Case Law[2025] ZAKZDHC 8South Africa
RGS Group Holdings Limited v Tongaat Hulett Limited (In Business Rescue) and Others (D13702/2024) [2025] ZAKZDHC 8 (18 February 2025)
High Court of South Africa (KwaZulu-Natal Division, Durban)
18 February 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
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## RGS Group Holdings Limited v Tongaat Hulett Limited (In Business Rescue) and Others (D13702/2024) [2025] ZAKZDHC 8 (18 February 2025)
RGS Group Holdings Limited v Tongaat Hulett Limited (In Business Rescue) and Others (D13702/2024) [2025] ZAKZDHC 8 (18 February 2025)
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sino date 18 February 2025
FLYNOTES:
COMPANY
– Business rescue –
Urgent
interdict
–
Sought
to prevent implementation of business rescue plan –
Applicant delayed in taking action – Failed to demonstrate
urgency – Alleged irreparable harm based on mere speculation
– Cannot be equated to well-grounded apprehension
of
irreparable harm to justify drastic remedy sought – Granting
interdict could collapse business rescue process and
lead to
company’s liquidation – Failed to meet requirements –
Part A dismissed – Part B adjourned
sine die –
Companies Act 71 of 2008
,
s 133.
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
KWAZULU-NATAL LOCAL
DIVISION, DURBAN
Reportable
Case no: D13702/2024
In
the matter between:
RGS
GROUP HOLDINGS
LIMITED
Applicant
and
TONGAAT
HULETT LIMITED
First Respondent
(IN
BUSINESS RESCUE)
TREVOR
JOHN MURGATROYD N.O
Second Respondent
PETRUS
FRANCOIS VAN DER STEEN N.O
Third Respondent
GERHARD
CONRAD ALBERTYN N.O
Fourth Respondent
VISION
INVESTMENTS 155 (PTY) LTD
Fifth Respondent
TERRIS
AGRIPRO (MAURITIUS)
Sixth Respondent
REMOGGO
(MAURITIUS) PCC
Seventh Respondent
GUMA
AGRI AND FOOD SECURITY LTD
Eighth Respondent
(MAURITIUS)
ALMOIZ
NA HOLDINGS LIMITED
Ninth Respondent
(UNITED
ARAB EMIRATES)
THE
LENDER GROUP OF TONGAAT
Tenth Respondent
HULETT
LIMITED
MOHINI
SINGARI NAIDOO t/a POWERTRANS
Eleventh Respondent
SALES
AND SERVICE
THE
AFFECTED PERSONS IN THE FIRST
Twelfth Respondent
RESPONDENT’S
BUSINESS RESCUE
Coram:
M E Nkosi J
Heard
:
29 January 2024
Delivered
:
18 February 2024
ORDER
1.
Part A of the application is dismissed for lack of urgency, and for
failure of the applicant
to satisfy the requirements of an interim
interdict.
2.
Part B of the application is adjourned
sine die.
3.
RGS is granted leave to supplement its founding affidavit prior to
the hearing of Part ‘B’,
and the second to ninth
respondents are granted leave to deliver further affidavits in
response to such affidavit.
4.
The applicant is ordered to pay the costs of Part ‘A’ of
the application on scale
C, such costs to include the costs of two
counsel, where employed.
#
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
M E Nkosi J
Introduction
[1]
Tongaat Hulett Limited (THL), the first respondent herein, has
significant sugarcane processing
facilities in the Province of
KwaZulu-Natal (KZN). It employs approximately 22 927 people,
[1]
and is the primary source of income to the sugarcane growing
communities in various parts of KZN. The company’s contribution
to the economy of KZN is significant, and its operations transcend
the borders of South Africa to other neighbouring countries,
including Botswana, Mozambique and Zimbabwe. It is for this reason
that the announcement that THL had voluntarily began business
rescue
proceedings on 27 October 2022 sent shockwaves that threatened not
only the KZN economy, but the broader South African economy
as well.
[2]
It is within the context of its economic role in KZN that THL has
been the centre of protracted
litigation between some of its
creditors and the Business Rescue Practitioners (‘BRPs’)
who are appointed jointly in
terms of Chapter 6 of the
Companies Act
(‘the
Companies Act&rsquo
;)
[2]
tasked with overseeing THL during business rescue proceedings and to
facilitate its rehabilitation. This application is brought
by RGS
Group Holdings Limited (‘RGS’), which is one of THL’s
many creditors. RGS is challenging the business
rescue plan that was
adopted by the creditors of THL on the basis that an alternative
version thereof is unlawful and/or has failed.
Nature of the
application and the relief sought
[3]
The application was launched as a matter of urgency on 6 November
2024, and was set down for hearing
on 28 November 2024. The relief
sought by RGS in the application is divided into two parts, the
salient features of which are couched
in the following terms:
Part A
1.
An interim interdict preventing the first to ninth
respondents from proceeding with or in any way progressing or
implementing the
‘Vision Asset Transaction’ in terms of
which all the assets of THL will be transferred to the fifth
respondent (‘Vision’),
or any other entity nominated by
the fifth to ninth respondents (‘the Vision Parties’),
following which THL will be
delisted and liquidated.
2.
An order directing the BRPs to publish the
following information required by RGS on THL’s business rescue
website within seven
business days:
(a)
A statement providing all the information
contemplated in
sections 150(2)
(c),
150
(3), and
150
(4) of the
Companies Act
in
relation to the Vision Asset Transaction;
(b)
A comprehensive description of all the agreements
and transactions that have been concluded / are intended to be
concluded in terms
of the Vision Asset Transaction, including all the
main steps in those transactions;
(c)
A statement confirming whether or not the
Industrial Development Corporation of South Africa (‘the IDC’),
in its capacity
as a post commencement finance creditor of THL, has
consented to the Vision Asset Transaction.
3.
An order directing the Vision Parties to provide
the following information (and/or documentation) to the BRPs for
publication on
THL’s business rescue website within seven
business days:
(a)
Copies
of all the versions, that is, the current version as well as the past
versions, of the Acquisition Agreement concluded between
the Vision
Parties and the Lender Group
[3]
of THL in terms of which the Vision Parties were / are to acquire the
Lender Group’s claims and security in the business
rescue of
THL (‘the Acquisition Agreement’);
(b)
Proof of all payment(s) made by the Vision Parties
to the Lender Group in terms of the Acquisition Agreement, including
the amount(s)
of such payments;
(c)
Proof that the Lender Group has transferred all
its claims and security in the THL business rescue to the Vision
Parties, alternatively
proof of the nature and extent of such claims
and security as have been transferred;
(d)
Confirmation under oath that they have not
concluded and will not in future conclude any agreement(s) with the
Lender Group in terms
of which, whether directly or indirectly, any
of THL’s assets (including any such assets which are intended
to be transferred
under the Vision Asset Transaction) will be sold
upon or after the conclusion of THL’s business rescue in order
to apply
the proceeds of such sale(s) to settle any amount(s) due:
(i)
by the Vision Parties to the Lender Group, whether
under the Acquisition Agreement or otherwise:
(ii)
to any other creditor(s) of THL.
4.
An order granting RGS leave to supplement its
founding affidavit prior to the hearing of Part B.
5.
An order that the costs of Part A be paid by the
first to ninth respondents, in addition to any party opposing the
relief sought
in Part A, on scale C, including the costs of two
counsel where so employed.
Part B
1.
An order that the business rescue plan adopted in
relation to THL on 11 January 2024 be set aside.
2.
An order that the costs of Part B be paid by the
first to ninth respondents, in addition to any party opposing the
relief sought
in Part A, on scale C, including the costs of two
counsel where employed.
Factual background
[4]
The factual background to the matter, briefly stated, is that on 27
October 2022 THL was placed
in business rescue, and the BRPs were
appointed as its joint business rescue practitioners. RGS is one of
more than 1 000 admitted
creditors of THL, with proven claims
exceeding R13 billion. The Lender Group is by far the largest
creditor, with secured claims
of approximately R8,5 billion.
[5]
On 10 and 11 January 2024 the BRPs convened and presided over a
meeting of creditors for the purpose
of considering the business
rescue plan for adoption by the creditors. Prior to the date of the
meeting there were two proposed
business rescue plans that the BRPs
were planning to put before the creditors for a vote. One was
proposed by Vision (‘the
Vision Plan’) and the other by
RGS (‘the RGS Plan’). However, RGS withdrew its Plan a
day before the meeting,
which left the Vision Plan as the only plan
that was put by the BRPs before the creditors for consideration.
Approval of the Vision
Plan
[6]
Being the only Plan available for approval, the Vision Plan was
approved and adopted by 98.51
per cent of the creditors who voted at
the meeting. RGS voted against its approval. The salient features of
the Vision Plan are
essentially a debt-to-equity conversion (‘the
Conversion’) in terms of which Vision would acquire shares in
THL in
exchange for acquiring some or all of the Lender Group’s
claims against THL.
[7]
Alternatively, if for whatever reason Vision failed to secure the
consents and/or approvals required
for the Conversion, as an integral
part of the proposals in the Vision Plan the transaction would be
switched from the Conversion
to the sale of THL assets and businesses
as going concerns (‘the Asset Sale’) on the basis that:
‘
(a)
payment for such assets will be effected by way of a set off against
the Secured Claims then held by
the Vision Parties;
(b)
suitable arrangements being made for payment of the full balance
outstanding in respect of the
IDC PFC Facility;
(c)
the sale of THL’s assets and businesses will be to an entity
nominated by the Vision Parties;
(d)
unsecured Creditors and Secured Creditors would otherwise be treated
as contemplated in the currently
contemplated Vision Transactions;
(e)
the Vision Parties will ensure that THL has sufficient funds to
enable it to implement this Business
Rescue Plan;
(f)
the sale of THL’s assets will be subject to the requisite
regulatory and other approvals
common for transactions of this nature
in each jurisdiction;
(g)
once it has sold its assets and businesses (as going concerns), THL
will be delisted from the
JSE and liquidated (noting that its shares
would have nil value); and
(h)
to the fullest extent possible Vision Parties and the BRPs will seek
to structure the implementation
of this Business Rescue Plan such
that all stakeholders, other than Shareholders and the JSE as a
result of the delisting / liquidation
of THL, will be in
substantially the same position as they would have been had the
originally contemplated Vision Transactions
been implemented.’
[8]
On 8 August 2024 a Special General Meeting of THL’s
shareholders (‘the SGM’)
was convened and held where the
special resolution for the adoption of the Conversion was tabled for
consideration by the THL’s
shareholders. The Conversion was
rejected by the shareholders. This resulted in the BRPs causing
notices to be published on the
JSE Stock Exchange News Services on
the same date advising the affected persons and shareholders that
consequent upon the rejection
of the Conversion by the shareholders,
the BRPs would continue to implement the Asset Sale alternative that
formed an integral
part of the Vision Plan.
The issues
[9]
Against the factual background set out above, the issues for
determination by this court for purposes
of Part A are:
(a)
whether the matter is urgent;
(b)
whether RGS was required to obtain leave of this court to commence
legal proceedings in relation
to property belonging to THL in terms
of
s 133(1)
(b)
of the
Companies Act;
(c
)
whether RGS has satisfied the requirements of an interim interdict;
and
(d)
whether RGS has made out a case to warrant this court ordering the
BRPs not to proceed with the
implementation of the Vision Plan
pending the final determination of the relief sought under Part B.
Urgency
[10]
On the issue of urgency, an applicant in an urgent application is
required in terms of Uniform
rule 6(12
)(b)
to
set forth explicitly in its founding affidavit the circumstances
which it is averred render the matter urgent, as well as the
reasons
why the applicant claims that it could not be afforded substantial
redress at a hearing in due course. In practice that
requirement
extends to the legal practitioners, who must carefully analyse the
facts of each case to determine whether there are,
indeed,
circumstances which render the matter urgent before they sign a
certificate to that effect in accordance with the requirements
of the
various divisions of the High Court.
[4]
[11] In
the present case, it is contended by RGS in its founding affidavit
that the matter is urgent because of
the following reasons:
(a)
the Asset Sale will culminate in the delisting and liquidation of
THL, the result which can never
be undone as it would signal the
death of a 132-year-old company; precisely the outcome that the
business rescue process in general
and the Adopted Plan in particular
are designed to avoid;
(b)
the BRPs have confirmed that they are proceeding to implement the
Asset Sale without first seeking
further approval from either the
creditors or the shareholders, and despite their ignorance regarding
the status of the Acquisition;
and
(c)
in correspondence exchanged prior to the filing of the application,
the BRPs indicated that they
were informed by the Vision Parties and
the Lender Group that (i) the Acquisition Agreement remains in place;
and (ii) that the
balance of the purchase price due by Vision
thereunder is payable by 31 December 2024.
[12] In
addition to the above, it was argued by Mr
Dickerson SC
, who
appeared with Mr
Kotze
on behalf of RGS, that neither the BRPs
nor Vision have given any indication as to whether and when the
acquisition will be achieved,
and when the Asset Sale will be
implemented. Furthermore, so he argued, RGS’s demands for both
an implementation timetable
and the production of essential
information have been ignored and/or refused.
[13]
With due respect to Mr
Dickerson
, the fact of the matter is
that the reasons advanced by RGS for urgency have been in existence
since November 2023 when the Vision
Plan was first published. As
indicated elsewhere in this judgment, it was expressly stipulated in
that Plan that if for whatever
reason the Conversion failed, the
transaction would be switched from the Conversion to the Asset Sale
as an alternative. Therefore,
if RGS had any concerns about the
alleged unlawfulness of the Asset Sale contained in the Plan, as an
alternative, it should have
applied for an interdict to stop the vote
on such Plan. Instead, RGS participated in the vote and voted against
the adoption of
the Vision Plan.
[14]
Furthermore, it was not disputed by RGS that it opposed an
application that was brought by another creditor,
namely, RCL Foods
and Sugar Milling (Pty) Ltd, in December 2023 to interdict the
holding of the creditors’ meeting. A month
thereafter, on 1
February 2024, RGS intervened in an application that was brought by
Powertrans Sales and Service (‘Powertrans’),
which is
another creditor of THL and is cited as the eleventh respondent in
this application. Just like RGS in this case, the relief
sought by
Powertrans in the aforesaid application was to interdict the
implementation of the Vision Plan pending an application
to set it
aside. RGS supported that relief.
[15]
Part A of the Powertrans application was struck from the roll for
want of urgency, and RGS elected not to
persist with its challenge of
the Vision Plan. Powertrans withdrew Part B of its application, but
only to bring a second application
on 5 April 2024 seeking similar
relief. The pleadings in the second Powertrans application closed in
July 2024, but no steps have
been taken by Powertrans to date to
bring that application to finality. RGS did not intervene in the
second Powertrans application,
but is believed by the Vision Parties
to have funded Powertrans in that litigation.
[16]
In any event, RGS has not provided any explanation for its delay in
instituting proceedings to interdict
the implementation of the Vision
Plan, nor has it shown to the satisfaction of this court that it
cannot be afforded substantial
redress at a hearing in due course.
[5]
If RGS was genuinely concerned about the Asset Sale being unlawful
and/or in contravention of
s 150
of the
Companies Act, it
ought to
have interdicted the BRPs from tabling that Plan for consideration at
the creditors’ meeting held on 10 and 11 January
2024.
[17]
RGS failed to seek interdictory relief even after a notice was
published by the BRPs on 8 August 2024 advising
THL shareholders and
other affected persons that they were proceeding to implement the
Asset Sale alternative following the rejection
of the Conversion by
the shareholders. There is also no legal basis for the submission
made by Mr
Dickerson
that the Asset Sale alternative was
supposed to be tabled before the THL creditors for approval prior to
its implementation by
the BRPs. The Asset Sale alternative was an
integral part of the Vision Plan that was approved by the creditors
on 11 January 2024.
[18] In
view of the aforegoing, I see no reason for this court to entertain
Part A of RGS’s application
on the basis of urgency.
Ordinarily, the proper order in the circumstances of this case would
be to strike off with costs Part
A of RSG’s application, thus
leaving it open for RGS to reinstate the matter on the roll for
determination by this court
in the normal course. However, this will
be pointless, in my view, if the relief sought in Part A of the
application would be without
any prospects of success even if it is
reinstated on the roll for hearing in due course.
[19]
Therefore, for the sake of completeness, I am now proceeding to
consider the other issues that are raised
by the parties for
determination by this court, including the requirements of an
interdict. This will leave Part B of the application
pending for
determination by the court at a later stage, that is, if RGS decides
to set it down for hearing.
Whether RGS
required leave of the court in terms of
s 133(1)(b)
of the
Companies
Act to
commence legal proceedings against, inter alia, THL and the
BRPs?
[20] To
put this issue in a proper context, a point
in limine
was
raised by the BRPs that RGS failed to obtain leave of the court to
institute legal proceedings against,
inter alia,
THL and the
BRPs when it was legally required to do so in terms of
s 133(1)
(b)
of the
Companies Act. For
a sense of perspective,
s 133
of the
Companies Act imposes
a general moratorium on legal proceedings
against a company in business rescue or in relation to any property
belonging to such
company. It is only with the consent of the
business rescue practitioner of the company, or with the leave of the
court on such
terms as it may consider suitable, that legal
proceedings may be commenced or proceeded with against a company in
business rescue.
[21]
It was submitted by Mr
Subel
SC
,
who appeared with Messrs
Goodman
SC
and
Mathiba
on
behalf of the BRPs, that it was mandatory for RGS to obtain leave of
the court as a prerequisite to commence legal proceedings
against
THL, or in relation to any property belonging to it. The submission
of Mr
Dickerson
,
on the other hand, was that although there are conflicting decisions
on the issue,
[6]
the
preponderance of authority is that leave to commence legal
proceedings under
s 33(1)
(b)
of the
Companies Act is
not required in matters pertaining to the
‘implementation’ of a business rescue plan.
[22]
According to Mr
Dickerson
,
leave of the court was not a prerequisite for RGS to institute legal
proceedings in this case. The reason, in his submission,
is because
these proceedings are not directed against the company and/or its
property. Therefore, they do not disturb the objectives
of the
moratorium, which is to give the company financial breathing space by
preventing the enforcement of its debts.
[7]
For authority in support of his argument, Mr
Dickerson
referred
me to the case of
Moodley
v On Digital Media (Pty) Ltd and Others
,
[8]
where the court held,
inter
alia
,
that:
‘
[10]…Legal
proceedings … which seek that an adopted business rescue plan
be executed and implemented strictly according
to its terms and in
accordance with the applicable provisions of the
Companies Act, are
legal proceedings against the business rescue practitioner
and
the
company in business rescue in connection with the business rescue
plan. They are not legal proceedings against the company or
property
belonging to the company or lawfully in its possession within the
meaning of
s 133(1).
[11]
Section 133
,
therefore, finds no application in legal proceedings against a
company in business rescue and its business rescue practitioner
in
connection with the business rescue plan, including its
interpretation and execution towards implementation…’
[23]
With due respect to the Learned Judge in
Moodley
,
I think the proposition that
s 133
is not applicable to legal
proceedings against a company in business rescue and its business
rescue practitioner in connection
with the business rescue plan,
including its interpretation and execution towards implementation, is
rather dangerous. For one,
there is no guarantee that if the legal
proceedings against a company in business rescue and its business
rescue practitioner are
in connection with the business rescue plan
such proceedings will not have an effect, directly or indirectly, on
the property belonging
to the company. Although the decision in
Moodley
was
subsequently followed in a number of other decisions
[9]
,
I share the view expressed by
Sher
AJ
in
Booysen
v Jonkheer Boerewynmakery (Pty) Ltd and Another
[10]
that
it was not correctly decided.
[24]
Taken to its logical conclusion, the proposition in
Moodley
would
inevitably hinder any business rescue practitioner from discharging
his or her statutory duty of implementing the adopted
business rescue
plan so that the company in financial distress can return to
financial viability as expediently as possible. In
my view, it is for
this very reason that written consent of the practitioner or the
leave of the court is a prerequisite for legal
proceedings against
the company in business rescue or in relation to any property
belonging to it.
[25]
Based on my interpretation of the relevant provisions of
s 133(1)
of
the
Companies Act, the
requirement of written consent of the
practitioner or the leave of the court is required irrespective of
whether or not the legal
proceedings concerned are in connection with
the business rescue plan. However, I am mindful of the fact that this
issue has a
bearing on not only Part A, but also Part B of this
application. Therefore, notwithstanding the views I expressed in
relation to
this issue, I think it is appropriate to leave it for
final determination by the court that will hear Part B of the
application.
[26] At
this stage, I digress momentarily to place it on record that Mr Blou
SC appeared with Mr Van Kerckhoven
on behalf of the Vision Parties.
For obvious reasons, the legal arguments advanced by Mr Blou were
aligned with those of Mr Subel,
hence I did not deem it necessary to
restate same in this judgment. Besides, I think the arguments of Mr
Blou are directed primarily
at Part ‘B’ of the
application, as opposed to Part ‘A.’
Whether RGS has
satisfied the requirements for an interim interdict?
[27]
The requirements for an interim interdict are trite. Therefore, I do
not think that it is necessary to provide
an elaborate explanation of
the circumstances under which the court may be prepared to grant such
relief. It suffices to merely
mention the basic requirements for an
interdict for the purposes of this judgment. These include:
(a)
a
prima facie
right that might be open to some doubt;
(b)
a reasonable apprehension of irreparable and imminent harm to the
applicant if the interdict is
not granted;
(c)
the absence of an alternative remedy; and
(d)
the balance of convenience.
[11]
A prima facie right
[28]
Starting with the requirement of a
prima
facie
right,
it is contended by RGS that by virtue of being a creditor of THL, it
has a right to a lawful business rescue process that
adheres to the
mandatory governing provisions of the
Companies Act. In
response, the
BRPs’ contention is that RGS is essentially seeking to
interdict them from exercising the statutory powers
entrusted upon
them in terms of
s 140(1)
(d)
read
with
s 152(5)
of the
Companies Act. In
support of the BRPs’
argument I was referred by Mr
Subel
to
the case of
Tshwane
City v Afriforum and Another
,
[12]
where the Constitutional Court quoted with approval the following
statement that was made by a full bench of the Cape Provincial
Division in
Gool
v Minister of Justice and Another:
[13]
‘…
Even
the common law recognises that courts should exercise the power to
grant an interdict restraining the exercise statutory powers,
“only
… in exceptional circumstances and when a strong case is made
out for relief”.’
[29] Of
course, the contention of RGS is based on the premise that the
implementation of the alternative version
of the Vision Plan by the
BRPs is unlawful, which is the relief sought in Part B of RGS’s
application. In the circumstances,
it accordingly follows that it is
only in the event that RGS is successful in respect of Part B of its
application that the court
hearing that part of the application may
make a determination as to whether or not RGS had a
prima facie
right to interdict the BRPs from exercising the statutory powers
entrusted upon them in terms of the
Companies Act. Such
determination
is not necessary at this stage of the proceedings.
Reasonable
apprehension of irreparable harm
[30]
This brings me to the second requirement of a reasonable apprehension
of irreparable and imminent harm. It
is contended by RGS that a
combined delisting and liquidation envisaged in the Asset Sale is the
worst-case scenario for THL, its
employees, creditors, trading
partners and the KZN economy. Should the Vision Asset Transaction be
implemented in circumstances
where Vision has not paid for the
acquisition and/or will sell the THL’s assets in order to repay
the Lender Group, all affected
persons in THL’s business rescue
would suffer irreparable harm.
[31]
The BRPs’ contention, on the other hand, is that RGS’s
contentions are baseless because: firstly,
the implementation of the
Alternative Plan will be more beneficial to all concerned, including
the employees and creditors of THL,
because the existing contractual
relationships between THL and other parties will be transferred
seamlessly to the relevant Vision
entity or its nominee, and;
secondly, the Lender Group and Vision have confirmed that the
Alternative Plan should be capable of
implementation irrespective of
whether the secured claims are owned by the Lender Group or by
Vision.
[32]
According to my understanding, the irreparable harm alleged by RGS is
based on mere speculation that Vision
may not be in a position to
raise sufficient funding for the acquisition of THL assets. By its
own admission, RGS was not privy
to the actual contents of the
Acquisition Agreement between Vision and the Lender Group, which is
one of the reasons it decided
to bring this application. In my view,
mere speculation as to what may or may not happen cannot be equated
to the well-grounded
apprehension of irreparable harm to justify the
drastic remedy of an interim interdict sought by RGS in these
proceedings.
Alternative remedy
[33]
RGS contends that it has no alternative remedy by which to protect
its rights. However, the fact of the matter
is that if it genuinely
believes that the Alternative Plan is unlawful, it can proceed to set
down for hearing Part B of its application
with a view to impugn such
Plan. Judging by the time it has taken the BRPs to implement the
Alternative Plan, my view is that RGS
could have very well proceeded
with its challenge of the lawfulness of that Plan without first
seeking an interim interdict.
Balance of convenience
[34] It
is alleged by RGS that the balance of convenience favours the
granting of an interdict because,
inter alia,
THL and Vision
stand to suffer little to no prejudice if the interim relief is
granted. With respect, I disagree with such proposition.
As I
indicated at the hearing of this matter, the granting of an
interdict, whether final or interim, will result in the business
rescue proceedings virtually collapsing because of the time it is
likely to take for the matter to be set down for hearing on the
opposed motion roll. Even then, chances are that whatever decision is
made by the court after hearing the application is more than
likely
to be taken on appeal, which would probably take years to finalise
and surely result in the final liquidation of THL.
[35]
The other cause for concern is, of course, the conditional extension
of the THL Post-Commencement Finance
Facility (‘the PCFF’)
by the IDC until 29 August 2025. It was expressly stipulated by the
IDC in its letter dated 12
December 2024 addressed to the BRPs that
the RGS application was, on its launch, an event of default in terms
of the relevant Agreement
with the BRPs in that it constitutes a
challenge by a party to the business rescue proceedings or the
implementation of the adopted
Plan by the BRPs. The IDC reserved its
right to cancel the Agreement if the interdict sought by RGS is
granted. This, in my view,
weighs the balance of convenience heavily
against the granting of an interim interdict.
[36] In
the result, I find that RGS has failed, firstly, to make out a case
for urgency and, secondly, to satisfy
the requirements for an
interdict. I accordingly make an order in the following terms:
Order
1.
Part A of the application is dismissed for lack of urgency, and for
failure of the applicant
to satisfy the requirements of an interim
interdict.
2.
Part B of the application is adjourned
sine die.
3.
RGS is granted leave to supplement its founding affidavit prior to
the hearing of Part ‘B’,
and the second to ninth
respondents are granted leave to deliver further affidavits in
response to such affidavit.
4.
The applicant is ordered to pay the costs of Part ‘A’ of
the application on scale
C, such costs to include the costs of two
counsel, where employed.
ME NKOSI
JUDGE
Appearances
For
the applicant:
Mr
Dickerson SC and Mr R Kotze
Instructed
by:
DMI
Attorneys, Durban
Tel:
(031)
301 8623
Emails:
devin@dmiatt.co.za
/
shellin@dmian.co.za
/
shreya@dmiatt.co.za
/
reception@dmiatt.co.za
Ref:
Mr D
Moodley /SG/RGS514 /
D
Moodley / DM / RSG
For
the first to fourth respondents:
Mr A
Subel SC and Ms I Goodman SC
Instructed
by:
Werksmans
Attorneys, Johannesburg.
Tel:
(011)
535 8000
Emails:
tboswell@werksmans.com
/
sgast@werksman.com
/
dhertz@werksmans.com
/
dandropoulos@werksmans.com
Ref:
Mr
T Boswell / Mr D Hertz /
Mr
D Andropoulos / Ms S Gast / TONG7430.17
c/o:
EVH
INC Attorneys, Umhlanga.
Tel:
(031)
492 7971
Emails:
erick@evhinc.co.za
/
irisha@evhinc.co.za
/
tia@evhinc.co.za
Ref:
W2409/0005
For
the fifth to ninth respondents:
Mr J
Blou SC and Mr M van Kerckhoven
Instructed
by:
Stein
Scop Attorneys Inc, Johannesburg.
Tel:
(011)
380 8080
Emails:
bradley@steinscop.com
/
glenn@steinscop.com
/
casper@steinscop.com
/
brookeb@steinscop.com
/
ayanda@steinscop.com
Ref:
RER2/0008/B
Scop
c/o:
Goodrickes
Attorneys, La Lucia
Emails:
legal1@goodrickes.co.za
ca1@goodrickes.co.za
ca2@goodrickes.co.za
Date
of Hearing:
29
January 2025
Date
of Judgment:
18
February 2025
[1]
Information
sourced from the THL website (available at www.tongaat.com).
[2]
Companies
Act 71 of 2008
.
[3]
A
group of 13 banks and financial institutions which together hold the
largest claim against THL in the approximate amount of
R8,5 billion.
[4]
Luna
Meubel Vervaardigers (Edms) Bpk v Makin and Another
(
t/a
Makin’s Furniture Manufacturers)
1977
(4) SA 135
(W) at 137E-F.
[5]
East-Rock
Trading 7 (Pty) Ltd and Another v Eagle Valley Granite (Pty) Ltd and
Others
[2011]
ZAGPJHC 196 para 9;
AG
v DG
2017
(2) SA 409 (GJ)
para
7.
[6]
See
the commentary in Delport
Henochsberg
on the Companies Act 71 of 2008
(Service
Issue 36) at 526(12)-(18).
[7]
Moodley
v On Digital Media (Pty) Ltd
and
Others
2014
(6) SA 279
(GJ) para 9;
Arendse
and Others v Van Der Merwe
and
Another NNO
2016
(6) SA 490
(GJ) para 14.
[8]
Moodley
ibid.
[9]
See
Resource Washing (Pty) Ltd v Zululand Coal Reclaimers (Pty) Ltd and
Others [2015] ZAKZPHC 21; Hlumisa Investment Holdings
(RF) Ltd and
Another v Van der Merwe NO and Others [2015] ZAKZPHC 21
[10]
Booysen
v Jonkheer Boerewynmakery (Pty) Ltd and Another 2017 (4) SA 51 (WCC)
[11]
See
Setlogelo
v Setlogelo
1914
AD 221
at 229;
Webster
v Mitchell
1948
(1) SA 1186
(W).
[12]
Tshwane City v
Afriforum
and
Another
2016
(6) SA 279
(CC) para 43.
[13]
Gool
v Minister of Justice and Another
1955 (2) SA 682
(C) at 688FC
.
sino noindex
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