Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 683South Africa
RH Plant Hire CC v Vlok and Others (2023-055592;2023-018259) [2023] ZAGPPHC 683 (14 August 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
14 August 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## RH Plant Hire CC v Vlok and Others (2023-055592;2023-018259) [2023] ZAGPPHC 683 (14 August 2023)
RH Plant Hire CC v Vlok and Others (2023-055592;2023-018259) [2023] ZAGPPHC 683 (14 August 2023)
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sino date 14 August 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO: 2023-055592
CASE NO: 2023-018259
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
Date: 14
August 2023
E van der Schyff
In
the matter between:
RH
PLANT HIRE CC
APPLICANT
and
KOBUS
VLOK
FIRST RESPONDENT
BCG
CONSTRUCTION AND CIVILS (PTY) LTD
SECOND RESPONDENT
COMPANIES
AND INTELLECTUAL PROPERTIES
COMMISSION
THIRD RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
Van
der Schyff J
Introduction
[1]
The applicant (RH) approached the urgent
court seeking an order that the business rescue application of the
first respondent (Mr.
Vlok) under the same case number, and the
applicant's liquidation application against the second respondent
under case number 2023-018259
be heard and determined simultaneously;
that the business rescue application be dismissed and that the second
respondent (BCG)
be placed under provisional liquidation.
Background facts
[2]
RH let certain equipment to BCG on agreed
terms, resulting in BCG becoming indebted to RH in the amount of R679
085.00 as of 6 February
2023. Since the debt was not settled, RH
commenced liquidation proceedings on 22 February 2023. The
application was served on 13
March 2023.
[3]
BCG belatedly filed a notice of intention
to oppose on 14 April 2023 but failed to deliver its answering
affidavit. The matter was
subsequently enrolled in the unopposed
motion court for hearing on 14 June 2023.
[4]
On 9 June 2023, Mr. Vlok, a shareholder and
director of BCG, served a business rescue application on RH. Mr. A.
Sesweni served a
notice to oppose the liquidation application as an
intervening party on 14 June 2023. Mr. Sesweni is represented by the
same attorneys
representing BCG and Mr. Vlok. On 14 June 2023, the
presiding judge removed the liquidation application from the
unopposed motion
court roll.
The parties'
contentions
[5]
RH takes issue with the fact that the
business rescue application was emailed to the affected parties
without reflecting the intended
hearing date. RH avers that, to date,
a hearing date has not been applied for, and neither is an interim
business rescue practitioner
nominated to be appointed to take over
BCG's affairs should an order of supervision be made. RH further
contends that the business
rescue application has not been served on
BCG or the third respondent, the CIPC. RH disputes Mr. Vlok's claim
that he has the necessary
locus standi
to have launched the business rescue application. RH claims that no
primary evidence supports assertions in the business rescue
application that BCG is financially distressed or that business
rescue proceedings would deliver a better result for creditors
than
liquidation.
[6]
As for urgency, RH states the following in
its founding affidavit to this application:
'under circumstances
where it is apparent that the business rescue application by Vlok has
been designed to protract the inevitable
liquidation of BCG and
constitutes a flagrant abuse of process, it is inherently urgent to
have this matter determined on an expedited
basis in the interest of
the affected parties.'
[7]
RH contends that the creditors cannot be
left in a 'fictitious loop of a putative moratorium whilst Vlok does
nothing to bring the
matter to finality.' BCG's affairs must either
be managed by a business rescue practitioner or a liquidator as soon
as possible
to protect the interests of the affected parties. Having
the application decided in the ordinary course will not afford RH
substantial
redress as BCG will be 'rudderless' until the matter is
finally determined.
[8]
Mr. Vlok deposed to the answering affidavit
as the applicant in the business rescue application. He disputes the
contention that
the application is urgent. He explains that the
matter was fully ventilated in the unopposed motion court before the
liquidation
application was removed from the roll. Mr. Vlok states
that RH could simply have enrolled the application on the unopposed
roll,
launched irregular step proceedings, or compelled the
respondent 'like every other litigant that feels frustrated by the
conduct
of an opponent.'
[9]
Mr. Vlok asserts in the business rescue
application that he is one of two directors of the first respondent
and, as such, has the
necessary
locus
standi
to bring the application. He
does not state explicitly in this application that he is a
shareholder of BCG, although he states,
'the applicant and all
remaining directors/shareholders verily believe … that the BCG
can be successfully rescued.' RH contends
that directors are not
included in the definition of affected persons as contained in the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
. Directors can, in my view, however, be
considered employees.
[10]
Mr. Vlok submits that the grounds for
business rescue have been set down in the business rescue
application, are
bona fide,
and were accompanied by the supporting documentation confirming the
amounts due to BCG and 'the plan to proceed to secure those
funds to
rescue the company'. He claims that BCG's financial distress is
attributed to the non-payment of its clients and the economic
disaster the country is experiencing.
[11]
The following submission contained in the
answering affidavit is of importance:
'The respondent never
intended on delaying the matter and it is intent on securing the
business rescue and ultimately rescuing the
company,
but it simply
took a little longer than hoped for in securing the necessary funds
to pursue the matter through the legal steps.' (My emphasis)
[12]
Mr. Vlok explains that his personal
financial woes contributed to the delay in obtaining a date for the
business rescue application
to be heard, as he first had to pay his
attorneys. He claims that he is BCG's 'main funder/ operator'. He
laments that RH has a
'vendetta' against him and is also pursuing
litigation against him in his personal capacity in terms of an
'alleged suretyship'
that he concluded with it.
[13]
Mr. Vlok submits that business rescue
proceedings would be more advantageous because it would allow for the
completion of existing
contracts. BCG's total asset value is R20
000.00, and RH's claim alone amounts to R618 871,00, with the
complete creditor balance
exceeding R7 500 000.00. Due to the highly
technical nature of BCG's business operations, a liquidator could not
see any existing
business operations to finality. Mr. Vlok claims
that 'even if my intentions are not pure (as alleged by the
applicant), the respondent
owes me personally an amount twice as much
as being claimed by the applicant.'
[14]
As for RH's claim that the business rescue
application was served without containing a hearing date, Mr. Vlok
explains:
'Since it was unknown
were there any party would oppose the application, my attorneys saw
it fit not to apply for a date beforehand.'
This explanation does not
accord with the explanation proffered by counsel when the matter was
argued before me when the process
of electronically issuing
applications was put forward as the reason why the application was
served without containing a hearing
date.
[15]
Mr. Vlok denies that the business rescue
application was not served on CIPC or the BCG. Service on the CIPC
was affected through
email. Service on BCG is alleged to have been
'physical', and it is stated in the service affidavit that 'proof of
acceptance of
service is found on the Notice of Motion of the
Application.' However, the notice of motion uploaded to the
caselines' file does
not reflect any acceptance note on behalf of
BCG.
Discussion
[16]
Section 131(2)(a)
of the
Companies Act
prescribes
that a business rescue application must be served on the
company and the CIPC. I accept that email service on the CIPC is
sufficient
in light of the CIPC's position that it accepts and
requested email service.
[17]
The same can, however, not be said
regarding service on the company. A company is a separate legal
entity from its directors and
shareholders. As a result, a director's
knowledge of a business rescue application does not imply that
service on the company is
not necessary. Service, in turn, is service
by Sheriff.
[18]
Section 132(1)(b)
of the
Companies Act
determines
that business rescue proceedings begin when an affected
person applies to the court for an order placing the company under
supervision.
The question that arises in this application is when an
application is 'made' in terms of
s 131.
Can it be said that an
application is made if an application is issued but a hearing date is
not reflected in the notice of motion,
served on the company and the
CIPC, if the application remains unopposed?
[19]
Rule 6(1) of the Uniform Rules of Court
prescribes that save where proceedings by way of petition are
prescribed by law, every application
must be brought on notice of
motion supported by an affidavit. Rule 6(5) provides that every
application other than one brought
ex
parte
must be brought on notice of
motion in accordance with Form 2(a) of the First Schedule. Rule
6(5)(b)(iii) prescribes that the applicant
must in the notice of
motion –
'set forth a day, not
less than five days of the service thereof on the respondent, on or
before which such respondent is required
to notify the applicant, in
writing, whether respondent intends to oppose such application, and
must
further state that if no such notification is
given the application will be set down for hearing on
a stated
day
, not being less than 10 days off the service on the said
respondent of the said notice' (my emphasis)
[20]
In the authoritative work
Erasmus
Superior Court Practice
, it is
succinctly explained that the requirement that the notice of motion
contains a stated date for hearing in the event that
the matter
remains unopposed, is not a formalistic application of procedural
rules –
'The subrule, whilst
procedural in nature, protects a fundamental principle of fairness -
that generally a person be afforded an
opportunity to be heard before
a court grants any relief against it.'
[21]
In
Simross
Vintners (Pty) Ltd v Vermeulen; VRG Africa (Pty) Ltd v Walters t/a
Trend Litho; Consolidated Credit Corporation (Pty) Ltd
v Van der
Westhuizen,
[1]
the court held that a notice of motion which is not substantially in
material respects as near as may be in accordance with Form
(2)(a) is
a nullity. In
Gallagher
v Norman's Transport Lines (Pty) Ltd
[2]
Flemming DJP held that Rule 6(5)(a) is peremptory.
[22]
An
omission to set out a stated date is fatal to the application in
question, and a subsequent notice of set down cannot cure the
defect.
[3]
As a result, the
omission to include a stated date in the notice of motion pertaining
to the business rescue application renders
the application, as it
stands, of no-consequence. It cannot be said that the business rescue
application was 'made' for it to suspend
liquidation proceedings.
[23]
The liquidation application was removed
from the roll by the presiding judge on 14 June 2023. In light of the
fatal defect in the
current business rescue application, which is
exacerbated by the fact that no business rescue practitioner is
proposed, there is
no impediment on RH to re-enroll the liquidation
application for hearing.
[24]
The
next question is whether a case was made out that renders the hearing
of the liquidation application sufficiently urgent to
be enrolled in
the urgent court. It is evident that BCG is indeed in financial
distress, if not commercially and factually insolvent.
[4]
[25]
In the circumstances, I am of the view that
a case for urgency has been made out. The discrepancy between the
explanation proffered
from the bar as to why the business rescue
application was served and issued without containing a stated date
for hearing if it
remains unopposed, and the explanation proffered in
the answering affidavit give rise to a feeling of discomfort. Despite
a submission
from the bar that a date for set-down relating to the
business rescue application was since obtained, no proof thereof was
provided
that substantiates such a submission – this is
notwithstanding the question as to whether a belated set-down can
cure the
fatal defect in the application. RH's counsel's contention
that creditors cannot 'be left in a fictitious loop of a putative
moratorium',
underpins the necessity to hear this application in the
urgent court.
[26]
Since I am of the view that the business
rescue application is defective, and that no business rescue
application was 'made' I need
not deal with the business rescue
application.
[27]
As for the provisional liquidation
application, RH’s claim that BCG owes it an amount in excess of
R600 000.00 stands uncontested
and is confirmed in the founding
affidavit to the defunct business rescue application. On 3 February
2023, BCG communicated in
writing to RH, indicating that it is
waiting for outstanding payments from their clients. It is evident
from the affidavit attached
to the business rescue application that
BCG is currently not able to pay its debt towards RH.
ORDER
In
the result, the following order is granted:
1. The
application is heard as an urgent application in terms of Rule 6(12)
and any non-compliance with forms
and service is condoned;
2. The
second respondent is placed under provisional winding-up;
3. All
persons who have a legitimate interest are called upon to put forward
their reasons why this Court should
not order the final winding-up of
the second respondent company in the unopposed motion court on 07
November 2023 at 10h00;
4. A
copy of this order is to be forthwith served on:
a. The
second respondent company at its registered office;
b. The
Master of the High Court;
c. The
South African Revenue Service;
d. The
second respondent's employees and employees' trade unions if any;
e. To
each known creditor by prepaid registered mail;
5. The
order granted in this application must be published in the
Government
Gazette
and in a local newspaper in circulation in the area of
the second respondent's registered address;
6.
Costs of the application are costs in the second respondent's
winding-up.
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 applicant:
Adv. J. Van Rooyen
Instructed by:
Donn E Bruwer
Attorney
For the first and
respondents:
Adv. J. Schoeman
Instructed by:
Van der Walt
Attorneys
Date of the
hearing:
10 August 2023
Date of judgment:
14 August 2023
[1]
1978
(1) SA 779
(T) at 782B.
[2]
1992
(3) SA 500
(W) at 502E-503C.
[3]
Meme-Akpta
v The Unlawful Occupiers of ERF 1168, City and Surban, 44 Nugget
Street, Johannesburg
2023
(3) SA 649
(GJ) at par [18 ].
Mashaba
v The Judicial Commission of Inquiry Into Allegations of State
Capture,
Corruption and Fraud In The Public Sector, Including Organs of State
(14261/21)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 586 (16 August 2022) at paras [12] and [14].
[4]
Mr.
Vlok contends that it has assets of R20 000.00 and liabilities
exceeding R7 million. In fact, Mr. Vlok states under oath:
‘The
difference between the combined asset value of the First Respondent
and the liabilities of the First Respondent is
negative R7 543
132.67’. Mr. Vlok also states that on current pending projects
more than R13.5 million in work remains
to be commenced with or
completed, and that more than R5.4 million remains unpaid to the
First Respondent.
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