Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 1872South Africa
Poole and Another v Rashida Industries (Pty) Ltd and Others (067770/2023) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1872 (26 October 2023)
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Poole and Another v Rashida Industries (Pty) Ltd and Others (067770/2023) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1872 (26 October 2023)
Poole and Another v Rashida Industries (Pty) Ltd and Others (067770/2023) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1872 (26 October 2023)
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sino date 26 October 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO: 067770/2023
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE 26/10/2023
LENYAI J
In
the matter of:
POOLE, ANGELENE
N.O.
First
Applicant
MAWELA, ABEL MAKALENE
N.O.
Second Applicant
And
RASHIDA INDUSTRIES
(PTY) LTD
First
Respondent
GANI,
SHANNA
Second Respondent
AYOB, NIZAMUDEEN NOOR
MOHAMED
Third Respondent
SCHICKERLING, JOHN
FREDERICK N.O.
Fourth Respondent
FIRST RAND BANK
LTD
Fifth Respondent
FEDBOND NOMINEES (PTY)
LTD
Sixth Respondent
SASFIN BANK
LTD
Seventh Respondent
NEDBANK
LTD
Eighth Respondent
THE SOUTH AFRICAN
REVENUE SERVICE
Ninth Respondent
THE EMPLOYEES and
TRADE UNIONS
Tenth Respondent
THE MASTER OF THE HIGH
COURT, PRETORIA
Eleventh Respondent
This
matter has been heard in terms of the Directives of the Judge
President of this Division dated 25 March 2020, 24 April 2020,
and 11
May 2020. The judgment and order are accordingly published and
distributed electronically. The date and time of hand-down
is
deemed to be 14:00
on 26 October 2023
JUDGMENT
LENYAI J
1.
This is an application
by the first and second applicants that it be directed in terms of
section 18(3)
of the
Superior Courts Act, 10 of 2013
that the
petition to the Supreme Court of Appeal for leave to appeal, do
not suspend the operation and execution of the order
granted by me in
the urgent court on the 26
th
July 2023 and the written reasons of the 31
st
August 2023.
2.
The leave to
appeal was heard on the 5
th
October 2023 and the judgment refusing the leave to appeal was handed
down by me on the 6
th
October 2023.
The
second and third respondents launched their petition to the Supreme
Court of Appeal to set aside the order refusing the leave
to appeal
and grant them leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of Appeal ,
alternatively to the Full Court of the Gauteng Division
against the
whole judgment and orders granted by me on the 26
th
July 2023.
3.
It is noteworthy to
mention at this stage that the Fifth Respondent (FRB) made an
intervention application that it be granted leave
to intervene as a
co-applicant in the
Section 18(3)
application and henceforth
participate as the third applicant.
4.
FRB’s reasons for
the intervening application are that on the 16
th
October 2023 it, together with the other creditors of Hanmar
Belliggings (Pty) Ltd, received an email from the provisional
liquidators
of Hanmar, informing them that without interim financial
support to pay the legal costs incurred to date and to be further
incurred
in prosecuting the
Section 18(3)
application to finality,
they will have no option but not to proceed with the matter. FRB has
also delivered an answering affidavit
in support of the
section 18(3)
application. FRB avers that it is for all intents and purposes
already in a position of a co-applicant and it cannot afford for
the
section 18(3)
application to be abandoned because the provisional
liquidators are financially constrained and as the major creditor,
they have
a direct and substantial interest in the subject matter of
the
section 18(3)
application and the application is seriously made
and is not frivolous.
5.
There was no opposition
at all to this application from the respondents. The court is of the
view that it is in the interests of
justice that this application be
granted.
6.
FRB
also made an application for leave to file a supplementary answering
affidavit. It was submitted that FRB seeks to demonstrate
that the
dismissed application for leave to appeal and the petition for leave
to appeal to the Supreme Court of Appeal are
inarguable, without
merit, an abuse of court process and are all part of a greater
strategy that pursues an ulterior, improper
and dishonest motive to
defeat the creditors of Hanmar by placing the assets of Hanmar out of
reach of the creditors and delaying
the finalization of the
liquidation proceedings. The supplementary affidavit deals with
crucial facts not known to FRB at the time
when its initial answering
affidavit in support of the
section 18(3)
was deposed to and
delivered. These new facts only transpired after the initial
affidavit was already signed and delivered.
7.
FRB further avers that
it is important to ensure that the
section 18(3)
application should
be adjudicated on the most recent and relevant facts. It was
submitted that it would be in the interests of
justice to allow this
affidavit and there is no legally recognized or relevant prejudice to
be suffered by the respondents as the
information in the affidavit is
known to them.
8.
There was no real
opposition to the application. The court observed that the second and
third respondents only uploaded their answering
affidavit on the
evening before the hearing, being the 19
th
October 2023 whilst the application for the supplementary affidavit
was served and uploaded on caselines on the 13
th
October 2023. I am of the view that there is no prejudice to the
respondents as they had ample time to deal with the averments
made in
the supplementary affidavit. It is in the interest of justice that
the application for leave to file the supplementary
affidavit be
condoned and it be admitted and form part of the evidence before
court.
9.
In order to properly
consider this application in terms of
section 18(3)
,a proper reading
and application of
section 18
is required.
Section
18
Suspension of
decision pending appeal
“
(1)
Subject to subsections (2) and (3), and
unless the court under exceptional circumstances orders otherwise,
the operation and execution of a decision which is the subject of an
application for leave to appeal or of an appeal, is suspended
pending
the decision of the application or appeal.
(2)
Subject to subsection (3), unless the court under exceptional
circumstances orders otherwise,
the operation and execution of a
decision that is an interlocutory order not having the effect of a
final judgment, which is the
subject of an application for leave to
appeal or of an appeal, is not suspended pending the decision of the
application or appeal.
(3)
A court may only order otherwise as contemplated in subsection (1) or
(2), if the party
who applied to the court to order otherwise, in
addition proves on a balance of probabilities that he or she will
suffer irreparable
harm if the court does not so order and that the
other party will not suffer irreparable harm if the court so orders.
(4)
If a court orders otherwise, as contemplated in subsection (1)
(i)
the court must
immediately record its reasons for doing so
(ii)
the aggrieved
party has an automatic right of appeal to the next highest court
(iii)
the court
hearing such an appeal must deal with it as a matter of extreme
urgency and
(iv)
such order will
be automatically suspended, pending the outcome of such appeal.
For purposes of
subsections (1) and (2), a decision becomes the subject of an
application for leave to appeal or of an appeal, as
soon as an
application for leave to appeal or a notice of appeal is lodged with
the registrar in terms of the rules”
10.
Turning to the
applicants’ application in terms of
section 18(3)
, the
applicants are required to demonstrate firstly exceptional
circumstances which justify the execution of the order pending
the
appeal, secondly that the applicants will suffer irreparable harm if
the order is not executed and lastly that the other party
will not
suffer irreparable harm if the order is granted.
Maughan
v Zuma and Another; Downer v Zuma and Another (12770/22p) [2023]
ZAKZPHC 75 ( 3 August 2023).
11.
The first stage of the
enquiry, whether exceptional circumstances are present depends on the
peculiar facts of each case. The exceptional
circumstances must be
derived from the actual predicaments in which the parties find
themselves.
12.
The following factors
to my mind, establish the exceptional circumstances :
12.1
the first and second applicants bring this application for leave to
execute the urgent order
granted on 26
th
July 2023 pending
the petition for leave to the Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA), in terms
of which it was ordered that :
12.1.1 the liquidators’
powers were extended in terms of section 386(5) and 387(3) of the
Companies Act 61 of 1973, and they
are authorized to institute and
prosecute the main application;
12.1.2 the transfer of
the business conducted by Hanmar to Rashida Industries in terms of a
written of the 31
st
March 2023, be declared void in terms
of section 34(1) of the insolvency Act, 24 of 1936.
12.1.3 Rashida
Industries, Gani and Ayob are ordered to restore possession of the
business and assets purportedly sold in terms
of the agreement
referred to in 12.1.2 above, to the liquidators within 3 days from
the date of the order;
12.1.4 that Gani and Ayob
are ordered to pay the costs of the main application jointly and
severally.
13.
The applicants being
the liquidators and FRB, contend that the petition of the leave to
appeal to the SCA is without merit and is
simply a stratagem to
prevent the liquidators from fulfilling their statutory obligation to
recover and reduce into their possession
all the assets and property
of Hanmar.
14.
The applicants aver
that several court orders were granted being:
14.1
The final winding up order in respect of Hanmar was granted on the
3
rd
October 2023 under case number 044099/2023.
14.2
The first business rescue in respect of Hanmar was dismissed on the
3
rd
October 2023 under case number 073163/2023.
14.3
The second business rescue in respect of Hanmar was dismissed on the
3
rd
October 2023 under case number 076414/2023.
14.4 The
application for leave to appeal by Gani and Ayob was dismissed on the
6
th
October 2023.
15.
The applicants aver
that there were a lot of maneuvers to prevent the liquidators from
fulfilling their obligations and protect
the creditors of Hanmar.
Again, on the 8
th
October 2023, Gani and Ayob filed a petition to appeal to the SCA.
16.
FRB in its
supplementary affidavit avers that an enquiry was convened into the
trade, dealings, affairs and property of Hanmar in
terms of sections
417 and 418 of the Companies Act, 1973. The Commissioner, Retired
Jugde Bertelsmann, gave his consent to FRB
to make use of the
evidence of Mr Henn (the former attorney of record for Gani and Ayob)
and Mr Schickerling (the former Business
rescue practitioner of
Hanmar) obtained during the enquiry. A transcript of the evidence of
Mr Henn and Mr Schickerling is attached
to the supplementary
affidavit and entails the following:
16.1
The sale of Hanmar’s business to Rashida and the subsequent
business rescue application in respect
of Hanmar was a dual stratagem
to stagnate the rights of Hanmar’s creditors by triggering the
moratorium provided in
section 133
of the
Companies Act, 2008
and
place the assets of Hanmar beyond the reach of its creditors by
stripping Hanmar of its assets and transferring them to Rashida.
16.2 Mr
Henn and Mr Schikerling, upon the request of Gani and Ayob, and in
consultation with them, devised and
implemented this strategy on
their behalf.
16.3
Hanmar, Mr Henn and Mr Schikerling implemented the stratagem contrary
to the prior written opinion and advice
of senior counsel, in terms
of which they were advised that the sale of Hanmar’s business
to Rashida had to be conducted
in compliance with
section 34(1)
of
the
Insolvency Act, 1936
16.4
Known to Hanmar, Mr Henn and Mr Schikerling FRB’s
liquidation application would defeat the second
object of the
strategy, in that the invocation of the
section 133
moratorium would
be neutralized once the business rescue resolution is set aside and
Hanmar is placed in liquidation, hence the
opposition of the
liquidation application by Gani and Ayob.
16.5
Also known to Hanmar, Mr Henn and Mr Schikerling, the
liquidators’
section 34
application would defeat the first
object of the stratagem and reverse their asset-stripping of Hanmar,
in that an order granted
to the liquidators in pursuance of the
section 34
application would divest Rashida of its possession of the
Hanmar business and restore same to the liquidators, rendering those
assets once again available to the creditors of Hanmar.
16.6
The second business rescue application was considered at the time
when the
section 34
application was brought but had not been
finalized. None the less the Hanmar protagonists required a business
rescue application
to be brought in the meantime to buy time whilst
the second business rescue application was being finalized. This was
required
to derail the
section 34
application by manufacturing a
basis to rely on
section 131(6)
of the
Companies Act, 2008
.
16.7
The first business rescue application was filed two days before the
hearing of the
section 34
application. This application was prepared
by Mr Schikerling, on the instructions of Mr Gani who happens to be
the husband of Ms
Gani. Mr Gani is neither a shareholder nor a
director of Hanmar. Mr Schikerling was instructed that an employee
(Mr Moswane) would
bring the application. Mr Schikerling had not met
Mr Moswane, he never consulted with him in pursuance of preparing the
first business
rescue application and he obtained Mr Moswane’s
details from a copy of his identity document provided to him. The
facts set
out in the founding affidavit of Mr Moswane in support of
the first business rescue application emanate from from Mr
Schikerling.
Mr Moswane was simply the nominated signatory to the
affidavit and he signed whatever was presented to him.
16.8 Mr
Schikerling provided Mr Henn with the draft of the first business
rescue application papers. Mr Henn collated
the annexures thereto and
assisted with the signing of the papers, arranging the commissioning
of the founding affidavit. He was
however not prepared to be the
attorney formally on record representing Mr Moswane and it was for
this reason that, in consultation
with Mr Schikerling, an attorney
Andre Scholtz (proposed by Mr Schikerling) was engaged to represent
Mr Moswane, hence his involvement.
16.9
The first business rescue application was prepared and prosecuted in
circumstances where everyone on the
Hanmar side knew that the
application was not bona fide, that it was inarguable and that it
presented no prospects of success.
They all knew that Mr Moswane was
not an employee of Hanmar and that he did not have locus standi to
pursue the application. The
application was never served.
16.10 The
applicants contend that the first business rescue application was and
remains an abuse. It was designed with a view
to derail the
section
34
application.
16.11 The
section
34
was granted despite the opposition mounted by Mr Ayob and Ms Gani
and FRB contend that the two did not have locus standi to oppose
same. Mr Ayob and Ms Gani then instructed Mr Henn to deliver an
application for leave to appeal, despite Mr Henn advising that
the
application for leave to appeal is unlikely to succeed. The
application for leave to appeal was delivered only with the view
to
trigger the
section 18
suspension of the
section 34
order, to buy
time and with the view to avoid having the sold and transferred
business returned to Hanmar.
16.12 The
application for leave to appeal was never and is not bona fide. It
rather constitutes an abuse of court processes.
Mr Henn agreed that
the application for leave to appeal had three purposes being :
(a)
to frustrate the
liquidation proceedings;
(b)
to buy time; and
(c)
to subvert the
interests of justice in the sense that it constituted, and still
constitutes an abuse.
16.13 Another plan
had to be devised because the stratagem devised was busy untangling.
The second business rescue application
by Joria entered the arena. Mr
Henn represented Joria when preparing the business rescue
application, wherein the application for
leave to appeal is
abandoned, it being accepted that the Hanmar business ought to revert
back to Hanmar and consequently the
liquidators.
16.14 The second
business rescue application was filed two days before the hearing in
respect of the return date of the provisional
liquidation order. Mr
Henn persisted with the stance that the second business rescue
application was arguable, however during the
enquiry he conceded that
that it too is without merit and is the proverbial non-starter.
16.15 The sale of
Hanmar, the resolution to apply for the business rescue of
Hanmar, the opposition of the liquidation
application, the
institution of the first and second business rescue applications and
the filing of the were part of a strategy
to avoid paying Hanmar’s
creditors.
17.
The second stage of the
enquiry is in regard to whether the liquidators, FRB and the other
creditors of Hanmar will on a balance
of probabilities suffer
irreparable harm if the court does not order otherwise as
contemplated by
section 18(1).
The evidence placed before the court
which was clearly stated in the first leg of the enquiry above shows
a chilling and calculated
stratagem that is intended to harm the
interests of the creditors of Hanmar and to render the liquidators
ineffective and useless.
18.
A decision to place a
company in business rescue must be
bona
fide
and a
section 129
resolution taken pursuant thereto must have been taken in
good faith, and for a proper and legitimate purpose.
Alderbaran
(Pty) Ltd and Another v Bouwer and Others (19992/2017)
[2018] ZAWCHC
38
;
[2018] (5) SA 215
(WCC) (22 March 2018).
19.
The Hanmar
business rescue resolution shortly after the sale and transfer of its
business and assets was lacking on the characteristics
alluded to in
Alderbaran.
20.
The applicants aver
that the critical consideration in pursuing the Hanmar liquidation
was and remains that the Hanmar protagonists
had embarked on a
transparent asset-stripping transaction prior to voluntarily placing
Hanmar in business rescue with the ultimate
aim being to put the
assets beyond the reach of its creditors and shield Hanmar from its
creditors. The applicants further submit
that the commencement of
liquidation proceedings brings with it the consequence of
establishing a
concursus
creditorium,
put
simply, a gathering of creditors in relation to the company concerned
and the hand of the law being placed upon the estate of
such company.
To this end, a fundamental public interest element is infused into
insolvency proceeding, the effect of which is
that the rights not
only of the petitioning creditor are safeguarded, but the rights and
interests of all creditors and persons
otherwise affected by the
ensuing insolvency of the subject company, in this case Hanmar.
ABSA
Bank Limited v Hammerie Group (Pty)
Ltd
2015 (5) SA 215
(SCA) at para 13.
21.
Section 391
of the
Companies Act,1973 provides as follows:
“
A
liquidator in any winding-up shall proceed forthwith to recover and
reduce into possession all the assets and property of the
company,
movable and immovable, shall apply the same so far as they extend in
satisfaction of the costs of the winding-up and the
claims of the
creditors, and shall distribute the balance among those who are
entitled thereto.”
22.
The Constitutional
Court in the matter of
Bernstein
and Others v Bester NO and Others ( CCT 23/95)
[1996] ZACC 2
;
1996
(4) BCLR 449
;
1996 (2) SA 751
(27 March 1996)
,
articulated the duties of the liquidators as follows:
“
[15]
Some of the major statutory duties of the liquidator in any winding
up are:
(a)
To proceed
forthwith to recover and reduce into possession all the assets
and property of the company, movable and immovable.”
23.
I agree with the
Bernstein
decision
of the Constitutional Court and I would even go as far as to say
section 391
of the
Companies Act is
crystal clear and there was never
any ambiguity in the language and interpretation thereof.
24.
In my view all the
liquidators are doing with the
section 34
application and the current
section 18(3)
application is in pursuance of their aforesaid
obligations and halt the asset-stripping stratagem that was conceded
to by the attorneys
in the
section 417
and
418
enquiry. The
applicants further aver that the debt that Hanmar is trying to avoid
is in excess of R 100 MILLION Rand of which R60
Million is owed to
FRB alone. The second and third respondents filed an answering
affidavit as already indicated that is not disputing
any of the
averments made in the affidavits filed by the applicants and FRB.
During argument in court the legal representative
of the second and
third respondents submitted that if the applicants are able to prove
exceptional circumstances and they are unable
to convince the court
otherwise, then their opposition to the
section 18(3)
application
must fail.
25.
The version placed
before court by the applicants remains uncontested and stands to be
accepted by the court. I am convinced that
if the order is not
granted by the court, the applicants and the other creditors will
suffer irreparable harm.
26.
The third stage of the
enquiry is whether there is irreparable harm to the other party, in
this case Mr Ayob and Ms Gani who are
the ones opposing all the
applications of the liquidators including this one before us.
27.
In my view the evidence
already placed before court in proving the first and second stages of
the enquiry, demonstrate that there
can be no prejudice suffered by
Mr Ayob and Ms Gani as they are the ones who have been the puppet
Master’s all along. It
cannot be correct that when their
nefarious activities have been exposed and laid bare for all to see
including the court, they
now want to cry foul and seek the
assistance of the court. They have been playing games to the
detriment of all concerned and wasting
everyone’s time, the
court frowns upon such behavior.
28.
Turning to the issue of
costs, it was argued by the liquidators that the conduct of Mr Ayob
and Ms Gani in this application merits
censure and that an
appropriate punitive order for costs would be on the scale as between
attorney and client. FRB on the other
hand submitted that the costs
should be costs in the appeal.
29.
In the circumstances it
is ordered that :
29.1
The intervening party is granted leave to intervene as a co-applicant
in the application in terms of
section 18(3)
of the
Superior Courts
Act and
to henceforth be cited and participate as the third
applicant.
29.2
The Application to file the supplementary affidavit by the Fifth
respondent is condoned.
29.3 The
section 34
Order granted on the 26
th
July 2023 shall not
be suspended pending the outcome of the Petition to the Supreme Court
of Appeal, and the applicants may carry
the order into effect.
29.4
The costs of the Intervening application, the application to condone
the supplementary affidavit and the
section 18(3)
application will
be borne by the second and third respondents on a scale as between
attorney and client scale.
M M DLENYAI J
Judge of the High
Court
Gauteng
Division, Pretoria
Appearances
Counsel
for Applicants: Adv Mokhethi:
Adv
Vorster
Instructed
by:
Reitz
Attorneys
Counsel
for the Second and Third Respondents:
Adv
Mokhethi
Instructed
by:
Soomar
& Malik Attorneys
Counsel
for Fifth Respondent:
Adv P
Lourens
Instructed
by:
Werksmans
Attorneys
Date
of hearing:
20
October 2023
Date
of Judgement:
26
October 2023
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