Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 95South Africa
Thusanyo Investments (Pty) Ltd v Maduo Supply & Projects CC (39913/20) [2022] ZAGPPHC 95 (24 February 2022)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Thusanyo Investments (Pty) Ltd v Maduo Supply & Projects CC (39913/20) [2022] ZAGPPHC 95 (24 February 2022)
Thusanyo Investments (Pty) Ltd v Maduo Supply & Projects CC (39913/20) [2022] ZAGPPHC 95 (24 February 2022)
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sino date 24 February 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
THE
HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
number 39913/20
In
the matter between:
THUSANYO
INVESTMENTS (PTY) LTD
(Registration
Number: 2006/017170/07)
And
APPLICANT
MADUO
SUPPLY & PROJECTS CC
RESPONDENT
(Registration
Number 2007/154285/23)
JUDGEMENT
BOKAKO
AJ
INTRODUCTION
1.
This is an application for
the winding-up of the respondent. The application is brought in terms
of the provisions of s 69 of the
Close Corporations Act 69 of 1984
("the
Close Corporations Act"
;), as read with subsection
344(f) and 346(1)(2)(3) and 4A of the Old Companies Act 61 of 1973
("the Old Companies Act"),
read with item 9 of Schedule 5
of the Companies Act 71 of 2008 ("the
Companies Act"
;),
which defines circumstances under which a close corporation is unable
to pay its debt.
2.
The applicant,
THUSANYO INVESTMENTS (PTY) LTD
seeks an order in terms of which the respondent MADUO SUPPLY &
PROJECTS CC a Close Corporation
registered as such in terms of the
Close Corporation Act be wound up.
3.
The applicant contends that the respondent is either
insolvent or may be deemed as such as it failed to respond to the
section 69
notice within 21 days after it had been served on it. This
is because of the provisions of s 69(1)(a) of the Close Corporation
Act.
4.
As to the
onus
to be discharged by
an applicant when it applies for the winding up of a respondent, it
is important to note that at the stage of
a provisional winding up
order being granted that the applicant only needs to show
prima
facie
that
it is a creditor of the respondent. At the stage when a final winding
up order is sought the
onus
resting on the
applicant is to show on a balance of probabilities that the debt is
not bona fide disputed on reasonable grounds
[1]
.
FACTUAL
BACKGROUND
5.
It is contended by the
applicant that it has locus standi to launch this application by
reason of the fact that the applicant is the
creditor of the
respondent as envisaged by s 346 of the Old
Companies Act, which
applies to the Close Corporations by reason of the provisions of
schedule 5 of the
Companies Act. Section
346(1)(a) of the
Companies Act provides
that:
"An
application to the Court for the winding-up of a company may, subject
to the provisions of this section, be made:
(b)
by one or more of the creditors (including contingent or prospective
creditors
).”
Section
68
of the
Close Corporations Act provides
that:
"A
corporation may be wound up by a Court, if-
(c)
the corporation is unable to pay its debts; or
(d)
it appears on application to the Court that it is just and equitable
that the corporation be wound up."
Section
69
of the
Close Corporations Act provides
that:
(1)
For the purposes of
section 68(c)
a corporation shall be deemed to be
unable to pay its debts, if-
(a)
a creditor, by cession or otherwise, to whom the corporation is
indebted in a sum of not less than two hundred rand then due has
served on the corporation, by delivering it at its registered office,
a demand requiring the corporation to pay the sum so due, and
the
corporation has for 21 days thereafter neglected to pay the sum or to
secure or compound for it to the reasonable satisfaction
of the
creditor;
(c)
it is proved to the satisfaction of the Court that the corporation is
unable to pay its debts."
6.
The applicant's case is
established on the contention that the respondent is indebted to it
in the sum of R828 401.97 together with
interest thereon and costs:
that the respondent be deemed to be unable to pay its debts by reason
of its failure to respond to the
notice in terms of
s 69
of the
Close
Corporations Act, within
a period of 21 days after delivery thereof.
7.
The respondent opposed the
application and filed opposing papers. The Applicant conducts
business as a labour broker in the oil, gas
and power sector. Various
business dealings were concluded between the parties during the
period 2018 - 2020 which dealings form
the basis of the Respondent's
liability.
The
Respondent was a 46% shareholder of the Applicant before a resolution
was made for her to be removed as a shareholder of the Applicant.
Apart from being a shareholder and director of the Applicant, she was
also employed by the Applicant as a joint CEO from October
2017 to
2019.
The
birth of the application is that the Applicant demands that the
Applicant should make payment to the Applicant of various sums
which
was due and payable to the Applicant at the time. The Respondent has
however for a period of 21 days neglected to pay the sum
or to secure
or compound for it to the reasonable of the Applicant, by operation
of law the Respondent is deemed to be unable
to pay its debts
in that the Respondent is indebted to the Applicant in the
following amounts: an amount of R91 ,875.47 in
respect of PAYE and
VAT payments made on behalf of the Respondent, an amount of
R235,000.00 in respect of two loan agreements
and an amount of
R651 ,526.50 in respect of the TW Stene contract.
8.
During 2017, the Applicant
approached the Respondent in her personal capacity to join the
Applicant and be the Shareholder, Director
and Co-CEO. The basis upon
which the Applicant approached the Respondent, reason being the
Applicant was doing work for Sasol as
a subcontractor. The Applicant
was at that time not compliant with BBBEE requirements due to the
fact that Marinus (Applicant) was
a white male and did not fall
within the category of persons who fulfilled the BBBEE requirements.
It all started when the
Applicant advanced and lent the amount of R91
875.47 to the Respondent which would enable the Respondent to pay
certain tax liabilities
of the Respondent and enable the Respondent
to obtain a tax clearance certificate. The second transaction
relates to a loan of
RI35 000.00 which had been advanced to the Respondent by the
Applicant. The Respondent has however failed to
repay the amount of
the loan. In the third transaction the Respondent loaned an amount
RI00 000.00 which loan became due and payable.
In the fourth
transaction the Applicant rented certain equipment and staff to the
Respondent at the Respondent's special instance
and request. The
amount invoiced amounted to R238 211.00 and R263 315.50 respectively.
The total indebtedness of the Respondent in
respect to this debt
amounts to R501 526.50. Despite demand the for the payment of the
above amount the Respondent has failed to
make any payment towards
these invoices, the total liability of all debts of the Respondent.
THE
ISSUES TO BE DECIDED
9.
The Court was called upon
to decide the following three issues:
whether
the respondent was indebted to the applicant in the amount claimed as
stipulated above,
whether
or not the respondent was or is unable to pay its debts; and whether
the respondent should be wound-up.
10.
The application for the
liquidation of the Respondent was issued on the 25
th
of August
2020. This was done in terms of
Section 69
of the
Close Corporations
Act and
after the Respondent failed to pay the debts owing to the
Applicant and further failed to set security for the amounts owing.
SUBMISSIONS
APPLICANT`S
CONTENTIONS
11.
The Applicant contends that
sale of shares agreement was entered into with the Respondent during
2017. The Respondent breached the
sale of shares agreement as she
never paid for the shares with the result that the sale of shares
agreement was duly cancelled. Further
contending that the Respondent
was not removed as a shareholder by way of resolution. Such an act
would, in any event, have been
meaningless as one cannot remove a
shareholder by way of resolution.
12.
It was also submitted that
neither the Respondent nor Ms Matlala are shareholders as both sale
of shares agreements has been duly
cancelled. The employment
with Ms Matlala as joint CEO and/or employee of the Applicant was
lawfully terminated on 10 June
2020 and she was removed as a director
on 30 June 2020. Further submitted that the question as to whether or
not Ms Matlala is a
shareholder, director or employee of the
Applicant is not relevant in the application for the liquidation of
the Respondent, which
is solely based on the inability of the
Respondent to pay its debts.
the
Respondent has never made any payment whatsoever for the shares.
13.
It was further argued by
the Applicant that the test for a final order of liquidation is
different to that of a provisional order,
in that the applicant must
establish its case on a balance of probabilities. Where the facts are
disputed, the court is not permitted
to determine the balance of
probabilities on the affidavits but must instead apply the
Plascon-Evans rule. If there are genuine disputes
of fact regarding
the existence of the applicant's claim at the final stage, the
applicant will fail on ordinary principles unless
it can persuade the
court to refer the matter to oral evidence. It was submitted that no
genuine disputes of facts that have been
raised by the Respondent.
14.
Section 344(f)
states that
a company may be wound up by the court if the company is unable to
pay its debts as described in section 69 of the Closed
Corporations
Act, 1984. Section 69 of the Closed Corporations Act, 1984 sets out
three circumstances in which a company shall be
deemed to be unable
to pay its debts. In casu the first circumstance, namely non-payment
in response to a statutory demand. As to
statutory demand, a company
is not deemed to be unable to pay its debts merely because an
established claim has not been paid or
secured: what must be shown is
that the company has neglected to pay or secure the claim. Contending
that once one of the three circumstances
in section 69 is
established, the ground for winding-up specified in s 344(f) is
satisfied.
15.
Further argued by the
Applicant that on the affidavits filed, the Respondent has failed to
show that it is disputing the claim on
bona fide grounds and that the
grounds are reasonable. Further submitted that the Respondent has not
raised any credible defence
in respect to the claims of the Applicant
or put differently the respondent has not shown that the applicant's
claim is disputed
either bona fide or on reasonable grounds.
16.
In response to preliminary
issues submitted by the Respondent. The Respondent rebutted such as
follows : The first preliminary point
is bad in law as the only
shareholders of the Applicant at the time of the launching of the
application are current directors being
Mr Ferreira and Mrs P
Mofokeng.
17.
The second point in limine
is the alleged failure to set security with the Master for costs. The
allegation is baseless as the security
was indeed set and forms part
of the founding papers.
18.
The third point in limine
is the purported failure of the Applicant to serve the application on
the employees and their Union as well
as the failure to serve on
SARS. The allegations are baseless as the service affidavit clearly
sets out that service had been effected
as required by the Act.
19.
The fourth point in limine
is based on the purported failure of the Applicant to institute the
action
section 69
of the
Close Corporations Act, 1984
read with
section 344(f)
of the Companies Act,1973. The point in limine is not
understood.
20.
The current application is
brought in terms of
s 69
of the
Close Corporations Act, which
defines
circumstances under which a close corporation is unable to pay its
debt.
RESPONDENT`S
CONTENTIONS
FIRST
POINT
IN
LIMINE
–
LOCUS
STANDI
OF
THE APPLICANT AND LACK
OF
AUTHORITY TO INSTITUTE LEGAL PROCEDINGS BY THE DEPONENT
ON
BEHALF OF THE APPLICANT
21.
The
Respondent argued that according to clause 22.1.21 of the
shareholders ‘agreement
[2]
dated
01 November 2019 provides as follows: “
Despite
anything to the contrary in this Agreement or in the memorandum and
articles of association of the Company, no resolution
on any of the
material issues listed below, shall have any effect, unless agreed to
by 100% (one hundred percent) of the Shareholders
and 22.1.22
entering into any legal disputes or proceedings…”.
22.
Further contending that the
applicants failed to prove that the action taken against the
respondent was authorized. In the founding
affidavit the deponent, on
behalf of the applicants, tersely avers that he has been authorized
to depose to the affidavit on behalf
of the applicant. No supporting
documents were attached.
23.
The applicant however
failed to produce the manner in which the meeting of 10 July 2020 was
called as well as the minutes of the said
meeting. Instead an
“extract” of the said meeting is produced dated 29 October 2020.
This extract is only produced after
the respondent has challenged in
its answering affidavit the locus standi and the authority of the
deponent to institute these proceedings.
24.
The
respondent has objected to the introduction of annexure “
REP1
”
[3]
in
the replying affidavit. In this regard it has instituted
interlocutory proceedings for its striking out.
25.
In any event the resolution
attached in “
REP1
”
to institute legal
proceedings against the respondent who is the shareholder, was taken
in a meeting of the Board of Directors contrary
to the provisions of
the shareholders’ agreement which requires that the resolution
should be that of the shareholders. The applicant
together with the
deponent to the founding affidavit have failed to produce a
resolution in which 100% of the shareholders have agreed
that these
legal proceedings be instituted and authorizing the deponent to
institute these proceedings on behalf of the applicant.
Annexure “
REP1
”
is null and void ab initio
and therefore any actions taken in compliance with the said
resolution is a nullity.
26.
Steps
to recover the “
monies
”
owed
to the applicant were taken before the so-called resolution in
Annexure “REP1” was taken. The steps were taken in the form
of
the letters of demand, allegedly, in terms of
section 69
of the
Close
Corporations Act which
were served on the respondent and issued. As a
result, the applicant does not have locus standi to even issue the
letters of the
demand as well as the notice in terms of
section 69
of
the
Close Corporations Act. In
paragraph 12.8 of the replying
affidavit the applicant alleges that the shareholder’s agreement
was cancelled on 4 August 2020.The
applicant failed to indicate in
which meeting the shareholders’ agreement was cancelled and in
which meeting of the shareholders,
in which it was agreed that the
shareholders agreed to terminate the shareholding of the respondent.
In terms of the shareholders’
agreement a shareholders’ meeting
has to be convened in accordance with clause 11.3. The applicant
fails to produce evidence that
the meeting in which it alleges that
the respondent’s shareholding was cancelled was in accordance with
the provisions of clause
11.3 despite the fact that the respondent in
its answering affidavit disputes the validity in which resolutions of
the applicant’s
shareholders and those of the Board of
Directors.
[4]
As
a result, any meeting which was held by the applicant culminating in
the institution of these proceedings, cancellation of the
shareholders’ agreement and cancellation of the respondent’s
shareholding in the applicant is void
ab
initio
.
SECOND
POINT
IN LIMINE
– FAILURE TO MAKE PROVISION
FOR
SECURITY
FOR COSTS CERTIFICATE BY THE MASTER OF THE HIGH
COURT
27.
It was further argued that
in terms of section 9(3)(b) of the Insolvency Act, the applicant
shall give sufficient security for the
payment of all the fees and
charges necessary for the prosecution of all winding – up
proceedings and all the costs of administering
the close corporation
in liquidation until a provisional liquidator has been appointed, or
if none is appointed, of all the fees
and charges necessary for the
discharge of the close corporation from the winding up. This
application was not accompanied by a certificate
issued by the Master
of the High Court not more than 10 days before the date of the
application to the effect that the security for
costs has been
given. Even Section 346(3) of the
1973
Companies Act stipulates
that “
Every
application to the Court referred to in subsection (1), except an
application by the Master in terms of paragraph (e) of that
subsection, shall be accompanied by a certificate by the Master,
issued not more than ten days before the date of the application,
to
the effect that sufficient security has been given for the
proceedings and of all costs of administering the company in
liquidation
until provisional liquidator has been appointed, or if no
provisional liquidator is appointed of all fees and charges necessary
for
the discharge of the company form winding up”.
28.
In
paragraph 15.4 of the founding affidavit, it is clear that at the
time of the issuance of the application, being 19 August 2020
[5]
and
its service to the respondent being September 2020
[6]
,
the certificate of security had not been obtained at the time. The
certificate of security is dated 16 September 2020.
[7]
This
was therefore obtained after the date of the application and
therefore does not comply with the provisions of section 346(3)
of
the 1973
Companies Act. Even
if the applicant states that the
Certificate from the Master was issued before the date in which this
application is to be had, the
certificate is invalid as it does not
comply with the provisions of section 346(3) of the 1973
Companies
Act. The
date of the application for provisional winding up is the
date upon which the application was issued by the Registrar of the
High
Court. In this matter the application was issued on 19 August
2020. The applicant’s failure to provide security for costs and for
the certificate as provided for in the Insolvency Act, is fatal to
this application. It was submitted during the hearing of the matter
that compliance with the provisions of Insolvency Act as well as the
applicable sections of the 1973
Companies Act in
this regard are
peremptory.
THIRD
POINT
IN
LIMINE
–
FAILURE
TO SERVE RESPONDENT’S
EMPLOYEES
OR THEIR UNION AND SARS WITH THE APPLICATION
29.
The applicant has failed to
comply with the provisions of section 346(4A) of the 1973
Companies
Act, it
failed to serve the employees and their registered trade
union/s in the manner prescribed, the applicant further failed to
serve
the application to SARS at all. It was further submitted during
the hearing of the matter that compliance with the provisions of
Insolvency Act as well as the applicable sections of the 1973
Companies Act in
this regard are peremptory.
FOURTH
POINT
IN
LIMINE
–
APPLICANT’S
FAILURE TO INSTITUTE THIS
APPLICATION
IN TERMS OF
SECTION 69
READ WITH
SECTION 344
OR 345
OF
THE COMPANIES ACT OF 1973
30.
Section
68 of the Close Corporation Act 69 of 1984 has been repealed and as a
result section 69 of the Close Corporation Act cannot
on its own be a
ground for liquidation or winding up of a close corporation. Section
68 of the Close Corporation Act is an empowering
provision, which
means that section 69 of the Close Corporation Act finds its
application on the basis of section 68. The failure
of the applicant
to cite the provisions of sections 344 and 345 of the companies Act
of 1973 renders the application defective.
[8]
The
applicant addressed letters to the respondent in terms of Section 69
of the Close Corporation Act and did not make any reference
to
sections 344 or 345 of the 1973 Companies Act.
31.
The Respondent
disputes that the applicant has
locus
standi
; further
denies that the Applicant has the authority of the deponent in
the proceedings on behalf of the applicant to
act on behalf of the
applicant; also disputing that the debts are due
and payable as contemplated in section 69
read with section 344 and
345 of the 1973 Companies Act , further denies that she is
unable to pay debts and lastly the
applicant has
not satisfied the requirements for the granting of a
provisional winding up.
32.
The Respondent contends
that she was a 46% shareholder of the Applicant before a resolution
was made for her to be removed as a shareholder
of the Applicant.
Apart from being a shareholder and director of the Applicant, she was
also employed by the Applicant as a joint
CEO from October 2017 to
201, in 2017, Marinus approached her in her personal capacity to join
the Applicant and be the Shareholder,
Director and Co-CEO. The basis
upon which Marinus approached her was that the Applicant was doing
work for Sasol as a subcontractor.
The Applicant was at that time not
compliant with BBBEE requirements due to the fact that Marinus was a
white male and did not fall
within the category of persons who
fulfilled the BBBEE requirements.
33.
The Respondent submitted
that on the 21
st
of April 2020 Rika
Deidrick’s, the chief financial officer of the Applicant
communicated with the Respondent as the shareholder
of the Applicant.
He requested the Respondent to fill in the documents for BBBEE
verification for the interest free loan for
the financial year of
2019/2020. She was informed that the Applicant would qualify
for interest free loan if the Applicant
complied with BBBEE. The
Applicant had printed a letter that the Respondent had to sign but
she refused to sign. Subsequently on
the 21
st
of April 2020 she received
an email with a content of a loan certificate in an amount of R 391
875.47 which had allegedly been signed
by the Respondent. On the said
date of the signing of the loan certificate, the Respondent was in
arcadia, Pretoria at the Bank.
The Respondent argued that she never
signed the loan certificate as she had refused to sign same. This
seemed as a pattern in that
at some stage she was once again asked to
acknowledge supplier development support of R 250 000.00. She also
refused to sign because
she had never entered into such an
agreement.
34.
On the 4
th
of May 2020, The Respondent
received an email from Marinus asking her to sign the documents
required as the Applicant could not issue
the BBBEE certificate if
the information required from her was not received. On 06 May 2020,
she received another correspondence
from Marinus requesting her to
send the documents as requested, on the 8
th
of May 2020, she received
another email from Marinus still requesting documentation from her.
He indicated that if she did not sign
the documents, the Applicant
would have to close its doors. Subsequent to that on the 14
th
of May 2020 she was
informed by her attorneys that the Applicant asserts that she has
appallingly failed to discharge her duties as
a shareholder of the
Applicant. The content of the correspondence further alleges that she
is indebted to the Applicant an amount
of R 91,875.47 in respect of
PAYE and VAT payments made on behalf of Maduo Supply, an amount of R
235, 000.00 in respect of two loan
agreements, an amount of R
651,526.50 in respect of the TW Stene contract. In the same letter
the Applicant proposed to write off
the above amounts and pay her an
amount of R 500 000.00 provided she signed over all of her shares to
the Applicant or the Applicant's
nominees and return all items
belonging to the Applicant, including but not limited to the vehicle
and the laptop. On the 20
th
of May 2020 she further
received an email from Mark indicating that on that day it was the
deadline for response of the enterprise
development. On 21 May 2020
during hard lockdown, she received an email from Marinus requesting
her to report for work and threatened
her that if she failed to
report for work, then he would proceed with the disciplinary action
against her. She did not did not report
for work.
35.
To date the Respondent have
not received any dividends from the Applicant. The Applicant refused
to provide financials. The First
loan agreement was concluded on 27
January 2020 in an amount of R 135 000.00 and the second loan
agreement was concluded on 13 March
2020. in an amount of R 135
000.00. An amount of R 100 000. 00 All loan agreements were signed on
13 March 2020. The loan agreements
were back dated. On the date
alleged on the loan agreements she was not available to sign. The
alleged loan of R 135 000.00 was the
money transferred in on or
during January 2020 after the round table meeting between
Respondent’s attorneys and the Applicant as
it was supposed to be
an increase to her salary as a director and co CEO of The Applicant.
The payment was transferred to the Respondent.
Applicant is adamant
that money was transferred to Respondent`s account in reference to a
WhatsApp communication wherein Marinus
confirms the transfer of the
RI 35 000.00.
36.
The Applicant has not
provided proof of payment of the above amounts to Maduo or into her
personal account. The alleged loan amounts
have already prescribed if
proven that they were paid to Maduo as they were transferred in 2017.
37.
The payment of R 91 875.47
by Marinus was made out of Marinus's own free will. Same was paid in
2018. The Respondent does not dispute
signing the loan agreements but
she signed the agreements after Marinus convinced her that the
signing was just a formality for the
purposes of tax and audit.
38.
It was further submitted
that the loan of R 600 000.00 was in respect of the project that the
Respondent had from ESKOM. The project
could not be done without the
assistance of machinery therefore the Applicant connected the
Respondent with TW Stene (Pty) Ltd. The
hiring of the machinery cost
R 600 000.00. The Respondent paid the money directly to TW Stene even
though the Applicant asked her
to pay the Applicant directly and not
TW Stene.
39.
The Respondent further
argued that ever since she became a shareholder from 2017 to May
2019, she has never earned any dividends.
She was simply told that
the company was not making money. There was no transparency at all
during all the years. All these fights
emanated from her
plea for transparency in the company. During year 2019 the Respondent
was offered a salary of R 31
000.00, in December 2019, Salaries and
bonuses were paid to employees.
40.
Further contending that she
does not owe the Applicant the alleged amounts claimed since she was
informed by Marinus that he would
scratch out the amounts as the loan
agreement was just a formality. Marinus also informed the Respondent
that he was also entitled
to the directors' withdrawal. Arguing
that the Respondent was not indebted to the Applicant, her refusal to
pay the alleged
amounts is not as a result of an inability on my part
on behalf of Maduo to pay its debts, bringing this Application, the
Applicant
has abused the process of the Court.
THE
LAW
41.
In terms of s 69, a close
corporation would be deemed unable to pay its debts, when, inter
alia, a creditor to whom an amount of no
less than R200 is due,
serves a demand upon the close corporation at its registered office
and pursuant thereto “the close corporation
has for 21 days
thereafter, neglected to pay the sum
or to secure or
compound for it to the reasonable satisfaction of the creditor
”
.
These two provisions (the latter being known as the deeming
provision) were mirrored in the old Act under s 344(f) as read with
s
345. Thus, save for the differences in respect of the minimum debt
which must be due and payable, close corporations and companies
could
be wound up by courts on substantially similar grounds, namely when
the entity was deemed to be commercially insolvent.
42.
In Scania Finance Southern
Africa (Pty) Ltd) v Thomi-Gee Road Carriers CC and Another
2013 (2)
SA 439
(FB), the court held otherwise. In this case the court
reasoned that the amendment of s 66(1) of the CC Act has the effect
of extending
the provisions of the old Act, which relate to the
winding up of companies, to the winding up of close corporations,
specifically
in the instance where the CC Act neglects to address a
particular matter. The court held that in order to give effect to the
legislative
intent, s 344 of the old Act must fill in the gap and
operate in conjunction with s 69 of the CC Act to form the basis upon
which
to liquidate a close corporation which is deemed to be
commercially insolvent. Essentially, “the grounds for
winding-up ‘insolvent’
close corporations by order of court are
now the same as the grounds for winding-up of ‘insolvent’
companies”.
43.
In HBT Construction and
Plant Hire CC v Uniplant Hire CC
2012 (5) SA 197
(FB), the court held
that an application for the liquidation of a close corporation could
not be based on s 69 of the CC Act alone.
The court reasoned that s
68(c) had been the empowering provision pursuant to which a close
corporation could be liquidated, and
that s 69 had merely qualified
the meaning of ‘unable to pay its debt’ under s 68. Thus,
according to the court, s 69 of the
CC Act did not constitute an
independent ground upon which to liquidate a close corporation.
Accordingly, and in the absence of s
68, s 69 could not be relied
upon to liquidate a close corporation. The court held that an
applicant seeking to liquidate a close
corporation must instead prove
that the close corporation is actually insolvent or persuade the
court that liquidation is just and
equitable in the circumstances.
CONDONATION
FOR THE LATE FILING OF THE ANSWERING AFFIDAVIT
44.
The respondent has applied for condonation of the late
filing of the answering affidavit. This is an indulgence that the
Court, after
consideration of all the relevant factors, may exercise
either in favour or against the respondent. The respondent has
furnished
reasons why this application should be granted.
The delay on their side was nor intentional but
they were busy gathering all the proof that would be necessary for
the Respondent
to oppose this application.
Also
some of the alleged loan amounts dates back to 2017 and 2018. The
Applicant only came to Court to enforce them in 2021.The Respondent
had therefore misplaced some of the communication and documentation
that needed to be attached to.
It will be in the
interest of justice if this matter is heard as it involves the
Respondent`s status as the director of Maduo and
was not intentional
on her part to serve the answering affidavit late. It is also
contended that the application should be granted
by reason of the
fact that the respondent has an unassailable
bona
fide
defence. This is one of the
considerations the Court must look into in deciding whether to grant
the application for the late filing
of the answering affidavit. This
court is content that the respondent has satisfied these requirements
and that the affidavit should
be allowed. The respondent's
application for the condonation for the late filing of its answering
affidavit is hereby granted.
APPLICATION
OF THE LAW TO THE FACTS
45.
Winding-up proceedings of close corporations by a Court
are governed by the provisions of Part IX of the
Close Corporations
Act 69 of 1984
, in part by Chapter XIV of the Companies Act 61 of
1973 and certain provisions of the
Insolvency Act 24 of 1936
and
finally the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
, despite the repeal of
section 68
of the
Close Corporations Act, and
the amendments to
section 66
and
67
thereof, and the repeal of the Companies Act 61 of
1973,
section 66(1)
of the
Close Corporations Act provides
that the
laws mentioned in Item 9 of Schedule 5 will apply to the winding-up
and liquidation insolvent close corporations, until
the date to be
determined in terms of Item 9(4).
46.
This court upon hearing argument on the request deemed
it prudent that the points in limine should rather be considered as
part of
the main application so as to not frustrate the adjudication
of the matter in its entirety. For the purposes of this judgment this
will be a convenient point of departure.
47.
In Kyle and Others v Maritz & Pieterse Incorporated
2002 (3) All SA 223
(T) Moseneke J (as he was then) considered the
dispute of an applicant’s claim in a liquidation application and
found as follows:
“
Where
the claim of the applicant is disputed the respondent bears the onus
to establish the existence of a bona fide dispute on reasonable
grounds. See Porterstraat Eiendomme (Pty) Ltd v PA Venter Worcester
(Pty) Ltd
2000 (4) SA 598
(C) at 606. The dispute raised by the
debtor company must be in good faith. It must be genuine and honest.
The dispute so raised
must of course be based on reasonable grounds.
Therefore, a defence that is inherently improbable or patently false
or dishonest
would not qualify as a bona fide dispute:
48.
The
Respondent argued that the applicant is bound by the provisions of
the shareholders’ agreement and that the underlying
principle
of the law of contract is that agreements seriously entered into
should be enforced.
[9]
The
respondent has raised several defences against the application.
Firstly, the respondent denied that the Applicant had a
locus standi;
secondly it denied vehemently that it was in any way indebted to the
applicant; thirdly it contended that there existed
no underlying
contractual relationship or liability to the applicant at all; and
fourthly and finally it contended she was a shareholder
at the time
and that the applicant could not bring an application for its
liquidation based on the said shareholder’s agreement.
47.
In Kalil v Decotex (Pty) Ltd and Another
1988 (1) SA 943
(A) Corbett
JA explained the nature of the onus which rests upon the respondent
in winding-up proceedings as follows:
“
In
regard to locus standi as a creditor, it has been held, following
certain English authority that an application for liquidation
should
not be resorted to in order to enforce a claim which is bona fide
disputed by the company. Consequently, where the respondent
shows on
a balance of probability that its indebtedness to the applicant is
disputed on bona fide and reasonable grounds, the Court
will refuse
the winding-up order. The onus on the respondent is not to show that
it is not indebted to the applicant: it is merely
to show that the
indebtedness is disputed on bona fide and reasonable grounds.”
49.
The applicant`s
contention that the said indebtedness arose from a debt of loans
advanced to the Respondent, a business owned by the
same member as
the respondent. It will be recalled that the respondent admitted
having been given the money as a shareholder, it
was the respondent's
case that the said money emanates from
the
Respondent asserting that she is a 46% shareholder in the Applicant.
In view of the above and, on a proper interpretation of the
shareholder’s agreement, the Applicant is precluded from
instituting the present application. The Respondent contended that
the
Applicant advanced and lent the amount of R91 875.47 for payment
of tax liabilities so that the Respondent can obtain tax clearance
certificate. Further loaned the Respondent R135 000.00. again the
Applicant loaned an amount RIOO 000.00 to the Respondent The fourth
transaction had to do with certain rented equipment and staff to the
Respondent at the Respondent's special instance and request.
The
amount invoiced amounted to R238 211.00 and R263 315.50 respectively.
The Respondent argued that the email dated 21 April 2020
of a loan
certificate in an amount of R 391 875.47 which had allegedly been
signed by her she is refuting it on the bases that on
the said date
of the signing of the loan certificate, was in arcadia, Pretoria at
the Bank she is adamant that she never signed the
loan certificate.
Further stated in her papers that
chief
financial officer of the Applicant sent an email to her as the
shareholder of the Applicant and requested her to fill in the
documents for BBBEE verification for the interest free loan for the
financial year of 2019/2020, she indicated that the Applicant
would
qualify for interest free loan if the Applicant complied with BBBEE.
From
the above it is as clear that: The Respondent did not deny that the
Applicant made three payments that are referred as loans
in their
founding affidavit and secondly, the applicant was unable to deny
that at some stage the Respondent was a shareholder of
the Applicant
and such payments were intended to make good of the BEEE status of
the Applicant and for business sustainability or
profitability.
It is, in my view,
not sufficient to base the application on unsigned agreements.
Moreover, the respondent is a 46% shareholder of
the applicant. It is
also not in dispute that on the 09
th
of November 2019,
the applicant issued a share certificate to the respondent wherein it
is indicated that the 46% shareholding is
fully paid
[10]
.
Now the question remains if the Applicant complied with the
provisions of the shareholder’s agreement, clause 22.1.21 of the
shareholders’
agreement. This court is not called to determine the
validity of the shareholder’s agreement, will focus on issues of
liquidity.
50.
The liability of the
respondent on the said sum of R828 401.97 is, in my view, disputed on
bona
fide
and
reasonable grounds. It is clear that on the Plascon Evans Rule, the
applicant has not succeeded to prove its
locus
standi
[11]
.
In casu
on
evidence before Court it is clear that the debt is not simply
disputed because the respondent claims so. The dispute is not only
bona
fide
but,
in my view it is reasonable and founded on substantial grounds. The
Applicant submitted that A party challenging an application
for the
winding-up of a company on the grounds that the applicant's claim
against the company is disputed must therefore show (a)
that the
claim is disputed; (b) that it is bona fide disputed; and (c) that
the grounds for disputing the claim are reasonable.
In
my view the Respondent has succeeded to show that its dispute for its
indebtedness is based on good and reasonable grounds.
The
Respondent
was
a 46% shareholder of the Applicant before a resolution was made for
her to be removed as a shareholder of the Applicant. Apart
from being
a shareholder and director of the Applicant, she was also employed by
the Applicant as a joint CEO from October 2017 to
2019 before she was
removed.
51.
The Respondent submitted during hearing that she refused
and asked for proof that the Respondent ("Maduo Supply")
was an
enterprise development as claimed that the Applicant assisted
Maduo Supply with an amount of R 391, 875.47. Such was never refuted
by the Applicant. They submitted that the Respondent signed a
loan certificate in an amount of R 391 875.47, she was adamant
in
that she never signed the loan certificate.
52.
This court further notes
that It was never refuted by the Applicant that on the 14
th
of May 2020 sent
correspondence to the Respondent alleging the Applicant have terribly
failed to discharge her duties as a shareholder
of the Applicant.
53.
Ironically in the same
letter the Applicant proposed to write off the debts as set out above
and offered to pay Applicant an amount
of R 500 000.00 if she signed
over all her shares to the Applicant or the Applicant's nominees and
return all items belonging to
the Applicant, including but not
limited to the vehicle and the laptop. The offer was limited until 20
May 2020.The irony is why
would the Applicant make an offer to the
Respondent whilst she is indebted to them. At the time of the
above mentioned correspondence,
the Applicant did not make any
financial demands in the contrary they offered to settle with the
Respondent. It is also not clear
whether the loans were personally
intended or for the company. In light of the recent change in
legislation a solvent Close Corporation
may therefore no longer be
wound-up purely because of the fact that it is indebted to a creditor
and it is unable to pay its debts.
54.
It is now trite that
an application for winding up of a CC shall be accompanied by a
certificate by the Master, issued not more than
ten days before the
date of the application, to the effect that sufficient security has
been given for the payment of all fees and
charges necessary for the
prosecution of all winding up proceedings and of all costs of
administering the CC in liquidation until
a provisional liquidator
had been appointed. A copy of the application for winding up a CC
together with the supporting affidavits
must be served on the Master
prior to filing same with the Court in order for the Master to
consider whether it should apply to Court
for postponement of the
hearing of the matter. It is also not disputed by the Applicant that
this application was instituted prior
serving the Master which is
contrary to the rules
[12]
. The
general Rules of Application, as set out in Rule 6 of the Uniform
Rules of Court, apply to winding up proceedings
[13]
.
55.
This
has been confirmed in the Free State division in the recent
unreported judgments of Daffue J in Herman v Set-Mak Civils
(5495/2011)
[2012] ZAFSHC 58
(5 April 2012) and Zietsman AJ in HBT
Construction and Plant Hire CC v Uniplant Hire CC 2012 JDR 0334
(FB). In these judgments
it is confirmed that a solvent CC can
only be wound up by the Court on application of a creditor thereof if
business rescue proceedings
have ended and it is just and equitable
that the CC be wound-up, alternatively if it is otherwise just and
equitable for the CC to
be wound up. The mere fact that a CC is
not paying the creditor’s debt is, however, not ground which makes
it just and equitable
for a CC to be wound-up and a creditor will
have to prove factual insolvency of the CC.
56.
The
applicant has failed to validate that the winding up of the
respondent will be to the advantage of the creditors. In this regard
the applicant merely made an unsupported averment.
57.
Further
nothing that the applicant bears the onus to prove that the debt in
which a section 69 of the Close Corporation Act is applicable,
has to
prove that the debt is due and payable. In this case the Applicant
did not satisfy the court that the debt is due and payable.
58.
In
my view there is no evidence that either the respondent was unable to
pay its debts. In my view, on the evidence before the Court,
application for the liquidation of the Respondent cannot succeed.
59.
It is concluded in that the applicant has failed to make
a proper case for the winding up of the respondent and has failed in
persuading
this court that liquidation is just and equitable in this
circumstances.
ORDER
60.
In the result the
application for liquidation of the respondent is hereby dismissed
with costs.
BOKAKO.
TP
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Pretoria
Appearances
Date
of Hearing
:
23 August 2021
Date
of Judgment
: 24 February
2022
Counsel
for the Applicant
: Adv. L
Kellermann SC
Attorney
for the Applicant :
: HATTINGH & NDZABANDZABA ATTORNEYS
Counsel
for the Respondent :
Adv. MG Makhoebe
Attorney
for the Respondent
: RAMAFOKO ATTORNEYS
Judgment
transmitted electronically.
[1]
Orestisolve (Pty) Ltd t/a Essa
Investments v NFDT Investment Holdings (Pty) Ltd
2015 (4) SA 429
(WCC) at para 7-13.
[2]
See
Annexure
“MM1
”
at page 001
– 201 to 232 of CaseLines.
[3]
See
Annexure
REP1
at page 001 -
329 of CaseLines.
[4]
See paragraphs 4 and 8 of the
answering affidavit in pages 001- 181 to 183 and 001 – 185 to 190
of CaseLines respectively.
[5]
See page 001-03 of CaseLines.
[6]
See page 001-69 of CaseLines.
[7]
See page 001 – 68 of
CaseLines.
[8]
First Rand Bank Ltd v Lodhi 5
Properties Investment CC
2013 (3) SA 212
(GNP) at 35, Scania Finance
Southern Africa (Pty) Ltd v Thomi-Gee Road Carrier CC, Absa Bank Ltd
v Fernofire Bethlehem CC
(2012) ZAFSHC 148
(19 July 2012).
[9]
See the Law of Contract in South
Africa – Dale Hutchison et al: Oxford Press Second Edition:
Chapter 7 at pages 175.
Barkhuizen
v Napier
[2007] ZACC
5
;
2007 (5) SA 323
(CC);
Brisley
v Drotsky
[2002]
ZASCA 35, 2002 (4) SA 1 (SCA).
[10]
See
Annexure
“MM3”
at pages
001-234 of CaseLines
[11]
LAWSA Vol.4 AD 3 paragraph 113
which dealt with the meaning of
"bona
fide
dispute" on
reasonable grounds. In this book it was stated that:
"A
debt is not bona fide disputed simply because the respondent company
says that it is in dispute. The dispute must not only
be bona fide
or genuine but must be on good, reasonable or substantial grounds.
The expression "genuine dispute:
connotes a plausible
contention requiring the same sort of consideration as a 'serious
question to be tried'. It is not sufficient
for the company merely
to establish that there is a serious question to be tried as to
whether the dispute over the debt is genuine
in that the debt is
disputed on the basis of an honestly held belief that it is not
payable and is not disputed merely for the
purposes of delay or
obstruction. 'Genuine' in this context means not fabricated for the
purposes of the proceedings or not just
thought up or brought
forward without genuine belief. There can be no genuine dispute if
there are not substantial grounds for
disputing the debt "
[12]
In terms of section 348 of
the Companies Act the winding-up of the company is deemed to have
commenced at the time of the presentation
of the application to
court, that is at the time the application is filed with the
Registrar of the High Court.
[13]
Venter v Farley
1991 1 SA 316
(W). See also Cilliers Corporate Law par 27.58 512 and the authority
cited in fn 152.
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