Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 1841South Africa
Engelbrecht N.O and Another v K and L Builders (Pty) Limited (82618/2019;82619/2019;7400/2020;35192/2020;) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1841 (3 November 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
3 November 2023
Headnotes
Summary:
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Engelbrecht N.O and Another v K and L Builders (Pty) Limited (82618/2019;82619/2019;7400/2020;35192/2020;) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1841 (3 November 2023)
Engelbrecht N.O and Another v K and L Builders (Pty) Limited (82618/2019;82619/2019;7400/2020;35192/2020;) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1841 (3 November 2023)
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sino date 3 November 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA)
Case
No. 82618/2019
(1) REPORTABLE:
YES
/NO
(2) OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES:
YES
/NO
(3) REVISED
DATE: 3 NOVEMBER 2023
SIGNATURE:.
In
the matter between:
JOHAN
FRANCOIS ENGELBRECHT N.O
FIRST
APPLICANT
BRIAN
CEYLON N.O
SECOND
APPLICANT
And
K
& L BUILDERS (PTY) LIMITED
RESPONDENT
In
re:
K
& L BUILDERS (PTY) LIMITED
APPLICANT
And
JOHAN
FRANCOIS ENGELBRECHT N.O
FIRST
RESPONDENT
BRIAN
CEYLON N.O
SECOND
RESPONDENT
THE
MASTER OF THE HIGH COURT, PRETORIA
THIRD
RESPONDENT
Case
No. 82619/2019
In the matter
between:
JOHAN
FRANCOIS ENGELBRECHT N.O
FIRST
APPLICANT
BRIAN
CEYLON N.O
SECOND
APPLICANT
And
K & L
BUILDERS (PTY) LIMITED
RESPONDENT
In re:
K & L
BUILDERS (PTY) LIMITED
APPLICANT
And
JOHAN FRANCOIS
ENGELBRECHT N.O
FIRST
RESPONDENT
BRIAN CEYLON N.O
SECOND
RESPONDENT
THE MASTER OF
THE HIGH COURT, PRETORIA
THIRD
RESPONDENT
______________________________________________________________________
Case No. 7400/2020
In the matter
between:
JOHAN
FRANCOIS ENGELBRECHT N.O
FIRST
APPLICANT
BRIAN
CEYLON N.O
SECOND
APPLICANT
PIETER
HENK STRYDOM
INTERVENING
PARTY
And
THE MASTER OF
THE HIGH COURT, PRETORIA
FIRST
RESPONDENT
ASSISTANT MASTER
B MAKHAYINGI
SECOND
RESPONDENT
K & L
BUILDERS (PTY) LIMITED
THIRD
RESPONDENT
Case No. 35192/2020
In the matter
between:
JOHAN
FRANCOIS ENGELBRECHT N.O
FIRST
APPLICANT
BRIAN
CEYLON N.O
SECOND
APPLICANT
JOHAN
VAN ROOYEN N.O
THIRD
APPLICANT
GLADYS
NKATEKO N.O
FOURTH
APPLICANT
JOHAN
FRANCOIS ENGELBRECHT N.O
FIFTH
APPLICANT
ANGELENE
POOLE N.O
SIXTH
APPLICANT
And
K & L
BUILDERS (PTY) LIMITED
RESPONDENT
Coram:
Millar
J
Heard
on
:
20
September 2023
Delivered:
03
November 2023 - This judgment was handed down electronically by
circulation to the parties' representatives by email,
by being
uploaded to the
CaseLines
system of the GD and
by release to SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed
to be 09H00 on 03 November
2023.
Summary:
Application for
review of rulings made by Master in insolvent estate and for
declaration in terms of
s 20(9)
of the
Companies Act 2008
in
respect of associated company – Rulings made allowing
inter alia
claim neither submitted nor proven and which
had prescribed together with interest – Reviewed and set
aside –
Various companies owned and controlled by
unrehabilitated insolvent through third parties –
circumstances under
which corporate veil to be pierced –
Evasion and concealment principles applied –
Circumstances of the
case demonstrate concealment applicable –
Order in terms of
s 20(9)
collapsing unliquidated company into
estate of liquidated company.
ORDER
It
is Ordered in
:
CASE
NO: 7400/2020
[1]
Paragraphs 8.1.2, 8.1.3, 8.1.4, 8.1.5
and 8.1.6 of the Ruling made by the Second Respondent on 7 October
2019 are declared
to be unlawful and are hereby reviewed and set
aside.
[2]
The Third Respondent is ordered to pay
the costs of the Applicants.
CASE
NO: 35192/2020
[1]
That in terms of
Section 20(9)
of the
Companies Act, 71 of 2008
it is declared that Platinum Electrical
(Pty) Ltd and K & L Builders (Pty) Ltd are not separate
juristic persons in respect
of any right, obligation or liability
of it on the basis that the incorporation of Platinum Electrical
(Pty) and K &
L Builders (Pty) Ltd, the use of Platinum
Electrical (Pty) Ltd and K & L Builders (Pty) Ltd and the acts
by and on behalf
of Platinum Electrical (Pty) Ltd and K & L
Builders (Pty) Ltd constitute an unconscionable abuse of their
juristic personalities
as separate entities.
[2]
That the estates of Platinum Electrical
(Pty) Ltd and K & L Builders (Pty) Ltd is one estate to be
known as the Platinum
Electrical (Pty) Ltd estate and which
combined estate is considered as a liquidated company and that the
business of each
separate entity be declared to be the business of
Platinum Electrical (Pty) Ltd.
[3]
That the combined estate under the name
of Platinum Electrical (Pty) Ltd be administered as one estate and
that, for this
reason, the fact that separate legal entities were
incorporated be disregarded.
[4]
That the order granted by this Court
will not affect the rights of a creditor who proves a claim
against any of the individual
companies being Platinum Electrical
(Pty) Ltd and K & L Builders (Pty) Ltd.
[5]
That the winding-up of the combined
estate be deemed to have commenced on 2 September 2014.
[6]
That the Applicants must regard any
claim proved against an individual company, as a claim proved
against the combined estate.
[7]
That the cost of this application are
costs in the administration of the combined estate
JUDGMENT
MILLAR J
[1]
This judgment deals with four interrelated
applications and an action that came before me for case management. A
number of case
management meetings were held and in consequence
directions for the filing of papers in the various matters given. The
directions
given were predicated upon an agreement between the
parties that all of the applications would be ripe for hearing before
me on
20 and 21 September 2023 and that the action would stand over
for determination at a later stage.
[2]
The path to the doors of the court is
seldom a smooth one but it suffices to state that in respect of the
applications, when they
were called on 20 September 2023, two of the
four were now unopposed.
BACKGROUND
[3]
The applications before this court all have
as their origin the liquidation of Platinum Electrical (Pty) Ltd (in
liquidation) (PE)
and rulings made by the Master on 7 October
2019 in the estate of PE.
[4]
The claims allowed by the Master were in
favour of K & L Builders (Pty) Ltd (K&L) and were opposed by
the liquidators of
PE. Subsequently the liquidators of two other
insolvent companies, Imali-Corp 155 CC (in liquidation) (IMALI) and T
& W Electrical
Contractors (Pty) Ltd (in liquidation) (T&W)
also became party to some of the proceedings. The liquidators all
make common
cause with each other in the orders sought against both
the Master and K&L and will for convenience be referred to
in
this judgment by the moniker of ‘the Liquidators’.
[5]
The Master’s rulings were:
"8.1.1
That your intention to have
claim number 99 (previously approved at a special meeting
held on the
8/10/2018) rejected in terms of section 45(3) of the Insolvency Act
24 of 1936 (as amended) is hereby rejected.
8.1.2
That what was purported to as salaries paid to employees in the tune
of R
1 649 942 (inclusive of interests at 5.3%) as stipulated in the
post commencement finance agreement stipulated in paragraph 5.3
which
interests exceeds the capital sum, and therefore is reduced by RI
below the capital sum to in duplum rule has to be repaid
back to K &
L within 14 days from date hereof.
8.1.3
That you are directed to expedite convening special meeting of
creditors
purposed to prove the said interests postulated in
paragraph 5.3 of post commencement finance agreement.
8.1.4
That the joint liquidators are directed to increase the bond of
security
to R44 million equal to the total claim which could be
between 40 and 44 million inclusive of interests which can be
substantiated
by vouchers.
8.1.5
That Henk Strydom who was the BRP is hereby directed to pay back RI
Million
rand to the estate within 14 days from date hereof.
8.1.6
That you provide me
with plausible reasons within 14 days why I should not
consider
conducting section 381 of the Companies Act 61 of 1973 (as amended).
"
[6]
This was followed a week later by the
institution of an action by the Liquidators for the expungement of
the claim of K&L against
PE (para 8.1.1 - which had been refused
by the Master).
[7]
Thereafter, on 1 November 2019, K&L
instituted applications to compel payment in terms of the rulings and
to have the
rulings made an order of court.
[8]
On 2 December 2019, following upon
representations made to the Master regarding the rulings, the effect
of the rulings was stayed
pending the outcome of all the litigation
that had been instituted up to that point.
[9]
On 31 January 2020 the Liquidators brought
an application to review and set aside the rulings. In this
application, the former business
rescue practitioner (BRP) of PE,
intervened and made common cause with the order sought reviewing and
setting aside the ruling
related to him. Subsequently on 31 July 2020
an application in terms of section 20(9) to collapse the business of
K&L into
the estate of PE together with Imali and T&W
was made.
THE FOUR MATTERS
BEFORE COURT
[10]
The first two matters, under case numbers
82618/2019 and 82619/2019 are in respect of the applications brought
by K&L against
the Liquidators for payment of R3 299 883.00 (para
8.1.2) and for an order that the ruling (para 8.1.1), which refused
the expungement
of a claim of R6 954 431.00, be made an order of
court.
[11]
The
third matter under case number 7400/2020 is brought by the
Liquidators for the reviewing and setting aside of all the rulings.
In this matter, K&L did not oppose the order sought insofar as
the BRP
[1]
was concerned. Its opposition was directed to opposing the reviewing
and setting aside of the ruling insofar as it had purported
to vest
rights in K&L to claim payments from PE.
[2]
By agreement between the parties, the dispute in respect of the
ruling in para 8.1.1 is not before me and stands over for
determination
in the action proceedings.
[12]
The
fourth matter under case number 35192/2020 is brought by the
Liquidators against K&L for an order in terms of section 20(9)
of
the Companies Act
[3]
to collapse the business of K&L into the insolvent estates of PE,
IMALI and T&W.
[13]
I intend to address each of these in turn.
THE TWO
APPLICATIONS FOR SECURITY FOR COSTS
[14]
After receiving K&L’s
applications for payment and to make the ruling an order of court,
the Liquidators, in both of the
respective applications delivered a
request for security for costs. Security was not furnished and
consequently application was
made, and orders granted compelling K&L
to furnish security.
[15]
Following on a request to the Registrar, on
18 May 2023, K&L was ordered to furnish security in the sum of
R200 000,00 in one
of the matters. Following upon an agreement
reached between the parties during case management, the amount for
security in the
other matter was set at the same amount. No security
for costs was ever furnished in either of the two matters.
[16]
The liquidators then brought applications
in terms of Rule 47(4) of the Uniform Rules of Court which
provides that:
“
(4)
The court may, if security be
not given within a reasonable time, dismiss any proceedings
instituted or strike out any pleadings filed by the party in default,
or make such other order as to it may seem meet.”
[17]
When the matters were called, the
Liquidators moved applications to dismiss both of K&L’s
applications for want of furnishing
security for costs. Neither
application was opposed on the papers and counsel for K&L in the
other matters before me confirmed
this.
[18]
I
then granted the orders dismissing the respective applications.
[4]
THE REVIEW
APPLICATION
[19]
The Liquidators seek an order reviewing and
setting aside the rulings of 7 October 2019 save in respect of
paragraph 8.1.1.
The BRP made common cause with this insofar as the
ruling in paragraph 8.1.5 of affected him. Accordingly, it was
the review
of paragraphs 8.1.2 to 8.1.6 which were before me. The
Master took the stance that he would abide the decision of the court
and
took no part in any of the proceedings.
[20]
The stance adopted by K&L in this
matter is succinctly set out by its counsel in the first two
paragraphs of his heads of argument
as follows:
“
1.
It is common cause that this application is to review the Master’s
ruling, which is not opposed by the Respondent.
2.
It is further common cause that the Respondent does not dispute the
grounds for review and the review of the Masters ruling, save for
denying that the entire ruling must be set aside.” (
footnotes
omitted)
[21]
The
parties agreed that the present review was one which was brought and
fell to be decided in terms of the Promotion of Justice
Act.
[5]
[22]
Since
the review and setting aside of all the rulings save 8.1.2 was not in
dispute between the parties, I granted on an unopposed
basis an order
reviewing and setting aside the ruling in para 8.1.5 sought by the
BRP and he took no further part in the proceedings.
[6]
[23]
The
review of the rulings made in paragraphs 8.1.3, 8.1.4 and 8.1.6 are
not in issue between the parties I do not intend to deal
with them.
It suffices to state that in my view a case was made out by the
Liquidators for reviewing and setting aside of each
of these
rulings
[7]
and the concession of this by K&L properly made.
[24]
The review turns on K&L’s
opposition to the setting aside of paragraph 8.1.2 of the ruling.
This was in respect of a claim
made against the estate of PE for the
refund of salaries that it was asserted had been paid by K&L on
behalf of PE and in respect
of which it was entitled to a refund.
[25]
Besides the amount of the claimed refund,
the Master had also ruled that interest equal to the amount of the
initial claim should
be paid, and, so on the basis of the application
of the
in duplum
rule, the Master had ruled PE liable to pay double the amount of the
claim.
THE RULING IN
RESPECT OF THE CLAIM FOR THE REFUND OF SALARIES
[26]
PE was an electrical construction business
and a preferred vendor of several large companies. Its fortunes
waned and by the
end of June 2014, it was put into business rescue.
Notwithstanding attempts to save the business, these were
unsuccessful
and on 2 September 2014 PE was placed into provisional
liquidation and final liquidation on 23 March 2015.
[27]
On 7 October 2014, the first and second
applicants together with Mr. Malcolm Schmidt (Mr. Schmidt) were
appointed as the provisional
liquidators of PE. It is not
disputed that as between themselves, the provisional liquidators
agreed that Mr. Schmidt would
oversee the day to day administrative
activities of PE. This he did until his passing on 13 December
2014.
[28]
It was asserted on behalf of K&L that
it had purportedly entered into an agreement with the late Mr.
Schmidt that it would advance
monies to him for the continued
operations of PE and that such monies advanced would be repaid both
with interest and before any
other creditor in the concursus.
The effect of this purported agreement was that K&L would obtain
a ‘super preference’.
All of this was purportedly
agreed between K&L and the late Mr. Schmidt, without the
knowledge of either the Master, the co-provisional
liquidators or the
concursus.
[29]
It was the case for K&L that:
“
On
or about the 12
th
or 13
th
December 2014 the Third Respondent [K&L], represented by Mr.
Feinberg, telephonically contacted the First Applicant herein
and
informed him of, inter alia, the urgent issue. The First
Applicant informed Mr. Feinberg that he was on holiday in Cape
Town
and cannot attend the Master’s to obtain singing [sic] powers
on the bank account and the Master’s approval.
The First
Applicant then requested that the Respondent pay the salaries and
Platinum [PE] would refund same once he returned from
Cape Town,
obtained access to the bank account and obtain [sic] the master’s
approval.
At first the
Respondent [K&L] rejected this as the Respondent required more
clarity on when payment will be made and how this
expense will be
dealt with. The First Applicant then stated he will treat this
expense as an administrative expense in the
estate of Platinum, in
[sic] contained in the PCFA, and same will be refunded no later than
the end of January 2015.”
[30]
It is ostensibly on this basis that payment
of the salaries for the staff of PE was to be made by K&L and in
respect of which
the Liquidators would authorize repayment from PE.
[31]
What transpired, as is evident from the
documents put up by K&L, is that:
[31.1]
On 15 December 2014 documents were sent by K&L to its attorneys
together
with the contact details of Mr. Engelbrecht. The
documents purported to be an email sent to Mr. Engelbrecht –
which
was only read by him on 18 December 2014.
[31.2]
On 18 December 2014, K&L’s attorney sent a letter to Mr.
Engelbrecht
in which it was pertinently recorded that:
“
As
discussed over the last couple of days, with the passing of Malcolm
Schmidt the liquidated company has been left in the invidious
position where there are numerous issues which must be urgently
addressed, first and foremost that of payment of salaries which
are
due to be paid tomorrow (19 December 2014), and which until such time
as you have received authorization from the Master, cannot
be paid by
Platinum Electrical.
As discussed this
morning between the writer and yourself, it has been agreed that our
client will release the salaries in an amount
of approximately
R1,215,000.00 (we will provide you with the exact figure shortly) and
once in receipt of authorization from the
Master to operate the bank
account, you will immediately refund our client the amount which it
is paying on behalf of Platinum
Electrical for salaries, which
payment will be made immediately on receipt of the Master’s
authorization and prior to any
other payments to any other creditor
of Platinum Electrical.
Please urgently by
return mail confirm that our client can proceed to make the payment
of the salaries on the basis above.”
[31.3]
On 19 December 2014, an email was sent under the name of K&L’s
attorney
[8]
stating:
“
I
confirm that pursuant to the agreement reached as recorded in my
letter sent to you yesterday, my client has made payment of the
salaries for the employees of the company in liquidation.”
[32]
It is common cause that Mr. Engelbrecht did
not respond during December 2014, in writing to any of the
correspondence that emanated
from either K&L or its attorney.
It is the case for the liquidators that Mr. Engelbrecht was informed
of the passing
of Mr. Schmidt and indicated that he was unaware of
any alleged agreement between K&L and Mr. Schmidt and that any
decision
taken by him would in any event have to have been authorized
by the Master beforehand.
[33]
Properly construed, the case on behalf of
K&L that either there was an agreement between Mr. Feinberg and
Mr. Engelbrecht alternatively
Mr. Schwartz and Mr. Engelbrecht is
nothing other than a self-serving, in the first instance fabrication,
and in the second instance,
misreading of the correspondence as to
the discussions between Mr. Swartz and Mr. Engelbrecht.
[34]
In elaboration, firstly, it is improbable,
that if there was any agreement between Mr. Feinberg and Mr.
Engelbrecht, that Mr. Swartz
would not have been informed of it and
he would not have recorded it in his discussion with Mr.
Engelbrecht. Since K&L’s
answering affidavit in this
matter was only filed on 29 August 2023, some 3.5 years after the
application for review was served
on it, I am driven to the
conclusion, at least as far as this particular version is concerned
that it is a recent fabrication.
[35]
Secondly, in regard to the correspondence,
it is quite clear from the concluding paragraph of the letter of 18
December 2014 sent
by Mr. Swartz to Mr. Engelbrecht, that there was
in fact no agreement reached between them. The penultimate
paragraph which
purports to record some agreement, does not record
what would actually have to be paid and so the two paragraphs read
conjunctively
contain an offer in respect of which the final figure
for payment still needed to be furnished and the ultimate paragraph,
a confirmation,
which was to be provided by Mr. Engelbrecht of his
“agreement to agree”.
[36]
In the absence of any response from Mr.
Engelbrecht, the ‘agreement to agree’ was then elevated
by K&L without more
to the status of a binding agreement in
respect of which it was then said that payment was going to be made
of the salaries.
The amount which was subsequently alleged to
have been paid was in the sum of R1 649 942.00.
[37]
The contents of the documents which were
purportedly sent to Mr. Engelbrecht on 15 December 2014, were
asserted on behalf of K&L
to have included proof of the payment
of the salaries on 14 December 2014 – notwithstanding the
contradictory allegation
in the answering affidavit that in fact the
agreement to pay on behalf of PE had only arisen on 19 December 2014
and that “
on or about the 19
th
of December 2014, the Respondent paid the salaries as agreed and the
Respondent’s Attorney, emailed the First Applicant informing
him of same.”
[38]
It is a matter of common sense that if the
salaries were paid before there had been any agreement, then any such
payment, if it
was made, was made
sine
causa
. The Liquidators for
their part, maintained that no agreement had been reached and in fact
asserted that the salaries
had in any event been paid from the bank
account of PE during December 2014. K&L complained in its
answer filed 3.5 years
later, that no proof had been furnished that
this was so. There is nothing before the Court to indicate
whether the provisions
of Rule 35 were ever utilized in the 3.5-year
period preceding the filing of the answering affidavit to obtain
documents in this
regard. It was in my view an afterthought.
[39]
On this aspect, I am fortified in my view
of this aspect by what subsequently transpired and what is set out
below in regard to
the conduct of K&L.
[40]
It
was argued by the Liquidators that even though the claim of K&L
was disputed from January 2015, no claim was ever submitted
in the
estate of PE and no summons ever issued. This was the position
both during the time that PE was under provisional
liquidation as
well as after it was put into final liquidation. By the time
the Master made the impugned ruling on 7 October
2019, almost 5 years
had passed and so in any event, any right of action to claim had long
since become prescribed and unenforceable
[9]
.
[41]
I
have found that there was no agreement to refund salaries, either
between Mr. Feinberg and Mr. Engelbrecht or between K&L’s
attorney and Mr. Engelbrecht. But even if I had not found this,
it is well established that Liquidators are required to act
jointly
and then only upon the instructions of either the creditors, the
Court or the Master.
[10]
It is readily apparent, even from the letter of K&L’s
attorney of 18 December 2014 that Mr. Engelbrecht was cognizant
of
this.
[42]
Since no claim was submitted for the refund
of salaries in the estate of PE and no action was instituted
timeously, the decision
of the Master to make the ruling that he did
is impeachable and is to be reviewed and set aside.
THE SECTION 20(9)
APPLICATION
[43]
This application engages what is referred
to as ‘piercing the corporate veil.’
[44]
In the Republic, Section 20(9) of the
Companies Act provides:
“
(9)
If, on application by an
interested person or in any proceedings in which a company is
involved, a court finds that the incorporation of the company, any
use of the company, or any act by or on behalf of the company,
constitutes an unconscionable abuse of the juristic personality of
the company as a separate entity, the court may -
(a)
declare that the company is to be deemed not to be a juristic person
in respect of any right, obligation
or liability, of the company or
of a shareholder of the company or, in the case of a nonprofit
company, a member of the company,
or of another person specified in
the declaration and
(b)
make any further order the court considers appropriate to give effect
to a declaration contemplated in paragraph
(a).”
[45]
The background relating to this application
overlaps with that relating to the review in case number 7400/2020.
Insofar as this
application is concerned, there are 4 companies –
PE, T&W, IMALI and K&L. PE, T&W and IMALI are already all
in
liquidation and the estates have all been
consolidated
and declared to be one and the same into one. In issue is whether or
not K&L which is not presently in liquidation
ought also to be
dealt with similarly.
[46]
Before embarking on a discussion of the
facts which the Liquidators contend establish their entitlement to
the section 20(9) order,
it is necessary to deal with two points
in
limine
raised by K&L. The first of
these was that the Liquidators have no
locus
standi
to bring the present proceedings
and the second is that the requirements of the section are not met.
[47]
It
was contended on behalf of K&L that the Liquidators lacked
locus
standi
to bring the application on the basis that there was no specific
authority granted to them to do so by the Master in terms of section
386 read together with section 387 of the old Companies Act
[11]
.
[48]
K&L pointed to the various letters of
appointment which the Liquidators had attached to their founding
papers. Besides these
letters of authority, each of the individual
Liquidators also furnished affidavits confirming their knowledge of
the proceedings
and that they were all acting jointly with their
co-liquidators in the respective estates of PE, IMALI and T&W.
[49]
The
challenge to the authority was predicated squarely on the specific
powers said to have been conferred upon each set of liquidators
[12]
in their letters of authority. The nub of the point is that none of
the prerequisites of section 386(3) had been shown to be met
in order
for the Liquidators to have the authority to institute the
proceedings.
[50]
Despite the service of the application upon
K&L as long ago as 21 August 2020, neither the issue of
locus
standi
nor authority on their part was
raised until the delivery of the answering affidavit in August 2023.
[51]
In
reply, the Liquidators demonstrated in respect of PE, that there had
been a meeting of the creditors
[13]
on 3 July 2017
[14]
and that it had been resolved at that meeting to authorise them to
institute legal proceedings. The authority to institute the
proceedings was extant at the time of the institution of the
proceedings in 2020.
[52]
The
subsequent attachment of the resolutions to the replying affidavit in
2023 does not detract from the fact that as a matter of
fact, the
Liquidators of PE were authorised to institute the proceedings in
2020 when they did
[15]
.
The first point
in
limine
is for this reason without merit and is dismissed.
[53]
It
was argued for K&L that whether or not the Liquidators had
complied with section 20(9) or not was to be decided as a point
in
limine
.
The Liquidators for their part argued that this was not a point
in
limine
.
It is self-evident that consideration of all the facts
[16]
before the court and the findings made thereon are what will be
determinative of whether the Liquidators are entitled to the order
they seek. For this reason, the second point
in
limine
is no point
in
limine
at all.
[54]
Turning now to the facts. The personae at
the centre of the operation and control of each the companies, prior
to their respective
liquidations and K&L, is Mr. Aubrey Feinberg,
his wife Mrs. Dianne Feinberg and Mr. Gareth Benson. Mr.
Feinberg was sequestrated
on 23 June 2011. He was and remained an
unrehabilitated insolvent at all times relevant to the present
litigation. The consequence
of his sequestration left him unable to
hold a directorship or to take part in the management of a company.
[55]
In
order to circumvent the prohibition of Mr. Feinberg taking part in
the management
[17]
of any of the companies, or holding any directorship,
[18]
an agreement was entered into with Mr. Benson in terms of which he
would nominally hold shares in the various companies on behalf
of
Mrs. Feinberg. The companies concerned and relevant to the
present matter are PE, T&W, IMALI and K&L. There were
besides
other companies listed in the agreement.
[56]
The name of Mr. Feinberg appeared nowhere
in the agreement although, as it was subsequently confirmed by both
Mr. and Ms. Feinberg
at the insolvency enquiry held into the affairs
of PE, Mr. Feinberg was the person who actually ran each of the
businesses.
[57]
It was apparent, as early as 10 June 2014
and shortly before PE was placed in business rescue on 27 June 2014
that Mr. Feinberg
together with Mr. Benson, were authorized to
inter
alia
enter into agreements on behalf of
and bind PE, specifically in respect of its financial and legal
matters. A letter was
addressed to SARS, on the PE letterhead
but signed by Mr. Feinberg, requesting that imminent action be
delayed by them because:
“
We
have recently entered into an agreement with a larger company than
ourselves who are more financially secure to take over a majority
interest in our company”
and
“
The
company, K&L Builders CC and its director is presently assessing
all our requirements in addition to assisting us in the
collection of
our debtors.”
and
“
This
process should be finished by approximately the end of June 2014
where after an approach will be made to SARS with a clear
payment
plan in respect of the entire indebtedness.”
[58]
There was no mention made of the fact that
Mr. Feinberg in referring to K&L, was referring to a company in
respect of which
his wife, Mrs. Feinberg was the sole director and
shareholder, or that putting PE into business rescue was
contemplated. His own
role was also similarly not disclosed, and SARS
would only have been informed of the business rescue after the fact.
[59]
The Liquidators asserted that the presence
of the hand of Mr. Feinberg and his involvement insofar as PE and K&L
are concerned
was apparent from an instruction given by him while PE
was under business rescue for the transfer of R1.2 million to K&L.
[60]
On 1 October 2014, PE addressed a letter to
Anglo American Corporation. The letter was ostensibly written
by the directors
of the company, notwithstanding that it was already
in provisional liquidation and somewhat surprisingly, informed
Anglo-American
Corporation that the “
administration
[was] being taken over by the Head Office of K&L”
and
that K&L had “
acquired a
majority share”
in T&W.
[61]
On 14 November 2014, K&L addressed a
letter to Impala Platinum (also a client of PE) in which it was
stated that:
“
K&L
Builders is quite prepared to give you any reasonable undertaking you
require insofar as Platinum’s obligations to
you are
concerned
.
We
have no intention whatsoever of allowing the business operations of
Platinum to cease.”
and
“
All
key staff of Platinum Electrical have been retained as well as junior
staff.”
and
“
For
your information we enclose herewith a company profile of our main
Black Empowerment Interest which is 51% black owned and which
will
give you some indication of the work we are qualified to do and have
done.”
[62]
The black empowerment interest referred to
in the letter was IMALI, of which K&L was a 49% shareholder.
[63]
On
12 December 2014, insofar as it may not already have been apparent
that Mr. Feinberg was the guiding hand behind all of the companies
and notwithstanding the insolvency of PE, and that he intended
to simply continue trading in the way he had through another
entity,
addressed a further letter from K&L
[19]
to Impala Platinum in which it was stated:
“
As
previously disclosed to you it was anticipated to have this
provisional order of liquidation discharged on 5 December 2014.
Unfortunately the order was not discharged as same was opposed by the
previous business rescue practitioner, Mr Henk Strydom.
At this
stage Mr Henk Strydom has not served papers and we are accordingly
unable to ascertain what his reasons are for this opposition.”
and
“
Members
of K&L Builders CC own 49% of IMALI CORP 155 CC.”
and
“
The
management committee of IMALI CORP 155 CC have reached agreement with
the senior management of PE in PL [provisional liquidation].”
and
“
IMALI
CORP 155 CC will formally employ 100% (102 staff members) of the
staff of PE in PL during January 2015.”
[64]
The excerpts of the letter of 12 December
2014 quoted above, make clear that it was the intention of Mr.
Feinberg through K&L
to take over the business, absent the
liabilities, of PE.
[65]
Insofar as it was alleged that Mr. Henk
Strydom the BRP had opposed the discharge of the provisional
liquidation order, it is simply
incorrect that neither Mr. Feinberg
nor K&L for that matter did not know the BRP’s reasons for
persisting with the liquidation.
[66]
The BRP was the one who applied for the
liquidation and in a letter of 13 October 2014, K&L’s
attorneys wrote to Ledjadja
Coal and informed them that PE had been
provisionally liquidated because “
Mr.
Strydom, primarily due to issues experienced with the South African
Revenue Services, decided to terminate the business rescue
proceedings and apply for provisional liquidation as he did not want
to risk the exposure of allowing Platinum to continue trading
under
business rescue proceedings which were at risk of being sabotaged by
one creditor’s lack of co-operation.”
[67]
The reference to an agreement having been
reached with senior management of PE in provisional liquidation, is
clearly incorrect.
The only persons at that stage who were
authorized to act on behalf of PE were the provisional liquidators.
It was never
alleged that IMALI had reached such an agreement with
the late Mr. Schmidt. The only agreement which it was alleged
had been
reached with him, was by K&L. In any event, absent
the knowledge and consent of the other two Liquidators, the creditors
and the Master, no such agreement could have been validly concluded.
[68]
If there was any doubt about the intentions
of Mr. Feinberg, these are put to rest by the following further
assertions in the letter
of 12 December 2014 abovementioned where it
is stated:
“
After
this process is complete, Platinum Electrical will henceforth trade
as IMALI CORP 155 CC trading as Platinum Electrical.”
and
“
This
arrangement has already been accepted by the majority of Platinum
Electrical’s customers including ANGLO AMERICAN and
ROYAL
BOFOKENG [sic] PLATINUM.”
and
“
As
discussed with you we request that IMPALA formally cancels their
contract with Platinum’s Electrical (Pty) Ltd and replace
it
services with Imali-Corp 155 cc [sic] trading as Platinum Electrical;
alternatively utilizes Imali-Corp 155 cc trading as Platinum
Electrical as a replacement vendor as certain other large mining
houses have done.”
and
“
A
clear and precise cut off point must be established so that the
effective date of cancellation which we suggest should be 19 December
2014 be agreed upon.”
[69]
By the time the letter of 12 December 2014
had been sent to Impala Platinum, the arrangements proposed had
already been accepted
by Anglo American who on 7 November 2014 had
replaced PE with IMALI as one of its vendors and on 5 December 2014
allocated a new
vendor number to IMALI.
[70]
By
27 November 2014, IMALI was now trading as Platinum Electrical.
With the ‘new entity’ in place, and although
there was a
different vendor number now being used, inexplicably – if they
were the separate entities as they appeared to
be - payments which
related to invoices for work done by PE were now paid by Anglo
American to IMALI.
[20]
[71]
Subsequent
to the final liquidation of PE an enquiry was held in terms of
sections 417 and 418 of the old Companies Act.
[21]
From the evidence given at the enquiry on 21 June 2017 and 7 to 8
November 2018, by both Mr. and Mrs. Feinberg, it emerged
that K&L
is not trading, has no assets or staff and was bereft of any audited
financial statements.
[22]
Significantly the evidence of Mrs. Feinberg was that as
the sole director she had never signed off on any financial
statements. There were none.
[72]
Insofar
as Mrs Feinberg is concerned, she failed to discharge her duties in
terms of section 76
[23]
of the Act and in so doing empowered and facilitated the conduct of
Mr. Feinberg.
[73]
Did the conduct of Mr.
Feinberg in his use of all the associated entities and in particular
K&L amount to an “unconscionable
abuse” justifying an
order in terms of section 20(9) of the Act?
[74]
In
Cape
Pacific Ltd v Lubner Controlling Investments (Pty) Ltd
[24]
it was held that:
“
It
is undoubtedly a salutary principle that our courts should not
lightly disregard a company’s separate personality but should
strive to give effect to and uphold it. To do otherwise would negate
or undermine the policy and principles that underpin the concept
of
separate corporate personality and the legal consequences that attach
to it. But where fraud, dishonesty, or other improper
conduct (and I
confine myself to such situations) are found to be present, other
considerations will come into play. The need to
preserve the separate
corporate identity would in such circumstances have to be balanced
against policy considerations which arise
in favour of piercing the
corporate veil…And a court would then be entitled to look to
substance rather than form in order
to arrive at the true facts, and
if there has been a misuse of corporate personality, to disregard it
and attribute liability where
it should rightly lie. Each case would
obviously have to be considered on its own merits.”
[75]
When
the legislature enacted section 20(9) of the Act, it provided for the
piercing of the corporate veil where there was an ‘unconscionable
abuse’ of a company’s juristic personality. In
Botha
v van Niekerk
[25]
this was aptly characterized as conduct which “
to
right minded persons, was clearly improper conduct
”
[26]
.
[76]
Section 20(9) is widely framed. It affords
“any interested” person the right to apply for the relief
it provides and
encompasses not only the acts of the company
concerned but also acts done on its behalf. The determination
of its applicability
follows an assessment of the conduct – by
or on behalf of the company and whether or not that conduct,
objectively construed
is to right minded persons improper.
[77]
In
assessing conduct, in
Prest
v Petrodel Resources Ltd
[27]
,
a decision of the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom, Lord Sumption
identified two distinct categories for consideration, the
first being
one of evasion and the second being one of concealment in
order to categorize the relevant wrongdoing and
pierce the corporate
veil thereafter.
[78]
The evasion principle was expressed as
follows:
“
The
evasion principle…the court may disregard the corporate veil
if there is a legal right against the person in control
of it which
exists independently of the company’s involvement, and a
company is interposed so that the separate legal personality
of the
company will defeat the right or frustrate its enforcement…”
[28]
[79]
The evasion principle calls for the actual
and pure piercing of the corporate veil where a company is used as a
sham or façade
to evade an existing duty. In the present
matter, IMALI, T&W and K&L were all in existence at the time
that the agreement
with Mr. Benson was concluded in June 2014 and so
it cannot be said that they were established in order to defeat or
frustrate
the enforcement of any right.
[80]
The principle that finds application in the
matter before this court, is the concealment principle which was
expressed as follows:
“
The
concealment principle is legally banal and does not involve piercing
the corporate veil at all. It is that the interposition
of a company
or perhaps several companies so as to conceal the identity of the
real actors will not deter the courts from identifying
them, assuming
that their identity is legally relevant. In these cases, the court is
not disregarding the “facade”,
but only looking behind it
to discover the facts which the corporate structure is
concealing.”
[29]
[81]
The
concealment principle calls for the lifting rather than the piercing
of the corporate veil, where the court looks behind the
structure of
the company to identity and reveal the true actors of the company.
This is achieved by looking at the nature of the
company’s
transactions where the company had ‘acted’ as an agent or
nominee of its controller(s).
[30]
In circumstances where the company acted as an agent or nominee or
even a “puppet” the court need not pierce or disregard
the corporate veil, it can simply circumvent the corporate veil to
uncover the true facts.
[82]
The
provisions of section 20(9) accommodate circumstances which fall
within the ambit of both principles. In
Ex
Parte Gore and Others NNO
[31]
it was held that unconscionable abuse:
“
postulates
conduct, in relation to the formation and use of companies, diverse
enough to cover all the descriptive terms like ‘sham’,
‘device’, ‘stratagem’ and the like used in
that connection in the earlier cases, and – as the current
case
illustrates – conceivably much more. The provision brings about
that a remedy can be provided whenever the illegitimate
use of the
concept of juristic personality affects a third party in a way that
reasonably should not be countenanced.
”
[32]
[83]
In the present matter Mr. Feinberg
being an unrehabilitated insolvent who could not be seen to be
involved in the ownership
or running (as a director) of any company
until rehabilitation, used his wife in her capacity as a shareholder
and then through
the mechanism of the secret agreement, to distance,
at least as far as any official records were concerned, the surname
of Feinberg
from the official ownership and control of the companies.
[84]
The conduct of Mr. Feinberg from the time
of the conclusion of the secret agreement through the business rescue
of PE and then subsequently
after its liquidation was plainly
directed to procuring and maintaining for his own benefit the
business of PE.
[85]
Without the knowledge of the liquidators of
PE and misrepresenting the reasons for it having been put into
business rescue and thereafter
liquidated, he then proceeded to
represent to the various debtors of PE that the transfer of contracts
and their benefits from
PE to IMALI was a legitimate transaction
which he was authorised to enter into – he used K&L which
had a controlling
interest in IMALI to facilitate this.
[86]
By all accounts, there is no doubt in my
mind that IMALI, T&W and in particular K&L were used by Mr.
Feinberg as ‘fronts’
for the furtherance of his stratagem
to be able to continue in business through companies when as a matter
of law he was disqualified
from doing so. The present case is
demonstrative of the concealment principle. The use of K&L was an
“unconscionable
abuse” of it and its juristic
personality.
[87]
Regarding
the order sought by the applicants,
Centaur
Mining South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Cloete Murray N.O and Others
[33]
held
the following in respect of collapsing an unliquidated company or
estate into a liquidated estate:
“…
The
provisions of s 20(9) allow the court to integrate or collapse the
entities and to structure its order with further orders that
it
considers appropriate. '[A]ppropriate means suitable or right for the
situation or occasion.' Or 'suitable, proper'. It
was found by
Binns-Ward J as follows:
'Paragraph (b) of the
subsection affords the court the very widest of powers to grant
consequential relief. An order made in terms
of paragraph (b) will
always have the effect, however, of fixing the right, obligation or
liability in issue of the company somewhere
else. In the current case
the "right" involved is the property held by the subsidiary
companies in the King Group and
the obligation or liability is that
which any of them might actually have to account to and make payment
to the investors.'
Being faced with the
conduct of the two collapsed companies and TMC, whose conduct
constituted an unconscionable abuse of their
juristic personalities,
the appropriate order was to collapse them into the other
perpetrator. The further appropriate order was
to allow the Master to
appoint liquidators to follow the requirements of the law regarding
liquidation of the two collapsed companies.”
[88]
Inasmuch as section 20(9) of the Act does
not deal with the winding-up of companies, it is permissible to
order an unliquidated
company be collapsed into the estate of a
liquidated one. This is permitted by section 20(9)(b) which allows
the grant of consequential
relief.
[89]
The Liquidators sought an order that the
costs be costs in the administration of the combined estate and that
is the costs order
I intend to make.
[90]
A final matter requires mention and that is
the role of Mrs. Feinberg and Mr. Benson in making themselves party
to the agreement
of October 2014 and thereby facilitating the use of
the various companies and in particular K&L by Mr. Feinberg. It
requires
further investigation as besides the companies forming the
subject of this litigation, there were others referred to in the
agreement.
A copy of this judgment should be furnished to the
Companies and Intellectual Property Commission (CIPC) for their
attention.
[91]
In the circumstances it is ordered:
CASE NO: 7400/2020
[90]
Paragraphs 8.1.2, 8.1.3, 8.1.4, 8.1.5 and
8.1.6 of the Ruling made by the Second Respondent on 7 October 2019
are declared to be
unlawful and are hereby reviewed and set aside.
[91]
The Third Respondent is ordered to pay the
costs of the Applicants.
CASE NO: 35192/2020
[93]
That in terms of
Section 20(9)
of the
Companies Act, 71 of 2008
it is declared that Platinum Electrical
(Pty) Ltd and K & L Builders (Pty) Ltd are not separate juristic
persons in respect
of any right, obligation or liability of it on the
basis that the incorporation of Platinum Electrical (Pty) and K &
L Builders
(Pty) Ltd, the use of Platinum Electrical (Pty) Ltd and K
& L Builders (Pty) Ltd and the acts by and on behalf of Platinum
Electrical (Pty) Ltd and K & L Builders (Pty) Ltd constitute an
unconscionable abuse of their juristic personalities as separate
entities.
[94]
That the estates of Platinum Electrical
(Pty) Ltd and K & L Builders (Pty) Ltd is one estate to be known
as the Platinum Electrical
(Pty) Ltd estate and which combined estate
is considered as a liquidated company and that the business of each
separate entity
be declared to be the business of Platinum Electrical
(Pty) Ltd.
[95]
That the combined estate under the name of
Platinum Electrical (Pty) Ltd be administered as one estate and that,
for this reason,
the fact that separate legal entities were
incorporated be disregarded.
[96]
That the order granted by this Court will
not affect the rights of a creditor who proves a claim against any of
the individual companies
being Platinum Electrical (Pty) Ltd and K &
L Builders (Pty) Ltd.
[97]
That the winding-up of the combined estate
be deemed to have commenced on 2 September 2014.
[98]
That the Applicants must regard any claim
proved against an individual company, as a claim proved against the
combined estate.
[99]
That the cost of this application are costs
in the administration of the combined estate.
A MILLAR
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
HEARD ON:
20 SEPTEMBER 2023
JUDGMENT DELIVERED ON:
03 NOVEMBER 2023
CASE
NOS: 82618/2019 & 82619/2019 – SECURITY FOR COSTS
APPLICATIONS
COUNSEL FOR THE
APPLICANTS:
ADV. PJ GREYLING
INSTRUCTED BY:
JOHN WALKER ATTORNEYS
INC.
REFERENCE:
MS. J VAN DEN BERG
NO
APPEARANCE FOR THE RESPONDENTS
CASE
NO: 7400/2020 – REVIEW OF MASTERS’ DECISION
COUNSEL FOR THE
APPLICANTS:
ADV. PJ GREYING
INSTRUCTED BY:
JOHN WALKER ATTORNEYS
INC.
REFERENCE:
MS. J VAN DEN BERG
COUNSEL
FOR THE THIRD RESPONDENT:
ADV. N RAMSINGH
INSTRUCTED BY:
NAIDOO & ROELOFSEN
ATTORNEYS
REFERENCE:
MR. T NAIDOO
COUNSEL
FOR THE INTERVENING PARTY:
ADV. AJ SCHOEMAN
INSTRUCTED BY:
KEBD ATTORNEYS INC.
REFERENCE:
MR. E TERBLANCHE
NO
APPEARANCE FOR THE FIRST OR SECOND RESPONDENTS
CASE
NO: 35192/2020 –
SECTION 20(9)
APPLICATION
COUNSEL FOR THE
APPLICANTS:
ADV. PJ GREYLING
INSTRUCTED BY:
JOHN WALKER ATTORNEYS
INC.
REFERENCE:
MS. J VAN DEN BERG
COUNSEL FOR THE
RESPONDENT:
ADV. N RAMSINGH
INSTRUCTED BY:
NAIDOO & ROELOFSEN
ATTORNEYS
REFERENCE:
MR. T NAIDOO
[1]
See
para [5] supra, par 8.1.5 of the Ruling.
[2]
Ibid
paras 8.1.1 and 8.1.2 and para [12]
supra
.
The aggregate amount of the two claims was R10 254 314,00.
[3]
71
of 2008.
[4]
The
terms of the orders in both case 82618/2019 and 82619/2020 were
identical and provided that the applications brought by K&L
were
both dismissed with costs.
[5]
3
of 2000. See also
Bato
Star Fishing (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Environmental Affairs and
Tourism and Others
[2004] ZACC 15
;
2004 (4) SA 490
(CC) at para
[25]
.
[6]
Paragraph
8.1.5 of the Ruling was reviewed and set aside, and the Master and
Deputy Master ordered to pay the costs jointly and
severally.
[7]
In
respect of para 8.1.3 it was argued that the Ruling was patently
wrong as the post-commencement finance agreement had provided
that
such finance was interest free. In respect of para 8.14 it was
argued since the purported basis to increase the security
was to
cover an unproven contingent debt which was disputed, there was no
rational basis to order the increase given the cost
implications for
doing so. In respect of 8.1.6 it was argued that there was nothing
on what was before the Master to justify
the invocation of s 381 of
the Companies Act 61 of 1973.
[8]
The
email was sent from the email address of “Gitta De Necker”
to Mr. Engelbrecht and K&L’s attorney, Mr.
David Swartz,
was copied in the email. The email concluded with the words
“Yours Faithfully David Swartz –
Director”.
[9]
See
section 12(1) read together with
section 13(1)(g)
and (i) of the
Prescription Act 68 of 1969
.
[10]
Section
382(1) of the Companies Act 61 of 1973;
Lynn
NO and Another v Coreejes and Another
2011 (6) SA 507
(SCA) at para [14].
[11]
61
of 1973.
[12]
In
the case of PE this was stated as the powers in section 386(1); In
the case of IMALI this was stated as the powers in section
386; and
in the case of T&W this was stated as the powers in section
386(1)(a),(b),(c),(e) and (4)(f).
[13]
In
terms of section 386(3).
[14]
The
written resolutions adopted at the meeting were reduced to writing,
signed and stamped by the Master on 31 July 2017.
[15]
Sunny
South Canners (Pty) Ltd v Mbangxa and Others NNO
2001 (2) SA 49
(SCA).
[16]
Hülse-Reutter
and Others v Gödde
2001
(4) SA 1336
(SCA) at para [20].
[17]
Section
47(1)(b)(i) of the Act.
[18]
Ibid
section 69(8)(b)(i).
[19]
The
letter was sent on the letterhead of K&L but was signed off by
“A Feinberg, K&L Builders cc and Imali Corp 155
cc.”
[20]
The
payments related to two invoices that were due on 6 November 2014 in
the aggregate R453 048.29.
[21]
61
of 1973 read together with item 9(1) of Schedule 5 of the
Companies
Act 71 of 2008
.
[22]
The
evidence of Mrs. Feinberg at the enquiry was that she had never and
has never signed off on any financial statements –
a situation
which it would appear persists to this day.
[23]
The
section prescribes the standard of conduct expected of directors
.
See also
Gihwala
and others v Grancy Property Ltd and Others
[
2016]
2 All SA 649
(SCA) para 143 in which it was held:
“…
Next
is taking personal advantage of information or opportunity available
because of the person’s position as a director.
This hits two
types of conduct. The first, in one of its common forms, is insider
trading, whereby a director makes use of information,
known only
because of their position as a director, for personal advantage or
the advantage of others. The second is where a
director appropriates
a business opportunity that should have accrued to the company. Our
law has deprecated that for over a
century. The third case is where
the director has intentionally or by gross negligence inflicted harm
upon the company or its
subsidiary…”
[24]
[1995] ZASCA 53
;
1995
(4) SA 790
(A) at 803G – 804A. See also
Littlewoods
Mail Order Stores Ltd v McGregor (Inspector of Taxes), Littlewoods
Mail Order Stores Ltd v Inland Revenue Commissioners
[1969]
3 All ER 855
at 861 where Lord Denning said: “
The
doctrine laid down in Salomon v Salomon has to be watched very
carefully. It has often been supposed to cast a veil over the
personality of a limited company through which the courts cannot
see. But that is not true. The courts can and often do draw
aside
the veil. They can, and often do, pull off the mask. They look to
see what really lies behind. The legislature has shown
the way with
group accounts and the rest. And the courts should follow suit.”
[25]
1983 (3) SA 513 (W).
[26]
Ibid
at
517C-D.
[27]
[2013] UKSC 34.
[28]
ibid
para 28.
[29]
ibid
[30]
Ibid
para 32.
[31]
2013 (3) SA 382
(WCC).
Airport
Cold Storage (Pty) Ltd v Ebrahim and Others
2008
(2) SA 303 (C).
[32]
Ibid
para 34.
[33]
2023 (1) SA 499
(GJ) at para [25].
sino noindex
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