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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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[2024] ZAGPJHC 61
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## Met Import CC t/a Metro Oriental Import & Export v Master of the High Court, Johannesburg and Others (122962/2023)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 61 (29 January 2024)
Met Import CC t/a Metro Oriental Import & Export v Master of the High Court, Johannesburg and Others (122962/2023)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 61 (29 January 2024)
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sino date 29 January 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
Number: 122962/2023
1.
Reportable: No
2.
Of interest to other judges: No
3.
Revised: No
January 2024
In
the matter between:
MET IMPORT CC t/a
METRO ORIENTAL
IMPORT
& EXPORT
(2000/017337/23)
APPLICANT
And
MASTER OF THE HIGH
COURT,
JOHANNESBURG
FIRST
RESPONDENT
TUTOR
TRUST
SECOND
RESPONDENT
KOBUS
VAN DER WESTHUIZEN N.O.
THIRD
RESPONDENT
MONIQUE
NOELLE DAMON N.O.
FOURTH
RESPONDENT
RUBEN
MAPHAHA
FIFTH
RESPONDENT
HANS MERENSKY
LANDOWNERS’
ASSOCIATION
NPC
SIXTH
RESPONDENT
VERMAAK
BEESLAAR ATTORNEYS
SEVENTH RESPONDENT
SOUTHERN SKY
DEVELOPMENT (PTY)
LTD
(2005/042887/07) IN LIQUIDATION
EIGHTH
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
Delivered
:
This judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose
name is reflected and is handed down electronically by circulation to
Parties / their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on CaseLines. The date
of the
order is deemed to be the 29
th
of January 2024.
MYBURGH, AJ
[1]
The applicant in this matter seeks an
interim interdict preventing the first respondent from appointing the
third and fourth respondents
as liquidators of the eighth respondent
pending the determination of the claims for relief contained in part
B of the notice of
motion. In the alternative, and in the event that
the first respondent has already made the appointments, the applicant
asks that
the powers of the third and fourth respondents, as
liquidators be suspended pending the determination of the applicant’s
claims for final relief as set out in part B. The application is cast
on the basis that the said third and fourth respondents, who
were
previously appointed as provisional liquidators of the eighth
respondent will remain in that capacity and continue to exercise
the
powers vested in them as provisional liquidators
pendente
lite
.
[2]
The applicant claims to be, and
prima
facie
is, a creditor of the eighth
respondent, which is a company in liquidation. The deponent to
the founding affidavit, a certain
Mrs Rinderknecht is the sole
director and controlling mind of the applicant. The first
respondent is the Master of the High
Court, Johannesburg. The
second respondent is a trust company. Its business includes the
rendering of services in connection
with liquidations. The third and
fourth respondents, who are both employees of the second respondent,
were appointed as the joint
provisional liquidators of the eighth
respondent and may, by this time, have been appointed as the joint
liquidators of that company.
The fifth respondent is an Assistant
Master in the office of the first respondent. The remaining
respondents are creditors who
proved claims at the first meeting of
the creditors of the eighth respondent
.
[3]
The
application, which came before me in the urgent court in the week
commencing 5 December 2023,
[1]
was opposed by the sixth and seventh respondents. The third and
fourth respondents delivered a report which was in the form of
an
affidavit deposed to by the fourth respondent. The first and fifth
respondents also delivered a report which was in the form
of an
affidavit deposed to by the fifth respondent. I will return to the
contents of these reports at the appropriate juncture
.
[4]
The facts may conveniently be summarised as
follows:
a.
The eighth respondent was placed under liquidation
by order of this Court on 31 August 2023.
b.
The first respondent thereafter appointed the
third and fourth respondents as joint provisional liquidators of the
eighth respondent.
This occurred on 26 September 2023.
c.
On
27 October 2023 the first respondent gave notice of a first meeting
of creditors to be held at the Randburg Magistrates’
Court on 8
November 2023. The notice was duly published.
[2]
d.
The meeting was presided over by the fifth
respondent.
e.
Mrs Rinderknecht was not present at the
meeting however, she and the applicant were represented by an
attorney, Mr Morris.
f.
The applicant, represented as aforesaid, attempted
to prove two claims at the meeting. Mr Morriss did not persist with
one as the
power of attorney which had been filed with the first
respondent had not been witnessed. The other claim was rejected
because of
discrepancies in the claim documentation. Other claims
which had been advanced by an entity or entities in which the
applicant
has an interest or interests were also rejected.
g.
The sixth and seventh respondents proved claims.
So did a certain Mr Mendelsohn who, for reasons known only to the
applicant, was
not joined in the application.
h.
The parties whose claims had been accepted at the
meeting then unanimously voted to appoint the third and fourth
respondents as
joint liquidators of the eighth respondent.
i.
On
the same day, the applicant addressed a letter to the first
respondent in which she complained about the rejection of the
applicant’s
claims and the acceptance of the sixth respondent’s
claims and asked for the appointment of an independent liquidator.
[3]
j.
On
10 November 2023 the first respondent, represented by the fifth
respondent, replied by way of email in which it was,
inter
alia
,
recorded that the first respondent was not disposed to appoint an
additional liquidator. That email concluded with a paragraph
in which
the applicant’s attention was brought to the remedy (of review)
provided for in section 151 of the Insolvency Act.
[4]
k.
On
13 November 2023 the applicant addressed a further letter to the
first respondent.
[5]
In that letter the applicant raised a fresh complaint, viz. that the
meeting had been conducted on a basis which was irregular.
The basis
of this complaint was that the meeting had been presided over by the
fifth respondent rather than a magistrate. This,
so the complaint
went, was contrary to the provisions of sub-section 39 (2) of the
Insolvency Act. For a reason which is not apparent
from the papers,
that letter, which was in the form of an email, was addressed to a
particular employee in the office of the first
respondent, a certain
Advocate Netshitahame, rather than to the first respondent’s
official email address (as had been the
case in respect of the letter
of 8 November) or the email address of the fifth respondent.
l.
On the same day, the said employee of the first
respondent responded by way of an email in which essentially, they
paraphrased the
provisions of sub-section 39 (2) and stated that the
fifth respondent was neither a magistrate nor a designated official
but in
fact “the Master”.
m.
The present application was launched on 24
November 2023. In terms of the notice of motion any respondent
wishing to oppose was
required to deliver its answering papers by 29
November 2023. The dates of the returns of service vary from 27
November to 29 November,
but it seems that service was, at least in
respect of some of the respondents, effected informally (by email)
prior to those dates.
Even if one assumes that (informal) service was
effected on 24 November 2023, respondents wishing to oppose were
given only three
business days in which to prepare and file their
opposing papers.
[5]
Two issues were raised by the opposing parties
in
limine
. The first was that the
applicant had failed to make out a proper case in respect of urgency.
The second concerned the applicant’s
failure to join Mr
Mendelsohn. I will deal with those issues in turn before proceeding
to deal with the merits
.
[6]
The
requirements in respect of alleged urgency are so well known as not
to require restatement. Suffice to say that an applicant
seeking an
urgent hearing is required to show (in a separate part of its
founding papers) that it will not be able to obtain satisfactory
redress at a hearing in due course. It is also required to justify
the degree of urgency or, put otherwise, the extent of the deviation
from the ordinary time periods contended for. This includes the time
afforded to the respondents – which should not be unduly
short.
The applicant is also required to satisfy the court that it has acted
with appropriate speed in bringing the application
– i.e. the
urgency must not have been “self-created”.
[6]
[7]
[7]
I have to say that I considered the
applicant’s case in respect of urgency to be thin. In the first
instance, the founding
papers were completely silent regarding the
period 13 to 24 November – i.e. a period of 11 calendar days.
While it is obviously
so that the applicant would have required some
time to put the application together and while it is also so that
legal advisors
are not always available at the click of a finger,
these are facts which the applicant ought properly to have addressed
in its
founding papers. Secondly, the time afforded to the
respondents was substantially less than the time which the applicant
had afforded
itself to prepare and deliver the application. Thirdly,
very little was said in relation to the consequences which were
likely
to follow if the third and fourth respondents were not
promptly interdicted from carrying out their functions as joint
liquidators
of the eighth respondent. The high-water mark of the
applicant’s case on this issue, as I understood it, was that
the third
and fourth respondents were likely to dispose of some or
all of the eighth respondent’s assets. When that might occur
was
not addressed – a significant omission in my view as such
things do not, in the ordinary course, occur overnight. Indeed,
I am
inclined to the view that the degree of urgency was overstated and
that a special allocation early in the first term of 2024
would have
sufficed. That said, I permitted the matter to be argued on an urgent
basis and having done so, believe that it would
be appropriate for me
to deliver a judgment on the merits
.
[8]
As indicated above, the second
in
limine
issue related to the non-joinder
of a creditor, Mr Mendelsohn. This issue was not addressed at any
length in argument. I do not
agree with the assertion that such
non-joinder had the effect of rendering the application fatally
defective. On my understanding,
it simply meant that no order which
would stand to prejudice the party who ought to have been joined
could be given until that
party had been given notice, and an
adequate opportunity to deliver papers, if so advised. Given my
assessment of the merits and
the order which I propose to make, to
require that would only serve to delay and to burden another judge
with having to read the
papers (which are voluminous) and to hear
argument. This would, in my view, entail a waste of public resources
and be inconsistent
with the proper administration of justice
.
[9]
Turning
to the merits, the first requirement which an applicant seeking an
interim interdict must satisfy is the establishment of
a right, which
may be open to some doubt – i.e. what is often referred to as a
“
prima
facie
right”. If the applicant satisfies this requirement, then the
further considerations come into play – viz. ongoing
harm or a
well-grounded apprehension of harm; the absence of a satisfactory
alternative remedy and that the balance of convenience
favours
the applicant. Conversely, if the applicant does not get over the
first hurdle, then that is the end of the
matter.
[8]
In the context of an application for an interim interdict pending the
outcome of review proceedings, an applicant has, in
order to
establish a right (albeit perhaps open to some doubt), to show that
it has some prospect of success in the review proceedings.
[9]
[10]
Although the attacks made by the applicant
in the founding papers were quite wide-ranging, the issues which were
argued before me
in respect of the right contended for were narrow.
What the applicant’s case came down to was that the first
meeting of creditors
was tainted by irregularity because it was
presided over by a member of the first respondent’s staff
rather than by a magistrate
or someone designated by him/her for that
purpose. Several counter arguments were advanced on behalf of the
respondents in this
regard. I will not deal with all of them as that
would be unnecessary given the facts
.
[11]
The
facts, as they appeared from the report of the first respondent were
that there had been a long-standing arrangement between
the office of
the first respondent and that of the Chief Magistrate, Randburg in
terms of which meetings of the kind under consideration
held at the
Randburg Magistrates’ court would be presided over by a member
of the first respondent’s staff.
[10]
That arrangement had been given effect to over the years, and it was
on that basis that the fifth respondent came to preside at
the
meeting in question
.
[12]
The argument which was advanced on behalf of the
applicant was that the arrangement was not competent as it fell foul
of subsection
39 (2) of the Insolvency Act – this, so the
argument went, because the fifth respondent was not a public official
who had
been designated by a magistrate to preside over the meeting.
Counsel for the applicant also asserted that it would not be
competent
for a magistrate to appoint or designate the first
respondent or a member of the first respondent’s staff to
preside over
a meeting of the kind under consideration
.
[13]
While
it is true that a strict, literal reading of the subsection is
supportive of the proposition that a Master may not preside
over a
meeting held outside the magisterial district in which his/her office
is situated,
[11]
such a reading gives rise to a measure of absurdity. After all, the
administration of all insolvent estates is subject to the authority
of the Master of the division of the court which granted the order –
be it one for the winding up of a corporation or the
sequestration of
a natural person, partnership or trust. It also appears to be
accepted law that a magistrate who presides over
a meeting of
creditors does so as an agent of the Master, to whom he/she must
report.
[12]
These things being so, it seems to me to be somewhat absurd to
suggest that the legislature intended that a Master should be
precluded
from presiding over a meeting in a “foreign”
district if he/she considers that to be appropriate. It is
however
not necessary for me to reach a final view on this issue
given the facts, and I will accordingly not do so
.
[14]
As I have already explained, the fifth respondent
came to preside over the meeting in issue pursuant to an arrangement
which had
been concluded between the office of the first respondent
and that of the Chief Magistrate, Randburg. Thus, even if it is to be
accepted that a designation by a magistrate rather than the first
respondent was a requirement in order for the fifth respondent
to
have been entitled to preside over the meeting (a proposition which I
consider to be questionable), it seems clear to me that
that
requirement was satisfied. The fifth respondent, who is an Assistant
Master in the employ of the first respondent, clearly
qualifies as an
“officer in the public service”. It is also clear that
his appointment was made in terms of and pursuant
to the arrangement
which I have already referred to. Subsection 39 (2) does not
stipulate a particular mode of designation and
I do not believe that
the law requires anything more than what in fact occurred. The
suggestion that the subsection precludes the
designation of any
official in the employ of the office of the Master is, to my mind,
utterly untenable. The subsection does not
contain words to that
effect, and it is not necessary to read such words into it in order
to avoid an absurdity. I was also not
pointed to any authority
supportive of that argument
.
[15]
I am accordingly of the view that the applicant
has failed to establish even a glimmer of the right contended for,
and that the
application must accordingly fail. However, even if I am
wrong in this regard, the application must, in my view, fail for
other
reasons. I will deal with these briefly in the paragraphs which
follow
.
[16]
The
second requirement for an interim interdict is that of harm. For this
purpose, the applicant must demonstrate either a continuing
infringement of the right in issue or a well-grounded apprehension of
infringement. In
casu
the applicant’s papers were hopelessly deficient. While the
deponent to the founding affidavit stated that a “
travesty
of justice
”
would occur and that “
it
could have grave and dire consequences
to
the effectual and proper winding up of…. the eighth
respondent
”
none of those allegations were underpinned by averments of primary
facts supportive of those assertions or concerns. The
high-water mark
of the applicant’s case on this issue was that the third and
fourth respondents might not deal appropriately
with claims advanced
by creditors and that they might sell some or all of the eighth
respondent’s assets. No proper basis
was laid for the first
concern (I deliberately put it no higher than that). To this I would
add that the third and fourth respondents,
as liquidators, would be
bound to carry out their duties in accordance with the law and with
due regard to the interests of creditors
– all under the eye of
the first respondent. In the absence of any evidence of prior
wrongdoing, I cannot properly
conclude that there is any likelihood
that the third and fourth respondents will not discharge their
obligations in a proper manner.
[13]
As to the second, while I accept that it does appear to be
likely that the third and fourth respondents will,
if left to their
own devices, sell some or possibly all of the eighth respondent’s
assets , that is a consequence which arises
from the fact that the
eighth respondent is insolvent. It has nothing to do with the
identities of the third and fourth respondents
per
se
.
To this I would add that the applicant’s papers are silent as
to any other possible solution – by way of example,
a
compromise or the injection of further capital. In the circumstances
I am not satisfied that a proper case has been made out
in respect of
the harm element
.
[17]
I am also not satisfied that the applicant does
not have any other suitable remedies. If the third and fourth
respondents should
do or attempt to do anything which is contrary to
law or otherwise inconsistent with their obligations to the creditors
of the
insolvent company then the applicant, like other creditors,
will have all the usual remedies at their disposal. I will not
elaborate
save to say that such remedies would include interdictory
relief and, in appropriate circumstances, the removal of the third
and
fourth respondents from office
.
[18]
Finally, I am not satisfied that the
balance of convenience favours the grant of the relief sought. While
it may be so that the
third and fourth respondents are likely to act
in a manner which will be prejudicial to the interests of the
applicant and those
of its controlling mind, Mrs Rinderknecht, the
enquiry does not end there. On the contrary, one has to consider the
interests of
the eighth respondent’s creditors generally. In my
view those interests are best served by an orderly winding up a
process
- which may well entail the sale of some or all of the eighth
respondent’s assets
.
[19]
I accordingly make the following order.
ORDER
[1]
The application is dismissed with costs,
such costs to include the costs of two counsel where so employed.
G S MYBURGH
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
JOHANNESBURG
APPEARANCES:
For
Applicant:
M M Van Zyl SCassisted by W R Du Preez
Instructed
by:
Goodes and Co
For 2
nd
, 3
rd
and 4
th
Respondents: Stroebel
Instructed by:
For 6
th
Respondent:
P Louw SC assisted by D Vetten
Instructed
by:
Esc and Kaka
For 7
th
Respondent:
J Hershenson assisted by R De Leeuw
Instructed
by:
Vermaak Beeslaar
Date of Hearing:
5 December 2023
Date
of Judgment:
29 January 2024
[1]
That
is, the calendar week which commenced on Monday 4 December 2023.
[2]
The
notice also convened a meeting of shareholders, however the
complaints raised by the first applicant relate solely to the
meeting of creditors. I will accordingly say nothing regarding the
meeting of shareholders.
[3]
Annexure
FA3 to the founding affidavit.
[4]
Act
24 of 1936.
[5]
Annexure
FA5 to the founding affidavit.
[6]
Luna
Meubel
Vervaardigers (Edms) Bpk v Makin and Another (t/a Makin's Furniture
Manufacturers)
1977
(4) SA 135
(W); see also
IL
& B Marcow Caterers (Pty) Ltd v Greatermans SA Ltd & Another
1981
(4) SA 108
(C);
Harvey
v Niland
2016
(2) SA 436
(ECG);
East
Rock Trading 7 (Pty) Ltd and Another v Eagle Valley Granite (Pty)
Ltd and Others
(11/33767)
[2011] ZAGPJHC 196.
[7]
A
further consideration which arises in this division is that matters
in which the papers exceed 400 pages in length cannot simply
be
enrolled on the urgent roll – this can only be done by way of
a special allocation authorised by the deputy judge president.
[8]
Webster
v Mitchell
1948
(1) SA 1186
(W);
Simon
N.O. v Air Operations of Europe AB & others
[1998]
ZASCA 79
;
1999 (1) SA 217
(SCA);
National
Council of Societies for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals v
Openshaw
[2008]
ZASCA 78;
2008
(5) SA 339 (SCA).
[9]
See
National
Treasury and others vs Opposition to Urban Tolling Alliance and
others
[2012]
ZACC 18
;
2012 (6) SA 223
(CC);
2012
(11) BCLR 1148
(CC);
National
Commissioner of Police and Another v The Gun Owners of South Africa
and Another
[2020] ZASCA 88
;
[2020]
4 All SA 1
(SCA).
[10]
According
to the evidence this arrangement was concluded during 2018. Nothing
turns on the exact date.
[11]
In
casu
,
Johannesburg Central.
[12]
See
Wilkens
v Potgieter N.O. en ’n ander
[1996]
2 All SA 546 (T).
[13]
Although
the deponent to the applicant’s founding affidavit alleged
that claims were accepted and rejected in circumstances
where they
ought not to have been, those acts were committed by the fifth
respondent, not the third and fourth respondents –
who are
under a duty to investigate all claims, regardless of whether they
were accepted or rejected at the first meeting.
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