Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 1166South Africa
Firstrand Bank Limited v Master of the High Court, Pretoria and Others (2022-035973) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1166 (29 September 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
29 September 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Firstrand Bank Limited v Master of the High Court, Pretoria and Others (2022-035973) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1166 (29 September 2023)
Firstrand Bank Limited v Master of the High Court, Pretoria and Others (2022-035973) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1166 (29 September 2023)
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sino date 29 September 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
Case
Number: 2022-035973
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO.
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO.
(3)
REVISED.
2023-09-29
DATE
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
FIRSTRAND
BANK LIMITED
Applicant
and
THE
MASTER OF THE HIGH COURT, PRETORIA
First Respondent
NGAKO
SERUMOLA N.O.
Second Respondent
THEODOR
WILHELM VAN DEN HEEVER N.O.
Third Respondent
DEBORAH
LYNN KHAN N.O.
Fourth Respondent
SIMON
MATELESHE SEIMA N.O.
Fifth Respondent
SUMAIYA
ABDOOL GAFAAR KHAMMISSA N.O.
Sixth
Respondent
This
judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected and is handed down electronically by circulation to
the
Parties/their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on CaseLines.
The date for
handing down is deemed to be 29 September
2023.
JUDGMENT
POTTERILL
J
Background
[1]
The applicant, FirstRand Bank Limited [FirstRand] applied for the
sequestration of
the estate of Willem Abraham Nel. The provisional
sequestration was granted on
7
February
2022
on an unopposed basis with the return
date of 6 May 2022.
[2]
On
4
May and
6
May
2022
various third parties made various
payments to FirstRand in respect of the amounts owed by the
insolvent.
[3]
On the return date, the registrar to the Acting Judge that was to
hear the matter,
informed the parties that no oral argument would be
entertained and the matter would be decided on the papers. The
insolvent’s
legal advisors attempted to reach the Judge to
advise that since payment had been made they would oppose the final
sequestration.
They however could not reach the Acting Judge and a
final sequestration order was granted on 6 May 2022.
[4]
As required in terms of section
40
of the
Insolvency Act,
24
of
1936
[the Act] the Master convened a first meeting of creditors on
21 September 2022 at 9:00 at the Magistrate Middelburg.
[5]
It is common cause that as the Master, Mr Serumola [the second
respondent] was not
at the Middelburg Court at 9:00 the first meeting
was referred to Magistrate Gololo. Magistrate Gololo was tasked with
civil trials
and he informed all those present that he did not have
the capacity to deal with the first meeting. He accordingly formally
opened
the meeting and then postponed it to 26 October 2022.
[6]
Mr Serumola arrived at the Magistrate’s Court around 10:00 and
announced he
was ready to start with the meeting. He decided to
proceed with the meeting despite objection thereto and it being
postponed and
did so because nobody would be prejudiced.
[7]
At the meeting Mr Serumola rejected the claim of FirstRand because:
“
Third, in
applicant's version, Willem Abraham Nel (‘Nel’ or ‘the
insolvent’) paid the amount that was owed
to the applicant
between
4
and
6
May
2022.
Payment
is not in dispute. As at
21
September
2022
the money was in the
bank account of the applicant and has been there since at least
6
May
2022.
”
and
“
I admit that I
rejected the applicant's claim on the basis that the debt was fully
paid and there was insufficient evidence to suggest
that the Nel
still owed the applicant. The fact that the money was in the
applicant's bank account after four months suggested
to me that by
conduct, the applicant had accepted.”
[8]
Mr Seromula also admitted claims 3-10, finding they were lodged 24
hours before the
advertised time of the meeting. He did so, because
the attorney who represented the claimants, Mr Mendelsohn, orally
submitted
that the claims were lodged on 19 September 2022.
The
issues
[9]
FirstRand seeks to review the Master’s decisions taken at this
first meeting
on 21 September 2022 in terms of 151 of the Act. It
abandoned its first ground of review, the postponement of the first
meeting,
but persists with two grounds; the Master’s rejection
of FirstRand’s claim; the acceptance of the claims not lodged
timeously.
[10]
Only the first respondent, The Master of the High [the Master] and
the second respondent, Mr
Ngako Serumola [Mr Serumola], the Master
who took the decision, opposed this application. The third to sixth
respondents, the insolvency
practitioners, did not oppose the review
application
Point
in limine
[11]
In the answering affidavit the point is raised that the deponent did
not have the authority to
depose on behalf of FirstRand. In the heads
of argument, the attack was changed to the deponent not having the
right to institute
legal proceedings on behalf of FirstRand.
[12]
If the respondents wanted to attack the right to institute legal
proceedings it should have utilised
Rule 7.
However, the complaint
was that the deponent had no authority and it is trite that a
deponent to an affidavit need not be authorised.
[13]
Accordingly the point
in limine
is dismissed.
The
rejection of FirstRand’s claim
[14]
As set out above Mr Serumola rejected the claim because he found that
FirstRand’s claim
was extinguished.
[15]
On behalf of FirstRand it was submitted that the debt was not
extinguished simply because at
the date of provisional sequestration
the debt was not paid. The critical date to determine claims against
the insolvent's estate
is
7
February
2022,
and
not
6
May
2022
(the
return date), or the date of the first meeting. Support for this
submission is found in
Vather
v Dhavraj
[1]
where the following was said:
“
Sec.
44
(1)
of Act
24
of
1936
provides:
'Any person or the
representative of any person who has a liquidated claim against an
insolvent estate, the cause of which arose
before the sequestration
of that estate, may at any time before the final distribution of that
estate
, …
prove that
claim in the manner hereinafter provided
...'
The wording of the
above-mentioned section shows that the claim must be one which is in
existence at the date of sequestration.
The effect of an order of
sequestration is to establish a concursus creditorum, and nothing can
thereafter be done by any of the
creditors to alter the rights of the
other creditors.
'The sequestration
order crystallises the insolvent's position; the hand of the law is
laid upon the estate, and at once the rights
of the general body of
creditors have to be taken into consideration. No transaction can
thereafter be entered into with regard
to estate matters by a single
creditor to the prejudice of the general body. The claim of each
creditor must be dealt with as it
existed at the issue of the order'
-
per INNES, J.A., in Walker v Syfret, N.O.,
111
AD
141
at p.
166,
(see also, e.g., Ward v
Barrett, N.O. and Another, N.O.,
1963 (2)
SA
546
(AD) at
p.
552)
In view of the fact
that the claims of creditors against an estate must be dealt with as
they existed at the date of the order of
sequestration it must follow
that the reference to 'creditors' in sec.
123
(1)
is a reference to those who had claims against the
insolvent estate as at the date of sequestration.
”
[16]
It was thus submitted that the payments to FirstRand were made after
the sequestration of the
insolvent's estate (i.e., after
7
February
2022).
FirstRand submitted
that a payment accepted after that date would constitute a voidable
disposition or undue preference.
[17]
This stance was confirmed in a letter by FirstRand’s attorney
to Mr Nel’s attorney
dated 13 May 2022 which relevant part
reads as follows:
“
4.1
It is evident from the payment affidavit that the payments did not
originate from WA Nel but it is alleged that these payments were
made
by various third parties, i.e. Tristate Contractors, Farm Rescue
(Pty) Ltd, Highveld Cattle Farms, Highveld GRN and Annale
Nel.
4.2
Our client has no knowledge of the origins of these funds; nor
of the reason why these funds were paid to our client from these
third parties on behalf of WA Nel. What is the relationship between
the third parties and WA Nel (apart from Annale Nel whom we
know is
married to WA Nel)? What was the causa for these funds being paid by
the third parties on behalf of WA Nel?
4.3
Our client is concerned that the payments originate from third
parties who may be in financial difficulties and that the
liquidators
/
trustees of such
third parties may lay claim to the funds paid to our client.
4.4
We record that our client cannot accept the payments in
reduction of the debts of WA Nel unconditionally, and will not do so
until
it is satisfied as to the origin of and the reason/cause for
these payments, and verified such information.
4.5
Our client therefore requires WA Nel to disclose the source of
the funds, the reason for the payments and provide our client with
the source documents evidencing the relationship between the third
parties and WA Nel, as well as the causa for such payments being
made
by the third parties on behalf of WA Nel. In other words, our client
needs to know that the causa for these payments as between
the third
parties and WA Nel was. Our client needs to be satisfied that these
funds will not be claimed from it as a result of,
for instance,
questionable transaction/s which may be set aside under insolvency
legislation.
”
[18]
This stance was reiterated in a letter dated 24 August
2022
:
“
2.
On
13
May
2022,
we informed you that our client cannot accept the
payments in reduction of the debts of WA Nel and will not do so until
it is satisfied
as to the origin of and the reason/causa for these
payments, and verified such information.
3.
…
4.
These payments were in any event made into the FNB account after the
provisional
sequestration of WA Nel on
7
February
2022.”
[19]
It was further submitted that Mr Serumola not only incorrectly
accepted the debt was extinguished when in fact payment was made
after the sequestration, but he also critically investigated the
claim. He did not apply the test as formulated in
Breda NO v The
Master of the High Court Kimberley
(20537/2014)
[2015] ZASCA 166
(26 November 2015) where in par [23] the following was found:
“
[T]he presiding
officer does not adjudicate upon the claim as a court of law, is not
required to examine the claim too critically
and only has to be
satisfied that the claim is prima facie proved”.
[20]
It was argued he exceeded his powers and should have merely accepted
the claim if the claim was
prima facie
valid.
[21]
On behalf of Mr Serumola it was submitted that the concern about the
origin of the money was
ingenious because FirstRand knew the origin
of the money. Despite Firstrand stating it did not accept the
money it did accept
it and kept the money in the bank. The
debtor acted validly through a third party and the third party
performed validly.
He was satisfied that there was insufficient
proof that the debt was not paid. FirstRand’s conduct
showed it accepted
the payment of the debt.
[22]
It was also submitted that FirstRand is incorrect because the date
has no bearing on the task
of the Presiding Officer in deciding
whether a debt was proved. The only time a date is relevant is
the date the cause of
action arose; it must be before the
sequestration. The
Vather
-matter expresses exactly that
and not that a debt must be extinguished before the sequestration.
The intention of this date is
clear; to prevent more debts being
incurred after sequestration.
[23]
It was submitted that he did not critically evaluate the claim, but
decided it on the
prima facie
evidence as required.
The
acceptance of claims 3-10
[24]
FirstRand set out that claims
3
to
10
were found on the file when the parties arrived at the
Magistrates Court on
21
September
2022
.
On the day, there were no date stamps reflected on the claims to
confirm when they were lodged. This was strange to Mr van
Heerden who
had enquired whether any claims had been filed and was informed that
there were no claims filed. Some of the claims
were from employees,
but employees were never previously disclosed. When the FirstRand’s
representative pointed out that
the claims were not lodged 24-hours
before the time advertised for the meeting, the attorney who
represented claimants
3
to
10,
Mr Mendelsohn, simply stated that according to him, the claims
had been lodged on
19
September
2022.
He could provide no evidence to support this statement and did
not state that he was the one that lodged the claims.
[25]
In terms of section
44(4)
of the
Insolvency
Act, the
affidavit and other documents supporting the claim must be
lodged not later than twenty-four hours before the advertised time of
such meeting. If not done within that time-frame the claim cannot be
admitted at the meeting. Late lodgement can only be done if
the
presiding officer is “
of opinion that through no fault of
the creditor he has been unable”
timeously to effect the
lodgement. Reliance was placed on
Sieradzki and Others v Brummer
and Another
1930 TPD 23
where a Full Court set out as follows:
"The Act (Act
32
of
1916)
does not say that the
presiding officer should exercise his discretion in the event of
there being a possible prejudice to the creditor
or to anyone else.
The object of the time limit is clearly to enable persons interested
to examine the claims before the meeting
is held. No actual prejudice
to the appellants can result in so far as the admission or rejection
of their claims is concerned,
because they are only debarred,
according to the section, from proving their claims at the meeting in
question and they may prove
their claims at any other meeting that
might be advertised. There might be an indirect prejudice to them, it
is true, in that they
may be debarred from exercising their vote in
the appointment of a trustee at the first meeting of creditors. But
these are not
matters which the presiding officer has to consider.
The Act provides that he shall have a discretion to admit to proof
the claims
at that meeting if he is of opinion that through no fault
of the creditor the evidences of the claim could not be delivered in
proper time. The question of prejudice was, however, considered in
the case of Graaff-Reinet Board of Executors and Another v. The
Magistrate and Taute, N.O., (
1917
CPD
332
)
,
where, under somewhat analogous circumstances, the Court
ordered the presiding officer to admit proof of the claims. It is not
necessary
to deal with the decision in that case as each case has to
be decided according to the circumstances proved."
and
In
Derby Shirt
Manufacturers (Pty.) Ltd. v Nel, N.O. and Another, N.O.
1964 (2)
SA 599
(D) at 602E:
"The
provision in sec.
44(4)
that
the affidavit or a copy of it be delivered not later than
24
hours before the advertised time of the meeting was not
observed. That provision is clearly peremptory; it is expressly
directed
that 'failing which the claim shall not be admitted to proof
at the meeting'. The presiding officer has no discretion save where
the delay is shown to be 'through no fault of the creditor'.”
In this matter, claims
3
to
10
were found on the file when
the parties arrived at the Magistrates Court on
21
September
2022
(i.e., on the day of
the meeting). On the day, there were no date stamps reflected on the
claims to confirm when they were lodged.
[26]
It was submitted that Mr Serumola plainly exceeded his statutory
powers because at the first
meeting the presiding officer does not
have a general discretion to allow late claims. What is clear
from the wording of
section
44(4)
is that
it expressly records that no late claims shall be admitted to prove.
This strict regime is necessary because section 44
(5) of the Act
creates a mechanism to enable creditors to inspect and scrutinise
claims submitted by others. This right ensures
that claims can be
objected to, or that proposed creditors can be interrogated in terms
of section
44(7).
[27]
The only exception to the strict regime imposed by section
44(4)
is when a presiding officer is convinced that the lateness was
not as a result of fault on the part of the creditor. No explanation
for the lateness was provided and the presiding officer had no facts
on which he could exercise his discretion and could not accept
the
claims that were lodged late.
[28]
It was also put before this Court that when the record was filed,
claims
3
to
10
suddenly
reflected stamps by the “
Family Law”
division of
the Middelburg Magistrates Court. No explanation is provided how
these stamps are now on the claims.
The following submissions
pertaining to the stamps were highlighted:
“
(1)
Section
44
requires
claims to be ‘submitted to the officer who is to preside at
that meeting’. As such, even if the claims were
somehow lodged
at the family court on
20
September
2022,
they were not lodged in
accordance with section
44.
The
stamps are therefore not evidence of proper lodgement.
(2)
The second respondent does not explain the conflict
between the submission made by the attorney representing proposed
claimants
3
to
10
that the claims were lodged on
19
September, and the appearance of a
20
September
2022
date
stamp.
(3)
The second respondent
does not attempt to explain why the date stamps were not noticed
during the meeting (the date stamps appear
on the first page of 7
different claims
-
it is
inconceivable that they would have been overlooked during the
proceedings
-
the date of
lodgement was, after all, a topic of serious debate).”
[29]
FirstRand thus submitted the claims were lodged irregular and they
could not be admitted and
proven.
[30]
On behalf of Mr Serumola it was argued that FirstRand is capitalising
on the gaps of the administration
at the Middelburg Court. To him it
is plain that different people received the claims, some were stamped
and some not. He does
not deny that the claims bore no stamps on the
day of the first meeting. FirstRand had the onus to prove that the
claims were submitted
outside the 24-hour period and it did not do
so. It was further submitted that Mr Serumola was thus correct in
accepting the word
of Mendelsohn that it was filed timeously. He did
not accept Mr van Heerden’s explanation about the enquiry and
that there
were no claims filed under oath.
Reasons
for decision
[31]
Section 151
of the
Insolvency Act grants
the High Court the power to
review decisions, rulings, or orders made by the Master. It provides
as follows:
“
Subject to the
provisions of section fifty-seven any person aggrieved by any
decision, ruling, order or taxation of the Master or
by a decision,
ruling or order of an officer presiding at a meeting of creditors may
bring it under review by the court and to
that end may apply to the
court by motion, after notice to the Master or to the presiding
officer, as the case may be, and to any
person whose interests are
affected: Provided that if all or most of the creditors are affected,
notice to the trustee shall be
deemed to be notice to all such
creditors; and provided further that the court shall not re-open any
duly confirmed trustee's account
otherwise than as is provided in
section one hundred and twelve.”
The
rejection of FirstRand’s claim
[32]
FirstRand lodged its claim on
20
September
2022
at the Middelburg Magistrates Court.
It must be mentioned that FirstRand is a secured creditor of the
insolvent. The claim,
consisted of
16
items
and was annexed to the founding affidavit as “
FA18”
.
This claim is reflected in the record attached by the Master. It was
never disputed that the claim was timeously lodged. In the
supplementary affidavit the date stamp and time in manuscript is
reflected on the attached claim.
[33]
No payments can be made after the
concursus creditorum
which
came into being when the provisional order was granted. FirstRand had
the right to refuse acceptance of the payment and proceed
to prove
its claim. This is so, because the moment an order is granted the
general body of creditors have to be taken into consideration
and a
single creditor cannot accept payment to the prejudice of the other
creditors. The claim of FirstRand must be dealt with
as it existed at
the issue of the order on 7 February 2022.
[34]
The argument that FirstRand is interpreting the
Vather
-matter
incorrectly is rejected. It speaks for itself that a cause of action
for a claim must arise before the date of sequestration,
but the
matter addresses when transactions for instance, payments to
extinguish debts, can take place.
“
No transaction
can thereafter be entered into with regard to estate matters by a
single creditor to the prejudice of the general
body. The claim of
each creditor must be dealt with as it existed at the issue of the
order”
[2]
[35]
Mr Serumola did not only consider if there was a
prima facie
claim. He took into consideration all the surrounding facts and made
a finding. He took note of the fact that payment was made,
that
FirstRand knew who the money came from and that FirstRand kept the
money in the bank. He made a deduction that FirstRand’s
conduct
showed that it accepted the payment, despite FirstRand stating it did
not accept payment and then found there was no claim;
he critically
analysed and adjudicated the claim. This is contrary to the duty of
the Master when deciding if there is a
prima facie
claim.
[36]
The decision of the Master to reject the claim of FirstRand is to be
set aside.
Admitting
claims 3-10
[37]
Section
44(4)
of the
Insolvency Act
provides
as follows:
“
The said
affidavit or a copy thereof and any documents submitted in support of
the claim shall be delivered at the office of the
officer who is to
preside at the meeting of creditors not later than twenty-four hours
before the advertised time of the meeting
at which the creditor
concerned intends to prove the claim, failing which the claim shall
not be admitted to proof at that meeting,
unless the presiding
officer is of opinion that through no fault of the creditor he has
been unable to deliver such evidences of
his claim within the
prescribed period
…”
and
s44(5)
“
Any document by
this section required to be delivered before a meeting of creditors
at the office of the officer who is to preside
at that meeting, shall
be open for inspection at such office during office hours free of
charge by any creditor, the trustee or
the insolvent or the
representative of any of them.”
[38]
The purpose of the time-limit in
s44(4)
thus becomes clear when read
with
s44(5)
; to allow claims to be inspected by other creditors. The
Courts have interpreted
s44(4)
as peremptory leaving a presiding
officer with no discretion to admit a claim that is lodged out of
time.
[3]
[39]
FirstRand had enquired whether there were claims filed. Mr van
Heerden confirms under oath that
he was informed that there were no
other claims. Some of the claims were now from employees who had not
been disclosed previously.
There were no date stamps on the claims.
[40]
Where the date of the lodgement of the claim was disputed Mr Serumola
could not accept the say-so
of Mr Mendelson. He had no discretion to
in fact accept the word of Mr Mendelson. If there were no date stamps
there was no objective
proof of the date of lodging the claims. The
record now reflects that the claims were not lodged on 19 September,
as averred by
Mr Mendelson, but in fact the 20
th
.
Strangely the claims are now stamped, but it clearly was not stamped
on 21 September otherwise there would have been no
debate about this
at the meeting.
[41]
Mr Serumola should have accepted that the claims were late. He could
not exercise a discretion
as to lateness because Mr Mendelson
informed him the claims were lodged timeously.
The decision to accept
the claim must be reviewed and set aside.
[42]
I accordingly make the following order:
42.1
That the decision by the second respondent to reject the applicant’s
claim (annexure “FA19”
to the founding affidavit) be
reviewed and set aside, and that the applicant’s claim be
admitted.
42.2
That the decision by the second respondent to accept claims 3 to 10
be reviewed and set aside and that the
claims be rejected based
thereon that they were not lodged within the prescribed period.
42.3
That the vote on the appointment of final trustees be reviewed and
set aside, and that the Master is directed
to reconvene the first
meeting of creditors only for the purpose of voting on the
appointment of the final trustees.
42.4
That the costs of the application be paid by the first and second
respondents, the one paying the other to
be absolved, including that
consequent upon the employment of two counsel.
S.
POTTERILL
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
CASE
NO:
2022-035973
HEARD
ON:
14
August 2023
FOR
THE APPLICANT:
ADV.
J. VORSTER
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Werksmans
Incorporated
FOR
THE 1
ST
AND 2
ND
RESPONDENTS:
Adv.
N. Mathle-Ndlazi
INSTRUCTED
BY:
State
Attorney, Pretoria
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
29
September 2023
[1]
1973
(2) SA 232
(N) at 236A-E.
[2]
Vather
matter
supra
[3]
Derby
Shirt Manufacturers (Pty) Ltd v Nel, NO and Another NO
1964
(2) SA 599
(D) at 602E
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