Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 350South Africa
Emvest Agricultural Corporation (Mauritius) Ltd v Emvest Evergreen (Pty) Ltd (43756/2016, 43734/2016, 43755/2016, 43757/2016) [2022] ZAGPPHC 350 (24 May 2022)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Emvest Agricultural Corporation (Mauritius) Ltd v Emvest Evergreen (Pty) Ltd (43756/2016, 43734/2016, 43755/2016, 43757/2016) [2022] ZAGPPHC 350 (24 May 2022)
Emvest Agricultural Corporation (Mauritius) Ltd v Emvest Evergreen (Pty) Ltd (43756/2016, 43734/2016, 43755/2016, 43757/2016) [2022] ZAGPPHC 350 (24 May 2022)
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sino date 24 May 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 43756/16, 43734/16,
43755/16,
43757/16
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
REVISED:
NO
Date:
24 MAY 2022
In
the matter between:
Emvest
Agricultural Corporation (Mauritius) Ltd
Applicant
Emvest
Food Products (Mauritius) Ltd
Intervening Party
and
Emvest
Evergreen (Pty) Ltd
Respondent
(Registration
number: 2010/004451/07)
and
Case
number 43755/2016,
the
matter between –
Emvest
Agricultural Corporation (Mauritius) Ltd
Applicant
Emvest
Food Products (Mauritius) Ltd
Intervening Party
and
Emvest
Foods (Pty) Ltd
Respondent
(Registration
number: 2009/017451/07)
and
Case
number: 43757/2016,
the
matter between –
Emvest
Agricultural Corporation (Mauritius) Ltd
Applicant
Emvest
Food Products (Mauritius) Ltd
Intervening Party
and
Emvest
Barvale (Pty)
Ltd
Respondent
(Registration
number: 1950/036399/07)
and
Case
number: 43756/2016,
the
matter between –
Emvest
Agricultural Corporation (Mauritius) Ltd
Applicant
and
Superior
Macadamias (Pty) Ltd
Respondent
(Registration
number: 2010/001094/07)
JUDGMENT
NYATHI
J
NATURE
OF APPLICATIONS AND CHRONOLOGY
[1]
These are applications for the confirmation of provisional winding-up
orders, and
for the final winding-up of the respective Respondents.
[2]
The Applicant brought four applications for the winding-up of four
different companies,
namely Emvest Evergreen (Pty) Ltd, Emvest Foods
(Pty) Ltd, Emvest Barvale (Pty) Ltd and Superior Macadamias (Pty)
Ltd. The matters
are similar, and for convenience of the court and
the parties the matters were heard together and dealt with.
[3]
Provisional orders for the winding-up of each of the Respondents were
granted on 19
December 2018, and a
rule nisi
with a return
date of 6 March 2019 was issued, calling on all interested parties to
show cause why the provisional orders should
not be made final. The
return date was postponed several times until the current date of
hearing.
[4]
The Applications for intervention were then brought by a shareholder
of three of the
abovementioned companies (Evergreen, Foods and
Barvale), in which the shareholder also seeks confirmation of the
provisional orders
concerned.
[5]
On 15 March 2021, the Court granted leave to the Intervening Party to
intervene in
the three applications concerned, and the Intervening
Party thereafter served its three applications on the three companies
concerned.
The three companies concerned oppose the said
applications. They are joined by the Second Intervening Applicant in
their opposition.
[6]
APPLICANT’S APPLICATIONS AS CREDITOR:
6.1 The
Applicant brings its applications for the final liquidation of the
Respondents.
6.2 The
Applicant’s cases are that the Respondents are indebted to it
in terms of four Service Level Agreements
(“the SLAs”)
and that this debt remains unpaid.
6.3 The
only issue to be determined by this Court is whether the Applicant
has
locus standi
to apply for the winding-up of the
Respondents.
6.4
This turns on whether, on the established tests, the Applicant has
established that the Respondents are indebted
to the Applicant in
terms of the SLAs upon which the Applicant itself relies.
6.5 The
extent of the discretion of the Court to not grant the relief in the
event that the Applicant’s
locus standi
is established.
[7]
SHAREHOLDER APPLICATIONS (BY THE INTERVENING PARTY):
7.1 The
Intervening Party seeks the final winding-up of the three Respondents
concerned in its capacity as a shareholder
of these Respondents on
the basis that the three Respondents are unable to pay their debts
and that it is just and equitable to
wind-up these Respondents.
7.2 As
the Intervening Party indisputably has
locus standi
, the issue
that must be determined in this application is whether the
Intervening Party has met the other requirements for the
winding-up
of the three Respondents concerned.
7.3 In
relation to the intervening applications, the issues that must be
determined are:
7.3.1 In respect of the
commercial insolvency ground: whether, having regard to section
346(2) of the Companies Act, 1973, a shareholder
is entitled in law
to rely on section 344(f) to windup the Emvest respondents on the
basis of commercial insolvency.
7.3.2 In respect to the
just and equitable ground:
7.3.2.1
First, whether the Intervening Party has established that these
respondents
are commercially insolvent as absent such commercial
insolvency, the Companies Act, 1973 does not apply at all;
7.3.2.2
Second, and in any event, whether the Intervening Party has
established
the requirements for a just and equitable winding-up.
[8]
Due to the similarity of the four matters, the parties agreed that
only one of the
four applications, namely, the Barvale matter should
be used as a central point in the hearing of the applications.
[9]
It is common cause that the Applicant and the Respondents were
previously companies
within the same group up until the Respondents
were sold off to a Canadian Company.
[10]
The founding affidavits in all the four applications were all deposed
to by Ms. Susan Margaret
Law Payne, formerly a director of all the
Respondents but currently a director of the Applicant.
[11]
According to Ms Payne, when one distils information from the four
founding affidavits for the
sake of brevity, the Respondents owed the
Applicant as follows:
11.1 Emvest
Evergreen: USD 233 177
11.2 Emvest
FOODS; USD 152 087
11.3 Superior
MACADAMIAS: USD 478 634 and
11.3 Emvest
Barvale: USD 287 304
[12]
Ms Payne has attached in each instance copies of the SLA’s and
the respective invoices.
[13]
Now that the provisional order has been granted, the Respondents who
seek to discharge the provisional
order, bear the onus to do so. In
this case the Respondents strive to do that by once again disputing
the existence of the debts
on which the Applicant creditor relies.
THE
CASE FOR THE RESPONDENTS
[14]
Mr Miller
submitted that there were disputes of fact arising
from the papers of both the Applicant and the Respondent.
[15]
The Respondent’s main contention is that the debts do not exist
or there is no proof that
anything is owing to the Applicant; and
therefore the Applicant has no
locus standi
to bring the
application in the first place.
[16]
If the debts exist, it was submitted, they are not enforceable.
[17]
Factual insolvency was not a ground for winding up a company,
commercial insolvency is required.
THE
APPLICANT’S CASE
[18]
The Applicant had delivered its letters of demand as contemplated in
section 345 (1) (a) (i)
of the Companies Act, 1973, which elicited no
discernible response from the Respondents. The debts remain unpaid.
18.1
On
26 November 2015 and on 1 June 2016 the Applicant caused a letter of
demand to be served on the Respondent (EMVEST EVERGREEN)
at the
Respondent's registered address.
18.2
On each occasion the return of service by the sheriff who effected
service of the letter of demand concerned recorded
that the company
closed down and premises were empty and that there were no employees
at the given address.
[19]
The issue of
locus standi
is a question of law which has for
ages been governed by the principle that an unpaid debtor has a right
ex debito iustitiae
to a winding up order against a company
that is unable to pay its debts. This was recently confirmed by the
Supreme Court of Appeal
in
Afgri Operations Ltd v Hamba Fleet
(Pty) Ltd
2022 (1) SA 91
(SCA) at para 12.
[20]
The respondents’ submissions are denials of indebtedness,
suggestions that the invoices
relied upon by the applicant are not
real. Respondents even take issue with Ms. Payne’s allegation
that the facts she deposed
to fall within her personal knowledge,
having been a director of the Applicant and the Respondent companies
themselves.
[21]
Respondents make suggestions that the property where the sheriff
could not effect proper service
due to abandonment has some intrinsic
value, and that should this provisional order not be confirmed, it
could somehow realize
and pay off its indebtedness (which it denies!)
with the proceeds.
[22]
Once a creditor has satisfied the requirements of a liquidation
order, the court has a narrow
discretion to refuse the relief sought.
In fact, the court may not on a whim decline the order.
[1]
[23]
The respondents’ answering affidavits contain broad denials of
each and every averment
by the applicant’s deponent with a view
to put forward artificial disputes of fact which are not borne out by
any real proof.
ANALYSIS
AND CONCLUSION
[24]
Winding-up proceedings ought not to be resorted to as a means to
enforce payment of a debt which
is contested by the respondent
company on bona fide reasonable grounds. The winding-up procedure was
not designed to resolve disputes
as to the existence or non-existence
of a debt. This is the core of the so-called
Badenhorst
rule.
[2]
[25]
Where the existence of the debt is bona fide disputed by the
respondent on reasonable grounds
a winding-up order, provisional or
final ought to be refused.
[3]
[25
In
Plascon-Evans Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984
(3) SA 623
(A)
Corbett JA had occasion to state that: “In
certain instances the denial by the respondent of a fact alleged by
the applicant
may not be such as to raise a real, genuine or bona
fide dispute of fact.” In such an instance the court is
entitled to grant
a final order.
[25]
The debts owed to the applicant remain unpaid to this date. The
respondents have not succeeded
to discharge the burden of proof, on a
balance of probabilities, that they are not indebted to the
applicant. Neither did they
successfully dispel applicant’s
allegations that they are not in a state of solvency and are unable
to pay their debts.
[26]
The above considerations are applicable similarly to the application
by the intervening parties.
[27]
I accordingly grant the following order:
That:
in cases No: 43756/2016, 43734/2016, 43755/2016 and 43757/2016 the
respondents be and are hereby placed under final winding-up
The
applicant is entitled to its costs of this application which are to
be costs in the winding-up.
JS.
NYATHI
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
CASE
NO: 43756/2016, 43734/2016, 43755/2016, 43757/2016
HEARD
ON: 15 March 2022
For
the Applicant and Intervening party: Adv. S D Wagener S.C.
INSTRUCTED
BY: Weavind & Weavind Inc.
For
the Respondents and Second Intervening party: Adv. S Miller
INSTRUCTED
BY: Bernardt Vukic Potash & Getz Inc.
c/o Friedland Hart
Solomon & Nicolson
DATE
OF JUDGMENT: 24 May 2022
[1]
Diepenaar
N.O. and Others v Business Venture Investments N.O. 134 (Pty) Ltd
and Another [2014] 2 All SA 162 (WCC); [2014] ZAWCHC
7.
[2]
Named
after the case of Badenhorst v Northern Construction Enterprises
(Pty) Ltd
1956 (2) SA 346
(T) at 347 – 348.
[3]
Kalil
v Decotex (Pty) Ltd and Another
1998 (1) SA 943
(A) at 980B-D
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