Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 453South Africa
Cleanjack SA (Pty) Ltd v Feedom Group (Pty) Ltd (3678/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 453 (20 June 2022)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Cleanjack SA (Pty) Ltd v Feedom Group (Pty) Ltd (3678/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 453 (20 June 2022)
Cleanjack SA (Pty) Ltd v Feedom Group (Pty) Ltd (3678/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 453 (20 June 2022)
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sino date 20 June 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
CASE
NO: 3678/2021
REPORTABLE:
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
REVISED.
20/06/2022
In
the matter between:
CLEANJACK
SA (Pty)
Ltd
Applicant
And
FEEDEM
GROUP (Pty)
Ltd
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MBONGWE
J:
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This is an application
wherein the applicant seeks an order for the final winding up of the
respondent in terms of the provisions
of section 344(f) of the
Companies Act 61 of 1973(“the 1973 Companies Act”) read
with the provisions of section 344,
345 and 346 thereof as well as
the provisions of Item 9 of schedule 5 of the Companies Act 71 of
2008 (“the
Companies Act&rdquo
;). The order is sought on the
ground that the respondent is unable to pay its debt as and when they
became due as described in
section 345 of the 1973
Companies Act.
FACTUAL
MATRIX
[2]
The parties
concluded a written agreement on 27 October 2017 in Meyersdal, south
of Johannesburg, in terms of which the applicant
was to supply the
Respondent with the CleanJack SA system for a period of 36
(thirty-six months) to enable the respondent to monitor
the
attendance and working hours of its employees at Cristal Solutions, a
division of the Respondent. The Applicant was to supply,
install and
activate the systems, but did not charge for the installations.
[3]
As
at the 30
th
March 2020, the respondent had been in arrears with its monthly
payments of R27 524-11 from the end of February 2020 which
had
allegedly escalated to R165 144-36 on 17 July 2020, when the
Applicant served the Respondent with a notice in terms of
section 345
of the 1973
Companies Act, and
to R247 716 -69 when the founding
affidavit was deposed to on behalf of the applicant.
[4]
On the 26 March 2020
the government of South Africa declared the state of national
disaster following the rampant effects of the
Covid-19 pandemic.
Amongst the restrictions imposed was the prohibition of persons from
physical attendance to their workplace
for a period of 21 days, save
in respect of those rendering essential services. The lockdown period
had an adverse economic effect
on many companies.
[5]
In a letter to the
applicant dated 30 March 2020, the respondent had sought the
suspension of its payment obligations due to the
Covid19 pandemic and
sought to cancel the agreement.
[6]
Despite the
lockdown, the applicant had sought payment and persisted, during
arguments in court, that the amount R27 524-11
for the month of
February 2020 had already been due and owing, that is, prior to the
declaration of the state of disaster on 26
March 2020. It is notable
that the respondent had not disputed its indebtedness to the
applicant in that amount, yet contends that
the applicant was not its
creditors. It is worth noting as well that the respondent ostensibly
seeks to rely on its purported cancellation
of the agreement in
support of the assertion that the applicant was not its creditor.
ANALYSIS
[7]
I deem it necessary, on the
facts above, to the state that the respondent’s blanket
denial
of its indebtedness to the applicant is without merit in light of the
amount it owed to the applicant for the month of February
2020 and in
respect of which it had sought a suspension of payment.
[8]
Depending on the finding on
validity of the respondent’s cancellation of the agreement,
there may be merit in the respondent’s dispute of the claimed
amount of R247 716-69 allegedly owing in October/November
2020
on which these proceedings are premised. This application was
launched on 27 January 2021.
[9]
The respondent grounds its cancellation of the agreement on the
Covid19 pandemic lockdown
(“the force majeure”). The
respondent’s entitlement to rely on the force majeure is
disputed by the applicant.
It comes as a relief that the applicant
had reconsidered its stance and accepted that the Covid19 lockdown
indeed constituted a
force majeure (applicant’s heads of
argument). Clearly, the prohibition of physical attendance by
employees to their respective
workplaces precluded the respondent
from earning an income and from utilising the CleanJack systems.
This, coupled with the applicant’s
insistence on payments,
necessitated that the respondent cancels the agreement. In my view,
the respondent had no alternative in
the circumstances and the
cancellation was, therefore justified. This finding impacts the
monthly amounts allegedly accumulated
subsequent to the cancellation
of the agreement and which had been in dispute prior to the launch of
these proceedings.
THE
LAW
[10]
It is trite that the court has a discretion
whether or not to grant an application for the liquidation of
a
company. The caveat to the exercise of such power is that the
discretion must be premised on judicial grounds (see
Irvin &
Johnson Ltd Oelofse Fisheries Ltd
1954 (1) SA 231
(E). It is
imperative that the court considers the grounds and the reasons
proffered for the liquidation sought (See
Leca Investment (Pty)
Ltd v Shiers
1978 (4) SA 703
(w)).
[11]
The legal principles guiding the court’s
approach in the exercise of discretionary powers were aptly
laid down
in
Orestisolve (Pty) Ltd t/a Rssa Investment v NDFT Investments
Holdings (Pty) Ltd
2015 (4) SA 449
(WCC) at paras [15] and [16]
in the following terms:
“
[15]
Section 344
(f) states that a company may be wind up by the court if
“the company is unable to pay its debts as described in
section
345
”.
Section 345
sets out three circumstances in which a
company “shall be deemed to be unable to pay its debts”.
Relevant to the present
case are the first and third circumstances,
namely non-payment in response to a statutory demand (para (a) and
actual (proven)
inability to pay debts (para (c). 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. The English cases hold that the word ‘neglected’
is not apt to describe a refusal to pay where the
claim is bona fide
disputed on some substantial grounds (see, for example, Re a Lympne
Investment Ltd
[1972] 2 ALL ER 335
(Ch) at 389; Re a Company (No
033729 of 1982 [1984] WLR- 1090 (ch) at 1093 B-G; Palmer’s
Company Law Vol 4 para 15.215; the
position in Australia is the same:
see KL Traders Ltd
[1954] VLR 505
at 508-511). This interpretation of
the word ‘neglected’, which has support in South African
authority (see, for example,
Ter Beek v United Resources cc &
Another
1997 (3) SA 315
(c) at 328G-330H; Nedbank Ltd v Applemint
Properties 22 (Pty) Ltd [2014] ZAGPPHC 1042 paras 20-21, is
essentially the Badenhorst
rule in a different guise and thus does
not in truth give a respondent an additional string to its bow”.
[16]
In ter Beek supra, where the court was considering a statutory demand
given in terms of the Comparative provisions of the close
corporation
Act 69 of 1984, Von Reenen J found that the company was not, at the
time of the statutory demand, bona fide disputing
the claim on
reasonable grounds. He thus concluded that the company had indeed
‘neglected’ to make a payment (at 330
G-H). He went on to
express the view, however, that the deeming effect of a statutory
demand could be neutralised by evidence rebutting
the inference of an
inability to pay - in that case, evidence of protracted settlement
negotiations (
at 30I-332A
). This view was cited with approval
by Malan J (as he then was) in Body Corporate of Fish Eagle v Group
Twelve Investments (Pty)
Ltd
2003 (5) SA 414
(w) paras 5 and 6”.
[12]
With regard to the word ‘deemed’, the learned Judges said
the following:
“
The
word “deemed” appears in the introductory portion of
s345(1) and thus applies to all three methods of determining
a
company’s inability to pay its debts, yet one could not
sensibly say that satisfactory proof of an actual inability to
pay a
company’s debts (para (c) is a rebuttable presumption. As I see
it, once one of the three circumstances in s345 (1)
is established,
the ground for winding-up specified in s344(f) is satisfied….
However, the reason for the company’s
refusing to make payment
in response to the statutory demand might, particularly in
conjunction with other circumstances, provide
a basis for the court
to exercise its discretion against liquidation”
[13]
It is worth emphasising that the present application is premised on
the allegations that the
Respondent’s indebtedness to the
Applicant is to the tune of R247 716-68, which includes the
undisputable debts of R27 524-11
as at the end of February 2020.
Noteworthy also, is the fact that the section 345(1) notice served on
the Respondent specifically
referred to the debt owing as at 28
October 2020, being the sum of R247 716-69.
[14]
It needs be stated that amount claimed, particularly in light of the
Respondent’s termination
of the agreement, had in dispute at
the time this application was launched. This dispute was known to the
applicant.
[15]
Payment of the amount owing as at the end of
February 2020 would have constituted partial payment and unlikely
to
have resolved the matter between the parties, regard being had to the
larger amount claimed in these proceedings
.
For the Applicant
to succeed, it would have had to rely on and demonstrate, that the
Respondent was unable to pay the undisputed
amount which, in my view,
was the R27 524-11 that was owing as at the end of February 2020. The
subsequent alleged accumulated
amounts were in dispute. In
Frank
Hermens
Wholesale (Pty) Ltd v Palma (Pty) Ltd
(1986) 10
ACLR 257
SC (NSW) the court held that even where a part of the amount
claimed is disputed on substantial grounds, the omission by the
respondent
to make payment of the total amount claimed will not
result in the inference that the respondent is unable to pay its
debts.
[16]
The question that arises is whether the
respondent’s disputing of its indebtedness to the applicant
in
the amount claimed in these proceedings is bona fide and founded on
reasonable grounds and/or whether the applicant had ignored
a
well-grounded reasonable dispute and launched the application merely
to enforce payment. The principle in
Badenhorst v Northern
Construction Enterprises (Pty) Ltd
1956 (2) SA 346
(T) not only
forbids the granting of an order for the liquidation of a respondent
company where a bona fide dispute regarding the
payment exists, but
also the bringing of a winding-up application of a company merely to
enforce payment. The circumstances in
the applicants clearly militate
against these well settled legal principles.
[17]
In addition to the applicant’s case being thumped by the
Bardenhorst
principle, the application of the
Plascon–Evans
rule also weighs in favour of the respondent and against the granting
of the winding up order sought. It is apposite to refer to
the
Orestisolve
matter in which the Court stated thus:
“
I
must emphasise, though that the Badenhorst rule is conventionally
formulated as requiring a company to satisfy the court of two
things:
its bona fides and the reasonableness of its grounds for disputing
the claim… Bona fides is a question of fact.
At the stage of a
final order, it must be assessed in accordance with the Plascon-evans
rule. Even though the onus on a particular
issue in motion
proceedings might rest on the Respondent, this does not reserve the
operation of the Plascon-Evans rule (see Ngqumba
en ‘n Ander v
Staatpresident en Andere
1988 (4) SA 244
(A) at 259E- 263D; Rawlins &
Another v Caravantruck (Pty) Ltd
[1992] ZASCA 204
1993 (1) SA 537
(A)
AT 541I- 542B. And bona fides, in the context of the Badenhorst rule,
does not in my view require that the company should hold
a belief
that at trial its defence to the claim would definitely succeed or
even be more likely than not to succeed. It would be
sufficient, I
think, that the company genuinely wishes to contest the claim and
believes it has reasonable prospects of success.
I mention bona fides
at this point, because it bears on the two remaining issues to be
addressed below, namely inability to pay
debts and discretion. A
finding that a company is not bona fide in disputing the Applicant’s
claim would usually go hand
in hand with a finding that the claim is
being disputed solely for the purpose of delay; and such a purpose
would often support
an inference that the company is unable to pay
its debts and militate against the exercise of a discretion in its
favour”
[18]
The Applicant, by seeking a final as opposed to a
provisional winding- up order, raised the bar in that
it has to
establish the factual commercial insolvency of the Respondent. The
applicant falls short of meeting this requirement.
The overall facts
of the present matter leave me with little to no doubt that the
applicant sought to enforce payment rather than
legitimately
believing that the respondent was unable to pay its debt and ought to
be wound-up. In this regard the court in stated
thus;
“
A
winding-up petition is not a legitimate means of seeking to enforce
payment of a debt which is bona fide disputed by the company.
A
petition presented ostensibly for a winding-up order but really to
exercise pressure will be dismissed and under circumstances
may be
stigmatized as a scandalous abuse of the process of the court. Some
years ago petitions founded on disputed debts were directed
to stand
over till the debt was established by action. If, however, there was
no reason to believe that the debt, if established,
would not be
paid, the petition was dismissed. The modern practice has been to
dismiss such petitions. But, of course, if the debts
is not disputed
on some substantial ground, the court may decide it on the petition
and make the order”.
CONCLUSION
[19]
It has to be stated in conclusion, that the
applicant has not demonstrated that the respondent was
commercially
insolvent as at the end of February 2020. The audited financial
statements of the respondent showing that its assets
exceeded its
debts at that stage have not been discredited. The finding that the
respondent was entitled in light of the force
majeure to terminate
the agreement points to the reasonableness and bona fides of the
opposition this application based on the
amount claimed. Importantly,
the applicant had been alive to the disputes, yet chose to pursue the
matter, irrespective. The application
must fail in these
circumstances.
COSTS
[20]
The general principle is that cost follow the
outcome of the litigation. The respondent has asked for a
punitive
costs order against the applicant. I take onto account in this matter
that the respondent had requested a meeting with
the applicant to try
and resolve the matter and the applicant had chosen to take the hard
stance of dragging the respondent to
court – this despite the
existence of a dispute, not only in respect of the amount, but the
applicant’s performance
in terms of the contract. The
Badenhorst principle weighs in favour of the respondent.
ORDER
[21]
Consequent to the findings in this judgment the
following order is made:
1.
The application is dismissed.
2.
The applicant is ordered to pay the costs on an attorney and own
client opposed scale
M.
MBONGWE, J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
OF
SOUTH AFRICA, GAUTENG
DIVISION,
PRETORIA
.
APPEARANCES
For
the Applicant
Adv. J Minnaar
Instructed
by
DDP Attorneys
Inc.
PRETORIA
For
the Respondent Adv. S. Swiegers
Instructed
by
LEE & MCADAM
Attorneys
c/o NIXON AND COLLINS
Attorneys
PRETORIA
JUDGMENT
ELECTRONICALLY TRANSMITTED ON JUNE 2022.
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