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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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[2024] ZAWCHC 348
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## Volkwyn and Another v Fredericks (21184/2022)
[2024] ZAWCHC 348 (5 November 2024)
Volkwyn and Another v Fredericks (21184/2022)
[2024] ZAWCHC 348 (5 November 2024)
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sino date 5 November 2024
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
CASE
NUMBER: 21184/2022
In
the matter between
WASHIEF
VOLKWYN
FIRST APPLICANT
THE
NETWORK COMPUTER SERVICES
WESTERN
CAPE CC
SECOND APPLICANT
and
ELVINA
FREDERICKS
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
Date
of hearing: 4 November 2024
Date
of judgment: 5 November 2024
BHOOPCHAND
AJ:
1.
The Second Applicant, Network Computer Services,
Western Cape
CC (“the CC”), began trading in 1991, providing
specialised network infrastructure and fibre optic services
to
state-owned enterprises, government departments, and private
businesses in various industries such as telecommunications,
mining,
and financial industries. The First Applicant acquired a 25% member’s
interest in the CC on 31 January 2013. In December
2017, the First
Applicant and Marthinus Cornelius Fredericks (“Martin”)
acquired the 75% member’s interest held
by another individual.
The Respondent is the wife of Martin. She acquired Martin’s
member’s interest in March 2020
to retain certain tax
considerations arising from the CC’s small business corporation
status. The First Applicant held 62.5%
and the Respondent 37.5% of
the member’s interest in the CC.
2.
This application commenced on 13 December 2022. The First
Applicant
sought urgent relief, seeking, among others, an order to purchase the
member’s interest held by the Respondent
in the CC. The
First Applicant alleged that the content of an email dated 20
September 2022 triggered the application.
In that email, the
Respondent informed the First Applicant that the Respondent had
received an offer from a potential investor,
which she was seriously
considering. The Respondent acknowledged the memorandum of
understanding (“MOU”) binding the
First Applicant and
Martin that obliged a retiring member to offer his interest in the CC
to the existing member before offering
it to any other potential
buyer. The Respondent denied the MOU bound her, alleging that it fell
away when Martin transferred his
membership to her.
3.
The Applicant stated that on 8 August 2022, he sent the
Respondent a
valuation of the CC performed by TdP Chartered Accountants. The
report is dated 8 June 2022, and the valuation is
as of 28 February
2022. The Respondent’s email referred to in the preceding
paragraph was a response to the valuation report.
The relationship
between the First Applicant, the Respondent and Martin had
irretrievably collapsed by this time. Each party alleges
that the
other was to blame for the breakdown of the working relationship. It
suffices to say, and to avoid burdening this judgment,
that both
parties gave the other sufficient reason to conclude that they could
not work together. The First Applicant sought an
order to purchase
the Respondent’s member’s interest for R352 500 per
the valuation, failing which he set out
a procedure to re-evaluate
the CC. The Respondent acknowledged that the First Applicant should
purchase her member’s interest but
declined the valuation
performed by TdP Chartered Accountants on various grounds, primarily
that it was a qualified valuation due
to the lack of proper and
complete financial information. The Respondent expanded the procedure
set out by the First Applicant
to revalue the CC.
4.
When the application came to be heard, the First Applicant
had
accepted the procedure set out by the Respondent. The Applicant
contended that the only issues remaining between the parties
concerned the costs relating to this application and the costs of the
proposed valuation. The Applicant asserted that each party
should pay
its own costs arising from the application and the
counterapplication. The Respondent contended that the First Applicant
pay the costs of this application. As for the costs of the proposed
valuation, the Applicant contended that the parties bear the
costs
equally. In contrast, the Respondent contended in her written
argument that the First Applicant bear the valuation costs.
The Court
shall return to these aspects.
5.
The parties sought to incorporate into their draft order
a clause to
the effect that they would endeavour to agree to appoint a practising
chartered accountant to perform the valuation.
The Court was not
inclined to grant this order, given the history of the matter and the
inability of the First Applicant and the
Respondent to cooperate.
The parties readily agreed to forego this clause.
6.
The parties had agreed that if they could not mutually
appoint a
valuator, then that task would devolve to the president of the South
African Institute of Chartered Accountants (“the
Institute”).
The Court formed the impression that the parties had not thought this
provision through. The CC was a small
enterprise, and the allegations
made in the papers suggested that its finances were limited. If the
president of the Institute
preferred a big firm of accountants to
perform the valuation, it could compromise the finances of the CC or
the party that would
be ordered to pay the costs of the valuation.
Neither did the parties consider recommending or seeking the
appointment of an accountant
from a previously disadvantaged group.
The Court could not let this opportunity to transform practitioners'
and, ultimately, litigants'
thinking on selecting independent experts
to perform specialised tasks slip.
7.
This Division has endeavoured to expand the practitioner
base to
promote the interests of previously disadvantaged practitioners to
act as curators. Practice directive 24G requires applicants
seeking
the appointment of curators to file the written consent of three
potential curators on the roll of legal practitioners
regarding
transformation imperatives. There is no reason why the Court should
not engage litigants and their legal representatives
to promote the
tenets of transformation when they seek orders to appoint experts to
perform specialised tasks. This application
provided the opportunity
to appoint a valuator from the ranks of previously disadvantaged
accountants to perform the valuation.
The Court records with
appreciation the willingness of the parties to participate and
incorporate this imperative in the order.
The Judiciary should coerce
all litigants to inculcate the principles of transformation in
practice where appropriate and applicable.
This objective is even
more compelling where parties benefit from transformation legislation
but make little effort to advance
or enable others. The First
Applicant alluded to securing lucrative work through the broad-based
Black economic empowerment
policy.
8.
The second consideration that should inform the President
of the
Institute’s choice of chartered accountant relates to the CC's
financial turnover. It would be counterproductive for
the Institute's
President to select a large accounting firm to perform the valuation
of a small enterprise. The parties have included
these considerations
in the orders that they have agreed to.
9.
The Court then turns to the issue of costs. The parties
could not
agree on this aspect of the application, leaving the Court the
insalubrious task of doing so. The Court asked the Applicant’s
Counsel at the outset why the CC should not bear the costs of the
proposed valuation. Counsel for the Applicant seemed receptive
to the
idea, provided the costs were included in the valuation of the
enterprise. The Respondent seemed more receptive to the idea.
The
parties stalled on reaching an agreement when invited to prepare
the draft order for the Court’s consideration.
Apart from
baldly asserting their respective Client's interests, the parties
would not compromise on this aspect. Neither did they
provide any
cogent argument for the position each held. The MOU did not address
the costs of the CC's valuation upon a member's
retirement. It is
unclear whether the CC shouldered the costs of the valuation
performed by the First Applicant. In the circumstances,
the Court is
at large to order the most pragmatic means to resolve this issue. The
CC shall bear the costs of the valuation.
10.
There are other considerations relating to the costs of this
application
and the counterapplication. The First Applicant raised
the application urgently, contending that the Respondent’s
intention
to surrender her member’s interest to a potential
investor, contrary to the provisions of the MOU, precipitated the
urgency.
The First Applicant had valued the CC before receiving the
Respondent’s email. The Respondent admitted that there
was
no investor and that she was not entitled to resile from the MOU.
The email was sent to the First Applicant to extract a reaction
as he
had ignored her requests for information.
11.
The counterapplication sought to enforce the arbitration clause in
the
MOU and obtain the information that the First Applicant had
denied the Respondent. Similarly to the Applicant, the Respondent did
not pursue the main thrust of the counterapplication. The Respondent
argued that although the First Applicant had sought an interim
interdict on an urgent basis, he failed to pursue the application,
meaning that he no longer sought urgent relief. Respondent contends
that the First Applicant created his own urgency. There is merit in
the Respondent’s assertion. The email was sent on 20
September
2022. The application was filed on 13 December 2023. Respondent
argues that the launch of the counterapplication corresponded
with
the time that the issue of bonuses would have arisen. Respondent
refers to irregular bonuses awarded to the First Applicant
and
his wife when the finances of the CC could not support the perk.
12.
The Court has considered the conduct of both parties. In the final
analysis,
and for the reasons provided in the preceding paragraph, it
would be equitable for each party to pay its own costs in the
application
and the counterapplication. The valuation costs are
included in the valuation of the CC. Any costs incurred by the First
Applicant
and paid by the CC in litigating this application and the
counterapplication will be excluded from the valuation. Neither party
requested in their papers that the Court consider the costs of the
initial valuation conducted by the First Applicant.
13.
In the premises, the Court makes the following orders, largely
confirming
the terms agreed upon by the parties. The Court has
amended certain terms and timeframes to render them more coherent and
realistic.
The valuer has been given forty-five days to perform the
valuation and the First Applicant sixty days to purchase the
Respondent’s
member’s interest, including the loan
account, fairly valued, in the CC.
ORDER
1.
The First Applicant is directed to purchase the Respondent's member’s
interest
and loan account in the Second Applicant at a fair value as
specified in paragraphs 2 to 9 below.
2.
The valuation of the Second Applicant shall be undertaken by a
practising chartered
accountant of not less than 10 years standing,
to be nominated by the President or Chairman of the Cape Town
Regional Association
of the South African Institute of Chartered
Accountants (“SAICA”). The President or Chairperson shall
consider the
following factors when appointing the valuer:
2.1
The appointed valuer is to be a member of a previously disadvantaged
group in line with the principles
of transformation and any
transformation objectives of SAICA and,
2.2
The Second Applicant is a small business with an annual turnover of
approximately R3 million (three
million rand).
3.
The valuer is to make the determination per the provisions of
paragraphs 3 to
7 of this order in respect of the fair value of the
member’s interest and loan account within 45 (forty-five)
calendar days
from the date of this order and shall communicate in
writing the fair value of the member’s interest and loan
account of
the Respondent in the Second Applicant.
4.
In determining the aforesaid fair value, the valuer shall act as an
expert and
not an arbitrator and:
4.1 the
fair value of the member’s interest and loan account shall be
determined with regard to the financial
condition of the Second
Applicant as at the date that this application was issued (i.e. 13
December 2022), being the value at which
the member’s interest
and loan account would have exchanged between a willing buyer and
willing seller, neither being under
compulsion, each having full
knowledge of the relevant facts and with equity to both;
4.2 All
costs relating to the valuation shall be borne by the Second
Applicant, i.e., the Network Computer Services,
Western Cape CC.
The costs shall be included in the valuation. All legal costs
relating to this application paid by
the Second Applicant shall be
excluded from the valuation.
5.
The First Applicant and the Respondent shall
fully and timeously cooperate with the valuer and furnish
all
information, appropriately vouched, and all documentation required by
him or her to undertake the valuation and determination,
failing
which the valuer is authorised to make an application through
the chamber book to a judge for such further directions
and relief as
may be appropriate. The valuer shall have the following further
powers:
5.1 the
right to conduct all investigations necessary and, in particular, to
obtain from the parties or any third
party or entity all information
and documentation considered by the valuer reasonably necessary for
the valuer’s determination,
including but not limited to bank
statements, paychecks, deposit books and personal statement of
affairs and liabilities which
the valuer considers relevant for the
determination; and the right to make physical inspection of assets
and take inventories;
5.2 the
right to obtain information regarding the financial affairs from any
bank, financial institution or other
entity where monies may have
been invested or to which/whom monies may be owed by any of the
entities relevant to the determination;
5.3 the
right to question any person or party and obtain explanations deemed
necessary for making the determination;
to do anything or to take any
such steps as may reasonably be considered by the valuer to be
relevant to the valuer’s determination,
including the
appointment of an expert valuer to value the commercial property of
the Second Applicant situated at 6[…]
W[…]l Street,
Sunbird Park, Cape Town (“the immovable property”);
5.4 to
be entitled to apply to this court for any further direction that the
valuer shall or may consider necessary
to perform his determination;
and
5.5 to
consider any matter the valuer considers relevant to determining what
the valuer considers a fair value
as of 13 December 2022.
6.
The First Applicant and the Respondent shall be entitled to forward
any documents or make representations
to the valuer and shall be
entitled to copies of any documents or representations made available
by the other party and in respect
of which the other party is
entitled to comment to the valuer.
7.
The valuer's determination shall be final and binding on the parties.
8.
The First Applicant shall pay the Respondent the fair value of the
member’s interest and
the loan account determined
within 60 (sixty) calendar days of such determination.
9.
Upon the full payment by the First Applicant, the Respondent shall
transfer her member’s
interest to the First Applicant.
10.
The First Applicant shall take all reasonable steps to procure the
release of the Respondent from any liability
which she may have under
any guarantee that she may have given for the Second Applicant’s
obligations (including the suretyship
that she signed in favour of
the First Rand Bank Limited) and that, until such release is
procured, each of the First and Second
applicants shall be jointly
and severally liable to indemnify the respondent against such
liability.
11.
Each party shall pay its own costs arising from this application and
the counterapplication.
Ajay
Bhoopchand
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Western
Cape Division
Cape
Town
Judgment
was handed down and delivered to the parties by e-mail on 5 November
2024
Applicant’s
Counsel: Advocate M Holland
Instructed
by SB Attorneys Inc
Counsel
for the Respondents: Advocate Lee Gabriel
Instructed
by Dixon Attorneys Michael Dixon Attorneys Inc
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