Case Law[2024] ZAWCHC 265South Africa
Routemaster (Pty) Ltd v Retro Active CC (SJP Intervening) (WCC16646/2022) [2024] ZAWCHC 265 (13 September 2024)
Judgment
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## Routemaster (Pty) Ltd v Retro Active CC (SJP Intervening) (WCC16646/2022) [2024] ZAWCHC 265 (13 September 2024)
Routemaster (Pty) Ltd v Retro Active CC (SJP Intervening) (WCC16646/2022) [2024] ZAWCHC 265 (13 September 2024)
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sino date 13 September 2024
HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case WCC 16646/2022
In the matter between:
ROUTEMASTER
(PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
RETRO
ACTIVE CC
Respondent
SJP
INVESTMENTS CC
Intervening
Party
Coram
:
Paschke
AJ
Heard
on
:
6
March 2024
Decided
on
:
13
September 2024, delivered electronically
ORDER
The following order is
made:
1.
Retro Active CC (Registration
2005/150681/23) is placed under final winding up.
2.
The costs of the application are to be
costs in the liquidation, to be recovered by the applicant
(Routemaster (Pty) Ltd) and the
intervening party (SJP Investments
CC) on a scale as between attorney and client.
3.
The costs of Retro Active CC in opposing
the application are disallowed as costs in the liquidation.
4.
The Registrar is directed to refer this
matter to the Director of Public Prosecutions to investigate Mr
Boolay, the member of Retro
Active CC, for the offence of perjury.
JUDGMENT
Paschke
AJ
:
# Introduction
Introduction
[1]
This is the return date of a provisional
order of winding-up of the respondent, Retro Active CC (
Retro
Active
),
handed
down on 17 August 2023 by Allie J.
[2]
The application is made by Routemaster
(Pty) Ltd (
Routemaster
),
supported by the intervening party, SJP Investments CC (
SJP
)
and opposed by Retro Active. The standing of Routemaster and
intervention by SJP are undisputed.
# Facts
Facts
[3]
Routemaster relies on a series of written
loan agreements with Retro Active. Under an initial agreement
in September 2019,
Routemaster advanced R12,5 million. This was for
Retro Active to undertake Phase 1 of a property development known as
the Rylands
4 Retro Active Estate. Under a further agreement,
Routemaster advanced a further amount of R9,057,289.25. for other
business interests
of Retro Active. Routemaster provided Retro Active
with a total capital amount of R21,557,289.25. The loans are
unsecured.
[4]
The repayment terms of the initial
agreement required Retro Active to pay Routemaster a ‘minimum
profit of 35% on completion
and sale of said units’. The
agreement recorded that the ‘anticipated maximum completion of
24 units’ in Phase
1 of the development would be 12 months
(i.e. by September 2020), and provided that the units would be ‘sold
based on demand’.
The parties later agreed to extend the time
for completion to 1 March 2022. The further agreement had the same
repayment duty.
[5]
During April and June of 2021, Retro Active
made two repayments to Routemaster, totalling R230,000. Retro
Active’s indebtedness
was further reduced when Routemaster
credited it R728,000 for a separate property transaction. The parties
also agreed to reduce
the return on the loan from 35% to 30% per
annum.
[6]
Accounting for the repayments and the
agreed reduction in return, Routemaster’s profit and loss
statement shows that Retro
Active owes it R29,493,130.09. In a series
of emails and a draft agreement to consolidate their transaction,
Retro Active’s
sole member, Mr Boolay, accepted the accuracy of
Routemaster’s calculation of the amount owing. While the
consolidation agreement
was not concluded, the draft terms are an
admission by Mr Boolay of Retro Active’s liability for
R29,493,130.09, which was
payable by December 2022.
[7]
By May 2022, relations soured, with Retro
Active refusing to repay anything but the capital and refusing to
sign the consolidation
agreement.
# Retro Active’s
defences
Retro Active’s
defences
[8]
Retro Active’s defence to its winding
up has shifted. In an initial opposing affidavit, Mr Boolay
denied that anything
was due, owing and payable to Routemaster. Retro
Active argued that Routemaster’s payments were an investment
rather than
a loan, any profit to be paid to Routemaster was at risk,
and that Routemaster was only a contingent creditor. Later he said
that
only the amount of the original capital amount of R12,5 million
was owing. Mr Boolay denied that Retro Active was insolvent,
contending
that it ‘is in good standing with its creditors, and
able to pay its debts when they are due, owing and payable.’
Retro
Active’s first affidavit did not detail its financial
position. It failed to mention two secured creditors (SJP and
another)
which had claims of more than R73 million secured by bonds
registered over Retro Active’s immovable property.
[9]
In a subsequent affidavit, Mr Boolay
backtracks on those claims. He concedes that his original answering
affidavit was untruthful
and apologises for what he refers to as
‘numerous factual inconsistencies’ in his earlier
affidavit. He now accepts
that Routemaster’s loans were not at
risk, that Retro Active owes Routemaster R21,557,189.25 and that he
had earlier falsely
claimed that Retro Active is solvent. Mr Boolay
admits the existence of two secured creditors with claims of more
than R73 million
and reveals a third, Josjorja Property Holdings
(Pty) Ltd, which has a secured claim of R60 million.
[10]
Unfortunately, Mr Boolay’s subsequent
affidavit compounds his dishonesty with implausible excuses and yet
more falsehoods.
For example, he claims that the amount Retro Active
owes to SJP ‘does not represent an actual debt’. In fact,
SJP’s
uncontested claim is that it lent Retro Active R90
million, of which R59,396,918 is secured, and that the debt is ‘due,
owing
and payable’. Mr Boolay also stated that SJP intends to
intervene on the return date to oppose the winding up of Retro
Active.
In fact, SJP intervened to seek a final order of winding-up
against Retro Active if Routemaster’s provisional order is not
made final.
[11]
SJP recounts other misrepresentations by Mr
Booley. After the provisional liquidation order had been granted, the
joint liquidators
of Retro Active applied to the Master of the High
Court for an extension of their powers to proceed with certain
incomplete sales
of immovable property. As a prerequisite to
consenting to the transfers in the absence of a final order, the
Master requested Mr
Boolay to confirm that Retro Active will not
oppose a final order. On 1 November 2023, Mr Boolay gave the Master
written confirmation
that Retro Active will not oppose the granting
of the final order. That undertaking was false. Two days earlier, on
30 October
2023, Mr Boolay had filed an opposing affidavit in this
application. At the hearing, on 6 March 2024, Retro Active’s
attorney
continued to argue in opposition to a final order.
[12]
In his subsequent affidavit, Mr Boolay
blames his former attorneys for the falsehoods in his first
affidavit. That attempt to evade
his responsibility for his false
statements is rejected. Mr Boolay would have known his statements
under oath were false. It also
undermines the sincerity of Mr
Boolay’s apologies to the court.
[13]
Perjury is the unlawful and intentional
making of a false statement by a person who has taken the oath or
made an affirmation in
a judicial proceeding. It is a serious offence
against the administration of justice and undermines the court’s
truth-seeking
function. Accordingly, the order in this matter directs
the Registrar to refer this matter to the Director of Public
Prosecutions
to investigate Mr Boolay for the offence of perjury.
[14]
At the hearing, Retro Active opposed a
final winding-up on three grounds: (a) that there is a bona fide
dispute about whether Retro
Active is indebted Routemaster; (b) that
Retro Active is solvent; and (c) that the court should exercise its
discretion to refuse
a final winding-up order.
# Bona fide dispute defence
Bona fide dispute defence
[15]
Retro Active does not dispute its
indebtedness. Rather, it seeks to avoid a final winding-up order by
arguing that the debt is only
prospective and is not yet due, and
that Retro Active will be able to pay when it becomes due. That is an
appeal to the court’s
discretion, which I will consider later.
# Retro Active’s
insolvency
Retro Active’s
insolvency
[16]
Retro Active says it can pay its debts when
they become due. It denies that its debt to Routemaster is not owing.
However, Routemaster
has established that Retro Active’s
admitted indebtedness for the capital of R21,557,189.25 has been
owing since the end
of December 2022. I find that it is not a
contingent liability.
[17]
The
failure of a debtor to pay an admitted debt is sufficient to
demonstrate the insolvency of the respondent, such failure being
prima facie proof of an inability to pay its debts.
[1]
[18]
Even Retro Active’s own management
accounts show its inability to pay its debts. The claimed value of
the stock and inventories
(R134,856,799) is less than Retro Active’s
admitted indebtedness to its creditors and would be insufficient to
pay its admitted
debts.
[19]
Retro Active has not provided credible
evidence that it can pay its debts. To the contrary, Retro Active
states that ‘it is
exceedingly difficult’ for a
construction company to establish factual solvency, and at the stage
that Retro Active finds
itself, ‘a construction company’s
liabilities initially exceed their assets’. Mr Boolay has said
that if Retro
Active is wound-up, ‘there is a serious danger
that [Routemaster] will receive cents to [the] rand’.
[20]
Nonetheless, Retro Active claims to be
factually solvent, relying on its management accounts for the year
ending 28 February 2023
and for the six months ending 31 August 2023.
The 31 August 2023 accounts purport to show assets of R800,158,893,
current and non-current
liabilities of R434,655,258 and capital and
reserves amounting to R365,503,635.
[21]
However, Retro Active’s management
accounts are unsubstantiated and inconsistent with facts before the
court. None of the
claimed asset values are supported by an
independent valuation. They appear inflated. For instance, Mr Boolay
claims the property
purchased from SJP is currently worth R90
million. But SJP states that the property’s current market
value is no more than
R35 million. The management accounts also fail
to mention the admitted or undisputed claims of Routemaster, SJP,
Josjorja and Prevance
Capital. Given Mr Boolay’s propensity for
falsehoods, not much store can be placed in the management accounts.
[22]
In
Boschpoort
Ondernemings
,
[2]
the
SCA explained the difficulty of adjudicating a winding up application
based on unproven asset valuations, and by contrast, the
utility of
the commercial insolvency test:
‘
That
a company’s commercial insolvency is a ground that will justify
an order for its liquidation has been a reality of law
which has
served us well through the passage of time. The reasons are not hard
to find: the valuation of assets, other than cash,
is a notoriously
elastic and often highly subjective one; the liquidity of assets is
often more viscous than recalcitrant debtors
would have a court
believe; more often than not, creditors do not have knowledge of the
assets of a company that owes them money
- and cannot be expected to
have; and courts are more comfortable with readily determinable and
objective tests such as whether
a company is able to meet its current
liabilities than with abstruse economic exercises as to the valuation
of a company’s
assets.
[23]
For those reasons, I do not intend to
decide this matter based on the contested claims of factual
insolvency.
[24]
The
liquidation of a close corporation is governed by the relevant
provisions of the Companies Act 61 of 1973.
[3]
Under
s 344(f) of the 1973 Companies Act, a Court may wind up a close
corporation if it is ‘unable to pay its debts as
described in s
345’. Under s 345(1)(c), a close corporation ‘shall
be deemed to be unable to pay its debts if
… it is proved to
the satisfaction of the Court that the [close corporation] is unable
to pay its debts.’
[25]
For purposes of s 345(1)(c), I am satisfied
that it has been proved that Retro Active cannot pay its debts.
# Discretion to refuse a
final winding-up order
Discretion to refuse a
final winding-up order
[26]
Retro Active asks the court to exercise its
discretion to refuse its winding up. It contends that ‘there is
a genuine dispute
concerning the [Routemaster’s] claim [Retro
Active] does not believe that the final winding up is in their best
interest,
nor is it an advantage to the body of creditors and most
certainly will not be an advantage to [Routemaster] as an unsecured
creditor …’.
[27]
In
Afgri
Operations
,
[4]
the
SCA affirmed that ‘an unpaid creditor has a right,
ex
debito justitiae
,
to a winding-up order against a company that has not discharged its
debt’. In
Imobrite
,
[5]
the
SCA reaffirmed that a court accordingly has narrow discretion to
refuse a winding-up order.
[28]
An unsubstantiated and doubtful claim about
the value of a corporation’s assets in support of a claim of
factual solvency
does not invoke the court’s narrow refusal
discretion.
[29]
Retro Active argues that its creditors’
best interests require a refusal of a final winding-up order. Those
creditors, which
are substantial commercial and financial
institutions, are best placed to decide what is in their best
interests. None asks this
court to refuse a final order.
[30]
Therefore, I decline to exercise my
discretion to refuse a final order of winding up.
# SJP
SJP
[31]
SJP’s uncontested evidence is that it
sold certain properties to Retro Active for R90 million. On 11
November 2019, Retro
Active caused a covering bond to be executed in
the amount of R73,333,000 in favour of SJP to cover a portion of the
purchase price
of the properties. The parties agreed that Retro
Active would replay SJP the entire loan, including any interest,
within 6 months
from the date of registration of the mortgage bond
(11 November 2019). Retro Active has never disputed the debt or that
it is due,
owing and payable. However, despite several demands, Retro
Active has failed to repay SJP. Accordingly, it is clear that Retro
Active is unable to pay its debt to SJP.
[32]
SJP asks for a final order winding up Retro
Active if the provisional order obtained by Routemaster is
discharged. Given the conclusion
I reach about Routemaster’s
application, SJP’s conditional application does not arise.
However, if I had refused Routemaster’s
application for a final
winding-up order, I would have granted SJP’s.
[33]
I am persuaded that SJP’s
intervention was reasonably necessary to protect its interests and
that it is entitled to a costs
order.
# Costs
Costs
[34]
Routemaster
and SJP submit that they should not be out of pocket in this
application and should be awarded costs in the liquidation
on an
attorney-client scale. They also ask, so as to not erode the equity
in the insolvent estate, that Retro Active’s costs
of opposing
the application should not be costs in the liquidation.
[6]
Routemaster
and SJP contended that such an award would be appropriate given that
Retro Active persisted with untenable defences
which are vexatious
and frivolous to defeat a bona fide application for liquidation, and
that the initial opposition was based
on falsehoods.
[35]
In answer to the requested cost order,
Retro Active submitted that it fought the application for the sake of
the creditors. However,
I do not accept Retro Active’s
professed benevolence towards its creditors.
[36]
I agree that the opposition is vexatious
and frivolous. Of even more significant concern is that it is founded
on serial dishonesty.
[37]
I am persuaded to make the requested cost
order.
# Order
Order
[38]
The following order is made:
1.
Retro Active CC (Registration
2005/150681/23) is placed under final winding up.
2.
The costs of the application are to be
costs in the liquidation, to be recovered by the applicant
(Routemaster (Pty) Ltd) and the
intervening party (SJP Investments
CC) on a scale as between attorney and client.
3.
The costs of Retro Active CC in opposing
the application are disallowed as costs in the liquidation.
4.
The Registrar is directed to refer this
matter to the Director of Public Prosecutions to investigate Mr
Boolay, the member of Retro
Active CC, for the offence of perjury.
Paschke AJ
Appearances
For Routemaster
(Pty) Ltd (the
applicant):
Joseph Whitaker
instructed by VDS Inc, per Nailah van der Schyff.
For
Retro Active CC
(the
respondent):
Quintin
Zimmerman (attorney) of Liddle and Associates.
For
SJP Investments
CC
(the intervening
party)
Zelek
Sing
instructed by Kassen and
Associates.
[1]
Rosenbach
& Co (Pty) Ltd v Singh’s Bazaars (Pty) Ltd
1962 (4) SA 593
(D) at 597.
[2]
Boschpoort
Ondernemings (Pty) Ltd v Absa Bank Limited
[2014]
1 All SA 507
(SCA);
2014 (2) SA 518
(SCA) para 17.
[3]
Section
66(1)
of the
Close Corporations Act 69 of 1984
read with item 9 of
Schedule 5 to the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
.
Section 66(1)
of the
Close Corporations Act states
: ‘The laws mentioned or
contemplated in item 9 of Schedule 5 of the
Companies Act, read
with
the changes required by the context, apply to the liquidation of a
corporation in respect of any matter not specifically
provided for
in this Part or in any other provision of this Act.’
Item 9(1) of Schedule 5
to the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
states: ‘Despite the repeal of
the previous Act, until the date determined in terms of sub-item
(4), Chapter 14 of that
Act continues to apply with respect to the
winding-up and liquidation of companies under this Act, as if that
Act had not been
repealed subject to sub-items (2) and (3).’
[4]
Afgri
Operations Limited v Hamba Fleet (Pty) Ltd
2022 (1) SA 91
(SCA) para 12
[5]
Imobrite
(Pty) Ltd v DTL Boerdery CC
(1007/20)
[2022] ZASCA 67
(May 2022) para 12.
[6]
Business
Partners Ltd v Montache Villas (Pty) Ltd
(62454/2021)
[2023] ZAGPPHC 1053 (6 September 2023).
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