Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 256South Africa
SJC v TRC (10837/2016; 19689/2016; 17728/2021) [2022] ZAWCHC 256 (11 May 2022)
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## SJC v TRC (10837/2016; 19689/2016; 17728/2021) [2022] ZAWCHC 256 (11 May 2022)
SJC v TRC (10837/2016; 19689/2016; 17728/2021) [2022] ZAWCHC 256 (11 May 2022)
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sino date 11 May 2022
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN
Case
number: 10837/2016
Case
number: 19689/2016
Case
number: 17728/2021
In
the matter between:
S[....]
J[....]
C[....]
Applicant/Defendant
and
T[....]
R[....]
C[....]
Respondent/Plaintiff
####
JUDGMENT
(1) DELIVERED ON 11 MAY 2022
VAN
ZYL AJ:
# Introduction
Introduction
#
1.
The parties
are embroiled in a long-running divorce action instituted in June
2016 under case number 10837/2016, in which the applicant
in this
application is the defendant, and the respondent is the plaintiff.
The parties were married on 7 January 2006.
They have two minor
children, the eldest of whom suffers from diabetes, pervasive
developmental disorder and other chronic conditions.
2.
I shall refer
to the parties as, respectively, the “applicant” and the
“respondent”.
3.
What is in
dispute in the divorce action is,
inter
alia
,
whether certain funds provided by the respondent to the applicant in
the course of their marriage were not gifts, but were loans
repayable
on divorce. This issue features prominently in these
proceedings.
4.
There are
essentially five opposed applications before me:
4.1.
An application
instituted by the applicant for the provisional sequestration of the
respondent’s estate under case number
17728/2021.
4.2.
An application
brought In September 2021 under case number 19689/2016 by the
respondent in terms of Rule 43(6), seeking a variation
of an order
made in terms of Rule 43 on 4 April 2017.
4.3.
A
counter-application to the respondent’s Rule 43(6) application
under the same case number, in which the applicant seeks
an order
holding the respondent in contempt for failure to comply with the
Rule 43 order granted on 4 April 2017 and the directions
made for the
purposes of trial preparation by the relevant case management judge
(the Honourable Justice Dolamo) on 6 February
2018, 7 October 2020,
and 26 November 2020.
4.4.
A procedural
complaint raised by the respondent that the applicant may not raise
the respondent’s contempt by way of a counter-application.
4.5.
An application by the respondent for the
setting aside of a writ of execution obtained by the respondent on 8
November 2021 under
case number 19689/2016.
#
5.
The same facts inform most of these
applications. In what follows I shall address the sequestration
application first, as
the fate of Rule 43(6) application and the
application for the setting aside of the writ of execution depends
upon the outcome
of the sequestration application.
6.
I shall, in a follow-up judgment, deal with
the applicant’s contempt application and the respondent’s
objection as to
the competence thereof.
7.
Both parties had delivered certain
affidavits late, and they both applied for condonation in respect
thereof. Condonation
was duly granted.
The applicant’s
application for the sequestration of the respondent’s estate
8.
Section 10 of the Insolvency Act provides
as follows:
“
If the court to
which the petition for the sequestration of the estate of a debtor
has been presented is of the opinion that
prima facie
-
(a)
the petitioning creditor has established against the debtor a
claim such as is mentioned in subsection (1) of section nine;
and
(b)
the debtor has committed an act of insolvency or is insolvent;
and
(c)
there is reason to believe that it will be to the advantage of
creditors of the debtor if his estate is sequestrated,
it may make an order
sequestrating the estate of the debtor provisionally
.”
9.
The claim mentioned is section 9(1) is a
claim of at least R100,00.
10.
Even if the papers disclose disputes of
fact, an applicant will nevertheless succeed in establishing a
prima
facie
case where he or she can show
that “
on a consideration of all
the affidavits filed [that] a case for sequestration has been
established on a balance of probabilities
”,
though open to some doubt (
Kalil v
Decotex (Pty) Ltd and another
1988 (1)
SA 943
(A) at 978D-E).
11.
I proceed to consider each of these
requirements in turn.
The applicant’s
claim against the respondent
The claim of R4,5
million
12.
The applicant relies, firstly, for the purposes of
locus standi
upon a claim of R4,5 million against the respondent.
13.
The applicant and respondent are married to each other out of
community of property
with the application of the accrual system.
In terms of their declaration of assets, read with an agreement
concluded between
them on 28 December 2005, the parties agreed that
the applicant would be "
regarded as being the owner of a one
half share of [Erf [....], Cape Town] and have the same rights and
obligations as if she were
a registered owner
.” Erf
[....] is also known as [....] E[....] Avenue, Kenrock Estate, Hout
Bay, and is the parties’ former common
matrimonial home.
14.
In terms of clause 3 of the 2005 agreement, upon the disposition of
that property
the respondent would be liable to pay to the applicant
50% of the net proceeds of the sale. Clause 4 of the 2005
agreement
enjoined the respondent from seeking the applicant’s
permission prior to disposing of Erf [....].
15.
On 23 March 2011 the applicant acquired another property in the same
development,
namely [....] F[....] Lane in Kenrock Estate. The
F[....] Lane property was occupied by the applicant’s father
and
his partner until September 2014. It was thereafter placed on the
market to be sold. The proceeds of the sale were to be paid to
the
applicant, as she was the registered owner. The respondent, however,
asked to borrow those proceeds from the applicant. That
led to the
applicant and the respondent concluding a further written agreement
on 22 October 2014.
16.
In terms of the 2014 agreement the applicant would lend R4,5 million
of the
proceeds of the sale of [....] F[....] Lane to the respondent.
The respondent would be liable to repay the loan to the applicant
on
the date on which the transfer of the former matrimonial home, Erf
[....], was registered. On the date of registration, the
respondent
would become liable to pay to the applicant the sum of R4,5 million
or, if half of the proceeds of the sale was higher
than R4,5 million,
then the respondent was to pay to the applicant half of the proceeds
of the sale.
17.
There is a dispute between the parties as to whether the 2014
agreement was
concluded to substitute the 2005 agreement. The
respondent says that that was the case, and that the applicant had
abandoned her
claim in relation to the 50% nett proceeds of Erf
[....] in a statement of issues in dispute formulated for the
purposes of the
divorce action. Apart from the fact that the
“abandonment” was made on a without prejudice basis and
in an attempt
to settle and narrow the issues in the divorce action,
the dispute is not material to this application. Either way, the
respondent
would be indebted to the applicant in the sum of at least
R4,5 million or half of the net proceeds of the sale of Erf [....]
should
it exceed R4,5 million. Alternatively, if the 2005 agreement
and the 2014 agreement co-exist, then the respondent is liable to pay
to the applicant R4,5 million (pursuant to the 2014 agreement) and
half of the proceeds of the sale of Erf [....], or R4,5 million
(pursuant to the 2005 agreement), totalling at least R9 million.
18.
In October 2016 the applicant brought a Rule 43 application. The
respondent
was in court for the hearing of the application. His
counsel conceded that, when the matrimonial home (Erf [....]) was
sold then
the respondent would become indebted to the applicant in
the sum of R4,5 million. The respondent did not object to that
concession.
(I pause to mention that the respondent also
admitted that at least R4.5 million was due to the applicant on
registration of the
transfer of Erf [....] in his particulars of
claim, insofar as he asked for an order implementing the terms of the
antenuptial
agreement. The admission was repeated in the
respondent’s plea to the applicant’s counterclaim.)
19.
Despite the provisions of clause 4 of the 2005 agreement, which
required the
applicant’s permission prior to the respondent’s
disposing of Erf [....], the respondent concluded a sale agreement
in
respect of that property on 7 May 2021. Transfer was registered on 27
July 2021. In terms of the agreements between the parties,
the
respondent became liable to pay to the applicant at least R4,5
million on that date. The applicant was not aware of the sale
and
transfer at the time, and the respondent did not repay the loan to
the applicant as he was obliged to do.
20.
Instead, he used the proceeds of the sale to settle various expenses,
including
unvouched loans in the amount of more than R3 million made
to him by his brothers, friends, and his late father’s estate.
He also repaid his current account overdraft and credit card debt,
settled his legal fees and accommodation expenses, and settled
some
of the arrear maintenance owed to the applicant in terms of the rule
43 order. The respondent accordingly depleted the proceeds
of the
sale and (so the applicant contends) preferred other creditors above
the applicant.
21.
The respondent opposes the applicant’s claim for payment of the
R4,5 million
loan, alleging that the applicant is in fact indebted to
him in the sum of more than R9 million. He relies on set-off to
indicate
that the applicant in fact owes him money. The respondent
alleges that the applicant’s indebtedness towards him arises
from
seven loan agreement concluded between the parties during the
subsistence of their marriage. These loans are, however, undocumented
and there is no contemporaneous detail as to the dates on which they
were advanced, what the agreed terms were, and what the agreed
repayment date would have been.
22.
The respondent says, correctly so, that the status of these loans is
still to
be determined by this Court at the finalisation of the
divorce action. He therefore concedes that he would have to prove at
the
divorce trial that there was a meeting of the minds between the
parties to conclude seven loan agreements, repayable on divorce,
and
what the terms were. He must prove that the amounts alleged to have
been lent were in fact advanced to the applicant and have
been
correctly calculated in accordance with the provisions of the
respective loan agreements. It is clear that in the circumstances
the
respondent cannot rely on set off.
23.
In Gilliat v Sassin
1954
(2) SA 278
(C) the issue was whether the applicant creditor had a
liquidated claim in circumstances where she relied on an amount due
to her
as heir in terms of the first and final liquidation and
distribution account in her late mother’s estate, which the
respondent,
the executor, had misappropriated out of the estate. The
respondent took the point that the estate account had not yet been
finally
approved by the Master, and that it was possible that the
Master might require amendments to the estate account, in which case
the amount due to the applicant would be subject to alteration. The
court was called upon to determine whether, in these circumstances,
the applicant had a liquidated claim entitling her to apply for the
sequestration of the respondent’s estate. The court held
as
follows at 280A-D:
“
To
be regarded as a liquidated claim the petitioner’s claim must
be fixed and determined. This Court, in the case of
Stephan
v Khan
1917
CPD 24
–
a
decision which has frequently been followed not only in this Court
but in other Courts – held that “liquidated claim”,
as those words are used in sec. 9(1) of the 1916 Insolvency
Act, mean
a
claim the amount of which has been determined by a judgment of the
Court, by agreement or otherwise.
Now,
in the present case the amount of the petitioner’s claim –
and indeed whether she will have a claim at all –
is
conditional upon whether the account in the estate of the
petitioner’s late mother is accepted in the form in which it
presently stands. The account has, however, still to be advertised
and objection may successfully be taken thereto, which might
have the
effect of reducing her claim or even eliminating it altogether
.
Mr.Meyerowitz stated that in any event she had a prima
facie claim to the amount appearing in this account and that
it
was highly probable that an amount would eventually be found to be
due to her which would be in excess of £ 50. This may
be so,
but to my mind this does not go far enough to satisfy the provisions
of sec.
9(1), which require a liquidated claim.
”
(Emphasis
added.)
24.
To my mind the reasoning in
Gilliatt
v Sassin
is equally apposite in
relation to the respondent’s claim against the applicant.
25.
Setoff comes into operation when two parties are mutually indebted to
each other,
and both debts are liquidated and fully due (
Fatti’s
Engineering Co (Pty) Ltd v Vendick Spares (Pty) Ltd
1962 (1) SA
736
(T) at 738E-H). The respondent’s claims are clearly
unliquidated are this stage.
26.
It appears further that the respondent has failed to comply with
various pretrial
directives in terms of which he was to provide
details and supporting evidence of the loans, including their
quantification.
I agree with the applicant’s counsel that
the schedules annexed to the answering affidavit do not constitute
sufficient proof
of the alleged loans. They are not
contemporaneous, and were obviously created for the purposes of these
proceedings.
The bank statements attached by the respondent
also do not provide substantiation for the alleged loans; as they
just reflect payments
made to a conveyancing attorney. In fact,
the answering affidavit displays a startling paucity of information
in relation
to what is alleged to be a very substantial total loan
obligation.
27.
Moreover, the alleged loans date back to 2009. As counsel for
the applicant
points out, an absurdity arises on the respondent’s
allegations: if the respondent’s version is correct, then
he effectively concluded the 2014 agreement with the applicant so as
to borrow money from himself. He did not both conclude
loans
with the applicant in 2011 and 2012, in terms of which the applicant
would be indebted to him in the sum of more than R5,5
million, just
so as to borrow money from the applicant in 2014 which, on his
version, was his own.
28.
The essence of the respondent’s defence is thus that he has a
possible
contingent claim against the applicant, which he wishes to
set off (in the face of the established requirements for set-off)
against
the claim for payment of R4,5 million as acknowledged by him
in court and in his pleadings. His claim is a “possible”
one because the existence of such claim depends on the outcome of the
divorce proceedings, and not on the happening of some certain
future
events such as the arrival of specific date for the debt to become
due. The applicant’s claim is not in the
same category,
despite the respondent’s submission in his heads of argument
that such loan “
stands to be determined as part of the
consequences and determination of the parties’ matrimonial
estate as part of their
divorce proceedings
.” The
applicant’s claim is already admitted, and is liquidated, due
and payable.
29.
In determining whether a person is solvent, contingent liabilities
are only
one of the factors taken into account, including the
remoteness of the contingency. A court cannot simply add up
contingent and
prospective liabilities: what it must do is to take
into account the contingent liabilities, whether such liabilities are
likely
to become present and, if so, when: see
Henochsberg on the
Companies Act
61 of 1973 (5ed) at page 711. By analogy in
relation to the respondent’s contingent claim, I agree with the
applicant’s
counsel that in the present case the seven loans
that the respondent seeks to set off against the already due R4.5
million (in
respect of which a written agreement, concessions made in
court, and a written undertaking exist) are significantly remote
contingent
claims.
30.
In any event, why would the parties be punctilious in recording the
loan from
the applicant to the respondent in the 2014 agreement,
whilst not once recording in writing any such agreement in relation
to the
substantial sums allegedly lent by the respondent to the
applicant over the years? The respondent was, after all,
the
businessman in the relationship.
31.
If the respondent cannot prove the loans but can show that he thought
that they
were loans whilst the applicant thought that they were
gifts, the respondent might notionally fall back on a claim for
unjustified
enrichment. The problem is that this argument has never
been pleaded by the respondent at any stage in these proceedings or
the
divorce proceedings in general and, moreover, any enrichment
claim that he may have enjoyed against the applicant as regards the
payments made during the period 2009 to 2016 has already become
prescribed in terms of
section 11(d)
of the
Prescription Act 68 of
1969
.
#
32.
The respondent argues that there is a presumption against donations,
in support
for his argument that the parties had concluded loan
agreements over the course of their marriage.
33.
He relies, in this regard, on the decision of
Barkhuizen v Forbes
1998 (1) SA 140
(E), and he contends that there is sufficient
evidence before this Court to consider the payments made by him to
the applicant
as loans, and therefore as debt owed by the applicant
to the respondent. When those payments are considered to be loans,
the respondent
establishes a dispute sufficient to resist the
sequestration application.
34.
A reading of
Barkhuizen v Forbes
indicates, however, that it
is distinguishable from the present matter on a number of grounds,
the most important being that those
parties were in a romantic
relationship, but they were not married and they did not cohabit.
The Court found (at 151I-152C)
that those facts advocated against the
presumption
of
donations between spouses established in the
Appellate Division’s decision in
Smith’s Trustee v
Smith
1927 AD 482:
“
A further
factor to be considered is how the close relationship between the
parties may affect the issue of onus. In
Smith's
Trustee v Smith…
it was pointed out that '
although
apparently no presumption can be based merely upon the close
relationship between the parties . . . Mascardus (Idem No
43) points out that there is a presumption of a gift on the
grounds of blood or other relationship where no cause appears
from which such presumption can be rebutted'
.
In this case the Court
was concerned with the relationship between a husband and a wife. In
the present case we are not dealing
with any blood relationship nor
is the relationship anywhere near as close as husband and wife
where the parties may make
donations in order to protect themselves
against various legal problems which may arise. In this case the
parties did not even
cohabit and, although plaintiff was in love with
the respondent, this is not, in my view, sufficient to create a
presumption that
the amounts now claimed were donations. In any
event, and insofar as plaintiff has presented acceptable
evidence that the
amounts now claimed were loans, there appears a
'cause' from which any presumption of a donation can be rebutted.”
35.
In
Smith’s Trustee
the Court found (at 486) that
the
presumption against donations does exist but that it does not apply
to the case of a husband and wife for various reasons.
36.
The
Smith’s
Trustee
presumption is regarded as the
exception to the general rule relating to the presumption against
donations. This spousal exemption
was also referred to by this Court
in its full bench decision in
Mogudi v
Fezi
(A67/07)
[2007] ZAWCHC 46
(28
August 2007) where the court remarked at para [36], following a
discussion of
Smith’s Trustee
,
that the probabilities, based on the conduct of the appellant of the
nature and the parties’ relationship, pointed to an
act of
generosity and benevolence rather than to a loan. See also, in
this respect,
PGJ v AEJ
(unreported
decision of the Free State Division under case number 49498/2013,
delivered on 19 May 2016) at paras [1] and [24].
37.
The Court in
Barkhuizen v Forbes
was of the view that it was
important to have regard to the nature of the payments to determine,
on the probabilities, whether
the payments constituted gifts or loans
(at 149H). In the present matter, disregarding the payments made not
to the applicant but
to third parties, the respondent made payments
to the applicant for the purposes of acquiring [....] F[....] Lane so
that the applicant’s
father could reside in close proximity in
order to assist in caring for their eldest child who suffers from
certain medical issues;
gifting the applicant with offshore funds (up
to a maximum of R4 million); and securing a rental property for the
applicant and
the minor children in fulfilment of the respondent’s
maintenance obligations towards them.
38.
I am, however, not required to make a finding as regards the nature
of these
payments to determine whether they constituted gifts or
loans. What I must decide is whether the respondent’s defence,
namely
that he enjoys a contingent loan claim against the applicant,
is sufficient to resist the sequestration application.
39.
Is the applicant’s claim disputed to such an extent that the
grant of
a provisional order of sequestration is excluded? It
is not sufficient for a respondent in a sequestration application
merely
to dispute the claim of an applicant creditor. A claim
must be disputed on
bona fide
grounds (
Laeveldse Koöperasie
BPK v Joubert
1980 (3) SA 1117
(T) at 1120H). The
respondent relies on the so called
Badenhorst
rule (with
reference to
Badenhorst v Northern Enterprises (Pty) Ltd
1956
(2) SA 346
(T) at 347H-348C) which states that a court will refuse an
application for the provisional winding-up of a company if the
company
bona fide
disputes the applicant’s claim on
reasonable grounds.
40.
This Court considered this issue in
Gap Merchant Recycling CC v
Goal Reach Trading 55 CC
2016 (1) SA 261
(WCC) at paras
[26]-[27]:
“
I
see no reason for adopting a different approach when considering, in
liquidation proceedings, whether the applicant’s claim
is
bona
fide
disputed on reasonable grounds.
Bona fides
relates
to the respondent’s subjective state of mind while
reasonableness has to do with whether, objectively speaking, the
facts alleged by the respondent constitute in law a defence. The two
elements are nevertheless inter-related because inadequacies
in the
statement of the facts underlying the alleged defence may indicate
that the respondent is not
bona fide
in
asserting those facts. As
Hülse-Reutter
makes clear, the objective requirement
of reasonable grounds for a defence is not met by bald allegations
lacking in particularity;
and, as appears from
Breitenbach
and
El-Naddaf
,
bald allegations lacking in particularity are unlikely to be
sufficient to persuade a court that the respondent is
bona
fide
.
…
The
foregoing discussion treats the
Badenhorst
rule
as laying down a rigid legal test: if the application is
bona
fide
disputed
on reasonable grounds, the application must as a rule of law be
dismissed. That is far from being settled in our law. In
Kalil
v Decotex (Pty) Ltd & Another
1988
(1) SA 943
(A)
Corbett JA, after listing a number of decisions in which the rule in
slightly varying formulations had been adopted, said the
following
(at 980F-I):
‘
This
rule would tend to cut across the general approach to applications
for a provisional order for winding-up which I have outlined
above as
it is conceivable that the situation might arise that the applicant
could show a balance of probabilities in his favour
on the
affidavits, while at the same time the respondent established that
its indebtedness to the applicant was disputed on
bona
fide
and reasonable grounds. Whether the
Badenhorst
rule
should be accepted then as an exception to the general approach
relating specifically to the
locus
standi
of the applicant as a creditor,
and the further question as to whether it should be applied
inflexibly or only when it appears that
the applicant is in effect
abusing the winding-up procedure by using it as a means of putting
pressure on the company to pay a
debt which is
bona
fide
disputed … need not,
however, be decided in this case. The point was not argued before us
and, as I shall show, it seems
to me that for various reasons the
Badenhorst
rule
should not be applied here.’”
41.
Incidentally, the Court also referred at
para [28] to the opinion expressed in recent case law in this Court
that the
Badenhorst
rule,
to the effect that winding-up proceedings should not be resorted to
as a means of enforcing payment of a debt the existence
of which is
bona fide
disputed on reasonable grounds, may not go to
locus
standi
, and that it is rather a
self-standing and possibly flexible principle. See also the
discussion of the rule in
Orestisolve
(Pty) Ltd t/a Essa Investments v NDFT Investment Holdings (Pty) Ltd
and another
2015 (4) SA 499
(WCC) at
paras [7] to [13], and
Trinity Asset
Management (Pty) Ltd v Grindstone Investments 132 (Pty) Ltd
2018 (1) SA 94
(CC) at paras [92] to [93].
42.
In the present case, the respondent’s contingent claim against
the applicant
is an unliquidated claim, and a remote one at that for
reasons set out earlier, dependent on the divorce court eventually
making
a finding in favour of the respondent.
43.
In contrast, the applicant has an admitted liquidated claim in the
sum of R4,5
million, based on the written loan agreement concluded
between the applicant and the respondent on 22 October 2014. As
mentioned
previously, at the hearing of the
Rule 43
application the
respondent’s counsel, with the respondent in attendance at
court, conceded that the latter would become liable
to repay the R4,5
million loan to the applicant on the date on which transfer of Erf
[....] was registered. The loan was
admitted in the
respondent’s pleadings. The respondent was required to
repay the loan on 27 July 2021, which he failed
to do. He used
the funds for his own purposes.
44.
In the circumstances, I am of the view that the respondent cannot
dispute his
indebtedness to the applicant on
bona fide
and
reasonable grounds. His unliquidated contingent claim does not
constitute a defence on reasonable grounds for the purposes of
section 10 of the Insolvency Act. There is no basis on the papers for
me to exercise my residual discretion in the respondent’s
favour in the face of the applicant’s fulfilment of the
requirements of section 10 (see
Firstrand Bank v Evans
2011
(4) SA 597
(KZD) at paras [27] and [33];
Investec Bank v
Lambrechts
2019 (5) SA 179
(WCC) at para [60]).
45.
The applicant denies that the parties had concluded personal loan
agreements
in respect of any funds given to her during the course of
the marriage. She alleges that the funds paid to her were gifts, as
the
respondent was at that stage very wealthy and generous towards
the applicant, whom he at that stage appreciated had given up her
career to make a home and raise their two children. This is
plausible evidence, given the relationship that had existed between
them at the time.
46.
Where a respondent raises a dispute about his indebtedness, he has an
onus,
in the sense of an evidentiary burden, to show that the dispute
is raised
bona fide
and on reasonable grounds (
Kalil v
Decotex supra
at 956H). The respondent disputes his indebtedness
to the applicant and contends that the applicant does not have
locus
standi
in the sequestration application. In the light of the
discussion set out above, I do not think that the respondent has
discharged
the onus to show that his allegations establish a
bona
fide
dispute and that they are premised upon reasonable grounds.
47.
In these circumstances, I am satisfied that the applicant has a
prima
facie
claim against the respondent in the sum of at least R4,5
million, in satisfaction of the requirement set out in section 10(a)
of
the Insolvency Act.
The
applicant’s claim under the Rule 43 order
48.
The applicant relies, secondly, upon a claim for arrear maintenance
under a
Rule 43 order made on 4 July 2017, which obliged the
respondent to make monthly maintenance to the applicant pending the
finalisation
of the divorce action. The applicant claims that
the sum of R334 998, 02 is owing on account of arrear maintenance.
This is disputed by the respondent.
49.
In
Gobel v Gobel
(6935/13)
[2013] ZAWCHC 91
(28 June 2013)
this Court also considered an application for the sequestration of a
spouse’s estate in the course of divorce
proceedings. The
applicant’s claim was for arrear maintenance and other payments
due under a Rule 43 order. The
respondent had previously
brought a Rule 43(6) application in which he asked for an order
retrospectively to vary the original
Rule 43 order. The Court
found that, in those circumstances, the applicant’s claim was
not certain, as a subsequent
finding by the Court determining the
Rule 43(6) application with retrospective effect could result in the
applicant having no claim
at all. In the present matter, the
respondent’s Rule 43(6) application does not seek a
retrospective amendment of the Rule
43 order and
Gobel
is thus
distinguishable.
50.
Be that as it may, given the conclusion to which I have come in
respect of the
applicant’s claim for R4,5 million, I do not
need to address the maintenance claim at this juncture. I shall
do so
in a follow-up judgment in relation to the applicant’s
contempt application arising from the respondent’s alleged
non-compliance
with the order.
The respondent’s
factual insolvency and acts of insolvency
##
51.
In fulfilment of the requirements of
section 10(b) of the Insolvency Act, the applicant relies on the
respondent’s factual
insolvency, as well as certain acts of
insolvency said to have been committed in the course of the
litigation between the parties.
52.
In
Ullman Sails (Pty) Ltd v
Jannie Reuvers Sails (Pty) Ltd and Others; Ullman Sails International
Incorporated and Others v Reuvers
and another; Ullman Sails
International Incorporated and Others v Reuvers and another
(8225/2021; 8231/2021; 8232/2021)
[2022] ZAWCHC 38
(22 March 2022)
,
this Court held as follows at para [48]:
“
It
is not incumbent on an applicant relying on factual insolvency to
adduce evidence that would enable the respondent’s assets
and
liabilities to be finitely determined in rands and cents. It
would be a rare case, other than in the context of so-called
friendly
sequestrations, for an applicant to be able to do that. It is
well established that an applicant can discharge the
onus of
establishing a
prima
facie
case
on the basis of factual insolvency by adducing sufficient evidence to
justify the inference as a matter of probability that
the respondent
is insolvent. Once an applicant does that, the respondent
attracts an evidential onus to rebut the inference
by showing that he
does possess sufficient assets to be able to settle his liabilities,
see
Absa
Bank Ltd v Rhebokskloof (Pty) Ltd and Others
1993
(4) SA 436
(C)
at 443D-G and
Mackay
v Cahi
1962
(4) SA 193
(O)
at 204F-G. A strong and persuasive indicator of insolvency is
the failure by a respondent to pay his debts; cf the oft
cited
observation by Innes CJ in
De
Waard v Andrews & Thienhans Ltd
1907
TS 727
at
733:
‘
To
my mind the best proof of solvency is that a man should pay his
debts; and therefore I always examine in a critical spirit the
case
of a man who does not pay what he owes
’.”
(Emphasis supplied.)
53.
The respondent has indicated that he has
had to sell his vehicle and the former matrimonial home to pay his
debts. The value
of his 25% interest in two close corporations
has been reduced to zero following the sale of the corporations’
assets.
He has had to draw down on his capital and has
allegedly incurred loans totalling more than R3,5 million to meet his
monthly obligations.
54.
Whilst the respondent alleges that his
assets exceed his liabilities by almost R400,000, he attaches no
substantiation for this
allegation in his papers opposing the
sequestration application. More importantly, the liabilities listed
by the respondent do
not include his obligation towards the applicant
in the sum of R4.5 million. That must clearly be taken into account.
It
follows that the respondent’s liabilities exceed its assets
by more than R4 million. His negative net asset value considered
together with his admitted financial demise, discloses that the
respondent is factually insolvent.
55.
In relation to the alleged acts of
insolvency, the applicant relies, firstly, on the provisions of
section 8(g) of the Insolvency
Act.
That
section provides that where a debtor gives notice in writing to any
of his creditors that he is unable to pay any of his debts,
he
commits an act of insolvency.
56.
In the respondent’s founding affidavit in the Rule 46(3)
application he
alleges that he does not have the funds to pay any
portion of his erstwhile attorney’s fees, and in an email dated
2 July
2021 he admits to having a lack of cash flow which has
resulted in him not being able to make the maintenance payments
required
in accordance with rule 43 order granted on 4 July 2017. He
has thus expressly indicated that he cannot pay his debts.
57.
In
Gobel supra
the respondent made statements in his Rule
43(6) application to the effect that he was
unable
to comply with the Rule 43 order due to a material change in his
financial circumstances. The Court held that, in the
particular
circumstances of that case, those statements did not qualify as acts
of insolvency in terms of section 8(g) of the Insolvency
Act, because
they were made in relation to disputed debts (with reference to what
is stated about
Gobel
earlier in this judgment) which were subject to change with
retrospective effect.
Gobel
is accordingly distinguishable from the present matter on this basis,
too.
58.
Another act of insolvency upon which the applicant relies is section
8(c) of
the Insolvency Act, which provides that where a debtor makes
or attempts to make any disposition of any of his property which has
or would have the effect of prejudicing his creditors or of
preferring one creditor above another, he commits an act of
insolvency.
59.
As regards this act of insolvency, the
Court in
Ullman Sails
remarked as follows:
“
[46] The
difficulty with an application for the sequestration of a person’s
estate based on act of insolvency in terms
of s 8(c) of the
Insolvency Act is that it will often be impossible to determine
whether the disposition in issue has or would
have the effect of
prejudicing his creditors or preferring one creditor above another
without an adequate overall insight into
the respondent’s
proprietary affairs. Thus, if the respondent is factually
solvent it would generally be difficult
to establish that the
disposition of any property that would not put his balance sheet into
the red would prejudice his creditors.
It would, however,
defeat the object of s 8(c) if it could find a basis to operate
only if an applicant established that the
disposition in question had
or would have the effect of rendering the respondent factually
insolvent; … Therefore,
having regard to the object of
the establishment of ‘acts of insolvency’ in terms of
s 8, which is to relieve
applicants of the often daunting
evidential burden of establishing factual insolvency, it seems to me
that the sort of disposition
that the legislature must have primarily
had in mind when it enacted s 8(c) must have been the sort that
by its very character,
seen in isolation, was likely to have the
postulated effect.
”
60.
The 2014 agreement identifies the applicant as a creditor of the
respondent,
who was required payment of the amount of at least R4,5
million on the sale of Erf [....]. I have already found that this is
an
admitted liability, due and owing to the applicant.
61.
Upon the registration of transfer of Erf [....], the respondent spent
the proceeds
of the sale by making payments to various of his alleged
creditors to such an extent that a negative balance is remaining. In
dissipating
the proceeds of the sale, the respondent preferred his
friends, family and his late father’s estate above his
obligation
to maintain his children and his wife. He is still
indebted to the applicant in the sum of R4,5 million which he was
required to
pay to her on 27 July 2021 when transfer of the property
was registered.
62.
The respondent’s balance sheet calculation discloses that he
cannot make
payment of the R4,5 million (as well as arrears owed to
the applicant in respect of the rule 43 maintenance order which I
have
not had to consider for the purposes of this application). In
settling the debts owed to his other creditors, the respondent
preferred
them over the applicant and in doing so committed the act
of insolvency contemplated in section 8(c) of the Insolvency Act.
63.
In these circumstances, I am satisfied that the applicant has
established,
prima facie
, that the respondent is factually
insolvent and that he has, in any event, committed acts of
insolvency, in fulfilment of the requirement
in section 10(b) of the
Insolvency Act.
Advantage to creditors
64.
As to an advantage to creditors, it was
stated in
Ullman Sails
at para [60] as follows:
“
The
prospect of a significant dividend to unsecured creditors does not
look promising on the papers, but, as explained in
Stratford
and Others v Investec Bank Limited and Others …
2015
(3) SA 1
(CC)
… at para 43-45, that is not necessary to establish that there
would be an advantage to creditors if the respondents’
estates
were sequestrated. The Constitutional Court there endorsed the
approach stated in
Meskin
& Co v Friedman
1948
(2) SA 555
(W)
at 559, where Roper J held that if the facts before the court
satisfied it that there was ‘a reasonable prospect
– not
necessarily a likelihood, but a prospect which is not too remote –
that some pecuniary benefit would result to
creditors’ that
would be sufficient. The learned judge elaborated: ‘It is
not necessary to prove that the insolvent
has any assets. Even
if there are none at all, but there are reasons for thinking that as
a result of enquiry under the Act
some may be revealed or recovered
for the benefit of creditors that is sufficient’
.”
65.
See also
London Estates (Pty) Ltd v Nair
1957 (3) SA 591
(D)
at 592F;
Cohen v Jacobs
1949 (4) SA 474
(C) at 481;
Botha v
Botha
1990 (4) SA 580
(W) at 584H-585D.
66.
In the present matter, if the dispositions made by the respondent
(whether six
months or two years preceding the date on which the
application was instituted) is set aside, the applicant anticipates
that a
dividend of approximately 57 cents in the rand may be paid to
the respondent’s creditors. That is on the basis that all of
the creditors listed by the respondent in his reconciliation are in
fact genuine. Given that no substantiation in relation to these
debts
was attached to his opposing affidavit it is by no means clear what
the status of those creditors is.
67.
The applicant also anticipates non-patrimonial advantages, namely
that the respondent’s
creditors will be assured of equal
treatment and that the respondent will not be able to incur further
dates to diminish his already
insolvent estate. It is in any event
clear that his financial dealings require investigation.
68.
In the circumstances I am of the view that the applicant has
in satisfaction of the requirement in section 10(c) of the Insolvency
Act
prima facie
shown a benefit to creditors.
#
Conclusion
69.
The respondent argues that
the sequestration application is an abuse of the process of court and
an opportunistic tactic to obtain
an advantage in the pending divorce
proceedings between the parties. That may well be the
respondent’ perception given
the parties’ acrimonious
relationship, but the fact remains that the applicant has made out a
proper case for the sequestration
of the respondent’s estate.
The respondent, on the other hand, has placed
no
evidence before the court credibly to disclose his financial
position.
70.
In all of these circumstances the applicant has made out a case for
the provisional
sequestration of the respondent estate and it will be
so ordered.
The applications
under Rule 43(6) and the application to set aside the warrant of
execution
#
71.
In the light of the finding in the
sequestration application, I refrain from considering these
applications.
72.
Insolvency does not terminate the
respondent’s maintenance obligations towards the applicant and
their minor children (
Weinberg v
Weinberg
1958 (2) SA 618
(C)). It
will be the task of the trustee to make maintenance payments under
the Rule 43 order, taking into account what the
estate can afford.
It will also be the trustee who will have to decide whether to
proceed with these applications in due
course.
73.
A trustee may furthermore apply for the
setting aide of disposition made by the respondent six months (or two
years, depending on
the nature of the disposition: see section 26 and
section 29 of the Insolvency Act) prior to the sequestration of his
estate.
Those dispositions (which the applicant contends
constitute acts of insolvency) are among the facts upon which the
respondent relies
for the purposes of his Rule 43(6) application.
It those dispositions are set aside, there might be sufficient funds
in the
estate to pay the maintenance due in terms of the Rule 43
order. Payments made under the Rule 43 order will not be set
aside
as they constitute dispositions in compliance with an order of
court as contemplated in section 2 (
sv
“disposition”) of the Insolvency Act. (For this
reason I do not agree with the respondent’s counsel that
I
should refuse to grant a provisional sequestration order because it
would be prejudicial to the interests of the parties’
minor
children.)
74.
The respondent’s application under
Rule 43(6) and his application to set aside the writ of execution
obtained on 8 November
2011 are accordingly postponed
sine
die
.
Order
25.
In the
circumstances, it is ordered as follows:
In case number 17728/2021:
25.1.
The estate of
the respondent is placed under provisional sequestration in the hands
of the Master of this Court.
25.2.
A rule
nisi
does hereby issue calling upon the respondent to appear before this
Honourable Court on
Thursday,
23 June 2022
at
10:00 or as soon thereafter as the matter may be called to show cause
why:
25.2.1.
his estate
should not be placed under a final order of sequestration, and
25.2.2.
why the costs
of this application should not be costs in the sequestration.
25.3.
The
provisional order must be served by the Sheriff on the respondent
personally and copies thereof must also be served as provided
in
terms of
section
11(2A), read with
section
11(4)
, of the
Insolvency
Act 24 of 1936
.
25.4.
Notice of the
provisional order must, in addition, be given by prepaid registered
post to all creditors whose claims exceed R25
000,00.
25.5.
The
Sheriff shall attach all moveable property in the insolvent estate
and shall, immediately after effecting the attachment, report
to the
Master in writing that the attachment has been effected and shall
submit with such report a copy of the inventory in terms
of
section
19
of
the
Insolvency
Act.
In
case number 19689/2016
25.6.
The
respondent’s application under
Rule 43(6)
for the variation of
the
Rule 43
order granted on 4 April 2017 is postponed
sine
die,
with
costs to stand over for later determination.
25.7.
The
respondent’s application for the setting aside of the writ of
execution obtained by the application on 8 November 2021
is postponed
sine die,
with costs
to stand over for later determination.
P.
S. VAN ZYL
Acting
judge of the High Court
Appearances:
For
the applicant:
R. G. Patrick (with
him H. Beviss-Challinor), instructed by Werksmans
For
the respondent:
P. C. Eia, instructed
by Fairbridges Wertheim Becker
sino noindex
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