Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 97South Africa
Sana Developers and Another v Nedbank Limited (Leave to Appeal) (2023/080710) [2025] ZAGPJHC 97 (10 February 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
10 February 2025
Headnotes
security by way of a cession of book debts over rentals of properties leased by Sana Developers. I was of the view that the purported suspension in the face of the
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Sana Developers and Another v Nedbank Limited (Leave to Appeal) (2023/080710) [2025] ZAGPJHC 97 (10 February 2025)
Sana Developers and Another v Nedbank Limited (Leave to Appeal) (2023/080710) [2025] ZAGPJHC 97 (10 February 2025)
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sino date 10 February 2025
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
Case
No: 2023/080710
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTREST TO OTHER JUDGES:NO
REVISED:
NO
IN
THE MATTER BETWEEN:
SANA
DEVELOPERS
1
st
APPLICANT/ RESPONDENT
(PTY)
LTD
MAHOMED
MAHIER
2
nd
APPLICANT/ RESPONDENT
TAYO
N.O
AND
NEDBANK
LIMITED
RESPONDENT/ APPLICANT
JUDGMENT
[ LEAVE TO APPEAL]
SIWENDU
J
[1]
The applicants, Sana Developers (Sana Developers) and the business
rescue practitioner, Mr Tayob
(Mr Tayob) were the respondents in the
application
a
quo
.
They seek the Court’s leave to appeal against its judgment
rendered on 23 October 2024 in favour of Nedbank Limited (Nedbank).
Nedbank was the applicant
a
quo
and
is the respondent in this application. The leave to appeal is brought
in terms of section 17(1)
(a)(i)
of the
Superior Courts Act
[1]
.
[2]
Section 17(1)
(a)(i)
stipulates
that a leave to appeal may only be given where the judge or judges
concerned are of the opinion that the appeal
would
have a reasonable prospect of success. Courts have repeatedly
affirmed the import of the provision limits the right to appeal cases
whether there
would
be reasonable prospect of success. The test is “stringent”
and the section “raises the bar” for the criterion
for
granting leave to appeal.
[2]
[3]
In the present case, the Court concluded
that Nedbank was entitled to the order both under section
130(1
)(a)(ii)
or (iii
)
of the Companies Act
[3]
(the
Act) and on the alternative ground in section 130(5
)(a)
(ii)
on
the basis that it is just and equitable to set aside the resolution
placing Sana Developers in business rescue. The Court granted
a
provisional
order
for the liquidation which included consequential orders:
i.Setting aside the
resolution placing Sana Developers under supervision;
ii.Terminating the
rescue proceedings;
iii.Finding on the facts
that the jurisdictional requirements for reasonable prospect of
successfully rescuing Sana Developer have
not been met; and
iv.Directing the filing
of further affidavits to oppose the final order.
[4]
Counsel for the applicants confirmed that the application for leave
to appeal is confined to specific
orders granted by the court, namely
the order:
i.Admitting Nedbank’s
supplementary affidavit dated 21 May 2024 into evidence.
ii.Placing Sana
Developers under provisional liquidation.
iii.Terminating business
rescue proceedings.
iv.Setting aside the
resolution taken by the board of directors of Sana Developers on 17
April 2023, placing it under supervision
and in business rescue, is
in terms of sections 130(1
)(a)(ii
) and/or
(iii)
of the
Act.
v.Declaring that the
business rescue proceedings of the first applicant have come to an
end in terms of section 132(2
)(a
) of the Act.
[5]
The complaint is that Nedbank filed a supplementary affidavit without
a formal application, which
was admitted by the court. The applicants
challenge the Court’s exercise of the discretion to do so.
They complain
they were denied a request to postpone the
liquidation proceedings as well as the opportunity to address the
contents of the supplementary
affidavit.
[6]
As the judgment appealed against states, a court will exercise its
discretion in permitting the
filing of further affidavits against the
backdrop of the fundamental consideration that a matter should be
adjudicated upon all
the facts relevant to the issues in dispute. The
qualification to the admission of further affidavits is that there
should be no
prejudice caused to the other party by the admission of
the additional affidavits.
[4]
The circumstance for the admission of the further affidavit and
the exercise of the discretion by the court have relevance,
and are
as follows below.
[7]
Nedbank alleged the commencement of the business rescue proceeding
was a stratagem to avoid the
sale of certain properties pursuant to
their attachment on or about 23 March 2023, following an order
obtained on 6 September 2022.
Mr Tayob was appointed as the business
rescue business practitioner on 19 April 2023.
[8]
Mr Tayob purported to suspend the obligations of Sana Developers to
Nedbank in terms of the loan
agreements in terms of section 136(2) of
the Act. As said, Nedbank, a secured creditor already had a
judgment against Sana
Developers in respect of the properties
underpinning its security, which were the subject of the loan
agreement. In addition, Nedbank
held security by way of a cession of
book debts over rentals of properties leased by Sana Developers. I
was of the view that the
purported suspension in the face of the
judgment was irregular.
[9]
Mr Tayob convened the first meeting of creditors, on 2 May 2023, but
failed to produce a business
rescue plan despite an extension granted
to him to 5 July 2023. As at the date of the launch of the
liquidation application
in August 2023, (the subject of the orders
appealed against), Mr Tayob had not published a business rescue plan
nor sought an extension
from creditors for the failure to do so.
That conduct is not countenanced by the Act.
[10]
Mr Tayob furnished the business rescue plan on 9 October 2023. The
business rescue plan considered by the
court was annexed to his
answering affidavit opposing the liquidation application. As said, it
was not published within the 25
business day period stipulated in
section 150(5) of the Act nor within the reasonable period after the
extension was granted. It
was published approximately two months
after Nedbank launched the application for liquidation.
[11]
The injunction in the Act contemplates that business rescue
proceedings should be conducted expeditiously.
The Court rejected Mr
Tayob’s explanation for the delay and found his explanation
implausible.
[12]
Nedbank contended that on 17 May 2024, a few days before the hearing
of the application for liquidation,
Mr Tayob unilaterally amended, or
in the language employed in section 153 (1
)(a)(i)
“revised
the plan” (the business rescue plan annexed to his answering
his affidavit) without the approval of the creditors.
It is
undisputed that although the revision was unauthorised, Nedbank
attended the meeting out of caution and voted against the
plan. It is
indeed so that extracts of the revised plan formed part of the
supplementary affidavit admitted by the Court.
[13]
Rather than accept the rejection of the plan and file a certificate
to terminate the proceedings, Mr Tayob
informed the meeting he would
avail to section 153 (1)
(a) (ii)
. The section permits him to
apply to court to challenge Nedbank’s vote against the plan as
“in appropriate.”
[14]
It is this unauthorised plan, voted against by Nedbank, a creditor
with 93,184% of the voting interest, that
the applicants complain I
should have granted the postponement for the applicants to address.
It is on this basis that the applicants
say the Court relied on
“incorrect evidence” – that being “the
original business rescue plan, which was
attached to the answering
affidavit.”
[15]
From the facts before the Court, the spectre of abuse of business
rescue proceedings which have been decried
by the courts in several
decisions, and the prejudice to the major creditor loomed large. The
revised plan surfaced on the eve
of the hearing of the liquidation
application. Nedbank anticipated Mr Tayob would seek a postponement
to further delay the hearing
of the liquidation application. At the
time of the hearing, he had “threatened to challenge” the
rejection of the plan.
I did not understand that the
application had been launched. He was required to do so within 5 days
of the rejection of the plan.
[16]
Significantly for the court, despite the request
to investigate the issue the cession of book debts and
the payment of
monies due to Nedbank in respect thereof, Mr Tayob failed to collect
monies due. He had no answer to this failure.
It was suggested during
argument that Nedbank’s debt had been reduced. This too is not
based on the true reason for the reduction
of the debt owing. Nedbank
exercised its rights to the security separately. The reduction of the
debt did not flow from Mr Tayob’s
impartial and independent
conduct of rescue proceedings expected of him under the Act.
[17]
Accordingly, the discretion to admit the supplementary affidavit was
judicially exercised in the circumstances.
As will be apparent below,
any prejudice that the applicants would likely suffer was ameliorated
by the import of the orders granted.
[18]
The applicants attack the Court’s conclusion that Nedbank would
have been entitled to the order under
section 130(1)
(a)(iii)
of the Companies Act for a procedural irregularity. Further they say
the Court ought to have found there is a reasonable prospect
of
rescuing Sana Developers based on the unilaterally revised business
rescue plan. They say the Court erred in proceeding with
the
liquidation application “during the adjourned period
contemplated by section 153(2)(a)”, on the same day that the
business rescue practitioner “had announced the intention”
to seek a court order to set aside the applicant's vote.
[16]
The complaints lack merit. The procedural irregularity in Ms Warren’s
affidavit, supported by correspondence,
catalogued the complaint but
was not challenged or disputed. In any event, section 130(1)
(a)(iii)
was not the sole basis for reaching the conclusion that Nedbank would
be entitled to an order setting aside the resolution initiating
business rescue and terminating the proceedings.
[17]
Here, Nedbank’s liquidation application was launched some
months before the belated unauthorised attempts
to revise the
business rescue plan. An announcement of an intention to challenge a
vote against the plan is of no moment. Section
153(2
)(a)
does
not provide an additional moratorium to a rescue practitioner. It
does not a bar an aggrieved affected person from instituting
liquidation proceedings.
[18]
I must add that when asked about the fate of the challenge to the
rejection of the plan during the hearing
of this appeal, it was clear
to the court that there have been no steps to prosecute it
expeditiously.
[19]
I turn to whether I should grant leave to appeal. The question is
whether the applicants would have a reasonable
prospect of success on
appeal. As put to Counsel for the applicants, I must be satisfied
that the decision in respect of which
leave to appeal is sought is
appealable. The often cited test in
Zweni
v Minister of Law and Order
[5]
makes
it plain that the order appealed against must be:
i.final in effect and
not open to alteration by the Court of first instance
ii.definitive of the
rights of the parties; and
iii.lastly, have the
effect of disposing at least a substantial portion of the relief
claimed in the main proceedings.
[20]
I accept that the interests of justice have been
infused with the above considerations.
[6]
Fundamentally, the flexible and pragmatic approach propounded in
Health
Professions Council of South Africa and Another v Emergency Medical
Supplies and Training CC t/a EMS
[7]
still applies. As stated in
Zweni
whether
the appeal will lead to a just and reasonably prompt resolution of
the real issue between the parties is an important
factor.
[21]
Counsel sought to contend that each of the orders should be construed
in discrete parts. I disagree with
this segmentation. In my view the
granting of the provisional order for liquidation is linked
inextricable with the finding on
the prospect of success in rescuing
Sana Developers. The same reasons for granting the provisional order
impact whether Sana Developers
can be rescued. Importantly, the
provisional order has not been rendered final or discharged.
[22]
In this case, the construction of the judgment and order appealed is
material. The often cited decision in
Firestone
South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Genticuro
[8]
makes it plain that:
“
The basic
principles applicable to construing documents also apply to the
construction of a court's judgment or order: the court’s
intention is to be ascertained primarily from the language of the
judgment or order as construed according to the usual, well-known
rules …
Thus, as in the case of a
document, the judgment or order and the court's reasons for giving it
must be read as a whole in order
to ascertain its intention. If, on
such a reading, the meaning of the judgment or order is clear
and unambiguous, no extrinsic
fact or evidence is admissible to
contradict, vary, qualify, or supplement it.”
[23]
Although Nedbank sought a final order for liquidation, the Court
granted a provisional order for liquidation
to safeguard the
interests of all affected persons including the applicants.
Notwithstanding the conduct which is not in keeping
with the objects
of business rescue and flagrant disregard of the requirements, the
Court in its Judgment states the following:
“
I am minded that
Professors Patrick O'Brien and Juanitta Calitz express the view that
the requirement of a reasonable prospect for
rescuing the company is
a continuous one that applies to business rescue from birth to
death." By implication Mr Tayob
can present facts pointing to
the availability of post commencement finance to answer Nedbank's
supplementary affidavit
. Pending that, and without pronouncing on
the correctness of the application, under section 153, or the right
of an affected person
to bring the business rescue proceedings, that
right is not a bar to the provisional order Nedbank seeks as a
security holder nor
a legitimate basis for a postponement of this
application.” [ emphasis added]
[24]
Accordingly, a final word has not been spoken on the fate of Sana
Developers. The applicants were not left
remediless or prejudiced by
the orders. The Court availed them the opportunity to answer the
supplementary affidavit and present
any new information before the
Court to dispel and rebut the
prima facie
view forming the
basis for the provisional liquidation order.
[25]
In the parlance in
Zweni
, a leave to appeal will not result if
it will not lead to “a just and reasonably prompt resolution of
the real issue between
the parties.” Here, leave to appeal
will not dispose of all the issue between the parties. The court
order is not final
and definitive of the rights of the applicants. It
could hardly be in the interest of justice to grant the leave to
appeal in this
case.
[26]
In the result, I make the following order
a. The Application
for leave to appeal is dismissed.
b. The applicants
are ordered to pay the costs of the application jointly and severally
at Scale C.
NTY
SIWENDU
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
JOHANNESBURG
This
Judgment is handed down electronically by circulation to the
Plaintiff’s Legal Representative and the Defendant by email,
publication on Case Lines. The date for the handing down is
deemed
2025
Date
of appearance: 29 January 2025
Date
Judgment delivered:
Appearances:
For
the Applicants: Advocate Mathopo
Instructed
by: Mayet Attorneys Inc
For
the Respondent: Advocate De Oliveira
Instructed
by: KWA Attorneys
[1]
10 of 2013.
[2]
Erasmus
Superior Court Practice at
RS
2, 2024, D-101 (see also
Matoto
v Free State Gambling and Liquor Authority
(unreported,
FB case no 4629/2015 dated 8 June 2017) at para [5]) referred to.
[3]
71 of 2008.
[4]
Ndlebe
v Budget Insurance Ltd
2019 JDR 0506 (GJ) at para [7].
[5]
1993
(1) SA 523 (A).
[6]
Tshwane
City v Afriforum
2016
(6) SA 279
(CC) at para [40].
[7]
2010
(6) SA 469
(SCA).
[8]
1977 (4) SA 298
(A) at 304 para D-F.
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