Case Law[2023] ZAKZDHC 93South Africa
Tongaat Hulett Limited (In Business Rescue) and Others v South African Sugar Association and Others (D4472/2023) [2023] ZAKZDHC 93; [2024] 1 All SA 509 (KZD) (4 December 2023)
High Court of South Africa (KwaZulu-Natal Division, Durban)
4 December 2023
Headnotes
s 136(2)(a) of the Companies Act does not allow the BRPs to suspend payment obligations that arise under the SI Agreement. In that event, the question that requires determination is whether s 136(2)(a) is under-inclusive and irrational, and accordingly contravenes the rule of law in s 1 of the Constitution, and arbitrarily differentiates between creditors in breach of s 9(1) of the Constitution.
Judgment
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# South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
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## Tongaat Hulett Limited (In Business Rescue) and Others v South African Sugar Association and Others (D4472/2023) [2023] ZAKZDHC 93; [2024] 1 All SA 509 (KZD) (4 December 2023)
Tongaat Hulett Limited (In Business Rescue) and Others v South African Sugar Association and Others (D4472/2023) [2023] ZAKZDHC 93; [2024] 1 All SA 509 (KZD) (4 December 2023)
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sino date 4 December 2023
FLYNOTES:
COMPANY – Business rescue –
Suspension
of obligation
–
Practitioners
not empowered to suspend obligations of Tongaat Hulett which arise
under Sugar Industry Agreement – Sugar
Association and
regulatory charges – Payment obligations not suspended under
agreement and Association not precluded
from seeking to enforce
those obligations – Ongoing obligations to association are
the costs of doing business and
are not subject to the moratorium
–
Companies Act 71 of 2008
,
ss 133
and
136
(2)(a)(i).
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
KWAZULU NATAL
LOCAL DIVISION, DURBAN
CASE NO.: D4472/2023
In
the matter between:
TONGAAT
HULETT LIMITED (IN BUSINESS RESCUE)
First Applicant
TONGAAT
HULETT SUGAR SOUTH AFRICA
(PROPRIETARY)
LIMITED (IN BUSINESS RESCUE)
Second Applicant
TREVOR
JOHN MURGATROYD
N.O.
Third Applicant
PETRUS
FRANCOIS VAN DEN STEEN N.O.
Fourth Applicant
GERHARD
CONRAD ALBERTYN
N.O.
Fifth Applicant
and
SOUTH
AFRICAN SUGAR ASSOCIATION
First Respondent
S.A.
SUGAR EXPORT CORPORATION
(PROPRIETARY)
LIMITED
Second Respondent
MINISTER
OF TRADE, INDUSTRY
AND
COMPETITION
Third Respondent
SOUTH
AFRICAN SUGAR MILLERS'
ASSOCIATION
NPC
Fourth Respondent
SOUTH
AFRICAN CANE GROWERS'
ASSOCIATION
NPC
Fifth Respondent
SOUTH
AFRICAN FARMERS'
DEVELOPMENT
ASSOCIATION NPC
Sixth Respondent
RCL
FOODS SUGAR & MILLING
(PROPRIETARY)
LIMITED
Seventh Respondent
ILLOVO
SUGAR (SOUTH AFRICA)
(PROPRIETARY)
LIMITED
Eighth Respondent
UMFOLOZI
SUGAR MILL (PROPRIETARY) LIMITED
Ninth Respondent
GLEDHOW
SUGAR
COMPANY
(PROPRIETARY)
LIMITED
Tenth Respondent
HARRY
SIDNEY SPAIN
N.O.
Eleventh Respondent
UCL
COMPANY (PROPRIETARY) LIMITED
Twelfth Respondent
ALL
REGISTERED GROWERS
Thirteenth to Twenty-Three
Thousandth
Respondents
THE
AFFECTED PERSONS IN
Twenty-Three Thousand and First
THL'S
BUSINESS RESCUE
Respondents and Further Respondents
JUDGMENT
Delivered:
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ legal representatives by email and by publication
on
SAFLII
.
The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 14h00 on 04 December
2023.
Vahed
J:
Introduction
[1]
The applicants seek Orders:
a.
Declaring that:
i.
the
business rescue practitioners ("
BRPs
")
of Tongaat Hulett Limited ("
THL
")
are empowered to suspend, for the duration of the business rescue
proceedings, any obligation of THL which arises under
the Sugar
Industry Agreement, 2000 ("
the
SI Agreement
");
ii.
alternatively,
the
BRPs are empowered to suspend, for the duration of the business
rescue proceedings, any local market redistribution payment
obligations, and related levies and interest, that became due in
terms of clauses 183 and 184 of the SI Agreement, and which would
otherwise become due during the business rescue proceedings.
b.
In the alternative
to the relief in
paragraph a. –
i.
declaring
s 136(2)(a)(i)
of the
Companies Act, 71 of 2008
, unconstitutional and
invalid insofar as its fails to provide for the suspension of
regulatory charges that become due during business
rescue
proceedings; and
ii.
reading
in the words "
or
regulatory regime
"
after the word "
agreement"
in
s 136(2)(a)(i)
of the
Companies Act.
c
.
striking the application
brought by the seventh respondent ("
RCL
Foods
")
before the Sugar Industry Appeals Tribunal;
alternatively
permanently staying
RCL Foods' application and directing RCL Foods to pay the applicants'
costs in relation thereto.
[2]
In the main three issues
require determination:
a.
The first is the proper
interpretation of
s 136(2)(a)(i)
of the
Companies Act, read
together
with the definition of "
agreement
"
in
s 1.
The question that requires determination is whether, properly
interpreted, the provision allows the BRPs of THL to suspend, for
the
duration of the business rescue proceedings, payment obligations that
arise under the SI Agreement.
b.
The second issue arises only
if it were held that
s 136(2)(a)
of the
Companies Act does
not allow
the BRPs to suspend payment obligations that arise under the SI
Agreement. In that event, the question that requires
determination is
whether
s 136(2)(a)
is under-inclusive and irrational, and
accordingly contravenes the rule of law in s 1 of the Constitution,
and arbitrarily differentiates
between creditors in breach of s 9(1)
of the Constitution.
c.
The third issue is whether
it was permissible for RCL Foods to institute proceedings before the
Sugar Industry Appeals Tribunal
seeking declaratory relief to the
effect that millers' payment obligations under the SI Agreement are
binding, and that no miller
is entitled to suspend them.
The
Parties
[3]
A description
of the parties is required for context.
[4]
The first applicant
is Tongaat Hulett Limited (In Business Rescue)
(“
THL
”), a public company which is currently in
business rescue.
[5]
The second
applicant is Tongaat Hulett Sugar South Africa
(Proprietary) Limited (In Business Rescue) (“
THSSA
”),
a public company which is also currently in business rescue. THSSA is
a wholly owned subsidiary of THL and which has been
appointed as
THL's agent to deal with all matters of and concerning the South
African sugar industry pursuant to a written agency
agreement between
THSSA and THL.
[6]
The third,
fourth and fifth applicants are Trevor John Murgatroyd
N.O., Petrus Francois van den Steen N.O. and Gerhard Conrad Albertyn
N.O.
respectively, all of Metis Strategic Advisors (Pty) Ltd,
Johannesburg, and who are the duly appointed joint business rescue
practitioners
of THL.
[7]
The first respondent
is the South African Sugar Association ("
SASA
"),
a juristic entity incorporated and constituted in terms of s 2 of the
Sugar Act, 9 of 1978 ("
the Sugar Act
").
[8]
The second
respondent is the S.A. Sugar Export Corporation (Pty)
Limited ("
SASEXCOR
").
[9]
The third respondent
is the Minister Of Trade, Industry And
Competition ("
The Minister
"), the executive
authority responsible for administering the
Companies Act and
the
Sugar Act as well as the Minister responsible for determining the
terms of the SI Agreement in terms of section 4 of the Sugar
Act. The
Minister is also joined in this application pursuant to Rule 10A of
the Uniform Rules of Court.
[10]
The fourth respondent is South
African Sugar Millers' Association NPC
("
SASMA
"). All domestic sugar millers and refiners
are required to be members of SASMA, which represents all domestic
millers and
refiners in sugar industry engagements, negotiations,
agreements, and arrangements, including when it participates in SASA
matters.
[11]
The fifth and sixth respondents
are the South African Cane Growers'
Association NPC ("
SACGA
") and the South African
Farmers' Development Association NPO ("
SAFDA
")
respectively. All domestic sugarcane growers are obliged to be
members of either SACGA or SAFDA, which represent the growers
in the
sugar industry engagements, negotiations, agreements, and
arrangements, including when they participate in SASA. In terms
SASA’s Constitution, SACGA and SAFDA have equal representation
on SASA. For ease of reference SACGA and SAFDA will be referred
to
collectively as "the Growers' Section". As the industry
representatives, the Growers' Section are parties to the SI
Agreement
and the arrangements to which the SI Agreement gives effect.
[12]
The seventh respondent is RCL
Foods Sugar & Milling (Proprietary)
Limited.
[13]
The eighth respondent is ILLOVO
SUGAR (SOUTH AFRICA) (PROPRIETARY)
LIMITED ("
Illovo Sugar
").
[14]
The ninth respondent is UMFOLOZI
SUGAR MILL (PROPRIETARY) LIMITED
("
Umfolozi Sugar
").
[15]
The tenth respondent is GLEDHOW
SUGAR COMPANY (PROPRIETARY) LIMITED
(IN BUSINESS RESCUE) ("
Gledhow Sugar
").
[16]
The eleventh respondent is HARRY
SIDNEY SPAIN N.O. ("
Mr
Spain
"). Mr Spain is the duly appointed business rescue
practitioner of Gledhow Sugar.
[17]
The twelfth respondent is UCL
COMPANY (PROPRIETARY) LIMITED ("
UCL
").
[18]
The thirteenth to twenty-three
thousandth respondents are the members
of SACGA and SAFDA who comprise all of the registered sugar cane
growers. They were informed
of these proceedings by way of
substituted service authorised by this court on a previous occasion
in the present proceedings.
[19]
The twenty-three thousand and
first respondent and further
respondents are the affected persons in THL's business rescue. They
are entitled to be joined in this
application by operation of the
provisions of
s 128
of the
Companies Act, as
read together with
sections 144(3)(b)
and (f),
145
(1)(a),(b) and (c),
145
(2)(a) and
146
(a),(b),(c) and (d) of the
Companies Act. They
too were informed
of these proceedings by way of substituted service authorised by this
court on a previous occasion in the present
proceedings.
[20]
Ultimately, the application
papers spanned some 1338 pages and the
opposed hearing unfolded over two days on 13 and 14 September 2023.
The 9
th
, 10
th
, 11
th
, 13
th
and further respondents have not opposed the application. Although
the 6
th
respondent, SAFDA, initially opposed the
application and delivered an answering affidavit, it subsequently
withdrew its notice
of opposition and affidavit and indicated that it
will abide the decision to be made in this case. The matter was
ultimately opposed
by the 1
st
, 2
nd
, 3
rd
,
4
th
, 5
th
, 7
th
, 8
th
and
12
th
respondents.
[21]
All counsel delivered extremely
helpful heads of argument, for which
I am grateful. I borrow generously from them from time to time,
particularly when sketching
the background and when dealing with
non-contentious matter.
Context
and Factual Background
[22]
I deal next with relevant aspects
of the factual background.
[23]
It is largely common cause that
the sugar industry is important to
the South African economy. An average of two million tons of sugar
per season is produced placing
the country regularly in the top
quartile of sugar producing countries. The industry generates in
excess of R18 billion annually
in annual direct income and creates
somewhere between 65 000 (according to 1
st
and 2
nd
respondents) and 85 000 (according to the applicants) direct
jobs, and 350 000 indirect jobs, predominantly in rural
areas
where employment and economic opportunities are particularly hard to
come by. Sugar is particularly significant for the rural
economy,
where sugar cane is a prolific and strategic crop, and local
economies are boosted by the close proximity of sugar mills,
and the
infrastructural support and income-generating benefits they bring.
Sugarcane farms and sugar mills, in most cases, form
the backbone of
the nearest rural town and are major contributors to the development
of secondary economic activity, services and
infrastructure that
otherwise would be absent. Sustaining the sugar industry and its
production levels, is a matter of national
social and economic
importance.
[24]
The sugar industry comprises
two broad segments. The first segment is
growers, which currently number approximately 23 000. All
growers must belong to
one or other of the two growers' associations,
the fifth respondent, SACGA, or the sixth respondent, SAFDA. The
second segment
is the milling companies, which are THL, Illovo Sugar,
RCL Foods (which each owns three mills), Gledhow Sugar, Umfolozi
Sugar and
UCL (which own one mill each). Of these, THL, Illovo Sugar,
RCL Foods and Gledhow Sugar operate as both millers and refiners. All
millers belong to the fourth respondent, SASMA.
[25]
The growers' and millers' associations
interact with one another and
with government through the council of the first respondent, SASA.
[26]
SASA is an association initially
established by agreement among the
growers and millers, and now recognised by s 2 of the Sugar Act.
It is governed by a constitution,
the terms of which are published by
the Minister in the Gazette. The SASA Constitution was amended in
2018, and again in 2020.
[27]
SASA is constituted as an industry
forum, through which participants
negotiate and agree on issues affecting the industry, in the best
interests of the sugar industry.
a.
SASA is made up of SASMA (representing the Millers' Section) on one
hand, and SACGA
and SAFDA (representing the Growers' Section) on the
other. In terms of clause 2 of the SASA Constitution, each
section may
select 18 delegates, making up a total of 36
delegates who meet annually to appoint councillors to sit on the SASA
Council.
b.
The SASA Council comprises 20 councillors (in addition to the
chairperson and vice
chairpersons), ten of whom are nominated by the
Millers' Section and ten of whom are nominated by the Growers'
Section. The
Council manages SASA's affairs.
[28]
The government has no representation
within SASA, does not appoint
delegates or councillors and does not provide SASA with any revenue.
SASA is funded by the sugar
industry and the levies that accrue to it
by its members.
[29]
SASA's powers derive, in the
main, from the SI Agreement. The
SI Agreement governs,
inter alia
, the relationship
between growers and millers, on the one hand, and between millers and
millers on the other, which includes recording
the terms of the
revenue sharing arrangement reached among and between them.
[30]
The global sugar industry is
huge and constitutes one of the top ten
commodities traded worldwide. South Africa is one of 120
sugar-producing countries worldwide.
[31]
Sugar is globally oversupplied.
While the vast majority of sugar is
consumed domestically in the country in which it is produced, the
export market is a dumping
market, in the sense that sugar is almost
always sold at a loss as an export. South Africa is thus vulnerable
to dumping by international
producers – that is, the import of
cheaper sugar at prices that undercuts the price at which the
industry can viably produce.
[32]
The government and the sugar
industry have, as a consequence, taken
two significant steps to guard against the risk of sugar dumping:
a.
Firstly, the government has, since 2000, imposed anti-dumping duties
on imported sugar,
so as to increase the price of imports and shield
domestic producers against competition for cheaper imports. The
duties also have
the effect of constraining the domestic price of
sugar, in that, in order to ensure that local consumers do not switch
to imported
sugar, local producers must logically price their product
below the price, including the import tariff, of the imported
product.
b.
Secondly, given the economic importance of the domestic sugar market,
and the difficulties
it has faced, the sugar industry itself has,
through SASA, and with the government's
imprimatur,
agreed a
revenue-sharing regime in which local sugar production is protected
and sustained. The revenue-sharing regime is particularly
important
in this matter, because it is THL's obligations under this regime
that the BRPs have sought to suspend under
section 136(2)(a)
of
the
Companies Act.
[33
]
The revenue-sharing arrangement
is based on the central and
overarching principle that the growers, the millers, and the refiners
should all benefit from an equitable
division of the proceeds of the
domestic market, and all be insulated against the risk of the export
market.
[34]
In broad terms the arrangement
operates as follows:
a.
Firstly, in terms of clause 164 of the SI Agreement, SASA
calculates the gross
industry proceeds. This comprises the sum of
local market sugar sales (at a notional local market price); export
sugar sales (at
a weighted average export price) and molasses sales
(at a notional local market price). This constitutes the total gross
amount
to be divided between the millers and growers, before the
deduction of levies.
b.
Secondly, in terms of clause 165 of the SI Agreement, SASA
deducts industrial
levies (which comprise all the costs SASA incurs
to fulfil its obligations in terms of the SASA Constitution) from the
gross industry
proceeds, to arrive at the "net divisible
proceeds". This constitutes the notional income generated by the
industry,
less the costs incurred by SASA, for division between
millers and growers.
c.
Thirdly, the net divisible proceeds are split into two notional
pools, and attributed
to the millers and growers according to the
ratio provided for in the SI Agreement, based on the relative costs
they incur. The
ratio is approximately 64% in favour of growers and
36% in favour of millers.
d.
Fourthly, the recoverable value ("RV") price of cane is
determined by (
i
) deducting the grower-specific levies owed to
SACGA and SAFDA (which are determined to be equal); and (
ii
)
dividing this amount by the number of tons of sugarcane produced by
all growers. The RV price constitutes the minimum price that
a miller
may pay to a grower for unprocessed cane, though millers can, and, in
practice, often do, pay more than the RV price in
terms of supply
contracts.
e.
Fifthly, SASA calculates the total tonnage of raw product produced
across the domestic,
export and molasses markets, and allocates each
miller a quota based on the proportion of the total raw product that
it has produced.
It is important to note that the quota is based on
the volume of raw sugar produced, as opposed to the volume of refined
sugar
sold. It is thus the milling activity that is rewarded, rather
than the refining activity – even though both are essential
activities in the value chain.
f.
The quota applies in each of the domestic sugar markets (i.e. for
refined
white sugar, refined brown sugar, and molasses), and for the
export market. Where a miller outperforms its quota for a particular
product in the domestic market (i.e. refined white or brown sugar or
molasses), it must pay SASA quarterly to the extent of its
overperformance, based on the relevant notional price. SASA then
redistributes the amount paid by over-performing mills to
under-performing
mills, in proportion to their quotas. Because the
quota is based on the volume of raw sugar produced but performance is
based on
the volume of refined sugar sold, a miller that also refines
is likely to be a domestic overperformer, whilst a miller that does
not refine (or refines less than the quantity of raw sugar it
produces), will be an underseller into the domestic market.
g.
Sixthly, any raw sugar which is in excess of the local market demand
is exported by
SASEXCOR which in turn pays the export proceeds
(calculated at the weighted average price for the year) to each mill,
according
to its quota allocation. Only some mills in fact deliver
raw sugar to SASEXCOR for export. THL never has.
[35]
The revenue sharing arrangement
is recorded in the SI Agreement.
The applicants assert that the essence of that arrangement is that it
has historically been
negotiated between and agreed among the
industry participants and thus operates consensually so as to
maximise domestic production,
and the benefits associated therewith.
Against this the respondents contend that the SI Agreement does not
operate consensually
but instead as subordinate legislation which
binds all millers and growers, who cannot elect not to be bound
thereby.
[36]
THL is an overproducer of sugar
in the domestic market in that it
refines and sells a greater percentage of the total refined sugar on
the domestic market than
its allocated quota. As a result it is
required to pay SASA redistribution amounts in respect thereof.
[37]
As an overproducer on the domestic
market, THL undersells its quota
on the export market (since the volume sold on the export market is a
function of how much of
the raw sugar produced is not sold on the
domestic market). Therefore, while THL owes redistribution payments
to SASA in respect
of its domestic overperformance, it is owed export
proceeds in respect of its export underperformance. Because THL sells
all the
sugar that it produces in the domestic market, and does not
export, it asserts that it is entitled to recover its full export
proceeds
from SASEXCOR as and when they fall due. The respondents,
and particularly SASA, hold the view that THL has elected to
over-perform
domestically and not supply any sugar for export and
that it cannot escape the consequences of that election. In response
THL counters
that it is not a large domestic over supplier by choice.
It has become, and is forced to remain, an overseller of refined
sugar
because other millers, particularly RCL Foods and Illovo, have
maintained their milling capacity (and thus their quotas) but reduced
their refining capacity (and thus their actual supply of refined
sugar to the domestic market).
[38]
THL is the oldest sugar milling
company in South Africa. Today, it is
said to be a mainstay of the South African sugar industry, and a
major contributor to the
economic and socio-economic development of
KwaZulu-Natal and South Africa. It is estimated that THL's trading
activities contributed
approximately R11 billion to the GDP of the
country in 2021 (based on direct, indirect and induced impacts). It
produces between
25% and 27% of the volume of sugar produced
domestically per year, and is, by far, the industry's major producer
of refined sugar,
producing more than 40% of the industry's
requirements.
[39]
THL has found itself in dire
financial straits. It asserts that it
has approximately 1 000 creditors, with cumulative claims
amounting to a total of approximately
R10,4 billion. All of its
assets are encumbered, with the Industrial Development Corporation
having taken cession of its bank accounts
and debts, and its
remaining secured creditors holding security over all its remaining
assets. For the purposes of this application
it is not disputed that
despite its best efforts, THL has been unable to turn its financial
position around.
[40]
On 26 October 2022 THL's board
of directors resolved to commence
voluntary business rescue proceedings. It asserts that the board did
so because, in its view,
THL remains capable of rehabilitation under
the business rescue provisions of the
Companies Act. Their
only
alternative was to liquidate the company, with all of the immediate
and deleterious consequences that would have entailed
for the sugar
industry and the public. The respondents do not dispute this but hold
the view that it was not made clear as to why
the board held that
view.
[41]
When THL first entered business
rescue, and the BRPs stepped into the
shoes of THL's board of directors, two months of the 2022/2023 sugar
season remained. The
applicants assert that rather than ceasing THL's
crushing and refining operations the BRPs decided to continue THL's
crushing and
refining operations and to suspend some of THL's payment
obligations to afford THL some financial respite within which
potentially
to recover. This they further assert they were expressly
empowered to do so by
s 136(2)(a)
of the
Companies Act. In
addition, the BRPs were able, after securing the provision of
post commencement finance from certain secured lender(s), to
recommence THL's operations within two weeks of its being placed in
business rescue.
[42]
When THL went into business
rescue, its affairs were effectively
frozen whilst the BRPs familiarised themselves with the business.
Consequently, from the end
of September 2022, THL made no payments to
SASA in respect of its obligations under the SI Agreement. It is
disputed that
during this process the BRPs were entitled to withhold
payments to SASA.
[43]
On 8 November 2022, SASA expressed
concern about THL being placed in
business rescue, particularly because its collapse would have
"catastrophic social and economic
consequences" and would
also "have further far-reaching implications and a domino effect
on other industry players"
.
SASA therefore offered its
support and established a task team to offer the BRPs industry
support.
[44]
On 13 January 2023, the
BRPs cautioned SASA that THL was
unlikely to be in a position to pay its redistribution payments, and
the associated interest and
levies, that would become due around 31
March 2023. SASA wrote to the BRPs on 23 January 2023 adopting the
stance that these payment
obligations could not be suspended, and
that SASA was entitled, under
s 133(1)(f)
of the
Companies Act,
to
bring proceedings to enforce payment. SASA also acknowledged that
there were export proceeds due and payable to THL in the amounts
of
R777 473 235 (ie. in excess of R777 million), and R225 643
688 (ie. in excess of R225 million), but said that
these payments
would be withheld until such time that THL settled its local market
redistribution payments which were in excess
of R1,727 billion).
[45]
On 23 February 2023, SASA
sent a letter of demand for R176 237
638.89 (ie. in excess of R176 million), comprising industry levies
that it claimed had
by then become due under the SI Agreement.
In response, on 24 February 2023, the BRPs confirmed that they
had suspended
the payment obligations under the SI Agreement in
terms of
s 136(2)
of the
Companies Act and
indicated that they
would defend any action undertaken by SASA to enforce payment
thereof.
[46]
The applicants emphasise that
what the BRPs suspended were only THL's
payment obligations under the SI Agreement and assert that there
is no merit in the
respondents' argument that the BRPs were unable to
suspend obligations that were reciprocal to obligations with which
THL has allegedly
not complied. They contend further that that the
SI Agreement may contain reciprocal obligations has no bearing
on the BRPs'
entitlement to suspend THL's payment obligations, and
that other than its payment obligations, THL has continued to comply
with
all of its other obligations in terms of the SI Agreement.
They say that in any event, as a matter of law, the BRPs are entitled
to suspend reciprocal obligations. For this they rely on the
following passage in
BP Southern Africa (Pty) Ltd v Intertrans Oil
SA (Pty) Ltd and Others
2017 (4) SA 592
(GJ) (footnote omitted):
“
[37]
Interpretation starts with a textual treatment of the words in their
context. The language conferring the power of suspension
is pretty
clear, at least on the face of it; 'any' is notoriously a word of
wide if not unlimited import, and so it would, at least
prima facie
and unless any absurdity is thrown up, include obligations that are
contractually tied with a reciprocal obligation
of the creditor.”
The
respondents dispute this on a number of grounds, including that the
obligations are neither contractual nor reciprocal.
[47]
23 March 2023, SASA sent
a further letter reiterating its view
that the obligations under the SI Agreement were incapable of
being suspended.
[48]
The amounts due to SASA that
have accrued since the commencement of
business rescue proceedings up to 31 March 2023, in respect of
levies, redistribution payments,
and interest, and those that have
become due subsequently are in some respects disputed but, in the
general scheme of things, irrelevant
for present purposes.
[49]
The BRPs have explained that
subject to the availability of funding,
payment of local market redistributions and levies would commence
from 1 April 2023,
and that the amounts accrued up to 31 March
2023 would be dealt with in the BR plan.
[50]
It seems that in accordance
with this undertaking, THL had commenced
paying its local market redistribution charges and industry levies
due from April 2023
onwards. As matters stand, it appears too that
only the amounts that became due before 1 April 2023 remain
outstanding (other than
a disputed amount for the June redistribution
payment). That much too is irrelevant for present purposes.
[51]
On 31 March 2023, SASA raised
a special levy, in terms of
section 175
of the SI Agreement, to meet its industry obligations despite
the shortfall in its funding created by,
inter alia
, THL's
non-payment. This levy has been paid by other industry
participants. The applicants accept that this may have impacted
the
other millers' profits and some have raised this aspect as being to
their detriment.
[52]
The BRPs published a business
rescue plan (“
the BR Plan
”)
on 31 May 2023.
The BR Plan made no provision for
the payment of any industry levies or redistribution payments under
the SI Agreement. The BR Plan
classified THL’s obligations to
SASA as an unsecured debt (and SASA as an unsecured creditor),
recorded that such debt had
been suspended and that confirmation of
that suspension was pending before the High Court. The fact that the
BR Plan published
on 31 May 2023 made no provision for payment of
THL’s industry obligations but instead seemed to suggest that
payment of
those obligations would be suspended for the duration of
business rescue caused RCL Foods, SASMA and Illovo to launch an
urgent
application in the KwaZulu-Natal Division, Pietermaritzburg,
to interdict the adoption of the BR Plan.
[53]
After having received service of the application
the BRPs obtained the consent of the creditors to postpone the
meeting called to
consider the BR Plan.
On 14 June 2023,
creditors holding 85% of the total claims against THL voted
unanimously to allow the BRPs to amend the BR Plan
to take into
account various developments. It would seem that the intended BR Plan
is a moving target.
Interpretation
and Approach
[54]
As the introduction foreshadows,
the
Companies Act and
the Sugar Act
require analysis and interpretation. Both require the application of
a unitary exercise where text, context and purpose
are examined.
[55]
It is now well established that
interpretation is the process of
attributing meaning to the words used in a document, having regard to
the context provided by
reading the particular provision in the light
of the document as a whole and the circumstances attendant upon its
coming into existence.
Whatever the nature of the document (be it a
contract or statute), consideration must be given to the language
used in the light
of the ordinary rules of grammar and syntax, the
context in which the provision appears, the apparent purpose to which
it is directed,
and the material known to those responsible for its
production. In other words, the exercise is holistic, the
considerations are
applied simultaneously and without predominance.
See
Natal Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
2012 (4) SA 593
(SCA) para 18;
University of Johannesburg v
Auckland Park Theological Seminary and Another
2021 (6) SA 1
(CC)
para 65.
[56]
With specific reference to legislation
it is helpful too to keep in
mind the guidance offered in
Chisuse and Others v
Director-General, Department of Home Affairs and Another
2020 (6)
SA 14
(CC) (footnotes omitted):
“
[47]
In interpreting statutory provisions, recourse is first had to the
plain, ordinary grammatical meaning of the words in question.
Poetry
and philosophical discourses may point to the malleability of words
and the nebulousness of meaning, but, in legal interpretation,
the
ordinary understanding of the words should serve as a vital
constraint on the interpretative exercise, unless this interpretation
would result in an absurdity. As this court has previously noted
in
Cool
Ideas
,
this principle has three broad riders, namely —
'(a)
that statutory provisions should always be interpreted purposively;
(b)
the relevant statutory provision must be properly contextualised; and
(c)
all statutes must be construed consistently with the Constitution,
that is,
where reasonably possible, legislative provisions ought to
be interpreted to preserve their constitutional validity. This
proviso
to the general principle is closely related to the purposive
approach referred to in
(a)
.'
[48]
Judges must hesitate 'to substitute what they regard as reasonable,
sensible or businesslike for the words actually used. To
do so in
regard to a statute or statutory instrument is to cross the divide
between interpretation and legislation.'
[49]
Strengthening this interpretative exercise is the obligation
enshrined in s 39(2) of the Constitution, which requires courts
when
interpreting legislation to give effect to the 'spirit, purport and
objects of the Bill of Rights'. This requires that —
'judicial
officers [must] read legislation, where possible, in ways which give
effect to [the Constitution's] fundamental values.
Consistently with
this, when the constitutionality of legislation is in issue, they are
under a duty to examine the objects and
purport of an Act and to read
the provisions of the legislation, so far as is possible, in
conformity with the Constitution.'
[50]
The command of s 39(2) has been articulated in various judgments of
this court. In
Bato Star
Ngcobo J stated as follows:
'The
Constitution is now the supreme law in our country. It is therefore
the starting point in interpreting any legislation. Indeed,
every
court must promote the spirit, purport and objects of the Bill of
Rights when interpreting any legislation. That is the command
of s
39(2). Implicit in this command are two propositions: first, the
interpretation that is placed upon a statute must, where
possible, be
one that would advance at least an identifiable value enshrined in
the Bill of Rights; and, second, the statute must
be reasonably
capable of such interpretation. This flows from the fact that the
Bill of Rights is a cornerstone of [our constitutional]
democracy. It
affirms the democratic values of human dignity, equality and
freedom.'
[51]
It is now axiomatic that the interpretation of legislation must
follow a purposive approach. This purposive approach was described
in
Bato Star
as follows:
'Certainly
no less important than the oft repeated statement that the words and
expressions used in a statute must be interpreted
according to their
ordinary meaning is the statement that they must be interpreted in
the light of their context. But it may be
useful to stress two points
in relation to the application of this principle. The first is that
''the context'', as here used,
is not limited to the language of the
rest of the statute regarded as throwing light of a dictionary kind
on the part to be interpreted.
Often of more importance is the matter
of the statute, its apparent scope and purpose, and within limits,
its background.'
[52]
The purposive or contextual interpretation of legislation must,
however, still remain faithful to the literal wording of the
statute.
This means that if no reasonable interpretation may be given to the
statute at hand, then courts are required to declare
the statute
unconstitutional and invalid. It is now settled that this approach to
interpretation is a unitary exercise.
[53]
In
De Beer NO
this court articulated the proper approach
when deciding between competing constructions of legislation:
'This
court has accepted the well-recognised principle of constitutional
construction that where a statutory provision is capable
of more than
one reasonable construction, one of which would lead to
constitutional invalidity and the other not, a court ought
to favour
the construction which avoids constitutional invalidity, provided
such interpretation is not unduly strained.'
[54]
However, in seeking a constitutional interpretation in accordance
with their obligations under s 39(2) of the Constitution,
courts must
not lose sight of the fact that the construction given to legislation
must still be reasonable. Strained readings of
texts, no matter how
well-intentioned, can lead to dissonance. As Moseneke J noted
in
Abahlali BaseMjondolo Movement SA
:
'The
rule of law is a founding value of our constitutional democracy. Its
content has been expanded in a long line of cases. It
requires that
the law must, on its face, be clear and ascertainable. To read in one
qualification to achieve constitutional conformity
is very different
from reading in six. Indeed, reading in so many qualifications
inevitably strains the text. This is all the more
so when the
legislation in issue affects vulnerable people in relation to so
vital an aspect of their lives as their security of
tenure. It will
be impossible for people in the position of the applicants, even if
advised by their lawyers, to be clear on how
this provision will
operate. The same will indeed apply to others affected by the law,
such as owners, and to the bureaucrats charged
with applying it.
There
can be no doubt that the over-expansive interpretation of s 16 is not
only strained but also offends the rule of law requirement
that the
law must be clear and ascertainable. In any event, separation of
power considerations require that courts should not embark
on an
interpretative exercise which would in effect re-write the text under
consideration. Such an exercise amounts to usurping
the legislative
function through interpretation.'
[55]
The function of a court is to arrive at an 'interpretation that
achieves the most appropriate balance between the parties,
that fits
most comfortably into the constitutional and statutory framework, and
that requires the least intrusive addition to the
text'. If the only
interpretation that achieves the best balance between the
constitutional and statutory framework would inflict
violence on the
text, then the court, where appropriate, should declare the relevant
provisions inconsistent with the Constitution.
Doing so is vital to
our conception of the rule of law, as noted above, which dictates
that laws be 'clear and ascertainable' to
the public. As this court
noted in
Hyundai
:
'There
will be occasions when a judicial officer will find that the
legislation, though open to a meaning which would be
unconstitutional,
is reasonably capable of being read ''in conformity
with the Constitution''. Such an interpretation should not, however,
be unduly
strained.
. . .
It
follows that where a legislative provision is reasonably capable of a
meaning that places it within constitutional bounds, it
should be
preserved. Only if this is not possible should one resort to the
remedy of reading in or notional severance.'
[56]
One final point. Even before the adoption of the Constitution, our
courts refused to construe statutory provisions in a manner
that
rendered them useless, if the language was reasonably capable of a
sensible and effective meaning. In
Schlohs
De Wet CJ
formulated the principle in these terms:
'(W)hen
the words of a statute are reasonably capable of an interpretation
which would not render the law useless and destitute
of all effect,
they should be given such interpretation.'
[57]
This principle was based on an earlier decision of the Appellate
Division in
Jacobson and Levy
where it was observed
that —
'if
the language of the statute is not clear and would be nugatory if
taken literally, but the object and intention are clear, then
the
statute must not be reduced to a nullity merely because the language
used is somewhat obscure'.
[58]
Presently, this principle is captured fully by the provisions of s
39(2) of the Constitution, which oblige every court, where
reasonably
possible, to interpret every statute in a manner that makes it
consonant with the Constitution. A claim for invalidity
must fail if
the impugned statute is reasonably capable of a meaning that is
constitutionally compliant.
[59]
Despite our duty to interpret legislation in accordance with the
injunction under s 39(2), courts must not fall into the trap
of
attempting to divine sense out of nonsense. If a reasonable
interpretation in line with the Constitution cannot be arrived at,
then a court must conclude, and declare, that the impugned provisions
are unconstitutional and have recourse to the remedies that
flow from
this finding.”
[57]
It is appropriate to conclude
the discussion on interpretation and
approach with references to the following passages from
Capitec
Bank Holdings Ltd and Another v Coral Lagoon Investments 194 (Pty)
Ltd and Others
2022 (1) SA 100
(SCA) (footnotes omitted):
“
[25]
Our analysis must commence with the provisions of the subscription
agreement that have relevance for deciding whether Capitec
Holdings'
consent was indeed required. The much-cited passages from
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality (Endumeni
)
offer guidance as to how to approach the interpretation of the words
used in a document. It is the language used, understood in
the
context in which it is used, and having regard to the purpose of the
provision that constitutes the unitary exercise of interpretation.
I
would only add that the triad of text, context and purpose should not
be used in a mechanical fashion. It is the relationship
between the
words used, the concepts expressed by those words and the place of
the contested provision within the scheme of the
agreement (or
instrument) as a whole that constitute the enterprise by recourse to
which a coherent and salient interpretation
is determined.
As
Endumeni
emphasised,
citing well-known cases, '(t)he inevitable point of departure is the
language of the provision itself'.
...
[47]
I offer a few observations, as to the implications of what the
Constitutional Court has decided in
University of
Johannesburg.
First, it is inevitable that extrinsic
evidence that one litigant contends as having the effect of
contradicting, altering
or adding to the written contract, the other
litigant will characterise as extrinsic evidence relevant to the
context or purpose
of the written contract. Since the interpretative
exercise affords the meaning yielded by text no priority and requires
no ambiguity
as to the meaning of the text to admit extrinsic
evidence, the parol evidence rule is likely to become a residual rule
that does
little more than identify the written agreement, the
meaning of which must be determined. That is so for an important
reason. It
is only possible to determine whether extrinsic evidence
is contradicting, altering or adding to a written contract once the
court
has determined the meaning of that contract. Since meaning is
ascertained by recourse to a wide-ranging engagement with the triad
of text, context and purpose, extrinsic evidence may be admitted as
relevant to context and purpose. It is this enquiry into relevance
that will determine the admissibility of the evidence. Once this has
taken place, the exclusionary force of the parol evidence
rule is
consigned to a rather residual role.
[48]
Second,
University of Johannesburg
recognises that
there are limits to the evidence that may be admitted as relevant to
context and purpose. While the factual
background known to the
parties before the contract was concluded may be of assistance in the
interpretation of the meaning of
a contract, the courts' aversion to
receiving evidence of the parties' prior negotiations and what they
intended (outside cases
of rectification) or understood the contract
to mean should remain an important limitation on what may be said to
be relevant to
the context or purpose of the contract.
Blair
Atholl
rightly warned of the laxity with which some courts
have permited evidence that traverses what a witness considers a
contract
to mean. That is strictly a matter for the court.
Comwezi
is
not to be understood as an invitation to harvest evidence, on an
indiscriminate basis, of what the parties did after they
concluded
their agreement. The case made it plain such evidence must be
relevant to an objective determination of the meaning of
the words
used in the contract.
[49]
Third,
Endumeni
has become a ritualised incantation
in many submissions before the courts. It is often used as an
open-ended permission to
pursue undisciplined and self-serving
interpretations. Neither
Endumeni,
nor its reception
in the Constitutional Court, most recently in
University of
Johannesburg
, evince skepticism that the words and terms used in
a contract have meaning.
[50]
Endumeni
simply
gives expression to the view that the words and concepts used in a
contract and their relationship to the external
world are not
self-defining. The case and its progeny emphasise that the meaning of
a contested term of a contract (or provision
in a statute) is
properly understood not simply by selecting standard definitions of
particular words, often taken from dictionaries,
but also by
understanding the words and sentences that comprise the contested
term as they fit into the larger structure of the
agreement, its
context and purpose. Meaning is ultimately the most compelling and
coherent account the interpreter can provide,
making use of these
sources of interpretation. It is not a partial selection of
interpretational materials directed at a predetermined
result.
[51]
Most contracts, and particularly commercial contracts, are
constructed with a design in mind, and their architects choose words
and concepts to give effect to that design. For this reason,
interpretation begins with the text and its structure. They have a
gravitational pull that is important. The proposition that context is
everything is not a licence to contend for meanings unmoored
in the
text and its structure. Rather, context and purpose may be used to
elucidate the text.”
The
Companies Act
[58
]
It is convenient to commence with
an examination of the applicable
sections of the
Companies Act.
[59]
The focus must be the text of
section 136
of the
Companies Act, which
reads as follows:
“
136.
Effect
of business rescue on employees and contracts
(1)
Despite any provision of an agreement to the contrary—
…
(2)
Subject to subsection (2A), and despite any provision of an
agreement to the contrary, during business
rescue proceedings, the
practitioner may—
(a)
entirely,
partially or conditionally suspend, for the duration of the business
rescue proceedings, any obligation of the company
that—
(i)
arises under an agreement to which the company was a party at the
commencement of the business
rescue proceedings; and
(ii)
would otherwise become due during those proceedings; or
(b)
apply urgently to a court to entirely, partially or
conditionally cancel, on any terms that are
just and reasonable in
the circumstances, any obligation of the company contemplated
in paragraph (a).
…
(3)
Any party to an agreement that has been suspended or cancelled, or
any provision which has been suspended
or cancelled, in terms
of
subsection
(2)
,
may assert a claim against the company only for damages.”
[60]
It is common cause that subsection
2A is not relevant for present
purposes.
[61]
Referring to
S v Wood
1976 (1) SA 703
(A),
Kham and Others
v Electoral Commission of South Africa and Another
2016 (2) SA
338
(CC),
R v Hugo
1926 AD 268
and
BP Southern Africa (Pty)
Ltd v Intertrans Oil SA (Pty) Ltd and Others
2017 (4) SA 592
(GJ)
the applicants argue that the word “any” as employed in
the term “any obligation” in
s 136(2)(a)
of the
Companies
Act is
of extremely wide import, extremely broad,
prima facie
unlimited and accordingly is a word of notoriously wide if not
unlimited import. I think that is safe to say, looking at
the
word “any” in isolation from the remainder of the
section, that that is uncontentious for present purposes.
[62]
However, I regard the applicants’
additional contentions that
the term “any obligation” in
s 136(2)(a)
must be
understood in the light of the wide meaning generally ascribed to the
word “any” that there are no limits on
the kinds of
obligations to which
s 136(2)
applies as unsustainable. It is, as I
understand the section, manifestly clear that the term “any
obligation” is limited
to obligations as defined in the
Companies Act, which
are those that are “arising under an
agreement”. The effect of the applicants’ argument
would be to strike
a line through “arising under an agreement”,
and strip that term of any meaning. See
Minister of Finance v
Afribusiness NPC
2022 (4) SA 362
(CC) at paras 46 and 106 to 110;
Tsogo Sun Caledon (Pty) Ltd and Others v
Western Cape Gambling and Racing Board and Another
2023 (2) SA 305
(SCA) at para 18.
[63]
“Agreement” is defined
in
s 1
of the
Companies Act as
one
that:
“
includes a
contract, or an arrangement or understanding between or among two or
more parties that purports to create rights and
obligations between
or among those parties”.
[64]
The applicants suggest that
three features of the definition of
"agreement" support their case. Firstly, they contend that
the term is defined in
an entirely non-exhaustive manner. It is not
defined to mean a contract, arrangement or understanding, but instead
to include such
things. That, they say, suggests that the legislature
contemplated that there may be “agreements” that do not
fit perfectly
within the meaning of a contract, arrangement or
understanding, but that should nevertheless be recognised as
“agreements”
for purposes of the
Companies Act. Secondly
they argue that an agreement is not defined merely to include a
contract, but instead the definition includes an arrangement or
understanding; concepts that are broad, and which suggest that
relationships between parties that do not meet the ordinary common
law requirements of contract might nevertheless qualify as an
agreement for purposes of the Companies Act. Finally they say that
the definition encompasses not only contracts, arrangements, and
understandings that in fact create rights and obligations between
parties, but also those that merely purport to do so which further
evidences a clear intention on the part of the legislature to
extend
the definition to encompass the widest possible range of
arrangements, including those that would not meet the ordinary
requirements of a contract.
[65]
In its terms, therefore, the
applicants submit that s 136(2)(a)
is capable of being understood to mean that the BRPs are empowered to
suspend the payment
obligations owed by THL under the SI Agreement
whatever its status or source and that it creates rights and
obligations among
the sugar industry participants and consequently
qualifies as an agreement amenable to suspension under the section.
[66]
Implicit in the applicants’
argument is that “includes”
within the definition of agreement is equivalent to the phrase
“includes but not
limited to”. However, the use of the
word “includes’ in the interpretation of a clause in a
statute is ambiguous.
[67]
In
R v Hurwitz
1944 EDL 23
the word “includes” was
discussed in the following manner:
“
In
Dillworth
v Commissioner of Stamps
(1899
AC 99)
it was pointed out by Lord WATSON that the use of the word
"includes" in the interpretation clause of a Statute is
ambiguous,
that it may sometimes be used to enlarge the meaning of
words and phrases occurring in the body of the Statute, but that it
may
also sometimes be used as being equivalent to "means and
includes" and as affording an exhaustive explanation of the
meaning of such words and phrases. The test would appear to depend on
the context, and such cases as those of
Attorney-General
,
Transvaal
v Additional Magistrate for Johannesburg
(
1924
AD 421
)
and
Johannesburg
Municipality v Cochrane
(
1928
TPD 224
)
on the one hand and that of
Rosen
v Rand Townships Registrar
(1931
WLD 5)
on the other show that the Courts have interpreted the word
"includes" as having sometimes been used in an explanatory
and exhaustive sense and on other occasions in an extensive sense.”
[68]
In
Estate Brownstein v Commissioner for Inland Revenue
1957
(3) SA 512
(A) the use of the word was explained in these terms at
521A:
“
The
question revolved round the meaning of the word 'includes'. As is
well-known this word in definition sections is sometimes the
equivalent of 'means', i.e. it operates to exclude everything else,
while in other cases it merely adds unusual or less usual
meanings to the one ordinarily borne by the word defined.”
[69]
Whatever the case here,
all of the examples in the definition
share the attribute of consensus. In my view however, the binding
nature of the SI Agreement
does not presuppose consensus. In
addition, and obvious by omission, is any reference in the definition
to “statute”
or “subordinate legislation”.
Perhaps this is why the applicants seek the alternative
constitutional relief.
[70]
The definition may also differently be viewed as
the Legislature extending the meaning of “agreement” on a
limited extension
basis by including within its ambit “an
arrangement or understanding
”
. The
“arrangement” or “understanding
”
is
not, however, any
arrangement or
understanding. From the context and the ordinary rules of grammar and
syntax it is clear that these two words are
also specifically and
exclusively qualified by the inclusion only of an arrangement or
understanding “between or among two
or more parties that
purports to create rights and obligations between or among those
parties
”
.
[71]
Illovo Sugar argues that the use of the relative
pronoun “that
”
in the
definition makes clear that what creates (as in the case of a
contract) or purports to create (as in the case of an arrangement
or
understanding) “rights and obligations
”
is
precisely the “contrac
t
”
,
“arrangement
”
or
“understanding
”
. It is clear
that the legislative intention is to include only those contracts,
arrangements or understandings, brought into being
by the parties
thereto, that are themselves the sources that give legal power to
their terms. Illovo Sugar argues further that
the definition of
“agreement” in
s 1
of the
Companies Act thus
operates
entirely on a horizontal level, and is confined to those instances
where the relevant act of agreement, arrangement or
understanding
of the parties bound by the phenomenon is the
source of their legal obligations – i.e. where there would be
no obligation
but for the consensus between them that creates the
obligation. Rights and obligations created or arising by other means,
including
vertical imposition by the state by means of legislation,
are not contained in the definition.
[72]
I agree with that argument.
[73]
I am consequently of the opinion that, having
regard to the ordinary meaning of the words used and the ordinary
rules of grammar
and syntax, it is plain that what the Legislature
regards as an “agreement
”
for
the purposes of the
Companies Act, is
a set of rights and obligations
that are founded or created by, and derive their legal power from, a
“contract”, “arrangement”
or “understanding”
“between or among” the persons who are party to it. Those
obligations are private law
obligations arising from consensus
between contracting parties (i.e. obligations
ex
contractu
).
[74]
The text of
s 136(2)(a)(i)
itself suggests that
the meaning of “agreement” refers to obligations arising
ex contractu.
The
“agreement” must be an agreement “to which the
company was a party”. A person or an entity is
“a
party” to a contract or agreement and not to national or
subordinate legislation.
[75]
The meaning of the word “agreement” as
used in
s 136(2)(a)(i)
as referring to a contract and obligations
that arise
ex contractu
is
reinforced when regard is had to
s 136
as a whole. Firstly, the
heading signifies that what the section deals with is the “Effect
of business rescue on employees
and contracts
”
.
Secondly,
ss 136(1)
and
136
(2A) refers to and deals with contracts
which comply with the qualification that come into being by consensus
and that create rights
and obligations, namely employment contracts
and agreements to which
ss 35A
or
35B
of the
Insolvency Act,
1936
apply
. Thirdly, in
s 136(2)(b)
provision is
made for an application to court to “cancel … any
obligation of the company contemplated in paragraph
(a)”. While
a court may have the power (by virtue of
s 136(2)(b))
to “cancel
”
an obligation that arises in contract, a court has
no power to “cancel” legislation. Parties themselves have
the power
to bring a contract into being by consensus and thereby to
create legal rights and obligations. This distinguishes an obligation
arising
ex contractu
from
one arising
ex lege
.
They also have the power to cancel the contract, always by mutual
agreement, sometimes unilaterally, and sometimes after following
certain formalities. They never have the power to cancel legislation
or law that binds them for reasons other than because they
created
it.
[76]
The applicants also rely on
the general moratorium on legal
proceedings under
s 133
of the
Companies Act as
support for their
interpretation. The applicants submit that the general moratorium
prevents enforcement action against THL whilst
it is under business
rescue and that that provision provides no basis for distinguishing
debts owed to SASA, from debts owed to
any other creditor of THL in
business rescue.
[77]
Section 133
of the Companies Act prescribes as follows:
“
133 General
moratorium on legal proceedings against company
(1)
During
business rescue proceedings, no legal proceeding, including
enforcement action, against the company, or in relation to any
property belonging to the company, or lawfully in its possession, may
be commenced or proceeded with in any forum, except—
(a)
with the written consent of the practitioner;
(b)
with the leave of the court and in accordance with any
terms the court considers suitable;
…
(f)
proceedings by a regulatory authority in the execution of its duties
after written notification
to the business rescue practitioner.”
[78]
Section 133 thus establishes
a general moratorium on the
institution of any legal proceedings or enforcement actions, subject
to certain, specified exceptions.
It affords a company in business
rescue a temporary reprieve from its ordinary obligations, in order
that it can re-structure its
affairs.
[79]
The most significant exception
to that general moratorium, for
present purposes, is that it does not apply to proceedings brought by
a "regulatory authority"
in the execution of its duties.
SASA asserts that it qualifies as a regulatory authority, and
consequently that it remains entitled
to bring enforcement
proceedings against THL in respect of its debts under the
SI Agreement.
[80]
The applicants submit that SASA
is wrong and suggest that that is
clear from the terms of
s 1
of the
Companies Act, which
defines
a "regulatory authority" as "an entity established in
terms of national or provincial legislation responsible
for
regulating an industry, or sector of an industry". They say that
although it is now statutorily recognised, SASA was not
established
by statute. It was created long before the Sugar Act, and even before
the 1936 Sugar Act, by agreement among the industry
participants.
They observe that SASA was formed in 1919, by agreement between
millers and growers at the time, and resuscitated
under the 1936
Sugar Act.
[81]
The applicants argue that SASA
also lacks the essential attributes of
a statutory regulatory authority for the following reasons:
a.
SASA acts as an association in the interests of its members and not
in the interests
of the State or in the public interest. That is
evident from SASA's constitution, which provides at clause 4 that
SASA is established
to represent the views of the sugar industry to
parliament, government and other public bodies and officials. The
primary objective
of SASA (including its Council) is to act in the
best interests of the sugar industry. The structure and voting
processes of SASA
are designed to ensure that the views of all
parties are considered, and the best interests of the industry
promoted. SASA is,
in other words, an independent, non-governmental
association operating on behalf of and in the interests of its
members;
b.
SASA is composed solely of industry representatives. Government is
not involved in
their appointment, and government is not in any way
represented within SASA. SASA does not bear reporting obligations to
government.
It is precisely because of the lack of government
involvement in SASA that a 1981 Committee of Inquiry into the Sugar
Industry
declined SASA's request that the industry be afforded more
freedom and flexibility to determine changes to the industrial
selling
price, since "… it cannot, in the opinion of the
Committee, be expected of government to invest an organisation with
far-reaching regulatory powers, such as price fixation, without
monitoring and having some say in decisions taken
"
.
c.
SASA does not receive any funds from the State. Its revenue is
derived entirely
from industry levies. These levies are collected for
commercial reasons, particularly to enable SASA to perform services
to its
members, such as cane testing, research, and administrative
functions. As such, SASA does not qualify as a state institution
within
the remit of the Public Finance Management Act, 1 of 2000.
d.
SASA's powers and functions, in the main, are sourced not in the
Sugar Act or any other
legislation but derive from the SI Agreement.
[82]
It seems to me that that assessment
of SASA is skewed so as to lend
support to the applicants’ cause.
[83]
Section 2 of the Sugar Act governed
SASA’s incorporation and
provides for the promulgation of its constitution by the Minister.
The corporate entity so recognised
and invested with statutory
incorporation (i.e. SASA) is one manifestly established by national
legislation.
[84]
It is indeed so that SASA is
comprised of the membership described
earlier, to the exclusion of government, and that it serves to
oversee cooperation amongst
the divers role-players in the industry,
but it is also clear that SASA operates to regulate the industry
itself.
[85]
The quotation from the 1981
Committee of Inquiry into the sugar
industry is somewhat selective. The Committee of Inquiry into the
Sugar Industry was established
in March 1981 by the Minister. The
terms of reference were:
"To inquire into,
report on and make recommendations on the following matters relating
to the sugar industry—
(a)
the expansion of sugar production in South and Southern Africa with
due regard to its geographical
distribution and economic, social and
strategic. factors;
(b)
the effectiveness of the local marketing system with special
reference to whether there is justification
for the continued
application of the existing price regulating measures within a free
market economy;
(c)
the system of marketing sugar abroad;
(d)
the basis on which the division of proceeds formula should be
adjusted from year to year for changing
price levels; and
(e)
any other related matters affecting the sugar industry, after
consultation with the Minister of
Industries, Commerce and Tourism."
[86]
In describing the nature of
sugar production and the sugar marketing
scheme the Committee said this in chapter one of its report:
“
3. The majority of
the twenty-four agricultural marketing schemes in the Republic
operate in terms of the Marketing Act which is
a general enabling
measure permitting the establishment of commodity marketing schemes
appropriate to the needs of the individual
farm products concerned.
Special enactments, however, apply to two commodities, namely wine
and sugar, and in the case of the latter,
the statutory marketing
arrangements are governed by the Sugar Act which was promulgated in
1936 and republished in consolidated
form in 1978.
4. In terms of the Sugar
Act the Minister of Industries, Commerce and Tourism shall, after
consultation with the sugar industry,
determine the terms of an
agreement known as the Sugar Industry Agreement to regulate the
production and marketing of sugar and
associated products. The main
regulatory provisions of the existing agreement may be summarised as
follows:
(i)
The exercise of quantitative control over production by means of
quota allocations
to cane growers.
(ii)
The regulation of the supply of sugar cane to mills which, in effect,
also provides regulatory
control over the establishment of sugar
mills.
(iii) The
control and regulation of the disposal of the total quantity of sugar
manufactured yearly. This involves
the determination of the quantity
of sugar required locally and the pro rata share of exports
apportioned to each mill.
(iv) The
channelling of all sugar exports through a central industry
organisation known as the SA Sugar Export Corporation
(Pty) Limited.
(v)
The pooling of proceeds on the sale of sugar and sugar by-products
and the division of these proceeds between
millers and growers in
accordance with the formula set out in the agreement,
(vi) The
imposition of levies to cover the cost of administering the sugar
control scheme.
5. In addition to the
foregoing, the Sugar Act also empowers the Minister of Industries,
Commerce and Tourism to prescribe, after
consultation with the
industry, the maximum industrial selling prices of sugar and
associated products.
6. The main controlling
body entrusted with the administration of the Sugar Agreement is the
SA Sugar Association, which is composed
of an equal number of
representatives of cane growers and miners. The regulatory measures
are applied in close consultation with
the Minister and in major
matters are subject to his approval.
7. The control scheme for
sugar is in the nature of the one-channel pool schemes operated in
terms of the Marketing Act for commodities
such as citrus and
deciduous fruit, wool and oil seeds. There are, however, two respects
in which the Sugar Agreement differs significantly
from the Marketing
Act schemes, these being the quantitative control of production and
the sharing on a partnership basis between
growers and millers of the
proceeds of sugar and associated products”
[87]
The quotation from the Committee’s
report and relied upon by
the applicants, can now be viewed in proper context:
“
243. A second
recommendation made by the Sugar Association in this regard is that
the industry should be allowed more freedom and
flexibility in
determining the extent, frequency and timing of price changes. The
Association avers that there is no doubt that
the sugar industry
would adopt a realistic and conservative approach in this respect
because of the dangers of decreasing domestic
consumption and
stimulating competition from alternative sweeteners, if prices were
not kept at a reasonable level.
244. It cannot, in the
opinion of the Committee, be expected of government to invest an
organisation with far-reaching regulatory
powers, such as price
fixation, without monitoring and hailing some say in decisions taken.
The Committee nevertheless considers
that there is merit in the
recommendation of the Sugar Association. Ministerial approval of
price proposals inevitably involves
delays which tend to inhibit
speedy decisions as well as price changes at frequent intervals. In
consequence prices are normally
reviewed by government only once a
year when, in these times of high inflation, relatively large price
adjustments necessarily
have to be made. This not only harms the
market but also encourages the accummulation (sic) of stocks in
anticipation of large
price increases which cannot be kept secret and
are fairly generally known in advance in the trade and elsewhere.
245. The Committee
accordingly recommends that the Sugar Association be given the
responsibility of determining the industrial selling
prices of sugar
within parameters which would be approved by the Minister from time
to time and which would grant the industry
sufficient flexibility to
decide on the timing and frequency of price adjustments.”
[88]
Thus it would appear that the
Committee regarded SASA as an entity
discharging regulatory functions.
[89]
SASA’s response to the
assertion that the general moratorium
provisions assists the BRP’s case relies on the Sugar Act being
national legislation
and that SASA’s incorporation was
sanctioned in terms of s 2 of that piece of national legislation (see
above). It argues
accordingly that SASA in its current form has been
established by national legislation. By extension it also argues by
reason of
s 1 of the Sugar Act, the SI Agreement is also legislation
and that the duties of SASA set out in the SI Agreement are
legislatively
imposed duties.
[90]
SASA’s argues further
that its Constitution is provided for
expressly in s 2 of the Sugar Act and the terms thereof are
determined by the Minister.
[91]
One of SASA’s objects
as contained in clause 4 of SASA’s
Constitution is stated in subclause (1):
“
The objects for
which the Association is established are:
(1)
To promote, foster,
regulate
, co-ordinate and assist with the
production, storage, transport, handling and sale of sugar industry
products.” (my underlining)
#
The
remainder of the objects referred to in clause 4 all relate to the
object stated in clause 4(1).
[92]
Amongst the powers conferred
on SASA’s council under clause 5
of SASA’s Constitution subclause (1) provides:
“
Without prejudice
to the general power conferred upon the Council by clause 3(2) hereof
it shall have and exercise the following
powers and functions,
namely:
(1)
To control and regulate
, year by year, the disposal of the
total quantity of sugar manufactured by millers and refiners, and, to
this end, to determine,
the quantity of sugar required for the local
market, the quantity of carry-over stocks, the quantity of sugar to
be exported each
year, and each mill’s quota of those
quantities, subject only to the provisions of the agreement and any
regulation published
under Section 10 of the Act or any section
amending or replacing the same.” (my underlining)
#
The
remainder of SASA’s powers stated under this clause are in the
main regulatory powers.
[93]
Thus SASA submits that it is
established in terms of national
legislation to regulate the Sugar Industry and as such falls squarely
under the definition of
‘regulatory authority’ in the
Companies Act. I
agree.
[94]
In the result SASA would self-evidently
be acting in the execution of
its duties in bringing legal proceedings against THL to enforce its
compliance with the statutory
scheme, including the payment of its
obligations owed to SASA imposed by that statutory scheme. SASA
is accordingly entitled
to bring legal proceedings against THL to
enforce its payment obligations owed to SASA under
section 133
of the
Companies Act.
[95
]
RCL Foods observes that in addition
to the obvious difficulty of
seeking a moratorium against the industry’s regulatory
authority, the applicants also seek a
blanket moratorium against over
twenty thousand other respondents from bringing any legal
proceedings, including enforcement action,
against THL in respect of
any payments that are owing under the SI Agreement and argues that
such relief is so overly broad as
to render it impermissible.
[96]
Section 133(1)
of the
Companies Act imposes
a general moratorium on
the commencement of legal proceedings against companies in business
rescue. It is not an absolute moratorium
and may be lifted with the
written consent of the practitioners or with the leave of the court
on such terms the court considers
suitable or by regulatory
authorities upon written notice to the practitioners.
[97]
RCL Foods is, in my view, correct
in its submission that THL is not
entitled to a blanket moratorium on any enforcement action regarding
payment obligations arising
under the SI Agreement as such an order
would (aside from ousting SASA’s rights to pursue such action
as the regulatory authority)
impermissibly oust the court’s
jurisdiction in future matters that may arise as well as limit a
business rescue practitioner’s
discretion to provide consent if
the need arises. There is accordingly no basis for such far-reaching
relief, which is, in any
event, entirely unnecessary since the
applicants have sought the very declaratory relief that will
determine whether payments owing
under the SI Agreement may be
suspended by the BRPs. If they are not capable of suspension,
then enforcement action by SASA
(or anyone who makes out a case for
the lifting of the moratorium) is permissible and inherently
necessary.
[98]
Upon a textual interpretation
I have found that
sections 136
and
133
of
Companies Act do
not entitle the BRPs to suspend THL's payment
obligations under the SI Agreement and do not preclude SASA, or
anyone else
in certain circumstances, from seeking to enforce those
obligations.
[99]
It becomes necessary, however,
to consider briefly the applicants’
additional hypothesis that their analysis of the
Companies Act is
fortified by understanding the provisions firstly, within the broader
context of the business rescue provisions of the
Companies Act as
a
whole, and secondly, in light of the purpose of the business rescue
provisions.
[100]
Section 7(k)
of the
Companies Act stipulates
that one of the
purposes of the Act is to "… provide for the efficient
rescue and recovery of financially distressed
companies, in a manner
that balances the rights and interests of all relevant
stakeholders…".
[101]
This purpose is achieved by Chapter 6 of the
Companies Act. Prior
to
the commencement of the
Companies Act and
the introduction of the
provisions of Chapter 6, the only option available for creditors and
stakeholders of financially distressed
companies was to apply for the
liquidation or judicial management of the company concerned, in the
hope that they would procure
(at least) a partial recovery of debts
owing by the company. The business rescue provisions in Chapter 6 of
the
Companies Act were
introduced as a mechanism to allow a
financially distressed company "breathing room" to
restructure its affairs whilst
continuing to trade, in the hope of
enabling it to rehabilitate itself. See
Chetty t/a Nationwide
Electrical v Hart and Another NNO
2015 (6) SA 424
(SCA) paras 28,
29 and 35;
Airports Co SA Ltd v Spain NO and Others
2021 (1)
SA 97
(KZD) para 2.
[102]
The applicants correctly describe these provisions
as cumulatively
affording business rescue practitioners the broadest possible scope
to restructure and rescue the company, within
the protective regime
that business rescue creates. In this regard:
a.
Business rescue demands that the company is placed under the
temporary supervision
and management of one or more registered
business rescue practitioners. These business rescue practitioners
oversee the company
during rescue, and have full management control
of the company, in terms of
s 140
of the
Companies Act. The
business rescue practitioners effectively step into the shoes of the
company's board.
b.
If the business rescue practitioners believe that there is a
reasonable prospect that
the company can be rescued, they must
prepare and propose a business rescue plan for consideration and
adoption by the company's
creditors (and, if applicable, the
company's shareholders) and any other holders of a voting
interest. This plan is required
to specify the basis upon which the
debt of the company is to be repaid and/or the extent to which debts
will become unenforceable
and plot the course for rescuing the
company by achieving the goals set out in
s 128(1)(b)
of the
Companies Act.
c
.
Section 133
creates a general moratorium, subject to certain
stipulated exceptions, on legal proceedings and enforcement action
against a company
in business rescue, or any property belonging to it
or in its lawful possession.
d.
Section 134(c)
provides that no person may exercise any rights
in respect of property in the lawful possession of the company,
except to the extent
its business rescue practitioners consent in
writing thereto.
e.
Section 135(1)
of the
Companies Act protects
employees by
providing for remuneration, reimbursement for expenses and any other
money relating to employment that becomes due
and payable during the
business rescue process, to be treated as post-commencement finance
and repaid only at the end of the business
rescue process.
f.
Section 136(2)
empowers the business rescue practitioners
entirely, partially or conditionally to suspend, or with the leave of
the court cancel,
any obligation of the company that arises under an
agreement to which the company was a party at the commencement of the
business
rescue proceedings, and which would otherwise become due
during the course of those proceedings.
g.
Section 137
stipulates that any alteration in the classification
or status of any issued securities of a company (other than by way of
transfer
in the ordinary course of business) is invalid unless a
court directs otherwise, or it is contemplated in an approved
business
rescue plan.
[103]
It is against this backdrop that the applicants
contend that
ss 133
and
136
must be understood and suggest that their essential purpose
is to create a payment moratorium and permit the BRPs to suspend
obligations
where there are little to no means to fulfil obligations.
Section 136(2)
, in particular, provides business rescue
practitioners the opportunity to disengage the company, whether
temporarily or permanently,
from onerous obligations that may prevent
the company from being rescued.
[104]
When successful, business rescue can ensure the
survival of the
company in question and, in turn, the survival of the commercial
relationship between the company and its creditors,
as well as the
preservation of jobs that the company provides. Even where the
company is ultimately unable to trade out of its
financial distress
and continue on a solvent basis, business rescue may result in a
better return for its creditors and shareholders
than if that company
was immediately liquidated. See
Oakdene Square Properties (Pty)
Ltd and Others v Farm Bothasfontein (Kyalami) (Pty) Ltd and Others
2013 (4) SA 539
(SCA) para 31.
[105]
One of the potential outcomes of business rescue,
then, is the
orderly winding down of the company. Where that occurs, the company's
debts are ranked as provided for on liquidation.
The business rescue
process cannot properly be used to change the ranking of creditors,
or to afford particular categories of creditors
a preferent or
secured status not expressly conferred upon them in business rescue.
To do so would be to subvert the purpose of
business rescue and to
undermine the proper functioning of the
Companies Act. The
applicants
accordingly argue that:
a.
Chapter 6 only provides for two categories of preferent claims in
business rescue:
post-commencement finance, and the remuneration
rights of employees due and payable before the commencement of
business rescue;
b.
The obligations imposed by the SI Agreement do not qualify as
either and they
thus enjoy no preference in business rescue;
c.
SASA, like SARS, consequently cannot demand that its claims be
settled in business
rescue ahead of other creditors.
d.
A contextual and purposive understanding of the
Companies Act
therefore
illustrates that:
i.
Parliament intended that a business rescue practitioner must be able
to
suspend any
inter
partes
obligation that, if not otherwise suspended, would make it impossible
to rescue the company;
ii.
unless the business rescue practitioners have the power to suspend
payment
obligations of this nature, chapter 6 of the
Companies
Act will
be rendered incapable of achieving the very object of
business rescue, particularly in highly regulated industries like the
South
African sugar industry;
iii.
a preclusion on suspension would force the BRPs to treat SASA as a
preferent
creditor, when there is no statutory basis for it to assume
that status; and
iv.
an interpretation of the
Companies Act which
allows the BRPs to
suspend the payment obligations under the SI Agreement, and
prohibits SASA from instituting proceedings
to enforce payment,
therefore accords better with the statutory context and purpose.
[106]
Submitting that the principle applies equally
in this case, the
applicants point to the caution in
Panamo Properties (Pty) Ltd and
Another v Nel and Others NNO
2015 (5) 63 (SCA), albeit in a
different context, against litigious creditors seeking to stultify
the business rescue process or
to gain advantages not contemplated by
its broad purpose (footnotes omitted):
"[1]
Business rescue proceedings under the Companies Act 71 of 2008 (the
Act) are intended to 'provide for the efficient
rescue and recovery
of financially distressed companies, in a manner that balances the
rights and interests of all relevant stakeholders'.
They contemplate
the temporary supervision of the company and its business by a
business rescue practitioner. During business rescue
there is a
temporary moratorium on the rights of claimants against the company
and its affairs are restructured through the development
of a
business rescue plan aimed at it continuing in operation on a solvent
basis or, if that is unattainable, leading to a better
result for the
company's creditors and shareholders than would otherwise be the
case. These commendable goals are unfortunately
being hampered
because the statutory provisions governing business rescue are not
always clearly drafted. Consequently they have
given rise to
confusion as to their meaning and provided ample scope for litigious
parties to exploit inconsistencies and advance
technical arguments
aimed at stultifying the business rescue process or securing
advantages not contemplated by its broad purpose.
This is such a
case."
[107]
In my view the instant matter is not such a case.
The applicants’
summary of the objects of business rescue, the principles to be
applied thereto and the description of the
potential outcomes are all
well and good. I agree with all of those general propositions.
[108]
The problem, however, is that that additional
hypothesis does not
obtain here. It is one thing to say that the recovery of accumulated
debts existing as at the commencement
of business rescue are not
claims payable in business rescue. It is quite another matter to
suggest that the payment of the debts
that go “hand-in-hand”
with the costs of doing business during business rescue are also
suspended and subject to the
moratorium. It can hardly be contended
that the Value Added Tax payable to SARS on ordinary day to day
commercial transactions
(say retail sales) by a company in business
rescue is suspended! What of the PAYE contributions, ongoing pension
fund or provident
fund contributions due by an employer company in
business rescue in respect of its employees who continue working and
earning salaries
during business rescue?
[109]
In my view, the ongoing obligations to SASA are
simply the costs of
doing business – nothing more, and certainly, nothing less.
They cannot be suspended and are not subject
to the moratorium.
[110]
During argument applicants’ counsel rejected
the assertion that if it were found that the SI Agreement is
subordinate legislation
it could not be suspended as that created
rule of law problems because that was not a power that could repose
in the business rescue
practitioners. Applicants’ counsel
suggest that that submission is simply wrong. If the SI Agreement is
subordinate legislation,
they argue then that the rule of law
requires that it be treated as binding, and that means that it must
be complied with unless
there are lawful grounds on which it can be
departed from. The importance of that, they suggest, is that if there
is a rule imposed
by law or available in law that permits the
suspension or abrogation from those rights, then that will be
consistent with the rule
of law and the suspension will be possible.
Put differently, counsel for the applicants argue that the
determination of whether
or not the SI Agreement is subordinate
legislation is also irrelevant to the outcome of these proceedings as
a matter of public
law. The question really, so the argument goes, is
whether or not the functionary had the power to suspend as a matter
of law.
[111]
That question, they argue further, turns on the
interpretation of
s 136(2)
of the
Companies Act. If
the BRP’s
have that power, they exercise a power conferred on them by
legislation and when they do that, that will be the
exercise of a
statutory power or administrative action if that power is a public
function.
[112]
Applicants’ counsel submit that the point is
illustrated very clearly by two examples. The first relates to
obligations that
arise under a collective bargaining agreement. It is
generally well known that ss 23 and 31 of the Labour Relations Act,
1995 (“
the LRA
”
)
permit bargaining councils to conclude agreements that bind not just
the parties to the agreement but their members and representatives.
It is also so that under s 32 of the LRA the Minister of Labour can
at the behest of the Bargaining Council extend the operation
of that
collective agreement to a whole industry, and so to non-parties to
that agreement, which takes effect on publication to
the Government
Gazette. It is suggested that very close parallels exist between that
regime and that applicable under the SI Agreement,
i.e. an agreement
that binds non-parties by virtue of imposition rather than by
consensus. It is argued that it is significant
that s 30 of the LRA
requires that the Constitution of Bargaining Councils include in
their provisions a process for exemption
from collective agreements.
Applicants’ counsel argue that in those circumstances the
Bargaining Council, a different entity
from the entity which renders
that agreement binding on non-parties, exercises the power to exempt
and therefore suspend those
obligations. They accordingly submit that
the power to exempt and the power to suspend are legally identical.
[113]
Applicants’ counsel submit that that first
example is particularly apposite because the work of a collective
Bargaining Council
has been found to be power exercised under a
statute but a private law power, not a public power. In
Calibre
Clinical Consultants (Pty) Ltd and Another v National Bargaining
Council for the Road Freight Industry and Another
2010
(5) SA 457
(SCA) the position was described thus (footnotes omitted):
“
[39]
While curial pronouncements from other jurisdictions are not
necessarily transferable to this country they can nonetheless
be
instructive. I do not find it surprising that courts both abroad and
in this country - including the Constitutional Court in
AAA
Investments -
have
almost always sought out features that are governmental in kind when
interrogating whether conduct is subject to public-law
review. Powers
or functions that are 'public' in nature, in the ordinary meaning of
the word, contemplate that they pertain
'to the people as a
whole' or that they are exercised or performed 'on behalf of the
community as a whole' (or at least a
group or class of the
public as a whole), which is pre-eminently the terrain of government.
[40]
It has been said before that there can be no single test of universal
application to determine whether a power or function
is of a public
nature, and I agree. But the extent to which the power or function
might or might not be described as 'governmental'
in nature, even if
it is not definitive, seems to me nonetheless to be a useful enquiry.
It directs the enquiry to whether the
exercise of the power or the
performance of the function might properly be said to entail public
accountability, and it seems to
me that accountability to the public
is what judicial review has always been about. It is about
accountability to those with
whom the functionary or body has no
special relationship other than that they are adversely affected by
its conduct, and the question
in each case will be whether it can
properly be said to be accountable, notwithstanding the absence of
any such special relationship.
[41]
A bargaining council, like a trade union and an employers'
association, is a voluntary association that is created by agreement
to perform functions in the interests and for the benefit of its
members. I have considerable difficulty seeing how a bargaining
council can be said to be publicly accountable for the procurement of
services for a project that is implemented for the benefit
of
its members - whether it be a medical-aid scheme, or a training
scheme, or a pension fund, or, in this case, its wellness programme.
[42]
I do not find in the implementation of such a project any of the
features that have been identified in the cases as signifying
that it
is subject to judicial review. When implementing such a project
a bargaining council is not performing a function
that is 'woven into
a system of governmental control' or 'integrated into a system of
statutory regulation'. Government does not
'regulate, supervise and
inspect the performance of the function', the task is not one for
which 'the public has assumed responsibility',
it is not 'linked to
the functions and powers of government', it is not 'a
privatisation of the business of government itself',
there is not
'potentially a governmental interest in the decision-making power in
question', the council is not 'taking the place
of central government
or local authorities', and, most important, it involves no public
money. It is true that a government might
itself undertake a similar
project on behalf of the public at large - just as it might provide
medical services generally
and pensions and training schemes to the
public at large - but the council is not substituting for government
when it provides
such services to employees with whom it is in a
special relationship.
43]
Much was sought to be made by counsel for the appellants, of the fact
that the council's collective agreement - which records
the terms
upon which the wellness fund was established and is to be
administered - has been extended to the industry in general
by
declaration in the
Government Gazette.
The argument,
as I understand it, was that the collective agreement - which has
been called, in a comparable context, a 'piece
of subordinate,
domestic legislation' - constitutes a 'public power' that it
exercises when it establishes and administers
such a fund, but in my
view counsel's reliance on the collective agreement is misplaced. The
collective agreement is not the source
of the council's powers. The
powers of the council emanate from its constitution, or the
equivalent powers conferred upon it by
s 28 of the statute. The
collective agreement is no more than the terms upon which the parties
have agreed that the council
will exercise those powers.
[44]
That the procurement of goods and services by the council - for
whatever purpose - is not a public function seems to me to
find
support in the Constitution itself. Government and its agencies are
expected to be publicly accountable for the contracts
that they
conclude because they are spending public money, and there are two
principal reasons why that should be so. In the first
place the
public is entitled to be assured that its moneys are properly spent.
And secondly, the commercial public is entitled
to equal opportunity
to benefit from the bounty of the State to which they are themselves
contributories. The accountability of government
for procurement
is expressly provided for in s 217 of the Constitution, which
requires that government bodies must contract 'in
accordance with a
system which is fair, equitable, transparent, competitive and cost
effective', but that prescript does not apply
to a bargaining
council. It is not an 'organ of State' within the narrower definition
of that term in s 217, nor is it an
'institution identified in
national legislation' to which that procurement policy applies. I
also see no principial reason why
it should be publicly accountable
for the contracts that it concludes. It is not expending public
money, but money that emanates
from its members and, in some cases,
others in the industry, and it is to them, not the public, that it is
accountable for the
manner in which it does so. More important,
for present purposes, I can see no basis upon which the commercial
public, who
are not contributors to its funds, not even indirectly,
might justifiably be entitled to hold the council to account for the
manner
in which they are spent.
[45]
Indeed, a singular feature of this case is that counsel for the
appellants conceded, correctly, that the council would have
been
perfectly entitled to seek out and appoint a service provider without
first inviting tenders or proposals at all. If it is
not publicly
accountable for choosing with whom to contract then I see no reason
why it is publicly accountable for choosing
with whom not to
contract.”
[114]
The second example that counsel for the applicants
raised of powers suspended, conferred or imposed by statute but
suspended by
the determination of a single person arises under s 24M
of the National Environmental Management Act, 1998 (“
NEMA
”
)
which permits the Minister or MEC for Environmental Affairs to
suspend the obligation to obtain an environmental authorisation
or to
change the process and to impose unilaterally a different process for
obtaining environmental authorisation in particular
specified
circumstances. So again, argues applicants’ counsel, statutory
regulation, this time enacted very clearly in the
public interest, is
capable of abrogation by the decision of the Minister in favour of
the interests of a particular person. So,
the submission made is said
to be a simple one. It is argued that it is clear that, as matter of
law, rights and obligations imposed
by statute can be suspended where
there is a power to do so, and here that power resides in 136 (2)(a)
of the
Companies Act, and
there is simply no merit to the submission
that that suspension cannot occur as a matter of law.
[115]
The submission is, in my view, fundamentally
flawed. In both examples
the power to exempt or suspend is given to the very person or entity
charged with the administration of,
or the regulation of, the
industry or activity or section to whom or which the exempted or
suspended obligation is owed. Not so
here – quite obviously.
Here the BRPs take control of THL and owe the obligation.
The
Sugar Industry Agreement and the Sugar Act – Historical
Assessment
[116]
Referring in some detail to David Lincoln ‘An
Ascendant
Sugarocracy: Natal’s Millers-Cum-Planters, 1905 – 1939’
(1988)
Journal of Natal and Zulu History
1, the applicants
suggest that an analysis of the history of the sugar industry, the
Sugar Act, and the SI Agreement reveals
two important facts. The
first is that SASA has never been a public regulatory authority, but
simply an association representing
the interests of the industry. The
second is that the Sugar Act has always merely given legislative
recognition to the pre-existing
contractual, cooperative arrangement
between millers and growers. They continue by saying that SASA, as an
industry association,
has always existed outside of government. It
was formed in 1919 as an alliance struck between the millers and the
growers but one
that was, at the time, a fragile association born of
compromise and pragmatism. Following a period of miller/grower
friction in
the 1920s, and SACGA splitting from SASA in 1930,
resulting in its collapse, SASA was resuscitated under the 1936 Sugar
Act, which
brought a new accord, and which compelled the industry to
adopt a formula for cane pricing that made provision for both the
millers'
and growers' costs of production. It thereby created a less
secretive and better regulated relationship between millers and
growers.
[117]
They then submit that SASA's mandate has thus
always been, on the one
hand, to engage with government on behalf of the industry and, on the
other, to facilitate the cooperative,
revenue sharing arrangement
agreed among industry participants.
[118]
It is so that the SI Agreement and the Sugar
Act must be
understood and interpreted in their statutory and historical context.
See
Kalil NO and Others v Mangaung Metropolitan Municipality and
Others
2014 (5) SA 123
(SCA) para 22. It is appropriate to
consider the provisions of the predecessor to the Sugar Act, ie. the
Sugar Act, 28 of 1936
(“
the 1936 Act
”).
[119]
The provisions of the 1936 Act gave legislative
recognition to the
cooperative and contractual arrangements between millers and growers:
a.
Section 1 authorised the Minister to publish in the Gazette "an
agreement
entered into ... between representatives of growers,
millers and refiners" if such an agreement had been approved by
at least
90% of the growers who together had produced not less than
90% of the cane grown in South Africa during that time, and if it was
in the public interest.
b.
Section 2 authorised the Minister, where no agreement under s 1
had been
concluded or published, to "determine the terms of an
agreement between growers, millers and refiners
"
if it
was in the interests of the sugar industry. On publication, the
agreement became binding on every grower, miller and refiner
that
received a quota in respect of the manufacture of sugar, "as if
it had been an agreement or amending agreement, as the
case may be,
signed by such grower, miller or refiner".
c.
Section 6 provided that the Minister could, by notice in the
Gazette, prescribe
specific prices, quantities, and grades of sugar.
d.
In terms of s 8, publication in the Gazette of any agreement or
amending agreement
served as
prima facie
proof of the terms of
the agreement, and of the prerequisites to its conclusion.
Publication thus served an evidentiary purpose,
providing certainty
as to the terms of the agreement.
[120]
The applicants argue that the effect of these
provisions was that the
Minister could make an agreement on behalf of all industry
participants who received a quota and bind them
to it. Relying on
Southernport Developments (Pty) Ltd v Transnet Ltd
2005
(2) SA 202
(SCA) para 16, quoting
Coal Cliff Collieries (Pty) Ltd
v Sijehama (Pty) Ltd
(1991) 24 NSWLR 1
at 26E - 27B, and
Shepherd
Real Estate Investments (Pty) Ltd v Roux Le Roux Motors CC
2020
(2) SA 419
(SCA) para 18 they contend that contracts of this kind
(ie. those that permit a third party to determine uncertain or
ambiguous
terms on behalf of the parties) are recognised and binding.
Thus, they conclude, that there was little doubt that the Minister's
power to make such an agreement was contractual, and distinct from
the Minister's powers under s 6, to prescribe regulations.
An
agreement made by the Minister remained a deemed agreement, and not
subordinate legislation. It gave legislative recognition
to the
underlying agreement among industry participants.
[121]
I am not convinced that those authorities support
the proposition
contended for. Ponnen JA, who penned the judgments in both
Southernport Developments
and
Shepherd Real Estate
,
said clearly that the third party in this context could not give
effect to arrangements that the parties themselves had not concluded.
In other words, the third party, who by agreement was empowered to do
so, was merely adding flesh to an already agreed skeleton.
The third
party was empowered to settle ambiguities and uncertainties, not to
make an entirely new agreement where none existed
before.
[122]
It therefore seems to me that, if under the 1936
Act, the Minister
acted in circumstances where no agreement existed (or had been
published) at all, it was not as if he was making
an agreement for
the parties. The terminology is unfortunate but it would appear that
the second use of the word agreement in s
2(a) was intended fit in
with the scheme of the provision. It is interesting that in ss 2(b),
2(c) and 3 what the Minister does
is referred to as “a
determination” and not “an agreement” and is said
to operate “as if it had been
an agreement”.
[123]
Accordingly at first blush it might be arguable,
in my view, that
under the 1936 Act the SI Agreement was either a contract or a
statute dependant on whether it was one published
in terms of s 1 or
a determination by the Minister in terms of s 2.
[124]
Seemingly in support of the submission that the
SI Agreement was an
agreement proper (and not something else) the applicants refer to
Lombard v Pongola Sugar Milling Co Ltd
1963 (4) SA 119
(D)
,
where it was held that the contract of sale and purchase that was
deemed to exist between a grower and a miller under the 1943
SI Agreement
(published pursuant to the 1936 Act), was a
contract for the sale of movables within the meaning of the
Prescription Act, 18 of
1943. It was suggested that that case
concluded that the SI Agreement there was an agreement proper. I do
not agree. A close consideration
of the decision in
Lombard
reveals that it was concerned with the sale of sugar cane between a
grower and a miller and the related transport costs concerning
the
movement of the sugar cane from point of harvest to the mill. Relying
on a provision in the SI Agreement to the effect that
“[c]ane
delivered ... shall ... be deemed to be so delivered ... in pursuance
of a contract for the sale of such cane on
the terms and conditions
herein set out” the court held that the supply of the sugar
cane in terms of the SI Agreement was
supply in terms of an agreement
in respect of which the Prescription Act, 18 of 1943 applied. That
was the issue before the court
which found that the provision was
“...
clear and unambiguous, and the true
meaning of the clause is that the contractual relationship between
the grower and the miller
in relation to cane delivered and accepted
is to be governed by the rules of law relating to purchase and
sale”. The
issue had nothing to do with whether the SI
Agreement itself was an agreement proper or something else.
The
Sugar Industry Agreement and the Sugar Act – 1978 onwards
[125]
The Sugar Act is very short, consisting of a
mere eleven effective
sections. Section 12 is the section defining its short title and
providing for dates of commencement. To
undertake an appropriate
textual and contextual analysis it is best that the necessary
provisions be set out in full:
“
To
consolidate and amend the laws relating to the sugar industry; and to
provide for matters incidental thereto.
1
Definitions
In this Act, unless the
context otherwise indicates-
'Agreement'
means
the Sugar Industry Agreement referred to in section 4;
'Association'
means
the South African Sugar Association incorporated in terms of section
2;
...
'Minister'
means
the Minister of Economic Affairs;
...
'this
Act'
includes the Agreement, a
notice issued in terms of section 6 and any regulation made in terms
of section 10;
...
2
Incorporation of South African Sugar Association
(1)
The Association known as the South African Sugar Association shall
under that name, with effect from the
date of commencement of this
Act, be a juristic person with a constitution of which the terms
shall be published by the Minister
by notice in the
Gazette
.
(2)
The Minister shall in like manner publish any amendment of the said
constitution.
(3)
The Registrar of Companies shall as soon as possible after the
commencement of this Act enter the name of
the Association in the
register kept by him of bodies incorporated by Statute.
...
4
Sugar Industry Agreement
(1)
(a)
The Minister shall after consultation with the Association determine
the terms of an agreement to be known
as the Sugar Industry
Agreement, which shall provide for, and deal with, such matters
relating to the sugar industry as are, in
the opinion of the
Minister, in the interests of that industry but not detrimental to
the public interest.
(b)
(i)
The Minister may at the instance of, or
after consultation with, the Association, amend the Agreement
if the
Minister is satisfied that such amendment is in the interests of the
sugar industry and not detrimental to the public interest.
(iii)
An amendment may be made with retrospective effect to any date
determined by the
Minister after consultation with
(c)
The Minister shall publish the Agreement and any amendment thereof by
notice in the
Gazette
,
whereupon the Agreement or such amendment shall become binding upon
every grower, miller and refiner.
(2)
Without derogating from the generality of subsection (1)
(a)
,
the matters with reference to which the Minister may provide for, and
deal with, in the Agreement, shall include-
(a)
the designation of any agricultural product from which it is or
becomes possible to manufacture sugar
as a product which is subject
to the Agreement;
(b)
(i) the regulation and control of the
production, marketing and exportation of
sugar industry products;
(ii)
the prohibition of the production, marketing and exportation of sugar
industry products;
(c)
the confiscation or destruction, which may be with or without
compensation, and the sale or other disposal,
which may be for the
benefit of the Association or not, of any sugar industry product in
circumstances in which the production
of that product, or the
marketing or other disposal or the exportation thereof, has been
effected or attempted in contravention
of the Agreement or any notice
published under section 6 or any regulation made under section 10;
(d)
a formula for determining the price to be paid by millers to growers
for sugar cane or any designated agricultural
product, which may
include any factor related to the sale or other disposal of any sugar
industry product;
(e)
the functions to be performed by the Association in the execution of
the Agreement;
(f)
the establishment and constitution of a board to carry out the terms
of the Agreement, and the functions
to be performed by it thereunder;
(f
A
)
the
granting of power, in specified cases or in general, to the board
established under paragraph
(f)
to
impose any penalty prescribed in the Agreement for the contravention
of, or failure to comply with, any term of the Agreement,
or any
provision of a notice issued under section 6;
(g)
the imposition of levies upon growers, millers and refiners for the
purpose of giving effect to the terms of
the Agreement and for the
purpose of enabling the Association to fulfil any obligation incurred
by it in accordance with its constitution;
(h)
the regulation and control of the transportation of sugar cane from
growers to millers, the prohibition
of agreements which are contrary
to the terms relating to such regulation and control, whether or not
the agreements exist at the
commencement of those terms, and whether
or not the other terms of the Agreement are applicable to the parties
to those agreements,
and any compensation to parties who suffer loss
as a result of such a prohibition;
(i)
the granting of power-
(aa)
in
specified cases, to any person or body (including the Association) to
provide for and deal with, with the approval
of the Minister, any
matter referred to in subsection (1)
(a)
,
read with paragraphs
(a)
to
(h)
,
inclusive, of this subsection, and, where necessary or desirable,
with retrospective effect to any date determined by the said
person
or body with the approval of the Minister, by means of rules,
regulations, notices, directions, orders or similar general
measures;
and
(bb)
in
specified cases or in general, to any such person or body to publish
any such rules, regulations, notices,
directions, orders or measures,
after consultation, where applicable, with the Association, by notice
in the
Gazette
or,
with the prior approval of the Minister, where it is deemed expedient
due to the restricted operation thereof or for any
other reason, in
such other manner as may in the opinion of the Minister be suitable
in the circumstances to make them known to
the persons affected
thereby,
and
which rules, regulations, notices, directions, orders or measures
shall on any such publication become binding in accordance
with the
provisions thereof on any grower, miller, refiner or other person
affected thereby.
(3)
The Minister may, after consultation with the Association, in the
Agreement or in any subsequent notice in
the
Gazette
,
declare any contravention of, or failure to comply with, any term of
the Agreement, or a notice issued by the Association under
section 6,
an offence, and may in like manner prescribe penalties for any such
contravention or failure.
5
Equality of treatment of growers, millers and refiners
Unless
the Agreement expressly provides to the contrary in respect of any
particular growers, millers or refiners, or any particular
class or
category of growers, millers or refiners, any right conferred, or any
obligation imposed, upon growers, millers or refiners
under the
Agreement, shall be construed as applying equally and without
distinction to all growers, millers and refiners, respectively.
6
Powers of Association with regard to prices and surcharge
(1)
(a)
The Association may by notice in the
Gazette
prescribe
the maximum industrial price at which any sugar industry product,
other than speciality sugar, may be sold.
(b)
Such price may vary in respect of different grades, kinds, quantities
and qualities of the product concerned,
and in respect of different
places or areas.
(2)
The Association may by notice in the
Gazette
or
by written notice to the person concerned-
(a)
impose a surcharge upon any sugar or molasses purchased or otherwise
acquired-
(i)
by any person or class or category of persons described in the
notice;
(ii)
for any purpose described in the notice; and
(b)
prescribe the manner in which such surcharge shall be collected, the
persons by whom it shall be paid, the persons
to whom or the fund to
which it shall be paid and the purpose for which it shall be
utilized.
(3)
The Association may in the case of a notice referred to in subsection
(1) or (2) revoke or amend the notice
by notice in the
Gazette
or
by written notice to the person concerned.
7
Penalties
Any
penalty which may be prescribed for any contravention of, or failure
to comply with, any term of the Agreement, or of any provision
of a
notice issued under section 6, or of any regulation made under
section 10, shall not exceed R100 000, in the case of a fine,
or a
period of twelve months, in the case of imprisonment, or both such
fine and such imprisonment.
8
Jurisdiction of magistrate's court
A
magistrate's court shall have jurisdiction to impose any penalty
prescribed in terms of this Act.
9
Minister may effect certain amendments to Schedules
The
Minister may at the request of the Association, and if he is
satisfied that it would be in the interests of the sugar industry
and
not detrimental to the public interest, by notice in
the
Gazette
amend any definition contained in
Schedule 1 or 2, or substitute any other definition for any such
definition.
10
Regulations
The
Minister may, after consultation with the Association, make
regulations providing for-
(a)
the regulation, control or prohibition of the production, marketing
or exportation of sugar or sugar industry
products;
(b)
the better achievement of the objects and the better administration
of the provisions of this Act and of the
Agreement or any amendment
thereof.
11
Repeals and savings
(1)
The Sugar Act, 1936 (Act 28 of 1936), the Sugar Amendment Act, 1955
(Act 17 of 1955), and the Sugar Amendment
Act, 1958 (Act 26 of 1958),
are hereby repealed.
(2)
The Sugar Industry Agreement of 1943 is hereby rescinded.
(3)
Any determination made, or any decision or action taken, by any
person, body or authority under any Act repealed
in terms of
subsection (1), and any agreement and any determination or regulation
published under any such Act, shall, except in
so far as it is
inconsistent with any provision of this Act, continue to be of force
until it is rescinded or varied under this
Act.”
[126]
The Minister’s powers and functions were
transferred to the
Minister of Trade and Industry by proclamation on 23 August 2019.
[127]
The applicants submit that there are a number of textual
features of the statutory regime that indicate that the SI Agreement
is an agreement
sui generis
.
[128]
They submit firstly that it is significant that s 4(1)(a)
itself describes the SI Agreement as an agreement. The point
they make is that it is not merely that it names the agreement the
"Sugar Industry Agreement", but instead that it provides
that there shall be "an agreement to be known as the Sugar
Industry Agreement". In other words, what is being named the
Sugar Industry Agreement is, according to the section, "an
agreement". They argue that if the purpose of the provision
was
to make the SI Agreement something other than an agreement, the
provision could have empowered the Minister, for example,
to "make
regulations to be known as the Sugar Industry Agreement".
[129]
They contend next that s 4 must be contrasted with ss 6
and 10, which provide for the making of subordinate legislation.
Section 6
empowers SASA to "by notice in the Gazette
prescribe" the maximum industrial price at which a sugar
industry product
may be sold while s 10 empowers the Minister to
"make regulations providing for" various issues. These
provisions,
which contemplate subordinate legislation, are said to
stand in sharp contrast to s 4, which simply provides for the
Minister
to "determine the terms of an agreement", to amend
the agreement in specified circumstances, and to publish the
agreement
in the Gazette for it to become binding. They conclude the
submission with the suggestion that the Sugar Act maintains the
distinction
created under the 1936 Act between regulations prescribed
by the Minister, and the SI Agreement, the terms of which are
determined
by the Minster.
[130]
The applicants’ case is thus grounded on the proposition
that the SI Agreement as a whole is contractual in nature and
qualifies
as an agreement and therefore capable of suspension under
the
Companies Act. Alternatively
, the applicants submit that the
payment obligations under the Industry Agreement are
inter partes
obligations and therefore capable of suspension under the
Companies Act.
[131
]
As I have outlined earlier, the applicants rely on certain
historical aspects to contend that the SI Agreement is contractual in
nature and simply given legislative recognition. The respondents,
although each puts it differently, suggest that the applicants
fail
to adequately consider the language of the instruments which are
relevant to this dispute ie. the Sugar Act and the SI Agreement.
The
argument proceeds with the contention that the applicants also fail
to give recognition to the fact that the legislature expressly
elected to repeal the 1936 Act and replace it with the Sugar Act, the
specific purpose of which was to,
inter alia
, “amend the
laws relating to the sugar industry”.
[132]
To my mind there is indeed a difference. It seems to me that
the 1936 Act authorised the Minister to publish “an agreement
entered into by” representatives of the various participants in
the sugar industry after consensus had been reached within
the
industry. The Minister was empowered to determine the terms of the
agreement only if the industry did not conclude an agreement,
and in
that case the terms of the agreement would be binding on industry
participants “as if it had been an agreement…
signed by
such grower, miller or refiner”. The legislature moved away
from this position with the passing of the Sugar Act,.
There is no
longer any reference in the legislative scheme to the industry
participants reaching an agreement. Instead, the Sugar
Act confers
the power on the Minister to determine the terms of the SI Agreement
and impose such terms on the industry. The Sugar
Act can therefore be
said to part company from the 1936 Act.
[133]
It is clear that in s 4(1)(a) of the Sugar Act the Minister is
empowered to determine the terms of the SI Agreement on his own after
consultation with SASA. The Minister is thus obliged to determine
what in “the opinion of the Minister” are to be the
terms
of the SI Agreement. No consensus is required – only
consultation. The concept of “after consultation”
does not require agreement, only that serious consideration is given
to the view of the party that is to be consulted. In
Public
Servants Association of South Africa and Others v Government
Employees Pension Fund and Others
[2020] ZASCA 126
;
[2020] 4 All
SA 710
(SCA) Navsa JA put it crisply as follows (footnote omitted):
“
[55] I
now turn to a consideration of the merits. It is clear that there is
a distinction between situations
in which a decision, by way of
statutory prescripts or binding rules, has to be taken ‘in
consultation’, and where
a decision has to be taken ‘after
consultation’.
The
former requires agreement and the latter requires that the decision
be taken in good faith,
after
consulting and giving
serious consideration to the view of the party that has to be
consulted.”
[134]
The determination of the terms of the SI Agreement
is thus up to the
Minister.
[135]
Then too, in terms of s 4(1)(b) of the Sugar
Act the Minister “may
at the instance of, or after consultation with, the Association,
amend the Agreement if the Minister
is satisfied that such amendment
is in the interests of the sugar industry and not detrimental to the
public interest”, and
in terms of s 4(1)(c) the “Minister
shall publish the Agreement and any amendment thereof by notice in
the Gazette, whereupon
the Agreement or such amendment shall become
binding upon every grower, miller and refiner”. As I see it,
the SI Agreement
self-evidently becomes binding on all millers,
growers and refiners once gazetted, whether they like it or not. The
obligations
contained therein are imposed on all industry members as
a matter of law, rather than agreed
inter partes
as a matter
of contract or arrangement, and unlike a contractual or
inter
partes
arrangement, are not open to being cancelled, amended or
suspended by the members themselves. Instead, the SI Agreement
operates
much like a statutory regime with consequences for
non-compliance.
[136]
That much is obvious from the offences that may
be declared and the
penalties that may be prescribed in terms of s 4(3) of the Sugar Act,
which provides that the Minister may
declare certain conduct as
constituting an offence or offences and prescribe penalties after
consultation with SASA for a contravention
of, or failure to comply
with, any term of the SI Agreement. The additional fact that he may
do so in the SI Agreement itself is
a further obvious pointer to the
SI Agreement being a legislative instrument as opposed to a document
of consensus imposing contractual
obligations. Penalties may not
exceed R100 000.00 in the case of a fine, or a period of twelve
months, in the case of imprisonment,
or both such fine and such
imprisonment.
[137]
The applicants’ suggestion that it is possible
to cleave the
payment obligations imposed under the SI Agreement from the rest of
the SI Agreement and contend that while the SI
Agreement may be
subordinate legislation, the payment obligations are somehow
inter
partes
obligations within the scope of
s 136(2)(a)
of the
Companies Act, is
, in my view, simply wrong.
[138]
It is manifestly clear that the payment obligations
are not
inter
partes
. This is evident from the fact that, in the event of a
default, the repayment obligations become an industry obligation by
way
of statutory levies, levied by SASA on the remaining millers in
terms of the SI Agreement. When this regime is contrasted with a
contractual
lex commissoria
or the availability of the
exceptio non adimpleti contractus
, the difference again
becomes self-evident.
[139]
The first and second respondents submit, referencing
the Shorter
Oxford English Dictionary, that “binding” in the context
of
s 4(1)(c)
means “obligatory (on), coercive”. They
refer also to Stroud’s Judicial Dictionary, 6
th
edition, where it means “Required; Obligatory” as
synonymous with “made binding”. They submit also
that in
context the phrase “binding upon” is synonymous with
“unavoidable by” and is distinct from the
1936 Act, which
in terms of s 1(4) thereof, made the agreement under that Act binding
only upon a subset of parties (growers delivering
to a miller with a
quota and millers that had signed the agreement). It must follow, the
submission concludes, that, irrespective
of the nature of the SI
Agreement, a suspension of the obligations imposed by it is only
permissible if it is also permissible
to suspend s 4(1)(c) of the
Sugar Act thus rendering the SI Agreement itself “not binding”.
The argument is compelling.
As I canvassed earlier, it must be
accepted that the
Companies Act does
not make provision for a BRP to
suspend the operation of an Act of Parliament.
[140]
The Minister himself confirms that he is responsible
for
administering the Sugar Act and determining the provisions of the SI
Agreement. He has further confirmed that the Sugar Act
reveals a
deliberate election by the legislature for a statutory basis of
regulation of the sugar industry. In addition the SI
Agreement itself
records that the Minister has determined its terms under s 4(1)(a) of
the Sugar Act and it records in clause 206
that the Minister was
satisfied that the amendments were in the interests of the sugar
industry and not detrimental to the public
interest. No consensus was
required nor recorded.
[141]
Add to that the indicator that the obligations
under the SI Agreement
are statutorily located in the definition section of the Sugar Act
which provides that “’this
Act’ includes the
Agreement, a notice issued in terms of section 6 and any regulation
made in terms of section 10”.
It follows, in my view, that the
obligations which arise under the SI Agreement arise, by definition,
directly from “this
Act”.
[142]
In addition, and although not solely determinative
of the question,
it bears noting too that on a reading through of the SI Agreement as
a whole one is left with the distinct sense
that one is considering
legislation as opposed to a document recording consensus reached
amongst industry role-players.
[143]
In addition to that analysis of the Sugar Act
and of the SI
Agreement, there is also judicial authority for the proposition that
the SI Agreement is legislative in nature.
[144]
In
Even Grand Trading 51 CC v Tongaat Hulett Limited (South
African Sugar Association intervening)
(Unreported Judgment,
KwaZulu Natal High Court, Pietermartizburg, 2 November 2012, Case No:
AR517/11) the court was seized with
an appeal from the Sugar Industry
Tribunal. The preliminary issue to be decided was whether the
High Court had jurisdiction.
To make such a determination it
was necessary to consider whether the SI Agreement was an agreement
in the ordinary sense of the
word. That question arose because
private parties cannot confer jurisdiction on a High Court that does
not naturally have
such jurisdiction. The Court (Kruger J with Schaup
AJ concurring, sitting as a full bench exercising appellate
jurisdiction) held
that the SI Agreement was subordinate legislation,
by the Minister exercising his powers in terms of National Statute
(i.e. the
Sugar Act). The analysis and conclusion on this aspect is
instructive:
“
[7] The current
Sugar Industry Agreement .("the Agreement") referred to
Section 4(1)(a) … was promulgated in 2000.
The previous
agreement promulgated in 1994, introduced the establishment of a
special tribunal - the Sugar Industry Appeals Tribunal.
This Tribunal
had jurisdiction to hear matters involving the sugar industry between
growers, millers and refiners as described
in the Act.
[8] Of importance are the
provisions of Clause 47 of the Agreement which provides
inter
alia
, as follows:
‘
A party to a
dispute decided by the Appeals Tribunal in terms of clause 34 may
within 21 days of the date of the Appeal Tribunal's
decision, appeal
to any provincial or local division of the High Court of South Africa
having jurisdiction against the Appeals
Tribunal's finding by lodging
with the registrar of the court concerned a notice of appeal setting
out in full the grounds of appeal,
in which event –
………
..
(d)
The appeal shall be prosecuted as if it were an
appeal from a judgment of a Magistrate's Court in a civil
matter and
all rules applicable to an appeal from such a judgment shall
mutatis
mutandis
apply to the appeal against the finding of the Appeals Tribunal; and
(e)
The court hearing the appeal may -
(i)
Confirm the finding of the Appeals
Tribunal; or
(ii)
Set aside such finding; or
(iii)
Substitute its own finding for that of the Appeals
Tribunal;
and
(iv)
Make such order as to costs as it deems to (sic)
meet.’
[9] As is evident from
the aforementioned, this clause allows an appeal to the High Court to
be prosecuted as if the appeal is from
a judgment of the Magistrate's
Court in a civil matter. It is trite that persons cannot, by
agreement, bestow and obligate a High
Court to hear and resolve
disputes between them by way of an appeal. In
Goldschrnidt and
another v Folb and another
1974(1) SA 576 (TPD)
,
Heimstra J, in deciding whether an agreement allowing for an
arbitration award was valid, held at 577(a):
‘
Private
individuals cannot confer jurisdiction on the courts which they do
not possess in terms of the common law or of statute;
nor can they
impose tasks upon the court which they are not legally obliged to
perform’.
[10] Is the Sugar
Industry Agreement an agreement/contract in the ordinary sense of the
word? Section 4(1) provides that the Minister,
on his own, shall
determine the terms of the agreement
after
consultation with
the necessary role players. It is therefore not an ‘agreement’
or ‘consensus’ between
the parties. After considering the
necessary input from the various stakeholders, the Minister is
empowered to determine the terms
of the Sugar Industry Agreement, ‘in
the interest of the sugar industry but not detrimental to the public
interest’.
(Section 4(1)). It is clearly distinguishable from
an agreement between the parties – e.g. an arbitration
agreement –
which seeks to confer appellate jurisdiction on the
High Court.
[11] The agreement is
therefore subordinate legislation, by the Minister, exercising his
powers in terms of a National Statute –
the Sugar Act, 1978.
[12] In terms of Section
171 of the constitution, ‘all courts function in terms of
National legislation, and their rules and
procedures must be provided
for in terms of National legislation'. ‘National legislation’
is defined in Section 239
of the Constitution as:
‘ “
National
Legislation" includes –
(a)
Subordinate legislation made in terms of an Act of Parliament,
and
(b)
Legislation that was in force when the Constitution took effect and
that is administered by the National
Government’.
[13] It is accordingly
apparent from the provisions of Section 171 of the Constitution that
subordinate legislation made or empowered
under National Legislation
has the capacity to determine how our courts function, and in
particular, to determine its powers and
jurisdiction.
[14] In terms of Section
19 of the Supreme Court Act, 59 of 1959 the High Court has
jurisdiction over ‘all other matters of
which it may according
to law take cognizance’ and had the ‘power to hear and
determine appeals from all inferior courts
within its area of
jurisdiction’. In
Daljosaphat Restorations (Pty) Ltd v
Kasteelhof CC
2006(6) SA 91 (CPD)
it was held, at
paragraph 30 and 31:
‘
Generally the
appeal jurisdiction of a High Court is circumscribed by s.19 of the
Supreme Court Act 59 of 1959, which in s.19(1)(a)(i)
provides for the
jurisdiction of a High Court to hear and determine appeals from all
inferior courts within its area of jurisdiction.
In addition, appellate
power may be vested in the High Court by statute. Here Mr Gamble
pointed, by way of example, to s.20 of the
Health Professions
Council. The Arbitration Act does not accord a similar right of
appeal to a High Court. There is no other general
power which a High
Court may exercise in relation to the hearing of an appeal to it
other than from an Inferior court or in terms
of a statutory
provision. Certainly, a High Court does not have such power in terms
of the common law or its inherent jurisdiction.’
[15] Given the conclusion
that the Sugar Industry Agreement is subordinate legislation, I am of
the opinion that the provisions
of Clause 47 of the Sugar Industry
Agreement validly confers appellate jurisdiction to the High Court.”
[145]
The applicants boldly assert that the court in
Even Grand Trading
was not justified by its reasoning and is wrong. They say that
the mere fact that the SI Agreement is not an ordinary
agreement,
and that the Minister is empowered to determine its terms
and to publish it in the Gazette, does not convert it into
subordinate
legislation. They argue further, and in any event, that
the court was tasked with the narrow question of determining whether
the
High Court had jurisdiction over disputes dealt with by the Sugar
Industry Appeals Tribunal. It is in that context, the applicants
say,
that
Even Grand Trading
found the SI Agreement to be
subordinate legislation. They argue also that in describing the
SI Agreement as subordinate
legislation, the court in
Even
Grand Trading
was not concerned with the payment obligations
under the SI Agreement. It limited its scope of inquiry to the
jurisdiction conferring
capacity of the SI Agreement, and
did not consider or decide whether, even if the Minister's
involvement in the SI Agreement
makes it capable of conferring
jurisdiction on the High Court, the SI Agreement remains, in
substance, and for other purposes,
an agreement.
[146]
That argument is plainly wrong. Firstly, the
applicants suggest that
the judgment in
Even Grand Trading
is one of the High Court
(not an Appeal Court) and submit that thus I am at liberty to hold
that the judgment is clearly wrong.
Plainly, that I cannot do.
Secondly, it is suggested that the court found only part of the SI
Agreement to be subordinate legislation.
Not only is this directly
contrary to the words of the decision itself but it is also illogical
to suggest that a single document
may in part be subordinate
legislation and in another part not be subordinate legislation. I
have already found earlier that it
is impermissible to cleave the
payment obligations imposed under the SI Agreement from the rest of
the SI Agreement. That view
applies equally here.
[147]
In
Sugar Industry Central Board and Another v Hermannsburg Mission
and Another
1983 (3) SA 669
(A) the court (Miller JA writing for
the majority) endorsed an earlier finding that the SI Agreements
(under the 1936 Act) were
subordinate legislation:
“
In
W
H Hindson and Co Ltd v Natal Estates Mill Group Board and Others
1941
NPD 41
at 48 - 49 SELKE J said this:
‘
The
sugar industry in Natal is governed by and organised pursuant to
a Union statute known as the Sugar Act 28 of 1936, and
an agreement
called the Sugar Industry Agreement, which has statutory force, and
is binding upon substantially all sugar growers,
millers and refiners
engaged in the industry.
The
Agreement amounts virtually to a code providing for the organisation
of the whole industry upon something of a co-operative
basis. So far
as is now relevant it divides those engaged in the industry into
two main classes:
(a)
growers, and
(b)
millers;
and it then proceeds by a series of elaborate provisions to establish
machinery for regulating and adjusting the
respective rights and
obligations as between growers and millers, and as between the
members of these two classes
inter se
.’ “
[148]
The 1936 Act essentially provided for a quota
system that rendered
growers, millers and refiners bound thereby. That it was
substantially binding on all sugar growers, millers
and refiners
engaged in the industry would have been a product of that quota
system. Those not in receipt of a quota fell outside
the system. I am
urged to accept, which I do, the proposition that if the Appellate
Division considered the SI Agreement under
the 1936 Act to have
statutory force, then
a fortiori
the SI Agreement under the
Sugar Act is of statutory force; it being binding on all millers,
growers and refiners regardless of
any quota entitlement or
allocation.
[149]
The applicants are critical of
Sugar Industry Central Board
and contend that it is not relevant to the instant matter for,
inter
alia
, the following reasons:
a.
Firstly, they submit that the matter concerned the 1936 Act, and the
SI Agreement
concluded under that Act and did not concern the
Sugar Act and the SI Agreement concluded under it.
b.
Secondly, and in any event, the court there considered the entirely
different question
as to whether, in the event of the closure of a
mill, the Sugar Industry Central Board (a body distinct from SASA)
had jurisdiction
to decide upon the mill to which an affected grower
could send its cane, and whether the Board was obliged to afford the
grower
a hearing and explained that the clause was to be interpreted
in the context of the Agreement as a whole, and against the
background
of the role of the Board in the conduct and organisation
of the sugar industry. Thus it was argued that it was in that context
that the court quoted the earlier decision in
Hindson
.
They conclude with the
assertion that
Hindson
therefore confirms that:
i. the
SI Agreement is akin to an industry "code";
ii.
SASA operates in a manner akin to a co-operative;
iii.
the rights and obligations under the SI Agreement are
inter
partes
– they operate as between growers and millers, and as between
the members of these two classes
inter
se
.
[150]
In my view the criticism of
Sugar Industry Central Board
is
founded on false premises. On the one hand the argument suggests that
the factual questions before the court were different
but this is
irrelevant. The
ratio decidendi
is the relevant aspect. On the
other hand the respondents suggest that the argument seeks to distil
from the judgment in
Hindson
a contention that SASA operates
in a manner akin to a co-operative, which misunderstands the judgment
which says that the industry
is organised on a co-operative basis;
and from there to bootstrap the argument that because there are
rights and obligations operating
inter partes
under the SI
Agreement, it qualifies as an agreement for the purposes of
s 136(2)
of the
Companies Act. The
argument is a
non sequitur
.
[151]
For all those reasons, in my view, the SI Agreement
constitutes
subordinate legislation.
The
alternative constitutional argument
[152]
In the alternative to their argument on the interpretation
of
s
136(2)(a)
of the
Companies Act, and
only in the event that it is
found that the obligations imposed under the SI Agreement are not
capable of suspension under
s 136(2)(a)
of the
Companies Act, the
applicants contend that
s 136(2)(a)(i)
is unconstitutional.
[153]
The first contention is that, so interpreted,
s 136(2)(a)
is
irrational in that the power of suspension conferred on BRPs may in
some instances be unable to achieve the purpose sought to
be achieved
through the enactment of the section, which is the rescue of a
financially distressed company.
[154]
The BRPs suggest that the payment obligations
under the SI Agreement
are fees owed for services rendered by SASA and, in relation to the
redistribution proceeds, monies
owed by THL to other millers. They
contend that those are
inter partes
obligations, not taxes,
fines or penalties imposed in the public interest and that the
irrationality and unconstitutionality of
s 136(2)(a)
lies in
permitting the suspension of obligations arising from contracts,
agreements, or arrangements between private parties, but
not
permitting the suspension of the self-same kinds of obligations,
merely because these obligations are (as the respondents contend,
and
as is assumed, for present purposes) regulatory in nature. Thus they
reject the Minister’s opinion that it is rational
to exclude
those obligations from the remit of
s 136(2)(a)
because they are
statutory in nature contending that whilst the Minister acknowledges
that
s 136(2)
differentiates between "obligations owed
under a regulatory regime to a regulatory authority and debts due
under a contract
to other creditors", they hold the view that he
does not identify the legitimate and rational government purpose
underpinning
that differentiation. Accordingly, it is submitted that
differentiation encapsulated by
s 136(2)(a)
of the
Companies
Act, on
the respondents' interpretation, gives rise to irrational
differentiation in breach of s 9(1) of the Constitution.
[155]
While the Constitution allows judicial review
of legislation, it does
so in a circumscribed manner. The reason for this caution was
explained in the following terms in
Ronald Bobroff & Partners
Inc v De La Guerre
2014 (3) SA 134
(CC) (footnotes omitted):
“
[6]
The Constitution allows judicial review of legislation, but in
a circumscribed manner. Underlying the caution is the
recognition
that courts should not unduly interfere with the
formulation and implementation of policy. Courts do not prescribe to
the legislative
arm of government the subject-matter on which it may
make laws. But the principle of legality that underlies the
Constitution requires
that, in general, the laws made by the
legislature must pass a legally defined test of 'rationality':
'The
fact that rationality is an important requirement for the exercise of
power in a constitutional state does not mean that a
Court may
take over the function of government to formulate and implement
policy. If more ways than one are available to deal
with a problem or
achieve an objective through legislation, any preference which a
Court has is immaterial. There must merely be
a rationally objective
basis justifying the conduct of the legislature.'“
[156]
Courts must show respect for legislative choices
made by Parliament,
especially where complex policy choices are required. That reminder
was sounded in
Electronic Media Network Limited and Others v e.tv
(Pty) Limited and Others
[2017] ZACC 17
;
2017 (9) BCLR 1108
(CC)
(footnotes omitted):
“
[1]
Ours
is a constitutional democracy, not a judiciocracy. And in
consonance with the principle of separation of powers, the
national
legislative authority of the Republic is vested in Parliament whereas
the judicial and the executive authority of the
Republic repose in
the Judiciary and the Executive respectively. Each arm enjoys
functional independence in the exercise
of its powers. Alive to
this arrangement, all three must always caution themselves against
intruding into the constitutionally-assigned
operational space of the
others, save where the encroachment is unavoidable and
constitutionally permissible.
[2]
Turning
to the Executive, one of the core features of its authority is
national policy development. For this reason, any legislation,
principle or practice that regulates a consultative process or
relates to the substance of national policy must recognise that
policy-determination is the space exclusively occupied by the
Executive. Meaning, the Judiciary may, as the ultimate guardian
of our Constitution and in the exercise of its constitutional mandate
of ensuring that other branches of government act within
the bounds
of the law, fulfil their constitutional obligations and account for
their failure to do so, encroach on the policy-determination
domain
only when it is necessary and unavoidable to do so.
[3]
A
genuine commitment to the preservation of comity among the three arms
of the State insists on their vigilance against an inadvertent
but
effective usurpation of the powers and authority of the others.
Absent that vigilance in this case, a travesty of justice
and an
impermissible intrusion into the policy-determination terrain would
take place to the grave prejudice of the Executive or
even the
nation. For, that is bound to happen whenever the eyes of
justice are unwittingly focused on peripherals rather
than on the
fundamentals.
[4]
Driven
by this reality, we were constrained to sound the following sobering
reminder:
‘
The
Judiciary is but one of the three branches of government. It
does not have unlimited powers and must always be sensitive
to the
need to refrain from undue interference with the functional
independence of other branches of government.
. .
.
Courts
ought not to blink at the thought of asserting their authority,
whenever it is constitutionally permissible to do so, irrespective
of
the issues or who is involved. At the same time, and mindful of
the vital strictures of their powers, they must be on
high alert
against impermissible encroachment on the powers of the other arms of
government.’ “
[157]
In
Glenister v President of the Republic of South Africa and
Others
2011 (3) SA 347
(CC) it was explained that (footnotes
omitted):
“
[67]
Under our constitutional scheme it is the responsibility of the
executive to develop and implement policy. It is also the
responsibility of the executive to initiate legislation in order
to implement policy. And it is the responsibility of Parliament
to
make laws. When making laws Parliament will exercise its judgment as
to the appropriate policy to address the situation. This
judgment is
political and may not always coincide with views of social scientists
or other experts. As has been said, '(i)t is
not for the court to
disturb political judgments, much less to substitute the
opinions of experts'.”
[158]
All that is required for rationality to be satisfied
is that:
a.
the legislature is seeking to achieve a legitimate government
purpose; and that
b.
the means chosen to achieve a particular purpose must be reasonably
capable of accomplishing
that purpose.
The
legislature has a wide discretion in choosing the means to achieve
its objective. The means selected need not be the best means
or the
most appropriate means available and courts may not interfere with
the means selected simply because they do not like them,
or because
there are other more appropriate means that could have been selected.
See
Albutt v Centre for the Study of Violence and
Reconciliation and Others
2010 (3) SA 293
(CC) at para
51.
[159]
As explained in
Weare and Another v Ndebele NO and Others
[2008] ZACC 20
;
2009
(1) SA 600
(CC) at para 46 (footnotes omitted):
“
Section
9(1) provides that everyone is equal before the law and has the right
to equal protection and benefit of the law. The test
for determining
whether s 9(1) is violated was set out by the court in
Prinsloo
v Van der Linde
and
Harksen
v Lane.
A law may differentiate between classes of persons if the
differentiation is rationally linked to the achievement of a
legitimate
government purpose. The question is not whether the
government could have achieved its purpose in a manner the court
feels is better
or more effective or more closely connected to that
purpose. The question is whether the means the government chose
are rationally
connected to the purpose, as opposed to being
arbitrary or capricious.”
[160]
It is the objector who challenges the legislative
scheme that bears
the onus of establishing the absence of a legitimate government
purpose, or the absence of a rational relationship
between the
measure and that purpose. See
New National Party v Government of
the Republic of South Africa
[1999] ZACC 5
;
1999 (3) SA 191
(CC) at para 19
.
[161]
Have the applicants come close to meeting that
onus? For the reasons
the follow I am of the view that they fall short in that regard.
[162]
Section 128(1)(b)
of the
Companies Act provides
that the purpose of
business rescue is to “facilitate the rehabilitation of a
company that is financially distressed”
by providing for, among
other things, the adoption of a business rescue plan that maximises
the likelihood of the company surviving
or “results in a better
return for the company’s creditors or shareholders than would
result from the immediate liquidation
of the company”. The
discussion in paras 100 to 105 above is also relevant here.
[163]
Conferring on business rescue practitioners the
power to suspend the
contractual obligations of a financially distressed company, for the
duration of the business rescue proceedings,
is manifestly rationally
related to the purpose sought to be achieved; namely that of enabling
the rescue of the company or securing
a better return for its
creditors or shareholders.
[164]
Whilst immunising a financially distressed company
from all
obligations, including statutory obligations, may more effectively
facilitate the rescue of the company, the legislature
must strike a
balance between competing objectives and competing interests. I
consider the legislature to have correctly determined
that this
balance is most appropriately struck by permitting the suspension of
contractual obligations but not legislative obligations.
In my view
the exclusion is perfectly rational. It recognises the policy
imperative of ensuring that regulatory authorities are
enabled to
continue to perform their statutorily mandated functions, to the
benefit of the industry and public at large. To put
it bluntly: if a
company cannot comply with its statutory obligations, then it cannot
be rescued and must seek liquidation. There
is nothing irrational
about such a legislative decision, which strikes the appropriate
balance between business rescue and the
proper functioning of a
regulatory regime.
[165]
If the financially distressed company, despite
being aided by the ability to suspend contractual obligations, is not
able to meet
its statutory obligations together with the other
obligations it must meet in order lawfully and successfully remain in
business,
then it falls to be wound up either by immediate
liquidation or in business rescue. Business rescue proceedings in
which a company
is wound down also terminate in liquidation.
[166]
Although equally relevant to the earlier discussion
on the
Companies
Act, it
serves just as well here to refer to
Diener NO v Minister
of Justice and Correctional Services and Others
2019 (4) SA 374
(CC) (footnotes omitted):
“
[54]
The purpose of business rescue is to assist a financially distressed
company with paying its debts, avoiding insolvency,
and maximising
the benefit to stakeholders upon liquidation (if inevitable). It is
stated expressly in
s 7
(k)
of
the
Companies Act that
one of the purposes of the Act is to
'provide for the efficient rescue and recovery of financially
distressed companies, in
a manner that balances the rights and
interests of all relevant stakeholders'. It must be emphasised that
this must be done while
balancing the rights of all affected persons,
including creditors, employees, and shareholders. The primary goal of
business rescue
is to avoid liquidation and its attendant
negative consequences on stakeholders. In addition, a secondary
purpose is to achieve
a better outcome on liquidation or
disinvestment, whereby '[t]he underlying principle behind
restructuring or reorganisation proceedings
is that a business may be
worth a lot more if preserved, or even sold, as a going concern than
if the parts are sold off piecemeal'.
At the same time, where it
is not viable to rescue a company, it should be liquidated and its
business sold. Business rescue
can only begin where there is a
reasonable prospect of saving the company. This was highlighted in
KJ
Foods
,
where the Supreme Court of Appeal quoted with approval the High Court
in
DH
Brothers Industries
,
which stated that —
'Chapter
[6] as a whole reflects ''a legislative preference for proceedings
aimed at the restoration of viable companies rather
than their
destruction''
but only of viable companies, not of all
companies placed under business rescue
.'
This
is in line with the ultimate aim of balancing the rights and
interests of all relevant stakeholders.”
[167]
The fact that statutory obligations must continue
to be discharged and are not capable of suspension, even if it were
held to result
in such obligations being preferred over the rights of
certain creditors, cannot by that result alone result in
“irrationality”.
The legislative choice to retain the
imperative for a company in business rescue to discharge its
statutory obligations in business
rescue, while creating breathing
space through the suspension of contractual obligations, is a
perfectly rational means to serve
the purpose of the provisions of
business rescue.
[168]
The respondents submit that the applicants ignore
the evidence of the
Minister (the Minister is responsible for administering both the
Companies Act and
the Sugar Act). The Minister explains that the
objective of
s 136(2)(a)
of the
Companies Act is
to differentiate
between contractual obligations, which in a sense are private
agreements between parties and which can be suspended,
and statutory
obligations, which have a bearing on the public and/or on industries
and which cannot be suspended. He explains that
this approach
“enables a balance between private and public interests”.
[169]
The Minister also explains that the exclusion
of statutory
obligations from the scope of
s 136(2)
is based on a policy
imperative of ensuring that regulatory authorities are enabled to
continue to perform their statutorily mandated
regulatory functions.
He further explains that the Legislature is faced with the
responsibility of carefully weighing trade-offs
when making policy
choices, such as this, and that the Legislature took a policy
decision to maintain statutory obligations over
the rescue of
companies, and that the Legislature’s policy decision is that
an appropriate balance is struck between permitting
the suspension of
contractual obligations but not statutorily imposed obligations owing
under a regulatory regime.
[170]
Finally, the Minister explains that the Legislature’s
policy
choice behind the exclusion is that the proper functioning of the
regulatory body would be disrupted and such a regulator
would be
unable to properly operate and achieve its regulatory purpose if
companies in business rescue could opt out of their statutory
obligations owing to it.
[171]
The respondents argue, correctly in my view,
that the Minister’s
evidence is not properly rebutted by the applicants. The applicants
say that the Minister’s affidavit
compromises largely legal
argument, but that is not so. His affidavit contains his evidence for
why Parliament chose as it did
and he has – under oath and as
the executive Minister in charge of the statutory scheme –
explained the rational choices
that Parliament made.
[172]
The applicants’ second contention concerning
the
constitutionality of
section 136(2)(a)
is that, so interpreted, the
section arbitrarily distinguishes between organs of state and other
creditors thus violating section
9(1) of the Constitution. The
contention is that organs of state are entitled to demand immediate
payment of obligations owed to
them while obligations owed to other
creditors may be suspended, and that there is no rational basis for
this distinction.
[173]
The test used to determine whether statutory
provisions amount to
unequal treatment by the law was set out
Harksen v Lane NO and
Others
[1997] ZACC 12
;
1998 (1) SA 300
(CC). The Court explained, dealing
there with s 8 of the Interim Constitution:
“
[43]
Where s 8 is invoked to attack a legislative provision or executive
conduct on the ground that it differentiates between people
or
categories of people in a manner that amounts to unequal
treatment or unfair discrimination, the first enquiry must be
directed to the question as to whether the impugned provision does
differentiate between people or categories of people. If it
does so
differentiate, then in order not to fall foul of s 8(1) of the
interim Constitution there must be a rational connection
between the
differentiation in question and the legitimate governmental
purpose it is designed to further or achieve. If it
is justified in
that way, then it does not amount to a breach of s 8(1).”
[174]
Weare
recognised that s 9(1) of the Constitution presents a
low threshold. In
Phaahla v Minister of Justice and Correctional
Services and Another
2019 (2) SACR 88
(CC) it was explained
(footnotes omitted):
“
[48]
It is important to note that when conducting a rationality
enquiry, the court must focus only on whether the
differentiation
is arbitrary or not rationally connected to a
legitimate government purpose. It is not for the court to decide if
there is a better
means to achieve the object of the differentiation.
When considering whether there is a rational link to the achievement
of a legitimate
government purpose –
'(t)he
question is not whether the government could have achieved its
purpose in a manner the court feels is better or more effective
or
more closely connected to that purpose. The question is whether the
means the government chose are rationally connected to the
purpose,
as opposed to being arbitrary or capricious.' “
[175]
The argument that a statutorily imposed obligation
necessarily
involves performance in favour of an organ of state is not correct
and in my view the applicants’ argument is
founded on a false
premise. The facts of this matter reveal that not all statutory
obligations involve organs of state.
[176]
In my view, as was correctly argued by the respondents,
an obligation
owed to an organ of state may be suspended under s 136(2)(a) if the
obligation arises under a contract or agreement.
Similarly, an
obligation owed to persons other than organs of state in terms of a
legislative scheme may not be suspended under
s 136(2)
of the
Companies Act. It
is the nature of the obligation imposed and
not the identity of the actor to whom the obligation is owed which is
of importance
for the purposes of
s 136(2)
of the
Companies Act.
There
is thus no distinction made in
s 136(2)(a)
between organs of
state and other creditors, let alone an arbitrary one.
[177]
It is plain that in the absence of any differentiation
between
persons or categories of persons, there can be no violation of s 9(1)
of the Constitution. There is thus no need
to embark upon the
second leg of the enquiry – namely, whether the differentiation
bears a rational connection to a legitimate
government purpose.
In any event, even if I were to find that s 136(2) differentiates
between private parties and regulatory
bodies, such differentiation
is neither arbitrary nor capricious.
[178]
The legislature did not legislate for the suspension
of legislative
obligations by business rescue practitioners and that decision is
evidently rational. As I have found, in the present
case, the nature
of the obligation is statutory, which arises out of subordinate
legislation.
[179]
In the applicants’ heads of argument, a
further argument is
raised with regard to the ranking of regulatory authorities. The
applicants argue that the inability to suspend
statutory obligations
will create a preference for regulatory authorities in business
rescue which contradicts its concurrent ranking
in liquidation. The
respondents (particularly RCL Foods) complain that this is
impermissible because by raising a new basis for
suggesting that s
136 is irrational for the first time in its written submissions, the
applicants deprived the respondents of an
opportunity of responding
thereto in answer.
[180]
In any event, the argument misconceives the nature
of
post-commencement debts which cannot be compromised by BRPs. Such
debts are to be considered as post-commencement finance. In
Henque
3935 CC t/a PQ Clothing Outlet (In Business Rescue) v Commissioner,
South African Revenue Service
2023 (6) SA 260
(GJ)
post-commencement finance was dealt with thus:
“
[5]
One of the innovations of the
Companies Act is
to be found in ch 6
thereof, where the concept or practice of business rescue is
introduced into our law. In terms of
s 128(1)
(b)
of
the
Companies Act, business
rescue is a 'proceeding' that is designed
to 'facilitate the rehabilitation' of an entity that is financially
distressed, by (i)
temporarily appointing a business rescue
practitioner (BRP) who supervises and manages the affairs of the
entity; (ii) placing
a temporary moratorium on the rights of
claimants against the entity or against any 'property' in the
possession of the entity
— the full extent of the moratorium is
further elaborated upon in s 133 of the Companies Act; and (iii)
allowing for a business
rescue plan (the plan) to be developed. By
placing a temporary moratorium on the rights of claimants, the
Companies Act ring-fences
the debts of the entity that have accrued
prior to the commencement of business rescue. It is these debts that
the plan would focus
upon to 'rehabilitate' or 'rescue' the entity.
Sections 151
and
152
of the
Companies Act provide
for the plan to be
tabled at a meeting of the creditors for adoption. In cases where the
plan adopted by the creditors affects
the rights of shareholders or
members, as in this case, then the plan would have to be tabled at a
meeting of these shareholders
or members for their approval of the
adoption. Should the plan be adopted and approved (in the case where
approval is necessary),
in terms of
s 152(4)
it is binding on all
creditors, regardless of whether a creditor was at the meeting or
not. Finally, in terms of
s 154(2)
, no creditor, including Sars, if
owed unpaid taxes which were due and payable pre- the commencement of
business rescue, can enforce
the debt, except in terms of the plan.
Post-commencement debts — referred to as 'Post-commencement
finance' in the
Companies Act — are
an altogether different
species. They are dealt with in terms of
s 135
of the
Companies Act.
They
are not affected or compromised by the plan. Salaries earned by
employees during the business rescue proceedings constitute
post-commencement
finance. Any taxes, such as income tax arising from
post-commencement profits, skills development levies (SDL) or VAT on
post-commencement
sales, for example, too, would constitute
post-commencement finance. All post-commencement finance has to be
settled before any
pre-commencement debts can be considered.”
[181]
The suspension of statutory obligations under
the SI Agreement
post-commencement therefore results in the preference of SASA in the
rescue of THL. This is a consideration which
the practitioners ought
to take into account when determining whether the business is capable
of rescue or whether a better return
will result in liquidation. The
ranking, however, has no bearing on the constitutionality of the
Companies Act and
will have to be dealt with in the business rescue
plan.
[182]
Insofar as the applicants seek final reading-in
relief to cure the
alleged constitutional defect in the
Companies Act, that
relief will
result in business rescue practitioners being able to suspend and
cancel statutory obligations as well as reduce statutory
claims to
general damages under
ss 136(2)(b)
and
136
(3) respectively.
[183]
In other words, practitioners will be afforded
expansively broad
powers in circumstances where the legislature evidently did not want
to ascribe such powers. The reading-in relief
thus amounts to a
severe intrusion on the legislative realm and impermissibly
transforms the scope and nature of
s 136
of the
Companies Act as
a
whole. In
National Coalition for Gay and Lesbian Equality and
Others v Minister of Home Affairs and Others
2000 (2)
SA 1
(CC) the principle was articulated as follows (footnotes
omitted):
“
[65]
In fashioning a declaration of invalidity, a Court has to keep in
balance two important considerations. One is the obligation
to
provide the 'appropriate relief' under s 38 of the Constitution, to
which claimants are entitled when 'a right in the Bill of
Rights
has been infringed or threatened'. Although the remedial
provision considered by this Court in
Fose
was
that of the interim Constitution, the two provisions are in all
material respects identical and the following observations in
that
case are equally applicable to s 38 of the Constitution:
'Given
the historical context in which the interim Constitution was adopted
and the extensive violation of fundamental rights which
had preceded
it, I have no doubt that this Court has a particular duty to ensure
that, within the bounds of the Constitution,
effective relief be
granted for the infringement of any of the rights entrenched in it.
In our context an appropriate remedy must
mean an effect remedy,
for without effective remedies for breach, the values underlying and
the rights entrenched in the Constitution
cannot properly be
upheld or enhanced. Particularly in a country where so few have the
means to enforce their rights through the
courts, it is essential
that on those occasions when the legal process does establish that an
infringement of an entrenched right
has occurred, it be effectively
vindicated. The courts have a particular responsibility in this
regard and are obliged to ''forge
new tools'' and shape innovative
remedies, if needs be, to achieve this goal.' (Footnote
omitted.)
The
Court's obligation to provide appropriate relief must be read
together with s 172(1)
(b)
which requires the Court to
make an order which is just and equitable.
[66]
The other consideration a Court must keep in mind is the principle
of the separation of powers and, flowing therefrom,
the deference it
owes to the Legislature in devising a remedy for a breach of the
Constitution in any particular case. It is not
possible to formulate
in general terms what such deference must embrace, for this depends
on the facts and circumstances of each
case. In essence, however,
it involves restraint by the Courts in not trespassing onto that part
of the legislative field
which has been reserved by the Constitution,
and for good reason, to the Legislature. Whether, and to what extent,
a Court may
interfere with the language of a statute will depend
ultimately on the correct construction to be placed on the
Constitution as
applied to the legislation and facts involved in each
case.”
[184]
At the hearing counsel for the applicants accepted
that the
reading-in originally sought was over-broad and that it created the
equal opposite and contended then for an amended dual
reading-in in
the following terms (the reading-in suggested is inserted in
underlined
bold italics
:
(2)
Subject to subsection (2A), and despite any provision of an
agreement to the contrary, during business
rescue proceedings, the
practitioner may—
(a)
entirely, partially or conditionally suspend, for the duration of the
business rescue proceedings, any
inter
partes
obligation of the company that—
(i)
arises under an agreement
or
regulatory regime
to which the company was a party at the commencement of the business
rescue proceedings; and
(ii)
would otherwise become due during those proceedings;
[185]
In my view that change makes absolutely no difference
to the
argument.
[186]
Caution is demanded regarding the granting of
reading-in relief –
particularly final reading-in relief, which must only be resorted to
sparingly. See
Gaertner and Others v Minister of Finance and
Others
2014 (1) SA 442
(CC) at paras 82 to 85.
[187]
The alternate constitutional challenge therefore fails.
The
permanent stay of RCL Foods’s complaint
[188]
RCL Foods referred a complaint to the Sugar Appeal
Tribunal (“
the
Tribunal”
) on a priority basis. RCL Foods requested the
Tribunal to determine the nature of the payment obligations imposed
on millers under
the SI Agreement and whether such obligations could
be unilaterally suspended thereunder.
[189]
Clause 35 of the SI Agreement provides that:
“
[s]ubject
to the provisions of this agreement relating to the determination of
particular disputes,
if
any dispute arises between any persons upon whom this agreement is
binding, insofar as the dispute relates to the subject matter,
application, any right or obligation arising out of, or the
interpretation of this agreement
. . ., the Appeals Tribunal shall have jurisdiction, exclusive of any
court of law, to determine such dispute.” (emphasis
added.)
[190]
The complaint brought by RCL Foods related to
obligations arising out
of the SI Agreement and/or the interpretation of the SI Agreement.
RCL Foods contends that the Tribunal
was thus the appropriate forum
to determine the complaint and that contrary to the applicants’
assertions, RCL Foods did
not seek declaratory relief regarding the
proper interpretation of
s 136(2)(a)
of the
Companies Act before
the
Tribunal. The declaratory relief sought in the complaint was limited
to the nature of the obligations under the SI Agreement.
[191]
The applicants’ position was that the SI
Agreement was
contractual and therefore capable of suspension. RCL Foods believed
that the SI Agreement was not contractual, and
accordingly sought
relief confirming the nature of the SI Agreement. The Tribunal had
jurisdiction to determine that dispute because
it involved the
interpretation of the SI Agreement itself.
[192]
It was only clarified in correspondence between
the parties after the
institution of RCL Foods’ complaint that the practitioners were
of the view that THL’s payment
obligations under the SI
Agreement were capable of suspension under
s 136(2)(a)
of the
Companies Act even
if they were not contractual in nature. In other
words that the practitioners could suspend even statutory
obligations.
[193]
RCL Foods’s complaint was then “stayed
by agreement to
allow the present application to proceed”. The BRPs did not
take any formal steps in RCL Food’s complaint
before the
proceedings were stayed in the Tribunal.
[194]
Notwithstanding all of that, the applicants seek
an order striking
out or a permanent stay of RCL Foods’s complaint, and the costs
incurred by them in respect of RCL Foods’
complaint.
[195]
Considering the mutual stay before the Tribunal,
an application for
the striking out or permanent staying of RCL Foods’ complaint
is without foundation. Instead, the applicants
ought to have
approached the Tribunal for such an order rather than agree to a stay
of proceedings.
[196]
RCL Foods’ complaint to the Tribunal was
also not precluded by
the general moratorium on legal proceedings against a company in
business rescue for the reason that it was
not sought against a
company in business rescue, as required in
s 133(1)
of the
Companies
Act. Rather
, RCL Foods requested the Tribunal to determine the nature
of the obligations under the SI Agreement and did not seek any relief
against THL.
[197]
In any event, an order for the permanent stay
of proceedings is an
extra-ordinary remedy that has far-reaching consequences. A
court’s power to permanently stay proceedings
is exercised in a
circumscribed manner and only in exceptional circumstances where the
interests of justice dictate such a stay.
See
Fisheries
Development Corporation of SA Ltd v Jorgensen and another; Fisheries
Development Corporation of SA Ltd v AWJ Investments
(
Pty
)
Ltd
and Others
1979 (3) SA 1331
(W)
at 1338.
[198]
In the present matter, no allegation has been
raised that suggests
the complaint was launched vexatiously nor that the interests of
justice dictate the permanent stay of the
complaint. The applicants’
main contention is that the Tribunal lacked jurisdiction to entertain
the dispute – a complaint
best addressed before the Tribunal
itself. In the circumstances, no case has been made out for a
permanent stay.
[199]
The applicants’ request for costs in the
complaint is even more
difficult to comprehend, given that the applicants did not even so
much as formally oppose the complaint.
In any event, the Tribunal has
the power to grant costs awards, and the applicants ought to approach
the Tribunal to recover whatever
costs it may establish have been
wasted (which would evidently be none given their non-involvement in
the proceedings).
[200]
The relief sought concerning RCL Foods’
complaint to the
Tribunal is without merit.
Costs
[201]
The applicants and RCL Foods employed the services
of multiple
counsel and each sought the costs of three counsel. The other
respondents were represented by one or two counsel and
sought costs
accordingly. I consider it appropriate to award costs of two counsel
only, where more than one counsel was employed.
The
early Order
[202]
On the morning of 29 November 2023 the parties
represented at the
hearing were notified that this judgment would be delivered at 14h00
on Monday, 4 December 2023. It was indicated
that I was in a position
then to issue the Order that follows, and that I was prepared to do
so if there was unanimous consent
thereto by all the parties
represented at the hearing. That consent was forthcoming and the
Order was issued at 14h00 on 29 November
2023.
The
Order
[203]
The application is dismissed with costs, such
costs to include the
costs of two counsel where so employed.
Vahed
J
Case
Information:
Date of Argument:
13 & 14
September 2023
Date Order Made:
29 November 2023
Date of Judgment:
04 December 2023
Applicants’
Counsel:
A Subel SC (with I
Goodman & M Mbikiwa)
Instructed by:
Werksmans Attorneys
Johannesburg
Ref: Mr T Boswell
Locally represented
by:
EVH Inc Attorneys
Umhlanga
Ref: W2409/0005
1st & 2nd
Respondents’ Counsel:
P J Wallis SC (with
L K Olsen)
Instructed by:
Garlicke &
Bousfield Inc
La Lucia Ridge
Ref: Mr H
Stephenson
3rd Respondent’s
Counsel:
L Harris SC (with M
Mtshali)
Instructed by:
The State Attorney
Durban
Ref:
417/0021795/23/T/P9/ncm
4
th
&
12
th
Respondents’ Counsel:
R M Van Rooyen
Instructed by:
Garlicke &
Bousfield Inc
La Lucia Ridge
Ref: Mr A
Liebenberg
7
th
Respondent’s Counsel
B Manca SC (with M
Du Plessis SC, D Robertson & C Kruyer)
Instructed
by:
Webber
Wentzel
Johannesburg
Ref
Ms L Kahn
Locally
represented by:
Stowell
Incorporated
Pietermaritzburg
Ref:
Ms S Myhill
8
th
Respondent’s Counsel:
F
A S Snyckers SC (with A J D’Oliveira)
Instructed
by:
Cox
Yeats
Umhlanga
Ridge
Ref:
Mr T Scheepers
sino noindex
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