Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 1088South Africa
Fire and Ice Fitness (Pty) Ltd and Others v Dansabe Trading 17 (Pty) Ltd and Another (2024/121455) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1088 (25 October 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
25 October 2024
Headnotes
in abeyance. That conduct was unfortunate, and it is not excused by the fact that Dansabe may very well have been worried that Fire & Ice’s deregistration left it, for the time being at least, without a legal persona against which it could press its claims for arrear rental and eviction. By assuring Dr. Bosch and Ms. Davis that it would suspend its action to press those claims, Dansabe, perhaps deliberately, created the misleading impression that it intended to give the executors a reasonable opportunity to get Fire & Ice’s affairs in
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Fire and Ice Fitness (Pty) Ltd and Others v Dansabe Trading 17 (Pty) Ltd and Another (2024/121455) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1088 (25 October 2024)
Fire and Ice Fitness (Pty) Ltd and Others v Dansabe Trading 17 (Pty) Ltd and Another (2024/121455) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1088 (25 October 2024)
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sino date 25 October 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
25
October 2024
Case
No. 2024-121455
In
the matter between:
FIRE
AND ICE FITNESS (PTY) LTD
First
Applicant
ESTATE
OF THE LATE DENZEL DAVIS
Second
Applicant
ESTATE
OF THE LATE RICHARD SHAM
Third
Applicant
and
DANSABE
TRADING 17 (PTY) LTD
First
Respondent
CITY
OF JOHANNESBURG
Second
Respondent
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J:
1
The applicant, Fire &
Ice, is a company that operated a gym out of premises in Linksfield.
It has, by all accounts, been finally
deregistered under
sections 82
(3) (a) (i) and (ii) of the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
. Those
provisions allow the Companies and Intellectual Property Commission
(CIPC) to deregister a company that has not filed an
annual return
for two years, and has not explained its failure to do so or shown
satisfactory cause to remain registered.
2
Fire & Ice had two
directors and shareholders, both of whom are now deceased. Their
estates are joined as the second and third
applicants. The deponent
to the founding affidavit, Dr. Bosch, is the executor of the third
applicant, the estate of Richard Sham.
She is also Mr. Sham’s
surviving spouse. The prospective executor of the Estate of Denzel
Davis, Ms. Davis, also signed a
confirmatory affidavit in support of
the application. She is Mr. Davis’ surviving spouse.
3
Fire & Ice’s
final deregistration and the death of its directors and shareholders
notwithstanding, the gym it operated
at the Linksfield property
carried on as a going concern until two days ago, Wednesday 23
October 2024. On that day, the gym’s
patrons and staff arrived
at the property to find that it had been locked by the first
respondent, Dansabe. Dansabe leased the
property from the second
respondent, the City, and in turn sublet it to Fire & Ice.
4
Dansabe’s action to
seal the property off came at the end of a series of steps Dansabe
had taken to collect the arrear rentals
Fire & Ice owed it, and
to eject Fire & Ice from the property. On Friday 13 September
2024, the day after Mr. Davis died,
Dansabe’s attorney assured
the executors’ attorneys that those proceedings would not
continue until new directors of
Fire & Ice had been appointed,
which in turn would require the appointment of executors of the
deceased directors’ estates.
That led Dr. Bosch and Ms. Davis
to believe, clearly
bona fide,
that no further steps would be
taken to exclude the gym’s patrons or employees from the
property until new directors and
executors had been appointed. Given
that Ms. Davis has not yet been able to get herself formally
appointed as the executor of Mr.
Davis’ estate, it seems clear
to me that Dansabe acted precipitously at best, and in bad faith at
worst.
5
Dr. Bosch and Ms. Davis
were obviously taken by surprise when Dansabe sealed the property off
and caused the gym’s operations
to cease. They, together with
Fire & Ice, apply urgently to me for an interim interdict
directing Dansabe to allow the gym’s
patrons and employees to
continue to access and use the property, at least until the pending
legal proceedings against Fire &
Ice are finalised.
6
Mr. Cassim, who appeared
together with Mr. Moodley for the applicants, argued the case as if
it were a spoliation application. But
that is not how it is pleaded.
The founding papers in fact seek an interim interdict restraining
Dansabe from interfering with
Fire & Ice’s right to operate
a gym at the Linksfield property.
7
Still, on the facts before
me, that relief would almost certainly have to follow, were I able to
find that that any of the applicants
had the standing to seek it.
8
However, none of the
applicants has such standing. Fire & Ice has been finally
deregistered. The effect of deregistration is
unambiguous: it is that
the Fire & Ice no longer exists, and is, as a result, unable to
authorise anyone to act on its behalf
(see
Silver Sands Transport
(Pty) Ltd v SA Linde (Pty) Ltd
1973 (3) SA 548
(W)). Because
deregistration “puts an end to the existence of the company”
(
Miller v NAFCOC Investment Holding
2010 (6) SA 390
(SCA),
paragraph 11), Fire & Ice technically has no rights to protect,
and no standing before me.
9
Accordingly, to the extent
that an interdict is sought to protect Fire & Ice’s rights,
the application cannot succeed.
Nor do I think that Dr. Bosch or Ms.
Davis can claim any relief in their capacities as executors of Fire &
Ice’s directors’
and shareholders’ estates. Any
attempt to do so would come up against the insurmountable problem
that Fire & Ice presently
has no directors or shareholders,
because it does not exist. This position does not change merely
because the liability of a director,
member or officer of a company
survives a company’s deregistration
(section 83
(2) of the
Companies Act).
10
The
executors may have had
a cognisable legal interest in the continuation of the gym as a going
concern in their capacities as the
former directors’ surviving
spouses. However, neither executor was herself cited as a party to
this application, and no interest
of that nature was alleged.
11
It follows from all of
this that no-one with the standing necessary to claim an order
restraining Dansabe from interfering with
the gym’s operations
is before me. The proper order is accordingly one striking the
application from the roll (see
Silver Sands Transport (Pty) Ltd v
SA Linde (Pty) Ltd
1973 (3) SA 548
(W) at 549E-H). Anything else
(a dismissal or a postponement for example) would entail the
recognition of an entity which the
Companies Act tells
me does not
exist.
12
This may seem harsh. I
have no doubt that Dansabe has taken advantage of Fire & Ice’s
deregistration to effect an act
of self-help, to the prejudice of Ms.
Davis, Dr. Bosch and the gym’s patrons and employees. This was
done having assured
Ms. Davis and Dr. Bosch that proceedings against
the Fire & Ice were being held in abeyance. That conduct was
unfortunate,
and it is not excused by the fact that Dansabe may very
well have been worried that Fire & Ice’s deregistration
left
it, for the time being at least, without a legal persona against
which it could press its claims for arrear rental and eviction.
By
assuring Dr. Bosch and Ms. Davis that it would suspend its action to
press those claims, Dansabe, perhaps deliberately, created
the
misleading impression that it intended to give the executors a
reasonable opportunity to get Fire & Ice’s affairs
in
order.
13
Nonetheless, the
Companies
Act does
provide the applicants with other remedies. An application
to the CIPC to reinstate Fire & Ice’s registration could
have
been made
(section 82
(4) of the
Companies Act). I
could also
have been approached for an order declaring Fire & Ice’s
dissolution void, and for “any other order
that is just and
equitable in the circumstances”
(section 83
(4) (a) of the
Companies Act).
14
It seems to me that
section 83
(4) is broad enough to accommodate an application for
relief shielding Fire & Ice from the ordinary consequences of
deregistration,
and permitting the gym to continue to operate until
new directors are appointed and those directors are given a
reasonable opportunity
get Fire & Ice back on an even keel. Had
that relief been applied for, I would have been hard-pressed, on the
facts presently
before me, to refuse it, provided that the state, in
which the assets of a deregistered company are automatically vested,
was joined
as a party (see
Rainbow Diamonds (Edms) Bpk v
Suid-Afrikaanse Nasionale Lewensassuransiemaats
kappy
1984 (3) SA
1
(A)). It also seems to me that such an application may still be
brought, urgently if need be.
15
However, I must decide the
application that was presented to me rather than the application I
would prefer to have heard. For the
reasons I have given, the
application actually before me is stillborn, and must be struck from
the roll. Given Dansabe’s
conduct, I am not inclined to award
costs in its favour.
16
The application is struck
from the roll, with each party paying their own costs.
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 25 October 2024.
HEARD
ON:
24
October 2024
DECIDED
ON:
25
October 2024
For
the Applicants:
N
Cassim SC
A
Moodley
Instructed
by
L Mafestsa Attorneys
For
the First Respondent:
HP
Van Nieuwenhuizen
H
Le Roux
Instructed
by Barry Aaron and Associates
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