Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 681South Africa
Pillay v Lopdale Energy (Pty) Ltd (2024/127178) [2025] ZAGPJHC 681 (15 July 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
15 July 2025
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Pillay v Lopdale Energy (Pty) Ltd (2024/127178) [2025] ZAGPJHC 681 (15 July 2025)
Pillay v Lopdale Energy (Pty) Ltd (2024/127178) [2025] ZAGPJHC 681 (15 July 2025)
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sino date 15 July 2025
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
Number:
2024-127178
(1)
REPORTABLE:
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES:
NO
(3)
REVISED:
In the matter between:
SUMENTHREN
POOBALAN PILLAY
Applicant
and
LOPDALE
ENERGY (PTY) LTD
Respondent
Coram
:
Johann Gautschi AJ
Heard
:
11 June 2025
Delivered
:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ legal representatives by email. The date and
time for
hand-down is deemed to be 10h00 on 15 July 2025
JUDGMENT
JOHANN GAUTSCHI AJ
[1]
This is an opposed application for the
final winding up of the Respondent in which the Applicant relies on
the inability of the
Respondent to pay its debts in terms of section
344 (f) and 345 (1) (c) of the Companies Act 61 of 1973 (the Act).
[2]
The Applicant conducts business as an
importer and distributor of petroleum products from Mozambique to
Johannesburg. Its sole director
and 100% shareholder is Edward
Mwanandimandi (Edward), a Zimbabwean national.
[3]
The debt of the Respondent upon which the
Applicant relies has its origin in a business relationship in terms
of which the Applicant
lent substantial amounts to the Respondent by
way of three investment agreements concluded in the first quarter of
2021 (the investment
agreements) in terms of which the Applicant lent
a total of R7.7 million to the Respondent as an investment in the
Respondent’s
business of importing and distributing petroleum
products and processing substantial amounts of diesel at its diesel
processing
plants in Glen Austin, Johannesburg.
[4]
Following the Respondent’s breach of
the investment agreements, the Applicant and Respondent on 18 October
2021 concluded
a written settlement agreement and an acknowledgement
of debt in respect of which Edward also signed as co-principal debtor
and
surety for a total indebtedness of R18.75 million.
[5]
In January 2022 the Respondent breached the
settlement agreement by failing to pay the amount of R1.5 million
which was due on 4
January 2022. In a letter dated 4 January 2022 to
the Applicant, Edward advised that the Respondent was unable to pay
the full
amount 4 January 2022 and undertook to pay R1 million on
that day and the balance of R500,000 within 14 days.
[6]
The Applicant responded by letter dated 5
January 2022. He advised that because the Respondent’s breaches
of the agreement
the Applicant would be forced to borrow an amount of
R500,000 which would only be advanced to him at an extra charge of
R50,000.
Consequently, he advised his preparedness to grant the
indulgence sought on condition that the Respondent pay by no later
than
2 PM on 4 January 2021 the R50,000 which the Applicant would be
charged for borrowing the R500,000. He stipulated that the indulgence
would only be for a period of 14 calendar days which meant that the
outstanding R500,000 would then be due and payable by not later
than
18 January 2022, that no further indulgence would be granted and if
the Respondent should fail to make payment legal action
would be
commenced without further notice to it.
[7]
The Respondent having failed to pay the
R500,000 by 18 January 2022, his present attorney of record addressed
a letter dated 2 February
2022 to the Applicant advising of the
Respondent’s inability to pay the R500,000 and requested a
restructuring of the agreement
to allow the Respondent to pay off the
debt at the rate of R500,000 before the seventh day of each month.
That led to the signing
of a new acknowledgement of debt on 14
February 2022 (the AOD). The AOD shows details of the opening balance
of R15.5 million and
the monthly payments which had to be made in a
schedule, annexure A to the AOD. In terms of the AOD varying amounts
would be paid
until 15 April 2022. Thereafter the balance outstanding
would be paid at the rate of R500,000 per month commencing on 15 May
2022
and no later than the 15
th
of each succeeding month. Interest would accrue on the outstanding
amount on the reducing balance at the rate of 8.25% per annum
[8]
The Applicant’s case is that the
Respondent failed to pay the R500,000 that was due on 15 September
2024 as well as the R500,000
that was due on 15 October 2024.
Consequently, by reason of clause 6 of the AOD which provides that “–
–
in the event of default, the
full balance outstanding at date of default, shall immediately become
due and payable”
, as at 15
September 2024, the date of default, the full amount due and owing
and payable was R1,446,916.
[9]
The Applicant says that he “
engaged
Edward the following day to follow up on the payment. Edward was
unable to make payment”
. Then he
engaged Edward again on WhatsApp on 19 September 2024 requesting to
be advised on payment. In response Edward referred
to payments that
he was expecting from others which the Applicant understood to be
creditors of the Respondent. The following day,
20 September 2024 the
Respondent again sent a WhatsApp stating “– –
we
are waiting for some payments to come in soon then will pass on to
you ASAP sorry for the delay people have let me down –
–“
.
[10]
The Applicant then by WhatsApp sent a
letter of demand dated 26 September 2024 in terms of section 345 (1)
(c) of the Act to the
Respondent. The Respondent responded “
let
me push payment in the coming week and endeavour to pay around the
20s the other payments and going to the client’s office
now
”.
Despite that, no further payment from the Respondent was received by
the Applicant.
[11]
The Applicant then launched an urgent
application for liquidation of the Respondent (the urgent
application). The Applicant explained
that the urgent application was
withdrawn on 15 October 2024 by reason of erroneous documentation
which had been attached to that
application. The Applicant in his
founding affidavit in the present application drew attention to the
contents of the answering
affidavit filed by the Respondent in that
urgent application and,
inter alia
,
to the fact that the Applicant had included an erroneous payment
schedule as annexure FA26 to the founding affidavit in the urgent
application. Its significance lies in the statements made by Edward
in the answering affidavit filed for the Respondent in the
urgent
application which contradict the contents of the defences raised by
the Respondent in the answering affidavit in the present
application.
[12]
In the Respondent’s answering
affidavit in the urgent application Edward stated at paragraph 25
that “
I must start off by clearly
stating that I acknowledge that as of February 2022 the respondent
was indebted to the applicant in
the amount of R15,500,000 (fifteen
million five hundred thousand rand) the underlying basis being the
failed investment agreement
that was followed by the signed
acknowledgement of debt”
.
[13]
Further in paragraph 30 of that answering
affidavit he stated that: “
From 25
February 2022 to August 2024, I have in total actually paid the
Applicant an amount of R15,800,000, being R300,000 in excess
of the
R15,500,000 that was brought forward on 14 February 2022 according to
his annexure FA 26”
.
[14]
Moreover, in the urgent application the
Respondent attached the financial statements of the Respondent for
the year ended February
2023, two pages of which were attached to the
founding affidavit in the present application. The full financial
statements were
attached to the answering affidavit in this
application as annexure
LE 3
.
The Applicant points out that the auditors qualified the financial
statements by stating that “
we do
not express an audit opinion on these financial statements”
and that the financial statements reflect the position at 28 February
2023, almost 2 years earlier. They do not reflect the Respondent’s
admitted liability to the Applicant which, according to the
Applicant, stood at R9,726,735 as at 28 February 2023, the date of
the financial statements, whereas the financial statements show no
liabilities as at 28 February 2023.
[15]
In addition, far from proving the
Respondent’s solvency as at the time of launching of this
application, even as at 28 February
2023 the full financial
statements annexed to the answering affidavit in this application
show total current assets consisting
of cash and cash equivalents of
only R62,152, the remaining assets being non-current assets
consisting of property, plant and equipment
and loan to group company
totalling just under R43 million.
[16]
The Respondent’s answering affidavit
submitted
in limine
that the application had been served on the Respondent by WhatsApp
and that it should be dismissed for lack of proper service of
the
application by the sheriff. That was without substance as the
Respondent filed an answering affidavit and appeared by counsel
to
oppose the application also on the merits. In the result this
argument was, understandably, not persisted in during oral argument
by Respondent’s counsel.
[17]
The thrust of oral argument by Respondent’s
counsel was that the Applicant’s repeated use of winding up
proceedings
constituted an abuse of process to enforce payment of a
debt in respect of which, according to the Respondent’s
affidavits,
the Respondent had raised a genuine and bona fide defence
to the Respondent’s alleged liability based on reasonable
grounds
and involving factual disputes that require reference to oral
evidence; that the February 2023 financial statements showed that
the
Respondent is commercially solvent; and finally, that even if I were
to find that the requirements for a final winding up had
been met, I
should exercise a discretion to dismiss the application,
alternatively, refer the matter for the hearing of oral evidence.
[18]
The genuine and bona fide defence contended
for was based on the submission that the AOD incorrectly reflected in
opening balance
of R15.5 million, whereas it should only have been
reduced by R500,000 because it failed to take into account a payment
of R500,000
which had been made by the Respondent on the very day of
signing of the AOD, namely 14 February 2022. Proceeding on that basis
it was submitted by reference to a schedule of payments attached to
the answering affidavit that: firstly, the 14 February 2022
payment
of R500,000 (the first payment) should have been shown as a payment
in reduction of the R15.5 million and that there were
a further three
payments which had incorrectly not been reflected in reduction of the
amount owing on the AOD, namely, secondly,
R50,000 on 20 February
2022 (the second payment), thirdly, R350,000 on 14 March 2022 (the
third payment) and fourthly, R289,800
on 17 May 2022 (the fourth
payment). I shall now address these individually by reference to the
detailed contents of the Applicant’s
replying affidavit where
these four payments were dealt with and where it was, in my view,
convincingly demonstrated that none
of them could credibly be taken
into account in reduction of the AOD debt. That being so the
Applicant in my view proved that the
Respondent has not raised a
genuine and bona fide defence based on reasonable grounds.
[19]
The
first
payment
: the R500,000 paid on 14
February 2022. There is no substance in this alleged defence. Not
only was it contradicted by the aforementioned
statements made under
oath by Edward on behalf of the Respondent in the urgent application
in which he acknowledged that the amount
owed under the AOD was R15.5
million, but also the timeline explained in detail by the Applicant
in its replying affidavit showed
that the R500,000 payment made on 14
February 2022 was made at 12:24:06 as reflected on the proof of
payment annexed to the answering
affidavit. It was thus paid prior to
signing of the AOD later that afternoon after a draft thereof had
been emailed to the Respondent’s
attorney at 15:45 that
afternoon. Importantly, the attorney responded to the draft by letter
dated Accordingly, that payment served
to reduce the existing
outstanding balance from R16 million to R15.5 million as is borne out
by the exchange of WhatsApp messages
and correspondence annexed to
the replying affidavit. Moreover, an adverse inference must be drawn
against the Respondent for failing
to deal with the further contents
of the replying affidavit by way of a rejoining affidavit when it
could and should have done
so if indeed it was able to counter the
contents of the replying affidavit.
[20]
The
second
payment
: the Respondent’s own
schedule (annexure
LE1b)
shows that the R50,000 payment relied upon was made on 20 February
2022. The Applicant’s replying affidavit explained that
it was
made for legal services rendered to Edward in respect of a SAE
Revenue Services matter. He annexed screenshots of his conversation
with Edward on 18 February 2022 and on 20 February 2022 which support
the Applicant’s version on the probabilities. Given
the
relationship between the parties as illustrated by the multiple
WhatsApps attached to the papers, the absence of an invoice
from the
Applicant as submitted in argument for the Respondent does not in my
view detract from the explanation given by the Applicant.
Here again
the Respondent’s failure to file a rejoining affidavit to
counter the aforegoing must count against the Respondent.
[21]
The
third
payment:
the schedule of payments
annexed to the Respondent’s answering affidavit shows two
payments of R350,000 each, both on 14 March
2022. That was obviously
an error as was conceded in oral argument on behalf of the
Respondent, correctly in my view.
[22]
The
fourth
payment:
in this instance the WhatsApp
messages attached by the Applicant to his replying affidavit provide
overwhelming and convincing
proof that this payment was merely
reimbursement by the Respondent to the Applicant for US$18,000 in
cash which the Respondent
had received from the Applicant. The
Respondent’s counsel was not able to provide any argument to
counter that evidence.
Also in this instance an adverse inference
must be drawn from the Respondent’s failure to file a rejoining
affidavit to counter
the Applicant’s evidence in its replying
affidavit.
[23]
In the result the Applicant has in my view
convincingly shown that the Respondent is insolvent and unable to pay
it states as contemplated
by section 344 (f) of the Act and that the
defences raised by the Respondent are without merit and do not
constitute genuine and
bona fide defences. In the circumstances the
Applicant is, in my view, entitled to an order for the final winding
up of the Respondent.
IT ISORDERED THAT:
1.
The estate of the
Respondent is placed under final liquidation in the hands of the
Master of the High Court;
2.
The costs of this
application are costs in the liquidation of the Respondent’s
estate.
JOHANN GAUTSCHI AJ
ACTING JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
JOHANNESBURG
For the Applicant: Adv N
Strydom
Instructed By: SP
Attorneys Inc
For the Respondent: Adv
KL Kelaotswa
Instructed By: Alibi Inc.
Attorneys
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