Case Law[2024] ZAKZDHC 8South Africa
Stewart N.O and Others v M.M.B (D2296/2021) [2024] ZAKZDHC 8 (12 February 2024)
High Court of South Africa (KwaZulu-Natal Division, Durban)
12 February 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
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## Stewart N.O and Others v M.M.B (D2296/2021) [2024] ZAKZDHC 8 (12 February 2024)
Stewart N.O and Others v M.M.B (D2296/2021) [2024] ZAKZDHC 8 (12 February 2024)
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sino date 12 February 2024
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IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
KWAZULU-NATAL LOCAL
DIVISION: DURBAN
CASE NO: D2296/2021
In the matter between:
MICHAEL LAWRENCE
STEWART N.O. FIRST
APPLICANT
PULENG FELICITY BODIBE
N.O.
SECOND APPLICANT
JERIFANOS MASHAMBA
N.O.
THIRD APPLICANT
(In their capacities as
duly appointed joint liquidators
of Carmol Distributors
(Pty) Limited in liquidation)
and
M[...] M[...]
B[...]
RESPONDENT
(Identity No. 6[...])
(Date of Birth: 29
January 1961)
ORDER
The following order is
granted: -
1.
The application for a final
sequestration order is dismissed, and the provisional order set
aside.
2.
The applicants shall pay the costs
of the application.
JUDGMENT
Delivered on: Monday,
12 February 2024
OLSEN J
[1]
This is the final extended return day of a provisional order of
sequestration relating
to the estate of the respondent, Mr MM B[...].
(Mr B[...] was originally cited as first respondent, married to one
Ms S[...] M[...]
who was cited as second respondent married in
community of property to him. Mr B[...] protested that the two of
them had become
divorced as long ago as 1980, and the case proceeded
against Mr B[...] alone.) The applicants are the joint liquidators of
Carmol
Distributors (Proprietary) Limited (in liquidation)
–“Carmol”.
[2]
Carmol was wound-up by order of the Gauteng Division of the High
Court of South Africa
upon the application of the Registrar of
Banks. That order was made on 30 November 2015. It
appears that Carmol was
targeted by the Registrar of Banks because
the company was soliciting deposits from members of the public,
ostensibly for the purpose
of generating substantial returns from
trading in some way or other in diesel fuel; whereas its mode of
business constituted inter
alia a scheme involving the use of
money paid by later investors to meet the company’s contractual
obligations to earlier
investors. According to the founding
papers in this application the respondent was not a participant in
that scheme, but
nevertheless received payments from Carmol totalling
R1 727 500 over the period October 2012 to November
2014.
[3]
In February 2018 the applicants instituted action against the
respondent for orders
setting aside those dispositions of money to
the respondent and for judgment for repayment of those amounts.
The respondent
defended the action but failed to comply with an order
to make discovery, as a result of which default judgment was entered
against
him in this court on 14 November 2019. Service of a
writ of execution resulted in a
nulla bona
return. The
applicants then launched this application for the sequestration of
the respondent’s estate, having thus
established its claim and
the existence of an act of insolvency, submitting that there was a
reasonable prospect of a pecuniary
advantage to Carmol’s
creditors if a trustee was able to unearth assets or money which the
respondent might have disposed
of or acquired, or which he might be
concealing.
[4]
A provisional order was granted despite opposition from the
respondent. His opposition
was grounded principally on the issue as
to whether there was a prospect of advantage to creditors, given that
he had no assets
at all.
[5]
The only issue at this stage of the proceedings, where the applicants
seek a final
sequestration order, is that of advantage to creditors.
[6]
The applicants first moved their application for a final
sequestration order in this
court on 26 October 2022. The
matter served before Lopes J. The respondent was unrepresented
on the day. Only
the applicants’ counsel was heard.
The order made by the learned Judge after hearing the applicants went
as follows.
‘
1.
The application is adjourned to the unopposed roll, and the rule nisi
is extended,
until the 6
th
March 2023.
3.
The Applicants are granted leave to deliver
a supplementary replying affidavit, if so advised, on the issue of
advantage to creditors.
4.
The First Respondent is granted leave to
deliver an affidavit in response to the Applicants’
supplementary replying affidavit
and notice of set down within 15
(fifteen) days of service of the said affidavit on the First
Respondent.
5.
There shall be no order as to costs.
6.
In the event of the applicants failing to
deliver a supplementary affidavit as envisaged in paragraph 2 above,
the rule nisi is
to be discharged on the date set out in paragraph 1
above.’
[7]
During argument before me I asked counsel for the applicants whether
they could explain
what happened during the hearing before Lopes J to
generate what appears on the face of it to be an unusual order.
I was
told that counsel could not help me with that.
[8]
The order made on 26 October 2022 is explained by the provisions of
s
12(2)
of the
Insolvency Act, 1936
. The relevant provisions of
s
12
read as follows.
’
12.
Final sequestration or dismissal of
petition for sequestration
(1)
If at the hearing pursuant to the aforesaid
rule nisi
the court
is satisfied
that-
(a)
…
(b)
…
; 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 sequestrate
the estate of the debtor.
(2)
If at such hearing the court is not so
satisfied
, it shall dismiss the
petition for the sequestration of the estate of the debtor and set
aside the order of provisional sequestration
or
require further proof of the matters set forth in the petition and
postpone the hearing for any reasonable period but not
sine
die
.’
(My emphasis)
[9]
Section 12(2)
of the
Insolvency Act accordingly
furnishes the court
with a discretion as to the course to be followed in the event of the
court deciding that, on the papers before
it, the applicant has
failed to make out the required case. The court must either
dismiss the application or require further
proof where there is a
shortcoming. In either case the “jurisdictional fact”
(perhaps using that term rather
loosely) is a decision by the court
that on the papers the required case has not been made out. As
pointed out in
Ganes and Another v Telecom Namibia Ltd
2004
(3) SA 615
(SCA) at 625 the effect of the provision is that in the
requisite circumstances the court may in the exercise of a discretion
allow
the applicants to make out a case in reply. The following
appears in paragraph 21 of the judgment.
‘
However,
in terms of
s 12(2)
of the Act, a court may on the return day of a
provisional sequestration order, if not satisfied that the debtor is
insolvent,
require further proof of such insolvency. It follows
logically that the court also has a discretion to allow such further
proof in a replying affidavit, subject, of course, to the debtor
being granted an opportunity to deal with the new matter.
Whether, in particular circumstances, an application for
sequestration should in terms of the section be dismissed or whether
the further proof of insolvency should be allowed is a matter
relating to the conduct of the business of the Court hearing the
application. In respect of such a matter “different
judicial officers, acting reasonably, could legitimately come to
different conclusions on the same facts”. In these
circumstances there can be no doubt that the discretion conferred
in
the court by
s 12
is a discretion which has been referred to as a
discretion in the strict or narrow sense, ie. it is for the court
hearing the application
to decide whether or not to allow further
proof.’
[10]
The discretion only arises when and if the court decides that the
issue upon which further evidence
may be submitted is one on which
the applicant or petitioner has failed to meet the required standard.
The resultant order in other
proceedings would be dismissal of the
application. The statute provides an alternative which may be
employed in the discretion
of the court. In my view the order of 26
October 2022 reflects that the discretion was exercised in favour of
the applicants.
[11]
Section 12(2)
of the
Insolvency Act does
not sanction two different
hearings on the same papers. That this was present to the mind
of the Judge making the order of
October 2022 is apparent from
paragraph 5 of his order, which clarifies the point that, on the
papers which served before the court
at that time, it was decided
that the applicant had failed to make out a case on the issue of
advantage to creditors.
[12]
A supplementary affidavit was delivered by the applicants. In
that affidavit the deponent
had this to say.
‘
It
is not apparent from the adjournment order as to what more is
required from the applicants in regard to “
the
issue of advantage to creditors
”.
However, considering the strict sanction contained in paragraph 5 of
the order the applicants shall elaborate further
herein on the said
issue.’
A decision on the issue
of advantage to creditors rests on the matrix of facts upon which the
court’s decision as to whether
there is reason to believe that
sequestration would be to the advantage of creditors must be based.
I am less than impressed
with the deponent’s professed
ignorance of what the learned Judge had in mind when giving the
applicants an opportunity to
deliver a further affidavit dealing with
advantage to creditors. The judge did not ask for further argument.
He undoubtedly conveyed
that the applicants were being afforded an
opportunity to place further relevant facts before the court.
The affidavit the
applicants delivered contained a lengthy quotation
from the founding affidavit which sets out the basis of its claim of
advantage
to creditors, but otherwise merely re-argues the case. The
affidavit added nothing to the case; it was not one of the type
which Lopes J had in mind, and which
s 12(2)
of the
Insolvency Act
sanctions
: that is to say an affidavit providing ‘further
proof of the matters set forth in the petition’.
[13]
It is on the strength of the delivery of that further replying
affidavit that the applicants
claimed a right to argue again before
me what they had argued before Lopes J, namely that the papers as
they were before that further
replying affidavit was delivered made
out a case for advantage to creditors. They were not entitled to do
that. That argument
was rejected by Lopes J. He made no
declaratory order to that effect. There was no need to do so.
The discretion
which he exercised when he made the order of 26
October 2022 depended for its existence on a decision made by him
that on the papers
before him the applicants had not made out a case
for advantage to creditors. In my view that decision was final,
subject
only to the discretionary relief granted to the applicants to
bolster their case by further proof. They failed to take
advantage
of the opportunity that they had been allowed.
[14]
I am bound by the decision made by Lopes J. On that basis the
application for the final
order must fail.
[15]
I should briefly mention my views on the issue of advantage to
creditors lest either party be
misled by the fact that I conclude
that my duty or role here is to make the order which must now follow
in the light of the decision
of the court made in October 2022. I
find no difficulty in reaching the same conclusion as was reached
then on the subject of advantage
to creditors. The applicants’
case in its founding affidavit and in its original replying affidavit
was based on historical
information which, due to the passage of
time, has become and entirely unsound basis for a conclusion that
there is reason to believe
that the exercise of investigatory powers
by a trustee would produce any advantage to creditors. The
applicants produce no
evidence to contradict the respondent’s
assertion that he has no assets.
[16]
I accordingly make the following order.
1.
The application for a final
sequestration order is dismissed, and the provisional order set
aside.
2.
The applicants shall pay the costs
of the application.
OLSEN J
Date
of Hearing:
Friday,
26 January 2024
Date of Judgment:
Monday, 12 February
2024
For
the Applicants:
Mr C
Prinsloo
Instructed
by:
C J
BRAND ATTORNEYS INC.
Appellants’
Attorneys
(Ref:
Mr C Brand/Ms C Swart)
Tel:
010 900 1600
Email:
carlin@cjblaw.co.za
c/o
BROOKES ATTORNEYS
2
Charles Way
Kloof…KZN
(Ref:
CJB110003)
Tel:
031 – 035 1055
Email:
samantha@brookes.co.za
For
the Respondent/s:
Mr MA
Raoof
Instructed
by:
SP
ATTORNEYS INCORPORATED
Respondents
Attorneys
Waterford
Place
27
Autumn Street
Rivonia
Sandton
(Ref:
SP)
(Tel:
010 – 020 7846/7
(Email:
sumen@spalaw.co.za
c/o
RODNEY REDDY & ASSOCIATED
Ruchida
House
28
Cypress Avenue
Stamford
Hill
Durban…KZN
Email:
rodney@rodlaw.co.za
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