Case Law[2023] ZAWCHC 124South Africa
P.J.D v Zantisi Student Services (Pty) Ltd (5841/2023) [2023] ZAWCHC 124 (17 May 2023)
Headnotes
no instructions from ZSS to repay D[...] from the sale proceeds. They also wrote that by 30 March 2023 the purchasers were to furnish a guarantee, which was what was required for them finally to lodge in the Deeds Office and transfer.
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## P.J.D v Zantisi Student Services (Pty) Ltd (5841/2023) [2023] ZAWCHC 124 (17 May 2023)
P.J.D v Zantisi Student Services (Pty) Ltd (5841/2023) [2023] ZAWCHC 124 (17 May 2023)
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sino date 17 May 2023
SAFLII Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
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OFFICE OF THE CHIEF JUSTICE
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
CASE NO: 5841/2023
In the matter between:
P[…]
J[…] D[…]
Applicant
And
ZANTISI
STUDENT SERVICES (PTY) LTD
Respondent
REASONS
FOR JUDGMENT DELIVERED ON THIS
17th
DAY
OF MAY 2023
PATRICK, AJ:
Events leading to the
application
1.
The
applicant, (“
D[...]
”)
and the sole director of the first respondent (“
M[...]
”
and “
ZSS
”
respectively) are brothers-in-law. M[...] is the husband of D[...]’
sister, though M[...] and D[...]’ sister
now are divorcing.
2.
In
2013 D[...] advanced R1 908 005,51 to ZSS. ZSS purchased
two properties, to conduct business providing accommodation.
D[...]
also stood surety for ZSS’s obligations to repay bond-secured
loans of R2 500 00 from Nedbank. The contract
between
D[...] and ZSS was oral. A term was that ZSS was to repay D[...] upon
sale of the properties.
D[...] and M[...],
at that stage, envisaged building a substantial business.
3.
During
the pandemic, ZSS suffered financial difficulties. In October 2022
and November 2022 it failed to pay its Nedbank loan instalments.
D[...] liased with Nedbank to try to prevent a sale in execution and
facilitate a sale on the open market.
4.
On
6 December 2022 D[...] and M[...] met. M[...] confirmed that the
properties were on the market. By January 2023 the loan
instalments
were four months in arrears. D[...] asked M[...] for an update on the
sale progress. None was forthcoming.
5.
D[...]
subsequently found out that the properties had been sold. Commencing
in mid-March, D[...] sent several emails and WhatsApp
messages to
M[...].
M[...] did not answer.
On 25 March
2023 D[...] wrote to the conveyancers.
D[...]
stated
that ZSS was indebted to him and asked the conveyancers to tell him
when they expected to transfer the sold properties, because,
he
explained, he was liaising with M[...] to ensure that ZSS repaid him
on transfer.
6.
On
27 March 2023 the conveyancers answered D[...]. They wrote that
they held no instructions from ZSS to repay D[...] from
the sale
proceeds. They also
wrote
that by 30 March
2023 the purchasers were to furnish a guarantee, which was what was
required for them finally to lodge in
the Deeds Office and transfer.
7.
On
28 March 2023 M[...] emailed D[...]. M[...] wrote
“
I feel
harassed and bullied by your emails and WhatsApp messages during the
past two weeks. I speculated what the emails are about,
and I have
not read them apart from the initial text. …
I was informed that you, in your
personal capacity, contacted the transferring attorneys with a claim
and threat of an interdict.
I was under the impression that
this matter was comprehensively concluded seven years ago.
I would ask and recommend that we
enter urgent binding arbitration to resolve this matter and avoid the
delay or cancelling of the
… property sale, which has been
very difficult. This arbitration should include all entities involved
and all matters relating
to the [ZSS] matters.
I hope everyone finds this
acceptable.
I reserve my rights.”
8.
On
4 April 2023 D[...]’ attorneys wrote to M[...]. They
requested an undertaking that the loan would be repaid by the
conveyancers from the sale proceeds. They threatened to apply to
liquidate ZSS if the undertaking were not provided. On 11 April
2023 M[...] answered that would need to take legal advice to answer.
By that stage the threatened application was all but finalised.
The application
9.
Indeed,
on the same day, 11 April 2023, D[...] launched the threatened
application as a matter of urgency. The notice of motion
instructed
ZSS
to answer if
it
opposed
by 18 April 2023, and set the application down on 25 April
2023, which is how it came before me in the urgent
court.
10.
In
the event, ZSS took until 20 April 2023 to deliver its answer,
deposed to by M[...].
ZSS
delivered an
eighteen-page affidavit. The first nine pages made comprehensive and
exhaustive complaints that D[...] had prepared
his papers at a
leisurely pace, that D[...] had imposed unreasonably short time
periods on ZSS, that D[...] had unreasonably procrastinated,
that
there had been “
an obvious and
egregious violation of the rights of [ZSS]”
in
that D[...] had deliberately violated the rights of ZSS to consult
with witnesses and prepare a meaningful answer, obtain
documentary evidence and “
fully
present it’s (sic) case adequately”
,
that D[...] had failed to use the long-form notice of motion, that
D[...] had obtained an undue tactical advantage, that D[...]
had not
explained why he would not be afforded substantial redress at a
hearing in in due course. They concluded that the matter
should be
appropriately dismissed or struck with an immediate costs order.
11.
The
second nine pages of the answering affidavit addressed the merits.
What I have
I have set out in paragraphs
2
- 8
above
was not controversial
.
ZSS characterised the advance as the provision of investment capital,
D[...] as a loan.
12.
In
2016, continued the answer, M[...] had approached D[...] to discuss
“
the issue of the business going
nowhere due to [D[...]’] failure to provide”
further
capital D[...] had promised. D[...] at that time suggested that
D[...] should become 75% shareholder. M[...] was not amenable.
They
“
then decided to part company”
.
M[...] still then “
intended
repaying [D[...]] funds which [D[...]] had initially invested in the
business”
; he had another entity
sell a property to that end.
13.
Continued
the answer “
(f)urther negotiations
were held with [D[...]] because I was deeply unhappy that I had spent
so much time on the business, but [D[...]]
had failed to meet these
commitments or make any contribution whatsoever. It was at this time
that we entered into an oral agreement
with each other – while
I represented [ZSS] – that we would both walk away, and that
neither [ZSS] nor I would have
to repay [D[...]].
Urgency
14.
Liquidation
applications are inherently urgent, and usually brought on the short
form notice of motion. This particular liquidation
application was
urgent because transfer was imminent. ZSS had refused the undertaking
D[...] requested. Nor had it offered at least
to retain the sale
proceeds in trust until resolution of D[...]’ now-disputed
claim. Though ZSS alleged that the urgency
precluded it consulting
with witnesses, it identified none. It did not request leave to
supplement. Though ZSS alleged that it
had been unable to procure
documents, it contended for an oral agreement in its defence, and
identified no documents which might
reflect the oral agreement. ZSS’s
answer was comprehensive. Its counsel prepared good heads, was ready
and to argue, and
well did so. In the circumstances I heard the
matter as a matter of urgency.
Approach
15.
D[...]
was required to show his entitlement to an order, including his
claim,
prima
facie
.
[1]
That meant showing that the balance of probabilities on the
affidavits favoured him.
[2]
If however ZSS
bona
fide
disputed
D[...]’ claim on reasonable grounds, then the application fell
to be dismissed – the
Badenhorst
rule.
[3]
The onus was on ZSS to show it bona fide disputed D[...]’ claim
on reasonable grounds.
[4]
Entitlement to order
16.
M[...]
alleged that in 2016, and before the conclusion of oral agreement for
which ZSS contended, he intended to procure D[...]’
repayment
and took steps to that end. D[...]’ claim to repayment –
whether of a loan or investment – therefore
is common cause.
D[...] established his claim on the affidavits. The next enquiry was
therefore whether ZSS discharged the onus
to show that it
bona
fide
disputed D[...]’ claims on
reasonable grounds.
Badenhorst
rule
17.
M[...]
did not allege that D[...] was a very rich man for whom the sum would
have been trifling, and nothing on the papers so indicates.
It is
inherently improbable that D[...] would have agreed to forgive
repayment of a sum so large. M[...] was vague in answer about
precisely when he and D[...] concluded the oral agreement. He could
only point to a particular year, 2016. That is perhaps
understandable.
The agreement would have been concluded a long time
ago and when relations between D[...] and M[...] had a different
complexion
- though I would have expected M[...] at least to have
remembered where he and D[...] were when they concluded the oral
agreement.
18.
M[...]
was also vague in answer about the terms of the oral agreement. He
alleged that the agreement had two components: [1]“
we
would both walk away, and
[2]
that
neither [ZSS] nor I would have to repay [D[...]]”
.
The vagueness is perhaps understandable, as I have explained. But the
difficulty for ZSS is that if D[...] and M[...] [1] spoke
and
discussed that they would both walk away, that bespeaks dissensus as
to [2] what that meant. M[...]: that it meant that D[...]
forgave
repayment, as M[...] alleged. D[...]: that it merely meant that they
would not seek to build a business as they had envisaged
in 2013, but
not that he forgave the debt. In reply D[...] denied any agreement at
all.
19.
On
ZSS’s version, the next enquiry is whether, even in absence of
consensus, there was apparent consensus upon which ZSS reasonably
could rely – the doctrine of quasi-mutual assent.
[5]
ZSS could not so reasonably rely, on account of the inherent
improbability. So, accepting ZSS’s
bona
fides
,
there was no oral contract.
20.
What
was telling was that before he deposed to his affidavit, M[...] at no
stage wrote that ZSS and D[...] agreed that D[...] would
forgive the
debt. I would have expected M[...] naturally to have done so in
answer to D[...]’ emails and WhatsApp messages
he received in
the two weeks prior to 28 March 2023, which he experienced as
harassing and bullying.
[6]
21.
When
finally M[...] answered D[...], what he wrote was “
I
was under the impression that this matter was comprehensively
concluded seven years ago”
.
An impression does not a contract make.
[7]
On the contrary, M[...] acknowledged that whatever he thought had
transpired in 2016 left him with a sense which differed from
that of
D[...]. M[...] himself acknowledged dissensus.
When
finally M[...] answered D[...], M[...]
did
not write that in 2016 D[...] agreed to forgive repayment.
Winding-up
22.
In
the circumstances I concluded that ZSS was unable to discharge the
onus to show that it
bona
fide
disputed D[...]’ claim on reasonable grounds. D[...] applied
for liquidation on the ground that ZSS was unable to pay its
debts as
and when they become due. The debt which D[...] contended ZSS would
be unable to pay was that due to him. That debt established,
and ZSS
unable to call to aid the
Badenhorst
rule, the inability to pay was common cause: ZSS refused to retain
the sale proceeds to pay D[...]; ZSS offered no evidence that
absent
the sale proceeds it would be able to meet D[...]’ claim.
[8]
All indications were that it would become all but an empty shell. In
the circumstances my discretion to refuse an order was “
a
very narrow one that is rarely exercised then only in special or
unusual circumstances.”
[9]
There were no such circumstances.
23.
ZSS
argued that as registration had not yet taken place, the debt to
D[...] was not yet due. This, argued ZSS, was an insurmountable
-
though technical - hurdle.
The
argument overlooked that
prospective
liabilities must be taken into account in considering whether D[...]
has proved that ZSS is unable to pay its debts.
[10]
A prospective liability is one which, by reason of an existing
vinculum
iuris
between
the creditor and the company, will become enforceable on a date
determinable by reference to future events.
[11]
24.
D[...]’
claim was to become enforceable on transfer and therefore was a
prospective liability. The requirement to take into
account
prospective liabilities “
gives
the words ‘unable to pay its debts’ an extended meaning
in this context”
.
[12]
The result is that a Court will not refuse an order where “
it
is reasonably certain that the company will not be able to pay its
debts when they fall due”
.
[13]
As ZSS will not retain the sale proceeds and pay D[...], and does not
allege it will otherwise be able to pay, it is reasonably
certain
that ZSS will not be able to pay its debts to when they fall due.
[14]
When D[...]’ debt becomes due and ZSS fails to pay it, as it
says it will, and
ZSS
does not
retain the proceeds, as it refuses to do,
then
ZSS “
would
simply be making dispositions of its property which would become
void, or which could be set aside, if [ZSS] were subsequently
wound
up. Thus it is sufficient to establish that the company is in fact
insolvent.”
[15]
Conclusion
25.
At
the conclusion of the hearing on 25 April 2023 ZSS kindly
undertook that if there were transfer pending the grant or refusal
of
any order it would retain the sale proceeds. After considering the
matter, and on 3 May 2023
,
I ordered
that ZSS be provisionally wound up. On 10 May 2023 ZSS requested
my reasons. What I have set out above are them.
PATRICK, AJ
[1]
Kalil v
Decotex (Pty) Ltd
1988
(1) SA 932
(A) at 975J – 979F,
Orestisolve
(Pty) Ltd t/a Essa Investments v NDFT Investment Holdings (Pty) Ltd
2015 (4) SA 449
(WCC) paragraph 7 at 453H – J.
[2]
Ibid.
[3]
Badenhorst
v Northern Construction Enterprises (Pty) Ltd
1956
(2) SA 346
(T) at 347H – 348C,
Orestisolve
(Pty) Ltd t/a Essa Investments v NDFT Investment Holdings (Pty) Ltd
supra
paragraph
8 at A – E.
[4]
Hülse-Reutter
and Another v HEG Consulting Enterprises (Pty) Ltd (Lane and Fey NNO
Intervening)
1998 (2) SA 208
(C) at 218D – 219C;
Orestisolve
(Pty) Ltd t/a Essa Investments v NDFT Investment Holdings (Pty) Ltd
supra
paragraph
8 at 454E – F.
[5]
ABSA
Bank Ltd v Moore
2017(1)
SA 255 (CC), footnote 24:
“
Even
if there had been no 'meeting of the minds' between Brusson and the
Moores, it does not follow that no valid loan came into
existence.
Our law of contract has long recognised quasi-mutual assent as a
source of contractual obligation: since it would
be unrealistic for
contractual liability to be based solely on the parties' subjective,
and possibly hidden, intentions. So where
dissensus is not readily
apparent, the party who acts contrary to the apparent consensus may
well be held bound. This protects
a contracting party unable to
dispute the other's denial of their 'true' intention. See Sonap
Petroleum (SA) (Pty) Ltd (formerly
known as Sonarep (SA) (Pty) Ltd v
Pappadoglianis
[1992] ZASCA 56
;
1992 (3) SA 234
(AD)
[“
Sonap
”]
at 239I – J:
‘…
The
decisive question in a case like the present is this: did the party
whose actual intention did not conform to the common intention
expressed, lean the other party, as a reasonable man, to believe
that his declared intention represented his actual intention?’”.
[6]
McWilliams
v First Consolidated Holdings (Pty) Ltd
1982 (2) SA 1
(A) at 10E – H:
“
I
accept that 'quiescence is not necessarily acquiescence' (see Collen
v Rietfontein Engineering Works
1948 (1) SA 413
(A) at 422) and that
a party's failure to reply to a letter asserting the existence of an
obligation owed by such party to the
writer does not always justify
an inference that the assertion was accepted as the truth. But in
general, when according to ordinary
commercial practice and human
expectation firm repudiation of such an assertion would be the norm
if it was not accepted as correct,
such party's silence and
inaction, unless satisfactorily explained, may be taken to
constitute an admission by him of the truth
of the assertion, or at
least will be an important factor telling against him in the
assessment of the probabilities and in the
final determination of
the dispute. And an adverse inference will the more readily be drawn
when the unchallenged assertion had
been preceded by correspondence
or negotiations between the parties relative to the subject-matter
of the assertion. (See Benefit
Cycle Works v Atmore
1927 TPD 524
at
530 - 532; Seedat v Tucker's Shoe Co
1952 (3) SA 513
(T) at 517 - 8;
Poort Sugar Planters (Pty) Ltd v Umfolozi Co-operative Sugar
Planters Ltd
1960 (1) SA 531
(D) at 541; and of Resisto Dairy (Pty)
Ltd v Auto Protection Insurance Co Ltd
1963 (1) SA 632
(A) at
642A - G.)”
[7]
The dictionary definition of impression is “
an
idea, feeling, or opinion about something or someone, especially one
formed without conscious thought or on the basis of little
evidence”
.
[8]
Afrgri
Operations Ltd v Hamba Fleet (Pty) Ltd
2022
(1) SA 91
(SCA) paragraph 4 at 93I/J;
Orestisolve
(Pty) Ltd t/a Essa Investments v NDFT Investment Holdings (Pty) Ltd
supra
paragraph 21 at 458H – I.
[9]
Service
Trade Supplies (Pty) Ltd v Dasco & Sons (Pty) Ltd
1962
(3) SA 424
(T) at 428B;
Afrgri
Operations Ltd v Hamba Fleet (Pty) Ltd supra
paragraph
12 at 96E/F – F,
Orestisolve
(Pty) Ltd t/a Essa Investments v NDFT Investment Holdings (Pty) Ltd
supra
paragraph
18 at 457I – 458A.
[10]
Section 345(2) of the old Companies Act No 61 of 1973.
[11]
Du
Plessis v Protea Inryteater (Edms) Bpk
1965
(3) SA 319
(T) at 320G – H.
[12]
Blackman
et
al
Commentary
on the Companies Act page 14 – 134.
[13]
Ibid.
[14]
The offer to submit to urgent arbitration did not assist ZSS. It was
not coupled with an assurance that the arbitration could
be
completed before transfer, or an offer to retain the sale proceeds
until the outcome of the arbitration.
[15]
Ibid.
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