Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 931South Africa
Evening Shade Properties 56 (Pty) Limited v Lets Care South Africa NPC and Another (2023/064626) [2025] ZAGPJHC 931 (19 September 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
19 September 2025
Headnotes
or administered by or on behalf of the First Respondent; and
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Evening Shade Properties 56 (Pty) Limited v Lets Care South Africa NPC and Another (2023/064626) [2025] ZAGPJHC 931 (19 September 2025)
Evening Shade Properties 56 (Pty) Limited v Lets Care South Africa NPC and Another (2023/064626) [2025] ZAGPJHC 931 (19 September 2025)
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sino date 19 September 2025
FLYNOTES:
COMPANY – Winding up –
Administration
powers
–
Whether
administration order barred creditors from pursuing liquidation –
Administration order merely suspended powers
of company’s
board and senior staff – Transferred management functions –
Neither provisions or administration
order created a moratorium on
liquidation – Administration order aimed to restore
viability but did not displace statutory
rights of creditors to
seek liquidation – Indebtedness proven – Placed under
final winding up.
THE REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Case Number: 2023-064626
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2) OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: YES
In the matter between:
EVENING
SHADE PROPERTIES 56 (PTY) LIMITED
Applicant
and
LETS
CARE SOUTH AFRICA NPC
First Respondent
SOCIAL
HOUSING REGULATORY AUTHORITY
Second Respondent
AND
In the matter between:
NEDBANK
LIMITED
Applicant
and
EVENING
SHADE PROPERTIES 56 (PTY) LIMITED
First Respondent
LETS
CARE SOUTH AFRICA NPC
Second Respondent
SOCIAL
HOUSING REGULATORY AUTHORITY
Third Respondent
AND
In the matter between:
SOCIAL
HOUSING REGULATORY AUTHORITY
Applicant
and
EVENING
SHADE PROPERTIES 56 (PTY) LIMITED
First Respondent
NEDBANK
LIMITED
Second Respondent
LETS
CARE SOUTH AFRICA NPC
Third Respondent
Delivered:
This judgment
was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is reflected and is
handed down electronically by circulation to
the parties' legal
representatives by email and by uploading it to the electronic file
of this matter on CaseLines. The date and
time for hand-down is
deemed to be 10:00 on ___ September 2025.
JUDGMENT
VAN EEDEN AJ
[1]
Three interlinked opposed applications came before
Court:
a.
In
the first matter, Mr C Gibson appeared on behalf of the
applicant, Evening Shade Properties 56 (Pty) Limited (“Evening
Shade”). This is a winding-up application against Lets Care
South Africa NPC (“Lets Care”) where a provisional
winding-up order had been issued by Vally J on 5 August
2024. Shortly thereafter and during August 2024, provisional
liquidators were appointed.
b.
In
the second matter, Nedbank Limited (“Nedbank”) was
represented by Mr NJ Horn and Ms LV Swandle. On 25 November
2024, Opperman J granted Nedbank leave to intervene in Evening
Shade’s application. Nedbank also seeks the final winding-up
of
Evening Shade.
c.
In
the third matter, Mr BM Lecoge SC and Mr CI Mokwena
represented the Social Housing Regulatory Authority (“SHRA”).
SHRA launched what it termed a counter-application for an order in
inter alia the following terms:
“
1.
Declaring that once this Honourable Court has granted an order for
the administration of a social
housing institution in terms of
section 12
of the
Social Housing Act 16 of 2008
, no creditor may
bring an application for the provisional and final liquidation of the
social housing institution in question until
the Social Housing
Regulatory Authority (“SHRA”) has completed the
administration process, or without the leave of
this Honourable
Court.
2.
Setting aside the provisional liquidation order in terms of section
149(2) of the Insolvency
Act 24 of 1936 (“the
Insolvency
Act&rdquo
;).”
[2]
I find it convenient to first deal with SHRA’s
counter-application and its opposition to the final winding-up order
sought
by both Evening Tide and Nedbank. SHRA seeks the setting aside
of the provisional liquidation order granted by Vally J on
5 August 2024.
Given the appointment of provisional
liquidators and the Master’s involvement following the
provisional winding up order,
it seems obvious that the Master
and the provisional liquidators are necessary parties and that SHRA’s
failure to join them
to its counter-application constitutes a
material non-joinder. However, I do not intend to dismiss the
counter-application
solely on this ground.
[3]
The parties have been at loggerheads since the
provisional winding-up order was granted, SHRA claiming that the
administration order
that it had obtained on 23 June 2023
remained in place. It refused to acknowledge the authority of the
provisional liquidators.
The following terms of the administration
order SHRA obtained before Tshombe AJ are relevant to these
three applications:
“
2.
The rights and obligations of
the
chairperson, members of the board, managers, executive and/or senior
staff
of
the First Respondent are hereby suspended, pending the conclusion of
the Applicant’s forensic investigations into the affairs
of the
First Respondent.
3.
The first respondent is hereby placed under administration of the
Applicant, in terms of
section 12
of the
Social Housing Act, 16 of
2008
, with the following powers and duties:
3.1
Applicant shall take immediate control of, and be in the place of,
the board of directors of the First
Respondent, manage the business
and operations of and concerning the First Respondent, together with
all assets and interests relating
to the business of the First
Respondent;
3.2
The Applicant shall take control of the cash, cash investments,
shares and other security, as well as
other assets owned, held or
administered by or on behalf of the First Respondent; and
3.3
The Applicant is permitted to engage such assistance of a legal,
accounting, actuarial, administrative
or other professional as the
Applicant may deem necessary, and to defray reasonable expenses and
charges thus incurred from the
assets owned, administered or held by
or on behalf of the First Respondent.
4.
The Applicant shall appoint, in its sole discretion, a suitably
qualified person to manage and administer the First Respondent’s
affairs as administrator of the Sondela Village Housing Project,
during the abovementioned period.
5.
The Applicant’s administrator shall run, at the Applicant’s
discretion, the administrative
and managerial affairs of the Sondela
Village Housing Project and shall be the sole representative dealing
with third parties,
including but not limited to the First
Respondent’s creditors.
6.
The Applicant is authorised to take such further steps as may be
necessary in terms of the
Act and/or any other applicable law, during
the administration of the First Respondent to achieve the First
Respondent’s
restoration to viability.”
[4]
Mr Lecoge SC argued that because the section 12
administration order that was granted, no order could issue in
respect of the winding-up
of Lets Care. In particular, he relied on
section 12(9) of the Housing Act which reads as follows:
“
12(9) If the
High Court grants an order placing the institution under the
administration of the Regulatory Authority, the Regulatory
Authority
–
(a)
must manage the institution effectively and
efficiently;
(b)
may remove the accreditation of the social housing
institution;
(c)
may transfer the housing stock or rights of the
social housing institution to another social housing institution
prepared to accept
such transfer on such terms and conditions as may
be agreed at the time; or
(d)
where appropriate, institute legal proceedings for
the winding up of the institution.”
[5]
With reference to section 12(9)(d), Mr Lecoge
submitted that only SHRA has the right to institute winding-up
proceedings against
an institution under its administration. Although
the founding papers contained a contention that the effect of the
administration
order was that SHRA stepped into the shoes of Lets
Care, during argument Mr Lecoge SC correctly conceded that that
was not
the case. Lets Care’s assets and liabilities remained
vested in it and the effect of the administration order was limited
to vest the management functions described in the Housing Act in
SHRA. SHRA took over the “
rights
and obligations”
of the persons
highlighted in paragraph 2 of the administration order, namely the
chairperson, members of the board, managers, executive
and/or senior
staff of Lets Care. The concession notwithstanding, Mr Lecoge argued
that SHRA’s exercise of the powers and
functions assigned to it
in terms of the Housing Act and administration were being hampered by
the provisional order.
[6]
The founding papers (paragraph 51) stated that
there was uncertainty because the provisional liquidators insisted on
acting in terms
of the provisional liquidation order without regard
to the existence of the administration order. It was stated
(paragraph 52)
that the administration order and the provisional
liquidation order have conflicting and opposing objectives. On the
one hand,
the administration order contemplates the continued
existence of Lets Care (or the Sondela Village Project as a social
housing
project), its restoration to financial viability for
inter
alia
the benefit of creditors and
beneficiaries of social housing and protecting the investment of the
state in the underlying social
housing stock. In contrast, so the
argument went, a liquidation pursues the disposal of the assets of
Lets Care for the benefit
of creditors and culminates in the
dissolution of the housing project itself, leaving the legitimate
social housing beneficiaries
destitute and again placing the
liability of housing those beneficiaries on another state housing
programme.
[7]
In this context, SHRA contended that section
12(9)(d) was to the effect that only it had the right to launch final
liquidation proceedings.
It contended (replying affidavit, paragraph
12) that the administration dispensation set out in the Housing Act
amounts to a special
dispensation in terms of special legislation
which finds application in respect of companies which fall under the
regulatory purview
of the applicant and the administration order. In
consequence, so the argument went, the process pursued in terms of
the regulatory
purview must be given precedence in the circumstances.
Finally, it was contended that during the time period when SHRA was
still
exercising its powers of administration, a moratorium was
created preventing other creditors from seeking a winding-up of the
entity
under administration.
[8]
In its express terms, neither the Housing Act nor
the administration order supports SHRA’s argument. No
moratorium is created
by the Housing Act or the administration order.
The rights of creditors are not dealt with at all. Section 12(9)(d)
does not
give SHRA the monopoly on the institution of liquidation
proceedings contended for. It serves to provide standing to SHRA
should
it seek to launch liquidation proceedings. If anything, the
scheme of the Housing Act serves to protect the rights of creditors.
Section 12(4), for instance, requires SHRA to consult “
with
the providers of any debt finance to the institution
”
and then to apply to Court for the administration
order.
[9]
The rights of creditors are firmly entrenched in
insolvency and winding up legislation. Both Mr Gibson and Mr
Horn provided
instructive arguments on the contention that the
Housing Act amends existing statutory rights. In this matter, Lets
Care is a company
registered under the Companies Act, 61 of 1973 (the
1973 Act). This is what section 13(5) of the Housing Act requires.
The Housing
Act does not provide for Lets Care to be treated
differently from any other company that is indebted to creditors.
Section 344(f)
of the 1973 Act provides that a company may be
wound-up if it is unable to pay its debts as described in section
345. The 1973
Act continues to apply with respect to the winding-up
and liquidation of companies by virtue of Item 9 to Schedule 5 of the
Companies
Act, 71 of 2008 (the 2008 Act). The moratorium created by
business rescue comes with many safeguards relating to creditor
participation,
strict time periods and the overarching requirement of
the need to demonstrate a reasonable prospect that the company will
be rescued
within the statutory framework if it receives some
breathing space.
[10]
The Housing Act does not interfere with the rights
of creditors in any manner – not even when a social housing
institution
is placed under the administration of SHRA. Its aim is
different. As the preamble states, its aim is to establish and
promote a
sustainable social housing environment; to define the
functions of national, provincial and local governments in respect of
social
housing; to provide for the establishment of the Social
Housing Regulatory Authority in order to regulate all social housing
institutions
obtaining or having obtained public funds; to allow for
the undertaking of approved projects by other delivery agents with
the
benefit of public money; to give statutory recognition to social
housing institutions; and to provide for matters connected therewith.
It follows that the counterclaim cannot succeed.
[11]
SHRA opposed both applications for winding-up. The
essence of the opposition is the contentions that underpin the
counter-application.
SHRA contended that the administration order was
granted prior to the provisional order and as such, that the
provisional order
should not have been granted by virtue of the
existence of the administration order. It contended that the
administration order
overrides the provisional liquidation order. It
stated that the two orders have conflicting and opposing objectives
and cannot
co-exist.
[12]
This reasoning is incorrect. The provisional
liquidation order superseded the administration order. After the
provisional liquidation
order issued, SHRA had no more powers than
the board of directors of any other company placed under provisional
liquidation. SHRA
was required to cooperate with the provisional
liquidators, it having taken over the rights and obligations of Lets
Care’s
chairperson, members of the board, managers, executive
and/or senior staff.
[13]
SHRA’s opposition to the two winding-up
applications did not extend beyond the contentions in terms of the
Housing Act and
the relief claimed in the counter-application. In
fact, it admitted Lets Care’s indebtedness to Evening Shade and
to Nedbank
and there are no further grounds of opposition to a final
winding-up order.
[14]
I have dealt with SHRA’s contentions
relating to its status in a final winding up, as it appeared to
me that the stand-off
position it had adopted may continue if a final
winding-up order was issued. This was how I understood Mr Lecoge’s
submissions,
and I consequently asked him whether he was inviting me
to make an order that the administration order will be superseded by
a
final winding up order and that SHRA had to render assistance
to final liquidators. That prompted counsel for Evening Shade
and
Nedbank in reply to request such an order to provide clarity to the
parties. Although an order along these lines do not form
part of the
papers, it was debated, and I consequently intend to incorporate
orders on SHRA’s future involvement in the affairs
of Lets
Care.
[15]
I
make the following orders:
1.
Lets Care South Africa NPC is placed under final
winding-up.
2.
It
is declared that the order granted by Tshombe AJ on 23 June 2023
placing Lets Care in administration was superseded by the provisional
winding-up order granted by Vally J on 5 August 2023.
3.
SHRA is directed to render such assistance to the
final liquidators as could have been statutorily demanded of Lets
Care’s
chairperson, members of the board, managers, executive
and/or senior staff immediately prior to the order granted by Tshombe
AJ
on 23 June 2023.
4.
The
costs of the winding-up applications, including the costs of the
extensions of the rule
nisi
issued on 5 August 2024 (with the return date of
18 September 2024, extended to 23 October 2024, then to 25 November
2024,
then to 28 July 2025 and finally to 15 September 2025)
shall be costs in the winding-up, including the costs of two counsel
where so employed, on scale C.
5.
The
counter-application instituted by the Social Housing Regulatory
Authority is dismissed and the Social Housing Regulatory Authority
is
to pay the costs thereof, including the costs of two counsel where so
employed, on scale C.
H VAN EEDEN
ACTING JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
JOHANNESBURG
For
Evening Shade Properties 56 (Pty) Ltd: C Gibson instructed by Senekal
Simmons Inc
For
Nedbank Limited: NJ Horn and LV Swandle instructed by Werksmans
For
Social Housing Regulatory Authority: MB Lecoge SC and CI Mokwena
instructed by Galanzhele Sebela Attorneys Inc
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