Case Law[2024] ZAWCHC 177South Africa
Linquenda Aqua Proprietary Limited v Winelands Bottling Company Proprietary Limited (2074/2024) [2024] ZAWCHC 177 (21 June 2024)
Judgment
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## Linquenda Aqua Proprietary Limited v Winelands Bottling Company Proprietary Limited (2074/2024) [2024] ZAWCHC 177 (21 June 2024)
Linquenda Aqua Proprietary Limited v Winelands Bottling Company Proprietary Limited (2074/2024) [2024] ZAWCHC 177 (21 June 2024)
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sino date 21 June 2024
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IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
WESTERN CAPE DIVISION,
CAPE TOWN
Case Number: 2074/2024
In the matter between:
LINQUENDA
AQUA PROPRIETARY LIMITED
Applicant
and
WINELANDS
BOTTLING COMPANY
Respondent
PROPRIETARY LIMITED
JUDGMENT
MAGARDIE AJ:
1.
The parties to this application are in the
water bottling business. The applicant (‘Linquenda’)
applies for the provisional
winding up of the respondent company
(‘Winelands’). Linquenda’s application is brought
on two grounds. Firstly,
on the basis that Winelands is unable to pay
its debts as contemplated by section 344(f) read with section 345 of
the Companies
Act 61 of 1973. Secondly, on just and equitable grounds
as provided for in section 344(h) of that Act.The essential facts are
either
common cause or not seriously disputed on the papers. Given
that provisional orders are being sought at this stage as opposed to
final relief, the factual background below is set out in broad
outline. The
bona fides
and
reasonableness of the main defences advanced by Winelands, which I
shall turn to later, must be considered against this contextual
background.
# Factual Background
Factual Background
2.
Linquenda and Winelands operate in the
bottled water industry. During 2018 Linquenda established a water
bottling plant on premises
in Stellenbosch (‘the property’).
The company aimed to supply water to meet the burgeoning demand for
water as result
of ongoing droughts in the Western Cape. The business
was initially successful but then ran into operational and financial
difficulties.
It was at this stage that Linquenda began a nascent
business relationship with Winelands and its sole director, Mr. Johan
Buys.
Mr. Buys is from all accounts an experienced operator in the
water industry and is the Chief Executive Officer of Oasis Holdings
(Pty) Ltd (‘Oasis’), the largest water refill and
beverage franchise in South Africa. Mr. Buys deposed to the
affidavits
on behalf of Winelands opposing its provisional
liquidation.
3.
According to Linquenda, it was agreed that
Mr. Buys, through Winelands, would take over Linquenda’s water
bottling plant and
business for its own account. Winelands in general
terms denies this but admits that there were negotiations as alleged.
In my
view nothing much turns on this denial. What is common cause is
that from October 2022, Winelands conducted the water bottling plant
operations in Stellenbosch without Linquenda’s assistance and
for its own account.
4.
During October 2022, two main written
agreements were concluded by Winelands to give effect to the
agreement that Winelands would
henceforth operate the water bottling
plant formerly operated by Linquenda on the property. The first was
an equipment rental agreement
relating to the moveable assets and
specialized equipment required to conduct the water bottling business
on the property. The
second was a lease agreement with Kumani
Beleggings (Pty) Ltd (‘Kumani’), the landlord of the
premises. The equipment
rental agreement was concluded between
Winelands and Linquenda on 28 October 2022.
5.
It is common cause that prior to concluding
the equipment rental agreement, various discussions took place
between Linquenda and
Mr. Buys on behalf of Winelands, regarding a
transaction which it was envisaged would result in Linquenda becoming
a shareholder
of Winelands. The discussions regarding the proposed
transaction related to the financing of the proposed transaction from
various
third parties including financing through Oasis Water’s
facility with Sanlam, the registration of a general notarial bond
over plant and equipment, cession of books debts and various board
approvals. Email exchanges between the parties in this regard
took
place between 19 and 24 October 2022. The affidavits are somewhat
unclear as to the details of any further discussions which
ensued
between the parties but what is evident is that the discussions which
commenced in October 2022 resulted in the distribution
of a draft
shareholders agreement. The draft shareholders agreement was attached
to Linquenda’s founding affidavit and is
marked as an
‘execution version’ dated 19 July 2023. Linquenda however
emphasizes that the draft shareholders agreement
was for discussion
purposes only. This is not disputed.
6.
Irrespective of the lack of clarity on the
papers for the apparent hiatus in discussions between 24 October 2022
and July 2023,
one central fact is undisputed
on
the
papers.
It
is
that
the
draft
shareholders
agreement distributed following the October
2022 discussions, was ultimately never signed by the parties, there
was no consensus
between the parties on its terms and no shares were
transferred to Linquenda in consequence of the draft agreement. This
aspect
has a significant bearing on the
bona
fides
and reasonableness of the main
defence advanced by Winelands, which is that the monthly rentals due
to Linquenda in terms of the
equipment rental agreement were credited
by Winelands to what it described as Linquenda’s ‘loan
account’ and
therefore are not due and payable.
7.
There is no serious dispute that Linquenda
is therefore legally and factually not a shareholder of Winelands and
that no shareholders
account was ever established in its favour.
Linquenda goes further and states that Mr. Buys is in fact aware of
the true extent
of the inability of the parties to reach any
consensus on the purported shareholders agreement. This is admitted
by Winelands in
its answering affidavit.
8.
Reverting to the chronology of events, on
27 October 2023, almost a year after the conclusion of the equipment
rental agreement,
Linquenda’s attorney directed a letter of
demand to Winelands alleging that Winelands had breached the
equipment rental agreement
by failing to make any payment to
Linquenda as required by the agreement. The letter of demand required
Winelands to make payment
to Linquenda in the amount of R1 211 293,
85 being outstanding rental for the period of October 2022 to 1
October 2023. The letter
informed Winelands that should it fail to
make payment of the sum demanded within 3 weeks of the letter of
demand, Winelands would
be deemed to be unable to pay its debts as
provided for in section 345(1)(a)(i) of the 1973 Act and liable to be
wound up as provided
for in section 344(f) alternatively section
344(h) of that Act.
9.
Notably, the letter from Linquenda’s
attorneys referred to clause 7.2 of the equipment rental agreement
which provides that
in the event that Winelands does not have
sufficient cash flow to cover the rental fees, the rental fees can be
capitalized against
Linquenda’s loan account. In this regard,
the letter stated that “…
this
clause cross references to an envisaged transaction in which our
client would acquire shares in Winelands Bottling, which transaction
was neither concluded nor implemented. No such shareholders credit
loan accounts could therefore be created
.”
10.
Winelands’ attorneys responded to the
letter of demand just under a month later, on 23 November 2023. They
began by stating
that “…
your
letter is aimed at throwing everything but the kitchen sink at our
client and can only be described as confusing. Your client
must
choose a proverbial chair to sit on
.”
The letter from Linquenda’s attorneys was a serious letter
claiming a serious amount of money. It served as a statutory
notice
in terms of section 345 of the 1973 Companies Act. This response
thereto by Winelands strikes a somewhat discordant note
in the
circumstances.
11.
The response from Winelands’
attorneys then alleged inter-alia that since the inception of the
equipment rental agreement,
Winelands had “…
punctually
complied with its obligations. The monthly rental has been credited
to your client’s loan account on a monthly
basis
.”
In this regard, an annexure was attached purporting to reflect an
amount of R 1 118 117.49 reflected in what was described
as “…
your
client’s loan account…in our client’s books
.”
The letter denied that any amounts were due and payable to Linquenda
and denied that there were any grounds for the liquidation
of
Winelands to be sought on just and equitable grounds. The letter went
on to conclude that “…
the
parties clearly envisaged a larger business relationship and you
unfortunately cannot read the agreement in isolation as you
have
done
.” No further details were
provided.
12.
The letter did not address or dispute the
pertinent reference in Linquenda’s letter of demand to the
failure of the parties
to have concluded or implemented the proposed
shareholders agreement. Although it referred fleetingly to clause 7.2
of the agreement,
the letter notably did not allege that Winelands
did not possess sufficient cash flow to pay rental or the reasons
why, if in fact
it did have sufficient cash flow and was solvent, it
had not paid the rentals due to Linquenda. And contrary to the
approach urged
on behalf of Winelands in oral argument at the hearing
of the application, no detailed tender of alternative dispute
resolution
or indeed any express reference was made to clause 18.1 of
the equipment rental agreement, in terms of which disputes arising
from
the agreement were to be submitted to arbitration. The letter
merely referred to the fact that the parties had agreed to disputes
being resolved “…
in an
amicable fashion
” and that
Winelands “…
tenders its co-
operation in this regard
.”
13.
The looming litigation threatened in the
letter from Linquenda’s attorneys in October 2023 began to
become a reality in January
2024. On 15 January 2024 Linquenda
received information that Winelands was intending to remove certain
of the rental equipment
from the premises and operations being
conducted in Stellenbosch. That same day, Mr. Gunter Henke, a
director of Kumani, the landlord
of the premises, deposed to an
affidavit in support of an
ex parte
application in the Stellenbosch
Magistrates Court for the attachment of the movable property on the
premises in terms of section
32 of the Magistrates Courts Act in
respect of unpaid rental by Winelands in the amount of at least R170
293.32 and unpaid electricity
and municipal charges. In his
affidavit, Mr. Henke alleged that he had been informed by Mr. Buys
that Winelands was intending to
remove certain of the equipment on
the premises, which equipment was subject to the landlord’s
hypothec, and that Winelands
intended vacating the premises after
removal of such equipment.
14.
The intended removal of the equipment was
confirmed on 22 January 2024 by way of an emailed letter dated 12
January 2024 from Mr.
Buys in which Linquenda was informed of
Winelands’ intention to remove certain rental equipment from
the leased premises
in Stellenbosch to a Plot 9[…] in D[…]
E[…], I[…], Pretoria. Winelands admits that the said
address
is the address of Oasis Bottling Company (Pty) Ltd, of which
Mr. Buys is the CEO as well as the address of another company, Clover
Waters (Pty) Ltd. The total value of the assets which are owned by
Linquenda and which it was notified were to be moved by Winelands
to
the plot in Pretoria, amounts to R4 398 066.85. Linquenda contends
that Winelands ‘cherry picked’ certain of the
most
valuable assets, intending to leave others behind on the property.
The letter informing Linquenda of Winelands’ intention
to move
these assets to Pretoria, purported to rely on clause 9.4 of the
equipment rental agreement, which provides for the lessee
to transfer
the equipment being the subject of the agreement, to a transferred
address specified in writing at least 5 business
days prior to the
transfer.
15.
Following receipt of this letter on 22
January 2024, counsel was briefed and engaged by Linquenda to prepare
the present application
as a matter of urgency.
16.
On 25 January 2024 Kumani obtained an order
in the Stellenbosch Magistrates Court in terms of which the Sheriff
was instructed to
attach Winelands’ moveable property inside
the premises. The return date of the order, which was obtained ex
parte and by
way of a rule
nisi
,
was 7 March 2024. While Winelands raised a number of grounds in its
answering affidavit dated 5 February 2024 as to why it maintained
that the Kumani application was ‘
fatally
defective’
and that it intended
to have the matter ‘
disposed of
’,
nothing much appears to have come of this. In a further supplementary
affidavit deposed to on behalf of Linquenda on 20
May 2024 shortly
before the hearing of this application, the court’s attention
was drawn to the fact that the
rule
nis
i
granted
against
Winelands
in
favour
of
Kumani,
was
in
fact
confirmed on 16 May 2024.
17.
The present application was thereafter
instituted by Linquenda on 30 January 2024 and enrolled for hearing
as an urgent application
on Wednesday 7 February 2024. Winelands
deposed to its answering affidavit on 5 February 2024. What emerged
now for the first time
in the answering affidavit, is that three days
before and on 2 February 2024 and more than two months after the
section 345(1)(a)
demand had been sent, it had “…
out
of an abundance of caution
”, paid
the full amount claimed by Linquenda ie the sum of R 1 490 823.20, to
its attorneys trust account “…
as
security until such time as the dispute between the parties has been
resolved
.” Winelands on this
basis contended that it was clearly not insolvent as alleged. It was
not explained why this amount was
not paid when the demand from
Linquenda’s attorneys was received in October 2023 or for that
matter, a tender to pay the
amount to its attorneys as security was
not made in the response from Winelands’ attorneys on 23
November 2023.
18.
On 7 February 2024, the date that the
application came before Francis J, it was struck from the roll due to
lack of urgency. The
application was thereafter by agreement and
pursuant to an order granted by Goliath AJP on 22 February 2024, set
down for hearing
on 23 May 2024.
# Evaluation
Evaluation
19.
This
being an application for provisional liquidation as opposed to
proceedings for a final winding up order, it is trite that where
the
applicant establishes on the affidavits a
prima
facie
case
(ie a balance of probabilities) in its favour, a provisional winding
up order should normally be granted.
[1]
20.
In
circumstances where it is common cause that a respondent has not paid
an admitted debt, the discretion of the court to refuse
a court to
refuse a winding up order, is not a broad discretion but a narrow
one.
[2]
21.
To
this must be added a further well-established principle. It is that
it is impermissible for winding up procedures to be utilized
for the
purposes of enforcing payment of a debt which is disputed on
bona
fide
and
reasonable grounds. The ‘
Badenhorst
’
principle, described by the Constitutional Court as ‘…
a
sensible rule of practice’
[3]
,
holds that an application for provisional liquidation will normally
be dismissed where there is a
genuine
and good faith factual dispute concerning an alleged insolvent
debtor’s indebtedness to a creditor.
[4]
At the provisional stage, the onus is on the respondent to show that
a debt which is
prima
facie
shown
to exist, is
bona
fide
disputed
on reasonable grounds.
[5]
22.
Where a respondent in liquidation
proceedings contents itself in its answering affidavit with vague and
bald averments lacking in
particularity, it can hardly be said that
its
bona fides
have
been demonstrated. In
Gap Merchant
,
Rogers J (as he then was) put it thus:
“
Bona
fides relates to the respondent’s subjective state of mind
while reasonableness has to do with whether, objectively speaking,
the facts alleged by the respondent constitute in law a defence. The
two elements are nevertheless inter-related because inadequacies
in
the statement of the facts underlying the alleged defence may
indicate that the respondent is not bona fide in asserting those
facts.As Hülse-Reutter makes clear, the objective requirement of
reasonable grounds for a defence is not met by bald allegations
lacking in particularity; and, as appears from Breitenbach and El-
Naddaf, bald allegations lacking in particularity are unlikely
to be
sufficient to persuade a court that the respondent is bona fide
.”
[6]
23.
Before applying these principles to the
main grounds on which Winelands opposes its provisional winding up, I
address a point
in limine
which
was advanced in Winelands’ answering affidavit.
Winelands’ point
in limine
Non-compliance with
section 345 of the 1973 Companies Act
24.
It was contended by Winelands that the
section 345(1) demand by Linquenda emailed on 23 October 2023 was not
served by the Sheriff
on Winelands’ registered address and that
the application was consequently fatally defective. The point was
made in the answering
affidavit and while not abandoned, it was not
strenuously urged, in my view advisedly, by Mr.
Van
Der Merwe
in oral argument.
25.
It
is not disputed that Winelands received the section 345(1)(a) demand
and responded to it in detail in the terms outlined earlier.
Directing the notice to Winelands by email in circumstances where it
is undisputed that the demand came to the notice of Winelands,
constituted in my view compliance with the statutory provision in the
light of its purpose.
[7]
In my
view the point has no merit.
# Winelands’ main
defence
Winelands’ main
defence
#
26.
Turning then to the main defence raised by
Winelands, I agree with Mr.
Manca
that
shorn of verbiage and its professed complexity, the only defence
raised by Winelands to its provisional winding up, is that
although
the sum claimed by Linquenda is due and owing, it has not yet become
payable. Related to this is the contention by Winelands
that the
pursuance by Linquenda of liquidation proceedings in these
circumstances, amounts to an abuse of process as such proceedings
may
not be utilized for the purposes of recovering disputed debts.
27.
The issue then is whether the debt claimed
by Linquenda is disputed by Winelands genuinely and on
bona
fide
and reasonable grounds. For the
following reasons, I am of the view that Winelands has not shown on
cogent and plausible grounds
that Linquenda’s claim is
genuinely disputed. I am therefore not persuaded that the institution
of winding up proceedings
in these circumstances amounts to an abuse
of process.
28.
To begin, it is not disputed on the
affidavits that the quantum of Linquenda’s claim is at least R1
490 823.60 at the date
of issuing of the application, that the claim
is against Winelands and that it is to be paid. Winelands disputes
that the claim
is due and payable and relies in this regard entirely
on clause 7.2 of the equipment rental agreement. The clause provides
that
in the event that Winelands
does
not have sufficient cash flow
(emphasis
added) to cover the rental fees, the rental fees can be capitalized
against Linquenda’s loan account. In this regard,
it will be
recalled that Mr. Buys admitted that he was indeed aware that the
parties had never reached consensus or agreement on
any shareholding
of Linquenda in Winelands and that consequently no shareholders loan
account exists. This then begs the question
as to what, according to
Winelands, are the precise nature of the terms and details of the
loan account in respect of which the
equipment rentals due to
Linquenda have purportedly been credited.
29.
In my view, at the very least, an
explanation setting forth in detail the terms of repayment of the
monies so credited to the purported
loan account, was called for. The
absence of such an explanation must of course have a bearing on the
bona fides
of
a defence which is advanced, bereft of further detail, that the
monies claimed by Linquenda are owed but are not due and payable
because they have been credited to a loan account. If so, when
exactly are these monies payable? Winelands does not take the court
into its confidence and directly answer this question.
30.
There is in my view a further difficulty
with the
bona fides
of
Winelands’ reliance on clause 7.2 of the equipment rental
agreement to justify its non- payment. Winelands on the one hand
relies on clause 7.2 of the equipment rental agreement to justify
non-payment of the monthly rental and in doing is constrained
to
attach the mast of its defence to the insufficient cash flow
requirement postulated by clause 7.2 of the agreement. On its own
version, Winelands had sought for the past year, when the rentals
were due, to allocate the rental amounts to Linquenda’s
alleged
loan account on the alleged basis that it had insufficient cash flow.
31.
Yet on the other hand, Winelands was
plainly possessed of sufficient cash flow to pay to its attorneys as
security, the very amount
claimed by Linquenda, this being a sum in
excess of R1 million. If Winelands is able to pay the entire
outstanding balance claimed
to its attorneys in trust, this must mean
that it in fact has the necessary cash flow to pay the rentals due to
Linquenda and its
reliance on clause 7.2 to avoid the monthly rental
payments was misplaced to say the least. It is not open to Winelands
to plead
inconsistent and mutually exclusive facts. In my view,
Linquenda’s submission that Winelands is vacillating between
contradictory
versions of events and thereby undermining its
bona
fides
in disputing liability to
Linquenda, is well-founded.
32.
A further argument advanced on behalf of
Winelands was that Linquenda was precluded from obtaining a
provisional winding up order
by virtue of clause 18.1 of the
equipment rental agreement, which provides for any dispute or
difference arising out of or in connection
with the agreement, to be
submitted to arbitration. It was contended in the answering affidavit
that by virtue of this clause,
the court had no jurisdiction to
entertain the application. In the course of oral argument, it was
urged by Mr.
Van Der Merwe
,
that it would be open to the court in the exercise of its discretion
to stay the winding up proceedings pending the outcome of
arbitration
proceedings, which Winelands tendered to institute forthwith.
Linquenda submitted that an arbitrator does not have
the necessary
jurisdiction to determine a liquidation.
33.
Arbitration proceedings as contemplated by
the equipment rental agreement and liquidation proceedings serve
conceptually separate
purposes. To the extent that the court does
have any discretion to stay the winding up proceedings pending
arbitration proceedings,
a matter on which I reach no firm
conclusion, the failure of Winelands to provide information regarding
the alleged loan account,
its terms such as when it is repayable, the
unsubstantiated denials replete in Wineland’s answering
affidavit and the contradictory
defences it has advanced, in my view
militate against the exercise of such a discretion in its favour.
Winelands in any event does
not dispute the quantum of Linquenda’s
claim or that the rental amounts are due. It is thus unclear on what
basis a dispute
exists which engages the arbitration clause in these
circumstances.
34.
It was furthermore undisputed on the papers
that in its business operations, Winelands had been incurring
significant losses to
a net tune of approximately R 7 539 000, that
it had as at June 2023 significant overdue creditors who in some
cases were unpaid
by more than 90 days, that it had retrenched staff
and that various movable assets had been attached pursuant to
an
order
obtained
by
Kumani
perfecting
its
tacit
hypothec
in
respect
of
unpaid rentals owed by Winelands.
35.
Winelands’ failure to pay its
indebtedness to Linquenda, which for the reasons set out above I
conclude has not been disputed
genuinely and on
bona
fide
and reasonable grounds, is in my
view
prima facie
proof
of its inability to pay its debts.
36.
On a conspectus of the evidence disclosed
by the application papers, I am satisfied that Winelands cannot pay
its debts as contemplated
by section 345 of the Act.
A
prima facie
case has in my view been made out for
the provisional liquidation of Winelands on the basis that it is
commercially insolvent.
Just and equitable
grounds
37.
The conclusion which I have reached that a
prima facie
case
has been established for the provisional liquidation of Winelands on
the basis that it is unable to pay its debts as contemplated
by
section 344(f) read with section 345 of the 1973 Companies Act, makes
it strictly speaking unnecessary for me to decide whether
the just
and equitable grounds as provided for in section 344(h) of that Act
have been established. Having regard to the admitted
loss-making
operations of Winelands, its non-payment of other creditors, the
evidence relating to its relocation of the business
from the property
and ‘cherry picking’ of assets owned by Linquenda and to
be removed in that process, its retrenchment
of staff and in
particular, the unmeritorious and contradictory bases on which it has
sought to contend that its admitted indebtedness
for the rental
amounts is not due and payable, I would nonetheless conclude that a
proper case has been made out by Linquenda for
the provisional
winding up of Winelands on just and equitable grounds as well.
Conclusion
38.
In my judgment Linquenda has made out a
proper case for the provisional winding up of Winelands on the basis
that it is unable to
pay its debts as contemplated by section 344(f)
read with section 345 of the 1973 Companies Act. I am not persuaded
that Winelands
has demonstrated that the amount claimed by Linquenda
is genuinely disputed on
bona fide
and
reasonable grounds or that the proceedings for its provisional
winding up constitute an abuse of process.
39.
In the result, a provisional winding up
order shall issue in respect of Winelands in accordance with the
order which I have signed
and mark “
X
’.
S G MAGARDIE
# Acting Judge of the High
Court
Acting Judge of the High
Court
APPEARANCES:
For
Applicant
B J Manca SC (with him M M Van Staden) Instructed by:Riaan Nabal
Attorneys
For
Respondent:
M P van der Merwe SC Instructed by:
Delberg
Attorneys
Date
of hearing: 23 May 2024
Date
of judgment: 21 June 2024 (revised: 24 June 2024)
[1]
Kalil
v Decotex (Pty) Ltd
1988 (1) SA 943
(A) at 979B (‘
Kali
l’).
[2]
Afgri
Operations Limited v Hamba Fleet (Pty) Limited (542/2016)
[2017]
ZASCA 24
;
2022 (1) SA
91 (SCA) (24 March 2017)
at para 13.
[3]
Trinity
Asset Management (Pty) Limited v Grindstone Investments 132 (Pty)
Limited
(2018 (1) SA 94
(CC) (5 September 2017) at para 86.
[4]
Badenhorst
v Northern Construction Enterprises (Pty) Ltd
1956 (2) SA 346
(T) at
347-9.
[5]
Gap
Merchant
Recycling
CC
v
Goal
Reach
Trading
55
CC
(2480/2014)
[2014]
ZAWCHC
53;
2016
(1) SA 261
(WCC) (15 April 2014) (‘
Gap
Merchant’
)
at para 20.
[6]
Gap
Merchant
at
para 26.
[7]
Stokes
v Cancape (Pty) Ltd (2023) 44 ILJ 431 (WCC).
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