Case Law[2025] ZASCA 97South Africa
Pick n Pay Retailers (Pty) Ltd v Da Silva NO, Ramalho NO and Another (946/2023) [2025] ZASCA 97; [2025] 4 All SA 60 (SCA); 2026 (1) SA 127 (SCA) (2 July 2025)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
2 July 2025
Headnotes
Summary: Liquidation-Concursus creditorum-Mandate given by the seller to the attorneys to make payment from the proceeds of sale terminated upon the seller’s liquidation-the payment made after liquidation was unlawful-appeal dismissed with costs.
Judgment
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## Pick n Pay Retailers (Pty) Ltd v Da Silva NO, Ramalho NO and Another (946/2023) [2025] ZASCA 97; [2025] 4 All SA 60 (SCA); 2026 (1) SA 127 (SCA) (2 July 2025)
Pick n Pay Retailers (Pty) Ltd v Da Silva NO, Ramalho NO and Another (946/2023) [2025] ZASCA 97; [2025] 4 All SA 60 (SCA); 2026 (1) SA 127 (SCA) (2 July 2025)
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sino date 2 July 2025
FLYNOTES:
INSOLVENCY – Disposition –
Concursus
creditorum
–
Payment
to creditor made after liquidation of debtor –Disregarded
concursus creditorum – Preferentially settled
appellant’s
claim to detriment of other creditors – Principle prevents
individual creditors from altering rights
of others
post-liquidation – Mandate to disburse funds terminated upon
liquidation – Payment was unlawful –
Contravened
concursus creditorum and principles of insolvency law – No
misdirection in court below – Appeal dismissed.
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case no: 946/2023
In
the matter between:
PICK ‘N PAY
RETAILERS (PTY) LTD
APPELLANT
and
GEORGE DA SILVA NO
RAMALHO NO
FIRST RESPONDENT
AMANDA LINDOKUHLE
VILAKAZI NO
SECOND RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Pick
‘
n
Pay Retailers (Pty) Ltd v Ramalho, NO and
Another
(946/2023)
[2025] ZASCA 97
(2
July 2025)
Coram:
ZONDI AP and UNTERHALTER and COPPIN JJA and
PHATSHOANE and BLOEM AJJA
Heard:
20 February 2025
Delivered:
2 July 2025
Summary:
Liquidation-
Concursus
creditorum
-Mandate given by the seller
to the attorneys to make payment from the proceeds of sale terminated
upon the seller’s liquidation-the
payment made after
liquidation was unlawful-appeal dismissed with costs.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng Division of the
High Court, Johannesburg (Keightley J, sitting as court of first
instance):
The appeal is dismissed
with costs including the costs of two counsel, where so employed.
JUDGMENT
Zondi AP (UNTERHALTER
and COPPIN JJA and PHATSHOANE and BLOEM AJJA concurring):
Introduction
[1]
This appeal concerns the payment made to a creditor by a third party
on behalf of the seller after
the commencement of the seller’s
liquidation and pursuant to an agreement of sale between the seller
and the purchaser. The
question is whether such payment was affected
by the
concursus
creditorum
established by the seller’s
liquidation. The Gauteng Division of the High Court, Johannesburg
(the high court) held that
the payment was affected by the
concursus
and ordered the creditor to repay to the liquidators the amount
it received from the seller’s agent for payment, White &
Case Attorneys. The appeal is with the leave of the high court.
[2]
Subsequent to the hearing of the argument on the appeal, the Court
directed the parties to file
supplementary heads of argument to
address the following questions concerning the payment made by the
agent for payment:
‘
a)
Does Clause 6.1 of the Sale of Business Agreement contain a mandate
to White &
Case (WC) to make payment of money held in trust on
defined terms failing which, does it contain a mandate to WC to make
payment
to Pick ‘n Pay?;
b)
Does Clause 6.1 provide that in the event of Lashka failing to
exercise the mandate
in 1 above Lashka authorises Pick ‘n Pay
to do so?;
c)
If so, did those mandates end on the winding up of Lashka as per
Klein
NO
[1]
judgment?
;
d)
If they did, was the payment to Pick ‘n Pay an invalid
disposition?;
e)
And if so, was any such claim made in the founding affidavit based on
the mandates and their extinction?;
f)
If so, could it have been pursued
without joining White & Case?;
g)
If not, how is this relevant to the resolution
of the appeal before
the Court?’
The Court received the
supplementary heads of argument from both parties for which it is
grateful.
The facts
[3]
The appellant is Pick ‘n Pay Retailers (Pty) Limited (Pick ‘n
Pay). The respondents
are the joint liquidators of Lashka 167 (Pty)
Ltd (in liquidation) (Lashka). Lashka was placed into final
liquidation on 19 February
2018, by virtue of a special resolution
which was submitted to and duly registered with the Companies and
Intellectual Property
Commission. Before its liquidation Lashka, as a
franchisee, and Pick ‘n Pay, as a franchisor, had concluded a
franchise agreement,
in respect of the operation of a retail store to
trade under the name and style of Pick ‘n Pay Family
Supermarket, San Ridge
Square, Midrand (the business) at a monthly
franchise fee.
[4]
During 2016 and 2017, Lashka experienced financial distress which
resulted in the business operating
at a loss and being unable to pay
its creditors, including Pick ‘n Pay, timeously. During August
2017, Pick ‘n Pay
launched an application, and was granted an
order, in terms of which it was entitled to perfect a general
notarial bond, which
it held in respect of Lashka’s
indebtedness. At that stage Lashka was substantially indebted to Pick
‘n Pay in the
amount of R13 536 351,90.
[5]
Following its perfection of the general notarial bond, Pick ‘n
Pay effectively took control
of the business. Lashka and Pick ‘n
Pay continued with settlement discussions in respect of Lashka’s
indebtedness to
Pick ‘n Pay. Pursuant to the discussions, it
was agreed that Lashka would sell the business to a suitable third
party and
Pick ‘n Pay agreed to assist with procuring potential
buyers. In due course, Pick ‘n Pay procured Enthrall Trading
(Pty) Ltd (Enthrall), and on 3 November 2017 Lashka and Enthrall
concluded a Sale of Business Agreement (the agreement).
[6]
The express material terms of the agreement were, among others, that
Pick ‘n Pay was required
in terms of a suspensive condition to
the agreement to consent to the sale and waive its rights of first
refusal contemplated in
the franchise agreement.
For
the agreement to be given effect to, Pick ‘n Pay was required
to consent to the transaction on the terms of the agreement
and to
release the security that it had perfected over the movable assets
pursuant to the perfection order, both of which it duly
did. The
suspensive condition was met. The purchase consideration payable by
Enthrall for the business was R25 million, which Enthrall
had to pay
into the trust account of White & Case Attorneys.
[7]
Clause 6 of the agreement provided a mechanism by which the purchase
price was to be disbursed.
Since clause 6 is central to the dispute,
I shall quote it in full. It provides the following:
‘
Amount
Held in Trust
6.1
White & Case will hold the funds referred to in clause 5.2.1
above ("Held Funds")
in trust for the benefit of the Seller
until such time as it releases or pays out same pursuant to the
provisions of clause 6.2
below.
The Seller shall, as soon
as may be practicable after the Effective Date, deliver a duly
completed payment instruction (countersigned
by the Franchisor) to
White & Case instructing White & Case to apply the Held Funds
in settlement of the amounts owed to
First National Bank and Pick ‘n
Pay in terms of the Pick ‘n Pay claims (including any and all
amounts owing by the
Seller to the franchisor in respect of stock
purchased by the Seller from the Franchisor), as specified in the
payment instruction
and in the amounts so specified in such payment
instruction, provided that in the event that the Seller fails to
timeously deliver
the completed payment instruction/s as contemplated
herein, White & Case shall, provided that the payment
instruction/s (i)
confirms the amount of the payments to be made
thereunder and (ii) is signed by a representative of the Franchisor,
be obliged
to proceed with such payments in accordance with such
payment instructions. The Seller hereby irrevocably and
unconditionally authorises
(a) the franchisor to deliver such payment
instruction and (b) White & Case to act in accordance with
any-such payments instruction.
Notwithstanding the
above, the parties agree that in the event of a dispute in respect of
the amounts owing by the Seller, the franchisor
will not sign off the
payment instructions until such time that the dispute is resolved.
6.2
The balance of the Held Funds (if any) remaining after payment of the
amounts contemplated
in clause 6.1 above shall, upon receipt of
written instructions from the Franchisor to that effect, be released
and paid by White
& Case into the Seller's Bank Account. The
Franchisor shall deliver such written instructions to White &
Case as soon as
the franchisor is satisfied that all business
creditors have been settled in full.
6.3
Simultaneously with the release of the Held Funds as contemplated
above, White & Case
shall release to:
6.3.1
the purchaser all interest, if any, which accrued to such amount/s
from the date of deposit thereof up until
the effective date; and
6.3.2
the Seller all interest, if any, which accrued to such amount/s from
the effective date up until the date
of release of such funds.
6.4
The parties hereby authorise White & Case to rely, without
enquiry, on any instruction/notice
contemplated in clause 6.1
(including a facsimile message) which appears, on the face of it, to
be signed by and on behalf of the
Seller and/or the Franchisor, as
the case may be.
6.5
The benefits accruing to White & Case in terms of this clause 6
are deemed to have been
imposed as a
stipulatio
alteri
for the benefit of White &
Case and may be accepted by White & Case at any time.
’
[8]
Lashka unconditionally gave Enthrall, among others, the following
warranties:
‘
19
.2.1 Save in respect of those assets forming the subject matter of
the Instalment Sale Agreements only, the Seller is, as at
the
Effective Date, the sole and beneficial owner of the Fixed/Movable
Assets and has the right and, save as otherwise contemplated
in this
Agreement, is able to sell and give free and unencumbered title to
the Fixed/Movable Assets to the Purchaser.
19.2.3
Save for the general notarial bond registered over the movable assets
of the Business in favour of the Franchisor and the
encumbrances
listed in Annexure "F" hereto, none
of
the Fixed/Movable Assets or Stock are or will be subject to any
reservation of
ownership,
lease, lien, hypothec, mortgage, notarial bond, pledge or other
encumbrance whatsoever.
19.2.4
Save for the Franchisor, no person has any right (whether pursuant to
any option, right of first refusal or otherwise) to
purchase or
acquire (whether as security or otherwise) any of the Fixed/Movable
Assets or Stock other than the right to purchase
trading stock in the
normal course of business for value.
19.2.20
As at the Effective Date, the Seller will not, in respect of the
Business, be engaged in any litigation, arbitration or
criminal
proceedings other than the proceedings for the collection of debts
from trade debtors in the ordinary course of business
and the legal
proceedings stipulated in Annexure G hereto. Having made all
reasonable enquiries, the Seller is not aware of any
facts, matters
or circumstances which may give rise to any such litigation,
arbitration or criminal proceedings.’
[9]
It is common cause that Enthrall paid the purchase consideration of
R25 million into the trust
account of White & Case. On 26
November 2017, the business of Lashka was transferred to Enthrall and
Enthrall took possession
of the business. First National Bank (FNB)
was paid in full. On 5 December 2017, a first payment instruction was
completed, signed
and delivered by Lashka to White & Case for the
settling of the FNB term loan. On 12 December 2017, Lashka completed,
signed
and delivered to White & Case a second payment instruction
for the settlement of the FNB overdraft facility. However, Lashka
failed to deliver to White & Case a payment instruction regarding
a payment to Pick ‘n Pay, and by the time of its liquidation
on
19 February 2018 it had not done so. In consequence, on 25 June 2019
Pick ‘n Pay proceeded to sign and deliver the payment
instruction to White & Case in terms of clause 6 of the agreement
and was paid R21 627 758.91 on 2 July 2019. This was a year
after the
appointment of the respondents as liquidators.
[10]
The dispute arose between the respondents and Pick ‘n Pay
regarding the latter’s entitlement
to retain the amount paid to
it by White & Case after Lashka’s liquidation. As a result,
on 17 February 2022 the respondents
brought an application against
Pick ‘n Pay in the high court seeking payment of R21 627 758,
91 plus interest and
costs.
[11]
Pick ‘n Pay opposed the application. It denied that it was
liable to repay the amount claimed
by the respondents. In addition to
disputing the claim on the merits, Pick ‘n Pay also raised
points in limine. It contended
that the respondents had failed to
make out a case for the relief they sought. This contention was based
on the grounds, first,
that s 32 of the Insolvency Act 24 of 1936
(the
Insolvency Act) on
which the respondents relied, is not the
correct section to invoke in seeking to impeach dispositions under
ss
26
,
29
,
30
and
31
of the
Insolvency Act. Second
, in light of serious
disputes of fact on the papers, the respondents should have proceeded
by way of action instead of motion proceedings.
[12] As
regards the merits, Pick ‘n Pay contended that it was entitled
to retain the payment it received
from White & Case as such
payment was made and received pursuant to an uncompleted executory
contract which the respondents
had elected to abide by. The payment,
according to Pick ‘n Pay, was thus unaffected by the
concursus
creditorum
established by Lashka’s liquidation. The
respondents, concluded Pick ‘n Pay, are bound by the payment
terms under clause
6 and are precluded from claiming repayment of the
amount.
The high court’s
findings
[13]
The high court rejected Pick ‘n Pay’s defences and
granted the order sought by the respondents.
According to the high
court, clause 6 does not preclude the respondents from claiming
repayment of the amounts paid to Pick ‘n
Pay. Despite its
terms, the essential nature of the agreement was that of an ordinary
sale and purchase of a business. To the extent
that the agreement was
executory in nature this applied only to the legal relationship
vis-a-vis the purchaser and the seller under
the agreement. The
reciprocal rights and obligations, reasoned the high court,
established under the agreement were solely between
Enthrall and
Lashka. The high court held that once liquidation intervened, Pick ‘n
Pay’s legal position under clause
6 was no different to that of
any other creditor to whom payment of a debt remained outstanding.
The high court concluded that
Pick ‘n Pay was not entitled to
exercise its rights under clause 6.1 by signing and delivering a
payment instruction to White
& Case. Its rights were limited by
the
concursu
s to participation in the insolvent estate as a
creditor.
Contentions of the
parties
[14]
Pick ‘n Pay attacks the findings and conclusions reached by the
high court and persists before this
Court with the defences it raised
in the high court. Pick ‘n Pay submits that the high court
ought to have upheld the point
in limine that the respondents’
affidavits failed to disclose a cause of action. And further that it
erred in finding, first,
that the respondents disputed that the
contract was an uncompleted executory contract when in their replying
affidavit the respondents
admitted this fact; and second, that the
reciprocal rights and obligations established under the agreement
were solely between
Enthrall and Lashka and that upon payment of the
purchase price and the delivery of the business to Enthral, the
contract was completed.
[15]
In response to the questions posed by the
Court, which are referred to in para 2 above, Pick ‘n Pay
submits that clause 6.1
of the agreement contains a mandate by Lashka
and Enthrall to White & Case and authority by Lashka to Pick ‘n
Pay to
exercise the mandate in the event of Lashka failing to
exercise the same. It argues that if the agreement is found to be an
executory
agreement, which the respondents abided, the mandate given
to White & Case, and the authority of Pick ‘n Pay did not
end on the winding-up of Lashka. The agreement, in all respects,
remained extant. But if the agreement is found not to be an executory
agreement, which the respondents abided by, the mandate to White &
Case ended upon the winding-up of Lashka, and so did the
authority
given to Pick ‘n Pay. Pick ‘n Pay contends, however, that
the termination of mandate and authority was not
pleaded by the
respondents.
[16] In
response, the respondents submit that the agreement was completed.
The purchase price was paid and the
business was transferred to
Enthrall prior to the winding-up of Lashka. The payment made to Pick
‘n Pay after the liquidation
of Lashka was irregular and
disregarded the
concursus.
The respondents argue that the
mandate provided for in clause 6.1 of the agreement came to an end on
the winding-up of Lashka. They
contend further that given that the
mandate pertained to the payment of Lashka’s funds, on
liquidation such funds could not
have been dispersed contrary to the
rights of the general body of creditors. The mandate automatically
terminated on Lashka being
wound-up.
Issues
[17]
Two main issues arise for consideration in this appeal. The first is
whether the respondents’ affidavits
disclosed a cause of action
and the second is whether, on its proper interpretation, the
agreement was an uncompleted executory
contract and whether the
respondents had elected to abide by it.
[18]
As regards the first point taken by Pick ‘n Pay, it is correct
that the affidavits in motion proceedings
serve to define not only
the pleaded issues between the parties, but also to place the
essential evidence before the court for
the benefit of not only the
court, but also the parties. They must contain factual averments that
are sufficient to support the
cause of action on which the relief
that is being sought is based.
[2]
[19] It
is clear from the respondents’ affidavits that they aver that
the payment that was made by White
& Case to Pick ‘n Pay,
on the latter’s instruction, fell to be set aside on the basis
that it was made in disregard
of the
concursus creditorum
established by the liquidation of Lashka. Such payment constituted a
disposition and that Pick ‘n Pay was ‘not entitled
to
help itself to the funds of Lashka after it became aware of its
liquidation.’
[20]
In
Walker
v Syfret
[3]
the effect of winding up was considered and it was held:
‘
The
effect of a windingup order is to establish a
concursus
creditorum
,
and nothing can thereafter be allowed to be done by any of the
creditors to alter the rights of the other creditors. If a debt
owing
by the insolvent company to one creditor has been extinguished by
compensation, he cannot, merely because the debt arises
out of a
negotiable instrument, be allowed to deprive the other creditors of
the benefit of such extinguishment by reviving it
by means of a
cession to a third party.’
[21]
The court went on to hold
[4]
:
‘
The
object of the Insolvent Ordinance is to ensure a due distribution of
assets among creditors in the order of their preference.
And with
this object all the debtor’s rights are vested in the Master or
the trustee from the moment insolvency commences.
The sequestration
order crystallises the insolvent's position; the hand of the law
is laid upon the estate, and at once the
rights of the general body
of creditors have to be taken into consideration. No transaction can
thereafter be entered into with
regard to estate matters by a single
creditor to the prejudice of the general body. The claim of each
creditor must be dealt with
as it existed at the issue of the order.
Now, to deprive the estate of a valid defence to a claim against it
is as prejudicial
to the creditors as to take from it the most
tangible asset of corresponding amount.’
[22]
The principles in
Walker
v Syfret
have
been consistently applied by our courts. In
Pride
Milling Company (Pty) Ltd v Bekker NO and Another
[5]
this Court was concerned with the dispositions made by a company
after the grant of a provisional winding-up order. This Court
held
that such payments cannot be validated in terms of s 341(2) of the
Companies Act 61 of 1973. Petse DP, writing for the Court,
explained
that to validate such payments would render nugatory the operative
part of s 341(2), in terms of which dispositions made
by a company
being wound up are void and would also have the effect of undermining
the essence of the
concursus
creditorum,
and
indeed the substratum of insolvency law.
[6]
He stated that this would mean that the recipient ‘would be
left to enjoy the benefits of its claim being settled in full,
while
other creditors would have to be content with whatever residue might
still be available’.
[7]
[23]
In
Administrator,
Natal v Magill, Grant & Nell (Pty) Ltd
(In
Liquidation)
[8]
it was held:
‘
Plaintiff
company was at all material dates unable to pay its debts in full,
and upon its liquidation during August 1966 a
concursus
creditorum
was
established (
Walker
v. Syfret
,
N.O.
,
1911 A.D. 141
at p. 160, and secs. 181 and 182 of the Companies Act,
46 of 1926). In a
concursus
"the
claim of each creditor must be dealt with as it existed at the issue
of the order" (per INNES, J.A., in
Walker
v. Syfret,
N.O.,
supra at p. 166). Included among plaintiff company's concurrent
creditors were the two aforementioned nominated sub-contractors.
Defendant's action in paying them direct, and in thereafter deducting
the amount so paid from his indebtedness to the plaintiff,
not only
converted the two nominated sub-contractors into preferent creditors
receiving payment in full, but, as is obvious, it
also reduced the
amount available for distribution by the liquidator amongst the
general body of concurrent creditors (including
the two
aforementioned nominated sub-creditors) by the R3,060.42 so paid.
Once the liquidation supervened, the two nominated sub-contractors
were only entitled to receive from their debtor (plaintiff company)
whatever dividend was ultimately awarded to its concurrent
creditors.
By paying them in full after liquidation had already supervened,
defendant thus enabled the nominated sub-contractors
to receive more
than they were legally entitled to claim.’
[9]
[24] I
accept that the cause of action is inelegantly pleaded in the
respondents’ affidavit, but if the
averments in the founding
affidavit are carefully analysed, it becomes clear that the
respondents’ case is that the payment
to Pick ‘n Pay was
made in a manner and at a time that disregards the
concursus.
The complaint is that the payment made in these circumstances had the
effect of preferring Pick ‘n Pay and causing prejudice
to the
general body of Lashka’s creditors. The claim was thus based
upon the principles applicable to a
concursus creditorum.
Pick
‘n Pay’s first point must therefore fail.
[25]
The second defence raised by Pick ‘n Pay is that the agreement
is an uncompleted executory contract
and that as the respondents had
elected to abide by it, the contract remained unaffected by the
creation of the
concursus.
This
Court in
Du
Plessis and Another NNO v Rolfes Ltd
[10]
had this to say regarding the effect of insolvency on uncompleted
contracts:
‘
At
common law a liquidator or trustee is not bound to perform unexecuted
contracts entered into by an insolvent
before
insolvency
unless
he,
in
conjunction
with
the
general
body
of
creditors,
considers
that
such
performance
will
be
in
their
interests (see, for example,
Uys
and Another v Sam Friedman Ltd
1934
OPD 80
at 85;
Ex
parte Liquidators of Parity Insurance Co Ltd
1966
(1) SA 463
(W) at 470FH and
Montelindo
Compania Naviera SA v
Bank
of
Lisbon and SA Ltd
1969
(2) SA 127
(W) at 141C142A). If a trustee elects to abide
by an executory contract he must of course perform all the
obligations
of the insolvent. He must also give reasonable notice of
his intention to continue with the contract, otherwise the other
party
to the contract may treat the contract as being
at
an
end
(
Tangney
and Others v Zive's Trustee
1961
(1) SA 449
(W) at 4523) and hold the insolvent estate
liable for any damages that it might have suffered as
a
consequence thereof. The claim for such damages is a concurrent one
and does not form part of the costs of administration. As
pointed out
by Friedman J in
Smith
and Another v Parton NO
1980
(3) SA 724
(D) at 728
in
fine
729B,
“
.
.
.
there
is
nothing
in
the
law
of
insolvency
which
affects
uncompleted
contracts
in
general;
the
contract
is
neither
terminated
nor
modified
nor
in
any
other
way altered by the insolvency of one of the parties (cf
Uys
and Another v Sam Friedman Ltd
1935
AD 165)
except in one respect, and that is that, because of the
supervening
concursus
,
the
trustee
cannot
be
compelled
by
the
other
party
to
perform
the
contract.
Put
somewhat
differently,
this
means
that
the
contract
survives
the
insolvency
and,
save
in
the
respect
mentioned,
the
trustee
steps
into
the
insolvent's
shoes.
The
rule
that
a
trustee
has
a
right
of
election
whether
or
not to abide by the contract is no more than one aspect of the
application of this legal principle that I have enunciated.'
”
[26]
Recently, in
Ellerine
Brothers (Pty) Ltd v McCarthy Ltd
[11]
this Court considered the effect of insolvency on uncompleted
executory contracts and explained it in these terms:
‘
Following
on the insolvency of the lessee the position is governed by the
ordinary principles of the common law which apply when
a party to an
executory contract goes insolvent. As in the case of any other
uncompleted contract, the liquidator inherits the
lease in its
entirety. The creation of the
concursus
creditorum
therefore
does not terminate the continuous operation of a lease agreement to
which the insolvent is a party. The
concursus
neither
alters nor suspends the rights and obligations of the parties
thereunder and the liquidator, as the universal successor,
steps into
the shoes of the insolvent and does not acquire any rights greater
than those of the insolvent. This means that the
liquidator must
perform whatever is required of the insolvent in terms of the lease,
including unfulfilled past obligations of
the lessee.
’
[12]
[27]
This Court went on further to state:
‘
The
intended aim of the
concursus
,
or as it has also been described, the ‘community of creditors’,
created immediately upon the liquidation of the insolvent,
is to give
equal protection to all the creditors without undue preference and to
preserve and distribute the estate to the benefit
of all of them. To
give effect to the
concursus
,
the liquidator must decide whether it would be to the benefit of the
community of creditors to continue to perform the inherited
obligations of the insolvent under an uncompleted contract. He may
elect not to do so. In that event a consequence of the
concursus
is
that the other party to the contract cannot demand performance by the
liquidator of the insolvent’s contractual obligations.
The
statement, ‘frequently encountered, that a trustee or a
liquidator in insolvency has a “right of election”
whether or not to abide by a contract’ means no more than that
by reason of the existence of the
concursus
‘
the
other party cannot exact specific performance against the trustee or
liquidator if the latter should decide to abandon the contract’.
The act of the liquidator in deciding not to continue the lease
constitutes ‘. . . a repudiation of the contract, which
would have afforded the lessor . . . the right, concurrently with
other creditors, to claim from the liquidator the payment of
damages
for the non-performance by the company of its contractual
obligations’. The claims of the other contractant are therefore
reduced by the
concursus
to a
monetary claim and participation in the insolvent estate as a
concurrent creditor, where it is treated on the same basis as
all the
other creditors in the insolvent estate.’
[13]
. . . .
‘
.
. . As stated in
Porteous
‘
after
the
concursus
occurs,
the trustee steps into the shoes of the insolvent, and the trustee is
then obliged to perform whatever is required of the
insolvent in
terms of the contract, including unfulfilled past obligations of the
insolvent’. It is only in the event of
the liquidator making an
election not to abide by the uncompleted contract that the lessor,
because of the
concursus
,
cannot compel performance. Absent such an election, the terms of the
lease remain in place and the liquidator must comply with
it.’
[14]
[28]
Pick ‘n Pay accepted that it was not a party to the contract,
notwithstanding the role it played in
its conclusion, which included
the right to decide whether to approve of or reject a purchaser
proposed to it by Laksha; a right
to receive payment of its claims
against Lashka from the proceeds of sale held by White & Case and
the authority to instruct
White & Case to pay it in the
event of Lashka’s failure to give similar instructions to
White & Case. But despite
this acceptance, Pick ‘n Pay
nevertheless submits that the rights which it derived from clause 6
of the agreement, including
the right to receive payment from the
proceeds of sale, are directly enforceable rights. It is
correct that clause 6 of the
agreement imposes an obligation on White
& Case to pay Pick ‘n Pay on Lashka’s written payment
instructions, failing
which, on Pick ‘n Pay’s written
payment instructions and that by the time of its liquidation Lashka
had not discharged
its obligation. Proceeding from this premise, Pick
‘n Pay argues that to the extent that its payment remained
outstanding
as at the time of Lashka’s liquidation, the
agreement was uncompleted and remained unaffected by the creation of
concursus
since the respondents had abided by it.
[29] I
am prepared to assume in favour of Pick ‘n Pay that although it
was not a party to the agreement
it nevertheless derived directly
enforceable rights from the agreement, including the right to be paid
its claims against Lashka.
This was facilitated by Lashka and
Enthrall agreeing for the payment instructions to be given to White &
Case by Lashka, and
in the event of Lashka failing to timeously
deliver such payment instructions, by Lashka irrevocably and
unconditionally authorising
Pick ‘n Pay to deliver payment
instructions to White & Case, and for the latter to act in
accordance with such instructions.
[30]
The funds held by White & Case belonged to Lashka and were to be
dealt with in accordance with Lashka’s
instructions, failing
such, on Pick ’n Pay’s instructions. Pick ‘n Pay’s
authority to give payment instructions
to White & Case was
conferred on it by Lashka in the event of the latter’s failure
to timeously give such instructions.
The mandate
that was given by Lashka to White & Case to make payment from the
proceeds of the sale and given
to Pick ‘n Pay to issue payment
instructions to White & Case terminated with the liquidation of
Lashka. White & Case’s
mandate to keep funds on behalf of
Lashka and to make payment to FNB and Pick ‘n Pay terminated
upon the insolvency of Lashka,
its principal (
Klein
NO
;
[15]
Goodricke
& Son v Auto Protection Insurance Co Ltd
[16]
)
.
Being
Lashka’s agent, White & Case was not permitted to execute
the instructions given to it by Pick ‘n Pay and
the latter, as
Lashka’s agent, was not permitted to issue payment instructions
to White & Case after Lashka’s insolvency.
Whatever mandate
White & Case might have obtained from Lashka to keep funds and to
pay FNB and Pick ‘n Pay from such
funds, such mandate could not
still have been in force after the liquidation of Lashka. Therefore
clause 6.1, which is the
source of Pick ‘n Pay’s
authority to give payment instructions to White & Case and to
receive payment from them
and the concomitant obligation by White &
Case to honour such instruction, did not survive Lashka’s
liquidation. This
must be so since the effect of authority for White
& Case to make payment without regard to the rights of other
creditors,
would be to prejudice such creditors. The contract was not
executory because the sale of business had been performed, and the
mandate
simply gave authority to White & Case to make payment
from the proceeds of the sale. That mandate confers authority; it
does
not require performance and hence is not executory in nature.
The payment made to Pick ‘n Pay, on its instructions, after
the
liquidation of Lashka, was unlawful. It follows, therefore, that the
money received by Pick ‘n Pay must be repaid to
the
respondents.
Order
[31] In
the result, I make the following order:
The appeal is dismissed
with costs including the costs of two counsel, where so employed.
D H ZONDI
ACTING PRESIDENT
Appearances
For
the appellant:
JE
Smit SC
Instructed
by:
DLA
Piper South Africa (RF) Inc
Symington
De Kok, Bloemfontein
For
the respondents:
AJ
Daniels SC and C de Villiers-Golding
Instructed
by:
Richter
Attorneys, Rosebank
Pieter
Skein Attorneys, Bloemfontein.
[1]
Klein
NO v South African Transport Services and Others
1992
(3) SA 509 (W).
[2]
Die
Dros (Pty) Ltd and Another v Telefon Beverages CC and Others
[2002]
ZAWCHC 53
;
[2003] 1 All SA 164
(C);
2003 (4) SA 207
(C) at para 28.
[3]
Walker
v Syfret
1911
AD 141
at 160.
[4]
Ibid
at 166.
[5]
Pride
Milling Company (Pty) Ltd v Bekker NO and Another
[2021]
ZASCA 127
;
[2021] 4 All SA 696
(SCA);
2022 (2) SA 410
(SCA).
[6]
Ibid
para 19.
[7]
Ibid
para 20.
[8]
Administrator,
Natal v Magill, Grant & Nell (Pty) Ltd
(In
Liquidation)
1969
(1) SA 660 (A).
[9]
Ibid
at 671F– 672A.
[10]
Du
Plessis and Another NNO v Rolfes Ltd
[1996]
ZASCA 45
;
1997 (2) SA 354
(SCA);
[1996] 2 All SA 390
(A) at 363E-J.
[11]
Ellerine
Brothers (Pty) Ltd v McCarthy Ltd
2014]
ZASCA 46
;
2014 (4) SA 22
(SCA).
[12]
Ibid para 10.
[13]
Ibid
para 11.
[14]
Ibid
para 13.
[15]
Klein
NO
513B-C.
[16]
Goodricke
& Son v Auto Protection Insurance Co Ltd
(in
liquidation)1968(1) SA 717 (A) at 722H-723A.
sino noindex
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