Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 296South Africa
Bidvest Bank v E Q Emporium (2023/020892) [2024] ZAGPJHC 296 (26 March 2024)
Headnotes
Summary: Winding-up application – commercial insolvency ground for winding-up order – debt owing, due and payable by the time s 345 notice dispatched – the exceptio de non adimpleti contractus principle not available to the respondent as a defence – total advances should be repaid – if not, company deemed unable to pay its debts and is therefore commercially insolvent – provisional winding-up order granted.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Bidvest Bank v E Q Emporium (2023/020892) [2024] ZAGPJHC 296 (26 March 2024)
Bidvest Bank v E Q Emporium (2023/020892) [2024] ZAGPJHC 296 (26 March 2024)
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sino date 26 March 2024
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
1.
NOT
REPORTABLE
2.
NOT
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES
CASE
NO
: 2023-020892
DATE
:
26
th
M
arch
2024
In the matter between:
BIDVEST
BANK
LIMITED
Applicant
And
EQ
EMPORIUM (PTY) LIMITED
Respondent
Neutral Citation
:
Bidvest Bank v EQ Emporium (2023-020892)
[2024] ZAGPJHC
----
(26 March 2024)
Coram:
Adams J
Heard
:
4 March 2024
Delivered:
26 March 2024 – This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties' representatives by
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 26
March 2024.
Summary:
Winding-up application – commercial insolvency ground for
winding-up order – debt owing, due and payable by the time
s
345 notice dispatched – the
exceptio de non adimpleti
contractus
principle not available to the respondent as a defence
– total advances should be repaid – if not, company
deemed unable
to pay its debts and is therefore commercially
insolvent – provisional winding-up order granted.
ORDER
(1)
The respondent be and is hereby placed under
provisional winding-up in the hands of the Master of the High Court
of South Africa.
(2)
All persons who have a legitimate interest are
called upon to put forward their reasons why this court should not
order the final
winding up of the respondent on
Monday,
10 June 2024,
at
10:00
am
or so soon thereafter as the matter
may be heard.
(3)
A copy of this order shall be served by the
Sheriff of this Court on the respondent at its registered office.
(4)
A copy of this order shall be published forthwith
once in the Government Gazette.
(5)
A copy of this order shall be forthwith forwarded
to each known creditor by electronically receipted telefax
transmission or by
electronically receipted email.
(6)
A copy of this provisional winding-up order must
be served on:
(a)
Every trade union or trade union representative
who represents any and/or all of the employees of the respondent;
(b)
The employees of the respondent by affixing a copy
of the application to any notice board to which the employees have
access inside
the respondent's business premises and/or principal
place of business, or if there is no access to the premises or to the
principal
place of business by the employees, by affixing a copy to
the front gate, where applicable, failing which to the front door of
the premises or the place of business from which the respondent
conducted any business at the time of the presentation of the
application;
(c)
The South African Revenue Service; and
(d)
The respondent.
(7)
The costs of this application shall be costs in
the winding-up of the respondent.
JUDGMENT
Adams J:
[1].
The
applicant (Bidvest Bank) applies for the winding-up of the respondent
(EQ Emporium) in terms of sections 344(f) and (h) and
section
345(1)
[1]
of
the Companies Act
[2]
(‘the
Companies Act’). The winding up of the respondent is sought on
the basis that it is unable to pay its debts and
that it is just and
equitable that the respondent be wound up.
[2].
Underpinning the
application is EQ Emporium’s indebtedness to Bidvest Bank
pursuant to and in terms of an agreement concluded
between the
parties in terms of which the bank would afford trade facilities to
EQ Emporium. This meant that EQ Emporium would
present certain trade
bills to the bank, which trade bills were essentially invoices from
EQ Emporium’s suppliers and which
it requested the bank to make
payment to the suppliers on its behalf. Bidvest Bank would make
payment to the suppliers on behalf
of EQ Emporium, which would then
become liable to repay to the bank such advances in terms of the
maturity dates reflected on the
bank’s invoices to EQ Emporium.
Repayment was normally due within a period of 120 days from the date
of on which payment
was made by Bidvest Bank. Such due dates were
however reflected on the invoices.
[3].
EQ Emporium is
indebted to Bidvest Bank in the amount of R7 947 898.57. It is
the case of the bank that, despite delivery to
EQ Emporium of a
notice in terms of s 345(1)(a)(i) of the Companies Act, demanding
payment of the debt, the latter has failed to
settle such
indebtedness to the bank. This means, so the case on behalf of
Bidvest Bank continues, that EQ Emporium is therefore
deemed to be
commercially insolvent since it has neglected to pay, secure or
compound the sum demanded.
[4].
EQ Emporium contends
that Bidvest Bank refused to make payment of certain trade bills as
requested by it. Therefore, so the contention
on behalf of EQ
Emporium goes, its obligation to make repayment of other trade bills,
which the bank had paid on its behalf, was
suspended until the bank
complied with its ‘reciprocal’ obligations to make
payment of such unpaid trade bills. EQ Emporium’s
case
accordingly appears to rely on the application of the
exceptio
de non adimpleti contractus
principle.
[5].
In addition, it is
the contention of EQ Emporium that, as a result of Bidvest Bank’s
breach of the contractual arrangement
between them, it has suffered
damages, which it claims from the bank, and which exceeds by far the
R8 million claimed by the bank
and which grounds the liquidation
application. In short, the case of EQ Emporium in its opposition to
the liquidation is that it
bona
fide
disputes
its indebtedness to the bank on reasonable grounds – the so
called
Badenhorst
principle.
[6].
The
question to be considered in this liquidation application is
therefore whether EQ Emporium’s disputing of its indebtedness
to Bidvest Bank is
bona
fide
and
on reasonable grounds. In that regard, it is a trite principle of the
law relating to winding-up proceedings that such proceedings
ought
not to be resorted to in order by means thereof to enforce payment of
a debt, the existence of which is
bona
fide
disputed
by the company on reasonable grounds. The procedure for winding-up is
not designed for the resolution of disputes as to
the existence or
non-existence of a debt
[3]
.
[7].
As
I have already indicated, Bidvest Bank, in essence, contends that EQ
Emporium is commercially insolvent and is unable to pay
its debts. In
Absa
Bank Ltd v Rhebokskloof (Pty) Ltd
[4]
,
Berman J held as follows in that regard:
‘
The
primary question which a Court is called upon to answer in deciding
whether or not a company carrying on business should be
wound up as
commercially insolvent is whether or not it has liquid assets or
readily realisable assets available to meet its liabilities
as they
fall due to be met in the ordinary course of business and thereafter
to be in a position to carry on normal trading –
in other
words, can the company meet current demands on it and remain buoyant?
It matters not that the company's assets, fairly
valued, far exceed
its liabilities: once the Court finds that it cannot do this, it
follows that it is entitled to, and should,
hold that the company is
unable to pay its debts within the meaning of s 345(1)(c) as read
with s 3440 of the Companies Act 61
of 1973 and is accordingly liable
to be wound up. As Caney J said in
Rosenbach
& Co (Pty) Ltd v Singh's Bazaar (Pty) Ltd
1962
(4) SA 593
(D) at 597E-F.
“
If
the company is in fact solvent, in the sense of its assets exceeding
its liabilities, this may or may not, depending upon the
circumstances, lead to a refusal of a winding-up order; the
circumstances particularly to be taken into consideration against the
making of an order are such as show that there are liquid assets or
readily realisable assets available out of which, or the proceeds
of
which, the company is in fact able to pay its debts”.’
[8].
In casu
,
it is therefore necessary to establish whether EQ Emporium
bona
fide
disputes its
indebtedness to Bidvest Bank on reasonable grounds. That, in turn,
requires an assessment of the sustainability from
a legal point of
view of EQ Emporium’s contention that the bank breached
the agreement in refusing to make payment of
trade bills presented to
it by EQ Emporium for settlement. This assessment would, in my view,
also take care of the ‘defence’
based on a counterclaim
for damages. The point is that, if the defence against the
indebtedness is bad in law, the counterclaim
also falls flat.
[9].
Before dealing with
the sustainability of the defence raised by EQ Emporium, I need to
address a preliminary point relied upon by
it and that relates to the
service of the section 345(1)(a)(i) statutory demand, which,
according to EQ Emporium, was not served
on it. I intend giving short
thrift to this issue as it clearly lacks merit.
[10].
According to the
sheriff’s return of service relating to the s 345 notice, same
was served at the registered address of EQ
Emporium on 25 November
2022 at 12:33 by service on one ‘Mr Brynalon’. As
correctly pointed out by Mr Kairinos
SC, who appeared on behalf
of Bidvest Bank, the deponent to EQ Emporium’s answering
affidavit, dated 15 June 2023, is
Brynalyn Roland Tuckett, its sole
director, who also happens to reside at the registered address at
which the notice was served
by the sheriff. It is, as submitted by Mr
Kairinos, way too much of a coincidence that the name of the person
mentioned in the
sheriff’s return so closely resembles the name
of the director of EQ Emporium. The point is that, in these
circumstances,
it is highly unlikely,
nay
nigh impossible, that
the said notice was not served as per the sheriff’s return at
the registered address of the respondent.
The version by EQ Emporium
on this aspect of the matter – its denial that the notice was
ever served on it – can and
therefore should be rejected on the
papers as being far-fetched and untenable.
[11].
That point on behalf
of EQ Emporium therefore falls to be rejected out of hand. Moreover,
the
prima
facie
nature of the
sheriff’s return of service as indicating that he indeed served
the statutory notice of demand at the registered
address of EQ
Emporium and did so by serving it on the deponent, being the sole
director of the respondent, means that I have to
accept as a fact, as
I do, that the notice was duly served as required by the said
section. That, as I indicated, is the end of
that preliminary point.
The point is that the Companies Act requires no more than that the
statutory notice of demand be ‘left’
at the registered
address of the company – it need not be served personally on a
person at such address.
[12].
That bring me back to
EQ Emporium’s indebtedness to Bidvest Bank and to whether its
disputing same is
bona
fide
and
on reasonable grounds.
[13].
In its answering
affidavit, EQ Emporium admits that as and at 30 August 2022, trade
bills amounting in total to R7 947 898.57
had been paid on
its behalf by the bank in respect of trade bills dated from 22 March
2022 to 30 August 2022. In terms of the agreement
between the parties
and the terms and conditions of the credit facilities afforded to EQ
Emporium, the due dates for repayment
of these amounts paid on behalf
of the said company ranged from 19 July 2022 to 23 November 2022.
[14].
By 30 August 2022,
tax invoices to the tune of about R2.064 million had become overdue
and payable by EQ Emporium to Bidvest Bank.
It was at that stage that
the bank decided that it would not continue paying trade bills as and
when presented to it for payment
by the company. Its obligation to
pay future trade bills, so Bidvest Bank contends, was conditional
upon EQ Emporium having made
payment timeously of invoices for
previous trade bills paid by the bank on EQ Emporium’s behalf.
[15].
EQ Emporium’s defence, as already indicated,
is that it was excused from making payment pending performance by
Bidvest Bank
of its reciprocal obligations in terms of the trade
finance facility and/or a compromise agreement subsequently reached
regarding
payment of arrear amounts. I revert to the compromise
agreement shortly. Bidvest Bank is alleged to have breached the terms
of
the trade finance facility by not making payment of trade bills
presented by EQ Emporium during June 2022. The first difficulty
with
this so-called defence is that it is factually incorrect. During June
2022 five trade bills were presented to Bidvest Bank
by EQ Emporium
for payment to their suppliers. These payments were, by admission by
EQ Emporium in its answering affidavit, in
fact paid by the bank on
behalf of EQ Emporium. It is therefore difficult to understand the
case on behalf of EQ Emporium, which
is clearly devoid of a factual
basis. That, in my view, spells the end of the defence on behalf of
EQ Emporium – there is
no defence whatsoever let alone a
bona
fide
one.
[16].
Moreover, and as
indicated
supra
,
by the end of August 2022, payment of invoices from Bidvest Bank to
EQ Emporium, amounting in total to over R2 million, was
already
overdue and payable. This then means that it was in fact EQ Emporium,
and not the bank, which was in default of its obligations
to perform
pursuant to and in terms of the credit facility. By all accounts, EQ
Emporium’s admitted indebtedness to the bank
is not disputed
bona fide
on reasonable
grounds.
[17].
EQ Emporium also
disputes liability for its indebtedness to Bidvest Bank on the basis
of a compromise agreement concluded between
the parties on or about
11 August 2022, in terms of which the bank agreed to reinstate the
facility on condition that the EQ Emporium
was to make weekly
payments in settlement of the overdue amounts. The first payment was
due on 24 August 2022 and thereafter subsequent
payments at regular
seven day intervals, until the whole arrear amounts had been brought
up to date. It does not appear to be in
dispute that, but for payment
of the first two instalments, EQ Emporium failed to effect payment of
the subsequent instalments
and it cannot therefore place any reliance
on the compromise agreement.
[18].
A company is
conclusively deemed unable to pay its debts when it fails to
positively respond to a demand in terms of section 345
of the
Companies Act. The phrase ‘unable to pay its debts’
connotes insolvency in the commercial sense, namely
an inability to
meet its day-to-day liabilities, even though the company’s
assets may exceed its liabilities.
[19].
In casu
,
an amount of about R8 million is presently – and has been since
November 2022 – owing, due and payable by EQ Emporium
to
Bidvest Bank. It is not able to pay this amount, which makes it
commercially insolvent in that it is ‘unable to pay its
debts’.
What is more is that EQ Emporium, which failed to comply with the s
345 demand from the bank, is conclusively deemed
to be unable to pay
its debts.
[20].
There is one more
issue which I need to address and that relates the alleged
non-compliance by Bidvest Bank with the provisions
of s 346(4A) of
the Companies Act, which provides as follows: -
'(4A)
(a) When an application is presented to the court in terms of this
section, the applicant must furnish a copy of the application
–
(i)
to every registered
trade union that, as far as the applicant can reasonably ascertain,
represents any of the employees of the company;
and
(ii)
to the employees
themselves –
(aa)
by affixing a copy of the application to any notice board to which
the applicant and the employees have access inside the premises
of
the company; or
(bb)
if there is no access to the premises by the applicant and the
employees, by affixing a copy of the application to the front
gate of
the premises, where applicable, failing which to the front door of
the premises from which the company conducted any business
at the
time of the application;
(iii)
… … …’.
[21].
Mr Saint, who
appeared on behalf of EQ Emporium, takes issue on behalf of it with
the fact that the winding-up application, although
addressed to the
‘Possible Employees of EQ Emporium (Pty) Limited)’ and to
the 'Possible Trade Union Representatives
of EQ Emporium (Pty)
Limited’, was supposedly served on the employees by the Sheriff
at the registered address of the said
company, which, we know, is in
fact the residential address of the sole director. This means, so the
argument by Mr Saint goes,
that the application was not properly
served on the employees – which reportedly are about eighty in
number – as required
by subsection (4A)(ii).
[22].
There
appears to be merit in this contention on behalf of EQ Emporium.
However, as was held by this court in
Intello
Capital CC v
Sigge
Managed Solutions (Pty) Limited
[5]
,
on the SCA authority in
EB
Steam Co (Pty) Ltd v Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd
[6]
,
even if the applicant is, for whatever reason, not able to furnish
the application papers to the employees before the hearing,
a court
could still grant relief in the form of a provisional winding-up
order. Put another way, there will be circumstances in
which a court
will be justified in granting a provisional winding-up order. An
important consideration in that regard would, in
my view, relate to
whether or not the respondent is
bona
fide
in
its opposition to the winding-up application.
[23].
In my view, such a
case is made out
in
casu
in
that an overwhelming case is made out on the papers for the grant of
a winding-up order.
[24].
In all the
circumstances, I believe that a provisional winding-up order should
be granted against the respondent.
Conclusion and Costs
[25].
Accordingly, a
provisional winding-up order should be granted against the
respondent.
[26].
As regards costs, I am of the view that the
standard costs order normally granted in liquidation applications
should be granted
in this matter, that being an order to the effect
that the costs of the winding-up application should be costs in the
winding-up
of the respondent.
I therefore
intend granting such a costs order.
Order
[27].
Accordingly, I make the following orders: -
(1)
The respondent be and is hereby placed under
provisional winding-up in the hands of the Master of the High Court
of South Africa.
(2)
All persons who have a legitimate interest are
called upon to put forward their reasons why this court should not
order the final
winding up of the respondent on
Monday,
10 June 2024,
at
10:00
am or so soon thereafter as the matter may be
heard.
(3)
A copy of this order shall be served by the
Sheriff of this Court on the respondent at its registered office.
(4)
A copy of this order shall be published forthwith
once in the Government Gazette.
(5)
A copy of this order shall be forthwith forwarded
to each known creditor by electronically receipted telefax
transmission or by
electronically receipted email.
(6)
A copy of this provisional winding-up order must
be served on: -
(a)
Every trade union or trade union representative
who represents any and/or all of the employees of the respondent;
(b)
The employees of the respondent by affixing a copy
of the application to any notice board to which the employees have
access inside
the respondent's business premises and/or principal
place of business, or if there is no access to the premises or to the
principal
place of business by the employees, by affixing a copy to
the front gate, where applicable, failing which to the front door of
the premises or the place of business from which the respondent
conducted any business at the time of the presentation of the
application;
(c)
The South African Revenue Service; and
(d)
The respondent.
(7)
The costs of this application shall be costs in
the winding-up of the respondent.
L R ADAMS
Judge of the High
Court of South Africa
Gauteng Division,
Johannesburg
HEARD ON:4
th
March 2024
JUDGMENT DATE:
26
th
March 2024 – judgment handed down
electronically.
FOR THE APPLICANT:
Advocate George Kairinos SC
INSTRUCTED BY:
Du
Toit – Sanchez
– Moodley Inc, Darrenwood, Randburg
FOR THE
RESPONDENT: Advocate F A Saint
INSTRUCTED
BY: Reddy
Incorporated, Bedfordview
[1]
‘
345
When
company deemed unable to pay its debts
(1)
A company or body corporate shall be deemed to be
unable to pay its debts if –
(a)
a creditor … …, to whom the company
is indebted in a sum not less than one hundred rand then due –
(i)
has served on the company, by leaving the same at
its registered office, a demand requiring the company to pay the sum
so due;
or
(ii)
in the case of any body corporate not
incorporated under this Act, has served such demand by leaving it at
its main office or
delivering it to the secretary or some director,
manager or principal officer of such body corporate or in such other
manner
as the Court may direct,
and the company or body
corporate has for three weeks thereafter neglected to pay the sum,
or to secure or compound for it to
the reasonable satisfaction of
the creditor; or
…
… …’
.
[2]
Companies
Act, Act 61 of 1973.
[3]
The
‘
Badenhorst
rule’
after
Badenhorst
v Northern Construction Enterprises (Pty) Ltd
1956
(2) SA 346
(T) at 347 – 348 and authorities there cited;
Gillis-Mason
Construction Co (Pty) Ltd v Overvaal Crushers (Pty) Ltd
1971
(1) SA 524
(T) at 529-530;
Walter
McNaughtan (Pty) Ltd v Impala Caravans (Pty) Ltd
1976
(1) SA 189
(W) at 191;
Machanick
Steel & Fencing (Pty) Ltd v Wesrhodan (Pty) Ltd
1979
(1) SA 265
(W) at 269;
Kalil
v Decotex (Pty) Ltd
1988
(1) SA 943
(AD) at 980;
Securefin
Ltd v KNA Insurance and Investment Brokers (Pty) Ltd
[2001]
3 All SA 15
(W) at 48;
Robson
v Wax Works (Pty) Ltd
2001
(3) SA 1117
;
SMM
Holdings (Pvt) Ltd v Southern Asbestos Sales (Pty) Ltd
120051
4 All SA 584
(W) at 591-592.
[4]
Absa
Bank Ltd v Rhebokskloof (Pty) Ltd
1993
(4) SA 436
(C) at 440.
[5]
Intello
Capital CC v
Sigge
Managed Solutions (Pty) Limited
2023
JDR 0644 (GJ).
[6]
EB
Steam Co (Pty) Ltd v Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd
2015
(2) SA 526
(SCA).
sino noindex
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