Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 14South Africa
Baic Automobile SA (Proprietary) Limited v Samaritan Car Cover (Proprietary) Limited and Another (2023/122995) [2024] ZAGPJHC 14 (9 January 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
9 January 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Baic Automobile SA (Proprietary) Limited v Samaritan Car Cover (Proprietary) Limited and Another (2023/122995) [2024] ZAGPJHC 14 (9 January 2024)
Baic Automobile SA (Proprietary) Limited v Samaritan Car Cover (Proprietary) Limited and Another (2023/122995) [2024] ZAGPJHC 14 (9 January 2024)
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sino date 9 January 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
number: 2023/122995
[1]
REPORTABLE: NO
[2]
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
[3]
REVISED: NO
DATE:
9 JANUARY 2022
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
BAIC
AUTOMOBILE SA (PROPRIETARY)
LIMITED
Applicant
and
SAMARITAN
CAR COVER (PROPRIETARY) LIMITED
(IN
BUSINESS RESCUE)
First Respondent
CHRISTIAAN
CERVAAS HERBST N.O
Second Respondent
JUDGMENT
PULLINGER
AJ
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This is an application for the return of certain motor vehicles
leased
by the applicant to the first respondent pursuant to the
cancellation of the lease agreement.
[2]
The material facts are not in dispute.
[3]
On 14 July 2021, the applicant and the first respondent concluded a
written
agreement styled "Fixed Term Lease Agreement" (“
the
Agreement
”).
[4]
In terms of the Agreement the applicant would lease a number of motor
vehicles to the first respondent for a period of 36 months. The
first respondent would, in turn, would lease the vehicles
to third
parties for use in e-hailing services.
[5]
As a
quid pro quo
for the use of the vehicles, the first
respondent would pay R4,161.00 per vehicle per month to the
applicant.
[6]
By late October 2023 the first respondent was in breach of the
Agreement
having failed to pay rent for the vehicles. As at
27 October 2023 the first respondent owed the applicant
some R4.1 million.
[7]
Pursuant to discussions between the applicant and the first
respondent,
and on 30 October 2023, the Agreement was
cancelled. Notwithstanding the cancellation of the Agreement the
first respondent
failed and refused to return the vehicles to the
applicant.
[8]
Instead, and on 14 November 2023, the first respondent's board of
directors
passed a resolution placing the respondent under
supervision and in business rescue as contemplated in Chapter 6
of the
Companies Act, 2008
. The second respondent was appointed as
the business rescue practitioner.
[9]
At this point, some observations are apposite:
[9.1]
first, by
the time the respondent was placed in business rescue, the Agreement
had been terminated. Accordingly, the vehicles which
were the subject
of the Agreement were, no longer, lawfully, in the respondent's
possession (to the extent that it, as sub-lessor
had possession of
the vehicles) as contemplated in
section 133(1)
of the
Companies Act,
2008
;
[1]
[9.2]
second,
upon termination of the fixed term lease agreement, the lease
agreements as between the respondent and its sub lessees
also
terminated by operation of law;
[2]
[9.3]
third, as a
matter of law, and unless the agreement between the parties
stipulates otherwise, the lessee is bound to restore the
let goods to
the lessor immediately upon termination of the lease
[3]
or, as in this case, procure the return thereof.
[10]
In the instant case, the respondent has failed and refused to procure
the return of the
vehicles to the applicant. This prompted the
applicant to approach this Court, by way of urgency, claiming an
absence of substantive
redress at a hearing in due course.
[11]
Given the
nature of the sub-lease agreements and the intended use of the
vehicles pursuant thereto, I am satisfied that the applicant
is
entitled to a hearing before the urgent court.
[4]
DISCUSSION
[12]
The basis of the respondent's opposition to the relief sought is
four fold.
[13]
First, the respondent takes a point of non joinder. The
respondent's case is that
each of the respondent's sub lessees
ought to have been joined to these proceedings on the basis of an
ostensible direct and
substantial interest in the outcome of these
proceedings.
[13.1]
The proposition is flawed.
[13.2]
The rights of a sub lessee are derivative. Thus, a sub lessee
only
enjoys rights in and to the leased
res
for so long as the
"main" lessee enjoys such rights.
[13.3]
The position was explained by the Appellate Division as follows:
"…
it must be obvious that the rights of his sub-lessees are
entirely dependent upon [the lessee’s]; if - apart from
the
Dutch rule
huur
gaat voor koop
,
which is not relevant since it can apply only to cases where the
lessor is also owner and not where the lessor's right is temporary
–
[the lessee’s] right expires, [the sub-lessees’] go with
it.”
[5]
[13.4]
Accordingly,
a sub-tenant is does not have direct and substantial interest in an
application for specific performance of an obligation
arising under
the head lease.
[6]
[13.5]
A sub-lessee is not in the same position as a joint contractor who
may
have a direct and substantial interest in the outcome of
the litigation.
[13.6]
The full bench of this court said:
“
The
mere feature that a person is a party to a multi-party agreement does
not necessarily have the consequence that such a person
has a direct
and substantial interest of a legal (in contradistinction to a
financial) nature in litigation between or among
other parties
to the agreement.
It
depends on an analysis of the rights and obligations created by the
multi-party agreement. Where a right sought to be enforced
vests in
parties jointly, or an obligation sought to be enforced rests on
parties jointly, joinder of the joint creditors or joint
debtors is
generally necessary. Such joint contracting parties are in
a similar position to joint owners and partners
.”
[7]
(emphasis added)
[14]
Second, it
was contended, that the business rescue practitioner enjoyed (or
enjoys) a right of election in relation to the Agreement
in terms of
section 136(2)
of the
Companies Act, 2008
.
[8]
[14.1]
Again proposition is flawed.
[14.2]
The right afforded to a business rescue practitioner in
section
136(2)
of the
Companies Act, 2008
requires an extant agreement. In
this sense it is analogous to
section 133(1)
of the
Companies Act,
2008
because the moratorium does not apply to cancelled agreements.
[14.3]
In
Timasani
,
[9]
the Supreme Court of Appeal explained the position thus:
"[30]
In my view, properly construed
section 133(1)
provides that during
business rescue proceedings:
(1)
no legal proceedings, including enforcement action, against the
company; and
(2)
no legal proceedings in relation to property belonging to or in the
lawful possession of
the company, may be commenced or proceeded with
in any forum. Put differently, the words “no legal proceedings”
straddle
both the circumstances envisaged in (1) and (2). Thus, in
Cloete Murray v FirstRand Bank
, it was stated that the
inclusion of the term “enforcement action” under the
generic phrase “legal proceedings”
seems to indicate that
“enforcement action” is a species of “legal
proceeding” or meant to have its origin
in legal proceedings.
[31]
This appeal concerns the moratorium in (2). Afrimat contends that
section 133(1)
is inapplicable because the deposit does not belong to
Timasani and it is in unlawful possession thereof. The plain language
of
the words “no legal proceedings in relation to any property
belonging to the company or lawfully in its possession may be
commenced or proceeded with”, limits the reach of the
moratorium and renders it inapplicable to legal proceedings in
relation
to property belonging to an entity other than the company in
business rescue, or property unlawfully possessed by the company.
Property “belonging to the company” in
section 133(1)
,
sensibly construed, can only mean property belonging in a legally
valid sense, such as property owned by the company, which in
section
133(1)
is expressly distinguished from property “lawfully in
its possession”. Common sense dictates that it could never have
been intended that the restructuring of the affairs of a company
during business rescue should prevent recovery of property not
belonging to it or unlawfully in its possession.
[32]
This construction is reinforced by the immediate context.
Section
134(1)(c)
of the Act which deals with the protection of property
interests during business rescue of a company is cast in similar
terms and
provides:
“
134
Protection
of property interests
– (1) Subject to subsections (2) and
(3), during a company’s business rescue proceedings –
.. .
(c)
despite any provision of an agreement to the contrary, no person may
exercise any right in respect of
any property in the lawful
possession of the company, irrespective of whether the property is
owned by the company, except to the
extent that the practitioner
consents in writing.”
[33]
Section 134(1)(c)
conditionally prohibits the exercise of any right
in respect of property “
in the lawful possession of the
company
” during business rescue proceedings, regardless of
whether that property is owned by the company. It does not prohibit
the
exercise of a right in relation to proper- ty in the
unlawful
possession of the company.
[34]
Thus, in
Cloete Murray v FirstRand Bank
, the
cancellation of an instalment sale agreement by a creditor rendered
unlawful the continued possession by a company in business
rescue of
the goods that formed the subject matter of that agreement. This
Court held that although the moratorium in
section 133(1)
of the Act
grants the company breathing space, the Legislature did not intend to
interfere with contractual rights and obligations
of parties to an
agreement. Likewise, in
Kythera Court v Le Rendez-Vous
Café CC
, it was held that the moratorium did not
preclude vindicatory proceedings or proceedings for the repossession
or attachment of
property in the unlawful possession of a company in
business rescue. The case concerned legal proceedings for ejectment
where a
lease had been validly cancelled and the company was an
unlawful occupier.
[35]
Applied to the present case, the agreement in terms of which the
deposit was paid did not materialise.
It is trite that when a
contract is subject to a suspensive condition which is fulfilled, the
obligations under the contract become
enforceable. On the other hand,
if the condition is not fulfilled then it is as if the contract never
came into existence, i.e
it is regarded as being void
ab initio
.
A party who has made a payment under a contract in anticipation of
the fulfilment of a suspensive condition is entitled to the
return of
the money, unless the contract provides otherwise. Once Timasani and
Afrimat did not conclude the draft agreements submitted
by Afrimat,
there was no right to retain the deposit because it was not money
that belonged to the company; neither was it property
lawfully in its
possession. The agreement in regard to the deposit was that it would
be held in a specific account and would accrue
interest for the
benefit of Afrimat. That made it clear that if the anticipated
agreement did not materialise the deposit had to
be repaid. Timasani
was rightly ordered to repay the deposit.” (emphasis added;
footnotes omitted)
[15]
Third, it
was contended that the applicant had not satisfied the requirements
of the
rei
vindicatio
because
the first respondent is not in possession of the let vehicles.
[10]
[15.1]
The proposition fails at its most elementary level – an action
(or
application) for the return of let property is not axiomatically
one in terms of the
rei vindicatio
.
[15.2]
In reality, a claim for the redelivery of let property is one of
specific
performance of a lessee’s obligations which may take
the form of a
rei vindicatio
when appropriate.
[16]
Finally, and pursuant to a proposed mechanism for the return of the
vehicles by the respondent
to the applicant, presented in the
replying affidavit, the respondent complained that an entirely new
case had been brought to
bear. The complaint is bad. The suggestion
made in the replying affidavit amounts to nothing more than a
proposal to conveniently
arrange for the return of the vehicles.
CONCLUSION
[17]
The opposition to this application was dilatory. There is no basis in
fact or in law for
the first respondent to retain the benefit of the
vehicles. In so doing, it is occasioning on-going harm to the
applicant
both in terms of lost income but also the reduction in
value of the vehicles and the loss of opportunity to rent them for a
return.
[18]
I intend to grant a rule
nisi
calling upon the second
respondent to show cause why he should not pay the costs of this
application,
de bonis propriis
jointly and severally
with the first respondent.
[19]
In the result, I make the following order:
1.
Mr
Christiaan
Cervaas
Herbst N.O. is joined as the second respondent in this application,
in his representative capacity as business rescue practitioner
of the
first respondent and will henceforth participate in these proceedings
as the second respondent.
2.
The applicant is, to the extent necessary, granted leave to prosecute
this
application as contemplated in
section 133(1)(c)
of the
Companies Act, 2008
.
3.
The respondents are ordered to return or to procure the return of
each
and every motor vehicle listed in annexure “X” to
the applicant’s notice of motion at its nominated address.
4.
The second respondent is called upon to show good cause on 25 March
2023
at 10h00 or so soon thereafter as counsel may be heard as to why
he should not be ordered to pay the costs of this application,
jointly and severally with the first respondent, on the attorney and
client scale,
de bonis propriis
.
A
W PULLINGER
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ and/or parties’ representatives by email
and by
being uploaded to CaseLines. The date and time for hand-down is
deemed to be
10h00
on
9 January 2024
.
DATE
OF HEARING:
7
DECEMBER 2023
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
9 JANUARY 2024
APPEARANCES:
COUNSEL
FOR THE APPLICANT:
P LOURENS
ATTORNEY
FOR THE APPLICANT:
WERKSMANS
COUNSEL
FOR THE RESPONDENT:
C GIBSON
ATTORNEY
FOR THE DEFENDANT:
SMITH
QWEMESHA McCARTHY INC.
[1]
Timasani
(Pty) Ltd (in business rescue) and Another v Afrimat Iron ore (Pty)
Ltd
[2021]
3 All SA 843
(SCA) at [26] and [31] and the authorities cited in
fn
12
[2]
Klaase
and another v van der Merwe N.O and Others
2016 (6) SA 131
(CC) at [86] and the authorities cited in
fn
90
[3]
Grotius
3.9.11;
Voet
19.2.32;
Phil
Morkel Ltd v Lawson & Kirk (Pty) Ltd
1955 (3) SA 249
(C) at 253 J;
Hyprop
Investments Ltd and Another v NCS Carriers and Forwarding CC and
Another
2013 (4) SA 607
(GSJ) at [42]
[4]
Chung-Fung
(Pty) Ltd and Another v Mayfair Resident’s Association and
Others
[2023] ZAGPJHC 1162 (13 October 2023) at [24] and [30] – [31]
[5]
Ntai
and others v Vereeniging Town Council and Another
1953 (4) SA 579
(A) at 589 A
[6]
Compare
Toekies
Butchery (Edms) Bpk en Andere v Stassen
1974
(4) SA 771
(T)
[7]
Rosebank
Mall (Pty) Ltd and Another v Cradock Heights (Pty) Ltd
2004
(2) SA 353
(W) at [14]
[8]
Section
136(2)
of the
Companies Act, 2008
provides:
“
(2) Subject to
subsection (2A), and despite any provision of an agreement to the
contrary, during business rescue proceedings,
the practitioner may-
(a)
entirely, partially or conditionally suspend, for the duration of
the business rescue proceedings, any obligation
of the company that-
(i)
arises under an agreement to which the company was a party at the
commencement of the business rescue proceedings;
and
(ii)
would otherwise become due during those proceedings; or
(b)
apply urgently to a court to entirely, partially or conditionally
cancel, on any terms that are just and reasonable
in the
circumstances, any obligation of the company contemplated in
paragraph (a).”
[9]
supra
[10]
The
jurisdictions requirements of the
rei
vindicatio
are long established and have been stated thus in
Graham
v Ridley
1931 TPD 476
at 478:
“
One
of the rights arising out of ownership is the right to possession;
indeed Grotius
Introd
.
2.3.4., says that ownership consists in the right to recover lost
possession.
Prima
facie
therefore
proof that the appellant is owner and that the respondent is in
possession entitles the appellant to an order
giving him possession,
i.e. to an order for ejectment.”
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