Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 1065South Africa
Eslick and Another v ASI Financial Services (Pty) Ltd and Others (2024/112123) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1065 (22 October 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
22 October 2024
Headnotes
in Naude[2] that “The test whether there has been non-joinder is whether a party has a direct and substantial interest in the subject-matter of the
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Eslick and Another v ASI Financial Services (Pty) Ltd and Others (2024/112123) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1065 (22 October 2024)
Eslick and Another v ASI Financial Services (Pty) Ltd and Others (2024/112123) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1065 (22 October 2024)
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sino date 22 October 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG.
Case
Number: 2024-112123
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES / NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/NO
(3)
REVISED: YES/NO
22.10.2024
In
the matter between:
MICHAEL
GERALD ESLICK
First
Applicant
REGINALD
WILLIAM BATH
Second
Applicant
And
ASI
FINALCIAL SERVICES (PTY) LTD
(Registration
No.: 2010/024437/07)
First
Respondent
ASI
WEALTH WESTERN CAPE (PTY) LTD
(Registration
No.: 2016/042040/07)
Second
Respondent
ANTHONY
GOVENDER
Third
Respondent
FINANCIAL
SECTOR CONDUCT AUTHORITY
Fourth
Respondent
## JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Noko
J
Introduction.
[1]
The
applicant launched urgent proceedings for an order directing the
respondent to, inter alia, restore applicant’s access
to the
email account and all servers upon which first and or second
respondents files and information are stored and accessed.
In
addition, that the second and third respondent be restrained from
interfering with or preventing the first applicant from having
access
to second respondent premises at Unit 3[…], H[…] P[…]
H[…], C[…] C[…], Cape Town
(“
Business
premises”
).
[1]
[2]
The respondents contend,
inter alia
, that the application is
bound to fail for want of urgency; that there are disputes of facts
which cannot be resolved in motion
proceedings; that spoliation
proceedings as a remedy is not applicable; raised point
in limine
of non-joinder of other directors (viz, Michael Brent Ross and
Naseema Banoo Ephraim - previously Nandkoomar) and finally that
the
first applicant has been properly suspended on the basis of his
misconduct.
Urgency.
[3]
The parties made submissions with regard to urgency including the
contention by the respondents that the application is
an abuse of the
court process. I made a determination that the
lis
warrant the
audience of the urgent court.
Non-Joinder
[4]
This point is raised on the basis that the third respondent was cited
in his personal capacity and as such he contends
that that other
directors should have been joined since the decisions were taken by
all directors. The first applicant retorted
that the other directors
were correctly not joined and the third respondent has been isolated
and cited as he is the
brain
behind the unlawful conduct
perpetrated unto to the applicants including publication of
defamatory statements against the first
applicant and the fact that
he uses the employees of the companies to advance his narrow personal
interests.
[5]
The SCA
held in
Naude
[2]
that “
The
test whether there has been non-joinder is whether a party has a
direct and substantial interest in the subject-matter of the
litigation which may prejudice the party that has not been
joined.
”
[3]
The SCA referred with approval to the sentiments in
Gordon
[4]
where it was held that “…
if
an order of judgment cannot be sustained without necessarily
prejudicing the interests of the third parties that had not been
joined, then those third parties have a legal interest in the matter
and must be joined”
.
[5]
[6]
The respondent has failed to demonstrate the basis for the alleged
direct and substantial interest of the other directors
and further in
what way will the outcome of the adjudication in this
lis
negatively impact on their rights. To this end I find that no case
has been made for the point
in limine
for non-joinder since
the applicants have clearly set out the basis for not citing the
other directors.
Dispute
of facts.
[7]
The respondents alluded to the presence of disputes of fact but
failed to set out explicitly which issues are in dispute
which would
become an insurmountable hurdle to adjudicate the relevant issues in
this
lis
in motion proceedings. As will be set out below the
issues serving before me are narrow and crystal and the determination
has been
made relative thereto. I conclude that this point is also
unsustainable.
Background
[8]
The factual background set out herein is limited to what is
identified as the crux of the dispute between the parties.
Such
issues exclude those which fall within the province of the arbitrator
as set out in the arbitration clause in the agreement
entered
inter
partes
.
[9]
The first
and second applicants were originally 100% shareholders of the second
respondent. They entered into a sale of share agreement
in terms of
which 51% shareholding was sold to the first respondent. The first
and second applicants then remained being 25% and
24% shareholders of
the second respondent respectively. The first applicant remained the
managing director of the second respondent
and also occupies the
position of a Key Individual appointed in terms of the provisions of
the Financial Advisory and Intermediary
Services Act
[6]
(“
FAIS
Act”
).
[10]
The sale of shares agreement was subject to the second respondent
paying the first respondent a perpetual right (referred
to as
Right-To-Income) to 20% of the total monthly revenue of the second
respondent alternatively amount of R151 417.000 whichever
is the
greater. The second respondent settled amounts due as invoiced by the
first respondent for the said perpetual right over
a period of time
till March 2024 and subsequently failed to keep up with payments
despite several undertakings to do so. The first
respondent demanded
that the applicants to personally settle the outstanding amounts in
accordance with suretyship agreement
inter se
. At some stage
the first applicant stated that he was going through an acrimonious
divorce and requested indulgence to effect payment
which was duly
granted.
[11]
The
applicants stated that they subsequently consulted legal
representatives with regard to the clause on the Right to Income and
were advised that the clause in the shareholders’ agreement was
unlawful. They were also advised that the claim against the
applicants personally is unsustainable as the parties did not sign
suretyship agreements. To this end a decision was made by the
applicants not to make payments in accordance with the impugned
clause.
[7]
[12]
As a result of failure to effect payment the respondents notified the
applicants that the said refusal to pay amount
to a breach of the
agreement between the parties. The respondents then disabled first
applicant’s connection / access to
the emails and server of the
second respondent; suspended the first applicant pending
shareholder’s meeting intended to remove
him as a director and
also attached the shares of the first applicant. All these were set
out in an email which was forwarded to
the first applicant on 28
September 2024. The respondents further instructed the first
applicant on 1 October 2024 to hand over
the keys to the second
respondent’s business premises and also to return company’s
equipment.
[13]
The first applicant then launched these proceedings for a remedy,
which has not been neatly crafted, for an order restoring
or
reinstating access to his email address and also the company servers.
Further that the court should order that the suspension
is unlawful
and interdict the respondent from interfering with his access to the
business premises.
Contentions
by the parties
.
[14]
The first
applicant contended that he is a managing director of the second
respondent and in that capacity, he has duties to discharge
imposed
on him in terms of the Companies Act
[8]
.
Further that the conduct of the second respondent in disabling the
access to email address and the server amount to self-help
which is
proscribed by the law. The first applicant has also since been unable
to communicate with the second respondent’s
and his client
whose details are on the server of the second respondent.
[15]
In addition to the aforegoing the first applicant is also appointed
as a Key Individual in terms of the FAIS Act and
has rights and
obligations which, the applicant contend, cannot be wished away on
the whims of the respondents.
[16]
Also predicated on the above statutory provisions the first applicant
contended that the attempt by the second respondent
to suspend him is
therefore ineffective for want of compliance with their provisions.
Firstly, suspension of a director is not
provided for in the
Companies Act. Secondly, the decision to suspend him was not
authorised by a resolution of the company through
its shareholders.
This applies
mutatis mutandis
to his position as a Key
Individual as contemplated in terms of the FAIS Act which provides
for the process to be followed to disbar
a Key Individual. The first
applicant contended that since the agreement signed by both parties
in terms of which he was appointed
as a Key Individual specifically
provided that he is not an employee of the second respondent the
applicant can therefore not be
suspended as he is an employee.
[17]
In retort
the respondents contended that in view of the infractions unleashed
by the first applicant, including siphoning of the
companies’
funds and applying the resources for personal use it was found to be
prudent that access to email and functionality
should be suspended.
The third respondent stated that this should not be construed as
self-help since the second respondent “…
and I were on
the contrary, obligated in terms of the FAIS Act and Companies Act to
act swiftly and decisively to avoid personal
liability by acquiescing
to Eslick’s misconduct”.
[9]
In any event, the counsel for respondents continued,
mandament
van spolie
is not available in instances the rights sought to be exerted by a
litigant are personal in nature and specific performance would
be a
competent redress to embark upon.
[18]
With regard to the suspension the respondents contended that the
first applicant is an employee of the second respondent
and as an
employer the second respondent is legally entitled to suspend him.
Where such an employee is suspended recourse is found
in the labour
relations regulatory framework and related for a should be
approached. It would therefore, the argument continued,
be
incompetent for this court to adjudicate over the dispute between an
employer and employee.
[19]
In retort
to the argument that the first applicant is not an employee the
counsel for the respondent submitted further that in terms
of section
213 of the Labour Relations Act
[10]
(“
LRA
”)
the finding whether a party is an employee is not exclusively
dependent on what the employment agreement between the parties
provides for but factors outside such an agreement may give a proper
view of whether there is an employment agreement or not. In
this
instance one of the factors is that the first applicant identified
some of the withdrawals of funds from the second respondent
as his
salary. To this end the respondents contend that the applicants case
is unsustainable and falls to be dismissed.
Legal
principles
[20]
The
principles underlying the remedy of
mandament
van spolie
is intended to proscribe self-help. The requirements are that a party
should demonstrate that such a party was in ‘peaceful
and
undisturbed possession’
[11]
and secondly that such a party was unlawfully deprived of that
possession’
[12]
.
Ordinarily the remedy is not available where the rights sought to be
exercised by a party arise from a contract in which case
recourse
should be a claim for specific performance.
[21]
The
determining question is whether the first applicant was in possession
of the property (either being movable, immovable or incorporeal
[13]
)
and secondly whether he was unlawfully dispossessed. The first
applicant has correctly argued that for him to discharge his
functions
as a director and as a Key Individual it is required that
he has access to the emails, companies’ server and the business
premises. In the alternative, it can also be validly argued that
access to the premises or emails/ server is an incident of the
possession or occupation of the positions the first applicant is
holding.
[14]
The conduct of
the respondents just to suspend access to emails and the server
without recourse to the courts amount to self-help
and cannot be
countenanced at any level.
[22]
It was
stated in
Unpacking Kapsimalis NO
[15]
that under these circumstances spoliation proceedings are an
appropriate recourse to take. The court stated that:
“
The first, second
and fourth respondents are therefore liable to the applicant for the
costs incurred in launching the spoliation
application under case
number 9624/2011. Clearly, the applicant was entitled as managing
director of the third respondent to have
access to the offices he
utilized on behalf of the third respondent in his capacity as
managing director and that the first, second
and fourth respondents
conduct in preventing him access to such offices was unlawful.”
[23]
To this end I find that the relief for spoliation is sustained.
[24]
With regard to the suspension, it is axiomatic that a person may
occupy a position as a director making him an officer
of the company
and the same person may be an employee of and appointed by the
company. In his capacity as a director the first
applicant
participates in the meetings of directors which take resolutions in
the interest of the company. Such a person may also
be a manager
(employee) of the company who would be implementing the resolutions
taken by the board of directors.
[25]
The email sent to the first applicant on 28 September 2024 had
several headings and one of them is crafted as follows:
“
YOUR ROLE AS A
DIRECTOR AND REPRESENTATIVE WITHIN ASI WEALTH WC AND MYFIN.
6.
You are
hereby notified that, due to your misconduct and bringing the ASI
brand into disrepute, you are immediately suspended and
relieved of
your duties and functions, in all aspects, within ASI Wealth WC and
Myfin. This is the reason for your email access
and functionality
being suspended this morning.”
[16]
[26]
The
respondents’ counsel contends that on proper interpretation of
the contents of the email the message was addressed to
him in all the
capacities he holds in relation to the second respondent. The
approach for interpretation is crisply enunciated
in
Endumeni
[17]
which requires that “from the outset one considers the context
and the language together, with neither predominating over
the
other”.
[18]
The
Constitutional Court, though in the context of statutory
interpretation, held that it is now the settled approach to
interpretation,
is a unitary’ exercise.
[19]
[27]
The headings makes specific reference to the first applicant as a
director and makes no reference to the first applicant
as an employee
alternatively as a Key Individual. The contention that it is
mentioned in the sentence that he is suspended in
all aspect
then all his capacities were implicated cannot itself meant that it
extends to his capacity as an employee or Key Individual.(underlining
added). One would have to venture into the realm of conjecture to
conclude that it was meant to the first applicant as a director
or
other capacities as an employee or Key Individual. It would have been
different if instead of stating
in all aspect
the respondent
should have stated in all capacities.
[28]
With the acknowledgement by the second respondent that the first
applicant’s capacities as a director or Key Individual
are
regulated by different legislative framework the heading should have
clearly stated that the first applicant is suspended as
an employee
as the suspension of a director, if possible, would have to comply
with the statutes or constitutive documents of the
company and comply
with FAIS Act is respect of a suspension or debarment of a Key
Individual.
[29]
The counsel for the respondent failed to comprehensively argue that
the first applicant is an employee of the company
besides having
mentioned that he paid himself salary. In any event, determination of
whether the first applicant is an employee
is not within my province
and I am not invited to make such a determination.
[30]
The question before me is whether a director or a Key Individual can
be suspended without invoking the relevant empowering
instruments. In
casu
the respondents have failed to demonstrate to this Court
that there is an empowering instrument which has been complied with
alternatively
that there are no legal requirements to suspend the
first applicant as a director and or as a Key Individual. To this end
their
arguments which do not address this issue have been raised to
be rejected.
[31]
The facts
set out in this
lis
are almost similar to those set out in
Unpacking Kapsimalis NO
where it was stated that ordinarily a director as the officer of a
company may not be suspended like it could be case with an
employee.
[20]
The court stated
that the director would not be suspended without a proper resolution
to that effect by the shareholders.
[32]
The managing director in
Unpacking Kapsimalis NO
was also
instructed to return,
inter alia,
the laptops and the court
ordered that spoliation proceedings were properly instituted. It was
stated that:
“
It is clear
therefore that the respondents prevented the applicant from having
access to his offices subsequent to the posting of
the notice
annexure “SK19” to him. That conduct was likewise
unlawful in view of the fact that the first and second
respondents
could not have taken any decision on behalf of the third respondent
in the absence of a validly constituted meeting
or resolution to
suspend him or prevent him from having access to his offices at
Westville.”
[21]
[33]
As was
argued by the first applicant the intermediary agreement
[22]
which preceded his appointment as a Key Individual clearly states
that he would not be regarded as an employee of the second
respondent.
Conclusion
[34]
In conclusion I am persuaded that the conduct of the second
respondent to suspend access to email and the server is unlawful.
The
suspension of the first applicant as a director and Key Individual is
also not sanctioned by the relevant statutes. Absent
compliance with
the said instruments ergo
cadit questio
.
Costs.
[35]
The general rule that the costs follows the results shall apply.
Order.
[36]
The following order is made:
1. The applicant’s
non-compliance with the Rules is condoned and the matter to be heard
as one of urgency in terms of
Rules 6(12) of the Uniform Rules of
Court.
2.
The
respondents are ordered to immediately restore first applicant’s
access to his email account with the address
m[…]
and to all serves in which client’s files of the first
applicant’s and second respondent’s files and information
is stored.
3. The respondents
are interdicted or restrained from interfering with or preventing the
first and second applicants access
to Unit 3[…], H[…]
P[…] H[…], C[…] C[…], Cape Town.
4. The respondents
are ordered to pay the costs of the application, including costs for
two counsel, where so employed, jointly
and severally the one paying
the others to be absolved.
M
V NOKO
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT,
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG.
Dates:
Hearing:
10 October 2024.
Judgment:
22 October 2024.
Appearances:
For
the Applicant: Adv Williams SC, with E Malherbe.
Instructed
by Alhadeff Attorneys
For
the Respondent: Adv Roux SC with Ms Fourie.
Instructed
by Gerhold & Van Wyk Attorneys.
[1]
The
applicant further sought to interdict the meeting of shareholders
scheduled for 11 October 2024 and since the said date has
been
changed to 28 October 2024 the applicants are no longer pursuing the
said relief.
[2]
Absa
Bank Ltd v Naude NO and Others
2016
(6) SA 540 (SCA).
[3]
Id a
t
para [10].
[4]
Gordon
v Department of Health, KwaZulu -Natal
(2008)
(6) SA 522 (SCA)
[5]
Id
at para [9].
[6]
Financial Advisory and Intermediary Services
Act
37 of 2002
.
[7]
The parties are in agreement that the dispute about payment is
subject to the arbitration clause.
[8]
Companies Act 71 of 2008
.
[9]
See
para 53.1 of the Respondent’s Answering Affidavit at CL 27-22.
[10]
Labour Relations Act 66 of 1995
.
[11]
Kgosana
and Another v Otto
1991
(2) SA 113 (W).
[12]
Lau
v Real Time Investments
165
CC
(GP)
(50134/2019) 313 ZAGPPHC (23 July 2019).
[13]
Telkom
SA Ltd v Xsinet (Pty) Ltd
[2003]
ZASCA 35
, where the SCA held that the remedy can be invoked even
where incorporeal rights are violated.
[14]
Eskom
Holdings SOC Ltd v Masinda
2019
(5) SA 386
(SCA).
JC
Impellers (Pty) Ltd v Erven 176/177 Wadeville Proprietary Limited
(107540/2024)
[2024]
ZAGPJHC (02 October 2024).
Simons
v The City of Johannesburg Forensic DPT
2019
JDR 2664.
[15]
Unpacking Kapsimalis NO
v
van Tonder
[2011]
ZAKZDC 40.
[16]
See
Respondents’ email of 28 September 2024 at CL 02-63q.
[17]
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
2012
(4)
S 593
(SCA)
[18]
Id
at
para [18].
[19]
Chisuse
v Director General, Department of Home Affairs
2020
(6) SA 14
(CC) at para [52].
[20]
Id
at
para 9.
[21]
Id
at
para 12.
[22]
Incorporating
FAIS Act and Code of Conduct) see para 42.1. of the AA at CL27-16
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