Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 849South Africa
Cassim N.O and Another v Strategic Investment Group Africa Asset Finance (Pty) Ltd and Others (2021/54279) [2022] ZAGPPHC 849 (8 November 2022)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Cassim N.O and Another v Strategic Investment Group Africa Asset Finance (Pty) Ltd and Others (2021/54279) [2022] ZAGPPHC 849 (8 November 2022)
Cassim N.O and Another v Strategic Investment Group Africa Asset Finance (Pty) Ltd and Others (2021/54279) [2022] ZAGPPHC 849 (8 November 2022)
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sino date 8 November 2022
IN THE HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE NO:
2021/54279
REPORTABLE: NO
OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES: NO
8 NOVEMBER 2022
In the matter
between:
ZAHEER CASSIM
N.O. First
Applicant
STEPHEN SMYTH
N.O. Second
Applicant
[In their
capacities as jointly appointed
Business Rescue
Practitioners of Busmark
2000 (Pty) Ltd
(in business rescue)]
and
STRATEGIC
INVESTMENT GROUP AFRICA First
Respondent
ASSET FINANCE
(PTY) LTD
(Registration
Number: 2020/004014/07)
THE COMPANIES
AND INTELLECTUAL
Second
Respondent
PROPERTY
COMMISSION (“CIPC”)
PATUXOLO
NODADA
Third Respondent
ALL AFFECTED
PARTIES AS DEFINED IN
SECTION 128
OF THE COMPANIES ACT 71 Fourth
Respondent
OF 2008
JUDGMENT
[1]
This is an application in terms of Section 131 (1) of Act 71 of 2008
in which the
applicants seek an order in the following terms: -
1.
That the
application be heard on urgent basis and that non-compliance of the
Rules of Court pertaining to time periods and service
be condoned;
2.
That the first
respondent be placed under supervision and that business rescue
proceedings be commenced against him;
3.
That the first
and second applicants be jointly appointed as the first respondent’s
business rescue practitioners. In the
alternative the above
Honourable Court should appoint a fit and proper business rescue
practitioner for the first respondent. That
the costs of this
application be costs in the business rescue of the first respondent
in the event of opposition. The first respondent
resists the relief
sought on the following grounds: -
1.
That the
applicant’s application lacks the necessary requisites for
urgency and that it is accordingly not urgent;
2.
It is
contended by the first respondent that the applicants failed to
establish and illustrate that the first respondent is in financial
distress;
3.
That it would
not be just and equitable that the first respondent be placed under
supervision and that business rescue proceedings
of the first
respondent be commenced with.
4.
The first
respondent argues that the applicant’s application is the abuse
of the process as the real motive of this application
is to assume
control over the first respondent for the sole benefit of the third
applicant.
CONDONATION
APPLICATION
[2]
The third respondent seeks condonation for the late filing of an
answering affidavit
on behalf of the first respondent and himself.
The application is based on the following grounds. Due to the short
notice afforded
to the third respondent and first respondent
including all the interested and affected parties, they could not
source another legal
representatives as their usual attorneys were
conflicted in this application. The three days’ notice afforded
to file the
answering affidavit were not sufficient to instruct
another set of attorneys to act on their behalf. The respondents
herein sought
an extension of time in which to serve and deliver
their answering affidavit. The applicants’ attorneys did not
respond to
the request for the extension of time. Ultimately the
respondents managed to procure the services of alternative attorneys
and
resumed to peruse the four hundred pages of the application and
further consult and draft the answering affidavit on behalf of the
affected respondents in this matter. The first and third respondents
submitted that the delay caused is not due to any tardiness
on the
side of the respondents.
[3]
The applicants accepts that the respondents secured the alternative
legal representatives
on the eleven hour but contend that no
explanation is tendered as to why they procured their alternative
attorneys late whereas
they were aware that their previous attorneys
were conflicted. They however indicated that they will abide by the
court’s
decision on the issue of condonation.A court may
condone non-compliance of the Rules of Court where the applicant
demonstrates
that a valid and justifiable reason exists why
non-compliance should be condoned.
[4]
An applicant is to furnish an explanation of his default sufficiently
and fully to
enable the Court to understand how it really came about
and to assess his conduct and motives. The factors to be considered
by
the court include the importance of the case, the prospects of
success on appeal, any prejudice caused, the respondents’
interest in the case and the finality of his judgment and the
convenience of the court and the avoidance of delay in the
administration
of justice. The burden lies with the applicant to
prove good cause for the relief it seeks.
See
Silber
.V. Ozen Wholesalers (Pty) Ltd
1954 (2) SA 345
A at 353 A and
Federated Employers Fire & General Insurance Co Ltd .V. McKenzie
1969 3 SA 360
A at 362 F-H
It is trite law
that the standard for considering application for condonation is the
interest of justice.
See
Brummer
.V. Gorfil Brother Investments (Pty) Ltd and Others
[2000] ZACC 3
;
2000 (2) SA 837
CC paragraph [3] and Grootboom .V. National Prosecuting Authority and
Another
2014 (2) SA 68
CC paragraphs [22] and [23]
[5]
I find that a full and sufficient explanation as to how the
non-compliance came About
were disclosed by the applicant herein. I
am of the view that a good and bona fide explanation has been
tendered by the applicants.
I further find
that it is in the interest of justice for both parties more
particularly in the interest of justice that condonation
be granted.
I therefore make
the following order: -
1)
That the
application for condonation is hereby granted.
FACTUAL
BACKGROUND
[6]
The third applicant’s (Busmark 2000 Pty Ltd) board resolved to
voluntarily commence
business rescue proceeding and placed the third
applicant under supervision in terms of Section 129 (1) of Act 71 of
2008. The
first and second applicants were licensed during 04 August
2021 to act as the joint business rescue practitioners in regard to
third applicant.
[7]
The records reflect that the first respondent Strategic Investment
Group Africa Asset
Finance Pty Ltd (SIGA) was initially registered
with the companies and Intellectual Properties Commission (CIPC) as
(CIMBIB) (Pty)
Ltd on 06 January 2020 which name was changed to
Strategic Investment Group Asset Finance (Pty) Ltd during 16 October
2020. Patuxola
Nodada the third respondent, is the sole director of
“SIGA” and its business is to procure tenders for
delivery of
buses to various organizations and in turn subcontracts
with the third applicant for the manufacturing and delivery of the
requisite
number of buses.
[8]
The first respondent will also enter into agreements with Busmark
Maintenance Services
(Pty) Ltd (Busmex) for the maintenance of the
buses so acquired.
[9]
The first respondent submitted a proposal to supply, lease and
maintain ten buses
to Rustenburg Transit (RF) Pty Ltd. In turn the
third applicant and the first respondent were to enter into Bus
Supply and maintenance
agreement with Rustenburg Transit and the
first respondent will source and supply the ten buses to Rustenburg
Transit. The third
applicant manufactured the ten buses and delivered
them to the first respondent. The first respondent delivered the
buses to Rustenburg
Transit and was paid a stepped lease in the sum
of R15 million and continued to pay rental amounts to the first
respondent.
[10]
During 1 August 2020 the first Respondent entered into a Bus Supply
Rental and Maintenance Agreement
with Africa’s Best 350 Pty Ltd
and sold and supplied 130 buses for which it was paid R78 963 600
and made monthly
payments of R1.5 million to the third applicant.
[11]
The first respondent was awarded a tender to supply, lease and
maintain 45 buses to Rustenburg
Transit. The third applicant is not a
party to an existing agreement between the first respondent and
Rustenburg Transit for the
lease of the ten buses as well as a
standing order for the delivery and lease and maintenance of further
forty five buses.
[12]
An attempt was made to formalize the relationship between the third
applicant and the first respondent
to regulate their relationship
prior to the first respondent placing an order to the third applicant
for the manufacturing of the
forty five buses for Rustenburg Transit
but could not agree to the terms thereof.
The parties
hereto did not conclude the Bus Supply and Rental and Maintenance
Agreement to
date.
[13]
The third applicant is a creditor of the first respondent in the sum
of R41 million in respect
of a loan advanced to the first respondent
for the purchase of buses and for an amount of R6.8 million in
respect of the lease
arrears. In the event of a dispute between the
third applicant the first respondent and Rustenburg Transit the
parties aforementioned
are supposed to resort to a dispute resolution
mechanism.
[14]
The first respondent and the third applicant are to date unable to
conclude an agreement relating
to the Bus Supply Rental and the
maintenance of the forty five buses the first respondent successfully
tendered for.
[15]
A letter of demand for payment of the R46, 8 million allegedly owed
by the first respondent to
the third applicant was dispatched to the
first respondent for payment. It is disputed that the amount owed to
the third applicant
is due and payable and that the amount is
correct. The failure by the first respondent to comply with the
applicants’ letter
of demand resulted in the applicants
launching an application for an order placing the first respondent
under supervision and commencing
business rescue proceedings.
ISSUES FOR
DETERMINATION
[16]
The issues to be decided are the following: -
1.
Whether the
first respondent is financially distressed;
2.
Whether the
first respondent should be placed under supervision and whether
business rescue proceedings should be commenced against
first
respondent;
3.
Whether the
applicants should be appointed as business rescue practitioners in
the event the first respondent is placed under supervision.
4.
Whether the
applicants’ application amounts to abuse of process court.
5.
Whether it
would be just and equitable that an order be granted for placing the
first respondent in business rescue.
LEGAL
PRINCIPLES FINDING APPLICATION
[17]
The applicants rely on the provisions of Section 131 (1) of Act 17 of
2008 in seeking an urgent
order for placing the first respondent
under supervision and business rescue proceedings to commence.
Section 131 (1)
of the Companies Act stipulates that: -
“
court
order to begin the business rescue proceedings : -
1)
Unless
a company has adopted a resolution contemplated in Section 129, an
affected person may apply to the court at any time for
an order
placing the company under supervision and commencing business rescue
proceedings”
[18]
In terms of Section 131 (4) of Act 17 of 2008 the applicants are
vested with an onus to establish
to the satisfaction of the court the
following requirements: -
1.
That the
company (first respondent) is financially distressed;
2.
That the first
respondent has failed to pay over any amount in terms of an
obligation under or in terms of a public regulation or
contract with
respect to employment related matters; or
3.
It is
otherwise just and equitable to do so for financial reasons;
4.
That there is
a reasonable prospect for rescuing the company.
[19]
If the court is satisfied that the aforementioned requirements are
met, may place the company
under supervision and business rescue
proceedings may commence.
[20]
The Act in Section 128 (1) (f) describes (Act 17 of 2008) financial
distress in the
following terms:
-
That it is
unreasonably unlikely that a company would be able to pay all its
debts as they become due and payable within the immediately
ensuing
six months.
That it
appears to be reasonably likely that the company will become
insolvent within immediately ensuing six months.
The
Applicant’s contentions
[21]
The applicants contends that the first respondent is financially
distressed and if placed under
supervision and business rescue, it
would return to a solvent entity and alternatively creditors will
immensely benefit as the
process will yield better dividends. It is
further contended by the applicants that despite the first respondent
having received
a stepped lease in the amount of R15 million, monthly
instalments deriving from the said lease, monthly instalments
payments from
instalments sale agreement concluded with AB 350 Pty
Ltd and payment for the delivery of the buses, the first respondent
has failed
to effect full payment to the third applicant.
[22]
According to the applicants, the first respondent is solely enjoying
all the benefits it sourced
from the agreements it concluded to the
detriment of the third applicant. As a result of non-payment by the
first respondent to
the third applicant, it is now in financial
distress together with its subsidiary groups. The applicants’
view is that the
existing agreement between the first respondent
regarding the ten buses already delivered and the standing order for
the delivery,
lease and maintenance of further forty five buses to
Rustenburg Transit will be in jeopardy as the contractual agreement
thereof
will not be met without all the Busmark Companies’
involvement as their business are inter-related.
The applicants
submitted that the third applicant will not be willing to supply the
forty five buses if a business rescue practitioner
is not appointed
for the first respondent.
If further
submitted that if the third applicant is not willing to supply the
buses and guarantee warranties on behalf of the first
respondent, the
first respondent will be unable to fulfil its obligations to
Rustenburg Transit or any potential client.
[23]
The applicants contends that the fact that the third applicant is not
a party to the agreement
entered into by the first respondent with
various institutions pertaining to the supply lease and maintenance
of the buses, such
agreements are reliant to the involvement of
Busmark Group of companies without which the first respondent cannot
comply with its
obligations to those entities. The applicants argues
that if the first respondent does not meet the requirements as set
out with
Rustenburg Transit, it will lose the business with
Rustenburg Transit including the existing lease agreement of ten
buses and the
standing order for the lease of further forty five
buses. The first respondent according to the applicants will become
insolvent
within the following six months.
[24]
Since the first respondent failed to respond to the applicants’
letter of demand for payment
of its debt, it is therefore in
financial distress and it cannot pay its liabilities which are due,
so argued the applicants. The
applicants contend that despite there
being no formal repayment agreement between them and the first
respondent such amount owed
by the first respondent to the third
applicant become due and payable on demand.
[25]
According to the applicants, it will be just and equitable to place
the first respondent under
supervision and that business rescue
proceedings be implemented as the rights of all affected parties will
be protected. The applicants
contend that it has demonstrated on the
objective facts available that there is a reasonable prospect under
business rescue that
the first respondent will be rescued from being
an insolvent entity as it is presently unable to pay its debts.
The first
Respondent’s arguments
[26]
The first respondent’s submitted that in motion proceedings a
final order will only be
granted if the facts as stated by the
respondents together with facts alleged by the applicants that are
admitted by the respondents
justify such order.
[27]
It is submitted by the first respondent that the applicants failed to
make out a
prima facie
case in its founding affidavit for the
relief it sought instead their application is premised on conjecture
and speculation which
is not helpful to their cause. The first
respondent argues that the facts admitted by the first applicant as
well as the facts
so admitted by the first respondent do not entitle
the applicants the relief they seek from this court.
The common facts
relied upon by the first respondent inter alia are the following: -
The applicants
were licensed to act as business rescue practitioners during 4 August
2020 on behalf of the third applicant.
The first
respondent has a standing order with Rustenburg Transit for the
supply, lease and maintenance of the forty five buses.
The third
applicant was supposed to deliver and supply and to provide guarantee
warranties on behalf of the first respondent. However
the third
applicant is not a party to the tender awarded to the first
respondent by Rustenburg transit and has no contractual and
/ or
legal right to interfere in the agreement between Rustenburg Transit
and the first respondent.
[28]
The applicant representing the third applicant and the first
respondent tried to formalize the
relationship between them but could
not agree on terms thereof. The third applicant is a creditor of the
first respondent in the
sum of R46.8 million of a loan advanced in
the purchasing of the forty five buses and loan arrears.
Despite the debt
owed to the third applicant, there is no obligation upon the first
respondent to enter into an agreement with the
third applicant for
the tender and standing order for forty five buses tendered by the
first respondent.
[29]
The third applicants are relying on the Bus Supply and maintenance
Agreement concluded between
them and the first respondent and
Rustenburg Transit during August 2020 and September 2020 for the ten
buses delivered. Rustenburg
Transit had concerns with the placing of
the third applicant under business rescue.
[30]
Realizing that there was no agreement formalizing the relationship
between the first respondent
and the third applicant, the third
applicant caused a letter of demand to be issued against the first
respondent recalling up a
loan of R46.8 million along with rental
payable within a period of four days including Saturday and Sunday.
The first respondent
failed to respond to the said demand and the
applicants approached the court on urgent basis to place the first
respondent under
supervision and business rescue alleging that the
first respondent is under financial distress. That applicant’s
reliance
on the possibility and speculation that Rustenburg Transit
may retract the standing order for the supply, delivery, lease and
maintenance
for forty five buses has no basis and the applicants
cannot rely on conjecture as a ground for urgency so argued the first
respondent.
[31]
According to the first respondent the applicants’ founding
affidavit does not contain any
allegation of any breach committed by
the first respondent in respect of the agreements relied upon. The
first respondent submitted
that the agreement between Rustenburg
Transit and the first respondent provides for repayment of
outstanding amounts on monthly
basis and the arrangements for payment
due to the third applicant depended on payment received from
Rustenburg Transit on payment
of the monthly instalments.
ii)
Busmex which is not in business rescue conducted the warranty and
maintenance obligations
on behalf of the first respondent while the
remaining mechanical warranty in respect of the ten buses will be
honoured by Mercedes
Benz of South Africa.
[32]
The first respondent’s view is that it will be able to place an
order with another manufacturer
should the first respondent and the
third applicant not be able to reach an agreement. The first
respondent submitted that in view
of the common facts aforementioned,
the applicants failed to make out a case for the relief sought.
[33]
The first respondent argues that the applicants failed to discharge
the onus vested on them in
terms of Section 131(4) of the Act and
satisfy the court that the first respondent is in financial distress.
The first respondent
submits that it is in fact up to date with its
payments and that it will be able to honour its obligations within
the ensuing six
months and is not likely to become insolvent in the
ensuing six months.
[34]
Except the unreasonable demand that the first respondent effect
payment of R46.8 million on a
four days’ notice, it is
contended that the applicants failed to establish any factual basis
for alleging that the first
respondent is in financial distress.
According to the first respondent, there is no evidence provided by
the applicants to prove
that the first respondent will be unable to
honour its obligations apart from a letter of demand addressed on
four days’
notice to the first respondent.
[35]
The only distress that may exist in the first respondent’s
view, is a relational distress
between the applicants and the first
respondent which cannot result in the first respondent being placed
in business rescue. The
contention by the applicants that it is just
and equitable that the first respondent be placed in business rescue
according to
the first respondent is not justified if one considers
the common facts in this matter.
[36]
The first respondent argues that the main reason why this application
was launched is that the
first respondent and the applicants could
not agree to terms of a written agreement formalizing their
relationship in which the
third applicants must be appointed to
manufacture and deliver forty five buses to the first respondent to
be delivered to Rustenburg
Transit. The view of the first respondent
is that the intention of the applicants in launching this application
is to gain control
of the first respondent, conclude agreements with
the third applicant as well as the Rustenburg Transit. The first
respondent contends
that the application was not brought in good
faith and it is in fact an abuse of the court process.
[37]
The contention by the applicants that they are entitled to assume
control of the first respondent
by instituting business rescue
proceedings and that the first respondent is duty bound to conclude
an agreement with the third
applicant is unacceptable according to
the first respondent as it amounts to an agreement to agree. The
first respondent’s
view is that since there is no agreement
with the applicants and as such there is no deadlock breaking
mechanism, any possible
agreement to agree between the parties herein
is unenforceable.
[38]
The first respondent submits that it is entitled to freely enter into
agreement with any manufacturer
for the supply of forty five buses in
order to fulfil its obligations in terms of the tender awarded to it
by Rustenburg Transit.
The first
respondent prays for the dismissal of the application and that the
first and second applicants to pay costs jointly and
severally on an
attorney and client scale
de bonis propriis.
URGENCY
[39]
The applicant approached the court with its application on the basis
that it is urgent as stipulated
in Rule 6 (12) of the Rules of Court.
The degree of urgency according to the applicants is premised on the
following consideration:-
That the first
respondent has an agreement with Rustenburg Transit for the lease of
the ten buses and a standing order for delivery
and lease and
maintenance of further forty five buses. The contractual agreements
between Rustenburg Transit and the first respondent
depend on the
involvement of the Busmark Companies (the third applicant being part
of the Busmark group of companies) whose businesses
are interlinked
and without their participation in the agreements the first
respondent will not be able to comply with its obligation
with
Rustenburg Transit. It is submitted that the survival of Busmark
Companies and first respondent rests on this matter being
heard on
urgent basis. The employment of 450 employees will be terminated if
this matter is not attend to urgently. The contention
of the
applicants is that the first respondent is unable to pay its debts
and fails to comply with the contractual obligations
it concluded.
If the
application is not heard on urgent basis, the very harm sought to be
prevented will be moot by the time this application
is brought on
normal roll as Rustenburg Transit may withdraw the tender awarded to
the first respondent. The effect thereof will
be devastating to all
interested parties herein including the Busmark Companies and the
first respondent.
The applicant
seeks a court order against the first and third respondents for the
costs of the application.
The first
respondent disputes the correctness of the debt owed and that the
amount is due and payable.
First
Respondent’s Submissions on Urgency
[40]
The first respondent’s contention is that the application is
not urgent as it is not based
on any factual foundation but it is
premised on conjecture and speculation.
[41]
The grounds of urgency cited by the applicants according to the first
respondent, concern the
tender the first respondent obtained from
Rustenburg Transit for the supply, lease and maintenance of buses of
which the third
applicant or the applicants are not a party thereto.
The first respondent contends that an attempt was made to formalize
the relationship
between the applicants but could not agree to the
terms thereof. It is argued that in the absence of an agreement
between the first
respondent and the applicants, the applicants do
not have any contractual and or legal right to interfere with the
first respondent’s
agreement with Rustenburg Transit.
[42]
The first respondent submitted that the applicants failed to
demonstrate and indicate the circumstances
which renders the
application urgent and the reasons why it is alleged that he could
not be afforded substantial redress at a hearing
in due course.
Accordingly the first respondent submits that the application be
dismissed with costs and it be struck off the roll
due to lack of
urgency.
Analysis
[43]
Urgent applications are governed by the provisions of rule 6 (12) of
the Rules of court. It is
provided in Rule 6 (12) (a) that the court
may dispense with the forms and service as provided in the Rules and
may dispose of
such a matter at such a manner and in accordance with
such procedure as in it meet fit.
[44]
The court is therefore seized with a special discretion in applying
Rule 6 (12) which discretion
is to be exercised reasonably and
judicially. There are different degrees of urgency. The question to
be considered is therefore
whether there must be a departure at all
from the times prescribed in Rule 6 (12).
See
Luna
Meubel Vervardigers .V. Makin and Another
1977 (4) SA 135
(W) at
paragraph 137 A-E.
It is upon the
applicants to demonstrate and set out explicitly the circumstances
which render the matter urgent. The applicants
must show that it will
inter alia suffer real loss or damage in the event the matter is
heard on normal court roll.
See
Voigt
BO .V. EGH IP (Pty) Ltd 2021 JDR 1113 ECG at paragraph 11-17.
[45]
The applicants contended that its reliance on urgency is premised on
the survival of both the
Busmark Group as a whole, the first
respondent and the interest of the 450 employees of the Busmark Group
and referring the matter
to a normal court roll will defeat harm
sought to be prevented and that Rustenburg Transit may withdraw the
tender awarded to the
first respondent.
[46]
On the other hand the first respondent argues that the applicants
failed to demonstrate that
they are entitled to a dispensing of the
Rules relating to form and service and further that their application
should be entertained
on a week’s notice without affording all
the affected parties adequate opportunity to deal with the averments
contained in
the founding affidavit. It is the first respondent’s
contention that the applicants’ application on urgency is not
based on actual facts and thus the applicants failed to make out a
case for urgency.
[47]
It is clear that what prompted the launching of this application is
the non-response to the letter
of demand sent to the first respondent
for immediate payment of an amount of R46.8 million owed to the third
applicant by the first
respondent relating to the tender awarded to
the first respondent by Rustenburg Transit. The applicants premised
the application
on the agreements the first respondent concluded
during August 2020 and September 2020. The letter of demand was only
issued during
October 2021 giving the first respondent about three
days which included Saturday and Sunday and a public holiday. Regard
having
had to the grounds raised in the urgent application, it is
noteworthy that the applicants rely not on actual facts but on
speculation
and what might happen if the matter is not heard on
urgent basis.
[48]
I am not persuaded that the applicants crossed the first hurdle to
demonstrate that it is entitled
to dispensing with the rules relating
to form and service. More so, in my view, the applicants failed to
discharge its obligation
to set out explicitly the circumstances
rendering the matter urgent. I find that this application is not
sufficiently urgent to
be heard at the time selected by the
applicants. The application was in my opinion correctly referred to
the opposed roll. The
urgent application is therefore dismissed.
[49]
In order to succeed with the application in terms of Section 131 of
Act 17 of 2008 the applicants
are to satisfy Section 131 (4) of the
Act. It is a requirement that a company should have adopted a
resolution for any person affected
to embark on a process of placing
the company under supervision and to commence business rescue
proceedings as provided for in
Section 129 (1) of the Act. The
applicants contented that since the first respondent failed to meet
the demand for payment of R46.8
million which it deems due and
payable, it is accordingly under financial distress.
[50]
Relying on
Tyre Corporation Cape Town (Pty) Ltd and Others
2017
(3) SA 74
(WCC)
at paragraph 15, the applicants argue that
existing commercial insolvency constitutes financial distress which
may also apply to
factual insolvency. The view of the applicants is
that the first respondent will lose the tender with Rustenburg
Transit if it
fails to meet its obligations as per the agreement
between the first respondent and Rustenburg Transit which will lead
to the first
respondent becoming insolvent. The unavoidable question
is whether the first respondent is really under financial distress
under
the circumstances of this matter. Sight must not be lost to the
fact that there is no agreement concluded with the third applicant
or
any legal right existing between it and the first respondent.
[51]
In my view, the distress between the first respondent and the third
applicant is due to the parties
not agreeing to terms in formalizing
their agreement relating to the tender of forty five buses awarded to
the first respondent.
The demand for payment of R46.8 million payable
within a very short period without any breach of any contract by the
first respondent
according to me, is not reasonable and acceptable.
[52]
The first respondent in any case disputes that the amount is due and
payable and further dispute
the correctness of the said amount in the
sum of R46.8 million. Realizing the fall out between the parties
herein, the first respondent
continued transferring what was due on
monthly instalments to the third applicant to a trust attorneys’
account.
The facts in
Tyre Corporation Cape Town (Pty) Ltd and other
referred
to supra, are distinguishable to the present matter. The grounds
relied upon by the applicants are not factual but based
on gesture
and the first respondent is not in my view commercially insolvent.
[53]
The first respondent’s contention is that there are no
outstanding amounts payable to the
third applicant presently and will
be able to meet its financial obligation within the ensuing six
months and beyond and that there
is no threat f it becoming insolvent
anytime soon. The amount claimed by the third applicant are disputed
and the first respondent
argues that the said amount is not payable
on demand. The first respondent submitted that the warranty and
maintenance obligation
are carried out by Busmax which is not in
business rescue. It is my view that the applicants failed to prove
that the amount is
due and payable on demand. The said amounts were
paid monthly to the third applicant and not at any time if demanded.
[54]
Having regard to the common facts of this matter, I find that there
is no reason to doubt and
conclude that the first respondent is
actually not in financial distress as in my view, there are no
pointers and evidence established
to find otherwise. It is my opinion
that the applicants did not succeed in establishing that the first
respondent is unable to
pay its debts to the third applicant as per
the demand which I found to be unreasonable under the circumstances.
The failure to
conclude an agreement between the parties to formalize their
relationship cannot in my view be a reason enough to
place the first
respondent under supervision and business rescue.
[55]
The applicant argued that it will be just and equitable to embark on
business rescue proceedings
against the first respondent as it will
make a financial sense resulting in the protection of all the
affected parties’ rights
and interests. According to the first
respondent, the sole purpose of placing the first respondent in
business rescue is simply
to gain control over the first respondent’s
affairs and the application is thus brought in bad faith.
[56]
Careful reading of the papers herein reveal that the distrust and
deadlock in not agreeing to
terms of formalizing the relationship
between the parties is in my view, the reason that resulted in this
application being instituted.
The motive and purpose of bringing this
application is highly questionable and cannot be regarded as just and
equitable as I have
already found that the applicants failed to make
out a case for financial distress against the first respondent. I
therefore find
that it is not just and equitable to place the first
respondent under business rescue as there is no evidence presented
justifying
same. It is therefore not far-fetched for the first
respondent to assert that the only reason why this application was
launched
is to gain control of its affairs. The applicants clearly
indicated that with the business practitioners appointed, the affairs
of the first respondent will be better controlled for the benefit and
interests of all affected parties. According to the applicants,
the
success of the first respondent is reliant in it concluding an
agreement with the third applicant. The applicants contended
that
there is a reasonable prospect of rescuing the first respondent from
insolvency and that it has not secured an independent
funder from any
institution.
[57]
The first respondent stated that it is entitled to freely contract
with any manufacturer to supply
the forty five buses for Rustenburg
Transit and refutes that its success is dependent on the third
applicant. The court has a discretion
in determining whether there is
a reasonable prospect of rescuing the companies from its insolvency
by placing it under business
rescue. I hold the view that the first
hurdle to be crossed is that the company is under financial distress
and that there is a
good and just cause to place it under supervision
and business rescue.
[58]
Having found that the applicants failed to make out a case for
financial distress and that it
is good and just to do so, the
determination of whether there is reasonable prospect that the first
respondent can be rescued is
neither here nor there. I find that
there is no justification to rescue the first respondent as it is not
financially distressed
to make such determination under the
circumstances of this matter. I am not convinced that it is important
and necessary to appoint
the applicants and any person as business
practitioners as there are no justifiable reasons to do so.
COSTS
[59]
Counsel for the first respondent requested that this Court should
grant a punitive costs order
de bonis propriis
against the
first and second applicants.
The basis of the
request is premised
inter alia
on the following: -
1)
That the
application is launched for ulterior purpose and its genesis is based
on an innuendo that the first respondent is in financial
distress;
2)
That the
application be heard on urgent basis as there is possibility that the
tender be awarded to the first respondent may be
cancelled by
Rustenburg Transit without any evidence provided;
3)
It is argued
by the first respondent that the applicants caused unnecessary
prolixity as its founding affidavit contains 420 pages
with annexures
without referring the Court to relevant portions of the attached
annexures despite the application being instituted
on urgent basis;
4)
That the
applicants’ unjustified letter of demand for amounts that are
not due and payable being aware of the existence of
dispute between
the parties regarding the said amount claimed deserves a punitive
costs order;
5)
That the
conduct of the applicants and lack of bona fides and their negligent
and unreasonable act of launching this application
calls for a cost
order
de
bonis
propriis
against
them.
[60]
The applicants in their notice of motion submitted that in the event
of no bona fide opposition
to the relief sought in the application
costs be in the business rescue of the first respondent. Counsel for
the applicants’
argued costs be for the first and second
respondents if the application is opposed. It is generally accepted
that ordinarily the
costs follow the result. A successful party is
therefore entitled to his / her costs.
[61]
The court in
Ferreira .V. Levin NO and Others
[1996] ZACC 27
;
1996 (2) SA 621
CC at 624 B-C par [3]
held that the award of costs unless
expressly otherwise enacted, is in the discretion of the court. The
facts of each and every
case are to be considered by the court when
exercising its discretion and has to be fair and just to all parties.
The court will
in appropriate circumstances award costs on a punitive scale
including costs de bonis propriis. However, the court
will not easily
grant a punitive costs order and costs de bonis propriis. It goes
without saying that punitive costs de bonis will
only be granted in
exceptional circumstances.
The criterion to
be used is inter alia misconduct of any sort or recklessness.
[62]
The conduct of the applicants in launching this application on urgent
roll and the unreasonable
time frames given to the first respondent
to answer the fact that there is a dispute about the correctness of
the amount claimed
which the applicants deemed due and payable
contrary to the protest of the first respondent and the grounds
relied upon by the
applicants which are speculative in nature, cannot
simply be ignored when considering the issue of costs in this matter.
[63]
The court in
Re Alluvial Creek Ltd
1929 CPD 532
at 535
stated that:
“
An
order is asked for that he pay the cost as between attorney and
client. Now sometimes such an order is given because of something
in
the conduct of a party which the court considers should be punished,
malice, misleading the court and things like that, but
I think the
order may also be granted without any reflection upon the party where
the proceedings are vexatious, and by vexatious
I mean where they
have the effect of being vexatious, although the intent may not have
been that they should be vexatious. There
are people who enter into
litigation with the most upright and a most firm belief in the
justice of the cause, and yet his proceedings
may be regarded as
vexatious when they put the other side to unnecessary trouble and
expense which the other side ought not to
bear”
[64]
It is settled law that the purpose of an award of costs to a
successful litigant is to indemnify
that party for the expense to
which it has been put through having unjustly compelled to initiate
or defend litigation as the case
may be. I find that the conduct of
the applicants to be unreasonable, reckless, unacceptable and amount
to the abuse of the court
process in the circumstances of this case.
A punitive costs is in my opinion warranted.
See
Nienaber
.V. Struckey
1946 AD 1049
at 1059
ORDER
I therefore make
the following order;
1.
The
application is dismissed;
2.
The applicants
are directed to pay all costs on attorney and client scale including
costs of
Counsel.
S
S MADIBA
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION PRETORIA
APPEARANCES:
FOR
THE APPLICANTS:
VEZI
& DE BEER INC.
319 ALPINE
WAY
CNR ALPINE
WAY & SOUTH
VILLAGE LAKE
LYNWOOD,
PRETORIA
TEL: 012 361
5640
FAX: 086 647
3120
E MAIL:
mustafa@vezidebeer.co.za
REF: M
MOHAMED/MAT 72553
FOR
THE 1
ST
AND 3
RD
RESPONDENTS:
MPOYANA LEDWABA INC.
194 BLACKWOOD
STREET
ARCADIA
TEL: 012 346
4093
E MAIL:
mpoyana@ledwaba.co.za
REF: MR
LEDWABA
DATE
OF HEARING:
17
FEBRUARY 2022
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
08
NOVEMBER 2022
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