Case Law[2022] ZACC 2South Africa
Cash Paymaster Services (Pty) Ltd and Others v Freedom Under Law NPC and Others (CCT 48/17) [2022] ZACC 2; 2022 (6) BCLR 661 (CC) (11 February 2022)
Constitutional Court of South Africa
11 February 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Joinder — direct and substantial interest — such not shown
Judgment
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## Cash Paymaster Services (Pty) Ltd and Others v Freedom Under Law NPC and Others (CCT 48/17) [2022] ZACC 2; 2022 (6) BCLR 661 (CC) (11 February 2022)
Cash Paymaster Services (Pty) Ltd and Others v Freedom Under Law NPC and Others (CCT 48/17) [2022] ZACC 2; 2022 (6) BCLR 661 (CC) (11 February 2022)
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sino date 11 February 2022
CONSTITUTIONAL
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
Case
CCT 48/17
In
the matter between:
CASH
PAYMASTER SERVICES (PTY) LIMITED
(IN
LIQUIDATION)
First
Applicant
PULENG
FELICITY BODIBE
N.O.
Second
Applicant
CHOSANE
NTLOANE ANDRONICCAH N.O.
Third
Applicant
and
FREEDOM
UNDER LAW NPC
First
Respondent
MINISTER
OF SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT
Second
Respondent
CHIEF
EXECUTIVE OFFICER OF THE SOUTH AFRICAN
SOCIAL
SECURITY
AGENCY
Third
Respondent
SOUTH
AFRICAN SOCIAL SECURITY AGENCY
Fourth Respondent
MINISTER
OF
FINANCE
Fifth Respondent
NATIONAL
TREASURY
Sixth Respondent
INFORMATION
REGULATOR
Seventh Respondent
RAIN
CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS INCORPORATED
Eighth Respondent
KPMG
SERVICES (PTY)
LIMITED
Ninth Respondent
MAZARS
INCORPORATED
Tenth Respondent
BLACK
SASH
TRUST
Eleventh Respondent
SOUTH
AFRICAN REVENUE SERVICE
Twelfth Respondent
and
CORRUPTION
WATCH (NPC) RF
First Amicus Curiae
SOUTH
AFRICAN POST OFFICE SOC LIMITED
Second Amicus Curiae
Neutral
citation:
Cash
Paymaster Services (Pty) Ltd and Others v Freedom Under Law NPC and
Others
[2022] ZACC 2
Coram:
Madlanga J, Madondo AJ, Majiedt J, Mhlantla J,
Pillay AJ, Rogers AJ, Theron J, Tlaletsi AJ and Tshiqi J
Judgment:
THE COURT
Decided
on:
11 February 2022
Summary:
Joinder —
direct
and substantial interest — such not shown
Variation of order —
provisional liquidators — section 359(1)(a) of Companies
Act 61 of 1973 — company remains
bound to comply with previous
order despite the fact that final liquidators not yet appointed
ORDER
Application
for joinder and for variation of this Court’s order of 1 April
2021:
1.
The application is dismissed.
JUDGMENT
THE
COURT:
Introduction
[1]
This is an application, brought by
the provisional liquidators of the sixth respondent in the main case,
Cash Paymaster Services
(Pty) Limited (CPS), to vary this Court’s
order of 1 April 2021 (April 2021 order) and to join the South
African Revenue
Service (SARS). The only party which has
responded to the variation application is Freedom under Law NPC
(FUL), the applicant
in the main case. FUL, while abiding this
Court’s decision on the variation application, has filed an
affidavit setting
out various circumstances said to militate against
the granting of the relief claimed by the provisional liquidators.
[2]
The variation application, though
dated 11 May 2021, was filed on 23 May 2021. Due to a
regrettable administrative lapse,
the application did not find its
way onto this Court’s weekly agendas, and it lay unprocessed
until a letter dated 16 November
2021 from attorneys representing the
provisional liquidators brought the omission to light.
Litigation
background
[3]
The
April 2021 order gave effect to earlier judgments of this Court which
required a determination to be made of the profits earned
by CPS from
the payment of social grants on behalf of the South African Social
Security Agency (SASSA) over the period 1 April
2012 to 30 September
2018. On 17 April 2014 this Court declared the initial
five-year contract between SASSA and CPS invalid,
but suspended the
declaration of invalidity on certain terms.
[1]
The suspension of invalidity was twice extended, by orders dated 17
March 2017
[2]
and 23 March
2018,
[3]
to ensure that social
grants would continue to be paid, such extensions being on the same
terms as the initial contract.
[4]
The
orders of 17 April 2014, 17 March 2017 and 23 March 2018 required CPS
to file with the Court an audited statement of the expenses
incurred,
income received and net profit earned in the relevant periods (profit
statements); and required SASSA to obtain and file
with the Court an
independent audited verification of the profit statements. The
second and third orders added a requirement
that the audit
verification be approved by National Treasury before it was filed
with the Court. These provisions were informed
by the statement
in the judgment of 17 April 2014 that, while the invalidation of the
contract should not result in any loss to
CPS, the company also had
“no right to benefit from an unlawful contract”, so that
any benefit CPS derived “should
not be beyond public
scrutiny”.
[4]
[5]
CPS filed profit statements audited
by KPMG Services (Pty) Limited (KPMG) in respect of the initial
five-year period and by Mazars
Incorporated (Mazars) in respect of
the two extensions. SASSA engaged RAiN Chartered Accountants
Incorporated (RAiN) to verify
the profit statements. In October
2019 RAiN furnished its review report. National Treasury issued
a letter approving
the report but noted certain shortcomings.
In November 2019 SASSA filed the RAiN report and the
National Treasury letter
with the Court.
[6]
In
its report, RAiN explained that there was a crucial outstanding
issue, namely whether CPS had engaged in cost-shifting and
profit-shifting.
RAiN said that it needed more information to
get to the bottom of this. In April 2020 FUL launched an
application to ensure
that RAiN was given the necessary information.
The only opposition was from CPS, and the only relief which it
opposed was
an order declaring that it was liable to repay all
profits to SASSA. On 1 April 2021 this Court granted, with some
modifications,
the relief which was unopposed.
[5]
In summary, the April 2021 order required the following steps
to happen in accordance with a timetable: RAiN to submit lists
of
required documents to CPS, KPMG and Mazars; the latter to supply the
listed documents to RAiN; RAiN to submit an updated verification
report to National Treasury; National Treasury to permit CPS and
SASSA to make representations on the updated report; and
National
Treasury to approve the updated report and file such approval with
this Court, alternatively to file an affidavit explaining
why it
could not approve the updated report.
The
variation application
[7]
The
provisional liquidators seek relief based on two circumstances,
namely that CPS is in liquidation, and final liquidators have
not yet
been appointed; and that SARS is engaged in an audit of CPS’
tax affairs which involves similar issues (particularly
a potential
over-statement of expenses) to those involved in the updated RAiN
verification. The relief claimed is in summary
the following:
(a) that SARS be joined and that the April 2021 order be varied to
align SARS’ audit process with the updated
RAiN verification
process; (b) that the description of CPS in the April 2021 order be
amended to add “(in liquidation)”;
and (c) that the
rights and obligations contained in the April 2021 order in so far as
CPS is concerned (i.e. the obligation to
supply documents to RAiN and
the right to make submissions to National Treasury) be varied so as
to refer not to CPS but to the
company’s final liquidators.
[6]
[8]
CPS
was placed in final liquidation on 16 October 2020. This was at
SASSA’s instance, which had an unsatisfied judgment
against CPS
for R316 447 361. The present applicants were
appointed as CPS’ provisional liquidators on 30
October 2020.
On 23 December 2020 FUL’s attorneys, Nortons, wrote to the
Registrar to notify this Court of the liquidation
and the appointment
of the provisional liquidators. Nortons stated that the
liquidation had heightened the need for this
Court to deliver
judgment in FUL’s application. Nortons added that they
had, to the extent necessary, notified CPS’
joint liquidators
in terms of section 359(2)(a) of the Companies Act
[7]
(Act or 1973 Act) of FUL’s intention to continue with the
application. Nortons added that SASSA supported the
continuation and determination of FUL’s application.
[9]
Although the Nortons letter was
written deep into this Court’s long recess, it was brought to
the attention of the member
of the Court tasked with preparing the
judgment in FUL’s application. On 30 December 2020 the
Registrar was directed
to reply that the matter was before Court and
that Nortons would be notified once judgment was ready. This
reply was sent
to all the parties on record as well as the two
provisional liquidators.
[10]
No further word was heard from any
of the parties before judgment was delivered on 1 April 2021.
The judgment does not mention
CPS’ liquidation. This is
unsurprising, given Nortons’ statement that FUL had given the
requisite notice in terms
of section 359(2)(a) and the absence
of any response from the liquidators. It turns out, however,
that the provisional
liquidators had tried, in a letter dated 18
January 2021, to communicate with this Court in response to the
Nortons letter.
Unfortunately, the provisional liquidators’
letter was sent to an email address of a registrar who left this
Court’s
service at the end of December 2020. The Court
was thus left in ignorance of the provisional liquidators’
position.
Although more than two months passed before delivery
of judgment on 1 April 2021, the provisional liquidators seemingly
took no
steps to make sure that their letter had been received.
[11]
In
the letter of 18 January 2021, which is attached to the founding
affidavit in the variation application, the provisional liquidators
stated that FUL’s notice in terms of section 359(2)(a) was
premature because CPS’ final liquidators
[8]
had not yet been appointed. The provisional liquidators
contended that in terms of section 359(1) all proceedings
against
CPS were suspended until the appointment of final
liquidators. They promised to notify Nortons and this Court as
soon as
final liquidators were appointed.
SARS’
joinder and associated variations
[12]
The
present applicants allege that SARS has a direct and substantial
interest in the matter. On analysis, however, the applicants’
case amounts to no more than an assertion that it would be convenient
for the RAiN verification and the SARS audit to proceed in
parallel
in accordance with a common timetable. This does not show that
SARS has a direct and substantial interest in the
relief which FUL
was seeking or in the relief which this Court granted in the April
2021 order.
[9]
The April
2021 order does not affect SARS’ rights, obligations or duties
in any way, and effect can be given to the
order as it stands without
any cooperation from SARS.
[13]
Although SARS has consented to its
joinder, it has not said that it agrees to the relief which the
provisional liquidators seek
against it in the varied order.
This Court has no jurisdiction in the tax dispute between CPS and
SARS. If SARS and
CPS’ liquidators find it convenient for
the SARS audit and the RAiN verification to proceed in parallel, SARS
can of its
own accord submit a timeous list of required documents to
the liquidators, and the liquidators can provide SARS with a timeous
response. If SARS would benefit from seeing the updated RAiN
report, the liquidators will be at liberty to furnish it to SARS.
[14]
It follows that the prayer for SARS’
joinder must be refused, and with it those variations of the April
2021 order making
reference to SARS.
Variation
in respect of CPS’ description
[15]
CPS’
final liquidation is a fact. The addition of the words “(in
liquidation)” wherever its name appears
in the April 2021 order
would have no substantive effect. CPS as a company has not
ceased to exist because it is in final
liquidation nor has it been
divested of its assets and liabilities.
[10]
The provisional liquidators have not sought to have themselves joined
nomine
officii
(in
their official capacities). The proposed variation does not
involve a substitution of parties as envisaged in this
Court’s rule 7(1).
[11]
[16]
If
there are further proceedings in the main case, the addition of the
words “(in liquidation)” after CPS’
name might
be desirable, but there is no justification for an application to
vary the April 2021 order in this respect. Section 49(5)
of the 1973 Act provided that if a company was being wound up by
the court, the statement “in liquidation”
should be
included in and be subjoined to its name, but this provision has not
been carried forward into the 2008 Act.
[12]
Variations
in respect of CPS’ final liquidators
[17]
In
their founding papers the applicants submit that the word
“liquidator” in section 359 refers to a final
liquidator,
not a provisional liquidator. This contention is
supported by authority
[13]
and
can be accepted as correct for present purposes. If the
applicants’ letter of 18 January 2021 had reached the
Registrar, this Court’s attention would have been directed to
this issue. Arguably the proceedings would have needed
to be
stayed, at least as against CPS, until final liquidators were
appointed.
[18]
We
say arguably, because FUL has advanced submissions in support of a
contrary view, contending that in the particular circumstances
of
this case, section 359(1)(a) would have not been operative.
The circumstances include: (a) that the April 2021 order
merely provided additional machinery to ensure compliance with orders
made before CPS’ liquidation; (b) that the orders were
made
against CPS not as an ordinary commercial entity but as an organ of
state;
[14]
(c) that all
affidavits and submissions had been filed by the time CPS was placed
in liquidation, and that CPS had not opposed
the relief granted in
the April 2021 order; and (d) that on 1 February 2021 the Master of
the High Court, Pretoria, granted the
provisional liquidators
extended powers in terms of section 387(2) of the Act, including
the power to institute and defend
proceedings in the name of and on
behalf of the company.
[19]
It is idle to speculate what course
the matter would have taken if the liquidators had taken care to
ensure that this Court was
aware of their position as set out in the
letter of 18 January 2021. It is also unnecessary to decide
whether or not section 359(1)(a)
would have been operative.
As a fact, the April 2021 order was issued. The applicants do
not assert that because of
section 359(1)(a), the April 2021
order either was a nullity or should be rescinded. Instead,
they seek a variation,
which presupposes the binding force of the
April 2021 order. Stated differently, they accept that if they
have not made out
grounds for a variation, the April 2021 order
stands and remains binding.
[20]
In our view, the applicants have not
made out a case for a variation. Section 359(1)(a) is not
a legal basis for varying
a valid order; it is a basis for staying
civil proceedings. The applicants are not seeking a stay of the
FUL proceedings.
What they are seeking is a variation which
will defer CPS’ obligation to furnish documents to RAiN, and
CPS’ right
to make submissions to National Treasury, until
final liquidators are appointed, and to impose the obligation and
confer the right
in question not on CPS but on its final
liquidators. The effect of the variations they seek would also
be to defer the obligations
of KPMG and Mazars.
[21]
The applicants have not pointed to
any statutory provision which renders compliance with the April 2021
order beyond the competence
of provisional liquidators.
Although they say that it is not possible for them to comply with the
April 2021 order,
they have not identified any relevant
statutory competence which final liquidators will have but which they
lack. They allege
that compliance will be daunting because
RAiN’s list of required documents is extensive. If this
is true, it will also
be daunting for final liquidators, but this has
no bearing on the legal competence of either the provisional or the
final liquidators
to comply. The applicants say that they have
already started the process of locating the relevant documents in
conjunction
with CPS’ directors, which refutes the notion that
compliance is something beyond their statutory powers. In terms
of their extended powers, they are entitled to engage professional
assistance reasonably required to perform their duties.
[22]
The proposed variations are
objectionable for another reason. The provisional liquidators
are seeking to impose obligations
on final liquidators. The
present applicants may or may not receive appointment as final
liquidators. This Court cannot
grant orders against absent
persons.
[23]
The
true position is that the April 2021 order is directed at CPS, the
company. Those in control of CPS’ affairs from
time to
time are required to ensure that the company complies. At the
present time, those persons are the provisional liquidators.
In
terms of section 361(1) they have custody and control of all
CPS’ property.
[15]
This includes its books, records and documents. If any
directors, members, agents or officers of CPS have such items
in
their possession and refuse to surrender them voluntarily, the
provisional liquidators have the power in terms of section 362(1)
to compel delivery to themselves of any such property to which CPS is
prima
facie
entitled.
[16]
We should
add that the applicants do not claim a lack of cooperation from those
formerly in control of CPS’ affairs.
[24]
The
primary function of an insolvent company’s final liquidator is
to realise the company’s assets and distribute the
proceeds to
those entitled to them. In relation to these functions, the
provisional liquidator may be viewed as a temporary
caretaker of the
company’s affairs, preserving the status quo until the
appointment of the final liquidator. But the
compliance
required from CPS in terms of the April 2021 order has nothing to do
with the winding up of the company in this sense.
The April
2021 order is the last in a series of just and equitable orders made
against CPS in the exercise of this Court’s
constitutional
jurisdiction under section 172(1)(b) following upon the
declaration of constitutional invalidity issued on
17 April 2014.
If provisional liquidators needed special statutory powers in order
to cause CPS to comply with the April 2021 order,
the same
would be true of final liquidators, because even final liquidators
only exercise special statutory powers if they have
the authority of
creditors or directions from the Master.
[17]
Yet it is unthinkable that CPS’ compliance with the this
Court’s order should depend on whether creditors or
the Master
are willing to authorise the liquidators, provisional or final, to
comply with the order. Liquidators may be entitled
to elect
whether or not they will cause the company to perform an executory
contract. Compliance with this Court’s
April 2021 order,
however, is not optional, and there is thus no reason to delay
compliance.
Conclusion
[25]
The application stands to be
dismissed. There being no formal opposition, no order as to
costs will be made.
Order
[26]
The following order is made:
1.
The application is dismissed.
[1]
Allpay
Consolidated Investment Holdings (Pty) Ltd v Chief Executive
Officer, South African Social Security Agency
[2014] ZACC 12
;
2014 (4) SA 179
(CC);
2014 (6) BCLR 641
(CC)
(
Allpay
).
[2]
Black
Sash Trust v Minister of Social Development (Freedom Under Law
Intervening)
[2017] ZACC 8
;
2017 (3) SA 335
(CC);
2017 (5) BCLR 543
(CC) (
Black
Sash
).
[3]
Reasons
handed down on 30 August 2018:
South
African Social Security Agency v Minister of Social Development
[2018] ZACC 26; 2018 (10) BCLR 1291 (CC).
[4]
Allpay
above
n 1 at para 67.
[5]
Freedom
Under Law v Minister of Social Development
[2021] ZACC 5
;
2021 (6) BCLR 575
(CC). The full terms of the
order appear in n 6 below.
[6]
The
April 2021 order as varied would read as follows, insertions being
given in square brackets and bold text and deletions in
strike-through text:
“
1.
Within 10 days from the date of
[the
appointment of the final liquidator(s) of Cash Paymaster Services
(Pty) Ltd (in liquidation)]
this
order
, Rain Chartered Accountants
Inc must submit to
[the liquidator so
appointed]
Cash Paymasters
Services (Pty) Limited,
KPMG
Services (Pty) Limited and Mazars Inc the list of all outstanding
documents relevant to the audit verification undertaken
by Rain
Chartered Accountants Inc under the order of 17 March 2017.
[1B. Within 10
days of the appointment of the final liquidator(s) of Cash Paymaster
Services (Pty) Ltd (in liquidation),
the South African Revenue
Service (‘SARS’) must submit to the liquidator so
appointed the list of documentation required
to finalise the SARS
audit.]
2.
Cash Paymasters Services (Pty) Limited,
KPMG
Services (Pty) Limited and Mazars Inc must furnish Rain Chartered
Accountants Inc with the listed documents in their possession,
within 15 days from the date of receipt of the list of outstanding
documents referred to in [
Order
]
paragraph
1.
[The final appointed liquidator(s) of Cash Paymaster Services
(Pty) Ltd (in liquidation) must furnish RAiN Chartered Accountants
Inc and SARS within 30 days of the date of the receipt of the lists
referred to in paragraph 1 and 1B with the listed documents
in
his/her/their possession together with an explanation in respect of
the documentation that the liquidator(s) is(are) not able
to
furnish.]
3.
Within 30 days of receipt of the outstanding documents referred to
in paragraph 1, Rain Chartered
Accountants Inc must submit to the
National Treasury, the updated verification report including:
3.1
all issues raised by the National Treasury in its letter of 28
November 2019; and
3.2
all issues arising from the documents referred to in paragraph 1.
[3A. RAiN
Chartered Accountants Inc must simultaneously furnish SARS with
furnishing the updated verification report to
the National
Treasury.]
[3B. Within 40
days of the receipt of the documentation in accordance with
paragraphs 2 and 3A, SARS must furnish the final
appointed
liquidator of Cash Paymaster Services (Pty) Ltd (in liquidation)
with an audit findings letter.]
4.
Within 20 days of receipt of the updated verification report, the
National Treasury must allow
[the final liquidator of]
Cash
Paymasters Services (Pty) Limited [
(in liquidation)]
and
the South African Social Security Agency to make representations on
the updated verification report, if they so wish.
[4A. Within 20
days of the receipt of the audit findings letter the final appointed
liquidator of Cash Paymaster Services
(Pty) Ltd (in liquidation)
must furnish SARS with any representations it wishes to make.]
5.
Within 40 days of receipt of the updated verification report, the
National Treasury must consider
and approve the updated verification
report and file its approval together with the updated verified
report with the Registrar
of this Court.
[5B. SARS must
within 10 days of the National Treasury’s approval of the
updated verification report or the affidavit
contemplated in
paragraph 6 below and with reference to any representations the
final appointed liquidator of Cash Paymaster
Services (Pty) Ltd (in
liquidation) made in respect of the audit findings letter, issue the
final assessment, if any, alternatively
if it (is) unable to make a
final assessment file an affidavit setting out why a final
assessment cannot be made and what is
required to make a final
assessment.]
6.
If the National Treasury is unable to approve the updated
verification report, the National Treasury
must file an
affidavit setting out:
6.1
reasons for not approving the updated verification report; and
6.2
the National Treasury’s own determination of the profit made
by Cash Paymasters Services (Pty) Limited
([in
liquidation])
from the unlawful
contract that was declared invalid; or
6.3
alternatively, should the National Treasury be unable to make the
determination referred to in subparagraph 6.2, it must set
out in
its affidavit what it requires to properly determine the profit
made by Cash Paymasters Services (Pty) Limited
([in liquidation])
.
7.
Costs are reserved.”
[7]
61
of 1973. In terms of item 9 of Schedule 5 to the Companies Act
71 of 2008 (2008 Act), Chapter 14 of the 1973 Act
continues to apply with respect to the winding-up and liquidation of
insolvent companies under the 2008 Act, as if the 1973 Act
had not been repealed. Section 359 of the 1973 Act
is part of Chapter 14. Section 359(1)(a) provides,
in relevant part, that when a court has made an order for the
winding-up of a company, “all civil proceedings by or against
the company concerned shall be suspended until the appointment of a
liquidator”. Section 359(2)(a) reads in
relevant
part:
“
Every
person who, having instituted legal proceedings against the company
which were suspended by a winding-up, intends to continue
the same,
. . . shall within four weeks after the appointment of the
liquidator give the liquidator not less than three weeks’
notice in writing before continuing or commencing the proceedings.”
[8]
To
avoid confusion, we refer throughout to a “final liquidator”,
though the 1973 Act refers simply to a “liquidator”.
Section 1 of the 1973 Act defines “liquidator”
as including a provisional liquidator. This definition
applies
unless the context indicates otherwise. There are certain
provisions in Chapter 14 of the 1973 Act in relation
to which
it has been held that “liquidator” does not include a
provisional liquidator. A provisional liquidator
is appointed
by the Master in terms of section 368 as soon as a winding-up
order has been made. The (final) liquidator
is appointed by
the Master in terms of section 369(2) in accordance with
nominations adopted at the first meeting of creditors
held in terms
of section 364.
[9]
South
African Riding for the Disabled Association v Regional Land Claims
Commissioner
[2017]
ZACC 4
;
2017 (5) SA 1
(CC);
2017 (8) BCLR 1053
(CC) at para 9,
stating that a direct and substantial interest is a “legal
interest in the subject-matter of the case which
could be
prejudicially affected by the order of the Court”, a test
requiring it to be shown that the party in question
“has a
right adversely affected or likely to be affected by the order
sought”.
[10]
Secretary
for Customs and Excise v Millman N.O.
1975 (3) SA 544
(A) at 552G and
Millman
N.O. v Koetter
[1993] ZASCA 21
;
1993
(2) SA 743
(C) at 756J-757A. See also Blackman et al
Commentary
on the
Companies Act
(Juta
& Co Ltd, Cape Town 2002) vol 3 at 250-3 and 251 (Blackman).
[11]
Rule
7(1)
reads:
“
If
a party dies or becomes incompetent to continue any proceedings, the
proceedings shall thereby be stayed until such time as
an authorised
representative or other competent person has been
appointed in the place of such party, or until such incompetence
ceases to exist.”
[12]
Item
2(3) of Schedule 5 to the 2008 Act provides that, despite the repeal
of the 1973 Act, sections 49(5) to (7)
continue
to apply to a pre-existing company that was, immediately before the
coming into force of the 2008 Act, engaged
in any circumstances
contemplated in those provisions. This saving provision does
not apply to CPS, which only went into
liquidation in October 2020.
Section 49(5) does not form part of Chapter 14 of the 1973 Act,
and is thus not
given extended life, at least not expressly, by item
9 of Schedule 5, though the authors of Yeats et al
Commentary
on the Companies Act of 2008
(Juta & Co Ltd, Cape Town 2018) vol 2 at Sched-164 write that
“[p]erhaps an argument can be made that the provision
[section 49(5)] is incorporated by implication”.
[13]
See,
among other cases,
Ronbel
108 (Pty) Ltd v Sublime Investments
(Pty)
Ltd (In Liquidation)
[2009]
ZASCA 103
;
2010 (2) SA 517
(SCA) at para 2, approving the decision
on this point in
Strydom
N.O. v MGN Construction (Pty) Ltd: In re
Haljen
(Pty)
Ltd (In Liquidation)
1983
(1) SA 799
(D) at 806B-807H.
[14]
Allpay
above
n 1 at paras 52-9 and
Black
Sash
above n 2 at paras 41, 53 and 79.
[15]
Section
361(1) reads:
“
In
any winding-up by the Court all the property of the company
concerned shall be deemed to be in the custody and under the control
of the Master until a provisional liquidator has been appointed and
has assumed office.”
This
necessarily implies that upon the appointment of the provisional
liquidator the latter has custody and control of the company's
property (Delport and Vorster
Henochsberg on the Companies Act 71
of 2008
(LexisNexis, Durban 2021) vol 1 at 764 and Blackman
above n 10 at 14-251).
[16]
Section
362(1) reads:
“
The
Court may at any time after making a winding-up order . . . order
any director, member, trustee, banker, agent or officer
of the
company concerned to pay, deliver, convey, surrender or transfer to
the liquidator of the company forthwith, or within
such time as the
Court directs, any money, property or books and papers in his hands
to which the company is
prima facie
entitled.”
In
Blackman above n 10 at 14-255, the authors state that clearly a
provisional liquidator may bring an application in terms of
this
provision.
[17]
See
sections 386(3) and 387 of the Act.
sino noindex
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