Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 1180South Africa
Brother International (Pty) Ltd v Bopang Distribution and Logistics (Pty) Ltd (2023-072737) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1180 (2 October 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
2 October 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Brother International (Pty) Ltd v Bopang Distribution and Logistics (Pty) Ltd (2023-072737) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1180 (2 October 2023)
Brother International (Pty) Ltd v Bopang Distribution and Logistics (Pty) Ltd (2023-072737) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1180 (2 October 2023)
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sino date 2 October 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO: 2023-072737
(1)
REPORTABLE: Yes
☐
/ No
☒
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: Yes
☐
/
No
☒
(3)
REVISED: Yes
☐
/ No
☒
Date: 02
October 2023
WJ du Plessis
In
the matter between:
BROTHER
INTERNATIONAL (PTY) LTD
APPLICANT
and
BOPANG
DISTRIBUTION AND LOGISTICS (PTY) LTD
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
DU
PLESSIS AJ
[1]
On 2 August 2023, in an urgent application,
this court granted an order placing the Respondent under provisional
liquidation. This
application deals with the return date for the
winding-up order to be made final. The Respondent opposes the
application, requesting
the court to extend the rule
nisi
to allow for further exchange of paper between the parties.
[2]
The
Applicant is the Respondent’s only significant creditor and its
only source of income. It generates income by purchasing
Brother
products from the Applicant and “on selling” them to
Mustek Ltd, a third-party distributor.
[1]
The Respondent states that it is merely a BEE conduit between the
Applicant and Mustek to obtain the necessary procurement points
to
continue to obtain government contracts.
[2]
For this, the Respondent received a 1% markup on the products
delivered to Mustek.
[3]
It
worked as follows: The Applicant and Mustek would negotiate the items
that were required for distribution. Mustek would then
place the
order with the Applicant, and the Applicant would render a pro forma
invoice to the Respondent, with the 1% markup. This
invoice will then
be sent to Mustek for payment, who will pay the Respondent, who will
then in turn pay the Applicant after deducting
the 1% markup. The
Applicant would then deliver the products directly to Mustek.
[3]
[4]
On 3 July 2023, the Respondent received a
payment of R15 461 542,46, from which it had to deduct 1%
and then pay the Applicant.
It did not do so immediately but
undertook to pay this amount to the Applicant by 12 July 2023. It did
not. It is this non-payment
that gave rise to the urgent application
for winding up. The Applicant has also thereafter elected to
terminate its contractual
relationship with the Respondent.
[5]
Instead of paying the Applicant, the
Respondent paid an amount of R15 000 000 into an
undisclosed account around 3 July
2023. The Applicant did not know
about this, and even though the Applicant asked several times that
the Respondent indicate where
the funds are, or to pay the money into
the Respondent’s attorney’s trust account pending the
outcome of their litigation,
the Respondent refuses. It, instead,
asks this court to extend the
rule nisi
to allow it to properly formulate its counterclaim against the
Applicant.
[6]
The
counterclaim is for an alleged R200 000 shortfall in payment of
the 1% markup over the last seven years, the expenses it
had to incur
for running the company, and an increase of the markup from 1% to
10%. Preliminary calculations of their accountants
indicate that the
Respondent may have a claim of between R40 million and R250 million
against the Applicant and Mustek, and thus
they decided to withhold
the R15 million payment, pending discussions with their legal
advisors.
[4]
[7]
The Respondent also emphasises the fact
that apart from the distribution agreement entered between the
Applicant and the Respondent,
they also entered into an agreement to
develop the Respondent as a black-owned enterprise. As such, the
Respondent was the Applicant’s
Enterprise and Supplier
Development beneficiary, which were to be developed to ultimately
operate independently in the distribution
and logistics industry.
However, this failed. This means, the Respondents contend, that there
is a
bona fide
triable issue to be determined between the parties which renders a
final winding-up of the Respondent inappropriate.
[8]
At the date of hearing this application, no
counterclaim was filed. This could not have been done in time for
this application,
the Respondent explains, because of the short time
between the hearing date of this application and the service of the
provisional
order has left them with insufficient time to properly
deal with this matter. This was because his wife instituted, what the
Respondent
calls, a baseless criminal complaint instituted against
him by his wife, who is allegedly working with the applicant and
Mustek.
The allegation is that she will withdraw the charges if the
Respondent makes payment to the Applicant. It was thus difficult to
deal with the criminal proceedings (with different attorneys) and
this Application (with the current attorneys) at the same time.
On
top of that, he had to “expedite” the divorce
proceedings, which have taken up time and resources. Furthermore,
counsel who have been briefed on this matter had to travel abroad on
short notice, making further consultations difficult. Therefore,
the
delay in this matter is not unreasonable. However, what the
Respondent requests is more time to properly consult with its legal
representatives and formulate its claim against Mustek.
[9]
It has also, in the meantime, appointed new
accountants to draft a report that it seeks to rely on in its
counterclaim. So far the
report confirms that the Respondent has a
potential claim of up to about R 268 million against the Applicant
and/or Mustek. This
is apart from the potential claim against the
parties at the Broad-Based Black Economic Empowerment Commission, and
a complaint
against VBI at the Legal Practice Council.
[10]
In its request for an extension of the
rule
nisi,
the Respondent points out that
the Applicant has alternative and contractual remedies available.
Amongst other things, there is
a cession agreement that it can, and
indeed did, call up. And while the Applicants pointed out in the
urgent application that by
1 August 2023 the debt will be
R29 529 206,62, the Respondents state this is false and
that the Applicant misled the
urgent court by not disclosing that it
received the approximately R14 million directly from Mustek, and that
it perfected the cession
agreement. The Applicant’s attorneys
were informed that they view this conduct in a serious light, but
have not responded
to it. This alone, the Respondents contend, would
be enough to discharge the
rule nisi
.
[11]
The Respondent further asserts that there
will be no prejudice to the Applicant should the
rule
nisi
be extended. This is because a
provisional liquidator has been appointed by the Master of the High
Court. This liquidator has taken
control of the company and the
employees, who have thus far fully cooperated with the requests that
have been received from the
provisional liquidator. What is now
necessary, the Respondents aver, is for all the interested parties to
be afforded the usual
procedures and time periods to approach this
court or to potentially intervene.
[12]
The Applicant argues that the Respondent is
not entitled to the postponement it seeks. It denies that the
Respondent has a
bona fide
and
reasonable dispute against the Applicant, stating that the sole
purpose of this application is to delay the winding-up application.
It finds the explanations offered by the Respondent as to the delays
unaccepted. The Applicant states that they already knew from
2 August
2023 that the return date is 4 September 2023. On 10 August 2023, the
Respondent’s attorneys even undertook to deliver
a further
answering affidavit against the provisional order, before the return
date. Furthermore, the Applicants state that there
is not sufficient
detail as to what kept the Respondent busy in the criminal case and
the divorce (that has not been instituted
yet). As for the
unavailability of counsel, no confirmatory affidavit was filed to
confirm that this is true, and neither is this
an excuse. Despite all
these delays, the Respondent’s attorneys at no time indicated
that they take issue with the return
date, or that they were not
prepared to argue the case. Instead, the Respondents only served an
application to extend the rule
nisi date on the Respondent 19h35 on
the 4
th
of September 2023, while the matter was set down for hearing on 7
September 2023.
[13]
Instead,
the Applicant states, that the reason for delaying the winding-up is
because it does not have a bona fide and reasonable
dispute to its
indebtedness to the applicant. The claim, as set out in the initial
winding-up application, is based on the Respondent’s
allegation
that it was underpaid and that the negotiated markup on sales prices
to Mustek was not enough to cover its expense and
should have been
much higher. The Respondent alleges that the Applicant and Mustek
mistreated and abused them. However, the Applicants
argue that this
has no prospects of success, as the law does not permit courts to
regulate contractual relationships because one
party drove a harsh
bargain and even if it is argued that the contracts are so unfair as
to be contrary to public policy, the law
does not permit the court to
create a new contract for the parties. The contract from which the
claim arises is also a contract
with Mustek, not with the Applicant.
If the claim is based on a breach of promise, such claim is precluded
by the operation of
the non-variation clause of the distribution
agreement between the parties. Lastly, if the claim is that the
arrangement between
the Respondent and the Applicant is unlawful
Broad-Based Black Economic Empowerment Act
[5]
“fronting”, it cannot enforce such a claim against the
Applicant, since no party is allowed to benefit from its
unlawful
conduct.
[14]
Regarding the fact that a liquidator has
been appointed, the Applicant states that the Respondent’s sole
director and its
employees have not cooperated with the liquidators.
Despite being requested to furnish the liquidators with,
inter
alia
, bank statements, VAT numbers, tax
numbers, and the details of the bank account into which the R15
million was deposited, the Respondents
have not done so. In the
absence of giving such information, the liquidators cannot take
control of the respondent or investigate
its affairs. If the
liquidator then must go to court to compel the Respondent to comply,
the whereabouts of the R15 million will
remain unknown - the reason
for the application. Furthermore, allowing for the finalisation of
the application to be delayed when
the Respondent is not cooperating
with the provisional liquidator would cause a delay in the
administration of justice and would
defeat the purpose for which the
provision order was granted on an urgent basis. The Respondent says
that this is all hearsay and
not based on any evidence.
[15]
As
for perfecting the session while applying for the winding up, the
Applicant argues that it is within its rights to pursue both
paths,
as the causes of action, relief and consequences when successful the
two processes are different. All it had to do was to
make out a case
for winding-up in terms of ss 344 (f) read with 345(1)(c) of the
Companies Act,
[6]
showing that
the Respondent is unable to pay its debts. The fact that the
Respondent did not pay the R15 461 542, 46
is proof of
such. The availability of the cession agreement does not change the
fact that the Respondent is unable to pay its debts.
Having to call
up the cession reinforces the fact that the Respondent cannot pay its
debts. The session agreement and the payment,
it states, were dealt
with in the papers and argument in the urgent court, the court was
aware.
[16]
Lastly, the Respondent has not identified a
third party that wants to intervene, and since the Applicant is the
only significant
creditor it is unlikely. No party has notified the
Applicant’s attorneys that they want to intervene, despite the
publication
of the provisional order.
# Issues to be determined
Issues to be determined
[17]
This
court is tasked with determining whether the provisional winding-up
order should be made final, with specific reference to
s 344(f) read
with s 345(1)(c) of the Companies Act 1973,
[7]
and whether it will be just and equitable to wind up the Respondent
under s 344(h) of the Companies Act 1973,
[8]
or
s 81(1)(c)(ii)
of the
Companies Act 2008
.
[9]
Tied up with this is the question of whether the Respondent has
demonstrated that there is a
bona
fide
dispute on reasonable grounds concerning the debt, which would
prevent a final liquidation order. Likewise, the question of whether
the court should exercise its discretion to order the final
winding-up of the Respondent on a just and equitable basis, in
circumstances
where there are several public policy issues and
allegations of Broad-Based Black Economic Empowerment Act
[10]
legislation contraventions levelled against the Applicant.
[18]
S
81(1)(c)(ii)
of the
Companies Act
[11
]
provides that a court may order a solvent company to be wound up if
one of the creditors has applied to the court for an order
to wind up
the company on the grounds that it is otherwise just and equitable
for the company to be wound up. This requires the
company to be
factually and commercially thinner.
[12]
This is a discretionary power
[13]
that must be exercised on judicial grounds.
[14]
[19]
In
Kia
Intertrade Johannesburg (Pty) Ltd v Infinite Motors (Pty) Ltd
,
[15]
the court concluded that "[t]he just and equitable ground for
winding-up is not a catch all to simply liquidate a company
that
is, for example, running its business at a loss or reducing its
scale. But, in my opinion, where a company […] (c)
has
virtually closed its head office, (d) is diverting funds which should
be used to pay its debts to an overseas concern on grounds
which are
not satisfactorily explained, (e) to excuse the nonpayment of
its liabilities sets up a contrived and baseless counterclaim,
and
(f) has transferred assets outside the ordinary course of a business,
it is just and equitable that the creditors should be
protected from
further losses and that it should be prevented from disposing of
assets and incurring further liabilities".
The justice and
equity of the winding-up must be considered by weighing up the
competing interests of all concerned.
[16]
As an independent ground for winding up, it also is the ground under
which the courts can take into account how a company is being
run or
conducted.
[17]
[20]
Ss
344(f) and (h) of the Companies Act 1973,
[18]
provides that a court may wind up a company that is unable to pay its
debts and/or if it appears to the Court that it is just and
equitable
that the company should be wound up. S 345(1)(c) states that a
company is deemed to be unable to pay its debts if it
is proved to
the satisfaction of the court that it is unable to pay its debts. If
a creditor seeks the winding-up and the application
is not opposed by
other creditors, the court has a narrow discretion, as an unpaid
creditor who cannot obtain payment and brings
a claim in terms of the
Act is entitled
ex
debito justitiae
to such an order.
[19]
[21]
Regarding
the existence of a counterclaim, in
Afgri
Operations Ltd v Hambs Fleet (Pty) Ltd
[20]
the Supreme Court of Appeal stated the following:
[12] Notwithstanding its
awareness of the fact that its discretion must be exercised
judicially, the court a quo did not keep in
view the specific
principle that, generally speaking, an unpaid creditor has a right,
ex debito justitiae
, to a winding-up order against the
respondent company that has not discharged that debt.[…] The
court a quo also did not
heed the principle that, in practice, the
discretion of a court to refuse to grant a winding-up order where an
unpaid creditor
applies therefor is a ‘very narrow one’
that is rarely exercised and in special or unusual circumstances
only.
[13] As mentioned above,
mere recourse to a counterclaim will not, in itself, enable a
respondent successfully to resist an application
for its winding-up.
Moreover, as set out above, the discretion to refuse a winding-up
order where it is common cause that the respondent
has not paid an
admitted debt is, notwithstanding a counterclaim, a narrow and not a
broad one. In these respects the court a quo
applied ‘the wrong
principle[s]’. There must be no room for any misunderstanding:
the onus is not discharged by the
respondent merely by claiming the
existence of a counterclaim. The principles of which the court
a quo lost sight are: (a)
as set out in Badenhorst and Kalil, once
the respondent’s indebtedness has prima facie been established,
the onus is on it
to show that this indebtedness is disputed on bona
fide and reasonable grounds and (b) the discretion of a court not to
grant a
winding-up order upon the application of an unpaid creditor
is narrow and not wide.
[22]
From
this, the following emerges: an unpaid creditor has a right to a
winding-up order if the Respondent has not discharged its
debt, and
the discretion to refuse such a winding-up is a narrow one. The
existence of a counterclaim in itself is not enough to
resist winding
up.
[21]
Neither is the
calling up of a session. Additionally, considering that the
Respondent showed some inertia in pursuing the
counterclaim, the
illiquidity of the claim, and the fact that there is simply no
indication that the Respondent is solvent and
able to pay its debts,
this all justifies the granting of a final order. The Respondent also
did not take the court into its confidence
by indicating that the R15
million is indeed in a secure account and available should its
counterclaim be unsuccessful. In the
absence of the above, the damage
that the Applicant suffers if a final order is not granted outweighs
the harm that the Respondent
may suffer. This is even more so when
considering that, on the Respondent’s version, it is still
collecting documents (which
should be readily available) to cooperate
with the liquidator’s request, without explaining the delay.
[23]
Moreover,
as far as the claim to the markup is concerned, none of it pertains
to the agreement with the Applicant. The Applicant
sold the products
to the Respondent, it is in the on selling of the products to Mustek
that the markup lies. Likewise, the Applicant
is not bound by the
Broad-Based Black Economic Empowerment Act.
[22]
If there is a
bona
fide
claim,
the liquidator will be bound to pursue it.
[24]
Lastly,
if the allegation of fronting is true (which I am not deciding on),
it will be a criminal offence in terms of s 130 of the
Broad-Based
Black Economic Empowerment Act,
[23]
and will constitute, by analogy to fraud, sufficient reason for
winding-up the Respondent on just and equitable grounds.
[24]
# Order
Order
[25]
Therefore, I make the following order:
1.
The respondent’s application for an
extension of the return date is dismissed.
2.
The rule
nisi
issued on 2 August 2023 is confirmed and the respondent is placed in
final winding-up.
3.
The costs of the winding-up application, as
well as the applicant’s cost in opposing this application, are
costs in the liquidation.
WJ DU PLESSIS
Acting Judge of the High
Court
Delivered: This
judgement is handed down electronically by uploading it to the
electronic file of this matter on CaseLines.
It will be sent to the
parties/their legal representatives by email.
Counsel
for the applicant:
Mr EJJ
Nel
Instructed
by:
Vorster
& Brandt Incorporated
Counsel
for the respondent:
Mr J
Butler
Instructed
by:
Ulrich
Roux & Associates
Date
of the hearing:
07
September 2023
Date
of judgment:
02
October 2023
[1]
This is evident from AA par 16.2 and paras 65 and 71.3.
[2]
Answering
Affidavit in the urgent application, para 49.
[3]
Answering
Affidavit in the urgent application, para 51.2.
[4]
Answering
Affidavit in the urgent application, para 74.
[5]
53
of 2003.
[6]
61
of 1973.
[7]
61
of 1973.
[8]
61 of 1973.
[9]
71 of 2008.
[10]
53
of 2003.
[11]
71 of 2008.
[12]
Murray
NO v African Global Holdings (Pty) Ltd
[2019]
JOL 46303
(SCA),
2020 (2) SA 93
(SCA) para 23
[13]
F
& C Building Construction Co (Pty) Ltd v Macsheil Investments
(Pty) Ltd
1959 (3) SA 841
(D) at 844.
[14]
Irvin
& Johnson Ltd v Oelofse Fisheries Ltd
1954 (1) SA 231
(E) at 244
[15]
[1999]
2 All SA 268 (W).
[16]
Moosa
NO v Mavjee Bhawan (Pty) Ltd
1967 (3) SA 131
(T) at 136.
[17]
Rand
Air (Pty) Ltd v Ray Bester Investments (Pty) Ltd
1985 (2) SA 345 (W).
[18]
61
of 1973.
[19]
Sammel
v President Brand Gold Mining Co Ltd
1969 (3) SA 629
(A) at 662.
[20]
2022
(1) SA 91 (SCA).
[21]
Paras
18.
[22]
53
of 2003.
[23]
53
of 2003.
[24]
Cuninghame
v First Ready Development 249
2010
(5) SA 325
(SCA) para 35.
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