Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 728South Africa
Nkamuhayo and Another v Butler and Others (072648/2023) [2023] ZAGPPHC 728 (24 August 2023)
Headnotes
Summary: Urgent application – suspension of other directors by Chairman – refused access to and prevented from entering the business premises of company – application for an order declaring the Chairman as a delinquent director in terms of section 162 of the Companies Act – also application for an order declaring invalid ‘precautionary suspension notices’ – case not made out to declare director delinquent – however, applicants entitled to other relief – suspension unlawful –
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Nkamuhayo and Another v Butler and Others (072648/2023) [2023] ZAGPPHC 728 (24 August 2023)
Nkamuhayo and Another v Butler and Others (072648/2023) [2023] ZAGPPHC 728 (24 August 2023)
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sino date 24 August 2023
# REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO
: 072648/2023
DATE
:
24
th
August
2023
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: YES
DATE:
24 August 2023
SIGNATURE:
In the matter between:
NKAMUHAYO
,
RWACUMIKA KIHURA NKUBA
First Applicant
WILLIAMS
,
RANDALL MERVYN
Second Applicant
and
BUTLER
,
HOWARD
DION
First Respondent
LANCASTER
GOLD MINING COMPANY (PTY) LTD
Second Respondent
ROX
SA MINING (PTY)
LTD
Third Respondent
Neutral
Citation
:
Nkamuhayo and Another v Butler and 2
Others (079845/2023)
[2023] ZAGPPHC
---
(24 August 2023)
Coram
:
Adams J
Heard
:
23 August 2023
Delivered:
24 August 2023 – This judgment was
handed down electronically by circulation to the parties'
representatives by email, by being
uploaded to
CaseLines
and by release to
SAFLII
.
The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 09:30 on 24 August
2023.
Summary:
Urgent application – suspension of
other directors by Chairman – refused access to and prevented from
entering the business premises
of company – application for an
order declaring the Chairman as a delinquent director in terms of
section 162 of the Companies
Act – also application for an order
declaring invalid ‘precautionary suspension notices’ – case not
made out to declare director
delinquent – however, applicants
entitled to other relief – suspension unlawful –
Applicants entitled to
some relief – application granted with costs.
# ORDER
ORDER
(1)
The ‘precautionary suspension notices’
issued against the first and the second applicants by the first
respondent, purportedly
on behalf of the third respondent, on 21 May
2023 be and are hereby declared to be invalid and of no force and
effect.
(2)
The first respondent be and is hereby
interdicted from obstructing, in any way, the first and the second
applicants from performing
and carrying out their functions and
duties as directors and employees of the third respondent.
(3)
The first respondent shall pay the first
and the second applicants’ costs of this urgent application.
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
## Adams J:
Adams J:
[1]. The first and
the second applicants are directors of the third respondent (‘Rox
SA Mining’), as is the first respondent.
The first applicant and
the first respondent are equal shareholders (50% each) in the said
company. On 21 May 2023, the first respondent
sent to the first and
the second applicants ‘precautionary suspension notices’ advising
them that, effective immediately, they
were suspended presumably as
directors and/or employees of Rox SA Mining. The suspension notices
bizarrely indicated that the reason
for their suspension was the fact
that they had both supposedly contravened the provisions of the
Protection of Personal Information
Act 4 of 2013 (‘the POPI Act’)
in that they had discussed the salary of an employee of another
company.
[2]. In this
opposed urgent application, the first and the second applicants, who
have since 21 May 2023 or thereabout been
refused access to and
prevented from entering the business premises of the third
respondent, apply for an order declaring the first
respondent as a
delinquent director in terms of section 162 of the Companies Act 71
of 2008 (‘the Companies Act’), as well as
for an order declaring
invalid the aforesaid ‘precautionary suspension notices’. In the
alternative, the applicants seek an order
interdicting the first
respondent from obstructing them in any way from carrying out their
functions as employees and directors of
the third respondent.
[3]. In a nutshell, the
applicants’ case against the first respondent is that he should be
declared a delinquent director because,
so the applicants contend, he
has made himself guilty of gross abuse of his position as director,
intentional or grossly negligent
infliction of harm on the company
and gross negligence, and wilful misconduct or breach of trust in
relation to the performance of
his director's functions within, and
duties to, the company, as envisaged by
section 162(2)
and (5) of the
Companies Act.
[4]. In support of
these legal conclusions, the applicants aver
inter alia
that
the first respondent, despite a valid and binding written agreement
between him and the first applicant for the sale of 50% shares
in Rox
SA Mining, has failed to transfer the acquired shares to the first
applicant.
[5]. As regards the POPI
Act complaint, this related to salaries paid by the second respondent
to some of its employees and the fact
that it transpired that there
was a discrepancy between salaries paid to different individuals.
Closely related to the aforegoing
was the fact that first applicant
took issue with the fact that the third respondent had embarked on a
‘feeding frenzy’, as the
first applicant puts it, after he had
paid into the account of Rox SA Mining the amount he invested in the
said company. The applicants
also make allegations of the
misappropriation by the first respondent of the assets of the third
respondents, in particular gold
extracted by Rox SA Mining. Moreover,
during March 2023 the first respondent inappropriately held himself
out as the ‘sole director’
of the third respondent, when he knew
full well that that was not the case. This, so the applicants
contend, is a further breach
by the first respondent of his fiduciary
duty as a director of Rox SA Mining.
[6]. In light of
the aforegoing and the proven misconduct on the part of the first
respondent, I am persuaded that the applicants
have made a case for
the order setting aside the ‘precautionary suspension notices’.
The issue of those notices was, in my judgment,
ill-advised and
premised on a contrived basis and motivated by
mala fides
.
What is more is that the said notices were clearly aimed at side-
lining the applicants so as to clear the way for the first respondent
to continue the operations of Rox SA Mining for his own benefit and
too the advantage of his other companies. Those notices should
therefore not have been issued.
[7]. This then
means that the applicants are entitled to an order setting aside the
said notices.
[8]. As regards the
request for an order that the first respondent be declared a
delinquent director, I am not persuaded that
the applicants have made
out a case for that relief. Whilst the conduct of the first
respondent leaves much to be desired and, by
all accounts, borders on
gross misconduct, I do not believe that it goes far enough as to
entitled the applicants to have him declared
as a delinquent
director.
[9]. As for
urgency, I have no difficulty in accepting that, in the circumstances
of this matter, the applicants were entitled
to approach this court
on an urgent basis. The simple fact of the matter is that the
applicants were being severely prejudiced as
a result of the unlawful
conduct on the part of the first respondent. They could not possibly
delay much longer approaching the court
for the relief sought.
[10]. For all of these
reasons, the applicants’ urgent application should succeed and they
should be granted some of the relief
sought by them.
## Costs
Costs
[11].
The general rule in matters of costs is that the successful party
should be given his costs, and this rule should not be departed
from
except where there are good grounds for doing so, such as misconduct
on the part of the successful party or other exceptional
circumstances. See:
Myers
v Abramson
[1]
.
[12]. I can think of no
reason why I should deviate from this general rule.
[13]. Accordingly, I
intend awarding costs in favour of the first and the second
applicants against the first respondent.
## Order
Order
[14]. Accordingly,
I make the following order: -
(1)
The ‘precautionary suspension notices’
issued against the first and the second applicants by the first
respondent, purportedly
on behalf of the third respondent, on 21 May
2023 be and are hereby declared to be invalid and of no force and
effect.
(2)
The first respondent be and is hereby
interdicted from obstructing, in any way, the first and the second
applicants from performing
and carrying out their functions and
duties as directors and employees of the third respondent.
(3)
The first respondent shall pay the first
and the second applicants’ costs of this urgent application.
# L R ADAMS
L R ADAMS
Judge of the High
Court of South Africa
Gauteng Division,
Pretoria
HEARD ON:
23
rd
August 2023
JUDGMENT DATE:
24
th
August 2023 – judgment handed down
electronically
FOR THE FIRST AND THE
SECOND APPLICANTS:
Attorney Michael
Wagener
INSTRUCTED BY:
Michael Wagener
Attorneys, Cape Town
FOR THE FIRST, THE
SECOND AND THE THIRD RESPONDENTS:
Advocate Juliana
Kamffer
INSTRUCTED BY:
Carmia Greyvenstein
Attorneys, Rietfontein, Pretoria
[1]
Myers
v Abramson
,
1951(3) SA 438 (C) at 455.
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