Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 45South Africa
Pathways Holdings (Pty) Ltd v Skyfi Internet Solutions (Pty) Ltd and Others (32429/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 45 (21 January 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
21 January 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Pathways Holdings (Pty) Ltd v Skyfi Internet Solutions (Pty) Ltd and Others (32429/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 45 (21 January 2022)
Pathways Holdings (Pty) Ltd v Skyfi Internet Solutions (Pty) Ltd and Others (32429/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 45 (21 January 2022)
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sino date 21 January 2022
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO:32429/2021
In
the matter between:
PATHWAYS
HOLDINGS (Pty)
LTD
Applicant
Registration
No: 1998/021930/07
And
SKYFI
INTERNET SOLUTIONS (Pty)
Ltd
First Respondent
Registration
No: 2014/274610/07
MICHAEL
JILIO PINTO
RIBEIRO
Second Respondent
ID
NO: [….]
FIBRE
STREAM (Pty)
Ltd
Third Respondent
Registration
NO 2017/152676/07
JUDGEMENT
MBONGWE
J:
INTRODUCTION
[1]
The Applicant commenced these proceedings on the 13 July 2021 on an
ex parte basis and
was granted urgent interim relief in the form of
an Anton Piller order for:- the search, seizure and preservation of
documents and
others things it believed are in the possession of each
of the three Respondents. The Applicant alleges that items to be
seized constitute
vital evidence in the claim for damages it intends
to pursue, particularly against the Second respondent. The Applicant
does not
rule out the possibility of claiming damages against the
Third Respondent either, depending on whether the Third Respondent
was aware
of the impugned actions of the Second Respondent in the
business of the First Respondent. The order was executed against the
Respondents
over a period of three days, being 16, 19 and 20 July
2021.
[2]
The matter came before me on the 27 July 2021, being the return date
and had become
opposed by the second and third Respondents. All the
necessary papers had been filed and the matter was ready for hearing.
The Applicant
sought confirmation of the rule nisi with costs and,
conversely, the Respondents sought a discharge of the rule with
costs.
BACKGROUND
FACTS
[3]
The Applicant alleges in the founding affidavit to have invested a
substantial amount
of money in the First Respondent in December 2020.
The investment had translated to a 45% shareholding in First
Respondent. The insolvency
of the First Respondent resulted in the
Applicant approaching the court on urgent basis seeking an Anton
Piller order for the purpose
stated in para 1, above.
[4]
It is not apparent from the papers who was/were the other
shareholders in the First
Respondent nor the details of their
shareholding. However, the Applicant does mention the Second
Respondent, whom it holds culpable
for the demise of the business of
the First Respondent. According to the Applicant the Second
Respondent, while being a director
of the First Respondent, had
established another business, the Third Respondent, and had, without
authorisation transferred (‘hijacked’)
the clients and assets of
the First Respondent to the Third Respondent. Documentary CIPC proof
linking the second Respondent to the
third forms part of the
annexures to the founding affidavit.
[5]
The Applicant’s founding affidavit and annexures consists of over
120 pages, the bulk
of which being correspondence the Second
Respondent is alleged to have sent to clients of the First Respondent
and other parties
and which, the Applicant surmises, serve as
confirmation of the takeover of the business of the First Respondent
by the Third Respondent.
Further annexures consists, inter alia, of
invoices addressed to the First Respondent by the Third Respondent
and another entity
called NND as suppliers of the First Respondent.
The Applicant has also annexed CIPC proof of the Second Respondent’s
interests
in and connectivity to NND.
NATURE
OF THE STANDARD OF PROOF REQUIRED
[6]
Unlike in ordinary civil proceedings and, due to the invasive nature
of an Anton Piller
application, the Court in Friedshelf 1509 (Pty)
Ltd t/a RTT Group and Others v Kalianji
2015 (4) SA 163
(G)
enunciated the principle in the following words:
“
[48]
The parties agree (and they are
supported by the authorities)
that the
onus resting on an applicant at the hearing of an ex parte
Anton Piller application is a clear case or extremely
strong prima
facie case
.
“
[49]
An Anton Piller search- and- seizure is an extremely invasive
procedure and there are sound public policy
reasons as to why an
applicant should be required to demonstrate a strong prima facie case
(as opposed to a prima facie case) at
the ex parte stage of the
application”.
[7]
For the purpose of solidifying its intended claim, the Applicant
sought and obtained
an interim Anton Piller order which authorised
the Sheriff to search for, identify and seize, from the premises of
the Respondents,
the originals or copies of:
7.1
Bank statements of the first, second and third Respondents;
7.2
Invoices pertaining to the first, second and third
Respondents;
7.3
Invoices sent to or received by the first Respondent;
7.4
Invoices sent to and received by the second Respondent concerning the
First and third Respondents;
7.5
Invoices sent to or received by the third Respondent;
7.6
Any audit information for all the first, second and third
Respondents
regardless of the dates.
The order was
executed on the 16, 19 and 20 July 2021.
ON
THE RETURN DATE
[8]
In both its replying affidavit and Heads of Arguments, the Applicant
appears to have
changed its stance in relation to both the capacity
in which it has approached the Court for relief and the beneficiary
of the relief.
In para 3.1 of the founding affidavit, the applicant
stares:
“
3.1
This affidavit is thus deposed to in support of an application for an
Anton Piller-type
order to secure evidence currently in the possession of the First,
Second and Third Respondents for an action to
be instituted against
any/all of the Respondents
by the
Applicant
, and/or for a possible
interdict and, if appropriate, damages arising out of the proverbial
“hijacking” of the First Respondent’s
clients and transfer
thereof by the Second Respondent to the Third Respondent.”
and,
in its heads of arguments:
“
2.5
The applicant, as set out herein above and in the founding affidavit,
approaches the Honourable Court for relief
in the form of an Anton
Piller type of order to obtain certain documents in order to issue
further legal proceedings against the
second respondent
on
behalf of the first
respondent
”.
[9]
This is a clear turn-about in relation to the capacity in which the
Applicant has presented
itself (locus standi) as a party in these
proceedings and the purpose for which it instituted the proceedings
(relief). The Applicant
is confined to the capacity, cause of action
and entitlement / lack thereof, set out in the notice of motion and
the founding affidavit.
Until gaining knowledge of the contents of
the Respondents’ replying affidavit, the Applicant had been acting
in its own capacity
and seeking relief for itself. Come the return
date, that situation has changed. The invasive interim relief
obtained in the now
abandoned circumstances remain pursued on the
papers.
[10]
This turn-about came as a result of and in response to the
Respondent’s averment that even if the Applicant
were a shareholder
in the first Respondent, the insolvency of the first Respondent would
have amounted to a reflective loss for the
Applicant not entitling it
to a claim against any of the Respondents. The judgment in
Hlumisa
Investment Holdings (RF) Ltd & Another v Kirkinis &
Others
[2020 [5] SA 419 SCA at para 32], defining a derivative
claim and belatedly relied on by the Applicant does not avail an
Applicant
who from the onset sought to claim damages for itself. The
Applicant would have had to be seeking relief on behalf of the first
Respondent
to find umbrage in the
Hlumisa Investment
case in
which it was aptly stated:
“
[32]
We pause to note that Nova trust also dealt
with derivative claims.
In a situation
where wrongdoers themselves control the company,
so
that they can prevent the taking of the necessary steps, any one
or more of its members may bring what is known as a
derivative
action, that is, an action by
an individual shareholder, in own name, against the wrongdoers for
relief to be granted to the company,
the
action
being one on the company’s behalf.”
[11]
The Applicant further sought to bolster its intended claim on what it
referred to as admissions by the
second Respondent in the answering
affidavit; namely that the first Respondent was;
11.1
Insolvent
11.2
Without any directors, and that;
11.3
First Respondent has not been wound-up and that;
11.4
The Second Respondent had transferred the assets of the first
Respondent to the third Respondent without a resolution
authorising
him to do so and “in contravention of the provisions
of section 115 of
the Companies Act”.
THE
RESPONDENTS’ DEFENCES
[12]
The Second Respondent deposed to the Answering Affidavit on his and
the third Respondent’s behalf.
In the first instance, the
Respondents dispute the locus standi of the Applicant to institute
these proceedings, contending that
the Applicant had no interest
whatsoever in the First Respondent, let alone as shareholder. This is
followed up by the Respondents
setting out the proximity of the
connectivity the Applicant has to the first Respondent thus;
“
The Applicant
is a shareholder in Steven Stars Technology (Pty) Ltd
which, in turn, is a shareholder in in Skytech
Solutions (Pty) Ltd. It is
Skytech
which is a shareholder in the first respondent.”
[13]
With regard to the Applicant’s allegations of the unauthorised
transfer of the clients and assets of
the First Respondent to the
third Respondent, the Second Respondent alleges that him and his
co-director/shareholder of the First
Respondent had taken a
resolution in 2019 to close the business of the first Respondent. A
copy of the relevant resolution is attached
to the answering
affidavit reads as follows:
“
It was
resolved by the shareholders that, Skyfi Internet Solutions, will no
longer continue in the fibre operation of business, and
that the
assets, will be given away at nil value, in order to
mitigate risk from its
supplier’s
accounts. Supplier accounts will be closed, and asset list will
be drawn up by the directors of the company. This
will be with
immediate effect”.
[14]
The Second Respondent states further that subsequent to the
resolution, the Third Respondent had bought
certain clients of the
First Respondent for an amount of R100 000-00 following the
conclusion of a written sale agreement. The
assets of the First
Respondent were taken over by the Third Respondent as determined in
the resolution.
ANALYSIS
[15]
Save for the bold allegation that it is a shareholder in the first
Respondent, the Applicant has not
established this fact, nor has it
produced cogent proof thereof in rebuttal of the Respondents’
denial and assertion that the Applicant
has no ties whatsoever to the
first Respondent. Section 1 of the Companies Act, 1973 defines a
shareholder in the following terms:
“
Shareholder…. means….
the holder of a share issued by a company and who is entered as such
in the certificated or uncertificated
securities register, as the
case may be.”
The Applicant has not proved that the first
Respondent had issued any shares to it nor that the Applicant was/is
entered in the securities
register as a shareholder in the first
Respondent. The challenge to its locus standi has seen the Applicant
deviating from the station
from which it initially sought relief for
itself to doing so on behalf of the first Respondent – an insolvent
entity without directors
that has been dormant since 2019. By and
large, the proceedings envisioned by the Applicant, such as
interdictory relief, expose
the Applicant’s oblivion to the
obtaining circumstances of the first Respondent.
[16]
The Applicant’s purported cause of action is plainly unfounded.
Both the alleged fraudulent hijacking
of the business of the first
Respondent and the alleged unlawful transfer of its assets are
plainly false. The second Respondent
has attached cogent proof that
establishes the legitimacy of his actions. The principle in
Frangos
v Corpcapital [
2004 (2) SA 643 (T) at 649] is that a
Respondent’s version, where supported by evidentiary proof, must be
accepted on the
application of the Plascon –Evans rule, for the
purposes of determining issues in motion proceedings.
THE
LAW
[17]
It is apparent in the present matter that the Applicant has
misconceived the purpose of an Anton Piller
order: - the seizure and
preservation of evidence that would be vital to the Applicant’s
case that is to follow. A reasonably grounded
apprehension that the
evidence may be lost, destroyed or disappear is the rationale behind
the order. The Applicant in the present
matter disingenuously sought
the order for the purpose of scouting whether it has a cause of
action against the Respondents.
[18]
The courts have in numerous matters set out criteria to be met by an
Applicant seeking an Anton Piller
order. [See
Viziya Corporation v
Collaborit Holdings (Pty) Ltd & Others
2019 (3) SA 173
(SCA);
Mathias International Ltd v Baillache
2015 (2) SA 357
(WCC);
Shoba v Officer Commanding, Temporary Peace Camp, Wagendrift Dam;
Maphanga v Officer Commanding, South African Police Murder &
Robbery Unit,
Pietermaritzburg
1995 (4) SA 1
(A) ], inter
alia, wherein the following requirements were laid down;
18.1
The Applicant must have an already existing cause of action which it
intends to pursue;
18.2
The evidence sought to be preserved must be clearly identified and,
18.3
Be in the possession of the Respondent and
18.4
Must constitute vital evidence in substantiation of the Applicant’s
cause of action;
18.5 There
must be a real and well-founded apprehension that the
specified evidence may be destroyed, hidden or in any
manner
spirited away by the time the case
comes to trial or reaches the
stage of
discovery.
18.6
That the remedy sought is the only reasonable and practical means of
protecting the Applicant’s rights [see
Roamer Watch Co SA v
African Textile Distributors also t/a M K Patel Wholesale Merchants &
Direct Importers
1980 (2) SA 254
(W)]
[19]
It is necessary in the determination of the present matter to weigh
the Applicant’s entire case against
the requirement mentioned
above.
THE
CAUSE OF ACTION
[20]
The core of Applicant’s case is that the second Respondent hijacked
the business of the first Respondent
by transferring both its clients
and assets to the third Respondent. The second Respondent’s actions
have resulted in the insolvency
of the first Respondent - an outcome
that in turn saw the Applicant losing its investment in the first
Respondent.
[21]
The relief, in the Applicant’s view, lay in possible proceedings in
the form of interdictory relief
or a claim for damages. Neither form
avails to the Applicant; the impossibility of interdicting an act
that occurred approximately
eighteen months earlier and, secondly, a
shareholder is not entitled to claim damages for losses suffered by
the company [see
Hlumisa Investment
, above). Only the company
can claim damages where a wrong has been done to it.
CONCLUSION
[22]
By its failure to establish the primary requirements such as its
locus standi and the cause of action
it intends to pursue; important
factors that are individually dispositive of this application, the
Applicant was clearly not entitled
to the Anton Piller order it
obtained, but for its failure to honestly disclose all relevant
facts, as it was obliged to do, when
applying for the ex parte orders
in the Urgent Court.
COSTS
[23]
It customary that costs follow the outcome of the matter. The entire
application and issues concerned
justified the employment of senior
counsel.
ORDER
[24]
Based on the findings in this judgment the following order is made;
1.
The matter is not urgent.
2.
The rule nisi issued against the respondents on 13 July 2021 is set
aside and discharged.
3.
The application is dismissed.
4. The
Sheriff of the Court is directed to return to the second and third
Respondents all the documents and things it has attached
or uplifted in
the execution of the order of the
13 July 2021.
5.
The Applicant is ordered to pay the costs of the second and third
Respondents on an attorney and client scale, including
the costs consequent upon the employment of senior counsel.
M.
MBONGWE J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA.
APPEARANCES
For
the Applicant:
Advocate J Prinsloo
Instructed
by:
Van der Berg Attorneys,
c/o Rontgen &
Rontgen Inc
HR Forum, 5
th
Floor
13 Stamvrug Street
Val De Grace,
Pretoria
For
the first and second Respondents:
Advocate
A R G Mundell SC
Instructed
by:
Keith Sutcliff &
Associates Inc.
Manor House, 210
Barkston Drive
Blairgowrie,
Randburg
Date
of hearing: 27 July 2021
JUDGMENT
HANDED DOWN / ELECTRONICALLY TRANSMITTED ON THE 21
st
JANUARY 2022.
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