Case Law[2024] ZAWCHC 123South Africa
Ace Films Corporation v Mimosa Rolprent Produksies (Pty) Ltd (In Liquidation) and Others (21717/2023) [2024] ZAWCHC 123 (7 May 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
7 May 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Ace Films Corporation v Mimosa Rolprent Produksies (Pty) Ltd (In Liquidation) and Others (21717/2023) [2024] ZAWCHC 123 (7 May 2024)
Ace Films Corporation v Mimosa Rolprent Produksies (Pty) Ltd (In Liquidation) and Others (21717/2023) [2024] ZAWCHC 123 (7 May 2024)
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sino date 7 May 2024
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Before: Golden AJ
Date of hearing: 20 February 2024
Date of judgment: 7
May 2024
Case
No.:
21717/2023
In
the matter between:
ACE
FILMS
CORPORATION
Applicant
and
MIMOSA
ROLPRENT PRODUKSIES (PTY) LTD
First Respondent
(In
Liquidation)
CHRISTINA
MAUREEN PENDERIS N.O.
Second Respondent
JOCHEN
ECKHOFF
N.O.
Third Respondent
MILANI
BECKER
N.O.
Fourth Respondent
TRACEY
LEE
TROSKIE
Fifth Respondent
EXCELSIOR
TRUST (PTY)
LTD
Sixth Respondent
TRACEY
LEE TROSKIE
N.O.
Seventh Respondent
ELNA
TROSKIE
Eighth Respondent
YOGO
CHATBOT (PTY)
LTD
Ninth Respondent
WJ
MOOLMAN
INC
Tenth Respondent
GODFRIED
JACOBUS JOHANNES KOTZE
Eleventh Respondent
MOOIDAM
BOERDERY (PTY)
LTD
Twelfth Respondent
MIMOSA
MALL (PTY)
LTD
Thirteenth Respondent
SOUTH
AFRICAN REVENUE SERVICE
Fourteenth Respondent
THE
MASTER OF THE HIGH
COURT
Fifteenth Respondent
JUDGMENT
GOLDEN
AJ
:
Introduction
[1]
This is an interlocutory application
brought in terms of Rule 7 of the High Court Rules relating to the
authority of CK Attorneys
(“CK Attorneys”) who purports
to represent the applicant, ACE Films Corporation (“ACE”),
in an application
to place the first respondent, Mimosa Rolprent
Produksies (Pty) Ltd (“Mimosa”) in business rescue.
Ms Rina Troskie
(“Troskie”) and Johan Victor Attorneys
(“JVA”) (supported by the liquidators of Mimosa) assert
that CK
Attorneys who is acting on the instructions of Mr Steven
Salant (“Salant”) does not have the authority to act on
behalf
of ACE and that only Troskie and JVA have authority to act on
ACE’s behalf.
[2]
The dispute relating to authority (‘the
authority dispute”) arises from the liquidation of Mimosa who
was placed under
provisional liquidation on 26 July 2022 and the
subsequent business rescue application (BR application) for an order
to place Mimosa
in business rescue.
[3]
Rule 7 of the High Court rules provides as
follows:
7
.
Power of attorney
(1) Subject to the
provisions of subrules (2) and (3) a power of attorney to act need
not be filed, but the authority
of anyone acting on behalf of a
party may, within 10 days after it has come to the notice of the
party that such person is
so acting, or with the leave of the court
on good cause shown at any time before judgment, be disputed,
whereafter such person
may no longer act unless he satisfied the
court that he is authorised so to act, and to enable him to do so the
court may postpone
the hearing of the action or the application.
[4]
Authority concerns the question whether a
party is properly before court in legal proceedings. It is the
institution of the proceedings
and the prosecution thereof that must
be authorised (
Ganes and Another v
Telecom Namibia Ltd
2004 (3) SA 615
(SCA)
at G-I and
Unlawful Occupiers, School
Site v City of Johannesburg
2005 (4) SA 199
(SCA)
).
The rule does not limit the challenge to the authority of the
attorneys and includes the authority of anyone who purports to
act on
behalf of another. The Court must be satisfied that authority exists
at the time when proof of it is proffered (Erasmus,
Superior
Court Practice
, 2
nd
Edition).
[5]
The first issue which I am required to
determine is whether Salant has the authority to represent ACE. The
obvious antecedent to
this is whether he was validly appointed by CAT
as a director of ACE. If this issue is decided in Salant’s
favour, then the
issue of his authority does not necessarily end
there as Troskie’s appointment as the director of ACE may have
subsequently
overtaken his appointment and authority. If on the other
hand Salant’s appointment was invalid
ab
initio
and Troskie’s appointment
as the sole director of CAT and ACE was valid, then this is
dispositive of the authority dispute.
[6]
It is necessary to set out the corporate
relationship between the parties first before I turn to deal with the
legal questions.
MIMOSA, CAT and ACE
[7]
Mimosa is a South African registered
company incorporated in terms of the company laws of South Africa.
[8]
Mimosa was originally a family-owned
company, established in 1964 with its primary focus the production
and distribution of cinematographic
films in South Africa and
internationally. It generated its income primarily from
marketing and distributing film rights
through local companies, like
Ster-Kinekor, M-Net and SABC.
[9]
To facilitate the distribution of its films
in the USA, Mimosa formed a 100%-owned subsidiary, CAT Films Inc
(“CAT”),
incorporated in Nevada, USA.
[10]
CAT in turn owns 100% of ACE. ACE is also a
US incorporated entity with offices in Los Angeles, California.
[11]
ACE in turn owns 95% of New Horizon Films
LLC.
[12]
Mimosa is thus at the apex of the corporate
structure and owns 100% of the shareholding in CAT, and through CAT,
it owns ACE.
[13]
Mimosa is in liquidation and in the process
of being wound-up.
The relevant facts and events
leading up to the authority dispute
[14]
On 30 November 2023, Salant, who purported
to act on behalf of ACE, launched a BR application to place Mimosa in
business rescue
in terms of Section 131 of the Companies Act, 2008
(“the Act”), and for an order appointing Mr Daniel
Terblanche as
the interim business rescue practitioner subject to
ratification by the holders of a majority of the independent
creditors’
voting interest at the first meeting of creditors,
as envisaged in Section 147 of the Act. Salant instructed CK
Attorneys
to launch the BR application and did so in his purported
capacity as the sole director of ACE.
[15]
In paragraph 42 of the founding affidavit
in the BR application (I have had the benefit of the papers filed to
date), Salant sets
out the reason why he, through ACE, sought to
bring the application for business rescue. He alleges that it
became progressively
clear over time that a group of relatives in the
Troskie family involved in the business of Mimosa sought to
improperly exclude
and sideline certain creditors and other
stakeholders, including ACE, himself and Ms Mireschen Marx (“Marx”).
Marx was previously employed by and an erstwhile director of Mimosa.
Salant alleges that the liquidators of Mimosa as well as attorney
Mr
WJ Moolman (“Moolman”) (whose firm is cited as the tenth
respondent), played a significant role in engineering the
liquidation
of Mimosa. I shall revert to the allegations pertaining to Moolman.
[16]
I need not in any further detail deal with
the basis of the BR application save to state that the outcome of the
authority dispute
will clearly have an impact on the fate of that
application. It is for this reason that the authority dispute
has been so
robustly litigated.
[17]
The liquidators (the second to fourth
respondents) corresponded with Salant on 25 October 2022 after Mimosa
was placed in liquidation.
Salant ran the affairs of CAT and ACE at
the time. Mr Jochen Eckhoff’s (“Eckhoff”)
(the third respondent)
email to Salant confirmed that Mimosa was
liquidated, and that he (Eckhoff) was appointed as the liquidator by
the Master of the
High Court. The email
inter
alia
records that Mimosa is the 100%
shareholder of CAT which in turn is the 100% shareholder of ACE who
owns 95% shares in New Horizon
Films. The email records that Mimosa
is the ultimate beneficiary / shareholder of CAT and ACE and
requested of Salant to send the
annual financial statements for each
company for the past three years, including the bank statements and a
brief background on
the current activities taking place in each
company. Eckhoff also informed Salant that no distribution /
disposition of funds
or assets may be made out of the company without
his (Eckhoff’s) prior written consent.
[18]
The liquidators were attending to the
winding up of Mimosa as they were required to do in accordance with
their statutory duties.
[19]
Troskie, supported by the liquidators,
allege that Salant was uncooperative and obstructive in the
winding-up of Mimosa’s
affairs which Salant denies.
According to them, Salant was subpoenaed to an enquiry in terms of
Section 415 of the 1973
Companies Act and
failed to appear. Salant
denies this.
[20]
According to Troskie and the liquidators,
Marx, who had attended the
Section 415
enquiry in October 2023,
testified that various funds had been paid out of ACE into Salant’s
personal bank account.
She provided ACE’s financial
statements at the enquiry, which reflected that significant amounts
were paid to Salant and
herself after the date of Mimosa’s
provisional liquidation on 26 July 2022.
[21]
At Salant’s instance and purportedly
as ACE’s sole director at the time, Salant caused an
application for business rescue
to be issued on 30 November 2023.
He instructed CK Attorneys to act on behalf ACE in the application,
which application was
served on the liquidators on 6 and 12 December
2023.
[22]
According to Troskie, the BR application is
a disguised stratagem to disrupt the liquidators in the discharge of
their duties in
the winding-up of Mimosa. She alleges that
Salant is alive to the fact that business rescue practitioners lack
the investigative
powers of liquidators and that any malfeasance on
his part will likely go undetected. She alleges that this is
likely the
motive of the BR application, rather than a restructuring
of Mimosa, who is hopelessly insolvent.
[23]
CK Attorneys received a letter from Moolman
Inc on 16 January 2024 with a letter from Troskie where Salant was
informed that he
and Marx had been dismissed as directors of ACE, and
that Troskie had been appointed in their place.
[24]
According to Salant, he was the only
director of ACE who could be replaced as Marx was no longer a
director at the time.
[25]
On Troskie’s instructions,
correspondence was also sent to CK Attorneys on 16 January 2024 where
they were informed that she
was appointed as the director of ACE on
11 December 2023, and where she instructed them to withdraw the BR
application within 48
hours of receipt of the letter as well as to
file a notice of withdrawal as attorneys of record for ACE.
[26]
CK Attorneys, acting on the instructions of
Salant, refused to withdraw as the attorneys of record for ACE.
[27]
On 18 January 2024, JVA acting on the
instructions of Troskie, addressed correspondence to CK Attorneys for
them to comply with
the instructions in Troskie’s letter of 16
January 2024. JVA also placed on record that they were acting for ACE
upon Troskie’s
instructions.
[28]
On 19 January 2024, CK Attorneys delivered
a notice in terms of
Rule 7
calling on Troskie and JVA to satisfy the
Court of their authority.
[29]
On the same day JVA filed a Notice of
Substitution as Attorneys of Record for ACE. This was followed by the
delivery of a similar
Rule 7
notice calling upon CK Attorneys to
satisfy the Court as to its authority to act in the BR application on
behalf of ACE.
[30]
CK Attorneys delivered a notice that they
intended to prove their authority at the hearing of the BR
application which was then
enrolled in the Third Division on 25
January 2024. The parties then reached agreement on the further
conduct of the dispute,
which agreement was made an Order of Court.
The Order inter alia provided for the postponement
sine
die
of the hearing of the BR
application pending the outcome of the authority dispute. The
Order also recorded that in terms of
Rule 7(1), CK Attorneys may no
longer act for ACE unless the Court is satisfied that CK Attorneys is
authorised so to act.
[31]
The two resolutions (written consents)
dated 8 and 11 December 2023 were sent to Salant on 15 January 2024
by Moolman on Troskie’s
instructions.
[32]
The resolution dated 8 December 2023 by the
liquidators on behalf of Mimosa appointed Troskie as the director of
CAT.
[33]
The resolution dated 11 December 2023,
signed by Troskie on behalf of CAT, replaced Salant with Troskie as
director of
ACE.
[34]
Salant asserts that the purported
appointment of Troskie as director of CAT by the liquidators is
invalid in law as is the purported
decision by Troskie on behalf of
ACE’s shareholder, CAT, where she replaced him with herself as
director. He contends
that the invalidity arises by reason of
the invalidity of her appointment as CAT’s director, but also
by its own terms.
[35]
Salant’s position is that:
[35.1]
He was reappointed as the sole director of ACE on 17 January 2023,
and thereby
had the authority to instruct attorneys to represent ACE
in the BR application.
[35.2]
The written consent (resolution) of the sole shareholder of CAT,
whereby Troskie was
appointed as director of CAT, was not valid.
[35.3]
Troskie never signed the written consent of CAT which consent
replaced him with Troskie.
[35.4]
The written consent was instead signed by Moolman, and the written
consent was a forgery.
[36]
Troskie on the other hand alleges that the
resolution which purportedly appointed Salant as the director of ACE
in January 2023,
supposedly by the written consent of its sole
shareholder CAT, was invalid. According to Troskie, Salant’s
claim that
he was reappointed as the director of ACE on 17 January
2023 cannot be correct given that he was not appointed with the
written
consent of the shareholders of CAT. She alleges that
the liquidators “
most certainly
did not give consent
” as claimed
by Salant and that the resolutions which appointed her as the sole
director of both CAT and ACE, clearly gave
her the authority to act
on behalf of ACE, and to thereby instruct JVA to withdraw the BR
application.
[37]
She alleges that the liquidators on behalf
of Mimosa, the sole shareholder of CAT, signed the consent appointing
her as sole director
of CAT:
[37.1]
Eckhoff and Penderis signed the consent in Cape Town on
11 December 2023.
[37.2]
Eckhoff sent a copy of the consent to Becker on 11 December 2023
and requested
her to consider and sign.
[37.3]
Becker signed the consent and sent same back to Eckhoff on
11 December 2023.
[37.4]
Insofar as the date of 8 December 2023 is concerned, this was an
error and according
to her was the date that the consent was drafted
by Mr Ward, the American attorney.
[37.5]
She signed the consent on behalf of CAT appointing her as the sole
director of ACE and
where Salant was removed on 11 December 2023
and the consent was sent to Mr Moolman that same evening.
Although
the email attachment of the consent appears to cut off the
full image of the consent, she confirmed that the signed consent was
incorporated in the body of the email.
[38]
Troskie confirms that her appointment as
sole director of ACE was in accordance with the wishes and directions
of the liquidators
which took place on 11 December 2023.
[39]
All three liquidators have filed
confirmatory affidavits where they support the allegations made by
Troskie. Eckhoff confirmed
that the joint final liquidators
appointed Troskie as director in CAT, that they support Troskie’s
appointment as a director
in ACE and confirms her authority to act as
such. He denies the authority of Salant to act in any capacity on
behalf of ACE.
[40]
Since Salant contends that the written
consent of the liquidators dated 8 December 2023 is invalid, it is
necessary to consider
the position of the liquidators when a business
rescue application is filed. The status and powers of the liquidators
is a prominent
feature of the dispute and central in the overall
determination of the main issue, which is the issue of authority.
The status and powers of the
liquidators
[41]
Mimosa is in liquidation. When a company is
in liquidation, a
concursus creditorum
is established and the liquidator is entrusted with the estate’s
assets, including the property rights and obligations of
the
insolvent company. The liquidator is obliged to hold and
administer the estate and distribute the proceeds among the
competing
creditors specified in the Insolvency Act. (
Emontic
Investments (Pty) Ltd v Bothomley N.O. and Others
[2024] ZASCA 1
at paragraph
[17]
; see also
Cohen
v ABSA Bank Limited
(1280/2021)
[2024]
ZASCA 16
(19 February 2024) at paragraph [24])
[42]
In terms of Section 391 of the Companies
Act 61 of 1973, the liquidators are under an obligation to forthwith
recover all the assets
and property of the company for satisfaction
of all proven claims of creditors and the costs of winding-up.
In the case of
Mimosa, the recovery of assets would include the
shareholding and interests in its subsidiaries, which includes CAT
and ACE.
[43]
The SCA in
GCC
Engineering v Maroos
2019
(2) SA 379
confirmed in terms of
Section 131(6)
of the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
that the liquidation
proceedings - and not the winding-up order- is suspended by the
institution of business rescue proceedings.
What is suspended is the
process
of
continuing with the realisation of the assets of the company in
liquidation with the aim of ultimately distributing them to
the
various creditors. The winding-up order is still in place; and
prior to the granting or refusal of the BR application,
the
provisional liquidators secure the assets of the company in
liquidation for the benefit of the body or creditors.
[44]
Section 131(6)
of the
Companies Act 2008
reads as follows:
“
131
Court order to begin business rescue proceedings
(6) If
liquidation proceedings have already been commenced by or against the
company at the time an application
is made in terms of subsection
(1), the application will suspend those liquidation proceedings
until-
(a)
the court has adjudicated upon the
application; or
(b)
the business rescue proceedings end,
if the court makes the order applied for.
”
[45]
The position was more recently confirmed in
Southern Sky Hotel and Leisure (Pty) Ltd
t/a Hans Merensky Hotel and Spa (in liquidation) and Others v
Southern Sky Food Enterprises
(Pty) Ltd
2023 (4) SA 1999
(SCA)
where the SCA held that it was not controversial that one of the most
important functions of the liquidators is to commence with
the
process of winding-up or liquidating the assets of the company with
the aim of constituting a
concursus
creditorum
. This process, it
held, is exhaustive and includes recovering and reducing into
possession the assets of the company, to
realise them and to
distribute the proceeds thereof to the satisfaction of the costs of
the winding-up as well as the claims of
creditors, and to distribute
the residue (if any) amongst the shareholders in accordance with
their rights.
[46]
It is not in dispute that on 7 October 2022
a majority of the creditors of Mimosa passed a resolution which
granted the liquidators
the power and authority to take control of
Mimosa’s subsidiary companies and to appoint directors of the
subsidiaries as
they see fit.
[47]
Thus, the powers of the liquidators arise
from the operation of law and the 7 October 2022 resolution where
they were authorised
to take control of CAT and ACE, Mimosa’s
subsidiaries. Their powers as liquidators were undisturbed at the
time of Salant’s
purported appointment as director of CAT, and
his purported re-appointment as director of ACE on 17 January 2023.
[48]
The liquidators decided to appoint Troskie
as director of CAT, and she decided to remove Salant as director of
ACE.
Salant’s re-appointment as
director of ACE
[49]
Salant asserts that he has been
re-appointed as director of ACE on 17 January 2023.
He relies on the written consent
of CAT, being the shareholder of
ACE.
[50]
The written consent upon which he relies
reads as follows:
ACTION TAKEN BY WRITTEN CONSENT
OF THE SHAREHOLDER OF
ACE Films Corporation
(a Californian corporation)
By written consent of the
Shareholder of this corporation, pursuant to the provisions of
Section 603(a)
of the California General Corporation Law, and
Section
10
of Article II of the bylaws of this Corporation, without a
physical meeting, the following resolutions are hereby adopted and
effective
as of the 17
th
day of January 2023.
REMOVAL AS
DIRECTOR: CORNELIS ABRAHAM TROSKIE
passed
away on December 24, 2022. He has been removed as a Director of
the Board of Directors of ACE Films Corporation effective
that date.
RESOLVED,
that the following persons be, and are hereby
elected as Directors of this Corporation to serve for a term of one
year or until
their successor/s are elected and qualified:
MIRESCHEN TROSKIE-MARX
STEVEN A SALANT
RESOLVED
FURTHER
, that all acts of the
directors of this corporation during the preceding year are hereby
ratified, confirmed and approved.
CAT FILMS INC.
a Nevada
Corporation
[51]
The resolution is signed by Salant as
President of CAT.
[52]
However, on Salant’s own version “
it
is common cause that at the time prior to Rina Troskie’s
purported appointment, CAT had no director
”.
[53]
It is undeniable that CAT’s
shareholder, Mimosa, who is represented by the liquidators, had the
authority to appoint directors
to CAT. It is uncontroverted
that the liquidators did
not
give their consent for Salant’s appointment as the director of
CAT, and therefore ACE.
[54]
As it reads, the CAT written consent was:
i) ostensibly obtained by the written consent of the shareholder,
CAT, whom we know not
to be factually correct nor valid in law for
reasons already addressed; ii) was obtained pursuant to
section 603
(a) of the California Corporation Law and; iii) obtained
pursuant to Article II (10) of the bylaws of CAT.
[55]
The bylaws of CAT do not assist Salant. In
fact, it considerably weakens his position.
[56]
I set out only the most salient provisions
of the bylaws.
[57]
The bylaws demonstrate the power of the
shareholder/s to decide on director and board appointments.
[58]
At the outset, Article I of the bylaws
provides that a meeting of the shareholders shall be held annually
for the election of directors
and the transaction of other business
on such date in each year as may be determined by the Board of
Directors.
[59]
Article II (1) provides that the business
of the Corporation shall be managed by the Board of Directors.
[60]
Article II (2) provides that the number of
directors constituting the entire Board of Directors shall be the
number, not less than
one, nor more than ten, fixed from time to time
by a majority of the total number of directors which the Corporation
would have,
prior to any increase or decrease, if there were no
vacancies, provided, however, that no decrease shall shorten the term
of an
incumbent director. Until otherwise fixed by the
directors, the number of directors constituting the entire board
shall be
four.
[61]
Article II (3) provides that at each annual
meeting of shareholders, directors shall be elected to hold office
until the next annual
meeting and until their successors have been
elected and qualified or until their death, resignation or removal in
the manner herein
after provided.
[62]
Article III (4) deals with the term of
office and removal of directors. It provides that each officer
shall hold office for
the term for which he is elected or appointed,
and until his successor has been elected or appointed and qualified.
Unless
otherwise provided in the resolution of the Board of Directors
electing or appointing an officer, his term of office shall extend
to
and expire at the meeting of the board following the next annual
meeting of shareholders. Any officer may be removed by
the
board with or without cause, at any time. Removal of an officer
without cause shall be without prejudice to his contract
rights, if
any, and the election or appointment of an officer shall not of
itself create contract rights.
[63]
Article III (5) provides that the President
shall be the Chief Executive Officer of the Corporation, shall have
general and active
management of the business of the Corporation and
shall see that all orders and resolutions of the Board of Directors
are carried
into effect. The President shall also preside at
all meetings of the shareholders and the Board of Directors.
[64]
The bylaws make it clear at the outset that
a meeting of the
shareholders
shall decide on the election of directors. Mimosa as the 100%
shareholder of CAT thus decides who is elected and appointed as a
director of CAT. It follows, by the operation of South African
law, that the conferral of authority for the appointment of
directors’ vest with the liquidators of Mimosa. Their decision
to appoint Troskie, and not Salant, was an exercise of this
power.
[65]
Salant’s self-appointment as a
director of ACE is clearly invalid and unlawful by virtue of the
absence of the required written
consent of the shareholder, CAT.
This position is also consistent with the bylaws of CAT.
[66]
But since CAT had no directors prior to the
decision to appoint Troskie, it could not have been legally competent
in any event for
Salant to re-appoint himself as a director of CAT.
[67]
In any event, I agree with counsel for
Troskie and JVA, that even if Salant’s appointment was properly
authorised and he was
validly re-appointed as a director of ACE, he
was subsequently removed and a successor was appointed in his place,
namely, Troskie.
This decision was also consistent with Article III
(4) of CAT’s bylaws which provides for the appointment of
director successors.
[68]
I accordingly find that Salant’s
re-appointment as the director of ACE on 17 January 2023 was invalid
and unlawful.
[69]
Taken to its logical legal conclusion, this
means that Salant did not have the authority to represent ACE and he
therefore did not
have the authority to instruct CK Attorneys to
represent ACE in the business rescue application.
[70]
Salant and CK Attorneys have failed to
satisfy the Court of their authority to represent ACE.
[71]
I am inclined to give Salant the benefit of
the doubt based on the bylaws of CAT that a resolution was not
required by the board
of directors for the institution of business
rescue proceedings and for the appointment of CK Attorneys. But this
does not assist
him. Even if the decision was properly authorised at
the time, it was short-lived, as eleven days later after the business
rescue
application was launched Salant was removed as director of ACE
and replaced with Troskie, who subsequently decided to withdraw the
application.
[72]
I need not further consider the validity of
Troskie’s appointment as the sole director of ACE given the
conclusion that Salant’s
re-appointment as a director of ACE
was invalid but will do so for the avoidance of doubt as to the
validity of her appointment.
Rina Troskie’s appointment
as the director of ACE
[73]
Salant asserts that Troskie’s
appointment as director of CAT and ACE was invalid by reason of the
invalidity of her appointment
as CAT’s director. He
challenges the validity of the written consents of 8 December 2023
and 11 December 2023.
More specifically, he
challenges the “
execution
”
of these documents.
[74]
According to him, the “
obvious
prompt
” for the decisions to
appoint Troskie as director of CAT and ACE was the service of the BR
application.
[75]
He alleges that the 8 and 11 December 2023
consents were part and parcel of a sinister plan where attorney
Moolman (who represents
all the creditors of Mimosa), Troskie and the
liquidators collaborated to remove him as a director. The stratagem,
according to
him, was to deliberately replace him as director of ACE
to incapacitate the BR application.
[76]
Salant alleges that the liquidators and
Moolman were part of this scheme to sabotage the BR application by
giving notice to defend
the application without having raised his
dismissal as a director with him. He alleges that Moolman did
not once allude to
the alleged decision where his (Salant’s)
directorship was terminated in the time leading up to the special
creditors’
meeting, and that Moolman only did so belatedly on
15 January 2024 when his hand was forced. Salant alleges that
the deliberately
clandestine conception and withholding of the
decisions from him and his attorneys, was “
therefore
clearly fraudulent
”
.
[77]
He alleges that it is “
extremely
doubtful
”
whether Troskie was at
all relevant times even aware of decisions purportedly taken by her
(referring to the 8 and 11 December 2023
written consents), as it was
Moolman whom, according to Salant, had sent the resolutions to him.
[78]
He asserts that the decisions taken by the
liquidators and Troskie were not
bona
fide
and were done for an improper
purpose. He alleges that the decisions were conceived on a
fraudulent basis, namely by making
the misrepresentation that he had
remained as director from 11 December 2023 until 15 January 2024.
He was deliberately kept
in the dark, for the nefarious reason that
they deliberately wanted him out in order to scupper the BR
application.
[79]
He alleges that in the given context, the
intention of the consents was that they would only take legal effect
when they were disclosed
to him, namely, on 15 January 2024. He
alleges that the two decisions were not serious in the sense that
they were unambiguous
and solemn legal acts intended to create legal
rights.
[80]
According to him, the liquidators had not
played open cards with him from the start and that they had acted in
bad faith insofar
as the decision of 8 December 2023 was not taken in
the interests of all creditors in an even-handed manner, but that
their decision
was clearly taken in the interests of the “
Troskie
group
”
which excludes him and
Marx and the other unproved creditors.
[81]
Salant has made very serious allegations
against Troskie, the liquidators and Moolman of improper conduct,
male fides, misrepresentation
and fraud. There is however nothing on
the papers before me which supports these accusations. Salant alleges
that Moolman was complicit
in the false misrepresentation to him and
the alleged forgery of Troskie’s signature on the written
consents. Troskie has
emphatically denied this and confirmed that she
gave instructions for the 11 December 2023 written consent which she
had signed
but that in the transmission of the email, a portion of
the consent was inadvertently cut off.
[82]
Moolman addresses the signature of the
written consents in his affidavit dated 12 February 2024 in
support of his application
to strike. He confirms that he is
the attorney for all the proven creditors in the insolvent estate of
Mimosa, save for ACE,
who is represented by JVA in the application.
He confirms that he acted on the instructions of Troskie and the
liquidators
in relation to the 8 and 11 December 2023 written
consents and that Salant’s allegations in relation to him is
false, abusive,
defamatory and made with the intention to harass
him.
[83]
In my view the application to intervene was
not necessary, but to the extent that it was, it is granted. The
allegations against
Moolman are baseless and speculative. I
accordingly grant the application to strike as the allegations are
vexatious and scandalous.
[84]
Turning to the written consents. For ease
of reference, I shall continue to identify them as the 8 and 11
December 2023 consents
mindful that according to Troskie, both
consents were in fact signed on 11 December 2023.
[85]
Salant challenges the ‘execution’
of the consents with the support of an expert in information
technology, Mr Matthew
Vos (“Vos”). Salant has
devoted a considerable portion of his affidavit to Vos’s
findings which, in my
view, does not assist his case. In his
examination of the metadata and properties of the written consents,
Vos concluded
inter alia
that the purported signature of Troskie was a picture as opposed to a
verified signature inserted with Adobe Reader. Vos’s
conclusion
was that the 11 December 2023 consent was potentially created by
Moolman and never actually signed by Troskie herself.
As
regards the 8 December 2023 consent, he concluded that it
appears to be a scanned document for which the metadata
is limited
but the conclusion, by way of inference, is that it would most likely
also have been originally drafted by Moolman prior
to the signature
of the liquidators.
[86]
Relying on the expert opinion of Vos,
Salant alleges that Troskie “
potentially
never actually signed the consent
”
by which he was dismissed, and that the document was deliberately
backdated to 11 December 2023 to make it appear
as if the
consent was signed and which purportedly dismissed him. Salant
disputes that these written consents were actually signed
by the
liquidators and Troskie and asserts that the signatures were a
forgery. The import of all of this, as I understand it to
be, is that
the consents were never properly and validly executed on the dates
that they were allegedly signed, which meant, according
to Salant,
that they were not valid or were never intended to be bona fide and
valid.
[87]
According to Troskie, the written consents
were drafted by US attorney, Henry Ward, and that she signed on
behalf of ACE.
She asserts that there was nothing untoward
about this and that the contents of the letter and the consent
represents the wishes
of the liquidators. She pertinently
denies that the consents were not signed / executed in accordance
with her and the liquidators’
instructions.
[88]
Her explanation for the delay in providing
the consents to Salant timeously was that they were waiting on legal
advice from the
US attorney Ward before any further steps were taken,
but that they were eventually advised that their conduct (hers and
the liquidators)
complied with the California Corporations Code. They
also wanted to gain control of ACE’s bank account before
notifying Salant
as they were fearful that he would loot the account
and destroy the company records given that he was uncooperative with
the Section
415 [liquidation] enquiry. Salant denies that he was
uncooperative.
[89]
It is not clear what is meant by Salant’s
allegation that the written consents were not serious and that they
did not have
a binding legal effect for the reason that they were
only disclosed to him on 15 January 2024. This proposition does
not
make sense, nor has counsel for Salant provided the Court with
authority for this proposition. The delay does not invalidate the
consents or make them less serious. Whilst it may not
have been ideal to withhold the consents from Salant, I cannot
disregard the circumstances and rationale for doing.
[90]
Salant’s challenge in relation to the
“execution” of the consents is illogical but is also
manifestly improbable.
In any event, the rule in
Plascon-Evans
Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd 1984 (3) SA623 (A)
dictates that I decide the application on Troskie’s version.
[91]
The liquidators have independently
confirmed the removal of Salant and the appointment of Troskie and
have explained that this decision
was necessary in order to preserve
the assets of Mimosa for the benefit of the general body of
creditors.
[92]
It is without doubt that Troskie’s
appointment as director of CAT and ACE was properly authorised and
valid.
Conclusion
[93]
For the reasons set out herein, Salant’s
self-reappointment as director of ACE was clearly unauthorised and
invalid.
[94]
Troskie, on the other hand, was validly
appointed as the director of CAT and ACE.
[95]
Consequently, it follows that Salant does
not have the authority to represent ACE and to instruct CK Attorneys,
or any other attorneys
for that matter, to represent ACE and to
institute business rescue proceedings on its behalf. CK Attorneys is
accordingly not authorised
to represent ACE.
[96]
Since only Troskie has the authority to
represent ACE, only she can appoint attorneys to represent ACE.
Accordingly, the appointment
of JVA to represent ACE was properly
authorised by her.
[97]
CK Attorneys should not be mulcted in
costs. They were instructed by Salant to represent ACE and to
launch the BR application
and did so in the
bona
fide
belief that Salant was properly
authorised to represent ACE. On Salant’s own version, CK
Attorneys believed that they were
lawfully acting on behalf of ACE in
the BR application on the basis that he (Salant) was the
bona
fide
appointed director of ACE.
[98]
Salant and CK Attorneys have accordingly
failed to satisfy the Court of their authority as required in terms
of Rule 7.
[99]
In the result, I make the following Order.
ORDER:
[a]
Mr Steven Salant and CK Attorneys are not authorised to act on behalf
of ACE Films
Corporation.
[b]
Ms Rina Troskie as the validly appointed director of CAT and ACE
Films Corporation
is authorised to represent ACE.
[c]
JV Attorneys, acting on the instruction of Ms Troskie to represent
ACE Films Corporation,
are the validly appointed and authorised
attorneys of record for ACE Films Corporation in the business rescue
application.
[d]
Mr Salant in his personal capacity, shall pay the costs of the Rule 7
application.
[e]
Mr Salant in his personal capacity, shall pay the costs of Mr W
Moolman in the application
to strike, on an attorney and client
scale.
T J GOLDEN
Acting Judge of the High Court
7 May 2024
On behalf
of Mr Salant and CK Attorneys
:
Counsel:
Advocate F
Rautenbach
Instructed by CK
Attorneys
Email:
reynhard@cklaw.co.za
On behalf
of Ms R Troskie and JV Attorneys:
Counsel:
Advocate C Cutler
Instructed by JV
Attorneys
Email:
chris@jvaa.co.za
On
behalf WJ Moolman Inc and Mr W Moolman (Attorneys for the Fifth to
Thirteenth Respondents):
Mr
W Moolman
Email:
werner@wjm.co.za
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