Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 170South Africa
Fleming and Another v PSV Holdings Ltd and Others (16217/2022) [2024] ZAGPJHC 170 (22 February 2024)
Headnotes
Summary:
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Fleming and Another v PSV Holdings Ltd and Others (16217/2022) [2024] ZAGPJHC 170 (22 February 2024)
Fleming and Another v PSV Holdings Ltd and Others (16217/2022) [2024] ZAGPJHC 170 (22 February 2024)
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‘
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
1.
NOT
REPORTABLE
2.
NOT
OF INTEREST
TO OTHER JUDGES
22
February 2024
CASE
NUMBER
:
16217/2022
DATE
:
In the application of :
IAN
BRYCE FLEMING
N.O.
1
st
Applicant
PETER
CAMERON GORDON
N.O
.
2
nd
Applicant
and
PSV
HOLDINGS
LTD
1
st
Respondent
(Registration
number:
1998/004365/06)
in
business rescue
COMPANIES
AND INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
COMMISSION
2
nd
Respondent
THE
AFFECTED PERSONS RELATING TO
PSV
HOLDINGS LTD (IN BUSINESS RESCUE)
AS
PER ANNEXURE "A" TO THE NOTICE OF MOTION
3
rd
Respondent
Delivered:
22 February 2024
– This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties' representatives
via
email, by being uploaded to
CaseLines
. The date and time for
hand-down is deemed to be 10:00 on 22 February 2024.
Summary:
Insolvency
– Business Rescue – Application by business rescue
practitioners to put company in final winding up –
opposition
by party proposing recapitalisation – delays and unfulfilled
promises making recapitalisation highly unlikely
and opposition
unsustainable.
Order:
1.
The business rescue proceedings of the first respondent are
discontinued and terminated.
2.
The first respondent, PSV Holdings Limited, Registration No.
1998/004365/06, is placed into final winding-up in the hands
of the
Master of the High Court.
3.
DNG Energy (Pty) Ltd (the affected person opposing this application)
is to pay the costs of the application on the scale
as between
attorney and client.
JUDGMENT
Turner AJ
[1]
The applicants in this matter are the
business rescue practitioners of the first respondent, PSV Holdings
Limited (“PSVH”),
a listed company that was placed in
business rescue during 2020. PSVH is a holding company and its
subsidiaries have already been
placed in liquidation or business
rescue. It is clear from the papers that the subsidiaries hold no
value for PSVH.
[2]
The business rescue plan for PSVH that was
presented and approved in August 2020 identified creditors to
the value of approximately
R31 million and noted that concurrent
creditors would receive an estimated two cents per Rand in a
liquidation scenario (i.e.
2% recovery). The business rescue plan was
motivated on the basis that a shareholder in PSVH, being DNG Energy
(Pty) Limited (“DNG”),
would recapitalise the business,
allowing a 100 cent or 100% recovery for creditors. The business
rescue plan also noted that Mr
AD Mbalati, a related party to DNG,
had offered to provide a facility of R2 million (on loan) for
post-commencement finance.
[3]
Since August 2020, neither Mr Mbalati nor
DNG has provided the R2 million post-commencement finance nor has a
capital injection
been made into PSVH (as contemplated or at all).
During that period, there have been a number of negotiations between
the interested
parties and re-packaged capitalisation proposals by
DNG and Mr Mbalati but none has come to fruition.
[4]
The applicants now apply for the final
winding-up up of PSVH. The application is opposed by DNG (as an
affected party) whose answering
affidavit is deposed to by Mr
Mbalati. There was initially some confusion over whether the party
opposing the application was DNG
or Mr Mbalati personally. This was
clarified in argument when
Mr Cohen
,
for the respondent, confirmed that the party opposing the application
is DNG, not Mr Mbalati personally.
[5]
In the answering affidavit, DNG contended
that the applicants had concluded an agreement with it in relation to
the mechanism for
recapitalisation. It argued that the existence of
this agreement precluded the applicants from winding up the company.
In
argument, however, respondent’s
counsel
abandoned reliance on such an agreement, correctly acknowledging that
no such agreement that would bind the applicants had
been established
on the papers. Counsel also did not rely on the other defences
raised in the answering affidavit.
Instead, he presented an
alternative draft order proposing to extend the business rescue
proceedings.
[6]
This draft order proposed that the matter
be removed from the roll and
inter alia
:
that within 30 days, DNG place an amount of R15,000,000 in escrow
against the issue of 250,000,000 shares being issued; that the
PSVH
shareholders meet to approve this share issue in terms of section
41(3) of the Companies Act; an amended business rescue plan
be
proposed to and accepted by the majority of creditors; and that the
recapitalised amount be used to settle the BRP costs and
all other
creditors claims (at 50 cents in the Rand). The draft order also
tendered the costs of the application – namely
all of the costs
of the application to date.
[7]
When the draft order was first presented,
its terms also contemplated orders being granted compelling third
parties to do various
things. On recognising that these parties were
not before the court and that it would be inappropriate to grant an
order with such
terms, the draft order was amended to remove the
offending elements.
[8]
The idea behind the draft order was that if
DNG did not comply with its obligation to make payments (within 30
days) or shareholders
did not give their approval (within 45 days)
the applicants could return to court for a final winding-up order.
[9]
Respondent’s
counsel motivated this approach with reference to
New
City
[1]
and
emphasised the discretion which a Court has to grant in an
application for business rescue (and analogously, to extend business
rescue proceedings) where the proposed alternate solution would
provide material benefits to creditors that are unlikely to be
realised in liquidation.
[10]
The matter stood down for the applicants’
representatives to take instructions from the applicants and Regis
Holdings, the
major shareholder in PSVH, on the terms of the new
draft order. After the adjournment,
Mr
Marais
, who appeared for the
applicants, confirmed that the proposal was rejected. The rejection
went both to the substance (including
the conditionality attached to
the proposal) as well as to the
bona
fides
of the proposal. Counsel relayed
the applicants’ contention that there is strong evidence to
suggest that the new proposal
is merely a delaying tactic, is not
bona fide
and is not workable.
[11]
While it is no doubt preferable to give a
company every reasonable chance to recover from business rescue
proceedings, there are
a number of indicators in the current matter
which sway me in exercising my discretion in favour of the
applicants.
[12]
First, the business rescue proceedings are
supposed to be resolved within three months but the current matter
has been dragging
on for some 42 months. The primary reason for these
delays appears to be the unfulfilled promises made by DNG (and Mr
Mbalati).
The correspondence relied upon by the parties shows that Mr
Mbalati, directly or through DNG, has made multiple undertakings to
pay funds to the business rescue practitioners, all of which have
failed.
[13]
Second, I would expect that if there were a
reasonable prospect of rescuing the company, the business rescue
practitioners would
be the first parties to support that plan. Not
only would this improve their record on successful turnarounds, they
would benefit
from continued employment in this matter and be able to
secure significant benefits for creditors. Their opposition to the
draft
order shows there is no belief whatsoever in DNG’s
promises being realised.
[14]
Third, DNG Energy produced this proposal
(and abandoned its other defences) on the morning of the hearing,
without any evidential
support. Counsel explained that he was only
appointed shortly before the hearing and had brought the
New
City
judgment to DNG’s attention.
However, the workability of the proposal and the source of the funds
to make the proposed payments
was not addressed by DNG on affidavit –
which would have been a minimum requirement in the context of this
matter where so
many prior proposals were not realised.
In my view, insufficient evidence has been produced to support this
alternative
and the delays in producing this alternative (together
with the applicants’ rejection) renders the proposal “too
little,
too late”.
[15]
Fourth, the opportunity remains for DNG and
Mr Mbalati to engage with the liquidators and to acquire the business
or settle the
debts of PSVH, if the stated purpose is
bona
fide.
[16]
I agree with the submissions by the
applicant that the only reasonable inference to draw, given the
conduct of DNG prior to the
hearing, is that this is a desperate
“last gasp” attempt to delay the liquidation of the
company. Knowing that its
previous conduct had frustrated the
applicants and other shareholders, DNG needed to have produced
significantly more evidence
to establish the existence of a
bona
fide
offer before making this
last-minute attempt to delay the consequences of liquidation.
[17]
In the circumstances, I am unable to agree
with or accept DNG’s proposal.
[18]
Mr Cohen
confirmed
that there is no dispute regarding the applicants’ entitlement
to liquidation relief if his counter proposal is
rejected.
[19]
Insofar as costs are concerned, DNG
tendered the costs of this application in the event that its draft
order was granted, recognising
that the grounds on which it had
initially opposed the application were not sustainable. It seems to
me that if the draft order
is rejected and the application is
granted, there is no reason to make the costs of this application
“costs in the liquidation”.
In the absence of the
unsustainable defences raised by DNG, the matter would have proceeded
unopposed and all of the costs
incurred by the applicants would
have been avoided.
[20]
If a party and party costs award were to be
granted, the creditors of the company would be further prejudiced by
costs that ought
not to have been incurred. In the
circumstances, the attorney-client scale should be used to tax the
applicant’s costs
to reduce this prejudice.
[21]
In the circumstances, I make the following
order:
1.
The business rescue proceedings of the first respondent are
discontinued and terminated.
2.
The first respondent, PSV Holdings Limited, Registration No.
1998/004365/06, is placed into final winding-up in the hands
of the
Master of the High Court.
3.
DNG Energy (Pty) Ltd (the affected person opposing this application)
is to pay the costs of the application on the scale
as between
attorney and client.
TURNER AJ
Gauteng Division,
Johannesburg
Heard
on: 23
January 2024
Judgment date:
22
February 2024
For the
applicant: Adv
B Marais
Instructed
by: De
Vries Incorporated Attorneys
For DNG (affected person)
: Adv S Cohen
Instructed
by: Larry
Marks Attorneys
[1]
Absa
Bank Ltd v New City Group (Pty) Ltd
(SGHC
Case No. 45670/2011), judgment by Sutherland J (as he then was)
dated 13 August 2012.
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