Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 826South Africa
Seima N.O and Others v Saharan Trade and Finance (Pty) Ltd (2022/027175) [2024] ZAGPJHC 826 (22 August 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
22 August 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Seima N.O and Others v Saharan Trade and Finance (Pty) Ltd (2022/027175) [2024] ZAGPJHC 826 (22 August 2024)
Seima N.O and Others v Saharan Trade and Finance (Pty) Ltd (2022/027175) [2024] ZAGPJHC 826 (22 August 2024)
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sino date 22 August 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Case No: 2022/027175
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED YES
DATE: 22/08/2024
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
SIMON
MATLESHE SEIMA
N.O.
First Applicant
TARYN
JANE NEIZEL N.O.
Second
Applicant
NURJEHAN
ABDOOL GAFAAR OMAR N.O.
Third
Applicant
SIBUSISO
NDUNA
N.O.
Fourth Applicant
(in
their capacities as the duly appointed joint trustees of
the
insolvent estate of Martin Ashley Levick)
and
SAHARAN
TRADE AND FINANCE (PTY) LTD
Respondent
(Registration Number:
1996/012499/07)
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ legal representatives by email. The date for hand-down
is deemed to be 22 August 2024
JUDGMENT
INGRID
OPPERMAN J
Introduction
[1]
This
is an application for the provisional liquidation of Saharan Trade
and Finance (Pty) Ltd (
Saharan
),
the respondent, which has been brought by the trustees of the
sequestrated estate of Mr Martin Ashley Levick (
the
insolvent
).
The trustees (
the
applicants
)
apply for the provisional liquidation of Saharan on the basis that
Saharan owed the insolvent some R45 million
[1]
(
the
loan
)
as at the date of the sequestration of the insolvent’s estate
and that Saharan is unable to pay its debts.
[2]
The applicants’ case is that
the loan is due to the insolvent and that, having stepped into the
shoes of the insolvent’s
estate, they have called up the loan
which has not been paid. Saharan disputes this. Its case is that if
the loan exists and it
is due, it is owing to Jamrae Capital
Corporation (
Jamrae
),
an off-shore trust registered in Lichtenstein. To address this
dispute, it is necessary to go back to the genesis of the loan.
The property and its
acquisition by Saharan
[3]
Saharan owns a property in Cape Town
described as Unit 903 Eventide, 24 Victoria Road, Clifton (
the
property
). The controlling mind behind
Saharan’s purchase of the property in the Cape was Mr Glynn
David Cohen, a resident of Zimbabwe
and a citizen of the principality
of Monaco. The property was registered into Saharan’s name in
the Deeds Registry in 2007.
The property is situated in an apartment
block called Eventide. That Saharan owned the property is one of the
few fixed points
of reference in this matter.
[4]
The Vulcam Trust (T 7931/02) (
the
Vulcam Trust
) is the owner of 100% of
the issued share capital of Saharan. Saharan raised both mortgage
bond finance (
the Bond Finance
)
and loan finance (
the Loan Finance
).
[5]
Mr Cohen explained the Loan Finance as
follows:
‘
[Saharan]
raised what I defined as ‘the Loan Finance’. This was a
loan from Mondo Investments & Finance Ltd (‘Mondo’)
a
company registered in the British Virgin Islands, to Saharan. Despite
a diligent search, I am unable to locate a copy of this
loan
agreement. Mondo advanced the loan to [Saharan] and the money was
duly transferred from Mondo’s bank, Hypo Swiss Private
Bank.’
[6]
Mondo then allegedly ceded the right to
receive payment of the loan to Chancery Consultants Inc (
Chancery
),
a company also registered in the British Virgin Isles. An
unsigned copy of the loan and cession agreement between Mondo,
Saharan and Chancery dated January 2009 recording (a) the loan
between Mondo and Saharan and, (b) the cession of such loan to
Chancery, is attached to Mr Cohen’s affidavit the content of
which he confirms (
the Chancery cession
agreement
).
[7]
The
purpose of the Loan Finance recorded in the Chancery cession
agreement was for the loan of R75 900 000 ‘
to
be utilised to assist Saharan in their cash flow requirements
relating to the investment side of their business.’
[2]
The purchase of the
property by the insolvent/Jamrae
[8]
According to the insolvent’s wife,
Leigh-Anne Gresham Levick, who deposed to Saharan’s answering
affidavit, she and
her husband holidayed frequently at Eventide and
became friendly with Mr Cohen who although living in Monaco was a
frequent visitor
to Cape Town with his wife Nadia.
[9]
At some point in mid-2013 Mr Cohen and the
insolvent discussed the purchase of the property. The insolvent was
informed by Mr Cohen
that Mr Cohen’s wife Nadia had fallen
pregnant with twins and that Mr Cohen was therefore going to sell the
property as it
was not suitable for infants. According to the
insolvent’s wife, Mrs Levick, the insolvent told Mr Cohen that
if the property
were to be purchased, the purchaser would be Jamrae,
the off-shore trust registered in Lichtenstein, of which the
insolvent and
his wife were trustees, and their three children were
beneficiaries.
[10]
Mrs Levick recalls that Mr Cohen informed
her husband that Saharan owned the property and that the shares in
Saharan were owned
by the Vulcam Trust of which Mr
Cohen was a trustee and his family and children were the
beneficiaries.
Mr Cohen apparently then suggested to the insolvent
that rather than purchasing the property from Saharan, the insolvent
should
just “purchase” or “take over” his and
his children’s beneficial interest in the Vulcam Trust.
[11]
Mr Cohen also informed the insolvent that
he had obtained exchange control approval from the South African
Reserve Bank for a loan
that had been made to Saharan. The entity to
which the loan was allegedly owed at this time was Chancery, which
had taken cession
of Mondo’s right to receive repayment of the
loan in terms of the Chancery cession agreement. The insolvent
apparently had
no idea of the nature or extent of the loan facility,
but he wished to ensure that Chancery should have no further claims
against
Saharan.
[12]
If Chancery called up the loan owed by
Saharan, then Saharan would have to pay it back. The rights of
Chancery to call up the loan
were to be transferred from Chancery by
a cession to a recipient nominated by the insolvent. The insolvent’s
version is that
the recipient of the right of Chancery to call up the
loan was supposed to be Jamrae, the off-shore trust registered in
Lichtenstein,
of which the insolvent and his wife were trustees, and
their children the beneficiaries.
[13]
The terms of the purchase agreement,
according to Mrs Levick, were that the purchase price of R65 000
000 for the property
would be discharged by Saharan remaining liable
to ABSA in the amount of R18 840 657, which was the amount
outstanding
and owing by Saharan to ABSA under and in terms of an
existing mortgage bond. This amount would be deducted from the
purchase price.
Jamrae would pay, or cause to be paid, the balance of
the purchase price which was agreed to be the US dollar amount
equivalent
of R46 159 343, to Mondo's account with
Chancery. Jamrae would take cession of Mondo/Chancery's claim against
Saharan.
[14]
In respect of Vulcam: Mr Cohen and one
Frank Davidson would resign as trustees of Vulcam. The insolvent and
Mrs Levick would be
appointed as trustees of Vulcam and their
children would replace Mr Cohen's daughter as the capital and income
beneficiaries. The
Vulcam's trust deed would be amended to record
this. In respect of Saharan: the existing directors would resign as
directors; The
insolvent and Mrs Levick and/or their nominees would
be appointed as directors; All other assets owned by Saharan would be
transferred
out of Saharan so that Unit 903 would remain as the sole
asset owned by Saharan, which when all of this manoeuvring was
completed,
would in effect be under the control of the insolvent and
his family.
[15]
This did not all come to fruition as
envisaged. For reasons unexplained, Mr
Cohen remained on as a trustee of Vulcam and the insolvent, Mr
Levick, was never appointed a director of Saharan. Mrs Levick claims
that the purchase price was duly paid in full but acknowledges that
Mr Cohen has denied that the full purchase price was paid and
that Mr
Cohen has instituted action against her daughter and herself as
Vulcam’s trustees for the balance that Mr Cohen alleges
remains
owing.
[16]
Despite the alleged failure to pay the
purchase price in full, the Levicks were given occupation of the
property by the Cohens on
31 March 2014 and immediately began making
renovations to the property.
The Badenhorst
Principle
[17]
The
Badenhorst principle, a concept used in liquidation proceedings,
which has been described as less of a principle and more of
a
sensible rule of practice
[3]
,
states that if an applicant wants to claim a debt they know is
disputed, they should not bring liquidation proceedings to do it,
but
should claim the debt by way of action to get the dispute resolved
and only once the claim has been established by judgment
in the trial
action may the applicant seek to liquidate.
[18]
As will be apparent, the facts of this
matter are reminiscent of a game of cups, where an object is hidden
below an upside-down
cup moved around by a trickster with other empty
upside-down cups to baffle the audience as to the whereabouts of the
object. In
this case the object is the loan. If it is found in the
cup which the applicants say it is in, the estate of the insolvent,
then
they receive the proceeds of the sale of the property up to the
value of the loan. If the loan is found in the cup which the
insolvent’s
wife (Mrs Levick as the deponent to Saharan’s
answering affidavit) says it should be in, then the proceeds of the
sale of
the property to repay the loan go to the Levick family trust,
Jamrae. An option introduced by the confusing trail of transactions
is that the loan vanished completely. A further option is that the
loan was not used in the game at all, and that all the receptacles
presently under consideration are empty.
[19]
Of significance to whether there is a
bona
fide
dispute over the loan is the fact
that action proceedings have been instituted by the applicants
against Saharan in which they seek
judgment for payment of the loan,
the very indebtedness upon which the applicants claim to have
standing to apply to wind up Saharan.
The summons in which the
applicants are the plaintiffs was served on Saharan on 11 August 2022
and on 26 August 2022, Mrs Levick
on behalf of Saharan, concluded a
sale agreement with a company called Blue Cloud Investments 37 (Pty)
Ltd (
Blue Cloud
)
for the sale of the property. On 2 September 2022, the trustees were
approached by Blue Cloud who sought information as to any
potential
risks that it may encounter as a result of the insolvent’s
association with Saharan. It became apparent that the
property had
not been marketed publicly, that the representatives of Blue Cloud
were approached directly and that the existence
of the ceded loan or
the dispute in respect thereof, had not been disclosed to Blue Cloud.
Mr Rothbart, Saharan’s attorney
of record, on 14
September 2022 advised that the summons
was served on Saharan’s
registered office and neither Saharan nor the offices of Mr Rothbart
were alerted to it. He attached
a notice of intention to oppose the
action and drew attention to the fact that the applicants were aware
of Saharan’s defences
which had been tabled to Fluxmans
Attorneys, the applicants’ former attorneys.
[20]
Because Mrs Levick had disposed of
Saharan’s primary asset, the property, the applicants contended
that there was a high probability
that she would attempt to dispose
of other assets of Saharan and accordingly sought an urgent
liquidation order. This resulted
in an agreement being concluded
(made an order of court) in terms of which some R65 million would be
held in trust by Mr Rothbart
pending finalisation of this
application.
[21]
I do not know what the status is of the
action which was instituted. From submissions made in the heads of
argument it would seem
that the action is still pending. It is now 3
years later and might have been finalised if actively advanced. What
is clear is
that the applicants from the outset appreciated that
there are disputes of fact which will probably be best decided in
trial proceedings.
They appreciated at that time that the Badenhorst
route had to be followed.
[22]
The only aspect which changed between
the action being instituted and this application being launched, was
the sudden sale of the
property. If dissipation of assets were the
only concern, then there were presumably other remedies available,
such as an interdict
prohibiting the dissipation of the funds pending
the outcome of the action. Liquidation proceedings are inappropriate
under circumstances
where action was instituted because inherent in
the choice of action proceedings is a tacit acknowledgement that the
claim is the
subject of a dispute of fact. Nonetheless I will assume,
in favour of the applicants, that their view that action proceedings
were
appropriate changed after action was instituted.
[23]
If
I nonetheless find that the claim is
bona
fide
disputed
on reasonable grounds
[4]
,
I should, by virtue of the Badenhorst rule/principle/practice,
dismiss the application and let the action, already instituted,
resolve the disputes of fact (and law
[5]
).
The Loan Reconsidered
[24]
The applicants contend that it is to be
inferred from documents presented that Saharan borrowed money from
Mondo. Mr Cohen’s
affidavit reflects that the written loan
agreement between Mondo and Saharan cannot be found. Saharan
denies that there ever
was such a loan, and points to the fact that
there is no loan agreement document evidencing a loan between Mondo
and Saharan. Saharan
therefore says that the Court cannot find as a
fact that there was a loan between Mondo and Saharan, and hence puts
in issue that
there was in fact such a loan.
[25]
Mondo’s right to be repaid the loan
was, according to the applicants, accomplished by means of a loan
agreement between Mondo,
Saharan and Chancery. A document was
provided by Mr Cohen ostensibly in support of this allegation, but it
is not signed.
[26]
The insolvent’s wife makes the
following observations about this unsigned document on behalf of
Saharan in an endeavour to
debunk the existence of the loan and the
cession from Mondo to Chancery:
‘
31.
The only document sent by Cohen to [the insolvent] allegedly
evidencing the “loan” was an unsigned copy of a document
titled “Loan Agreement” recording the cession of the loan
from Mondo to [Chancery]. This document is annexed ... to
Cohen’s
“further affidavit”. As can be observed from this
document:
31.1
the facility that was made available by Mondo to [Saharan] was
R75,900,000
and
not
R107,601,703;
31.2
the facility is recorded as being made available to [Saharan] to
“
assist Saharan in their cash
flow requirements relating to the investment side of their business
”
;
31.3
the term is recorded as: -
‘
The
period of the Loan is defined as being from date of drawdown of the
capital by Saharan Trade & Finance, until date of repayment
of
such loan inclusive of all interest.
In the absence of a
demand or cancellation by Saharan Trade & finance, an amount of
up to the capital of the Facility is available
for utilisation until
this Agreement is terminated by the parties hereto.
31.4
It is recorded that the loan plus all interest thereon was ceded to
[Chancery] ‘
according to the
Letter of Understanding attached hereto and marked Annexure A
.’
………
‘
33.
If however, one has regard to annexure A..., it is clear that this
cession from Mondo to [Chancery] was not a legitimate
cession. In this regard annexure A records that:
33.1
the loan was ceded by Mondo to [Chancery] “
for
structure purposes
”
;
33.2
Mondo remained “
the true owner
of the loan (the Option)
”
;
33.3
Mondo would have “
the option
to have the loan ceded back to Mondo as the true
owner of the loan
”
;
33.4
Mondo was provided with an undated document that it could exercise at
any time in order to cause
the loan to be ceded back to it.”
[27]
Thus, concludes Mrs Levick on behalf of
Saharan:
“
34.
Accordingly, from the above, it is apparent that [Chancery] simply
held the loan for ‘
structure
purposes
’
and
not a true cession. [Chancery] could not cede the loan to [the
insolvent] because it had no right to cede the loan to [the
insolvent].”
[28]
Given the unsigned nature of these
documents being commented on by Mrs
Levick and the sketchiness of Mr Cohen’s description of the
transactions (which are, to say the least, guarded), the document
would appear to provide a very flimsy foundation for a liquidation
claim indeed and I would have little hesitation in finding that
the
trustees do
not
have
locus standi
or
at least that their
locus standi
is
bona fide
and reasonably disputed, if this was where the evidence stopped.
[29]
But
there is a document signed by the insolvent, Saharan and Chancery
which rather changes the otherwise flimsy foundation of the
application, at least insofar as
locus
standi
is
concerned. This document is entitled a “Cession of Loan
Agreement” and is concluded between Chancery as the cedent,
the
insolvent as the cessionary, and Saharan as the company (previously
herein defined as the Chancery cession agreement
[6]
).
[30]
In terms of the Chancery cession agreement
which the insolvent signed, as did the other parties just named, the
following is recorded:
‘
2.1
On or about 1 December 2005 and in terms of South African Reserve
Bank loan reference number ... [Chancery] lent and advanced
monies to
[Saharan] in the amount of R107,601,704 (hundred and seven million
six hundred and one thousand, seven hundred and four
Rand) ...
2.2 The total
drawdowns and repayments made in respect of same loan as at date of
30 January 2014 is as per the loan recon
annexed hereto.
3.
Cession of rights and obligations
3.1 [Chancery]
hereby irrevocably and unconditionally cedes, transfers, makes over
and assigns to [the insolvent] all of Chancery’s
rights, title
and interest in and to the loan with effect from the Effective date.
3.2 The [insolvent]
hereby accepts the cession as referred to in 3.1 hereinabove.’
[31]
As quoted, clause 3.1 provides that
Chancery ceded, transferred, made over and assigned to the insolvent
all of Chancery’s
rights, title and interest in and to the loan
owed by Saharan to Chancery. Thus, after the cession, instead of
Chancery being owed
the loan due by Saharan, the insolvent was owed
the loan due by Saharan. In this way the insolvent acquired the right
to receive
payment of the loan from Saharan.
[32]
The amount that Saharan owed to Chancery
then, appears to have been R44,815,658.64 and accordingly, once this
transfer of rights
via the cession just described had taken place,
Saharan appears to have owed the insolvent this amount. In other
words, the right
to claim payment in this amount fell as an asset
into the insolvent’s estate. The applicants in this application
seek to
exercise the rights that the insolvent acquired by way of
this document to receive payment of this amount from Saharan.
[33]
The objective in taking the cession was, as
the insolvent’s wife records in her affidavit on behalf of
Saharan :
‘
50.
Martin [the insolvent] wanted to regularise the situation. He and
Cohen had been involved in other business dealings with a
certain
David Shane Cornelius. ... Martin [the insolvent] did not want Cohen
using the [Chancery] loan facility as leverage in
the David Shane
Cornelius transaction, particularly as it should have been ceded and
no longer held by [Chancery].
51. Accordingly,
Martin [the insolvent] engaged with Cohen again regarding the cession
of the [Chancery] loan facility.
52. Jamrae [the
Levicks’ Family Trust] should have been the cessionary of the
[Chancery] loan facility. Jamrae had paid
the lion’s share of
the purchase price [for the property] to Mondo. Jamrae, of all the
parties involved in the transaction,
was the only creditor of
[Saharan]
53. However, for
reasons that Martin [the insolvent] cannot recall, the cession
(attached as FA9 to the founding affidavit)
was concluded in Martin’s
[the insolvent’s] name. This was patently wrong. Martin [the
insolvent] had never advanced
funds directly to Cohen for the
purchase price of Unit 903.’
[34]
This version assumes that he who paid for
the property ought to have been he who took cession of the right to
be paid by Saharan.
However, there are many reasons why individuals
use companies and trusts to regulate their tax and other affairs and
it does not
automatically follow that just because Jamrae would,
viewed from one perspective have been the obvious recipient of the
right to
receive payment from Saharan that this was what the
insolvent actually intended. The insolvent is described by his wife
as ‘
an extremely wealthy man with
an estate in excess of R500 million
’
.
The insolvent has a B.Com degree with several law subjects and he was
the Chief Executive Officer of Genesis Capital, an investment
holding
company. It is difficult to accept that such an individual with such
a high-powered job in a financial services company
should have his
own name inserted in a document, ceding a loan of this magnitude to
him, have it signed by the company that owns
such a valuable property
and then say, through his wife, that he “cannot recall”
why it was concluded in his name instead
of the family trust’s
and that this was “patently wrong”.
[35]
I also find it difficult to accept that a
businessman of the insolvent’s education and training pedigree
can have a document
like this “cession and loan agreement”
(which acknowledges the existence and quantum, if not the terms, of
the loan)
signed in his own name and then turn around and say many
years later when it suits him that actually, it should have been
signed
in the name of the family trust, Jamrae. That is an
indication of a lack of genuineness.
[36]
Then there is the point made by the
applicants that the insolvent’s auditor had included the loan
in the insolvent’s
estate, this recordal appearing in a
document prepared by the auditor six months before the insolvent’s
sequestration. It
reflects as an asset in the insolvent’s (not
Jamrae’s) estate the very loan that he now says was
not
part of his estate but ought to have been
Jamrae’s. This anomaly bears on the issue of the existence of
the loan and whether
it was owed to the insolvent or to Jamrae. The
auditor-produced document is annexed to the founding affidavit and is
entitled
“
Martin Levick as at 30
September 2018 Assets Direct and Indirect
”
.
It contains the following entry: “
Saharan
Trade and Finance (Pty) Ltd Cape Town property R220,484,852
”
and “Note No 2” is referenced next to
this entry. “Note No. 2” reads in relevant part:
‘
Loan
to Vulcram /Saharan Trade and Finance (Pty) Ltd (ceded to M
Levick)
Loan from Chancery
Consultants Inc registered in BVI Ceded to M Levick
Reserve Bank approval no.
[...]
Capital plus
interest
136,234,851
Storeroom
250 000
Alterations appliances
and furniture
4 000 000
Settlement of bond in
2016
19 000 000
Payment to G Cohen Total
R80 million less bond
61,000,000
220,484,851
[37]
The document thus reflects under the hand
of an auditor that the loan is owed to the insolvent. The affidavit
of the applicants
regarding this document contains the following
averments:
‘
The
statement of his assets and liabilities which was drawn up by Hewitt
[the insolvent’s auditor] on his instructions relatively
close
to his sequestration (FA28) demonstrates that Levick considered the
Ceded Loan as a major asset of his [estate]...’
[38]
The insolvent’s wife has the
following to say about this:
‘
I
admit that Hewitt [he auditor] prepared the list of assets attached
as FA28. Martin asked Hewitt to prepare a list of assets and
liabilities to send to Anthony Ball with whom Martin did a lot of
business.
Ball needed the list of
assets to procure financing for a deal in which Martin and Ball were
involved.
Hewitt prepared and sent
the list to Ball without obtaining Martin’s input or approval.
The list is replete with
errors. For instance, the list –
·
Includes
the ‘
Houghton property
’
as an asset of
Martin whereas the Houghton property is and always has been owned by
me. ...;
·
Includes
the ‘
Cape Town property
’
as Martin’s
asset when in truth Unit 903 is owned by Saharan which in turn is
owned by the Vulcam;
·
Includes
Jamrae [the Levick Family Trust] as Martin’s asset, when Jamrae
is not his asset but a trust in which our children
are the
beneficiaries;
·
includes
Jamrae’s payment to Mondo as a payment by Martin to Cohen. Not
only are the parties wrong but so is the amount;
·
includes
the alleged Ceded Loan as Martin’s asset when, in truth and in
fact, not only was there never a loan but even if
there was, which I
do not concede, it was not for R136,234,851.’
[39]
What these criticisms of the auditor’s
schedule do not consider is its heading “
Martin
Levick asset 30 September 2018 assets
direct
and indirect
”
. The phrase
underlined is plainly intended to reflect assets over which the
insolvent has control and can be taken into account
as part of his
estate, in other words, assets of which he is the
direct
or indirect
/ beneficial owner. The
answer to the question of what is form and what is substance is
subsumed in what is hard not to read as
a deliberately confusing
account.
[40]
What did the insolvent do about his
auditor’s apparent errors? This is what his wife proffers in
answer to that question:
‘
Martin
immediately contacted Ball after he read the list of assets and
informedhim of the fundamental errors in it.
Ball was so eager to
consummate the deal that he told Martin not to create complications
for the deal and to leave things as they
were. Martin took his
advice.
The list of assets is
manifestly wrong….’
[41]
That he could have been convinced by a
fellow businessman (Mr Ball) to allow a document containing so many
“errors”
about his estate to be used in a business
transaction is shocking because this version (if it is true) amounts
to an admission
that he, the insolvent, allowed a highly misleading
document to be presented to a third party to induce them to go into a
deal
with the insolvent and Mr Ball, both of them knowing that it was
replete with falsehoods. The more plausible inference to draw from
this sketch is that the document prepared by the auditor is not
misleading but is a correct reflection of what assets the insolvent
directly and indirectly controlled (had at his disposal), but now it
no longer suits the insolvent to reflect his assets in this
way.
[42]
There is no affidavit submitted by Saharan
from the auditor who drew the document saying that “I got it
all wrong”.
One would have expected an auditor to fall on her
sword for her client if indeed it was the auditor’s error, but
even if
it was, how does one accept the explanation that the
insolvent allowed the document (with knowledge of its “errors”)
to be used in a business transaction to mislead another or others?
The obvious question must be posed, as would inevitably
be asked in a
trial, when was the insolvent being economical with the truth, then
or now?
[43]
Can a dispute raised on this basis where
the sums involved are so enormous and the improbability of the
version so high be said
to be a “genuine” dispute?
[44]
The loan recorded in the cession from
Mondo to Chancery is for the amount of R75 900 000 plus
interest. In terms of Annexure
‘A’ thereto the sole
purpose of the loan by Mondo to Chancery was for structure purposes
and Mondo remained the true
owner of the loan as it had the option to
have the loan ceded back to Mondo at any future date beyond 15
January 2009. This break
in the chain i.e. the lack of entitlement by
Chancery to cede good title to the loan to the insolvent, or to
Jamrae for that matter,
is not explained. If the loan was not
Chancery’s to cede, (which it could not have been if Mondo
could have it ceded back
to itself at Mondo’s option) then the
loan could not have passed, the debt on which the liquidation
application is based
does not exist, and that is the end of the
matter.
[45]
Perhaps that is why the loan facility of
R107 801 704 (or was it R75 000 000?) was not
used after its cession
to the insolvent in 2014. The following is
said by Mrs Levick and unanswered by the applicants:
‘
The
"
loan facility
"
was never used after its cession to Martin. The respondent [Saharan]
never drew down on the "
loan
facility
" and never paid any
monies to CCI or Martin in respect thereof.’
[46]
On 25 April 2019 Chancery demanded payment
from Saharan in the sum of R110 567 999. The applicants do
not explain this
letter of demand. Why is Chancery claiming money? Is
it because Chancery knows that in terms of its contractual
obligations to
Mondo, it could not and did not cede such rights
(insofar as they existed or were capable of being transferred) to the
insolvent?
[47]
The loan facility available was allegedly
R107 601 703 (on some documents) of which R44 815 658.64
was available
for drawdown into South Africa but such loan facility
was not, according to Mrs Levick, a legitimate loan. It was, she
contends,
part of a structure that Mr Cohen had designed and
implemented to enable Mr Cohen to remit funds from South Africa
without falling
foul of exchange control regulations. Mrs
Levick explained that exchange control
approval for the "loan
facility" was renewed on a yearly basis from 2015 onward. Mrs
Levick also gave instructions in
2018 for the "loan facility"
to be renewed. She explained that Lisa Pienaar, who worked for Mr
Cohen pressured them year
in and year out to renew exchange control
approval for the "loan facility". If the loan had been
ceded to the insolvent,
one asks why would approval be necessary at
all, and what would Mr Cohen’s interest be in having it? It is
no longer a foreign
loan. In addition, the content of the reserve
bank application itself reflects Chancery as the beneficiary i.e.
that the loan is
from Saharan to Chancery and not from Saharan to the
insolvent.
Prescription
[48]
Assuming that none of the questions raised
in respect of the existence of the loan, the parties thereto and the
amount of such loan
can be labelled as defences which are
bona
fide
and based on reasonable grounds
and one were to assume that a loan from Mondo to Saharan has been
established and the cession thereof
to the insolvent, the next
question arises whether such debt has not prescribed?
[49]
The following appears from SARB Foreign
Debt Reporting Form B14: The loan agreement was concluded on 1 May
2001 and the first draw
down was on 18 May 2001. Saharan relies on
Trinity
for
purposes of the proposition that a loan is repayable on demand and
thus argues that the loan became immediately repayable in
2001 or
whenever a draw-down took place. The SARB record reveals that the
last draw down was on 22 March 2005 and the last payment
was on 20
August 2007. Mr Miltz SC, representing Saharan, argues that even if
one treats a repayment as an acknowledgment of debt
interrupting
prescription, prescription would have started to run on 21 August
2007, being the date on which the creditor (at that
time Mondo or
Chancery) could have demanded repayment of the full loan balance.
That being the case, so the argument continues,
any claim for
repayment of the loan amount would have prescribed and the debt
extinguished at the latest by 20 August 2010, being
a date long
before the insolvent’s alleged acquisition of the loan. On this
analysis of the facts the insolvent did not acquire
any claim against
Saharan at all.
[50]
In an attempt to distinguish
Trinity’s
case, the applicants argue that
Trinity
only applies where the ‘
Loan
was a featureless, standard commercial loan agreement’
and the loan in the present matter is not such an
agreement but rather a ‘never-never’ loan – one
without a specified
date for repayment or demand pursuant to a breach
or potentially mutual termination pursuant to repayment. Mr Smit,
representing
the applicants, thus argued that prescription only began
to run when demand was first made by the applicants on 4 November
2019.
[51]
Trinity
is
not authority for the proposition that prescription begins to run
immediately only in respect of ‘
standard,
featureless agreements’
for loans
payable on demand. Justice Cameron explains in that decision:
[104] Here, of
course, the loan was not 'payable on demand' but rather repayable 30
days after demand. Does the additional
30-day period afforded to the
debtor to repay change anything? Does it take this agreement outside
the law applying to loans 'payable
on demand'? No. The 30-day period
makes no difference. The point of the jurisprudence is that the
creditor has the unilateral power
to demand performance from the
debtor at any time from advance — not that, following demand,
the debtor must pay immediately
('on demand') or 30 days later. In
both instances the creditor has the sole power to demand performance
at any time.
[105] lt is this
fact — that the creditor has the exclusive power to demand that
performance be made when the creditor
so chooses — that has
given rise to the general rule applying to loans 'payable on demand',
namely that prescription begins
to run when the debt arises, unless
there is a clear indication to the contrary.’
[52]
The
Court thereafter considered whether the loan in question “
gives
us enough signs to justify dumping this general principle that in
loans 'payable on demand' prescription begins to run as
soon as the
money is paid.
”
[7]
[53]
The Court found that whether or not the
general principle applies is a
“
question
of fact whether the parties intended demand to be a condition
precedent for the debt to be due.”
The
Court held that one of the factors relevant to the termination was
whether there were
"distinguishing
features of the agreement"
or
"circumstances surrounding its
conclusion"
that would justify a
departure from the general principle. Another factor was whether
there was evidence that the creditor could
not make demand straight
after advance, or that it could only demand after circumstances had
changed to allow the creditor to demand
payment. Ultimately, the
Court held that there must be a clear indication that the agreement
deviates from the general principle,
as to allow a creditor to
unliterally delay prescription would be against public policy.
[54]
In the context of the facts before it, the
Court found that the “
standard,
featureless agreement”
presented
to it gave no indication that the parties intended the general
principle not to apply.
[55]
What needs to occur is that the facts need
to be interrogated and there is no need, in the context of a
liquidation application
in which a provisional order is sought, for
me to find any more than that Saharan has set out sufficient evidence
to show that
it would be able to raise a
prima
facie
defence based on prescription at
a trial in due course, which is all that is required of them at this
stage. If the debt is prescribed
then even if one makes all other
assumptions in favour of the applicants regarding the existence of
the loan and to whom it is
due, the defence of prescription has been
raised
bona fide
and on reasonable grounds which grounds include that the loan
agreement relied upon by the applicants in the founding affidavit
gives no indication that the general principle would not apply. There
are no distinguishing features
ex facie
the document to suggest that the parties did not intend for the
creditor to make immediate demand as and when it desired. On the
contrary, the onerous terms contained in the unsigned loan agreement,
including undertakings, representations, and warranties given
by the
borrower, give every indication that it was an ordinary commercial
loan. The counter argument advanced by the applicants
being that the
“context of the loan” evidences that specific demand
would have been needed in order to render the loans
repayable, is an
argument which might well have prospects of success in the fullness
of time, but cannot displace my finding that
the defence of
prescription in these proceedings has been raised
bona
fide
and on reasonable grounds.
[56]
So too, the argument advanced that
completion of prescription was delayed in terms of
Section 13
of the
Prescription Act 68 of 1969
because the person in control of
Mondo/Chancery – the creditor (i.e. Mr Cohen and thereafter Mr
Levick) was the same person
in control of Saharan/Vulcam – the
debtor. In these circumstances they contend, the period of
prescription would not be completed
before a year elapsed after the
"impediment" was removed (i.e Mr Levick stopped being
in control of his affairs).
[57]
Mr Levick's estate was provisionally
sequestrated on 23 April 2019, and finally sequestrated on 4 June
2019. Mr Levick's provisional
trustees' powers were extended on 16
August 2019 in terms of
Section 73(1)
of the
Insolvency Act of 1936
,
meaning that they could have instituted proceedings against Saharan
from that date. At worst for Saharan, Mr Levick's final trustees
were
appointed on 21 June 2021.
[58]
Therefore, any impediment to Mr Levick's
estate claiming payment of the amounts allegedly owing by Saharan
were removed either on
16 August 2019, alternatively 21 June 2021.
The trustees therefore had one year from the date the impediment was
removed (i.e.
one year from either 16 August 2019 or 21 June 2021) in
which to institute proceedings against Saharan for the recovery of
the
amounts allegedly owing. Summons was only served in August 2022,
more than two years after the completion of the running of
prescription
and more than a year after the removal of the impediment
whether it was removed on 16 August 2019 or 21 June 2021.
[59]
To make it clear: I do not find that the
debt has prescribed. But just as I find that there is a dispute
incapable of resolution
on the papers regarding the existence, terms,
quantum and present parties to the loan, so too, do I find that in
relation to prescription,
sufficient has been placed before me to
apply the Badenhorst principle and to dismiss the application.
Conclusion
[60]
Applying the Badenhorst principle to the
disputes described herein, I conclude that the uncertainty relating
to the existence of
the loan, the cession and consequently the
identity of the present parties to the loan, the positioning of the
loan under “the
cups’’ and the prescription
concerns, have been raised
bona fide
and on reasonable grounds and that these disputes should be resolved
by way of action proceedings.
Order
[61]
I accordingly grant the following order:
The application is
dismissed with costs on scale C including the costs of two counsel
where so employed.
I Opperman
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng Division,
Johannesburg
Counsel
for the applicants:
Adv
J.E. Smit and Adv C. Morgan
Instructed
by:
ENS
Africa
Counsel
for the respondent:
Adv I.
Miltz SC and Adv J.M. Hoffman
Instructed
by:
Rothbart
Inc
Date
of hearing:
18
March 2024
Date
of judgment:
22
August 2024
[1]
R44 815 658.64
according to the loan reconciliation annexed to the cession ‘FA9’
and R48 491 000
as at 31 March 2019 according to the South
African Reserve Bank foreign debt report ‘FA11’.
[2]
Clause
1 of the Chancery cession agreement
[3]
Trinity
Asset Management (Pty) Ltd v Grindstone Investments 132 (Pty) Ltd
,
2018 (1) SA 94
(CC) at para [86]
[4]
[4]
Orestisolve
(Pty) Ltd t/a Essa Investments v NDFT Investment Holdings (Pty) Ltd
and Another
,
2015 (4) SA 449
(WCC) at para [13]
[5]
Trinity
(supra) at para [93] and Froneman J in his minority judgment in
Trinity
at
para [148]
[6]
Paragraph
[6] hereof
[7]
Trinity
supra
at paragraph [106]
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