Case Law[2024] ZASCA 91South Africa
Mawerco (Pty) Ltd v Sithole and Others (322/2023) [2024] ZASCA 91 (10 June 2024)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
10 June 2024
Headnotes
Summary: Challenge to decision to remove directors – on the facts declaratory relief without review not competent.
Judgment
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## Mawerco (Pty) Ltd v Sithole and Others (322/2023) [2024] ZASCA 91 (10 June 2024)
Mawerco (Pty) Ltd v Sithole and Others (322/2023) [2024] ZASCA 91 (10 June 2024)
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sino date 10 June 2024
Last
amended version 25 July 2024.
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Not reportable
Case no: 322/2023
In
the matter between:
MAWECRO (PTY)
LTD
APPELLANT
and
JABULANI LIGHTER
SITHOLE
FIRST RESPONDENT
ISAAC MYOMO
NITWANE
SECOND RESPONDENT
ETIENNE JACQUES
NAUDE
THIRD RESPONDENT
JOHANNES PETRUS
KOEKEMOER
FOURTH RESPONDENT
JOHANNES LODEWYK
BOUWER
FIFTH RESPONDENT
MAWEWE COMMUNAL
PROPERTY ASSOCIATION SIXTH RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Mawecro
(Pty) Ltd v Sithole and Others
(322/2023)
[2024] ZASCA 91
(10 June 2024)
Coram:
PONNAN, MATOJANE and KGOELE JJA and DAWOOD and
BAARTMAN AJJA
Heard
:
22 May 2024
Delivered
:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ representatives by email,
publication on the Supreme
Court of Appeal website and release to SAFLII. The date and time for
hand-down of the judgment is deemed
to be 11h00 on 10 June 2024.
Summary:
Challenge to decision to remove
directors –
on the facts declaratory
relief without review not competent.
ORDER
On
appeal from
:
Mpumalanga Division of the High Court
,
Mbombela
(
Roelofse
AJ sitting as court of first instance
)
.
1 The
appeal is upheld with costs such costs to include those of two
counsel, where
so employed.
2 The
order of the court below is set aside and replaced with the
following:
‘
The
application is dismissed with costs, including those of two counsel
where so employed.’
JUDGMENT
Baartman
AJA (Ponnan, Matojane and Kgoele JJA and Dawood AJA concurring):
[1]
The appellant, Mawecro (Pty) Ltd (the
company) is a joint venture. It has two shareholders, the sixth
respondent, Mawewe Communal Property Association (the Association)
and Crooks Brothers Limited. The latter holds a 49% share in
the
company while the Association holds 51% of the shares. Their
relationship is governed by a Shareholders’ Agreement which,
in
clause 10.1.1,
[1]
provides that
each shareholder may appoint three directors to the company’s
board as representatives of the respective shareholder,
while clause
10.1.2 provides for the removal of said directors.
[2]
[2]
Acting in terms of the Shareholders’ Agreement, the Association
appointed Mr Sithole (the first
respondent) and Mr Nitwane (the
second respondent) as directors of the company. The Association
subsequently resolved that they
be removed as directors of the
company. Both Messrs Sithole and Nitwane thereafter approached the
high court seeking declaratory
relief, under case numbers 714/2021
and 715/2021 respectively. The applications were heard together and
succeeded before Roelofse
AJ in the Mpumalanga Division of the High
Court, Mbombela (the high court), which granted the following order:
‘
1.
The removal of Mr. Jabulani Lighter Sithole (“Mr. Sithole) as
Director and Chairperson of Mawecro (Pty) Ltd (“the
company”)
is hereby set aside;
2. The removal of Mr
Isaac Myomo Nitwane (“Mr Nitwane”) as Director of the
company is hereby set aside;
3. The company is ordered
to pay the directors’ fees of Mr Sithole and Mr Nitwane from
March 2020 to date of this judgment,
such payment to be effected to
Mr. Sithole and Mr. Nitwane within 30 days of this order;
4. All meetings of the
reconstituted Board from March 2020 to date of this judgment are
declared unlawful;
5. The company is ordered
to pay the applicants’ costs.’
The appeal by the company
against that order is with leave of the high court.
[3]
The application to the high court arose against the following
backdrop: Infighting in the Association
led to an urgent application
by the chieftainess, Ms Mkhatshwa and the Mawewe Tribal Authority and
followed by the grant of an
Anton Piller Order, dated 4 February
2020, in the following terms:
‘
Interim
Interdict
28. Pending the further
proceedings to be instituted by the applicants not more than 180 days
from the execution of this order,
which further proceedings are
foreshadowed in this application, it is ordered that:
28.1. the current
committee of the Mawewe Communal Association is dissolved with
immediate effect;
28.2 no person other than
the persons appointed in prayer 28.3 below, may conduct the affairs
of the Mawewe Communal Property Association,
or hold themselves out
as being authorised to conduct the affairs of the Mawewe Communal
Property Association.
28.3. that the following
persons are appointed to take control of all affairs of the Mawewe
Communal Property Association, and to
report back to this Court on
the affairs of the Mawewe Communal Property association within 180
days of the date of the execution
of this order:
28.3.1. Mr Johannes
Lodewyk Bouwer
28.3.2. Mr Johannes
Petrus Koekemoer
28.3.3. Mr Etienne
Jacques Naude. . .’
[4]
On 10 March 2020, the high court confirmed the Anton Piller order and
granted the following additional
relief:
‘
3.
Pending the further proceedings to be instituted by the applicants
not more than 120 days from the execution of the order. .
.it is
ordered that:
3.1. the current
committee of the Mawewe Communal Property Association (eighth
respondent) has dissolved on 4 February 2020;
3.2. no person other than
the persons appointed in prayer 3.3 below, may conduct the affairs of
the Mawewe Communal Property Association,
or hold themselves out as
being authorised to conduct the affairs of the Mawewe Communal
Property Association;
3.3. that the following
persons are appointed to take control of all the affairs of the
Mawewe Communal Property Association and
to report back to this
court. . .within 90 days of the date of execution of this order;
3.3.1 Mr Johannes Lodewyk
Bouwer [the fifth respondent];
3.3.2 Mr Johannes Petrus
Koekemoer [the fourth respondent];
3.3.3 Mr Etienne Jacques
Naudè [the third respondent] who shall at all relevant times
and in conjunction with and in agreement
with Mr Justus van Wyk.’
[5]
On 13 March 2020, three days after the grant of the order, the
Association’s management,
represented by Messrs Naudè,
Bouwer and Koekemoer, who had been appointed in terms of the court
order dated 10 March 2020,
resolved as follows:
‘
1.
That [first respondent] and [second respondent] be removed as
Directors of Mawecro Farming (Pty) Ltd. with immediate effect.
2. That Etienne Jacques
Naudè, Johannes Lodewyk Bouwer and Justus van Wyk be appointed
as Directors to represent Mawewe Communal
Property Association as
Directors to represent Mawecro Farming (Pty) Ltd.’
[6]
The first and second respondents, aggrieved by their removal,
approached the high court seeking the
following declaratory relief:
‘
1.
Setting aside the suspension of the Applicant as director and
Chairperson of Mawecro (Pty) Ltd;
2. Re-appointing the
Applicant director and chairperson of the Fifth Respondent with
immediate effect;
3. The Fifth Respondent
to pay all director fees due to the Applicant for the period dating
from March 2020, to date within 30 days;
4. The meetings that were
held before, during and after the removal of the Applicant were not
properly constituted and are declared
unlawful. . .’
[7]
The respondents did not seek to review or the setting aside of the
decision to remove them, nor
did they specify precisely which of the
decisions they sought to impugn. In
Oudekraal
Estates (Pty) Ltd v City of Cape Town
,
[3]
this Court confirmed that a decision stands until reviewed and set
aside. Without reviewing and setting aside the impugned decision(s),
in particular that of the Association removing them as directors, for
which no proper case had been made out, the application had
to fail.
On appeal, it was suggested, on the respondents’ behalf, that
it was unclear to the respondents when the application
had been
launched, which decisions were susceptible to review, including the
dates when those decisions had been taken, and by
whom. Rule 53 of
the Uniform Rules of Court caters for precisely such a situation;
however instead of employing rule 53, the respondents
confined
themselves to declaratory relief.
[8]
The high court approached the matter on the basis that
s 71
of the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
provides for the removal of directors and
since that process was not followed, the respondents were entitled to
declaratory relief.
However, that misconceived the enquiry. The
respondents served as directors of the company – as the
representatives of the
Association. The resolution of the Association
had not been challenged. The adoption of the resolution had the
effect that the
respondents could no longer serve as directors of the
company. It follows that the relief granted by the high court cannot
stand
and falls to be set aside on appeal.
In the result:
1 The
appeal is upheld with costs such costs to include those of two
counsel, where so employed.
2 The
order of the court below is set aside and replaced with:
‘
The
application is dismissed with costs, including those of two counsel
where so employed.’
E BAARTMAN
ACTING JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
the appellant:
J de
Beer SC with A Van Dyk
Instructed
by:
WDT
Attorneys, Mbombela
Honey
Attorneys, Bloemfontein.
For
the first and second respondents:
S Van
Rensburg SC
Instructed
by:
S
Tsotetsi Attorneys, Middleburg
Mavuya
Attorneys Inc, Bloemfontein.
[1]
Clause
10.1.1
of the Shareholders’ Agreement states as follows:
‘
each
SHAREHOLDER holding more than 45% (forty-five percent) of the voting
rights of the COMPANY shall have the right to appoint
3 (three)
DIRECTORS to the BOARD. . .’.
[2]
Clause 10.1.2 of the Shareholders’ Agreement provides as
follows:
‘
the
SHAREHOLDERS will be entitled to remove any of their representative
appointees to the BOARD and to replace any such DIRECTOR
who is
removed or who ceases for any other reason to be a DIRECTOR. . . ’.
[3]
Oudekraal
Estates (Pty) Ltd v City of Cape Town and Others
[2004] ZASCA 48
;
[2004] 3 All SA 1
(SCA);
2004 (6) SA 222
(SCA) para
26.
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