Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 424South Africa
Matebesi and Another v Naicker and Others (2024-041410) [2024] ZAGPJHC 424 (3 April 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
3 April 2024
Headnotes
Summary
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Matebesi and Another v Naicker and Others (2024-041410) [2024] ZAGPJHC 424 (3 April 2024)
Matebesi and Another v Naicker and Others (2024-041410) [2024] ZAGPJHC 424 (3 April 2024)
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sino date 3 April 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 2024 – 041410
1.
REPORTABLE: NO
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
In
the application by
MATEBESI,
DAVID KEEBINE
First Applicant
VAN
ROOYEN, BRIAN GEORGE
Second Applicant
and
NAICKER,
CINDY, NO
First Respondent
IMFUYO
PROJECTS (PTY) LTD
Second Respondent
(In
Business Rescue)
IMFUYO
AIR PRODUCTS (PTY) LTD
Third Respondent
(In
Business Rescue)
SOUTH AFRICAN
RESTRUCTURING
AND
INSOLVENCY PRACTITIONERS
ASSOCIATION
NPC
Fourth
Respondent
COMPANIES
AND INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
COMMISSION
Fifth Respondent
JUDGMENT
MOORCROFT
AJ:
Summary
Section
139 of the Companies act 71 of 2008 - application for the removal of
the first respondent as business rescue practitioner
consequent upon
the suspension and revocation of her licence to practice as business
rescue practitioner – first respondent
failing in duties
Punitive
cost order justified
Order
[1]
In this matter I make the following order:
1.
The First Respondent (CINDY NAICKER) be and is hereby removed
from office as the Business Rescue Practitioner of the Second
Respondent
and Third Respondent (“the Companies in business
rescue”);
2.
The First Respondent be and is hereby directed to immediately
cease to carry out any work in her capacity as the Business Rescue
Practitioner of the Companies in business rescue;
3.
The First Respondent be and is hereby directed to immediately
disclose the total amount she paid herself in her capacity as the
Business Rescue Practitioner of Second Respondent and Third
Respondent and provide all invoices relating to her fees thereof;
4.
The First Respondent should forfeit the fees and/or
remuneration she has earned since coming into office, and if such
fees and/or
remuneration have already been paid, then the First
Respondent is hereby ordered to pay back such fees and/or
remuneration to the
Second Respondent and Third Respondent (“the
Companies in business rescue”);
5.
ZOLANI PRINCE BUBA
, with Identity Number 8[…],
as nominated by the Applicants (the affected Persons), be appointed
to replace the First Respondent
as the Business Rescue Practitioner
of the Second Respondent and Third Respondent in terms of the
provisions of
Section 139(3)
of the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
;
6.
The First Respondent be and is hereby be ordered in her
personal capacity to pay the costs of this application on a scale as
between
attorney and client, being not less than the fees taxed on
scale C.
7.
A copy of this order together with the application papers
shall forthwith be delivered to all affected persons known to the
applicant
and to the CIPC.
[2]
The reasons for the order follow below.
Introduction
[3]
This is a judgement in the urgent court. The applicants seek all an
order that the first respondent be removed i
n
terms of
section 139
(2) of the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
as
the business rescue practitioner of the second and third respondents
and for related relief.
Section 139
read as follows:
“
139
Removal and replacement of practitioner
(1)
A practitioner may be removed only-
(a) by
a court order in terms of
section 130
; or
(b) as
provided for in this section.
(2)
Upon request of an affected person, or on its own motion, the court
may remove a practitioner from office on any of the following
grounds:
(a) Incompetence
or failure to perform the duties of a business rescue practitioner of
the particular company;
[Para. (a) substituted
by
s.
89
of
Act
3 of 2011
(wef
1 May 2011).]
(b) failure
to exercise the proper degree of care in the performance of the
practitioner's functions;
(c) engaging
in illegal acts or conduct;
(d) if
the practitioner no longer satisfies the requirements set out in
section 138
(1);
(e) conflict
of interest or lack of independence; or
(f) the
practitioner is incapacitated and unable to perform the functions of
that office, and is unlikely to regain
that capacity within a
reasonable time.
(3)
The company, or the creditor who nominated the practitioner, as the
case may be, must appoint a new practitioner if a practitioner
dies,
resigns or is removed from office, subject to the right of an
affected person to bring a fresh application in terms of
section 130
(1) (b) to set aside that new appointment.”
[4]
As will be shown below the removal of the first respondent is based
on and justified by
section 139
(2) (a), (b), (d), and (f) of the
Act.
[5]
The application is opposed by the first respondent and counsel was
briefed to appear to argue the matter and also to seek a postponement
from the bar, but the first respondent did not file any affidavits in
response to the main application or in support of the application
for
a postponement brought on her behalf.
Analysis
[6]
The applicants collectively hold 53% of the shareholding of the
second respondent and are directors of the third respondent. The
second respondent is the shareholder of the third respondent. The
applicants derive their standing from
section 128
(1) (a) (i) of the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
as they are affected persons in terms of the
Act.
[7]
The second and third respondents adopted resolutions in terms of
section 129
(1) and (2) of the
Companies Act on
21 July 2020 to place
the two companies in business rescue. The first respondent accepted
an appointment as business rescue practitioner
by the first
respondent (the Companies and Intellectual Property Commission,
CIPC). Her appointment was confirmed during July 2020.
[8]
The first respondent failed to perform her duties as business rescue
practitioner. In the four years since her appointment she
has failed
to deliver monthly reports and to prepare a business rescue plan for
consideration and when the business rescue proceedings
were not
completed within three months as envisaged in
section 132
(3) of the
Companies Act she
did not prepare a report on the progress of the
business rescue proceedings. She did not fulfil her duties imposed on
her by
section 141
(1) of the
Companies Act. She
did not apply court
and did not consult with creditors of the company’s in business
rescue in order to extend the publication
of the business rescue plan
as contemplated in
section 150
(5) of the
Companies Act
[9
]
The applicants complained that as a result of the conduct of the
first respondent they have no knowledge of the status of the two
companies and are left in the dark as to whether the first respondent
is succeeding in any attempts to rescue the companies. She
nevertheless continues to earn fees as business rescue practitioner
without doing any work. She withdraws money from the bank accounts
of
the company’s as fees without producing any invoices. She
transfers funds from the companies’ bank accounts to our
own
bank account and allegedly claimed that those funds are payments to
suppliers and of expenses.
[10]
The
applicants have not been provided with bank statements and it is
impossible to verify her activities. A business rescue
practitioner
[1]
is in a position
of trust in relation to all affected parties and must be able in
appropriate circumstances to account for fees
taken, expenditure
incurred, and decisions made.
[11]
A criminal case of misappropriation of funds and of fraud was opened
under case number CAS 236/4/2024 at the Benoni police station
on 10
April 2024.
[12]
The debts of the second respondent increased from R831,292. 84 when
the first respondent was appointed to R5,731,242. 12. The debts
of
the third respondent totalled R106,378. 49 when the first respondent
was appointed and the present status is not known. The
first
respondent should have disclosed these details to affected parties
but failed to communicate with them.
[13]
The first respondent’s licence to practice as a business rescue
practitioner was suspended by the CIBC on 23 December 2023
and
subsequently revoked as reflected in a publication dated 8 April
2024.
Section 138
(1) requires a business rescue practitioner to be
licensed as such by the CIBC.
[14]
The applicants addressed a letter to the first respondent on 3 April
2024 requiring her resignation as business rescue practitioner.
The
first respondent replied on 5 April 2024 to state that –
“
an
appropriate response dealing with all aspects of the contents”
[of the applicants’ letter] “
will follow in due course
therefor [sic] failure to respond to those contents shall not be
construed as an admission thereon….
We urge your clients to
refrain from any further disruption of the business rescue process,
any disruption henceforth will be deemed
as malum in se and we will
be using the appropriate forum for remedy.”
[15]
The promised response never materialised. When the application was
brought the first respondent opposed the application but did
not file
any answering papers. The first respondent made no attempt to explain
why she should be permitted to remain as business
rescue practitioner
of the two companies despite the allegations of dereliction of duty
to which no answer was provided and despite
the revocation of the
licence. She made no attempt to answer the very serious allegations
made against her in the founding affidavit.
The revocation of a
business practitioner’s license on its own is of course per se
a ground for removal from office and from
my reading of the
Companies
Act this
is not a discretionary decision. Removal must follow and
removal must also follow when any of the other grounds for removal
are
proven.
[16]
For these reasons and on the basis of the facts set out above as
alleged by the applicant a punitive cost order on the scale of
attorney and client, payable by the first respondent de bonis
proprius, and on a scale not less than scale C, is justified, and
the
CIBC should be requested to carry out its own investigations into the
business rescue proceedings of these two companies as
well as the
conduct of the first respondent.
[17]
The first respondent was removed as the business rescue practitioner
in two other applications in this Division. In the matter
of the
National Empowerment Fund v Naicker and L&R Buildings and Civils
construction (Pty) Ltd under case number 5332 of 2022
the High Court
in Johannesburg set aside a resolution by the board of directors of
the second respondent to appoint the first respondent
as business
rescue practitioner on 26 July 2022. On 13 September 2023 the High
Court in Pretoria set aside the appointment of the
first respondent
as business rescue practitioner and ordered her to forthwith vacate
her office under case number 09692 of 2022
in the matter between
Tradmet Ltd and Naicker NO and others. She was ordered to pay the
cost of the latter application and an attorney
and client scale.
[18]
The applicants seek the appointment of Dr Zolani Prince Buba who is a
registered senior business rescue practitioner as the business
rescue
practitioner of the two companies. He has consented to such
appointment.
[19]
The application was served by the sheriff on an adult person at the
first respondent’s place of residence on 17 April 2024.
It was
also served by electronic mail by the attorneys for the applicants.
There is no merit in the contention made from the bar
that the
application was not properly served on the first respondent.
[20]
I also find that the applicant is urgent on the grounds of the
interests not only of the applicants and the two companies and the
other affected parties, but in the public interest.
Conclusion
[21]
For the reasons as set out above I made the order in paragraph 1.
MOORCROFT
AJ
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION
JOHANNESBURG
Electronically
submitted
Delivered:
This judgement was prepared and authored by the Acting Judge whose
name is reflected and is handed down electronically
by circulation to
the Parties / their legal representatives by email and by uploading
it to the electronic file of this matter
on CaseLines. The date of
the judgment is deemed to be
3 MAY 2024
COUNSEL
FOR THE APPLICANT:
B
F GEDEDGER
INSTRUCTED
BY:
MCONTSI
ATTORNEYS
COUNSEL
FOR THE FIRST RESPONDENT:
S
NAIDOO
INSTRUCTED
BY:
N
MAHARAJ ATTORNEYS
DATE
OF ARGUMENT:
30
APRIL 2024
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
3
MAY 2024
[1]
See in general Delport
Henochsberg
on the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
443 et seq.
sino noindex
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