Case Law[2023] ZASCA 107South Africa
Firm-O-Seal CC v Prinsloo & Van Eeden Inc and Another (483/22) [2023] ZASCA 107; 2024 (6) SA 52 (SCA) (27 June 2023)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
27 June 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Locus standi - section 137(4) of the Companies Act 71 of 2008 - special plea of lack of locus standi to institute legal proceedings.
Judgment
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## Firm-O-Seal CC v Prinsloo & Van Eeden Inc and Another (483/22) [2023] ZASCA 107; 2024 (6) SA 52 (SCA) (27 June 2023)
Firm-O-Seal CC v Prinsloo & Van Eeden Inc and Another (483/22) [2023] ZASCA 107; 2024 (6) SA 52 (SCA) (27 June 2023)
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sino date 27 June 2023
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case no: 483/22
In the matter between:
FIRM-O-SEAL
CC
APPELLANT
and
WYNAND PRINSLOO &
VAN EEDEN INC. FIRST
RESPONDENT
DERICK VAN
WYK SECOND
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Firm-O-Seal
CC v Prinsloo & Van Eeden Inc. and Another
(483/22)
[2023] ZASCA 107
(27 June 2023)
Coram:
PONNAN and MEYER JJA and KATHREE-SETILOANE AJA
Heard:
19 May 2023
Delivered:
27
June 2023
Summary:
Locus standi -
section 137(4)
of the
Companies Act
71 of 2008
- special plea of lack of locus standi to institute legal
proceedings.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Mpumalanga Division of the
High Court, Middelburg (Ratshibvumo J, sitting as court of first
instance):
1
The appeal is upheld with costs.
2
The order of the high court is set aside and replaced with the
following:
‘
The
special plea of lack of
locus standi
is dismissed with costs.’
JUDGMENT
Ponnan JA and
Kathree-Setiloane AJA (Meyer JA concurring):
[1]
The appellant, Firm-O-Seal CC, instituted action in the Mpumalanga
Division of the
High Court, Middelburg (the high court) against the
first respondent, Wynand Prinsloo & Van Eeden Inc., and the
second respondent,
Mr Derick van Wyk, who, at the relevant time,
served as an attorney and director of the first respondent.
[2]
Four claims were asserted arising out of professional legal services
rendered by the
respondents to the appellant. The claims were met by
five special pleas - four of prescription and one of lack of
locus
standi
.
The parties agreed,
pursuant to Rule 33(4) of the Uniform Rules of Court, that the
special pleas be adjudicated prior to and separately
from the
remaining issues and the high court made an order to that effect.
After hearing the parties,
the high court upheld
the special plea of lack of
locus standi
and consequently dismissed the claims with costs. It did not think it
necessary to consider the four remaining special pleas of
prescription or to enter into the substantive merits of the matter.
It took the view that the finding on the special plea of lack
of
locus standi
was dispositive of the matter. The appeal is with the leave of that
court.
[3]
The special plea was framed thus:
‘
1.5.
SPECIAL PLEA: LACK OF
LOCUS
STANDI
1.5.1. The
summons was issued in the name of and on instruction of the directors
of “Firm-O-Seal CC” on
2 December 2020.
1.5.2. The
particulars of claim appended to the summons at paragraph 2 contain
the averment that the respondent was
placed under business rescue on
5 June 2019.
1.5.3. On 27
January 2021, the attorneys for the appointed business rescue
practitioner, confirmed that the business
rescue practitioner Mr
Mahier Tayob did not authorize the action already instituted against
the defendants . . .
1.5.4. On 2
February 2021, the defendants requested that the respondent furnish
them with a power of attorney as contemplated
under Rule 7 . . .
1.5.5. On 4
March 2021, the respondent favoured the defendants with its reply
under Rule 7 . . .
1.5.6.
Annexure “
A”
as read with annexure “
C”
confirmed the fact that when the process was issued, the
plaintiff has not resolved and was consequently not authorised to
have
bought the action.
1.5.7. The
director(s) of the respondent in bringing the action acted outside
the scope and ambit of section 137(2)
(b)
of the Companies Act
71 of 2011 (the “Act”).
1.5.8.
Consequently the bringing of the action is void as contemplated under
section 137(4) of the Act.
1.5.9. In the
premises, the plaintiff did not resolve and therefore lacked
locus
standi
to have instituted the action and on that basis the
particulars of claim as read with annexures “A” and “C”
cannot sustain a cause of action.’
[4]
The special plea was answered by the following replication:
‘
10.1
The plaintiff denies the defendants’ allegation that the
plaintiff does not have locus standi and puts
the defendants to the
proof thereof.
10.2
. . . the plaintiff further pleads as follows:
10.2.1 On the 25
th
of November 2020, Mr Schutte of Karien Schutte Attorneys, forwarded
to Mr Essop, who at all material times represented the business
rescue practitioner, the draft particulars of claim in this action.
10.2.2 Mr Essop was
requested by Mr Schutte to obtain the business rescue practitioner’s
consent to proceed with the
issuing of the action.
10.2.3 On the 2
nd
of December 2020, Mr Essop confirmed to Mr Schutte that the business
rescue practitioner had consented to the institution of the
action.
10.2.4 Karien
Schutte Attorneys accordingly proceeded with the issuing of summons.
10.2.5 However, it
later transpired that in confirming consent to proceed, Mr Essop had
confused this action with another
matter, which was also dealt with
by Karien Schutte Attorneys, also on behalf of the plaintiff.
10.2.6 The business
rescue practitioner has upon learning the correct situation, and
after considering the merits of the plaintiff’s
case against
the defendants, mandated and authorised the action by plaintiff
against the defendants, for which purpose the business
rescue
practitioner on 3 March 2021 has signed a written power of attorney.
The power of attorney is attached to the plaintiff’s
reply in
terms of Uniform Rule 7(1) and is repeated here, as if specifically
pleaded.
10.2.7 The business
rescue practitioner has also ratified the steps already undertaken by
the plaintiff in this action.
10.3
The plaintiff accordingly denies the defendants’ allegation
that the plaintiff does not have
locus standi and puts the defendants
to the proof thereof.
10.4
Alternatively, the plaintiff pleads that the institution of the
action was ratified in terms of
Section 137(4)
of the
Companies Act
71 of 2008
by the business rescue practitioner.
10.5
Section 137(4)
. . . provides:
If, during a company’s
business rescue proceedings, the board, or one or more directors of
the company, purports to take any
action on behalf of the company
that requires the approval of the practitioner, that action is void
unless approved by the practitioner.
. . .’
[5]
We have quoted
in
extenso
from
the pleadings to show that the high court appears to have
misapprehended the enquiry. It approached the enquiry on the basis
of
the general rule that ‘a contract or agreement which is
expressly prohibited by statute is illegal and null and void’
(
Neugarten
and Others v Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd
[1]
).
However, with respect to the high court, that was to misconstrue the
enquiry.
[6]
Locus
standi in iudicio
is
an access mechanism controlled by the court itself.
[2]
Generally,
the requirements for
locus
standi
are these: the plaintiff must have an adequate interest in the
subject matter of the litigation, usually described as a direct
interest in the relief sought; the interest must not be too remote;
the interest must be actual, not abstract or academic; and,
it must
be a current interest and not a hypothetical one.
[3]
Standing is thus not just a procedural question, it is also a
question of substance, concerning as it does the sufficiency of a
litigant’s interest in the proceedings.
[4]
The sufficiency of the interest depends on the particular facts in
any given situation.
[5]
The real enquiry being whether the events constitute a wrong as
against the litigant.
[6]
[7]
T
he
high court failed to consider whether, in each instance, the claim
asserted was indeed in the nature of an ‘action’
that
‘requires the approval of the practitioner’ as
contemplated by the section. Absent that determination, the special
plea could not succeed. This, because where
locus
standi
is challenged, it must be dealt with on the assumption that all
allegations of fact relied upon by the party whose
locus
standi
is attacked are true.
[7]
Properly construed, as the debate at the bar in this Court appeared
to demonstrate, the question perhaps is rather whether the
claims as
pleaded are bad in law. But, that is not before us for the present
and need not detain us.
[8]
On the strength of its finding on voidness, the high court
concluded that
ex post facto
ratification was not possible. As
the former has been found to be wanting, the latter must suffer a
similar fate. In any event,
it is clear from the
common cause facts that the practitioner had consented to the
institution of the action. Significantly, in
this regard, well before
the institution of the action the appellant’s attorney sought
the practitioner’s consent.
On 2 December 2020, the
practitioner’s representative confirmed that the practitioner
had consented to the institution of
the action. Thereafter, the
appellant’s attorney proceeded to issue the summons.
[9]
Approximately two months later, there was an intimation that the
practitioner may
not have consented because his representative had
confused this action with another. However, once the practitioner
became aware
that there may have been some confusion, he signed a
power of attorney authorising the institution of the proceedings.
Accordingly,
the members of the appellant had the requisite approval
of the practitioner to institute the action against the respondents.
[10]
It follows that the conclusion reached by the high court that the
appellant lacked
locus
standi
to
approach the court for the relief sought cannot be supported. It
remains to observe that there is little to commend the approach
of
the high court. In confining itself to the single issue, as it did,
the approach of the high court ‘opened the door to
a fractional
disposal of proceedings and the piecemeal hearings of appeals on each
part so disposed of’.
[8]
[11]
In the result:
1
The appeal is upheld with costs.
2
The order of the high court is set aside and replaced with the
following:
‘
The
special plea of lack of
locus standi
is dismissed with costs.’
_________________
VM PONNAN
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
________________________
F KATHREE-SETILOANE
ACTING JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
appellant:
PJ
Greyling
Instructed
by:
Karien
Schutte Attorneys, Johannesburg
Maree
Partners, Bloemfontein
For
respondent:
SJ
Myburg with E Mann
Instructed
by
Ngwane
Mamod Inc, Johannesburg
Matsepes
Attorneys, Bloemfontein
[1]
Neugarten
and Others v Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd
1989
(1) SA 797
(A) at 808D - 809E.
[2]
Watt v
Sea Plant Products Bpk
[1998]
4 All SA 109
(C) at 113H.
[3]
Four
Wheel Drive CC v Leshni Rattan NO
[2018] ZASCA 124
para 7.
[4]
Wessels
en Andere v Sinodale Kerkkantoor Kommissie van die Nederduitse
Gereformeerde Kerk, OVS
1978 (3) SA 716
(A) at 725H;
Cabinet
of the Transitional Government for the Territory of South West
Africa v Eins
1988 (3) SA 369
11 (A) at 388B-E.
[5]
Jacobs
en 'n Ander v Waks en Andere
[1991] ZASCA 152
;
1992 (1) SA 521
(A) at 534D);
Gross
and Others v Pentz
1996 (4) SA 617 (A) 632 B-D.
[6]
Muller
v De Wet NO & Others
2001(2) SA 489 (W).
[7]
Kuter v
SA Pharmacy Board
1953
(2) SA 307
(T) at 313;
Letseng
Diamonds Limited v JCI Limited and Others
[2007] ZAGPHC 119
para 13.
[8]
Theron
NO and Another v Loubser NO and Others: In Re: Theron NO and Another
v Loubser and Others
[2013] ZASCA 195
;
[2014] 1 All SA 460
(SCA);
2014 (3) SA 323
(SCA)
para 19.
sino noindex
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