Case Law[2025] ZAWCHC 82South Africa
De Ridder v Coetzer N.O and Others (5896/22) [2025] ZAWCHC 82 (27 February 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
27 February 2025
Headnotes
in Shareblock by the Trust in the Bluewater Chalets (Pty) Ltd, contemplated in the resolution adopted by the First- and Second Respondents dated 5th July 2021;
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## De Ridder v Coetzer N.O and Others (5896/22) [2025] ZAWCHC 82 (27 February 2025)
De Ridder v Coetzer N.O and Others (5896/22) [2025] ZAWCHC 82 (27 February 2025)
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sino date 27 February 2025
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE
DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case
No: 5896/22
In the matter between:
ANDRÉ
JOHAN DE
RIDDER
Applicant
and
ANDRÉ
DAWID COETZER
N.O
First Respondent
SHARON
COETZER
N.O.
Second Respondent
IGNATIUS
WALTER WAIT
N.O.
Third Respondent
In their capacities as
trustees for the time being of the
Andrè
Coetzer Familie Trust with IT Number: 2387/1995
JUDGMENT
PARKER, AJ:
Introduction
[1]
In this application for the provisional sequestration of the Andrè
Coetzer
Familie Trust (“the Trust”), whereby:
1.1
The Applicant is a creditor of Trust, who has committed an act of
insolvency as contemplated
in the
Insolvency Act, 24 of 1936
, when it
admitted its inability to pay, after providing written guarantees to
repay following the conclusion of loan agreements.
1.2
The Trust, has very little, if any, realizable assets.
1.3
It is just and equitable to sequestrate the Trust.
[2]
On 3 June 2022, the First Respondent’s resignation as trustee
of the Trust were
accepted by the remaining Respondents. All
future reference to the Trustees shall be named Respondents.
Issues
for determination
[3]
3.1 Whether the court does have jurisdiction
to hear the
application.
3.2.
Whether the intervening parties, namely the joint liquidators of
Sportscentre (Pty) Ltd who withdrew their
application are to bear
costs.
3.3
Whether the application for sequestration of the of the Trust has
merit.
[4]
It makes sense that the adjudication in respect of whether the
applicant has jurisdiction
for the court to hear this matter should
be the first determination. If Respondents are successful, then
the determination
in respect of paragraph 3.3 falls away.
Intervening parties
[5]
The joint liquidators of Sportscentre (“the intervening
parties”) brought an
application for leave to intervene in the
sequestration application however they have not filed a replying
affidavit, and eventually
withdrew their application. This
application was opposed by the Trust on the basis that;
5.1
The court does not have jurisdiction to hear the application.
5.2
The intervening parties do not have a direct and substantial interest
in the sequestration.
5.3
The intervening parties lack locus standi.
5.4
The Trust has not committed an act of insolvency.
5.5
The Trust is not insolvent.
The application for
sequestration
[6]
Is opposed by the Respondents on the basis that:
6.1
The court does not have jurisdiction.
6.2
The Applicant does not have local standi.
6.3
The Trust has not committed an act of insolvency.
6.4
The Trust is not insolvent.
Background
Loans
[7]
First Respondent approached the Applicant for funding of the business
Sportscentre
(Pty) Limited (“Sportscentre”) to purchase
sports gear and equipment to distribute to over 200 smaller
retailers/ traders
throughout Southern Africa. This resulted in
several written loan agreements being concluded, including
suretyships signed by First
Respondent in respect of each loan.
7.1
An initial amount of R2 million and further amount of R500 000,
repayable with a 10% interest
on the 22
July 2021.
7.2
On the 8 July another loan in the amount of R1.5 million which was
repayable with 10% interest
on 8th of August 2021.
[8]
In respect of these loans the First Respondent provided Applicant
with a resolution
by the trustees of the Trust in respect of a
decision taken by the Trust on 5 July 2021 in respect of which the
Trust owns an immovable
property valued at R4.5 million and is
unencumbered. Applicant contends this property was ceded to applicant
for the debt owing
to the value of R4 million which property, if
sold, the proceeds thereof will first be applied to payment of the
debt owing to
the applicant.
Repayments
[9]
Sportscentre made a payment on 20
September 2021 to the
Applicant in the amounts of R400 000 and R100 000 respectively. The
further payment arrangement for
the period between October 2021 to
December 2021 was not met. Subsequently, on 4
March 2022,
First Respondent in an e-mail confirmed that he had decided to put
the holiday house which is the property owned by
the Trust on the
market. Since the property was ceded to the Applicant no transaction
could take place without Applicant’s
consent. In the same
e-mail the First Respondent acknowledges that he had a few challenges
in the past few months, he had cash
flow issues and unforeseen
challenges which impacted on his business and he sought a new
repayment plan. This resulted in
a new repayment plan for the
period 15
March 2022 to the end of May 2022. It is this
e-mail which applicant relies on as an act of insolvency in terms of
Section 8(g)
end (8 e) of the
Insolvency Act.
>
[10]
On 3 June 2022, a structural order was put in place. It was
ordered that the Second and
Third Respondents shall notify the fund
manager of the Thabeng High Impact Fund of the First Respondent’s
resignation immediately.
[11]
Furthermore, the assets and loan accounts of the Trust were spelled
out in detail specifically the
shareholding of the Trust in various
companies including a 60% shares in Sports Culture (Pty) Ltd; 200
(5%) Shares in the Thabeng
High Impact Fund (Pty) Ltd, a loan Account
in Thabeng High Impact Fund (Pty) Ltd in the amount of approximately
R3 224 629.00;
a 60% Shareholding in Sportscentre (Pty) Ltd and a
Loan Account in Sportcentre (Pty) Ltd, to be verified.
[12] Pending the
finalization of this Application, the order further provided for;
“
5.4
Second and Third Respondents shall provide Applicant with all
resolutions and power of attorneys signed
by the trustees authorizing
the sale of shares of the property in Keurboom Bluewater Chalets,
previously held in Shareblock by
the Trust in the Bluewater Chalets
(Pty) Ltd, contemplated in the resolution adopted by the First- and
Second Respondents dated
5
th
July 2021;
5.5
Second and Third Respondents shall disclose to Applicant all funds
received by the Trust
in respect of the sale of shares in of
paragraph 15.1 above and fully disclose how and to who such proceeds
were distributed, alternatively
the whereabouts thereof, by no later
than Wednesday, 15
th
June 2022;
5.6
Second and Third Respondents shall terminate First Respondent’s
access and authority
to any bank account held by the Trust by no
later than Friday, 10
th
June 2022;
5.7
Applicant shall be entitled to re-enroll this application on the fast
lane should the outcome
of the investigation by Third Respondent or
any new facts which may arise hereafter warrant the urgent disposal
of this matter.
5.8
The costs shall stand over for later determination.”
[13]
According to the Applicant the Respondents have refused and/or failed
to comply with the above
Order, and despite being ordered to provide
all the financial statements of the Trust, the Respondents initially
asserted to (in
October 2022) that they were in the process of
finalizing the 2020, 2021 and 2022 financial statements. Applicant’s
attorneys
addressed a letter on 15
December 2022, to the Respondents
Attorney calling for the financial statements which the Respondents
failed to do, thus causing
the Applicant to file a supplementary
affidavit on 15th September 2022 after material information came to
light.
[14]
Second and Third Respondents opposition was filed on 24 May 2022, and
later they filed an answering
affidavit on 19
th
October
2022, being the day before the matter was to be heard again.
[15]
The matter was postponed by agreement to the 8 March 2023 and
thereafter postponed on the semi urgent roll
on the 6 November 2023,
following a postponement to the 30 April 2024 with the Applicant and
the intervening parties to pay such
costs. On the 30 April 2024 the
matter was removed from the roll for settlement purposes, which were
unsuccessful and thereafter
the Applicant failed to re-enroll the
application. The Respondents then did so to bring finality to
the matter.
Jurisdiction
[16]
The core issue for determination is that of jurisdiction. The
Respondents contends that
this Court lacks jurisdiction to hear the
application on the grounds that the trust deed is registered at the
Master's Office located
in the Eastern Cape. In his founding
affidavit, the Applicant contends that “
The Trust is
registered with the office of the Master of the High Court, Cape
Town”
which was denied by the Trust in the answering
affidavit. It is now common case that the Trust is registered with
the Master of
the Makhanda High Court which was conceded in argument
by the Applicant. It would, however, have been open to the Makhanda
High
Court to postpone the application and/or transfer it to another
division, should it have deemed it equitable or convenient.
[17]
The Respondents opposed the application because the First and Second
Respondent conducted their business
from East London for many years.
These averments were not countered by the Applicant in the replying
affidavit. Third
Respondent resides within the jurisdiction of
the Eastern Cape. Additionally, the Respondents submit that the
Trust did not
hold any immovable property within the jurisdiction of
this Court.
[18]
In the supplementary heads of argument, the applicant relies on
Section 149 of the Insolvency
Act, 24 of 1936 (“the
Insolvency
Act&rdquo
;) as well as
Section 21
of the Superior Courts of 2013
(“the Superior Courts Act”) for jurisdiction. In this
regard the Respondents argue that
Applicant’s reliance on the
Superior Courts Act is misplaced. The law relating to
insolvency, including jurisdiction
of the Court, has been codified in
the
Insolvency Act. Where
the Act is not a complete statement of the
law, recourse must be had to the common law.
[19]
In the circumstances,
Section 149
of the
Insolvency Act governs
which
Court has jurisdiction over the Trust. The supplementary heads of
argument then make reference to the repealed Supreme Court
Act, for
reasons unknown, as same has been replaced by Section 21 of the
Superior Courts Act.
[20]
Applicant cites from Gallo African Ltd v Sting Music (Pty) Ltd
[1]
,
and appears to be an attempt at relying on the common law (which is
as misplaced as the reliance on the Superior Courts
Act.)
[21]
Respondents argued that in Goode, Durant & Murray (SA) Ltd &
Another v Lawrence,
[2]
the Court
held that the question of convenience does not relate to which Court
may conveniently hear the application, but to what
happens after the
order is granted. Reliance on this section is not available to
the Applicant as this Court does not have
jurisdiction over the
Trust.
[22]
Notwithstanding the misplaced reliance on the common law and the
Superior Courts Act, the Applicant
concludes that it is “axiomatic”
or self-evident that this Court has jurisdiction.
The Respondents
strongly argued that the Master of the High Court,
Cape Town has no authority over a Trust registered in a different
province.
In addition, the first Master’s report had the
incorrect Trust registration number and referred to the liquidation
of a company.
The second report had two Trust registration
numbers (the Master apparently being willing to liquidate (not
sequestrate) either
Trust. Furthermore, the Master relied on
the Close Corporations Act and the Companies Act, for a sequestration
of the Trust.
Both Master’s reports cited the incorrect
trustees as Respondents.
[23]
Accordingly, the Applicant has failed to establish that this Court
has jurisdiction on any basis
prescribed by
Section 149
of the
Insolvency Act.
[24]
To show that the applicant has jurisdiction for this court to hear
the application it was argued
that the jurisdiction of a Court in
liquidation and/or sequestration proceedings are determined by
Section 149
of the
Insolvency Act, 24 of 1936
:
"The Court shall
have jurisdiction under this Act over every debtor and in regard to
the Estate of every
debtor who –
(a)
On the date on which a petition of the acceptance of the surrender or
for the sequestration
of his estate is lodged with the Registrar of
the Court, is domiciled or owns or is entitled to property situated
within the jurisdiction
of the Court;”
[25]
Furthermore
Section 21
of the
Superior Court's Act 10 of 2013
provides for persons over whom and matters in relation to which
divisions of the High Court has jurisdiction.
"1. A
division has jurisdiction over all persons residing or being in and
in relation to all causes arising and all offences
trialable within,
its area of jurisdiction and all other matters of which it may
according to law take cognisance, and has the
power-
(a) ...;
(b) ..;
(c) in its discretion,
and at the instance of any interested person, to enquire into and
determine any existing, future or contingent
right or obligation,
notwithstanding that such person cannot claim any relief
consequential upon the determination.
2. A division
also has jurisdiction over any person residing or being outside its
area of jurisdiction who is joined as a
party to any cause in
relation to which such Court has jurisdiction or who in terms of a
third-party notice becomes a party to
such cause, if the said person
resides or is within the area of jurisdiction of any other division."
[26]
In terms of
Section 9(4)
of the
Insolvency Act, an
application for
the sequestration of a person shall be lodged with the Master, or, if
there is no Master at the seat of the Court,
with an Officer in the
public service designated for that purpose by the Master by notice in
the Gazette, and the Master or such
Officer may report to the Court
any facts ascertained by him which would appear to him to justify the
Court in postponing the hearing
or dismissing the petition.
[27]
In terms of
Section 2
of the
Insolvency Act, a
"Master" in
relation to any matter, means the Master of the Supreme Court within
whose area of jurisdiction that matter
is to be dealt with and
includes an Assistant-Master.
[28]
Jurisdiction means the power vested in a Court to adjudicate upon,
determine and dispose of a
matter. Importantly, it is territorial.
The disposal of a jurisdictional challenge on acceptance entails no
more than the
factual enquiry, with reference (in application
proceedings) to the Applicant's Founding Affidavit, to establish the
nature of
the right that is being asserted in support of the claim.
In other words, jurisdiction depends on either the nature of the
proceedings
or the nature of the relief claimed or, in some cases, on
both. It does not depend on the substantive merits of the case
or defence relied upon by a Defendant.
[29]
In its argument advanced by the Respondents in respect of the
jurisdictional issue contends,
that the Trust held shares in
Sportscentre and Sports Culture (Pty) Ltd, both are within the
court’s jurisdiction.
At the time of the petition both
Sportscentre and Sports Culture have been liquidated and therefore
the shareholding does not found
jurisdiction. The liquidators
of these entities practice within the jurisdiction of the court,
however it does not serve
as a basis to find jurisdiction. The
liquidators were not granted leave to intervene and withdrew the
intervention application
and accordingly are not a party to these
proceedings. Nothing stops the liquidators of those entities to
institute action against
the Trust where the Trust is registered on
where the cause of action arose as set out in section 21 of the
Superior Courts Act,
as the relief would not fall within the ambit of
section 149
of the
Insolvency Act.
[30
]
Secondly the Trust had loan accounts in these liquidated entities
which means that the Trust is
a creditor in the liquidated entities
and the Trust could lodge a claim with the respective liquidators.
[31]
The Applicant also relied on the Second and Third Respondents
domicile as being within the court’s
jurisdiction. This the
Respondent argued is denied as the third respondent resides in East
London in the Eastern Cape. Furthermore,
the Second and the
Third Respondent are cited in their
nomine officio
capacities,
rather than the domicile of the Trust.
[32]
The Applicant’s reliance on the report of the Master of the
High Court Cape Town, could
not assist it any further in finding
jurisdiction. It was shown that the Master of the High Court of Cape
Town has filed more than
one report fraught with errors. The Master
of the High Court of Cape Town has no authority over the Trust
registered in a different
province. Insofar as the errors
contained in the Master’s reports are concerned not only were
the incorrect trustees
cited as respondents, the first Masters report
had the incorrect trust registration number and referred to the
liquidation of a
company. The second Master’ss report had two
trust remote registration numbers with the Master apparently being
willing to
liquidate and not sequestrate the Trust. Lastly the
Master of the High Court of Cape Town incorrectly relied on the Close
Corporations Act and the Companies Act for a sequestration of the
Trust.
[33]
In eschewing the jurisdictional issue it is clear that this court
does not have jurisdiction
to hear the application for sequestration
of the Trust. For the aforegoing reasons the Applicant’s
reliance on the
common law and Superior Courts Act is misplaced.
[34]
The Applicant has failed to establish that this court has
jurisdiction in respect of the provisional
order for sequestration of
the Respondents on any basis prescribed by
section 149
of the
Insolvency Act.
Costs
[35]
Given the long history of this matter and the importance of it to all
the parties, it was Respondents
who took the reins to re-enroll this
matter in order for it to reach finality. I see no reason why the
Respondents should not be
awarded costs. Although, the Second
and Third Respondents presented the court with a draft order asking
for costs on an attorney-client
scale alternatively on the party and
party scale C. In my view it was not a complex matter and
therefore I am reluctant to
award an attorney and client scale for
fees and I am of the view that scale B would be appropriate.
[36]
Accordingly it is ordered:
a)
The intervention application brought by the
joint liquidators of Sportscentre Pty Ltd (the intervention
application) is withdrawn
with the leave of the court.
b)
The cost of the intervention application
shall be borne by the intervening parties on a party and party scale
on scale B, including
the cost of two counsel where so employed.
c)
The sequestration application of the
Applicant against the Second and Third Respondents, in their
capacities of the Andrè
Coetzer Familie Trust (“the
trust”) is dismissed.
d)
The Applicant shall bear the costs of the
sequestration application on a party and party scale B, including the
cost of two counsel
where so employed.
PARKER AJ
Acting Judge of the High
Court
Appearances
Counsel for the
Applicant:
Adv W J Bezuidenhout, Sandton Chambers
Instructed
by:
Van Wyk Van Heerden Inc.
Counsel for the First
Respondents:
Adv M A McChesney
Instructed
by:
Strydom & Bredenkamp Inc.
Date of Hearing:
18 October 2024
Date of Judgment:
27 February 2025
This judgment was
handed down electronically by circulation to the parties’
representatives by email.
[1]
2010(6) SA 329 (SCA)
[2]
1961(4)
SA 329 (W)
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