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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Engineering Industries Pension Fund and Another v Pioneer Mechanical CC and Another (13568/2020)
[2022] ZAWCHC 215 (3 June 2022)
Engineering Industries Pension Fund and Another v Pioneer Mechanical CC and Another (13568/2020)
[2022] ZAWCHC 215 (3 June 2022)
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sino date 3 June 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
## CASE
NO: 13568/2020
CASE
NO: 13568/2020
REPORTABLE
In
the matter between:
## ENGINEERING
INDUSTRIES PENSION FUNDFirst
Applicant
ENGINEERING
INDUSTRIES PENSION FUND
First
Applicant
## METAL
INDUSTRIES PROVIDENT
FUNDSecond
Applicant
METAL
INDUSTRIES PROVIDENT
FUND
Second
Applicant
and
## PIONEER
MECHANICAL CC (In Liquidation)First
Respondent
PIONEER
MECHANICAL CC (In Liquidation)
First
Respondent
## JOHN
EDWARD
NICKELSecond
Respondent
JOHN
EDWARD
NICKEL
Second
Respondent
Date
of hearing
:
24
May 2022
Judgment
delivered: 3 June 2022
## JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
CARTER,
AJ
INTRODUCTION
[1]
As will be gleaned from the parties cited in this matter
,
the
first respondent is currently under voluntary liquidation.
[1]
The
second respondent is its sole member and always has been.
The
first and second applicants are pension and provident funds
,
in
the engineering and metal industries respectively
,
who
seek a money judgment
,
in
the amount of RS 030 437
.
11
,
against
the second respondent for outstanding fund contribution payments
which should have been made by the first respondent.
[2]
In
its
notice
of motion the applicants sought further relief directing the second
respondent to provide the applicants with fund contribution
schedules
,
which
have ostensibly been received
,
so
I shall therefore concentrate my judgment on the relief sought in
paragraph 1 above.
[3]
The
central issue therefore revolves around the application and
interpretation of section 13A(1), read with sections 13A(7) and
13A(8) and (9) of the Pension Funds Act ("the Act").
[2]
For
ease of reference I shall quote the sections in this judgment
,
starting
with 13A(1):
'
Payment
of contributions and certain benefits to pension funds
(1)
Notwithstanding
any provision in the
rules of a
registered fund
to the
contrary, the
employer
of
any member of such a fund shall pay the following to the fund
in
full, namely
-
(a)
any
contribution
which
,
in
terms
of
the rules of the fund,
is
to
be
deducted
from the member's remuneration
;
and
(b)
any contribution for which the employer is
liable in terms of those rules
.
'
It
is acutely
and
unambiguously
clear
that an employer has a statutory obligation to pay such deductions
from a members
'
remuneration
to
the
pension fund that the employer is a member of.
This
is customary practice and subject to certain statutory time limits
within which payment needs to be made
,
failing
which appropriate
criminal
sanction
may
be
imposed
for
failure
to
comply
with
the
aforementioned
statutory provisions.
[3]
There
is little doubt regarding the duties of the employer, and in most
cases these duties are complied with in the pension funds
industry,
of course with the odd exception to this general rule. An employee's
pension interest is a critical nest egg, accumulated
over years of
service, in anticipation of the employee's eventual retirement.
This
is the consequence of living in a capitalist society, as opposed to a
socialism society where the government to a large extent
provides
comforts and income upon retirement.
[4]
The
landscape of accountability and responsibility, regarding liability
for the payment of an employee's pension fund contributions
to a
fund, was changed with the Legislative intervention of the Financial
Services Laws General Amendment Act
[4]
by re-introducing criminal sanctions which will be imposed on all
those who fail to comply with certain provisions of the Act including
section 13A of the Act. More relevant to this matter was the
introduction of sections 13A(8) and (9), as follows:
'(8)
For the purposes of this section, the following persons shall be
personally liable for compliance with this section and for
the
payment of any contributions referred to in subsection (1):
(a)
If an employee is a company, every director who
is regularly involved in the management of the company's overall
financial affairs:
(b)
If an employer is a close corporation
registered under the Close Corporations Act, 1984 (Act No. 69 of
1984), every member who controls
or is regularly involved in the
management
of
the close corporation's overall financial affairs; and
(c)
In respect of any other employer of any
legal status or description that has not already been referred to in
paragraphs (a) and
(b), every person in accordance with whose
directions or instructions the governing body or structure of the
employer acts or who
controls or who is regularly involved in the
management of the employer's overall financial affairs.
(9)(a)
A fund to which the provisions of
subsection (8) apply, must request the employer in writing to notify
it of the identity of any
such person so personally liable in terms
of subsection (8).
(b)
In the event that an employer fails to
comply with the requirements of this provision
,
all the directors
(in
respect of a company), all the members
regularly involved in the management
of
the closed corporation (in respect of a closed corporation),
or all the persons comprising the
governing body of the employer,
as
the
case
may
be, shall be personally liable in terms of subsection
(8).'
In
my view, the new statutory requirements are unambiguous and specific
in intent and application, without any additional or ancillary
due
processes or obligations being bestowed upon the directors
,
members, or governing bodies
respectively.
[5]
In
applying the abovementioned statutory principles to the present case,
the second respondent, in his answering affidavit,
[5]
ostensibly
relies upon the procedures provided for in section 359 of the
Companies Act No 61 of 1973, read with section 66 of the
Close
Corporation Act 69 of 1984
,
as
a defence to this application
,
and
the relevance of section 13A(8) of the Act, and therefore contends
that any proceedings brought against either of the respondents
are
effectively null and void.
[6]
Notwithstanding the above, the second
respondent makes significant admissions which, in my view,
underscores the rationale for the
implementation and application of
section 13A(8), and thereby weakens his argument that this section
only imposes accessory, not
primary, obligations upon him to comply
therewith.
In
my view, the
raison d'etre
of
this section is to ensure that, in circumstances where a failure to
comply with section 13A(1) occurs, someone must and should,
via
compulsion, be responsible to
'step
into
the shoes' of the employer, in this case of the first respondent.
If this were not the intention of the
Legislature
,
it
would call into question why this section was enacted and is
interpreted strictly. In
Fundstrust
(Pty)
Ltd
(In Liquidation) v Van Deventer the
Court
held:
#
"The
Legislature
has not unambiguously expressed its intention and here it becomes of
prime importance to have regard to the context,
and thus including
the
often
more
important
matter
of
the
statute
it's
apparent
scope
and purpose
and
within
limits
,
its
background.
"
[6]
I
therefore disagree with the second respondent's rationale and
practical application of subsection (8)
[7]
.
[7]
The
second respondent admits
[8]
that
the first respondent is in breach of the statutory provisions of
section 13A(1), and does not dispute the binding nature of
the
applicant's rules.
[9]
The
second respondent even goes as far as to accept that the amount of R5
030 437.11 is outstanding, which is due and payable to
the
applicants
,
in
respect of its respective employee contributions
.
[10]
[8]
However
,
counsel for the second respondent argued
that, notwithstanding the admissions and/or acknowledgments made by
the second respondent,
he is protected from any course of action
and/or personal liability
,
for
two principal reasons:
8.1
that
'.
.
.
members
of
a
corporation
shall
not
merely
by
reason
of
their
membership
be
liable for the liabilities or obligations of the corporation
';
[11]
and
8.2
to
preserve
the
sanctity
of
not
piercing
the
corporate
veil,
as
held
in
the
Fundstrust
case.
[12]
Inasmuch
as these submissions might have sought to convince me to apply same
to this matter, they did not.
In
Fundstrust
the
appellate division states that the regime of the corporate veil
'
remained
firmly intact
.
.
.
except
for rare and exceptional cases of
"
piercing
"
by the Legislature or the Courts.'
I agree with this approach and am of the
view that this matter is precisely such an instance as the
Legislature foresaw in enacting
the provisions of section 13A(8), and
this court should apply its discretion in invoking its powers to
prevent the second respondent
from hiding
behind the corporate veil and escaping
liability
,
discarding
any
onus
which rests upon him, leaving
unsuspecting and disadvantaged employees rudderless and up the creek
without a paddle. The three amendments
of subsections (8), (9) and
(10):
"...
aim to pierce the corporate veil and mandates employers to identify a
person who can be held personally liable for non-payment
of
contributions to the fund."
[13]
[9]
Counsel
for the second respondent argued that the personal liability that the
applicants assert is imposed by section 13A(8) is
far-reaching and
untenable for reasons set out in the
De
Bruyn v Steinhoff International Holdings NV and Others
[14]
and
therefore this subsection requires restrictive interpretation
.
Notionally
it may be not clear from the amendments, if once subsection (9) has
been complied with, then if a company experiences
financial
difficulties which lead to the identified person to fail to make
contributions to the applicants, then would such identified
person
still be held liable for the non-payment. This places a heavy onus
and burden upon such an identified person if non payment
is due to
circumstances beyond such person's control. In the
Steinhoff
case
Unterhalter J was of the view that:
"the
fiduciary duties of directors are
owed to the company. A fiduciary duty is predicated upon a duty of
loyalty ad that requires the
director to act in the interests of the
company. A fiduciary duty owed by directors to shareholders
as
been recognised in certain cases
where the directors have persuaded outside shareholders to sell their
shares in
a
company.
In family companies where shareholders reposed trust and confidence
in a family member and sought
advice
and information
,
a
fiduciary
duty was recognised."
[1
0]
The above encapsulates the present matter in that the second
respondent is the sole member
[15]
of the first respondent, and is therefore, in my view
,
the
member who
controlled
or
was
regularly involved in the management
of the first respondent's
overall
financial affairs
.
[16]
On
the second respondent's own version
there
is therefore no need to pierce the corporate veil, further also as he
placed the first respondent into voluntary liquidation.
The second
respondent distinctly had a fiduciary duty of care
,
loyalty
and to act in the best interests of the first respondent
,
but
failed to. There was a special relationship between the second and
first respondent and in these unique personal circumstances,
quite
distinct from the
Steinhoff
circumstances
,
the
applicants by way on invoking the provisions of subsection (8)
,
have
the right to enforce the provisions thereof by seeking redress as
pleaded against the second respondent, because of a breach
committed
by the first respondent for which the second respondent is
statutorily liable for
.
[10]
I agree further on the second respondent's own version that section
13A(1) does not create a
primary obligation on the second respondent
,
but
rather the obligation to pay contributions falls squarely on the
first respondent
,
and
it is thus the employer who bears the primary obligation and who must
first be claimed against before looking to the individuals
who
control or controlled the first respondent.
[17]
This
might very well be functionally true,
but
for
the saving provisions of section 13A(8), which cannot simply be
ignored.
If
that were the case
,
it
would make a mockery
of
the re-enactment of this section and serve no purpose
.
I
find this implausible
,
and
illogical to decide otherwise.
[11]
Based on my understanding
of section 13A(8) there are two
remaining aspects I wish to deal with
:
11.1
Firstly
,
there is no mention by any stretch of
the imagination
,
nor
is it suggested in the interpretation thereof, that some form of
'
other
process'
,
for
instance an enquiry
,
must
first be undertaken under section 13A(1) before the provisions of
section 13A(8)
may
be
invoked.
This
simply does not exist.
11.2
Secondly, section 13A(8)(b) states:
'
...
the following persons shall be
personally liable for compliance with this section
and
for the payment of any contributions
referred to in subsection (1)'.
(My
emphasis
.
)
This is self explanatory
and
,
in
my
view
,
any
interpretation
to
the
contrary
can
only
be
considered
as being otherwise hopeful and therefore wrong. This is well
summarised as follows:
"Section
13A(8) of the of the Act imposes personal liability on certain
parties within the employer's organization. These persons
will be
held personally responsible for ensuring that contributions are
deducted and paid to the fund within the prescribed period.
This
section allows for determining the person who will be held personally
liable for the corporation's
failure
to make contributions. In the event that an employer fails to comply
with the requirements of this provision, all the directors
(in
respect of a company), all the members regularly involved in the
management of the closed corporation
(in
respect
of a closed corporation), or all the persons comprising the governing
body of the employer
,
as
the case may be, shall be personally
liable
in terms of subsection (8)"
[18]
[12]
I
am
satisfied
that
the
applicants
did
comply
with
the
provisions
of
section 13A(9) of the Act, proof of which is to be found in Annexure
"OG10" to the applicants' replying affidavit.
[19]
The
underlying rationale for doing so is, firstly, to comply with the
provisions of the Act, and, secondly, for the purposes of
the
applicants' election to commence with proceedings against the second
respondent, unconstrained
by
the principle of excussion, as this would undermine the statutory
provisions of section 13A(8).
This
in my view was surely not the intention of the Legislature.
[13]
Accordingly the following order is
therefore made:
1.
Within one (1) calendar month of the
applicants having determined any additional outstanding Provident
Fund contributions other
than the amount referred to in point 2 below
payable by the first and second respondents, based on the schedules
submitted by the
liquidators of the first respondent to date, the
second respondent (in his personal capacity in terms of s 13A(8)(a)
of the Pension
Funds Act 24 of 1956 ('the PFA')) shall pay any
additional outstanding Provident Fund contributions
,
together with interest and late payment
interest thereon at the rate prescribed
in terms of the PFA, to the applicants.
2.
The second respondent (in his personal
capacity in terms of s 13A(8)(a) of the PFA) shall pay to the
applicants the monies admitted
and owing
,
as determined based on contribution
schedules already submitted by the respondents, in the total sum of
R5,030,437.11,
within
60 (sixty) calendar days of the date of service of this order on him.
3.
In the event of the second respondent
failing to comply with paragraph 1 above
,
the applicants are granted leave to
approach this Court on the same papers, duly supplemented, on notice
to the second respondent,
for judgment on the amounts quantified by
the applicants in terms of paragraph 1 above
.
4.
The second respondent shall pay the
costs of this application on the scale as between attorney and own
client.
##
##
## G L CARTER
G L CARTER
## ACTING JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
ACTING JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
For
applicant:
Adv. P Coston
Instructed
by:
Soonder Inc. c/o Vezi De Beer Inc.
For
Respondents:
Adv. L Crow
Instructed
by:
Anneke Wheelan Attorneys
[1]
Since May 2020- record page 213.
[2]
24 of 1956 as amended.
[3]
The penalty provision was set aside by Section 14 of the Financial
Services Laws General Amendment Act 22 of 2008 ("FSLGA"),
however the criminal sanction was reintroduced by an amendment of
Section 37 of the Act.
[4]
Act No 45 of 2013.
[5]
Record page 196.
[6]
1997 (1) SA 710 (A)
[7]
Record page 200 at para 15.4
[8]
Even via an acknowledgement of debt.
[9]
Record page 204 at para 28.1.
[10]
Record page 207 at para 34.1.3.
[11]
Section 2(3)
of the
Close Corporations Act 69 of 1984
.
[12]
Ibid fn 6. See also
Salomon
v A Salomon
&
Co
Ltd
[1897]
AC 22
and
Dadoo
Ltd and Others v Krugersdorp Municipal Council
1920
AD 530.
[13]
Speculum Juris, Volume 29
Part 1
,
2015
by Motseotsile Marumoagae,
Senior Lecturer in the Community Law Centre North-West University
(Mafikeng Campus)
[14]
2022 (1) SA442 (GJ)
[15]
A 100% member's interest.
[16]
Record page 203 at para 27.1.
[17]
Record page 207 at para 34.2.
[18]
Momentum Corporate Compliance Alert
[19]
Record page 235 read with page 223 at para 17.
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