Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 640South Africa
Homii Lifestye (Pty) Ltd and Another v Unemployment Insurance Fund and Another (Appeal) (134443/2023) [2025] ZAGPJHC 640 (17 June 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
17 June 2025
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within 14 days, among other things to appoint new
Judgment
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## Homii Lifestye (Pty) Ltd and Another v Unemployment Insurance Fund and Another (Appeal) (134443/2023) [2025] ZAGPJHC 640 (17 June 2025)
Homii Lifestye (Pty) Ltd and Another v Unemployment Insurance Fund and Another (Appeal) (134443/2023) [2025] ZAGPJHC 640 (17 June 2025)
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sino date 17 June 2025
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
number: 134443/2023
(1) REPORTABLE: No
(2)
OF INTEREST TO THE JUDGES: No
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
17/06/2025
SIGNATURE:
BRAND AJ
Date:
17 June 2025
In
the appeal between:
HOMII
LIFESTYLE (PTY) LTD
First
Appellant
URBAN
LIFESTYLE INVESTMENT
HOLDINGS
(PTY) LTD
Second
Appellant
and
UNEMPLOYMENT
INSURANCE FUND
First
Respondent
PUBLIC
INVESTMENT CORPORATION SOC LTD
Second
Respondent
In
re
UNEMPLOYMENT
INSURANCE FUND
First
Applicant
PUBLIC
INVESTMENT CORPORATION SOC LTD
Second
Applicant
and
PATRICIA
CATHERINE JOHNSON
First
Respondent
HOMII
LIFESTYLE (PTY) LTD
Second
Respondent
URBAN
LIFESTYLE INVESTMENT
HOLDINGS
(PTY) LTD
Third
Respondent
JUDGMENT
BRAND
AJ (with MLAMBO JP and BARNARDT AJ concurring)
Introduction
and background
[1]
This is an appeal against an order of this court, per Davis J in
terms of section
18(3) of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013 (‘the
Superior Courts Act&rsquo
;) that an earlier order of his against
which an appeal is currently pending before the Supreme Court of
Appeal (the SCA), remains
in force and may be executed while that
appeal is pending.
[2]
The first appellant, Homii Lifestyle (‘Homii’) is a
property development
and management company. The second appellant,
Urban Lifestyle Investment Holdings (‘Urban’), is Homii’s
holding
company.
[3]
The first respondent is the Unemployment Insurance Fund (‘the
UIF’), a
statutory body with the main purpose of accepting
contributions from employers, from which to pay unemployment
insurance to those
who lose their jobs. The second respondent, the
Public Investment Corporation (‘the PIC’), is likewise a
statutory
body with the mandate to invest public money for a return
on behalf of the State.
[4]
The genesis of the dispute between the parties is a series of
agreements between them,
concluded in 2019. The first was a loan
agreement, referred to as the ‘Mezzanine Agreement’, in
terms of which the
UIF, through the PIC, lent a sum of
R410,000,000.00 to Homii. Homii was required to make six-monthly
interest payments on this
loan and also to provide the UIF annually
with its audited financial statements and each of its ‘approved
budget(s)’
as well as those of its ‘guarantors’.
[5]
To secure this loan, the UIF further entered into the second
agreement with Urban,
styled the ‘Cession and Pledge
Agreement’. In terms of this agreement Urban ceded and pledged
all its rights and interest
in its shares, shareholders’ claims
and ‘related rights’ in Homii, explicitly as security for
Homii’s ‘entire
indebtedness’, including interest,
fees or costs.
[6]
The rights that Urban so ‘ceded and pledged’ to the UIF
included the right
to attend all shareholders’ general meetings
and cast all votes attached to the ceded shares. These rights would
become operative
(in the sense that the UIF could exercise them) only
should Homii default on any of its obligations in terms of the
Mezzanine Agreement.
[7]
Over a prolonged period Homii failed to pay any of the six-monthly
interest amounts
required. Homii also failed to provide the UIF with
any of the information it was supposed to in terms of the Mezzanine
Agreement.
When this default persisted despite repeated demand, the
UIF wrote Urban in October 2023 that it perfected the session and
demanded
hand-over of all Urban’s shares in Homii and
particulars of all shareholders’ claims and related rights.
[8]
The perfection of the cession meant that the UIF had replaced Urban
as Homii’s
sole shareholder. As such, it demanded from Homii’s
sole director, Patricia Catherine Johnson (‘Johnson’),
that
a general shareholders’ meeting be convened, among other
things to appoint a new board of directors.
[9]
When neither Johnson nor Homii complied with this demand, the UIF and
PIC approached
this court with an application for a declaration that
the UIF is entitled to exercise voting rights concerning all Urban’s
shares in Homii and an order that a general shareholders’
meeting be held within 14 days, among other things to appoint new
directors (the ‘main application’).
[10]
This main application was first heard as urgent, before Strijdom J,
who struck the matter from
the roll because the necessary facts to
establish the jurisdiction of this Court, had not been pleaded.
[11]
When the matter was re-enrolled with supplemented papers now pleading
facts concerning jurisdiction,
it came before Collis J, who directed
that it be moved to the ordinary roll. The matter was finally heard
on the ordinary roll
before Davis J on 15 May 2024, who, in a
judgment dated 30 July 2024 granted the application.
[12]
Davis J dismissed an application for leave to appeal against his 30
July judgment in the main
application on 18 September 2024, whereupon
Homii and Urban approached the SCA. That court granted leave to
appeal on 3 December
2024. This prompted an urgent approach to this
court by the respondents in this appeal, in terms of
section 18(3)
of
the
Superior Courts Act to
have Davis J’
s 30
July order in the
main application declared enforceable pending the appeal to the SCA.
[13]
In a judgment and order dated 13 December 2024, Davis J granted the
section 18(3)
order sought (the ‘enforcement order’),
rendering the order in the main application enforceable despite the
appeal
against it pending before the SCA. The appellants promptly, on
23 December 2024 and in exercise of their automatic right to appeal
in terms of
section 18(4)
of the
Superior Courts Act, noted an
appeal
against the
section 18(3)
enforcement order. This is the appeal
before us.
[14]
In addition and finally, on 24 March 2025, the appellants filed an
application for leave to rely
on section 45 of the Companies Act 71
of 2008 (’the
Companies Act&rsquo
;) and to introduce new
evidence relating to that in this appeal against the enforcement
order.
Issues
[15]
In light of this background there are only two issues for this Court
to decide in this appeal:
[15.1] Whether to grant
leave to the appellants to rely on
section 45
of the
Companies Act
and
to introduce new evidence related to that in this appeal; and
[15.2] whether to uphold
or set aside Davis J’s section 18(3) enforcement order.
We
deal with these issues in turn below.
Analysis
Reliance
on
section 45
and introduction of new evidence
[16]
The appellants in this appeal seek to introduce both a new defence
against the respondents’
claim, not pleaded before, and new
evidence to support that new defence. This is apparent from their
notice of motion concerning
this, where they pray for an order for,
among other things, leave ‘for purpose of [this] appeal …
to rely upon
Section 45
of the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
and to
introduce the evidence in relation thereto contained in the Founding
Affidavit’.
[17]
Section 45
of the
Companies Act that
they seek to rely on relates to
the provision of financial assistance by one company to another.
Summarised in relevant part it
determines that if a company wishes to
provide financial assistance to a related company, such a decision
must be approved by its
board and a special meeting of shareholders,
and its board must be ‘satisfied that immediately after
providing the financial
assistance, the company would satisfy the
solvency and liquidity test’.
[1]
Failure to comply with these two requirements renders any resultant
agreement void from the outset.
[2]
[17]
The defence they wish to raise anew on appeal is that both the
Mezzanine and the Session and
Pledge agreements are void from the
outset for want of compliance with
section 45.
The evidence they seek
to introduce now are share-holders’ resolutions and a
director’s resolution that on their version
show non-compliance
with
section 45.
In sum the appellants’ position is that the
respondents were required by law to plead compliance with
section 45
before the court
a quo
but failed to do so. This, they say,
rendered their main application excipiable. The appellants wish to
raise this defence now,
in the appeal against the
section 18(3)
enforcement order. They wish to do so to show that they will suffer
irreparable harm in being held to agreements that are void
should the
enforcement order be upheld on appeal.
[18]
Leave to raise a new defence on appeal is not there for the asking –
it is given only in
certain circumstances. The reason for this is
obvious: An appeal court considers and must pronounce on the cogency
of the judgment
of the court a quo. Logically, it must as a rule do
so in light of the case presented to that court. To consider a
different case
than that turns the appeal into a re-hearing of the
matter rather than an assessment of the judgment of the Court a
quo.
[3]
[19]
To persuade us to allow them to raise the
section 45
defence on
appeal, the appellants placed great stock in the well-known dictum of
Jansen JA in
Paddock
Motors (Pty) Ltd v Igesund
[4]
that it ‘would create an intolerable position if a Court were
to be precluded from giving the right decision on accepted
facts,
merely because a party failed to raise a legal point, as a result of
an error of law on his part’.
[5]
[19]
They were correct to do so. The circumstances under which a new
defence may be raised on appeal
are indeed comprehensively described
in Paddock Motors, drawing on the earlier judgment in
Cole
v Government of the Union of S.A.
where Innes JA set out the position as follows:
[6]
'If the point is covered
by the pleadings, and if its consideration on appeal involves no
unfairness to the party against whom it
is directed, the Court is
bound to deal with it. And no such unfairness can exist if the facts
upon which the legal point depends
are common cause, or if they are
clear beyond doubt upon the record, and there is no ground for
thinking that further or other
evidence would have been produced had
the point been raised at the outset.'
[20]
From this arise two requirements that must be met before a new point
of law may be raised on
appeal: the point must be ‘covered by
the pleadings’; and its consideration on appeal should not
cause any unfairness
for the party against which it is directed.
[21]
In sum the inquiry is whether it is in the interest of justice to
allow the new defence on appeal,
in the sense that ‘a refusal
by a Court of Appeal to give effect to a point of law fatal to one or
other of the contentions
of the parties would amount to the
confirmation by it of a decision clearly wrong’.
[7]
[23]
As to the first of the two requirements, the appellants submitted
that their
section 45
defence was covered in the pleadings in the
negative: The respondents, to plead existence of valid agreements on
which to found
their main application, were required to plead
compliance with
section 45.
Their failure to do so was evident on the
papers a quo and as such covered by the pleadings.
[24]
These submissions are very tenuous. From
Barkhuizen
v Napier
it is clear that what is meant with the requirement that the point
raised on appeal must have been ‘covered in the pleadings’
before the court
a
quo
, is
that all the facts required for determination of the point of law now
raised on appeal must have been on the papers before
the Court
a
quo
.
[8]
In both
Barkhuizen
and
Paddock
Motors
this was manifestly the case: both were decided on agreed facts.
Indeed, in
Paddock
the point of law later raised on appeal was initially raised
a
quo
,
with the facts to support it, but then later abandoned.
[25]
In this matter, the opposite is true. The very fact that the
appellants now seek to introduce
new evidence before this Court on
appeal to sustain the point of law they want to raise (evidence that
they had in their possession
all along) shows that these facts were
not on the papers
a quo
, so that the
section 45
defence is not
covered by the pleadings. In short, there may have been enough facts
on the papers a quo to raise the
section 45
point, but not to
determine it.
[26]
This conclusion is underscored by the reliance Mr Wasserman SC for
the respondents placed on
the matter of
Yannakou
v Apollo Club
.
[9]
This case involved a contractual dispute in which the party against
whom the contract was sought to be enforced on appeal for the
first
time raised the defence that the contract in question was void due to
an illegality, as it was in contravention of a statutory
prohibition.
Trollip JA held that if a defendant ‘relies on a particular
section of a statute, he must either state the number
of the section
and the statute he is relying on or formulate his defence
sufficiently clearly so as to indicate that he is relying
on it’
and that ‘if his defence is illegality, which does not appear
ex facie
the transaction sued on but arises from its surrounding
circumstances, such illegality and the circumstances founding it must
be pleaded’.
[10]
[27]
In this light there was in fact a duty on the appellants to raise the
provisions of the
Companies Act on
which they now seek to rely to
establish that the contracts were void for non-compliance with
section 45
, in the Court
a quo
. There is also nothing on the
record to show that this non-compliance and resultant voidness
appeared on the face of the pleadings
before the Court a quo so that
it should have taken cognisance of it
mero motu
.
[28]
Apart from the fact that in my view the appellants fail to establish
that the
section 45
defence they now seek to raise was covered by the
papers, their raising this defence now, on appeal, is unfair to the
respondents.
One of the examples that Innes JA lists in
Cole
of unfairness to the other party resulting from the raising of a new
point on appeal that was not raised
a
quo
, is
if there are grounds ‘for thinking that further or other
evidence would have been produced had the point been raised
at the
outset’.
[11]
[29]
There were two routes through which the appellants could have raised
non- compliance with
section 45
in the main application: it could
have excepted to the application on grounds that it failed to
disclose a cause of action (in
motion proceedings the more uncommon
route) or it could simply have raised this defence in its answering
affidavit. In both cases
the appellants’ raising of the defence
at that stage would have afforded the respondents the opportunity to
raise evidence
up to then not on the papers to rebut the defence.
[30]
If the appellants excepted and the exception was upheld, in the
ordinary course the offending
pleading would have been set aside, and
the respondents would have been given leave to amend it within a
prescribed period.
[12]
If the
section 45
defence was raised in the answering affidavit, the
respondents could have raised evidence to rebut it in their reply.
For the appellants
not to raise this defence a quo in the main
application (as it is, following
Yannakou
,
required to do), precluded the respondents from raising evidence to
rebut it and it is for that reason that it is unfair.
[13]
[31]
In addition to this unfairness, it would in my view also not be in
the interests of justice for
us to allow the appellants to raise this
defence anew in this appeal. The ‘intolerable position’
that Jansen JA warns
of in
Paddock
Motors
,
[14]
refers to the manifest injustice that would arise if a Court on
appeal must confirm and uphold a decision of the Court a quo that
is
‘
clearly
wrong
’
[15]
in light of a defence that a party is precluded from raising on
appeal simply because it did not raise it at the outset. In other
words, there should be no reasonable dispute on the merits of the
defence raised on appeal and certainly no need to introduce new
evidence on appeal on the basis of which the defence must be decided.
[32]
This is evidently not so with the appellants’ attempted
reliance on
section 45.
The fact that there was need for the
appellants to apply for leave to introduce new evidence on appeal on
its own already shows
that the appellants’
section 45
point is
not
clearly
right and that the two agreements were not
clearly
void from the outset. But quite apart from that, Mr Wasserman for the
respondents submitted (persuasively to my mind) that the
merits of
the appellants’
section 45
defence are decidedly thin –
at best arguable.
[33]
I emphasise that the purpose now is not to decide the merits of the
appellants’ purported
section 45
defence one way or the other.
Instead, we must consider the merits of that defence only to
determine whether it is clearly right
or open to reasonable doubt. If
the latter, then it would not be in the interests of justice to admit
it at this stage.
[34]
The respondents to my mind clearly cast considerable doubt on the
merits of the
section 45
defence, broadly in two ways. First, Mr
Wasserman submitted that
section 45
does not apply to the Mezzanine
agreement, so that its requirements need not have been complied with
there.
[35]
He points out that
section 45
applies only to financial assistance
extended by a company to a ‘director or prescribed officer of
the company or of a related
or inter- related company, or to a
related or inter-related company or corporation, or to a member of a
related or inter-related
corporation, or to a person related to any
such company, corporation, director, prescribed officer or member’.
The only part
of this excerpt from the section that can conceivably
apply to the Mezzanine Agreement (concluded between the UIF and
Homii) is
the reference to a ‘related or inter-related company
or corporation’. When the Mezzanine Agreement was concluded
(and
also thereafter) there was no relation or interrelation between
the UIF and Homii. It was an ordinary, arms-length commercial
transaction
between two unrelated companies. For that reason, so the
submission concludes,
section 45
does not apply. There is merit in
this submission.
[36]
Second, concerning the Cession and Pledge Agreement, the submission
was that even if
Section 45
applied to it, the documents that the
appellants seek to admit on appeal show that it was complied with.
These are in the first
place a shareholders’ resolution in
which the Cession and Pledge Agreement is approved and a resolution
signed by the sole
director of the appellants at the time, Ms Johnson
in which she likewise approves the agreement and confirms her
satisfaction that
immediately after the provision of the financial
assistance concerned, the company would satisfy the solvency and
liquidity test.
[37]
To be sure, Mr Harpur SC for the appellants offered cogent rejoinders
particularly to the respondents’
submissions concerning the
Cession and Pledge Agreements (concerning the shareholders’
resolution that it was passed by the
previous sole shareholder in
Homii, A1, while the UIF had at that time by agreement already been
give a 42% share stake in Urban,
so that the resolution was invalid
due to the UIF’s non participation in voting, and that it was
not properly a special resolution
as required; and concerning the
Board resolution that an
ex post facto
report on Urban’s
financial position later acquired showed that objectively the
solvency and liquidity test was not satisfied).
[38]
But the point at this stage again is not which of the two is correct
– instead it is simply
that there is no clear resolution to the
dispute. Reasonably, it will remain in dispute until fully ventilated
and decided on the
basis of relevant facts. As such it clearly cannot
be said that Davis J’s judgment and order in the main
application is clearly
wrong so that it would be ‘intolerable’
to confirm it despite a potential cogent challenge that cannot be
raised on
appeal simply because it was not raised earlier.
[39]
For these three reasons then (that the
section 45
defence was not
covered by the pleadings; that admitting it would be unfair to the
respondents; and that it would not offend the
interests of justice to
exclude it), taken together and each on its own, I conclude that the
appellants cannot be permitted to
rely on
section 45
in this appeal.
Accordingly, their application for leave to do so must be dismissed.
[40]
This conclusion of course puts paid also to their application for
leave to introduce new evidence
on appeal, in support of the
section
45
defence – the two parts of the application are mutually
supportive and interrelated. I nonetheless for sake of completeness
proceed briefly to consider also this aspect of the application for
leave.
[41]
The point of departure in dealing with applications to introduce new
evidence on appeal is that
it should be allowed only
exceptionally.
[16]
The reason
for this is much the same as applies in the case of raising a new
defence. If the purpose of a Court on appeal is to
assess the
judgment of the Court
a
quo
,
then it can properly fulfil that purpose only if it assesses that
judgment against the evidence upon which it was arrived at alone.
[42]
In
Coleman
v Dunbar
[17]
it was held that a party seeking to introduce new evidence on appeal
must at a minimum provide a cogent explanation for why the
evidence
was not introduced in the Court of first instance and show that the
evidence concerned is material to the outcome of the
matter and at
face value true.
[18]
Below I
consider each of these requirements in turn in relation to the
appellants’ case.
[43]
The only explanation that the appellants offer for their failure to
raise the
section 45
defence at the outset is that their legal advice
when first faced with the main application was that the jurisdiction
point on
which that application was initially struck from the roll
and with which they now persist on appeal was clearly dispositive of
the application so that alternative defences to the application were
at that stage not pursued. The reason why their counsel at
the time
did not then alert them also to the
section 45
defence, is that he
was not ‘alive to’ it. They were only alerted to the
section 45
defence when they briefed new counsel for purposes of
their opposition to the application for the
section 18(3)
enforcement
order. He immediately informed them that the defence was available to
them, but by then, of course, the proverbial
horse had bolted.
[44]
This is simply no explanation at all, let alone a cogent or
persuasive one as required. It does
not say why they didn’t
raise the defence at the outset.
[19]
Instead, it is simply a restatement of the appellants’
predicament: Whether by design or oversight, they didn’t raise
the
section 45
defence at the outset and they seek to do so now. The
application to introduce new evidence on appeal thus falls at the
first hurdle.
[45]
The second requirement, materiality, means that the evidence, if
admitted and shown true for
the purpose for which it was admitted,
would have a bearing on the outcome of the matter – could
decisively influence or
determine the outcome, that is. Much of the
evidence the appellants seek to introduce also fails this test in
that it is not self-evidently
even relevant, let alone material to
the outcome of the matter. Indeed, this can be said about all but the
shareholders’
and director’s resolutions. Both these
latter two documents certainly pass the test of materiality –
if they say and
show what the appellants allege they do (that the
requirements of
section 45
were not complied with, something the
respondents of course dispute) then they potentially prove that at
least the Cession and
Pledge agreement is void, so that the
respondents would not be entitled to the relief they seek in the main
application.
[46]
But herein lies the rub: are the shareholders’ and directors’
resolutions true on
the face of it, in the sense that without more,
they show the non-compliance with
section 45
that the appellants say
they do? The answer must be no.
[47]
As already traversed in outline above, the respondents submit that
these two documents in fact
show exactly the opposite to what the
appellants say they do – compliance instead of non-compliance
with
section 45
and so validity instead of voidness of the Cession
and Pledge Agreement.
[48]
The appellants submit that the shareholders’ resolution was
invalid because the UIF, which
at that time had already acquired a
42% shareholding in Urban, had not participated in adopting it. The
respondents counter this
and say that, even after you have acquired
the relevant shares, one becomes a shareholder only once your name
has been entered
in the share register. They argue that the
appellants had placed no evidence before this Court that this had
occurred, so that
it was unclear whether the UIF could have voted on
the resolution.
[49]
The appellants say that the director’s resolution is invalid
because a subsequent auditors’
report shows that despite the
sole director’s satisfaction to the contrary, Urban did in fact
not satisfy the solvency and
liquidity test immediately after
conclusion of the Cession and Pledge Agreement. The respondents reply
that the
section 45
requirement is subjective – the Board (in
this case the sole director) must be so
satisfied
– and
that Ms Johnson was so satisfied and cannot now attempt to disavow
that.
[50]
Also in this context the point now is not to decide who is right and
who is wrong concerning
this. Instead, for purposes of determining
whether new evidence may be admitted on appeal it needs only be
determined whether the
evidence is on its face, without more, true.
The fact that such level of dispute exists on the meaning, import and
implications
of the evidence shows clearly that it is not.
[51]
I conclude from this that the appellants’ application to
introduce further evidence on
appeal also on its own terms does not
meet all the requirements for leave for such introduction to be
allowed, so that the application
concerning this must also be
dismissed.
[52]
In sum concerning the appellants’ attempt to rely on
section 45
and to introduce new evidence in support of that reliance in this
appeal, I conclude that the appellants may do neither.
The
appeal against the
section 18(3)
enforcement order
[53]
The appellants seek to challenge Davis J’s section 18(3)
enforcement order and judgment
on three grounds, namely that he erred
in holding that:
[53.1] there were
exceptional circumstances that warranted the grant of the enforcement
order;
[53.2] the respondents
would suffer irreparable harm should the enforcement order not be
granted; and
[53.3] the appellants
would not suffer irreparable harm in the event it were granted.
[54]
Despite the
section 18(3)
order being an interim order
pendente
lite
there is no reason for us in this appeal to apply anything other than
the usual standard applied by Courts of appeal, which is
to ask
simply whether Davis J’s judgment and order was correct on the
law and the facts,
[20]
or, put
differently, whether the respondents’
section 18(3)
application
‘should have achieved a different outcome’.
[21]
[55]
The appellants’ grounds of appeal track the requirements for
the grant of a
section 18(3)
enforcement order that were applied by
Davis J in reaching his judgment. Derived from the text of
section 18
itself
(section 18(1)
read with (3)) these are that an enforcement
order may be granted a) only in exceptional circumstances, if a Court
is persuaded
on a balance of probabilities that b) the party applying
for the order will suffer irreparable harm if it is not granted, and
c)
the party against which it is sought will not suffer irreparable
harm if it is granted.
[22]
Exceptional
circumstances
[56]
The first arrow in the appellants’ bow concerns the first
requirement that an enforcement
order may be granted only in
exceptional circumstances. They seize upon the following excerpts
from Davis J’s judgment concerning
this:
‘
[T]he relief
sought was not ordinary in nature. It was neither a money judgment
[n]or the customary order for execution against
property by way of a
sale.’
[23]
and
‘
When a debtor
fails in its obligations, the UIF as lender needs to secure the
debtor’s indebtedness by taking control thereof.
This is done
by exercising shareholders’ voting rights and thereby
appointing new directors for the debtor. … [T]he
relief
securing these rights, can only be described as “exceptional”.’
[24]
[57]
They object to these excerpts that it is not the relief that a party
seeks to enforce through
a
section 18(3)
order that must be
exceptional but the circumstances in which the parties find
themselves; and that the mere fact of the existence
of a
debtor/creditor relationship between the parties and the existence of
default in that relationship cannot constitute exceptional
circumstances for purposes of
section 18(1).
[58]
As authority for this proposition they rely on the judgment of the
Constitutional Court in
S
v Liesching
,
where it was held in a different context
[25]
that the term ‘exceptional circumstances’ is
fact-specific to individual litigants and ‘should be linked to
either the probability of grave individual injustice … or a
situation where, even if grave individual injustice might not
follow,
the administration of justice might be brought into disrepute’.
[26]
[59]
They conclude that the mere fact of default in the debtor/creditor
relationship between the UIF
and Homii and the precarious financial
position in which Homii (and Urban) find themselves cannot qualify as
the kind of fact-specific
grave injustice or affront to the
administration of justice referred to in
Liesching
– it
is nothing different from the situation that may pertain in any other
debtor/creditor relationship. On this basis they
then conclude that
Davis J erred in finding that there were exceptional circumstances.
[60]
This criticism of the judgment
a quo
is misconceived. Simply
put, by reducing Davis J’s judgment in this respect to a
finding that the exceptional circumstances
exist because the remedy
the respondents wish to enforce is an exceptional one, the appellants
mischaracterise it.
[61]
A proper reading of paragraphs [16] to [19] of Davis J’s
judgment where the issue of exceptional
circumstances is canvassed,
shows that the reference to the exceptionality of the remedy is
simply an entry point for Davis J into
a description of the
exceptionality of the UIF as creditor and of the relationship between
the UIF and Homii as a debtor/creditor
relationship. That is, the
exceptionality of the remedy is an indication of the exceptionality
of the UIF and PIC as lenders, the
exceptionality of the relationship
they have with their creditors, the exceptionality of their purpose
and the exceptionality of
the nature and scope of the risks that they
face if their debtors default.
[62]
The UIF and PIC are both public bodies and not private commercial
entities. They participate
in commercial activity such as investing
money in the private sector not for any private commercial gain, but
to advance public
interests. The UIF does so to protect and nurture
the funds paid to it by employers to secure against unemployment on
behalf of
all employees in South Africa – to protect millions
of vulnerable workers. The PIC in turn does so to advance more
generally
the interests of the state.
[63]
It is these public responsibilities that prompted them in the first
place to conclude the Cession
and Pledge agreement on the terms
concerning their remedies in case of default by Homii that they did.
And it is the fact of, and
the enormity and urgency of these public
responsibilities (more than R600,000,000.00 of these public funds at
risk due to the continuing
default by the appellants and the
generally precarious financial position in which they find
themselves) that constitute the exceptional
circumstances that
justify their resort to
section 18(3)
for enforcement of the order
they had obtained.
[63]
So understood, Davis J’s finding of exceptional circumstances
easily meets the requirements
of context-specificity set in
Lieschink
and those described in the more clearly applicable
Incubeta
decision: that exceptional circumstances are those that depart (to a
special degree) from the norm;
[27]
that they must arise from and be specific to the case at hand;
[28]
and that they are not a matter of discretion but of fact.
[29]
[64]
Accordingly, Davis J’s conclusion that exceptional
circumstances exist must be upheld and
the appellants’
challenge to it dismissed.
The
respondents’ irreparable harm
[65]
Concerning the second requirement that it must be shown on a balance
of probabilities that, should
the enforcement order not be granted,
the party seeking it (here the respondents) will suffer irreparable
harm, Davis J held that
‘if no control is taken of [the]
delinquent debtor, there is a
real
risk
that funds which would be needed to pay unemployment insurance claims
(and which had been lent to Homii) might never be recovered’.
[30]
[66]
This risk of irreparable harm was for Davis J founded in fact. He
listed the fact of several
years of persistent default on the side of
Homii. But he also, and more importantly referred to the range of
unrefuted allegations
by the respondents that the group of companies
of which Homii and Urban are part (the A1 Group) are facing severe
financial strain,
such that several companies that are part of the
group have applied for voluntary liquidation and that public money
lent to some
of these companies by the PIC in terms of other loan
agreements has been diverted from their intended purpose.
[67]
He concluded that, against this background there was a real and
substantial risk that Homii or
Urban will likewise be liquidated or
the money lent Homii would be diverted to other companies in the
group. Should that happen,
the harm would be irreparable – the
UIF would no longer be able to recover the money that it needed to
pay unemployment insurance
claims.
[31]
[77]
The appellants challenge these conclusions on two grounds. They first
point to the fact that
Davis J uses the phrase ‘real risk’
to describe that which he holds is irreparable harm (‘…there
is a
real risk
that … funds might never be recovered’).
[78]
To them the use of this phrase indicates that the harm that is
anticipated is not imminent enough
– ie, too remote – to
justify the drastic intervention that a
section 18(3)
enforcement
order entails. In support of this point, they submit that the
respondent’s complaint of Homii’s default
dates from
2021, so that it is not open to them now to argue that the risk of
losing their funds is imminent.
[79]
Second, the appellants seek to refute the respondents’
averments concerning the precarious
financial position of the group
of companies of which they are part. They submit that the respondents
provide no evidence to back
up those averments, so that they cannot
withstand scrutiny. This to them renders the respondents’ fears
of Homii being liquidated
voluntarily or diverting funds to other
companies in the A1 Group so that the respondents would be unable to
recover their debt,
speculative.
[80]
Neither of these points can be sustained. In
Knoop
,
the SCA describes the test to determine whether there is irreparable
harm for purposes of
section 18
as that there must be a ‘real
and substantial risk of immediate and irreparable harm being suffered
while waiting for the
enrolment, hearing and outcome of the
appeal’.
[32]
Davis J was
in this light clearly correct to use the phrase ‘real risk’;
and it could not be otherwise at the stage
of applying for a
section
18
enforcement order that there can as yet only be an apprehension of
harm that has not yet realised – a risk of harm rather
than
already harm itself.
[81]
And although
Knoop
says that the harm, in addition to being
irreparable must also be immediate, this cannot mean that an
applicant for an enforcement
order must be able to fix a date and
time to the harm actualising – it simply means that the harm
must indeed be threatening
in the sense that it can occur any day and
time.
[82]
And this does seem to be the case here: In the context of by now more
than four years of seemingly
wilful default on the side of the
appellants, the respondents have become aware that the A1 Group of
companies of which the appellants
are part is crumbling, with several
of the appellants’ sister companies opting for voluntary
liquidation and creditable allegations
of the syphoning off and
redistribution of public money invested within the group. Given in
particular the financial information
blackout the appellants have
directed the past four years at the respondents, there clearly is a
‘real and substantial risk’
that Homii will follow the
example of its sister companies. Should it do so, the loss of the
public money that the UIF has invested
with Homii will be
irrevocable.
[83]
The appellants’ attempt to refute on appeal the respondents’
averments concerning
the financial position of the A1 Group simply
has no wings. To state the obvious: In motion proceedings an
applicant places the
facts on which its application is based before
Court in a founding affidavit. The respondent can then attempt to
refute those facts
by placing contradicting facts before the Court in
its answering affidavit. Bald denials as the appellants have offered
up to now,
not undergirded by documentary or other evidence do not
contradict the respondents’ averments in the founding and any
further
affidavits. This is so in particular where, as here, the
denying party (the appellants) has all the information at its
exclusive
disposal with which, were it possible, to dispel the
averments in the respondents’ affidavits. The only conclusion
that can
be drawn from the fact that the appellants have not despite
ample opportunity produced such evidence, is that there is none. In
sum, these averments concerning the A1 group’s financial
condition stand, and this appeal must be decided on their basis,
as
was the case with Davis J’s enforcement judgment.
[84]
Accordingly, the appellants’ challenge to Davis J’s
conclusion that the respondents
will suffer irreparable harm should
the enforcement order not be granted must be dismissed and the
holding in this respect upheld.
The
appellants’ irreparable harm
[85]
This leaves only the question whether the appellants would suffer
irreparable harm should the
enforcement order be allowed to stand.
[86]
At the outset in considering this issue I must mention that it is
only here that the appellants’
purported reliance on
section 45
of the
Companies Act and
the further evidence in that respect that it
wished to have admitted would have been relevant had leave been
given. As I understood
it, the appellants wished to raise the alleged
ab initio
voidness of the agreements due to non-compliance
with
section 45
as a further factor indicating their irreparable
harm. To them, it would be an injustice adding to their supposed
irreparable harm
if they were to be held to agreements in the
interim, with serious consequences, that they know are void and will
be declared such
on appeal.
[87]
If I characterise their submissions correctly concerning this, then
they add nothing. That a
party subject to a
section 18(3)
order is
held to an earlier order that may later on appeal be set aside is
inherent to the mechanism of an enforcement order. This
is true
whatever the grounds of appeal are. While it is so that the prospects
of success on appeal may be higher on one ground
than another, the
prospects of success on appeal are in the ordinary course not
supposed to influence a Court in its decision whether
or not to grant
an enforcement order. To do otherwise would inevitably prefigure the
appeal proper. So understood, it is unclear
to me how, had we given
leave to the appellants to rely on
section 45
and to introduce new
evidence, this would have assisted them in this appeal – how,
indeed, this new defence and the evidence
supporting it, eminently
relevant to the appeal itself, are at all relevant in this appeal
against the
section 18(3)
enforcement order.
[88]
Turning back to the judgment
a quo
, on the issue of the
appellants’ possible irreparable harm should the 18(3) order be
allowed to stand, Davis J held that
all that will happen if his order
in the main application were enforced pending appeal, is that the
required shareholders’
meeting will be held and a new Board of
Directors appointed. This in itself presents no harm to the
appellants: the new directors,
as were the old would be subject to
the Companies act and their more general fiduciary duties and the
remedies those entail.
[86]
Davis J proceeded to hold that there is nothing in the papers to
sustain the submissions on behalf
of the appellants that such newly
appointed directors would do the appellants harm, whether by neglect
or intent. On the contrary:
Instead of effecting a ‘hostile
take-over’, as the appellants darkly warned before us, it would
clearly be in the interest
of the respondents once in control to do
their best to save Homii rather than destroy or dissipate it. This
would secure the respondents’
investment, which is the reason
why the ‘exceptional remedy’ of a controlled take-over of
Homii by the respondents
instead of simply a calling up of debt in
the case of Homii’s default was preferred in the Mezzanine and
Cession and Pledge
agreements.
[87]
In any event, so Davis J concludes, should the appeal to the SCA be
successful, the situation
concerning control of Homii will simply
revert to what it was before the new directors were appointed, with
nothing on the papers
to show that Homii (and Urban) would be any
worse off than before. Accordingly, he concluded that no irreparable
harm in the event
of grant of the enforcement order was shown by the
appellants.
[88]
Before us, the appellants offered nothing in their challenge to Davis
J’s holding concerning
their irreparable harm that had not
already been properly canvassed and, to my mind correctly, rejected
in the Court
a quo
. There was only one seemingly new
submission: Mr Harpur strongly pressed us to accept the possibility
that, should new directors
for Homii be appointed pursuant to the
enforcement order, they may direct that the pending appeal before the
SCA be abandoned.
In this way, he continued, the respondents would in
this litigation become judges in their own cause.
[89]
Apart from being circular, this warning takes the matter no further.
First, as with all the other
warnings of irreparable harm for the
appellants should new directors be appointed, this one is entirely
speculative. We simply
don’t know, and no evidence is on the
record to show, exactly what the new directors will or will not do.
What we do know,
for which there is ample substantiation on the
papers is that the respondents and any new directors appointed by
them have every
incentive to act in, rather than contrary to Homii’s
interests. Should they do differently, the speedy remedies afforded
by the
Companies Act and
by virtue of the directors’ fiduciary
duties would be at the appellants’ disposal.
[90]
More importantly and to the point: Even were Mr Harpur’s
warning to become true and newly
appointed directors abandoned the
appeal to the SCA, this in and of itself has nothing to do with the
question of irreparable harm.
It may very well be that such a
decision, other than ending the long trail of litigation between the
parties, is in some way harmful
to the appellants’ interests.
If that is sufficiently the case, the appellants’ ordinary
remedies for directorial misconduct
remain. But it may equally be in
the appellants’ best interest to abandon the appeal. This Court
does not and cannot now
know. What is clear is that any decision to
abandon the appeal is not inherently harmful, irreparably or
otherwise, to the appellants.
[91]
Accordingly, the appellants’ challenge in this appeal to Davis
J’s holding that they
will suffer no irreparable harm should
the enforcement order be granted, must be dismissed. In light of this
and my conclusions
above concerning exceptional circumstances and
irreparable harm for the respondents, this means that the appeal
itself in its entirety
also stands to be dismissed.
Costs
[91]
During the hearing of this appeal, before us and in the respondents’
various sets of heads
of argument, at various points oblique
references were made to the possibility that this appeal was tactical
and intended only
to delay the process of the respondents getting and
implementing what they said was inevitable relief. In this sense
there were
suggestions that the appeal was brough in bad faith.
[92]
None of these were taken any further or canvassed before us. In this
light there is no reason
that costs should be ordered at anything
other than the ordinary scale. Likewise, there is no reason, both in
the appeal and concerning
the appellants’
section 45
application, to depart from the general rule that costs follow the
result.
[93]
This means that the appellants are liable to pay the costs, including
the costs of three counsel
(the employment of which the complexity of
this matter clearly warranted), arising from both the appeal itself
and the application
to rely on
section 45
and to introduce new
evidence.
[94]
In this light we order that:
1.
The application for leave to rely on
section 45
of the
Companies Act
71 of 2008
and to introduce new evidence on appeal, is dismissed.
2.
The appeal is dismissed.
3.
The appellants are ordered to pay the respondents’ costs,
including
the costs of three counsel, on scale C, in the application
for leave to rely on
section 45
of the
Companies Act and
to introduce
new evidence, and in the appeal.
JFD
Brand
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Pretoria
COUNSEL
FOR THE APPELLANTS: GD Harpur SC
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Mooney Ford Attorneys
COUNSEL
FOR THE RESPONDENT: J Wasserman SC
M Msomi A Vorster
INSTRUCTED
BY:
TGR Attorneys
DATE
OF THE HEARING: 13 May 2025
DATE
OF JUDGMENT: 17 June 2025
[1]
Section 45(2)
and (3).
[2]
Section 45(6).
[3]
Cole v
Government of the Union of S.A.
1910 AD 263
at 272 (‘
Cole’
)
per Innes JA: '[T]he duty of an appellate tribunal is to ascertain
whether the Court below came to a correct conclusion on the
case
submitted to it'.
[4]
Paddock
Motors (Pty) Ltd v Igesund
1976 (3) SA 16
(A) (‘
Paddock
Motors’
).
[5]
Paddock
Motors
(above) at 23F.
[6]
Cole
(above) at 272-273. See also
Barkhuizen
v Napier
[2007]
ZACC 5
;
2007 (5) SA 323
(CC) (‘Barkhuizen’) at para
[39].
[7]
Cole
(above) at 272;
Mokweni
and Others v Plaatjies and Others
- Appeal (A178/2022)
[2023] ZAWCHC 266
(26 October 2023) (‘
Mokweni
’)
at para [25].
[8]
Barkhuizen
(above) at para [41]. See also
Yannakou
v Apollo Club
1974 (1) SA 614
(A) (‘Yannakou’) at 26H.
[9]
Yannakou
v Apollo Club
1974 (1) SA 614
(A) (‘
Yannakou’
).
[10]
Yannakou
(above) at 623F-H.
[11]
Cole
(above) at 272.
[12]
Group
Five Building Ltd v Government of the Republic of South Africa
(Minister of Public Works and Land Affairs)
[1993] ZASCA 4
;
1993 (2) SA 593
(A) at 602D.
[13]
Yannakou
(above) at 625H.
[14]
Paddock
Motors
(above) at 23F.
[15]
Per Innes JA in
Cole
(above) at 272 (emphasis added).
[16]
Ibex
RSA Holdco Ltd & Another v Tiso Blackstar Group (Pty) Ltd &
Others
[2024]
ZASCA 166
(‘Ibex’) at para [28].
[17]
Coleman
v Dunbar
1933
AD 141
(‘
Coleman’
)
at 162. See also for a more recent affirmation of Coleman,
Rail
Commuters Action Group and Others v Transnet Ltd t/a Metrorail and
Others
[2004] ZACC 20
;
2005 (2) SA 359
(CC) (‘
Rail
Commuters
’)
at para [43].
[18]
De
Aguiar v Real People Housing (Pty) Ltd
[2010]
ZASCA 67
;
2011 (1) SA 16
(SCA) (‘
De
Aguiar
’)
at paras [10] and [11].
[19]
[20]
Knox
D'Arcy Ltd and Others v Jamieson and Others
[1996] ZASCA 58
;
1996
(4) SA 348
(A) (‘
Knox
D’Arcy
’
at 362G).
[21]
Makhado
Local Municipality and Another v Makhado and Another
(HCAA04/2020; 542/2020) [2020] ZALMPPHC 45 (3 July 2020) (‘
Makhado’
)
at para [2].
[22]
Knoop
NO v Gupta (Tayob intervening)
2021 (3) SA 135
(SCA) (‘
Knoop’
)
at [45];
Incubeta
Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Another v Ellis and Another
2014 (3) SA 189
(GJ) (‘
Incubeta’
)
at para [16].
[23]
Enforcement judgment at para [16].
[24]
24 Enforcement judgment at para [18].
[25]
Liesching
concerned the reconsideration by the President of the Supreme Court
of Appeal of a refusal of leave to appeal to that court,
in a
criminal matter.
[26]
Liesching
at para [138].
[27]
Incubeta
(above) at para [17]: ‘[T]he primary meaning is unusual or
different; the secondary meaning is markedly unusual or
specially different’.
[28]
Incubeta
(above) at para [17]: ‘To be exceptional the circumstances
concerned must arise out of, or be incidental to, the particular
case.’
[29]
Incubeta
(above) at para [17]: ‘Whether or not exceptional
circumstances exist is not a decision which depends upon the
exercise
of a judicial discretion: their existence or otherwise is a
matter of fact which the Court must decide accordingly.’
[30]
Enforcement judgment at para [20] (emphasis added).
[31]
Enforcement judgment at para [21] to [25] and [28].
[32]
Knoop
(above) at para [47].
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