Case Law[2023] ZASCA 166South Africa
Islandsite Investments (Pty) Ltd v The National Director of Public Prosecutions and Others (894/2022) [2023] ZASCA 166; 2024 (5) SA 20 (SCA) (1 December 2023)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
1 December 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Company Law –– restraint order under the Prevention of Organised Crime Act 121 of 1998 – authority to represent company in business rescue – directors have no such authority – authority residing with business rescue practitioners.
Judgment
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## Islandsite Investments (Pty) Ltd v The National Director of Public Prosecutions and Others (894/2022) [2023] ZASCA 166; 2024 (5) SA 20 (SCA) (1 December 2023)
Islandsite Investments (Pty) Ltd v The National Director of Public Prosecutions and Others (894/2022) [2023] ZASCA 166; 2024 (5) SA 20 (SCA) (1 December 2023)
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sino date 1 December 2023
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case
no: 894/2022
In
the matter between:
ISLANDSITE
INVESTMENTS 180 (PTY) LTD APPELLANT
and
THE
NATIONAL DIRECTOR OF
PUBLIC
PROSECUTIONS
FIRST
RESPONDENT
IQBAL
MEER SHARMA
SECOND RESPONDENT
NULANE
INVESTMENTS 204 (PTY) LTD THIRD
RESPONDENT
KURT
ROBERT KNOOP NO
FOURTH RESPONDENT
JOHAN
LOUIS KLOPPER NO FIFTH
RESPONDENT
ISSAR
GLOBAL LTD SIXTH
RESPONDENT
ISSAR
CAPITAL LTD
SEVENTH RESPONDENT
TARINA
PATEL-SHARMA EIGHTH
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Islandsite Investments 180 (Pty) Ltd
v
National Director of Public Prosecutions and Others
(Case no
894/2022)
[2023] ZASCA 166
(1 December 2023)
Coram:
GORVEN, MOTHLE and MEYER JJA and KATHREE-SETILOANE and
UNTERHALTER AJJA
Heard
:
3 November 2023
Delivered
:
1 December 2023
Summary:
Company Law –– restraint order under the
Prevention of
Organised Crime Act 121 of 1998
– authority to represent
company in business rescue – directors have no such authority –
authority residing with
business rescue practitioners.
### ORDER
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Free State Division of the High Court, Bloemfontein
(Musi JP, sitting as court of first instance):
1
The appeal is dismissed.
2
The directors of Islandsite Investments 180 (Pty) Ltd, Ms Ragavan and
Mr Chawla,
are directed to pay the costs of the appeal jointly
and severally, the one paying, the other to be absolved.
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Gorven
JA (Mothle and Meyer JJA and Kathree-Setiloane and Unterhalter AJJA
concurring)
[1]
At all material times, the appellant, Islandsite Investments
180
(Pty) Ltd (the company) has been in business rescue in terms of
Chapter 6 of the Companies Act 71 of 2008 (the Act). The fourth
and
fifth respondents on appeal were appointed business rescue
practitioners (the BRPs). The first respondent, the National Director
of Public Prosecutions (the NDPP), launched an application in the
Free State Division of the High Court of South Africa, Bloemfontein,
(the high court) in terms of s 26(3) of the Prevention of
Organised Crime Act 121 of 1998 (the POCA litigation). It was brought
on an
ex parte
basis, without prior notice to the company, the
BRPs or the other respondents. The high court granted a provisional
restraint order
in respect of property of the company and also of the
second, third, sixth, seventh and eighth respondents. When reference
is made
to the POCA litigation in this judgment, it is to the
provisional restraint order proceedings only. It goes no further.
[2]
The order prompted the directors of the company (the
directors) to
appoint a firm of attorneys, BDK Attorneys, purporting to do so
on behalf of the company. Those attorneys delivered
a notice of
intention to oppose and an answering affidavit, deposed to by one of
the directors. This sought to oppose the confirmation
of the
provisional restraint order on behalf of the company. Attorneys
appointed by the BRPs also delivered an affidavit. In it,
the BRPs
indicated that there was a dispute between the directors and the BRPs
as to which of them was authorised to represent
the company in the
POCA litigation.
[3]
In
response, the NDPP launched an application in terms of Uniform rule
7(1).
[1]
This allows a party to
dispute the authority of attorneys who purport to represent another
party. The directors opposed that application,
again purporting to
represent the company. The application proceeded on the issue of
whether the directors, on the one hand, or
the BRPs, on the
other, had the requisite authority to appoint attorneys to represent
the company. The matter was dealt with
without reference to the
merits of the POCA litigation. The confirmation or otherwise of the
provisional restraint order was held
over pending the determination
of the issue of representation.
[4]
On 11 August 2021, Musi JP granted the following order:
‘
1
BDK Attorneys do not have authority to act on behalf of the [company]
in these proceedings.
2
The directors and or shareholders of the [company] have no standing
to oppose these proceedings without the approval of
the business
rescue practitioners.’
The
appeal against that order is before us with the leave of this court.
[5]
The parties agreed that either the directors, or the
BRPs, have the
requisite authority to represent the company in the POCA litigation
and not both of them.
[6]
It is as well briefly to sketch the course of the POCA
litigation.
The court was approached on an
ex parte
basis and a
provisional restraint order was granted by way of a rule
nisi
with interim relief. Parties were called upon to show cause why the
provisional restraint order should not be made final. That
is the
stage reached by the present POCA litigation. Should a final order be
made, that would restrain the property, pending a
criminal trial and
any subsequent order confiscating the restrained property. Thus, the
restraint order, even if dubbed final,
is temporary and designed only
to ensure that the property is not dissipated should a conviction
ensue and, in addition, an order
is thereafter granted confiscating
the property in question. If neither eventuates, the restraint order
will be discharged.
[7]
The point of departure in this matter is s 66(1)
of the Act,
which reads:
‘
The
business and affairs of a company must be managed by or under the
direction of its board, which has the authority to exercise
all of
the powers and perform any of the functions of the company, except to
the extent that this Act or the company’s Memorandum
of
Incorporation provides otherwise.’
This
is a general provision. In general terms, then, and unless other
parts of the Act provide otherwise, the directors have authority
to
represent the company. In the present matter, the question is whether
the provisions of chapter 6 of the Act concerning business
rescue do
so.
[8]
The contention of the directors was that they alone have
authority to
represent the company in the POCA litigation. While they accepted
that the BRPs were authorised to perform certain
functions under the
business rescue provisions of the Act, this did not extend to the
POCA litigation.
[9]
Their point of departure was the definition of ‘business
rescue’ in s 128 of the Act:
‘“
business
rescue” means proceedings to facilitate the rehabilitation
of a company that is financially distressed by providing
for-
(i) the
temporary supervision of the company, and of the management of its
affairs, business and property;
(ii) a
temporary moratorium on the rights of claimants against the company
or in respect of property in its possession;
and
(iii) the
development and implementation, if approved, of a plan to rescue the
company by restructuring its affairs,
business, property, debt and
other liabilities, and equity in a manner that maximises the
likelihood of the company continuing
in existence on a solvent basis
or, if it is not possible for the company to so continue in
existence, results in a better return
for the company's creditors or
shareholders than would result from the immediate liquidation of the
company.’
They
submitted that the POCA litigation did not ‘facilitate the
rehabilitation’ of the company. It was thus not ‘business
rescue related litigation’. The function of representing the
company cannot be said to be part of the temporary supervision
of the
company, or of the management of its affairs, business, and property.
The authority of the BRPs is limited to day to day
management of the
company and the compilation of a business rescue plan. Beyond those
narrow functions, they have no authority.
Accordingly, the BRPs have
no authority to act on behalf of the company in the POCA litigation.
The default position set out in
s 66(1) prevails and the
authority of the directors to represent the company remains intact.
[10]
The
directors set some store by
Ragavan
and Others v Optimum Coal Terminal (Pty) Ltd and Others
.
[2]
In that
matter, Tegeta Exploration and Resources (Pty) Ltd (Tegeta) was in
business rescue. It was a creditor of Optimum Coal Terminal
(Pty) Ltd
(OCT) which was also in business rescue. The business rescue
practitioners of OCT published a business rescue plan. The
directors
of Tegeta contended that they had a right to vote on the plan. This
court rejected that argument, finding that it was
the business rescue
practitioners who enjoyed that right. In arriving at this conclusion,
this court held that the ‘temporary
supervision of the
company’
[3]
and ‘full management control’
[4]
included the right to vote on the plan.
[11]
Despite that outcome, the directors relied on a
dictum
in
Ragavan
. This was:
‘
.
. . whether or not the board retains any power on strategic matters
of the company during business rescue is a matter we do not
need to
determine because, as I have explained, the practitioner enjoys the
power to vote as a creditor on the debtor’s plan.’
[5]
They
submitted that this meant that they retained power on ‘strategic
matters of the company during business rescue’.
But that does
not properly understand the
dictum
. It simply recognised a
category of decision making power but found it unnecessary to decide
who enjoyed this power.
[12]
They also
relied on two
dicta
of this court in
Tayob
and Another v Shiva Uranium (Pty) Ltd and Others
.
[6]
‘
Unless
indicated otherwise, “company” must bear its ordinary
meaning and the same meaning as in s 129, that is, the
company
represented by its board.’
[7]
and:
‘
As
I have said, the court a quo based its decision to dismiss the
applicants’ application essentially on the provisions of
s
137(2)
(a)
of
the Act. It provides that during a company’s business rescue
proceedings, each director of the company must continue to
exercise
the functions of a director, “subject to the authority of the
practitioner”. Subsection 137(2)
(a)
must, of course, be read with the provisions of Chapter 6 of the Act
and those of s 140 in particular. They circumscribe the ambit
of the
authority of the practitioner. Any function of a director that falls
outside of that ambit, cannot be subject to the approval
of the
practitioner. It follows that s 137(2)
(a)
only affects the exercise of the functions of a director in respect
of matters falling within the ambit of the authority of the
practitioner. As I have shown, the appointment of a practitioner does
not fall within the powers or authority of a practitioner.’
[8]
The
directors sought support from these
dicta
for their contention
that they retained the authority to represent the company in the POCA
litigation. But these
dicta
simply give effect to the default
position set out in s 66(1), and dealt with above. A similar
submission had been advanced
in
Ragavan
in support of the
contention of those directors that they had the right to vote on the
business rescue plan of OCT. Referring to
Tayob
, this court
gave that argument short shrift:
‘
In
that matter, the court had to address a narrow issue of who of the
board or an affected person represented “the company”
in
appointing a new practitioner in terms of s 139(3) of the Act, in
situations where a practitioner dies, resigns, or is removed
from
office. The court held that the appointment of a practitioner did not
fall within the “full management powers”
or authority of
a practitioner.
In
that case, the power of the board was found in s 139(3) and was not
expressly qualified. In other words, that function fell outside
the
ambit of the authority of a practitioner and could not be subject to
the approval of a practitioner as contemplated in s 137(2)
(a)
of
the Act.’
[9]
[13]
In
Tayob
, the company in question had been placed in voluntary
business rescue. As such, the directors were empowered and obliged,
in terms
of s 129(3), to appoint BRPs. Although they had done
so, the BRPs had resigned and a court order had replaced one of them,
and directed that the Companies and Intellectual Property Commission
(the Commission) appoint another. After this, one of the two
replacement BRPs intended to resign. Prior to resigning, that BRP and
the remaining one had resolved to appoint another to replace
the
resigning BRP. On a construction of s 129(3), this court held
that the power to appoint BRPs rested with the directors
and not with
the BRPs. It was found that s 129(3) specifically granted them
that power.
[14]
The issue remains whether, in the circumstances of this matter, the
Act ‘provides
otherwise’. This requires construing the
provisions of the Act concerning the respective authority of the BRPs
and directors
during business rescue. The approach to that exercise
is well established:
‘
Whilst
the starting point remains the words of the document, which are the
only relevant medium through which the parties have
expressed their
contractual intentions, the process of interpretation does not stop
at a perceived literal meaning of those words,
but considers them in
the light of all relevant and admissible context, including the
circumstances in which the document came
into being. The former
distinction between permissible background and surrounding
circumstances, never very clear, has fallen away.
Interpretation is
no longer a process that occurs in stages but is “essentially
one unitary exercise”.’
[10]
[15]
The context under POCA has already been set out. Specific provisions
of chapter
6 of the Act concerning business rescue bear on the
respective roles of directors and BRPs in the business rescue
process. The
definition of business rescue in s 128 of the Act
connotes proceedings to facilitate the rehabilitation of a company.
The
goal of those proceedings is rehabilitation. In order to achieve
that goal, those proceedings provide for the temporary supervision
of
the company by persons other than the directors. The only
qualification to the word ‘supervision’ is that it is
temporary. It is temporary because the rehabilitation or otherwise of
the company is time-bound. It is not the supervision which
must be
demonstrated, at every point, to advance the rehabilitation of the
company. That would be a recipe for contestation for
every decision
and would result in the paralysis of the process of business rescue.
It is supervision in every respect. In addition,
the management of
the company’s affairs, business and property are part of the
process. It is implicit in the definition
that the BRPs are the
persons engaged in the supervision of the company.
[16]
Section 137(2) provides, in its material parts:
‘
During
a company’s business rescue proceedings, each director of the
company-
(a)
must
continue to exercise the functions of director, subject to the
authority of the practitioner;
(b)
has
a duty to the company to exercise any management function within the
company in accordance with the express
instructions or direction of
the practitioner, to the extent that it is reasonable to do so’.
The
first of these relates to the general functions of directors. They
are obliged to continue to exercise these functions but can
do so
only ‘subject to the authority’ of the BRPs. This is
clearly one of the provisions of the Act which qualifies
the position
of directors set out in s 66(1). Again, this does not delineate
those functions of directors which are subject
to the authority of
the BRPs. The second relates to management functions. All of these
must be exercised on ‘the express
instructions or direction’
of the BRPs. This also qualifies the provisions of s 66(1). In
addition, in terms of s 142,
the directors are obliged to
surrender all books of the company and to provide information on
material transactions, litigation
and the assets and liabilities of
the company to the BRPs.
[17]
In contrast
to the position of directors, the BRPs are clothed with a number of
powers in the Act. In the first place, a BRP is
defined as one
appointed to ‘oversee a company’ during business rescue
proceedings.
[11]
Once again,
the word ‘oversee’ is not qualified. There is no mention
as to what aspects of the company the BRPs are
to oversee. Are they
to oversee the company in every respect? That they have the power to
do so is implicit in the definition.
Another set of implicit powers
are those in s 137(2), of assuming authority over the exercise
by the directors of their general
functions, and giving express
instructions and direction to any management functions exercised by
them.
[18]
Along with these implicit powers, the Act grants explicit powers in
s140, the
material parts of which are:
‘
(1)
During a company's business rescue proceedings, the practitioner, in
addition to any other powers and duties set out in this
Chapter-
(a)
has
full management control of the company in substitution for its board
and pre-existing management;
(b)
may
delegate any power or function of the practitioner to a person who
was part of the board or pre-existing management
of the company;
.
. .
(3) During a
company's business rescue proceedings, the practitioner-
(a)
is
an officer of the court, and must report to the court in accordance
with any applicable rules of, or orders
made by, the court;
(b)
has
the responsibilities, duties and liabilities of a director of the
company, as set out in sections 75 to 77.’
The
BRPs are thus accorded ‘full management control of the company’
in place of the board and management but may delegate
any of their
powers and functions to the directors or erstwhile management.
[19]
Of further
significance is that BRPs have the ‘responsibilities, duties
and liabilities of a director . . . as set out in
sections 75 to 77’.
Those sections deal with directors’ personal financial
interests, the standards of conduct of directors
and the liability of
directors, inter alia, for breaches of fiduciary duties. The BRPs
are, in addition, officers of the court
and obliged to report to the
court in certain circumstances. They are obliged to report ‘reckless
trading, fraud or other
contravention of any law relating to the
company’ to the appropriate authorities and to take remedial
action.
[12]
[20]
In answer
to the contention of the directors that the authority of the BRPs
must be construed very narrowly, the NDPP referred to
the reasoning
in
Ragavan
.
There, this court held that a wide meaning should be given to ‘full
management control’ in the Act.
[13]
It went on to hold:
‘
The
facilitation of the rehabilitation of a company expressly includes
management of property. Everything that has to do with the
company's
debtors clearly falls within the category of management.’
[14]
This
court held that, since s 133(1)
(a)
prohibits enforcement action against the company in relation to any
property belonging to it, this ‘reflects the practitioner's
control in relation to the claims by third parties to the property of
the company’.
[15]
The
BRPs will have to consider the effect of the restrained property to
determine whether the company is a candidate for rescue
and how the
restrained assets are to be dealt with in a business rescue plan. The
POCA litigation implicates the property of the
company directly. In
addition, and as was held by the high court, a decision to enter into
litigation on behalf of the company,
whether as initiator or
defender, has potential costs implications which bear on the property
of a company.
[21]
In
Tayob
, this court, for the purpose of that matter,
distinguished between management and governance functions as follows:
‘
To
appoint a substitute practitioner (who will then be in full
management control of the company) is rather a function of governance
and approval thereof is not in my view a management function.’
The
directors submitted that defending the POCA litigation related to
‘strategic matters of the company’ and ‘governance’
rather than to the ‘full management control’. But Part F
of the Act, dealing with governance deals with compliance
with the
Memorandum of Incorporation and provisions of the Act relating to
shareholder rights and resolutions, the calling and
conduct of
meetings, directors’ powers and duties, eligibility, election
and removal, the board and committees and their
meetings. Those are
governance matters dealt with in the Act. The NDPP contended that the
decision to defend litigation is, in
any event, a management power
rather than one of governance. This appears to me to be correct but I
find the distinction sought
to be drawn between powers of management
and governance of companies unhelpful in the present enquiry. As has
already been pointed
out, the enquiry is whether the provisions in
the Act relating to business rescue provide an exception to the
general provisions
of s 66(1) regarding the powers of directors.
[22]
An argument before us which was not foreshadowed in the heads, was
that the
POCA litigation may well have implications for the conduct
of the impending criminal trial. The directors contended that, for
that
reason, only they could adequately protect the interests of the
company. An example given was that, if they were allowed to represent
the company in the POCA litigation, the BRPs might prejudice the
right to silence of the company in the criminal matter. As indicated,
the POCA litigation directly implicates the property of the company,
which falls within the ambit of the authority of the BRPs.
What must
be borne in mind is that both the directors and the BRPs are enjoined
to act in the best interests of the company. The
first resort would
be to explore whether the directors and the BRPs are able to agree on
the conduct of the POCA litigation. If
agreement cannot be reached,
and if it can be shown that the BRPs had acted or were about to act
in a manner which could be shown
to prejudice the company, there are
remedies available to interested parties such as directors.
[23]
In the light of the provisions of the Act, there is no warrant for
finding
that the directors have the requisite authority to appoint
attorneys to litigate on behalf of the company. The clear
interpretation
of the Act affords the BRPs that authority in the POCA
litigation. This is, in particular, because property of the company
is implicated
in the POCA litigation. It follows that the order of
the high court cannot be faulted. As a result, the appeal must be
dismissed.
[24]
The BRPs contended that they could authorise the directors to deliver
an affidavit
and present argument in the POCA litigation. That
contention proceeds from the premise that they have authority. It
does not inform
the issue in the rule 7 application which is
limited to the question whether or not they have such authority. The
contention
goes to the question of the manner in which the BRPs
exercise that authority. That enquiry does not fall within the ambit
of the
rule 7 application. It must be reserved for another day.
[25]
The NDPP submitted that the directors, Ms Ragavan and Mr Chawla,
should
be directed to pay the costs of the appeal personally.
It has been found that they had no authority to represent the
company, which
is nominally the appellant, and instruct the attorneys
to appeal the judgment of the high court on its behalf. The directors
did
so without authority. If persons who are not authorised to do so,
purport to appoint attorneys to represent a company, it can hardly
be
expected of the company to bear the costs flowing from that action.
Notice was given to the directors that such an order would
be sought.
It is appropriate that they pay the costs of this appeal.
[26]
In the result, the following order issues:
1
The appeal is dismissed.
2
The directors of Islandsite Investments 180 (Pty) Ltd, Ms Ragavan and
Mr Chawla,
are directed to pay the costs of the appeal jointly
and severally, the one paying, the other to be absolved.
____________________
T
R GORVEN
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
appellant:
M R Hellens SC with D J
Joubert SC
Instructed
by:
Krause Attorneys,
Johannesburg
Honey
Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For
first respondent:
G
Budlender SC
Instructed
by: State
Attorney, Bloemfontein
For
fourth and fifth respondents: A
E Bham SC with T Scott
Instructed
by:
Smit Sewgoolam Incorporated, Johannesburg
McIntyre van der Post,
Bloemfontein
[1]
Rule 7(1) provides: ‘Subject to the provisions of
subrules (2) and (3) a power of attorney to act need not be filed,
but the authority of anyone acting on behalf of a party may, within
10 days after it has come to the notice of a party that such
person
is so acting, or with the leave of the court on good cause shown at
any time before judgment, be disputed, whereafter
such person may no
longer act unless he satisfied the court that he is authorised so to
act, and to enable him to do so the court
may postpone the hearing
of the action or application.’
[2]
Ragavan
and Others v Optimum Coal Terminal (Pty) Ltd and Others
(
Ragavan
)
[2023] ZASCA 34
;
2023 (4) SA 78
(SCA)
.
[3]
Provided for as part of the definition of ‘business rescue’
in s 128(1)
(b)
.
[4]
Granted to the BRPs by s 140(1)
(a)
of the Act.
[5]
Ragavan
para 26.
[6]
Tayob
and Another v Shiva Uranium (Pty) Ltd and Others
(
Tayob
)
[2020] ZASCA 162.
[7]
Tayob
para 20.
[8]
Tayob
para 25. Reference omitted.
[9]
Ragavan
para 27.
[10]
Bothma-Batho
Transport (Edms) Bpk v S Bothma & Seun Transport (Edms) Bpk
[2013] ZASCA 176
;
2014 (2) SA 494
(SCA);
[2014] 1 All SA 517
(SCA)
para 12. References omitted.
[11]
A business rescue practitioner is defined as ‘a person
appointed, or two or more persons appointed jointly, in terms of
this Chapter to oversee a company during business rescue proceedings
and “practitioner” has a corresponding meaning’.
[12]
Section 141(2)
(c)
(ii).
[13]
Ragavan
para 16.
[14]
Ragavan
para 18.
[15]
Ragavan
para 19.
sino noindex
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