Case Law[2023] ZAWCHC 55South Africa
Khoza v Radebe and Others (A113/2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 55 (15 March 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
29 October 2021
Judgment
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## Khoza v Radebe and Others (A113/2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 55 (15 March 2023)
Khoza v Radebe and Others (A113/2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 55 (15 March 2023)
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sino date 15 March 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE
DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case
No: A113/2022
In
the matter between:
DUMISANI
CHILTON KHOZA
Appellant
and
MARKO
RADEBE
First
Respondent
MOONGATE
129 (PTY) LTD
Second
Respondent
MUTODO PROPERTIES
(PTY) LTD
Third
Respondent
## JUDGMENT DELIVERED
ELECTRONICALLY
JUDGMENT DELIVERED
ELECTRONICALLY
## 15 MARCH 2023
15 MARCH 2023
NZIWENI
J
[1]
The appellant, Mr Khoza, appeals against the judgment and order of
Goliath DJP (as
she then was) handed down on 29 October 2021. The
appellant and Mr Radebe (
the first respondent
), are the
co-directors and equal shareholders in the second respondent
(
Moongate
). The appeal arises from the dismissal of an
application brought by the appellant, seeking, inter alia, a
declaratory relief
that the first respondent’s pre-emptive
right had lapsed as he had failed to exercise the right provided for
in the Article
23 of the Article of Association (
AOA
)
timeously, alternatively that the first respondent had not validly
exercised the right of pre-emption.
[2]
The appeal primarily turns on the interpretation of certain
provisions of Moongate’s
AOA.
The
AOA
contains a right of pre-emption in favour of the two directors of
Moongate in respect of the sale of shares and which was triggered
upon an event defined in the
AOA
.
[3]
The relevant provisions of the AOA that inter
alia
, gave a
shareholder a right of first refusal to buy the shares of other
shareholders before the shares could be sold to a third
party,
provides as follows:
‘
22.
If a member of the company desires to sell all or any of his shares
of the company he shall give
notice, in writing, of his intention to
sell, to the directors of the company and state the price he requires
for the shares.
23.
The directors shall within one month of the date of receipt of the
notice referred to in
article 22 advise every other member of the
company of the contents thereof and each such member shall be
entitled to acquire the
shares so offered within one month after the
date of the receipt of such advice: Provided that if more than one
member makes an
offer for all of the shares so offered the shares
shall be sold to each such member proportionately, and where fraction
proportions
of shares remain, such members shall become holders
jointly of such fractional proportions of the shares.
24.
If the members of the company are unable to agree upon the selling
price of the shares,
the auditor of the company may be requested to
determine the true and fair value thereof and the members shall
accept that value
as the selling price of the shares.
25.
If none of the members of the company offer to purchase the shares
within the time referred
to in article 23, or if members of the
company offer to purchase a part of the shares so offered, the member
who is offering the
shares for sale my [sic] offer the shares or the
remaining portion of the shares which have not been purchased by
members of the
company, for sale to any other person.’
Factual background
[4]
The salient facts of this matter are largely undisputed. They are
briefly as follows.
Each of the directors, i.e., the appellant and
the first respondent hold equal shares of 50 %. On 17 October 2019,
the appellant
entered into a sale agreement with the third respondent
(
Mutodo
) wherein he offered his shares for sale for the total
sum of R12 500 000.00. On the same day, the appellant sent
a letter
to the first respondent, notifying him [the first
respondent] of the offer and gave him the opportunity to exercise his
pre-emptive
right.
[5]
On 21 October 2019, due to an error in the letter dated 17 October
2019, the appellant
re-sent an email that rectified the error.
According to the appellant, the email of 21 October 2019, gave notice
of his intention
to sell his shares at a price of R12 500 000.
00. It is common cause that the proposed sale agreement with Mutodo
triggered
the right of first refusal as provided in the provisions in
the AOA referred to above.
[6]
The first respondent
was sceptical as to the
bona fides
of
Mutodo’s
offer
and claimed that the
amount of R12 500 000. 00 was grossly inflated. He
therefore did not match the price of the
shares offered by Mutodo.
On
the failure by the parties to agree on the “true
and
fair value
" of the shares,
the first
respondent referred the valuation of the shares to Moongate’s
accounting officer (
Smartt
),
to determine the real value of the shares as provided in
Article 24 of the AOA.
[7]
On 25 October 2019, the first respondent wrote the
following email to
the appellant:
‘
Dear
Dumisani,
In terms of the Article
of Association, once your request to sell the shares is received by
the directors (your request must also
state the price at which you
wish to sell- I take it this is the price you have put into offer,
i.e. R12.5m), the directors must
forward the request to all the
shareholders within one month, for them to request to acquire the
shares so offered. In this regard,
I confirm that I (Marko Radebe)
wish to buy your shares.
Importantly however, if
the shareholders cannot agree on the price, the auditors of the
company have to determine the true and fair
value of the shares as I
do not agree with the price you are offering them. I will now
instruct Moongate’s auditors to value
the shares and they will
then send us both their determination of the fair market price.
Again, there is no MOI
that was signed between us so the Articles of Association need to be
followed . . .”
[8]
Following the receipt of the email dated 25 October 2019, the
appellant sent the first
respondent an email dated 13 November 2019,
which stated the following:
‘
.
. . 2. I agree that we should treat my offer, as you do, as one
given in terms of the applicable memorandum and articles
of
association of the company.
3.
I have noted your comments regarding the determination of the
purchase price
for the shares by the auditors and I do not agree with
your interpretation of Article 24, in that the determination by the
auditor
may only be invoked if both parties agree to refer the matter
to an auditor.
4.
Article 24 does not create an obligation that once the other member
does not accept
the price at which the shares are sold, such member
is at liberty to invoke the power of the auditor of the company to
determine
the fair value of the shares. It simply cannot be that the
other member is at liberty to reject the offer price that is proposed
and to unilaterally refer the matter to the auditor to determine the
fair value.
5.
Therefore, it is my intention to proceed with the sale of my shares
with Mutodo
Properties (Pty) Ltd, having provided the relevant
notices in terms of Article 22 of the company’s articles of
association,
which remains valid. I expect Marko to reply to the
notice by either waiving his pre-emptive rights in accordance with
the Articles
of association or by offering me the same offer on my
shares on the same terms and conditions…’
[9]
In an evaluation conducted by Smartt, dated 4 December 2019, the
shares were valued
at R11 623 912.00. The appraised
value of each shareholders interest by Smartt was approximately
R5 811 956.00,
excluding the value of their individual loan
account balances owed to them.
[10]
On 04 December 2019, the first respondent caused an email, stating
amongst others, the following:
‘
. . . I have
since obtained such evaluation for R13m of 100% of the shares so
R6.5m would be the price we would have to pay you.
I hereby tender
payment of this amount against transfer of your shares to myself
(Marko Radebe). . .”
[11]
On 05 December 2019 the appellant responded by email to the first
respondent as follows:
‘
. . . 3. Surely
you cannot expect me to accept your offer of R6 500 000 for my 50%
shares in the company. In fact, I find it surprising
that the
auditors carried out the valuation without engaging with me as a
shareholder and without obtaining the necessary mandate
from the
board of the Company.
4.
I cannot accept the valuation which was prepared by your auditors as
it seems
that their interest are mainly aligned with yours and not
with the Company and therefore cannot accept their independence
in this regard.
5.
In the circumstances, I will not be entertaining nor accept the offer
as tabled
by yourselves per your letter. Accordingly, please be
advised I shall be proceeding with the offer as received by Mutodo
Properties
(Pty) Ltd for acquisition of my shares and claims in the
Company.
6.
Please note that my rights remain reserved.’
[12]
On 09 December 2019, the first respondent responded by email to the
appellant. He stated the
following:
“
Hi Dumisani
. . .You can’t go
ahead with the sale of the shares to Mutodo Properties (Pty) Lt. You
don’t have my consent and the
process is now for me to buy you
out as per the Article of Association . . .
I am even prepared to pay
R7m for your shares to accommodate further even though only half of
the auditors’ valuation is what
I need to pay for the shares .
. .’
[13]
On 27 February 2020, the attorneys of the first respondent wrote to
the appellant detailing the
chronology of events between the parties
and recorded that the appellant had, on 12 December 2019,
telephonically confirmed that
he would accept a purchase price of
R8.5 million.
[14]
From the myriad of correspondence, I readily discern that further
discussion on 12 December 2019,
had taken place between the appellant
and the first respondent; wherein the appellant indicated an
inclination to accept a purchase
price of R8.5 million. There is no
evidence that this was disputed.
[15]
In an email dated 13 December 2019, the appellant informed the first
respondent that he would
not be entertaining his offer. The appellant
further warned the first respondent that the offer had lapsed,
therefore he would
proceed with the sale of his shares to Mutodo.
Evaluation
[16]
On appeal, the determinative questions are whether:
(i)
the right of first refusal, which was triggered by an
agreement
with Mutodo, should have in fact been exercised by the first
respondent within the one month period as specified in clause
23; and
whether
(ii)
the first respondent validly exercised his
pre-emptive right.
[17]
It is common cause that an agreed share price was not reached between
the appellant and the first
respondent when an opportunity was
afforded to the first respondent to exercise his right of
pre-emption. This was evident from
the correspondence between the
appellant and the first respondent.
[18]
Several arguments were made on behalf of the appellant as to why the
first respondent’s
right of pre-emption had lapsed and why the
court a
quo
was wrong in its interpretation of the
AOA
.
[19]
Mr Sibanda, appellant’s counsel, maintained during the hearing
of the appeal that the first
respondent had not exercised his
pre-emptive right within the stated time limit. Additionally,
he contended that article
23 granted the first respondent the right
to “acquire” the shares within one month of the date on
which he was informed
of the intended sale to Mutodo. According to
the appellant, the court a
quo
incorrectly interpreted the
first respondent’s legal entitlement under the pre-emptive
right.
[20]
Mr Sibanda submitted that in order to validly exercise the
pre-emptive right, he [the first respondent]
was required to
“acquire
the shares so offered”
by either accepting the initial
price of the shares or having arrived at an agreement with the
appellant as to the purchase price
and to enter into a valid sale
agreement in respect thereof.
[21]
The correspondence between the parties,
inter alia
, revealed
that after the offer was made by Mutodo and presented to the first
respondent; the first respondent in less than five
days responded and
indicated that he wished to purchase the shares. As correctly
pointed out by the court a
quo
, the first respondent thereupon
indicated his interest in exercising his right of pre-emption and
stated that he
did not agree with the price
offered by the Mutodo to the appellant.
[22]
Among other things, in the email dated 25 October 2019, the first
respondent advised the appellant
of the confirmation of his wish to
buy the shares. The only thing that prevented the first respondent
from acquiring the shares
was the price issue. The first respondent
informed the appellant that he had the specific intention of
purchasing his shares. The
first respondent, therefore, conditionally
accepted the offer which was made by the appellant to sell his shares
subject to the
purchase price being settled in terms of clause 24 of
the AOA.
In
this regard it cannot be said that the first respondent never
exercised his right.
[23]
Importantly, Mr Sibanda explained during the hearing of this appeal
that the acquisition of shares
occurs in stages.
Pursuant to the conditional acceptance of the offer, the purchase
price, payment and the delivery of the shares remained outstanding.
That meant that when the parties could not agree upon
the price, the request of the auditor’s determination was
triggered,
as the acquisition of shares could not be completed.
Realistically, all the “stages” in the acquisition could
not be completed in the course of one month.
[24]
Thus, the court a
quo
correctly found that the first
respondent had unequivocally notified the appellant within the
prescribed one month period of his
intention to purchase the shares.
The court a
quo
further noted that, in the email of 25 October
2019 to the appellant, the first respondent clearly expressed his
disagreement with
the price of the shares and indicated that he would
instruct Moongate’s auditors to evaluate the shares. It
therefore
in the context of the matter, due to the share price
deadlock, the complete acquisition process could not be completed
within the
period as referred to in article 23. The first
respondent could not acquire the shares within a thirty day period in
which
he was entitled to do so. In the circumstances, the court a
quo
cannot be faulted for concluding that the email of the 25
th
October 2019, triggered the provisions of article 24.
Interpretation
of the
AOA
[25]
First and foremost, in spite of a lack of a specific time frame
article 24 is not rendered ambiguous
nor ineffective.
As
stated above, it
was the appellant’s
contention that the first respondent should have acquired the shares
within one month after the date of
receipt of the advice of the
intention to sell the shares.
[26]
It is settled law that several factors guide a court's interpretation
of statutes and contracts.
The purpose of the article in the AOA, the
plain meaning of the language and other principles of construction
play an important
role in its interpretation. It is trite that, where
the language of the document is clear and unambiguous and conveys a
clear and
definite meaning, it should be given its plain and ordinary
meaning.
[1]
[27]
In
Independent
Institute of Education (Pty) Limited v Kwazulu Natal Law Society and
Others
[2]
,
Theron J (with Froneman J, concurring), stated as follows:
‘
[38]
It is a well-established canon of statutory construction that “every
part of a statute should be construed so as to be
consistent, so far
as possible, with every other part of that statute . . .’
[28]
For a shareholder to be entitled to acquire the other’s shares
as contemplated in article
23, it is essential that there is
agreement between them regarding the share value. Article 23
covers the terms of the right of pre-emption.
It
may be inferred from the reading of article 23 that it creates a
right for the director of Moongate to purchase the shares within
one
month after notice to him of that right. Against this background, it
seems clear that the right to purchase which is created
by
article 23, is subject to the parties agreeing to a purchase price.
It
is important to note that, nowhere does the AOA mention that if
the parties cannot agree about the price, the right of pre-emption
shall lapse.
Notably,
the provisions of article 24 are not expressly limited in point of
time. As such, article 24 does not provide a specific
time frame for
the auditor to determine the value of the shares.
On
the other hand,
articles 23 and 25 make explicit
mention of timeframes.
Hence,
article 24 is at the root of the controversy in this matter.
[29]
The appellant’s contention that the time limit of article 23 is
to be regarded the default
in article 24 because another article
[article 25] of the
AOA
explicitly adopted
the time limit of article 23, is in my view unsustainable.
[30]
The fact that the
AOA
was explicit
about time frames in certain articles where does not necessarily
suggest that the explicit time frame prevails if
the time limit is
not mentioned in a different but related article. Similarly,
the mention of a time limit in a preceding
article does not mean the
existence of a default time limit in a following article. Each
article must be considered in context
to give sense and meaning.
[31]
There is therefore in my view, no reason to hold that a time
limit in article 23 necessarily extends across to article 24. The
fact that article 25 invokes article 23’s time frame, but
article 24 does not explicitly adopt the limits of article 23,
indicates in my view that article 23’s time frame does not
apply to article 24.
[32]
My view is buttressed by the fact that;
the
valuation of company shares is not necessarily an easy process,
especially where there is a dispute about the real value of
the
shares. Thus, common sense, reality and practicality justify an
inference that this process may well endure for more
than one month.
Needless to say, the valuation process must be attended to diligently
and within a reasonable period of time.
[33]
The appellant’s claim that
articles
24 and 23 must be read together, and that the one month provision of
article 23 must be read into article 24
is contradicted
by the
AOA itself
. Therefore, the
court a
quo
correctly in my view did not apply the one month
limit in an article that did not prescribe such a limit.
[34]
Additionally, the wording of the
AOA
does
not state nor suggest that if there is a deadlock in the
determination of the share price, the discord must be resolved within
one month, and if such resolution is not reached within a month, the
seller is released from the right of pre-emption.
[35]
On a plain reading of the relevant provisions of the AOA, the
insertion of article 24 establishes
a default mechanism in the
absence of agreement on the share price. It is thus a
contingency procedure. The court a
quo
was in my view correct
in finding that article 24 envisages a deadlock-breaking mechanism in
the event of a dispute relating the
sale price of the shares.
Importantly,
as mentioned earlier, a close scrutiny of the
AOA
reveals that article 24 was meant to ensure that shareholders get a
fair price for their shares. Consequently, article 24 makes
it clear
that none of the shareholders has an unfettered discretion to
determine the price of the shares.
Article 24 seeks to achieve a fair market price between
shareholders.
[36]
It is important to note that, from a reading of article 24, it is
clear that the article presupposes
a situation where the first
respondent [the right holder] can refuse a price offered by a third
party [Mutodo], to the seller [the
appellant]. The corollary of
this is that, the first respondent, as a holder of the pre-emption
right, is not obliged to
match an offer that has been agreed to
between the appellant and a third party.
[37]
On the other hand, the time period in article 23 is to be implemented
where the parties agree
upon a price. Similarly, article 25 is
designed for a situation where no offer is made by the shareholders
to buy the shares or
if a shareholder of the
company offers to purchase a part of the shares so offered.
A
rticles 23
and 25 contemplate situations where there is no dispute that triggers
the provisions of article 24.
[38]
It was contended for the appellant that, the mere existence of a tie
- breaking valuation mechanism
cannot change the plain meaning of
article 23. This argument is misplaced inasmuch as the court a
quo
did not suggest that the deadlock mechanism changed the
meaning of article 23. The argument also ignores the plain
language
of article 23 which cannot be read in isolation but in context with
the other relevant provisions of the AOA. In interpretation,
context
is important.
Reasonable
time
[39]
In my view it cannot be said that article 24 gave a director or a
member an unlimited time to
acquire the shares as suggested by the
appellant. At first blush, it may appear so, but that does not mean
that the auditor has
carte blanche
to conduct his evaluation
without regard to the constraint of a reasonable time.
[40]
Clearly, where no time limit is specifically provided, no time limit
is intended. Equally, it
is settled that if no time is specified, a
reasonable time is implied. It would follow that the
implementation
of the contingency procedure (deadlock mechanism)
should occur within a reasonable period of time.
Was
the right of pre-emption validly exercised?
[41]
It was also contended that the first respondent had
failed to timeously make an offer within the one month in that he had
to indicate
an amount that he wished to purchase the shares for. The
provisions of the AOA do not support such a contention. It states
that
a member shall be entitled to acquire the shares offered within
one month after the date of being advised of the intention to sell.
Referral
of the price dispute to the auditors.
[42]
The court a
quo
concluded that, it would be
in the interest of justice that it should make an order related to
the appointment of an auditor. A
careful examination of the evidence
indicates that Moongate did not have an auditor. Both
parties are in agreement
that the order by the court a
quo
pertaining to the appointment of the auditor as provided for in
the order of the court
a quo
cannot stand.
[
44
]
It remains for the second respondent to appoint an auditor in terms
of AOA who would be required
to do the valuation of the shares within
a reasonable period.
Costs
[45]
That notwithstanding, the successful party on appeal is the first
respondent. There is no reason
why the costs of the appeal should not
to follow the results.
[46]
In the result I propose the following order:
1.
The appeal is dismissed with costs.
2.
The order of the court a
quo
is amended by deletion of
paragraph 43.1 - 43.8 and replaced with the directive that the second
respondent shall appoint an auditor
to determine the true and fair
value of the shares as contemplated in paragraph 24 of the
AOA
.
C.N. NZIWENI J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
I AGREE AND IT IS SO
ORDERED.
V.C. SALDANHA
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
I
AGREE
R.C.A HENNEY
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
Appearances
Counsel
for the Appellant:
Adv
M Sibanda
Instructed
by
Mkhabela
Huntley Attorneys Inc.
c/o
Maderumule Attorneys
Counsel
for the First Respondents
Adv
D Goldberg
Instructed
by
STBB/
Smith Tabata Buchanan Boyes
[1]
See
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
2012 (4) SA 593 (SCA).
[2]
[2019] ZACC 47
at para 38
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