Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 608South Africa
Dupont NO and Others and Lehlobo's Trading and Enterprise (Pty) Ltd ta Lehlobo Auto Body Repairs and Others - Leave to Appeal (123253/2023) [2024] ZAGPJHC 608 (1 July 2024)
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Dupont NO and Others and Lehlobo's Trading and Enterprise (Pty) Ltd ta Lehlobo Auto Body Repairs and Others - Leave to Appeal (123253/2023) [2024] ZAGPJHC 608 (1 July 2024)
Dupont NO and Others and Lehlobo's Trading and Enterprise (Pty) Ltd ta Lehlobo Auto Body Repairs and Others - Leave to Appeal (123253/2023) [2024] ZAGPJHC 608 (1 July 2024)
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sino date 1 July 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: 123253/2023
In the matter between:
STEPHEN
ROBERT DUPONT N.O.
First Applicant
DONYA
DUPONT
N.O.
Second
Applicant
KOSTA
GEORGIEV N.O.
Third Applicant
And
LEHLOBO’S
TRADING AND ENTERPRISE (PTY) LTD t/a
LEHLOBO
AUTO BODY REPAIRS (IN BUSINESS RESCUE)
First
Respondent
HERBERT
BONGANI MATHIBELA N.O.
Second
Respondent
COMPANIES AND
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
COMMISSION
Third Respondent
This judgment was handed
down electronically by circulation to the parties legal
representatives by email, and uploading on Caselines.
The date and
time for hand-down is deemed to be 10h00 1 July 2024
JUDGMENT ON LEAVE TO
APPEAL
[1]
On 12 June 2024 I delivered an
ex
tempore
judgment in which I granted the
following orders:
“
1.
The applicants are granted leave to amend their notice of motion.
2.
The applicants non-compliance with
the Uniform Rules of Court relating to forms, service and time
periods is condoned and the matter
is heard on an urgent basis in
terms of Rule 6(12)(a).
3.
The applicants are granted leave, to
the extent necessary, in terms of s 133(1)(b) of the Companies Act 71
of 2008 (‘
Companies Act&rsquo
;) to bring this application and
to request the relief sought in paragraphs 2 to 9.
4.
Setting aside in terms of
s
130(1)(a)(ii)
and (iii) and
130
(5)(ii) of the
Companies Act
>
a.
the resolution of the respondent
dated 19 June 2023 placing the first respondent under business rescue
as provided for in
s 129
of the
Companies Act; and
b.
the appointment of the second
respondent as business rescue practitioner.
5.
Placing the first respondent under
provisional winding-up.
6.
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 16 July
2024 at 10h00 or as soon thereafter as the matter may be heard.
7.
A copy of this order must be served
on the first respondent at its registered office. A copy of this
order must be published forthwith
in the Government Gazette.
8.
A copy of this order must forthwith
be forwarded to each known creditor by prepaid registered post or by
email.
9.
A copy of the provisional winding-up
order must be served on –
a.
every registered trade union
representing the first respondent’s employees, if any
b.
the employees of the first
respondent by affixing a copy of the application to any notice board
to which the employees have access
inside the first respondent’s
premises or if there is no access to the premises by the employees,
by annexing a copy to the
front gate, where applicable, failing which
to the front door of the premises from which the first respondent
conducted any business
at the time of the presentation of this
application, and
c.
The South African Revenue Service.
10.
Any person who is entitled to respond to
this rule nisi is also entitled to apply on notice to the applicants
to anticipate the
return date and to set the matter down for
determination on an earlier date as one of urgency, if circumstances
justify it.
11.
The costs of this application are to
be costs in the winding-up.”
[2]
The respondents in this application, to
which I will refer as the “main application” filed an
application for leave
to appeal to a Full Bench on Thursday 20 June
2024. I shall continue to refer to the parties as they were in the
main application.
[3]
Because my term as an Acting Judge of this
Division was due to end on 21 June 2024, I set the application for
leave to appeal down
for a hearing on that day.
However, I received an
email from the respondents’ attorneys advising that Mr Mantsha,
who appeared for the respondent in
the main application, was unable
to be present at court due to family funerals. In the circumstances,
I directed the parties to
file heads of argument in relation to the
application for leave to appeal and indicated that I would deal with
the matter on the
papers, as I am entitled to do. (See
Mogale and
others v Seima
2008 (5) SA 637
(SCA) at para 2).
[4]
Applications for leave to appeal are
determined by
section 17
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
. Leave
to appeal may only be given,
inter alia
,
where “
the appeal would have a
reasonable prospect of success”
.
After some debate as to whether this provision postulated a higher
bar than was previously the case, the Supreme Court of Appeal
has
settled that issue, stating:
“
I
am mindful of the decisions at high court level debating whether the
use of the word ‘would’ as opposed to ‘could’
possibly means that the threshold for granting the appeal has been
raised. If a reasonable prospect of success is established,
leave to
appeal should be granted. ... The test of reasonable prospects of
success postulates a dispassionate decision based on
the facts and
the law that a court of appeal could reasonably arrive at a
conclusion different to that of the trial court.”
Ramakatsa
v African National Congress
[2021]
ZASCA 31
(31 March 2021) at para 10
[5]
The application for leave to appeal raises
eight grounds of appeal including appeals against the two purely
procedural matters dealt
with in my judgment, namely, the admission
of a supplementary affidavit, to which the respondents filed an
answer, and allowing
the amendment to the notice of motion, which was
occasioned by the changed circumstances set out in the supplementary
affidavit.
These grounds of appeal, even if they raise appealable
issues, which is doubtful, are devoid of merit. In the hearing on the
merits
and in light of the fact that the respondents had filed an
answer to the supplementary affidavit, I asked counsel for the
respondents
to identify what prejudice the respondents had suffered.
He was unable to point to any prejudice and none is identified in his
heads of argument on leave to appeal. I accordingly ordered the
admission of the supplementary affidavit and allowed the amendment
to
the notice of motion by exercising a discretion to do so. That
disposes of the sixth and seventh grounds of appeal.
[6]
The remaining grounds of appeal go to the
substance of the order granted. (I focus on those grounds of appeal
addressed in the heads
of argument). In my
ex
tempore
judgment, I was at pains to
point out that the resolution of factual disputes in motion
proceedings is governed by well settled
rules. I gave particular
attention to the question of whether the business rescue plan had
been adopted. On the papers there was
no evidence that the plan had
been adopted and Mr Mantsha informed me from the bar that it had not
been adopted. Accordingly, the
contention that I erred in not
considering the business rescue plan (the second ground of appeal) is
without merit. In his heads
of argument on leave to appeal, counsel
contended that regard should have been to the business rescue plan
which, according to
counsel “had all the details and facts to
show that the ‘company’ can be reasonably .. rescued”.
There
are two problems with this contention First, the business
rescue plan had not been adopted. Accordingly, it has no status
beyond
a recommendation. Second, the business rescue plan was
prepared on 15 November 2023. Accordingly, the business rescue plan
does
not take account of the changed circumstances necessitating the
urgent approach to the court, some seven months later.
[7]
As to the remaining grounds of appeal, they
all essentially turn on whether the company has any reasonable
prospects of being rescued.
That is a factual enquiry. I referred in
my
ex
tempore judgment to
PFC Properties (Pty)
Ltd v Commissioner of the South African Revenue Service and others
2024 (1) SA 400
(SCA) where the point was made at paragraph 27 that:
“
Business
rescue proceedings are aimed at restoring a company to solvency and
are not to be abused by a company with no prospect
of being rescued,
but mainly to avoid a winding-up or to obtain some respite for
creditors.”
[8]
At the level of fact, I reached the
conclusion that on the facts of the present case, business rescue was
incapable of meeting the
stated objective. This issue fell to be
determined by the established rules for resolving factual disputes in
motion proceedings.
On this score, the respondents have simply not
come to grips with the facts put up by the applicants which
demonstrated that the
company was beyond rescue.
[9]
In the first ground of appeal, it is
contended that I “erred in concluding that there was no
reasonable basis for believing
that [the Company] was financially
distressed” at the time of the resolution to place it under
business rescue. I made no
such finding. It was common cause that the
company was financially distressed. The core issue before me was
whether there remained
any reasonable prospect of it being rescued.
Indeed, the orders I granted flow from my acceptance, on the facts,
that the company
was financially distressed, but with no reasonable
prospect of recovery.
[10]
In the fourth ground of appeal, it is
contended that I erred in “concluding that it was just and
equitable to set aside the
resolution to place [the Company] under
business rescue proceedings without having regard to all the
evidence”. Again, this
is not correct. The setting aside of the
resolution flowed from the conclusion I reached on the facts that
there was no reasonable
prospect that the company could be rescued.
In this regard, the heads of argument do not come to grips with the
changed circumstances
that emerged after the business rescue plan was
tabled (regardless of the fact that it was not adopted). In my
judgment, I referred
to the undisputed evidence in this regard.
Logically, the enquiry cannot be confined to the date when the
resolution was adopted.
The relevant time is when the resolution is
challenged in a court of law in the light of changed circumstance (Cf
Nedbank Ltd v Pacinamix (Pty) Ltd and
other
2023 JDR 4563 (GJ) at para 21).
Accordingly, the orders granted are accommodated by my just and
equitable discretion.
[11]
The third ground of appeal was that I erred
“by concluding that the First Respondent failed to satisfy the
procedure requirement
set out in
section 123
of the
Companies Act and
by so
doing disregarding the administrative process as outlined by the
first Respondent, in the business rescue plan.” No
argument was
addressed on this ground of appeal. Indeed I did not make the finding
alleged.
[12]
The fifth ground of appeal is that I “erred
by setting aside the appointment of the second Respondent with due
regard to the
requirements of
section 138
of the
Companies Act&rdquo
;.
No argument was addressed to this ground of appeal Once I had
concluded that the Company was beyond rescue, the setting aside
of
the appointment of the business rescue practitioner was a logical
consequence.
[13]
The eighth ground of appeal is that I
“erred by granting the order in terms of
section 133(1)(b)
of
the
Companies Act while
the jurisdictional requirements of granting
such was absent”. No argument was addressed to this ground of
appeal. Accordingly
no attempt was made to identify which
jurisdictional facts were allegedly absent. As already indicated, the
facts demonstrated
that there was no reasonable prospect of the
company being rescued
[14]
In the circumstances I make the following
order:
The application for leave
to appeal is dismissed with costs.
MARCUS AJ
Gauteng Division,
Johannesburg
JUDGMENT
DATE:
1
July 2024
FOR
THE APPLICANTS:
Adv
M Gwala
(Respondents
in leave to appeal)
FOR
THE RESPONDENTS:
Mr
L Mantsha
(Applicants
in leave to appeal)
sino noindex
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