Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 9South Africa
Engen Petroleum Limited v Jai Hind EMCC t/a Emmarentia Convenience Centre and Others [2023] ZAGPJHC 9 (13 January 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
13 January 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Engen Petroleum Limited v Jai Hind EMCC t/a Emmarentia Convenience Centre and Others [2023] ZAGPJHC 9 (13 January 2023)
Engen Petroleum Limited v Jai Hind EMCC t/a Emmarentia Convenience Centre and Others [2023] ZAGPJHC 9 (13 January 2023)
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sino date 13 January 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
13
January 2023
In
the matter between:
ENGEN
PETROLEUM LIMITED
Applicant
and
JAI
HIND EMCC CC t/a EMMARENTIA CONVENIENCE
CENTRE
First
Respondent
IGOLKISSHORE
RAGUNANDAN NO
Second
Respondent
AFFECTED
PERSONS IN THE FIRST
RESPONDENT’S
BUSINESS
Third
Respondent
#####
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J
:
1
The applicant, Engen, approaches the
court on an urgent basis seeking the postponement of a meeting of the
first respondent’s
creditors. The first respondent is Jai Hind
CC. The meeting was convened by the second respondent, Mr.
Ragunandan, to discuss,
amongst other things, the adoption of a
business rescue plan. The meeting was scheduled to proceed at 10am
today. At 09h53 today,
I dismissed Engen’s application with
costs, including the costs of two counsel, and indicated that my
reasons for making
that order would follow as soon as possible.
These, briefly, are my reasons.
2
Engen is by far the biggest creditor of
Jai Hind CC. It takes the view that Jai Hind CC is incapable of
business rescue. It opposes
the adoption of a business rescue plan,
and is seeking the conversion of the business rescue procedure into a
forced liquidation.
Its application for that relief is due to be
heard before my brother Vally J in his opposed motion court during
the week of 16
January 2023.
Engen’s
fears
3
Engen brings its urgent application
before me on the basis that the adoption of a business rescue plan
will render its application
enrolled before Vally J moot, because
section 133 (1) (a) of the Act states that no litigation against a
company in business rescue
“may be commenced or proceeded with
in any forum”. That is why it seeks the postponement of the
meeting at which the
plan is to be discussed, and possibly adopted.
4
Engen accepts that, as Jai Hind CC’s
biggest creditor, it could ordinarily outvote all of Jai Hind CC’s
other creditors
at the meeting and prevent the adoption of the plan.
It fears, however, that it will be prevented from doing this. One of
Jai Hind
CC’s other creditors, a Mr. Dhuki, who Engen alleges
is also the controlling mind behind Jai Hind CC, has made a “binding
offer”, in terms of
section 153
(1) (b) (ii) of the
Companies
Act 71 of 2008
, to purchase Engen’s voting interest for an
amount equivalent to the value of the return Engen could expect if
Jai Hind CC
was finally liquidated. The effect of that offer, if
accepted, would be to exclude Engen from any decision on whether to
adopt
the business rescue plan.
5
The meaning of “binding offer”
in terms of
section 153
is that the offer is binding on the offeror,
not the offeree (see
African Banking
Corporation of Botswana Ltd v Kariba Furniture Manufacturers
(Pty) Ltd
2015 (5) SA 192
(SCA), paragraphs 15 to 25). This means
that Engen is free to reject Mr. Dhuki’s offer and to continue
to vote against the
adoption of a business rescue plan. If its does
so, no business rescue plan can lawfully be adopted.
6
That notwithstanding, Engen’s case
is that, knowing all of this, Mr. Ragunandan intends to proceed with
the meeting, to take
Engen as bound to accept Mr. Dhuki’s
offer, to divest Engen of its voting rights and to adopt a business
rescue plan over
Engen’s objections. Once that is done, Engen
says that the business rescue plan, though unlawfully adopted, would
still have
legal and factual consequences that could not be ignored
unless the plan were reviewed and set aside.
7
One of those consequences is that
Engen’s litigation to convert the business rescue process into
a forced liquidation will
be automatically suspended, and Vally J
will not be able to entertain that application next week.
No
facts to support the relief sought
8
I have grave doubts about every step in
Engen’s argument, but Engen’s failure to allege and prove
that it reasonably
apprehends that Mr.
Ragunandan
will act in the manner Engen fears is dispositive of its case. If Mr.
Ragunandan were to proceed in the manner that Engen
fears, he would
have to act unlawfully and intentionally. And he would have to have
planned to do so as part of a bad faith strategy
to improperly divest
Engen of its voting rights. There is nothing on Engen’s papers
that comes close to demonstrating that
there is such a stratagem, and
that Mr. Rangunandan seriously intends to carry it out.
9
These being interim
interdict proceedings, Engen does not have to establish on a balance
of probabilities that Mr. Rangunandan will
act as it fears. It must
instead establish that it has, at least on the face of it, a
reasonable apprehension that Mr. Rangunandan
is about to act pursuant
to the unlawful scheme that Engen alleges.
10
But even
prima
facie
fears have to be grounded in some facts. All Engen is really able to
demonstrate is that Mr. Rangunandan has called a meeting at
which a
business rescue plan might be adopted, knowing full well that Engen
opposes the adoption of that plan. I accept Engen might
view the
“binding offer” on the table with some suspicion. But
there is a great deal of ground to be covered between
the existence
of that offer – which Mr. Dhuki was legally entitled to make –
and the existence of an unlawful scheme
to enforce it. That ground is
simply not traversed in Engen’s papers.
11
That conclusion is
sufficient for me to have dismissed Engen’s application.
However, I am not convinced that, even if Engen’s
fears are
realised, the unlawfully adopted business rescue plan Engen seeks to
nip in the bud would have any legal consequences
injurious to Engen.
It is well established that invalid administrative acts generally
have factual and legal consequences until
they are reviewed and set
aside. But there are exceptions to that rule. One exception applies
where a person is sought to be compelled
to do something, or to be
restrained from doing something, on the basis of a substantively
invalid act (see
Oudekraal
Estates v City of Cape Town
2004 (6) SA 222
(SCA), paragraph 32).
12
Even assuming (with
some hesitation) that the adoption of a business rescue plan is
administrative action, or has similar binding
consequences despite
its illegality, it is not clear to me, even
prima
facie
,
that Engen could not simply continue with its litigation before Vally
J on the basis that the business rescue plan is invalid,
and does not
for that reason engage the general prohibition on litigation in
section 133
(1) of the Act.
13
Finally, even if I am
wrong about all of this,
section 133
(1) (b) of the Act permits
a court to grant leave to proceed against a company in business
rescue on “any terms the
court considers suitable”. I
find it hard to imagine the basis on which a court could refuse such
leave in the face of the
brazen illegality Engen fears might come to
pass. That in itself saves Engen’s pending application from
mootness.
14
It follows from all
of this that Engen established neither a
prima
facie
right to the relief it sought, nor a reasonable apprehension of
irreparable harm in the event that the relief is not granted. Its
application had to fail.
Costs
15
In the event that I
reached that conclusion, Mr. Solomon pressed for costs on the
attorney and client scale. I am not persuaded,
however, that Engen’s
fears were so far-fetched as to warrant a punitive costs order. Costs
on the ordinary scale sufficed.
S
D J WILSON
Judge
of the High Court
This
judgment was prepared and authored by Judge Wilson. It is handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties or their
legal
representatives by email and by uploading it to the electronic file
of this matter on Caselines. The date for hand-down is
deemed to be
13 January 2023.
HEARD
ON: 13
January 2023
DECIDED
ON:
13
January 2023
For
the Applicant: S
Aucamp
R
Tshetlo
Instructed
by DM5
Inc
For
the Respondents:
R
Solomon
SC
A
Raw
Instructed
by Des
Naidoo and Assocaites
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