Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 2040South Africa
Wessels N.O and Others v Estate Late Esias Johannes Janse Van Rensburg N.O and Others (48555/2011) [2023] ZAGPPHC 2040 (29 December 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
29 December 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Wessels N.O and Others v Estate Late Esias Johannes Janse Van Rensburg N.O and Others (48555/2011) [2023] ZAGPPHC 2040 (29 December 2023)
Wessels N.O and Others v Estate Late Esias Johannes Janse Van Rensburg N.O and Others (48555/2011) [2023] ZAGPPHC 2040 (29 December 2023)
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sino date 29 December 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
No.
48555/2011
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES / NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES / NO
(3)
REVISED
DATE:
29/12/2023
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
JOHANNES
STEPHANUS WESSELS N.O
First
Applicant
VERA
MARIA WESSELS N.O
Second
Applicant
JOHANNES
STEPHANUS WESSELS
Third
Applicant
and
ESTATE
LATE ESIAS JOHANNES JANSE VAN RENSBURG N.O
First
Respondent
FAROUK
SHARIEF N.O
Second
Respondent
THE
MASTER OF THE HIGH COURT
Third
Respondent
ABSA
BANK LIMITED
Fourth
Respondent
RAND
MERCHANT BANK
Fifth
Respondent
MANDLA
PROFESSOR MADLALA N.O
Sixth
Respondent
THE
COMPANIES AND INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY COMMISSION
Seventh
Respondent
MABALINGWE
SHAREBLOCK
Eighth
Respondent
This
judgment is prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected as such, and is handed down electronically by
circulation to the parties / their legal representatives by email
and by uploading it to the electronic file of this matter
on
CaseLines. The date for handing down is deemed to be 29 December
2023.
JUDGMENT
RETIEF
J
INTRODUCTION
[1]
The First, Second and Third Applicant [the Applicants] seek the
setting aside of a
Court order which placed Boschpoort Ondernemings
(Pty) Ltd (in liquidation) [Boschpoort] under final winding-up. The
Applicants
seek such relief in terms of section 354 of the Companies
Act, 61 of 1973 [old Companies Act] contending that Boschpoort is now
solvent [section 354 relief].
[2]
In the alternative, the Applicants sought Boschpoort to be
placed under supervision as envisaged in terms of
section 131
of the
Companies Act, 71 of 2008
[new
Companies Act]. The
Applicants’
Counsel however, in argument, confirmed that the Applicants no longer
seek the relief in the alternative.
[3]
The application is opposed by the Second Applicant, Farouk Sharief
N.O the duly appointed
co-liquidator of Boschpoort up until his
removal by the third Respondent, the Master of the High Court
[Sharief], and the Eighth
Respondent, Mabalingwe Shareblock
[Mabalingwe], as an alleged creditor.
[4]
Sharief and Mabalingwe [collectively the Respondents] seek
condonation for the late
filing of their answering affidavits which
were both filed 6 (six) court days out of time. The Applicants
refused to condone the
delay, as a result thereof, the Respondents
brought a formal condonation application. Notwithstanding the
refusal, the condonation
application was not opposed and the
Applicants proceeded to file their replies thereto.
[5]
On the date of the hearing, and after having regard to the arguments
and, the papers
filed, condonation was granted with costs in the
cause.
[6]
In consequence, the only matter for adjudication is the
section 354
relief which the Respondents,
inter alias
, challenged by
raising a point in
limine
. Such point
in llmine
, the
non-joinder of all the members and shareholders of Boschpoort.
[7]
The outcome of the in
limine
point will be decisive of the
necessity of this Court to deal with the
section 354
relief and in
consequence it is deal with first.
POINT IN
LIMINE
(NON-JOINDER OF MEMBERS)
[8]
The nub of the Respondents’ complaint of non-joinder is that
not all the shareholders
and members of the Boschpoort are to be
joined in these proceedings in that such members and shareholders
have a material and legal
interest in the subject matter of the
section 354
relief. On this basis they contend, it is obligatory to
have joined them. The Respondents seek that the application be struck
with
costs as direct result of such non-joinder.
[9]
The Applicants however argue that no such necessity exists to join
the remaining members
and shareholders as complained of and, that in
any event one of the shareholders, the Hannes Wessels Family Trust is
mandated by
the remaining shareholders to bring these proceedings. In
short, all the shareholders possess knowledge and have consented to
the
launching of the application thereby negating the necessity to
join them in the proceedings. Furthermore, as I understand the
expanded
argument, no complaint of non-joinder had ever been raised
in previously proceedings before. Such proceedings meaning those
which
dealt with the same subject matter, the Boschpoort’s
liquidation. In this regard reliance and deference was made to the
mandamus
application brought against the Third Respondent, the
Master of the High Court, which served
before
Wanless AJ, as he was then was.
[10] To
unpack the respective arguments and resolve the complaint,
necessitates establishing who the
shareholders and members of
Boschpoort are and to consider whether the legal interest of all
those shareholders may be affect by
the outcome of the
section 354
relief.
Who
are the members and shareholders of Boschpoort
?
[11] It
is common cause that Boschpoort has 3 (three) shareholders, the
Mabalingwe Trust (IT 5583/94),
the Hannes Wessels Family Trust (IT
7618/98) and the Willem Wessels Trust.
[12] It
is an undisputed fact the Applicants failed to cite both the
Mabalingwe Trust and the Willem
Wessels Trust. In support of the
Respondents’ argument, the Court was invited to have regard to
the provisions of
section 354
of the old
Companies Act, the
very
basis for the Applicants’ relief.
[13] By
virtue of item 9 of schedule 5 of the new
Companies Act, section
354
of the repealed old
Companies Act remains
in force until a date to be
determined.
[14]
Section 354
provides:
“
354. Court may
stay or set aside winding-up
(1)
The Court may at any time after the commencement of a
winding-up, on the application of any liquidator, creditor or member,
and
on proof to the satisfaction of the Court that all proceedings in
relation to the winding-up ought to be stayed or set aside, make
an
order staying or setting aside the proceedings or for the continuance
of any voluntary winding-up on such terms and conditions
as the Court
may deem fit.
(2)
The
Court may, as to all matters relating to a winding-up, have
regard
to the wishes of
the creditors or
members
as proved to it by any sufficient evidence
.” (own emphasis)
[15] As
I understand the Respondents argument on the papers, particular
reliance is made to the provisions
of
section 354(2)
in which a
Court, exercising its
section 354
discretion, is entitled to consider
the wishes of the “
creditors or members as proved to it by
any sufficient evidence
” when coming to its decision.
[16] It
is clear from the wording of sub-section (2), unlike on subsection
(1), that the plural of
the words “creditor” and “member”
is used and as such, more than just one member or creditor, as the
case
maybe is envisaged. A common sense approach to the
interpretation of the words is warranted in that the wishes of all
those affected
can be considered and measured before the Court
exercises its discretion.
[17]
Applying
section 354(2)
, failure to cite all the members results in
the inability of a Court to consider and/or satisfy itself that it
has considered all
wishes of the members. In this case, the remaining
members of Boschpoort, the Mabalingwe and Willem Wessels Trust. The
failure
is in direct contrast with the provisions of
section 354(2).
The mere provision of
section 354(2)
statutorily illustrates that all
the members of Boschpoort have a direct and substantial interest into
the subject matter of the
section 354
relief.
[18]
Furthermore, the Respondents’ argument on the papers was
expanded in argument and in the
heads of argument, when their Counsel
contended that notwithstanding the Applicants’ denial of the
necessity to join the
remaining shareholders, they themselves in
their replying affidavit deemed it necessary to justify. The
necessity to justify affirms
the reason for the call to join. In
support of this argument the Court was invited to have regard to the
Applicants reply when
dealing with the in
limine
point. In
particular paragraph 35 thereof. The particular extract from the
Applicants’ replying affidavit states the following:
“
35.
In the third instance, the Hannes
Wessels Trust is mandated by the shareholders to bring this
application to the benefit of all
shareholders. See in this regard a
resolution from the relevant shareholders confirming same as annexure
“
CA2.1
”.
”
[19]
“CA2.1” contains and refers to 3 (three) separate
resolutions. Two of these resolutions
were taken by the trustees of
the Mabalingwe Trust (IT5583/94) and the remaining resolution by the
Hannes Wessels Family Trust
(IT7618/98). The absence of a resolution
by the remaining shareholder, the Willem Wessels Trust is evident and
in consequence the
reliance by the Applicants of the allegations in
paragraph 35 is not unclear.
[20] Of
further concern, and as pointed out by the Respondents’
Counsel, is that the content
of all the resolutions relied on and,
which make up annexure “CA2.1”, do not deal with the
mandate to bring the application
in the interest of all the
shareholder, as relied on. The content of each resolution indicates
that they were taken for entirely
different purposes.
[21] To
illustrate the point, the resolution of 23 October 2015 taken by the
Mabalingwe Trust, only
deals with providing the Third Applicant with
consent to investigate the liquidation of Boschpoort, at his own
cost. Moreover,
the second resolution by the Mabalingwe Trust and
too, the resolution by the Hannes Wessels Family Trust dated in March
2021, merely
provided the Third Applicant, and not the Hannes Wessels
Family trust, with the necessary authority to enter into settlement
negotiations.
Such authorised negotiations extended to creditors, the
Master of the High Court, and the liquidators. In contrast, the
relief
sought by the Applicants, including the
section 354
relief,
has nothing to do with settlement negotiations. In contrast, the
provisions of
section 354
deal with an application to Court to stay
or set aside winding-up.
[22]
No resolution/s on the papers, as relied on by the Applicants in
paragraph 35 of their reply:
exist specifically mandating the
Hannes Wessels Family Trust to launch the
section 354
relief on
behalf of the remaining shareholders; and exist for the Willem
Wessels Trust at all.
[23]
The only resolution by the Hannes Wessels Trust authorising the Third
Applicant to launch this
application, and only on its behalf, is
annexure “JS1”. An annexure annexed to the founding
papers.
“
JS1”
is headed “
MINUTES OF THE MEETING OF THE TRUSTEES FOR THE
TIME BEING OF THE HANNES WESSELS FAMILIE TRUST
”.
[24] The
authority in “JS1” provided to the Third Applicant to
launch these proceedings
is confined to the Hannes Wessels Family
Trust. No other shareholders are mentioned in support of the
Applicants contention at
paragraph 35 of its reply.
[25]
Confusingly though, the Third Applicant, as the deponent in the
founding papers alleges that
he possessed authority to depose to the
affidavit on behalf of the Wessels Family Trust and not the Hannes
Wessels Family Trust.
The confusion created more questions than
answers, simply: who was the
section 354(1)
Applicant and did the
Third Applicant had authority to act on behalf of the Wessels Trust?
This confusion was raised by the Respondents
in answer, but
unfortunately the confusion persists as the Applicants failed to deal
with the point adequately in reply.
[26]
Nonetheless, the consequence of the confusion, as a point on
contention, was not taken further
in argument and the Respondents’
Counsel in his heads of argument accepted that the Hannes Wessels
Family Trust was duly
represented by the Second and Third Applicant
as provided for in
section 354(1).
On that basis, this Court does not
expand on the confusion.
[27] In
consequence, having regard to all the facts, the necessity of the
Applicants to justify the
non-joinder in paragraph 35 is understood,
but the veracity of the allegation falls short of sufficient proof of
the alleged facts
relied on.
[28] In
short,
section 354(2)
clearly indicates that the wishes of all the
members be considered. This stands to reason, not only to assist the
Court in the
exercise of its discretion afforded by
section 354
, but
because the members and shareholders will be duly affected by the
exercise of such discretion. It must flow that all shareholders
must
be joined and if not, that the Court must be provided with the
assurance that all of Boschpoort’s shareholders possess
knowledge and have expressed their wishes for the success of the
relief to be entertained. This is not evident on the papers.
[29]
Lastly, the fact that the point of non-joinder had not been raised
before as an arguable defence
to the complaint, is of no moment
having regard to the effects of the
section 354relief
vis a vis
in respect of the affected parties and having regard to the statutory
provisions of
section 354(2).
Furthermore this point was not
raised in the matter before Wanless AJ nor did the Court raise it.
[30] In
consequence, the Respondents in
limine
point of non-joinder
must succeed and the necessity to, at this stage deal with the merits
of the
section 354
relief is not apparent.
[31] The
following order is made:
1.
The Second and Eighth Respondents are
granted condonation for the late filing of their answering
affidavits;
2.
The application is struck from the roll
with costs, such costs to include the costs associated with the
Second and Eighth Respondents’
application for condonation.
L.A.
RETIEF
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng
Division
Appearances
:
For the first to third
applicant:
Adv F.G. Janse Van Rensburg
Instructed by attorneys:
Haasbroek & Boezaart Inc.
For the first to eighth
respondent:
Adv B.H. Swart SC
Instructed by attorneys:
Jaco Roos Attorneys
Date of hearing:
18 October 2023
Date judgment delivered:
29 December 2023
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