Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 472South Africa
Johannes Frederick Gouws N.O and Others v Chapman Fund Managers (Pty) Ltd and Others (A157/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 472 (20 June 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
20 June 2022
Headnotes
[4] The appellants, who are shareholders in the first respondent, passed a special resolution on 1 December 2010 authorising the creation of Class B shares in the first respondent. These shares were to be transferred to the Sixth, Seventh and Eighth Respondents (BEE Partners in the first respondent) to facilitate their receipt of a better dividend without affording them voting rights normally attached to ordinary shares.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Johannes Frederick Gouws N.O and Others v Chapman Fund Managers (Pty) Ltd and Others (A157/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 472 (20 June 2022)
Johannes Frederick Gouws N.O and Others v Chapman Fund Managers (Pty) Ltd and Others (A157/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 472 (20 June 2022)
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HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
CASE
NO: A157/2020
DELETE
WHICHEVER IS NOT APPLICABLE
REPORTABLE:
NO.
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
In
the matter between:
JOHANNES
FREDERICK GOUWS N.O.
First
Appellant
WILLEM
JACQUES GOUWS N.O.
Second
Appellant
LYNETTE
GOUWS N.O.
Third Appellant
ABRAHAM
AARON ROUP
N.O.
Fourth
Appellant
JOHANNES
PETRUS ERASMUS SWARTS N.O.
Fifth
Appellant
JOHANNES
PETRUS ERASMUS SWARTS N.O.
Sixth
Appellant
ANETTE
VAN ZYL
N.O.
Seventh
Appellant
BORN
FREE INVESTMENTS 161 (PTY) LTD
Eighth
Appellant
and
CHAPMAN
FUND MANAGERS (PTY) LTD
First
Respondent
DOUW
GERBRANDT KRUGER N.O.
Second
Respondent
JOHANNES
NICOLAAS BELL N.O
.
Third Respondent
ERIKA
KRUGER
N.O
.
Fourth Respondent
ANETTE
VAN ZYL
N.O.
Fifth Respondent
PATRICK
MPHEPHU N.O.
Sixth
Respondent
ABIGAIL
MPHEPHU N.O.
Seventh
Respondent
PACIFIC
COAST INVESTMENTS 121 (PTY) LTD
Eighth
Respondent
COMPANIES
AND INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
COMMISSION
Ninth
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MBONGWE
J
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This is an appeal against the whole of the judgment of Makhuvele J
that was handed
down on 6 August 2019. In that judgment, the Court a
quo dismissed an application by the shareholders in the first
respondent seeking
an order setting aside a resolution of the first
respondent that had been amended without authorisation and registered
by the ninth
respondent. The original resolution was intended
for the creation and allocation of a special class shares (Class B
shares)
to the BEE partners in the first respondent to afford them
more dividends without the voting rights normally attached to
ordinary
shares. The unauthorised amendments have the effect that
they gave voting rights to the 6
th
to 8
th
respondents.
[2]
A subsequent application for leave to appeal was dismissed by the
Court a quo, but
leave to appeal to the full bench of this division
has since been granted by the Supreme Court of appeal.
[3]
The appeal is opposed by the eighth respondent who agrees with and
supports the decision
of the Court a quo that the appellants ought to
have sought a review of the decision of the Registrar to register the
amended resolution
instead of the setting aside of the resolution
itself. The eighth respondent contends further that the review
procedure no longer
avails to the appellants and had lapsed due to
the effluxion of time.
FACTUAL
SYNOPSIS
[4]
The appellants, who are shareholders in the first respondent, passed
a special resolution
on 1 December 2010 authorising the creation of
Class B shares in the first respondent. These shares were to be
transferred to the
Sixth, Seventh and Eighth Respondents (BEE
Partners in the first respondent) to facilitate their receipt of a
better dividend without
affording them voting rights normally
attached to ordinary shares.
[5]
The second respondent, Kruger, then a director of the first
respondent, was entrusted
with the registration of the resolution by
the CIPC in terms of Section 203 of the Companies Act 61 of 1973.
Kruger initially submitted
the MC26 form for registration on the 6
December 2010, but registration was refused by the Registrar due to
non- compliance with
the law. Without authorisation by the
appellants, Kruger had amended the resolution and re-submitted same
on 20 December 2010.
The amended MC26 form was registered on 12
January 2011.
[6]
The appellants became aware of Kruger’s actions during a
meeting in January
2018, wherein they sought the removal of Kruger as
a director, but the 6
th
, 7
th
and 8th
respondents sought to exercise voting rights in terms of the Class B
shares.
[7]
The applicants’ investigations that followed revealed that
Kruger had amended
the terms of the special resolution to reflect
that the holders of the Class B shares shall enjoyed voting rights
and any other
rights normally attached to ordinary shares.
[8]
The reason for the Registrar’s refusal to register the original
Form MC26 submitted
on 6
th
December 2010 was that it was
in conflict with the provisions of section 193(1) of the Act in terms
of which ‘’
every member of a company having a share
capital shall have a right to vote in respect of each share held by
him.’’
[9]
The Registrar derives its authority to refuse registration from the
provisions of
section 200 of the Companies Act, 1973 which read thus:
“
(1)
Within one month from the passing of a special resolution a copy of
such resolution together with
either a copy of the notice convening
the meeting concerned a copy of the consent contemplated in section
199(3A), as the case
may be, shall be lodged with the Registrar, who
shall subject to the provisions of sub-section (2), and upon payment
of prescribed
fee, register such resolution.
(2)
The Registrar may refuse to register any special resolution so lodged
with him, except
upon an order of the court, if such resolution
appears to him to be contrary to the provisions of this Act or of the
memorandum
or articles of the company concerned”.
[10]
Subsequent to the meeting of January 2018 the appellants launched an
application to court seeking
the following order:
10.1
Setting aside the
amended Form MC26 lodged with and registered by the ninth respondent
on 12 January 2011 on behalf of the first
respondent;
10.2
Setting aside the
Class B shares with voting rights in the first respondent created by
the registration of the amended Form MC26.
[11]
The gravamen of the appellants’ contentions, particularly on
appeal, were that; the registration
had occurred despite the
amendments to the special resolution being in manuscript and the
absence of written authorisation / further
resolution confirming the
amendment; that the resolution itself was signed by Kruger on 1
December 2010 and that the amended resolution
is in conflict with the
first respondent’s Articles of Association.
[12]
For what it is worth, I deem it necessary to quote Kruger’s
response to the appellants’
enquiry why he had amended the
resolution. The response was that
:
“
It
was a tacit term, alternatively an implied term, of my mandate that I
will do all things necessary in order to comply with the
legal
prescripts of the Registrar and in order to give effect to the
share-issue of the ordinary B shares to the BEE partners”.
[13]
The Court a quo dismissed the application reasoning that the
appellants ought to have sought
the setting aside of the registration
of the special resolution rather than the setting aside of the
resolution itself.
[14]
The essence of the appellants’ contentions in paragraph 12,
above, are that, in addition
to the manuscript amendment not having
been confirmed in writing, registration of the MC26 should also not
have occurred as there
was no compliance with section 200 of the Act
which required that registration should occur within one month after
the resolution
had been taken Registration of the amended MC26
occurred on 12 January 2011 whereas Kruger had signed the amended
resolution on
1 December 2010. A further implied reason was
that Article 3 of the first respondent’s Articles of
Association provided
for the creation of a category of shares without
voting rights in respect thereof – a suggestion that the
original special
resolution ought to have been registered.
[15]
In support of the procedure they had followed and the relief sought
in the court a quo, the appellants
relied on the principle in
Seale
v Van Rooyen N.O
.
2008 4 SA 43
SCA that the setting aside of the
resolution will automatically lead to the cancellation of the
registration thereof by the Registrar.
A further contention by the
appellants was that regardless of the reason for the refusal to
register the original resolution, there
was no special resolution
passed by the members of the first respondent authorising the issuing
of Class B shares with voting rights.
ANALYSIS
[16]
Unless determined by the Registrar to be compliant and, therefore,
registered, a special resolution
is of no legal consequence and does
not alter the extant circumstances of the parties. It is the
registration of the special resolution
that brought about the harmful
change to the circumstances of appellants. By law, the Registrar’s
decision to register the
special resolution is an exercise of an
administrative action as illustrated in
Nedbank Ltd v Mendelow and
Another NNO
2013 (6) SA 130
(SCA) in the following terms;
“
[25]
Administrative action entails a decision, or a failure to make a
decision, by a functionary, and which
has a direct legal affect on an
individual. A decision must entail some form of choice or
evaluation……
’’
.
[17]
It follows, in my view, that the action of the registration of a
special resolution is a segmented
chain- action that begins with the
assessment of whether the documents submitted comply with the law,
particularly sections 193
(1), 199 and 200, followed by a
determination of compliance which results in the decision to either
register, or not to register
in the event of non-compliance. No
registration of a special resolution can ensue unless a determination
of compliance and the
resultant decision to register has been made.
[18]
The eighth respondent correctly contended that the provisions of
section 200 (2) enjoined the
Registrar to ensure that the resolution
did not appear to be contrary to the provisions of the Act or of the
memorandum or articles
of the company concerned. Thus the decision
that the resolution complied with the provisions of the Act preceded
the stamping /
physical registration of the MC26.
[19]
By their very nature, the facts forming the subjects of the criticism
of the registration of
the amended MC26 mentioned in paragraph 15,
above, fall squarely within the process of assessment by the
Registrar whether a special
resolution complied with the law. They
constituted pertinent ground for the reversal of the decision to
register and the registration
of the amended resolution.
[20]
The law recognises only one procedure for the reversal of an
administrative decision –
the procedure may be the legislative
review procedure in terms of the Promotion of Administrative Justice
Act 3 of 2000 (PAJA)
or be premised on the common law principle of
legality.
[21]
It is immaterial, in my view, that the Registrar’s decision was
influenced by unauthorised
amendments of the special resolution or
any other cause, for that matter. Once the Registrar has taken the
decision to register
and registered a special resolution that causes
harm, the relief lies in the institution of review proceedings to set
aside the
impugned decision – in the present matter, PAJA was
the applicable procedure to have been followed by the appellants.
[22]
It would have been sufficient for the appellants to demonstrate that
the decision of the Registrar
was influenced as aforementioned and
that it is harmful to the appellants so as to render it reviewable in
terms of PAJA.
The appellants’ argument that the
provisions of PAJA do not find Application in the present matter,
consequently, lacks legal
grounding.
[23]
Similarly, it would be impermissible to apply the principle in the
Seale
matter to
indirectly reverse the harm occasioned by the exercise of an
administrative action. The appellants’ arguments to
the
contrary are a mere attempt at circumventing the reality that they
were well out of time in January 2018 for instituting review
proceedings. The provisions of PAJA prescribe a period of 180 days,
from the date of the registration of the special resolution,
being 12
January 2011, for the institution of review proceedings.
CONCLUSION
[24]
I find, in conclusion, that the decision of the Court a quo was well
taken, correct and meritoriously
supported by the eighth respondent.
Following this finding, the appeal stands to be dismissed.
COSTS
[25]
There is no reason for a deviation from the general principle that
costs follow the outcome in
the proceedings.
ORDER
[26]
Consequent to the findings in this judgment, I would suggest that the
following order be made:
1.
The appeal is
dismissed.
2.
The appellants are
ordered to pay the costs on an opposed scale.
M.
MBONGWE J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
JUDGMENT
DAVIS
J
[1]
Introduction
I
have had the benefit of reading the judgment prepared by my brother
Mbongwe J. Unfortunately, I find myself unable to agree
with
the conclusion reached therein. In my view, the appeal should
be upheld and the decision in the court
a quo
be replaced with the one upholding the setting aside the resolution
registered by the Registrar of Companies and Intellectual Property
Commission (the CIPC).
[2]
Summary of facts
2.1
The factual synopsis
has been correctly and succinctly summarised by my learned brother
Mbongwe J in paragraphs [4] – [10]
of the judgment prepared by
him and need no repetition.
2.2
I deem it however,
necessary to engage with paragraph [12] of the judgment where my
learned brother referred to Kruger’s response
to the enquiry as
to how it came about that he amended the original typed resolution in
manuscript. In this paragraph Kruger’s
contention that he
was tacitly or by implication authorised to amend the resolution is
mentioned “for what it is worth”.
In my respectful
view the “worth” of such a contention should be evaluated
before it finds its way into a court’s
reasoning.
2.3
Kruger clearly had
no authority to amend the resolution. He also did not revert to
the appellants as other shareholders when
the Registrar refused to
register it (in its unamended form). That much is clear from
Kruger’s own affidavit.
He unilaterally proceeded to
amend the resolution and re-submitted it. He did not inform the
other shareholders of his actions
and did so clandestinely. It
was only many years later, when a vote had to be cast on his removal
as a director, that his
actions came to light. This was when he
needed and relied on the votes of the other shareholders, votes which
had been made
possible by his clandestine action. For Kruger,
once he had been caught out in this fashion, to
ex
post facto
claim
that it was a “tacit” on “implied term” of
his mandate that he may amend a shareholder’s resolution
to
reflect something which the shareholders had not resolved, is
patently opportunistic and should have been rejected at the hearing
of the matter and should still be rejected. This exculpatory
statement is, in my view, worth nothing.
[3]
Further analysis
3.1
My brother Mbongwe J
has referred to the Registrar’s authority in paragraph [9] of
his judgment, with reference to Section
200 of the (old) Companies
Act 61 of 1973 (which was the operative statutory provision at the
relevant time).
3.2
In terms of this
section, the Registrar has two functions: firstly, he has to evaluate
the contents of a shareholder’s resolution
presented to him.
If it does not comply with the provisions of the Act, he “may”
refuse to register it.
His second function, should the
resolution comply with the provisions of the Act, is simply to
register it.
3.3
The first of the
aforementioned functions was performed when the original resolution,
reflecting what the shareholders had actually
resolved, was presented
to the Registrar on 6 December. The evaluation and refusal to
register might conceivably involve
the exercise of a discretion and
constitute an administrative act or “decision” for
purpose of section 1 of the Promotion
of Administrative Justice Act 3
of 2000 (PAJA).
3.4
The second function,
however, involves no decision-making. It is a purely clerical
act. Even though the registration
of a compliant resolution is
administrative in nature, it is not an administrative act for
purposes of PAJA. The Registrar
has no discretion, exercises no
decision-making powers and simply performs a registering function.
It is for example analogous
to the acceptance of a compliant
application for an advertisement of a voluntary surrender in the
Government Gazette. The Government
Printer, if the advertisement
complies with the prescribed format, has no option but to publish
it. Here too, the Registrar,
should the resolution be
compliant, has no option but to register it. He does not
perform an administrative act, but a clerical
function.
3.5
With respect to the
learned judge in the court
a
quo
, to find
that the appellants had to launch a review application, be it in
terms of PAJA or a legality review, would lead to an
absurdity: no
“reasons” could be furnished by the Registrar for his
“decision”, simply because no “decision”
had
been taken. Upon receipt of a compliant resolution, by law the
Registrar had to register it. Such a resolution
is simply
lodged and “stamped” as it were. It is a
“mechanical” action.
3.6
The difference
between the exercise of a discretionary power (which could constitute
an administrative act) and a “mechanical
power” (which
would be a purely clerical function) has been considered and
pronounced on by the Supreme Court of Appeal in
Nedbank
v Mendelow NNO
2013 (6) SA 130
(SCA). The instructive reasoning of this
judgment is found at paragraph [26] thereof: “
A
distinction must this be drawn between discretionary powers and
mechanical powers. Professor Hoexter points out that a
mechanical power involves no choice on the part of the holder of the
power. A discretionary power, on the other hand, does
impose
such a choice. Whether the Master or the Registrar exercises a
mechanical power or one that is discretionary involves
an enquiry as
to what he or she is called upon to do. There may be situations
where the functionary is required to make genuine
decisions whether
to perform a duty. But where the requirements for registration
have been met, no choice is given to the
Registrar
”.
3.7
Not only do I find
that the Registrar in this appeal was in the same position as the
Registrar in the
Nedbank
– matter, but I find that this court is bound by the decision
of the Supreme Court of Appeal. It follows that the provisions
and
procedures of PAJA are not applicable to the relief claimed by the
appellants and neither could they have been compelled to
launch a
review application of any nature.
3.8
For sake of
completeness of the reference in paragraph 3.6 above, the reference
to Professor Hoexter is a reference to Hoexter,
Administrative
Law in South Africa
,
2
nd
Ed (2012) at 46 – 48.
3.9
In conclusion, to
refuse the appeal, would be to put this court’s approval upon
the registration of a resolution which had
not been taken by the
shareholders of the first respondent. In my view, that cannot
be countenanced.
[4]
Conclusion
I
would therefore uphold the appeal, with costs, and replace the order
of the court a quo with an order whereby the relief set out
in
paragraphs 10.1 and 10.2 of the judgment of my brother Mbongwe are
granted.
N.
DAVIS J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Order
I
have read the judgments prepared by my brothers Mbongwe and Davis and
I concur with the judgment of my brother Davis.
Accordingly,
the following order is granted:
1.
The appeal is upheld
with costs, and replaced with the following;
1.1
The amended Form
MC26 lodged with and registered by the ninth
respondent
on 12 January 2011 on behalf of the first respondent is set aside.
1.2
The Class B shares
with voting rights in the first respondent
created
by the registration of the amended Form MC26 is set aside.
V.
V. TLHAPI J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Date of Hearing:
19 January 2022
Judgment
delivered: 20 June 2022
APPEARANCES:
For
Appellant: Adv
E C Labuschagne SC
Attorney
for Appellant: Savage,
Jooste & Adams Inc.,
Attorneys,
Pretoria
For
the 8
th
Respondent: Adv
K Tsatsawane SC
Attorneys
for the 8
th
Respondent:
Mabotja Attorneys, Pretoria
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