Case Law[2022] ZASCA 176South Africa
Mellet N O and Others v Vermeulen and Another (1049/2021) [2022] ZASCA 176 (7 December 2022)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
7 December 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Close Corporation Act 69 of 1984 – whether a Trust inter vivos can own member’s interest in a Close Corporation – ss 29(1) and 29(1A) of the Close Corporation Act – party alleging compliance with s 29(1A)(a) – (d) must prove it – onus not discharged – appeal dismissed with costs.
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
>>
2022
>>
[2022] ZASCA 176
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Mellet N O and Others v Vermeulen and Another (1049/2021) [2022] ZASCA 176 (7 December 2022)
Mellet N O and Others v Vermeulen and Another (1049/2021) [2022] ZASCA 176 (7 December 2022)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZASCA/Data/2022_176.html
sino date 7 December 2022
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Not
Reportable
Case
No: 1049/2021
In the matter between:
BLUCHER
HAUMAN MELLET N O
FIRST
APPELLANT
HENDRIK FRANCOIS
MELLET N O
SECOND APPELLANT
CAROLINA JOHANNA
PRINSLOO N O
THIRD APPELLANT
and
MARAIS ROCCO
VERMEULEN
FIRST RESPONDENT
EVAN ERNEST
CORBETT
SECOND RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Mellet
N O and Others v Vermeulen and Another
(1049/2021)
[2022] ZASCA 176
(07 December 2022)
Coram:
PETSE AP, MAKGOKA AND PLASKET JJA AND MAKAULA AND
MASIPA AJJA
Heard:
07 September 2022
Delivered:
07 December 2022
Summary:
Close
Corporation Act 69 of 1984 – whether a Trust inter vivos
can own member’s interest in a Close Corporation
– ss
29(1) and 29(1A) of the Close Corporation Act – party alleging
compliance with s 29(1A)
(a)
–
(d)
must prove it – onus not discharged – appeal dismissed
with costs.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Free State Division of the
High Court, Bloemfontein (Musi JP, Loubser J concurring, Daffue J
dissenting, sitting as court of appeal):
The appeal is dismissed
with costs.
JUDGMENT
Makaula
AJA
(Petse AP, Makgoka and Plasket JJA
and Masipa AJA concurring):
Introduction
[1]
This appeal relates to the application of s 29(1) and s 29(1A) of the
Close Corporation
Act 69 of 1984 (the CCA), in the instance where the
Blucher Mellet Family Trust (the Trust) acquired a 60 percent
member’s
interest in a close corporation, Findaload CC (the
close corporation), and sold it to the respondents. The core issue
for determination
is whether the Trust was legally able to acquire
the member’s interest and it arose in the following
circumstances. The respondents
failed to perform their obligations in
terms of the agreement of sale. The appellants brought an application
in the Free State
Division of the High Court, Bloemfontein (the high
court) to compel them to do so. The respondents brought a
counter-application
in which they attacked the validity of the
agreement of sale on the basis that s 29(1) of the CCA prohibited the
Trust from holding
a member’s interest in the close
corporation.
[2]
The contention by the appellants before the high court was that the
Trust
did not, in fact, hold the member’s
interest, but merely served as a conduit to channel the sale from the
first appellant,
in his personal capacity, to the first and second
respondents. The high court, per Mbhele J, sitting as the court of
first instance,
upheld the application and ordered, amongst others,
that: (a) a bond be registered over the properties owned or
registered in the
names of the respondents (as security for payment
of the purchase price); and (b) for the respondents to pay 50 percent
of the
‘transfer’ costs to the attorneys seized with the
task of registering the bond. (The word ‘transfer’ in
the
order is a patent error. The parties agree that the word should be
‘registration’.)
[3]
Following this, the respondents appealed to the full court of the
Free State Division
of the High Court, Bloemfontein (the full court).
Musi JP and Loubser J upheld the appeal with costs, with Daffue J
dissenting.
The further appeal is before us with the speval leave of
this Court.
Background facts
[4]
The appellants are members of the Trust. The first and the third
appellants are also
members of the close corporation. The first
appellant held a 60 percent member’s interest, and the third
appellant a 40 percent
member’s interest, in the close
corporation. The first appellant wanted to sell his member’s
interest to the respondents.
He did not want the purchase price to be
paid directly to him, so he asked the respondents to pay him via the
Trust. To fulfil
this arrangement, the Trust entered into an
agreement titled a Deed of Sale of Membership Interest (the
agreement) with the respondents.
[5]
I turn now to the salient provisions of the agreement. The seller is
defined as the
Trust and the purchaser is defined as both
respondents. The subject of the sale, the ‘membership interest’
is defined
as the 60 percent member’s interest ‘currently
held by B H Mellet and to be transferred to the Seller as well as the
Claims consisting of the assets and liabilities listed in Annexure A,
B, C and D hereto’.
[6]
Clause 4 provides that the ‘Seller sells to the Purchaser, who
purchases the
Membership Interest and the claims consisting of the
assets listed in Annexures A, B, C and D hereto with effect from the
effective
date, subject to the terms and conditions set out in this
agreement’.
[7]
Clause 7 contains a warranty. The Trust warranted that Mellet would
transfer his member’s
interest to the Trust, and that he would
be bound by the agreement ‘in the same manner as if he
personally sold the interest
to the Purchaser’.
[8]
Clause 14 is headed ‘MISCELLANEOUS’. It
inter alia
provides that, when possible, every provision of the agreement should
be interpreted ‘in a manner which makes it effective
and valid
under applicable Law’ but if a provision is ‘held to be
illegal, invalid or unenforceable under applicable
Law, that
illeglity, invalidity or unenforceability shall not affect the other
provisions of this Agreement, all of which shall
remain in full
force’.
[9]
Finally, in clause 26, the respondents undertook to furnish security
‘for the
due and proper payment of the purchase price’.
They were required to do so by registering a bond over two
properties. Clause
26.3 provides that the registration of the bond
‘shall be handled by Blair Attorneys and the registration costs
and fees
shall be paid by the seller and the purchaser on a 50/50
basis’.
The issue
[10]
As indicated above, s 29(1) and s 29(1A) of the CCA are central to a
determination of the issue
before us. Together, they create a
prohibition and an exception to the prohibition.
[11]
Section 29(1) creates the prohibition. It provides:
‘
Subject
to subsection (1A) or (2)
(b)
and
(c)
,
only natural persons may be members of a corporation and no juristic
person or trustee of a trust
inter vivos
in that capacity shall directly or indirectly (whether through the
instrumentality of a nominee or otherwise) hold a member’s
interest in a corporation.’
[12]
Section 29(1A) creates the exception. It provides:
‘
A
natural or juristic person in the capacity of a trustee of a trust
inter vivos may be a member of a corporation: Provided that-
(a)
no juristic person shall directly or indirectly be a beneficiary of
that trust;
(b)
the member concerned shall, as between himself or herself and the
corporation, personally have all the
obligations and rights of a
member;
(c)
the corporation shall not be obliged to observe or have any
obligation in respect of any provision of
or affecting the trust or
any agreement between the trust and the member concerned of the
corporation; and
(d)
if at any time the number of natural persons at that time entitled to
receive any benefit from the trust
shall, when added to the number of
members of the corporation at that time, exceed 10, the provisions
of, and exemption under,
this subsection shall cease to apply and
shall not again become applicable notwithstanding any diminution in
the number of members
or beneficiaries.’
The appellants’
argument
[13]
Before the court of first instance, the appellants sought an order
enforcing the provisions of
clause 26 of the agreement. They averred
that the Trust had already complied with the provisions of clause
26.3 by paying its 50
percent contribution towards the costs of
registering the bond.
[14]
The appellants contended that it was common cause between the parties
that the Trust would take
transfer of the member’s interest
solely as a conduit between Mellet and the respondents. It was never
the intention of the
parties that the Trust should hold the member’s
interest. They contended, however, that s 29(1A) makes it clear that
an
inter vivos
Trust can hold or own an interest in a close
corporation.
[15]
In addition, the appellants argued that it was not incumbent upon
them to attach the Trust Deed,
the relevant resolutions, and other
documents to show that the Trust met the requirements of s 29(1A). A
bald statement that the
Trust met the requirements, without any
evidence to support it, was made in the appellants’ replying
affidavit. The appellants
also stated that a certificate issued by
the Companies and Intellectual Property Commission proved that the
requirements of s 29(1A)
had been met.
The respondents’
argument
[16]
The respondents pleaded that the agreement is in direct conflict with
s 29(1) of the CCA in that
the seller was not a natural person and
could not have been a holder of a member’s interest in a close
corporation. Their
counter–application sought declaratory
orders that the agreement was, as a result, unlawful,
void ab
initio
and consequently unenforceable.
[17]
The respondents submitted that the legality of the agreement was
pertinently raised in the papers
and the appellants did not place any
evidence before the court that brought them within the terms of s
29(1A) of the CCA. They
submitted that the agreement is unambiguous
and means that the Trust and not the appellants in their personal
capacities would
own 60 percent of the member’s interest, and
then sell it to the respondents.
Analysis
[18]
The agreement makes it clear that the seller of the member’s
interest is the Trust. It
is common cause that the Trust held a
member’s interest in a close corporation and purported to sell
it to the respondents.
If there had been any doubt, it was dispelled
by the first appellant himself when he stated that as he was
‘desirous to transfer
the benefits of the sale to the Trust’
provision was made in the agreement ‘that the member’s
interest held by
myself, was to be transferred to the Trust and
directly be sold to the Respondents’. Section 29(1) of the CCA
is thus implicated.
It was raised squarely by the respondents to
assail the validity of the sale.
[19]
A member of a close corporation is defined in s 1 of the CCA to mean
‘a person qualified
for membership of a corporation in terms of
section 29 . . .’. Section 29(1) is clear and unambiguous. It
provides that only
natural persons can become members of a close
corporation. The word ‘only’ is prescriptive and
disqualifies juristic
persons and Trustees of trusts
inter vivos
from either directly or indirectly holding a member’s interest
in a close corporation unless there is compliance with s 29(1A).
[20]
Section 29(1) is qualified by s 29(1A). It specifies the
circumstances in which natural or juristic
persons who are trustees
of inter vivos trusts may hold member’s interests in
close corporations. Two of the four requirements
are that no juristic
person may be a beneficiary of the trust whether directly or
indirectly; and the total of natural persons
who are beneficiaries
plus the members of the close corporation do not exceed ten.
Furthermore, s 29(2) specifies in positive terms
who may hold
member’s interests. Three categories of person qualify. They
are: a natural person and two categories of natural
or juristic
persons who are trustees.
[21]
It stands out starkly that s 29 contemplates, as a default position,
that only natural persons
are capable of holding member’s
interests. The exception created by s 29(1A) is qualified: natural as
well as juristic persons
may hold member’s interests but only
in the capacity of a trustee in certain circumstances. This point was
made by Boruchowitz
J in
Southern
African Bank of Athens Ltd v Salvadora Properties Ninety Nine CC
[1]
when, with reference to the definition of a member of a close
corporation in terms of s 1, he held that the definition ‘envisages
membership of the person representing the trust and not the trust
itself’.
[22]
It seems to me that because the Trust purported to hold the member’s
interest, rather than
a trustee, the appellants do not get out of the
starting blocks to bring themselves within the terms of s 29(1A). In
any event,
they have adduced no evidence whatsoever to do so. It was
suggested by counsel for the appellants that a certificate issued by
the Companies and Intellectual Property Commission (CIPC) that
reflects the first appellant and third appellant, Ms Carolina
Prinsloo,
as members of the close corporation in their capacity as
trustees, proves compliance with s 29(1A). There is no merit in this
argument.
Speculation that some unknown functionary must have
satisfied himself that Mellet and Prinsloo were authorised and met
the requirements
of s 29(1A) is not evidence of these facts.
[23]
It is as well to remember that it is incumbent on parties to set out
their cause of action or
defence, as the case may be, in clear and
concise terms to enable to opposing party to know the nature of the
case or defence advanced.
[2]
It
was accordingly crucial that the appellants place relevant facts to
prove compliance with s 29(1) and s 29(1A)
and not
merely rely on a copy of the CK document which was an annexure to the
replying affidavit. In view of the appellants’
failure to
adequately prove compliance with the provisions of s 29, there was
insufficient evidence upon which the court of first
instance could
find in their favour.
[24]
The respondents have established that the agreement is in conflict
with s 29(1) and was accordingly
invalid. The appeal must therefore
fail. There is nothing to suggest that costs should not follow the
result. Counsel for the respondents
requested that costs of two
counsel be allowed. The matter is not at all complex. The costs of
two counsel are not warranted.
[25]
In the result, the following order is made:
The appeal is dismissed
with costs.
M Makaula
Acting Judge of Appeal
APPEARANCES
For appellants:
SJ Reinders
Instructed by:
Eugene Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For respondents:
N Snellenburg SC (with R van der Merwe)
Instructed by:
Lovius Block Attorneys, Bloemfontein
[1]
Southern
African Bank of Athens Ltd v Salvadora Properties Ninety Nine CC
[2010] ZAGPJHC 37 para 15.
[2]
Rule 18 of the Uniform Rules of Court.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Motsima and Another v Kopa and Others (1316/23) [2025] ZASCA 144 (7 October 2025)
[2025] ZASCA 144Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa98% similar
Adendorff N O and Another v Kubheka and Another (463/2020) [2022] ZASCA 29 (24 March 2022)
[2022] ZASCA 29Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa98% 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 Africa98% similar
Stemmet and Another v Mokhethi and Another (681/2022) [2023] ZASCA 127 (4 October 2023)
[2023] ZASCA 127Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa98% 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 Africa98% similar