Case Law[2024] ZASCA 181South Africa
Macneil Plastics (Pty) Ltd v Van den Heever N O and Others (906/2023) [2024] ZASCA 181 (20 December 2024)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
20 December 2024
Headnotes
Summary: Liquidation – Company placed in liquidation due to inability to pay its debts – payment made by company to its creditor after the commencement of liquidation void under s 341(2) of the Companies Act 61 of 1973 and cannot be validated by court: An order placing a company in business rescue whilst in liquidation does not terminate liquidation proceedings under s 131(6)(b) of the Companies Act 71 of 2008 but merely suspends those proceedings – liquidation order remains extant and liquidation proceedings reinstated when the business rescue proceedings are brought to an end in terms of s 132(2)(a) of the Companies Act 71 of 2008.
Judgment
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## Macneil Plastics (Pty) Ltd v Van den Heever N O and Others (906/2023) [2024] ZASCA 181 (20 December 2024)
Macneil Plastics (Pty) Ltd v Van den Heever N O and Others (906/2023) [2024] ZASCA 181 (20 December 2024)
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sino date 20 December 2024
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Not
Reportable
Case
no: 906/2023
In
the matter between:
MACNEIL
PLASTICS (PTY) LTD
APPELLANT
and
THEODOR
WILHELM VAN DEN HEEVER N O
FIRST RESPONDENT
JAYANT
DAJI PEMA N O
SECOND RESPONDENT
MONIQUE
STANDER N O
THIRD RESPONDENT
RONNIE
DENNISON AGENCIES (PTY) LTD
FOURTH RESPONDENT
t/a
WATER AFRICA SYSTEMS (PTY) LTD
(IN
LIQUIDATION)
Neutral citation:
Macneil Plastics (Pty) Ltd v Van den Heever N O and
Others
(906/2023)
[2024] ZASCA 181
(20 December 2024)
Coram:
ZONDI DP and KGOELE JA and GORVEN, MAKUME and CHILI AJJA
Heard:
5 November 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 released to SAFLII. The time and date for
hand-down of the judgment is deemed
to be 11h00 on 20 December 2024.
Summary:
Liquidation – Company placed in liquidation due to inability to
pay its debts – payment made
by company to its creditor after
the commencement of liquidation void under s 341(2) of the Companies
Act 61 of 1973 and cannot
be validated by court: An order placing a
company in business rescue whilst in liquidation does not terminate
liquidation proceedings
under s 131(6)
(b)
of the
Companies Act
71 of 2008
but merely suspends those proceedings – liquidation
order remains extant and liquidation proceedings reinstated when the
business rescue proceedings are brought to an end in terms of
s
132(2)
(a)
of the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng Division of the High Court
,
Pretoria
(Mogale AJ with Molopa-Sethosa J and Sethusa-Shongwe AJ concurring,
sitting as a full court):
The
appeal is dismissed with costs.
JUDGMENT
Zondi
DP (Kgoele JA and Gorven, Makume and Chili AJJA concurring):
[1]
The issue in this appeal is whether the void payments which were made
by the fourth
respondent, Ronnie Dennison Agencies (Pty) Ltd t/a
Water Africa Systems (Pty) Ltd (in liquidation) (the Company) to the
appellant,
Macneil Plastics (Pty) Ltd (Macneil Plastics) after the
commencement of liquidation proceedings were validated by the
subsequent
order placing the Company in business rescue in terms of s
131(6) of the Companies Act 71 of 2008 (the new
Companies Act). It
is
common cause that Macneil Plastics was one of the Company’s
creditors and that the payments in question were void in terms
of s
341(2) of the Companies Act 61 of 1973 (the old Companies Act) as
they were made after the commencement of the liquidation
of the
Company.
[2]
The Gauteng Division of the High Court, Pretoria (the high court)
held that the subsequent
placing of the Company in liquidation in
business rescue did not validate the void payments and that while the
Company was under
business rescue the liquidation order remained
unaffected. These findings were upheld on appeal by the full court of
the same Division.
The appeal is with special leave granted by this
Court. The findings of the full court are challenged by Macneil
Plastics in its
grounds of appeal.
[3]
The facts which gave rise to this appeal are briefly the following.
On 7 February
2014, DPI Plastics (Pty) Ltd, the Company’s
creditor, issued an application for the winding-up of the Company out
of the
high court on the basis that it was unable to pay its
creditors. On 28 October 2015, the high court (Hughes J) granted the
application
placing the Company under final winding-up. The first,
second and third respondents were appointed by the Master of the High
Court
as joint liquidators of the Company.
[4]
On 2 November 2015 (being a date after it had been finally
liquidated) the Company
paid a total amount of R407 010.30 to
Macneil Plastics. On 11 January 2019, the liquidators brought an
application in the
high court in which they challenged the lawfulness
of the payments in question. Briefly, the liquidators sought an order
declaring
the relevant payments void in terms of s 341(2) of the old
Companies Act
[1]
and ordering
Macneil Plastics to repay the amounts concerned to the liquidators
together with interest thereon. The repayment was
sought on the basis
that the relevant payments were made to Macneil Plastics after the
commencement of the winding-up of the Company
within the meaning of s
348 of the old Companies Act
[2]
and thus while it was finally wound-up.
[5]
On 9 December 2015, and subsequent to the winding-up order and the
making of the impugned
payments, the high court (Tuchten J) granted
an order suspending the liquidation proceedings of the Company and
placing it under
business rescue in terms of s 131 of the new
Companies Act. Tuchten J’s order reads as follows:
‘
2.
The winding up (liquidation proceedings) of Water Africa Systems
(Proprietary) Limited
(in liquidation) (‘
the company
’)
[Ronnie Dennison Agencies (Pty) Ltd] commenced in terms of the order
issued by this Honourable Court under case no. 10136/2014
on 28
October 2015 be and is hereby suspended.
3.
The company be and is hereby placed under supervision and business
rescue in
terms of section 131(1) of the Companies Act, 2008 (‘
the
Act
’).
4.
Niell Michael Hobbs be and is hereby appointed as the interim
business rescue
practitioner in respect of the company in terms of
section 131(5) of the Act.
5.
The applicants, the business rescue practitioner of the company and
all affected
persons as contemplated in section 128(1) of the Act are
granted leave to apply to this Honourable Court (after having
notified
affected persons of the intention to do so in the prescribed
manner) on the same papers, amplified to the extent necessary, for
an
order to end the business rescue proceedings and for an order in
terms of section 354 of the Companies Act, 1973 to set aside
the
winding up of the company, alternatively, for an order to discontinue
the business rescue proceedings in respect of the company
and
reinstate the final winding up of the company, alternatively, for
other relief as may be appropriate.’
[6]
On 12 April 2016, Potterill J set aside the order of Tuchten J
suspending the liquidation
proceedings and reinstated the final
winding-up of the Company. Potterill J’s order reads as
follows:
‘
2.
Setting aside the Court Order that began the Business Rescue
Proceedings in respect
of Water Africa Systems (Pty) Limited (“the
Company”) in terms of Section 131 (6) of the Companies Act No
71 of 2008
(“the Act”);
3.
Declaring that the Business Rescue Proceedings have ended by virtue
of the provisions
of Section 132 (2) of the Act in that:
3.1
An order has been made setting aside order that began the Business
Rescue Proceedings; and/or
3.2
A Business Plan has been proposed and rejected and no affected person
has acted to extend
the proceedings in any manner contemplated in
section 153; and/or
3.3
The practitioner has filed with the Commission a notice of the
termination of business rescue
proceedings;
4.
Re-instating the final winding up of the Company.’
[7]
The application for the repayment of the void payments served before
Mngqibisa-Thusi
J. She found that the payments were void in terms of
s 341(2) of the old
Companies Act as
the Company made them after the
commencement of its winding-up. In fact, when the Company made the
payments in question to Macneil
Plastics, a final liquidation order
had already been granted. The learned Judge found that the effect of
the liquidation order
was to place the Company and its assets under
the control of the Master of the High Court pending the appointment
of liquidators.
Based on this finding, she concluded that she did not
have a discretion to validate the impugned payments. She accordingly
ordered
Macneil Plastics to repay the monies it received from the
Company to the liquidators. As already alluded to, on appeal the full
court confirmed Mngqibisa-Thusi J’s findings and dismissed the
appeal with costs.
[8]
In argument before us, although Macneil Plastics accepted that
ordinarily the payments
made by the Company after its winding-up due
to its inability to pay its debts are void, it contended that the
subsequent placing
of the Company under business rescue proceedings
superseded or replaced the liquidation proceedings and nullified the
voidness
of the payments. The thrust of Macneil Plastics’
argument was that the liquidation process and the business rescue
process
cannot co-exist. It submitted that the placing of a company
under business rescue not only terminates the pre-existing
liquidation
proceedings, but also extinguishes the concomitant
concursus creditorum
that is established when the company is
placed under winding-up. Consequently, the payments were not void and
Macneil Plastics
is excused from repaying the monies in question.
[9]
Macneil Plastics’ argument must be rejected for three reasons.
First, the payments
in question were made after the commencement of
the Company’s liquidation. It is not in dispute that the
Company was wound
up on 28 October 2015 and that it was unable to pay
its debts on that date and thereafter. The Company’s inability
to pay
its debts, therefore, existed when it was wound up and when
the payments in question were made. The payments that were made by
the Company on 2 November 2015 therefore constituted a disposition of
its property after the commencement of its winding up within
the
meaning of
s 341(2)
of the old
Companies Act and
those payments
cannot be validated.
[10]
Validating such payments would undermine the
concursus
creditorum
that is established by the liquidation of a company. Once the
concursus
creditorum
is established nothing can thereafter be allowed to be done by any of
the creditors to alter the rights of the creditors. The creditors
must be paid in the order of their preference. No transaction can
thereafter be entered into regarding estate matters by a single
creditor to the prejudice of the general body of creditors. The claim
of each creditor must be dealt with as it existed at the
date when
the
concursus
creditorum
was formed.
[3]
Dispositions made
subsequent to the grant of a provisional or final order of winding-up
are void and cannot be validated in terms
of
s 341(2)
of the old
Companies Act. This
was authoritatively decided by this Court in
Pride
Milling.
[4]
[11]
Petse AP in
Pride
Milling
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.
[5]
He stated that this would further 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’.
[6]
[12]
Second, Macneil Plastics’ argument that the order placing the
Company under business rescue
supersedes or replaces the liquidation
order is inconsistent with the provisions of
s 131(6)
(b)
of
the new
Companies Act. This
section provides as follows:
‘
If liquidation
proceedings have already been commenced by or against the company at
the time an application is made in terms of
subsection (1), the
application will suspend those liquidation proceedings until-
…
(
b)
the business rescue proceedings end, if the court makes the order
applied for.’
[13]
In
GCC
Engineering v Maroos
,
[7]
a business rescue practitioner obtained a provisional winding-up
order after the failure of the business rescue proceedings. A
second
business rescue application was thereafter instituted. This Court
thus dealt with the period after the winding-up order
and before a
(new) business rescue order was made.
[14]
This Court, in interpreting the provisions of
s 131(6)
found that an
application for business rescue proceedings does not terminate the
office of provisional liquidators, nor does it
result in the assets
and management of the company in liquidation re-vesting in the
directors of the company in provisional liquidation.
[8]
It is the process of winding-up and not the legal consequences of a
winding-up order that is suspended. The winding-up order is
still in
place.
[9]
The ‘legal
consequences’ include the principle that payments made after
the granting of the winding-up order are void.
That applies equally
to the present matter.
[15]
At the time the payments to Macneil Plastics were made, they were
void as they were made after
the winding-up of the Company. Business
rescue is dealt with in Chapter 6 of the new
Companies Act. There
is
no provision in that chapter which provides that a void payment is
somehow validated once a company in liquidation is placed
in business
rescue. A subsequent placing of the Company in business rescue does
not reverse the voidness of the dispositions.
[16]
Third, the interpretation contended for by counsel for Macneil
Plastics would require that a
provision be read into
s 131(6)
which
would provide that placing a company in business rescue would
automatically set aside a prior existing liquidation order
ex
tunc
.
Statutory interpretation is a unitary exercise which requires a court
to ascertain the meaning of a provision, having regard to
the
language used, the context and the purpose of the provision.
[10]
The inevitable point of departure is the language of the provision
itself.
[11]
The section uses
the word ‘suspend’ – not ‘set aside’ or
‘terminate’. ‘Suspend’
is defined in the
Concise Oxford English Dictionary as ‘to halt temporarily’.
The wording of the statute can simply
not accommodate Macneil
Plastics’ interpretation.
[17]
Additionally, Macneil Plastics’ argument runs counter to the
orders of Tuchten J and Potterill
J. Those orders made explicit the
position in the section that only a suspension rather than a
supersession takes place when a
liquidated company is placed in
business rescue. The order made by Tuchten J authorised a future
application to ‘set aside’
the winding-up or to
‘reinstate’ the final winding-up of the Company. It was
therefore clearly contemplated that the
liquidation order was still
extant, and that the order placing the Company in business rescue did
not supersede the winding-up
order – the winding-up order
either had to be ‘set aside’ or ‘reinstated’
in future.
[18]
Similarly, the order made by Potterill J (which was foreshadowed by
Tuchten J’s order)
expressly provided in paragraph 5:
‘…reinstat[ing] the final winding up of the company’.
It is clear from this
analysis that the construction of
s 131(6)
contended for by Macneil Plastics cannot be supported. It would lead
to absurdity so glaring that it could never have been contemplated
by
the legislature.
[12]
[19]
In the result the appeal is dismissed with costs.
D
H ZONDI
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
Appearances
For the
appellant:
A R Newton SC and S
C Pitcher
Instructed by:
C
& A Friedlander Attorneys, Centurion
Symington
De Kok, Bloemfontein
For the
respondents: P van
der Berg SC
Instructed
by:
Van
Veijeren Inc
c/o
Friedland Hart Solomon & Nicholson Attorneys, Pretoria
Pieter
Skein Attorneys, Bloemfontein
[1]
Section
341(2) of the Old
Companies Act reads
:
‘
Every
disposition of its property (including rights of action) by any
company being wound-up and unable to pay its debts made
after the
commencement of the winding up, shall be void unless the Court
otherwise orders.’
[2]
Section
348 of the Old
Companies Act reads
:
‘
A winding-up of a
company by the Court shall be deemed to commence at the time of the
presentation to the Court of the application
for the winding-up
.’
[3]
Walker
v Syfret N O
1911
AD 141
at 160 and 166.
[4]
Pride
Milling Company (Pty) Ltd v Bekker N O and Another
[2021]
ZASCA 127
;
[2021] 4 All SA 696
(SCA);
2022 (2) SA 410
(SCA) (
Pride
Milling
)
paras 17 to 20.
[5]
Pride
Milling
fn
4 para 19, with reference to
Walker
v Syfret N O
.
[6]
Pride
Milling
fn
4 para 20.
[7]
GCC
Engineering (Pty) Ltd and Others v Maroos and Others
[2018] ZASCA 178
;
2019
(2) SA 379
(SCA) (
GCC
Engineering
).
[8]
Section
131(6)
reads:
‘
(6)
If liquidation proceedings have already been commenced by or against
the company at the time an application is made in terms
of
subsection (1), the application will
suspend
those liquidation proceedings
until–
(a)
the court has adjudicated upon the application;
or
(b)
the business rescue proceedings end, if the court
makes the order applied for.’ (Own emphasis.)
[9]
GCC
Engineering
fn 7
paras
17 to 19.
[10]
Capitec
Bank Holdings Ltd and Another v Coral Lagoon Investments 194 (Pty)
Ltd and Others
[2021] ZASCA 99
;
[2021] 3 All SA 647
(SCA);
2022 (1) SA 100
(SCA)
para 25.
[11]
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
[2012] ZASCA 13
;
[2012] 2 All SA 262
(SCA);
2012 (4) SA 593
(SCA)
para 18.
[12]
Hanekom
v Builders Market Klerksdorp (Pty) Ltd and Others
[2006] ZASCA 2
;
2007 (3) SA 95
(SCA) para 7.
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