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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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[2022] ZAGPPHC 476
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## Sithole N.O. and Others v Mulaudzi and Another (A286/2020)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 476 (24 June 2022)
Sithole N.O. and Others v Mulaudzi and Another (A286/2020)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 476 (24 June 2022)
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sino date 24 June 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO: A286/2020
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
24
June 2022
In
the matter between:
OSCAR
JABULANI SITHOLE N.O.
First Appellant
(Second Respondent
a
quo
)
CHRISTOPHER
PETER VAN ZYL N.O.
Second Appellant
(Third Respondent
a
quo
)
SELBY
MUSAWONKE NTSIBANDE N.O.
Third Appellant
(Fourth Respondent
a
quo
)
And
MATTHEWS
TUWANI MULAUDZI
First Respondent
VIOLET
MABONTSI MULAUDZI
Second Respondent
JUDGEMENT
TLHAPI
J
INTRODUCTION
[1]
The joint trustees of the
insolvent estate of the respondents, with leave granted
by
the court
a quo
, appeal the whole of the judgment and order of
Maumela J of 11 May 2018, being an order in a reconsideration
application brought
by the appellants in terms of Rule 6(12)(c) of
the Rules of Court.
[2]
The respondents launched an urgent application, which was purportedly
set down for
4 April 2017. The appellants contend that they learnt
of the urgent application through a Mr Kruger who represented Old
Mutual
in another matter in which the respondents were involved. They
were provided with a copy of the notice of motion as described in
annexure ‘CZ5’. Instructions were given to their counsel
to proceed to court on 4 April 2017 to seek indulgence to
oppose the
application. The respondents had also notified the appellants of the
application by email dated 3 April 2017. Annexed
to the said email
was the notice of motion ‘CZ5’ and not the founding
papers. On 4 April 2017 Counsel informed the
appellants that the
application had not been enrolled on that day.
[3]
On 6 April 2017 an email from the respondents informed the
appellants, in particular
Mr Van Zyl, the second appellant that he
had breached a written undertaking not to proceed with the second
meeting of creditors,
which he had convened for the 11 April 2017.
The respondents informed them that they would proceed with the urgent
application
which would be enrolled for the 14 April 2017. The
respondents proceeded to obtain an order despite the appellants
informing them
that no founding papers had been served on them or
annexed to the email of 3 April 2017. Their attorneys approached the
registrar’s
office to obtain a copy of the founding papers from
the court file and, despite a diligent search in the records office
the file
could not be located. The appellants obtained a copy of the
court order.
[4]
Consequently, the subject of the reconsideration before Maumela J was
the following
order granted by Mothle J on 18 April 2017, and I quote
the relevant prayers granted:
“
3.
That the appellants are granted leave to bring this application as a
matter of urgency
…………
..
4. Interdicting the
first, second, third and fourth respondents or any other person
acting on their behalf from proceeding with
the creditors’
meeting of the 11 April 2017 or any other special or general meeting
or any other process pending the outcome
of the s381 enquiry into the
Trustees fitness to hold office;
5.
Interdicting the first, second, third and fourth respondents or any
person acting on their behalf from proceeding with the creditor’s
meeting of the 11 April 2017 or any other special or general meeting
or process pending the outcome of the review application in
case
number 15616/2017;
6. Interdicting the
first, second, third and fourth respondents or any other person
acting on their behalf from proceeding with
the creditors meeting of
the 11 April 2017 or any other special or general meeting pending the
outcome of the application for the
expungement of claims lodged with
the first respondent.”
[5]
The following order was granted by the court
a quo
by Maumela
J in the reconsideration application
;
“
1.
The application for the court to set aside creditors meeting is
granted.
2. The application for
the appointment of trustees for the estate of the applicants to be
set aside is refused.
3. The application for
the court to order the removal from office of the trustees in the
estate of the applicants is refused.
4. The trustees in the
insolvent estate of the applicants are ordered to halt the process of
the disposal of the estate pending
the institution of a section 381
enquiry against the trustees.
5. The first responded is
ordered to institute a section 381 enquiry against the trustees in
the insolvent estate of the applicant.
6. Costs shall be costs
in the insolvent estate.”
[6]
It is contended by the appellants that the main ground in this appeal
is that the
court
a quo
erred and/ or misdirected itself, in
not appreciating or taking into account that the relief granted was
prejudicial to the creditors.
[7]
The respondents were in person and, they opposed the appeal,
describing such opposition
as a cross-appeal on the following
grounds:
(i)
That the appellants were not fit and proper to hold office as
trustees and that
they were irregularly appointed by the Master at a
creditors meeting;
(ii)
That there exists a pending part-heard enquiry in terms of s 381 of
the Companies
Act into their fitness to hold office and that there
was another pending court case number: 15616/17 for their removal;
(iii)
that the appellants were fraudulently
appointed by the Master and are facing various serious
charges, and
cannot administer the insolvent estate till they were cleared.
[8]
Subsequent to the hearing of this appeal the respondents on 02 June
2022 filed a document
titled “Further Submissions’ and
the following annexures were attached :
1. s174 & Acquittal
Judgment of the Pretoria Specialised Commercial Crimes Court.
2. Leave to Appeal:
Constitutional Court.
3. SCA 471/2021 corrected
to 472/2021.
4. SCA 185/2021 Order.
FACTUAL
BACKGROUND
[9]
The respondents were
sequestrated by Cash Crusaders Franchising (Pty) Ltd and a final
order under case number: 29047/2015 was granted on 27 May 2016. The
application in the court
a quo
was launched by the respondents
with the aim of interdicting a second meeting of creditors, a special
meeting and or any general
meeting being convened, including any
process by the trustees, until such time as the complaints of
impropriety against the first
and third appellants, which were being
investigated in an enquiry in terms of section 381 of the Companies
Act 61 of 1973 was finalized.
Also pending was the review application
in which the appellants’ appointment was challenged. Further,
the respondents intended
expunging the claims already proved against
the insolvent estate.
[10]
The respondents contended in their founding papers that the first and
third appellant had to
be removed because they were illegally and
fraudulently appointed by the Master and, criminal charges had been
laid against them
for extortion, fraud and corruption with the Master
and with the South African Police. The first appellant was accused of
soliciting
a bribe in order to engage a friendly sequestration. The
first appellant had also through his attorneys undertaken not to
oppose
or defend any action taken by the respondents and would abide
the decision of the court.
[11]
Further, respondents contended that they were not invited to the
first meeting of creditors and
that Ms Rossouw at the Master’s
office informed them that it was not necessary for them to be
present, despite the officers
presiding over the s381 enquiry
expressing a view that it was not acceptable to hold a creditor’s
meeting in the absence
of the insolvent. The Master had proceeded to
make final appointments of trustees after the first meeting. The
respondents annexed
to their founding affidavit trails of emails sent
to the Master’s Office relating to complaints he had against Ms
Rossouw
and, documents presented by the first appellant relating to
claims, which they disputed, which had been proved at a first meeting
of creditors held on 15 November 2016..
[12]
The respondents contended that on being informed
that there was a second creditors meeting convened for
11 April 2017,
they immediately wrote to Ms Rossouw seeking an explanation why a
meeting had been convened when there were matters
which were still
pending against the appellants.
[13]
The respondents also lamented the appointment of the second
appellant, Mr Van Zyl who was either
a director / employee of
Mazzars, which was the company he had complained about regarding the
first appellant.
[14]
The appellants contended that the litigation between the parties had
a protracted history and
the background is succinctly described in
Counsel for the appellants’ Heads of Argument as follows:
“
1.
On 27 May 2016, Respondents were sequestrated by
an order granted by the Gauteng Division of this Honourable
Court;
2.
An application for leave to appeal was refused,
and Respondents thereafter applied to the Supreme Court of
Appeal
(“the SCA”) for leave to appeal. On 9 November 2016, the
SCA dismissed the application for leave to appeal,
with costs. On 30
January 2017, Respondents’ application for leave to appeal to
the Constitutional Court of South Africa
(“the Constitutional
Court”) against the final order of sequestration was similarly
refused with costs. In December
2016, Respondents also launched an
application in the SCA in terms of Section 17(2)(f) of the Superior
Courts Act No. 10 of 2013
(“the
Superior Courts Act&rdquo
;),
requesting the President of the SCA to refer the decision of the
Judges of the SCA back to the Judges for reconsideration and/or
variation of the earlier refusal by the SCA to grant Mr Mulaudzi
leave to appeal. The Acting Judge President of the SCA dismissed
the
last mentioned application, with costs.
3.
Undeterred by the afore going, and on 15 March 2017, the Respondents
again made application for
leave to appeal to the Constitutional
Court, against the refusal of the reconsideration application. In an
entirely separate application,
Respondents applied to the North
Gauteng High Court, as a court of first instance, for the setting
aside of the sequestration order
granted on 27 May 2016. An answering
affidavit was filed in that matter. Respondents failed to file
replying papers or further
prosecute that application.
4.
(……….)
5.
On 15 November 2016, a first meeting of creditors
was called by the Master of the High Court (“the Master”)
where a number of creditors (including Cash Crusaders) successfully
proved claims against Mr Mulaudzi’s estate. The proven
creditors voted for the appointment of two trustees, and the Master
appointed a third trustee, exercising his statutory powers
to do so.
On 20 February 2017, the Master issued the final certificate of
appointment for the Trustees.
6.
On 2 February 2017, the Respondents launched an application for an
order “[t]hat the order
and judgment of the above honourable
court [the final order of sequestration] is rescinded and/or set
aside” or in the alternative
that “Applicants be declared
rehabilitated insolvents” (“the Rescission
b
Application”). The Rescission
Application was nothing other than an ill-founded attempt by the
Respondents to prevent the
Trustees and the Master from discharging
their statutory duties, investigating the financial affairs of the
Respondents, and recovering
such assets as may be discovered in the
course of such investigation. There was no basis in law for the
relief sought by the Respondents
in the Rescission Application
especially in circumstances where his various applications for leave
to appeal the final sequestration
orders, have all been dismissed
with costs. The Rescission Application was opposed, and answering
affidavits filed. No replying
papers were delivered, and the
Respondents took no further steps to enrol the Rescission Application
for hearing.
7.
On 3 March 2017, the Respondents launched an
application for an order to set aside the appointment of the
Trustees
and to also set aside the first meeting of creditors of 15 November
2016 and the decisions taken thereat (“the Review
Application”). The Review Application is a further desperate
attempt by the Respondents to prevent the Trustees from discharging
their statutory duties and investigating the financial affairs of the
Respondents, and recovering such assets as may be discovered
in the
course of such investigation. The Review Application was opposed by
the Master of the High Court and the Trustees.
8.
…….
9.
On 18 April 2017, and under this case number
21848/17, Respondents obtained an order on an ex parte basis
interdicting the Master and the trustees from proceeding with the
second meeting of creditors or any other meetings or processes
(i)
“pending the outcome of the
Section 381
enquiry into trustees
fitness to hold office” (details of the purported
Section 381
enquiry are given below); (ii) “pending the outcome of the
review application in case number 15616/2017” (referred
to in
paragraph 7 above); and (iii) “pending the outcome of the
application for expungement of claims lodged with the Master
”
which so-called expungement application is
referred to in paragraph 8 above. The Respondents sought and obtained
this order without:
9.1. Effecting any
service of the founding papers on the Respondents against whom the
order was granted. Respondents had
purported to set the same matter
down for hearing on an earlier date, i.e. 4 April 2017; had served
the notice of motion without
any founding affidavit on the attorneys
representing one of the creditors in Respondents’ insolvent
estate;
9.2.
Respondents were advised on no less than three occasions that they
needed to serve the founding papers on
the Respondents before moving
the Court for any relief.
9.3. The first
respondent then surreptitiously and without making any attempt to
serve the founding papers on the trustees
in any manner obtained the
court order….
10. ..........the
trustees enrolled the matter in terms of
rule 6(12)(c)
,seeking the
reconsideration and discharge of the order granted on 18 April 2017.
The Application in terms of
rule 6(12)
(c) was opposed by the
respondents. On 5 May 2017, the court acting in terms of
rule
6(12)(c)
discharged the order of 18 April 2017”).
ISSUES
FOR DETERMINATION ON APPEAL
[15]
This appeal is about the following:
(i)
whether the court
a quo
, erred in granting an order
interdicting a second meeting of creditors or any meeting of
creditors following upon the first meeting
at the instance of the
insolvent and not the creditors, and
(ii)
whether the respondents have satisfied the requirements for the grant
of an interim interdict against
the trustees.
(iii)
whether the court may order the Master to investigate the insolvent’s
complaints in terms of section
381 of the Companies Act 61 of 1973
and whether such section is applicable to trustees;
(iv)
whether the effect of the interim interdict granted in favour of the
respondents has caused severe prejudice
to the creditors of the
insolvent estate, exacerbated by the plethora of litigation brought
by the respondents.
APPLICABLE
LEGAL PRESCRIPTS AND ANALYSIS
[16]
Although the respondents had much to say in their founding papers
about their complaints and
about the appellants not being fit and
proper persons to be appointed as trustees, the notice of motion
initiating the launch of
the urgent application before Mothle J ‘CZ5’
annexed to the appellants answering affidavit, does not pray for
setting
aside of the appointments and removal of the trustees. The
subsequent order ‘CZ2’ granted by him on 18 April 2017
also
does not deal with such.
[17]
It is my view, that the complaints against the trustees only had
relevance in as far as it had
to be determined whether they had
established grounds to justify the grant of an interim order,
interdicting the second meeting
of creditors, pending the
finalization of the s381 enquiry and the review application under
case number: 15616/2017. Having regard
to the purpose of the
reconsideration application it was erroneous for Maumela J to have
stated in the opening paragraphs of his
judgement that besides
prayers for the setting aside of a creditors meeting, the court also
had to determine the issue around the
irregular appointment of the
trustees and their removal as appears in orders 2 and 3 granted on 11
May 2018.
[18]
It is trite that after a final sequestration order
is granted all assets (movable and immovable) of the
insolvent fall
into the insolvent estate. The insolvent estate vests first with the
Master until a trustee/s is appointed. The
purpose of sequestration
is to place all the debtors’ assets into the hands of the
trustee/s appointed by the Master for
a fair distribution of the
assets / proceeds to the general body of creditors in order of
preference. A
concursus
creditorum
is
therefore established after the final order of sequestration to deal
with such process. The final order therefore crystallises
the
position of the insolvent,
Walker
v Syfret NO
[1]
.
“
The
sequestration order crystalises the insolvent’s position; 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”.
In
this regard and in summary, the argument for the appellants relied
heavily on the principle that the rights of creditors should
not be
prejudiced by anything done post
concursus,
since
the positions of the respondents are frozen, as at that date and,
their rights and obligations are determined on that basis.
[19]
The appellants contend that nothing in
section 40
of the
Insolvency
Act 24 of 1936
provides for the Master to give consideration to the
complaints and desires of the insolvent. In terms of
section 40(1)
of
the
Insolvency Act the
Master must publish and convene a first
meeting of creditors in the Government Gazette after the final order
of sequestration had
been granted. The purposes for the meeting is
for proving claims by the creditors and for the election by the
creditors of a trustee/s,
[20]
The appellants contend that
section 40(3)(a)
makes it peremptory for
the Master to appoint a second meeting of creditors:
“
After
the first meeting of creditors and the appointment of a trustee, the
Master
shall
appoint a second meeting of creditors for the proof of claims against
the estate, and for the purpose of receiving the report of
the
trustee on the affairs and conditions of the estate and giving the
trustee directions in connection with the administration
of the
estate.”
[21]
The Master is not precluded from making any additional appointment of
a trustee, as occurred
in this matter. The duty of a trustee is to
administer the insolvent estate on the directions of the creditors
and Master. This
much was understood by the respondents when they
stated in their founding papers that the launch of the application
was not intended
to interfere or frustrate the process of
administering their insolvent estate. In my view, in determining
whether the insolvent
may interdict a second meeting of creditors,
the process unfolding in
section 40
should be read with those
sections that deal with the insolvent’s participatory role in
the administration of the insolvent
estate, as defined in sections
64, 65 and 66 of the Act. Section 64(1) obliges the insolvent to
attend the first and second meeting
of creditors:
“
An
insolvent
shall
attend the first and second
meeting of creditors of his estate and every adjourned first and
second meeting unless he has written
permission of the officer who is
to preside or who presided at such meeting granted after consultation
with the trustee to absent
himself
.
The insolvent shall also attend any subsequent meeting of creditors
if required to do so by written notice of the trustee of his
estate.”
(my emphasis).
Sections
65 and 66 provide for the process of subpoenaing the insolvent or any
person to be questioned by the officer presiding
or the trustee and
what will transpire should they fail to heed the subpoena. These
processes are engaged in the interests of the
general body of
creditors. The respondents contend that they were not notified of the
first meeting of creditors. In my view there
are insufficient fact
for me to establish when the Master convened the first meeting of
creditors. In the absents of a report from
the Master, I am not in a
position to comment on whether or not the Master was obliged to
invite the insolvent. What the Act provides
is that the Master on
receipt of the final order of sequestration shall immediately convene
a first meeting of creditors. However,
on their own version the
respondents had knowledge of the second meeting of creditors and,
instead of attending such meeting they
launched an application to
interdict the said meeting. When the second meeting was convened
creditors, trustees and insolvents
were by law obliged to attend. The
Act makes it peremptory that they, as insolvents attend. They failed
to attend and they were
not granted permission to absent themselves
by the presiding officer.
[22]
In
Van
Der Merwe and Others v UTI South Africa Proprietary Limited and
Others
[2]
,
at
paragraph 12, the Court recognised the fundamental principle of
insolvency law as follows:
"The
fundamental principle of insolvency law is that all creditors are
subject to its provisions, save in exceptional cases
where statutes
specifically provide otherwise. This fundamental principle is given
effect to in two ways. Firstly, by the creation
of a concursus
creditorum in terms of which the claims and rights of all creditors
of an insolvent company are determined as at
the date of insolvency,
with the result that one creditor is not entitled to improve its
position in relation to others after the
date of the concursus.
Secondly, by ensuring that every asset belonging to the insolvent
company
is
properly realised by its liquidator so that the proceeds can be
distributed amongst the company's creditors in the order preference
dictated by insolvency law and determined as at the concursus. So, it
is then that section
391
of
the old Companies Act obliges a liquidator to recover "all the
assets and property" of the insolvent company, "all"
being a word of the widest possible import."
[23]
In this instance the trustees were appointed, in
the process that unfolded at the first meeting of creditors.
It then
became their primary responsibility to take charge of all property in
the insolvent estate, keep an eye over its assets
for the benefit of
the general body of creditors under the watchful eye of the Master
who retains overall supervisory powers. ;
Jansen
Van Rensburg NO v Cardio-Fitness Properties (Pty) Ltd
[3]
.
[24]
The process envisaged in the second meeting and other subsequent
meetings, is to obtain a report
from the trustee on its investigation
of claims that were proved at the first meeting and a report on the
status of administration
of the insolvent estate, to receive
instructions from the creditors on steps to be taken in the
administration of the estate.
Section 41
and
42
of the
Insolvency Act
allows
the trustee to convene further meetings by publication in the
Gazette or at the instance of the Master or creditor/s for further
directives on the administration of the insolvent estate. No room is
created for the insolvent to play any role in this process
of
electing a trustee to protect his/her interests in the insolvent
estate.
[25]
In
Ex
Parte The Master of the High Court South Africa (North Gauteng)
[4]
the
following was stated:
“
The
South African Insolvency system is creditor-driven. The majority of
creditors in number or claims have the right to elect trustees
and
liquidators and to make decisions in respect of the manner in which
assets falling into the estate or constituting property
of a
corporate body in a winding up should be dealt with. Nonetheless,
their choice of a trustee is subject to the Master’s
approval
and the exercise of their functions is subject to the Master’s
control.
[26]
The insolvent is not without recourse to taking up issues of improper
conduct of the trustee/s
in their administration of the insolvent
estate. The insolvent has a right to demand that action be taken
against a trustee who
fails to administer the insolvent estate in the
interest of the creditors and not in the insolvent’s interest.
A trustee
has a duty to account to the creditors, the insolvent and
any other interested person on his/her administration of the
insolvent
estate. For example, they may file objections to a
Liquidation and Distribution Account lying for inspection, and the
Master is
obliged to seek and an explanation from the trustee and to
adjudicate over such objections.
[27]
The respondents are entitled to approach the Master or the court as
provided for in
section 60
of the
Insolvency Act
AME="_ftnref5">[5]
,
which can be used to seek the removal of a trustee.
It
is my view that when the insolvent is engaging in such process, it
should not have the effect of stopping the administration
of the
insolvent estate
otherwise
this will gravely prejudice the interests of the creditors. If need
be a creditors meeting may be called for by the creditors
or convened
by the Master to appoint another trustee. In other words, that a
concursus creditorum
was established by granting a final order
of sequestration, in protecting the interest of the general body of
creditors the process
under
section 60
should not halt the
administration of the estate.
THE
SECTION 381
ENQUIRY
[28]
It is common cause that the respondents sought the institution of a
section 381
enquiry and the court
a quo
ordered the Master to
do so. The appellants contend that the respondents failed to put up
any facts in the affidavits relied upon
which justified the holding
of a
section 381
enquiry and, for interdicting any of the trustees in
continuing with their administration in the insolvent estate.
[29]
Annexed to the respondents’ founding affidavit is annexure
‘TM4’ to annexure
‘A’, which is a notice
dated 7 December 2016, to the respondents to attend an Enquiry
convened by the Master in terms
of
section 152(1)
and (2) of the
Insolvency Act read
with section 381 of the Companies Act 61 of 1973,
commencing 6 November 2016. In the founding affidavit at paragraph 9
d, the respondents
make no mention of section 152(1) and (2). They
only mention that the enquiry was a sec 381 enquiry which was
convened as a result
of persistence on their part and they await the
outcome.
[30]
The appellants aver that the Master held a section 381 enquiry at the
Master’s Office on
23 and 24 January 2017, where the Master
questioned both the first respondent and Mr Sithole about the
complaints lodged by the
respondents. Mr Sithole filed a confirmatory
affidavit. The appellants contend that the Master is under no
obligation to disclose
what happened thereafter, save to state that
the Master appointed Mr Van Zyl the second appellant as an additional
trustee.
[31]
It is not clear from the papers what the nature of the enquiries
relating to the notice “TM4”
calling for the respondents
to appear before the Master on 6 November 2016 in respect of section
152 (1) and (2) of the Insolvency
read with section 381 of the
Companies Act was about. The same applied to meetings of the 23 and
24 January 2017.
[32]
Section 152(1)
of the
Insolvency Act provides
:
“
The
Master may at any time direct a trustee to deliver to him any book or
document relating or any property belonging to the insolvent
estate
of which he is a trustee.”
152(2)
“
If
at any time after the sequestration of the estate of a debtor and
before his Rehabilitation, the Master is of the opinion that
the
insolvent or the trustee of that estate or any other person is able
to give any information which the Master considers to be
desirable to
obtain concerning the insolvent, or concerns his estate or the
administration of the estate, or concerning any claim
or demand made
against the estate, he may by notice in writing, delivered to the
insolvent or the trustee or such other person
…..to furnish
the Master or other officer before whom he is summoned to appear with
all information within his knowledge
concerning the insolvent or the
insolvent's estate or the administration of the estate"
[33]
Section 381(1) of the Companies Act 61 of 1973 provide:
“
The
Master shall take cognizance of the conduct of liquidators and shall,
if he has reason to believe that a liquidator is not faithfully
performing his duties and duly observing all the requirements imposed
on him by any law or otherwise with respect to the performance
of his
duties, or if any complaint is made to him by any creditor, member or
contributory in regard thereto, enquire into the matter
and take such
action thereanent as he may think expedient”
Section 381 (2)
“
The
Master may at any time require any liquidator to answer any query in
relations to the winding -up in which such liquidator is
engaged, and
may, if he thinks it fil, examine such liquidator or any other person
on oath concerning the winding up;”
[34]
In
Walker v Syfret NO
supra
the position
of the insolvent is crystallised by the final order of sequestration
therefore, it is the interest of the general body
of creditors which
is paramount. The only right that the insolvent may have or exercise
is to demand that the Trustees manage the
administration of the
estate not to serve or safeguard their interests as stated in their
founding papers. As stated above,
section 60
of the
Insolvency Act is
applicable.
[35]
Therefore, in my view
section 381
is not applicable in this instance
as this provides only for an investigation of the liquidation of a
company.
Section 381
does not concern the trustees in the insolvent
estate of the respondents who are natural persons. There is scant
authority for
this view of this view however, it is expressed in
Christopher
Peter Van Zyl v The
Master
of the High Court, Western Cape Division and Another
.
[6]
In
this matter the Master was enquiring into the conduct of Mr Van Zyl
who was a liquidator in Asch Professional Services (Pty)
Ltd. The
enquiry was extended to 16 estates and the court found among these
that two of the estates (“ ….
concerned
trusteeships of the insolvent estates of natural person and were not
susceptible to s381 of the Companies Act”).
[36]
Furthermore, it is my view that if there is a pending review
application, then still the administration
of the insolvent estate
cannot wait until the review is finalized, because that would not
serve the purpose for which the final
order was granted.
HAVE
THE RESPONDENTS SATISFIED THE REQUIREMENTS FOR AN INTERIM
INTERDICTORY
RELIEF?
[37]
The requirements for the grant of an interim interdict are trite:
“
(i)
the existence of a prima facie right;
(ii) a well-grounded
apprehension of irreparable harm if the interim relief is not granted
and the ultimate relief is finally granted;
(iii) the balance of
convenience favours the grant of an interim relief;
(iv) the applicant has
no other satisfactory relief.”
[38]
It was argued for appellants that the founding affidavit relied upon
in the court
a quo
failed to satisfy the following:
(i) in
order to assess the presence a
prima
facie
right the court a quo had to have regard to the facts alleged by the
applicant together with those of the respondent which the
applicant
could not dispute and having regard to the inherent probabilities,
determine whether the applicants were entitled to
relief. In
Spur
Steak Ranches Ltd v Saddles Steak Ranches
[7]
it
was stated that where on the probabilities such right existed then a
further two stage enquiry needed to be engaged, to determine
whether
on the version of the respondent, serious doubt existed, having
regard to the version of the applicant as to the existence
of such
right. Where there was serious doubt the applicant could not succeed.
In my view the nature of
the process that unfolds after the final order of sequestration does
not give an insolvent the right to
interdict a second meeting of
creditors, which is a process mainly for the benefit of the general
body of creditors as already
stated.
(ii)
it was contended that the founding affidavit contained hearsay
evidence. The affidavit should allege essential evidence equivalent
to such evidence which could be led at trial;
Mostert
v First Rand Bank Ltd
[8]
.
Further
the deponent failed to state that the allegations of fact were true
on the basis of such knowledge and belief
Galp
v Tansley NO
[9]
.
In
this regard, the question is what primary facts were present before
the court
a
quo
,
which justified the need to suspend the holding of a second meeting
of creditors in order to launch an investigation against the
trustees. In motion proceedings, the affidavits are pleadings and
evidence.
(iii)
for the court to have regard to documents annexed to an affidavit the
relevance thereof and the identification of the portions
to which the
court has to consider have to be fully explained,
Swissborough
Diamond Mines (Pty) Ltd v Government of the RSA
[10]
.
A
litigant cannot assume that the court will take cognizance of the
contents of the documents annexed without pertinently dealing
with
those parts, which are relevant in the affidavit.
[39]
I do not intend to deal with all examples where no case is made out
on the papers. It is common
cause that the respondents annexed a
number of documents to the founding affidavit. Under the heading “Why
the Honourable
Court Should Find in Our Favour” the respondents
state as at paragraph 22 of their founding papers:
“
..Sithole
of Ngwenduna Trustees and his joint Trustee were illegally,
irregularly and fraudulently appointed due to what I term
"inside
job" at the Master's office. The details relating to this are
contained in various correspondences to which I
referred above, where
the above Honourable court will note how I was misled and lied to.
hence the fraudulent appointments. For
completeness I attach hereto
various correspondence wherein Sithole solicits bribe and extorts
payments from me, annexed hereto
marked TM7. I also attach for ease
of reference the fraudulent claims which were used to support
Sithole’s and his Co-Trustees
appointment annexed hereto Marked
TM8”
[40]
Nowhere in the affidavit do the respondents explain the circumstances
around which the bribe
was solicited, and from who and to who’s
numbers these messages were exchanged, the dates on which these
bribes were solicited.
In as far as annexures under ‘TM8’
are concerned, there is no explanation why these claims which were
presented at
a creditors meeting were fraudulent, why these were not
presented to the Master by the respondents as a complaint that they
were
fraudulent or to have same reviewed by the trustee.
In
Foize
Africa (Pty)Ltd v Foize Beheer BV and Others
[11]
Leach
JA stated:
“
[30]
The court a quo, in purporting to exercise its discretion, stated
that it did so in the light of ‘the attendant
circumstances’
without in any way identifying what circumstances it took into
account. But as the respondents objection was
merely raised from the
bar without any supporting affidavits, the only relevant circumstance
then known appears to have been the
existence of the foreign
jurisdiction and arbitration clauses as most of the facts and
circumstances as outline above which could
have been relevant to the
exercise of the court’s discretion had not been canvassed in
the papers. As already mentioned,
a party wishing to raise an
arbitration or foreign jurisdiction clause as a reason to stay a
court from exercising jurisdiction,
should do so by way of a dilatory
plea. As in motion proceedings, the affidavits serve as both
pleadings and evidence, in a case
such as this it would be necessary
to place the relevant facts upon which reliance is placed before
court by way of affidavit.
This the respondents failed to do. By the
same token, the appellant was not obliged to deal with a dilatory
plea based on clause
10 until it had been properly raise. In light of
this the court a quo was left in a position where apart from a few
basic facts,
it was not in a position to take an informed decision in
exercising its discretion.
[31] That
being so, this was clearly a matter in which the court a quo ought
not to have taken a final decision at that
stage on whether a South
African court should exercise jurisdiction in respect of appellant’s
proposed action. It was a matter
which cried out for that issue to
stand over for decision by the trial court.”
[41]
In my view it does not seem to me that the court before was given
sufficient facts for it to
consider and to have a proper ventilation
of the principles set out above. It was necessary for the trustees to
be heard alternatively
if the court was satisfied initially that the
papers were served on the trustees and they had not opposed the
application the court
should have determined whether, at law a court
could be called upon to interdict a second creditors meeting lawfully
constituted
in terms of the
Insolvency Act.
>
[42]
Having regard to the consequences following upon
the grant of a final sequestration order, the court
a quo (
the
reconsideration application before Maumela J) was given a second
opportunity to consider whether it was lawful to interdict
a second
creditors meeting, at the instance of an insolvent and, whether the
court was competent to order that
section 381
inquiry be convened.
[43]
A reading of the court a quo’s judgment paragraphs 14 -18 seems
to suggest that the interests
of the respondents need to be
protected; that the trustees also need to avail themselves of the
audi alteram rule
and
be cleared from allegations of impropriety and that they may only
proceed to administer the insolvent estate after they have
been
cleared. With respect, the reasoning in paragraphs 14-18 is misplaced
in that it totally ignored the consequences of the sequestration
order. The sequestration order has not been rescinded, the
respondents have not been rehabilitated and, in my view, the
respondents
as insolvents clearly lacked
locus
standi
to bring an application
interdicting the trustees in their administration of the insolvent
estate.
[44]
Given the view that I take of this matter, the
appeal must be upheld.
[45]
It is appropriate at this stage to mention that the appeal was
confined to the proceedings in
the court
a quo.
Therefore,
further submissions dated 2
nd
June 2022 as described in
paragraph 8 above have no relevance in this appeal.
[46]
In the result the following order is made:
1.
Appeal is upheld.
2.
The order of 11 May 2017 is set aside.
3.
Costs to be costs in the sequestration
.
TLHAPI
J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
I
agree,
MADIBA
AJ
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
I
agree and It is so ordered.
NDLOKOVANE
AJ
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
APPEARANCES
FOR
THE APPELLANTS
: ADV. A.C. OOSTHUIZEN SC
INSTRUCTED
BY
: ASHERSON ATTORNEYS
FOR
THE FIRST AND SECOND RESPONDENTS
: IN PERSON
HEARD
ON
: 09 February 2022
DATE
OF JUDGMENT
: 24 June 2022
[1]
1911
AD 141
at 160
[2]
2014
ZAKZDHC 61(17December 2014).
[3]
2014
ZAGPJHC 40(4 March 2014)
[4]
2011
(5)SA311 (GNP) at paragraphs 28 and 29
[5]
The
Master may remove a trustee from his office on the ground
—
(a)
that he was not qualified for election or appointment as trustee or
that his election or appointment was for any other reason
illegal,
or that he has become disqualified from election or appointment as a
trustee or has been authorised, specially or under
a general power
of attorney, to vote for or on behalf of a creditor at a meeting of
creditors of the insolvent estate of which
he is the trustee and has
acted or purported to act under such special authority or general
power of attorney; or
(b)
that he has failed to perform satisfactorily any duty imposed upon
him by this Act or to comply with a lawful demand of the
Master; or
(c)
that he is mentally or physically incapable of performing
satisfactorily his duties as trustee; or
(d)
that the majority (reckoned in number and in value) of creditors
entitled to vote at a meeting of creditors has requested
him in
writing to do so; or
(e) that,
in his opinion, the trustee is no longer suitable to be the trustee
of the estate concerned.
[6]
Unreported
Case Number 16839/2018 at para 1 (30 April 2020)
[7]
1996
(3) SA 706
(c )
[8]
2018
(4) SA 443 (SCA)
[9]
1966
(4) SA 555 (C)
[10]
1999
(2) SA 279 (T)
[11]
2013
(3) SA 91
(SCA) at [30] and [31]
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