Case Law[2023] ZASCA 5South Africa
Enforced Investment (Pty) Ltd and Others v Verifika Incorporated and Another (599/2021) [2023] ZASCA 5 (25 January 2023)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
25 January 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Contract – loan and repayment agreement – whether demand for payment valid – whether lender entitled to perfect security and accelerate payment of outstanding amounts.
Judgment
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## Enforced Investment (Pty) Ltd and Others v Verifika Incorporated and Another (599/2021) [2023] ZASCA 5 (25 January 2023)
Enforced Investment (Pty) Ltd and Others v Verifika Incorporated and Another (599/2021) [2023] ZASCA 5 (25 January 2023)
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sino date 25 January 2023
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Not reportable
Case no: 599/2021
In
the matter between:
ENFORCED INVESTMENTS
(PTY) LTD FIRST
APPELLANT
FATIMA PEREIRA
TORRES SECOND
APPELLANT
JOHN
ROBERT WOODNUTT THIRD
APPELLANT
and
VERIFIKA
INCORPORATED FIRST
RESPONDENT
BERNARD
JOHN LAFERLA SECOND
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Enforced
Investment (Pty) Ltd and Others v Verifika Incorporated and Another
(599/2021)
[2023] ZASCA 5
(25 January
2023)
Coram:
PONNAN, MAKGOKA and GORVEN JJA and NHLANGULELA and
SALIE AJJA
Heard
:
9 November 2022
Delivered
:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ legal representatives
via e-mail, publication on the
Supreme Court of Appeal website and released to SAFLII. The date and
time for hand-down are deemed
to be delivered on 25 January 2023.
Summary:
Contract – loan and repayment
agreement – whether demand for payment valid – whether
lender entitled to perfect
security and accelerate payment of
outstanding amounts.
ORDER
On
appeal from
:
Gauteng Division of the High Court
,
Johannesburg
(
Dippenaar
J,
sitting
as
court of first
instance)
.
1 The appeal under case
number 6183/2020 succeeds with costs, including the costs of two
counsel.
2 Paragraphs 3 and 4 of
the order of the high court are set aside and substituted as follows:
‘
(3)
In the counter application, the second applicant is ordered to pay to
the first respondent an amount of R1 361 704.74 together
with
interest thereon at the rate of 10% per annum
a
tempore morae
;
(4) The applicants shall
pay the costs of the application and counter-application, including
the costs of two counsel, jointly and
severally, the one paying the
other to be absolved, such costs to be paid on an attorney-client
scale.’
3
The appeal under case number 14799/2020 is dismissed with costs.
JUDGMENT
Salie
AJA (Ponnan, Makgoka and Gorven JJA and Nhlangulela AJA concurring):
[1]
The second appellant, Fatima Pereira Torres (Ms Torres), was formerly
the sole shareholder
of the first respondent, Verifika Incorporated
(Verifika). On 18 March 2016, Ms Torres sold 50% of her shareholding
in Verifika
to the second respondent, Bernard John Laferla (Mr
Laferla). Mr Laferla was then appointed as director of Verifika and
although
Ms Torres resigned as a director of Verifika, she remained a
signatory on its bank accounts. On 6 June 2019, Ms Torres sold the
remaining 50% of her shares in Verifika to Mr Laferla for the sum of
R2 million. Mr Laferla paid a deposit of R100 000. On
the same
date, the first appellant, Enforced Investment (Pty) Ltd (Enforced),
represented by the third appellant, John Robert Woodnutt
(Mr
Woodnutt), lent and advanced an amount of R1.9 million to Verifika.
The purpose of the loan was to enable Verifika to expand
its business
operations. It is common cause, however, that Mr Laferla
misappropriated the R1.9 million, which he used to pay Ms
Torres for
her shareholding in Verifika. She was however not aware of this when
the payment was made to her. As security for the
loan, Mr Laferla
ceded his shareholding in Verifika to Enforced.
[2]
This appeal centres on the legal effect of any one of three breach
notices sent by
Enforced to Verifika in terms of the Loan and
Repayment Agreement (the loan agreement) concluded on 6 June 2019
between Enforced,
as lender, and the first respondent, as borrower.
[3]
The relevant provisions of the loan agreement are clauses 5, 7 (read
with appendix
2) and 11. They provide:
‘
5
CESSION
5.1 Laferla
hereby cedes and assigns all right title and interest in the Security
to Enforced
Investments Pty Limited as security for the loans.
5.2 Upon
signature hereof Laferla will deliver to the company secretary of
Enforced Investments
Pty limited the following:
5.2.1 Signed
and undated share transfer forms for the Security.
5
.
2.2 The
share certificates in respect of the Security.
5.2.3 His
written and undated resignation as a director of Verifica Inc.
5.3
Laferla upon signature hereof agrees to the company secretary giving
transfer of the security
from his name into the name of Enforced
Investments Pty Limited or its nominee in the event of a default as
set out in paragraph
11 below.
. .
.
7
LOAN:
INTEREST AND PRINCIPAL REPAYMENTS
7.1
For each
Interest
Period the
Loan Principal shall accrue interest at the Loan Interest Rate. The
aforesaid interest shall:-
7.1.1
accrue on a day-to-day basis; and
7
.1.2
be calculated
on the actual number of days elapsed and on the basis of a 365 (three
hundred and sixty five) day year, irrespective
of whether or not the
applicable year is a leap year
.
7
.
2
The Borrower shall repay the Loan Principal and interest to the
Lender
in
accordance
with the Payment Schedule set out in Appendix
2.
11
EVENTS OF DEFAULT
11.1
An Event of Default shall occur if any of the following events, each
of which shall be several and
distinct from the others, occurs
(whether or not caused by any reason whatsoever outside the control
of the Borrower)
11.1.1 the Borrower
fails to pay to the Lender any amount which becomes payable by it
pursuant to this Agreement strictly
on due date, and the Borrower
fails to remedy such default within 3 (three) Business Days of
written demand;
11.2
If an Event of Default occurs the Lender shall be entitled, without
notice to the Borrower accelerate
or place on demand all amounts
owing by the Borrower to the Lender under this Agreement, whether in
respect of principal, interest
or otherwise so that all such amounts
shall immediately become due and payable, and call up the Security.’
Appendix 2 reads:
‘
PAYMENT
SCHEDULE
1
The Loan is repayable as follows:
Years
one and two
R500
000 per annum
Year
three
R1
000 000
payable
at each year end.
2
Interest payable monthly on the outstanding balance.
’
[4]
By 30 June 2019, interest in the amount of R14 054.79 was due and
payable by Mr Laferla
to Enforced in terms of the loan agreement.
This amount had escalated to R32 343.19 by 31 July 2019 and led
to the first letter
of demand on 8 August 2019. On that date, Mr
Woodnutt, on behalf of Enforced, personally delivered by hand to
Verifika’s
chosen
domicilium
citandi et executandi
the following
letter:
‘
Arrears
Interest payment: R32 343.19
The foregoing amount
remains unpaid and needs to be settled immediately in respect of your
loan to Enforced Investments (Pty) Ltd.
Please note that in terms of
the loan agreement any failure to pay is an act of default. For ease
of reference the following amounts,
based upon current interest rates
are due and payable at each month end.
. . .
Please
ensure that the arrears are settled immediately and that all future
payments are made on due date.’
[5]
Enforced made further written demands on 18 October 2019 and 24
January 2020 respectively,
claiming payment of the arrear interest.
On 28 January 2020, Enforced called up its security by entering Ms
Torres’ name
in Verifika’s securities register and she
was appointed a director of Verifika. On 31 January 2020, Enforced
sent a letter
of demand to Verifika claiming payment of the full
amount due in terms of the loan agreement. Mr Laferla made his first
payment
of arrear interest on 24 February 2020. Mr Woodnutt was
appointed as a director of Verifika on 10 March 2020. On 11 March
2020,
a special resolution was passed by Verifika, and signed by Ms
Torres, for the voluntary winding up of Verifika on the basis that
it
was insolvent. At that time, it appeared to Mr Woodnutt and Ms Torres
that Verifika did not have sufficient funds to pay its
liabilities
because unbeknown to them, Mr Laferla had in fact been depositing
Verifika’s funds into a separate bank account.
[6]
This breakdown in the relationship between Ms Torres and Mr Woodnutt,
on the one hand,
and, Mr Laferla, on the other, led to several
applications and counter-applications being launched. On 25 February
2020, Verifika
and Mr Laferla brought an urgent application under
case number 6183/2020 before the Gauteng Division of the High Court,
Johannesburg
(the high court) against Enforced and Ms Torres, seeking
interim relief pending a final order that the entire shareholding of
Verifika
be restored to Mr Laferla and that the cession activated by
Enforced, in terms of the loan agreement, be set aside (the main
application).
The main application was postponed to 4 May 2020, but
an interim order issued by consent on 11 March 2020, which inter alia
reinstated
Mr Laferla as a director of Verifika.
[7]
The main application was opposed by Enforced and Ms Torres, who also
brought a wide-ranging
counter-application under the same case number
on 4 May 2020. An urgent application by Verifika and Mr Laferla
followed on 29 June
2020 under case number 14799/2020. They sought to
set aside the resolution to place Verifika in voluntary liquidation
(the liquidation
application). That application prompted a
conditional counter-application on 3 July 2020 by Ms Torres and Mr
Woodnutt, seeking
the final winding up of Verifika. On 14 July 2020,
an interim order was granted by the high court (per Yacoob J) setting
aside
the voluntary liquidation of Verifika.
[8]
The two applications led to a consolidated hearing before Dippenaar J
in the high
court. On 18 January 2021, the learned judge issued the
following order:
‘
Case
number 14799/2020
[1]
The first and second respondents' taking possession of the second
applicant's shareholding in the first applicant is set aside;
[2]
The voluntary winding up of the first appl
i
cant
is set aside
;
[3]
The fourth respondent is directed to reinstate the first applicant to
an enterprise status of
"in business";
[4]
The second respondent's appointment as a director of the first
applicant is set aside
;
[5]
The first and second respondents are
interdicted
and restrained
from interfering with or altering the status of the first applicant;
[6]
The
first
and
second respondents’ counter-application is dismissed with
costs;
[7]
The first and second
respondents
are directed
to pay the costs of this application jointly and severally,
the
one paying the
other to be absolved, including the costs of two counsel where
employed.
Case
number
6183/2020
[1]
The
first
and
second
respondents'
taking
possession of the
second
applicant's
shareholding
in
the first
applicant is
set aside;
[2]
The second applicant's entire shareholding in the first applicant is
restored.
[3]
The first and second
respondents'
counter
application is dismissed with costs, including the costs of two
counsel
[4]
the first
and
second respondents are directed to pay the costs of the application
jointly and severally,
the
one paying, the
other
to
be
absolved, including
the
costs of two
counsel
where
employed.’
[9]
The appeal by Enforced, Ms Torres and Mr Woodnutt (as the first to
third appellants
respectively), with the leave of this Court, is
directed at paragraphs 3 and 4 of the order issued under case number
6183/2020
and the costs order in paragraph 6 that followed upon the
dismissal of their counter-application under case number 14799/2020.
[10]
The question therefore in the appeal under case number 6183/2020, as
the high court recognised,
is whether any of the three demands
triggered the entitlement of Enforced to claim the acceleration of
all amounts and to call
up the security. The respondents contended
that the breach notices were defective. Inasmuch as they were not
clear and unequivocal
as to the consequences of a failure on their
part to perform timeously. Their argument was that if cancellation
was intended, it
ought to have been expressed in the notice.
[11]
Dippenaar J’s reasons for rejecting reliance on the first
demand were:
‘
Even
if it was not necessary to specify a time. In the notice, as I have
concluded, the applicants were not notified of the consequences
if
the breach was not remedied. The letter further did not unequivocally
and unconditionally state Enforced’s intention if
the breach
was not remedied. In those circumstances, I conclude that the first
demand was not in compliance with the
lex
commissoria
and was defective.’
[12]
The reasoning of the learned judge, with respect, does not withstand
scrutiny. Once there was
an event of default, there was no duty on
Enforced to notify Verifika that it intends to call up the security
as one of the options
available to it.
[1]
Importantly, what Enforced conveyed was not an intention to enforce a
lex
commissoria
,
but an indication that there was a breach and a demand for payment of
the arrears. Three business days after this written demand,
absent
the breach having been remedied, an event of default occurred.
Accordingly, Enforced became entitled to accelerate payment
of all
amounts owing and to call up the security in terms of clause 11.2 of
the loan agreement. An event of default had occurred
inasmuch
as no interest had been paid by Verifika between the advance date (6
June 2019) and 24 February 2020. The decision to
accelerate payment
and perfect the security was taken by Enforced on 28 January 2020.
Verifika only paid the arrear interest on
24 February 2020. By then
the security had been perfected and the total amount, including
interest, had become due.
[13]
Once the first written demand was valid, Enforced could perfect the
security on 28 January 2020
and accelerate payment of the amounts
outstanding, as it had done. In the circumstances, Dippenaar J ought
to have held in the
main application that upon the failure by
Verifika to pay the arrear interest within three business days of the
first written demand,
Enforced became entitled, in terms of the
provisions of the loan agreement, to accelerate payment of the full
amount then owing
and to call up its security without further notice.
This conclusion renders it unnecessary to consider the legal effect
of the
two further written demands. It follows that the appeal under
case number 6183/2020 must succeed with costs, including the costs
of
two counsel.
[14]
Turning to the appeal in respect of the costs of the
counter-application under case number 14799/2020.
The high court
found that the application for Verifika’s winding up was
fatally defective on the basis that no valid certificate
of security
in terms of s 346(3) of the Companies Act 61 of 1973 had been filed.
The appellants have not sought to assail
that finding. The high court
dismissed the counter-application on that basis alone, without having
to consider its merits. In the
circumstances, it follows that the
order as to costs was correctly granted, and the appeal in respect
thereof must fail.
[15]
As to costs: Insofar as the costs of the counter application under
case number
6183/2020
are concerned, those must obviously follow the result. The costs of
the main application are less straightforward. The
main application
succeeded in having Ms Torres’ shareholding in Verifika set
aside and restored to Mr Laferla. To that extent
the main application
was successful. However, sight cannot be lost of the fact that what
precipitated the dispute between the parties,
was Mr Laferla having
deliberately caused Verifika, a personal liability company of which
he was a director and shareholder, to
breach its obligations to
Enforced by failing to effect payment when due. Ms Torres had made
plain in her answering affidavit,
that she was intent on avoiding
costly and protracted litigation. According to Ms Torres, Mr Woodnutt
had personally delivered
the first demand to Verifika’s chosen
domicilium. That was confirmed by the latter on oath. Those
allegations in Ms Torres’
answering affidavit, had been
preceded by a version in Mr Laferla’s founding affidavit that
whilst he did have knowledge
of all three demands, they had not been
sent to him; were not ‘proper’ breach notices
according to the loan agreement
and had not been sent to the chosen
domicilium. In his replying affidavit, Mr Laferla contended that the
first demand was not a
breach letter; that there was no proof of
delivery – he asserted that there was no confirmatory affidavit
from Lynn, despite
the fact that Ms Lynn worked as the receptionist
at Verifika’s chosen domicilium; that both Ms Torres and him
were overseas
at the time and that the demand was not given to him.
As mentioned already, the first demand did however comply with clause
11.2
of the loan agreement.
[16]
In his founding affidavit, Mr Laferla asserted:
‘
43.2
It was an express; alternatively tacit; further alternatively implied
term of the agreement that the amount of interest would
be
communicated to me on a monthly basis, and demand would be made for
same.
43.3 Alternatively, in
accordance with commercial practice, the amount of interest would be
communicated to me on a monthly basis,
and demand would be made for
same.
43.4 I was therefore
entitled to receive demand for the outstanding interest, in order to
effect payment of same.’
As
a qualified chartered accountant and auditor, it was disingenuous for
Mr Laferla to assert that further notice was required before
payment
became due and payable. Mr Laferla had, in effect, borrowed the money
in his personal capacity from Verifika presumably
upon the same or
similar terms to those afforded by Enforced. He would accordingly
have been obliged to make monthly interest payments
to Verifika in
respect of those obligations. The monthly interest charges, he would
have had to raise upon himself and receive
in Verifika in his
capacity as Verifika’s accountant and financial director. Once
Verifika received the monthly payments
from Mr Laferla, it logically
would have been obliged to pay those on to Enforced. Thus, however,
one looks at it, Mr Laferla ought
to have been fully aware of his
obligations as to payment, yet refused to honour same, by raising
what may be described as untenable
dilatory defences. Verifika had
not paid either the interest or any part of the capital until 24
February 2020, yet Mr Laferla
had enjoyed the benefits of the loan
agreement. Accordingly, the unreasonable refusal on the part of Mr
Lafela to make good his
obligations bordered on the dishonest. In
these circumstances, despite their partial success in the main
application, Mr Laferla
and Verifika should jointly and severally be
liable for those costs. It is also appropriate that, as contended on
behalf of the
appellants, they be paid on a punitive scale, because
in terms of clause 16.1 of the loan agreement all legal costs
incurred by
either party in consequence of any default shall be
payable on a punitive scale.
[17]
In the result, the following order is made:
1 The appeal under case
number 6183/2020 succeeds with costs, including the costs of two
counsel.
2 Paragraphs 3 and 4 of
the order of the high court are set aside and substituted as follows:
‘
(3)
In the counter application, the second applicant is ordered to pay to
the first respondent an amount of R1 361 704.74 together
with
interest thereon at the rate of 10% per annum
a
tempore morae
;
(4) The applicants shall
pay the costs of the application and counter-application, including
the costs of two counsel, jointly and
severally, the one paying the
other to be absolved, such costs to be paid on an attorney-client
scale.’
3
The appeal under case number 14799/2020 is dismissed with costs.
______________________
G SALIE
ACTING
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
For appellants: S
Burger SC (with him S Georgiou)
Instructed by: Hahn
& Hahn Attorneys, Pretoria
Webbers,
Bloemfontein
For respondents: C
Georgiades SC (with him R Bosman)
Instructed
by: Messina Incorporated,
Johannesburg
Honey
Inc, Attorneys, Bloemfontein.
[1]
See
Winter
v South African Railways and Harbours
1929
AD 100
at 105-6;
Chesterfield
Investments
(Pty) Ltd v Venter
1972
(3) SA 777
(T) at 780F-H.
sino noindex
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