Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 968South Africa
South African Medical Association NPC v Sihlangu and Another (1141/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 968 (6 December 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
6 December 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## South African Medical Association NPC v Sihlangu and Another (1141/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 968 (6 December 2022)
South African Medical Association NPC v Sihlangu and Another (1141/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 968 (6 December 2022)
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sino date 6 December 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 1141/2021
REPORTABLE:
YES/NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
NO
6
December 2022
In
the matter between:
SOUTH
AFRICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION NPC. APPLICANT
and
DR
C.S. SIHLANGU
FIRST RESPONDENT
DR.
T. O. SADIKI
SECOND
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
Van
der Schyff J
Introduction
[1]
In this application, the applicant seeks
an order that the respondents be declared delinquent directors in
terms of s 162 of the
Companies Act 71 of 2009 (the CA). The
applicant relies on the provisions of s 165(5)(c) of the CA. In this
judgment, I deal only
with the salient issues.
Factual
background
[2]
The respondents, two medical doctors,
were nominated as directors of the applicant. They accepted the
nominations and were appointed
as such. They were, at the time of
their nomination and appointment, directors of a company known as
Health Professionals Group
(Pty) Ltd (HPG). The applicant avers that
the respondents failed to disclose that they were directors of HPG.
This failure, the
applicant alleges, gave rise to a conflict of
interest that amounted to a breach of trust in relation to the
performance of the
respondents’ functions within, and duties to
the applicant. The applicant contends HPG offered services similar to
the services
offered by itself, and that by serving on the board of
directors of two companies that offer the same services the
respondents
improperly competed with the applicant.
[3]
The papers filed of record indicate that
the respondents indeed disclosed their directorship in HPG, although
the specific date
on which the disclosure was first made, is not
ascertainable.
i.Annexure
CC8 to the founding affidavit is a document titled ‘Confidentiality
and Conflict of Interest Disclosure Form: 2019
THE SOUTH AFRICAN
MEDICAL ASSOCIATION NPC (SAMA)’. This document was completed
and signed by the first respondent, Dr. Sihlangu’
on 26 January
2019. Dr. Sihlangu alerted to a potential conflict of interest when
he stated on this document: ‘I am a director
and shareholder in
Health Professionals Group (Pty) Ltd – a marketing and
consulting company established in 2018 to provide
affordable and
reliable professional protection for health professionals in South
Africa through access to professional indemnity,
life products and
financial services while acting in a corporate socially responsible
manner.’ It is relevant to note that
the ‘Statement of
Procedure’ incorporated in the said document reads as follows:
‘On disclosure of a potential
conflict of interest the SAMA
Board (with the exception of the director or prescribed officer
declaring such potential conflict)
will determine the existence of a
conflict of interest and take appropriate steps to resolve the
conflict.’
ii.Annexure
CC10 is the same disclosure form, completed by the first respondent
and dated 24 May 2019. Dr. Sihlangu again declared
his directorship
in HPG.
iii.Annexure
CC11 is the same form completed and signed by Dr. Sadiki on 25
January 2019. Dr. Sadiki declared a potential conflict
of interest by
stating: ‘I Dr. Sadiki (SAMA BOD) declare that I hold shares
and directorship status at the Health Professionals
Group (Pty) Ltd,
which is a company concerned with sales and marketing of medical
indemnity insurance. HPG Pty/Ltd and its partners
are aware of the
potential conflict.’
iv.From
an email from SAMA’s legal advisor, dated 3 April 2019, annexed
to the answering affidavit, it is evident that the
applicant was
aware of the respondents’ interest in HPG.
[4]
The applicant contends that the acting
Company Secretary did not take any action against the respondents at
the time they disclosed
their interests in HPG based on the
activities disclosed. This contention fails to consider that the
respondents’ obligation
was merely to disclose a potential
conflict of interest. The applicant’s own disclosure form
reflects that after a potential
conflict of interest was revealed,
the SAMA Board would determine the existence of a conflict of
interest and take appropriate
steps to resolve the conflict.
[5]
The respondents aver that at the time
they were elected as SAMA board members, they had already established
HPG as a company for
profit with totally different intentions. HPG
was established to provide its members in the health profession with
insurance products,
which SAMA did not do. ‘SAMA being limited
to medical practitioners and acting as a professional association and
Trade Union
consisting of elected representatives and being [a]
non-profit organisation, was never considered a ‘competitor’
of
HPG. One of the products which HPG was marketing, the legal
insurance, overlapped with SAMA benefits. However, the respondents
contend, that this should be viewed against the context that SAMA, at
the time being in control of SAMATU, enjoyed organisational
rights,
which included the right to represent members in disciplinary
proceedings or grievances and matters of ‘mutual interest’,
something which HPG could not provide.
[6]
The respondents deny that by taking part
in the strategic planning session during January and February 2019,
they took personal
advantage of the information obtained as directors
to gain an advantage for HPG. The applicant’s bold statement in
this regard
is not substantiated by facts, and neither is the
contention that the applicant was harmed or caused to suffer damage
or loss by
any conduct of the respondents as a result of a conflict
of interest that existed, or arose subsequent to their appointments
as
directors..
Discussion
[7]
The applicant fails in making out a case
that the respondents, while being directors of SAMA, grossly abused
their position as directors,
took personal advantage of information
or an opportunity contra to s 76(2)(a) of the CA, intentionally or by
gross negligence inflicted
harm upon the applicant contrary to s
76(2)(a) acted in a manner that amounted to gross negligence, wilful
misconduct or breach
of trust in relation to the performance of the
director’s functions within, and duties to the company, or
contemplated in
s 77(3)(a), (b), or (c).
[8]
The
applicant failed to make out a case that the respondents’
conduct inevitably leads to the inference that it is necessary
to
protect the investing public against them.
[1]
There is no evidence that the respondents made use of information
acquired only because of their position as directors of SAMA
for
their personal advantage or for HPG’s advantage. Neither is
there evidence that the respondents appropriated business
opportunities that should have accrued to the applicant. The
respondents’ role in the SAMA-SAMATU litigation cannot be
construed
as negligent or wilful misconduct, nor can it be considered
as resulting from a breach of trust.
[9]
A court should be slow to grant a
punitive costs order so as not to limit the constitutional right to
have a dispute resolved by
the application of law in a fair public
hearing. In this matter, however, the applicant should have refrained
from approaching
the court in the absence of evidence substantiating
its view that the respondents acted in a manner that amounted to
gross negligence,
wilful misconduct or breach of trust in relation to
the performance of the director’s functions within, and duties
to the
company . There is no reason justifying the respondents to be
out of pocket.
ORDER
In
the result, the following order is granted:
1.
The application is dismissed with costs
on an attorney and client scale.
E
van der Schyff
Judge
of the High Court
Delivered:
This judgement is handed down electronically by uploading it to the
electronic file of this matter on CaseLines.
As a courtesy gesture,
it will be sent to the parties/their legal representatives by email.
For
the applicant: Adv.
Y. P. Krüger SC
With:
Adv.
F Storm
Instructed
by:
Welman
Bloem Inc.
For
the respondents:
Adv.
D. J.
Groenewald
Instructed
by:
Serfontein,
Viljoen and Swart Attorneys
Date
of the hearing: 7
November 2022
Date
of judgment: 6
December 2022
[1]
See
Gihwala
v Grancy Property Ltd
and
Others
2017 (2) SA 337
(SCA) at paras [142 – 143];
Msimang
v Katuliiba
2012 JDR 2391 (GSJ) para [29].
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