Case Law[2023] ZASCA 134South Africa
Mantis Investments Holdings v De Jager N O (696/2022) [2023] ZASCA 134; 2024 (3) SA 431 (SCA) (18 October 2023)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
18 October 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Sections 44 and 151 of the Insolvency Act – Master’s decision admitting a creditor’s claim against a company in liquidation stands unless set aside on review in terms of s 151 thereof. Section 31 of Insolvency Act – in an action to set aside a collusive disposition – no entitlement to contest a proved claim of creditor.
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: Supreme Court of Appeal
South Africa: Supreme Court of Appeal
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: Supreme Court of Appeal
>>
2023
>>
[2023] ZASCA 134
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Mantis Investments Holdings v De Jager N O (696/2022) [2023] ZASCA 134; 2024 (3) SA 431 (SCA) (18 October 2023)
Mantis Investments Holdings v De Jager N O (696/2022) [2023] ZASCA 134; 2024 (3) SA 431 (SCA) (18 October 2023)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
Links to summary
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZASCA/Data/2023_134.html
sino date 18 October 2023
THE
SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH
AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case
No. 696/2022
In the matter between:
MANTIS INVESTMENTS
HOLDINGS (PTY) LIMITED FIRST APPELLANT
ADRIAN JOHN FAULKNER
GARDINER SECOND
APPELLANT
and
WERNER DE JAGER
N.O.
FIRST
RESPONDENT
CAROL-ANN SCHRӦDER
N.O.
SECOND
RESPONDENT
Neutral
Citation:
Mantis
Investments Holdings v De Jager N O
(696/2022)
[2023] ZASCA
134 (18 October 2023)
Coram:
PONNAN and MBATHA JJA,
KATHREE-SETILOANE, KEIGHTLEY and UNTERHALTER AJJA
Heard:
16 August 2023
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties’ representatives
via email, publication on the
Supreme Court of Appeal website and
release to SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be
11:00 am on 18 October 2023.
Summary:
Sections 44 and 151 of the Insolvency
Act – Master’s decision admitting a creditor’s
claim against a company in
liquidation stands unless set aside on
review in terms of s 151 thereof. Section 31 of Insolvency Act –
in an action to set
aside a collusive disposition – no
entitlement to contest a proved claim of creditor.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Eastern Cape Division of
the High Court, Makanda (Beneke AJ) sitting as a court of first
instance:
The
appeal is dismissed with costs.
JUDGMENT
Kathree-Setiloane
AJA (Ponnan and Mbatha JJA, Keightley and Unterhalter AJJA
concurring):
[1]
Werner
de Jager, the first respondent and Carol Ann-Schröder, the
second respondent (the liquidators), are the duly appointed
joint
liquidators of No. 1 Watt Street (Pty) Ltd (Watt
Street).
[1]
Mantis Investment
Holdings (Pty) Ltd (Mantis), the first appellant, is a shareholder in
Watt Street. Mr Adrian John Faulkner Gardiner
(Mr Gardiner), the
second appellant, is a director of both Mantis and Watt Street.
[2]
[2]
The appellants appeal against the judgment
and order of Beneke AJ in the Eastern Cape Division of the High
Court, Makanda (the high
court) in which it,
inter
alia,
made an order that the appellants
are not lawfully entitled to contest the claims proved by the Eastern
Cape Development Corporation
(ECDC) in the liquidation proceedings of
Watt Street. The matter before the high court proceeded by way of a
special case in terms
of rule 33(1) of the Uniform Rules of Court.
[3]
The special case has its genesis in an
action, which the liquidators instituted against the appellants to
set aside a collusive
disposition of the assets of Watt Street. The
agreed facts which form the background to the action are that, during
2005, ECDC
advanced certain monies to Bushman Sands Development (Pty)
Ltd (Bushman Sands). Watt Street bound itself as surety and
co-principal
debtor, with Bushman Sands, to ECDC.
[4]
As
a result of the failure of Bushman Sands to repay the loan to ECDC,
the latter instituted an action in the Eastern Cape Division
of the
High Court, Gqeberha (Gqeberha high court)
[3]
against Watt Street and Bushman Sands for,
inter
alia
,
payment of the amount of about R19 million (the ECDC action). Watt
Street defended the ECDC action.
[5]
Shortly
before the commencement of the trial in the ECDC action, Mantis,
represented by Mr Gardiner, brought an application in the
Gqeberha
high court,
[4]
for the
liquidation of Watt Street. Mantis contended, in this application,
that it was a creditor of Watt Street for an amount
of about R2.5
million arising from certain unsecured and interest free loans
advanced to Watt Street, without specified repayment
terms. In
November 2014, the Gqeberha high court placed Watt Street in final
winding-up.
[6]
ECDC
and Mantis proved claims against Watt Street in terms of s 44
[5]
of the Insolvency Act 24 of 1936 (the Act). Despite Mantis
disputing the claim of ECDC, it was proved and accepted by the
Master
of the Gqeberha high court (the Master). Mantis’ claim was also
accepted by the Master.
[7]
The
liquidators’ cause of action to set aside what it describes as
a collusive disposition is premised on s 31 of the Act.
[6]
The liquidators pleaded,
inter
alia
,
as follows in the particulars of claim:
‘
(a)
The appellants had embarked upon a restructuring of Watt Street which
resulted in the disposal and transfer of its assets, and
a
declaration and payment of a dividend in an amount exceeding R64
million from Watt Street to Mantis, as its shareholder;
(b) The appellants
effectively denuded Watt Street of all its significant assets despite
being aware that there existed an actual
or contingent liability due
by it to ECDC;
(c) As a result, Watt
Street was not in a position to meet its obligations to pay an amount
purportedly owing to ECDC;
(d) The disposal and
transfer of assets and the declaration and payment of a dividend, had
the effect of prejudicing the creditors
of Watt Street and, in
particular, ECDC;
(d) Watt Street, Mantis
and Mr Gardiner intended to defraud ECDC by deliberately prejudicing
and frustrating its claims against
Watt Street, such that there is no
prospect of any dividend to be paid in Watt Street; and
(e) As parties to the
collusive disposition, Mantis and Mr Gardiner are jointly and
severally liable to make good the loss caused
to Watt Street and are
obliged to pay a penalty in the amount of R64 million for its
benefit.’
[8]
The liquidators accordingly sought an
order: (a) setting aside the disposal and transfer of the assets and
the declaration and payment
of a dividend in an amount of not less
than R64 million in terms of s 31 of the Act; (b) that the said sum
be paid to the liquidators
of Watt Street; (c) declaring that Mantis
is to forfeit any claim it may have against Watt Street; (d) for
payment of compensation
and a penalty in the sum of R64 million; and
(e) for costs.
[9]
In answer, the appellants filed a plea in
which they admitted that ECDC had proved a claim against Watt Street
in the amount of
about R19 million. They, however, denied that the
amount claimed (or any lesser amount) was due, owing, and payable to
ECDC. They
also denied that the restructuring, rationalization and
declaration of a dividend constituted a collusive agreement which
prejudiced
the creditors of Watt Street, and more particularly ECDC.
The appellants furthermore pleaded that, from time to time, Bushman
Sands
(the principal debtor) had effected payments to ECDC and
continued to do so.
[10]
The liquidators filed a replication in
which they contended that: (a) the Master’s decision to admit
ECDC’s claim constitutes
an administrative act which exists as
a fact and has legal effect until set aside; (b) neither of the
appellants sought to review
the Master’s decision; (c)
consequently, any determination in the action that ECDC does not have
a claim against Watt Street
is precluded. In answer, the appellants
filed a rejoinder in which they contended that they are not bound, in
the action, by the
decision of the Master to admit the claim, as it
was made in the context of a claim by ECDC against Watt Street. They
also contended
that in law, it was incumbent upon the liquidators to
establish, as a prerequisite to a claim based on a collusive
disposition
that, at the date of the institution of the action, ECDC
was, and is, a creditor of the company in liquidation.
[11]
Two
questions arose, namely whether the appellants were entitled to: (a)
contest the claim of ECDC as against the principal debtor
(Bushman’s
Sands); and, (b) revisit the indebtedness and quantum of ECDC’s
claim against the surety. On 1 December 2020,
the high
court made an order separating those issues from the remainder of the
issues in the action.
[7]
[12]
Having
heard argument, the high court found that the decision of the Master
to accept a claim under s 44 of the Act constitutes
administrative
action, which exists and continues to have legal consequences until
and unless it is reviewed and set aside in terms
of s 151 of the
Act.
[8]
Relying for support on
the decision of
Bester
NO and Others v CTS Trailers (Pty) Ltd and Another
,
[9]
it concluded that ‘[a]bsent a successful application for the
review and setting aside of an acceptance of a claim, and even
despite objections to the claim having merit, the decision of the
Master to accept a creditor’s claim must stand’.
[10]
The high court accordingly made the following order:
‘
1.The
[appellants] are not lawfully entitled to revisit the indebtedness of
No. 1 Watt Street (Pty) Ltd (previously known as Mantis
Group
Holdings (Pty) Ltd) – (and referred hereinafter as “the
company in liquidation”) as set out in paragraphs
7.3, 7.4,
7.5, and 7.6 of the particulars of claim read with paragraphs 6 and 7
of the [appellants’] plea, and read further
with the
[respondents’] replication and the [appellants’]
rejoinder and the [respondents’] surrejoinder filed
of record;
2. The [appellants] are
not lawfully entitled to continue to contest the claims proved by
ECDC in the liquidation proceedings of
the company in liquidation, as
set out in paragraph 7.7 and 7.8 of the particulars of claim, read
with paragraphs 9 and 10 of the
[appellants] plea, and further read
with the [respondents’] replication, the [appellants’]
rejoinder, and the [respondents’]
surrejoinder filed of record;
and
3. The costs occasioned
by the separated special case, including the costs of the application
for separation, including the costs
of two counsel where so utilized,
shall be borne by the appellants.’
[13]
The appeal against the order of the high
court is before us with the leave of this Court. In my view, the
appeal can be disposed
of on a narrower basis than that foreshadowed
in the pleadings. Both the appellants and the liquidators appeared to
accept this
during argument in the appeal.
[14]
Section
44
[11]
of the Act deals
comprehensively with the procedure for the proof of liquidated claims
against an insolvent estate. In
Caldeira
v The Master and Another
,
Levinsohn J said that ‘[t]he proof of claim procedure enables
creditors to prove their claims in a relatively simple and
expeditious fashion’.
[12]
More recently in
Breda
N O v Master of the High Court, Kimberley
,
[13]
this Court observed that: ‘[a] presiding officer does not
adjudicate upon the claim as a court of law, is not required to
examine a claim too critically and only has to be satisfied that the
claim is
prima
facie
proved’.
[14]
Put
differently, the Master must examine the proof of claims’
documents to determine whether they disclose
prima
facie
the existence of an enforceable claim.
[15]
Where
a Master admits a claim, the Master cannot subsequently alter that
decision.
[15]
This does not,
however, mean that the Master’s decision to admit the claim is
conclusive and payable out of property of the
insolvent estate. That
is so because, at this stage, the admission of the claim is
provisional. This means that it is open to the
liquidator to dispute
the claim by following the procedure envisaged in s 45(3) of the Act
which provides:
‘
If
the trustee disputes a claim after it has been proved against the
estate at a meeting of creditors, he shall report the fact
in writing
to the Master and shall state in his report his reasons for disputing
the claim. Thereupon the Master may confirm the
claim, . . . reduce
or disallow the claim, and if he has done so, he shall forthwith
notify the claimant in writing: Provided that
such reduction or
disallowance shall not debar the claimant from establishing his claim
by an action at law, but subject to the
provisions of section
seventy-five
’.
[16]
If the liquidator is dissatisfied with the
Master’s decision to admit the claim of a creditor, he or she
may apply to court
to review it in terms of s 151 of the Act which
provides:
‘
Subject
to the provisions of section
fifty-seven
any person aggrieved by any decision, ruling, order or taxation of
the Master or by a decision, ruling or order of an officer presiding
at a meeting of creditors may bring it under review by the court and
to that end may apply to the court by motion, after notice
to the
Master or to the presiding officer, as the case may be and to any
person whose interests are affected: Provided that if
all or most of
the creditors are affected, notice to the trustee shall be deemed to
be notice to all such creditors; and provided
further that the court
shall not re-open any duly confirmed trustee’s account
otherwise than as is provided in section
one
hundred and twelve
.’
[17]
A
liquidator may not review the decision of the Master to admit the
claim, unless the liquidator has followed the procedure contemplated
in s 45(3) of the Act, which is peremptory.
[16]
A creditor who has unsuccessfully objected to the Master’s
decision to admit the claim, may take the Master’s decision
on
review in terms of s 151 of the Act.
[17]
The Master’s decision to reject a creditor’s proved claim
may also be taken on review by the aggrieved creditor. However,
where
no steps are taken to review the Master’s decision to admit or
reject a proved claim, that claim becomes conclusive
and enforceable
in law against the company in liquidation. In that event, the
Master’s decision would stand.
[18]
As the appellants, in the present matter,
did not challenge the Master’s decision to admit ECDC’s
claim in terms of
s 151 of the Act, the Master’s decision
stands. The
consequence is that ECDC is
factually and legally a creditor of the company in liquidation. The
appellants had a tailor-made remedy
in terms of the Act to review the
Master’s decision but did not do so.
[19]
The
legislature has provided parties in the position of the appellants
with a suite of statutory remedies. In argument, the appellants
appeared to accept that reliance on the common law as the basis to
assert a claim
, is bound to result in an incongruity with the
overall scheme of the Act. Any decision on that claim could
notionally be at odds
with the decision of the Master to admit such
claim to proof, where, as here, the Master was not cited nor afforded
an opportunity
to defend his or her decision.
It
follows that in circumstances such as the present, a litigant, in the
position of the appellants, who is aggrieved by a decision
of the
Master to admit to proof a claim against an insolvent estate, would
be restricted to the remedy of a review under s 151
of the Act.
[20]
Several consequences arise from the final winding-up of a company.
Foremost is the creation of a
concursus
creditorum,
the
effect of which was described by this Court in
Walker
v Syfret N O
:
[18]
‘
.
. . the hand of the law is laid upon the estate, and at once the
rights of the general body of creditors have to be taken into
consideration. No transaction can thereafter be entered into with
regard to estate matters by a single creditor to the prejudice
of the
general body. The claim of each creditor must be dealt with as it
existed at the issue of the order.’
[21] ECDC is
a creditor with a proved claim that is enforceable against Watt
Street. That decision has not been set
aside on review. It therefore
stands. The appellants, however, seek to avoid this legal consequence
by contending that it is incumbent
on the liquidators to establish,
as a pre-requisite to their claim that, at the date of institution of
the action ECDC was, and
is, a creditor in respect of the amount
claimed. To require this of the liquidators, in the face of ECDC’s
pre-existing proved
claim, is to negate the comprehensive set of
measures in the Act to protect creditors.
[22]
In the result, the appeal must fail. I make the following order:
The
appeal is dismissed with costs.
_______________________
F
KATHREE-SETILOANE
ACTING
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
For the appellants: A
Beyleveld SC
Instructed by:BLC
Attorneys, c/o Wheeldon Rushmere & Cole Inc, Grahamstown
Symington De Kok,
Bloemfontein
For the respondents:RG
Buchanan SC
Instructed by:Tabata
Smith Inc, c/o Nettletons Attorneys, Grahamstown
Webbers,
Bloemfontein
[1]
Watt Street
was
formerly known as Mantis Group Holdings (Pty) Ltd.
[2]
Mantis
and Mr Gardiner are referred to collectively as ‘the
appellants’ in the judgment.
[3]
Case
No. 1165/2012.
[4]
C
ase
No. 3805/14.
[5]
Section
44
of the
Insolvency Act, in
relevant part, provides:
‘
44
Proof of liquidated claims against estate
(1) Any person or the
representative of any person who has a liquidated claim against an
insolvent estate, the cause of which
arose before the sequestration
of that estate, may, at any time before the final distribution of
that estate in terms of section
one hundred and thirteen
, but
subject to the provisions of section
one hundred and four
,
prove that claim in the manner hereinafter provided: Provided that
no claim shall be proved against an estate after the expiration
of a
period of three months as from the conclusion of the second meeting
of creditors of the estate, except with leave of the
Court or the
Master, and on payment of such sum to cover the cost or any part
thereof, occasioned by the late proof of the claim,
as the Court or
Master may direct.
. . .
(3) A claim made against
an insolvent estate shall be proved at a meeting of the creditors of
that estate to the satisfaction
of the officer presiding at that
meeting, who shall admit or reject the claim: Provided that the
rejection of a claim shall not
debar the claimant from proving that
claim at a subsequent meeting of creditors or from establishing his
claim by an action at
law, but subject to the provisions of section
seventy-five
: and provided further that if a creditor has
twenty-four or more hours before the time advertised for the
commencement of a meeting
of creditors submitted to the officer who
is to preside at that meeting the affidavit and other documents
mentioned in subsection
(4), he shall be deemed to have tendered
proof of his claim at that meeting.
(4) Every such claim
shall be proved by affidavit in a form corresponding substantially
with Form C or D in the First Schedule
to this Act. That affidavit
may be made by the creditor or by any person fully cognizant of the
claim, who shall set forth in
the affidavit the facts upon which his
knowledge of the claim is based and the nature and particulars of
the claim, whether it
was acquired by cession after the institution
of the proceedings by which the estate was sequestrated, and if the
creditor holds
security therefor, the nature and particulars of that
security and in the case of security other than movable property
which
he has realized in terms of section
eighty-three
, the
amount at which he values the security. The said affidavit or a copy
thereof and any documents submitted in support of the
claim shall be
delivered at the office of the officer who is to preside at the
meeting of creditors not later than twenty-four
hours before the
advertised time of the meeting at which the creditor concerned
intends to prove the claim, failing which the
claim shall not be
admitted to proof at that meeting, unless the presiding officer is
of opinion that through no fault of the
creditor he has been unable
to deliver such evidences of his claim within the prescribed period:
Provided that if a creditor
has proved an incorrect claim, he may,
with the consent in writing of the Master given after consultation
with the trustee and
on such conditions as the Master may think fit
to impose correct his claim or submit a fresh correct claim.
(5) Any document by this
section required to be delivered before a meeting of creditors at
the office of the officer who is to
preside at that meeting, shall
be open for inspection at such office during office hours free of
charge by any creditor, the
trustee or the insolvent or the
representative of any of them.
(6) A claim against an
insolvent’s estate for payment of the purchase price of goods
sold and delivered to the insolvent
on an open account shall not be
admitted to proof unless a statement is submitted in support of such
claim showing the monthly
total and a brief description of the
purchases and payments for the full period of trading or for the
period of twelve months
immediately before the date of
sequestration, whichever is the lesser.
(7) The officer
presiding at any meeting of creditors may of his own motion or at
the request of the trustee or his agent or at
the request of any
creditor who has proved his claim, or his agent, call upon any
person present at the meeting who wishes to
prove or who has at any
time proved a claim against the estate to take an oath, to be
administered by the said officer, and to
submit to interrogation by
the said officer or by the trustee or his agent or by a creditor or
the agent of a creditor whose
claim has been proved, in regard to
the said claim.
(8) If any person who
wishes to prove or who has at any time proved a claim against the
estate is absent from a meeting of creditors
the officer who
presided or who presides thereat, may summon him in writing to
appear before him at a place and time stated in
the summons, for the
purpose of being interrogated by the said officer or by the trustee
or his agent or by a creditor or the
agent of a creditor whose claim
has been proved, and I he appears in answer to the summons the
provisions of subsection (7) shall
apply.
(9)
If any such person fails without reasonable excuse to appear in
answer to such summons or having appeared or when present
at any
meeting of creditors refuses to take the oath or to submit to the
said interrogation or to answer fully and satisfactorily
any lawful
question put to him, his claim, if already proved, may be expunged
by the Master, and if not yet proved, may be rejected.’
[6]
Section
31
of the
Insolvency Act provides
:
‘
31
Collusive dealings before sequestration
(1) After the
sequestration of a debtor’s estate the court may set aside any
transaction entered into by the debtor before
the sequestration,
whereby he, in collusion with another person, disposed of property
belonging to him in a manner which had
the effect of prejudicing his
creditors or of preferring one of his creditors above another.
(2) Any person who was a
party to such collusive disposition shall be liable to make good any
loss thereby caused to the estate,
by way of penalty, such sum as
the court may adjudge, not exceeding the amount by which he would
have benefited by such dealing
if it had not been set aside; and if
he is a creditor he shall also forfeit his claim against the estate.
(3) Such compensation
and penalty may be recovered in any action to set aside the
transaction in question.’
[7]
Order
of the Eastern Cape Division of the High Court, Makhanda:
De
Jager N O and Another v Mantis Investments Holdings (Pty) Ltd and
Another
[2021] ZAECGHC 120.
[8]
See para
16
below.
[9]
Bester
N O and Others v CTS Trailers (Pty) Ltd and Another
[2020]
ZAWCHC 169; 2021 (4) SA 167 (WCC).
[10]
Bester
paras
21-27.
Although
Bester
deals with a decision made by the Master in terms of
s 46
of the
Insolvency Act and
not
s 44
, it affirms the principle that, a
decision taken by the Master in terms of the
Insolvency Act has
legal consequences until set aside.
[11]
See
fn 6 above.
[12]
Caldeira
v The Master and Another
1996
(1) SA 868
(NPD) at 873H-874F.
[13]
Breda
N O v Master of the High Court, Kimberley
[2015]
ZASCA 166.
[14]
Ibid para 23.
[15]
Ben
Rossouw Motors v Druker NO and Others
1975
(1) SA 821
(W) at 823;
[1975] 1 All SA 311
(W) at 314.
[16]
Estate
Jeewa v The Master and Bukhsh
(1927)
NLR 86
;
Estate
Wilson v Estate Giddy, Giddy and White and Others
1937 AD 239.
[17]
Noord-kaaplandse
Ko-op Lewendehawe Agentskap Bpk v Van Rooyen and Others
1977
(1) SA 403
(NC) at 406-407.
[18]
Walker
v Syfret NO
1911 AD 141.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Mawerco (Pty) Ltd v Sithole and Others (322/2023) [2024] ZASCA 91 (10 June 2024)
[2024] ZASCA 91Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa97% similar
Media 24 (Pty) Ltd v Nhleko and Another (109/22) [2023] ZASCA 77 (29 May 2023)
[2023] ZASCA 77Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa97% similar
Makhala & Another v S (438/20) [2022] ZASCA 19; 2022 (1) SACR 485 (SCA); [2022] 2 All SA 367 (SCA) (18 February 2022)
[2022] ZASCA 19Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa97% similar
Snyman v De Kooker N O and Others (400/2023) [2024] ZASCA 119; [2024] 4 All SA 47 (SCA); 2024 (6) SA 136 (SCA) (2 August 2024)
[2024] ZASCA 119Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa97% similar
Scholtz and Another v De Kock NO and Others (312/2023) [2024] ZASCA 132 (2 October 2024)
[2024] ZASCA 132Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa97% similar