Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 207South Africa
Vincemus Investments (Pty) Ltd v Bekker N.O. and Others In re: Vincemus Investments (Pty) Ltd v Travea (Pty) Ltd (12477/2020) [2022] ZAWCHC 207 (28 October 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
28 October 2022
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
>>
2022
>>
[2022] ZAWCHC 207
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Vincemus Investments (Pty) Ltd v Bekker N.O. and Others In re: Vincemus Investments (Pty) Ltd v Travea (Pty) Ltd (12477/2020) [2022] ZAWCHC 207 (28 October 2022)
Vincemus Investments (Pty) Ltd v Bekker N.O. and Others In re: Vincemus Investments (Pty) Ltd v Travea (Pty) Ltd (12477/2020) [2022] ZAWCHC 207 (28 October 2022)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAWCHC/Data/2022_207.html
sino date 28 October 2022
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
Republic of South
Africa
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case
No. 12477/2020
Before:
The Hon. Mr Justice Binns-Ward
Date
of hearing: 12 October 2022
Date
of judgment: 28 October 2022
In
the matter between:
VINCEMUS
INVESTMENTS (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
MARTHINUS
JACOBUS BEKKER N.O.
First Respondent
OTTLIE
ANTON NOORDMAN N.O.
Second Respondent
AVIWE
NTANDAZO NDYAMARA N.O.
Third Respondent
(in their respective
capacities as the joint liquidators
of
Travea (Pty) Ltd (in liquidation))
in re:
VINCEMUS
INVESTMENTS (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
TRAVEA
(PTY)
LTD
Respondent
JUDGMENT
BINNS-WARD
J:
[1]
On the extended return day of a rule
nisi
issued by this court on 21 May 2021 in an opposed winding-up
application, the applicant does not - as would ordinarily happen -
seek confirmation of the provisional winding-up order that
accompanied the rule. It does not do so because, in the circumstances
to be described presently, the company concerned, Travea (Pty) Ltd,
has already been placed into final liquidation. That happened
in
parallel proceedings instituted by a different creditor. The
applicant-creditor in the other application was Vital Fleet (Pty)
Ltd
(‘Vital Fleet’). At this stage, pursuant to an amendment
to paragraph 4 of its notice of motion, the applicant
therefore seeks
only an order in the following terms:
‘
That
the costs of this Application be costs in the estate of the
Respondent company
[Travea (Pty) Ltd]
,
alternatively
that the costs of this Application shall be paid as administrative
costs in the estate of the Respondent company consequent upon
the
provisional order of liquidation under case number 2474/2021, issued
by
(sic)
Vital
Fleet (Pty) Ltd against Travea (Pty) Ltd which was heard on 23
February 2021 and granted on 2 March 2021, and which order
was made
final on 20 April 2021 consequent upon the hearing thereof on 13
April 2021
.’
[2]
The
relief sought by the applicant was opposed by the liquidators of
Travea (Pty) Ltd, who have been jointly substituted as respondents
in
the proceedings, pursuant to a notice given by the applicant in terms
of Uniform Rule 15(2). The applicant delivered two supplementary
affidavits in support of its amended prayer for costs, to which the
respondents have responded. To the extent necessary, condonation
is
granted in respect of the delivery of the additional affidavits.
[1]
[3]
Proceedings in the current matter, in which
the applicant obtained a provisional order of winding-up and rule
nisi
in
May 2021, were commenced on 20 September 2020. The application was
opposed by the company. Argument was heard (by Nyati AJ)
on 22
February 2021 after the exchange of papers was completed. Judgment
was thereupon reserved.
[4]
On 8 February 2021, at a time when the
applicant’s application had already been set down for hearing
in the opposed motion
court, Vital Fleet launched a parallel
winding-up application and set it down for hearing (before Samela J)
on 23 February
in the court reserved for urgent matters. Vital
Fleet’s application was therefore heard on the day after
judgment had been
reserved in the prior application brought by the
applicant for the same relief.
[5]
Notwithstanding the dates mentioned in
paragraph 4 of the applicant’s aforementioned amended notice of
motion, it appears
that Vital Fleet succeeded in obtaining a
provisional winding-up order in respect of Travea on 23 February
2021. There was a passing
reference in Vital Fleet’s supporting
affidavit to the pending application for the same relief by the
applicant, but it is
nevertheless not altogether clear that the judge
who granted the winding-up order on 23 February 2021 was astute
to the fact
that judgment had been reserved in that matter on the
previous day. I was informed from the bar that the judge was informed
at
the hearing of Vital Fleet’s application of the existence of
a competing application, but there is no record before me as
to
precisely what was said in that regard.
[6]
It is evident that the applicant’s
attorneys were informed that Vital Fleet’s application would be
moved on 23 February,
but it appears that they took no measures to
alert the court seized of the matter on that date that judgment had
been reserved
in their client’s competing application. They
also took no steps to pre-empt a final order being taken in Vital
Fleet’s
application on the return day in that matter in April
2021. It is common ground that the judge who had heard the
applicant’s
application was not informed of the aforementioned
developments before she delivered the reserved judgment on 21 May
2021.
[7]
It is trite that once a winding-up order
has been made at the instance of a petitioner, it is not competent
for a court to make
a subsequent order to the same effect whilst the
first mentioned order remains operative. The reason is obvious: the
later order
would be incapable of being carried out at a stage when
the company concerned was already in the process of liquidation and
the
concursus creditorum
already constituted. It is unsurprising in the circumstances that,
despite some initial irresolution, the applicant has abandoned
any
idea of seeking confirmation of the legally ineffectual provisional
order made at its instance, and proceeds for relief only
in respect
of its costs in the now redundant application.
[8]
The
history of events is a sad one. As counsel for the applicant observed
in their heads of argument, the circumstances in which
two orders
were taken for the liquidation of a company in separate proceedings
in the same court appear to be unique. As they also
remark, it is
something that should not have occurred. Vital Fleet was ill-advised
to have moved its application in the manner
described. The
difficulties that have since presented could have been avoided had it
instead applied to join as a co-petitioner
in the applicant’s
already pending application. It was also unfortunate that the court
entertained Vital Fleet’s application
apparently without any
consideration of the jurisprudence concerning the Court’s
practice with regard to competing winding-up
and sequestration
applications.
[2]
It is unclear
whether counsel representing Vital Fleet directed the judge’s
attention to the relevant case law, as should
have happened.
[9]
My impression is that the legal
representatives of the applicants in both liquidation applications
were remiss in not raising the
issue pertinently either at the
hearing of Vital Fleet’s application on 23 February or on the
return day of the provisional
order granted on that day. Ideally, the
Master’s report in the Vital Fleet matter should also have
drawn to the court’s
attention that a bond of security had been
lodged in respect of an earlier application by a different party for
the liquidation
of the same company. There was a longstanding
practice in this Division, discontinued 20 or so years ago, that an
applicant in
sequestration and liquidation matters was required to
present with his petition an affidavit of search by his attorney
confirming
that a security bond had not been lodged in the Master’s
Office in respect of a potentially competing application. The facts
of the current matter suggest that consideration might usefully be
given to reinstating that practice.
[10]
The
final order granted to Vital Fleet included a provision that its
costs of suit be treated as costs in the winding-up, with the
result
that Vital Fleet’s claim in that regard will enjoy the
preference allowed in terms of s 97(2)(c) of the Insolvency
Act
[3]
in respect of the ‘
taxed
costs of sequestration
’.
Section 97(3) defines that term to mean ‘
the
costs (as taxed by the registrar of the court) incurred in connection
with the petition of the debtor for acceptance of the
surrender of
his estate or of a creditor for the sequestration for the
sequestration of the debtor’s estate, but it does
not include
the costs of opposition to such a petition, unless the court directs
that they shall be included
’.
[11]
Section
97 of the current Insolvency Act is, in material respects, the
reincarnation of s 83 of its statutory predecessor,
the 1916
Insolvency Act.
[4]
In
Ex
Parte The Merchants’ Trust Ltd
1930 TPD 142
, Barry J was called upon to answer the question
‘
whether
the words in sec 83 “upon the petition of ... a creditor”
mean a creditor who has obtained sequestration,
or whether they mean
a creditor in the usual sense of the term
’.
The learned judge gave the following answer: ‘
Now
it seems to me that the words “upon the petition of a creditor”
should be construed to mean on the petition of any
creditor, and
should not be confined to a creditor who has obtained sequestration.
The reason for that construction is, firstly,
that provision is made
for the costs of the sequestrating creditor in sec. 13
[the equivalent of s 14 of the current Act]
and,
secondly, read with the definition, “creditor” includes a
creditor in the usual sense of the term. But a more important
consideration is that I do not think the words “necessarily or
rightly incurred” would be necessary if only the sequestrating
creditor were meant, because under sec. 13 the taxed costs have to be
paid out of the free residue, and it seems to me that the
taxing
officer, in taxing those costs, would decide whether the costs had
been necessarily or rightly incurred. And there is this
further
reason, the practice of this Court before 1924 has been to allow the
costs of a creditor who petitions for sequestration
of an estate but
who does not obtain the sequestration; those costs, have been treated
as preferent if the costs have been bona
fide incurred
’.
[12]
Despite
the differences between s 83 of the 1916 Act and its equivalent
in s 97 of the current Insolvency Act - notably
the absence in
the current iteration of any reference to costs ‘
necessarily
or rightly incurred
’
- the construction applied by Barry J has been consistently followed
in the subsequent jurisprudence in relation to the
current Act.
[5]
It was accordingly not in contestation in the current proceedings
that as a matter of law the applicant’s claim for payment
of
its taxed costs as ‘costs of sequestration’ within the
meaning of s 97(2) is not excluded from consideration.
The
question in this case is whether the court should, at least at this
stage, grant the applicant an order directing that its
taxed costs
should be costs in the winding-up with the resultant preference.
[13]
It is appropriate to address that question
with reference to the evidence in the affidavits delivered by the
parties for the purposes
of the extended return date.
[14]
The applicant approached the liquidators in
respect of their claim for costs and was advised that it would be
premature for it to
press for a costs order at that stage. The
liquidators’ attorneys referred to the judgments in
Ex
parte Aithchison
1924 TPD 570
and
Simms
Service Station v Maharaj
1960 (3) SA
465
(N) at 466G in support of their clients’ position. The
liquidators advised that should the applicant press for a costs order
on any extended date of the rule
nisi
made by Nyati AJ prior to the first meeting of creditors the
liquidators would be constrained to oppose such a measure, as only
once their appointment was made final after the holding of such a
meeting would they be in a position to consider abiding the judgment
of the court or to raise substantive opposition to the claim.
[15]
The liquidators’ appointment was
thereafter made final on 4 March 2022 and the applicant’s
attorneys were given notice
of that on 11 April 2022. The
applicant was advised that the creditors had ‘provisionally
agreed’ to accept the
applicant’s costs as costs in the
liquidation, but that a final decision on the issue could be made
only after the creditors
had been afforded the opportunity to
consider a bill of costs.
[16]
The liquidators were not provided with a
bill of costs, but they nevertheless put a proposal to the second
meeting of creditors,
held on 1 July 2022, that the applicant’s
taxed costs be allowed and treated as an administration expense.
Eighteen creditors
apart from the applicant proved claims at the
meeting, and the applicant was the only creditor to vote in favour of
the proposal
that its costs in the first winding up application be
treated as costs in the administration of the liquidation.
[17]
In an email, dated 8 July 2022, the
liquidators’ attorney advised the applicant’s attorney
that allowing the applicant
to obtain a costs order ‘would go
against the wishes of the Creditors as noted at the second meeting of
creditors’
and that the liquidators accordingly would be
constrained to oppose the applicant’s application for costs.
[18]
The applicant furnished the liquidators
with a bill of costs in a very substantial amount in early August
2022. The liquidators
thereafter made a settlement proposal to the
applicant premised on the idea that a settlement would save on the
irrecoverable costs
of opposing further litigation by the applicant
to press its claim. It was made clear, however, that any settlement
would be subject
to the approval of the general body of proved
creditors. By pressing for relief at the hearing before me on 12
October 2022, the
applicant tacitly signally its rejection of the
liquidators’ proposal.
[19]
The liquidators delivered opposing papers
in which they raised
in limine
the contention that the application was premature because it was, so
they contended, not the practice of the court to entertain
such
applications for costs before the liquidator had determined whether
to include such costs in the final account submitted to
the Master.
They also contended that ‘[t]
here
is no basis in law for the Applicant to claim an order for costs ...
given the provisions of Section 97(3) of the Insolvency
Act ... given
that the Applicant’s costs was
(sic)
not incurred in connection with the
petition of Vital for the liquidation of Travea
’.
[20]
As discussed above, the decision in
Ex
parte The Merchant Trust Ltd
supra, is
adversely dispositive of the second of the forementioned contentions
by the liquidators. The first was advanced on the
basis of the
judgment in
Aitchison
supra,
and the cases in which that judgment has been followed.
[21]
The essence of the decision in
Aitchison
is captured in the following passage of the judgment of Mason JP (De
Waal and Tindall JJ concurring):
‘
If
the solicitor's costs in cases such as the present [applications for
sequestration competing with that of the petitioner who
obtained the
order] are preferent by the law, then he is entitled to them, but the
persons really interested in the determination
of that question are
the creditors in the estate, and not the trustee. If those costs are
not preferent under the statute the creditors
have the right to
object, and I do not think it is right that this Court should at this
stage close the mouths of the creditors
by making an order saying
that these costs shall be preferent. The law gives every creditor who
proves the right to object to the
trustee putting into an account any
costs or charges which he ought not to put in. The creditors are the
proper people to object
because they are the ones who are interested,
and we do not know at this stage who the creditors are. Nobody will
know who the
creditors are, in fact, until the account is filed,
because till then anybody may prove in the estate. That seems to me
to show
quite clearly that, in respect of the practice of so many of
us in making these orders as to costs, it is not a right procedure
to
make an anticipatory order at this stage, but the proper course is
for a solicitor to claim his costs and make his claim on
the trustee.
If the trustee ranks him for those costs, then any creditor can
object. If the trustee declines to rank him for those
costs, then the
solicitor can object, and there is provision made in the Insolvency
Law for the decision of this question, by the
proper and ordinary
method of procedure under which those interested in the estate can
make their voices heard.’
The
court declined to make what it called ‘an anticipatory order’
allowing costs in a competing application before the
process
described in the extract from the judgment quoted above had been
followed.
[22]
The judgment in
Aitchison
has been followed in numerous cases, including in matters decided in
this Division. In
Ex parte Hankins and
Another: in re Cellocrete Manufacturing Co (Pty) Ltd
1950 (2) SA 611
(N), Selke J endorsed the approach stated in
Aitchison
,
saying:
‘
In
its application to winding-up proceedings, this imports that, in
future, the question whether any costs incurred by a petitioner
for a
winding-up order, whose proceedings have proved to be abortive, are
or are not to be treated as part of the costs in the
winding-up is a
question which should, in the first place, be submitted to the
liquidator, and that normally, the Court will not
make any order in
regard to such costs at the stage at which a petition for a
winding-up order is before it
.’
In
Simms
Service Station
supra, Henning AJ construed that extract from the judgment in
Ex
parte Hankins
to allow that while such an order would not
normally
be made, the court retains a discretion to make it if the
circumstances merited that. (The learned judge used the expression
‘exceptional
circumstances’.
[6]
)
[23]
The situation in
Aitchison
’s
case was distinguishable from the current matter in more than one
respect. The competing application in that matter had
not been
entertained by a court. As discussed earlier in this judgment the
current matter is quite unique, in that Vital Fleet
obtained a
winding-up order from one judge of the court after another judge had
already heard and reserved judgment in an equivalent
application
brought earlier by the applicant. The applicant in the current case
has already obtained a rule
nisi
in respect of its costs. Whilst the provisional winding-up order
granted by Nyati AJ was ineffectual in the peculiar circumstances,
the rule she issued in respect of the applicant’s costs was
not. Furthermore, in the current matter the creditors –
at
least those that have proved claims – have already indicated
that they object to the applicant’s claim in respect
of the
costs of its application being accepted as costs in the winding-up.
[24]
I
think it can fairly be inferred in the circumstances that the
liquidators will not include the applicant’s costs in the
liquidation and distribution account. In my view, in the face of the
creditors’ objection to the claim, it would in any event
not be
open to them to do so, nor to the Master to allow it insofar as
treating it as preferent under s 97(2)(c) of the Insolvency
Act.
In
Ex
parte The Merchants’ Trust Ltd
supra, at p. 146, Barry J held, with reference to s 51 of
the 1916 Insolvency Act (the equivalent whereof is s 53
of the
current Act), that the creditors had ‘
no
power to make preferent a charge which the law does not allow to be
preferent
’.
I read that to mean that, in order to obtain preference, the
applicant’s costs have to be allowed as costs in the
liquidation by the court.
[7]
The
essential effect of
Aitchison
’s
case is that such an order should not be made before the interested
parties have been given an opportunity to be heard.
[25]
In the special circumstances of the current
case, it seems to me that little purpose would be served by deferring
the decision on
the applicant’s costs until after the
completion of the process provided for in ss 403-408 of the
Companies Act 61 of
1973, and that the appropriate course to follow
would be to issue a further rule in the terms set forth below. An
order is made
accordingly.
[26]
Order
1.
The application is
further postponed for hearing on the semi-urgent roll on 6 March
2023.
2.
A rule
nisi
shall and
does hereby issue calling on all interested parties to show cause on
6 March 2023 at 10h00, or so soon thereafter as counsel
may be heard,
as to why an order should not be made directing that the applicant’s
costs in this application, inclusive of
the fees of two counsel where
such were engaged, be costs in the liquidation of Travea (Pty) Ltd.
3.
Any
party wishing to oppose the granting of the order contemplated in
paragraph 2 above may access a copy of the papers in this
application
by directing a request therefor, by no later than 13 January 2023, to
the applicant’s attorneys (De Jager &
Lordan Inc, [...]
A[...] Street, Makhanda, ref: J[...], email:
m[...]
), who will furnish a copy thereof at the requester’s cost, or
by accessing same free of charge at
https://tinyurl.com/TRAVEA
,
and shall deliver his, her or its notice of intention to oppose by no
later than Friday, 20 January 2023 and his, her or its answering
affidavit (if any) by no later than Friday, 10 February 2023.
4.
A copy of this
judgment and order shall:
4.1.
be provided, by means
of their usual form of communication with them, by the liquidators to
the creditors of Travea (Pty) Ltd (in
liquidation) who have proved
claims against the company in liquidation;
4.2.
be served by the
applicant’s attorneys upon the Master of the High Court, Cape
Town, by no later than Friday, 9 December 2022;
and
4.3.
be published by the
applicant’s attorneys in one edition of the Business Day
newspaper, by no later than Friday, 9 December
2022.
5.
The liquidators are
directed to deliver an affidavit of service confirming compliance
with the direction in para 4.1 above, by no
later than Friday, 9
December 2022.
A.G.
BINNS-WARD
Judge
of the High Court
APPEARANCES
Applicant’s
counsel:
A.R. Sholto-Douglas SC
G.
Brown
Applicant’s
attorneys:
De Jager & Lordan Inc
Makhanda
Van der Spuy &
Partners
Cape
Town
Respondents’
counsel:
J. van
Rooyen
Respondents’
attorneys:
Donn E Bruwer
Attorney
Hartbeespoort
Chris Fick &
Associates Inc
Cape
Town
[1]
Condonation
for the delivery of the additional affidavits was sought by the
applicant, and not opposed by the respondents. I doubt
that
condonation was required. It seems to me that as the hearing was on
the extended return date of a rule
nisi
,
the parties did not require leave to deliver such further affidavits
as they might consider appropriate for the purpose of the
order to
be sought on the return day.
[2]
See
e.g.
Kriel
& Co (Pty) Ltd v Pienaar
1937 CPD 152
,
Helling
v Dorfman
1949 (2) SA 266
(C),
Courier
Townhouse (Pty) Ltd v Myers
1986 (4) SA 1038
(C) at 1039 F-G and the other cases cited there,
and
First
National Bank Ltd v E U Civils (Pty) Ltd; First National Bank Ltd v
E U Plant (Pty) Ltd; Basset v E U Civils (Pty) Ltd;
E U Holdings
(Pty) Ltd v E U Plant (Pty) Ltd
1996 (1) SA 924 (C).
[3]
Act
24 of 1936.
[4]
Act
32 of
1916. Sec 83
provided in relevant part:
‘
The
costs of sequestration shall be paid in the following order:
(1)
...
(2)
...
(3)
the following costs and charges which
shall rank pari passu and abate in equal proportions if necessary,
that is to say:
_
the taxed costs of sequestration ... . “Taxed costs of
sequestration” shall include costs incurred upon the petition
of the insolvent or a creditor, in so far as any such costs have
been necessarily or rightly incurred, but shall not include
costs of
opposition unless the Court so order. Costs in any legal proceedings
awarded against the estate shall be included under
costs of
administration.
’
[5]
Lipworth
& Co v Bhyat
1938
WLD 86
,
Helling
v Dorfman
supra,
at p.269 fin,
Cooper
and Others v Trustee in Insolvent Estate of Pretorius and Another
1967 (3) SA 602
(O) at 610,
Jones
v The Master and Others
1986 (2) SA 220
(T) and
Ex
parte Jordaan: In re Grunow Estates (Edms) Bpk v Jordaan
1993 (3) SA 448
(O) at 452F-G.
[6]
At
467B.
[7]
That
seems to me also to be the import of the phrase ‘
in
the first place
’
in the extract from
Ex
parte Hankins
quoted in paragraph [22]
above.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Vincemus Investments (Pty) Ltd v Bekker N.O. and Others (12477/2020) [2023] ZAWCHC 169 (25 July 2023)
[2023] ZAWCHC 169High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)100% similar
Visigro Investments (Pty) Ltd v SFF Association (14906/2022) [2024] ZAWCHC 356 (3 June 2024)
[2024] ZAWCHC 356High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)98% similar
Varnardo Investments (Pty) Ltd and Another v K2012150042 South Africa (Proprietary) Ltd (19618/2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 22; 2023 (4) SA 314 (WCC) (9 February 2023)
[2023] ZAWCHC 22High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)98% similar
Gamlam Investments (Pty) Ltd v Coetzee (Appeal) (A108/2025) [2025] ZAWCHC 569 (25 November 2025)
[2025] ZAWCHC 569High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)98% similar
Imvusa Trading 1581 BK v Oudtshoorn Municipality (1708/2017) [2022] ZAWCHC 211 (20 October 2022)
[2022] ZAWCHC 211High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)98% similar