Case Law[2024] ZAKZDHC 14South Africa
Mann v Aero Natal (Pty) Ltd and Another (11250/21) [2024] ZAKZDHC 14 (24 April 2024)
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by the Fairways Trust were to be transferred to the second respondent.
Judgment
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# South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
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## Mann v Aero Natal (Pty) Ltd and Another (11250/21) [2024] ZAKZDHC 14 (24 April 2024)
Mann v Aero Natal (Pty) Ltd and Another (11250/21) [2024] ZAKZDHC 14 (24 April 2024)
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sino date 24 April 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
KWAZULU-NATAL
LOCAL DIVISION, DIVISION
CASE
NO: 11250/21
In
the matter between:
DARYL
MANN
APPLICANT
and
AERO NATAL (PTY) LTD
FIRST
RESPONDENT
BLACK SHEEP CAPITAL
(PTY) LTD
SECOND RESPONDENT
ORDER
The
following order is granted:
1.
Clause 14 of the second sale of shares agreement concluded on 1
December 2021 is amended by inserting the words
“
and or the
purchaser
” immediately after the phrase “
by the
company
”.
2.The
balance of the relief sought by the applicant is dismissed.
3.
The applicant is to bear the costs of the application on a party and
party scale.
JUDGMENT
TUCKER
AJ
[1]
The applicant brought what was initially an urgent application to
protect
his contractual rights under an agreement of sale of shares.
Envisaged as security for the obligations towards the second
respondent’s
payment obligations in respect of the shares was
three aircraft and an immovable property.
[2]
At the hearing of the urgent application on 25 January 2023 an order
was
taken by consent where the respondents gave an undertaking not to
dispose of the aircraft and the immovable property without giving
prior notice. As will become relevant later, the applicant was
also given leave to file a supplementary founding affidavit.
[3]
The relief
sought by the applicant on the opposed roll on 16 April 2024 was the
relief under Part B of the amended notice of motion
comprising of a
claim for rectification of the second shareholders agreement,
[1]
together with relief declaring the applicant’s entitlement to
ownership of the aircraft and the immovable property and corollary
relief thereto directing the second respondent to pass transfer of
the assets.
Background
[4]
The first respondent Aero Natal (Pty) Ltd is a company specialising
in
aircraft maintenance and trades from Virginia Airport in Durban
North. The second respondent is an entity that wished to purchase
the
shareholding in the first respondent.
[5]
On 26 October 2021, the Fairways Trust (a trust to which the
applicant
is affiliated) signed a sale of shares agreement in terms
of which the total shares held by the Fairways Trust were to be
transferred
to the second respondent.
[6]
The difficulty that subsequently arose is that it came to the
parties’
attention to that agreement that it was in fact the
applicant who owned such shareholding in his own name rather through
the Fairways
Trust.
[7]
Subsequent thereto and on 1 December 2021, two further agreements
were
concluded:
(a)
a “cancellation of agreement” signed by the Fairway Trust
and the respondents; and
(b)
a second sale of shares agreement which is signed by the applicant
and
a representative of the second respondent.
[8]
The terms of the first and second sale of shares agreements are
nearly
identical, save that the applicant has been substituted as
seller of the shareholding in the first respondent, and certain
suspensive
conditions of the first sale of shares agreement were
removed.
[9]
For the purposes of the present determination the following clauses
of
the second sale of shares agreement are relevant:
(a)
clause 2.1 which inserts suspensive conditions that all the annexures
are to be signed by
both parties, the necessary changes to CIPC and
appointments stay as they had been registered as at 30 November 2021
until such
time as the Civil Aviation Authority approves the change
in ownership, the applicant resigns as a director, and the applicant
concludes
a 12-month consultancy agreement;
(b)
clause 2.3 where it is recorded that the suspensive conditions were
inserted for the benefit
of the purchaser;
(c)
clause 2.4 of the agreement states:
‘
The suspensive
conditions may be waived by written notice to the seller by the
purchaser by no later than 5 November 2021 except
for 2.1.2 that will
automatically be waived within a maximum period of twelve months or
as soon as Civil Aviation Authority consent
to the change in
ownership, whichever the sooner’.
(d)
the purchase price would be a total amount of R8,2 million payable by
an initial amount
of R1,4 million on signature, R1,6 million by 15
January 2022, and the balance of R5,2 million within 30 days of the
fulfilment
of the suspensive condition of the approval by the Civil
Aviation Authority of the sale;
(e)
clause 14 of the agreement provides:
‘
Should the
purchaser breach of this agreement by not performing to pay as per
clause 4 more specific to clause 4.1.3 and fail to
remedy such breach
within 14 (fourteen) days of written notice requiring the breach to
be remedied, then the seller be entitled
to attach for his own
benefit and ownership the following assets owned by the company up to
the value outstanding for the purchase
consideration and retain such
monies as an offset to the amount due under 4.1.3:
-
ZA-MOL Cessna 172
-
ZA-LXA Piper Sennica 2
-
ZS-KCR Beach Craft Sundowner
-
Erf 9074, Secunda, Extension 57.’
[10]
The usual
Shifren
clauses are also present in the agreement.
[11]
The applicant’s contention is that the second respondent had
paid the initial amount
of R1,4 million, together with a further
payment of R150 000. Thereafter the agreement had been
breached by the second
respondent by failing to pay the balance owing
of R6,65 million.
[12]
Prior to delving into the defences raised by the respondents, there
are two further matters
arising from the papers that need to be
briefly discussed.
[13]
Firstly, and in terms of the amended notice of motion, a claim for
rectification has been
brought to insert the words “
and or
the purchaser
” after the word company in the abovementioned
clause 14 of the agreement. It was stated in the supplementary
affidavit delivered
on behalf of the applicant that this omission was
as a result of a mutual error between the applicant and the
representatives of
the respondents.
[14]
The respondents have elected not to deliver an answering affidavit to
the allegations contained
in supplementary founding affidavit.
Accordingly, there is no dispute that clause 14 does not in its
current state reflect
the true intention of the parties as a result
of a mutual error.
[15]
Secondly, there appears to be no dispute by the applicant, that the
three aircraft are
owned by the first respondent whereas the
immovable property is owned by the second respondent.
Defences
raised by the respondents
[16]
The defences raised by the respondents to the application require
varying degrees of interrogation.
[17]
The
respondents firstly contended that, considering that the agreement
concluded between the parties contained a consent as envisaged
in
terms of s 45(1) of the Magistrates’ Court,
[2]
this Court accordingly did not have jurisdiction to entertain any
complaint that arose pursuant to such contract.
[18]
Apart from
the difficulties the Magistrates’ Court would have in
entertaining the declaratory relief sought in the notice
of motion
and the claim for specific performance under the contract, it is a
matter of recently reaffirmed law that the fact that
jurisdiction may
be conferred (whether by contract or statute) to deal with an issue
in the Magistrates’ Court that such
provisions would not oust
the High Court’s jurisdiction.
[3]
[19]
The second
defence raised is that clause 14, albeit conditionally on breach,
constitutes a disposition of the greater part of the
assets of the
first respondent and consequently the conclusion of any such
agreement would have had to have complied with the requirements
of ss
112 and 115 of the Companies Act (‘the Companies Act’).
[4]
[20]
As was correctly raised by Mr
van Huyssteen
for the applicant,
the difficulty with this argument raised by the respondents was that
the sole shareholder was a signatory to
the second sale of shares
agreement, being the applicant at the time of the signature (and the
prospective sole shareholder being
the second respondent on
fulfilment).
[22]
In the decision of
Moraitis
Investments (Pty) Ltd and Others v Montic Dairy (Pty) Ltd and
Others
,
[5]
specifically at paragraph 37, Wallis JA writing for the Supreme Court
of Appeal in a unanimous decision stated as follows:
‘
The
purpose underpinning the requirements of
ss 112
and
115
is
to ensure that the interests and views of all shareholders are taken
into account before the company disposes of the whole or
the greater
part of its assets or the undertaking itself. In the case of a
special resolution
ss 65(9)
and
(10) stipulate the majority that must be achieved for such a
resolution to be passed. Where the company only has a single
shareholder,
these requirements become a mere formality. In those
circumstances it seems to me that the principle of unanimous consent
can be
invoked in answer to the appellants’ contention. That
principle, long recognised in English company law, from which our
courts
have received much guidance, was accepted as part of our law
relating to companies, under both the 1926 and the 1973 Companies
Acts. I can see nothing in the current Act to suggest that the
principle no longer finds application. The problems that this
court
identified in
Quadrangle
Investments
and
those identified by Professor Beuthin in his article on the topic do
not arise here to preclude the invocation of the
principle.’
(Footnotes omitted.)
[23]
The contention by the respondents that the formality of special
resolution needed to have
been complied with accordingly, on the
principle about, must fail.
[24]
The further defences raised by the respondents, however, require a
more detailed investigation.
Suspensive
conditions
[25]
The respondents contend that the suspensive conditions in the
agreement were not fulfilled,
in particular clause 2.1.8 which
specifies:
‘
That
Mr Daryl G Mann ID number … entered into a 12 months
consultancy agreement with “the company” and to be
the
responsible accounting person on the AMO and all other licences.’
[26]
This clause clearly envisages two separate acts to be fulfilled –
the conclusion
of the consultancy agreement and the appointment of
the applicant as the responsible accounting person.
[27]
The predominant focus of the answering affidavit appears to be
challenging the fulfilment
of the first part of the suspensive
condition. This criticism is misplaced on the common cause facts.
[28]
The respondents agree in the answering affidavit that such agreement
was concluded, but
thereafter alleges breach of the consultancy
agreement and premature termination.
[29]
The reason
for the termination of the consultancy agreement forms a dispute of
fact on the papers, though one that need not be delved
into further.
This is because where a suspensive condition is fulfilled, but later
the basis for such fulfilment is withdrawn (for
example, a financier
granting a mortgage bond to a purchaser of an immovable property, and
thereafter withdrawing such approval),
this does not have the effect
in law of undoing an already met suspensive condition.
[6]
[30]
As a consequence of this, and even if (without making any such
finding) the subsequent
conduct of the applicant constituted a breach
of the consultancy agreement, this would not have the effect of
undoing the fulfilment
of the first part of suspensive condition
contained in clause 2.1.8.
[31]
The second part of the suspensive condition in clause 2.1.8, being
that the applicant was
to “
be the responsible accounting
person on the AMO and all other licences
”, is more
contentious.
[32]
Annexed to the answering affidavit is a letter sent by the Civil
Aviation Authority dated
12 November 2021, where it notes the change
in directorship of the first respondent and the failure to register a
new accountable
manager, the same constituting an offence.
[33]
The approval from the Civil Aviation Authority to the transfer of the
shareholding appears
to have been later obtained on 30 June 2022.
[34]
In response
to the allegations relating to the failure to appoint an accountable
manager as envisaged by the Regulations to the
Aviation Act, the
applicant himself states:
[7]
‘
28
This is not a process that can be undertaken unilaterally by a
person. There has to be an application
to the Civil Aviation
Authority by the relevant aircraft maintenance organisation and not
by the individual.
29
It was therefore up to Aero Natal to process the documents for me to
become a responsible person but
at the very least, from the day my
consultancy agreement was terminated, any steps that were being taken
in that regard simply,
fell away.’
[35]
These are the difficulties with this argument:
(a)
Clause 2.3 of the agreement expressly records that the suspensive
conditions are for the benefit of the purchaser, being the
second
respondent; and
(b)
clause 2.4 of the agreement seems to restrict the ability of the
second respondent to waive fulfilment of the suspensive conditions
save if written notice is given by the second respondent to the
applicant by no later than 5 November 2021 (save for suspensive
condition 2.1.2, which is uncontentious).
[36]
Whether a suspensive condition is met or not is a factual enquiry.
That it may have been
up to the first respondent to assist in this
process does not change that on the applicant’s own version the
suspensive condition
was not fulfilled.
[37]
There is further no suggestion made, nor could there be, that
fictional fulfilment would
apply in the circumstances considering the
first respondent is not a party to the second sale of shares
agreement.
[38]
The contention that the suspensive conditions must be regarded as
having been met, as was
presented in the heads of argument, because
both parties are seeking the enforcement of the agreement would be to
ignore the express
wording of the contract.
[39]
Considering it is common cause that the applicant was not so
appointed as the responsible
accounting person as envisaged by clause
2.1.8 of the agreement, the suspensive condition was not met and
consequently the agreement
is void.
[40]
On the strength of this finding, the remainder of the applicant’s
relief must fail.
[41]
That said, and for the sake of completeness, the balance of the
contentions between the
parties shall nonetheless be dealt with.
Who
are the parties to the second sale of shares agreement?
[42]
Clause 14 of the second sale of shares agreement detailed above,
being the foundation of
the applicant’s claim to the
entitlement of ownership of the three aircraft and the immovable
property, will state in its
rectified form that in the event of
breach, the aircraft and the immovable property may be taken for the
applicant’s own
benefit and ownership up to the value of the
amounts stipulated in clause 4.1.3 being an amount of R5,2 million.
[43]
Again, there is no dispute that the three aircraft listed in the
agreement are owned by
the first respondent, whereas the immovable
property is owned by the second respondent.
[44]
One of the disputes that has arisen between the parties, is whether
the second sale of
shares agreement is enforceable against the first
respondent. The challenge by the respondents is that the first
respondent is
not a party to the second sale of shares agreement and,
consequently, it does not create any obligations for the first
respondent,
including the obligation to deliver the aircraft in the
event of default by the second respondent with its payment
obligations
owed to the applicant.
[45]
As stated at the outset, the agreement of cancelation was signed by
the respondents and
the Fairways Trust on 1 December 2021. On that
same date, the second sale of shares agreement which belies the
present dispute
was concluded. Crucially, however, the
signatories to that agreement were only the applicant and the second
respondent’s
representative.
[46]
Submission was made in argument for the applicant that, considering
it appeared that the
cancellation agreement was concluded
simultaneously with the second sale of shares agreement, that the
first respondent must equally
have been agreeing to the contents of
the second sale of shares agreement.
[47]
The argument cannot be sustained and is also a proverbial
double-edged sword.
[48]
If the first respondent’s representative was available, ready
and willing to be party
to the agreement then there is no reason why
their signature would also not appear on the second sale of shares
agreement. An inference
could equally be drawn that the failure to
sign was a purposeful act.
[49]
Moreover, and while the definition of “parties” is not
included in the second
sale of shares agreement, the following
clauses are of relevance:
(a)
clause 2.1.1 makes reference to the annexures “to be completed
and
signed by
both
parties
”;
(b)
clause
18.2.2 refers to “to which
either or both
of the parties are subject”;
(c)
clauses 18.2.3 and 18.2.4 both further make use of the word “either”;
and
(d)
clause 18.2.6 makes reference to the phrase “by the other
party”.
[50]
Each of these phrases supports the notion of there only being two
parties to the agreement,
and that that agreement is not a tripartite
agreement as contended for by the applicant. To suggest for a
tripartite agreement
having come into effect would be to do violence
to the wording of the second sale of shares agreement.
[51]
Furthermore, clause 1.2.17 of the second sale of shares agreement has
the definition of
“signature date” as being “the
date of signature of this agreement by the party last signing”.
This clearly
envisages that the agreement should be signed by the
parties thereto in order to be effective. Consequently, the
conclusion that
the sale of shares agreement was a tripartite
agreement with the first respondent being a party, cannot be
sustained.
[52]
Privity of
contract is a fundamental pillar of our law of contract. As
stated in
Christie’s
The Law of Contract in South Africa
[8]
the basic idea of contract being that people must be bound by the
contracts they make with each other. Strangers cannot sue or
be sued
on contract to which they are in no way connected. The doctrine
that prevents this situation arising is usually known
as the doctrine
of privity of contract; parties who are not privy to a contract
cannot sue or be sued on it.
[53]
The applicant would accordingly not be able to enforce any claim for
the declaratory or
delivery relief in respect of the aircraft when
those aircraft are owned by the first respondent, who is not a party
to the contract.
[54]
Furthermore, and considering the express wording of the agreement
that any amount of value
derived from the aircraft would be credited
towards the outstanding balance owing under clause 4.1.3 of the
agreement for the acquisition
by the second respondent of the
applicant’s shares in the first respondent, this arrangement
would in any event be contrary
to s 44(3) of the Companies Act. This
is because there is no evidence that the board completed the
requisite solvency tests and
were so empowered, and the clause places
the first respondent in the position where it would be financing the
acquisition of its
own shares.
Further
considerations
[55]
The
difficulties mentioned above relating to the aircraft specifically
and the agreement being bilateral rather than tripartite
would have
no impact on the immovable property. That said the further hurdle
(though by no means insurmountable) for the applicant
is that the
request for the transfer of the immovable property would trigger the
requirements of s 97 of the Deeds Registries Act.
[9]
The Registrar of Deeds has not been given the requisite seven days’
notice and afforded the opportunity to make such report
as may be
deemed fit.
[56]
The declaratory relief of entitlement to ownership, (which was not
strongly persisted for
in argument) would have in any event been
inappropriate. The papers before the Court did not provide sufficient
evidence to exclude
potential real rights of third parties in respect
of the aircraft and the immovable property that could interfere with
the entitlement
for declaratory relief relating to ownership.
[57]
Without delving into these aspects in great detail, there are further
debates relating
to clause 14 of the second sale of share agreement,
including:
(a)
whether clause 14 constitutes an unenforceable
pactum
commissorium
; and
(b)
whether the phraseology of clause 14 itself confers automatic rights
on
default and therefore is a
parate executie
clause and
possibly unenforceable.
[58]
Tied with these potential difficulties
pactum commissorium
and
parate executie
, and despite both the applicant and the
respondents having proffered approximate values for the aircraft and
the immovable property,
there is no admissible evidence before the
Court relating to the value of the aircraft and the immovable
property. This is owing
to neither side having employed the services
of a suitably qualified expert, and value being evidence of the
nature of an opinion.
[59]
Considering clause 14 of the agreement would only permit the
applicant to take ownership
of the immovable property “
up
to the value
outstanding for the purchase consideration
”,
this would have constituted essential evidence. It is not sufficient
that it has merely been stated in the replying affidavit
that these
assets may be sold and applied towards the outstanding purchase
consideration, and any excess tendered. This is
because what is
being requested is a conferral of ownership in the relief, not an
entitlement to execute against.
[60]
For these reasons, and apart from the undefended claim for
rectification, the applicant’s
application must fail.
[61]
Turning to the aspect of costs and while:
(a)
the applicant was successful in its claim for rectification (though
that part was essentially
undefended);
(b)
the applicant will nonetheless gain control of the aircraft again
through the finding that
the second sale of shares agreement did not
come into existence; the applicant has been predominantly
unsuccessful relief sought.
[62]
Consequently the applicant should pay the costs of the application.
Order
[63]
In a result of the above the following order is made:
1.
Clause 14 of the second sale of shares agreement concluded on 1
December 2021 is amended by inserting
the words “
and or the
purchaser
” immediately after the phrase “
by the
company
”.
2.
The balance of the relief sought by the applicant is dismissed.
3.
The applicant is to bear the costs of the application on a party and
party scale.
TUCKER AJ
Appearances
Counsel
for Applicant:
K J
Van Huyssteen
Instructed
by:
Fluxmans
Attorneys
Counsel for the
Respondent:
No Appearance
Instructed
by:
Date
Judgment Reserved:
16
April 2024
Date
Judgment Delivered:
24
April 2024
[1]
Annexure “B” to the founding affidavit.
[2]
Magistrates’ Court Act 32 of 1944.
[3]
Standard
Bank of South Africa Ltd and Others v Mpongo and Others
2021 (6) SA 403
(SCA), as subsequently confirmed by the
Constitutional Court in
South
African Human Rights Commission v Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd
and Others
2023 (3) SA 36 (CC).
[4]
Companies Act 71 of 2008
.
[5]
Moraitis
Investments (Pty) Ltd and Others v Montic Dairy (Pty) Ltd and Others
2017
(5) SA 508 (SCA).
[6]
Dharsey
v Shelly
1995 (2) SA 58
(C) at 64B-E.
[7]
Supplementary
affidavit, page 297 paras 28 and 29.
[8]
R
H Christie and G B Bradfield
The
Law of Contract in South Africa
8 ed (2022) at 317 para 6.3.
[9]
Deeds Registries Act 47 of 1937
.
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