Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 609South Africa
Aviation Co-Ordination Services (Pty) Ltd v Mango Airlines SOC Limited and Others (2022/058326) [2025] ZAGPJHC 609 (17 June 2025)
Headnotes
Summary
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Aviation Co-Ordination Services (Pty) Ltd v Mango Airlines SOC Limited and Others (2022/058326) [2025] ZAGPJHC 609 (17 June 2025)
Aviation Co-Ordination Services (Pty) Ltd v Mango Airlines SOC Limited and Others (2022/058326) [2025] ZAGPJHC 609 (17 June 2025)
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sino date 17 June 2025
FLYNOTES:
COMPANY
– Business rescue –
Cession
of book debts
–
Validity
– Plan's structure transferred creditors' claims to an
investor for negligible consideration – Leaves
company's
debt burden unchanged – Conflicts with purpose of business
rescue which aims to restructure debts to facilitate
solvency –
Compulsory cession was invalid – Unlawfully deprived
creditors of their claims without consent –
Invalidity
rendered entire plan incapable of lawful implementation –
Declared invalid and unenforceable –
Companies Act 71 of
2008
,
s 154.
#
# REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case no: 2022-058326
REPORTABLE: YES
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: YES
REVISED: NO
DATE 17/06/2025
In the matter between:
AVIATION
CO-ORDINATION
Applicant
# SERVICES (PTY) LTD
SERVICES (PTY) LTD
and
MANGO AIRLINES SOC
LIMITED
1st Respondent
(in business rescue)
SIPHO
SONO
2nd Respondent
THE AFFECTED PERSONS
LISTED IN
3rd to 90th Respondent
ANNEXURE A TO THE
NOTICE OF MOTION
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Summary
Business Rescue Plan
that sought to create an automatic and compulsory cession of claims.
Held -Proposed
compulsory cession in Business Rescue Plan invalid on the basis that
a cession requires intention to cede.
Held -
Section 154
of
the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
– cession of book debts does not
constitute a discharge under the section.
Held –
Section
154
relates to compromise and does not extend to cession of book
debts
# FISHER J
FISHER J
Introduction
[1]
The applicant is a creditor of Mango in business
rescue. The respondents are Mango in business rescue and the business
rescue practitioner,
Mr Sipho Sono.
[2]
The case involves questions around the validity of
a cession of book debts to an Investor under a Business Rescue Plan
pertaining
to the rescue of Mango. The Plan has allegedly been
approved by 98% of the voting creditors.
[3]
The applicant was one of the creditors that voted
against the Plan.
[4]
The applicant seeks that it be declared that the
Plan is not capable of lawful implementation.
[5]
The Plan prescribes, as a central feature thereof,
an automatic and compulsory cession of the book debts of Mango to an
unnamed
third-party Investor.
[6]
The cession is stated to come into effect
automatically on a negligible part payment of the debts of the
creditors and the
spes
of
receiving payment of a “top-up” in an amount which will
be determined at the end of what is called “the Investor
Process” in the Plan.
[7]
The validity of this cession is central to the
case.
The competing
arguments
The application
[8]
The applicant argues that the compulsory cession,
which lies at the heart of the Plan, is invalid for being the
dispossession of
property at common law and under the Constitution.
[9]
The applicant submits that this central invalidity
vitiates the entire Plan and renders it incapable of lawful
implementation.
The counter
-application
[10]
The
respondents argue in their conditional counter-claim that all
creditors, including the applicant and other dissenting and
non-voting
creditors are bound by the Plan. This argument is made on
the basis of section 154 of the Companies Act
[1]
(the
Act).
[11]
The respondents argue that section 154 operates to
render the imposed cessions valid and capable of implementation,
either
per se
or
alternatively, in the context of declarations of rights sought in the
counter-application.
[12]
The relief in the counter-application is framed,
in the first instance, on the basis that it be declared that the
rights of creditors
against sureties for the ceded debts will not be
affected by the cessions in the Plan.
[13]
This claim emerges from an argument to the effect
that the only invalidity which could possibly arise from the cession
scheme in
the Plan is the extinguishing of the creditors’
rights to claim against sureties for the debts. This is because,
argue the
respondents, under section 154(2) of the Act the applicant
is deprived of the ability to enforce its claim so the only possible
prejudice would arise out of the loss of a claim against the surety.
If this is taken account of by declarator that the suretyship
rights
are not affected by the cession, say the applicants, then any
possible invalidity is eradicated.
[14]
The point is made that the applicant, in any
event, has no basis for complaint in that there is no accessory
obligation to the principal
debt owed by Mango to it. The applicant
is accused of acting in bad faith to scupper the plan in a bid to
obtain a better deal
for itself.
[15]
In the alternative to the relief which seeks to
solve what is framed as this “suretyship difficulty”, a
declarator is
sought to the effect that clause 6.2.6 of the Plan,
which contains the impugned compulsory cession, does not apply to the
applicant
or any other creditor that has dissented from the Plan.
This argument goes that this declaration will have the effect that
any
invalidity which arises because of the lack of agreement to the
cession is taken account of by excluding the dissenting creditors
from the Plan.
[16]
These alternative claims notwithstanding, the
counter-application seeks to go further still and obtain declaratory
relief to the
effect that the applicant is, nonetheless, bound by the
Plan. This it seeks on the basis of a construction of section 154(2)
of
the Act.
[17]
The respondents also seek yet a further declarator
to the effect that the applicant is not entitled, upon the
implementation of
the Plan, to enforce its claims against the
company.
[18]
This latter declarator will be put into context
later. It suffices here to state that the relief stems also from the
respondents’
construction of section 154 of the Act with which
interpretation the applicant joins issue.
Issues for
determination
[19]
The central question is whether the Plan is
incapable of lawful implementation for its purpose under the Act
because of the central
invalidity of the compulsory cession.
[20]
A second question is whether the Plan can be
rendered unobjectionable by a reading thereof in the context of the
declaratory relief.
[21]
I will deal with these questions in turn.
Is the Plan capable of
implementation?
[22]
Business rescue entails putting a distressed
company under temporary supervision and management by a properly
qualified Business
Rescue Practitioner.
[23]
The
soul of the business rescue process is compromise in respect of the
company’s debts.
[2]
The
Act accepts that, without such compromise, business rescue is not
possible. The Act thus allows for the putting in place of
temporary
moratoria to give the company “breathing space” to
develop a plan which has, as its purpose, the rescue of
the company
through the restructuring of the company’s business, property
and debt and other liabilities.
[3]
[24]
Thus, what is envisaged is the development, to the
greater good, of a solution to the financial distress in which the
company finds
itself.
[25]
Any
such solution would, in the normal course, amount to the
implementation of an agreed Plan which is directed at managing the
company’s indebtedness such that the company is given a chance
at solvency or the prospects of recovery of creditors and
members on
insolvency are improved.
[4]
[26]
The validity and appropriateness of the Plan must
be considered as against its salient features as seen in this
context.
The salient features
of the Plan
[27]
All emphasis in quotations from the Plan are mine.
[28]
South African Airways (SOC) (SAA), the sole
shareholder of Mango has declined to provide further funding in the
business rescue
and has distanced itself from the Business Rescue
process. Thus, the rescue process can only succeed with investor
funding. The
terms under which this investor funding is obtained are
thus central to the Plan that creditors have been asked to accede to.
[29]
The Plan proposes that Mango pay the residue of
the funds that were previously injected by SAA (net of employee
claims and restructuring
costs) to concurrent creditors in part
payment of their claims.
[30]
The estimated settlement that would be forthcoming
from these funds is 4.43 cents in the Rand – which would
translate roughly
to R44 300 per R1 million. Thus, the return from
this fund is negligible, if not nominal.
[31]
The Plan envisages that the shares are then sold
and transferred by SAA to the Investor at a nominal price after
payment of this
negligible dividend to creditors.
[32]
Immediately after the sale date in respect of the
shares, the Investor will subscribe for additional shares so as to
provide funds.
There is no detail provided as to the nature of the
subscription, the amount that will flow from this process and who
will be obliged
to provide the funds.
[33]
These funds in an unspecified amount will then, it
is hoped, be paid as a “top up” settlement to concurrent
creditors
in addition to the 4.43 cents.
[34]
The concurrent creditors (save for SARS and a
category of creditor having what is called “un-flown ticket
liability”
who would be given vouchers) would be in line for
the hoped for top up payment.
[35]
The relevant term of the Plan stating this
position is clause 6.2.5.3.1 which reads as follows:
“
The
Concurrent Creditors (save for SARS and the creditors in respect of
the Un- flown Ticket Liability) will be paid a "top
up"
settlement payment for their Claims in addition to the payment
referred to paragraph[sic] 6.2.5.1 [i.e. the 4.43 cents
in the Rand]”
[36]
Clause 6.2.6 is a central provision of the Plan.
It reads as follows:
“
On
payment to the Creditors as contemplated in paragraph[sic] 6.2.5.3.1,
all of the remaining balance of the Claims of the remaining
Concurrent Creditors
are
ceded
to
the Investor at face value thereof but for nominal consideration.
Under
the heading “Discharge of Debts and Claims” it was stated
that if the Plan was adopted and implemented in accordance
with its
terms as set out in the Investor Process all claims (save for those
of SARS)
“
will
not be compromised.”
[37]
Clause 6.10.3 purports to provide legal advice to
the creditors. It seeks to
explain the
effect of the cession with reference to the operation of section 154
(2) of the Act as follows:
“
Accordingly,
in terms of
Section 154(2)
of the
Companies Act, if
a BR Plan has
been approved and implemented, a Creditor will not be entitled to
enforce any debt owed by the Company immediately
before the beginning
of the Proceedings, except to the extent provided for in this BR
Plan.
Thereafter
the debt acquired by the Investor through the cession of Claims of
Concurrent Creditors may be converted to equity
(or quasi equity instrument),
subordinated
or otherwise be dealt with in such manner that the Company will be
restored to solvency.”
[38]
The deal proposed to the creditors is essentially
this. The creditors are asked to assent to a cession of their claims
to an Investor
(whose identity is not disclosed) on the understanding
that, if the required 75% majority vote for the deal is achieved, the
dissenting
and non-voting creditors’ claims will, in any event,
become unenforceable under
section 154(2).
[39]
Thus, the thrust of clause 6.10.3 is to inform the
creditors that they may as well agree to the proposed cession because
their claims
are in danger of being rendered unenforceable in any
event.
[40]
Regrettably, this advice to the creditors is
wholly misleading in that it misstates the effect of
section 154
(2).
[41]
In fact,
section 154
does not operate in the event
of cession. Thus, the central premise of the deal offered to the
creditors under the Plan is false.
[42]
Once this misstatement of the legal position on
cession is made clear, it is unlikely that any sensible creditor
would accede to
the Plan. In my view, it is commercially unviable.
[43]
Simply put, the Plan is based on the incorrect
assertion that the proposed compulsory cession is lawful.
[44]
The respondents concede that compulsory cession is
not competent on general principles. They, seek, however to posit
that
section 154(2)
provides a statutory mechanism to render the
cession valid.
[45]
The argument, simply put, is that the hapless
creditor who is bound by this Plan can refuse to cede, but is still
bound by the Plan
to the extent that it cannot pursue the ceded
claim. Thus, goes the argument, the claim is of no real value to the
creditor so
he may as well cede it.
[46]
The respondents in their heads of argument posit
the following construct which they argue leads to a conclusion of
validity of the
cession under the Plan:
“
As
for the validity of the cession, it is common cause that
section
154(1)
renders it incompetent to extinguish a creditor's claim
against its consent. But the law is settled that a creditor's claim
may
be rendered unenforceable against the company without the consent
of the creditor.
The
only practical difference for the creditor between
extinguishing
the claim and rendering it unenforceable against the company is that
extinguishing
the claim means it is lost against a surety as well
.
Purporting
to deprive a creditor of a right against a surety against the
creditor's consent is not competent.”
[47]
This statement of the respondents’ argument
represents a curious blend of
non-sequiturs and
anomalies.
[48]
The point of departure of the argument is the
positioning of the reason for invalidity as flowing from
section
154(1).
From this point of departure and on a treatment of
section
154(2)
a statutory basis for the submission of validity of the
compulsory cession in clause 6.2.6 is conjured up.
[49]
The argument goes that invalidity, in effect,
arises
solely
from
the fact that a claim against a surety is lost upon cession.
There is, it is argued, no practical benefit other
than the retention of the accessory claim against the surety on a
reading of
section 154(2).
The reason for this, it is submitted, is
that the claims under the Plan are not enforceable in any event. But
the respondents go
so far as to seek a declarator to this effect for
good measure.
[50]
The argument is then made that the surety problem
does not exist on a proper reading of the Plan, which is one which is
in favour
of validity. It is argued, on this basis, that this implies
that the claim against the surety remains extant on transfer of the
principal debt. Alternatively, say the respondents any insecurity
around this issue can be cured by the declarator sought to the
effect
that rights against sureties are not affected.
[51]
Simply put, the argument goes that, once the
possible suretyship problem is solved by the reading in of an implied
preservation
of the claim against sureties or the declarator, then
the cession is not invalid.
[52]
The applicant argues that this is a non-sequitur.
The invalidity, it says, in not cured by the alleged accommodation of
the suretyship
problem in that this is not the reason for the
invalidity. It argues, in any event, that
section 154
has no
application to the cession.
[53]
Thus, if the applicant is correct and
section
154(2)
does not apply to the cession, the whole argument unravels
because there is no basis for the statutory validity contended for
and
neither is there a
basis for the
contention creditors who do not accede are deprived of the right of
enforcement of their claims.
[54]
I turn to deal with the respondents’
argument in more detail.
[55]
The
first and, with respect, most obvious fallacy in the reasoning is
that the invalidity of the cession does not lie in the deprivation
of
the creditors’ claims against a surety where there is such a
suretyship liability. The invalidity arises simply because,
according
to the law of cession and at common law generally, one cannot deprive
the creditor of the debt or claim without his agreement.
[5]
Section
154
does not operate to change this principle.
[56]
And neither can
section 154(2)
be construed as a
statutory mechanism that allows for a treatment of the purported
cession in a manner that lawfully deprives the
applicant and other
dissenting creditors of their right to pursue their claims.
[57]
On the back of the submission that the only
impediment to validity was the suretyship problem, the respondents
have sought to segway
into an elaborate examination of whether it is
possible, on legal principles, to preserve the claim against a surety
in the face
of cession without the surety’s agreement. This
convoluted analysis is nothing more than an irrelevant distraction
and it
is not entertained.
[58]
Thus, to my mind, the matter begins and ends with
the trite principle that a cession cannot be forced on a person
without their
consent. Once this is accepted the entire argument of
the respondents fail.
[59]
Regrettably, because of the suggestion, on behalf
of the respondents, that
section 154
of the Act can be employed or
interpreted to, in some way, make inroads into this trite principle,
I am compelled to deal with
how
section 154
actually operates under
Chapter 6 of the Act.
Section 154
[60]
It is helpful to set out the section in full.
“
154
Discharge
of
debts and claims
(1)
A business rescue plan may provide that, if it is
implemented in accordance with its terms and conditions, a creditor
who has acceded
to
the discharge
of
the whole or part of a debt owing to that creditor will lose the
right to enforce the relevant debt or part of it.
(2)
If a business rescue plan has been approved and
implemented in accordance with this
Chapter
, a creditor is not entitled to
enforce any debt owed by the company immediately before the beginning
of the business rescue process,
except to the extent provided for in
the business rescue plan.” (Italics added).
[61]
Wallis
JA in
Van
Zyl v Auto Commodities (Pty) Ltd
[6]
in the
course of a comprehensive interpretation of
section 154
, made it
plain that the section applied only to
discharge
of
indebtedness.
[7]
Section 154(1)
allows a business rescue plan to contain a provision that operates to
discharge the company's indebtedness to particular creditors
(i.e.
acceding creditors) and limit the claims of others (dissenting
creditors). Where such a provision is contained in the business
rescue plan and a creditor 'accedes' to it, the debt is discharged in
the sense that it ceases to exist.
[8]
[62]
Section 154
has nothing to do with cession and,
once this is accepted, the respondents must fail.
[63]
A
classic Catch 22
[9]
arises
from the model proposed in the Plan: dissenting (and probably
non-voting)
[10]
creditors who,
as such, do not agree to cede their claims can only enforce their
claims through the Plan which entails cession.
[64]
Section
154
entails majority compromise of indebtedness. The minority
dissenters do not lose their claims, but they can only enforce them
to
the extent of the compromise. Thus, the discharge of the debt
under
section 154(1)
and its unenforceability by the creditor go hand
in hand. The compromised debt under
section 154(1)
ceases to exist
whereas, under
section 154(2)
, the debt continues to exist but its
enforcement is curtailed under
the
Plan
in
that
it
is
only
realizable
to
the
extent
of
the
compromise
accepted by the majority; in effect
section 154(2)
provides a
personal defence to the company, without discharging the debt
itself.
[11]
[65]
Cession is incompatible with
section 154(1).
The
subsection deals with complete discharge. It does not accommodate a
situation where the debt remains extant but is transferred
to another
person with the right to enforce.
[66]
The two subsections deal with different situations
entirely: the application of
section 154(1)
results in the discharge
of debt on compromise, whereas
section 154(2)
accepts that the debt
is extant but places a statutory limitation on the right of the
dissenting creditor to claim from the company.
[67]
In terms of the section, acceding creditors’
claims are dealt with under subsection 154(1) and dissenting
creditors are dealt
with under subsection (2).
[68]
In contrast, the melange of rights proposed by the
respondents entails that there is no compromise. Instead, the balance
of the
claims after payment of the paltry 4.43 cents in the Rand
remain extant but are not enforceable to any extent by creditors. But
they are enforceable by the Investor. Thus, the creditors get the
worst of both worlds: the company is no better off from an
indebtedness
perspective and the unpaid debts pass to the Investor
for no consideration. How this could possibly achieve the rescue of
the company
is difficult to understand.
[69]
Furthermore, a creditor cannot, under the section,
be deprived of the right to enforce a claim that remains enforceable
in the hands
of a cessionary of the claim.
[70]
And
this brings me to a further fundamental problem with the proposed
cession. If the creditor is deprived of the right of recovery,
as the
Plan seeks to do, the debt cannot be transferred to the Investor with
the right of recovery. To the extent that the Plan
seeks to override
the general principle that a person cannot cede more rights than he
has, and it seems, on its terms, that it
purports to do so, the
inability to implement the Plan arises also at this fundamental
level.
[12]
[71]
In short, the cession is unsustainable and unable
to be implemented on legal principles and this renders the entire
Plan incapable
of implementation.
[72]
These fundamental problems operate at the level of
principle and are not capable of severance as contended for on behalf
of the
respondents.
[73]
Regrettably, the Plan seeks to posit a central but
false incentive to creditors – they are advised that their
claims would
not be enforceable in any event because of
section
154(2).
This advice has no basis in law and is nothing but a chimera.
[74]
Section 150(2)(b)(ii)
of the Act provides that it
is mandatory for a business rescue plan to include a statement of the
extent to which the company is
to be released from payment of “any
of its debts”.
[75]
It comes as no surprise, in the circumstances,
that the Plan does not provide the required statement of the extent
to which the
company is released from payment of its debts. This is
because it is not released at all.
[76]
To the extent that the Plan seeks to create the
impression that the cession of debts under clause 6.2.6 amounts to a
discharge as
contemplated by
section 154(2)
, it is specious.
[77]
Mr Subel SC, for the applicant, correctly points
out that the Plan makes provision for the complete loss of the
creditors’
claims to the Investor on payment by the company of
the negligible amount of 4.43 cents in the Rand and the hope of some
undetermined
“top up”. He argues that this is a very bad
solution for creditors and a most attractive one for the Investor in
that
the Investor gets the claims and shares of the company for no
consideration whilst his required investment is neither quantified
nor mandated under the Plan. I agree; it is a very bad deal for all
creditors.
[78]
It is argued on behalf of the respondents that the
only value that the cession to the Investor has in the Plan is a “tax
benefit”.
The vague implication in this argument is that the
debts will not be enforced by the Investor on a subsequent
liquidation or otherwise.
[79]
There is, however, nothing in the Plan that
precludes the debts being enforced.
On the
contrary, the Plan expressly provides that “…the Claims
of Concurrent Creditors that are ceded to the Investor,
in terms of
the Investor Process,
may be converted
to equity (or quasi equity instrument),
subordinated
or otherwise be dealt with in such manner that the Company
will be restored to solvency
”
.
[80]
The debts can also be set off, in due course,
against debts owed to the company by the Investor. They have value to
the Investor
far above an alleged tax benefit.
[81]
Once it is accepted, as it must be, that the
cession proposed is invalid and not capable of being dealt with under
section 154
, it follows that the argument that, if the debt is not
ceded it cannot in any event be enforced is incorrect.
Conclusion
[82]
The Plan, shorn of its complexity, amounts to
nothing more than the confiscation of the creditors’ claims in
order that they
be transferred by Sono to an Investor who pays no
value for them or the shares.
[83]
The creditors’ position in the advent of
liquidation, which is a distinct possibility, is also worsened rather
than improved
by the Plan in that they have been divested of their
claims.
#
[84]
All these consequences would be in conflict with
the purpose of Business Rescue if the Plan were capable of lawful
implementation
– which, clearly, it is not.
[85]
In sum, the cession provided for is unenforceable
which, in turn, results in the Plan being incapable of
implementation.
[86]
In the circumstances, the applicant must succeed.
Costs
[87]
There was a dispute regarding whether it was
necessary for the applicant to obtain leave in terms of
section
133(1)
of the Act to institute the application. There was also a
dispute as to whether the applicant had properly served the
application
on affected persons.
[88]
These disputes resulted in opposed interlocutory
proceedings.
[89]
Mr Sono later consented to the bringing of the
proceedings, to the extent necessary, which takes account of the
section 133(1)
point and the further
interlocutory issue relating to service on affected parties was
resolved by way of a consent order.
[90]
The parties seek costs in the interlocutory
application which were reserved for determination by this court.
[91]
To my mind, the opposition by the respondents in
the main application was so unmeritorious that the costs should
follow the result
in relation to interlocutory issues as well as the
main claim and the counter -claim.
Order
[92]
I make the following order:
1.
The compulsory cession contained in clause 6.2.6
of the Business Rescue Plan is declared to be invalid and of no force
and effect.
2.
It is declared that the Business Rescue Plan
cannot be implemented.
3.
The respondents are to pay the costs which are to
include the costs of two counsel where employed, to be calculated on
scale C in
respect of senior counsel and scale B in respect of junior
counsel, and which costs are to include the reserved costs in respect
of the interlocutory application dated 3 March 2023.
#
# FISHER J
FISHER J
# JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
JOHANNESBURG
This Judgment was
handed down electronically by circulation to the parties/their legal
representatives by email and by uploading
to the electronic file on
Caselines. The date for hand-down is deemed to be 17 June 2025.
Heard:
27 May 2025
Delivered:
17 June 2025
# APPEARANCES:
APPEARANCES:
Applicant’s
counsel:
Adv. A Subel SC Adv
A Vorster
Applicant’s
Attorneys:
Cox Yeats Attorneys
1st Respondent's
Counsel: Adv F Snyckers SC Adv B M Gilbert
Respondent
Attorneys:
Bowman Gilfillan Inc
[1]
Companies
Act 71 of 2008
[2]
The
heading of Chapter 6 makes direct reference to the fact that
compromise is entailed. It reads: “CHAPTER 6 - BUSINESS
RESCUE
AND COMPROMISE WITH CREDITORS
(ss 128
-
155
)”
[3]
S
128(1)(b)
of the Act
[4]
Section
128(b):
'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;
[5]
Johnson
v Inc General Insurances Ltd 1983(1) SA 318 (A);
Skjelbreds
Rederi AS v Hartless (Pty) Ltd 1982(2) SA 710 A
[6]
Van
Zyl v Auto Commodities (Pty) Ltd
2021
(5) SA 171 (SCA).
[7]
Id at
para 20.
[8]
Van
Zyl at para 23.
[9]
A
Catch 22 is a paradoxical situation from which a person cannot
escape because of contradictory rules or limitations. The term
was
coined by Joseph Heller in his 1961 novel of that name. The plot
involves a fighter pilot who must fly on dangerous missions
unless
he achieves exemption on the grounds of insanity. If he expresses
that he will not fly because he is afraid, then this
indicates that
he is sane and he is thus not eligible for exemption; if he is not
afraid, he will fly even though the lack of
fear indicates insanity.
[10]
In
van Zyl at para 23 the Court raised without deciding the question of
what is required for a creditor to 'accede' to the discharge
of the
debt. The following questions are posed: “Does it mean that
they must have agreed to it? If so, is the agreement
constituted by
voting in support of the plan, or merely by accepting the benefits
under the plan, or in some other way? “The
Court concluded
that the answers to these questions are by no means clear-cut. The
indication given is that the Court is inclined
to the view that the
section contemplates a discharge brought about by the voluntary
action of the creditor, or consented to
by way of an overt act,
rather than a compulsory deprivation of rights.
[11]
van
Zyl at para 28
[12]
Brayton
Carlswald (Pty) Ltd and another v Brews
2017 (5) SA 498
(SCA) at
para12.
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