Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 870South Africa
Nuharvest (Pty) Ltd and Others v Mcquarries N.O (084385/2024) [2024] ZAGPJHC 870 (26 August 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
26 August 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Nuharvest (Pty) Ltd and Others v Mcquarries N.O (084385/2024) [2024] ZAGPJHC 870 (26 August 2024)
Nuharvest (Pty) Ltd and Others v Mcquarries N.O (084385/2024) [2024] ZAGPJHC 870 (26 August 2024)
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sino date 26 August 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
Number: 084385/2024
1.
REPORTABLE: NO
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
3.
REVISED: NO
26
August 2024
In
the matter between:
NUHARVEST
(PTY) LTD
First
Applicant
JARED
DEAN PETERS
Second
Applicant
TANNER
ARON PETERS
Third
Applicant
and
ADEL
DOREEN MCQUARRIE N.O.
(In
her nominal capacity as the court appointed Receiver
of
the assets of the Dennis Ronald Peters Will Trust)
Respondent
JUDGMENT
YACOOB J:
[1]
The
second and third applicants (“Jared” and “Tanner”)
are the sons of Dennis Ronald Peters, who died in
2001 when both his
sons were minors.
[1]
They are
the beneficiaries of a trust created in terms of the will of Mr
Peters senior, the Dennis Ronald Peters Will Trust (“the
Trust”). Until 2020 Jared and their mother were trustees of the
Trust.
[2]
The Trust was created
to hold assets on behalf of and for the benefit of Jared and Tanner
until they became each entitled to their
shares of the assets in
terms of the Will, on attaining the age of thirty-three.
[2]
In March 2020, pursuant to litigation
instituted by Jared to remove his mother as a trustee, in which his
mother brought a counter-application
to remove Jared, the trust was
dissolved and the respondent, Ms McQuarrie, was appointed Receiver
and Liquidator of the Trust’s
assets. At the time Jared, who is
the younger, had not yet turned thirty-three, but he did so at the
end of that year. Ms McQuarrie
was nominated by Jared for the
appointment.
[3]
The first applicant, Nuharvest, was
incorporated in September 2020, with Jared and Tanner equal
shareholders. The fresh produce
business of Tanner Estates and its
assets, which was at the time the only income producing entity in the
Trust, was transferred
to Nuharvest in March 2021. This transfer was
intended to include the immoveable property on which the fresh
produce was cultivated
and from which the business was, and is, run,
but it did not. The reason was a concern about the tax liability the
transfer of
the property, valued at R30 million, would attract.
[4]
There are five immoveable properties in the
Trust, which are the subject of this urgent application. It is common
cause that they
have a combined value of approximately R35 million.
It is also common cause that, in order to minimise the tax liability
on the
transfer of the remainder of the Trust property to Jared and
Tanner, the properties would be transferred to Nuharvest in exchange
for shares in Nuharvest, in accordance with section 42 of the Income
Tax Act, 58 of 1962.
[5]
While discussions and negotiations were
taking place about the best way in which to liquidate the Trust
property, Nuharvest continued
to successfully run the Tanner Estates
business. It is common cause that the business was successful and not
in any difficulty
in the ordinary course. It is also common cause
that there was full cooperation between Jared and Ms McQuarrie until
about February
2024. It is also common cause that certain of the
properties (it is not disclosed which) are already bonded to ABSA for
loans advanced
to the business. It is not disclosed to what extent
the properties are bonded, or whether the loans were advanced to the
business
before or after transfer to Nuharvest.
[6]
In February 2024, Nuharvest concluded a
supply agreement with KFC, in terms of which Nuharvest will supply
fresh produce to KFC.
According to the applicants the KFC agreement
requires Nuharvest to make significant investments in machinery and
working capital
to be able to service the agreement. In other words,
Nuharvest was not able to service the KFC agreement on the basis of
its productivity
as it was at the time it entered into the agreement.
Nuharvest then approached ABSA for finance, but ABSA agreed to
provide a further
loan facility to Nuharvest of R10 500 000 (R10,5
million) on condition that the properties are all transferred to
Nuharvest before
the loan facility is made available.
[7]
Ms McQuarrie, as liquidator and receiver,
however, refused to finalise the transfer until provision was made
for the Trust’s
liabilities. According to her, these
liabilities, which are made up of the Trust’s existing tax
liability, plus the tax which
will result from the transfer of the
properties, as well as her fees, will amount to over R11 million. The
applicants dispute this,
saying that the basis on which Ms McQuarrie
has calculated her fees is disputed, that the existing tax liability
has been disputed
with SARS, and that the amount of tax liability Ms
McQuarrie contends will attach to the transfer of the properties is
unlikely
to be as much as she has alleged. They do not suggest a
different amount or a different basis for the calculation.
[8]
The applicants contend that Ms McQuarrie is
being obstructive, by not accepting their own guarantee that they
will shoulder these
liabilities, alternately their tender of a bond
over two of the properties (which together are worth less than half
of the amount
that is supposedly implicated). They contend that, by
insisting on a bank guarantee, Ms McQuarrie is being obstructive.
They contend
also that Ms McQuarrie is being disingenuous by
suggesting that, absent a bank guarantee, she does not have the power
to transfer
the properties as it would amount to an early
distribution.
[9]
Nuharvest, Jared and Tanner approach this
court on an urgent basis for an order that Ms McQuarrie do all things
necessary to transfer
the properties to Nuharvest, within five days
of the order, alternately, that the court declare that Ms McQuarrie
has the power
to do so, that Nuharvest provide a guarantee for the
Trust’s liabilities, and that Nuharvest register a mortgage
bond on
the two identified properties in favour of the Trust as
security for the liabilities of the Trust.
[10]
The basis on which they contend that the
application is urgent is that they require the transfer to secure the
finance from ABSA,
to perform in terms of the KFC agreement. They
make some allegations about how many people the business employs and
so on, but
there is no evidence that the performance in terms of the
KFC agreement is vital to the survival of the business. On the
contrary,
the evidence is that the business was thriving before the
KFC agreement was entered into. There is no evidence of what the
difference
in production is between what the business was producing
before the KFC agreement was entered into, and what it has to be
after
the KFC agreement, or of when ABSA requires the properties to
be available for the finance to be made available. Finally, there
is
no evidence of by when Nuharvest needs the finance. The court is
expected simply to accept Jared’s say so that the matter
is
urgent because Nuharvest has to perform and needs the finance.
[11]
Ms McQuarrie opposes the application on the
basis that it is not urgent, and that the application is without
merit.
[12]
According to Ms McQuarrie she advised the
applicants on 7 March that a guarantee would have to be issued to
cover the liabilities
before transfer could take place. The
applicants, on the other hand, contend that, until 26 June 2024, they
were unaware that the
guarantee required had to be a bank guarantee.
They assumed the guarantee could be simply a guarantee that they
themselves would
undertake to pay the liabilities.
[13]
I am satisfied that the applicants have not
established urgency. It is clear the transfer of the properties
became urgent for the
applicants in at least March 2024, if at all,
and that the bone of contention between the parties was provision for
the Trust’s
liabilities before transfer could take place.
Jared’s allegation that it only became clear on 26 June 2024
that a bank guarantee
was required is, at best, naïve. Where
Nuharvest could not even secure working capital of R10,5 million from
its bank without
obtaining transfer of the Trust properties, a
guarantee from Nuharvest for liabilities of over R11 million would be
almost worthless.
It must have been clear to Jared, as a businessman,
that more would be required.
[14]
In addition to the fact that the applicants
have not acted with any apparent urgency, the relevant timelines in
terms of which the
court can evaluate the urgency have not been set
out. It is by now well established that urgency is not there for the
taking. Even
accepting that commercial urgency is a valid reason to
approach the urgent court, an applicant still has to make out a
proper case
for urgency, and to justify every departure from the
rules. The applicants have not done that. The founding affidavit is
vague
about what makes the matter urgent.
[15]
In addition, the applicants approach the
court on extreme urgency. The respondent was given truncated time
periods within which
to respond. No attempt was made to justify this
at all. The applicants have failed to demonstrate any real loss or
damage which
would result had they not imposed the very short time
periods they did impose, and had they not set the matter down in the
week
they chose to have the matter heard.
[16]
Certainly
the attempt to gain the sympathy of the court by listing the
so-called hardships suffered by the people associated with
Nuharvest
are misplaced. Firstly, many of these allegations are simply
hearsay. Secondly, even taken on face value, it appears
from
these allegations that Nuharvest overextended itself on the basis of
funds to which it did not yet have access, and now approaches
the
court claiming urgency. This does not, in my view, entitle the
applicants to jump the queue. Any loss established is “not
the
kind of loss that justifies the disruption of the roll and the
resultant prejudice to other members of the litigating public”.
[3]
[17]
It
was submitted for Ms McQuarrie that the complete failure of the
applicants to justify the urgency they have claimed justifies
the
dismissal of the application as a mark of the Court’s
displeasure, especially as the applicants would not be non-suited,
since they would be entitled to institute the application again
properly in the ordinary course. Reliance for the submission was
placed on
Vena
v Vena and Another NO
.
[4]
[18]
In this case I do not believe it is
necessary to dismiss the application as a mark of the Court’s
displeasure. Striking the
matter from the roll is sufficient, and
still obtains the necessary costs order for the respondent. I also do
not see why the applicants
should have the privilege of starting the
application again from a clean slate, which in my view is what a
dismissal would give
them.
[19]
Both the applicants and the respondent were
agreed that the complexity of the matter warranted that costs be
awarded on scale B.
[20]
For the reasons set out above, I make the
following order:
1.
The application is struck for want of
urgency.
2.
The applicants are to pay the costs,
jointly and severally, the one paying the other to be absolved, on
scale B.
S YACOOB
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
JOHANNESBURG
For
the Applicant:'
Instructed
by:
P
Bosman
Brand
Potgieter Incorporated
For
the Respondent:
Instructed
by:
M
T A Costa
Reenen
van Reenen Inc
Date
of Hearing:
Date
of Judgment:
14
August 2024
26
August 2024
[1]
It
must be noted that at the time the age of majority was 21.
[2]
Jared
alleges in his founding affidavit that Tanner was also a trustee,
but it is clear form the judgment of Manoim AJ (as he
then was) that
Tanner was never a trustee.
[3]
IL
& B Marcow Caterers (Pty) Limited v Greaterman SA Limited &
Another; Aroma Inn (Pty) Limited v Hypermarkest (Pty) Ltd
&
Another
1981
(4) SA 108
(C) at 114B.
[4]
2010
(2) SA 248.
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