Case Law[2023] ZAWCHC 169South Africa
Vincemus Investments (Pty) Ltd v Bekker N.O. and Others (12477/2020) [2023] ZAWCHC 169 (25 July 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
25 July 2023
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
>>
2023
>>
[2023] ZAWCHC 169
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Vincemus Investments (Pty) Ltd v Bekker N.O. and Others (12477/2020) [2023] ZAWCHC 169 (25 July 2023)
Vincemus Investments (Pty) Ltd v Bekker N.O. and Others (12477/2020) [2023] ZAWCHC 169 (25 July 2023)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAWCHC/Data/2023_169.html
sino date 25 July 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:
COSTS – Winding up –
Wasted costs
–
Vincemus obtaining provisional order for winding up of Travea –
Vital not seeking to intervene but launching
separate application
and final order obtained – Whether Vincemus’ costs in
its abortive application (including
the costs of two counsel where
employed) should be costs in the liquidation of Travea –
Where position of liquidators
is that they will not include
Vincemus’ claim in the liquidation and distribution account
–
Insolvency Act 24 of 1936
,
s 97.
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
WESTERN CAPE DIVISION,
CAPE TOWN
REPORTABLE
CASE NO: 12477/2020
In the matter between:
VINCEMUS INVESTMENTS
(PTY) LTD
(Registration
number: 196[…])
Applicant
And
MARTHINUS
JACOBUS BEKKER N.O.
First Respondent
OTTLIE
ANTON NOORDMAN N.O.
Second Respondent
AVIWE NTANDAZO
NDYAMARA N.O.
(In their capacities
as joint liquidators of
TRAVEA
(PTY) LTD (in liquidation)
Third Respondent
VITAL
FLEET (PTY)
LTD
Interested Party
in re:
VINCEMUS INVESTMENTS
(PTY) LTD
(Registration
number: 196[…])
Applicant
And
TRAVEA
(PTY)
LTD
Respondent
Bench:
P.A.L. Gamble, J
Heard:
6 March 2023
Delivered:
25 July 2023
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties' representatives via email and release to SAFLII. The
date
and time for hand-down is deemed to be 10h00 on Tuesday 25 July 2023.
JUDGMENT
GAMBLE, J:
INTRODUCTION
1.
This is the extended return day of a rule
nisi issued by Binns-Ward J on 28 October 2022 relating to that most
common of disputes:
the recovery of costs incurred in litigation. The
matter has a rather turgid history.
2.
On 7 September 2020, the present applicant
(“Vincemus”) launched an application in this Division
under case no 12477/20
for the winding-up of Travea (Pty) Ltd
(“Travea”), which allegedly owed it a substantial amount
of money. That application
was opposed with Travea, inter alia,
contesting the extent of its liability to Vincemus. The application
wound its way through
the Motion Court and was eventually referred to
the semi-urgent roll where it was heard on 22 February 2021. Having
heard full
argument, Nyati AJ reserved judgment and later handed down
a provisional winding-up order on 21 May 2021, returnable on 21 July
2021.
3.
In the meanwhile, another creditor, Vital
Fleet (Pty) Ltd (“Vital”), launched a separate
application for the winding-up
of Travea on 8 February 2021 under
case no 2474/21. That application was served on Vincemus’
attorneys on 10 February 2021
and the matter was enrolled for hearing
in the Fast Lane of the Motion Court on 23 February 2021. Vital
approached the court in
the full knowledge that Vincemus’
application was already pending. However, it did not seek leave to
intervene as a creditor
in that application and says that it
preferred to launch a separate application to put the ailing company
out of its misery there
and then. It did so, it says, because it
believed that its claim against Travea, unlike that of Vincemus, was
uncontestable.
4.
Vital’s application was heard by
Samela J on 23 February 2021, the very day after Nyati AJ had
reserved judgment in Vincemus’
application. The matter was not
opposed by Travea despite proper service on it and Samela J was
persuaded to grant a provisional
winding-up order there and then. The
return day of that order was fixed as 12 April 2021 when the
provisional order was confirmed
in the absence of any opposition.
Pursuant to Samela J’s provisional winding-up order, the First
to Third Respondents were
duly appointed as the provisional
liquidators of Travea on 25 March 2021, which appointments were
subsequently confirmed on 1 March
2022.
5.
The consequence of the confirmation of the
provisional order made by Samela J was that the adjourned proceedings
pending before
Nyati AJ became redundant: it is trite that once the
provisional order made by Samela J had been made final, it was not
competent
for Nyati AJ to make a similar order while the order of
Samela J remained operative. Travea had already been declared to be
finally
wound up and that was the end of its corporate life. I should
stress that it appears that Nyati AJ was not informed by any of the
parties of the existence of the provisional order of Samela J. The
judgment of Binns-Ward J indicates that he was informed by counsel
from the Bar that Samela J had been informed of the upcoming
application before Nyati AJ but Binns-Ward J notes that there was
no
evidence before him to that effect.
6.
In the result, on the return day of the
order of Nyati AJ, Vincemus did not seek confirmation of the
provisional order. Rather,
it sought to amend para 4 of its notice of
motion to read as follows –
“
That
the costs of this Application be costs in the estate of [Travea],
alternatively
that
the costs of this Application shall be paid as administrative costs
in the estate of [Travea] consequent upon the provisional
order of
liquidation under case number 2474/21, issued by (sic) [Vital]
against [Travea] which was heard on 23 February 2021 and
granted on 2
March 2021, and which order was made final on 20 April 2021
consequent upon the hearing thereof on 13 April 2021.”
7.
In a nutshell then, Vincemus asks that its
wasted costs expended in the abortive winding-up application before
Nyati AJ be paid
by the liquidators as part of the administrative
costs in the winding up of Travea. This application (which I shall
call “the
costs application”) is opposed by the
liquidators, on the instructions of the other creditors of Travea.
THE COSTS’
APPLICATION
8.
The costs application elicited a
substantial bundle of papers and was eventually heard on 12 October
2022 by Binns-Ward J who found
favour with the relief sought. On 28
October 2022, His Lordship delivered a considered judgment and issued
a rule nisi calling
on all interested parties to show cause on 6
March 2023 as to why an order should not be made directing that
Vincemus’ costs
in its abortive application (including the
costs of two counsel where employed) should be costs in the
liquidation of Travea.
9.
By the time the matter came before this
Court on 6 March 2023, Vital had joined the fray as an interested
party pursuant to the
judicial invitation issued by Binns-Ward J on
28 October 2022. To that end it filed an affidavit on 9 February 2023
in which it
sought to persuade this Court that the rule nisi issued
by His Lordship should be discharged. This elicited a response from
Vincemus
on 20 February 2023 in the form of a replying affidavit.
10.
Counsel for Vincemus did not file fresh
heads of argument for the hearing on the return day but relied on the
extant heads filed
when the matter was before the court in October
2022. The heads on behalf of Vital were filed very late – on
Friday 3 March
2023, the last court day before the hearing. When the
matter was called before this Court it appeared that the rule had not
been
served on The Master and so her attitude on this rather unusual
point was not known. This was important in light of the argument
advanced by Vital that by granting the relief sought in the costs
application, the Court would be depriving The Master of her statutory
discretion to disallow such costs when assessing the liquidation and
distribution account eventually submitted to her by the liquidators.
In addition, the Court did not have the benefit of heads of argument
from counsel for Vincemus in response to those filed on behalf
of
Vital.
11.
The Court accordingly extended the return
day to 18 May 2023, directing that the rule be served on The Master
thus affording her
an opportunity to file an explanatory report, if
so advised. The parties were also given the opportunity to file
affidavits in
response to any issues raised by The Master. Finally,
Vincemus was directed to file heads of argument in reply to Vital’s
argument.
12.
In the result, The Master did not file any
report with the Court, while, in the interim, Vital filed an
application for condonation
of the late filing of its heads of
argument. As fate would have it, the Court was indisposed on 18 May
2023 and the parties thus
agreed that the matter would be dealt with
further by the Court in chambers on the basis of the papers filed of
record. In addition,
they agreed to the filing of further written
submissions, which were duly lodged. The matter is thus to be dealt
with on the papers
as they stand.
13.
The pertinent facts are set out in the
judgment of Binns-Ward J and need not be repeated herein. In addition
to those facts set
out above, I would mention the following. After
their appointment, the liquidators were initially not averse to
considering the
payment of Vincemus’ costs as part of the
administration of Travea and advised Vincemus that the creditors had
“
provisionally agreed
”
thereto. However, the liquidators advised Vincemus that a final
decision could only be taken once the creditors had been
afforded the
opportunity to consider a bill of costs.
14.
At the second meeting of creditors, which
was convened on 1 July 2022, the liquidators put forward a proposal
that Vincemus’
costs be paid as part of the administration.
This proposal was supported only by Vincemus, with the remaining 17
creditors whose
claims had been proved voting against it. The
objection appears to have been based, not on any principle in law,
but purely on
account of the extent of the bill of costs.
15.
In the result, the liquidators wrote to
Vincemus on 8 July 2022 informing it that payment of its costs was
contrary to the express
wishes of the remaining creditors and that
they would be obliged to oppose the costs application. Thereafter, a
settlement proposal
was made by the liquidators to settle the costs
application in an endeavour to avoid the running up of further
expense in the administration.
However, this did not find favour with
Vincemus which proceeded to argue the matter before Binns-Ward J.
16.
The parties before Binns-Ward J were only
Vincemus and the liquidators. The latter duly advanced argument to
the Court as to why
the costs should not form part of the
administration in the liquidation. The principle complaint then was
that the costs application
was premature because the liquidators had
yet to decide whether to include such costs in the final liquidation
and distribution
account before submitting it to The Master.
17.
The liquidators further argued that there
was no basis in law for the costs application, which it was said
sought relief contrary
to the provisions of
s 97
(and in particular
s97(3)) of the Insolvency Act, 24 of 1936 (“the Act”)
which governs the payment of the taxed costs
of sequestration. As
will be seen hereunder, s97(2) prescribes the ranking of such costs
and is qualified by s97(3) which gives
content to the term where it
is used in that subsection.
“
97
Cost of sequestration
(1)
Thereafter any balance of the free residue shall be applied in
defraying the costs of sequestration of the estate in question
with
the exception of the costs mentioned in subsection (1) of section
eighty-nine
.
[1]
(2) The costs of
sequestration shall rank according to the following order of priority
–
(a) the sheriff’s
charges incurred since the sequestration;
(b) fees payable to the
Master in connection with the sequestration;
(c) the following costs
which shall rank
pari passu
and abate in equal proportions if
necessary, that is to say: the text costs of sequestration (as
defined in subsection (3), the
fee mentioned in section 16 (5), the
remuneration of the
curator bonis
and of the trustee and all
other costs of administration and liquidation including such costs
incurred by the trustee in giving
security for his proper
administration of the estate as the Master considers reasonable, in
so far as they are not payable by a
particular creditor in terms of
section 89(1), any expenses incurred by the Master or by a presiding
officer in terms of section
53(2) and the salary or wages of any
person who was engaged by the
curator bonis
or the trustee in
connection with the administration of the insolvent estate.
(3)
In paragraph (c) of subsection (2) the expression ‘taxed costs
of sequestration’ means the costs (as taxed by the
registrar of
the court) incurred in connection with the petition of the debtor for
acceptance of the surrender of his estate or
of a creditor for the
sequestration of the debtor’s estate, but it does not include
the costs of opposition to such a petition,
unless the court directs
that they shall be included
.”
VITAL’S RESPONSE
TO THE
RULE NISI
18.
On the return day, as I have said, Vital
entered the lists and advanced reasons as to why the costs
application should not be granted.
Any suggestion that Vital
approached the Court in the costs application as a disinterested
party is illusory. Its affidavit in
opposition was deposed to by its
director Mr. Uren, who also deposed to the founding affidavit in
Vital’s urgent liquidation
application heard by Samela J and,
further, it has been represented throughout by the same attorneys and
counsel who appeared on
behalf of the liquidators before Binns-Ward
J. Vital clearly has an interest to ensure that sufficient funds are
available to the
liquidators to settle its claim in full.
19.
Vital’s case as pleaded is
essentially a regurgitation of that advanced earlier by the
liquidators and its intervening affidavit
in these proceedings raises
precious little by way of new facts for further consideration by this
Court. Rather it is replete with
argument urging this Court to
discharge the rule and proceeds from the premise that –
“
[7]
Binns-Ward J did not make any
prima
facie
findings in respect of the
question whether [Vincemus’] costs should be included in the
administration costs of Travea or
not. This aspect has been deferred
in toto
to
be decided on the return day of the rule
nisi.
”
20.
That
argument is specious and demonstrates that the deponent has either
not properly read, or not understood, the clear wording
of the
judgment. Indeed, His Lordship made findings which are neither prima
facie nor provisional as the discussion below will
demonstrate. On
the contrary, Binns-Ward J made definitive findings of fact and law
in the course of exercising a wide discretion
regarding the recovery
of costs. The purpose of the court issuing a rule nisi was founded on
the practice suggested in
Aitchison
[2]
-
that all creditors should be granted an opportunity to be heard
before such an order is made final. With Vital having been granted
such an opportunity, this Court must now determine whether there is
any basis to reconsider the findings and the extent of the
costs
order made by Binns-Ward J.
21.
In its heads of argument Vital identified
four questions of law purportedly arising from that judgment which it
contends fall to
be considered now by this Court.
(a)
Firstly, was Vital entitled to institute and prosecute its urgent
application for the liquidation
of Travea while knowing of Vincemus’
application?
(b) Secondly, is the
court able to grant the relief claimed by Vincemus at this juncture
i.e. before the liquidators have drafted
a liquidation and
distribution account?
(c) Then, does a court
have the power and/or a discretion to award two sets of costs to form
part of the administration costs of
an insolvent company?
(d) Lastly, what
circumstances would permit the inclusion of a creditor’s costs,
if one creditor was not the creditor who
procured the order, as
administration costs pursuant to the provisions of s97(3) of the Act?
22.
I have considered the thorough and
well-reasoned judgment of Binns-Ward J and can find no reason to come
to a different conclusion,
notwithstanding Vital’s submissions
made on the return day. To avoid prolixity, I intend answering those
submissions collectively.
23.
In
his judgment, Binns-Ward J relied primarily on the decision in
Merchants’
Trust
[3]
for
the finding that Vincemus was entitled, as of right, to seek to
recover its costs. His Lordship found support for this view
in the
judgment of the Full Bench in
Hankins
[4]
and
Simms
Service Station
[5]
and
observed, following
Aitchison
,
that such an order could be made provided the other creditors had
been given notice to object. While those cases found that the
demand
for the payment of costs such as those incurred Vincemus should first
be made on the liquidator, they did not proscribe
the entitlement in
law to make such a claim.
24.
In this matter, as Binns-Ward J observed,
it was pointless requiring Vincemus to follow that route because the
liquidators had already
indicated that they would not recognize the
claim. Thus, His Lordship followed the directions in the cases to
afford the other
creditors the opportunity to be heard before
directing that Vincemus’ costs should be costs in the
liquidation.
25.
In the exercise of his judicial discretion
to sanction the inclusion of Vincemus’ costs in the costs of
the liquidation, Binns-Ward
J, correctly in my view, had regard to
the fact that it was
bona fide
in
approaching the court initially. Further, His Lordship considered
that Vital launched its application of extreme urgency well-knowing
that Vincemus had already approached the court in the ordinary course
for a provisional order which was to be heard the day after
it set
down its application in the Fast Lane. The learned Judge rightly
excoriated Vital for not seeking to intervene as a co-creditor
in the
Vincemus application which was the obvious step to take in the
circumstances, given that the latter application was well-advanced
and ripe for hearing. If Vital considered that its claim was akin to
the proverbial silver bullet, it should have joined the extant
application and added a round to the chamber in the revolver pointed
at Travea rather than attempting to sneak in via the side
door, if I
may be permitted to mix my metaphors.
26.
The complaint by Vital that the admission
of Vincemus’ claim as a preferent claim will render its claim
worthless and possibly
lead to a contribution by creditors is no
basis for objection. It really amounts to a plea
ad
misericordiam
by a creditor which
expediently adopted an unwarranted approach. Had Vital followed the
correct route as suggested by Binns-Ward
J, the litigation costs in
this liquidation would have been significantly reduced. It is thus
the cause of any short-fall that
it may suffer in its claim against
Travea.
27.
Lastly,
there is the decision of Berman J in this Division in
Courier
Townhouse
[6]
which
counsel for Vital argued in their “Short Submissions” of
25 May 2023 was clear authority for the proposition that
only one set
of costs was recoverable in a case of a multiplicity of applications
for sequestration. The judgment is hailed as
a “landmark
ruling” which is “binding authority” on this Court.
28.
With respect, there is nothing novel in the
judgment of Berman J which, I should point out, was reserved and
later delivered after
an unopposed hearing in the Motion Court, with
the court not having had the benefit of argument from the competing
or other interested
creditors. Be that as it may, and while His
Lordship expressed some reservations in that regard, the judgment is
not binding authority
for the proposition that only one set of costs
may be recoverable under s97(3) of the Act, as the following passage
at 1041G makes
clear.
“
It
seems to me then that, even if it is competent for this Court to
order that the costs of both competing creditors applying for
the
sequestration of their debtor’s estate should be included in
the cost of sequestration (as to which proposition I have
considerable doubt), the practice of this Court is to leave a
decision as to who should bear the costs incurred by the unsuccessful
creditor to the trustee.”
29.
The judgment thus refers to a practice in
this Division which evidently existed some 37 years ago and which, I
must confess, I am
not aware is still the practice. But whatever the
practice, the order which His Lordship granted left the decision as
to whether
such costs might be recovered to the discretion of the
trustee of the insolvent estate. That is certainly in accordance with
the
approach advocated in cases such as
Aitchison
and
The Merchants’ Trust
and manifestly does not, in law, preclude an entitlement to recover
such costs. The case does therefore not bind this Court to
refuse
Vincemus’ application.
30.
As far as the “practice” of
leaving the matter to the discretion of the liquidators is concerned,
I agree with Binns-Ward
J that this would serve little purpose in the
instant case because the liquidators have repeatedly made their
position clear –
they will not include Vincemus’ claim in
the liquidation and distribution account. In para 25 of the judgment
His Lordship
adverted to the “special circumstances”
inherent in this matter as affording him the basis to exercise his
discretion
to direct that Vincemus’ costs be included in the
liquidation. Those circumstances, in my view correctly, distinguish
this
matter from the “normal” situation discussed in
cases such as
Hankins
and
Simms Service Station
.
COSTS
31.
Vital opposed Vincemus’ application
on the return day and has not succeeded in disturbing the conclusions
arrived at by Binns-Ward
J. In doing so it has introduced nothing new
to the debate and there is thus no reason why the insolvent company
should be saddled
with these costs, which should rather follow the
result.
32.
The liquidators initially opposed Vincemus’
application but then backed off at a late stage and indicated that
they would
abide. But in doing so they went so far as to file a
so-called “Liquidator’s Report” which was no more
than an
opposing affidavit dressed up as such. That report
necessitated a further reply by Vincemus which occasioned it further
costs.
As already noted, Vital and the liquidators share a
commonality of interests – what counsel for Vincemus
appropriately dubbed
a “complicity of intention” - and
there is thus no reason to permit Vital to seek to recover its costs
from the insolvent
company.
33.
Further, it was Vital’s conduct
that occasioned the postponement of the matter on 6 March 2023 when
it filed its opposing
papers at such a late stage that an adjournment
of the matter was inevitable. It should thus bear the wasted costs
incurred by
Vincemus and the liquidators when the matter was
postponed.
34.
Given that Vincemus was statutorily
required to approach the court to secure a direction that the
liquidators should include its
wasted costs in the abortive
winding-up application, I am of the view that it is only the costs
occasioned by Vital’s opposition
that should be borne by it.
35.
Ex abundante cautela
I
shall direct that any remaining costs are to be costs in the
administration.
ORDER OF COURT
Accordingly, it is
ordered that
:
A.
The rule nisi issued in this matter on 28
October 2022 is confirmed.
B.
The applicant’s costs occasioned by
the opposition hereto by the interested party, Vital Fleet (Pty) Ltd,
are to be paid by
that interested party.
C.
The applicant’s costs occasioned by
its reply to the “Liquidators’ Report” of 9
February 2023 are to be
paid by the said liquidators, being the First
to Third Respondents herein.
D.
Any remaining costs are to be costs in the
administration of Travea (Pty) Ltd (in liquidation).
GAMBLE, J
APPEARANCES
For the applicant
Adv.
A.R. Sholto-Douglas SC and
Adv.
G. Brown
Instructed
by De Jager & Lordan Attorneys
Makhanda
c/o
Van der Spuy and Partners
Cape
Town.
For the first to third
respondents and the interested party
Adv.
M.P. van der Merwe SC and
Adv.
J. van Rooyen
Instructed
by Donn Bruwer Attorneys
Hartebeestpoort
c/o
Chris Fick & Associates Inc.
Cape
Town
[1]
Section 89 concerns such costs which have been incurred in relation
to the realization of any security which have not been covered
by
the secured asset.
[2]
Ex
parte Aitchison
1924 TPD 570
at 572
[3]
Ex
parte The Merchants’’ Trust Ltd
1930 TPD 142
at 146
[4]
Ex
parte Hankins and another: in re Cellocrete Manufacturing Co (Pty)
Ltd
1950 (2) SA 611
(N) at 614
[5]
Simms
Service Station v Maharaj
1960 (3) SA 465
(N)
[6]
Courier
Townhouse (Pty) Ltd v Myers
1986 (4) SA 1038
(C)
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Vincemus Investments (Pty) Ltd v Bekker N.O. and Others In re: Vincemus Investments (Pty) Ltd v Travea (Pty) Ltd (12477/2020) [2022] ZAWCHC 207 (28 October 2022)
[2022] ZAWCHC 207High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)100% similar
Visigro Investments (Pty) Ltd v SFF Association (14906/2022) [2024] ZAWCHC 356 (3 June 2024)
[2024] ZAWCHC 356High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)98% similar
Varnardo Investments (Pty) Ltd and Another v K2012150042 South Africa (Proprietary) Ltd (19618/2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 22; 2023 (4) SA 314 (WCC) (9 February 2023)
[2023] ZAWCHC 22High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)98% similar
Gamlam Investments (Pty) Ltd v Coetzee (Appeal) (A108/2025) [2025] ZAWCHC 569 (25 November 2025)
[2025] ZAWCHC 569High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)98% similar
Infovest Consulting (Pty) Ltd and Another v Libra Partners LLC (19524/2018) [2023] ZAWCHC 85 (3 May 2023)
[2023] ZAWCHC 85High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)98% similar