Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 249South Africa
Air Liquide Large Industries (Pty) Ltd v Lemnotho Catering CC (2024/006165) [2025] ZAGPJHC 249 (7 March 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
7 March 2025
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Air Liquide Large Industries (Pty) Ltd v Lemnotho Catering CC (2024/006165) [2025] ZAGPJHC 249 (7 March 2025)
Air Liquide Large Industries (Pty) Ltd v Lemnotho Catering CC (2024/006165) [2025] ZAGPJHC 249 (7 March 2025)
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sino date 7 March 2025
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
Number:
2024-006165
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES/
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/
NO
(3)
REVISED: YES/
NO
DATE:
7 March 2025
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
AIR
LIQUIDE LARGE INDUSTRIES (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
LEMNOTHO
CATERING
CC
Respondent
JUDGMENT
HA VAN DER MERWE, AJ:
[1]
This is an application for the liquidation
of the respondent close corporation.
[2]
In the founding affidavit, the applicant
relies on two grounds on which it bases its case on jurisdiction:
that the respondent chose
a
domicilium
citandi et executandi
within the
territorial jurisdiction of this court and that the respondent
consented to the jurisdiction of this court in terms
of a written
agreement concluded with the respondent.
[3]
In terms section 7 of the Close
Corporations Act 69 of 1984 (the Act):
“
For
the purposes of this Act any High Court and any magistrate's court,
within whose area of jurisdiction the registered office
or the main
place of business of the corporation is situated, shall have
jurisdiction.”
[4]
An application for the liquidation of a
close corporation is a proceeding in terms of the Act.
[5]
As an application for liquidation is a
status matter, section 7 is the exclusive source of this court’s
jurisdiction. In
Sibakhulu Construction
(Pty) Ltd v Wedgewood Village Golf Country Estate (Pty) Ltd (Nedbank
Ltd Intervening)
2013 (1) SA 191
(WCC),
(
Sibakhulu
)
Binns-Ward J found in respect of a company:
“
I
think it admits of no doubt that winding up and supervision for
business rescue purposes are both matters going to the status
of the
subject company, and that the power to make a determination on a
question of status involves a
ratio
jurisdictionis
exercisable only by the court within whose jurisdiction the company
resides or is domiciled.”
[1]
[6]
The judgement in
Sibakhulu
was not followed in
Wild & Marr
(Pty) Ltd v Intratek Properties (Pty) Ltd
2019 (5) SA 310
(GJ), but not on this point.
[7]
In
Ex Parte
Oxton
1948 (1) SA 1011
(C), Searle AJ
found:
“
It
is now firmly established that in our law in all matters affecting
status, in the absence of express statutory power, the exercise
of
jurisdiction is confined to the Court of the domicile of the parties
at the time when the action commenced; and the fact that
a party
submits to or fails to object to the jurisdiction of the Court does
not confer jurisdiction in respect of such matters
or absolve the
Court from satisfying itself as to the true domicile of the parties.”
[2]
[8]
It therefore does not matter for purposes
of establishing this court’s jurisdiction that the respondent
chose a
domicilium citandi et executandi
within the area of jurisdiction of this court, or that the respondent
failed to raise jurisdiction as a point in limine in the
answering
affidavit. (The respondent’s failure to raise jurisdiction as a
point in limine has an effect on costs, that I
deal with below).
[9]
Mr
Petersen, who appeared for the applicant, argued that the
respondent’s registered office is apparent from a summons
(annexed
to the answering affidavit) issued by a different company,
Air Liquide (Pty) Ltd against the respondent, wherein it is alleged
that the respondent has its registered office at an address in Dawn
Park, Boksburg. There are several problems with this submission.
An
allegation made in a pleading by a third party can hardly count as
evidence against the respondent. The summons was issued 2021,
so even
if it could be taken as evidence of the address of the respondent’s
registered office at that time, it does not assist
the applicant in
this application that was served on the respondent on
31 January 2024.
[3]
The
applicant is bound to make out its case in the founding affidavit on
jurisdiction pertinently. It is not entitled to found its
case on a
document annexed to an affidavit (especially an answering affidavit)
without having canvassed the point in issue in,
if not the founding
affidavit, then if permitted to do so, in the replying affidavit.
[4]
[10]
Mr Lindeque, who appeared for the
respondent, fairly drew my attention to a return of service annexed
to the founding affidavit,
that pertains to the service of a letter
of demand on the respondent, in which it is recorded that the
respondent’s registered
office is in Dawn Park, Boksburg. The
return of service deals with the sheriff’s attempt to serve the
letter of demand on
7 June 2023, so it still does not establish this
court’s jurisdiction when the application was served on
31 January 2024.
Moreover, although, in terms of
section
43(2)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
, “[t]
he
return of the sheriff or a deputy sheriff of what has been done upon
any process of a court, shall be prima facie evidence of
the matters
therein stated
”, the return is
prima facie evidence of how the sheriff served the letter of demand,
it is not prima facie evidence of the
address of the respondent’s
registered office. Invariably, the party instructing the sheriff to
serve a document instructs
the sheriff where the document is to be
served and whether it is a registered office – so that the
sheriff will be alive
to the rules that apply when service takes
place on a registered office. The sheriff does not independently
establish whether a
particular address is where a company’s
registered office is situated.
[11]
Mr Petersen also referred to me an
agreement in which it is recorded that the respondent has its
registered office at the address
in Dawn Park referred to above.
However, this agreement was concluded in 2018, so it also is not
evidence of the address of the
respondent’s registered office
on 31 January 2024. It also does not assist the applicant
for the same reasons set
out above in respect of the summons issued
by Air Liquide (Pty) Ltd.
[12]
Mr Petersen submitted that this court’s
inherent jurisdiction in terms of section 173 of the Constitution
solves the applicant’s
problem. In my view it does not. This
court’s inherent jurisdiction to regulate its own process is
not a ground on which
it may exercise jurisdiction over a respondent.
[13]
The applicant delivered a supplementary
affidavit in which it is stated:
“
In
this regard, I submit that this Court has jurisdiction to entertain
this application as the Respondent's principal place of business
and
registered address are situated within its jurisdiction.”
[14]
As
Mr Lindeque correctly submitted, those are conclusions of law, it is
not evidence of the location of the respondent’s registered
office or its principal place of business. Certainly not without the
applicant at least providing the address or addresses. It
therefore
is of no assistance to the applicant.
[5]
Typically,
the address of a company’s registered office is proven with the
records kept by the Companies and Intellectual
Property Commission.
Why that could not have been done has not been explained.
[15]
For these reasons the applicant has not
made out a case that this court has jurisdiction in terms of section
7 of Act.
[16]
As
I referred to above, the respondent did not raise jurisdiction in the
answering affidavit – all it disputed is the allegation
that
the respondent’s
domicilium
address is a ground of jurisdiction. The respondent also did not
raise jurisdiction in its heads of argument, or its practice note,
or
in the parties’ joint practice note. In my assessment
therefore, the respondent should not be entitled to any costs other
than those occasioned by a perusal of the notice of motion and
founding affidavit and the delivery of its notice of intention to
oppose.
[6]
[17]
I make the following order:
(a)
The applicant is dismissed on the ground
that the applicant failed to show that this court has jurisdiction;
(b)
The respondent is entitled to costs
pertaining to only perusing the notice of motion and founding
affidavit and delivery of its
notice of intention to oppose.
Otherwise I make no order as to costs.
H
A VAN DER MERWE
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
Heard
on:
6 March 2025
Delivered
on: 7 March
2025
For
the applicant:
Adv R Petersen instructed by Motsoeneng
Bill Attorneys
For the
respondent: Adv
IM Lindeque instructed by D & P Smit Attorneys
[1]
Para
[23]
[2]
At
1014. See also
Malvern
Trading CC v Absa Bank Ltd
2024 (1) SA 478
(GJ) para 47
[3]
Jurisdiction
falls to be determined when the proceedings are instituted:
Doctors
for Life International v Speaker of the National Assembly
2006
(6) SA 416 (CC)
para
[57]
[4]
Botha
v Smuts
2025
(1) SA 581
(CC) para [329];
Genesis
Medical Aid Scheme v Registrar, Medical Schemes
2017
(6) SA 1
(CC) para [172]
[5]
Mfwethu
Investments CC v Citiq Meter Solutions (Pty) Ltd
2020 (6) SA 578
(WCC) para [27]
[6]
Malan
& Co v Sahib
1918
WLD 51
;
Perumal
v Govender
1997
(3) SA 644
(N) 654C
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