respondent came into being and got to
purchase
the property but could not be
because of the restrictions. They therefore agreed that the Applicant
would contribute towards the
renovations of the property. The 2nd
Respondent alleges to have secured the sale
of the property which was found by the 3rd
Respondent.
[34]
In respect of Applicant’s citing of
the 3rd
Respondent,
she argued that the 3rd
Respondent
cannot be a party to this litigation as he has no interest in the 1st
Respondent or 4th
Respondent. He is also neither employed nor
contracted in any capacity by the two entities. She reckons that
Applicant’s citing
of the 3rd
Respondent was for malicious and hurtful
intent to her family
in
case she does not adhere to his request. She denies that a corporate
agreement exists between the 1st
and
4th
Respondent as
it is not allowed by the Act.
[35]
The Applicant in his reply reiterated that
he was the director of the 4th Respondent as he and the 2nd
Respondent had undertaken to work together
on a 50/50 basis as partners. He argued that their partnership
agreement was not terminated
by the amendment as per the Veterinary
Council’s
requirement.
He was as a result reappointed as a SARS registered representative of
the 4th Respondent through the auditors. He argued
that the
remuneration he received was agreed upon between the parties.
[36]
In addition, that the 2nd
Respondent blocked his access, contrary to
the 50/50 profit sharing agreement in the 4th
Respondent. He persists in his argument
that he provided the funds for purchasing the immovable property,
negotiated and facilitated
the sale of the business the basis of
which was to become a shareholder in the veterinary business. He did
not want the 2nd Respondent
to buy his share in the business as he
deems the business to be profitable
and
would
want
to
keep
his
investment
therein.
He
then
again
stated
that
it
is
undisputed
that
he
invested
the
R800
000
in
the
1st
Respondent.
[37]
He further disputed having ever wanted to
leave the business alleging that it was the 2nd
Respondent that attempted to force him to
do so. He reiterated that as an investor in the 4th
Respondent business he has a direct and
substantial interest in the financial affairs of the business. He
persisted that he holds
a financial and administrative interest in
the business and undisputed that he invested the money in the 1st
Respondent.
He
also agreed that the grounds for the liquidation are not a matter for
this court to decide.
## Legal framework
Legal framework
[38]
The following provisions of the Veterinary
and Para Veterinary Professions Act 19 of 1982 form a substantial
barrier to entry to
the veterinary business and practice:
[38.1] Section 24 (4)
reads:
(4)
Notwithstanding
the
provisions of subsection (1) a corporation shall be registered in
terms of this Act only if—
(a)
the principal business of that corporation
is the practising of a veterinary profession or a para-veterinary
profession, as the
case may be;
(b)
that corporation has nominated one of its
members as the manager thereof for the purposes of this Act;
(c)
the manager which has been so nominated—
(i)
resides
in the Republic; and
(ii)
is
a
person
who
is
registered
in
terms
of
this Act to practise a veterinary
profession or the para - veterinary profession concerned, as the case
may be;
(d)
the members' interest in that corporation
are held, subject to the provisions of section 28 (1A) (a), solely by
natural persons
who are registered in terms of this Act to practise a
veterinary profession or the para-veterinary profession concerned, as
the
case may be. [Sub-s. (4) added by s. 7 (c) of Act No. 19 of 1989]
[38.2] Section 24 (5)
reads:
“
5
(a) Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (1) a private
company shall be registered in terms of this Act only if-
(i)
The
principal business of that private company is the practising of a
veterinary profession or para veterinary profession, as the
case may
be;
(ii)
All
the shareholders of the company are registered in terms of this Act
to practice a veterinary of a para veterinary profession;
(iii)
The
name of the company has been approved by the Council;
(iv)
Every
shareholder of the company is a director and only a shareholder shall
be a director thereof; and
(v)
Its
memorandum of directors provides that its directors and past
directors shall be liable jointly and severally together with the
company for such debt and liabilities of the company as are or were
incurred during their periods of office.” (b) If a private
company ceases to conform to any requirement
of paragraph (a), it shall forthwith cease
to practise and shall. as from the date on which it ceases to
conform. not be recognised
to practise the veterinary or
para-veterinary profession. as the case may be.”.
[39]
In
terms
of
the
Rules
relating
to
the
practising
of
the
Veterinary
Professions as amended, the following is provided-
[39.1] Rule 8 provides
that on - Covering
(1)
A veterinary professional may not enter
into a partnership or allow any shareholding or interest in his/her
practice with
another
person, unless that person is registered with Council as a veterinary
professional or para-veterinary professional.
[39.2] Rule 8 (2) that
was amended by the substitution for sub rule (2) with the following
sub rule reads:
“
2.
Subject to rule 8 (3) a veterinary professional
shall not-
(a)
place his/her professional knowledge at the
disposal of a member of the public or a lay organisation; or
(b)
be
involved
in
co-operation
or
collaboration
with
a
member of the public or a lay organisation;
if
unlawful or irregular practices are or may be encouraged thereby or
it may adversely affect a
veterinary
professional."
[39.3] Rule 37 on general
procedural requirements (previously Rule 42) reads:
(1)
Only a veterinarian may have a financial
interest in and own a veterinary shop.
(2)
No staff employed at a veterinary shop that
are not qualified as a veterinary professional or para-veterinary
professional, may
give any advice whatsoever regarding the products
on sale, unless they have completed a minimum training course
acceptable to Council
to ensure that they are adequately and
appropriately trained and qualified to offer a professional service
to the public;
## Analysis
Analysis
[40]
It is accordingly clear, reading from the
statutes that governs the operation of a veterinary business, that
the Applicant cannot
be a shareholder or a director of the 4th
Respondent and therefore his claims to be a
50/50% profit sharing partner with the 2nd
Respondent in the 4th
Respondent business is refutable. Likewise,
his claim based on that allegation that he therefore has a
locus
standi
to bring the Application for the
relief that he sought and
obtained
against the 4th
Respondent
is unsustainable.
[41]
The Applicant also alleged that he paid an
amount of R800 000 as a contribution towards the 4th
Respondent veterinary business’s
start-up capital. He therefore reasoned that he rather has an
interest in the business as
an investor with equity which entitles
him access to its bank account and to seek the relief ordered. It is
clear from Rule 8 that
the 2nd
Respondent
as a veterinary professional may not enter into a partnership or
allow any shareholding or interest in his/her practice
with another
person, unless that person is registered with Council as a veterinary
professional or para- veterinary professional.
Further that she is
also prohibited as a veterinary professional to be involved in
co-operation or collaboration with a member
of the public or a lay
organisation. Whilst the Act stipulates that only the shareholders
and directors will hold equity, they
will also and
be liable jointly
and
severally together with the veterinary company for such debt and
liabilities of the company as are or were
incurred during their periods of office. On that note the 2nd
Respondent correctly disputes the
Applicant’s
locus standi
on
that basis.
[42]
According to the 2nd
Respondent the Applicant’s R800 000
was invested in the 1st
Respondent,
which was utilised in the buying of the
property which was then leased to the 4th
Respondent. Furthermore, it was also used
by the 1st
Respondent
to renovate the property to meet the requirements of a veterinary
clinic business that was to be conducted at the premises
and to which
the property was to be rented. A plausible scenario under the
circumstances. The factual disputes will have to be
determined on the
basis of the
Plascon-Evans
principle,
there being no suggestion that the 2nd
Respondent’s version is far-fetched
or otherwise untenable. The allegation has actually been confirmed by
the Applicant in
his replying Affidavit wherein he persisted in his
argument that he provided the funds for purchasing the immovable
property, albeit
alleging that the reason for that was to become a
shareholder in the veterinary business.
[43]
The Applicant was aware when he approached
the court that he could not be either of all these things he was
alleging to be in relation
to the 4th Respondent, as he came to know
of the statutory bar before the veterinary business commenced its
operations in December
2022. As a result, he had to resign on 2
September 2022 and get his name removed from the incorporated
company’s registration
documents. It is therefore disingenuous
of him to approach the court and still insist that he is a 50/50
shareholder not only in
the 1st
Respondent
but also even in the 4th
Respondent,
the veterinary business. Also not mentioning that he had to resign
and the circumstances that led to such resignation.
[44]
The Applicant could also not legally be an
investor or a partner in the 4th Respondent’s with an
entitlement or expectation
of a return as the 2nd Respondent may not
enter into a partnership or allow any shareholding or interest
in
his/her
practice
with
another
person,
unless
that
person
is
registered as a veterinary practitioner. He
consequently does not carry the
risk
of liability for the 4th
Respondent’s
debts and liabilities nor can he profit from the operations of the
4th
Respondent’s
veterinary business as a result of any collaboration or partnership
with the 2nd
Respondent.
His claim of working with the 2nd
Respondent on a 50/50 basis as partners
notwithstanding the prohibition by the law is refutable. He therefore
failed to make a case
on the alleged locus
standi
for the relief sought against the 4th
Respondent. The granting of the order
therefore freezing the 4th
Respondent
bank account was therefore improper, and bound to be set aside.
[45]
The Applicant also alleged that the agreed
terms were that he was to remain on the board of the 4th
Respondent not only as an equity investor,
that funded the start-up capital and negotiated the sale of the
property to the 1st Respondent
at a greatly reduced value for the
benefit of the 4th Respondent, but also as an administrative manager
of the business whose duties
involved the day to day running of the
4th Respondent’ veterinary business. Also that his employment
by the 4th
Respondent
as a manager was with specific tasks, that included,
inter
alia
, access to its bank account of
which he has been prevented to fulfill.
[46]
The 4th
Respondent, meaning the veterinary
business, bound by the provisions of the Act, could only nominate one
of its members as the manager
who is supposed to be a person who is
registered in terms of the Act to practise a veterinary profession or
the para-veterinary
profession concerned, as the case may be.
Moreover, the members' interest in that corporation is to be held
solely by natural persons
who are in terms of this Act registered to
practise a veterinary profession or the para-veterinary profession
concerned. The Applicant
is registered as neither of the two
professions. According to the Respondents the Applicant was employed
through his company Kabili
Holdings (Pty) Ltd as a provider of
specific services. The Applicant did not disclose in his Founding
Affidavit that he rendered
his services through Kabili, but only
alleged to have been a manager. It was only after the answering
affidavit that he confirmed
the rendering of his services through
Kabili which services were then simply terminated.
[47]
The Applicant has also claimed to seek the
relief against the 4th Respondent on the legal basis that he is a
creditor of the 4th
Respondent
having loaned the business the amount of R800 000. He alleges to
consequently to have a financial and an administrative
interest. Such
an allegation has been proven not to be correct by the averment
Applicant made in the Founding Affidavit. He confirmed
that the money
was paid into the account of the 1st
Respondent intended for the purchasing of
the property.
The
Accountant’s document DVMD2, that the Applicant annexed to his
Founding Affidavit confirmed that the R800 000 investment
was made in
the 1st
Respondent
during the period June to November 2022. He further in his Replying
Affidavit also flip flops stating that it is undisputed
that he
invested the R800 000 in the 1st
Respondent. He therefore besides being
prohibited by law to be an equity investor, factually did not invest
the R800 000 in the
4th Respondent. His claim of any financial
interest in the 4th
Respondent
therefore unsustainable. He nevertheless did not apply for leave to
liquidate the 4th Respondent but the 1st
Respondent, the relief therefore for
freezing the 4th Respondent’s account inappropriate without a
correlating demand in relation
thereto.
[48]
The Applicant alleged that by refusing him
access to the business premises so as to fulfill his duties,
undertaking unauthorized
costly improvements, the 2nd
and 3rd Respondent spoliated him from his
duties and legitimate interest in the 1st
Respondent, and blocking his access to the
4th Respondent bank account, hijacked the 4th
Respondent. He nonetheless did not seek
reinstatement of that agreement or his access to the premises or bank
account to be restored
(which he knew it could not be done) but
instead sought the freezing of an account of a business in which he
does not or
cannot
have an interest in its finances or operations and nothing to do with
spoliation.
[49]
The
Applicant has mischievously equated such conduct with spoliation,
(and relied on the
Nino
Bonino v De Lange
[5]
judgment)
which is ill-advised because there is no spoliation nor does he have
a legitimate interest in the 4th Respondent or its
bank account.
Besides, to the extent that the Applicant may have felt aggrieved by
the conduct of the 2nd
and
3rd
Respondents,
in relation to the rendering of his services and access to the
business operations and bank account, the relief sought
was not an
appropriate remedy. That did not entitle him the order to freeze the
4th
Respondent’s
account. As a result the objection raised that the allegations in his
founding papers do not support the relief
claimed, is sound.
[6]
[50]
Moreover, it is inexplicable that the
freezing of the 4th
Respondent
bank account is coupled with an order for leave to apply for
liquidation of the 1st Respondent, a separate entity, and
that the
freezing is to remain pending the appointment of a liquidator. An
occurrence that does not make sense since it is not
clear if the
appointment of the liquidator mentioned is to be for the 1st
Respondent or 4th
Respondent.
Except for the fact that the 1st
Respondent
owns the property from which the 4th
Respondent’ business is operated, the
liquidation of the 1st
Respondent
has got no bearing to the bank account of
the 4th
Respondent and its operations. It can only
affect the operations of the 1st Respondent.
[51]
What is also worryingly notable of the
relief is that not only the circumstances and reasons under which it
was obtained inexplicable,
it is a final interdict, granted pending
the appointment of a liquidator. In the meantime, the 4th
Respondent is not under liquidation, the
occasion upon which the liquidator may be appointed. In the same
instance, leave is granted
to apply for liquidation of the 1st
Respondent, a separate entity. The
soundness in law of granting such a relief of freezing the account of
the 4th Respondent
pending
a
non-
existent
liquidation
or
that
of
another
company
was correctly labelled by the Respondent’s Counsel as ambiguous
since it infers either that the 4th
Respondent company is liquidated or that
liquidation a mere formality which is extra ordinarily vague and
confusing.
[52]
The Respondents’ counsel has
correctly pointed out that the relief sought by the Applicant is also
not based on a spoliation
as alleged by the Applicant but an
application to decide the grounds for liquidation of the First
Respondent, to freeze the account
of another entity pending the
appointment of a liquidator as if the 4th
Respondent is already liquidated and to
confirm the period within which the liquidation proceedings will be
instituted. What has
been put before me is obviously not sufficient
to enable me to exercise my discretion in the applicant’s
favour. The Applicant
has failed dismally to make a case for any of
the reliefs sought and for the process followed.
[53]
In addition, the liquidation of and or
appointment of a Liquidator for the 1st
Respondent can never justify the freezing
of another Company’s bank account or operations, unless a
collaboration or partnership
can be proven between the companies and
both alleged to be guilty of the alleged illegal or fraudulent
conduct. The liquidation
of the 1st
Respondent had nothing to do with the 4th
Respondent.
## Costs
Costs
[54]
The Applicant also referred to having a
well- grounded apprehension of his equity in the 1st
Respondent being at risk due to the
malicious conduct of the 2nd
and
3rd
Respondent
that they will attempt to conceal or dispose of the funds that he
invested in the 4th
Respondent
to the detriment of the 1st
and
the 4th
Respondent,
hence his failure to take the necessary steps of giving notice when
approaching the court. Also due to real apprehension
of imminent and
irremediable harm of losing his equity in the 1st
and 4th
Respondent. However the conduct he
complained about is far from indicating any risk of
concealment or disposal of any funds, or
irremediable harm. He has mentioned the procurement of services of a
plumber to fix the
geyser, an electrician
and
of
standby
locums
plus
the
security.
He
argued
based
on
an
invalid assertion that he has a direct and
substantial interest in the 4th Respondent as an investor which
entitles him a say in
the running of the 4th Respondent.
[55]
The Application was certainly an abuse of
the court process. There is no good enough reason for the Applicant
not to have served
the Application considering the severity of the
order he was seeking. The lack of diligence
and prudence by Counsel in filing a
practice note with misinformation regarding the awareness and
participation of the Respondents
also exacerbated the situation and
cannot be excused. It created a potential situation of a court being
misled, seeing that the
Applicant also confirmed that the Application
was to be served on the Respondents and all interested parties.
[56]
In addition, the Applicant continued
perpetuating the abuse of the process by seeking of a punitive cost
order considering the flimsy
reasons proffered for having failed to
serve the Application and the relief sought. The 1st
Respondent owns a property and the 4th
Respondent’s business remains
operational and the incurred expenses were for enabling its
operations. The conduct he complained
about can hardly be regarded as
squandering the reserves of the entities or risking his alleged
shares in them. The Applicant has
failed to demonstrate a right to
the relief sought or a well- grounded apprehension of irremediable
harm to his alleged shares
due to disposal or concealment.
[57]
He
furthermore did not make a full disclosure of all relevant facts when
he launched his
ex
parte
Application,
a fact the court would be justified to also consider on the costs to
be ordered in case of the order being set aside
and or dismissal of
Application. As it is indeed trite law as submitted by Respondents in
argument that an Applicant who applies
to court to obtain an order on
an ex parte basis must in his / her or its conduct be beyond
reproach. Such an Applicant is required
to place all relevant facts
before the court and the Applicant may not furnish incorrect
information to the court. Due
to
the
nature
of,
and
consequences
of
such
Applications
our
courts
have made it clear that in cases where the incorrect information is
furnished to the court carelessly, and not recklessly
or
deliberately, the court is entitled to discharge the rule nisi on
that ground alone,
[7]
with
an appropriate costs order.
[58]
Under the circumstances It is ordered that:
1.
Non- compliance of the Respondents with the
rules and forms prescribed and service thereof is condoned in terms
of Rule 6 (12);
2.
The order granted to the Applicant on 8
February 2023 under the abovementioned case number is hereby set
aside;
3.
The Applicant’s Application is
dismissed with costs;
4.
The Applicant to pay the costs of the
Application on
an
attorney and client costs
# N V KHUMALO J
N V KHUMALO J
## Judge of the High Court
Judge of the High Court
## Gauteng Division,
Pretoria
Gauteng Division,
Pretoria
On
behalf of the Applicant: Adv
A J Swanepoel
Instructed
by: M
C Schoeman Attorneys
mercades@mweb.co.za
Klerk3@mlschoemanattorneys.co.za
On
behalf of the Respondents: Adv A Van der Merwe
Instructed
by:
Jay Incorporated
mandyjay@jayattorneys.co.za
[1]
Respondents’
answering affidavit par 2.2 p 09-3
[2]
Wijnen
and Another v Mohamed and Others (16043/13)
[2014] ZAWCHC 138
(1
September 2014)
[3]
Wijnen
and Another v Mohamed and Others (16043/13)
[2014] ZAWCHC 138
(1
September 2014)
[4]
South
African Airways SOC vs BDFM Publishers
2016 (2) SA 561
GJ
[5]
[6]
Swissborough
Diamond Mines (Pty) Ltd and Others v Government of the Republic of
South Africa and Others 1999(2) SA 279 (T) at
323 G - J.)
[7]
Hall
and Another v Heyns & Others 1991(1) SA 381 (C) at 397 B –
C
sino noindex
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