Case Law[2023] ZAWCHC 111South Africa
Inca Concrete Products (Pty) Ltd v Groeneveld Civil Engineering Construction (Pty) Ltd (15445/2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 111 (16 May 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
16 May 2023
Headnotes
as follows:
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Inca Concrete Products (Pty) Ltd v Groeneveld Civil Engineering Construction (Pty) Ltd (15445/2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 111 (16 May 2023)
Inca Concrete Products (Pty) Ltd v Groeneveld Civil Engineering Construction (Pty) Ltd (15445/2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 111 (16 May 2023)
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sino date 16 May 2023
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
FLYNOTES:
COMPANY – Liquidation – Provisional – Respondent
indebted for supply of building materials –
Respondent
arguing set-off and contending that it had counterclaim for
defective materials – Dispute arising in normal
commercial
circumstances – Withdrawal of the summons to institute
motion proceedings – Because court rolls congested
–
Reasons for alternative process an abuse of court process
justifying exercise of court's discretion – Not just
and
equitable to liquidate the respondent.
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case
Number: 15445/2022
In
the matter between:
Inca
Concrete Products (Pty) Ltd
Applicant
(In
business rescue)
(Registration
Number: 2007[....]07)
And
Groeneveld
Civil Engineering
Respondent
Construction
(Pty) Ltd
(Registration
Number: 2014[....]07
Registered
address: 7 Schoongezicht Street,
Simonswyk,
Stellenbosch, Western Cape.
JUDGMENT
ELECTRONICALLY DELIVERED
16
MAY 2023
Baartman,
J
[1]
The applicant seeks a provisional liquidation order against the
respondent. The latter is indebted to
the applicant in the amount of
R330 507.74, but has failed to settle the debt. The respondent
opposes the application on the basis
that it has a counter claim
against the applicant that would extinguish the applicant's claim by
way of set-off but for an amount
of R28 765.89. Therefore, on 18 July
2022, the respondent paid R28 765.89 into its attorneys' trust
account.
[2]
The applicant manufactures and supplies concrete face bricks, plaster
bricks, blocks and paving products.
It is common cause that the
applicant has delivered bricks/paving blocks to various projects at
the respondent's request. The applicant
said the following about
their business relationship:
'20. The Respondent has
been buying products from the Applicant for seven years since the
Agreement was concluded in March 2015.
Payments have been regular and
consistent. Only after the Applicant went into business rescue have
the Respondent's payments become
scarce.'
[3]
The respondent said the following about its 'scarce payments':
'8. In a letter dated 16
April 2022... Applicant claimed payment for the overdue account of
R324 122.08. At that stage Applicant
was well aware of the dispute
pertaining to damages suffered by Respondent due to the Applicant's
supply of material at the project
known as Grootvadersbosch that was
already in dispute for ten months prior to the demand. ... there were
several areas where the
bricks/blocks supplied by the Applicant have
cracked. We were expecting the Applicant's credit note for R180 000
plus V.A.T. whereafter
Respondent would proceed with settling the
outstanding balance. As reflected in the aforementioned
correspondence, it is clear
that Respondent were (sic) struggling
with Applicant for almost ten months prior to the letter of demand to
resolve the defects
in goods supplied. Whilst some of the items or
amounts constituting the Respondent's damages were easy to determine
at that stage,
some further items or amounts were not so easy to
determine. Hence the more accurate determination of the full...
amount...
10. On 10 June the
Applicant issued summons against the Respondent ...under case number
9804/2022...However this summons was withdrawn
on/about 30 June 2022
without explanation.'
[4]
The respondent alleged that the applicant's inexplicable withdrawal
of the summons to institute motion
proceedings is an abuse of the
process. The applicant's counsel has informed the court, from the
bar, that the action was withdrawn
because of the congested court
rolls, therefore it was expedient to proceed with motion proceedings.
An amazing admission in the
circumstances of this matter. The
respondent has been liquid and operating for 7 years on the
applicant's version and the dispute
pertaining to the defective
materials is common cause. In those circumstances, I cannot agree
with the submission that the failure
to settle the debt is prima
facie proof of the respondent's inability to pay. In addition to the
applicant's attesting to the respondent's
good credit record for many
years, Mr Groenewald, the respondent's sole director, said the
following in the answering affidavit:
'6.1 Respondent is not
insolvent. Its non-payment to the Applicant is due to a counterclaim
based on bona fide and reasonable grounds,
in the amount of R301
741.85 (including VAT).'
[5]
The common cause facts such as the relatively long amicable relations
between the parties during which
the respondent met its financial
obligations to the applicant, the evidence of the respondent's sole
director, the payment into
the attorneys' trust account of the amount
the respondent admits would be due if its counter claim was off-set
against the applicant's
claim and the absence of any other indication
that the respondent is unable to meet its financial obligations, as
and when they
fall due, indicate that the respondent is not
insolvent. There is also no indication that the respondent had to
seek a loan or
other financial assistance to meet its obligation. The
respondent demanded credit for alleged defective material and
tendered payment
of substantial amounts in return. I accept that the
respondent, for the reasons stated above, is unwilling to pay the
debt and
considers the liquidation application 'as a tactic to
intimidate the Respondent into paying ...'
[6]
Therefore, this matter is distinguishable from the facts considered
in Gap
[1]
where the court held
as follows:
'53... The correspondence
to which I have referred indicates that the respondent has often
battled to meet its cash-flow requirements.
Prima facie, therefore,
the respondent is unable to pay its debts as they fall due, and this
is the test for commercial insolvency...'
[7]
The parties held differing views in respect of whether the respondent
would be able to off-set its alleged
claim against that of the
applicant. The respondent's claim is for damages suffered as a result
of the applicant's alleged defective
performance. The parties could
also not agree what effect, if any, the applicant's business rescue
had on the respondent's alleged
claim. It is obvious that the
respondent's failure to settle the debt was induced by its legal
representatives' view in respect
of the possibility to off-set its
claim against that of the applicant. The respondent's counsel
appeared to accept that his view
might not be correct; it was not
conceded. The respondent has also not decided whether its claim arose
before or after the applicant
was placed in business rescue.
[8]
I am persuaded to accept without finding that the respondent's claim
for damages is not a liquidated
claim capable of off-set. I do so
because as indicated above, the respondent was caught off guard when
the applicant decided to
abandon the action in favour of motion
proceedings. In Van Zyl
[2]
, in
strikingly similar circumstances, the court held as follows:
'... The respondent
justifies its failure to pay by claiming that it was entitled to set
off the amount of R247 577.43 against the
said amount of R286 347.75
leaving a balance of R38 770.31, which balance the respondent has
paid into court.
... This raises the
question of whether the respondent's defence of set-off can be said
to be bona fide and based on reasonable
grounds I consider the
respondent's defence of set-off to be an invalid one. This does not,
however, mean that the applicant
is entitled to the relief he seeks
without more.
The applicant only became
aware of the existence of the cession [in these proceedings].
What is more, apart from
the fact that the respondent has failed to pay the amount which the
applicant alleges the respondent owes
there is nothing in the
papers to suggest that the respondent is unable to pay its debts
'
[9]
The respondent's case, as it appears from the answering affidavit, is
not a model of clarity and includes
hearsay evidence pertaining to
'falsified laboratory test results to confirm the strength and
composition of their bricks/blocks'.
It appears that there are
disputes over material delivered to several projects.
[10]
The respondent has also referred to 'without prejudice settlement
negotiations between the parties'. I agree with
the applicant that
the inclusion of those negotiations is 'to be deprecated', however,
that explains why the applicant is unable
to allege that the
respondent has a cash flow problem and instead relies on the failure
to pay the debt as prima facie proof of
its commercial insolvency. In
the circumstances of this case, that will not suffice.
[11]
This application is brought on the basis that the respondent 'is
unable to pay its debts...' I am unable to find
that the respondent
is unable to meet its financial obligations as and when they fall
due. I am, however, persuaded that a dispute
in respect of the
quality of material delivered to the respondent arose in normal
commercial circumstances and that the parties
have thus far been
unable to resolve the dispute despite attempts to resolve it. In the
alternative, the applicant sought relief
on the following basis:
'8. Alternatively, this
application is brought in terms of section 344(h) of the 1973
Companies Act read together with schedules
5, item 9 of the 2008
Companies Act, on the basis that it would be just and equitable for
the Respondent to be wound up.'
[12]
Liquidations are by their very nature urgent; this is not such a
case. Considering the perilous state of the economy
resulting in dire
unemployment, it is deplorable to liquidate an economically viable
company because the court rolls are congested.
In the circumstances
of this matter, I consider the reasons for the alternative process an
abuse of the court process justifying
the exercise of the court's
'very narrow ...[discretion] that is rarely exercised.
[3]
In the circumstances of these proceedings, it is not just and
equitable to liquidate the respondent. I intend to dismiss the
application
with costs to follow the result.
Conclusion
[13]
I, for the reasons stated above, make the following order:
(a) The
application is dismissed with costs.
Baartman,
J
[1]
GAP Merchant Recycling CC v Goal Reach Trading 55 CC
2016 (1) SA 261
para 53.
[2]
Van Zyl NO v Look Good Clothing CC 1966 (3) SA 523 (SE).
[3]
Afri Operations Ltd v Hamba Fleet (Pty) Ltd
2022 (1) SA 91.
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