Case Law[2024] ZAWCHC 163South Africa
First Time Trading CC v Magistrate for the District of the City of Cape Town sub district Bellville and Others (6222/2024) [2024] ZAWCHC 163 (10 June 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
10 June 2024
Headnotes
AT BELLVILLE R MAAS
Judgment
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## First Time Trading CC v Magistrate for the District of the City of Cape Town sub district Bellville and Others (6222/2024) [2024] ZAWCHC 163 (10 June 2024)
First Time Trading CC v Magistrate for the District of the City of Cape Town sub district Bellville and Others (6222/2024) [2024] ZAWCHC 163 (10 June 2024)
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IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE
DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
CASE
NUMBER
: 6222/2024
In the matter between:
FIRST TIME TRADING
CC
Applicant
And
THE MAGISTRATE FOR THE
DISTRICT OF THE
CITY OF CAPE TOWN
SUB-DISTRICT
BELLVILLE, HELD AT
BELLVILLE R MAAS
First Respondent
THE MASTER OF THE HIGH
COURT
OF THE WESTERN
CAPE
Second Respondent
STEPHEN MALCOM GORE
N.O.
Third Respondent
DONOVAN THEORDORE
MAJIEDT N .O.
Fourth Respondent
NONKULULEKO LAWRENCIA
THWALA N.O.
Fifth Respondent
NICHOLAS TIMKOE
N.O.
Sixth Respondent
GREIG MICHAEL TIMKOE
N.O.
Seventh Respondent
FANTOM OPERATIONS
LTD
Eighth Respondent
SRB FINANCIAL SERVICES
CC
Ninth Respondent
JGL FORENSIC SERVICES
(PTY) LTD
Tenth Respondent
RE COÖPERATIE
U.A.
Eleventh
Respondent
REASONS FOR ORDER
DELIVERED
ELECTRONICALLY ON 10 JUNE 2024
MANGCU-LOCKWOOD, J
A.
INTRODUCTION
[1]
I hereby provide reasons for an order I granted on
9 May 2024, which was as follows:
“
Having
heard counsel for the applicant and the third to eighth respondents,
an order is granted in the following terms:
1.
It is directed that the application brought by
First Time Trading CC under case number 6222/24, which was set down
for hearing on
10 May 2024, is promoted on the roll and that the
hearing proceeds on 7 May 2024.
2.
The application brought by First Time Trading CC
under case number 6222/24 is dismissed.
3.
The applicant, First Time Trading CC, is directed
to pay the costs of the application under case number 6222/24, based
on a party-and-party
scale C tariff.”
[2]
The applicant sought an order setting aside the
first meeting of creditors which was held on 2 February 2024 in the
insolvent estate
of Reeco Holdings Pty Ltd (under liquidation) before
Magistrate R Maas in terms of section 44 of the Insolvency Act 24 of
1936
(“
the
Insolvency Act”
);
and alternatively, that the claims proved at that meeting be declared
as not proved and that it be declared that no votes were
cast at that
meeting. A further prayer sought was the removal of the third
respondent as a provisional liquidator in the estate
of Reeco
Holdings.
B.
BACKGROUND FACTS
[3]
On 20 July 2023 Reeco Holdings was placed under
provisional liquidation in terms of section 346 of the Companies Act
61 of 1973
(“
the 1973 Companies
Act”
), and on 8 August 2023 the
third to seventh respondents were appointed as provisional
liquidators of the insolvent estate. The
provisional order of
liquidation was made final on 22 August 2023.
[4]
On 22 December 2023 the first meeting of creditors
and of members, the subject of these proceedings, was advertised in
the
Government Gazette
,
and was to be held on 2 February 2024 at the Bellville Magistrate’s
Court. It proceeded on that date before Magistrate R
Maas. The
proceedings were recorded and transcribed, and a copy of the
transcript, which is attached to the parties’ papers,
indicates
that all parties present were legally represented.
[5]
First, a meeting of the sole shareholder of Reeco
Holdings, named RE Cooperatie (eleventh respondent), was convened,
where the third
respondent was nominated as liquidator. Thereafter, a
meeting of creditors was convened, where a claim belonging to Fantom
Operations
Limited (eighth respondent), worth R185 million, was
sought to be proved. During that process, Mr. Harms attempted to
object against
the claim of Fantom Operations.
[6]
It appears from the transcript that the creditors’
claims that Mr Harms purported to represent, numbered from 4 to 14,
had
already been paid. Further, that another claim which he purported
to represent (numbered 22), was an unliquidated damages’
claim
which was, in any event, represented by another attorney whose
instructions were to withdraw the claim, as reflected in the
documents before the Magistrate. One of the specific issues that
arose during those interactions is the fact that the applicant’s
claim against Reeco Holdings, which was based on an invoice worth
R43,125, had been paid in full prior to the meeting, and the
payment
was effected by Fantom Operations. Despite vociferous objections and
interjections from Mr Harms the Magistrate considered
the R185
million claim of Fantom Operations proved. At the end of the
proceedings, the meeting of creditors was postponed to 10
May 2024 at
9h00.
[7]
Thereafter, on or about 28 March 2024 the
applicant instituted these proceedings, seeking to be heard at 9h00
on 10 May 2024. The
application was opposed by the third to eighth
respondents. In addition, the third to seventh respondents (“
the
liquidators”
), supported by
Fantom Operations, brought a counter-application for promotion of the
matter to the urgent roll of 7 May 2024 so
that it could be heard
before the date of 10 May 2024.
[8]
The counter-application for promotion of the
matter on the roll, which was opposed by the applicant, was based on
the fact that
the adjourned meeting of creditors was scheduled for
the exact same time and date that the applicant sought to be heard in
this
Court. The respondents explained that an interrogation in terms
of
section 44(7)
of the
Insolvency Act was
planned for that day,
where the deponent to the applicant’s affidavits, Mr Jaco
Avenant, was to be interrogated, and they
argued that the application
before this Court was a
stratagem
to evade and frustrate the progress of those
proceedings. They also pointed out that much expenditure of time and
resources would
be wasted if the adjourned meeting was aborted
because of the applicant’s application, since court officials,
including the
Magistrate, had been preparing for it as well as a
large array of creditors, the shareholder, and their representatives.
[9]
The respondents stated that there was no basis to
place the meeting in jeopardy by adjourning it or risking its
adjournment whilst
the applicant pursued its application at a
leisurely pace. This would indefinitely delay the distribution of
dividends to creditors.
In addition to this, the respondents argued
that the applicant’s application was in any event brought on
spurious grounds,
discussed below, which include the fact that its
claim had already been paid. As a result, the respondents argued that
it was appropriate
for the matter to be dispensed with on an urgent
basis prior to the meeting of creditors of 10 May 2024.
[10]
The applicant opposed the promotion of the matter
to the urgent roll on the basis that no case was made out for urgency
in compliance
with Uniform Rules 6(12)(b), and the respondents had
already been in receipt of the application by 20 March 2024, and they
had
only delivered their notice of intention to oppose on 10 April
2024. Nevertheless, the applicant’s replying affidavit was
delivered on 6 May 2024 in time for the hearing of 7 May 2024. As
appears from the order I granted on 9 May 2024, the matter was
promoted to the roll of 7 May 2024.
[11]
Given that the applicant set the matter down for
10 May 2024 at 9h00, the very same time and date on which the
creditors’
meeting was scheduled, the conclusion was
irresistible that it must have foreseen the possibility that those
proceedings would
have to be postponed in light of these court
proceedings. That was borne out by correspondence exchanged between
the parties in
the lead up to these proceedings. In a letter dated 10
April 2024, the applicant’s legal representatives requested the
liquidators
to explain why they “
[held]
the view that it should be necessary to proceed with the inquiry in
terms of
section 44(7)
and
44
(8) of the
Insolvency Act while
the
meeting is subject to a review”
.
Then, after the liquidators’ legal representatives responded
that the creditors’ meeting was to continue despite the
launching of these proceedings by the applicant, the applicant’s
representatives responded by stating that it was not in
the interest
of the company and creditors that the inquiry in terms of the
Insolvency Act should
proceed on 10 May 2024, and that if the
applicant was successful in setting aside the first meeting as sought
in its notice of
motion, all costs would be wasted. As a result, the
letter requested the liquidators to advise whether they would
indemnify the
creditors against wasted costs if the meeting was set
aside in these proceedings. This makes it clear that in the
applicant’s
mind, its application before this Court would have
an impact on the proceedings before the Magistrate and, the
implication in the
letter was that those proceedings should not
continue until completion of these proceedings.
[12]
It was as a result of the applicant’s
attitude displayed in the above correspondence that the respondents
communicated an
intention to promote the applicant’s
application on the roll so that it could be heard prior to 10 May
2024. In the respondents’
letter dated 22 April 2024, the
applicant was confronted regarding its “
intention…
to utilize the fact that a High Court application is pending as a
spurious basis to suggest that the [creditors’]
meeting should
be postponed thereby avoiding interrogation of your clients”
.
It was a mere four days later, on 26 April 2024, that the answering
affidavit of the liquidators was delivered, including the
counter-application, and on 30 April 2024 that the answering
affidavit of the eighth respondent was delivered. I do not consider
that to have been an undue delay in light of the correspondence
highlighted above. The correspondence makes it clear that the
applicant was made aware since 22 April 2024 that the respondents
were to pursue legal proceedings to ensure that the meeting of
10 May
2024 would proceed.
[13]
Needless to say, considerations of the proper
administration of justice required that there should be clarity
regarding the status
of the adjourned meeting which was scheduled to
be heard before the Magistrate. It was conceded at the hearing of the
matter on
behalf of the applicant that the outcome of these court
proceedings would inevitably have an impact on the adjourned meeting
of
the creditors which was scheduled for 10 May 2024. It was
furthermore convenient to hear the matter on 7 May 2024 since, as
already
indicated, all the parties had delivered papers, which in
total, ran to approximately 590 pages, and the matter was ripe for
hearing.
I also considered it to be in the interests of justice for
the matter to proceed, one of those considerations being the common
cause fact that the applicant’s claim has in fact been paid. It
is also noteworthy that, although the applicant stated that
there was
no urgency to hear the matter, it also provided no assurances that Mr
Avenant, who was to be interrogated at the meeting
of 10 May 2024,
intended to attend the adjourned meeting.
[14]
Before discussing the application, it is apposite
to set out the relevant applicable law.
C.
THE LAW
[15]
The
meeting that is the subject of these proceedings was convened by the
Master in terms of section 364 of the 1973 Companies Act.
In
terms of Item 9 in Schedule 5 of the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
, the
winding-up and liquidation provisions in Chapter 14 of the 1973
Companies Act continue
to apply, and
in
terms of
section 366(1)
thereof, the claims against a company in
winding-up by a court “
shall
be proved at a meeting of creditors mutatis mutandis in
accordance with the provisions relating to the proof of
claims
against an insolvent estate under the law relating to insolvency
”
.
[1]
Hence the application of the provisions of section 44 of the
Insolvency Act 24 of 1936 (“
the
Insolvency Act”
).
But those provisions apply
mutatis
mutandis
[2]
-
‘subject to the necessary alterations’
[3]
-
and must accordingly, be applied in their proper context.
[16]
Section 44(1)
of the
Insolvency Act
provides
as follows:
‘
Any
person or the representative of any person who has a liquidated claim
against an insolvent estate, the cause of which arose
before the
sequestration of that estate, may, at any time before the final
distribution of that estate in terms of section
one
hundred and thirteen
,
but subject to the provisions of section
one
hundred and four
,
prove that claim in the manner hereinafter provided: Provided that no
claim shall be proved against an estate after the expiration
of a
period of three months as from the conclusion of the second meeting
of creditors of the estate, except with leave of the Court
or the
Master, and on payment of such sum to cover the cost or any part
thereof, occasioned by the late proof of the claim, as
the Court or
Master may direct.’
[17]
The
Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA) recently held in
Mantis
Investments Holdings v De Jager NO
[4]
that
section
44
of the
Insolvency Act deals
comprehensively with the procedure for
the proof of liquidated claims against an insolvent estate. The
procedure is intended
to enable creditors to prove their claims in a
relatively simple and expeditious fashion.
[5]
In
Breda
N O v Master of the High Court, Kimberley
,
the SCA Court observed that a presiding officer does not adjudicate
upon the claim as a court of law, is not required to examine
a claim
too critically and only has to be satisfied that the claim is
prima
facie
proved.
[6]
[18]
After the process set out in
section 44
of the
insolvency Act, the provisions of section 45 apply, notably
subsection (3), which provides as follows:
“
If
the trustee disputes a claim after it has been proved against the
estate at a meeting of creditors, he shall report the fact
in writing
to the Master and shall state in his report his reasons for disputing
the claim. Thereupon the Master may confirm the
claim, or he may,
after having afforded the claimant an opportunity to substantiate his
claim, reduce or disallow the claim, and
if he has done so, he shall
forthwith notify the claimant in writing: Provided that such
reduction or disallowance shall not debar
the claimant from
establishing his claim by an action at law, but subject to the
provisions of section 75.”
[19]
It has
been held that, similar to section 44, section 45 only requires the
Master to examine the documents supporting the proof
of claims to
determine whether they disclose
prima
facie
the
existence of an enforceable claim.
[7]
A
liquidator
[8]
or creditor
[9]
who has unsuccessfully objected to the Master’s decision to
admit a claim
may
apply to court to review it in terms of
section 151
of the
Insolvency
Act which
provides as follows:
“
Subject
to the provisions of section
fifty-seven
any
person
aggrieved
by
any decision, ruling, order or taxation of the Master or by a
decision, ruling or order of an officer presiding at a meeting
of
creditors may bring it under review by the court and to that end may
apply to the court by motion, after notice to the Master
or to the
presiding officer, as the case may be and to any person whose
interests are affected: Provided that if all or most of
the creditors
are affected, notice to the trustee shall be deemed to be notice to
all such creditors; and provided further that
the court shall not
re-open any duly confirmed trustee’s account otherwise than as
is provided in section
one
hundred and twelve
.”
(my emphasis)
[20]
In
order to have
locus
standi
to
bring a review under
section 151
, an applicant must be a
‘person aggrieved’. It has been held
[10]
that “
the
words ‘person aggrieved’ are of wide import and should
not be subjected to a restrictive interpretation. They do
not
include, of course, a mere busybody who is interfering in things
which do not concern him; but they do include a person who
has
a genuine grievance because an order has been made which
prejudicially affects his interests.”
[21]
It has
also been held
[11]
that
a
‘person aggrieved’ signifies someone whose legal rights
have been infringed – a person harbouring a legal grievance.
Further, that the legal rights which are alleged to have been
infringed must have existed at the time when the decision in question
was made.
[12]
Further,
that
a ‘person aggrieved’ does not mean someone “
is
disappointed of a benefit which he or she might have received if some
other order had been made. A person aggrieved must be a
person who
has suffered a legal grievance… against whom a decision has
been pronounced which has wrongfully deprived him
or her of
something, or wrongfully refused him or her something or wrongfully
affected his or her title to something”
.
[13]
[22]
Since
the application is final in nature, the legal principles set out in
Plascon-Evans
[14]
apply
insofar as any disputes of fact may arise in the papers. That is,
that a final order can be granted only if the facts averred
in the
applicant’s affidavits, which have been admitted by the
respondents, together with the facts alleged by the latter,
justify
such order.
[15]
It may be
different if the respondents’ version consists of bald or
uncreditworthy denials, raises fictitious disputes of
fact, is
palpably implausible, far-fetched or so clearly untenable that the
court is justified in rejecting them merely on the
papers.
[16]
The Court has to accept those facts averred by applicant that were
not disputed by respondents, and respondents’ version
insofar
as it was plausible, tenable and credible.
[17]
D.
DISCUSSION
[23]
The applicant does not specifically seek to review
a decision of the Magistrate, but instead seeks an order setting
aside the creditors’
meeting itself, which is a far-reaching
remedy, and no reason is given for why it has opted to seek that
relief as opposed to the
normal available remedy of a review. As the
case law above indicates,
section 151
of the
Insolvency Act provides
the remedy for any person aggrieved by a decision of the presiding
officer at a meeting of creditors by means of a review. No specific
reference is made in the notice of motion or in the founding
affidavit to any decision of the Magistrate that is sought to be
reviewed, and the applicant has otherwise made no mention of
section
151
or indicated an intention to bring its application within the
purview of those provisions. To the extent that the applicant
intended
the application to be determined in the light of
section 151
which remains opaque, it is trite that it falls upon an applicant to
specify the relief it seeks as well as the grounds upon which
relies
for the relief. That is not a task for the respondents or the Court.
Nevertheless, the grounds of irregularity raised by
the applicant are
examined later below, within the purview of the relief sought by the
applicant.
[24]
I do take into account the fact that the admission
of creditors’ claims, which is the subject of the alternative
relief, was
indeed a decision made by the Magistrate. However, to the
extent that this aspect of the application is to be read as a review,
it is premature because the provisions of
section 45
of the
Insolvency Act set
out above had not yet been exhausted when the
applicant approached this Court. It provides as follows:
“
(1)
After a meeting of creditors the officer who presided thereat shall
deliver to the trustee every
claim proved against the insolvent
estate at that meeting and every document submitted in support of the
claim.
(2)
The trustee shall examine all available books and documents relating
to the insolvent
estate for the purpose of ascertaining whether the
estate in fact owes the claimant the amount claimed.”
[25]
It is common cause that, matters had not reached
the stage enunciated in the above provisions for the liquidator to
examine the
documents to ascertain whether the estate in fact owed
any of the claims. Neither had the Master had opportunity to
determine any
dispute of a claim that might be raised by the
liquidator after the aforesaid examination, as envisaged in
subsection 45(3).
[26]
In any
event, contrary to what the applicant avers in its papers, the case
law summarized earlier
[18]
makes it clear that a presiding officer does not adjudicate upon the
claim as a court of law and is not required to examine a claim
too
critically, and only has to be satisfied that it is
prima
facie
proved.
Thus, if the presiding officer in this case was satisfied that the
claims were regular on their face, the requirement is
met.
[27]
Furthermore, in terms of the case law set out
earlier, a person instituting a review in terms of
section 151
must
establish that (s)he is an aggrieved person. It is in this respect
that the respondents have raised a point
in
limine
, stating that the applicant is
not a creditor of the company in liquidation because its claim is
based on an invoice dated 8 May
2023 for services rendered to Reeco
Holdings for an amount of R43,125, which was paid on 1 February 2024,
before the first meeting
of creditors was held. They state that,
since the applicant’s claim has been paid, there is no basis to
suggest how or why
its legal interests have been adversely affected
by any decision taken by the presiding officer. The applicant admits
that it was
paid but tendered to return the payment stating that the
payment was calculated to deprive it of
locus
standi
at the insolvency proceedings,
which included the right to question the conduct and independence of
the liquidators.
[28]
I do not consider it desirable to determine the
dispute relating to whether the applicant is an ‘aggrieved
person’ or
a creditor, given that the insolvency proceedings
are currently underway, especially as a preliminary issue preventing
the applicant
from instituting these proceedings at this stage.
Although it may well be the case later that the applicant is not an
aggrieved
person and creditor, it is also true that the issue may
very well be affected by the processes outlined in terms of
section
45
, amongst other avenues that may be available to the applicant. In
my view, this is one of the reasons why the statutory mechanism
provides, in the main, for recourse to court at a later stage, once
all the statutory remedies have been exhausted. By then, a
court
would have all the information relevant and necessary to be able to
make a determination of that nature, after taking into
account all
the information and evidence from the insolvency proceedings. Given
the findings made in this judgment that this application
is premature
because the statutory scheme provides for alternative remedies before
this Court is approached, it would be premature
to finally decide
that issue before those processes are exhausted. However, I do take
into account the fact that the applicant’s
claim was paid in
full, an issue which is common cause amongst the parties.
[29]
I now proceed to deal with the irregularities
raised by the applicant in its application, which may be summarized
as follows:
a.
Firstly, there were procedural irregularities in
relation to the shareholder’s meeting, including the fact that
it was held
before the first meeting of creditors, and that the
documents submitted on behalf of the shareholder were not submitted
24 hours
prior to the meeting.
b.
Secondly, there were numerous disputes relating to
the shareholding.
c.
Thirdly, there were irregularities in the claims
submitted for proof by Fantom and JGL Forensic Services. With regard
to the Fantom
claim, the applicant alleges that there was an
irregularity with the resolution authorizing Andre Cronje to act on
behalf of Fantom
Operations and submit its creditor claim; and
secondly, there was a calculation error with regards to the claim
amount. With regards
to JGL Forensic Services, the applicant alleges
that some aspects of the invoice supporting the claim post-date the
deemed date
of Reeco’s liquidation.
d.
As regards the removal of the provisional
liquidator, the applicant states that there was an irregularity in
the voting at the shareholder’s
meeting where the liquidator
was nominated.
[30]
The applicant claims that its legal representative
was not afforded
audi alteram
partem
because he
was not afforded an opportunity to participate in the proceedings.
The transcript shows the opposite. Mr Harms addressed
the Magistrate
at various stages, some of which I have pointed to earlier. It is
correct that his views did not carry the day.
That, however, does not
mean he was not given opportunity to address the proceedings. I have
otherwise referred to the difficulties,
which are evident from the
transcript, regarding the exact identity of his clients at the
proceedings. I find no basis for the
claim made that he was not
afforded an opportunity to participate.
[31]
As regards the complaint that the order of the two
meetings was wrong because the shareholder’s meeting was
irregularly held
before the creditors’ meeting, no legal basis
was laid for the allegation that this amounted to an irregularity.
The two
meetings were held in terms of
section 364
of the 1973
Companies Act. Although
that provision sets out the provisions
relating to a meeting of creditors (at
section 364(1)(a))
before
those relating to a meeting of the members (at
section 364(1)(b))
,
there is no requirement in the statute for the meetings to appear in
any particular order, and the applicant has not referred
to any such
statutory requirement. There was accordingly no merit to this
argument. This point was in any event conceded at the
hearing before
me by the counsel representing the applicant.
[32]
As to the complaints relating to the shareholder’s
meeting, the applicant alleged firstly that there was non-compliance
with
Regulation 12
of the Regulations for the Winding-Up and Judicial
Management of Companies published under GNR2490 in
Government
Gazette
4128 dated 28 September 1973
(“
the Regulations”
)
because at the meeting the Magistrate requested one of the parties’
legal representatives to compile a list of the creditors’
claims, which thereafter became an official court document and was
placed in the file. The applicant stated that this was contrary
to
the 24 hours’ deadline for submission of documents prescribed
in the Regulations. Coupled with this, is an allegation
that, on the
morning before the proceedings resumed, “
the
only documentation in the file was the claims of the creditors and
nothing else”
. Thus, the
allegation regarding the presence or not of the creditors’
claims is, in itself unclear and contradictory. Nevertheless,
it was
similarly claimed that the power of attorney from the counsel
representing Reeco Holdings was also handed up during the
proceedings
and was not in the court file by the deadline prescribed in terms of
Regulation 12.
[33]
In answer to the applicant’s allegations
relating to the non-compliance with
Regulation 12
, the respondents
filed a comprehensive affidavit deposed by Katherine Jane Morgan and
a confirmatory affidavit of an attorney Mr
Dunster, in which all the
allegations are refuted. Ms Morgan was specifically tasked with
lodging the creditors’ claim documents
of the eighth and tenth
respondents, as well as shareholder documents of the eleventh
respondent, which she attended to on 31 January
2024, two days prior
to the meeting. On 31 January 2024 she also lodged the relevant
powers of attorney in the court file. Then,
on 1 February 2024 she
again attended at the Bellville Magistrate’s Court to submit a
further creditor’s claim, on
behalf of the tenth respondent and
to also check what further creditors’ claims had been lodged
since her lodgment on the
previous day.
[34]
On 2 February 2024 she was present throughout the
proceedings, and she states that the Magistrate struggled to locate
the shareholder
documents, especially the shareholder’s power
of attorney in the court file and that as a result, the counsel
representing
the liquidators (Adv Woodland SC) handed up a copy of
the shareholder’s documents, including the power of attorney,
for the
Magistrate’s convenience. Indeed, the transcript bears
this out, including Mr Woodland’s mention to the Magistrate
that the documents were otherwise already in the court file.
[35]
There is no basis to refute the averments of Ms
Morgan. At the hearing, the applicant’s counsel also conceded
this point,
and accepted that the issue relating to the alleged
irregularity in this regard has no merit. My observation is that even
in the
papers, the applicant’s case in this regard was not
clearly established in any event because the applicant did not state
that he personally inspected the file or how he established that the
said documents were missing as alleged from the court file.
[36]
The applicant also alleged that there were
numerous disputes relating to the shareholding, presumably of Reeco
Holdings, which are
not identified in the papers. No case was made
out in this regard, and here too the applicant’s counsel
capitulated at the
hearing.
[37]
Next, the applicant claimed that the resolution
which authorized Mr Cronje to act on behalf of Fantom was invalid
because it was
not signed by Mr Cronje who is a director of Fantom.
The complaint is that the resolution is signed by two other
directors. However,
there is no discernible reason for why the
resolution is invalid, since it was not disputed that the two
directors who did sign
the resolution had the authority to grant Mr
Cronje the authorization to sign all necessary documents and to take
all the steps
required to enforce Fantom Operation’s rights.
Accordingly, this ground had no merit, and indeed the applicant was
unable
to substantiate it.
[38]
Likewise, the allegation that the calculation of
the rand value of Fantom Operation’s claim as reflected in the
documents
was invalid appeared to be based on a reliance on the
applicant’s own rand value of them claim. I say ‘appeared
to
be based’ because there was otherwise no substantiation for
why the applicant’s calculation was said to be correct and
Fantom Operations’ was not. I was otherwise not referred to any
legal authority for the proposition that a creditor is only
permitted
to advance its claim in South African rands. There was no legal
impediment to Fantom Operations to calculate its claim
in foreign
currency. The respondents have referred to figures contained in an
affidavit submitted by Fantom Operations in the insolvency
proceedings, where the rand value was reflected as of the date of
transfer, stating that the figures were correct. The applicant
has
not provided any evidence to the contrary, save to state a figure
that it relies upon, without substantiation. On application
of the
principles laid down in
Plascon-Evans
set out earlier, the respondents’ version
must prevail. Lastly on this point, it is worth pointing out that,
even if the calculation
was incorrect, this would not alter the
position of Fantom Operations as a creditor, although admittedly the
claim would have to
altered, which would trigger a process in terms
of
section 45
, and not application to this Court at this stage.
[39]
As regards the JGL Forensics Services claim, the
applicant claims that some of the work claimed for in the invoices
was performed
after the issue of the papers in the liquidation
application. However, whether these amounts should ultimately be
included in the
claim is a matter for determination in the insolvency
proceedings and specifically investigations in terms of
section 45(3)
of the
Insolvency Act. It
is not for this Court at this juncture to
make such a determination.
[40]
I now proceed to deal with the applicant’s
grounds for the removal of the third respondent. First, the applicant
claims that
the voting for the third respondent was irregular and in
contravention of
section 59
of the
Insolvency Act and/or
sections 339
and 379 of the 1973
Companies Act. The
first observation is that
section 59
of the
Insolvency Act does
not apply to liquidators but
only to trustees. As for
section 339
of the
Companies Act, there
is
no indication from the applicant of how it specifically applies
independently of
section 379.
[41]
Section 379
of the
Companies Act is
the provision
which specifically provides for removal of liquidators. It provides
for the removal of a liquidator by the Master
and by the court in
certain specified circumstances. Notably, in terms of subsection (2)
“
the court may, on application by
the Master or any person, remove a liquidator from office if the
Master fails to do so in any of
the circumstances in subsection (1),
or for any other good cause”
.
Thus, in terms of
section 379
an applicant is first required to
approach the Master before approaching this Court for removal of the
third respondent. It is
common cause that the applicant has not done
so in this case. Accordingly, the application is premature.
[42]
Furthermore,
section 379
provides for various
grounds upon which a liquidator’s removal may be sought.
However, the applicant has not specified the
ground(s) he seeks to
invoke. It is trite that it falls upon the applicant to plead its
case clearly and precisely, and the applicant
has failed to comply
with this requirement. At the hearing, the applicant’s counsel
conceded that no case is mase out regarding
any misconduct by the
third respondent.
[43]
But in
any event, the third respondent was merely nominated by the
shareholder in terms of
section 369(2)(a)
of the 1973 Companies Act,
and the nomination has yet to be confirmed by the Master. It is only
once that is done that section
371 provides the mechanism for
challenging the appointed liquidator, which must be instituted by an
‘aggrieved person’.
Because the third respondent
had only been nominated by the shareholder in this case, the Master
had not accepted the nomination
when the applicant approached this
Court. In fact, the creditors had not yet nominated the liquidator.
Only after the Master has
accepted the nomination would the applicant
have a remedy in terms of section 371.
[19]
Once again, the applicant’s counsel conceded that section 371
does not apply in the circumstances of this case for all the
reasons
already mentioned.
[44]
Thus, insofar as the applicant sought the removal
of the third respondent, the application was premature. In addition,
section 371(2)
provides that a court may only remove a liquidator
after the Master fails to remove a liquidator on the request of an
interested
person. In this regard, provided that the applicant will
be able to establish that it is an ‘aggrieved person’, it
has available alternative remedy.
[45]
Then, the applicant sought to rely on
section
55(m)
of the
Insolvency Act stating
that in terms of a power of
attorney, Advocate Woodland SC was authorized to act on behalf of the
creditors Fantom Operations and
JGL Forensics, but also advanced
arguments on behalf of the “
the
liquidator”
. It is not
clear from the papers which liquidator this is said to refer to,
since there are no fewer than five liquidators
in this matter.
However, assuming that this is a reference to the third respondent,
the first observation is that
section 55
of the
Insolvency Act does
not apply to liquidators but to trustees, and that section 372(j) of
the 1973
Companies Act is
the equivalent, applicable provision. But
in order for that provision to apply, it would have to be established
that Mr Woodland
sought appointment as liquidator, which is not the
case of the applicant. Alternatively, since it is the liquidator’s
nomination
that the applicant challenges, it would have to be
established that the third respondent was an agent authorized to vote
on behalf
of creditor(s) at the meeting. No such case has been made
out by the applicant. Also significant is that the transcript reveals
that Fantom Operations was represented by a different counsel,
Advocate Greig, whilst Mr Woodland represented the liquidators.
This
was made clear to the Magistrate as the proceedings commenced on 2
February 2024. There is accordingly no substance to this
complaint.
[46]
In conclusion, there is no doubt that the relief
sought by the applicant is drastic and is final in nature.
Accordingly, the applicant
was required to make out a clear case for
it. As appears from the discussion above, the case had very poor
merit, and most of the
case was, in any event, conceded at the
hearing. Furthermore, this judgment has discussed various remedies
available to the applicant
in the event that it should encounter
irregularities, or there should be objections to be raised during the
winding-up proceedings.
E.
COSTS
[47]
There is no reason why costs should not follow the
result. The applicant’s case was without merit and, by all
accounts, was
calculated to delay if not collapse a meeting scheduled
for 10 May 2024. No reason has ever been provided by the applicant
why
that specific date of 10 May 2024 and the specific time of 9h00
was chosen for the hearing of the matter, even after the respondents
challenged the applicant directly regarding its motives. The
inference is irresistible that the purpose was to collapse the
adjourned
creditors’ meeting scheduled for that date and time.
Furthermore, the respondents had no option but to approach the court,
not only to resist the applicant’s unmeritorious application,
but to also ensure that the insolvency proceedings continue
on the
scheduled the date of 10 May 2024. The respondents should not be
placed out of pocket in those circumstances.
F.
ORDER
[48]
In the circumstances, the following order is made:
1.
It is directed that the application brought by First Time Trading CC
under case
number 6222/24, which was set down for hearing on 10 May
2024, is promoted on the roll and that the hearing proceeds on 7 May
2024.
2.
The application brought by First Time Trading CC under case number
6222/24 is
dismissed.
3.
The applicant, First Time Trading CC, is directed to pay the costs of
the application
under case number 6222/24, based on a party-and-party
scale C tariff.
___________________________
N. MANGCU-LOCKWOOD
Judge of the High
Court
APPEARANCES
For the
applicant
: Adv M H
van Twisk
Instructed
by
:
Grundlingh & Associates
Mr
J M Grundlingh
For the third to
seventh respondents
:
Adv G W
Woodland SC
Instructed
by
: Gillan
& Veldhuizen Inc.
Mr
P J Veldhuizen
For the eighth
respondent
: Adv M
Greig
Instructed
by
:
Dunsters Attorneys
[1]
In
terms of
section
339 of the 1973
Companies Act, the
provisions of
the
Insolvency Act apply
mutatis
mutandis
to
the winding-up of a company.
[2]
See
section 366(1)
1973
Companies Act.
##
[3
]
South
African Fabrics Ltd v Millman NO
&
another
1972
(4) SA 592 (A);
Mayo
NO v De Montlehu
(20504/2014)
[2015] ZASCA 127; 2016 (1) SA 36 (SCA) (23 September 2015) para 14.
[4]
Mantis
Investments Holdings v De Jager NO
(696/2022)
[2023] ZASCA 134
;
2024 (3) SA 431
(SCA) (18 October 2023) para 14.
[5]
Caldeira
v The Master and Another
1996
(1) SA 868
(NPD)
at 873H-874F.
[6]
Breda
N O v Master of the High Court, Kimberley
[2015]
ZASCA 166.
[7]
Mantis
Investments Holdings v De Jager NO
paras
14-15.
[8]
See
Mantis
Investments Holdings v De Jager NO
para
16.
[9]
Noord-Kaaplandse
Ko-op Lewendehawe Agentskap Bpk v Van Rooyen and Others
1977
(1) SA 403
(NC)
at 406-407.
[10]
See
Kaniah
v WPC Logistics (Joburg) CC (in liquidation) &
Others
(5794/2016)
[2017] ZAKZDHC 45 (13 December 2017) at para [21], where the Court
quoted with approval Attorney-General of Gambia
v N’Jie
(1961)
2 All ER 504
(PC)
at 511.
[11]
Frances
George Hill Family Trust v SA Reserve Bank and others
1992(3)
SA 91 (AD) at 102C.
[12]
Jeeva
and another v Tuck N.O. and Others
1998
(1) SA 785
(SE)
at 795 D-E.
[13]
De
Hart NO v Klopper & Botha NNO & others
1969
(2) SA 91 (T)
[14]
Plascon-Evans
Paints (TVL) Ltd v Van Riebeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
1984
(3) SA 623 (A).
[15]
Harmse
Civil
Procedure in the Supreme Court
,B6.45.
[16]
Media
24 Books (Pty) Ltd v Oxford University Press Southern Africa (Pty)
Ltd
2017
(2) SA 1
(SCA);
National
Director
of Public Prosecutions v Zuma
[2009]
2 All SA 243; 2009 (2) SA 279 (SCA).
[17]
Airports
Company South Africa Soc Ltd v Airports Bookshops (Pty) Ltd t/a
Exclusive Books
[2016]
4 All SA 665 (SCA).
[18]
Breda
NO v Master of the High Court, Kimberley
[2015]
ZA SCA 166.
Mantis
Investments Holdings v De Jager
NO
[2023] ZA SCA 134
(18 October 2023).
[19]
Henochsberg
on the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
, Delport et al 371, and C Geduldt v
The Master & others
2005
(4) SA 460 (C) at 464.
sino noindex
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