Case Law[2024] ZASCA 60South Africa
Venator Africa (Pty) Ltd v Watts and Another (053/2023) [2024] ZASCA 60; 2024 (4) SA 539 (SCA) (24 April 2024)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
24 April 2024
Headnotes
Summary: Company law – exception – s 218(2) read with s 22(1) of the Companies Act 61 of 2008 – allegation that company carried on its business recklessly – action proceedings by a creditor against directors of company.
Judgment
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## Venator Africa (Pty) Ltd v Watts and Another (053/2023) [2024] ZASCA 60; 2024 (4) SA 539 (SCA) (24 April 2024)
Venator Africa (Pty) Ltd v Watts and Another (053/2023) [2024] ZASCA 60; 2024 (4) SA 539 (SCA) (24 April 2024)
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sino date 24 April 2024
FLYNOTES:
COMPANY – Director –
Personal
liability
–
Alleged
loss suffered after SARS short paid by clearing and forwarding
agent – Relied on section 22(1) and reckless
carrying on of
business – Section imposes duty on company, not its
directors – Section 218(2) not itself creating
liability –
Contravention of some other provision of the Act required –
Appellant unable to identify provision
that has been contravened
by directors in order to invoke section 218(2) – High Court
cannot be faulted for upholding
exception –
Companies Act 71
of 2008
,
ss 22(1)
and
218
(2).
THE SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF
SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case no: 053/2023
In
the matter between:
VENATOR
AFRICA (PTY) LTD
APPELLANT
and
LLOYD
MASON WATTS
FIRST RESPONDENT
MARTIN
BEKKER
SECOND RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Venator
Africa (Pty) Ltd v Watts and Another
(053/2023)
[2024] ZASCA 60
(24 April 2024)
Coram:
MOTHLE, MABINDLA-BOQWANA and MOLEFE JJA and
BAARTMAN and KEIGHTLEY AJJA
Heard:
4 March 2024
Delivered:
24 April 2024
Summary:
Company law – exception –
s
218(2)
read with
s 22(1)
of the
Companies Act 61 of 2008
–
allegation that company carried on its business recklessly –
action proceedings by a creditor against directors of
company.
### ORDER
ORDER
On
appeal from:
KwaZulu-Natal Division of
the High Court, Pietermaritzburg
(
Bezuidenhout
AJ, sitting as court of first instance):
1
The appeal is dismissed with costs
including the costs of two counsel, where so employed.
2
The order of the high court is
confirmed save for paragraph 3 of the order which is substituted as
follows:
‘
3.The
plaintiff is granted leave, if so advised, to file amended
particulars of claim within 10 days of the date of this order.’
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Mabindla-Boqwana JA (Mothle and
Molefe JJA and Baartman and Keightley AJJA concurring):
Introduction
[1]
This appeal, which arises from an exception upheld
by the KwaZulu-Natal Division of the High Court, Pietermaritzburg
(the high court),
concerns the interpretation of s 218(2) of the
Companies Act 71 of 2008 (the Act), which provides for civil
liability against any
person who contravenes the provisions of the
Act, read with s 22(1), prohibiting reckless trading by a company.
These must be viewed
alongside provisions dealing with fiduciary
duties of directors (s 76(3)), consequential liability (s 77(2))
and the longstanding
principle that a company has a legal personality
separate from its directors and shareholders.
[2]
The high court considered and upheld an exception
to the particulars of claim, wherein the question whether a creditor
could claim
against the directors of a company personally, in terms
of s 218(2) read with s 22(1) of the Act, was raised. Section
214(1)
(c)
of
the Act, which provides for criminal offences and an alternative
common law claim of fraud against the directors, were tangentially
also raised before it. The appeal is with the leave of the high
court.
Background facts
[3]
The appellant is Venator Africa (Pty) Ltd. It
instituted action in the high court against the respondents, Lloyd
Mason Watts and
Martin Bekker. The respondents were the directors of
a company known as Siyazi Logistics and Trading (Pty) Ltd (Siyazi),
which
conducted business as a clearing and forwarding agent. Siyazi
had a contractual relationship with the appellant. In the action,
Mr
Bekker was cited as the first defendant and Mr Watts as a second
defendant, respectively. Mr Bekker however does not participate
in
this appeal. I shall henceforth refer to the appellant as ‘the
plaintiff’ and the respondents as ‘the first
and second
defendants’, respectively, as in the action.
[4]
It was alleged in the particulars of claim:
‘
7.
As regards the relationship between Plaintiff and Siyazi:
7.1 the
Plaintiff contracted
with Siyazi
for the performance of clearing and forwarding duties
by Siyazi on behalf of the Plaintiff;
7.2 the said agreement
commenced during or around 2016 and was
orally agreed between the
duly authorised representatives of Siyazi and the Plaintiff
at
Durban;
7.3 the material terms of that
agreement were:
7.3.1 from time to time and at
the request of the Plaintiff, Siyazi would perform clearing services
in respect of the importation
of goods by the Plaintiff into the
Republic;
7.3.2 in the performance of
those services,
Siyazi would issue disbursement accounts to the
Plaintiff which represented the amounts due by Plaintiff to the South
African Revenue
Services (“SARS”)
;
7.3.3 the Plaintiff would pay
the amounts reflected on the disbursement accounts to Siyazi; and
7.3.4
Siyaz
i
would
pay
the amounts received against the disbursement account to the
respective party entitled
to payment (i.e. SARS)
.
8. During the period 2018 and
early 2019,
Siyazi
delivered disbursement accounts to
the
Plaintiff
in respect of SARS in the total sum of R66,395,006.27.
9. The
Plaintiff paid
the
full amount of R66,395,006.27
to Siyazi
.
10. The disbursement accounts
constituted a representation
by Siyazi to Plaintiff
that the
amounts reflected thereon were due by Plaintiff to SARS.
11. Siyazi caused only an amount
of R31,353,697.27 to be paid to SARS on behalf of the Plaintiff.
12. The difference between the
amount paid by Plaintiff to
Siyazi
against the disbursements
accounts and the amount paid by
Siy
azi
to SARS
is
R34,612,576.19.
13. Consequent upon that short
payment,
SARS has raised assessments
as follows:
13.1 VAT due- R34,630.202.00;
13.2 penalties- R2,143,774.00;
and
13.3 interest- R4,633,244.00.
14. The total damages suffered
by the Plaintiff in consequence of the short payment
by Siyazi
to SARS is therefore R41,407,220.00.
15. The short payment occurred
as a result of fraud and/or theft
by Siyazi’s
employees
and/or the Defendants.
16.
Section 22(1)
of the
Companies Act 2008
provides:
“
A
company must not carry on its business recklessly, with gross
negligence, with intent to defraud any person or for any fraudulent
purpose.”
17.
The conduct of Siyazi
was reckless, alternatively grossly negligent, further alternatively
the business of Siyazi was conducted with the intention to
defraud
the Plaintiff or further alternatively for a fraudulent purpose.
18.
Section 218(2)
of the
Companies Act provides
:
“
Any
person who contravenes any provision of this Act is liable to any
other person for any loss or damage suffered by that person
as a
result of that contravention”.
19. As
directors
of
Siyazi, the
First and Second Defendants
were:
19.1 the guiding minds behind
the fraud; alternatively
19.2 reckless; further
alternatively
19.3 grossly negligent;
in controlling the activities of
Siyazi.
20. The recklessness or gross
negligence manifested in:
20.1 A failure to maintain
proper records and books of account;
20.2 A failure to maintain
controls in respect of compilation of disbursement accounts;
20.3 A failure to reconcile
disbursement accounts and accurately to report them to Applicant;
and/or
20.4 A failure to impose
controls such that moneys paid against disbursement accounts were
paid over to the third parties
entitled to same.
21. But for the First and Second
Defendants’ fraud, alternatively recklessness, further
alternatively, gross negligence,
the
Plaintiff would not have been
obliged to pay to SARS the amount of R41,407,220.00
.
22. In the premises, the First
and Second Defendants are jointly and severally
liable in terms of
Section 218(2) read with
Section 22(1)
of the
Companies Act, 2008
for the amount of R41,407,220.00.’ (Emphasis added.)
[5]
The first defendant delivered a plea to the
particulars of claim. The second
defendant,
however, filed two exceptions. Only the first is relevant. In its
terms:
‘
4.
Section 22(1)
does not regulate what directors, such as the
defendants, must do or not do. (There is no allegation in the
particulars of claim
that
section 22
regulates directors’
conduct).
5.
Section 22
imposes duties
upon the company and not its directors.
6.
Section 218(2)
finds
application where a person breaches a provision of the Act.
7. There is no allegation in the
particulars of claim that the defendants breached a
provision of the Act.
8. The allegations in paragraph
19 (read with paragraphs 20 and 21) mirror the jurisdictional
requirements of section 22(1),
with reference to fraud, recklessness
and gross negligence. However, section 22(1) does not impose
obligations on, and cannot apply
to, the defendants as directors.
9. The obligations and duties of
directors are set out in section 76 of the Act and the available
remedies for breaches in
section 77. The plaintiff does not locate a
claim in those sections. In substance, the plaintiff seems to contend
for a contravention
of the obligations of a director articulated in
section 76(3)
of the
Companies Act. But
any claim under that section
is confined to
section 77(2)
(and
section 218(2)
cannot be invoked –
where a statute expressly and specifically creates liability for a
breach of a section, then a general
section in the same statute
cannot be invoked to establish a co-ordinate liability).
Section
77(3)(b)
specifically deals with the liability of directors in
respect of
section 22.
It effectively provides that a director who is
a party to the carrying on of the business of the company contrary to
section 22
is liable for any loss, damages or costs sustained by the
company.
10. The particulars of claim
accordingly do not:
10.1 aver a breach by the
defendants of an obligation imposed on them by the Act in order to
bring them and the alleged loss
said to be caused by them within the
purview of section 218(2);
10.2 sustain a cause of
action.’
[6]
The second defendant further contended that
,
to the extent the claim was predicated on fraud, the allegations in
the particulars of claim were insufficient to sustain a case.
It is not necessary to detail the second exception
as the high court only dealt with the first.
In the high court
[7]
In upholding the
first exception, the high court went through a line of cases dealing
with the interpretation of s 218(2) read with
s 22 and, in some
instances, s 214(1)
(c)
of the Act. The
plaintiff’s case was based on the decision of
Rabinowitz
v Van Graan and Others
[1]
(
Rabinowitz
)
and related judgments. The court in
Rabinowitz
held:
‘
[A]
person who is guilty of an offence in terms of the Act, must . . . be
found to have “
contravened”
a provision of the
Act. If, therefore, a director is guilty of the offence created by
section 214, such director must therefore
be found to have
contravened a provision of the Act for the purposes of s 218(2).’
[2]
It
further held, ‘a third party can hold a director personally
liable in terms of the Act for acquiescing in or knowing about
conduct that falls within the ambit of s 22(1) thereof.’
[3]
[8]
The court in
Rabinowitz
found
it hard to believe that the legislature could, despite the criminal
liability contemplated by the Act in terms of s 214(1)
(c)
,
the delinquency provided for in s 162(5)
(c)
(iv)
(bb)
and the liability
created in s 77(3) against the directors, preclude a director from
knowingly being a party in s 22 of the Act.
It took this view bearing
in mind s 66(1) of the Act which brought the company affairs under
the direction of the board.
[4]
Rabinowitz
’
s
reasoning was followed in several cases.
[5]
It is not necessary
to discuss these cases as the thrust is largely the same.
[9]
The high court disagreed with
Rabinowitz
and the cases that followed it. It observed the
following:
‘
One
can sense the frustration some judges might feel when it is clear
that a director was up to no good and a creditor ended up
suffering
damages or a huge financial loss. The fact however remains that the
Companies Act does
not make express provision for such liability. It
could never have been the intention of the legislator to provide for
liability
in a manner that would involve a convoluted manner of
interpreting various sections, and then to arrive at a conclusion
that is
still open to doubt, based on how certain sections are
interpreted.’
[6]
[10]
The court embraced
the approach adopted in
De
Bruyn v Steinhoff International Holdings N.V. and Others
[7]
(
Steinhoff
)
which held that:
‘
Section
218(2)
should not be interpreted in a literal way. Rather, the
provision recognizes that liability for loss or damage may arise from
contraventions
of the
Companies Act. And
so the statute confers a
right of action. But what that right consists of, who enjoys the
right, and against whom the right may
be exercised are all issues to
be resolved by reference to the substantive provisions of the
Companies Act.’
[8
]
[11]
The high court also
referred to the judgment of this Court in
Hlumisa
Investment Holdings (RF) Ltd and Another v Kirkinis and Others
[9]
(
Hlumisa
)
where, with reference to
ss 77(2)
(b)
and
77(3)
(b)
of the Act, the
Court held:
‘
These
provisions of the
Companies Act make
it clear that the legislature
decided where liability should lie for conduct by directors in
contravention of certain sections
of the Act and who could recover
the resultant loss. It is also clear that the legislature was astute
to preserve certain common law
principles. It makes for a
harmonious blend.’
[10]
[12]
The high court concluded that:
‘
.
. .the so-called lacuna created by the legislature in not providing
expressly for the liability of directors to other persons,
such as
creditors, for loss or damage suffered, is a clear indication that it
was not its intention to do so, thereby continuing
to recognise what
has been referred to as a foundation of company law.’
[11]
[13]
It consequentially upheld the second defendant’s
exception, set aside the particulars of claim, and granted leave to
the plaintiff,
if so advised, to file amended particulars of claim
within 10 days from the date of the granting of its order.
In this Court
[14]
The plaintiff contends that the high court did not
conduct a discrete interpretative analysis of s 218(2). Rather, it
opined on
the correctness of the judgments it identified and appeared
to have adopted a prominent focus on s 22 rather than s 218(2).
[15]
It further submits that it was unlikely to have
been the purpose of the Act to have intended to exclude liability for
fraudulent
or reckless trading by directors [to creditors of the
company]; this claim was permitted by common law, and it would
require clear
language in the Act to preclude it. Neither the
language of s 218, nor the surrounding matrix of legislation suggest
that revocation.
[16]
Counsel for the plaintiff further submitted that
the Court should prefer an interpretation that promotes access to
justice than
one that denies any remedy. Thus, it should be slow to
accept the interpretation offered by the excipient.
[17]
Secondly, he argued that the Court is not dealing
with the breach of a fiduciary duty which is owed to the company, but
with a breach
of a statutory duty. For purposes of a creditor’s
claim, the phrase ‘
any person who
contravenes the Act
’
in s 218(2)
must be read to mean the director who is behind the company that
contravened s 22(1).
[18]
According to the plaintiff, neither
Hlumisa
nor
Steinhoff
stand
in the way of this interpretation as these cases had to do with
claims of shareholders against the directors of the company,
rather
than with the claims of creditors; shareholders’ claims against
directors are not permitted. In this instance, however,
where the
allegation is that the company was used by the directors to
perpetrate a fraud on a creditor, the company neither suffers
a loss
nor is it likely to seek to recover from the directors.
[19]
As to s 214(1)
(c)
,
which creates a criminal offence, this was not specifically pleaded.
However, it was argued that sufficient facts have been pleaded
which,
if proved, would render the second defendant guilty of an offence.
The plaintiff contends that the interpretation followed
in
Rabinowitz
should be adopted in this regard. Lastly, it
contends that a common law claim of fraud or theft can be inferred
from the facts.
The test on exception
[20]
It is trite that it
is for an excipient to show that on every reasonable interpretation
of the facts, the pleading is excipiable.
On interpretation, ‘the
question is not whether the meaning contended for by the [plaintiff]
is necessarily the correct one,
but whether it is a reasonably
possible one’.
[12]
The excipient must
satisfy the court that the conclusion of law set out in the
particulars of claim is unsustainable on every interpretation
that
can be put on those facts. It is important to note that ‘the
facts are what must be accepted as correct; not the conclusions
of
law’.
[13]
What is before us
is a question of law. Either s 218(2), read with s 22(1), permits
what is contended for by the plaintiff, or it
does not.
Legislative scheme
[21]
It is important to recap the relevant principles
underpinning the Act before undertaking the interpretive exercise.
Section 1 of
the Act defines a company as a juristic person
incorporated in terms of the Act. Sections 19(1)
(a)
and
(b)
,
dealing with the legal status of companies provide that a company is
a juristic person and that it has all the legal powers and
capacity
of an individual subject to certain exceptions. Section 19(2)
expressly states that:
‘
A
person is not, solely by reason of being an incorporator, shareholder
or director of a company, liable for any liabilities or
obligations
of the company, except to the extent that this Act or the company’s
Memorandum of Incorporation provides otherwise.’
[22]
The situation is different where a company is a
personal liability company. In that case, the directors and past
directors are jointly
and severally liable, together with the
company, for any debts and liabilities of the company (s 19(3)). This
exception serves
to highlight the importance of the director’s
default immunity.
[23]
In the case of
unconscionable abuse of the juristic personality of the company as a
separate entity, s 20(9) provides that the court
may declare the
company not to be a juristic person in respect of any right,
obligation or liability of the company and make any
further order it
considers appropriate. It has been stated that this provision does
not disregard the company as a separate entity.
It also does not do
away with the requirements for piercing the corporate veil. It
‘
broadens
the bases upon which the courts in this country… have hitherto
been prepared to grant relief that entails disregarding
corporate
personality.
Section
20(9)
,
therefore
does
not replace the common law, it supplements the common law.’
[14]
[24]
These provisions
emphasise the long-standing legal principles that the company’s
legal persona cannot be ignored at the choosing
of a party. As this
Court said in
Hlumisa
,
the separate personality is ‘no mere technicality. It is
foundational to company law.’
[15]
A party cannot
simply disregard the ‘corporate veil’; it must be
permitted by law to do so. Against these principles
as the backdrop,
I turn to the interpretation of s 218(2) read with s 22(1).
Interpretation of the relevant
provisions
[25]
The plaintiff’s
case is based on a statutory duty. Interpretation of statutes ‘is
an objective unitary process where
consideration must be given to the
language used in the light of 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.
The inevitable point of departure is the language
used in the provision under consideration.’
[16]
[26]
Section 218 (2) says:
‘
Any
person who contravenes any
provision
of this Act
is
liable to any other person for any loss or damage suffered by that
person as a result of that contravention.’ (Emphasis
added.)
This
section creates a right to recovery if there has been a breach of a
provision of the Act. ‘When a wrongdoer “contravenes”
the Act and causes loss to a person, the wrongdoer is liable to that
person…the word “contravenes” in s 218(2)
includes a breach or an infringement of any provision of the Act,
“which is by nature prescriptive or which in some way regulates
conduct”.’
[17]
[27]
This section does
not itself create liability. It imposes liability in the event of a
contravention of some other provision of the
Act. As was held in
Steinhoff
:
[18]
‘
[T]he
statute confers a right of action. But what that right consists of,
who enjoys the right, and against whom the right may be
exercised are
all issues to be resolved by reference to the substantive provisions
of the
Companies Act.
Such
an interpretation answers another difficulty that the literal
interpretation of
s 218(2)
does not. As
Hlumisa
[19]
observed, can
s
218(2)
be understood to impose liability without the regulating
concepts of fault, foreseeability and remoteness; and an
undifferentiated
conception of permissible plaintiffs. Such an
understanding would require an interpretation of
s 218(2)
that gives
rise to wholesale liability at the instance of all persons who
sustained loss or damage as a result of the contravention.
That is to
place a burden of liability and hence risk upon directors so great
that it is hard to imagine who would accept office
on these terms.
And if that is what the legislature intended it would be expected to
have made the imposition of so great a burden
clear. The better
interpretation is that the legislature intended that the specific
requirements of any liability are to be found
in the substantive
provisions of the
Companies Act. Section
218(2) has a different
function. It determines the question posed in
Steenkamp
:
[20]
contraventions do
permit a right of action. Whether there is a right of action, who
enjoys the right, and on what basis of all matters
regulated by the
substantive provision of the
Companies Act.’
[28
]
The plaintiff relies on
s 22(1)
as the provision
that it asserts has been contravened and triggers the operation of
s 218(2).
Section 22(1)
stipulates:
‘
A
company must not carry on its business recklessly, with gross
negligence, with intent to defraud any person or for any fraudulent
purpose.’
This section plainly imposes a duty on
the company, and not its directors, to refrain from carrying on its
business recklessly,
among other things. To construe
s 22(1)
as
being capable of infringement by the directors is to read into the
section a prohibition that is not there.
[29]
Sections 22(2)
and
22
(3) create remedies for the Commission
[21]
when reckless
trading is suspected. These provisions as well, are directed at the
company. The section that deals expressly with
directors’
liability is
s 77(3)
(b)
,
which states:
‘
(3)
A director of a company is liable for any loss, damages or costs
sustained
by the company
as
a direct or indirect consequence of the director having—
(b)
acquiesced in the
carrying on of the company’s business despite knowing that it
was being conducted in a manner prohibited
by
section 22(1)
’
(Emphasis added.)
[30]
In
Gihwala
and Others v Grancy Property Ltd and Others
[22]
this Court,
referring to
s 77(3)
, held that:
‘
That
section . . . does not involve a declaration by the court, but
creates
a statutory claim in favour of the company against a director
,
imposing liability on the latter for any loss, damages or costs
incurred by the company in certain circumstances, including whether
the director acquiesces in the company engaging in reckless trading.
It
is not a provision that can be invoked to secure payment to a
creditor or shareholder in respect of their claim against the company
or a director
.’
(Emphasis added.)
[31]
Section 76(3)
imposes duties upon the directors to, inter alia, act in good faith
and in the best interests of the company. These are common
law
principles which have now been entrenched in the Act.
[23]
These duties are
owed to the company. In the event of a wrong done to the company in
terms of any of the provisions of the section,
the company can sue to
recover damages. ‘The company would be the proper plaintiff. It
is no coincidence, then, that s 77(2)
(a)
provides
that a director of a company may be held liable for breaches of
fiduciary duties resulting in any loss or damage sustained
by the
company.’
[24]
Section 77(2)
(b)
similarly provides
that a director of a company may be held liable in accordance with
the principles of the common law relating
to delict for any loss,
damages or costs sustained by the company as a consequence of any
breach by the director of the duty contemplated
in s 76(3)
(b)
;
any provision of the Act, not otherwise mentioned in the section; or
any provision of the company’s Memorandum of Incorporation.
[32]
As stated in
Hlumisa
,
these provisions make it clear that ‘the legislature decided
where liability should lie for conduct by directors in contravention
of certain sections of the Act and who could recover the resultant
loss. It is also clear that the legislature was astute to preserve
certain common law principles. It makes a harmonious blend.’
[25]
Further, the Act
abounds with provisions for recovery of loss resulting from
misconduct on the part of directors. There must clearly
be a link
between the contravention and the loss allegedly suffered.
[26]
[33]
The plaintiff has been unable to identify a
provision that has been contravened by the directors in order to
invoke s 218(2). As
the court in
Steinhoff
observes:
‘
The
statutory scheme of liability under the
Companies Act does
not attach
a singular consequence for a contravention of the Act. Rather, the
Companies Act attaches
a regime of liability for particular
contraventions. I have already observed that this is so in respect of
the contravention of
s 76
and
s 22.
This is a systemic feature of the
Companies Act. A
breach of duty may exact compliance by the
Commission
(s22(3))
; a breach may be an offence
(s32(5))
; and a
breach may give rise to liability to make good a loss as a
consequence of the breach
(s77).
Certain breaches are visited with
more than one permissible consequence. Thus,
s 22
permits the
Commission to issue a compliance notice. In addition, a director may
be held liable to the company for reckless trading
(s22(1)
read with
s 77(3)(b)).
The
more general point of interpretation is that the legislature has been
careful to stipulate what form of liability, civil, criminal,
or
regulatory, may result from different contraventions. There is no
coherent reading of the
Companies Act that
would subordinate this
specification of differentiated liability for the recognition under
s
218(2)
of general liability of all persons who contravene the
Companies Act in
favour of all who suffer loss as a result
thereof.’
[27]
[34]
In the circumstances,
Rabinowitz
and other high court cases were wrongly
decided. It is irrelevant that
Hlumisa
and
Steinhoff
concerned claims brought by shareholders against
directors. While those facts are important to note, the relevant
principles in
those decisions as well as
Gihwala
are instructive for present purposes.
[35]
For these reasons, the high court cannot be
faulted for upholding the first exception. The appeal must,
accordingly, fail. Counsel
for the second defendant requested that
the order allowing the amendment, be substituted to provide for a new
operative date. I
agree.
[36]
In the result, the following order is made:
1
The appeal is dismissed with costs
including the costs of two counsel, where so employed.
2
The order of the high court is
confirmed save for paragraph 3 of the order which is substituted as
follows:
‘
3.
The plaintiff is granted leave, if so advised, to file amended
particulars of claim within 10 days of the date of this order.’
N P MABINDLA-BOQWANA
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
For the appellant:
F Snyckers SC
Instructed by:
Shepstone & Wylie Attorneys, Durban
Symington De Kok
Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For the first respondent:
A Annandale SC with J Miranda
Instructed by:
Grant and Swanepoel Attorneys, Pietermaritzburg
Kramer Wiehmann
Attorneys, Bloemfontein.
[1]
Rabinowitz
v Van Graan and Others
[2013]
ZAGPJHC 151;
2013
(5) SA 315
(GSJ). See also
Chemfit
Fine Chemicals (Pty) Ltd v Maake
2017
JDR 1473 (LP);
Maake
and Others v Chemfit Finechemical (Pty) Ltd
[2018]
ZALMPPHC 71;
Blue
Farm Fashion Limited v Rapitrade 6 (Pty) Ltd and Others
[2016]
JOL 35613
(WCC);
Meatworld
Factory CC v ET Trading House (Pty) Ltd
2019
JDR 1351 (GJ).
[2]
Ibid
para 17.
[3]
Ibid
para 22.
[4]
Ibid para 21.
[5]
C
ases
listed in fn 1.
[6]
Venator
Africa (Pty) Limited v Bekker and Another
[2022]
ZAKZPHC 50;
[2022] 4 All SA 600
(KZP) (High Court judgment) para 86.
[7]
De
Bruyn v Steinhoff International Holdings N.V. and Others
[2020]
ZAGPJHC 145; 2022 (1) SA 442 (GJ).
[8]
Ibid
para 191.
[9]
Hlumisa
Investment Holdings (RF) Ltd and Another v Kirkinis and Others
[2020]
ZASCA 83
;
[2020] 3 All SA 650
(SCA);
2020 (5) SA 419
(SCA).
[10]
Ibid
para 50.
[11]
High
Court judgment fn 6 above para 88.
[12]
Fairlands
Ltd v Inter-Continental Motors Ltd
1972
(2) 270 (A) at 275G-H.
[13]
Hlumisa
fn 9
above para 22.
[14]
Ex
Parte Gore and Others N N O (Gore)
2013
(3) SA 382
(WC);
[2013]
2 All SA 437
(WCC)
(
Gore
)
para 31,
cited
with approval by this Court in
Butcher
Shop and Grill CC v Trustees for the time being of the Bymyam Trust
[2023]
ZASCA 57
;
[2023] 3 All SA 40
(SCA);
2023 (5) SA 68
(SCA) para 40.
[15]
Hlumisa
fn 9
above para 42 referring to this Court’s judgment in
Itzikowitz
v Absa Bank Ltd
[2016]
ZASCA 43; 2016 (4) SA 432 (SCA).
[16]
Commissioner
for the South African Revenue Service v United Manganese of Kalahari
(Pty) Ltd
[2020]
ZASCA 16
para 8.
[17]
Hlumisa
fn 9
above para 45.
[18]
Steinhoff
fn
7 above paras 191 and 192.
[19]
Hlumisa
Investment Holdings RF Ltd and Another v Kirkinis and Others
[2018] ZAGPPHC 676;
2019
(4) SA 569
(GP). This is the judgment that was later confirmed by
this Court on appeal in
Hlumisa
fn 9
above.
[20]
Steenkamp v
Provincial Tender Board of the Eastern Cape
[2005]
ZASCA 120
;
[2006] 1 All SA 478
(SCA);
2006 (3) SA 151
(SCA) paras 21
and 22.
[21]
The
sections stipulate: ‘(2) If the Commission has reasonable
grounds to believe that a company is engaging in conduct
prohibited
by subsection (1), or is unable to pay its debts as they become due
and payable in the normal course of business,
the Commission may
issue a notice to the company to show cause why the company should
be permitted to continue carrying on its
business, or to trade, as
the case may be.
(3)
If a company to whom a notice has been issued in terms of subsection
(2) fails within 20 business days to satisfy the Commission
that it
is not engaging in conduct prohibited by subsection (1), or that it
is able to pay its debts as they become due and payable
in the
normal course of business, the Commission may issue a compliance
notice to the company requiring it to cease carrying
on its business
or trading, as the case may be.’
[22]
Gihwala and Others v
Grancy Property Ltd and Others
[2016]
ZASCA 35
;
[2016] 2 All SA 649
(SCA);
2017 (2) SA 337
(SCA)
para
120.
[23]
P
Delport
Henochsberg
on the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
at
298(12M)-298(12N).
[24]
Hlumisa
fn 9
above para 48.
[25]
Hlumisa
fn 9
above para 50.
[26]
Hlumisa
fn 9
above para 51.
[27]
Steinhoff
fn 7
above paras 213 and 214.
sino noindex
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