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# South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
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[2024] ZAKZDHC 49
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## Voltex (Pty) Ltd v EP Inland (Pty) Ltd (Formerly known as Edison Power Gauteng (Pty) Ltd) (D10784/2021)
[2024] ZAKZDHC 49 (22 July 2024)
Voltex (Pty) Ltd v EP Inland (Pty) Ltd (Formerly known as Edison Power Gauteng (Pty) Ltd) (D10784/2021)
[2024] ZAKZDHC 49 (22 July 2024)
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sino date 22 July 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
KWAZULU-NATAL
LOCAL DIVISION, DURBAN
CASE
NO.: D10784/2021
In
the matter between:
VOLTEX
(PTY) LTD
APPLICANT
And
EP
INLAND (PTY) LTD
RESPONDENT
(FORMERLY
KNOWN AS EDISON POWER
GAUTENG
(PTY) LTD)
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties' representatives by email and released to SAFLII. The
date
for hand down is deemed to be on 22 July 2024 at 14:30
ORDER
The
following order is made:
1.
The respondent is placed in final liquidation.
2.
The applicant's costs are to be costs in the liquidation. Such costs
to include the costs
of two counsel, where employed, on Scale C.
JUDGMENT
Broster
AJ
[1]
This is an opposed application wherein the applicant seeks a final
winding-up order against the
respondent. The provisional order was
granted by the Honourable Madam Acting Justice Gabriel on 11 May
2023.
[2]
The applicant is a supplier of electrical goods. In 2013 the
respondent, represented by Vathasallum
Reddy & Thaseegavasen
Govender signed credit application agreements
[1]
with the applicant for the supply and delivery of electrical goods at
the respondent's special instance and request. During the
period from
2020 to August 2021
[2]
the
applicant sold and delivered electrical goods to the respondent at
the respondent's special instance and request to the value
of R 6 688
763.18. Despite delivery of the goods, the respondent did not pay for
those electrical goods. On 8 October 2021, the
applicant, by Sheriff,
served a notice in terms of s 345(1)
(a)(i)
of the
Companies Act 61 of 1973 ('the Act') at the respondent's registered
address.
[3]
Subsequently, on 1
December 2021, the applicant initiated these liquidation proceedings,
which were also served on the respondent's
registered address. On 9
March 2022, the applicant filed a supplementary founding affidavit,
which set out that the respondent's
director, Etienne Singh, had
acknowledged liability for the debt and had made an offer to settle.
Additionally, it was noted that
the respondent's assets had been
subject to attachment, and default judgments had been obtained
against the respondent by South
African Revenue Service ('SARS') and
Diesel Electric (Pty) Ltd.
[4]
[3]
On 5 April 2022, the respondent filed its initial answering
affidavit, deposed to by Etienne Singh,
who alleged that:
(i)
In 2019, a whistle-blower informed the respondent's shareholder of a
large scale fraud
involving the misappropriation of significant
funds belonging to the respondent was being perpetrated by senior
managers and directors
of the respondent in collusion with
suppliers;
[5]
(ii)
A forensic inquiry was in progress, and that various criminal
complaints were lodged with the
Hawks in July, August and November
2020;
[6]
(iii)
The respondent undertook efforts to verify the authenticity of the
applicant's claim due to
alleged collusion between key managers,
directors of the respondent, and certain suppliers;
[7]
(iv)
The respondent's shareholder had allegedly provided security in the
amount of R 7 million by depositing
funds into the trust account held
by the respondent's attorney of record..
[4]
On 14 April 2022, the applicant served its replying affidavit,
asserting that the respondent's
previous attorneys of record believed
that the applicant's debt had been liquidated. The applicant
highlighted that the respondent's
answering affidavit did not dispute
the debt, and subsequently attached 500 invoices and delivery notes
as evidence supporting
its claim regarding sales and deliveries of
goods.
[8]
[5]
Subsequently, and with the leave of the court, on 8 February 2023,
the respondent filed a supplementary
answering affidavit. The
affidavit was deposed to by Etienne Singh and in attempting to
elaborate on the content of the initial
answering affidavit, he:
(i)
Reiterated allegations that the respondent had been the victim of a
large-scale fraud however,
provided no further details regarding the
alleged fraud;
(ii)
Contradicted the initial answering affidavit by asserting that the
analysis of the alleged fraud
lacked the involvement of an accountant
with forensic expertise;
[9]
(iii)
Alleged that, due to his appointed in March 2020 and active
involvement in the day-to-day business
from June 2021, the invoices
and delivery notes annexed to the applicant's replying affidavit had
occurred before his employment
at the business.
[10]
However, the dates on these documents span from June 2021 to August
2021, with only a minor portion falling within the May to April
2021
timeframe,
[11]
(iv)
Clarified that he was not suggesting that the applicant was involved
with any criminal or untoward
conduct;
[12]
(v)
Asserted that certain invoices and delivery notes contained false
purchase orders and numbers.
[13]
Annexure "ES1" provided a list of 75 "transactions"
which total R833 559.02.
[14]
(vi)
Admitted to agreeing to a payment plan with the applicant, but
stipulated that the plan was provisional
and depended on the
verification of the applicant's claim.
[15]
[6]
The applicant then filed a substantial replying affidavit to the
supplementary affidavit. The
matter was set down for argument before
the Honourable Madam Acting Justice Gabriel, who granted a
provisional winding-up order
on 11 May 2023.
[16]
The provisional order was duly served on SARS,
[17]
published in the Government Gazette,
[18]
published in the local newspapers,
[19]
on the employees of the respondent
[20]
and on the creditors of the respondent.
[7]
On 24 August 2023, the respondent filed an answering affidavit to the
final winding-up order.
The deponent to this answering affidavit was
Siyabonga Temba, another director of the respondent. Temba asserted
the following
allegations:
(i)
That in
March/April 2023, the respondent ceased accepting new work and was
not working on any further projects, resulting in the
respondent's
cessation of its operations ;
[21]
(ii)
The
respondent had instituted various legal proceedings against its
former directors, including sequestration and anti-dissipation
applications, with the aim of recovering funds allegedly
misappropriated by those directors from the respondent ;
[22]
(iii)
That the
applicant and other secured creditors should await receipt by the
respondent of the funds potentially recovered in the
litigation to
ensure payment to both the applicant and unsecured creditors, and
that the liquidation was not in the interests of
justice.
[23]
[8]
Temba's answering affidavit did not attempt to dispute the
applicant's claim; instead, Temba contended
that the debt was not
due, relying on statements made in previous affidavits by Etienne
Singh.
[24]
[9]
On 28 September 2023, the applicant filed its replying affidavit,
asserting that despite the lapse
of four years since the 2019
whistle-blower allegation, no allegations or evidence substantiated
fraud or collusion between the
applicant and the directors of the
respondent. Additionally, the applicant disputed that there was any
factual basis for recovery
in respect of the allegations of fraud,
maintaining that the respondent remained insolvent and justifying the
winding-up order.
[10]
On 29 January 2024, the morning of the hearing for the opposed motion
for final winding-up, the respondent
again launched an application to
supplement their papers. The respondent sought leave to introduce a
bank statement of its former
director, Govender, which revealed a
payment of R 85 000 made to Govender in August 2019. The amount was
paid from Voltex Group
Account.
[25]
The allegation based on the bank account statement was that the
payment constituted a "kickback" paid by the applicant
to
the respondent's former director, with the purpose of approving the
applicant's supply of goods at inflated prices, for goods
not
required, or goods not delivered by the applicant to the
respondent.
[26]
[11]
Considering the lateness of the application to supplement, I ordered
that the parties exchange further
affidavits and adjourned the matter
to 22 February 2024, for the continuation of the opposed motion.
[12]
On 5 February 2024, the respondent filed a further supplementary
affidavit attempting to connect the R85
000 kickback to transactions
between the applicant and the respondent on the "XON Project",
which concluded in March
2019.
[27]
It must be pointed out that the respondent did not establish a
connection between the R85 000 payment and any specific invoice
or
delivery note in respect of the amounts claimed by the applicant in
the period of May 2021 to August 2021. Further, the respondent
again
failed to demonstrate that any items indicated on those delivery
notes were either charged at an inflated price, not delivered
to the
respondent, or were not ordered at all.
[13]
The applicant filed a reply to the further supplementary affidavit
and sought to explain the payment of R85
000 was an ex gratia payment
made by the then CEO of the applicant to Govender. This payment aimed
to promote the applicant's products
to consulting engineers in
Johannesburg between 2008 to 2019.
[28]
[14]
At the hearing of the opposed motion:
(i)
Counsel for the applicant submitted that there was no basis to admit
the further supplementary
affidavit and that the information
contained therein had been available to the respondent since at least
2019 and ought to have
been included in the affidavits previously
filed by the respondent. Additionally, counsel for the applicant
submitted that the
statutory requirements for the service of the
provisional order had been complied with, the debt claimed was not
disputed on
reasonable grounds and that the respondent
was factually insolvent, justifying the applicant's entitlement to a
final winding-up
order;
(ii)
Counsel for the respondent submitted that the court possesses a
discretion to refuse a winding-up
order, that there were reasonable
prospects that the respondent could recover monies. Once these monies
are recovered, the respondent
would have sufficient funds to settle
the applicant's debt together with the other trade creditors.
Further, the payment of R85
000 raised concerns that the applicant
may have been party to a fraudulent scheme with the former directors
of the respondent.
This issue necessitated the hearing of oral
evidence.
[15]
In my engagement with counsel for the respondent, counsel was
constrained to concede that there was no allegation
connecting the R
85 000 payment to any portion of the debt claimed by the applicant in
these proceedings. Further, counsel for
the respondent was
constrained to concede that the allegations of corruption and/or
collusion were, at best, speculation and relied
on three paragraphs
from the supplementary affidavit filed in February 2024.
[29]
Admission
of supplementary affidavit
[16]
There is much to be said for the applicant's proposition that the
facts outlined in the supplementary answering
affidavit, filed on 29
January 2024, where already within the respondent's knowledge at the
time of the filing of the other affidavits
in this matter. However,
considering that the applicant had the opportunity to reply to the
supplementary answering affidavit,
and the view I take as a whole, I
am inclined to grant the respondent leave to file the further
supplementary affidavit.
Issues
[17]
The factual circumstances give rise to the following considerations
before this court::
(i)
Is the applicant's debt disputed, and is the dispute
of fact a
genuine?
(ii)
What is the nature of the discretion of a court in deciding
a final
winding-up or liquidation proceeding?
(iii) Are there
sufficient grounds present for the court to exercise its discretion
to refuse a final winding-up order?
Legal
principles
[18]
Where a final winding-up order is sought, the applicant must
establish its claim on a balance of probability.
However, in matters
where facts are disputed, the court is not permitted to determine the
dispute on a balance of probability and
must instead apply the
Plascon-Evans
[30]
test.
[31]
If a genuine dispute
of fact exists regarding the existence of the applicant's claim at a
final liquidation stage, the application
must fail.
[32]
[19]
Where a respondent wants to dispute the Applicant's debt and alleges
that that dispute, if proved, would
constitute a defence, but is
unable to provide an affidavit containing allegations that prima
facie establish that defence, then
the respondent is oblige to follow
the method set out by Cloete J in
Minister
of Land Affairs and Agriculture and Others v D & F Wevell Trust
and Others
[33]
at paragraph 56:
"In
the situation presently being considered the respondent may not
dispute the facts alleged by the applicant, but does seek
an
opportunity to prove allegations which would constitute a defence to
the applicant's claim. In the former case the respondent
in effect
says: given the opportunity, I propose showing that the applicant
will not be able to establish the facts which it must
establish in
order to obtain the relief it seeks; and in the latter the respondent
in effect says: given the opportunity, I propose
showing that even if
the facts alleged by the applicant are true, I can prove a defence.
(It is no answer to say that motion proceedings
must be decided on
the version of the respondent even when the onus of proving that
version rests upon the respondent, because
ex hypothesi
the
respondent is unable to produce evidence in affidavit form in support
of its version.) It would be essential in the situation
postulated
for the deponent to the respondent's answering affidavit to set out
the import of the evidence which the respondent
proposes to elicit
(by way of cross-examination of the applicants' deponents or other
persons he proposes to subpoena) and explain
why the evidence is not
available.
Most
importantly, and this requirement deserves particular emphasis, the
deponent would have to satisfy the court that there are
reasonable
grounds for believing that the defence would be established."
[20]
When a respondent raises commercial bribery or kickbacks as part of
its defence to contract or claim predicated
on fraud, the essential
elements of commercial bribery that must be alleged are outlined in
Extel
Industrial (Pty) Ltd and Another v Crown Mills (Pty) Ltd
[34]
where Nienaber JA stated that:
"Elements
of commercial bribery that can be identified are: (i) a
reward (ii) paid or promised (iii) by one party,
the briber, (iv) to
another, the agent (who may be an agent in the true sense or merely a
go-between or facilitator), (v) who is
able to exert influence over
(vi) a third party, the principal (vii) with the intention that the
agent (viii) should induce the
principal (ix) without the latter's
knowledge and (x) for the direct or indirect benefit of the briber
(xi) to enter into or maintain
or alter a contractual relationship
(xii) with the briber, his principal, associate or subordinate."
[35]
[21]
Where a party seeks a referral to oral evidence, the Constitutional
Court in
Mamadi
and Another v Premier of Limpopo Province and Others
[36]
recently explained that:
"General
principles governing the referral of a matter to oral evidence or
trial remain applicable. Litigants should, as a
general rule, apply
for a referral to oral evidence or trial, where warranted, as soon as
the affidavits have been exchanged."
[37]
Has
the applicant established a claim?
[22]
The applicant contends that the respondent ought to be subject to
winding-up proceedings in terms of s344
(f)
of the Act by virtue of the fact that the respondent is deemed to be
unable to pay its debts or provided for in terms of s 345(1)
(a)(i)
of the
Act, and/or that the respondent is unable to pay its debts stipulated
in terms of s 345(1)
(c)
of the
Act.
[38]
The respondent does
not dispute the service of the s 345(1)
(c)
notice
in terms of the Act. However, the debt alleged in that statutory
demand is allegedly disputed.
[23]
The applicant alleges that the debt arises from goods sold and
delivered during the period from March 2021
to August 2021. The
applicant provided a comprehensive set of invoices and delivery notes
justifying the amounts claimed. However,
despite these documents
being part of the pleadings since August 2021,
[39]
there has been no genuine
bona
fide
attempt by the respondent to dispute any of the invoices or amounts
claimed. Notably, this is more problematic given that the respondent
has, on two occasions, sought to supplement its affidavits in these
proceedings. In each of the supplementary affidavits the respondent
sought to advance the proposition that a fraud had been perpetrated
on the respondent. Despite the lapse of time between 2019 when
the
fraud was first discovered and the hearing of this matter in February
2024, the respondent has singularly failed to indicate
that the
invoices were inflated, that goods were not delivered, or not ordered
at all.
[24]
The crux of the respondent's argument in respect of disputing the
debt owed to the applicant may be found
within the respondent's first
supplementary affidavit, where the respondent alleges that 75
transactions contained no purchase
order numbers
[40]
and annexure "ES1" tabulates the alleged questionable
transactions which amount to R837 559.02.
[25]
Even if one accepts the respondent's version of the transactions
outlined in annexure "ES1" and
acknowledging that these
transactions are genuinely disputed, there remains an unchallenged
balance of R 5 851 204.16 in favour
of the applicant's claim. The
respondent complains of a lack of time to analyse the applicant's
invoices and delivery notes however,
despite the lapse of two years
from the date of the filing of the applicant's replying affidavit in
2022, which contained the invoices
and delivery notes. the respondent
has not :
(i)
Attempted to dispute the invoices and delivery
notes properly;
(iii)
Set out which of the invoices the prices were inflated;
(iv)
Set out which of the invoices demonstrated goods that had not been
delivered or orders that had not been placed.
[26]
These failures inevitably lead to the conclusion that the debt is not
genuinely disputed.
[27]
The next question is whether the R85 000 kickback allegation creates
a genuine dispute of fact or is sufficient
to require a reference to
oral evidence. Commercial bribery, if properly alleged, would create
a genuine dispute of fact concerning
the applicant's claim. However,
the allegations made by the respondent significantly fail to meet the
elements required as set
out in
Extel
lndustries
[41]
because:
(i)
There is no nexus pleaded between the R85 000 kickback
and the
invoices which are the subject matter of the applicant's claim ins
345(1)
(a)(i)
notice;
(ii)
There is no allegation that the contract between the
applicant and
the respondent was created to the prejudice of the respondent by
Govender;
(iii)
There is no allegation that Govender was involved in, ordered,
or
took delivery of any goods recorded in the invoices which occurred
between March 2021 and August 2021.
[28]
Instead, dealing with the applicant's debt which arose from May 2021
to August 2021, the respondent sought
to rely on overpayment in an
"XON Project" which concluded in March 2019.
[42]
The respondent pleads an overpayment in some detail in the "XON
Project" but made no attempt to demonstrate any overpayments
concerning the applicant's debt between May 2021 and August 2021.
[29]
It would appear from the affidavits filed by the respondent over a
two-year period that the fraud perpetrated
on the respondent was
discovered in 2019, that criminal referrals were made in July, August
and October 2020 and Etienne Singh
was a director during the period
from June 2020 to November 2021 and was appointed to "unravel
the fraud perpetrated on the
respondent" in August 2021.
[43]
[30]
Notwithstanding the sequence of events outlined above , there is no
evidence presented in respect of the
alleged commercial bribery
between the applicant and Govender. It would have been a simple
matter to examine the invoices and delivery
notes put up by the
applicant in these papers to determine whether the orders were
placed, goods were not delivered, invoice prices
were inflated or to
plead what involvement Govender had with the orders and how such
involvement prejudiced the respondent. Commercial
bribery is a
serious allegation, and the more serious the allegation, the higher
standard of evidence must be required for a court
to establish the
validity of the allegation .
[44]
[31]
Accordingly, the respondent has failed to establish the elements of
commercial bribery and has equally failed
to plead facts sufficient
to create a genuine dispute of fact in respect of the debt. Mere
speculation is not sufficient to create
a genuine dispute of fact.
[32]
In argument, counsel for the respondent sought to refer the issue of
"commercial bribery" to the
hearing of oral evidence. Had
the respondent made these allegations seriously and made a timely
effort to raise the issue of bribery,
it should have raised the issue
squarely in the pleadings and pleaded evidence to justify those
allegations; or if the respondent
lacked the necessary affidavits to
justify the allegation then to plead the reference to oral evidence
properly and plead what
cross examination would reveal by
adhering to the directions outlined by Cloete JA in
D
& F Wevell Trust
.
[45]
Having done none of these things, there is no discernible dispute to
refer to oral evidence and as such the requested referral
must be
dismissed.
Nature
of court's discretion in final winding up order
[33]
Counsel for the respondent referred to a number of cases
[46]
to demonstrate that the court had a "wide" discretion to
refuse a final winding-up order where an unpaid debt had been
established. Relying on
Firstrand
Bank Limited v DLX Properties (Pty) Ltd
[47]
, it was argued that the ambit of the court's discretion ought to be
a "wide discretion".
[34]
The
DLX
Properties
[48]
judgment pertains to the leave to appeal application. The learned
Acting Judge had dismissed the liquidation and had exercised
a wide
discretion. In the leave to appeal application, reference was made to
Afgri
Operations Limited v Hamba Fleet (Pty) United
[49]
wherein Willis JA stated at paragraph 13 as follows:
"The
principles of which the court a quo lost sight are: (a) as set out in
Badenhorst and Kalil
, once the respondent's indebtedness has
prima facie been established, the onus is on it to show that this
indebtedness is disputed
on bona fide and reasonable grounds and (b)
the discretion of a court not to grant a winding-up order upon the
application of an
unpaid creditor is narrow and not wide."
[35]
The learned Acting Judge in
DLX
Properties
[50]
had proceeded from the wrong principle in law and had assumed a wide
discretion which led to the refusal of the liquidation. However,
that
"wide discretion" had been rejected by the Supreme Court of
Appeal in
Afgri
Operations
.
[51]
It is important to note that the
DLX
Properties
[52]
judgment does not support the proposition that a court in a final
winding-up application possesses such a wide discretion.
[36]
Thereafter, counsel for the respondent invoked
Absa
Bank Limited v Newcity Group (Pty) Ltd
[53]
,
where the Honourable Mr Justice Sutherland addressed a final
liquidation and a competing business rescue application brought by
Newcity. The order granted preserved the right of Absa to return to
court for a winding-up order if Newcity failed to make payments.
The
facts of
Newcity
[54]
are clearly distinguishable from the present matter, primarily
because
Newcity
had
offered to dispose of assets to make payment to Absa Bank of its
debt.
[37]
Finally, counsel for the respondent relied on
Orestisolve
(Pty) Ltd T/A Essa Investments v NDFT Investments Holdings (Pty)
Ltd
[55]
in which Rogers J, provides a detailed description of the nature of
the discretion and concluded that:
"I
doubt that the ex debito justitiae maxim has ever been, or justified,
an inflexible limitation on the court's discretion.
In one of the
leading English cases on the discretion to refuse a winding up,
Re
Southard & Co Ltd
[1979] 3 All ER (CA), Buckley LJ said that, where a judicial
discretion is concerned, it is mistaken to attempt to lay down rules
for its exercise and that no judge can fetter any other judge in the
manner of its exercise or lay down rules binding on others
in the
exercise of the discretion (562b-c). The ex debito justitiae maxim, I
venture to suggest, conveys no more than that, once
a creditor has
satisfied the requirements for a liquidation order, the court may not
on a whim decline to grant the order (and
see Blackman op cit Vol 3
at 14-91). To borrow another judge's memorable phrase, the court
'does not sit under a palm tree'. There
must be some particular
reason why, despite the making out of the requirements for
liquidation, an order is withheld."
[56]
[38]
However, Rogers J went to state at paragraph 21 of
Orestisolve
as follows:
"[21]
Another circumstance which, in my view, would favour an exercise of
the court's discretion against winding-up is where,
despite the
deemed inability to pay debts created bys 345(1)(a), the evidence
shows that the company is not in fact commercially
insolvent. It may
also be relevant in this regard that the company's failure to pay is
attributable to a genuine dispute concerning
the claim, even if the
court in the event considers the grounds of dispute are ill-founded."
[39]
The distinction between a "wide" or "narrow"
discretion is not without difficulty. The
discretion is also
described as a "loose" or "true" discretion. In
Trencon
Constru
ction
(Pty)
Limited v Industrial Development Corporation of South Africa
Limited,
[57]
Khampepe J described the distinction as follows:
"[85]
A discretion in the true sense is found where the lower court has a
wide range of equally permissible options available
to it. This type
of discretion has been found by this Court in many instances,
including matters of costs, damages and in the award
of a remedy in
terms of section 35 of the Restitution of Land Rights Act. It is
"true" in that the lower court has an
election of which
option it will apply and any option can never be said to be wrong as
each is entirely permissible.
[86]
In contrast, where a court has a discretion in the loose sense, it
does not necessarily have a choice between equally permissible
options. Instead, as described in
Knox
, a discretion in the
loose sense-
'means
no more than that the court is entitled to have regard to a number of
disparate and incommensurable features in coming to
a decision."'
[58]
[40]
From the above, it is clear that the discretion afforded to a court
hearing a liquidation application is
a narrow one and must be
exercised in light of the special circumstances of each case. The
discretion could never be a "wide"
or "loose"
discretion because that would defeat the purpose of liquidation
applications and give the Judge hearing the
matter licence to have
regard to facts unconnected to the case or other "incommensurate"
features.
[41]
A final winding-up order may be refused if special circumstances
exist, such special circumstances include
the solvency of the
company. The factual position in respect of the respondent's solvency
in this matter has never been adequately
explained nor established by
way of proper audited financial statements. The respondent alleges
the potential recovery by way of
litigation as a mechanism to satisfy
the debt owed to the applicant.
[59]
This assertion amounts to speculation, and at best, the respondent's
claims can be described as contingent claims dependent on
success in
the litigation and on the defendant in those actions having
realisable assets. The respondent makes the admission that
it only
has realisable assets of R3.9 million, which is insufficient to cover
the debt owed to the applicant. Additionally, the
respondent also
alleges that it has ceased trading.
[42]
Therefore, the facts alleged by the respondent are insufficient to
create "special circumstances"
to justify the exercise of
the narrow discretion afforded to refuse the final winding-up order.
Order
[43]
In the circumstances, I make the following order:
1.
The respondent is placed in final liquidation.
2.
The applicant's costs are to be costs in the liquidation. Such costs
to include the costs
of two counsel, where employed, on Scale "C".
BROSTER
AJ
Counsel
for the Applicant:
Snyman
SC
Instructed
by:
Orelowitz
Incorporate
c/o
NSG Attorneys
(J H
Nicolson Stiller & Geshen)
2nd
Floor Clifton Place
19
Hurst Grove, Musgrave
Durban
Tel.:
031 202 9751
Ref.:
T Lombard
Email:
tarryn@nsg.co.za
Counsel
for the Respondent:
P
Kissoon-Singh
Instructed
by:
V
Chetty Inc
Suite
3, 6 Rydall Vale Office Park
Douglas
Saunders Drive
La
Lucia Ridge, Durban
Ref.:
Mr Chetty/MC/E 16529
Date
of hearing:
22
February 2024
Date
of Judgment:
22
July 2024 - Electronically
[1]
Vol 1 at 6.
[2]
Vol 1 at 7.
[3]
Vol 1 at 25; Sheriff's return of service at 769.
[4]
Vol 1 at 53.
[5]
Vol2at114.
[6]
Vol 2 at 115.
[7]
Vol 2 at 115.
[8]
Vol 2 at 139 to Vol 8 at 757.
[9]
Vol 8 at 757-758.
[10]
Vol 9 at 759.
[11]
Vol 8 at 701-740.
[12]
Vol 9 at 761.
[13]
Vol 9 at 703.
[14]
Vol 9 at 791-792.
[15]
Vol 9 at766.
[16]
Vol 12 at 1019-1021.
[17]
Vol 12 at 1022.
[18]
Vol 12 at1025-1026.
[19]
Vol 12 at1023-1024.
[20]
Vol 12 at1027-1170.
[21]
Vol 12 at1222-1230.
[22]
Vol 12 at1228-1229
[23]
Vol 12 at1231.
[24]
Vol 12 at1221.
[25]
Vol 15 at 1306.
[26]
Vol 15 at1303.
[27]
Vol 15 at1322.
[28]
Vol 15 at1367-1375.
[29]
Supplementary Affidavit, paras 9.1, 9.9 and 19.
[30]
Plascon-Evans
Paints (TVL) Ltd. v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd [
1984]
ZASCA 51
;
[1984] 2 All SA
366
(A);
1984 (3) SA 623
;
1984 (3) SA 620.
[31]
Paarwater
v South Sahara Investments (Pty) Ltd
[2005]
ZASCA 4
;
[2005] 4 All SA 185
(SCA) para 4.
[32]
Orestisolve
(Pty) Ltd T/A Essa Investments v NDFT Investments Holdings (Pty) Ltd
and Another
[2015] ZAWCHC 71
;
2015 (4) SA 449
(WCC) para 10.
[33]
Minister
of Land Affairs and Agriculture and Others v D & F Wevell Trust
and Others
[2007] ZASCA 153
; [2007] SCA 153 (RSA); 2008 (2) SA 184.
[34]
Extel
Industrial (Pty) Ltd and Another v Crown Mills (Pty) Ltd
[1998] ZASCA 67;
1999 (2) SA 719 (SCA); [1998] 4 All SA 465 (A).
[35]
Ibid at 724.
[36]
Mamadi
and Another v Premier of Limpopo Province and Others
[2022] ZACC 26
;
2023 (6) BCLR 733
(CC);
2024 (1) SA 1
(CC).
[37]
Ibid para 44.
[38]
Vol 1 at 9.
[39]
Date of when the applicant filed its replying affidavit in the
provisional liquidation stage.
[40]
Vol 9 at 762.
[41]
Extel
Industries
above fn 34.
[42]
Vol 15 at1323-1324.
[43]
Vol 15, annexure "EP9.1" at 1261-1262.
[44]
National
Director of Public Prosecutions v Zuma
[2009] ZASCA 1
;
2009 (2) SA 277
(SCA);
2009 (1)
SACR
361 (SCA);
2009 (4) BCLR 393
(SCA);
[2009] 2 All SA 243
(SCA) para
27.
[45]
D &
F Wevell Trust
above
fn 33.
[46]
Absa
Bank Limited v Newcity Group (Pty) Ltd and another related matter
[2013] 3 All SA 146
(GSJ);
Firstrand
Bank Limited v DLX Properties (Pty) Ltd
[2022]
ZAWCHC 29.
[47]
DLX
Properties
ibid.
[48]
Ibid.
[49]
Afgri
Operations Limited v Hamba Fleet (Pty) Limited
[2017]
ZASCA 24;
2022 (1) SA 91 (SCA).
[50]
DLX
Properties
above fn 46.
[51]
Afgri
Operations
above fn 49.
[52]
DLX
Properties
above fn 46.
[53]
Newcity
Group
above fn 46.
[54]
Ibid.
[55]
Orestisolve
above
fn 32.
[56]
Ibid para 18.
[57]
Trencon
Construction (Pty) Limited v Industrial Development Corporation of
South Africa Limited and Another
[2015] ZACC 22;
2015 (5) SA 245 (CC);
2015 (10) BCLR 1199 (CC).
[58]
Ibid paras 83-86.
[59]
Vol 14 at 1222; Vol 14 at1228-1229; Vol 14 at1229.
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