Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 548South Africa
Tsebane Molaba Incorporated and Another v Molatedi N.O. (A26/2019) [2024] ZAGPJHC 548 (11 June 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
11 June 2024
Headnotes
it had no discretion to refuse inspection if the records sought fell within the scope of section 26, and if Mr. Tsebane had demonstrated a beneficial interest in the firm’s securities.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Tsebane Molaba Incorporated and Another v Molatedi N.O. (A26/2019) [2024] ZAGPJHC 548 (11 June 2024)
Tsebane Molaba Incorporated and Another v Molatedi N.O. (A26/2019) [2024] ZAGPJHC 548 (11 June 2024)
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sino date 11 June 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
REPORTABLE: NO
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
SIGNATURE
DATE: 11 June 2024
Case No. A26/2019
In
the matter between:
TSEBANE
MOLABA INCORPORATED
First
Appellant
KOTISHI
BERNARD MOLABA
Second
Appellant
and
ELIZABETH
LETOANE MOLATEDI NO
Respondent
CORAM: MUDAU J, MALINDI J
AND WILSON J
#####
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J (with whom MUDAU J and MALINDI J agree)
:
1
The first appellant, Tsebane Molaba, is a firm of attorneys
incorporated as a “profit company” in terms of the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
. The second appellant, Mr. Molaba, is a
director of that firm. The respondent, Ms. Molatedi, is the executrix
of the estate of
Matifane Tsebane. Mr. Tsebane was once a director of
Tsebane Molaba, but this appeal was argued on the basis that he
resigned his
directorship on or about 1 July 2010.
2
In November 2016, Mr. Tsebane sued in the court below for
access to Tsebane Molaba’s company records. He claimed that he
had
a right to inspect those records under
section 26
of the
Companies Act. Section
26 (1) entitles the holder of a “beneficial
interest” in any securities issued by a profit company to
inspect the records
set out in the section. Mr. Tsebane apparently
did not accept that he had in fact resigned as a director of Tsebane
Molaba. However,
his case was that, even if he had, he remained one
of its shareholders. He was, as such, beneficially interested in the
firm’s
securities, and he had a right to inspect the records he
sought.
3
The appellants resisted Mr. Tsebane’s application on
essentially two grounds. First, it was said that Mr. Tsebane sought
the
records to further an unlawful or oppressive purpose. On that
basis, the appellants asked the court below to exercise its
discretion
against allowing inspection of the records. However, the
court below held that it had no discretion to refuse inspection if
the
records sought fell within the scope of
section 26
, and if Mr.
Tsebane had demonstrated a beneficial interest in the firm’s
securities.
4
That led the court below to an examination of the appellants’
second basis of opposition. This was that, by virtue of section
23
(2) of the Attorneys Act 53 of 1979 (now repealed), Mr. Tsebane had
lost his shares in the firm by operation of law when he
ceased to be
a director. Section 23 (2) of the Attorneys Act provides that
attorneys firms may be incorporated as companies provided
that
“
[e]very shareholder of the company shall be
a director of the company, and only a shareholder of the company
shall be a director
thereof”. The effect of this provision, the
appellants argued, is that Mr. Tsebane lost his shares when he ceased
to be a
director of the firm.
5
The court below rejected this argument too. It held that
section 23 (2) does not authorise the uncompensated expropriation of
Mr.
Tsebane’s shares merely because he ceased to be a director.
There was no evidence before the court below that Mr. Tsebane’s
shares had been sold or transferred, whether to another director of
the firm or otherwise. For that reason, whatever the effect
of
section 23 (2) was, it could not have been that Mr. Tsebane lost
ownership of his shares on the termination of his directorship.
6
The court below accordingly made a fairly extensive order
directing that Mr. Tsebane be given a range of company records
generated
during the period of January 2010 and November 2016. The
appellants now appeal against that order, relying on the same
arguments
they advanced in the court below.
7
Mr. Tsebane died on 6 August 2020, while this appeal was
pending. He was substituted as a party to the appeal by the executrix
of
his estate, Ms. Molatedi. Before us, it was accepted that Ms.
Molatedi requires the firm’s records for the sole purpose of
valuing Mr. Tsebane’s shareholding in the firm.
8
This puts an end to any suggestion that the records are being
sought for an unlawful purpose. Ms. Molatedi seeks what is necessary
to determine the value of the shares that everyone accepts Mr.
Tsebane owned while he was a director of the firm. There can be
nothing unlawful or oppressive about that.
9
Mr. Louw, who appeared together with Ms. Pretorius for the
appellants, argued that, by operation of section 23 (2) of the
Attorneys
Act, Mr. Tsebane was divested of the shares on his
resignation, and that they were transferred to Mr. Molaba by virtue
of Article
18 of the standard articles of association which applied
under the Companies Act 61 of 1973. After that transfer, Mr. Louw
argued,
Mr. Tsebane was left with a personal right to payment of the
value of the shares. He had no beneficial interest in any of the
firm’s
securities, and no right to inspect the firm’s
records under
section 26
(1) of the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
.
10
I have my doubts about whether Article 18 has the effect that
Mr. Louw argues, but that does not matter. In my view, once it is
accepted that Mr. Tsebane had at least a personal right to be paid
the value of the shares, there was no basis for resisting the
relief
he sought in the court below.
Section 1
of the
Companies Act defines
a “beneficial interest when used in relation to a company's
securities” as “the right or entitlement of a person,
through ownership, agreement, relationship or otherwise, alone or
together with another person to (a) receive or participate in
any
distribution in respect of the company's securities; (b) exercise or
cause to be exercised, in the ordinary course, any or
all of the
rights attaching to the company's securities; or (c) dispose or
direct the disposition of the company's securities,
or any part of a
distribution in respect of the securities”.
11
In my view, this definition is broad enough to cover Mr.
Tsebane’s interest in valuing and obtaining payment for his
shares,
even if he had been divested of them by operation of law. In
their written submissions, the appellants argued that a “beneficial
interest” is held only by a person who has the right to receive
a “distribution” from “the company”.
Since
Mr. Tsebane’s rights were, at best, a right to payment from Mr.
Molaba, and not from the company, it was argued that
he had no
beneficial interest in the company’s securities.
12
This, however, overlooks the fact that Mr. Tsebane’s
shares need not have been transmitted to Mr. Molaba. They could just
as easily have been purchased by or transmitted to the firm itself if
its articles of association so provided (a situation specifically
envisaged and catered for by section 22 (5) of the Attorneys Act). We
heard no argument on this point, and it is far from clear
on whom the
shares would settle in the event that Mr. Tsebane was divested of
them.
13
Moreover, and in any event, the appellants’ argument
does not address the beneficial interest identified in paragraph (b)
of the definition: the exercise of “any or all of the rights
attaching to the company's securities”. One of those rights
is
the right to be paid the fair value of the shares on relinquishing or
being divested of them – whether in favour of another
director
or the company itself. As
section 1
of the
Companies Act makes
clear,
a beneficial interest in a company’s securities need not be
derived from ownership of them. All that need be demonstrated
is a
person’s “right or entitlement” whether through
“ownership, agreement, relationship or otherwise”.
Both
Mr. Tsebane and his estate plainly had a right attaching to the
firm’s securities derived through “agreement,
relationship or otherwise”, even if Mr. Tsebane no longer owned
his shares after he left the firm.
14
It follows that Mr. Tsebane had a beneficial interest in the
shares whether or not he owned them at the time he brought his
application
in the court below, and that he was entitled to the
information he sought there.
15
For the purposes of this appeal, it does not matter whether
Mr. Tsebane resigned or was otherwise discharged from the firm, or
whether
he owned the shares beyond his resignation. The least that
everyone accepts is that Mr. Tsebane, and by extension his estate,
has
the right to their value, whatever that was, as at the date he
ceased to be a director of the firm, whenever that was. We heard
no
argument on how the shares should be valued, or what the effective
date of their valuation should be. Nor did we hear any argument
on
the extent to which the likely value of the shares at any particular
time affected the scope of the disclosure the court below
ordered. It
is accordingly unnecessary for us to consider whether, when or how
section 23 (2) of the Attorneys’ Act divested
Mr. Tsebane of
his shares.
16
It follows that there is no basis for us to interfere with the
order of the court below. Mr. Tsebane’s estate is entitled to
the information necessary to value his shareholding, and it has not
been established that the court below ordered wider disclosure
than
was necessary to achieve that purpose.
17
The appeal is dismissed with costs.
S
D J WILSON
Judge
of the High Court
This
judgment is handed down electronically by circulation to the parties
or their legal representatives by email, by uploading
to Caselines,
and by publication of the judgment to the South African Legal
Information Institute. The date for hand-down is deemed
to be 11 June
2024.
HEARD
ON:
22
May 2024
DECIDED
ON:
11
June 2024
For
the Appellants:
AJ
Louw SC
K
Pretorious
Instructed
by Couzyn Hetrzog & Horak
For
the Respondent:
M
Stubbs
Instructed
by Webber Wentzel
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