Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 505South Africa
Van Veluw Beheer Bv v Maxxliving Pty Ltd and Another (A2023/045208) [2024] ZAGPJHC 505 (22 May 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
22 May 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Van Veluw Beheer Bv v Maxxliving Pty Ltd and Another (A2023/045208) [2024] ZAGPJHC 505 (22 May 2024)
Van Veluw Beheer Bv v Maxxliving Pty Ltd and Another (A2023/045208) [2024] ZAGPJHC 505 (22 May 2024)
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sino date 22 May 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
THE
HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO:
2023-045208
1.
REPORTABLE: NO
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
3.
REVISED: NO
22
May 2024
In
the matter between:
Van
Veluw Beheer
BV
Applicant
Maxxliving
(Pty) Ltd,
1
st
Respondent
The
Registrar of Deeds, Johannesburg
2
nd
Respondent
JUDGMENT
BOKAKO
AJ
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 Case Lines. The date
of the judgment is deemed to
be 22 May 2024.
INTRODUCTION
1.
The Applicant has brought an application seeking an order to wind up
the Respondent in terms of section 346, read with
section 344(f) and
section 345 of the Companies Act 71 of 1973 ("the old Act").
The basis of the Applicant's Application
is that the Respondent
cannot pay its debts. The Respondent is opposing the Applicant's
Application because the Applicant has failed
to establish a
prima
facie
case for winding up the first Respondent; there is a
bona
fide
and reasonable dispute regarding the alleged indebtedness of
the first Respondent to the Applicant; the Applicant's demand in
terms
of section 345(1)(a) of the Companies Act 61 of 1973 ("the
Act") is defective. The court lacks jurisdiction due to the
choice of law clause in the agreement between the Applicant and the
first Respondent.
2.
The Essence of Section 345 as a Deeming Provision. It serves as a
legal mechanism that can deem a company unable to pay
its debts,
potentially triggering liquidation proceedings. This occurs when a
company fails to satisfy a letter of demand for a
due and payable
debt.
BACKGROUND
FACTS
3.
On 24 September 2021, the Applicant and the First Respondent entered
into a written agreement to supply solar panels, batteries,
and
inverters for the First Respondent's energy-self-sufficient
residential development.
4.
In terms of Appendix A to the agreement, the first Respondent was
required to pay the Applicant €375,000 as a down
payment for 50
houses. This payment was due within four weeks of signing the
agreement, which meant that payment was due by 22
October 2021.
5.
Both parties agreed that the purchase price would be paid by the
dates specified in Appendix A (clause 5). The down payment
of
€375,000 was not conditional on the Applicant's delivery of any
goods. Instead, it was payable upon land transfer for the
development
several months later.
6.
The application is resisted because the Applicant knows that the
goods underlying the dispute were materially defective
and have
caused the Respondent significant damage.
7.
On 17 April 2023, the Applicant's attorney
addressed a letter to the Respondent in terms of section 345(1) (a)
of the old Act demanding
payment of the total amount within 21
calendar days of receipt of the said letter. According to the
Applicant, the period of 21
calendar days has lapsed without the
Respondent paying the total amount or a portion of it. Based on that,
the Applicant believes
the Respondent cannot pay its debt as
contemplated in section 345(1) of the old Act.
The Applicant
submits that winding up the 1
st
Respondent would be just
and equitable.
8.
The Applicant relies on section 345 of the letter to allege that the
Respondent cannot pay its debt. This court must determine
whether the
Respondent cannot pay its debts and whether the Respondent's denial
of the Applicant's claim is based on bona fide
grounds.
9.
The Applicant contends that the 1st Respondent has been and remains
indebted to the Applicant concerning the sale price
since October
2021. Despite the 1st Respondent's numerous admissions of liability
and undertakings to effect payment, no payment
has been forthcoming.
10.
The 1st Respondent disputes its alleged indebtedness to the Applicant
because the batteries supplied were defective. The
batteries were
discovered to be defective shortly after delivery to the first
Respondent; given the technical nature of the batteries,
latent
defects could not have been observed on the initial receipt.
11.
The Respondent has filed its answering affidavit. In it, the
Respondent alleges that the Applicant's liquidation application
constitutes an abuse of court processes, stating that the Applicant
is fully aware that the goods underlying the dispute were materially
defective and caused significant damage to the Respondent.
12.
The 1st Respondent further alleges that on 5 January 2023, it
asserted that defects in the batteries delivered by the
Applicant
were discovered. Subsequently, on 4 May 2023, the first Respondent
canceled the agreement because the batteries were
defective and
tendered to return the batteries to the Applicant.
13.
The Respondent contends that it has replied to the Applicant's
section 345 notice and vehemently contested the validity
of the
Applicant's claim in its reply. The Respondent denies that it is
insolvent and commercially insolvent. The Respondent contends
that
the reason for not paying the Applicant's invoice is not its
inability to pay but the dispute it is having with the Applicant.
The
Respondent further alleges that it is contemplating having a
counterclaim over the Applicant's claim.
14.
The sale agreement explicitly provides that the first Respondent is
entitled to inspect the goods upon delivery and makes
provision for
giving notice of any defects. After discovering the defects around
January 2023, the first Respondent took steps
consistent with the
agreement by canceling the contract and tendering the return of the
defective batteries.
15.
1st Respondent contends there is a bona fide and reasonable dispute
regarding the indebtedness, which precludes reliance
on winding up
proceedings. Further, the Applicant needed to demonstrate that the
dispute was not reasonable.
16.
The Respondent also argued that the letter of demand served by the
Applicant in terms of section 345(1) (a) of the Act
is defective and,
therefore, cannot trigger the deeming provision that a company cannot
pay its debts. The defects in the letter
of demand include: The
letter needs to be updated, which makes it impossible to calculate
the 21 days required under the Act. The
letter only allows 14 days
for payment instead of the 21 days prescribed by section 345(1) (a).
The letter fails to provide that
the debt can be secured or
compounded to the reasonable satisfaction of the Applicant, as
required by the Act. The letter does
not state that the amount
claimed is due and owing, which does not comply with the formalities
for a valid demand.
LEGAL
PRINCIPLES AND ANALYSIS
17.
Section 344 of the Companies Act is the
source of authority that vests a court with the power to liquidate a
company in certain
circumstances. Sub-section 344 (1), read with
section 345 (1)(a)(i) of the Companies Act, provides that a court may
wind up a company
if it is unable to pay its debts and that the
company will be deemed to be unable to pay its debts if a creditor
who is owed not
less than R100 serves on the company a demand
requiring the company to pay the sum due and the company fails to
comply.
18.
In this matter, the Respondent has disputed the
debt allegedly due to the Applicant.
19.
In
Imobrite
(Pty) Ltd v DTL Boerdery CC
, the
Supreme Court of Appeal summarized the principles to be applied in
cases where a debt is disputed as follows:
"It is trite
that, by their very nature, winding-up proceedings are not designed
to resolve disputes about the existence or
non-existence of a debt.
Thus, winding-up proceedings should not be resorted to enforce a debt
that is bona fide (genuinely) disputed
on reasonable grounds. That
approach is part of the broader principle that the court's processes
should not be abused”.
20.
A winding-up order will not be granted
where the sole or predominant motive or purpose of seeking the
winding-up order is something
other than the bona fide bringing about
of the company's liquidation. It would also constitute an abuse of
process if there is
an attempt to enforce payment of a debt that is
bona fide disputed or where the motive is to oppress or defraud the
company or
frustrate its rights."
21.
Part G of Chapter 2 of the Companies Act 71
of 2008 ("the new
Companies Act"
;) and Chapter XIV of the
old Act regulates the winding up of a company, read with the
applicable laws relating to insolvency. The
old Act continues to
apply by the provisions of item 9 of Schedule 5 notwithstanding its
repeal, which was effective from 1 May
2008. The provisions of
Chapter XIV of the old Act will continue to apply until the Minister,
by notice in the Government Gazette,
determines a date on which it
shall cease to have effect. However, in terms of item 9(2) of
Schedule 5 ss 343, 344, 346, and 348
to 353 of the old Act does not
apply to the winding up of a solvent company except to the extent
necessary to give effect to the
provisions of Part G of Chapter 2 of
the new Act. The winding up of solvent companies is dealt with in ss
79 to 81 of the new Act.
22.
In this case, the application has been
initiated in sections 344(f) and 345 of the old Act. It is settled
law that our law recognizes
two forms of insolvency: factual
insolvency, where a company's liabilities exceed its assets, and
commercial insolvency. In this
state of illiquidity, a company is
unable to pay its debts even though its assets may exceed its
liabilities (See
Ex Parte de Villiers &
Another NNO
: In
Re
Carbon Developments 1993 (3) SA 493 (A) and Johnson v Hirotect (PTY)
Ltd
2000 (4) SA 930 (SCA)).
23.
In
Standard
Bank of SA v R-Bay Logistics 2013
(2)
SA 295 (KZD) at para 24, the court said:
“
Nothing
in the new
Companies Act has
changed any of the provisions of chapter
14 of the old
Companies Act. Accordingly
, to wind up an insolvent
company,
s344
must still regulate the basis upon which it can be
wound up. Of particular relevance in this case is
s 344(f)
, which
requires an applicant to prove that the respondent company cannot pay
its debts, as contemplated in
s 345
of the
Companies Act."
24.
The
key is that winding up requires an
existing debt obligation that is due and payable. This prevents
winding up procedurally where
the debt is disputed or yet to be
enforceable against the company.
25.
The court has discretion in deciding
whether to grant the order for the liquidation of the company and of
equal importance to the
application and enforcement of the creditor's
entitlement about its rights in the old
Companies Act, as
referred to
above, is that the debt owed to the creditor cannot be disputed on
bona fide and reasonable grounds by the company.
Once the creditor
establishes the existence of the debt, the onus will be on the
company to show that the debt is disputed on bona
fide and reasonable
grounds.
26.
An issue during this hearing, albeit
tangentially, was whether the Badenhorst rule applies at the final
stage of liquidation proceedings.
In
Orestisolve
(Pty) Limited t/a Essa Investments v NDFT Investment Holdings (Pty)
Limited and Another
, Rogers J
expressed the view that the Badenhorst rule only applied at the
provisional stage of liquidation proceedings where there
was a
factual dispute relating to the Respondent's liability to the
Applicant. The test to be used for a final liquidation order
where
material facts are in dispute is the Plascon-Evans test as expressed
in
Plascon Evans Paints Ltd v Van
Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
. Thus when
an applicant seeks final relief in liquidation proceedings. There are
conflicting versions of fact, and the court must
accept the version
of the Respondent and any facts admitted in the Applicant's papers
unless the Respondent's version is far-fetched
and untenable.
27.
With respect, I am of the view that both
the Badenhorst rule and Plascon-Evans test must be applied where
there is a factual dispute
in respect of a respondent’s
indebtedness in an application for a final liquidation order: quite
simply, the Badenhorst rule
and Plascon-Evans test serve different
purposes. As Movshovich AJ commented in
Voltex
(Pty) Limited t/a Atlas Group v Resilient Rock (Pty) Limited
,
the Plascon-Evans test is mainly concerned with rules of procedure
and evidence and not the substantive requirements for an application
to succeed. In contrast, the Badenhorst rule is not a rule of the
procedure but relates to substantive requirements as to what
a party
must establish to make out a claim or establish a defense.
28.
In this matter, the Respondent does not
dispute how the alleged debt claimed by the Applicant arose. Whether
the debt is due or
payable, and the amount thereof, is in dispute.
The Respondent avers that it is not only a bona fide dispute on
reasonable
grounds but relates to the supply of defective goods, "the
batteries," and there is no evidence that the Respondent
admitted that it was not able to pay its debts in the ordinary course
of its business,
29.
In deciding such cases, the Supreme
Court of Appeal (SCA) reaffirmed that 'the discretion of a court to
refuse to grant a winding-up
order where an unpaid creditor applies
is a "very narrow one" that is rarely exercised' and
exercised in unique or unusual
circumstances. Further, it affirmed
that generally, after creditors' indebtedness has prima facie been
established, the burden
of proof where a company debtor seeks to
resist an order being made against it then shifts to the company
debtor, which must show
that the indebtedness established is disputed
on bona fide and reasonable grounds.
30.
The court confirmed that the test for
establishing the existence of bona fide and reasonable grounds to
refuse an order sought by
the creditor where a company debtor alleged
the existence of a counterclaim the debtor company has against the
creditor is found
in
Plascon-Evans
Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
[1984] 2 All SA 366
(A). The court noted that for the company debtor
to succeed in its attempts to resist the order based on the existence
of a counterclaim,
the pleadings of the debtor company must
demonstrate a prima facie case in favor of the debtor company,
specifically in respect
of the counterclaim.
31.
In
casu,
t
he Respondent has attached a copy
of a letter to its answering affidavit, alleging that it is a reply
to the Applicant's
section 345(1)
notice. In that letter, the
Respondent denies being indebted to the Applicant for any amount of
whatever nature. In that letter,
the Respondent states explicitly the
reasons for disputing the Applicant's claim. In essence, the
Respondent also warned the Applicant
that any application for their
liquidation would be mala fide and would be opposed, and it would
seek a cost order against the
Applicant. The Respondent further
argued that the Applicant was advised that should they wish to
institute legal action against
them, they are invited to proceed
through arbitration.
32.
Further, in its answering affidavit, the
Respondent purports that before the launch of the winding-up
application, a bona fide dispute
existed between the Applicant and
the Respondent, which Annexure AA1 validates. In the letter dated 4
May 2023, the Respondent
addressed pertinent issues regarding
defects.
33.
Paragraph 8 of Annexure AA1 read thus :
"All
these batteries were received in wooden crates; when our client
started installing the batteries, it discovered that they
were faulty
and were not working; our client brought these defects to your
attention and did not open the remainder of the crates."
34.
On 10 May 2023, the Applicant's attorney
responded by asserting
“
Should
the 1st Respondent not make any effort to make a payment or at least
a suitable payment arrangement, the winding up application
would be
launched, and if necessary, an urgent interdict would be sought in
stopping payments to any service providers".
35.
This does not change that the Applicant
was aware of a dispute. After that, the notice of motion dated 15 May
2023 was launched.
36.
Annexure AA11 contains screenshots of
What's Up correspondence between the Applicant and the 1st Respondent
discussing defects.
Paragraph 35, pages 08-11 of the Respondent's
answering affidavits stipulates that the 1st Respondent is in the
process of issuing
summons for repayment of the sum it expended on
the freight and import costs for the batteries supplied by the
Applicant.
37.
When considering the issue as to whether
the Respondent has discharged the onus of showing that the
indebtedness is genuinely disputed
on reasonable grounds, recourse
must be had to the Respondent's answering affidavit. The Respondent's
answering affidavit is highly
detailed in support of its defense. The
Respondent refers to the correspondence between the parties and the
letter sent to the
Applicant's attorney querying the defective
batteries. Such documents referred to were annexed to the answering
affidavit. The
court is privy to the what's up communications between
the parties, reflecting challenges the Respondent encountered in
installing
the said batteries. All this information is within the
Applicant's knowledge; such details were furnished and placed before
this
court.
38.
The Respondent has offered supporting
evidence to substantiate its position, which reflects positively on
the
bona fides
of
its defense.
39.
Despite being warned not to proceed
through motion proceedings, the Applicant issued its notice of
motion.
40.
The Respondent has offered a convincing
explanation for why it is a genuine dispute.
41.
Accordingly, the Applicant has not
established that the Respondent is commercially insolvent from the
evidence placed before this
court. The Respondent has shown that its
indebtedness is genuinely disputed on reasonable grounds.
42.
In the circumstances of this matter, the
Applicant is not entitled to seek the liquidation of the Respondent.
All the requirements
for a liquidation order have yet to be met,
including the formalities prescribed by
section 346
of the
Companies
Act.
43.
In
National
Director of Public Prosecutions v Zuma
2009 (2) SA 277 (SCA) at para 26, Harms DP said: "Motion
proceedings, unless concerned with interim relief, are all about
the
resolution of legal issues based on common cause facts. Unless the
circumstances are unique, they cannot be used to resolve
the factual
problems because they are not designed to determine probabilities.
44.
It is well established under the Plascon
Evans rule that where in motion proceedings, dispute of fact arises
on the affidavit, a
final order can be granted only if the facts
arrived in the Applicant's affidavits, which have been admitted by
the Respondent,
together with the facts alleged by the latter,
justify such order. It may be different if the Respondent's written
version consists
of bad or untrustworthy denials, raises fictitious
disputes of fact, and is implausible, farfetched, or untenable that
the court
is justified in rejecting them entirely on the papers.
45.
It
is also trite that liquidation may not be used to enforce disputed
debt payments. It is not suitable to resolve complex factual
disputes. See
Trinity
Asset Management (Pty) Ltd v Grindstone Investments (Pty) Ltd
[1]
and
Badenhorst
v Northern Construction Enterprises (Pty) Ltd
[2]
.
Probabilities may only be the basis for factual findings if the court
is satisfied that there is no real and genuine factual dispute.
Where
the court finds a real and genuine factual dispute incapable of
resolution on paper, it can only dismiss the application
if it
considers that the Applicant should have realized when launching the
application that there was a factual dispute. See
Adbro
Investment Company Ltd v Minister of Interior.
[3]
.
46.
In this case, it is evident that when
the Applicant issued its notice of motion, it was aware or ought to
have foreseen that a dispute
of fact would arise based on the answer
it received from the Respondent. In essence, the Respondent has
advised the Applicant to
proceed through arbitration given the
dispute, but it has deliberately ignored that advice. I'm therefore
satisfied that the Respondent
raised a bona fide defense on the
papers and explained.
47.
This matter will not be determined on
paper only based on the real, genuine, and bona fide dispute of fact
raised by the Respondent.
I believe the Respondent's denial of the
Applicant's claim is based on bona fide grounds. On that point alone,
the Applicant's
application stands to fail.
48.
Rule 6(5)(g)
states as follows:
"Where
an application cannot correctly be decided on affidavit, the court
may dismiss the application or make such order as
it deems fit to
ensure a just and expeditious decision. In particular, but without
affecting the generality of the preceding, it
may direct that oral
evidence he heard on specified issues to resolve any dispute of fact
and, to that end, may order any deponent
to appear personally or
grant leave for such deponent or any other person to be subpoenaed to
appear and be examined and cross-examined
as a witness or it may
refer the matter to trial with appropriate directions as to pleadings
or definition of issues, or otherwise.
49.
In application proceedings, where a
genuine and far-reaching dispute of fact has emerged and the
probabilities are sufficiently
evenly balanced, referral to oral
evidence or trial, as the case may be, will generally be appropriate.
This court will not dwell
on and determine this aspect as none of the
parties called upon it.
50.
This court concludes that the Applicant
failed to establish a prima facie case for winding up the 1
st
Respondent. The Applicant did not provide substantial evidence of the
1
st
Respondent's indebtedness to it and failed to provide proof of its
inability to pay its debts.
51.
I then conclude that there is a bona fide and reasonable dispute
regarding the indebtedness, which prevents reliance on
winding-up
proceedings. A dispute existed prior to the launch of the winding-up
process.
52.
Correspondence dated 4 May 2023 was sent
to the Applicant's attorney, "AA1." The essence of the
correspondence alluded
that batteries were received. Upon
installation, the Respondent discovered that they were faulty and
were not working, and this
was brought to the attention of the
Applicant. The Applicant has since failed to fix or replace the said
batteries.
53.
Annexure AA6 indicates the Respondent's
predicament and complaints that the batteries were not functional. It
also depicts photographs
of the Respondent's screen displays.
54.
Also, Annexure AA 11 depicts screenshots
of Whats App correspondence between the Applicant and the Respondent,
wherein issues relating
to the batteries' non-functionality and
defectiveness are raised.
55.
This court finds that the liquidation
process is not applicable at this stage, as such a process is
intended for winding up the
affairs of an insolvent business. The
Applicant has failed to satisfy the court that the Respondent is
insolvent.
56.
The Applicant should have realized there
was a factual dispute when launching the application.
57.
There
are more issues that I need to address, and they relate to the
alleged non-compliance by the Applicant with the provisions
of
s
346(4A)
of the
Companies Act.
[4
]
.
Preliminary
Issues:
58.
I now turn to deal with the preliminary
issues raised by the Respondent:
Execution
of the Applicant's founding affidavit: The 1
st
Respondent
raised preliminary issues and points
in limine. T
he Respondent
challenged the validity of the Applicant's Founding Affidavit and
sought a ruling that they ought to be rejected by
this court in their
current form. A variety of submissions were made by the Respondents
on whether or not the Applicant's Founding
Affidavit deserved serious
legal scrutiny by this court or whether they should be rejected. The
Respondent submitted during the
hearing for preliminary issues that
the Applicant's Founding Affidavit was irregular and fatally
defective because they did not
comply with the provisions of the
Justice Peace Commissioner of Oaths Act, 16 of 1963 ("the Act")
and Regulation 4 in
terms of section 10 of the Act.
59.
In support of the Respondent's
preliminary issues and point
in
limine
, the Respondent argued that
the Founding Affidavit is not appropriate before this court because
of non-compliance and should not
be accepted in its current form.
60.
It was submitted that, based on the
Regulations, the Founding Affidavit was fatally defective and
irregular and should not be accepted
by this court. The implications
of this would have been the dismissal of the entire application
because none of the founding affidavits
were commissioned correctly.
61.
The issues of
whether the Regulations Governing the Administering of an Oath or
Affirmation are peremptory or directory and whether
there was
compliance with the Regulations by the Applicant in commissioning its
founding affidavit and replying to the affidavit
will be dealt with
at the same time. Regulation 4(2) of the Regulations Governing the
Administering of an Oath or Affirmation provides
that:
“
(2)
The Commissioner of oaths shall-
(a)Sign
the declaration and print his full name and business address below
his signature; and
(b)
State his designation and the area where he holds his appointment or
office if he has his appointment
ex officio
.”
62.
Turning to the question of whether the Regulations Governing The
Administering of Oath or Affirmation are peremptory or
directory, it
was held in
S
v Msibi
[5]
the
requirements in the Regulations are not peremptory but merely
directory. The Court in
Msibi
further
held that where the requirements of the Regulations have not been
complied with, the court may refuse to accept the affidavit
concerned
as such or give effect to it, but the question should, in each case,
be whether there has been substantial compliance
with the
requirements.
63.
I align myself with that decision.
Msibi’s
case has been
correctly decided concerning whether the Regulations are peremptory
or direct. The Commissioner of Oath duly signed
the Applicant's
founding affidavit and replying affidavit. Regarding the Regulations,
the details of the Commissioner of Oaths
must appear strictly below
the signature of the Commissioner of Oaths.
64.
Regarding Regulation 3(1), the deponent must sign a declaration in
the presence of the Commissioner of Oaths. Regulation
3(2) provides
that if the deponent cannot write, he shall affix his mark at the
foot of the declaration. Regulation 4(1) provides
that the
Commissioner of oaths shall certify the deponents' signature or mark
below.
65.
What must be looked at is whether the full names, designation, and
business address of the Commissioner of oaths appear
on the
certificate. Even if there are certain deficiencies, like in the case
at hand, the court must look at the information as
a whole and
determine whether the weaknesses are that material to render the
whole affidavit defective, what prejudice will cause
to the affected
party, and the interest of justice. If the deficiencies are not that
material, there is substantial compliance.
In the case at hand, the
presence of the Commissioner of oaths is different under the
circumstances, and there was substantial
compliance. The virtual
presence of the deponent amounts to substantial compliance with
Regulation 3(1).
66.
If there is doubt as to whether the details and process followed
during the commission of an affidavit are not regular
and what
appears on that certificate is not that of the Commissioner of Oaths,
it is for the party who doubted to challenge and
substantiate that.
In this case, that was not the question; therefore, the point
in
limine
has to fail.
67.
The other preliminary point raised by the Respondent is that the
Applicant has failed to demonstrate that Netherlands
law makes
provision for the winding up of companies on the grounds presented in
this application, further contending that the Applicable
Law: Clause
23 of the sale agreement between the parties provides that the
agreement is governed by and must be construed by the
laws of the
Netherlands and that this constitutes a clear and express choice of
law clause in favor of the laws of the Netherlands.
Therefore, this
court lacks jurisdiction to grant the winding up order in light of
the choice of law clause.
68.
This particular clause does not exclude the jurisdiction of the South
African courts.
This
is important because the appropriate legal system governing the
international contract under consideration must be identified
as the
"proper law of the contract." As was held in Harnischfeger
Corporation and Another v Appleton and Another
[6]
,
to a South African court, each aspect of foreign law is a factual
question, and any evidence of that aspect must emanate from
someone
with the necessary expertise. It is assumed that on any relevant
point, there is no difference between our law and the
law in a
foreign country. The result is that the party who wants the court to
find that there is a difference, the party who in
that sense relies
upon foreign law to assist him to a point where South African Law
would not bring him, must produce such evidence.
69.
The Respondent failed to substantiate this aspect. Clause 23 does not
exclude the jurisdiction of South African courts.
Therefore, the
point
in limine
has to fail.
70.
I now turn to the issue of costs. A punitive costs order is an
extraordinary one that should not be quickly resorted to
and can only
be applicable on special considerations arising either from the
circumstances that gave rise to the action or from
the conduct of the
party, should a court in a particular case deem it, to ensure that
the other party is not out of pocket in respect
of the expenses
caused to it by the litigation. As such, the order should not be
granted lightly, as Courts look upon such orders
with unpopularity
and are loath to penalize a person who has exercised a right to
obtain a judicial decision on any complaint such
a party may have.
71.
On receipt of the Respondent's reply to its section 345 notice, it
was clear to the Applicant that a fact dispute would
arise that could
not be resolved on paper. The Respondent also gave the Applicant
friendly advice on whether to institute legal
proceedings against it
should it decide. This was to inform the Applicant that motion
proceedings will not be able to resolve this
matter as a dispute of
fact will arise.
72.
The Respondent contended that they are in the process of issuing a
summons for repayment of the sum it expended on the
freight and
import costs for what is said to be defective goods.
73.
It is clear that the Applicant wanted to take a shortcut by using the
liquidation application as a debt-collecting tool,
which might scare
the Respondent to pay immediately. It knew that should it proceed by
way of action, litigation would take some
time before the matter is
finalized. However, in motion proceedings, it will be much quicker.
Even though the Respondent believes
this is a clear abuse of Court
processes, I’m not convinced that punitive costs are
justifiable.
74.
In the result, I make the following order:
1. The Application
is dismissed.
2. The Applicant is
to pay the Respondent's costs.
T. BOKAKO
Acting Judge of the
High Court
Gauteng Local
Division, Johannesburg
APPEARANCES
Counsel
for the Applicant
ADV. HOLLANDER
Counsel
for the 1
st
Respondent
ADV. GARVEY
Date
of Hearing:
6 MARCH 2024
Date
of Judgment:
22. MAY 2024
[1]
Trinity
Asset Management (Pty) Ltd v Grindstone Investments (Pty) Ltd
2017
(12) BCLR 1562
(CC);
2018 (1) SA 94
(CC) at para 154;
[2]
Badenhorst
v Northern Construction Enterprises (Pty) Ltd
1956
(2) SA 346(T)
at 347-348;
[3]
Adbro
Investment Company Ltd v Minister of Interior
1956
(3) SA 345
(A) at 350A.
[4]
Companies Act, Act
61 of 1973;
[5]
1974 (4) 821 (T)
[6]
1993 (4) SA 479
WLD at para 485 H
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