Case Law[2022] ZASCA 141South Africa
Lebashe Financial Services (Pty) Ltd v The Prudential Authority and Others (346/2021) [2022] ZASCA 141; [2023] 1 All SA 318 (SCA); 2023 (2) SA 130 (SCA) (24 October 2022)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
24 October 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Practice – standing on appeal – depends on directness and sufficiency of interest in relief claimed on appeal – creditor and shareholder of holding company of insolvent insurer has no locus standi to seek curatorship of insurer under s 54 of Insurance Act 18 of 2017 (Insurance Act) instead of liquidation.
Judgment
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## Lebashe Financial Services (Pty) Ltd v The Prudential Authority and Others (346/2021) [2022] ZASCA 141; [2023] 1 All SA 318 (SCA); 2023 (2) SA 130 (SCA) (24 October 2022)
Lebashe Financial Services (Pty) Ltd v The Prudential Authority and Others (346/2021) [2022] ZASCA 141; [2023] 1 All SA 318 (SCA); 2023 (2) SA 130 (SCA) (24 October 2022)
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sino date 24 October 2022
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case
no: 346/2021
In
the matter between:
LEBASHE
FINANCIAL SERVICES (PTY)
LTD
APPELLANT
and
THE
PRUDENTIAL
AUTHORITY
FIRST RESPONDENT
BOPHELO
LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY LIMITED
SECOND RESPONDENT
NZALO
INSURANCE SERVICES LIMITED
THIRD RESPONDENT
TRUE
SOUTH ACTUARIES AND CONSULTANTS
(PTY)
LTD
FOURTH RESPONDENT
FRANCOIS
HUGO
N.O.
FIFTH RESPONDENT
PAUL
ZONDAGH
N.O.
SIXTH RESPONDENT
THE
FINANCIAL SECTOR CONDUCT AUTHORITY
SEVENTH RESPONDENT
THE
TRANSPORT SECTOR RETIREMENT FUND
EIGHTH RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Lebashe
Financial Services (Pty) Ltd v The Prudential Authority and Others
(346/2021)
[2022] ZASCA 141
(24 October
2022)
Coram:
PONNAN, VAN DER MERWE and MOTHLE JJA and BASSON
and WINDELL AJJA
Heard
:
15 September 2022
Delivered
:
24 October 2022
Summary:
Practice – standing on appeal –
depends on directness and sufficiency of interest in relief claimed
on appeal –
creditor and shareholder of holding company of
insolvent insurer has no locus standi to seek curatorship of insurer
under s 54
of Insurance Act 18 of 2017 (Insurance Act) instead of
liquidation.
Insurance
Act – interpretation of s 54(5) – precludes commencement
of business rescue or winding-up by resolution or
court order –
proceedings as such not prohibited and not void – nature of
powers of curator under s 54(2) – to
hold, investigate and
report – no duty to seek rescue or recapitalisation of insurer.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng Local Division of
the High Court, Johannesburg (Yacoob J), sitting as court of first
instance:
The appeal is dismissed with costs,
including the costs of two counsel.
JUDGMENT
Van
der Merwe JA (Ponnan and Mothle JJA and Basson and Windell AJJA
concurring):
[1]
In terms of s 32 of the Financial Sector Regulation Act 9 of 2017,
the first respondent,
the Prudential Authority, is a juristic person
that operates within the administration of the South African Reserve
Bank. On 6
November 2018, the Prudential Authority obtained orders in
the Gauteng Local Division, Johannesburg (the high court) placing
Bophelo
Life Insurance Company Limited (Bophelo) and Nzalo Insurance
Services Limited (Nzalo) under provisional curatorship in terms of
s
54(1) of the Insurance Act 18 of 2017 (the Insurance Act). Whilst
these orders were in force and, at the instance of the Prudential
Authority, the high court placed Bophelo and Nzalo under provisional
winding-up. Eventually the high court discharged the provisional
curatorship orders and made final liquidation orders in respect of
both of them. The appellant, Lebashe Financial Services (Pty)
Ltd
(Lebashe), which had by agreement been granted leave to intervene in
the liquidation applications, obtained leave from the
high court to
appeal to this court. Lebashe, in essence, seeks to have the
liquidation orders overturned and the curatorships reinstated.
The
main issues are whether: firstly, Lebashe has standing to obtain that
relief on appeal and, secondly, a proper case has been
made out for
such relief. Only Lebashe and the Prudential Authority took part in
the appeal.
Background
[2]
Bophelo and Nzalo are public companies that were licensed to conduct
insurance business
under the Insurance Act. On 10 April 2014, Bophelo
was licensed as a long-term insurer. Nzalo was licensed as a
short-term insurer
on 2 November 2016. Bophelo and Nzalo (jointly
referred to as the insurers) are wholly owned by Bophelo Insurance
Group Limited
(BIG). Prior to the developments that I shall allude
to, Vele Financial Group (Pty) Ltd (Vele) held a 70 per cent
shareholding
in BIG and the Public Investment Corporation (SOC)
Limited held the remaining 30 per cent. Vele was also a shareholder
in VBS Mutual
Bank Limited (VBS).
[3]
Section 36(1) of the Insurance Act provides:
‘
An
insurer must at all times maintain its business in a financially
sound condition, by holding eligible own funds that are at least
equal to the minimum capital requirement or solvency capital
requirement, as prescribed, whichever is the greater.’
The Prudential Authority prescribes
these requirements under s 36(6). In addition, it was a condition of
the registration of Bophelo
as an insurer that it had to maintain a
capital adequacy cover of 1.2. This meant that capital held by
Bophelo at any given time
had to amount to at least 1.2 times the
aggregate of its obligations to policyholders and other liabilities.
[4]
To comply with these requirements, Bophelo deposited an amount of
approximately R114
million with VBS. That represented in the order of
68 per cent of Bophelo’s total assets. However, VBS was placed
under curatorship
in terms of the Banks Act 94 of 1990 during March
2015 and subsequently placed in final winding-up. Lebashe accepts
that the deposit
of Bophelo was ‘effectively lost’.
[5]
This understandably caused the Prudential Authority to become
concerned about the
financial soundness of Bophelo. As Vele was a
shareholder in both VBS and BIG, it also had concerns about the
ability of BIG to
continue to fund Nzalo. Therefore the Prudential
Authority proceeded to engage with the insurers, as well as BIG. On
26 April 2018,
the Prudential Authority notified the insurers that
they were, with immediate effect, prohibited from writing new
business.
[6]
These engagements naturally raised the matter of the recapitalisation
of the insurers.
At a meeting held on 1 June 2018, the Prudential
Authority informed these parties that it required proof that an
amount of at least
R100 million was immediately available to meet the
capital requirements of the insurers. It required such proof by no
later than
8h30 on 8 June 2018. The deadline was not met, but on 12
June 2018, the Prudential Authority received written confirmation
that
Lebashe had deposited R100 million into its attorneys’
trust account. According to this document, R60 million would be paid
to Bophelo and R40 million to Nzalo. The Prudential Authority
insisted on proof that these funds had actually been paid to the
insurers. On 28 June 2018, it eventually received confirmation
thereof.
[7]
The arrangements that led to these payments were as follows. Lebashe,
who described
itself as an investment holding company, was approached
to recapitalise BIG. According to Lebashe, it obtained Vele’s
70
per cent shareholding in BIG at around this time. After
negotiations, Lebashe and BIG entered into a written loan agreement
on
26 June 2018. In terms thereof, Lebashe lent and advanced the
capital sum of R100 million to BIG. The loan agreement did not
evidence
a long-term commitment by Lebashe. The loan had to be repaid
30 calendar days after the ‘Advancement Date’. That meant
the first business day after the ‘Effective Date’. That,
in turn, referred to the date on which Lebashe confirmed in
writing
that the suspensive conditions to the loan agreement had been
fulfilled or waived. But in terms of clause 2, the suspensive
conditions had to be fulfilled by no later than 22 June 2018 (except
if an extended date was mutually been agreed upon, which did
not
happen).
[8]
The loan agreement provided that the capital received by BIG ‘shall
immediately
be transferred in agreed proportions’ to the
insurers, in exchange for subscriptions by BIG for additional shares
in each
of the insurers. On 26 June 2018, Bophelo and BIG concluded a
written share subscription agreement in terms of which Bophelo would
issue and allot 100 ordinary shares in the name of BIG, in exchange
for the subscription price of R60 million. On the same date,
Nzalo
and BIG concluded a similar agreement. It provided that BIG would pay
the subscription price of R40 million for 120 newly
issued ordinary
shares in Nzalo. Both these agreements were subject to suspensive
conditions. Lebashe stated that these conditions
were not fulfilled
timeously or at all, as a result of ‘the hasty manner in which
the whole process was handled and due to
the pressure’ of the
Prudential Authority. According to Lebashe, the result was that these
monies were paid by BIG to the
insurers respectively as shareholders’
loans.
[9]
On 31 July 2018, Vele was placed in winding-up at the instance of the
curator of VBS.
Meanwhile, so Lebashe said, a due diligence process
exposed issues regarding the management of the insurers. In terms of
a letter
of demand dated 26 October 2018, Lebashe claimed repayment
of the capital and interest under the loan (then amounting to
approximately
R106 million) from BIG. On the same day, BIG paid the
sum of R87 million to Lebashe, leaving an outstanding balance of some
R19
million.
[10] On 29 October
2018, the Prudential Authority was advised that Lebashe had withdrawn
its capital injection.
As a result, the Prudential Authority
ex
parte
approached the high court on an urgent basis for orders
placing each of the insurers under provisional curatorship in terms
of
s 54(1)
(a)
of the Insurance Act. The high court granted the
orders sought on 6 November 2018. The return date of each provisional
order was
11 March 2019.
[11]
These orders appointed True South Actuaries and Consultants (Pty)
Ltd, represented by Mr Francois
Hugo and Mr Paul Zondagh, as the
provisional curator (the curator) of each of the insurers. Pending
the return date, the curator
was vested with all the powers and
duties in s 54(2) of the Insurance Act. Paragraph 5 of the order in
the Bophelo application
provided:
‘
Pending
the return day of this order, all actions, proceedings, the execution
of all writs, summonses and other processes against
Bophelo,
including any proceedings before the Commission of Conciliation,
Mediation and Arbitration, are hereby stayed and are
not to be
instituted or proceeded with, without the leave of this Court.’
The order in respect of Nzalo, of
course, contained an identical provision.
[12] The
provisional curatorship orders directed the curator to furnish a
report to the high court
(with a copy served on the Prudential
Authority) by no later than 5 days prior to the return date,
regarding the matters listed
therein. For convenience, I again
reproduce the relevant extract from the Bophelo order:
‘
9.1
[T]he overall financial position of Bophelo, with specific details of
its financial soundness,
assets, liabilities, Minimum Capital
Requirements and Solvency Capital Requirements;
9.2
the status of any business conducted by Bophelo or any of its
subsidiaries, holding companies,
affiliated or associated companies,
involving money received from policyholders and other parties in
connection with insurance;
9.3
the number and value of policies issued by Bophelo in the various
classes of insurance business;
9.4
any irregularities committed by Bophelo, its directors, management,
officers, members, auditors,
investors (including but not limited to
Lebashe Financial Services (Proprietary) Limited) (“Lebashe”)
and shareholders,
and full details of the contravention of any laws
in the conduct of its business;
9.5
what further steps should be taken and by whom in order to safeguard
the interests of the
policyholders and other creditors of Bophelo;
9.6
the viability of the business of Bophelo and any other entity in
which the Bophelo has a
direct interest, and set out the ways to
ensure the survival of the business of Bophelo in particular with
regard to the protection
of the interests of its policyholders;
9.7
the curator’s opinion as to whether Lebashe was permitted to
withdraw the funds invested
by it in Bophelo (if indeed such funds
have been withdrawn by Lebashe);
9.8
the curator’s opinion as to whether Bophelo should be placed in
liquidation; and if
so, the persons to be appointed as liquidators of
Bophelo. This must include: the number of persons to be appointed as
liquidators
and details of their experience; and
9.9
the curator’s opinion as to whether the rule
nisi
should
be confirmed, its provisional appointment should be made final, and
if so, to give an indication of the term required for
completion of
the curatorship.’
[13] The
high court also ordered the curator to furnish the Prudential
Authority with progress reports
on a weekly basis, the first to be
submitted 30 days after acceptance by the curator of the provisional
appointment. The curator,
however, produced only one combined
progress report, on 5 December 2018. The curator explained that it
was unable to furnish other
or further progress reports or a final
report, because the insurers had insufficient funds. That was
something that it could not
fairly be criticised for.
[14] The
progress report, nevertheless, told a woeful tale about the financial
position and long-term
business prospects of each of the insurers.
The report demonstrated that, as at 30 November 2018, the liabilities
of Bophelo exceeded
its assets by R58 million. On the same date,
Nzalo’s liabilities were R30 million in excess of its assets.
[15]
Bophelo’s main business was to provide risk policies to two
group schemes, the Private
Security Sector Provident Fund (PSSPF) and
the Transport Sector Retirement Fund (TSRF). As at November 2018,
Bophelo provided cover
under roughly 272 000 policies. Roughly
200 000 of these related to the PSSPF, which had given notice of
the termination
of its agreement with Bophelo at the end of December
2018. About 70 000 of these policies resorted under the TSRF. On
the
ground that Bophelo would be unable to pay claims under these
policies, the curator urged the TSRF to arrange alternative cover
from 1 January 2019, but no commitment to do so was forthcoming. At
the end of November 2018, the curator consequently gave 90
days’
notice of the termination of the contract between the TSRF and
Bophelo. Thus, only some 2 000 policies remained
extant. At the
time almost all policies with Nzalo had been cancelled and moved to
other insurers.
[16] In
the respect of each insurer, their curator reported:
‘
After
having settled all liabilities and adequately capitalised the
business, it would also be akin to a new insurer (apart from
the
brand damage sustained), starting from having to sell the first
policy and thus the reality of operational expense overruns
until
scale can be achieved in due course.’
It concluded:
‘
As
set out through general reasoning above, both insurers are facing
bleak longer-term prospects. At the date hereof, it seems that
only
substantial recapitalisation could possibly ensure the continued
existence of the insurers over the longer-term.’
[17] In
the light of this report, the Prudential Authority resolved to apply
for the provisional liquidation
of the insurers. On 4 February 2019,
it launched such applications, which were set down for hearing on 12
February 2019. In the
main, the grounds for winding-up were that both
the insurers were ‘hopelessly insolvent’, had no
directors and had
ceased to be going concerns. The Prudential
Authority also averred that in the event of the provisional
winding-up of the insurers,
the provisional curatorships would have
served their purpose and indicated that it would seek their
discharge.
[18] On
11 February 2019, Lebashe delivered an application for leave to
intervene in the liquidation
applications. In addition, on 7 March
2019, Lebashe filed what was described as a ‘conditional
answering affidavit’,
which so it stated, ‘will become
unconditional if and when Lebashe is granted leave to intervene in
the winding-up application’.
On 12 February 2019, however, the
high court issued a provisional liquidation order in respect of each
insurer, with the same return
date as the provisional curatorship
orders, namely 11 March 2019. It postponed Lebashe’s
intervention application to the
same date.
[19] On
11 March 2019 and subsequently, the return date of the four
provisional orders was extended.
In the meantime, the high court
granted leave to Lebashe to intervene in the liquidation
applications, by agreement between the
relevant parties. Thus,
Lebashe’s earlier conditional answering affidavit was duly
placed before the high court. The high
court also granted leave to
the TSRF to intervene in the Bophelo liquidation application. These
were the only parties that opposed
the relief sought. The curator
filed affidavits confirming that the insurers were insolvent.
[20] In
its answering affidavit, Lebashe rightly did not dispute that the
insurers were insolvent.
It contended, however, that s 54(5) of the
Insurance Act precluded the provisional liquidation orders. I shall
reproduce this subsection
shortly. Lebashe also adequately
foreshadowed an argument that para 5 of the provisional curatorship
orders did the same. Alternatively
it sought the setting aside or
stay of the provisional liquidation orders on the ground that the
curator had not reported on steps
taken by it to recapitalise the
insurers.
[21] All
four applications eventually came before Yacoob J, who conveniently
dealt with them in one
judgment. The high court determined that the
provisional curatorship orders should be discharged. It rejected
Lebashe’s contention
that s 54(5) of the Insurance Act rendered
the provisional liquidation orders incompetent and proceeded to
confirm them.
Analysis
[22] In
the light of what I have said, there are three issues in the appeal,
namely whether:
(a)
Lebashe has standing in the appeal;
(b)
Section 54(5) of the Insurance Act and/or para 5 of the provisional
curatorship orders precluded
final liquidation orders in respect of
the insurers; and
(c) The
curator was in law required to seek - or effect - the
recapitalisation of the insurers.
Standing
[23] As
I have said, Lebashe had been granted leave to intervene in the
liquidation applications by
agreement and obtained leave from the
high court to appeal to this court. That, however, did not relieve
Lebashe of the duty to
satisfy this court that it has locus standi to
obtain the relief that it seeks on appeal. That is so for two main
reasons. The
first is that the respective tests are not identical.
Germane to the second, are the oft-repeated dicta that the scarce
resources
of this court should not be expended on deciding abstract
or academic issues.
[24] As
Harms JA said in
Gross & Others v Pentz
[1996] ZASCA 78
;
1996 (4) SA 617
(A) at 632C:
‘
The
question of
locus standi
is
in a sense a procedural matter, but it is also a matter of substance.
It concerns the sufficiency and directness of interest
in the
litigation in order to be accepted as a litigating party.’
See also
Sandton Civic Precinct
(Pty) Ltd v City of Johannesburg & Another
[2008] ZASCA 104
;
2009 (1) SA 317
(SCA) para 19. Although there are no hard and fast
rules in this regard, the general rule is that a direct and existing
interest
in the relief is required. A direct interest is one that is
not too far removed and an existing interest is one that is not
abstract,
academic or hypothetical. See
Cabinet of the
Transitional Government for the Territory of South West Africa v Eins
1988 (3) SA 369
(A) at 388B-H;
Jacobs en ‘n Ander v Waks en
Andere
[1991] ZASCA 152
;
1992 (1) SA 521
(A) at 534A-E and
Public Protector v
Mail & Guardian Ltd & Others
[2011] ZASCA 108
;
2011 (4)
SA 420
(SCA) para 29.
[25] The
winding-up orders in respect of the insurers do not, of course,
operate against Lebashe.
What then is Lebashe’s interest in
having the liquidation orders overturned? Lebashe is a creditor of
BIG. I accept that
it is also the majority shareholder of BIG, which
holds the shares in the insurers. These were the only factors
referred to by
counsel for Lebashe when this court raised this issue
during argument. On this basis, however, Lebashe is only a creditor
and shareholder
of the holding company of the insurers. As such,
there are no legal relationships between Lebashe and the insurers.
Lebashe has
no rights to a preferred legal process of dealing with
the undisputed insolvency of the insurers, even though it may have an
indirect
financial or commercial interest therein. In my view,
Lebashe’s interest is too indirect and insufficient to clothe
it with
locus standi in the appeal.
[26] The
high court ought to have considered these matters in determining
whether leave to appeal
should be granted. And, quite frankly, that
should have resulted in a refusal of leave to appeal. It follows that
the appeal must
fail for this reason alone. Ordinarily that would
have been the end of the matter. However, the remaining issues have
been fully
argued, are novel and are likely to arise in the future.
In the circumstances, I regard it in the interests of justice to
determine
the remaining issues.
Statutory context of s 54 of the
Insurance Act
[27]
Chapter 9 (ss 52-59) of the Insurance Act is entitled ‘Resolution’.
It consists of
four parts that provides powers to the Prudential
Authority to deal with non-compliant insurers and controlling
companies (as defined).
It is not necessary to make further reference
to controlling companies. Part 1 (s 53) provides that the Prudential
Authority may
appoint a statutory manager in terms of s 5A of the
Financial Institutions (Protection of Funds) Act 28 of 2001 (FIPF) in
respect
of an insurer. Part 2 (s 54) deals with curatorship. In terms
of Part 3 (ss 55-56) provision is made for the Prudential Authority
to apply to a court for an order placing an insurer under business
rescue in terms of the Companies Act 71 of 2008 (the
Companies Act).
[28
]
Part 4
(ss
57
-
59
) provides for the winding-up of an insurer at the
instance of the Prudential Authority, in these terms:
‘
Despite
any other law under which an insurer is incorporated,
sections 79
to
81
of, and item 9 of Schedule 5 to, the
Companies Act shall
, subject
to this section and with the necessary changes, apply in relation to
the winding-up of an insurer or a controlling company,
and to the
exclusion of any similar provisions under the Co-operatives Act or
any other law under which an insurer or controlling
company is
established or incorporated, and in such application the Prudential
Authority is deemed to be a person authorised under
the
Companies Act
to
make an application to the court for the winding-up thereof.’
Section 57(2)
gives particulars as to
how these provisions of the
Companies Act should
be applied to the
winding-up of an insurer in terms of this section.
[29]
Section 54(1) of the Insurance Act reads:
‘
(1)
Despite any other law–
(a)
the court may, on application by the
Prudential Authority; or
(b)
the Prudential Authority may by
agreement with an insurer or controlling company and without the
intervention of the court,
appoint a curator in terms of
section
5
of the
Financial Institutions (Protection of Funds) Act in
respect
of any insurer or controlling company.
[30]
Section 5(1)
of the FIPF provides for an application, on an
ex
parte
basis, for the appointment of a curator.
Section 5(2)
reads:
‘
(2)
Upon an application in terms of subsection (1) the court may–
(a)
on good cause shown, provisionally
appoint a curator to take control of, and to manage the whole or any
part of, the business of
the institution on such conditions and for
such a period as the court deems fit; and
(b)
simultaneously grant a rule
nisi
calling upon the institution and other
interested parties to show cause on a day mentioned in the rule why
the appointment of the
curator should not be confirmed.’
If at the hearing pursuant to the rule
nisi
, the court is satisfied that it is desirable to do so, it
may confirm the appointment of the curator
(s 5(4)
of the FIPF).
[31] In
terms of
s 5(5)
, a court may for the purposes of a provisional
appointment under
s 5(2)
(a)
and a final appointment under
s
5(4)
, make an order with regard to
inter alia
: the suspension
of legal proceedings against the institution for the duration of the
curatorship; the authority of the curator
to investigate the affairs
of the institution; and the powers and duties of the curator.
Section
5(9)
provides that the court may, on good cause shown, cancel the
appointment of a curator at any time.
Final liquidation precluded?
[32]
Section 54(5) of the Insurance Act reads:
‘
An
insurer or a controlling company may not begin or enter business
rescue or be wound-up while under curatorship within the meaning
of
the
Financial Institutions (Protection of Funds) Act, unless
the
curator applies for the business rescue or winding-up.’
[33] In
rejecting Lebashe’s argument that
s 54(5)
precluded the
provisional liquidation orders, the court a quo essentially reasoned
that the expression ‘be wound-up’
did not refer to the
commencement of a winding-up, but to the process of winding-up. See
GCC Engineering & Others v Maroos
[2018] ZASCA 178
;
2019
(2) SA 379
(SCA) para 17. For the reasons that follow, this
interpretation is not tenable.
[34]
First, it fails to have regard to the full text of
s 54(5).
The
phrase ‘An insurer may not begin or enter business rescue . .
.’, clearly refers to the adoption and filing of
a resolution
to begin business rescue in terms of
s 129
and a court order placing
a company under business rescue in terms of
s 131
of the
Companies
Act. Thus
, unlike s 53(2) of the Insurance Act (which provides that
no business rescue or winding-up proceedings may be commenced whilst
a statutory manager holds office), s 54(5) has to do with the
effecting of business rescue or winding-up. Winding-up of a solvent
company is effected either by the adoption and filing of a special
resolution in terms of s 80 or a court order under
s 81
of the
Companies Act. The
same applies to an insolvent company in terms of
s
343
,
s 344
and s 349 of the Companies Act 61 of 1973 (which continues
in force by reason of item 9 of Schedule 5 to the Companies Act).
Thus,
it would make no sense to prohibit the coming into effect of
business rescue whilst a curatorship is in place, but not the
commencement
of liquidation, which would have far more drastic
consequences.
[35] The
process of winding-up (the realisation of assets) is, of course, not
itself something that
one can apply for in a court. A curator can
only apply for a winding-up order. The phrase: ‘An insurer may
not be wound-up
. . . unless the curator applies for the . . .
winding-up’, must therefore mean that in these circumstances a
liquidation
may not be ordered unless the curator applies for it.
[36] In
the second place, having regard to the powers and duties of curators
and liquidators respectively,
curatorship and liquidation cannot
co-exist. Who, one might ask, would have the duty to take custody and
control of the assets
of the insurer and to safeguard them, should it
simultaneously be under curatorship and in liquidation? This is a
powerful indicator
that a liquidation order may not be issued in
respect of an insurer that is under curatorship.
[37] On
this basis, there is conflict between the provisions of s 54(5) and
those of s 57(1). Should
the latter mean that the Prudential
Authority may, irrespective of an existing curatorship, at any time
obtain a winding-up order,
s 54(5) (and s 53(2)) would be rendered
nugatory. That could clearly not have been intended. In my view, the
answer lies in the
maxim
generalia specialibus non derogant.
See
Sunny South Canners (Pty) Ltd v Mbangxa & Others NNO
2001
(2) SA 49
(SCA) para 27. The special provision (s 54(5)) limits the
application of the general one (s 57(1)).
[38] It
follows that by reason of s 54(5), the provisional liquidation orders
in respect of the insurers
should not have been granted. That result
should also have flowed from the provisions of para 5 of the
provisional curatorship
orders. It will be recalled that it provided,
inter alia
, that pending the return date of the order,
proceedings against the insurer ‘are hereby stayed and are not
to be instituted
or proceeded with, without the leave of the Court’.
That leave had not been obtained.
[39] In
Born Free Investments 247 (Pty) Ltd v Pierre du Plessis Kriel NO
[2019] ZASCA 21
, this court was called upon to determine the legal
effect of an order that was materially the same as para 5 of the
provisional
curatorship orders. It reasoned as follows:
‘
Although
paragraph 6.2 is clumsily worded, it does not state that
non-compliance with its provisions would result in a nullity.
To
accept that failure to obtain leave of the court prior to instituting
legal proceedings leads to nullity would, in my view,
lead to
injustice. It would also lead to inconsistency, because existing
actions would be stayed, but an action instituted without
prior leave
would be dismissed, which seems an extreme and unnecessary result. It
would be contrary to s 34 of the Constitution
which provides that
“everyone has the right to have any dispute that can be
resolved by the application of the law decided
in a fair public
hearing before a court”. Suppose a creditor, oblivious to the
moratorium, issued summons without obtaining
the leave of the court,
it would mean that it would be precluded from proceeding with its
claim because its summons was a nullity
for want of prior leave of
the court. Such a construction, in my view, would be unjust. It seems
to me that a sensible interpretation
of paragraph 6.2 is that an
action may not be instituted without the leave of the court, and
where it has been instituted, such
action should be stayed until
leave is obtained.’
[40] In
my view, this reasoning is not only applicable to para 5 of the
provisional curatorship orders,
but also to non-compliance with s
54(5). As I have demonstrated, it does not seek to prohibit the
institution of proceedings, but
the commencement of business rescue
or winding-up by a resolution or court order. If anything, therefore,
there is a clearer indication
in s 54(5) that the liquidation
applications were not themselves rendered null and void. The
provisional liquidation orders were
incompetent, but the applications
for liquidation not. By operation of law, they were stayed whilst the
curatorships were in place.
[41] It
follows that the liquidation applications could be proceeded with
once the curatorships came
to an end. That, in effect, was what
happened in the court a quo. The court firstly considered whether it
was desirable (in terms
of s 5(4) of the FIPF) to confirm the
provisional curatorship orders and concluded that they should be
discharged. It then proceeded
to hold that final winding-up orders
should be issued.
[42]
While a final winding-up order is usually preceded by a provisional
order and a rule
nisi
, calling upon interested parties to show
cause why on the return date a final winding-up order should not be
made, that is not
invariably so and valid provisional liquidation
orders are not prerequisites for final winding-up orders. Thus, the
issuance of
the final winding-up orders were not precluded by s 54
(5) of the Insurance Act, nor by para 5 of the provisional
curatorship orders.
Duty on curator to effect
recapitalisation?
[43]
Lebashe complained that the liquidation of the insurers was
premature, as the curator had not
yet reported on the steps taken by
it to recapitalise them. This contention implied that the curator had
a duty to do so. As I
shall show, however, this contention is refuted
by the text, context and purpose of the provisional curatorship
orders.
[44]
These orders, in essence, conveyed that the curator had to take
control of the businesses of
the insurers, investigate their affairs
and report to the high court on the stipulated topics. They said
nothing about seeking
or obtaining capital injections or long-term
financing for the insurers. The stipulated topics themselves
demonstrated that the
curator was not required to do anything of the
sort.
[45]
This accorded with the provisions of s 54(2) which, as I have said,
were incorporated in these
orders. It is not necessary to reproduce
this lengthy subsection. It suffices to say that it provided the
curator with wide powers
to manage and investigate. In terms of s
54(2)
(e)
, the powers vested in the curator had to be exercised
‘with a view to conserving the business’. And in terms of
s 54(2)
(e)
(iii), it could only raise funding on behalf of the
insurer with the prior approval of the Prudential Authority to
provide security
over the assets of the insurer.
[46]
Thus, the curatorship of the insurer was only a means to an end. By
its nature it would be of
temporary duration. And its purpose was not
to rescue the business of the insurer. That option, as I have said,
was available to
the Prudential Authority under Part 3 of Chapter 9.
It follows that this argument cannot be sustained.
[47] The
appeal is dismissed with costs, including the costs of two counsel.
C
H G VAN DER MERWE
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
Appearances:
For
appellant:
T J B Bokaba SC and A C McKenzie
Instructed
by:
Rams Attorneys, Sandton
Honey Attorneys, Bloemfontein.
For
first respondent: A E Bham SC and J E Smit
Instructed
by:
Werksmans Attorneys, Sandton
Symington & De Kok, Bloemfontein.
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