begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
>>
2023
>>
[2023] ZAGPJHC 42
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Da Silve N.O and Another v Pick n Pay Retailers (Pty) Ltd (6367/2022)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 42 (25 January 2023)
Da Silve N.O and Another v Pick n Pay Retailers (Pty) Ltd (6367/2022)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 42 (25 January 2023)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2023_42.html
sino date 25 January 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
25
JANUARY 2023
JUDGE
RM KEIGHTLEY
CASE
NO:
6367/2022
In
the matter between
:
RAMAHLO,
GEORGE DA SILVE N.O.
First
Applicant
VILAKAZHI,
AMANDA LINDAKUHLE N.O.
Second
Applicant
and
PICK
n PAY RETAILERS (PTY)
LTD
Respondent
JUDGMENT
KEIGHTLEY
J:
INTRODUCTION
1.
At issue in this matter is a payment of
R21,627,758.91 to the respondent, Pick n Pay Retailers (Pty) Ltd
(Pick n Pay). The
payment was made pursuant to an agreement and
pursuant to a debt owed to Pick n Pay by a company called Lashka 167
(Pty) Limited
(Lashka). The payment is controversial because of
two common cause facts: (1) Lashka was placed in final voluntary
liquidation
on 19 February 2018; and (2) Payment to Pick n Pay was
effected on 02 July 2019, long after Lashka’s liquidation.
The
applicants are the joint liquidators of Lashka (the
liquidators). They say that the payment was made in disregard
of the
concursus creditorum
and is invalid. The liquidators seek an order directing Pick n
Pay to repay the money with interest.
2.
Pick n Pay advances a layered response to
the application. First, it contends that the liquidators have
failed to establish
a cause of action. Second, it contends that
the agreement underlying the payment was of an executory nature,
giving rise
to reciprocal rights and obligations, which obligations
were inherited by the liquidators on winding up. The final leg
of
Pick n Pay’s opposition to the application is its contention
that the liquidators elected to abide by the terms of the agreement.
Consequently, it says that it was entitled to exercise its rights and
effect payment to itself of the debt due to it.
FACTS
3.
In 2012 Pick n Pay and Lashka entered into
a franchisor-franchisee agreement in terms of which Lashka operated a
Pick n Pay Family
Supermarket. In addition, Lashka registered a
general notarial mortgage bond over its movable property in favour of
the Pick
n Pay as security for Lashka's indebtedness to it.
Lashka was unable to meet its payment obligations to Pick n Pay,
despite
an agreed payment variation regime. Consequently, Pick
n Pay sought to perfect its notarial bond. On 25 August 2017
an
interim order was granted by agreement between the parties in terms
of which Lashka consented to the perfection and agreed to
an order
that it make payment of all debts due to Pick n Pay.
Thereafter, Pick n Pay took possession of the movables.
In
effect, it became involved in running the business of the stores
(which now also included a liquor outlet) with Lashka.
4.
Lashka’s dire situation was best
resolved by the sale of the business. Lashka agreed to this and
a suitable buyer, acceptable
to Pick n Pay, was found. In
November 2017 the purchaser, Enthrall Trading (Pty) Ltd (Enthrall),
and Lashka entered into
a Sale of Business agreement. The
parties to this agreement were expressly identified as Lashka and
Enthrall. Pick
n Pay was not a party to the agreement.
However, the agreement contained certain provisions involving Pick n
Pay and, importantly,
establishing rights in its favour. In
brief, these were as follows:
4.1
The agreement noted that Pick n Pay had
claims against Lashka for payment of outstanding amounts due to the
former.
4.2
As a suspensive condition to the Sale of
Business Agreement, Pick n Pay was required to consent to the sale to
Enthrall and to waive
its rights of first refusal under the original
franchise agreement between it and Lashka.
4.3
Clause 4.4 of the agreement recorded that
Pick n Pay had given its required consent and waiver.
4.4
The payments due under the Sale of Business
agreement, including the purchase consideration of twenty-five
million Rand, was to
be made to attorneys White & Case, to be
held for the benefit of Lashka until the release of the funds under
clause 6.2 of
the agreement.
4.5
Under clause 6.1, Lashka was required, as
soon as practicable after the effective date, to deliver a duly
completed payment instruction
(countersigned by Pick n Pay) to White
& Case instructing White & Case to apply the held funds in
settlement of the amounts
owed to First National Bank (the bank) and
Pick n Pay in terms of its claims against Lashka. (The bank was
another of Lashka’s
creditors, but Lashka’s liability to
the bank, and the settlement of that liability, are not of central
relevance to these
proceedings.)
4.6
Further, under clause 6.1, if Lashka failed
timeously to deliver that payment instruction, White & Case was
obliged (by the
use of the word ‘shall’), to proceed with
the relevant payments, provided that the payment instruction
confirmed the
amount of the payments to be made thereunder; and was
signed by a representative of Pick n Pay. Lashka also
irrevocably and
unconditionally authorised Pick n Pay to deliver the
payment instruction and White & Case to act in accordance with
any payment
instruction signed and delivered by Pick n Pay.
5.
Essentially, then, the agreement envisaged
that Lashka’s indebtedness to Pick n Pay would be met from the
proceeds of the
sale of the business. Pick n Pay would have a
first claim to payment (as would the bank), and only in the event of
there
being a balance remaining after its claims were settled would
White & Case be permitted to pay that balance to Lashka.
6.
It is also important to note that while the
Sale of Business agreement obliged Lashka to issue a payment
instruction to White &
Case, Pick n Pay was protected by the
fall-back provided under clause 6.1 that permitted it to issue the
necessary payment instruction
on default of Lashka’s obligation
to do so. Pick n Pay’s protection was underscored by the
express irrevocable
authorisation given by Lashka under the same
clause.
7.
Subsequent to the conclusion of the Sale of
Business agreement Pick n Pay released the security it had perfected
under the notarial
bond. The business was transferred from Lashka to
Enthrall on 26 November 2017 and the latter took over the stores.
By 02
December 2017 Enthrall had satisfied the obligation to pay the
purchase consideration in full to White & Case. The latter
released funds to settle the bank’s claims on payment
instructions delivered by Lashka on 05 and 12 December 2017.
However, Lashka did not comply with the similar obligation to
deliver the requisite payment instructions vis-a-vis Pick n
Pay. It
is common cause that neither Lashka nor the liquidators has ever
complied with that obligation.
8.
On 2 July 2019, Pick n Pay proceeded to
sign and deliver the payment instruction to White & Case as
provided for in clause 6.1
for settlement of Pick n Pay’s
claims against Lashka. White & Case obliged and released
the funds to Pick n Pay.
The payment instruction and payment to
Pick n Pay was effected approximately 19 months after the conclusion
of the Sale of Business
agreement and almost 17 months after Lashka’s
winding up. The affidavits filed by the parties provide no
explanation
for the delay. In fact, the affidavits are silent
on what events took place in the interim period, save for a brief
reference
to a meeting between Pick n Pay’s attorneys and the
liquidators shortly before the former delivered the payment
instructions
to White & Case.
IS A CAUSE OF ACTION
ESTABLISHED?
9.
Pick n Pay advances a point
in
limine
which, it says, renders the
application stillborn. It points to paragraph 40 of the
founding affidavit as identifying the
liquidators’ cause of
action. The relevant part of that paragraph reads as follows:
‘…
(T)he
transfer of the amount of R21, 627, 758.91, from White & Case
Attorneys to the respondent, falls to be set aside on the
basis,
inter alia:
40.1.1. in terms of the
provisions of section 32 of the Insolvency Act no. 24 of 1936 (as
amended); and
40.1.2.
on the basis of disregarding the
concursus
creditorum
that had been constituted
long before the transfer.’
10.
Pick n Pay says that neither of these two
grounds identifies a cause of action.
Section 32(1)(a)
of the
Insolvency Act provides
:
‘
Proceedings
to recover the value of property or a right in terms of
section
25(4)
, to set aside any disposition of property under
section 26
,
29
,
30
or
31
, or for the recovery of compensation or a penalty under
section 31
, may be taken by the (liquidator).’
While
the section gives a liquidator the power to institute proceedings to
recover dispositions, Pick n Pay points out, correctly,
that the
power extends only to those dispositions that fall within the ambit
of
ss 26
,
29
,
30
or
31
of the
Insolvency Act. In
other words,
s
32
is an enabling provision and does not constitute an independent
and general cause of action. It points out further that the
affected sections all address dispositions made prior to winding up.
It follows logically that
s 32
, read, as it must be, with
ss 26
,
29
,
30
or
31
of the
Insolvency Act, have
no application in this case, as
the disposition in questions was made well after Lashka was wound up.
11.
At the hearing of the matter counsel for
the liquidators conceded that despite what was stated in the founding
affidavit, they placed
no reliance on
s 32
and its companion sections
to found a cause of action. Pick n Pay recognised that this
concession was not enough to uphold
its point
in
limine
, as the liquidators had not
confined their application to those sections. In developing its
case that no cause of action
had been established, Pick n Pay
suggested that a liquidator’s power to seek to recover a
disposition are circumscribed.
Its case is that that power must
be founded either:
(a) in
statute, more specifically,
s 32
and its companion sections of the
Insolvency Act, or
s 341(2) of the Companies Act 61 of 1963; or
(b) on
a recognised cause of action under the common law, such as
the
actio pauliana
.
Pick
n Pay’s argument was that a disposition ‘in disregard of
the
concursus creditorum
’
(as posited by the liquidators in paragraph 40 of the founding
affidavit) was not a cause of action recognised under these
statutes
or under the common law. Accordingly, Pick n Pay submitted that
the liquidators were bereft of a cause of action.
12.
I have difficulty in accepting the
correctness of Pick n Pay’s starting point, namely that a
liquidator may only proceed to
recover a disposition under the
identified statutory provisions or based on a recognised remedy
available to anyone (whether a
liquidator or not) under the common
law. The fact that the legislator has seen fit to enact
specific provisions giving liquidators
the power of recovery under
the
Insolvency Act and
the Companies Act is not, in my view, an
indication that the intention was to circumscribe a liquidator’s
powers to effect
recovery of dispositions as suggested by Pick n Pay.
13.
Each of these statutory provisions serves a
particular purpose. As to s 32 (and its companion sections) of
the
Insolvency Act, they
are aimed at extending a liquidator’s
powers to recover dispositions made
before
the winding-up process commenced, and hence before the
concursus
creditorum
was constituted.
Absent these statutory provisions a liquidator would have no power to
interfere with dispositions of that
nature with the object of
securing recovery for the general benefit of creditors.
14.
Section
341(2) of the Companies Act provides that: ‘Every disposition
of its property … by any company being would-up
and unable to
pay its debts made after the commencement of winding-up, shall be
void unless the Court orders otherwise.’
The
section must be read with s 348, which provides that a winding-up is
deemed to have commenced on the date when the application
was
presented to court. In the recent decision in
Pride
Milling Company (Pty) Ltd v Bekker NO and Another
[1]
the
Supreme Court of Appeal held that the predominant purpose of s 341(2)
is to decree that all dispositions made by a company being
wound-up
are void. The mischief the section seeks to address is:
‘…
a
possible attempt by a dishonest company, or directors, or creditors
or others, to snatch some unfair advantage
during
the period between the presentation of the petition for a winding-up
order and the granting of that order by a Court
by, for example, dissipating the assets of the company or, …
preferring one creditor above another to the prejudice of the
concursus
creditorum
.’
[2]
(my
emphasis)
15.
As
explained in
Pride
Milling
,
[3]
all
dispositions made within the period underlined above, namely, between
the presentation of the application and the grant of a
winding-up
order, are potentially invalid because the grant of an order triggers
s 341(2), rendering such dispositions void.
A court has a
discretion under this section to validate dispositions made during
this period, with due regard to the mischief at
which the section is
aimed. However, a court has no power to validate any
dispositions made
after
the grant of a provisional or final winding-up order.
[4]
The
reason for this is not difficult to fathom; as
Pride
Milling
explains:
‘…
once
a court grants a provisional order a
concursus
creditorum
is established. The effect of this is that the claim of each creditor
falls to be dealt with as it existed at the time when the
provisional
order was granted. … Accordingly, to order otherwise would not
only render nugatory the operative part of s
341(2), in terms of
which dispositions made by a company being wound-up are void, but
would also have the effect of undermining
the essence of the
concursus
creditorum
and indeed the substratum of insolvency law.’
[5]
16.
Pick
n Pay submit that the liquidators have failed to establish a cause of
action because their claim does not fall within the ambit
of either s
341(2) or s 32. This submission is flawed. Neither of
these sections has any application to dispositions
made after a
winding-up order is granted. It follows that these sections do
not cover the field of causes of action available
to a liquidator to
recover dispositions for the benefit of the general body of
creditors. Indeed, it is precisely at the
post-
consursus
creditorum
stage that the power to recover dispositions prejudicial to the
general body of creditors is most critical. As the much-quoted
dicta from
Walker
v Syfret
NO
[6]
lay
down:
‘
nothing
can thereafter be allowed to be done by any of the creditors to alter
the rights of the other creditors
’
.
[7]
17.
This is so because:
'The
sequestration order crystallises the insolvent's position; the hand
of the law is laid upon the estate, and at once the rights
of the
general body of creditors have to be taken into consideration.
No
transaction can thereafter be entered into with regard to estate
matters by a single creditor to the prejudice of the general
body
.
The claim of each creditor must be dealt with as it existed at the
issue of the order.
’
[8]
(my
emphasis)
18.
The power of a liquidator to recover
dispositions made after the constitution of the
consursus
of necessity stems from the essence of the
consursus
itself and what the SCA described in
Pride
Milling
as the ‘substratum of
insolvency law’. A liquidator’s cause of action is
inherent in these foundational
principles. I conclude that
there is no merit in Pick n Pay’s point
in
limine
. The liquidators
permissibly pinned their cause of action on the conduct of Pick n Pay
in disregarding the
concursus
creditorum
.
WAS THE PAYMENT JUSTIFIED
UNDER THE SALE OF BUSINESS AGREEMENT?
19.
Pick n Pay contends that it acted lawfully
under the Sale of Business agreement in signing and delivering the
payment instruction
to White & Case and thus causing payment of
its claims to be made notwithstanding that this was done after Lashka
was placed
under winding-up. This is because that
agreement was executory in nature. It gave rise to reciprocal
rights
and obligations between the parties. Further, Pick n
Pay’s case is that at the time that Lashka was liquidated the
agreement was uncompleted. Despite Pick n Pay being part and
parcel of clause 6 and the mechanism for payment built into that
clause, Lashka had failed to provide the written instructions which
it was obliged to do in terms of clause 6.1 with the effect
that Pick
n Pay had not been paid.
20.
The
legal position governing uncompleted executory contracts on
insolvency was explained in
Ellerine
Bros (Pty) Ltd v McCarthy Ltd
:
[9]
‘
Following
on the insolvency of the lessee the position is governed by the
ordinary principles of the common law which apply when
a party to an
executory contract goes insolvent. As in the case of any other
uncompleted contract, the liquidator inherits the
lease in its
entirety. The creation of the
concursus
creditorum
therefore does not terminate the continuous operation of a lease
agreement to which the insolvent is a party. The
concursus
neither alters nor suspends the rights and obligations of the parties
thereunder and the liquidator, as the universal successor,
steps into
the shoes of the insolvent and does not acquire any rights greater
than those of the insolvent. This means that the
liquidator must
perform whatever is required of the insolvent in terms of the lease,
including unfulfilled past obligations of
the lessee.’
[10]
And:
‘
The
intended aim of the
concursus
,
or as it has also been described, the “community of creditors”,
created immediately upon the liquidation of the insolvent,
is to give
equal protection to all the creditors without undue preference and to
preserve and distribute the estate to the benefit
of all of them. To
give effect to the
concursus
,
the liquidator must decide whether it would be to the benefit of the
community of creditors to continue to perform the inherited
obligations of the insolvent under an uncompleted contract. He may
elect not to do so. In that event a consequence of the
concursus
is that the other party to the contract cannot demand performance by
the liquidator of the insolvent's contractual obligations.
The
statement, “frequently encountered, that a trustee or a
liquidator in insolvency has a right of election whether or not
to
abide by a contract” means no more than that by reason of the
existence of the
concursus
“the other party cannot exact specific performance against the
trustee or liquidator if the latter should decide to abandon
the
contract”. The act of the liquidator in deciding not to
continue the lease constitutes:
“…
a
repudiation of the contract, which would have afforded the lessor ...
the right, concurrently with other creditors, to claim from
the
liquidator the payment of damages for the non-performance by the
company of its contractual obligations”.
The
claims of the other contractant are therefore reduced by the
concursus
to a monetary claim and participation in the insolvent estate as a
concurrent creditor, where it is treated on the same basis as
all the
other creditors in the insolvent estate.’
[11]
Further:
‘
The
existence of the
concursus
does not on this principle in any way affect the continued existence
of the rights and obligations of the respective parties to
an
uncompleted contract. There is accordingly nothing, as Galgut AJ
correctly found in
Porteous
v Strydom NO
,
that “excuses the trustee from performing the insolvent's
obligations which fall due to be performed between the date of
sequestration and the date upon which the trustee makes his election”
to abide the contract.’
[12]
Also:
‘
It
is only in the event of the liquidator making an election not to
abide by the uncompleted contract that the lessor, because of
the
concursus
,
cannot compel performance. Absent such an election, the terms of the
lease remain in place and the liquidator must comply with
it.’
[13]
21.
The parties are agreed on these
principles. Where they disagree is on the question of whether
the Sale of Business agreement
was an uncompleted executory contract
and thus whether these principles are applicable, and, if so, whether
the liquidators elected
to abide by the agreement.
22.
Pick n Pay accepts that it was not a party
to the Sale of Business agreement. However, it says that it
played a pivotal role
in the lead-up to the conclusion of the
agreement and it agreed to give up certain of its rights under the
agreement which it otherwise
would have been entitled to exercise to
protect its position vis-a-viz Lashka. As I have already
recorded, under the agreement
Pick n Pay waived its right of first
refusal, and it consented to Enthrall as purchaser. In
addition, in order to give effect
to the agreement, Pick n Pay
released the security it had effected under the notarial bond.
Clause 6 of the agreement also
provided expressly for a payment
mechanism for the settlement of Pick n Pay’s claims and its
right to ensure that payment
was effected from the purchase
consideration.
23.
The gist of Pick n Pay’s case in this
regard is that it does not matter that it was not a party to the Sale
of Business agreement.
Despite it being a non-party, the
agreement, read as a whole, gave rise to rights directly enforceable
by Pick n Pay under clause
6. It was thus an executory contract
which had not been completed on liquidation. Pick n Pay
contends that being an
executory contract, it was open to the
liquidators to elect not to abide by it. However, this would
have required them to:
(a)
repudiate the Sale of Business Agreement in its entirety;
(b)
procure the return of the Business to Lashka;
(c)
tender return of the purchase price to Enthrall or state that the
liquidators are excused from doing
so and that Enthrall could lodge a
concurrent claim against Lashka in liquidation;
(d)
require return of the funds paid to FNB;
(e)
procure the return of the portion of the purchase price paid by
Enthrall directly to Lashka in respect
of stock; and
(f)
procure the return of the funds held by White & Case.
According
to Pick n Pay the liquidators’ failure to do so demonstrates an
election to abide by the Sale of Business agreement.
Consequently, they are bound by the payment terms under clause 6 and
are precluded from claiming repayment of the amounts paid
to Pick n
Pay.
24.
The liquidators dispute this
interpretation. Their case, which in my view has merit, is that
despite the inclusion of clause
6, in terms of which Pick n Pay
acquired rights, the essential nature of the agreement was that of an
ordinary sale and purchase
of a business. To the extent that it
was executionary in nature, this applied only to the legal
relationship viz-a-viz the
purchaser and seller under the agreement.
The reciprocal rights and obligations established under the agreement
were solely
between Enthrall and Lashka: Enthrall was obliged to pay
the purchase consideration and Lashka was obliged to transfer the
business
to Enthrall. Once this was done, the contract was
complete.
25.
The remaining obligations under clause 6,
and the legal nexus established thereby, were between Lashka and Pick
n Pay. What
is more, the rights and obligations under clause 6
pertained to what was to be done with the purchase consideration paid
by Enthrall
to White & Case. The purpose of the clause was to
provide a scheme for the settlement of Lashka’s pre-existing
debt to
Pick n Pay under the franchise agreement. Consequently,
the liquidators were correct in comparing the nature and effect of
clause 6 to a form of acknowledgement of debt.
26.
It is plain that the only parties with any
substantive legal interest under clause 6 were Lashka, as the debtor,
and Pick n Pay,
as the creditor. Clause 6 established no
reciprocal legal nexus between Pick n Pay and Enthrall, or between
Lashka and Enthrall.
By the time clause 6 was triggered, Lashka
and Enthrall’s performance under the agreement was already
complete. This
was prior to Lashka’s liquidation.
In these circumstances, there was no legal scope for the liquidators
to repudiate
the sale of the business and to seek a restoration of
the
status quo ante
,
as Pick n Pay suggests.
27.
Once liquidation intervened, Pick n Pay’s
legal position under clause 6 was no different to that of any other
creditor to
whom payment of a debt remained outstanding. It was
not entitled to exercise its rights under clause 6.1 by signing and
delivering
a payment instruction to White & Case. Its
rights were limited by the
concursus
to participation in the insolvent estate as a creditor. It
follows that the liquidators have a valid claim against Pick n
Pay
for recovery of the disposition effected by its conduct.
ORDER
28.
I make the following order:
1.
The respondent is directed to pay the amount of R21, 627, 758.91,
together with interest
thereon a tempore morae, to the
account of Lashka 167 (Pty) Ltd (in liquidation), held with the
Standard Bank of South Africa Limited,
under account number 202 348
520.
2.
The respondent is directed to pay the costs of the application.
_________________________
R M KEIGHTLEY
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
COUNSEL FOR
APPLICANT ADVOCATE AJ DANIELS SC
APPLICANTS’
ATTORNEYS RICHTER ATTORNEYS
COUNSEL FOR
RESPONDENTS ADVOCATE JE SMIT
RESPONDENTS’
ATTORNEYS DLA PIPER SOUTH AFRICA
(RF) INC
DATE OF HEARING: 02
NOVEMBER 2022
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 25
JANUARY 2023
[1]
2022 (2) SA 410
(SCA)
para
13.
[2]
Lief
NO v Western Credit (Africa) (Pty) Ltd
1966
(3) SA 344
(W) at 803, cited in
Pride
Milling
above, para 14.
[3]
Above,
para 13.
[4]
Pride
Milling
,
above, paras 17-18
[5]
Above,
para 19
[6]
1911
AD 141
at
160, cited in Pride Milling, above, para 15
[7]
Walker
v Syfret
,
above p160.
[8]
Walker
v Syfret
,
above p166.
[9]
2014 (4) SA 22 (SCA).
[10]
At
para 10, footnotes excluded.
[11]
At para 1
1,
footnotes excluded.
[12]
At para 1
2,
footnotes excluded.
[13]
At
para 13.
sino noindex
make_database footer start