Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 166South Africa
Vosloo N.O and Another v South African Medical Association NPC and Another (44983/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 166 (28 March 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
28 March 2022
Headnotes
or administered by or on behalf of the Trade Union”, the Administrator obtained an order on the Labour Court under case number J1973/19.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Vosloo N.O and Another v South African Medical Association NPC and Another (44983/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 166 (28 March 2022)
Vosloo N.O and Another v South African Medical Association NPC and Another (44983/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 166 (28 March 2022)
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sino date 28 March 2022
HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO.
(2) OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
28 MARCH 2022
CASE
NO: 44983/2020
In
the matter between:
GERHARD
VOSLOO NO
First
Applicant
THE
SOUTH AFRICAN MEDICAL
ASSOCIATION
TRADE UNION (under administration)
Second
Applicant
and
THE
SOUTH AFRICAN MEDICAL
ASSOCIATION
NPC
First
Respondent
THE
REGISTRAR OF LABOUR RELATIONS
Second
Respondent
J
U D G M E N T
This matter has been heard in
open court and otherwise disposed of in terms of the Directives of
the Judge President of this Division.
The judgment and order
are accordingly published and distributed electronically.
DAVIS, J
[1]
Introduction
For many years the First
Respondent, being the South African Medical Association (SAMA) has
been collecting membership fees, subscriptions
and the like by
utilizing the procedure created by section 13 of the Labour Relations
Act 66 of 1995 (the LRA). This section
caters for the deduction
of trade union dues from the salaries of medical practitioners who
are government employees via the PERSAL/PERSOL
payroll system.
The South African Medical Association Trade Union (SAMATU) to which
some of the medical practitioners in government
employ belong, has
been placed under administration. It was previously fully
administrated by SAMA. SAMATU’s Administrator demanded
payment of
all the amounts which had historically been deducted via the
PERSAL/PERSOL system and paid over to SAMA. When this
demand
was not met, the Administrator applied to finally wind up SAMA.
[2]
The SAMA/SAMATU
relationship
2.1
SAMA was established in
1927. It is registered as a non-profit-company. It is run
as a voluntary association with currently
some 16 000 members.
The practitioners who are members have been referred to by various
epitaphs in the papers, but mostly
the term “doctor” was used as
the applicable generic description. I shall continue to do so.
2.2
Prior to the advent of
the LRA, SAMA also sought to represent its members who were in
government employ (the employed doctors) in
employer/employee
negotiations. In fact, its memorandum of incorporation stated
that it was “…
committed
… to fulfill the role as a trade union to represent the labour
interest and rights of all medical doctors who are employees
…
”.
2.3
As a member of SAMA,
doctors receive the following services and benefits (irrespective of
whether they are employed doctors or not):
-
individual and
collective representation aimed at influencing medical and health
legislation, regulation and policies;
-
updates on legislation,
medical ethics, labour relations, continuing professional development
and coding products and practice tools;
-
representation for
individuals and groups in all matters affecting the profession;
-
industrial relations
assistance, support and representation;
-
private practice
assistance and medical coding support services;
-
Continuing Professional
Development services, including access to advice, information,
recording systems and point-earning opportunities;
-
a monthly hard copy of
the South African Medical Journal (SAMJ), incorporating Continuing
Medical Education (CME).
2.4
With the advent of the
LRA and, in the words used in the Heads of Argument delivered on
behalf of the Administrator, “…
in
order to better represent the medical profession … SAMA perceived a
need … to register as a trade union
”.
This gave rise to the birth of SAMATU which was registered as a trade
union in terms of section 96(7)(a) of the LRA.
It was initially
known as MASA trade union.
2.5
Although trade unions
are required to be independent, as a result of the historical facts
referred to above and while SAMA continued
to exist as a voluntary
association, it exercised administration and control over SAMATU,
which was treated as an operating division
of SAMA.
2.6
On 7 October 2002, MASA
trade union changed its name to SAMATU. All other aspects of
administration and control remained unchanged
and over the years
SAMATU concluded various collective bargaining agreements with
employers, other trade unions and bargaining councils.
It also
partnered with another trade union, DENOSA, representing the nursing
profession to obtain more organisational rights in terms
of the LRA.
2.7
After SAMATU had
obtained organisational rights in the public sector, it put in place
stop order facilities in order to collect trade
union subscriptions
from the PERSAL/PERSOL payroll system in respect of doctors employed
by the government. It needs to be
noted that doctors in private
practice would have no need to belong to a trade union (and might be
precluded from membership) while
doctors in government employ might
opt for membership of either or both SAMATU and SAMA. Trade union
membership is not compulsory.
There are therefore doctors in
government employ who might opt to only be a member of SAMA and not
of SAMATU. The figures reflecting
these options became apparent
only after litigation had ensued and will be referred to hereunder.
2.8
On 10 October 2019
SAMATU was placed under administration.
2.9
Up to the date
immediately prior to SAMATU being placed under administration, its
administration was in totality conducted by SAMA.
This included
the receipt of trade union dues and bargaining counsel fees into
SAMA’s bank account, but it also included the covering
of SAMATU’s
expenses as well as collective bargaining expenses from this same
account. There appears to have been a complete
commixtio
of funds and administration.
[3]
The “Van Niekerk
judgment”
3.1
Dissatisfied with the
level of co-operation (or level of obstruction) received from SAMA in
respect of the Administrator’s efforts
to “
take
control of all assets owned, held or administered by or on behalf of
the Trade Union
”,
the Administrator obtained an order on the Labour Court under case
number J1973/19.
3.2
The Administrator, for
purposes of the current application, relies on the following extract
of the judgment given in the Labour Court
by Van Niekerk J: “
[24]
… Given that the stop order deductions in place in respect of the
doctors employed in the public sector were deductions made
in terms
of section 13 of the LRA solely for the benefit of the union, the
union is entitled to a declaratory order to that effect,
as well as a
declaratory order to the effect that all employees in respect of whom
such stop orders were and are being made, are
union members, at least
for as long as they have not terminated their membership of the
union
”.
3.3
Pursuant to the above
finding, the learned judge in the Labour Court made the following
declarations as part of the order issued by
him: “
2.
It is declared that all amounts deducted in favour of the second
applicant (SAMATU) on the PERSAL payroll system pursuant
to the right
to the deduction of trade union subscriptions and levies in terms of
section 13
of the
Labour Relations Act, were
remitted in terms of
section 13(3)
to and for the account of the second applicant … .
3. It is declared that in the absence of any proof to the
contrary, all SAMA members in respect of whom such a stop order
deductions were and continued to be made through the PERSAL system,
are and remain members of the second applicant
”.
3.4
What must also be
understood, both in relation to the Administrator’s case, as well
as the declarations made in the Labour Court,
is that it is the
individual employee or doctor who has the authority to determine what
may or may not be deducted, via the PERSAL
system, from that
individual’s salary (either in terms of
section 13
of the LRA or
otherwise, except as statutorily prescribed).
3.5
Pursuant to the
judgment in the Labour Court, this exercise of personal authority
resulted in the following: the Administrator utilized
the judgment to
proceed from the premise that every doctor who had used the PERSAL
system to pay money to SAMA/SAMATU, was by default
a SAMATU member
and not a SAMA member at all. Once this view was made clear to
the doctors, 4 000 of the employed doctors
indicated that they
wished to remain SAMA members only. They have shifted the
payment of their SAMA membership from the PERSAL
stop order system to
direct debit orders. This constitutes “
proof
to the contrary”
as contemplated in paragraph 3 of the Labour Court order.
3.6
Apart from the 4 000
employed doctors who have already elected to cease PERSAL payments, a
further number of doctors have expressed
a desire to remain members
of SAMA and are in the process of changing their PERSAL instructions.
3.7
Even if one were to
rely on rounded off figures, of the 16 000 members of SAMA,
8 000 are doctors in private practice and
of the remaining 8 000
members, 4 000 chose to remain SAMA (and not SAMATU) members,
leaving only 4 000 members of
SAMATU falling in paragraph 3 of
the declaration issued in the Labour Court, i.e 25% of the initial
total membership.
[4]
The administrator’s
claim
4.1
It is against the above
backdrop that the Administrator’s claim must be adjudicated.
It is for an amount of some R307 million.
It encompasses the
total of all the PERSAL deductions historically made in terms of
section 13
of the LRA. It does not, however, account for the
portion of those amounts intended by the payers thereof, being the
individual
doctors, to be in respect of their SAMA membership
(irrespective of the mechanism whereby the funds have been deducted
or paid over
and whether this had been statutorily permitted or
not). Neither does it account for a calculation of what portion
of those
funds have since been disbursed in respect of SAMATU’s
expenses. It also does not take into account what portion of
those
funds have been disbursed in respect of collective bargaining
expenses incurred by SAMATU.
4.2
SAMA had commissioned a
forensic investigation to be conducted by Adams and Adams Forensic
Investigative Services (Pty) Ltd.
An affidavit by a Dr Van
Romburgh, a Chartered Accountant, together with a detailed report by
him has been produced. Both the
report and the affidavit are
extensive. The attempt made by these documents was to
“unscramble the omelette” or to separate
the
commixtio
of funds referred to in paragraph 2.9 above which has occurred due to
all the deducted funds having been paid into SAMA’s account.
The result of this detailed exercise was that, once contributions and
expenses have been properly apportioned between SAMA and SAMATU
and
the respective members, SAMATU, representing the employed doctors,
may be indebted to SAMA, representing its other members being
the
private doctors, in an amount of more than R 15, 5 million.
4.3
Even if this amount may
be open to some doubt and even if the Labour Court judgment is taken
as the justification for an initial starting
point of a claim for the
gross amount of historical deductions, once an accounting exercise is
done as to the nett amount actually
accrued in favour of SAMATU as
intended by those doctors who had authorized the deductions or a
calculation has been made of what
amount may be due by SAMATU to
SAMA, it cannot be found that it been established with a
preponderance of probabilities that SAMATU
(or the Administrator) is
a creditor of SAMA.
[5]
The legal position
and the application thereof
5.1
Section 81(1)(c)(ii)
of
the
Companies Act, 71 of 2008
, provides that a court may order a
solvent company to be would up if one or more of the company’s
creditors have applied to court
for a winding-up order.
5.2
The Administrator
further relies on the deeming provision created by
section
345(1)(iii)
of the “old” Companies Act, 61 of 1973. Read
with section 344 of that Act, it provides that a company is deemed to
be unable
to pay its debts as they become due and payable if such a
company has failed to pay, secure or compound a creditor’s claim
for
three weeks after it has been served with a written notice to do
so.
5.3
However, the deeming
provision is reliant on the existence of an undisputed claim, for in
the absence thereof, there can be no creditor
entitled to rely on the
deeming provisions or entitled to claim a winding-up of the company.
5.4
The case law is further
clear that, where the claim is disputed on
bona
fide
and reasonable
grounds, a winding-up order should not be granted. A company
need not prove the absence of a claim, but merely
the disputing
thereof on those grounds. This principle is known as the
“Badenhorst Rule” after the decision in
Badenhorst
v Northern Construction Enterprises (Pty) Ltd
1956 (2) SA 346
(T) at 347H – 348C.
5.5
The application of the
Badenhorst Rule, particularly at the stage where a final winding-up
order is sought, requires the Administrator
to convince the court on
a balance of probabilities of the existence and extent of his claim,
in the case of it being disputed. This
comprises of a two-stage
enquiry. The first stage is the enquiry into the
bona
fid
es of the
dispute and the second is that of the determination of the
reasonableness of the dispute regarding the claim itself. See
Hülse-Reutter v HEG
Consulting Enterprises (Pty) Ltd
1998 (2) SA 208
(C) at 218F – 220C.
5.6
In respect of the first
stage, both parties accuse each other. The Adminstrator complains
that SAMA is obstructive and disregards
the contents of the Labour
Court declarations and on the other hand SAMA accuses the
Administrator of abusing the process of this
court in pursuing a
termination of a voluntary association as an ulterior purpose to
seeking a winding-up of a non-profit company
for liquidation
purposes. On the papers before me, I am unable to find that the
disputing of the claim has been raised
mala
fide
by SAMA.
5.7
In respect of the
second stage, one must appreciate that the minutiae of the disputes
regarding the calculation of the actual amounts
run into an extensive
number of pages. It is not only not the kind of dispute which
should be determined by way of motion proceedings,
but the extent
thereof indicate that the simplistic application of the declarations
made by the Labour Court, in the fashion that
the Administrator seeks
to do, is not only inappropriate but does not reflect the true or
correct extent of SAMA’s liability.
Put differently, a
serious dispute of fact has been raised in respect of the
Administrator’s claim. Even if the dispute may only
in the end
relate to the extent thereof, that dispute impacts on the question of
whether the court is dealing with a solvent or insolvent
company.
The dispute has not been raised without foundation and, despite the
Labour Court’s declarators, it strikes at the
heart of the
Administrator’s
locus
standi
as
creditor. See also in this regard the
locus
classicus
of
Kalil
v Decotex
1988 (1)
SA 943
(A). I am therefore similarly convinced that the
“defence” has been made on sufficiently reasonable grounds to
satisfy
the Badenhorst Rule. The result is that a winding-up order
should not be granted.
5.8
Even if I may be wrong
in either or both of the above conclusions, the court has an
overriding discretion to exercise in respect of
the granting of a
winding-up order, particularly in circumstances where the
Administrator, in the alternative ground relied on, claims
that it is
just and equitable that SAMA be wound-up.
5.9
In considering the
judicial exercise of the discretion vested in this court, the
following are taken into account:
-
despite the
declarations made in the Labour Court, the current situation was one
brought about by the acquiescence by SAMA, SAMATU
and their
respective or joint members over a number of years;
-
during those years, the
administration and the discharging (or support in the discharging) of
SAMATU’s objectives and obligations
had been done by SAMA;
-
these historical facts
indicate that there was over the years no such pressing urgency
regarding the claims now advanced by the Administrator
that they need
be resolved in a winding-up application, rather than by way of an
action (or mediation or settlement). The refusal
of a winding-up
order would not finally determine SAMATU’s claims, if any, and
would therefore not prejudice it, save for whatever
delay may result
as a consequence;
-
there is no dispute
that all future union dues to be deducted in terms of section 13 of
the LRA would go to SAMATU and SAMATU only.
There is therefore
no continuing prejudice, should a winding-up order not be granted.
-
on the other hand, the
winding-up of SAMA would prejudice a great number of doctors,
including members of SAMATU and would deprive
them of benefits they
currently receive. A winding-up of SAM would terminate all the
doctors’ access to services beyond that which
SAMATU provides,
including continued medical education;
-
the doctors who would
be prejudiced by a winding-up order are innocent in respect of the
creation of the preceding events or the current
dispute.
5.10
Based on the aforesaid,
I cannot find that it would be just and equitable to wind up SAMA.
I therefore exercise the court’s
discretion, based on the facts set
out earlier and the considerations mentioned above, against the
granting of a winding-up order.
5.11
Having regard to the
respective contentions, I am of the view that this is one of those
cases where costs should not follow the event,
but that each party
should pay its own costs.
[6]
Order
1.
The application is
dismissed.
2.
Each party is to pay
its own costs.
N
DAVIS
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng Division, Pretoria
Date
of Hearing: 8 March 2022
Judgment
delivered: 28 March 2022
APPEARANCES:
For
Applicant:
Adv PA Swanepoel SC together with
Adv
DJ Groenewald
Attorney
for Applicant:
Serfontein Viljoen &
Swart, Pretoria
For
the 1
st
Respondent:
Adv
DM Fine SC
together with
Adv
MJ Cooke
Attorneys for the
1
st
Respondent: Welman &
Bloem Inc, Pretoria
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