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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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[2024] ZAGPJHC 802
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## TUHF Limited v Farber (2024/066493)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 802 (26 August 2024)
TUHF Limited v Farber (2024/066493)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 802 (26 August 2024)
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sino date 26 August 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
1.
REPORTABLE: NO
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
3.
REVISED.
26
August 2024
Case
No. 2024-066493
In
the matter between:
TUHF
LIMITED
Applicant
and
MARK
MORRIS FARBER
Respondent
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J:
1
The applicant, TUHF,
finances the purchase, renovation and letting of residential property
in the inner city of Johannesburg. The
respondent, Mr. Farber, took
finance from TUHF to acquire and run several properties in the inner
city. In each case, TUHF’s
finance was secured by a mortgage on
the property itself, cession of the rental income derived from the
property and a suretyship
from Mr. Faber himself.
2
TUHF and Mr. Farber are
presently engaged in fairly extensive litigation arising from those
finance agreements. There are a number
of cases in which TUHF has
sought to realise its security, and has obtained judgment against Mr.
Farber or the companies he controls
for the amounts outstanding under
the various agreements. In each of those matters, Mr. Farber has
sought to challenge the judgments
on appeal. In two of the matters,
however, judgments against Mr. Farber in his personal capacity have
become final, in the sense
that Mr. Farber has exhausted his avenues
of appeal against them.
3
In the first of these
matters,
TUHF Limited v Esselen Street Hillbrow CC
(44393/2020)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 566 (12 August 2022), TUHF obtained
judgment against Mr. Farber in the sum of R9 198 953.70,
which Mr. Farber was ordered to pay jointly and severally with five
of his property-holding companies. In the second matter,
TUHF v 68
Wolmarans Street Johannesburg
(A5073/2022)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 1390
(29 November 2023), a Full Court of this division directed Mr.
Farber, jointly and severally with
two of his property-holding
companies, to pay R4 897 004.22.
4
It is common cause that neither of these judgments has been
satisfied. On 14 February 2024, two days after the
Esselen Street
judgment had become final, TUHF despatched the Sheriff to Mr.
Farber’s home with instructions to execute against Mr. Farber’s
assets. The Sheriff’s return records that Mr. Farber was able
neither to satisfy the judgment nor to point out movable or
immovable
assets which could be attached to satisfy the full amount due under
it.
5
During the three months
following the Sheriff’s visit, Mr. Farber removed a number of
assets from his office. It also came
to TUHF’s attention that
Mr. Farber had donated to his wife his controlling interest in
various other property-owning entities
over which TUHF held no
security. Based substantially on this conduct, TUHF formed the view
that Mr. Farber had begun to dispose
of his assets in order to
protect them from any steps TUHF or his other creditors may take to
recover the sums Mr. Farber owes.
6
On 18 June 2024, TUHF
instituted these proceedings, in which it seeks a provisional order
of sequestration against Mr. Farber. The
proceedings have been
brought on what TUHF calls a “semi-urgent” basis, and
were enrolled before me in my urgent court
on 20 August 2024. TUHF
claims that it is entitled to an order provisionally sequestrating
Mr. Farber because it has an unsatisfied
claim against him of more
that R100; because Mr. Farber has committed at least three acts of
insolvency, one of which was his failure
to produce the assets
necessary to satisfy the writ of execution served on him on 14
February 2024; and because it would be to
the advantage of Mr.
Farber’s creditors that his estate be sequestrated.
7
These are the well-known
requirements of the
Insolvency Act 24 of 1936
. TUHF is entitled to a
provisional order of sequestration if they are
prima facie
satisfied, and if there is no other reason for me to exercise my
discretion against making a provisional order for Mr. Farber’s
sequestration. The principal basis on which I could exercise my
discretion against granting such an order would be that Mr. Farber
has established that he is factually solvent, in the sense that his
assets exceed his liabilities.
8
The
Insolvency Act’s
requirements are established
prima facie
if they are met on
the facts TUHF sets out, evaluated together with any facts Mr. Farber
alleges that TUHF does not or cannot deny,
and provided also that
TUHF’s version is not inherently improbable overall (see
Webster v Mitchell
1948 (1) SA 1186
(W) at 1189).
9
Before turning to evaluate
the papers in light of this test, it is necessary for me to deal
briefly with the question of urgency.
Urgency
10
TUHF claims to have
brought the application on a “semi-urgent” basis. Mr.
Marais, who appeared for Mr. Farber, was quick
to point out that
there is no such thing as a “semi-urgent” roll in this
court. A matter either qualifies for consideration
on an urgent basis
or it does not. That is true enough, but there is no magic in the
term “semi-urgent”. There are
obviously degrees of
urgency. An urgent matter is simply a matter that needs to be
considered more quickly than it would be if
it joined the queue for
hearing on the ordinary opposed roll. The question is whether, in the
circumstances of the case, that sort
of preference ought to be given.
11
In this case, it seems to
me that TUHF has clearly demonstrated that it should. On TUHF’s
papers, all the requirements for
an order of sequestration are met,
and Mr. Farber is plainly factually insolvent. What is more, he is
disposing of his assets at
a rate that would prevent TUHF from
satisfying its proven claims if he is allowed to go on doing so for
the thirty or so weeks
that TUHF would have to wait for a hearing in
the ordinary course. The mere fact that, as Mr. Marais submitted, Mr.
Farber has
not managed to frustrate TUHF’s claims in the two
months since this application was launched does not mean that he
would
not be successful in doing so if TUHF had to wait the better
part of a further eight months before being able to obtain even a
provisional order of sequestration.
12
Accordingly, on TUHF’s
version – which is all I am required to consider for the
purposes of urgency – the application
plainly ought to enjoy
the preference that TUHF asks that I give it.
TUHF’s
monetary claims
13
It is common cause that
TUHF has monetary claims against Mr. Farber in excess of R14.2
million. These claims are incapable of dispute,
because they are
embodied in final court orders. It follows that the first requirement
for an order of sequestration – a
claim in excess of R100 for
the purposes of
section 9
(1) of the
Insolvency Act – has
been
met.
Act
of insolvency
14
Section 8
(b) of the
Insolvency Act provides
that Mr. Farber commits an act of insolvency
if “a court has given judgment against him and he fails, upon
the demand of
the officer whose duty it is to execute that judgment,
to satisfy it or to indicate to that officer disposable property
sufficient
to satisfy it, or if it appears from the return made by
that officer that he has not found sufficient disposable property to
satisfy
the judgment”.
15
There can be no serious
dispute that this is exactly what happened when the Sheriff visited
Mr. Farber’s home on 14 February
2024. Mr. Farber denies in his
answering affidavit that the Sheriff ever asked him to point out
assets capable of satisfying the
judgment, but I reject that version.
Mr. Farber’s affidavit fails to deal in full – or indeed
in any detail whatsoever
– with what happened when the Sheriff
came knocking.
16
In the absence of a
sufficiently detailed version from Mr. Farber, the denial that the
requirements of
section 8
(b) of the
Insolvency Act have
been met is
insufficient. What is required is a clear factual foundation for
impeaching the content of the Sheriff’s return
(see
Sussman
and co Ltd v Schwarzer
1960 (3) SA 94
(O) at 96G-H). Mr. Farber
has not laid that foundation.
17
Having found that the act
of insolvency defined in
section 8
(b) of the Act has been
established, at least
prima facie
, it is not necessary for me
to consider whether the further acts of insolvency TUHF alleged have
been made out.
Advantage
to creditors
18
There is a wealth of
evidence on the papers that Mr. Farber’s financial affairs are,
to put it mildly, opaque. He operates
through a number of
property-holding companies, which are arranged, on the face of it, to
allow him to treat the rental stream
from each of the relevant
properties as his personal income. The papers suggest that the income
from each of Mr. Farber’s
properties is fed into an entity
called Hillbrow Consolidated Investments (HCI). This is achieved by
HCI charging each of the property-owning
companies grossly inflated
fees for managing each of the properties. It appears that HCI also
takes loans from individual property-holding
companies at the same
time as lending money to Mr. Farber himself as and when the need
arises. In 2020, HCI’s books disclosed
loans of around
R20 million to Mr. Farber. HCI also pays personal expenses on
Mr. Farber’s behalf.
19
There is no sense in the
papers of where the properties and their holding companies end and
Mr. Farber begins. HCI’s accounting
officer, a Mr. Snoyman,
freely admits on the papers that he cannot give a clear account of
how Mr. Farber’s companies relate
to each other, and which of
them owes what to whom. He bemoans that the situation is such that it
is impossible to provide a clean
audit for the web of companies in
which Mr. Farber maintains an interest – including, if not
especially, HCI.
20
Were Mr. Farber able to
pay his debts, perhaps that would not matter, at least in the short
term. But Mr. Farber has substantial
liabilities to TUHF, which are
only likely to increase in future. His companies also owe significant
sums to the City of Johannesburg.
Mr. Farber doubtless has other
creditors who are perhaps less aware of the way in which he conducts
his financial affairs.
21
In all these circumstances
it seems to me, at least
prima facie
, to be to Mr. Farber’s
creditors’ advantage that those affairs be interrogated with
the aim of establishing exactly
what is available to satisfy Mr.
Farber’s proven and substantial indebtedness. Provided that
there is some prospect that
such an investigation will uncover assets
that can be liquidated to pay his debts, Mr. Farber’s
provisional sequestration
will advantage his creditors in at least
this sense (see, in this respect,
Meskin & Co v Friedman
1948 (2) SA 555
(W) at 559, which was approved in
Commissioner,
SARS v Hawker Air Services
[2006] ZASCA 51
;
2006 (4) SA 292
(SCA) at paragraph
29). Given the substantial amounts of money involved –
including the loans HCI appears to have made to
Mr. Farber over the
years – there must, I think, be some prospect of an
investigation identifying assets that can be used
to pay Mr. Farber’s
debts.
Is
there any reason not to make a provisional order?
22
It follows from all this
that TUHF has satisfied the requirements for a provisional
sequestration order. Nonetheless, clear evidence
that Mr. Farber is
factually solvent would have convinced me to refuse such an order.
Indeed, Mr Farber contends that he is factually
solvent, in the sense
that his assets exceed his liabilities. The evidence on which he
advances this contention is, however, slender.
23
That evidence takes the
form of a one-page chart that purports to show that the equity in Mr.
Farber’s properties exceeds
his liabilities by some margin.
Quite apart from the fact that the chart has been produced by Mr.
Farber himself, and it is not
clear to me how the figures on the
chart relate to any objective or reliable evidence, the chart itself
overlooks substantial amounts
owing to the City of Johannesburg on
each of Mr. Farber’s properties. TUHF makes the point that the
amounts the City currently
claims are owed to it on each of the
properties eliminate the equity Mr. Farber claims the properties
hold.
24
Mr. Marais was not able to
gainsay this. He instead submitted that I cannot be sure what is
really owed on each of the properties,
as the City’s claims
against them are the subject of ongoing disputes. This is a far cry
from the clear evidence I would
need to exercise my discretion to
refuse TUHF’s request for a provisional order.
25
Ultimately, though, I am
most convinced by the simple proposition that, were he in fact
solvent, Mr. Farber would have paid his
debts to TUHF by now. There
is no prospect – at least none identified on the papers –
of Mr. Farber being able to contest
the R14.2 million worth of claims
on which TUHF relies. In these circumstances, I might have looked
sympathetically on a clearly
pleaded plan to liquidate Mr. Farber’s
assets so as to satisfy TUHF’s proven claims. But that was
nowhere in sight
on the papers.
26
“[T]he best proof of solvency is that a man should
pay his debts” (
De Waardt v Andrew & Tienhaus Ltd
1907 TS 727
at 733). In this case, Mr. Farber does not even begin to
suggest how he intends to do so, and the information about his
financial
situation available to me on the papers is far from
reassuring. There is accordingly no basis on which to refuse a
provisional
sequestration order.
Order
27
For all these reasons –
27.1 The
applicant’s non-compliance with the rules as to service and
prescribed time periods is condoned, and this
matter is treated as
one of urgency under
Rule 6
(12).
1.25cm; margin-bottom: 0cm; line-height: 150%">
27.2 The
respondent’s estate is provisionally sequestrated.
27.3 The
respondent and any other interested party are called upon to advance
reasons why the respondent ought not to be
finally sequestrated at
10h00 on Monday 25 November 2024, or as soon thereafter as counsel
may be heard.
27.4 A copy of
this order is to be served upon
27.4.1 the
respondent personally;
27.4.2 the
respondent’s employees, if any, and their trade unions, if any.
The Sheriff is directed to make enquiries
to establish the existence
of such employees or trade unions.
27.4.3 the Master
of the High Court; and
27.4.4 the
Commissioner of the South African Revenue Service.
27.5 The costs of
this application will be costs in the sequestration.
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
it to the
electronic file of this matter on Caselines, and by publication of
the judgment to the South African Legal Information
Institute. The
date for hand-down is deemed to be 26 August 2024.
HEARD
ON:
21
August 2024
DECIDED
ON:
26
August 2024
For
the Applicants:
A
Botha SC
(Heads
of argument drawn by A Botha SC and E Eksteen)
Instructed
by HBG Schindlers Attorneys
For
the Respondent:
H
Marais SC
SS
Cohen
(Heads
of argument drawn by SS Cohen)
Instructed
by Dempster McKinnon Inc
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