Case Law[2025] ZAWCHC 112South Africa
Van Zyl N.O and Another v Cometa Trading (Pty) Ltd (Leave to Appeal) (4425/24) [2025] ZAWCHC 112 (17 March 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
17 March 2025
Headnotes
Summary Introduction
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Van Zyl N.O and Another v Cometa Trading (Pty) Ltd (Leave to Appeal) (4425/24) [2025] ZAWCHC 112 (17 March 2025)
Van Zyl N.O and Another v Cometa Trading (Pty) Ltd (Leave to Appeal) (4425/24) [2025] ZAWCHC 112 (17 March 2025)
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sino date 17 March 2025
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
WESTERN CAPE DIVISION,
CAPE TOWN
Case number: 4425/24
In the application
between:
THOMAS
CHRISTOPHER VAN ZYL N.O.
First
Applicant
DEIDRE
BASSON N.O.
Second
Applicant
In
their capacities as duly appointed final liquidators of
Senqu
Coal Trading (Pty) Ltd,
Registration
No: 2018/043976/07)
and
COMETA
TRADING (PTY) LTD
Respondent
(
Application
seeking disposition in terms of s 341(2) of
the
1973 Companies Act)
Before:
The Hon. Mr Acting Justice Montzinger
Heard:
17 March 2025
Judgment
delivered electronically: 17 March 2025
JUDGMENT
(LEAVE TO APPEAL)
Montzinger AJ
Summary Introduction
1.
The respondent, Cometa Trading (Pty) Ltd, applies for leave
to appeal
against my judgment of 14 November 2024. In that judgment, I granted
relief in favour of the applicants, the liquidators
of Senqu Coal
Trading (Pty) Ltd (“Senqu”), who approached the court
seeking an order to recover a disposition of R710,763.92,
paid to
Cometa after the commencement of Senqu’s winding-up.
2.
The application for leave to appeal was noted in time already
on 5
December 2024. However, due to administrative hurdles and the
temporary nature of my appointment, my tenure as an Acting Judge
having come to an end, I was not initially aware that Cometa had
filed the application.
3.
The application for leave
to appeal is premised on section 16(1)(a)(i), read with section 17(1)
and (6) of the Superior Courts Act
[1]
.
Cometa’s basis for seeking leave is essentially that the appeal
would have a reasonable prospect of success or that there
are
compelling circumstances justifying the granting of leave.
4.
The application for leave is opposed.
The grounds relied on
why leave should be granted
5.
The application for leave to appeal suggests that, although
I
correctly identified the four requirements for granting relief in
terms of section 341(2) of the 1973 Companies Act, I erred
in
concluding that the liquidators had established all these grounds.
6.
Section 341(2) provides for the requirements for
establishing a voidable disposition. The party claiming a disposition
must show
that (i) a disposition was made; (ii) by the company (iii)
of property that belong to the company to be wounded-up (iv) and that
the company was unable to pay its debts after the commencement of the
winding-up.
7.
The liquidators plainly met two of these requirements, as it
was
undisputed that (i) a disposition was made, and (ii) it occurred
after the commencement of Senqu’s winding-up. Cometa
takes
issue with the remaining two requirements, and that is where it
contends I committed errors.
8.
First, it was argued, by Mr. Jonker on behalf of Cometa, that
I never
made a finding on whether the disposition was in fact made by Senqu,
claiming my judgment dealt only with whether the funds
belonged to
Senqu. As in the main hearing, emphasis was placed on applying the
Plascon-Evans
rule to resolve factual disputes. I am
criticised for not having applied the rule correctly; Cometa contends
that, had I done so,
I would have found that on its version (which I
was bound to accept):
8.1
The transfer of funds on which the liquidators relied was effected
by
Cometa, not Senqu, because at the time Senqu had no control or
management over the funds in the bank account.
8.2
When the funds were transferred, Ms. Lourie (who actually executed
the payment via internet banking) did not do so as a duly authorised
representative of Senqu, nor did Senqu’s Board of Directors
authorise her to transfer the funds.
9.
Second, regarding whether the funds (or property) belonged to
Senqu,
I apparently failed to consider that, on a
Plascon-Evans
approach to the facts, the legal relationship between Senqu and
Cometa was such that Senqu, as the named account holder, merely
held
the account as Cometa’s agent. I am criticised for overlooking
that Senqu was a dormant, non-trading entity with no
interest or
control over the deposits and withdrawals in the bank account, while
Cometa, with Senqu’s knowledge, maintained
full control over
and operated the account with Senqu’s consent.
10.
Reliance
was placed on the judgment of
McEwen,
NO v Hansa
[2]
to
argue
that I should have recognised the agency relationship and by not
doing so I allowed “
the
insolvent’s creditors to reap the benefit of that which was in
truth never legally vested in the insolvent himself…”
.
11.
Third, Cometa says a compelling reason for granting leave exists
because the
matter raises an important question about what
constitutes a disposition by “the company”, particularly
where the company
is dormant and has ceased trading.
12.
Fourth, Cometa contends that another compelling reason for leave is
whether,
on these facts, Senqu was an agent of Cometa and whether
that agency was terminated by insolvency. Cometa argues that this has
an effect on whether the funds can be said to be Senqu’s
“property” as contemplated by section 341(2) of the 1973
Companies Act.
13.
I will briefly outline the requirements for granting leave to appeal
before
addressing each ground.
Requirements for leave
to appeal to granted
14.
The
Superior
Courts Act
[3]
and
case
law
[4]
from courts higher up in
the decision making hierarchy requires me to assess, dispassionately
and by reference to the facts and
law, whether an appellate court
could reasonably arrive at a different conclusion.
Also,
as articulated in
Ramakatsa
[5]
,
Senqu
as the party seeking leave to appeal
must
show, on proper grounds, a sound, rational basis for concluding that
there is a reasonable rather than a remote chance of success
on
appeal. In my view this means that the merits of the case remain
crucial to determine whether a realistic prospect of success
exists.
A bare or speculative contention of error is insufficient; the
applicant must establish a credible premise for believing
that
another court could arrive at a different outcome.
15.
Furthermore,
an applicant can also seek leave on the basis that there are
compelling reasons that justify leave being granted
[6]
.
Compelling reasons include, among others, the involvement of
substantial public interest, an important question of law, differing
judicial interpretations, or a discrete issue of statutory
interpretation with implications for future cases
[7]
.
However, where it is proposed that compelling reasons exist why leave
should be granted, I am required to consider the compelling
reasons
also in conjunction with the merits of the appeal, which remain often
decisive
[8]
.
16.
Therefore, a court considering an application for leave to appeal
must first
decide whether there is a sound, rational basis to
conclude that another court would uphold the appeal. In considering
whether
compelling reasons exist that warrant appellate interference,
the court may grant leave on that basis, but not without due regard
to the merits.
17.
In my reading of the application for leave to
appeal I identified two grounds in support of the contention that an
appeal would
have good prospects of success and two further grounds
why compelling circumstances justify that leave to appeal should be
granted.
Ground
1:
No finding whether the disposition was
in fact made by Senqu
18.
I am not persuaded that this ground warrants that
leave be granted.
19.
In the main judgment, I
explained that I am bound by the legal position that funds in a
company’s bank account belong to that
company. I addressed this
under the heading “
The
status of money in a bank account,”
referring
to the
Whitehead
[9]
judgment. Later in the
main judgment, when evaluating the facts and law, I found that it was
undisputed that the R710,763.92 was
held in a bank account registered
to Senqu
[10]
.
I also concluded that while Cometa might have treated the 706-account
as its own, until the bank was notified of that arrangement,
it owed
its obligations regarding the funds to Senqu
[11]
.
20.
In paragraph 31 of the main judgment, I stated:
“
Consequently,
the legal position prevails: the funds in the 706-account belonged to
Senqu. The fact that the transfer was executed
by someone
unauthorised to act on Senqu’s behalf does not alter this
conclusion, as the law attaches no significance to such
an action in
determining ownership of the funds.”
21.
Mr. Jonker, appearing on
behalf of Cometa, impressed on me that I never actually found that
Senqu itself made the disputed disposition.
He pointed out that the
person who executed the electronic transfer, Ms. Lourie, was a
director of Cometa and did not act under
Senqu’s authority when
she moved the funds. However, this submission loses sight of the
legal position I expounded on
[12]
,
in the main judgment, which is that once a company opens a bank
account, the bank owes its obligations solely to that account
holder,
absent any special arrangement of which the bank is aware. If no
agreement exists to the contrary (or if the bank is not
notified of
such an agreement), the account holder (in this case Senqu) is the
only party entitled to direct the flow of funds.
Consequently, Ms.
Lourie’s conduct in transferring the money from Senqu’s
account to Cometa necessarily constitutes
a disposition by Senqu for
the purposes of section 341(2) of the 1973 Companies Act, because the
bank’s obligation was to
Senqu alone. In law and on the facts
it is therefore Senqu who made the payment, regardless of the fact
Ms. Lourie in fact did
so and regardless of her subjective intention.
Ground 2: Failure to
consider that
Senqu held the account in its
name merely as an agent of Cometa
22.
This ground also fails to gain traction.
23.
It was never Cometa’s case that Senqu was acting or holding the
bank account
as Cometa’s agent. My review of Cometa’s
answering papers, confirmatory affidavits, and written submissions
reveals
no mention of an agency arrangement. The term “agent”
does not appear, nor does any indirect reference to it.
24.
Cometa cannot raise this new point now in support of its application
for leave
to appeal, as it was not pleaded.
25.
In any event, the agency argument fails on the merits. Having regard
to the
facts of this case, it does not change the established legal
position that once money is deposited, it belongs to the bank, and
neither the account holder nor a third party can vary the bank’s
obligation in the absence of prior notification. The bank
was never
informed of any agency arrangement. If the bank was aware of such
agency arrangement Cometa could potentially have succeeded
under the
exception to the general rule that the bank only owes its obligations
solely to the account holder.
Grounds 3 and 4:
Special circumstances for leave to be granted
26.
I am unpersuaded that this matter warrants leave on the basis that it
presents
important legal questions or considerations that only a
higher court can decide.
27.
What constitutes a “disposition” is already defined in
the Insolvency
Act.
28.
The argument that a “dormant” company cannot effect a
disposition
does not, in my view, constitute a compelling reason for
appellate scrutiny. Whether a company is dormant or active does not
affect
its legal personality or the requirements under section 341(2)
of the 1973 Companies Act. As far as I am aware, South African law
makes no distinction between active and dormant companies; both
remain juristic persons until deregistration.
29.
In any event, in my view, the question of dormancy will ultimately
always be
factual to determine whether the company continued to exist
and had the capacity to dispose of its property. It is not clear in
my mind what principle an appellate court will be asked to clarify or
establish.
30.
As for agency, it likewise does not qualify as a compelling basis for
leave.
I have already noted that agency was never pleaded. Even if it
had been, Cometa has a substantive problem: the bank was never
informed
of any agency arrangement. In terms of the
Joint Stock
Company
judgment and other authorities that dealt with the same
central issue, Cometa would remain unable to show that the bank was
aware
of such an arrangement. Thus, even if Senqu had acted as
Cometa’s agent, and even if an appellate court should find that
in the circumstances like the present a dormant company may be
regarded as an agent where its bank account is used as a ‘stash’
account by a third party, that would not entitle Cometa to the funds
in the absence of the bank being aware of such an arrangement.
Conclusion
31.
For the reasons stated
Cometa has failed to
demonstrate a sound, rational basis for concluding that another court
would reasonably come to a different
outcome. I am therefore not
persuaded to grant leave and in the circumstances
make
the following order:
“
The
application for leave to appeal is dismissed with costs on a party
and party scale, including the costs of counsel on scale
B.”
A
MONTZINGER
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Appearances:
Applicant’s
counsel:
Mr. P S Bothma
Applicant’s
attorney:
Boshoff Bronn & Smit Inc
Respondent’s
counsel:
Mr. J W Jonker
Respondent’s
attorney:
Cliffe Dekker Hofmeyr Inc
[1]
10 of
2013
[2]
1968
(1) SA 465
(A) at 472A - B
[3]
10 of
2013
[4]
Minister
of Justice and Constitutional Development and Others v Southern
Africa Litigation Centre and Others
[2016]
ZASCA 17; 2016
(3) SA 317 (SCA);
[5]
Ramakatsa
v African National Congress
(Case
no 724/2019) (“Ramakatsa”)
[6]
Section
17(1)(a) of the Superior Court Act
[7]
Van
Loggerenberg:
Erasmus
Superior
Court Practice (3
rd
ed)
Vol 1 D106-108
[8]
Caratco
(Pty) Ltd v Independent Advisory (Pty) Ltd
2020
(5) SA 35
(SCA) at para 2
[9]
Trustees
of the Insolvent Estate of Whitehead v Dumas and Another
2013
(3) SA 331
(SCA) (“
Whitehead
”
)
[10]
Par
27 of main judgment
[11]
Par
28 of main judgment
[12]
Joint Stock Company
Varvarinskoye v ABSA Bank Ltd and Others
[2008] ZASCA 35
;
2008 (4) SA 287
(SCA)
,
and
Van
Wyk Van Heerden Attorneys v Gore N.O. and Another
[2022] ZASCA 128
sino noindex
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