Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 66South Africa
Audacia Stellenbosch Market (Pty) Ltd v Downing Investments CC and Another (8552/21) [2022] ZAWCHC 66 (3 May 2022)
Headnotes
the locus standi of Hendrikse was not established. The court concluded that Hendrikse failed to show that the institution of the proceedings had been duly authorised by the company. For the same reasons, the court found that it could not be said that the confirmatory affidavit of Strydom was sufficient to conclude that the second intervening party was a shareholder of the company, and thus entitling the second intervening party to bring the application in that capacity.
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Audacia Stellenbosch Market (Pty) Ltd v Downing Investments CC and Another (8552/21) [2022] ZAWCHC 66 (3 May 2022)
Audacia Stellenbosch Market (Pty) Ltd v Downing Investments CC and Another (8552/21) [2022] ZAWCHC 66 (3 May 2022)
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sino date 3 May 2022
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE
DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
CASE NO: 8552/21
In the matter between
AUDACIA
STELLENBIOSCH MARKET (PTY) LTD
APPLICANT
AND
DOWNING
INVESTMENTS CC
FIRST INTERVENING PARTY
AUDACIA
WINES (PTY) LTD
SECOND INTERVENING
PARTY
Date of Hearing:
17 March 2022
Date of Judgment:
3 May 2022 (to be delivered via email to the respective counsel)
JUDGMENT ON
APPLICATION FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL
THULARE
J
[1] Ordinarily it is not
desirable, in my view, for judicial officers to make a statement in
respect of criticism of their judgments,
even in the context of an
application for leave to appeal. Judicial Officers should speak once,
for as long as it is necessary
and as short as possible, on the
issues relevant for the just determination of the case, in
pronouncing their judgment. This application
for leave to appeal is a
classic example of why it is sometimes impossible not to speak, and
in fact necessary for one to speak,
on the issues after judgment.
[2] In the judgment on 7
February 2022 the court found that the onus was on Hendrikse to
establish his authority to act on behalf
of the applicant in bringing
the application and that in the absence of a resolution of the
company, it was impossible to find
that the company authorized
Hendrikse to institute the proceedings. The court was unable to
conclude that Hendrikse had the mandate
to depose to a founding
affidavit on behalf of the company and held that the
locus standi
of Hendrikse was not established. The court concluded that Hendrikse
failed to show that the institution of the proceedings had
been duly
authorised by the company. For the same reasons, the court found that
it could not be said that the confirmatory affidavit
of Strydom was
sufficient to conclude that the second intervening party was a
shareholder of the company, and thus entitling the
second intervening
party to bring the application in that capacity.
[3] The second
intervening party had passed a resolution which authorized it to
intervene in the liquidation application and the
appointment of the
attorneys in furtherance thereof and authorized Strydom to sign all
and any documentation relating to the application
to intervene. In
considering the resolution, the court found that the second
intervening party at the time, was already aware that
the authority
of Hendrikse, Strydom and their attorneys to represent the company
was disputed. A notice in terms of Rule 7 to this
effect had been
prepared on 21 July 2021 and served on them and they had already
replied thereto in a reply dated 16 August 2021
and filed at court on
17 August 2021. The court found that the second intervening party did
not authorize Strydom to seek the intervention
in order to secure a
provisional order of liquidation in its own name.
[4] In the application
for leave to appeal, the applicant said that the application was
brought in the name of the company by the
one director, Hendrickse,
and by the other shareholder, the second intervening party who was
also a director. It is argued in the
application for leave to appeal,
that the extended
locus standi
provisions of section 157 (1)
of the Companies Act, 2008 (Act No. 71 of 2008) (the Act) permitted
an application for the winding
up of the company by any party
directly contemplated in the Act (the second intervening party both
as creditor and shareholder)
and secondly Hendrikse as director,
being parties contemplated in section 81 of the Act and the deponent
to the founding papers
in the application for the winding up of the
company. It was further argued that section 157 (1) of the Act also
permitted any
party (Hendrikse as director of the party) acting on
behalf of a party directly contemplated in the Act (in
casu
the
company) who cannot act in their own name because of the deadlock, to
bring the application on behalf of that party, being the
company.
[5] The case was that on
any basis, there was an application for the winding up of the company
before the court, whether:
(a) by the company which
could not act in its own name as it was not possible to pass a
special resolution due to the deadlock,
hence the need for Hendrikse,
as one of the directors and the second intervening party as
shareholder and creditor, to bring the
application on its behalf; or
(b) by these two parties
in their own rights.
[6] The case is that the
Act in any event permitted one or more directors or one or more
shareholders to bring the application and
that is what Hendrickse and
the second intervening party were doing, if not in form, in
substance. It is argued that section 81
of the Act specifically
provided for the winding up application to be brought and the
situation was the one directly contemplated
in section 81 and fell
within the first category of standing contemplated in section
157(1)(a) of the Act and that section 157(1)(b)
was also applicable
given that the company could not act in its own name due to the
deadlock. It was argued that the court erred
in dismissing the
application for the winding up of the company on the authority point
alone and in not considering the merits
of the winding up application
and not granting the provisional order sought.
[7] The first intervening
party opposed the application for leave to appeal. It highlighted two
factual findings of the court which
were not disputed or challenged
in the application for leave to appeal. In the first, the court found
that Hendrikse stated in
the founding affidavit that he was duly
authorized to depose to the affidavit and to bring the application
and that he did so with
the support of the 50% shareholder. The first
intervening party argued that Hendrikse’s statement under oath
was incompatible
with the submission now being advanced in the
application for leave to appeal, that Hendrikse was acting in terms
of the extending
standing to apply for remedies in terms of section
157 of the Act. Section 157 envisaged a situation where the company
could not
act in its own name, whilst Hendrikse stated under oath
that he had been authorized by the company to both depose to the
affidavit
and bring the application which showed that on his version
the company could act in its own name.
[8] The second factual
finding was that the onus was on Hendrikse to establish his authority
to act in bringing the application
and that in the absence of the
resolution of the company, it was impossible to find that the company
authorized Hendrikse the institute
the proceedings. It was argued
that the applicant did not dispute that the application was brought
on the basis that the company
had authorized Hendrikse and further
not disputed that this authorization had in fact not been given by
the company. According
to the first intervening party, that was the
end of the matter.
[9] The first intervening
party’s case was that the bringing of the liquidation
application in the name of the company, under
the circumstances, was
untenable for at least three reasons.
(a) it results in there
being no party cited as the respondent.
(b) it complicates the
question of costs
(c) it attempts to avoid
the requirement that an applicant comes to court with clean hands.
In first intervening
party’s view to do so under these circumstances where there is
a deadlock and dispute between co-directors
and co-shareholders
constitutes a clear abuse of process.
[10] It was further
argued that section 157 did not make provision for a party to bring
an application in the name of the other
party. It provided for a
person to bring an application in their own name of behalf of
another. In this matter, according to the
first intervening party,
this was not a case where the company could not act in its own name
as envisaged in section 157(1)(b)
of the Act. The factual position
was that the company did not want to do so as half of the persons in
control of the company were
opposed to the liquidation. No leave was
sought for an application to be brought by a person acting in the
public interest, for
purposes of section 157(1)(d). Both Hendrikse
and the second intervening party qualified in terms of section
81(1)(d) to apply
to court for an order to wind-up the company in
their own names and they accordingly both had an alternative remedy.
[11] The first
intervening party argued that the court’s finding that the
second intervening party did not authorize Strydom
to seek the
intervention in order to secure a provisional order of liquidation in
its own name, was not disputed by the second
intervening party in its
application for leave to appeal. In the second intervening party’s
notice of motion it did not ask
anything more than it be allowed to
intervene in the liquidation application as co-applicant in so far as
this may be necessary.
It neither asked for a provisional order of
liquidation in its own name, nor made out a case for such relief to
be granted to it.
It was further argued that fatal to the request for
a provisional order being granted at the second intervening party’s
instance
was the fact, which was conceded by the second intervening
party at the hearing of the liquidation application, that no Master’s
report was filed on its behalf. It was argued that accordingly, the
second intervening party neither asked for, nor complied with
the
requirements for a stand-alone liquidation application. The first
intervening party’s conclusion was that there was no
merit in
the application for leave to appeal.
[12] Section 17(1)(a)(i)
and (ii) of the Superior Courts Act, 2013 (Act No. 10 of 2013)
provides as follows:
“
Leave
to appeal may only be given where the judge or judges concerned are
of the opinion that: -
(i)
The appeal would have a
reasonable prospect of success; or
(ii)
There is some other
compelling reason why the appeal should be heard, including
conflicting judgments on the matter under consideration;”
[13]
The sacred principle of our law,
audi
alteram partem,
translates
in that even abusers deserve an equal opportunity to be heard. For
that reason one deems it prudent to engage with the
arguments
advanced and pronounce oneself thereon, in its proper context, that
is whether, having regard thereto, the applicants
would have a
reasonable prospect of success or it offered some other compelling
reason why the appeal should be heard.
[14] Furthermore, where
the initial judgment did not deal exhaustively with a ground of
appeal relied upon in the application for
leave, it is highly
desirable for the presiding officer, in the judgment on the
application for leave to appeal, to indicate that
the evidence was
carefully considered [
Parkes v Parkes
1921 AD 69
at the bottom
of page 74]. It has been held, in the context of a Rule 51(8) of the
Magistrates’ Courts Rules of Court, that
a response of the
judicial officer to grounds of appeal served to assist the court of
appeal in dealing with the appeal in a speedy,
efficient and
cost-effective manner. This was because the parties would be informed
with precision as regards the points on which
to prepare for the
appeal [
S v M
1978 (1) SA 571
[NPD] at 573A-D] and this would
also enable the court to cut to the heart of the appeal and finalise
it [
Regent Insurance Co Ltd v Maseko
2000 (3) SA 983
(WPA) at
990C-E]. There is no compulsion to say anything if everything that
needed to be said was said in the substantive judgment
and the
judicial officer considered the reasons to be adequate, however, a
failure to give proper reasons on grounds provided might
work an
injustice to one or both parties [
S v M, supra,
at C].
[15] Section 81(1)(d) of
the Act provides:
“
81.
Winding-up of solvent companies by court order. –
(1)
A court may order a
solvent company to be wound up if –
(d) the company, one or
more directors or one or more shareholders have applied to the court
for an order to wind up the company
on the grounds that –
(i) the directors are
dreadlocked in the management of the company, and the shareholders
are unable to break the deadlock, and –
(aa) irreparable injury
to the company is resulting, or may result, from the deadlock; or
(bb) the company’s
business cannot be conducted to the advantage of shareholders
generally, as a result of the deadlock.
(ii)the shareholders are
deadlocked in voting power, and have failed for a period that
includes at least two consecutive annual
general meeting dates, to
elect successors to directors whose terms have expired; or
(iii)
It is otherwise just
and equitable for the company to be wound up;”
[16] Section 157(1)(a)
and (b) of the Act provides as follows:
‘
157.
Extended standing to apply for remedies.
(1)
When, in terms of this
Act, an application can be made to, or a matter can be brought
before, a court, the Companies Tribunal, the
Panel or the Commission,
the right to make the application or bring the matter may be
exercised by a person –
(a)
Directly contemplated
in the particular provision of this Act;
(b)
Acting on behalf of a
person contemplated in paragraph (a) who cannot act in their own
name;”
[17] The material parts
of the first five paragraphs of the founding affidavit to the main
application read as follows:
“
I,
the undersigned
WYNAND HENDRIKSE
Do hereby make oath and
state:
1.
I am an adult male
businessman and a director of the Applicant.
2.
…
3.
I am duly authorized to
depose to this affidavit and bring this application for the
winding-up of the Applicant. I do so with the
support of the 50%
shareholder of the Applicant, whose confirmatory affidavit as
aforesaid is filed herewith.
The Parties:
4.
The applicant is
Audacia Stellenbosch market (Pty) Ltd, with registration number:
2012/005367/07, a company duly registered and
incorporated in
accordance with laws of the Republic of South Africa with its
registered address at Audacia Wines, R44 Highway,
Stellenbosch, 7613
Western Cape Province. A copy of the company search of the Applicant
is annexed marked “WHI”.
Relief Sought:
5.
This is an application
for the winding-up of the Applicant on the basis that it has lost its
substratum, is dormant and no longer
functioning, its directors and
shareholders are deadlocked on resolving to do so themselves and the
winding-up would be just and
equitable.”
[18] The following
paragraphs are material to the second intervening party’s
application. The deponent to its founding affidavit
said:
“
I,
the undersigned,
TREVOR GORDON STRYDOM
Do hereby make oath and
say that:
1.
I am an adult male
business man and director of Audacia Wines (Pty) Ltd and c/o Audacia
Wines, R44 Highway, Stellenbosch.
2.
I am duly authorized to
depose to this affidavit and bring this application for leave for
Audacia Wines (Pty) Ltd, as a 50% shareholder
of Applicant, to
intervene in the above application in so far as may be necessary
pursuant to the provisions of
section 81(d)
of the
Companies Act, Act
71 of 2008. A resolution to that effect is annexed marked “TS1”.
3.
…
4.
I bring this
application in an abundance of caution.
5.
…
6.
As appears from
paragraph 3 of the founding papers in that application I deposed to
the founding affidavit in the winding up application
in order to
express my support on behalf of the Audacia Wines (Pty) Ltd, both as
50% shareholder of the Applicant and as creditor,
in the bringing of
the application.
7.
…
8.
Audacia Wines (Pty)
Ltd, in its capacity as a creditor of the company, therefore also has
a direct interest in the winding up of
the company and insofar as it
needs to be joined in its own name
in
order for it to support the application currently before court on its
behalf in any event, it seeks leave to be so joined/intervene.”
(bold,
italics and underlined for my own emphasis).
[19] There was no special
resolution by the company to be wound up by the court or a special
resolution by the company to apply
to court as regards its winding
up. The court provided reasons I deem adequate as to why it was not
established that the company
applied for the order sought in the main
application. The authority of Hendrikse to act on behalf of the
applicant was disputed
and the court found that it was not
established. There was no application before the court by Hendrikse
as a director or by the
second intervening party as a shareholder and
creditor of the company. Basic necessaries for such an application,
like the Master’s
report in respect of an application by
Hendrikse or the second intervening party were not filed, simply and
primarily because they
were not necessary for what was before court.
This is the reason why the judgment of the court did not pronounce
itself on the
standing of Hendrikse, in his name as a director, or
the second intervening party in its name as a shareholder and
creditor, to
bring the application.
[20] The fact that the
directors are deadlocked in the management of the company or that the
shareholders are deadlocked in voting
power may be a ground for a
court to order that a solvent company be wound-up, but on its own
does not confer
locus standi
on a director or a shareholder to
unilaterally act on behalf of the company. This is not how I
understand section 81(1)(d) of the
Act and by extension section
157(1)(a) of the Act. The well- established grounds of
locus
standi
should still be met. I understand the sections, read
together, to provide for a director or shareholder to bring an
application
in their own name on behalf of the company. Hendrikse and
the second intervening party did not have standing, as envisaged in
section
157(1)(a), to act on behalf of the company in the company’s
name.
[21] I understand section
157(1)(b) to include persons in the position beyond those provided
for in section 81 of the Act in respect
of the winding up of solvent
companies by a court order. What the section envisaged is a departure
from the common law approach
to this type of litigation which is
individualistic, to an African jurisprudential approach which is
communal. It is a provision
which champions a cause which includes
that when a winding-up of a solvent company is considered by the
courts, the interests of
the applicants should not be narrowly
construed but should be widely construed. In other words, the
character of a winding-up application
of a solvent company must be
inclusive and not exclusive. In interpreting standing, I understand
this part of our law to favour
freedom from technical and formalistic
restraints of access to court proceedings through an extended
construction of the law. This
in my view envisaged the inclusion of
any person not covered by section 157(1)(a), who could not ordinarily
obtain instructions
from or authority from the person envisaged in
section 157(1)(a). In the founding affidavit, such person should set
forth grounds
to the satisfaction of the court explaining:
(a) their relationship
with the person envisaged in section 157(1)(a),
(b) why they were acting
on behalf of the person contemplated in section 157(1)(a) and
(c) why the person
envisaged in section 157(1)(a) cannot act in their own name.
[22] Section 157(1)(b)
was not designed to provide a multiplicity of opportunities for
persons envisaged in section 157(1)(a) of
the Act. It was intended to
be an extension of the foundations of
locus standi
to persons
not covered by section 81 in respect of applications for winding up
of companies that were still solvent. Even if I am
wrong on this
point, a party purporting to be acting on behalf of a person
contemplated in section 157(1)(a) who cannot act in
their own name,
must clearly identify themselves and it must be clear as to the
person in whose stead they are acting, properly,
in the citation of
the parties including in the particulars of the claim. It must be
clear that the party referred to in section
157(1)(b) is a party as
envisaged in that section. In my view, a person covered by section
157(1)(a) cannot simply decide to jump
out of a provision
specifically designed for their
locus standi,
without
explaining why that provision is not appropriate in their case. An
interested party like the first intervening party deserves,
in our
law, to have an opportunity to fully engage with the particulars in
(a) –(c) as set out in paragraph 21 of this judgment,
in
assisting the court to determine the issues.
[23] For these reasons I
make the following order:
(a)
The application for
leave to appeal in respect of the company is dismissed. Wynand
Hendrikse is to pay the costs on attorney and
client scale.
(b)
The application for
leave to appeal in respect of the second intervening party is
dismissed. The second intervening party to pay
the costs on attorney
and client scale.
DM
THULARE
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
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