Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 11South Africa
Avaris Group (Pty) Limited v Du Plessis and Another (A45004/2023) [2024] ZAGPJHC 11 (12 January 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
12 January 2024
Headnotes
Summary: Appeal from the Magistrates Court – Close Corporation – winding up – property of liquidated company – property passing to liquidators – warrant to search for and take possession of company's property – property concealed or otherwise unlawfully withheld from liquidators – warrant may be issued by Magistrate if there are reasonable grounds for suspecting that property belonging to the insolvent estate is concealed or unlawfully withheld from the liquidators – Insolvency Act 24 of 1936, s 69(3) –
Judgment
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## Avaris Group (Pty) Limited v Du Plessis and Another (A45004/2023) [2024] ZAGPJHC 11 (12 January 2024)
Avaris Group (Pty) Limited v Du Plessis and Another (A45004/2023) [2024] ZAGPJHC 11 (12 January 2024)
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sino date 12 January 2024
FLYNOTES:
COMPANY – Winding up –
Search
and seizure warrant
–
Obtained
from magistrate by liquidators of close corporation – Belief
that assets being dissipated or concealed –
Reasonable
suspicion as contemplated by section 69(3) – Contention that
information was derived from inadmissible hearsay
evidence –
Whilst liquidators may have relied on information which could be
characterised as hearsay, by the time they
approached the court
they had done their own investigations to verify that information
– Magistrate correctly concluded
that there was reasonable
belief that assets being concealed or unlawfully held –
Insolvency Act 24 of 1936
,
s 69(3).
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NUMBER
:
A45004/2023
DATE
:
12
th
January 2024
(1)
NOT
REPORTABLE
(2)
NOT
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES
In
the matter between:
AVARIS
GROUP (PTY)
LIMITED
Appellant
and
DU
PLESSIS
, JOHANNES HENDRICUS N O
(In his capacity as Joint
Liquidator of
Beth
and Bev Packaging Products
CC)
First Respondent
FORTEIN
,
KAREN N O
(In
her capacity as Joint Liquidator of
Beth
and Bev Packaging Products
CC)
Second Respondent
Neutral Citation
:
Avaris Group v Du Plessis NO and Another (A45004/2023)
[2024]
ZAGPJHC ---
(12 January 2024)
Coram
:
Adams J
et
Thupaatlase AJ
Heard
:
09 November 2023
Delivered:
12 January 2024 – This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties' representatives
via
email, by being uploaded to
CaseLines
and by release to
SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 10:00 on 12
January 2024.
Summary:
Appeal from the Magistrates Court – Close Corporation –
winding up – property of liquidated
company – property
passing to liquidators – warrant to search for and take
possession of company's property –
property concealed or
otherwise unlawfully withheld from liquidators – warrant may be
issued by Magistrate if there are
reasonable grounds
for
suspecting that property belonging to the insolvent estate is
concealed or unlawfully withheld from the liquidators –
Insolvency Act 24 of 1936
,
s 69(3)
–
Appeal
dismissed with costs.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
The
Kempton Park Magistrates Court (Magistrate Mammburu sitting as Court
of first instance):
(1)
The appellant’s appeal is dismissed with
costs.
JUDGMENT
Thupaatlase AJ (Adams
J concurring):
[1].
This is a Full Bench
appeal relating to the validity of a search and seizure warrant
issued by the learned Magistrate in the Kempton
Park Magistrate’s
Court (‘the Magistrates Court’) in terms of
section 69
(3) of the
Insolvency Act, Act
24 of 1936 (‘the Act’).
The first and the second respondents
[1]
,
who are the joint liquidators of Beth and Bev Packaging CC (in
liquidation) (‘Beth and Bev’), obtained a warrant from
the Magistrate on the basis of a reasonable belief that assets
belonging to the liquidated Beth and Bev, a close corporation in
liquidation, were being dissipated and/or concealed.
[2].
The application to issue
the warrant as contemplated by the Act was served on the appellant
[2]
who proceeded to oppose the issuing of such a warrant to search and
seize. Despite the opposition by the appellant, the learned
magistrate issued the warrant as applied for by the joint
liquidators. It is that order, authorising the issue of the search
and
seizure warrant, which is the subject of this appeal.
[3].
The notice was served on
the basis of the majority decision in
Cooper
NO v First National Bank of SA Ltd
[3]
,
where it was held that a warrant under
section 69(3)
should not be
issued without notice to any and all person/s affected, save where
the items to which the warrant relates have allegedly
been concealed
in the sense that they had been hidden with a view to denying or
preventing their recovery.
[4].
Cooper NO (supra)
endorsed an earlier
decision in
Putter
v Minister of Law and Order and Another NO
[4]
,
where it was held that the
audi
alteram
rule
should be applied where a person holding property openly and
maintaining that such possession is lawful, since the issuing
of a
warrant would prejudicially affect the rights of such person.
[5].
Based on certain information and reports, the respondents deposed to
a founding
affidavit and subsequently an answering affidavit. Both
founding and answering affidavits were deposed to by the first
respondent
and confirmed by the second respondent, who deposed to a
confirmatory affidavit.
[6].
The respondents (as the Liquidators of the CC) asserted in the papers
in the
Magistrates Court that the assets of the close corporation had
been dissipated, alienated, concealed or subsumed as the assets of
the appellant, Avaris Group (Pty) Ltd. This was vehemently denied by
the appellant during the hearing before the magistrate. The
appellant
sought to show that any assets that previously belonged to Beth and
Bev were lawfully acquired, through cash purchases.
Needless to say,
the assertion was rejected by the magistrate.
Grounds of Appeal
[7].
The main point raised on appeal by the appellant relates to whether
the magistrate
had reasonable belief that assets were being
dissipated or concealed as alleged by the joint liquidators. The
appellant submitted
that the magistrate wrongly relied on hearsay
evidence in issuing a warrant contemplated by section 69 (3) of the
Act.
[8].
It was further stated that the magistrate erred in law in finding
that a reasonable
suspicion as required by section 69(3) could be
formed based on inadmissible hearsay evidence. Additionally, so the
appellant contends,
the magistrate erred in finding that the
appellant was concealing the assets of the Beth and Bev as the
liquidators had an inventory
of all the assets and were acutely aware
where the assets were situated.
[9].
It was further submitted by the appellant that the learned magistrate
erred
in drawing inferences to justify the suspicion that the
appellant was concealing assets, as such an inference was not the
most
probable inference that could be drawn on the proven facts.
The
Law
[10].
The gravamen of the criticism of the magistrate on the papers and
during argument centred around
the jurisdictional requirements of
section 69 (3) of the Act. The following provisions of the section
are relevant here:
‘
(2)
If the trustee has reason to believe that any property or document is
concealed or otherwise unlawfully withheld
from him, he may apply to
the magistrate having jurisdiction for a search warrant mentioned in
subsection (3).
(3) If
it appears to a magistrate to whom such application is made, from a
statement made upon oath, that there
are reasonable grounds for
suspecting that any property, book or document belonging to the
insolvent estate is concealed upon any
person, or at any place or
upon or in any vehicle or vessel or receptacle of whatever nature, or
is otherwise unlawfully withheld
from the trustee concerned, within
the area of the magistrate’s jurisdiction, he may issue a
warrant of search for and take
possession of that property, book or
document.
(4)
Such a warrant shall be executed in a like manner as a warrant to
search stolen property, and the person
executing the warrant shall
deliver any article seized thereunder to the trustee.’
[11].
A reasonable suspicion as envisaged under s 69(3), so the magistrate
concluded, was established
and as such a warrant of search and
seizure was issued.
[12].
The appellant is challenging that finding, hence this appeal to the
Full Bench of this Division.
As indicated above, the validity of the
warrant is challenged on several grounds. The principal objection
being that the magistrate
could not have found that there are
reasonable grounds because the information was derived from
inadmissible hearsay evidence.
The other ground was that it was
unnecessary to obtain a warrant as the respondents knew where the
goods were stored and there
was no case to suggest that there was
concealment of any of the goods.
[13].
The judgment of the magistrate shows that he was indeed satisfied
that there was a reasonable
suspicion that acts contemplated in the
subsection were taking place. He dealt with the issue of ownership of
some of the property
that were allegedly bought from the close
corporation. The court found no merit in the appellant’s
allegations that certain
assets which form the subject matter of the
warrant, were acquired by the appellant with money emanating from an
independent source.
[14].
The appellant argued that the learned magistrate erred in making a
finding regarding ownership
of the property. It is trite that the
magistrate’s decision to issue the warrant is not dispositive
of any ownership rights.
[15].
In
Cooper (supra)
at para 4 of the minority judgment it was
held that:
‘
The
decision to issue a warrant is in no sense an adjudication of any
substantive issue, existing or potential, between the trustee
and the
third party or between the insolvent and the third party. Success in
obtaining a warrant and success in its execution brings
the trustee
no more than provisional physical possession of the relevant asset.
The trustee’s continued possession is open
to challenge in the
courts and the customary gamut of remedies (review proceedings,
prohibitory interdicts, vindicatory actions,
declaration of right,
etc.) is available to the third party. A successful challenge will
bring an end to the trustee’s possession.’
[16].
In
Naidoo
and Others v Kalianjee NO and Others
[5]
,
the court quoted with
approval the minority judgment regarding the underlying purpose of
the section. At para 25 it held as follows:
‘
The
underlying purpose of a seizure in terms of s 69 of the Act is
fundamentally different. As stated by Marais JA in
Cooper
:
“
[11] It is to
disable the insolvent and anyone else who may be physically in
possession of such assets from alienating or encumbering
them to the
prejudice of creditors. The purpose is achieved
inter
alia
providing for the trustee to have physical possession of them in the
case of movables or, in case movables under attachment or
immovables,
by having the relevant functionaries place caveats against assets.
[12] Despite
all that, but for s 69, there would remain a window of opportunity
for a third party in possession of a
movable asset, the ownership of
which is vested in the trustee, to alienate it in such that it could
not be vindicated by the trustee….
The longer the third party
can resist handing over the asset, the more extensive the
opportunities of alienating the asset to another
for value to the
prejudice of creditors of the insolvent may be…Hence the need
for a provision such as s 69”.’
[17].
The argument by the
appellant that section 21 of the Criminal Procedure Act, Act 51 of
1977 (‘the CPA’) is akin to s
69 is misplaced and cannot
be sustained. In
Minister
of Safety and Security v Van der Merwe and Others
[6]
,
the court described the
overall purpose of s 21 of CPA as being to find and seize evidence of
the commission of a crime which may
be preserved for use, should a
prosecution follow. It was held that the section is an important
weapon ‘designed to help
the police to carry out efficiently
their constitutional mandate of, amongst others, combating and
investigating crime’.
[18].
Naidoo
further provided lucid clarity on the differences
between s 21 and s 69(3). At para 26 of the judgment the following is
stated:
-
‘
In
the light of these fundamental differences, a warrant under s 69 can
neither be construed as being akin to a warrant issued under
s 21 of
the Criminal Procedure Act, nor necessarily subject to the same
limitations and restrictions attendant upon criminal warrants.
In any
event, a distinction must be drawn between the issue of a warrant on
the one hand, and its execution on the other. As s
69(4) only
requires a warrant to be executed and not issued in a like manner as
a warrant to search stolen property, the provisions
relating to the
issue of warrants in criminal proceedings are of no relevance to a s
69 warrant’.
[19].
Having dealt with the
distinction between the two sections, I now turn to deal with the
purpose of s 69. The matter was dealt with
in the case of
Bruwil
Konstruksie (Edms) Bpk v Whitson NO and Another
[7]
,
which described the section as draconian and proceeded to state the
following at page 711:
‘
It
seems to me that the purpose of the section is clearly to enable the
liquidator or trustee to obtain speedy possession of goods
belonging
to an estate which he suspects, or believes on reasonable grounds, to
be assets of the estate. The safeguard to the ordinary
public lies in
the words “reasonable belief” or “reasonable
grounds” for suspecting. … whether the
words “reasonable
grounds” imply that it should amount to a
prima
facie
case in a court of law. Unfortunately, there is no guidance or
precedent on this particular section but, in my view, it contemplates
a lesser burden than
prima
facie
in a court of law, otherwise there would be hardly any purpose in the
section. The section is obviously designed to enable a liquidator
or
trustee to obtain possession of assets speedily and to place the onus
on the person in possession to prove his ownership or
right of
possession, and to remove the burden from an estate instituting
action first and discharging the onus of proving that
the estate is
the owner. If this is so, it seems to me that it would be wrong to
equate the duty resting on a liquidator or trustee
under this section
with that of a litigant in proving a
prima
facie
case. It seems clear that sometimes less would suffice. However, he
can never be free of a burden before he applies to the magistrate
and
makes the statement that he had reasonable grounds for suspecting
that these are assets belonging to the estate.’
[20].
The court further held at page 711E as follows:
‘
It
seems to me that the words “reasonable grounds” imply an
investigation of some kind. The question is how far does
he have to
go in his investigation? It seems clear that the reasonable suspicion
which must exist must be objective and not a subjective
one, as far
as the particular liquidator or trustee is concerned.’
Duty of a Magistrate
in terms of section 69(3) of the Act
[21].
A magistrate, to whom application is made by a trustee or liquidator
of a company for a warrant
to search for and seize an insolvent’s
property in terms of s 69(3) of the Act, has a duty to insist on
the facts being
placed before him/her on which he/she could then make
a decision to issue a warrant. The magistrate is required to consider
all
the facts that are deemed appropriate to determine whether there
are reasonable grounds that a warrant of search should be issued
or
not.
[22].
The question to be considered is whether a Magistrate can rely on
hearsay evidence to determine
whether a search and seizure should be
issued.
[23].
As indicated elsewhere in this judgment, a considerable amount of
time was spent on this issue.
The learned magistrate also spent some
time dealing with the admission of hearsay evidence. The magistrate
has to rely on the evidence
provided by the liquidator or trustee as
the case may be. It is also important to note that one of the most
important duties of
the liquidator is to establish what the assets of
the estate are, whether they can be found and then ensure that the
assets are
properly secured, stored and insured, where applicable.
[24].
The affidavit of the respondents shows that they acted on information
received and that the
veracity of the information was confirmed when
they conducted further investigations. It is not denied by the
appellant that a
substantial portion of the assets of Beth and Bev
are currently being used to conduct a business of the same nature.
The business
is being conducted from the same premises as the
liquidated Beth and Bev and by the same people who traded under the
name and style
of Beth and Bev.
[25].
It is apparent that the premises are the same that Beth and Bev
rented to conduct its business
before applying for voluntary
sequestration. The answering affidavit does not explain if it entered
into a new lease agreement
with Eight Nine Delville CC, which is the
owner of the premises.
[26].
The manner in which the assets of Beth and Bev were acquired is also
strange and rather peculiar,
and in itself was more than enough
reason to raise eyebrows. The property was allegedly sold to the
appellant by payment of cash.
It is not explained by the appellant
what were the source of such cash. Whilst that may have been an
innocent transaction, the
timing thereof can justifiably lead to an
inference that assets were being dissipated or subsumed into the new
entity.
[27].
In order to draw that inference the chronology of events is telling.
The CC, Beth and Bev, was
placed under provisional sequestration on
26 May 2022. In the meantime, the appellant had bought assets worth
R5 727, paying
the purchase price in cash on the same day. The
appellant had previously paid R172 500 to acquire assets on 16
February 2022
and another asset was bought on 04 April 2022 for
R57 500 and a month earlier on the 04 March 2022 for R218 500.
Other
assets were sold to the appellant on 12 May 2022. This was for
a purchase price of R109 500. The company under which the assets
are currently housed was acquired as a shelf company on 24 March
2022. It is not unreasonable to look at the aforegoing, especially
the cash transactions for substantial sums of money, possibly
implicating the provisions of the Financial Intelligence Centre Act,
with a great deal of suspicion.
[28].
The respondents filed the founding affidavit before the learned
magistrate and attached an application
by the member of Beth and Bev
for voluntary surrender. In the application the member disclosed that
the close corporation has not
operated a business since 2020 and that
at the same time it laid off all its staff. This is of course
contrary to the assertion
by the appellant’s deponent that he
stayed on until 2022 to train new staff. His affidavit was deposed to
on 12 May 2022.
The inconsistency in the appellant’s case,
which, in my view, is material, is instructive and iterated the
suspicion already
aroused by the somewhat questionable cash
transactions in terms of which the assets of the liquidated CC was
supposedly sold to
the appellant at a time, which, at the very least,
seems rather suspicious. Little wonder then that the first and the
second respondents
became suspicious.
[29].
It was submitted on behalf of the appellant that the fact that the
liquidator stated that ‘whilst
fulfilling our statutory duties
imposed on us as liquidators of Beth and Bev in collecting the debts
due to the insolvent estate,
it came to our attention that the former
member of Beth and Bev and her daughter, with her husband, Paul Roux
Dreyer, are operating
the same business under the style and name
Avaris Group (Pty) Ltd (appellant), with the assets of Beth and Bev’,
amounts
to hearsay evidence.
[30].
The argument is that based on this statement, the magistrate erred in
issuing a warrant to search
and seize. The argument is misplaced for
various reasons. As required by law, the liquidators conducted
further investigations
in order to verify the information so
received. The liquidators were able to establish the creditors of the
insolvent estate and
they were also able to establish that the
property of Beth and Bev was judicially attached by way of automatic
rent interdict.
They attached the application by the Beth and Bev for
voluntary surrender.
[31].
This was with a view to demonstrating to the court that their
suspicion was reasonable.
It is worth noting that except for the
appellant attacking what it alleged is an incorrect application of
the hearsay evidence
rule, there was no attempt to deal with the
requirements of section 69(3). In that regard the submissions by the
appellant were,
to say the least, of very little assistance to this
court. This much is regrettable. There is enough case law that deals
with the
s 69(3) requirements and its purpose and the duty of a
magistrate dealing with the said provision. If the appellant had
engaged
with those issues sensibly, the appeal would probably have
been rendered unnecessary. The appellant’s focus in this appeal
on the supposed inadmissibility of hearsay evidence was misplaced and
ill advised.
[32].
The learned magistrate dealt with
section 3(1)
(c) of the
Law of
Evidence Amendment Act 45 of 1988
.
[33].
The appellant criticises the learned magistrate for dealing only with
factors 1 to 4. The submission
is that all factors ought to have been
considered. The affidavit of the respondents (the liquidators) deals
with the proof of what
they found upon the investigation of the
information received.
[34].
As I understand the reasoning of the learned magistrate, he was
satisfied that, whilst the respondents
may have relied on information
which can be characterised as hearsay, that is not the do all and the
end all of the matter. By
the time the respondents approached the
court they had done their own investigations to verify that
information. The learned magistrate
was not asked to make a decision
whether or not to issue a warrant based on hearsay, but rather on the
outcome of the ‘investigations’
that the respondents had
conducted.
[35].
The learned magistrate commented on the nature of the evidence. As
stated above, reasonableness
contemplates a lesser burden than
prima
facie
proof in a court of law. The learned magistrate commented
and correctly held that the issue of the warrant was not dispositive
of the matter. And finally, the fact that the reasonable suspicion as
contemplated by
section 69
(3) requires much less standard of proof
than the civil standard of proof. It follows that the nature of
evidence and the probative
value cannot be the standard envisaged by
section 3(1)
(c) of Act 34 of 1988. I am satisfied that the
conclusion of the learned magistrate cannot be faulted.
[36].
The issue of inferences
in the context other than criminal cases was discussed in
Skilya
Property Investments (Pty) Ltd v Lloyds Underwriting
[8]
and the court held as follows:
‘
Where
more than one inference is possible on the objective proved facts,
the Court may by balancing probabilities select a conclusion
which
seems to be more natural, or plausible, conclusion from amongst
several conceivable ones, even though that conclusion be
not only the
reasonable one. And in this context “plausible” has the
connotation of “acceptance, credible, suitable”.’
[37].
On the basis of the evidence presented to him, the learned magistrate
made concluded that on
the available evidence, which was plausible,
there could be and indeed was a reasonable belief that the assets of
the estate were
being concealed or unlawfully held by the appellant.
[38].
This is hardly surprising if one takes an objective view of the
transactions that took place
between the application for voluntary
surrender and the supposed ‘cash sale’ transactions that
took place between Beth
and Bev and the new entity, Avaris Group
(Pty) Ltd. The acquisition of these assets made it possible to
commence the same business
and even on the same premises. The
plausible inference is that the appellant operated an
alter ego
of Bev and Beth. The same premises, same management personnel and
same premises. The magistrate’s reasoning in that regard
cannot
be faulted.
[39].
For all of these reasons, the appeal to the Full Bench should fail.
[40].
As for costs, there is, in my view, no reason to deviate from the
general rule that the successful
party in legal proceedings should be
awarded costs.
Order
[41].
Accordingly, the following order is made: -
(1)
The appellant’s appeal is dismissed with
costs.
T THUPAATLASE
Acting Judge of the
High Court,
Gauteng Division,
Johannesburg
HEARD ON:
9
th
November 2023
JUDGMENT DATE:
12
th
January 2024
FOR THE APPELLANT
Advocate Sias B Nel
INSTRUCTED BY:
Brazington &
McConnel Attorneys, Hatfield, Pretoria
FOR THE FIRST AND THE
SECOND RESPONDENTS:
Advocate W C Carstens
INSTRUCTED BY:
Hartzenberg Attorneys,
Hatfield, Pretoria
[1]
First
and Second Applicants in the Magistrates Court
[2]
The respondent in the
Magistrates Court.
[3]
Cooper NO v First
National Bank of SA Ltd
2001
(3) SA 705 (SCA).
[4]
Putter v Minister of
Law and Order and Another NO
1988
(2) SA 259 (T).
[5]
Naidoo and Others v
Kalianjee NO and Others
2016
(2) SA 451 (SCA).
[6]
Minister of Safety
and Security v Van der Merwe and Others
2011
(2) SACR 301 (CC).
[7]
Bruwil Konstruksie
(Edms) Bpk v Whitson NO and Another
1980
(4) SA 703 (T).
[8]
Skilya Property
Investments (Pty) Ltd v Lloyds Underwriting
2002
(3) SA 765
(T) at 780G -781B.
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