Case Law[2024] ZAKZDHC 41South Africa
Kilken Platinum (Pty) Limited v Lutzkie and Others (D11532/2022) [2024] ZAKZDHC 41 (4 June 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
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## Kilken Platinum (Pty) Limited v Lutzkie and Others (D11532/2022) [2024] ZAKZDHC 41 (4 June 2024)
Kilken Platinum (Pty) Limited v Lutzkie and Others (D11532/2022) [2024] ZAKZDHC 41 (4 June 2024)
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sino date 4 June 2024
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
KWAZULU-NATAL LOCAL
DIVISION: DURBAN
CASE NO: D11532/2022
In the matter between:
KILKEN PLATINUM (PTY)
LIMITED
APPLICANT
and
FREDERICK WILHELM
AUGUST LUTZKIE
FIRST RESPONDENT
EUGENE
BOTHA
SECOND RESPONDENT
NEW SALT ROCK CITY
(PTY) LIMITED
THIRD RESPONDENT
ORDER
The following order is
granted: -
1.
The application
is dismissed with costs.
JUDGMENT
OLSEN J
[1]
These are contempt proceedings. The applicant is Kilken
Platinum Proprietary
Limited. It seeks an order imprisoning the
first and second respondents, Messrs Lutzkie and Botha for 90 days,
and the imposition
of a fine of R250 000 on the third
respondent, New Rock City (Pty) Limited. The applicant’s
case is that on 7
May 2021 this court granted it an interim interdict
under case number D4047/2021 against the third respondent,
prohibiting the
third respondent from launching winding-up
proceedings against the applicant pending the decision in those
proceedings. The applicant
alleges that Mr Lutzkie, the first
respondent, is a former director of the third respondent and an
“indirect shareholder”
in it, and that he and the second
respondent, Mr Botha, who is a director of the third respondent,
exert total control and influence
over it. It is alleged that
the respondents “have been confederate with each other”,
and that they acted in concert
in contempt of the interim
order, in the manner described below.
[2]
On 5 May 2021 the applicant launched an urgent application against
the third respondent
for the issue of a
rule nisi
accompanied
by interim relief. This was done under case number D4047/2021.
The essential elements of its case were
relatively simple and may be
summarised as follows.
(a)
The third respondent
was a shareholder in the applicant. There was a shareholders’
agreement to which the third respondent
was a party, in terms of
which, if a dispute should arise
inter
alia
between the
company and a shareholder, the dispute would be submitted to private
arbitration for resolution.
(b)
The third respondent
sent a letter to the applicant demanding the payment of monies
claimed to be owing to the third respondent.
The letter was
framed in terms of s 345 of the Companies Act, 1973, warning that
winding-up proceedings would be commenced if the
debt was not paid.
(c)
The debt is in fact
disputed. It had to be submitted to private arbitration for
resolution. It was therefore not open
to the third respondent
to institute the threatened winding-up proceedings.
(d)
If the third respondent
were to proceed as it threatened to do, it would take out a bond of
security and launch an application,
both of which events would cause
severe harm to the applicant.
[3]
The relief sought in the Notice of Motion in case number D4047/2021
was for an interim
interdict as follows.
‘
2.1
The first respondent is hereby restrained and interdicted from
issuing an Application and/or Counter-Application
to this
Application, for the Compulsory Winding-Up of the Applicant founded
upon the First Respondent’s claims as demanded
under section
345 of the
Companies
Act, 1973
in its
letter dated 19 April, 2021 that appears as annexure “A”
hereto.
2.2.
The First Respondent is hereby restrained and interdicted from
applying to [The Master] for the
issue of a Security Bond in terms of
section 346(3) of the
Companies Act, 1973
for the
Winding-Up of the Applicant.’
[4]
On 6 May 2021 the attorneys representing the third respondent wrote a
letter to the
attorneys representing the applicant, stating that the
former were instructed “that between Mr Lutzkie [the first
respondent
in these proceedings] on behalf of the first respondent
[the third respondent in these proceedings] and Mr Zunaid Moti on
behalf
of the applicant, a draft order had been agreed, to the
following effect: …”
[5]
The material part of the draft order set out in that letter read as
follows.
‘
2.2
That
pendente lite
this Application the First Respondent [the third respondent in the
present proceedings] undertakes:
2.2.1 not to
issue an Application for the Winding-Up of the Applicant under
section 345 of the Companies Act, 61 of
1973 or the
Companies Act
2008
;
2.2.2 not to
apply for the issue of a Security Bond in terms of section 346(3) of
the
Companies Act 1973 and
for the Winding-Up of the
Applicant.’
That is the order which
was granted by this court on the morning of 7 May 2021.
[6]
The order was not granted without protest on behalf of the third
respondent who was
represented by junior counsel on the day.
Counsel for the third respondent informed the court that shortly
before the hearing
commenced, he had received a telephone call from
the third respondent’s senior counsel who instructed him to ask
that the
words “or the
Companies Act 2008
” be deleted
from the proposed consent order on the basis that it might be
interpreted to be a prohibition against exercising
other remedies
such as those under s 163 of the Companies Act, 2008. (One
would have thought that the complaint would be
that the order would
obstruct proceedings particularly under
s 81
of the
Companies Act,
2008
.) After a short debate the learned Judge considered the
letter just referred to and, as I understand his comments in the
transcript of those proceedings, he decided that because the letter
records that the order had been agreed upon between the parties,
that
was the order that had to be granted.
[7]
The applicant’s case in these proceedings is that, in contempt
of the court
order of 7 May 2021, on 8 August 2022 the third
respondent (as one of three applicants) launched an application out
of the Gauteng
Division, Pretoria, in terms of
s 81(1)(d)(iii)
of the
Companies Act, 2008
for an order placing the applicant in final
liquidation on the basis that it was just and equitable to do so.
[8]
The first respondent signed the opposing affidavit in the present
proceedings on his
own behalf, and on behalf of the second and third
respondents. He says in effect that the reference to the
Companies Act, 2008
was only inserted in the order because, having
been repealed, the provisions of the 1973 Act relating to the
winding-up of insolvent
companies only continued to operate because
of the transitional provisions made in Schedule 5 to the
Companies
Act, 2008
. He argued that it was necessary to refer to both
Acts in order to identify the scope of the interdict.
Unfortunately
for the first respondent the wording of paragraph 2.2.1
of the order that was granted does not support his interpretation.
On his interpretation the words “or the
Companies Act, 2008
”
ought to read “read with the
Companies Act 2008
”.
On the other hand, no affidavit by Mr Moti has been delivered to
contradict the first respondent’s explanation
for the refence
to the
Companies Act, 2008
in the order of 7 May 2021. I heard
argument on the proper approach to the interpretation of the court
order. The applicant
argues that the order agreed upon and
granted conveys that winding-up proceedings under the
Companies Act,
2008
were also forbidden under the order. I do not propose to
traverse the arguments on the subject of the interpretation of the
order. I will proceed upon the assumption that the applicant’s
interpretation is correct, without being convinced that
it is.
In my view the outcome of these proceedings turns on a different
issue.
[9]
In his answering affidavit the first respondent raised the fact that
on 19 and 25
October 2021 the parties concluded an agreement of
settlement and compromise. In terms of that agreement all then
existing
litigation between the parties was settled. That
included the litigation under case number D4047/2021. The
effect of
the settlement of that case was that the interim order now
relied upon by the applicant ceased to have any effect, it having
been
granted pending the determination of that litigation. That
the settlement was concluded and had that effect at the time is
not
disputed by the applicant.
[10]
The following facts are also undisputed.
(a)
The settlement
agreement provided that the entire shareholding of the third
respondent’s group in the applicant was bought
by the other
shareholder group for a substantial price, including the payment of
R350 million.
(b)
Claiming that there had
been non-performance of the settlement agreement justifying
cancellation, the third respondent purported
to cancel the settlement
agreement on 16 June 2022.
(c)
The applicant regarded
that as a repudiation of the settlement agreement which it eventually
accepted on 13 September 2022.
[11]
The argument for the applicant, based on the foregoing, is set out in
its replying affidavit
as follows.
‘
But
the cancellation of the Settlement Agreement has the effect of
undoing the full and final settlement which in turn has the effect
that the litigation previously fully and finally settled is no longer
settled but resurrected’.
The argument goes
further, it being the contention of the applicant that the
“resurrection” of the litigation meant
that the interim
order which had been discharged as a result of the settlement also
became “resurrected”. The
argument for the
respondents is that, whatever other consequences the cancellation of
the settlement agreement may have had, it
could not and did not
revive the litigation which preceded it, and could not revive or
bring into force the interim order which
ceased to have any effect -
which in effect expired – upon the settlement of the
litigation.
[12]
If the fundamental rule concerning the consequences of a compromise
or settlement of litigation
was ever in doubt, matters were clarified
by the Supreme Court of Appeal in
Road Accident Fund v Taylor and
Other Matters
2023 (5) SA 147
(SCA). The principle was
stated, and the long history of judgments affirming that principle
considered, at paragraphs 36
to 39 of the judgment of Van Der Merwe
JA. A compromise is “the final settlement of disputed or
uncertain rights or
obligations by agreement”. Unless the
agreement or compromise provides otherwise, “it extinguishes
the disputed
rights or obligations”. It puts an end to
litigation. A compromise has the effect of
res iudicata
.
[13]
The matter was put as follows in
Hlobo v Multilateral Motor
Vehicle Accidents Fund
2001 (2) SA 59
(SCA) at para 10.
‘
A
compromise (or
transactio
)
arrived at between litigants is a well-established measure. Our
courts encourage parties to deal with their disputes in
this way and
the rules decree that compromises must be sought. When
concluded such a compromise disposes of the proceedings.’
[14]
The effect of a compromise being to extinguish the rights and
obligations which were the subject
of the compromise, a party to a
compromise cannot claim enforcement of those extinguished rights.
A shortfall in the performance
of obligations in terms of an
agreement of compromise would only give rise to a claim for
enforcement thereof. The third
respondent’s right when
there was an alleged unlawful breach of the agreement of compromise
was to enforce the obligation
in question. It could not
unilaterally cancel the agreement of compromise and revert to the
position it claimed to occupy
before the compromise was reached.
However, when it purported to cancel the agreement it undoubtedly
showed an unequivocal
intention not to be bound by the agreement of
compromise. It repudiated it. The repudiation was accepted by the
applicant. The
agreement of compromise was terminated. It was
as if there was a consensual cancellation of the compromise which
would ordinarily
carry the implication that the parties agreed to
revert to their claimed rights and obligations which existed before
the compromise.
[15]
However, it is another thing to say that the agreement of compromise
automatically revived the
legal proceedings which had been the
subject of the compromise. They were terminated just as they would
have been if the court
had made its final order in those proceedings.
That must be the effect of the law treating the issues in settled
proceedings as
res judicata
. There was no agreement to revive
the proceedings. One supposes that, having cancelled the compromise,
the parties may agree that
the papers delivered in the proceedings
should be allowed to stand so that they could pick up from where they
were before settling
the case, perhaps in the interest of saving
costs. But I doubt the soundness of the proposition that this
happens automatically.
The applicant cited no authority for its
contention, and I have found none.
[16]
However, in my view this case does not turn on the question as to
whether the litigation under
case number D4047/2021 was “resurrected”
after it had died (adopting the terminology of the applicant).
It turns
on the question as to whether the interim order itself went
through such a process.
[17]
When the matter became settled the order expired in its own terms
because the litigation gained
the status of
res judicata
.
The order ceased to have the quality of being capable of enforcement.
It was not merely suspended. It contained no provision
or
qualification that if it expired it would automatically revive in any
circumstances.
[18]
In my view the order could not be rendered enforceable by agreement,
once its period of operation
came to an end. A silly example
illustrates the point. Two parties cannot by contract agree that as
between them an order of court
shall be deemed to exist obliging one
to perform an obligation in favour of the other, and on the strength
of that call upon the
registrar of the court to issue a process in
execution of the so-called deemed order. The enforcing party would be
obliged to ask
the court to make an order enforcing the obligation in
question before any processes in execution could be employed. It is
likewise
with variations of court orders. The parties may agree
upon the fact that an order already made should be varied to widen
its ambit. It is trite that the court itself must vary the
order to widen its ambit before it can be enforced in that form.
It
is not logical to suppose that despite the fact that an order like
the one in issue cannot be rendered enforceable by agreement,
that
should be regarded as having happened automatically, ie without a
further court order reviving the expired one.
[18]
The applicant cited no authority for the proposition that the interim
order automatically regained
the enforceability which it had lost
once the settlement agreement was terminated. I have been
unable to find any such authority.
[19]
I conclude that in launching its proceedings in Pretoria the third
respondent (and consequently
the first and second respondents) did
not act in contempt or breach of any order enforceable against them.
I MAKE THE FOLLOWING
ORDER.
The application is
dismissed with costs, including the costs of two counsel where
employed.
OLSEN J
Date of Hearing:
FRIDAY, 26 JANUARY
2024
Date
of Judgment:
Tuesday
4 June 2024
For
the Applicant:
Mr T
Dalrymple with Ms N Siboza
Instructed
by:
ULRICH
ROUX AND ASSOCIATES
Applicant’s
Attorney
Ground
Floor
15
Chaplin Road….Illovo
Sandton…..2196
(REF:
UR/VF/MT/MU1645)
(TEL:
011 455 4640)
EMAIL:
Ulrich@rouxlegal.com
Vanessa@rouxlegal.com
Matthew@rouxlegal.com
c/o
GRANT AND SWANEPOEL INC
(Ref:
A Grant / Priyanka / 01 U000123)
(Cell:
083 272 3110)
Email:
anthony@gsalaw.co.za
c/o
BEALL CHAPLIN AND HATHORN
121
Clarence Road
Essenwood…Berea
Durban
(Ref:
Anthony Chaplin)
(Cell:
083 272 3110)
Email:
anthony@bch.co.za
For
1
st
Respondent:
Mr A
Stokes SC
Instructed
by:
GOTHE
ATTORNEYS INC
1
st
and 2
nd
Respondents Attorneys
225
Muller Street
Queenswood
Pretoria
(REF:
KE Gothe/AC/A0108)
(TEL:
087 802 2013)
Email:
konrad@gotheattorneys.co.za
antoinette@gotheattorneys.co.za
c/o
GOODRICKES ATTORNEYS
1
Nollsworth Park
Nollsworth
Crescent
La
Lucia Ridge
Durban
(REF:
Ra-eesa Vorajee)
(TEL:
031 – 301 6211)
Email:
legal2@goodrickes.co.za
For
the 2
nd
& 3
rd
Respondents:
Mr JJ
Brett SC with Adv Jan G Smit
Instructed
by:
GOTHE
ATTORNEYS INC
1
st
and 2
nd
Respondents Attorneys
225
Muller Street
Queenswood
Pretoria
(REF:
KE Gothe/AC/A0108)
(TEL:
087 802 2013)
Email:
konrad@gotheattorneys.co.za
antoinette@gotheattorneys.co.za
c/o
GOODRICKES ATTORNEYS
1
Nollsworth Park
Nollsworth
Crescent
La
Lucia Ridge
Durban
(REF:
Ra-eesa Vorajee)
(TEL:
031 – 301 6211)
Email:
legal2@goodrickes.co.za
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