Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 67South Africa
Cudlipp N.O. and Others v Maitland N.O. and Others (15628/2015) [2022] ZAWCHC 67 (3 May 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
3 May 2022
Judgment
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## Cudlipp N.O. and Others v Maitland N.O. and Others (15628/2015) [2022] ZAWCHC 67 (3 May 2022)
Cudlipp N.O. and Others v Maitland N.O. and Others (15628/2015) [2022] ZAWCHC 67 (3 May 2022)
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sino date 3 May 2022
Republic
of South Africa
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case
No. 15628/2015
Before:
The Hon. Mr Justice Binns-Ward
Date
of hearing: 19-21, 25, 28 April 2022
Date
of judgment: 3 May 2022
In
the matter between:
DAVID
JOHN CUDLIPP
N.O.
First Plaintiff
HUSSEINALI
HIRJI
N.O.
Second Plaintiff
SAMIRA
NASSER-HIRJI
N.O.
Third Plaintiff
ASHRAFALY
MOHAMED
N.O.
Fourth Plaintiff
SHAHZIA
MOHAMED
N.O.
Fifth Plaintiff
MILTIADIS
KOUMBATIS
N.O.
Sixth Plaintiff
LIAQAT
PARKER
N.O.
Seventh Plaintiff
and
ALLAN
OWEN MAITLAND
N.O.
First Defendant
OLIVIER
JOSEPH AMEDEE MAUJEAN N.O.
Second Defendant
JOSEPH
JACQUES MICHEL MAUJEAN N.O.
Third Defendant
LOUIS
MARIES JOSEPH ROBERT MAINGARD N.O.
Fourth Defendant
IMRANNE
BUX
N.O.
Fifth Defendant
AKTHAR
HASSEN GOOLAM HOOSEN SHAIK N.O.
Sixth Defendant
JOSEPH
JACQUES MICHEL MAUJEAN N.O.
Seventh Defendant
MARK
ANDREW McCALL
N.O.
Eighth Defendant
CLAIRE
ANNE MAUJEAN
N.O
Ninth Defendant
OLIVIER
JOSEPH AMEDEE MAUJEAN N.O.
Tenth Defendant
OLIVIER
JOSEPH AMEDEE MAUJEAN
Eleventh Defendant
LOUIS
MARIES JOSEPH ROBERT MAINGARD
Twelfth Defendant
AKTHAR
HASSEN GOOLAM HOOSEN
Thirteenth Defendant
JUDGMENT
BINNS-WARD
J
[1]
The first, second and third plaintiffs are the trustees of the Hirji
Trust
who have sued in their capacities as such. The fourth, fifth,
sixth and seventh plaintiffs are the trustees of the Ashrim Trust
in
their capacities as such. They sued as cessionaries of the claims
asserted by Huesseinali Hirji and Ashrufaly Mohamed against
the
Robmain Trust, the AHGH Shaik Family Trust and the OJA Maujean Family
Trust ‘arising from or relating to’ an agreement
entered
into by the cedents on 28 May 2012 for the purchase of all the
issued shares in Green Willows Properties 302 (Pty)
Ltd (‘GWP
302’). The said agreement was referred to in the deed of
cession as the ‘Original Agreement’
and the forementioned
Robmain Trust, AHGH Shaik Family Trust and OJA Maujean Family Trust
were collectively described therein as
‘the Original Sellers’.
The subject matter of the cession was described in the deed as the
cedents’ ‘claim/claims
against the Original Sellers
arising from or relating to the Original Agreement and certain non
disclosures (sic) and similar defaults
perpetrated by the Original
Sellers’.
[2]
The first to fourth defendants are the trustees of the Robmain Trust,
who have been sued in their capacities as such. The fifth and sixth
defendants are the trustees of the AHGH Shaik Family Trust and
seventh to tenth defendants those of the OJA Maujean Family Trust.
Messrs Olivier Maujean, Robert Maingard and Akhthar Shaik, who
number
amongst the forementioned trustees joined as the first to tenth
defendants, have also been joined in their personal capacities
as the
eleventh, twelfth and thirteenth defendants, respectively. The claim
against the last-mentioned three defendants was brought
by reason of
their alleged liability as sureties for the debts of the sellers
under the forementioned ‘Original Agreement’.
[3]
The agreement that Messrs Hirji and Mohamed, qua ‘buyers’,
concluded with the Robmain, AHGH Shaik Family and OJA Majean Family
Trusts, qua ‘sellers’, was for the purchase of
all the
issued shares in GWP 302’ for the grand sum of R200. Analysis
of that apparently simple and straightforward transaction
reveals,
however, that the sale of shares agreement was merely the mechanism
whereby the purchasers were to acquire, through GWP
302, two
operating shopping centres in Franschhoek for a total consideration
of over R59 million. The sale of shares agreement
was an
integral part of a complex contractual arrangement between the
parties, which fell to be understood with reference to what
are
described in clause 1.4 (m) of the agreement as the ‘Linked
Transactions’. The sale of shares agreement was signed
by the
purchasers on 24 May 2012 and on behalf of the sellers on 28 May
2012.
[4]
The ‘Linked Transactions’ were defined in the sale of
shares
agreement as ‘the transactions recorded in paragraphs
9.1, 9.2 and 9.3 below’.
[5]
Clause 9 of the sale of shares agreement bore the heading ‘Special
Terms’. It provided in sub-clauses 9.1 to 9.5 (sub-clauses 9.6
and 9.7 are not relevant for present purposes) as follows:
‘
9.1 It
is agreed between the parties that the Seller shall cause the Company
[ie GWP 302] The to enter into the Sale
of Enterprise Agreement
annexed hereto as Annexure “B” and to ensure that the
parties thereto perform their obligations
timeously and fully as
therein set out as soon as possible after fulfilment of all
suspensive conditions set out in this agreement.
9.2 It
is agreed between the parties that the Seller shall cause the Company
to enter into the Purchase of Property
Agreement annexed hereto as
Annexure “C”
[1]
and to ensure that the parties thereto perform their obligations
timeously and fully as therein set out as soon as possible after
fulfilment of all suspensive conditions set out in this agreement.
9.3 It
is agreed between the parties that the Seller shall prior to the
Effective Date cause the Company to enter
into a Sub lease Agreement
with GWP241 relating to a portion of the Property commonly known as
Lease Area Number 3 for an annual
rental inclusive of VAT of R1.00
for the balance of the duration of the period of the Notarial Lease
whereby GWP241 shall be liable
for all municipal charges relating to
the portion, whereby GWP241 shall not be permitted to conduct the
business of retail letting
on the portion of the Property and
otherwise on terms acceptable to the parties.
9.4 It
is further agreed between the parties shall, on the Effective Date,
advance to the Company a total of R59 000 000.00
plus the
costs of transfer, transfer duty and/or VAT which might arise from or
be associated with the agreements annexed hereto
as Annexures “B”
and “C”. The Company shall apply these funds to settle
the full claim of Investec against
the Company and/or GWP241 and for
the performance of its financial obligations in terms of the linked
transactions. The Purchaser
shall be obliged to deliver to the
Sellers banker’s guarantees reasonably acceptable to the
Sellers for such payment within
thirty (30) days from fulfilment of
all suspensive conditions.
9.5 The
Sellers shall prior to the Effective Date deliver to the Purchasers
suretyships in format reasonably acceptable
to the Purchasers whereby
Louis Marie Joseph Robert Maingard, Akthar Hassen Goolam Hoosen Shaik
and Oliver Joseph Amedee Maujean
bind themselves jointly and
severally as surety to the Purchasers for all the obligations of the
Sellers arising from or associated
with this agreement and to the
Company for the obligations of any of the other contracting parties
to the Company arising from
or associated with the agreements annexed
as Annexures “B” and “C” waiving the benefit
of division and
excussion.
The
’Effective Date’ was defined in clause 1 of the sale of
shares agreement to mean ‘the date of simultaneous
registration
in the Deeds Office of all the transactions contemplated in this
agreement which require Deeds Office registration’.
[6]
The sale of shares agreement was subject to a number of suspensive
conditions,
including -
1.
The confirmation by the buyers within 60 days of the date of
signature of the
agreement that they were satisfied with the due
diligence investigation. The term ‘due diligence investigation’
was
defined to mean ‘the due diligence investigation to be
undertaken by the Buyers on the affairs of the Company and of the
Linked Transactions’.
2.
The procurement within 60 days of date of signature of the agreement
of a loan
‘on behalf of the Company to enable the Company/the
Buyers to honour its obligations in terms of this agreement and the
Linked
Transactions’.
3.
‘Trade Quick’s (sic) Board of Directors approving in
writing the
terms of Annexure “C” within a period of
ten (10) days from Date of Signature’.
[7]
Clause 11 of the sale of shares agreement provided:
‘
11.1 In addition
to any other warranties given in terms of this agreement, the Sellers
give to the Buyers the warranties set out
in Annexure “A”.
Each of the said warranties constitutes a material representation
inducing the buyers to enter into
this agreement.
11.2 Save where the
context clearly indicates the contrary:
(a)
each warranty is given at the Effective Date and at the date of
signature of this agreement and is a
continuing warranty which will
remain in force notwithstanding the fulfilment of any terms and
conditions of this agreement;
(b)
each warranty is given and shall be enforceable separately.’
[8]
Clause 12 of the sale of shares agreement provided:
‘
Indemnity
The Sellers hereby
indemnify the Buyers and/or the Company against any loss whatsoever
which may arise as a result of a breach or
failure of any of the
warranties set out in this agreement and in the Schedule of
Warranties annexed and against any liability
up to the Effective
Date. In particular the Sellers indemnify the Buyers against any
taxation liability of the Company in respect
of its activities up to
and including the effective date.’
[9]
Item 12 of the schedule of warranties annexed to the sale of shares
agreement
provided:
‘
To the best of
their knowledge and belief the sellers have disclosed to the buyer
all facts and circumstances within their knowledge
which are
reasonably likely to be material to a purchaser of the shares and
shareholders loan accounts on the terms and conditions
set out in the
agreement.’
[10]
Annexure B to the sale of shares agreement was a ‘Memorandum of
Agreement of Sale
of Enterprise between Green Willows Properties 241
Proprietary Limited (“the Seller”) and Green Willows 302
Proprietary
Limited (“the Buyer”)’. The document
evidenced an agreement concluded between the Green Willows Properties
241
(Pty) Ltd (‘GWP 241’) and GWP 302 in respect of the
sale as a going concern of an operating shopping centre on land
leased by GWP 302 from Transnet. It is common ground that the
contract annexed as annexure B to the sale of shares agreement was
duly implemented and it plays no role in the dispute being litigated
in the action.
[11]
The matter
in contention involves the agreement, a copy of which was attached to
the sale of shares agreement as Annexure C. It
was the contract
referred to in clause 9.2, quoted earlier.
[2]
That was an agreement concluded between GWP 302 and Tradequick 108
(Pty) Ltd (‘Tradequick’). It concerned the sale
of
another shopping centre, also as a going concern. The
res
vendita
was described in the agreement as ‘the Rental Enterprise as a
going concern’. The term ‘Rental Enterprise’
was
defined as ‘the rental enterprise carried on by the Seller [ie
Tradequick] and includes (1) the Property and improvements
and
(2) all the Seller’s right, title and interest in and to
the Leases’. The ‘Property’ was described
as
‘(1) Erf 714 Huguenot Road Franschhoek (3015 m
2
in extent) with a gross building area of 1469 m
2
held by Deed of Transfer No T 23466/2005’ and ‘(2) Erf 692
La Rochelle Road Franschhoek (535 m
2
in
extent) with a gross building area of 260 m
2
held by Deed of Transfer No T 51929/1999’. The purchase price
was R29 500 000.
[12]
Unbeknown to Messrs Hirji and Mohamed when they concluded the
agreement for the purchase
of all the shares in GWP 302, Tradequick,
represented by Mr Robert Maingard (cited, in his respective personal
and representative
capacities, as fourth and twelfth defendant in the
action), had, on 24 March 2011, entered into a written agreement
with Ravenscoe
Properties 327 (Pty) Ltd (‘Ravenscoe’) in
terms of which the parties agreed on a reciprocal servitude of right
of way
approximately five metres wide for the purposes of pedestrian
access over Erf 714 Franschhoek and the Remainder of Erf 269
Franschhoek,
which at the time the agreement was concluded was about
to be transferred into Ravenscoe’s name. It was apparent from
the
deed of that agreement that it was Ravenscoe’s intention to
develop Erf 269 and the adjoining Erf 268 for mixed commercial
and
residential uses. A diagram attached to the servitude agreement
illustrated the ‘proposed buildings’ that it was
contemplated would straddle Erven 269 and 268 and the ‘existing
buildings’ on Erf 714 which comprised the structure
within
which Tradequick operated its shopping centre.
[13]
The section of the servitutal area that was to traverse Erf 714 ran
roughly through the
middle of the existing shopping centre,
congruently with the position of the arcade in the shopping centre
building. The arcade
opened off Huguenot Street (Franschhoek’s
main thoroughfare). It would be necessary, were effect to be given to
the right
of way granted in terms of the servitude agreement, to
break through the wall at the back of the existing arcade in the
shopping
centre owned by Tradequick to create an opening to the
adjoining building that Ravenscoe proposed to erect on the common
boundary
between Erven 269 and 268 on the one hand and Erf 714 on the
other. The existence of the servitude, if it came into being, would
restrict the ability of any owner of Erf 714 to reconfigure the
internal space of the existing shopping centre and obviously, would
similarly have to be accommodated in any possible future
redevelopment of the property.
[14]
Messrs Hirji and Mohamed were introduced to the shopping centres
ultimately purchased by
GWP 302 in the context described above by a
Franschhoek estate agent that was marketing them. The two shopping
centres were being
marketed along with a third centre across the road
from the Tradequick centre. Hirji and Mohamed dealt initially with
the agent,
Mr Dawid Jacobs, and were subsequently invited to
negotiate directly with the latter’s principal, Mr Robert
Maingard.
[15]
The three trusts that held the shares in GWP 302 (i.e. the sellers
under the sale of shares
agreement) had no interest in the Tradequick
shopping centre. GWP 302 held the head lease in respect of the
Transnet property on
which GWP 241 operated the other shopping
centre. GWP 302’s acquisition of the Tradequick shopping
centre was merely
for the purpose of satisfying the forementioned
structure in terms of which Messrs Hirji and Mohamed determined to
acquire both
shopping centres in a single corporate entity.
[16]
Mr Hirji explained in his evidence, which was uncontested in this
regard, that the purchase
of the two shopping centres by him and Mr
Mohamed was structured in the manner evidenced by the terms of the
sale of shares agreement
read with the annexed deeds of agreement in
respect of the ‘linked transactions’ in order to avoid
the delay and bureaucratic
entanglement that the parties feared would
be involved in transferring the leases that GWP 302 had with Transnet
to a different
entity. The funding required to give effect to the
linked agreements, including for the payment by GWP 302 of the
purchase price
to Tradequick for the enterprise conducted on Erven
714 and 692, was provided by Messrs Hirji and Mohamed, who arranged a
loan
to GWP 302 from a bank to cover the greater part of the cost and
personally advanced the balance on loan to the company.
[17]
The right of way servitude contemplated in the abovementioned
agreement between Tradequick
and Ravenscoe had not been registered
because Ravenscoe had still to acquire ownership of Erf 268 in order
to be able to proceed
with the contemplated development in respect of
which the servitude was intended operate. Ravenscoe also still needed
to obtain
planning permission for their proposed development. Messrs
Mohamed and Hirji were not informed of the existence of the servitude
agreement, and its existence went undetected in the due diligence
investigation provided for in the sale of shares agreement because
of
the absence of a registered record of it. It is obvious that Mr
Robert Maingard knew about the servitude agreement. He was a
director
of Tradequick and was the signatory to it on Tradequick’s
behalf. Mr Joseph Maujean, who was his fellow director
should also
have known about it. But there was nothing in the evidence to
indicate that the agreement would have been of any interest
to the
Robmain Trust, the AHGH Shaik Family Trust or the OJA Maujean Family
Trust or that Messrs Maingard or Joseph Maujean had
informed their
respective fellow trustees about it.
[18]
The duty to make disclosure of the servitude in the context of the
transactions linked
to sale of shares agreement was owed by the
directors of Tradequick to the directors of GWP 302. It is not
necessary to make
determination to that effect, but I think it is
also clear, in the context in which the sale of shares agreement was
concluded,
that there was a duty on Mr Maingard to have informed
Messrs Hirji and Mohamed about it because he must have appreciated
that their
interest was in the acquisition of the shopping centre and
that that was the only reason for them entering into the contract to
purchase the shares in GWP 302 and arranging the funds with which
that company was to buy the shopping centre. He would also have
appreciated that they were also the persons who would be incurring
the expense of undertaking the due diligence exercise contemplated
in
the sale of shares agreement.
[19]
It was, however, only on 18 April 2013, after the papers had been
lodged at the Deeds Office
for the conveyance of the Tradequick erven
to GWP 302, that Messrs Hirji and Mohamed were told about the
servitude by Mr Dawid
Jacobs. Mr Jacobs provided Mr Hirji with a copy
of the servitutal agreement later that evening.
[20]
Messrs Hirji and Mohamed were advised by their attorneys that they
were entitled to cancel
the contract on account of the
non-disclosure, but they elected not to do so. Mr Maingard told them
that he had not thought it
material to mention the servitude
agreement because he considered that the contemplated servitude would
be an enhancement to the
Tradequick property. I agree with the
opinion expressed by Mr Hirji during his testimony that if that were
really so one would
have expected Mr Maingard to have highlighted the
existence of the agreement for the purpose of marketing the sale of
the shopping
centre. Maingard declined a proposal by Hirji and
Mohamed that part of the purchase price payable by GWP 302 for the
Tradequick
property be withheld in trust pending determination of the
effect of the servitude agreement on its value. Maingard gave Hirji
and Mohamed to understand that he would probably be able to procure
the cancellation of the servitude agreement, failing which any
claim
by them arising from the existence of the servitude agreement could
be referred for arbitration.
[21]
The servitude agreement has not been cancelled and Ravenscoe
indicated that it intends
to hold GWP 302, as Tradequick’s
successor in title, to it. It would arguably be entitled to do so
because Mr Maingard was
also a director of GWP 302 when Erf 714 was
transferred to the company; cf.
Bowring N.O. v Vrededorp
Properties CC
[2007] ZASCA 80
(31 May 2007); 2007 (5) SA 391
(SCA) at para 16-17.
[22]
As mentioned, when Messrs Hirji and Mohamed purchased the shopping
centre on Erf 714 on
the basis described above, the contemplated
servitutal area coincided with the arcade that ran through the middle
of the building.
The arcade was lined with shops on either side, and
apart from as an area to provide pedestrian access to the shops it
was a space
that was not put to any commercial use. The chain store
supermarket that was the anchor tenant in the centre had its shop off
the
rear end of the arcade thus denying it the advantage of the high
street exposure that frontage onto Huguenot Street could give it.
[23]
I deduced from the general tenor of their evidence that Messrs Hirji
and Mohamed are experienced
commercial property investors. They
considered that the internal layout of the existing building could be
reconfigured to improve
the income generating capacity of the
shopping centre and also generally enhance its ability to attract to
passing trade. The most
significant means of achieving the
improvements would be by expanding the space used by the anchor
tenant into the arcade area
which, apart from any other
consideration, would give the anchor tenant high street frontage.
That would be done, of course, by
GWP 302, the company in which they
had acquired all the shares, and not by them personally.
[24]
Implementing the idea of reconfiguring the layout of the shopping
centre was not practicable,
however, whilst the prospect of the
contemplated servitude remained an unresolved issue. To that end GWP
302 managed to conclude
an agreement to purchase Erf 268. The owners
of Erf 268 were Dr and Mrs Heywood. Dr Heywood and an associate
conducted their
medical practice from the dwelling house situate on
Erf 268. Ravenscoe had already been engaged in discussions with
Dr Heywood
to acquire Erf 268 in order to proceed with its plan
to consolidate the erf with the adjoining Erf 269 for the purpose of
carrying
out the development of the consolidated erven on the basis
adumbrated in the forementioned servitude agreement. The discussions
had reportedly included making provision for Dr Heywood to continue
practising from rooms in the development Ravenscoe wanted to
proceed
with on the consolidated erf.
[25]
GWP 302 purchased the Heywood property in 2014 for R4 million,
which it is common
ground was about R750 000 above its open
market value. As part of the transaction, the purchaser was also
required to give
Dr Heywood the right to rent the property for six
years to continue conducting his medical practice there at a fixed
rental of
R5000 per month, which was considerably less than a
market-related rental would have been.
[26]
GWP 302 sold the Erf in 2021 for the sum of R5 million. GWP 302
incurred R250 000
in estate agent’s commission in that
transaction.
[27]
The parties agreed before the commencement of the trial that the
plaintiffs would proceed
only in respect of Claim A2 in the amended
particulars of claim. The claim was set forth in the following manner
in paragraphs
33-36 of the pleading:
‘
33.
The buyers were - by virtue of their acquisition of the shares in GWP
302 - the governing mind of GWP 302 after
the said acquisition.
34. The
enterprise which GWP 302 conducted after the performance of the
obligations under POC 1:
34.1 Comprised the
shopping centre enterprise as referred to in paragraph 22.4 above ,
and the Tradequick Rental Enterprise
referred to in paragraph 22.6.3
above;
34.2 Was
jeopardised by the servitude referred to in paragraph 25 above;
34.3 Threatened -
in the absence of steps in mitigation - to reduce the value of their
shareholding in GWP 302 by R3 500 000.00.
35. In
mitigation of these contemplated damages:
35.1 The buyers
procured that GWP 302 acquired Erf 268 from the owner, Dr Alexander
van der Horst Heywood [‘Heywood’];
35.2 In doing so:
35.2.1
They precluded the consolidation of Erf 268 Franschhoek with Erf
269
Franschhoek;
35.2.2
They rendered impossible the consolidation of these two erven
at the
behest of Ravenscoe
35.2.3
They removed the taint of the servitude over Erf 714;
35.3 In order to
persuade Dr and Mrs Heywood to sell Erf 268, the buyers:
35.3.1
caused GWP 302 to pay the sum of R1 million over and above the
market
value of the property, and – in so doing – reduced the
value of their shareholding in GWP 302 by R1 million;
35.3.2
caused GWP 302 to lease a portion of Erf 268 comprising 1160 square
metres to Heywood and, in so doing, GWP 302 suffered loss in that:
35.3.2.1
The lease will endure from 1 June 2014 until at least 1 June
2020;
35.3.2.2
The rental payable by Heywood is a fixed amount of R60 000
per
annum (computed at R5000.00 per month);
35.3.2.3
The market rental for the leased portion would have been R20 000
per month escalating at 8% per annum.
35.4 GWP 302
accordingly suffered a loss of R1 055 960.55, being the
present day value (after applying a discount
rate of 8%) of the
difference between:
35.4.1.1
The sum of R360 000.00 payable by Heywood over the first
six
years of the lease; and
35.4.1.2
The sum of R1 760 622.97, which would have been payable
over the same six year period had the area being let out at a market
related rental of R20 000 per month, escalating annually
at 8%.
36. In
the circumstances, the buyers:
36.1 Have suffered
damages in the sum of R2 055 960,55 (that is R1 m +
R1 055 960,55).
36.2 Have, in
writing as set forth more fully below in paragraph 38 below (sic),
ceded to the Plaintiffs nomine officio as
trustees for the Hirji
Trust and Ashrim Trust respectively, their rights to claim from
Defendants payment for the damages referred
to in paragraph 36.1
above. Therefore, Plaintiffs are entitled to sue the Defendants in
Plaintiffs’ capacity as cessionaries.’
[28]
Somewhat to my surprise, the expert opinion evidence led on both
sides was to the effect
that the servitude agreement did not have any
effect on the open market value of the Tradequick shopping centre in
the state in
which it was when GWP 302 purchased it. In the context
of the uncontested evidence that the price paid by GWP 302 for the
centre
was in line with the estimated market value of the property it
necessarily follows that the transaction did not have any adverse
effect on the net asset value of the company. It received fair value
for the price it paid for the rental enterprise. The existence
of the
servitude agreement therefore did not negatively affect the value of
the shareholding acquired by Messrs Hirji and Mohamed.
GWP 302 could
have disposed of the shopping centre at the same value as that at
which it had acquired it. The proposition pleaded
in paragraph 34.3
of the plaintiffs’ amended particulars of claim was accordingly
not supported by the evidence.
[29]
The evidence established that the basis for the claim was the adverse
effect the contemplated
servitude would have on GWP 302’s
ability to optimise the lettable area within the centre by
reconfiguring it in a manner
that would result in the anchor tenant
using the arcade space as part of its retail area. It was mentioned
in the course of the
trial that, after its acquisition of the Heywood
property so as to prevent the servitude agreement from becoming
capable of implementation,
GWP 302 expended approximately R1,5
million to alter the premises to the desired effect. What was
formerly dead space in the arcade
is now rented and used to good
effect by the new anchor tenant as part of its premises. The rental
income generating capacity of
the centre has been enhanced as a
consequence of the alterations. But the cost of achieving that result
was obviously increased
by the expenses necessarily incurred to
neutralise the effect of the servitude agreement.
[30]
The
plaintiffs’ claim was pleaded in contract, alternatively in
delict. The claim pleaded in contract was founded in an alleged
breach by the defendants of item 12 of the schedule of warranties
attached to the sale of shares agreement, which has been quoted
above.
[3]
The claim pleaded in
delict was founded on the allegedly fraudulent, alternatively,
negligent non-disclosure of the servitude agreement
between
Tradequick and Ravenscoe.
[31]
Regarding the claim pleaded in contract, Mr
Voormolen
submitted that the plaintiffs’ approach ignores the fact that
the seller trusts, as holders of the shares in GWP 302, had
no
interest in the Tradequick enterprise prior to the conclusion of the
sale of shares agreement. He contended that the warranty
by the
trustees of the seller trusts was given in relation to the sale of
the shares and loan accounts in GWP 302. He argued that
the fact that
Mr Maingard, a trustee of one of the trusts, was also a director of
Tradequick did not change the character of the
warranty from one
given by the sellers as sellers of their shares in GWP 302 into some
other warranty, such as a warranty by Tradequick
as to the absence of
any defect in the property it would be selling to GWP 302 in
terms of annexure C to the sale of shares
agreement. He submitted
that there could be no better illustration of the plaintiffs’
misdirection in construing the warranty
as pertaining to the
characteristics of the Tradequick rental enterprise than to consider
its effect on the trustees of the AHGH
Shaik Family Trust. The Trust
held shares in GWP 302, but there was no evidence to indicate that it
had any interest in the Tradequick
enterprise or that any of its
trustees had knowledge of Tradequick’s business.
[32]
In my judgment, Mr
Voormolen
’s argument is well made.
The sale of shares agreement, in respect of which the warranties were
provided, is a separate contract
from that in terms of which
Tradequick sold the rental enterprise to GWP 302. The fact that the
implementation of the one agreement
was conditional upon the
execution of the other and that the two contracts were expressly
described as ‘linked’ does
not derogate from their
discreteness. The warranty in the sale of shares agreement did not
pertain to the agreement of sale between
Tradequick and GWP 302.
[33]
Turning to examine the claim pleaded in delict. The evidence did not
sustain the allegation
of fraudulent non-disclosure. The disclosure
to Messrs Hirji and Mohamed of the servitude agreement prior to the
transfer of the
property from Tradequick to GWP 302 is irreconcilable
with an intention to conceal the fact of its existence. As already
mentioned,
however, I have no doubt, however, that the directors of
Tradequick were under a duty to have made the disclosure when the
contract
was concluded. They had exclusive knowledge of the agreement
in the relevant sense, and the right to have it communicated in the
circumstances would be mutually recognised by honest men in the
circumstances; cf.
Absa Bank Ltd v Fouche
2003 (1) SA 176
(SCA) at para 4-5 and the authority cited there. Their conduct in
failing to make the disclosure was unreasonable.
[34]
The duty to disclose the servitude agreement rested on Tradequick as
the seller in terms
of the agreement it entered into with GWP 302. It
was a duty owed to GWP 302, qua purchaser. The contention by the
plaintiffs’
legal representatives that Mr Maingard had been
acting as the seller trusts’ agent when he failed to make the
disclosure
does not bear scrutiny. Maingard’s responsibilities
and conduct in his capacity as a director of Tradequick were quite
discrete
from those of the defendant trustees.
[35]
It is
unnecessary for present purposes to determine whether in the peculiar
circumstances, in which Maingard appears to have acted
wearing more
than one hat in negotiating a composite agreement for the disposal of
the two unrelated shopping centres, he had an
independent duty in law
in his personal capacity to make disclosure of the servitude
agreement to Messrs Hirji and Mohamed. Assuming
ex hypothesi that he
did, would not alter the fact that the claim advanced in para 33-36
of the particulars of claim
[4]
is predicated on the wrong done to GWP 302 by reason that it, viz.
the company, was potentially restricted by the terms of the
servitude
agreement from being able to optimally use the shopping centre on Erf
714. The claim advanced in the plaintiffs’
particulars of claim
is predicated on the damages allegedly sustained by GWP 302 as a
consequence of the wrong done to it by reason
of the non-disclosure.
The company, and not its shareholders, would therefore be the proper
party to pursue the claim.
[36]
In the circumstances, Mr
Voormolen
’s contention that the
plaintiffs’ claim, as formulated, was an impermissible claim
for reflective loss was well founded.
The position in law in this
regard was authoritatively stated by Lord Bingham of Cornhill in
Johnson v. Gore Wood & Co.
[2000] UKHL 65
(14 December
2000)
[2000] UKHL 65
; ,
[2002] 2 AC 1
,
[2001] BCC 820
,
[2001] 1 All ER 481
,
[2001]
PNLR 18
,
[2001] 1 BCLC 313
,
[2001] 2 WLR 72
to be encapsulated in the
following three principles:
‘
1) Where a company
suffers loss caused by a breach of duty owed to it, only the company
may sue in respect of that loss. No action
lies at the suit of a
shareholder suing in that capacity and no other to make good a
diminution in the value of the shareholder's
shareholding where that
merely reflects the loss suffered by the company. A claim will not
lie by a shareholder to make good a
loss which would be made good if
the company’s assets were replenished through action against
the party responsible for the
loss, even if the company, acting
through its constitutional organs, has declined or failed to make
good that loss. So much is
clear from
Prudential
,
[5]
particularly at pages 222-3,
Heron
International
,
[6]
particularly at pages 261-2,
George
Fischer
,
particularly at pages 266 and 270-271,
[7]
Gerber
[8]
and
Stein
v. Blake
,
particularly at pages 726-729.
[9]
2) Where a company
suffers loss but has no cause of action to sue to recover that loss,
the shareholder in the company may sue in
respect of it (if the
shareholder has a cause of action to do so), even though the loss is
a diminution in the value of the shareholding.
This is supported by
Lee v.
Sheard
,
at pages 195-6,
[10]
George
Fischer and Gerber
.
3) Where a company
suffers loss caused by a breach of duty to it, and a shareholder
suffers a loss separate and distinct from that
suffered by the
company caused by breach of a duty independently owed to the
shareholder, each may sue to recover the loss caused
to it by breach
of the duty owed to it but neither may recover loss caused to the
other by breach of the duty owed to that other.
I take this to be the
effect of
Lee
v. Sheard
,
at pages 195-6,
Heron
International
,
particularly at page 262,
R.
P. Howard
,
particularly at page 123,
[11]
Gerber
and
Stein v.
Blake
,
particularly at page 726. I do not think the observations of Leggatt
L.J. in
Barings
at p. 435B
[12]
and of the
Court of Appeal of New Zealand in
Christensen
v. Scott
at page 280, lines 25-35,
[13]
can be reconciled with this statement of principle.’
[37]
In the same matter, Lord Millett explained the position to the same
effect as follows:
‘
A
company is a legal entity separate and distinct from its
shareholders. It has its own assets and liabilities and its own
creditors.
The company's property belongs to the company and not to
its shareholders. If the company has a cause of action, this
represents
a legal chose in action which represents part of its
assets. Accordingly, where a company suffers loss as a result of an
actionable
wrong done to it, the cause of action is vested in the
company and the company alone can sue. No action lies at the suit of
a shareholder
suing as such, though exceptionally he may be permitted
to bring a derivative action in right of the company and recover
damages
on its behalf: see
Prudential
Assurance Co. Ltd. v. Newman Industries Ltd. (No. 2)
[1982]
Ch. 204
at p. 210. Correspondingly, of course, a company's shares are
the property of the shareholder and not of the company, and if he
suffers loss as a result of an actionable wrong done to him, then
prima facie he alone can sue and the company cannot. On the other
hand, although a share is an identifiable piece of property which
belongs to the shareholder and has an ascertainable value, it
also
represents a proportionate part of the company's net assets, and if
these are depleted the diminution in its assets will be
reflected in
the diminution in the value of the shares. The correspondence may not
be exact, especially in the case of a company
whose shares are
publicly traded, since their value depends on market sentiment. But
in the case of a small private company like
this company, the
correspondence is exact.
This causes no difficulty
where the company has a cause of action and the shareholder has none;
or where the shareholder has a cause
of action and the company has
none, as in
Lee v. Sheard
[1956] 1 Q.B. 192
,
George
Fischer (Great Britain) Ltd. v. Multi Construction Ltd.
[1995]
1 B.C.L.C. 260
, and
Gerber Garment Technology Inc. v. Lectra
Systems Ltd.
[1997] R.P.C. 443.
Where the company suffers
loss as a result of a wrong to the shareholder but has no cause of
action in respect of its loss, the
shareholder can sue and recover
damages for his own loss, whether of a capital or income nature,
measured by the diminution in
the value of his shareholding. He must,
of course, show that he has an independent cause of action of his own
and that he has suffered
personal loss caused by the defendant’s
actionable wrong. Since the company itself has no cause of action in
respect of its
loss, its assets are not depleted by the recovery of
damages by the shareholder.
The position is, however,
different where the company suffers loss caused by the breach of a
duty owed both to the company and to
the shareholder. In such a case
the shareholder’s loss, insofar as this is measured by the
diminution in value of his shareholding
or the loss of dividends,
merely reflects the loss suffered by the company in respect of which
the company has its own cause of
action. If the shareholder is
allowed to recover in respect of such loss, then either there will be
double recovery at the expense
of the defendant or the shareholder
will recover at the expense of the company and its creditors and
other shareholders. Neither
course can be permitted. This is a matter
of principle; there is no discretion involved. Justice to the
defendant requires the
exclusion of one claim or the other;
protection of the interests of the company’s creditors requires
that it is the company
which is allowed to recover to the exclusion
of the shareholder. These principles have been established in a
number of cases, though
they have not always been faithfully
observed.’
[38]
Lord
Bingham’s statement of the law has been endorsed by the South
African courts, amongst others, in
Itzikowitz
v Absa Bank Ltd
[2016] ZASCA 43
(31 March
2016); 2016 (4) SA 432
(SCA) at para 9-
16,
[14]
Gihwala
and Others v Grancy Property Ltd and Others
[2016] ZASCA 35
(24 March 2016);
[2016] 2 All SA 649
(SCA);
2017 (2)
SA 337
(SCA) at para 107-110 and
Hlumisa
Investment Holdings RF Ltd and Another v Kirkinis and Others
[2020] ZASCA 83
(3 July 2020);
[2020] 3 All SA 650
(SCA);
2020 (5) SA
419
(SCA) at para 24-31.
[39]
For these reasons the claim cannot succeed. An order will accordingly
issue in the following
terms:
1.
The action for relief in terms of Claim A2 of the amended particulars
of claim
is dismissed.
2.
The plaintiffs shall be liable jointly and severally for the
defendants’
costs of suit.
A.G.
BINNS-WARD
Judge
of the High Court
APPEARANCES
Plaintiffs’
legal representatives: F.
Moosa
M.M. Pearson
Moosa & Pearson
Inc.
Rondebosch, Cape Town
Defendants’
counsel:
A.V. Voormolen SC
Defendants’
attorneys:
Cox Yeats
Durban
Clyde & Co
Cape Town
[1]
The
signed agreement was erroneously referred to in clause 9.2 as
‘Annexure “B”’, but it was common ground
that this was a common mistake amenable to rectification.
[2]
In
paragraph [5]
above.
[3]
In
paragraph [9].
[4]
Quoted
in paragraph [27]
above.
[5]
Prudential
Assurance Co. Ltd. v. Newman Industries Ltd. and others (No.
2)
[1982]
Ch. 204.
[6]
Heron
International Ltd. and Others v. Lord Grade, Associated
Communications Corp. Plc. and Others
[1983]
BCLC 244.
[7]
George
Fischer (Great Britain) Ltd. v. Multi Construction Ltd., Dexion Ltd.
(third party)
[1995]
1 BCLC 260.
[8]
Gerber
Garment Technology Inc. v. Lectra Systems Ltd. and another
[1997]
RPC 443.
[9]
Stein
v. Blake and Others (No.2)
[1997]
EWCA Civ 4002
(13 October 1997); [1998] 1 All ER 724 (CA); [1996] AC
243, [1998] BCC 316, [1998] 1 BCLC 573.
[10]
Lee
v. Sheard
[1956]
1 QB 192.
[11]
R.
P. Howard Ltd. & Richard Alan Witchell v. Woodman Matthews and
Co. (a firm)
[1983]
BCLC 117.
[12]
Barings
plc. (in administration) and another v. Coopers & Lybrand (a
firm) and others
[1997] 1 BCLC 427.
[13]
Christensen
v. Scott
[1996]
1 NZLR 273.
[14]
Disapproving
the judgments in
McLelland
v Hulett
1992 (1) SA 456
(D),
Kalinko
v Nisbet & others
2002 (5) SA 766
(W) and
McCrae
v Absa Bank Limited
unreported judgment of the South Gauteng High Court in case no.
42229/2008 delivered on 7 April 2009.
sino noindex
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