Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 832South Africa
TUHF Properties (Pty) Ltd v Argyle Court Housing Association and Others (26865/2019) [2025] ZAGPJHC 832 (19 August 2025)
Headnotes
Summary: Application for the liquidation of the First Respondent – whether the Applicant established that it was as creditor of the First Respondent – whether the First Respondent was commercially or factually insolvent – whether it is just and equitable to wind-up the First Respondent - whether the Court should exercise its discretion not to place the First Respondent in winding-up – whether the winding-up of the First Respondent will lead to homelessness.
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
>>
2025
>>
[2025] ZAGPJHC 832
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## TUHF Properties (Pty) Ltd v Argyle Court Housing Association and Others (26865/2019) [2025] ZAGPJHC 832 (19 August 2025)
TUHF Properties (Pty) Ltd v Argyle Court Housing Association and Others (26865/2019) [2025] ZAGPJHC 832 (19 August 2025)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2025_832.html
sino date 19 August 2025
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG
DIVISION,JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO: 26865/2019
(1)
REPORTABLE:
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
In the matter between:
TUHF PROPERTIES (PTY)
LTD
Applicant
(Registration number:
2003/021683/07)
and
THE ARGYLE COURT
HOUSING ASSOCIATION First
Respondent
(NPC Registration
number: 2001/025492/08)
BONELAKHE MTHANDENI
NDLOVU
Second Respondent
FRANS MASIMATLA
NONG
Third Respondent
TINNY
XHAKAZA
Fourth Respondent
HILTON
NDLOVU
Fifth Respondent
SIBUSISO
TWALA
Sixth Respondent
PASTER DINGULWAZI
NKOSI
Seventh Respondent
VALENTIA
MATSHOBA
Eighth Respondent
Summary: Application
for the liquidation of the First Respondent – whether the
Applicant established that it was as creditor
of the First Respondent
– whether the First Respondent was commercially or factually
insolvent – whether it is just
and equitable to wind-up the
First Respondent - whether the Court should exercise its discretion
not to place the First Respondent
in winding-up – whether the
winding-up of the First Respondent will lead to homelessness.
Held: The evidence
established that the Applicant was a creditor of the First Respondent
and that the Applicant therefore had locus
standi to apply for the
winding up of the First Respondent. The evidence established that the
First Respondent was both factually
and commercially insolvent.
Held: It was just and
equitable to grant an order winding up the First Respondent in order
to put an end to the ever-increasing
indebtedness of the First
Respondent to the Applicant and the City of Johannesburg in
circumstances where there was no evidence
of the First Respondent
being able to make payment of such indebtedness. Held: The
Respondents contention that the winding up of
the First Respondent
would lead to the homelessness of the occupier of Argyle Court did
not have merit since their rights of occupation
would be protected by
the provisions and protections in the Prevention of Illegal Eviction
from and Unlawful Occupation of Land
Act, 19 of 1998 and was not a
reason to exercise a discretion not to grant an order winding up the
First Respondent, particularly
in circumstances where the Applicant
was entitled to seek the winding up of the First Respondent, ex
debito justitiae.
Held: The application
for the winding up of the Respondent in the hands of the Master of
the High Court is granted and the costs
of the application are costs
in the winding up proceedings.
The joinder
application is dismissed and the parties are each to pay their own
legal costs occasioned by the joinder application.
JUDGMENT
KAIRINOS AJ:
1.
This is an application
for:
1.1.
an order winding up the
first respondent on the basis that:
1.1.1.
it is unable to pay its
debts; and that it would be just and equitable for the first
respondent to be wound up; as contemplated
in sections 344(f) and
(h), 345(c), 346 and 347 of the Companies Act 61 of 1973 of the
Republic of South Africa ("the 1973
Companies Act").
2.
The matter has a long
and unfortunate history which evidences that the First Respondent
does not generate sufficient income to pay
its ever-increasing debts
and has been plagued by infighting and factionalism. This infighting
and factionalism together with tenants
not paying their rental
obligations has placed the First Respondent in this position of
insolvency.
3.
What is indeed sad as
will appear below, is that at a certain point, the First Respondent
owed a negligible amount of some R54 to
the Applicant and
cold have applied for
the transfer of the immovable property (being the subject matter of
the written agreement of sale between
the Applicant and the First
Respondent). That was however thwarted by the infighting between the
members and/or directors of the
First Respondent to the point where
over a period of some
13 years since 2012, the First Respondent has not been paying its
debts and has been plunged into what the
Applicant calls “hopeless
insolvency”.
4.
The facts of this
matter sadly reflect how a laudable project to allow the
disadvantaged in society an opportunity to access home
ownership was
brought to its knees by in-fighting and factionalism.
5.
The Second to Eighth
Respondents are directors of the First Respondent (being a Housing
Association) and beneficiaries of the project
by the Gauteng
Department of Human Settlements called the Seven Buildings Projects
(“the Project”).
The aim of the Project
was to enable people of low income to access home ownership and to
secure their tenure, through the provision
of a housing subsidy that
was utilised to purchase equity into the Project. The Project
involved approximately 2500 people living
in seven blocks of flats in
the city centre of Johannesburg, Joubert Park, Hillbrow and Berea and
was run through an incorporated
entity as Sevens Building Company
(Pty) Ltd (“SBC”).
6.
The Project was meant
to transform the low-income residents of the 400 apartments of Argyle
Court, Banksome Towers, Coniston Court,
Manhattan Court, Margate
Court and Stonehope Mansions, into joint owners of the buildings in a
collective housing scheme.
7.
The Inner City Housing
Upgrade Trust (“ICHUT”), loaned the SBP approximately
four million rands for the renovation of
the buildings under the
project. After failing to repay this loan, the SBP was liquidated in
January 2002 by this Court.
8.
Owing to their
inability to access conventional sources of funding, and not wanting
to lose their government offered housing subsidy
equity in the
building, the Housing Association of Argyle Court, being the First
Respondent, accepted financial assistance from
the Applicant for the
purchase of Argyle Court from the liquidator of SBP.
9.
The financial
assistance from the Applicant was effected through the conclusion of
three related agreements:
9.1.
the first agreement,
titled the Tripartite Agreement, was entered into between SBC (in
liquidation), the First Respondent and the
Applicant. The purpose of
this agreement was to cancel the offer to purchase agreement between
the SBC in liquidation and the First
Respondent, termed the First
Purchase agreement, owing to the inability of the First Respondent to
procure funding from the conventional
financiers and to record the
Second Purchase Agreement between the SBC (in liquidation) and the
Applicant;
9.2.
the second agreement
was the Deed of Sale between the SBC (in liquidation) and the
Applicant, in terms of which the Argyle Court
was sold
to
the
Applicant
on
13
October
2014,
for
a
consideration
of R 415 000.00;
9.3.
the third agreement was
the Deferred Sale Agreement between the Applicant
and
the
First
Respondent.
This
agreement
was
entered into in
accordance with the provisions of the
Alienation of Land Act, 66 of
1981
and entitled the First Respondent to the transfer of Argyle
Court into its name upon the payment of the loan for the purchase of
Argyle Court by the First Respondent.
The First Respondent
was also, in terms of section 27(1) of the Act, entitled to the
transfer of
the
property to its name as soon as it had paid 50% of the purchase
price.
10.
The Deferred Sale
Agreement was performed with relatively little difficulty until 2012,
when some members of the First Respondent
sought to have the property
transferred into its name in accordance with the Deferred Sale
Agreement.
What
followed was infighting between the members of the First Respondent –
which had split into two factions. This infighting
between the
members of the First Respondent effectively paralysed the First
Respondent and from then on its debts grew.
11.
Had the debt been paid
and the property transferred to the First Respondent in 2012, the
Argyle Court block of flats would have
been transferred to the First
Respondent and would have constituted an asset of the First
Respondent. Alas this was not to be as
a result of the factional
infighting between the members of the First Respondent and the
concomitant
paralysis
in the decision making of the First Respondent.
12.
To make matters worse,
when the members became factionalised, each faction
appointed
its
own
property
management
agent
to
whom
they allegedly paid
their rental. However, no evidence of the payment of rentals to the
property management agents was produced
by the Respondents.
13.
An administrator, Mr
Cyprian Mondli Pehlukwayo, was appointed by this Court on 31 July
2017, in accordance with an earlier court
order granted on 31 May
2017. There are opposing contentions between the Applicant and
the Second to Eighth
Respondents as to whether the administrator carried out his functions
properly and adequately. The Applicant
and the administrator contend
that his functions were thwarted by the infighting between the two
factions and the failure of the
tenants to meet their rental
obligations and numerous other insurmountable problems with the
administration of the First Respondent.
14.
The Respondents contend
that despite the First Respondent being unable to pay its debts as
and when they fall due or at all and
therefore being both
commercially and factually insolvent, I should nevertheless exercise
my discretion not to wind up the First
Respondent.
15.
The Second to Eighth
Respondents, being both members and directors of the First
Respondent, oppose the application on the following
grounds:
15.1.
a large portion of the
R 2 052 512.00 amount allegedly owed by the First Respondent to the
Applicant is unsubstantiated and or prescribed;
15.2.
The debt relating to
the City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality is for the City to
collect and not the Applicant;
15.3.
the First Respondent is
not insolvent and the true financial position
of the First Respondent
is unknown and there cannot therefore be a conclusion that it is is
unable to pay its debts;
15.4.
that the Recovery Plan
proposed by the administrator has not been implemented;
15.5.
that liquidation will
lead to homelessness;
15.6.
that it is not just and
equitable to wind-up the First Respondent.
16.
The following issues
therefore call for determination
16.1.
The authority of the
deponent to the founding affidavit – this issue was wisely not
proceeded with;
16.2.
The Applicant’s
locus standi
as
creditor of the First Respondent;
16.3.
Whether the First
Respondent is commercially insolvent, i.e. unable to pay its debts as
and when they fall due;
16.4.
Whether it is just an
equitable for the First Respondent to be wound up based largely on
the Respondents’ contention that
liquidation of the First
Respondent will lead to homelessness;
16.5.
Whether the Applicant
has complied with the procedural requirements of the Companies Act,
61 of 1973;
16.6.
The Respondents’
contention that there should be a stay of proceedings and a joinder
of various Government Departments.
17.
In regard to the
Applicant’s
locus
standi
as a
creditor and the First Respondent’s commercial insolvency, the
evidence establishes that on the Second to Eighth Respondents’
own version, the First Respondent has for years been unable to pay
its debts and that appears from annexure “T4.5”
to the
founding affidavit.
18.
On 30 July 2018, the
Third, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh and Eighth Respondents personally signed
a resolution in their capacities as directors
of the First
Respondent, expressly recording that the First Respondent “owes
the City of Johannesburg R3,506,066,72 as at
end May 2018 and the
City had switched off electricity supply since May 2018 due to the
long standing electricity account of R1,714,837.80
as at end of May
2018” and that the First Respondent would apply to the
Applicant to borrow R60,000.00 as a draw- down on
its current
facility, in order to make a down payment of R100,000.00 to
re-establish
the
electricity
supply,
since
the
First
Respondent
only
had R53,000.00 in its
bank account.
19.
Furthermore, the
Applicant relies on two loans for venue hire and the above- mentioned
loan for settlement of utilities in the sum
of R60,000.00, which were
all advanced during the course of 2018 with the concurrence of the
directors, including of several of
the opposing Respondents and the
Court appointed administrator. There appears to be no cogent answer
as to why the amounts owed
to the Applicant have not been paid, which
leads to the irresistible inference that the First Respondent does
not have funds to
do so.
20.
Whilst the Respondents
also contend that many of the debts relied upon by the Applicant have
prescribed, they have no cogent explanation
why a taxed costs order
under case number 45485/2013 in the sum of R63,795.56 - which is
subject to a 30-year prescription period
and has therefore clearly
not prescribed –
has not been paid.
21.
Furthermore, the
Applicant points out that the Court appointed administrator
acknowledged the First Respondent’s indebtedness
when he
deposed to his confirmatory affidavit on 16 July 2019 and the First
Respondent is liable to the Applicant for insurance
costs which are
being incurred on a monthly
basis to date and which
is not disputed by the Respondents.
22.
The Applicant correctly
contends that the facts demonstrating the hopeless financial position
of the First Respondent and its complete
inability to pay its debts,
are incontrovertible. This is clearly proved not only by the First
Respondent’s failure to make
payment to the Applicant, but also
by its failure to make payment of the debt owed to the City of
Johannesburg, which remains unpaid.
23.
As at the following
dates, the First Respondent owed the City the following amounts:
23.1.
At the end of July
2017, R2,5 million;
23.2.
As at June 2019,
R4,046,007.27; and
23.3.
As at the end of
January 2023, R8,436,042.56.
24.
Whilst it is correct,
as contended by the Respondents, that the Applicant cannot rely on
the First Respondent’s indebtedness
to the City to establish
the Applicant’s
locus
standi
as a
creditor, it can nevertheless rely on the indebtedness to the City to
establish that the First Respondent cannot pay its debts
as and when
they fall due and that it is therefore both commercially and
factually insolvent. In relation to its own locus standi,
the
Applicant has
at
least an unpaid and taxed costs order as aforesaid which is more than
R100 and therefore affords it
locus
standi
as a
creditor.
25.
The matter was
previously on the roll and argument was presented before the
Honourable Ms Justice Dippenaar. The learned judge did
not determine
the merits of the application, but postponed the matter
sine
die
and required
the administrator to deliver a comprehensive report pertaining to the
affairs
of
the First Respondent from the date of his appointment to date, as
well as particulars of when and how the administrator complied
with
his duties and obligations.
The learned judge also
provided the parties with an opportunity to deliver further
affidavits.
26.
The administrator
delivered his affidavit and report, which further demonstrated that
the First Respondent is clearly unable to
pay its debts at present,
it has been unable to do so for years and there is no reasonable
prospect of the First Respondent ever
paying off its debts from the
only income that it could potentially generate, being rental income.
27.
The parties thereafter
delivered further affidavits. Nothing therein controverted the
Applicant’s evidence that the Applicant
is a creditor of the
First Respondent, the First Respondent is heavily indebted both to
the Applicant and the City and the First
Respondent has for many
years been unable to pay its debts and is still unable to pay its
debts.
28.
Section 346(1)(b) of
the 1973 Companies Act provides as follows:
“
346
Application for
winding-up of company
(1)
An
application
to
the
Court
for
the
winding-up
of
a
company
may, subject to
the provisions of this section, be made-
(a)
…
;
(b)
by
one
or
more
of
its
creditors
(including
contingent
or
prospective
creditors);
”
29.
A contingent or
prospective creditor has been defined in
Gillis-Mason
Construction Co (Pty) Ltd v Overvaal Crushers (Pty) Ltd
1971 (1) SA
524
(T)
at 528C, as
one who by reason of some existing
vinculum
juris
has a claim
against a company which may ripen into an enforceable debt on the
happening of some future event or on some future date.
30.
The Applicant is a
creditor of the First Respondent, in that the latter is indebted to
the applicant in the amount of R2,052,512.00
as at 31 March 2019,
which amount is
inter
alia
made up of the
following:
30.1.
service costs incurred
in terms of clause 7 of the deferred sale agreement concluded between
the Applicant and the First Respondent
in relation to Argyle Court
(“the deferred sale agreement”);
30.2.
insurance charges
incurred in terms of clause 8 of the deferred sale agreement. All the
debts set out in paragraphs 16.1 to 16.7
of the founding affidavit
appear
inter alia
from annexure
“T4.7” thereto. The service costs and insurance charges
are debts specifically provided for in clauses
7 and 8 of the
deferred sale agreement.
The First Respondent
failed to insure the building, hence the Applicant had to do so in
terms of the deferred sale agreement, with
the First Respondent being
contractually obliged to repay the costs thereof to the Applicant,
which were debited to “T4.7”
from time to time.
These charges continue
to be incurred on a monthly basis, to this date;
30.3.
loans extended by the
Applicant to the First Respondent in respect
of legal fees incurred
by the First Respondent from time to time, as appears from
resolutions passed by the Board of Directors of
the First Respondent
inter alia
on
31 May 2016 and 12 July 2016;
30.4.
a loan extended by the
Applicant to the First Respondent (represented by the administrator)
during March 2018 in the amount of R23,300.00
in respect of venue and
related costs for the holding
of a members’
meeting on 7 April 2018;
30.5.
a loan extended by the
Applicant to the First Respondent (represented by the administrator)
during June 2018 in the amount
of R22,250.00 in
respect of venue and related costs for the holding
of the First
Respondent’s annual general meeting on 2 June 2018;
30.6.
a loan extended by the
Applicant to the First Respondent during July 2018 in the amount of
R60,000.00 in order to re-connect essential
services by virtue of the
First Respondent’s failure to make payment of its accounts with
the City.
Each
of the Third, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh and Eighth Respondents, in their
capacities as directors of the First Respondent, personally
signed
the resolution referring to this loan, and it was signed by the
administrator as well;
30.7.
monthly interest
accruing on the outstanding balance of the account of the First
Respondent with the Applicant;
30.8.
a taxed bill of costs
in the sum of R63,795.56.
31.
It is important to note
that the legal fees required in terms of the resolution dated 31 May
2016, were in order to defend criminal
charges that had been brought
against
inter alia
the Second
Respondent (who is the deponent to the opposing Respondents’
answering affidavit, in which this very debt is
now sought to be
denied).
This
resolution was signed by
inter
alia
the Third
Respondent, the Seventh Respondent and the Eighth Respondent. The
legal fees required in terms of the resolution dated
12 July 2016,
were in order to defend civil proceedings instituted against
inter
alia
the Third
Respondent and the Fourth respondent.
This resolution was
signed by
inter alia
the Second
Respondent, the Seventh Respondent and the Eighth Respondent.
32.
The Respondents’
defence to the Applicants’ claims constitutes in essence bare
denials, a bald allegation that the Applicant
has not provided any
amounts for the service costs and insurance charges, that the
Applicant has not specified the principal sum
on which interest is
calculated, as well as an unsubstantiated contention that the debts
in paragraphs 16.3 to 19 of the founding
affidavit “have since
prescribed.”
33.
In
Fakie
NO v CCII Systems (Pty) Ltd
[2006] ZASCA 52
;
2006 (4) SA 326
(SCA)
at
par
[55]
, the Supreme Court of Appeal per Cameron JA (as he then
was), summarized
the
relevant principles as follows with reference to the well-known cases
of
R Room Hire Co
(Pty) Ltd v Jeppe Street Mansions (Pty) Ltd
1949 (3) SA 1155
(T)
at 1168 and
Plascon-Evans Paints
Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984 (3) SA 623
(A)
at
634-5, as follows:
“
[55]
That conflicting affidavits are not a suitable means for determining
disputes of fact has been doctrine in this court for more
than 80
years.
Yet
motion proceedings are quicker and cheaper than trial proceedings
and, in the interests of justice, courts have been at pains
not to
permit unvirtuous respondents to shelter behind patently implausible
affidavit versions or bald denials. More than 60 years
ago, this
Court determined that a Judge should not allow a respondent to raise
'fictitious' disputes of fact to delay the hearing
of the matter or
to deny the applicant its order.
There had to be
'a bona fide dispute of fact on a material matter'. This means that
an uncreditworthy denial, or a palpably implausible
version, can be
rejected out of hand,
without recourse
to oral evidence. In Plascon-Evans Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints
(Pty) Ltd, this Court extended the ambit of
uncreditworthy denials.
They now encompassed not merely those that fail to raise a real,
genuine or bona fide dispute of fact but
also allegations or denials
that are
so
far-fetched or clearly untenable that the Court is justified in
rejecting them merely on the papers.
”
34.
In casu
,
the Respondents have simply not advanced any evidence whatsoever of
any facts that would support their bare denial of the First
Respondent’s indebtedness and commercial insolvency.
35.
Section 344(f) of the
1973 Companies Act, 61 of 1973 provides that:
“
A
company may be wound up by the Court if –
…
(f)
the company is
unable to pay its debts as described in section 345;
”
36.
Section 345 of the
aforesaid Companies Act provides as follows (with added emphasis):
“
(1)
A company or
body corporate shall be deemed to be unable to pay
its debts if-
(a)
a creditor, by
cession or otherwise, to whom the company is
indebted in a
sum not less than one hundred rand then due-
(i)
has served on
the company, by leaving the same at its registered office, a demand
requiring the company to pay the sum so due; or
(ii)
in the case of
any body corporate not incorporated under this Act, has served such
demand by leaving it at its main office or delivering
it to the
secretary or some director, manager or principal officer of such body
corporate or in such other manner as the Court
may direct,
and the company or
body corporate has for three weeks thereafter neglected to pay the
sum, or to secure or compound for it to the
reasonable satisfaction
of the creditor; or
(b)
…
; or
(c)
it is proved to
the satisfaction of the Court that the company is
unable to pay
its debts.
(2)
In determining
for the purpose of subsection (1) whether a company is unable to pay
its debts, the Court shall also take into account
the contingent and
prospective liabilities of the company.
”
37.
South African law
recognises two forms of insolvency:
37.1.
factual insolvency
(where a company's liabilities exceed its assets);commercial
insolvency (a position in which a company is in
such a state of
illiquidity that it is unable to pay its debts, even though its
assets may exceed its liabilities)
-
Rosenbach
& Co (Pty) Ltd v Singh's Bazaars (Pty) Ltd
1962 (4) SA 593
(D)
at
597 D - G;
Johnson
v Hirotec (Pty) Ltd
[2000] ZASCA 131
;
2000 (4) SA 930
(SCA)
at
par 6.
38.
In
Rosenbach
&
Co
(Pty)
Ltd
v
Singh's
Bazaars
(Pty)
Ltd
1962
(4)
SA
593 (D)
,
Caney J held as follows at 597 D – G:
“
The
proper approach in deciding the question whether a company should
be wound up on
this ground appears to me, in the light of what I have said,
to be that, if
it is established that a company is unable to pay its debts, in the
sense of being unable to meet the current demands
upon it, its day to
day liabilities in the ordinary course of its business, it is in a
state of commercial insolvency; that it
is unable to pay its debts
may be established by the
means provided
in para. (a) or para. (b) of sec. 112, or in any other way, by proper
evidence. If the company is in fact solvent,
in the sense of its
assets exceeding its liabilities, this may or may not, depending upon
the circumstances, lead to a refusal
of a winding-up order; the
circumstances particularly to be taken into consideration against the
making of an order are such as
show that there are liquid assets or
readily realisable assets available out of which, or the proceeds of
which, the company is
in fact able to pay its debts. Cf. Chandlers
Ltd v Dealesville Hotel (Pty.) Ltd., 1954 (4)
SA 748 (O) at p.
749. Nevertheless, in exercising its powers the Court will have
regard to the fact that
'a creditor who cannot
obtain payment of his debt is entitled as between himself and the
company ex debito justitiae to an order
if he brings his case within
the Act. He is not bound to give time'.
Buckley, p. 450.
This view is supported
also by Palmer at p. 27:
'The fact that there
is due to the petitioner a liquidated sum, that the debt is not
disputed, and that the petitioner has demanded
payment without
success, affords cogent prima facie evidence of the company's
inability to pay its debts, and is the evidence most
commonly relied
on.'
Evidence that a
company has failed on demand to pay a debt, payment of which is due,
is cogent prima facie proof of inability to
pay its debts:
“…
for
a concern which is not in financial difficulties ought to be able to
pay
its
way from current revenue or readily available resources.
”
39.
In
ABSA
Bank Ltd v Rhebokskloof (Pty) Ltd and Others
1993 (4) SA 436
(C)
,
Berman J held as follows at 440F – H:
“
The
concept of commercial insolvency as a ground for winding up a company
is eminently practical and commercially sensible. The
primary
question which a Court is called upon to answer in deciding whether
or not a company carrying on business should be wound
up as
commercially insolvent is whether or not it has liquid assets or
readily realisable assets available to meet its liabilities
as they
fall due to be met in the ordinary
course of
business and thereafter to be in a position to carry on normal
trading - in other words, can the company meet current
demands on it
and remain buoyant? It matters not that the company's assets, fairly
valued, far exceed its liabilities: once the
Court finds that it
cannot do this, it follows that it is entitled to, and
should, hold
that the company is unable to pay its debts within the meaning of s
345(1)(c) as read with s 344(f) of the Companies
Act 61 of 1973 and
is accordingly liable to be wound up.
”
40.
In
Boschpoort
Ondernemings
(Pty)
Ltd
v
Absa
Bank
Ltd
2014
(2)
SA
518 (SCA)
,
it was held as follows at par [17]:
“
[17]
That a company's commercial insolvency is a ground that will justify
an order
for
its
liquidation
has
been
a
reality
of
law
which
has
served
us
well
through
the passage of time. The reasons are not hard to find: the valuation
of assets, other than cash, is a notoriously elastic
and often highly
subjective one; the liquidity of assets is often more viscous than
recalcitrant debtors would have a court believe;
more often than not,
creditors do not have knowledge of the assets of a company that owes
them money — and cannot be expected
to have; and courts are
more comfortable with readily determinable and objective tests such
as whether a company is able to meet
its current liabilities than
with abstruse economic exercises as to the valuation of a company's
assets.
Were
the test for solvency in liquidation proceedings to be whether assets
exceed liabilities, this would undermine there being
a predictable
and therefore effective legal environment for the adjudication of the
liquidation of companies: one of the purposes
of the new Act, set out
in s 7(l) thereof.
”
41.
The objective facts,
including the First Respondent’s own conduct and
words, clearly
demonstrate that it is unable to pay its debts. The First Respondent
does not have enough funds to settle the massive
outstanding account
of the City, which has spiralled out of control and which remains
unpaid. How the First Respondent will pay
its debts to the City, the
Applicant and other creditors is not explained.The First Respondent
could not make payment of the reconnection
charge of R100,000.00 or
the amounts owing to the Applicant.
42.
It must be borne in
mind that the First Respondent presently occupies Argyle Court (and
has been occupying Argyle Court for many
years) in terms of the
deferred sale agreement. The First Respondent is liable for all
electricity and water consumed, as well
as for other municipal
charges in respect of Argyle Court and the Applicant as owner remains
liable to the City should the First
Respondent not make such
payments. In addition, by virtue of its occupation and consumption,
the First Respondent is also in terms
of
inter
alia
section 49 of
the Gauteng Local Government Ordinance 17 of 1939 liable to the City
for the consumption charges for water and electricity
supplied to
Argyle Court.
43.
As appears from
paragraph 18 of the founding affidavit, it was recorded that the
First Respondent was at that point in time indebted
to the City in
the amount of R4 056 007.27 in respect of municipal charges for
water,
electricity
and the like. The Respondents have not alleged that this debt, or any
of the First Respondent’s other debts, have
or can be paid.
They have also not furnished any evidence of any liquid assets or
readily realisable assets available to meet the
First Respondent’s
liabilities as they fall due in the ordinary course of business, and
thereafter to be in a position to
carry on normal trading.
44.
Having regard to all
the evidence of insolvency (both commercial and factual), I find that
not only is the First Respondent commercially
insolvent but also that
the Applicant has the necessary
locus
standi
to apply for
its winding-up and is entitled to such order
ex
debito justitiae
.
45.
In regard to whether it
is just and equitable to wind-up the First Respondent, section 344(h)
of the Companies Act, 61 0f 1973,
unlike the preceding subparagraphs
of section 344, this section postulates not facts but only a broad
conclusion of law, justice
and equity as a ground for winding-up. It
is well
settled
that
the
subsection
giving
power
to
the
court
to
wind
up
a company on the just
and equitable ground is not confined to cases in which there are
grounds analogous to those mentioned in other
parts of the
section. Nor, on the
other hand, can any general rule be laid down as to the nature of the
circumstances that have to be borne in
mind in considering whether a
case comes within the phrase.
It must also be
recognised that there is no necessary limit to the generality of the
words “just and equitable”. Section
344(h) affords a
court a wide judicial discretion in the exercise whereof.
46.
In
Sweet
v Finbain
1984 (3) SA 441
(W)
it
was held as follows:
“
The
ground is to be widely construed; it confers a wide judicial
discretion, and it is not to be interpreted so as to exclude matters
which are not
ejusdem generis
with the other grounds specified in s 344. The fact that the Courts
have evolved certain principles as guides in
particular cases, or
examples of situations where the discretion to grant a winding-up
order will be exercised, does not require
or entitle the Court to cut
down the generality of the words "just and equitable".
”
47.
The Respondents dispute
that it is just an equitable for the First Respondent to be wound up,
and they contend that there is no
longer factionalism in the Argyle
Court community and that all factions are now dissolved and people
are working together.
48.
There is however, no
explanation of how the tenants are allegedly working together and how
they intend to address the First Respondent’s
massive debt and
its evident inability to make payment thereof.
49.
The court appointed
administrator, was not able to put the affairs of the First
Respondent in order.
Rental increases were
met expectedly met with hostility and so were the steps taken by the
administrator to put proper security
and cleaning services in place.
The administrator apparently had numerous meetings with the various
parties and the Applicant was
even requested to advance further funds
in order to facilitate the venues and logistical arrangements for
some of the meetings,
and to make payment to the City of Johannesburg
to re-connect the electricity supply.
50.
Letcor, one of the
property managing agents, has not submitted past financial records
and it has not transferred monies that belong
to the First
Respondent. Some tenants continue to make payment to Letcor.
The continued presence
of two property managers for one building is making it impossible to
account for past income and expenditure,
as well as going forward.
This a liquidator will put an end to and sort out with the various
mechanisms afforded to liquidators
in the Companies Acts and the
Insolvency Act, 24 of 1936
.
51.
The bottom line is that
the First Respondent does not have funds. The proposed recovery plan
relied upon by the Respondents requires
funding to implement and it
is impossible to implement the recovery plan without funding.
52.
The First Respondent is
in continuous breach of the deferred sale agreement,
it
has
borrowed
monies
it
has
not
repaid,
it
has
run
up
a considerable debt and
it is evidently no longer anywhere near becoming the owner of the
Argyle Court building.
It is financially
objectively unable to take transfer.
53.
The First Respondent’s
debt has spiralled out of control and it continues to mount further,
to the prejudice of all concerned.
It can no longer achieve its
objective, as laudable as such was.
54.
The First Respondent
simply cannot be allowed to continue incurring further debt and to
trade further in hopelessly insolvent circumstances.
The only solution is
for it be wound up and it would be just and equitable for that to
occur.
55.
If the just and
equitable basis for the winding-up needs be considered at all, since
the Applicant has established that the First
Respondent is both
factually and commercially insolvent therefore entitling it to a
winding-up order, it must be taken into account
when having regard to
justice and equity that the Applicant, being the owner of the
property currently occupied by the First Respondent,
remains liable
to the City for the services rendered by the City to the property. At
a certain point this state of affairs must
come to an end. This point
has now been reached. The bleeding must stop and the First Respondent
must be put out of its misery,
unless the Respondents are able to
show why this Court’s discretion to place the First Respondent
must nevertheless be exercised
against such order.
56.
It seems to me that the
only issue which therefore requires further determination is the
Respondents’ contention that the
winding-up of the First
Respondent will lead to homelessness in respect of the tenants and
therefore I should
exercise my discretion against granting a winding-up order in respect
of the First Respondent. In essence the
Respondents contend that now
that the infighting has abated and the directors and members are all
working together, the First Respondent
should be given a further
chance to continue to operate in order to prevent the homelessness of
the tenants.
57.
The Respondents contend
that the implications of a winding-up of the First Respondent is that
such an order will lead to homelessness
of the Second to Eighth
Respondents and/or other tenants living in Argyle Court, in the
context where the state
housing subsidy is implicated and where the City will be required in
law to furnish emergency alternative
accommodation. The Respondents
contend further that the Court ought to therefore join the national,
provincial, and municipal authorities
in charge of human
settlements to these
proceedings. The Respondents contend that a report from these
authorities detailing how, in the context of
the potential loss of
state investment to this project they may intervene in order to
secure the Associations hold over the property
and the residents’
tenure in it, is a necessary step in these proceedings.
58.
The Respondents’
contentions are based on the authority of the Constitutional Court in
Jaftha v Schoeman
and Others; Van Rooyen v Stolz and
Others
[2004] ZACC 25
;
2005
(1)
BCLR
78
(CC)
at
para
31,
where
the
Constitutional Court
held that there is a ‘negative content to socio-economic
rights.’ In this regard, the Constitutional
Court was in
agreement with the appellants’ argument that the ‘negative
obligation under section 26 of the Constitution
of the Republic of
South Africa, 1996, is not to prevent or impair existing
access to adequate
housing and while the positive obligations fall only on
the State, the negative
obligation applies to everyone, including private persons’.
59.
The Respondents contend
that it is for this reason that the Constitutional Court in
Gundwana
v Steko Development and Others
2011 (3) SA 608
(CC)
held
that the
Jaftha
decision applies to
mortgage bonds as well as to so- called extraneous debts and that it
applied to High Court execution procedures
and that the result was
the Rule 46 and 46A.
60.
Similarly here, so the
Respondents contend, the impact of winding-up the First Respondent
would have a direct effect on the Second
to Eighth Respondents’
rights under section 26 of the Constitution and it is only just and
equitable that section 26 considerations
be taken into account in the
exercise of the Court’s discretion whether or not to grant the
Applicant the relief it seeks.
61.
The Applicant contends
that the present application is not an eviction application, and the
liquidation relief will not have any
legal or practical impact on the
right to housing of the occupiers of the Argyle Court building.
62.
The Applicant also
state that the liquidation of the First Respondent does not amount to
an order evicting the occupiers.
The Respondents in turn
contend that the aforesaid argument is not sustainable and is
purportedly rejected by the authorities in
Jaftha
and
Gundwana
pointing to exactly
the opposite line of reasoning.
63.
I have considered the
respective contentions of the parties in relation to the exercise of
my discretion, particularly in relation
to the issue of whether a
winding-up order will lead to homelessness. I find myself favouring
the contentions of the Applicant
that the winding-up order will
itself not necessarily lead to homelessness. A liquidator has a
number of various avenues to follow
in the liquidation of the First
Respondent. The liquidator may elect to cancel the agreement with the
Applicant or may elect to
enforce it – no party has suggested
that the said agreement has been cancelled and
I was informed that it
has not been cancelled by either party. The Applicant may thereafter
seek to either conclude its own agreements
of lease with the existing
tenants or to evict them. It is only at that stage that there is a
risk of homelessness. That being
so, the occupiers – whether
lawful or unlawful – have the protection of the
Prevention
of Illegal Eviction from and Unlawful Occupation of Land Act, 19 of
1998
.
64.
This approach has
support in in relation to Rule 46A, where the Constitutional Court in
Bestbier and Others
v Nedbank Ltd
2024 (4) SA 331
(CC)
held
that tenants in a property need not be joined in proceedings since
they
are
protected
either
by
ESTA
or
the
rule
of
huur
gaat
voor
koop
.
Similarly, in the context of winding-up proceedings – where the
property housing the potential homeless is not even owned
by the
First Respondent, there can be no potential homelessness arising
merely from the winding-up of the First Respondent. It
is for the
Applicant to then take steps to evict the occupiers and at that stage
the requirements of
Prevention
of Illegal Eviction from and Unlawful Occupation of Land Act
will
become applicable which affords a measure of procedural and
substantive protections to the occupiers of the property. It is
at
that stage that their section 26 constitutional rights will be taken
into account and if necessary protected by the courts.
65.
Having made such
finding, it follows that the joinder of various government
departments is not necessary and the joinder application
must be
dismissed. The Applicant seeks the costs of the joinder application
from the Second to Eighth Respondents. However, it
is clear that the
Respondents sought the joinder purely to attempt to protect their
section 26 constitutional rights, however misguided
that may have
been. I therefore decline to award a costs order in favour of the
Applicant in respect of the joinder application.
66.
In the circumstances,
there is no reason to exercise my discretion not to grant a winding
up order of the First Respondent.
67.
Despite a bald denial
in this regard by the Respondents, the affidavits and annexures
evidence that the Applicant has complied with
all the statutory
and procedural
requirements for a winding-up order.
68.
In the circumstances,
the following order is made:
68.1.
The First Respondent is
placed under final winding up in the hands
of the Master of the
High Court.
68.2.
The costs of the
application are to be costs in the winding up of the First
Respondent.
68.3.
The joinder application
is dismissed and the Applicant and the Second to Eighth Respondents
are to bear their own costs in respect
of the joinder application.
KAIRINOS AJ
Acting Judge of the
High Court: Gauteng Division, Johannesburg
For the Applicant:
Adv E Kromhout
Instructed by:
Malatji & Co
Attorneys
For the Respondents:
Adv D Linde Adv N
Soekoe
Instructed by:
Kropman Attorneys
Dates of Hearing: 23 July 2025
This
judgment is delivered by upload to the digital data base of the court
and by transmission email to the parties on 19 August
2025. The
judgment is deemed to be delivered on 19 August 2025.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
TUHF Limited v Farber (2024/066493) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1309 (14 January 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 1309High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
TUHF Limited v Farber (2024/066493) [2024] ZAGPJHC 802 (26 August 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 802High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
TUHF v 68 Wolmarans Street Johannesburg and Others (A5073/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1390 (29 November 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 1390High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
TUHF Urban Finance (RF) Ltd v House of Tandoor and Others (2021/55306) [2022] ZAGPJHC 156 (4 March 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 156High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
TUHF Limited v 266 Bree Street Johannesburg (Pty) Ltd and Others (11987/2020) [2023] ZAGPJHC 361 (21 April 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 361High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar