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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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[2022] ZAGPPHC 230
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## Commissioner for the South African Revenue Services v Louis Pasteur Investments (Pty) Ltd and Others (12194/2017)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 230;
2022 (5) SA 179 (GP) (11 April 2022)
Commissioner for the South African Revenue Services v Louis Pasteur Investments (Pty) Ltd and Others (12194/2017)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 230;
2022 (5) SA 179 (GP) (11 April 2022)
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sino date 11 April 2022
IN THE HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
(1) REPORTABLE: YES
(2) OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: YES
(3) REVISED: YES
DATE:
11 April 2022
Case
No. 12194/2017
In the matter
between:
COMMISSIONER
FOR THE SOUTH AFRICAN REVENUE SERVICES
Applicant
And
LOUIS PASTEUR
INVESTMENTS (PTY) LTD
(IN
PROVISIONAL LIQUIDATION)
1
ST
Respondent
PRAKKE,
ADRIAAN EVERT N.O
2
ND
Respondent
THE AFFECTED
PERSONS RELATING TO
LOUIS PASTEUR
INVESTMENTS (PTY) LTD
3
RD
Respondent
NAUDE,
ETIENNE JACQUES
4
TH
Respondent
LOUIS PASTEUR
GROUP (PTY) LTD
Affected
Person
MIA, ZUBEIDA
ALLI
Intervening
Party
Coram:
Millar J
Heard
on
:
23 & 24 February 2022
Delivered:
11 April 2022 – This judgment
was handed down electronically by circulation to the parties'
representatives by email, by being
uploaded to the
CaseLines
system
of the GLD and by release to SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down
is deemed to be 10H00 on 11 April 2022.
Summary:
Company
Law – Business Rescue and Liquidation – Lifting of moratorium on
legal proceedings - Creditor’s right to apply for liquidation
at
any time on good cause shown – Section 132(2)(a)(ii) – Statutory
confirmation of Court’s inherent right to hear application
for
liquidation notwithstanding the adoption and implementation of a
business rescue – Business rescue plan a sham designed to
subvert
rights of creditors –– Practitioner is an officer of the Court
and obliged to apply for liquidation or at least not oppose
liquidation in circumstances where no prospect of a better dividend
to creditors through continued implementation of the plan –
Opposition unreasonable - and meriting censure by court -
final winding up order granted with punitive order for costs.
ORDER
It
is Ordered
:
1.
The First Respondent is
placed in final winding up in the hands of the Master of the High
Court.
2.
The Second Respondent
personally
(de bonis
propriis
) is
ordered to pay the costs of the application from 5 March 2021 to date
of judgment on the scale as between attorney and client
save as set
out in 3 below.
3.
The Second Respondent
personally
(de bonis
propriis)
and the
intervening party is ordered, jointly and severally, the one paying
the other to be absolved, to pay the costs for 23 and
24 February
2022 on the scale as between attorney and client.
4.
Save as set out in
paragraphs 2 and 3 above and not already provided for in the court
orders granted on 4 May 2018 and 4 March 2021,
all costs are to be
costs in the liquidation.
JUDGMENT
MILLAR
J
1.
The applicant (‘SARS’)
seeks an order for the final winding up the First Respondent,
Louis Pasteur Investments (Pty) Ltd
(‘LPI’). It is not
disputed that LPI is presently insolvent and unable to pay its
debts. This notwithstanding, this
Court was also called upon to
decide an application for intervention, an application for rescission
of the order converting the business
rescue proceedings into
liquidation proceedings and also the discharge of the provisional
winding up order.
2.
During
June 2012, LPI was placed in business rescue
[1]
and a formal business rescue plan adopted on 15 November 2012.
From this date onwards, the Fourth Respondent (‘Mr. Naude’)
the
business rescue practitioner, proceeded with the business rescue.
It is a particular feature of business rescue proceedings
that for so
long as those proceedings endure, there is, in terms of section
133(1) of the Act, a general moratorium on all legal
proceedings.
3.
Notwithstanding the
general moratorium, various legal actions were brought against LPI by
secured creditors, being mainly commercial
banks in whose favour
mortgage bonds had been registered over immovable properties owned by
LPI.
4.
In
each instance where there were such proceedings, Mr. Naude was able
to take steps to settle the liabilities and the litigation.
The
present application was brought on 20 February 2017, 5 years into the
business rescue plan. SARS brought the application
in 2 parts
and initially sought leave to serve the application by way of
substituted service on all the affected persons
[2]
and having obtained an order on 4 May 2018, served on the affected
parties and then proceeded to set the matter down for an order
converting the business rescue to liquidation proceedings and for the
winding up of LPI.
5.
On 16 October 2018, a
few months after the order authorizing service on the affected
parties was granted, Mr. Naude resigned as the
business rescue
practitioner of LPI. His resignation had as its direct
consequence, a delay in the proceedings.
6.
Although Mr. Naude had
resigned as business rescue practitioner on 16 October 2018, it was
not until 11 February 2019 that the board
of directors of LPI had
resolved to appoint the Second Respondent (‘Mr. Prakke’) as
business rescue practitioner - this notwithstanding
the fact that he
was not an accredited business rescue practitioner at the time.
7.
No explanation has ever
been furnished for why the directors of LPI took 5 months to resolve
to appoint a new business rescue practitioner,
who was not even an
accredited business rescue practitioner at the time of his
appointment. There is similarly no explanation
as to how LPI
operated during this period.
8.
Coincidently
on resignation as the business rescue practitioner of LPI, Mr. Naude
then took up appointment as the business rescue
practitioner for
Louis Pasteur Hospital Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Mr. Prakke who had been
a director of that company which now also
was placed under business
rescue, resigned as a director and then sought accreditation and was
appointed as the business rescue practitioner
of LPI on 4 May
2019
[3]
.
9.
On 7 August 2019, when
the matter came before the Court, the application for the provisional
winding up of LPI did not proceed.
The Court ordered Mr. Prakke
to produce a report by 5 December 2019. It was only on 16 March
2020 that Mr. Prakke issued his
report. The reasons for not
complying timeously were laid at the door of Mr. Naude. In
consequence of this report, further
affidavits were filed and the
application was eventually heard in October 2020.
10.
By this time more than
8 years had passed since SARS had obtained its initial judgment and 3
years since the present application had
been launched.
11.
On 4 March 2021, an
order was granted which inter alia converted the business rescue
proceedings to liquidation proceedings by making
an order in terms of
section 132 (2)(a)(ii) and also placing LPI in provisional
liquidation.
12.
The Court also granted
a punitive order for costs against Mr. Naude. This order is
presently the subject matter of an appeal
to a full Court of this
division. SARS, besides seeking the final winding up order,
also seeks a punitive order for costs
de
bonis propriis
against Mr. Prakke.
13.
At the end of October
2021, the application for the granting of a final order was set down
for hearing as a special motion.
Two weeks before the hearing,
the intervening party (‘Ms. Mia’), brought an application to
intervene in the proceedings and for
the rescission of the order that
set aside the business rescue proceedings and converted them into
liquidation proceedings.
14.
The basis upon which
this application was brought was that she, as an ‘affected person’,
had not been given notice of the hearing
in October 2020. The
order converting the business rescue to liquidation proceedings,
which was a final order and which was
not the subject of an appeal by
either LPI or Mr. Prakke or any other affected party, was granted in
her absence and on that basis
ought to be rescinded. Subject to
success in obtaining a rescission, Ms. Mia made common cause with LPI
and Mr. Prakke in opposing
the granting of a final order for the
winding up of LPI.
15.
SARS did not oppose Ms.
Mia’s intervention but did oppose the relief she sought in the main
application. It was on this basis
that an order was made
granting her leave to intervene at the commencement of the hearing.
16.
The opposition to the
granting of the final order of liquidation was argued on 3 bases.
17.
Firstly, that the order
converting the business rescue proceedings into liquidation
proceedings should be rescinded because an affected
person (Ms. Mia)
had not been given notice of the proceedings in October 2020.
18.
Secondly, that as a
matter of law it was not competent for a creditor such as SARS to
apply to Court to convert business rescue proceedings
into
liquidation proceedings – such an application, so the argument
went, could only be made by the business rescue practitioner
acting
in that capacity.
19.
Thirdly, that having
regard to the report of Mr. Prakke, the business was in fact possibly
capable of being ‘rescued’ in the 8
months between the time of
the hearing of the application on 23 February 2022 and the expiry of
the 10-year period of the business
rescue plan on 15 November 2022.
20.
SARS argued that the
entire business rescue plan in respect of LPI was nothing more than a
sham. It was a
winding up of a
hopelessly insolvent company clothed as a business rescue.
21.
The only beneficiaries, aside those
creditors fortunate enough to have security, were the debenture
holders and business rescuer.
This was specifically to the
prejudice of SARS.
22.
Before dealing with
each of the arguments, it is apposite to set out the circumstances of
LPI from the time that it was placed in
business rescue to the
present.
23.
LPI is one of 19
interlinked entities owned and controlled by the Adam Family Trust
through Louis Pasteur Holdings (Pty) Ltd.
LPI is registered as
being in the
‘
Financial
Intermediation, Insurance, Real Estate and Business Services’
industry. It conducted business as –
‘
an
investment company, comprising the borrowing of money through the
issue of debentures, and the on lending of money, primarily to
subsidiaries’
–
both
its own subsidiaries and to others within the wider Louis Pasteur
Holdings (Pty) Ltd group.
24.
On
29 January 2010 and 12 December 2011 respectively, SARS obtained
judgments in terms of sections 172 and 174 of the Tax Administration
Act
[4]
and section 40(2)(a) of the Value Added Tax Act
[5]
against LPI. The total of the judgments obtained in 2010 was R3 485
340,59 and in 2011 was R10 230 024,21. The combined total was
by the
end of 2011 totalled R13 715 364,80. Neither of these 2 judgments
have ever been challenged and remain presently unimpeached.
25.
On 20 June 2012, LPI
was placed under business rescue and the final rescue business plan
adopted on 15 November of that year.
At a meeting in October
2012 all attending creditors had approved a plan, the crux of which
was that ‘
debt
was to be converted to Equity in the Company, or in any other Company
where applicable’
and
that the plan would be applied for a period of 10 years.
26.
During the course of
its business in the period preceding business rescue, LPI had issued
debentures to investors in the amount of
R123 million.
According to Mr. Prakke, by the time business rescue proceedings had
commenced in 2012, most of the debentures
had been repaid although
there was an amount of R87 459 301.00 of debenture
liability which was still unpaid when the plan
was adopted. By
the time the present application came before court in October 2020,
an amount of R53 million in respect of
this initial liability was
still outstanding.
27.
Initially while under
business rescue, two disputed issues arose. The first was
whether all debenture holders had in fact become
shareholders and the
second, was the amount of SARS claim. By converting the
debenture holders to shareholders, most of the
disclosed unsecured
debt of LPI was extinguished and also by including the SARS claim in
the sum of R5 million and then recording
it as ‘disputed’, an
otherwise insolvent enterprise was, after the adoption of the plan
presented as one for which business rescue
was entirely appropriate
and which would achieve its purpose over the following 10 years.
28.
SARS contended from the
outset that it was never informed of the intention to place LPI in
business rescue and was never invited to
any of the meetings prior to
the adoption of the plan. There is merit to this contention.
When Mr. Naude was requested
to provide proof that SARS had been
notified, he was unable to do so. Rather, he sought to suggest
that a person employed by
another creditor who had been notified and
had sometime later then been employed by SARS, had received
notification on behalf of
SARS. Significantly, the SARS’s
judgments in the sum of R13 715 364.80 were not included when the
plan was conceived or adopted.
29.
Furthermore, after the
business rescue had commenced – albeit unknown to SARS an audit of
LPI for the 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009 and
2010 tax years was undertaken.
LPI was notified of this audit on 18 December 2012. The audit
was finalised by 30 April 2013.
As a result the amount of the
claims by SARS were revised.
30.
The outcome of this
audit were new assessments which were comprehensively motivated and
explained in a written report to LPI with
reference to each of the
years under review. The last audited financial statements submitted
by LPI were for 2010 and so these SARS
assessments were based on
LPI’s own audited financial statements.
31.
It is common cause that
these were the last audited financial statements ever submitted by
LPI or even produced. The last ten years
in respect of which no
financial statements have been audited represent a period for which
SARS has yet to make any assessment.
32.
The
liability of LPI as of 30 April 2013 was now an additional R242 392
687,20. Considering the tax judgments and new assessments
the
total was R256 108 052,00. Consonant with the approach to the
judgments obtained in 2010 and 2011, the 2013 assessments have
also
remained unimpeached
[6]
.
33.
Surprisingly, no steps
were ever taken to rescind the judgments obtained or to pursue
objections or appeals to the assessments.
Despite this, only
once the present application was brought, Mr. Naude and then Mr.
Prakke sought to impugn the judgments and assessments
– without any
substantive basis for doing so other than to try and relegate SARS
claim to being a disputed claim which should be
disregarded in the
determination of whether a final winding up order should be granted.
34.
The
present application is not the first litigation initiated against LPI
post business rescue. During the period from the adoption
of
the plan in November 2012 until the end of 2016, secured creditors
[7]
– mainly commercial banks at various stages threatened or brought
applications to liquidate LPI. However, in each of those
cases
funds were ‘obtained’ in order to discharge the debt to those
secured creditors and to procure the settlement or withdrawal
of
those particular proceedings.
35.
Turning now to the
arguments raised in opposing the granting of the orders sought.
36.
Firstly, Ms. Mia argued
that she was unaware of the current proceedings and that the
application had not been served on her.
Her assertion was that
‘
approximately
two (2) weeks ago, it came to my knowledge that LPI was placed under
provisional liquidation in terms of an order by
this Honourable Court
on 4 March 2021.’
And that
‘
in
this regard I communicated with the business rescue practitioner of
LPI, Mr. AE Prakke who I came to know in that capacity since
his
appointment in May 2019. Since 2019, I spoke on several
occasions with Mr Prakke with regard to my claim outstanding under
business rescue in respect of which he assisted me and other
investors who were in the same position as I am, to comply with the
obligations of the business rescue plan of LPI, to ourselves as
investors.’
37.
All
affected parties, which include Ms. Mia, received service of the
application by substituted service in consequence of the order
granted on 4 May 2018. Both Mr. Naude and Mr. Prakke in their
respective affidavits asserted that they had reported to affected
persons on the status of the business rescue proceedings as required
by Section 132(3)(a) and Section 132(3)(b) of the Act
[8]
.
Proof of such reporting formed part of the papers filed of record.
38.
In Mr. Prakke’s
report of 21 August 2020 to the affected parties he specifically
refers to the present proceedings. The assertions
by Ms. Mia
that she did not know about the present proceedings are simply not
borne out by her own version that she had been in communication
with
Mr. Prakke since his appointment in 2019 on a number of occasions or
the report of Mr. Prakke to affected persons.
39.
Ms. Mia’s application
to intervene in the present proceedings was brought on the eve of the
hearing, it seems to me that this was
to serve no other purpose than
to facilitate the hearing of the argument that the court ought not to
have granted the order that
it did in terms of section
132(2)(a)(ii).
40.
Neither LPI nor Mr.
Prakke has appealed this particular order. The only way in
which the argument could be made (in the event
that the argument was
countered by an argument of acquiescence) was if an affected party
applied to intervene and then sought the
rescission of that
particular order.
41.
Ms.
Mia failed in her application, other than to make common cause with
LPI and Mr. Prakke, to set out any prima facie defence
[9]
to the granting of a final winding up order.
42.
I
find that Ms. Mia was given notice of these proceedings and was kept
appraised of the course of the proceedings by Mr. Prakke.
For
this reason, her failure to intervene when the matter was heard in
October 2020 was advertent and it certainly cannot be said
that the
order granted in terms of section 132(2)(a)(ii) was granted in her
absence
[10]
.
43.
Secondly, can a
creditor apply to court for an order that the court convert business
rescue proceedings into liquidation proceedings
or can this only be
done by the business rescue practitioner?
44.
Section 132(2) of the
Act provides:
‘
(2)
Business rescue
proceedings end when-
(a)
the
Court-
(i) sets
aside the resolution or Order that began those proceedings; or
(ii)
has converted the proceedings to liquidation proceedings;
(b)
the
practitioner has filed with the Commission a notice of the
termination of business rescue proceedings; or
(c)
a
business rescue plan has been-
(i)
proposed
and rejected in terms of Part D of this Chapter, and no affected
person has acted to extend the proceedings in any manner
contemplated
in section 153; or
(ii)
adopted in terms of Part D of this Chapter, and the practitioner has
subsequently filed
a notice of substantial implementation of that
plan’.
45.
The Act clearly
envisages 3 separate scenarios in which business rescue proceedings,
once commenced in terms of section 132(1) may
be terminated.
45.1
The
first is provided for in section 132(2)(a) where the court either
sets aside the resolution or court order that commenced the
proceedings or orders the conversion of the business rescue to
liquidation proceedings.
[11]
45.2
The
second is where the business rescue practitioner files for the
termination of the proceedings
[12]
.
45.3
The
third is where the business rescue plan ‘falls away’ either
because it was not adopted or alternatively because it was
substantially
implemented.
[13]
46.
From
the plain meaning
[14]
of section 132(2), it is readily apparent that each of the procedures
set out in sub sections (a), (b) and (c) respectively are separate
and distinct and each is to be considered and applied as such
[15]
.
47.
It was argued on behalf
of LPI and Mr. Prakke that, properly construed, section 132(2) means
that only the business rescue practitioner
can apply for the
conversion of the business rescue into liquidation proceedings.
48.
It was argued that the
only way in which the provisions of section 132(2)(a)(ii) could be
invoked is if there were first an application
in terms of section
141(2)(a)(ii) by the business rescue practitioner himself.
49.
In
this regard I was referred to a judgment of the full court of this
division in The Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service
v
Primrose Goldmines (Pty) Ltd & Others
[16]
which it was argued confirmed the judgment in Sibakhulu Construction
(Pty) Ltd v Wedgewood Village Golf Country Estate (Pty) Ltd
(Nedbank
Ltd and Others intervening).
[17]
50.
In the former case, the
issue for decision was whether or not the business rescue
practitioners were still in office at the time that
they themselves
brought an application for liquidation and in the latter, whether or
not liquidation proceedings which had been instituted
prior to the
company being placed under business rescue were to be suspended
pending the determination of an application to place
the company
under business rescue in terms of section 131(1) of the Act.
51.
Both cases are
distinguishable on the facts – in the present matter there is no
dispute about the locus standi of any of the parties
before the court
and the application was brought some years after the plan had already
been adopted and implemented.
52.
It was also argued that
since the SARS judgment and claims arose prior to the adoption of the
business rescue plan, in terms of section
152(2) read together with
section 152(4) meant that the SARS claim could not be enforced except
to the extent provided in the business
rescue plan. This
against the background of SARS not having been given notice of the
business rescue or adoption of the plan
as well as the
understatement, as a disputed provision, of the SARS claim at the
time that the plan was adopted. It was argued
that had SARS
wished to challenge the plan, then that is the procedure that it
ought to have followed.
53.
I
was referred to the judgment of the Supreme Court of Appeal in Van
Zyl v Auto Commodities (Pty) Ltd.
[18]
The paragraphs I was referred to deal with the contrast in language
between section 154(1) and 154(2) which pertain to the
discharge of
debts and claims. Both sections speak specifically to the
enforcement of debt, a situation distinguishable from
the present
application which is not a proceeding for the enforcement of any
debt.
54.
It
was held in
Ex
Parte:
Target Shelf 284 CC (in business rescue): Commissioner, South African
Revenue Services and Another v Cawood N O and Others
[19]
that:
‘
[72]
The Act does not allow for an automatic termination of business
rescue proceedings. Even though section 132 provides for
circumstances under which business rescue proceedings end, there is
still a process which must ensue in order for the business rescue
process to be finalized. When business rescue proceedings
come
to an end, either a court shall have set aside the resolution or
order that began the proceedings; or converted the proceedings
to
liquidation proceedings; or the business rescue plan was proposed and
rejected and the practitioner (s) subsequently filed a notice
of
substantial implementation of that plan. SARS and Business
Partners are aware of this, they have as such approached this
Court
in terms of section 132(2)(c)(i) for a declaratory order to terminate
the business rescue proceedings and in the same breath
seek an order
in terms of section 132(2)(a)(ii) to convert the business rescue
proceedings to liquidation proceedings.
[73]
In the Primrose judgment above, I took a view that the
practitioner
in that judgment was the person suited to apply to court for the
discontinuance of the business rescue proceedings,
however, on a
proper reading of section 132(2)(a) it is not specifically stated who
must apply to have the business rescue proceedings
set aside or
converted to liquidation proceedings. I am, therefore, of the
view that in the circumstances of this matter, the
creditors are
entitled to apply for conversion of the business rescue proceedings
to liquidation proceedings and such application
ought to be granted’
55.
This argument also
disregards the provisions of section 133(1) which does not provide a
‘blanket’ moratorium which once ‘wrapped
around a company’
offers an absolute and indefinite protection against action by
creditors.
56.
The moratorium is of
general application but may be lifted. Section 133(1) of the
Act which provides that:
‘
General
moratorium on legal proceedings against company.
(1)
During
business rescue proceedings, no legal proceeding, including
enforcement action, against the company, or in relation to any
property belonging to the company, or lawfully in its possession, may
be commenced or proceeded with in any forum, except-
(a)
.
. .
(b)
with the leave of the court and in
accordance with any terms of the court considers suitable.’
57.
SARS,
obtained an order
[20]
lifting the moratorium in terms of section 133(1)(b) at the same time
that it sought the order seeking permission to serve the application
on affected persons by way of substituted service.
58.
In the circumstances,
properly considered, section 132(2)(a)(ii) does provide a separate
and distinct way in which business rescue
can be ended and that in
the circumstances of the present application, the order sought by
SARS was in my view, correctly granted.
59.
The last and third
argument advanced on behalf of LPI and Mr. Prakke, was that LPI is
still capable of being rescued and that notwithstanding
that it is
presently both factually and commercially insolvent, a final order of
winding up ought not to be granted. Various
grounds were
advanced as to how LPI could possibly between February 2022 and
November 2022 become solvent and pay its debts.
60.
What is business rescue
and how could LPI after 9 years of business rescue now become solvent
and pay its debts?
61.
Generally:
‘
Business
rescue is designed to resolve a company’s future direction
quickly. An independent and suitably qualified person,
referred
to as a business rescue practitioner, takes full control of the
company to try to work out a way to save the business.
Where a
turnaround is unlikely to succeed, the aim is to administer the
affairs of the company in a way that results in a better
return for
the creditors than they would have received if the company had been
liquidated’
[21]
and
‘
Modern
corporate rescue and reorganization seeks to take advantage of the
reality that in many cases an enterprise not only has substantial
value as a going concern, but its going concern value exceeds its
liquidation value. Through judicial bankruptcy procedures,
reorganization seeks to maximise, preserve and possibly even enhance
the value of a debtors enterprise, in order to maximise payment
to
the creditors of the distressed debtor.’
[22]
62.
Section 128(1)(b)
defines business rescue as follows:
‘
(b)
‘
business
rescue’
means proceedings to facilitate the rehabilitation of a company that
is financially distressed by providing for-
(i)
The
temporary supervision of the company, and of the management of its
affairs, business and property;
(ii)
a
temporary moratorium on the rights of the claimants against the
company or in respect of property in its possession; and
(iii)
the
development and implementation, if approved, of a plan to rescue the
company by restructuring its affairs, business, property,
debt and
other liabilities, and equity in a manner that maximizes the
likelihood of the company continuing in existence on a solvent
basis
or, if it is not possible for the company to so continue in
existence, results in a better return for the company’s creditors
or shareholders than would result from the immediate liquidation of
the company’
63.
Two of the features of
LPI’s adopted business rescue plan bear consideration.
63.1
Firstly,
the debenture holders exchanged their claims
[23]
against LPI for equity in the form of shares. Once they did so,
they ceased to be creditors and then became holders of securities
in
LPI.
[24]
63.2
Secondly,
is the duration of the business plan: - 10 years
[25]
.
It is unclear as to how the unsecured creditors and in particular the
debenture holders decided that it would be in their
and LPI’s
interests for a business rescue plan of such long duration. It is
clear from a consideration of sections 128 to 137 of
the Act which
deal with business rescue proceedings, as a whole that such
proceedings were designed and intended to be implemented
within a
limited period of time. Regard need only be had to the
definition of ‘business rescue’ in section 128(b) and to
the use
of the word ‘temporary’
[26]
in sections 128(1)(b)(i) and (ii).
63.3
Furthermore,
section 132(3) of the Act sets the norm for the completion of the
process of business rescue at 3 months from when the
proceedings
start.
[27]
64.
When first appointed
and after being ordered to deliver a report, Mr. Prakke raised a
number of issues and these included inter alia:
64.1
Why the claims by SARS were not properly investigated or objected
to
by Mr. Naude and the directors?
64.2
Why LPI continuously entered into contracts which caused financial
loss and which were unexplained?
64.3
The circumstances under which loans were provided to LPI by other
group associated entities without any transfer of underlying assets
with the result that claims were created with no value being
provided.
64.4
Why Mr. Naude allowed a former director to withdraw large amounts
of
money from the bank account of LPI which amounts were paid into that
director’s account?
64.5
Why the former director remained in control of the finances of LPI
and operated the bank accounts of LPI for his own benefit?
64.6
Although LPI owned various improved immovable properties, a number
of
these were occupied by the former director and family members.
No rental was paid for the occupation of these properties
and neither
were the monthly bond installments or municipal rates and taxes
paid. In some instances, even though the bonds
had been paid up
to August 2018, thereafter they were not and, in some instances, the
municipal rates and taxes had not been paid
for up to 7 years.
64.7
In 2015 a decision was taken, while Mr. Naude was still the business
rescue practitioner for LPI, to sell one of the properties and to
settle what was owed on the mortgage bond of that property to ABSA
as
well as other unsecured liabilities owed to ABSA.
64.8
It was Mr. Prakke’s opinion that the decision to sell the property
and to settle the other secured liabilities owed to ABSA was done in
circumstances where the former director had stood surety or
was
personally exposed to liability.
65.
None of the questions
raised by Mr. Prakke in the initial report have been addressed and
the true extent of the consequences of events
and conduct during the
tenure of Mr. Naude in the 6 years that he was the business rescue
practitioner remain unrevealed.
66.
The contents of the
initial report made clear that the business rescue plan had not
achieved its purpose to any degree in the preceeding
8 years up to
the time of the preparation of the report. Surprisingly, Mr.
Prakke then opposed the grant of the final order
of winding up –
making a volte face in which he then formed the view that in the year
or so remaining of the 10 year plan, LPI
could be restored to
solvency.
67.
His view was premised
on the basis that at the time of the onset of business rescue
proceedings, LPI had been the registered owner
of 11 different
immovable properties. LPI had no cash flow to speak of and that
it was necessary to dispose of those properties
in order to pursue
the business rescue proceedings.
68.
This had been brought
about, at least until Mr. Prakke was appointed as business rescue
practitioner in 2019 by reason of:
68.1
The former director of LPI being in de facto control of the Louis
Pasteur Group of companies and was in fact still exercising full
control over LPI .
68.2
The former director having managed the affairs of the group and used
the bank accounts of LPI to enrich himself.
68.3
The former director having been finally sequestrated.
68.4
No immediate cash resources being available to the company and that
the former director and his family members had acted in concert
through other entities to maintain control of the assets of the group
and in particular LPI to the prejudice of the creditors and other
affected persons.
68.5
The steps taken by the former director and his family members to
interfere with the discharge of his duties and to prevent the sale of
assets.
68.6
The fact that by August 2020 – 6 of the 11
[28]
properties had been sold
69.
In a comprehensive
report submitted to the affected persons on 21 August 2020, it was
recorded that:
‘
Funding
for the administration of the company and for opposing litigation
The
BRP needs funding for the following reasons if he is to rescue this
company and pay creditors and investors their money:
12.1
To pay administration costs,
12.2
To pay legal cost specifically to oppose the liquidation application
of SARS and the opposition to the Applicants adventurous and
opportunistic application.
12.3
To make payment to persons to assist in drafting financial
records
and statements which are essential for the proper management of the
company, opposing of the Sars liquidation application
and to verify
the claims of creditors of which a number seems to be fraudulently
and or collusively made.
12.4
To investigate where the assets of the company are as the assets
have
been sold or transferred without receiving value. In this
regard, millions of Rands worth of assets were merely transfers
[sic]
or “sold” under dubious circumstances. Linked to this is
also the collective income streams linked to these substantial
assets.
12.5
To enable the BRP to properly and diligently perform his function
as
BRP of the company.’
70.
In addition, this
report that was disclosed to affected persons, that in respect of the
unsold properties, there were outstanding
mortgage bonds of R4.2
million due to Investec Bank Ltd and R3 million to Nedbank Ltd.
There were also outstanding municipal
rates and taxes of
approximately R1 759 000.00.
71.
Against all the
liabilities, he indicated that a final demand had been issued to
Louis Pasteur Holdings (Pty) Ltd for R135 million
in respect of
outstanding interest on debentures. I was informed from the bar
during the argument that this company too had
been placed under
business rescue.
72.
By the time Mr. Prakke
deposed to the affidavit of 28 July 2021, he had also ascertained
that:
’
12.1.2
Apart from the fact that the company is the owner of extremely
valuable assets and
on the basis that the company is possessed in
terms of the book values forming part of the business rescue plan, a
reasonable net
asset value which is ascertainable from the
documentation available to me;
12.1.3
Both the companies Louis Pasteur Holdings (Pty) Ltd and First City
Property
1 (Pty) Ltd is indebted to LPI collectively in the sum of
almost R1 billion even though First City Properties has since been
liquidated,
the claim against Louis Pasteur Holdings still exist and
will be collected. Even if only 10% to 20% is realized, the
company
will pay all of its liabilities and retain sufficient capital
to continue as a going concern with a large and attractive available
tax redemption
12.1.4
Moreover, the two (2) entities liable to LPI have fixed property of
real value
and as soon as these claims have been collected under
business rescue, the available proceeds derived will be sufficient to
settle
the claim of the Applicant as stated, and other creditors the
true quantum of which is much lower in terms of the evidence set out
herein above;
12.1.5
In terms of the evidence presented by me [sic] arising from the
investigations
set out in my report, there are immovable assets
available in the estate in terms of the remaining immovable property
of which LPI
is the owner;
12.1.6
I [sic] further identified substantial claims, the particulars of
which are
set out in detail in my report and in respect of which I in
terms of my evidence in the answering affidavit, demonstrated are
collectable
and will render a substantial income sufficient to pay
the company’s liabilities in full.
And
12.1.30
Apart from the banks as the secured creditors and the Applicant, the
erstwhile debenture
holders invested monies in the company in the sum
of approximately R 53 million. These debenture holders who have
been translated
into preference shareholders in terms of the business
rescue plan, are entitled to redeem those preferent shares and
accumulated
dividends thereunder;’
73.
Unaudited financial
statements were obtained by Mr. Prakke for the 2015 and 2016
financial years. These offer no insight into
the true state of
LPI’s affairs and make no provision whatsoever, even though income
is disclosed in those years, for the payment
of any taxes to SARS let
alone to provide properly or at all for the judgment or claims of
SARS. The financial statements are
of no assistance and only
serve, in their brevity, to obfuscate the true financial position of
LPI during those financial years.
74.
There
is no doubt on any consideration of the financial status of LPI that
it is hopelessly insolvent
[29]
and that all things being equal, the granting of a final winding up
order is apposite. In such circumstances, the court has
a
limited discretion to refuse such an order.
[30]
75.
It
was argued on behalf of LPI that the discretion should be exercised
in its favour as section 128(1)(f)
[31]
created a threshold which disregarded factual or commercial
insolvency and that notwithstanding such factual or commercial
insolvency,
the continuation of the current business rescue of LPI
was apposite.
76.
It may well be that
there are circumstances where the discretion could be exercised in
favour of LPI. However, having regard
to the provisions of
section 128(1)(f)(i) and 128(1)(f)(ii), the threshold referred to in
that section applies only in respect of
a period of 6 months -
the 6 month period can only apply from the time that the resolution
is passed to place the company in
business rescue and the adoption of
the plan – it can never mean that the threshold is to apply at any
given time on a prospective
basis – such an interpretation would
necessarily mean that the process could continue indefinitely.
77.
The argument for
refusing to grant a final winding up order, besides disputing without
any basis the judgment and claims of SARS,
the single biggest
creditor, is premised on the sale of the remaining assets and also
the collection of debts. At least some
of those debts are owed
by companies that are also under business rescue.
78.
Axiomatically a
business rescue plan cannot be premised on the business being denuded
of its assets necessary for it to function as
a business. No
plan which adopts this course of action can ever be regarded as a
proper plan as provided for in section 150
and would certainly not
meet the requirement of section 150(2)(b)(vi) which provides that a
plan must include consideration of inter
alia :
‘
the
benefits of adopting the business rescue plan as opposed to the
benefits that would be received by creditors if the company were
to
be placed in liquidation’.
79.
Mr.
Prakke suggests that to restore LPI to solvency, the remaining fixed
assets be liquidated, a comprehensive audit and writing up
of the
books of LPI for a 10 year period, action to challenge or dispute
SARS claim as well as institution of action against parties
(themselves in business rescue) can all take place before 15 November
2022. No reasonable business practitioner could,
on an
objective consideration of the facts in this matter,
bona
fide
hold this view
[32]
.
80.
The
proposed action is in fact a winding up and not a business rescue.
The consequences of allowing the plan to continue and
necessarily be
extended, as demonstrated in the present case, is not the
rehabilitation of the business and the payment of a full
or better
dividend to all creditors but rather a preference in favour so some
to the detriment of others. Were a final up order
not granted,
the remaining assets would be liquidated as proposed by Mr. Prakke
and the proceeds then utilized towards professional
legal and
accounting fees, including his own
[33]
in order to pursue debts, the recovery of a portion of which is only
10% to 20%. These are speculative claims.
81.
While the business
rescue continues, the general moratorium on legal proceedings applies
and so the unsecured claims of SARS, the
municipalities and others
remain unenforceable without legal action – such action to be
instituted against a company which has
not conducted any business for
10 years and which has and continues to be denuded of its assets.
82.
There
is simply no commercial or rational basis for the continuation of the
plan for LPI. In similar circumstances, the view
was expressed
obiter in SARS v Beginsel NO
[34]
that:
‘
I
accordingly accept, without deciding, that the court has the power to
intervene where it is shown that the BRPs [business rescue
practitioners] have committed a material mistake in concluding that
the continued implementation of the business rescue plan would
result
in a better return for the creditors of the company as envisaged in
section 128(1)(b)(iii) of the Act.’
83.
I
agree with this view. LPI was and is hopelessly insolvent.
The actions already taken and proposed by Mr. Prakke do not
contemplate the operation or rehabilitation of LPI. They are in
effect nothing more than an informal winding up
[35]
.
For this reason, I intend to make the order that I do.
84.
Business rescue
provides a shield for a business that, absent the delivery of the
proverbial mortal blow by an unsympathetic creditor,
can be rescued.
It does not and nor was it ever intended to provide a sword to be
used by the directors and/or business rescue
practitioners to keep
the creditors at bay irrespective of the prospect of the payment of a
better dividend and saving of the business.
85.
Lastly, in regard to
costs. The court on 4 March 2021 granted a punitive order for
costs
de bonis
propris
against Mr.
Naude. What remains for consideration are the costs incurred
from that date. Since then, Mr. Prakke has been
the business
rescue practitioner and it is he who has opposed the granting of a
final winding up order.
86.
The
special position of a business rescue practitioner is set out in
section 140(3)(a) and (b) of the Act
[36]
.
Besides the duties and liabilities of a director of a company,
the business rescue practitioner is also an officer of the
court and
expected to conduct himself with the utmost good faith and to provide
an objective and reasoned approach in assessing the
state of the
business and then deciding whether or not to continue with business
rescue.
87.
The
practitioner must act at all times in the furtherance of the purpose
for which he was appointed
[37]
and as soon as it becomes apparent that the company is unlikely to
continue in existence on a solvent basis or if there is unlikely
to
be a better return to the company’s creditors or shareholders, to
then apply to convert the business rescue to liquidation
[38]
proceedings. He is specifically enjoined to do so by virtue of
the office that he holds.
[39]
88.
‘
Attempting
to delay the inevitable liquidation of the company when there is no
realistic hope or prospect of recovery is a dangerous
practice and
one which should be discouraged. It is submitted that a long
business rescue process can result in diminished
liquidation
dividends which will seriously affect the creditor’s ability to
recover. Business rescue practitioners who delay
the process do
so at substantial risk to themselves, especially when disgruntles
creditors go looking for the proverbial ‘scapegoat’
once the
company goes into liquidation.’
[40]
89.
The present application
is now in its 5
th
year from the time that it was instituted. After the granting
of the order on 4 May 2018 and Mr. Naude’s resignation on 16
October 2018, there ensued a number of entirely avoidable delays
before the hearing of the application in October 2020. These
delays are not germane to the present matter save that bears
mentioning that Mr. Prakke’s appointment and investigation and
delay
in reporting to the court contributed significantly to this.
90.
Despite having
investigated and initially correctly identified that:
90.1
the
business rescue plan was nothing more than a sham
[41]
90.2
designed or at the very
least in effect perpetuated so as to keep creditors at bay; and
90.3
to allow the former
director a free hand to continue to use LPI and its funds for his own
benefit and for the benefit of members of
his family,
He
then, rather than making common cause with the order sought by SARS,
made a volte face and chose to oppose the granting of a final
winding
up order
[42]
.
91.
The opposition was ill
considered and deliberate in flagrant disregard of his obligations.
The eleventh-hour application for
intervention by Ms. Mia and the
spurious basis on which it was made make it clear that it was
contrived and designed to put the creditors
and in particular SARS to
unnecessary and costly further litigation.
92.
In so doing, many
hundreds of pages of affidavits and annexures (many of which were
already before the court) were filed. They
contained circuitous
and repetitious argument, with no substantive basis, the tenor of
which that SARS was bringing the application
in a ‘predatory’
fashion and in order to steal a preference was made.
93.
This
served no purpose other than to burden the papers to such an extent
that the application could not be heard on the ordinary opposed
motion roll but had to be set down for hearing as a special motion –
causing a further delay. All of this has as its consequence
substantial and additional unnecessary costs to SARS and LPI while
Mr. Prakke stands behind the statutory preference
[43]
for payment of his own remuneration and expenses.
94.
The
way in which Mr. Prakke, after he had reported to the court the state
of the affairs of LPI, conducted himself was neither
bona
fide
nor reasonable
[44]
.
95.
The
Supreme Court of Appeal
[45]
held in circumstances similar to the present case that:
‘
All
of that constituted an abuse of the process of the court and an abuse
of the business rescue procedure. It has repeatedly
been
stressed that business rescue exits for the sake of rehabilitating
companies that have fallen on hard times but are capable
of being
restored to profitability or, if that is impossible, to be employed
where I will lead to creditors receiving an enhanced
dividend.
Its use to delay a winding-up, or to afford an opportunity to those
who were behind its business operations not to
account for their
stewardship, should not be permitted. When a court is
confronted with a case where it is satisfied that the
purpose behind
a business rescue application was not to achieve either of these
goals, a punitive order is appropriate.’
96.
In the circumstances, I
make the following orders: -
96.1
The First Respondent is
placed in final winding up in the hands of the Master of the High
Court.
96.2
The Second Respondent
personally
(de bonis
propriis
) is
ordered to pay the costs of the application from 5 March 2021 to date
of judgment on the scale as between attorney and client
save as set
out in 96.3 below.
96.3
The Second Respondent
personally
(de bonis
propriis)
and the
intervening party is ordered, jointly and severally, the one paying
the other to be absolved, to pay the costs for 23 and
24 February
2022 on the scale as between attorney and client.
96.4
Save as set out in
paragraphs 96.2 and 96.3 above and not already provided for in the
court orders granted on 4 May 2018 and 4 March
2021, all costs are to
be costs in the liquidation.
A MILLAR
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA
HEARD
ON:
23 & 24 FEBRUARY 2022
JUDGMENT DELIVERED
ON:
11
APRIL 2022
COUNSEL FOR THE
APPLICANT:
ADV. B BERGENTHUIN SC
INSTRUCTED
BY:
VZLR INC.
REFERENCE:
MR. T FARI
COUNSEL FOR THE 1
ST
&
2
ND
RESPONDENTS:
ADV. MA BADENHORST SC
INSTRUCTED
BY:
EUGENE
GEYSER ATTORNEYS
REFERENCE:
MR. L BOTHA
COUNSEL FOR THE INTERVENING
PARTY:
ADV. MA
BADENHORST SC
INSTRUCTED
BY:
GRUNDLINGH & ASSOCIATES
REFERENCE:
MR. GRUNDLINGH
NO APPEARANCES FOR ANY OF THE
OTHER CITED PARTIES
[1]
In
terms of
Section 128(1)(b)
of the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
,-
'business rescue' means proceedings to facilitate the rehabilitation
of a company that is financially distressed by providing
for (i) the
temporary supervision of the company, and of the management of its
affairs, business and property;(ii) a temporary
moratorium on the
rights of claimants against the company or in respect of property in
its possession; and (iii) the development
and implementation, if
approved, of a plan to rescue the company by restructuring its
affairs, business, property, debt and other
liabilities, and equity
in a manner that maximises the likelihood of the company continuing
in existence on a solvent basis or,
if it is not possible for the
company to so continue in existence, results in a better return for
the company's creditors or shareholders
than would result from the
immediate liquidation of the company;"
[2]
Sections
145(1)(b)
and
146
(a) and
146
(b) of the Act provide for the rights of
both creditors as well as shareholders to be given notice as
‘affected parties’ of
the litigation. See ABSA Bank Ltd v Naude
NO and Others
2016 (6) SA 540
(SCA) at paras 10 and 11.
[3]
The
Act does not provide specifically for the resignation of a business
rescue practitioner but only provides in section 139(3)
that: ‘The
company, or the creditor who nominated the practitioner, as the case
may be, must appoint a new practitioner if a
practitioner dies,
resigns or is removed from office, subject to the right of an
affected person to bring a fresh application in
terms of Section 130
(1) (b) to set aside that new appointment’ See also in regard to
the conduct of persons within the group
of companies using business
rescue as a means to frustrate liquidation proceedings: Louis
Pasteur Holdings (Pty) Ltd v ABSA Bank
Ltd 2019 3 (SA) 97 (SCA) at
paras 3-6.
[4]
28
0f 2011
[5]
89
of 1991
[6]
Barnard
Labuschagne Incorporated v South African Revenue Service and Another
(CCT 60/21)
[2022] ZACC 8
(11 March 2022) in which the
Constitutional Court affirmed that judgments obtained against a
taxpayer in their absence may be rescinded.
This is in addition to
internal remedies provided for in the
Tax Administration Act 28 of
2011
such as an objection in terms of
section 104
or an appeal in
terms of
section 107.
### [7]Investec
Bank Ltd v Louis Pasteur Investments (Pty) (Ltd) [in business
rescue] & Another with case number 7939/2016 instituted
in the
Gauteng Division, Pretoria; Absa Bank Limited v Naude NO and Others
2016
(6) SA 540 (SCA)
[7]
Investec
Bank Ltd v Louis Pasteur Investments (Pty) (Ltd) [in business
rescue] & Another with case number 7939/2016 instituted
in the
Gauteng Division, Pretoria; Absa Bank Limited v Naude NO and Others
2016
(6) SA 540 (SCA)
.
[8]
Section
132(3)(a)
and (b) provide: ‘
If
a company’s business rescue proceedings have not ended within
three months after the start of those proceedings, or such longer
time as the court, on application by the practitioner, may allow,
the practitioner must –
(a)
Prepare a
report on the progress of the business rescue proceedings, and
update it at the end of each subsequent month until the
end of those
proceedings and
(b)
Deliver the report
and each update in the prescribed manner to each affected person, .
. .’
[9]
Helderberg
Laboratories CC v Sola Technologies 2008 2 (SA) 627 (CPD) at para
37.
[10]
In
regard to the requirements for the granting of rescission of an
order see De Wet v Western Bank
1977 (4) SA 770
(T) at 780H-781A and
also De Wet v Western Bank
1979 (2) SA 1031
(A) at 1042F-1043A
[11]
Section
132(2)(a)(i)
and (ii)
[12]
Section
132(2)(b)
[13]
Section
132(2)(c)
[14]
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
2012 (4) SA 593
(SCA), para [18] in which it was held:.
‘
The
present state of the law can be expressed as follows: Interpretation
is the process of attributing meaning to the words used
in a
document, be it legislation, some other statutory instrument, or
contract, having regard to the context provided by reading
the
particular provision or provisions in the light of the document as a
whole and the circumstances attendant upon its coming
into
existence. Whatever the nature of the document, considerations
must be given to the language used in the light of the
ordinary
rules of grammar and syntax; the context in which the provision
appears; the apparent purpose to which it is directed
and the
material known to those responsible for its production. Where
more than one meaning is possible each possibility
must be weighed
in the light of all these factors. The process is objective,
not subjective. A sensible meaning is
to be preferred to one
that leads to insensible or unbusinesslike results or undermines the
apparent purpose of the document.
Judges must be alert to, and
guard against, the temptation to substitute what they regard as
reasonable, sensible or businesslike
for the words actually used.
To do so in regard to a statute or statutory instrument is to cross
the divide between interpretation
and legislation; in a contractual
context it is to make a contract for the parties other than the one
they in fact made.
The “inevitable point of departure is the
language of the provision itself,” read in context and having
regard to the purpose
of the provision and the background to the
preparation and production of the document.’
[15]
South
African Business Rescue Procedure, Dr E Levenstein, Lexis Nexis,
2017 at page 8-67.
[16]
[2016]
ZAGPPHC 737 (23 August 2016)
[17]
[2012]
JOL 28484 (WCC)
[18]
2021
5 (SA) 171 (SCA) at paras 29-30
[19]
[
2017]
JOL 37690
(GP) at paras 72 and 73
[20]
The
order of 4 May 2018 granted by Pienaar AJ was that ‘That the
moratorium on legal proceedings against First Respondent, in
business rescue, be uplifted in terms of
section 132(2)(a)(ii)
of
the Companies Act’. – The order erroneously refers to
section
132(2)(a)(ii)
instead of
section 133(1)(b)
but in its terms it is
clear that it was meant to refer to the latter section. This
issue was raised by Ms. Mia in her application
but was correctly, in
my view, not pursued in argument.
[21]
Smits,
A. J. 1999. ‘Corporate administration: a proposed model’, De
Jure, 32: 80-107
[22]
Expectations
a business rescue plan: International directives for Chapter 6
implementation, M Pretorius and W Rosslyn-Smith, Southern
African
Business Review Volume 18 Number 2 2014.
[23]
Section
154(1)
[24]
Section
146
[25]
In
ABSA Bank Ltd v Caine N O, in re: ABSA Bank Ltd v Caine N O &
Another
[2014] ZAFSHC 45
at para 48 it was held that: ‘.
. .this was definitely not the idea of the legislature that
creditors could be held
ransom and be prevented from exercising
their normal contractual rights for such an extraordinary period of
time’
[26]
‘
temporary’
– lasting or meant to last for a limited time only; not permanent;
made or arranged to supply a passing need. The
Shorter Oxford
English Dictionary, Volume 2, 6
th
ed, Oxford University Press, 2007.page 2304
[27]
See
Diener N.O v Minister of Justice and Constitutional Development &
Others
2018 (2) SA 399
(SCA) at paras [28] & [40] & [54]
[28]
1
property had been sold in 2015 while Mr. Naude was the business
rescue practitioner and the next 5 sold during 2020 when Mr. Prakke
was business rescue practitioner. The remaining properties did
not fetch acceptable bids having regard to the valuations
obtained
and so those properties remain unsold.
[29]
The
test to be applied is whether or not LPI is commercially insolvent,
which it is common cause it is. See Murray v African
Global
Holdings 2020 2 (SA) 93 (SCA) at para 23.
[30]
AFGRI
Operations Ltd v Hamba Fleet (Pty) Ltd
2022 (1) SA 91
(SCA); ABSA
Bank Ltd v Rhebokskloof (Pty) Ltd 1993 4 (SA) 436 (CPD) at 440F-H.
[31]
‘
financially
distressed
’
in reference to a particular company at any particular time, means
that-
(i)
It appears to be
reasonably unlikely that the company will be able to pay all of its
debts as they become due and payable within
the immediate ensuing
six months; or
(ii)
It appears to be
reasonably likely that the company will become insolvent within the
immediately ensuing six months;’
[32]
This
in contrast to Carroll v Michael Carroll CC in re: In the
application for liquidation of : Michael Carroll CC (under
supervision)
[2019] ZAGPPHC 74 (15 March 2019): An application for
the liquidation of a company under business rescue was considered by
the
Court, but not granted. The reason for the dismissal of the
liquidation application was, according to the Court, that the
company
under business rescue had in fact been rescued by the
implementation of the adopted business rescue plan. See also
SA Bank
of Athens v Zennies Fresh Fruit 2018 3 (SA) 278 (WCC) at
para 43.
[33]
Section
143(5)
which provides that ‘to the extent that the practitioner’s
remuneration and expenses are not fully paid, the practitioner’s
claim for those amounts will rank in the priority before the claims
of all other secured and unsecured creditors.’
[34]
2013
(1) SA 307
(WCC) at 321A-B
[35]
See
also SA Bank of Athens v Zennies Fresh Fruit 2018 3 (SA) 278 (WCC)
at para 40.
[36]
‘
During
a company’s business rescue proceedings, the practitioner –
(a)
Is an officer of the
court, and must report to the court in accordance with any
applicable rules of, or orders made by, the court;
(b)
Has the
responsibilities, duties and liabilities of a director of the
company, as set out in
sections 75
to
77
; and . . .’
[37]
Section
128(1)(b)(iii)
[38]
The
consequence of liquidation is a Concursus creditorum – In
Walker v Syfret NO
1911 AD 141
at 166 it was held “the hand of the
law is laid upon the estate, and at once the rights of the general
body of creditors have
to be taken into consideration. No
transaction can thereafter be entered into with regard to estate
matters by a single creditor
to the prejudice of the general body.
The claim of each creditor must be dealt with as it existed at the
issue of the order.
[39]
African
Banking Corporation of Botswana Ltd v Kariba Furniture Manufacturers
(Pty) Ltd
2015 (5) SA 192
(SCA) at paras 35 -38 and 56
[40]
South
African Business Rescue Procedure, Dr E Levenstein, LexisNexis, 2017
page 8 - 75
[41]
Greissel
v Lizemore
2016 (6) SA 236
(GJ) at paras 83 and 84
[42]
See
Gupta v Knoop
2020 (4) SA 218
(GP) at para 37.
[43]
Section
143(5)
[44]
Visser
v Cryopreservation Technology CC
2003 (6) SA 607
(TPD) at para 6
[45]
Van
Staden v Pro-Wizz
2019 (4) SA 532
(SCA) at para 22
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