Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 63South Africa
Foxvest Group (Pty) Ltd and Another v Rocky Park Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others (2022/2807) [2023] ZAGPJHC 63 (27 January 2023)
Headnotes
virtually on 10 November 2021. On 25 October 2021 Mr Blarney responded per email stating that he would attend the meeting together with his legal representative. On 26 October 2021 Mr Fakade wrote per email to Mr Blarney stating that he would shortly issue the notice of the meeting on behalf of the board. On 29 October 2021 Rocky Park directors (Mr Fakade and Mr Cebekhulu) met and passed a resolution to the effect that Rocky Park as shareholder of Holdings must, at the meeting of the 10 November 2021, vote for the removal of Mr Blarney as a director of Holdings. Mr Fakade was empowered to appoint a proxy to attend the meeting on behalf of Rocky Park.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Foxvest Group (Pty) Ltd and Another v Rocky Park Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others (2022/2807) [2023] ZAGPJHC 63 (27 January 2023)
Foxvest Group (Pty) Ltd and Another v Rocky Park Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others (2022/2807) [2023] ZAGPJHC 63 (27 January 2023)
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sino date 27 January 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 2022/2807
Reportable:
No
Of
interest to other judges: No
27
January 2023
In
the matter between:
Foxvest
Group (Pty) Ltd
First
Applicant
Warwick
Marshall
Blamey
Second
Applicant
and
Rocky
Park Holdings (Pty) Ltd
First
Respondent
(Reg
No.: 2018/388603/07)
Rocky
Park Farming Group (Pty) Ltd
Second
Respondent
Sinelizwi
Fakade
Third
Respondent
The
Companies and Intellectual Property Commission
Fourth Respondent
JUDGMENT
Vally
J
Introduction
[1]
The applicants seek to set aside a
resolution proposed by a single shareholder of the first respondent,
Rocky Park Holdings (Pty)
Ltd (Holdings) removing the second
applicant, Mr Blarney, as director of Holdings. They also sought an
order placing Holdings under
final winding up, but no longer do so.
The matter really turns on the interpretation of a provision of the
Companies Act, 71 of
2008 (Act), more particularly sub-sections 65(3)
thereof.
[2]
Holdings it appears was formed as part
of a transaction involving the sale of a fifty-one percent share in
an immovable property
by the first applicant, Foxvest Group (Pty) Ltd
(Foxvest) to the second respondent, Rocky Park Farming Group (Pty)
Ltd (Rocky Park)
for a princely sum of R21m. A Shareholders Agreement
was entered into between Rocky Park and Foxvest. It was agreed that
the immovable
property would be transferred into the name of Holdings
and the shareholding of Holdings would be divided in accordance with
the
respective contribution of Foxvest and Rocky Park to the value of
the property. Thus, Foxvest holds a forty-nine percent shareholding
in Holdings and Rocky Park holds fifty-one percent of the shares in
Holdings. The two entities – Foxvest and Rocky Park –
were the only shareholders of Holdings. Each of them nominated a
director to attend to the running of the operations of Holdings.
Foxvest appointed Mr Blarney and Rocky Park appointed the third
respondent, Mr Fakade. Rocky Park and Mr Fakade are displeased
with
the transaction which, according to them, was marred by fraudulent
conduct on the part of Foxvest and Mr Blarney. The actions
and events
that followed resulted in the present application.
[3]
Only Rocky Park and Mr Fakade opposed
the application. Thus any reference to respondents in this judgment
is a reference to both
of them.
Factual
foundation for the relief sought
[4]
On 21 October 2021 Rocky Park
requisitioned a shareholders meeting of Holdings. The requisition was
sent to the board of directors
of Holdings, being Mr Fakade and Mr
Blarney. It is signed by Mr Fakade and a Mr Sanele Cebekhulu in their
capacity as directors
of Rocky Park. The requisition, in relevant
part, reads:
‘
[Rocky
Park] shareholder holding greater than 10% of the voting rights in
[Holdings], in terms of Section 61(3) of the [Act] hereby
requisitions the board of directors (Mr Fakade and Mr Blarney) to
call the below contemplated meeting in terms of the below notice
for
the purpose of:
·
Removing [Mr Blarney] as a director of
[Holdings]
·
Should the Shareholders elect to remove
[Mr] Blarney as a director, then for the passing of a resolution that
[Mr] Blarney no longer
be entitled to as a signatory on any of the
company bank accounts and that the new signatory to the company bank
accounts be [Mr]
Fakade …’
[5]
The requisition goes on to list the
reasons for seeking the removal of Mr Blarney. They all relate to his
alleged fraudulent conduct.
The requisition was accompanied by a
‘Notice of Meeting’ of the shareholders of Holdings,
which was to be held virtually
on 10 November 2021. On 25 October
2021 Mr Blarney responded per email stating that he would attend the
meeting together with his
legal representative. On 26 October 2021 Mr
Fakade wrote per email to Mr Blarney stating that he would shortly
issue the notice
of the meeting on behalf of the board. On 29 October
2021 Rocky Park directors (Mr Fakade and Mr Cebekhulu) met and passed
a resolution
to the effect that Rocky Park as shareholder of Holdings
must, at the meeting of the 10 November 2021, vote for the removal of
Mr Blarney as a director of Holdings. Mr Fakade was empowered to
appoint a proxy to attend the meeting on behalf of Rocky Park.
On 10 November 2021 the meeting was convened virtually. The attorney
for the second and third respondents (Rocky Park and Mr Fakade)
was
the only attendee. He attended in his capacity as a proxy for Rocky
Park. After waiting for 61 minutes and after making some
comments (to
himself) which he minuted, he postponed the meeting to 17 November
2021. On 17 November 2021 the meeting was reconstituted
virtually.
Again, only the attorney for the two respondents was present. He
noted that the meeting was in terms of s 64 of the
Act and then said
the following:
‘…
There
is
one
shareholder present who holds sufficient voting rights
for the meeting to proceed. The time is now ripe in order for us to
proceed
with this meeting with those that are present in terms of
Section 64 of the Act and accordingly we shall then deal with the
business
stipulated on the shareholders meeting notice which I would
want to read into the record at this point in time.
[the
reason for requisitioning the meeting in the Rocky Park’s
requisition was read into the record]
…
I
hereby record that Rocky Park holds 51% of the voting rights in
[Holdings] and, as such proposed motions are then passed and a
resolution to that effect will be provided.’ (Underlining
added.)
[6]
The minutes do not reflect that the
resolution was proposed and seconded. However, nothing turns on this
and no further factual
enquiry on this issue need be undertaken. A
written resolution was then transmitted to Foxvest. It records that
Mr Blarney was
removed as a director of Holdings and that his signing
powers on the bank accounts of Holdings were terminated.
[7]
The resolution was taken in terms of the
Act and not in terms of the Memorandum of Incorporation or in terms
of the Shareholders
Agreement.
[8]
It is this resolution that Foxvest and
Mr Blarney seek to have set aside. Their ground for doing so is that
it fails to comply with
mandatory requirements of the Act. Rocky Park
and Mr Fakade take a very different view.
The
Shareholders Agreement
[9]
The Shareholders Agreement makes
provision for meetings of shareholders and for a quorum for these
meetings. It entitles any shareholder
to call a meeting of
shareholders by notice and it prescribes that a quorum for ‘any
meeting shall be 75% of existing shareholders’,
and if the
meeting is not quorate fifteen minutes after the time fixed for its
commencement, ‘the meeting shall be adjourned
to the same venue
and to a time and day determined by those present.’ It is
silent on whether the next meeting would be quorate
regardless of
whether the threshold of 75% is met or not. But as the meeting was
called in terms of s 61(3) of the Act, the provision
of the
Shareholders Agreement regarding the calling of a shareholders
meeting is of no relevance.
The
relevant provisions of the Act
[10]
Section 65 of the Act attends to the
issue of shareholder resolutions. Sub-section (3) thereof is
particularly pertinent, for it
empowers shareholders to propose a
resolution on any matter on which they are entitled to exercise a
right. It provides:
‘
(3)
Any two shareholders of a company-
(a)
may propose a resolution concerning any
matter in respect of which they are each entitled to exercise voting
rights; and,
(b)
when proposing a resolution, may require
that the resolution be submitted to shareholders for consideration-
(i)
at a meeting demanded in terms of
section 61(3);
…’
[11]
Section 71 is another section that
requires our attention for it deals with the issue of removal of
directors.
‘
Removal
of directors-
(1)
Despite anything to the contrary
in a company's Memorandum of Incorporation or rules, or any agreement
between a company and a director,
or between any shareholders and a
director, a director may be removed by an
ordinary
resolution
adopted
at
a
shareholders
meeting
by
the
persons
entitled to exercise voting rights in an election of that director,
subject to subsection (2).
(2)
Before
the
shareholders
of
a
company
may
consider
a
resolution contemplated in subsection
(1)-
(a)
the
director
concerned
must
be
given
notice
of
the
meeting
and
the
resolution, at least equivalent to that which a shareholder is
entitled to receive, irrespective of whether or not the director
is a
shareholder of the company; and
(b)
the director
must be
afforded a reasonable opportunity to
make
a
presentation,
in
person
or
through
a
representative,
to
the
meeting,
before
the resolution is put to a vote’
[12]
The applicants rely on sub-section 65(3)
to make out their case while the respondents rely on s 71(1) and (2)
to defeat the case
of the applicants.
Application
of the law to the facts
[13]
Sub-section 65(3) of the Act is an
empowering provision. It empowers ‘Any two shareholders of a
company’ to propose
a resolution on matters where they have
voting rights. The provision does not say ‘any shareholder’
may propose a resolution.
The word or number ‘two’ and
the plural ‘shareholders’ have been specifically
mentioned by the legislature.
They cannot be ignored. They are not
superfluous or insignificant. On the contrary they are most
significant. The two words read
together are clearly designed to
ensure that at least two shareholders propose the resolution. If the
legislature intended to empower
a single shareholder to propose a
resolution, it could have simply said so by not using the word ‘two’
and by referring
to ‘shareholder’ in the singular. That
if failed to do so is, in my view, deliberate. It elected not to
empower a single
shareholder to propose a resolution. Whether or not
this is consistent with the provisions of the
Constitution
of the Republic of South Africa Act, 108 or 1996
or not is not an issue before me.
[14]
There is nothing in the Memorandum of
Incorporation or in the Shareholders’ Agreement that empowers a
single shareholder to
propose a resolution on a matter where the
shareholders have voting rights. And, in any event, it is not the
case of the respondents
that the resolution was taken in terms of the
Shareholders Agreement.
[15]
Indisputably, the resolution to remove
Mr Blarney was proposed by a single shareholder. It failed to comply
with the provisions
of sub-section 65(3). It is therefore unlawful,
invalid and stands to be set aside.
[16]
Sub-sections 71(1) and (2) of the Act,
allow for the removal of a director by ordinary resolution. But this
does not detract from
the fact that if the resolution originates from
a shareholder it has to comply with the provisions of sub-section
65(3). So
while there is no dispute that the respondents
complied with the mandatory requirements set out in these
sub-sections for the removal
of Mr Blarney, this is of no assistance
to the respondents. The non-compliance with the provisions of
sub-section 65(3) is fatal.
Costs
[17]
These should rightfully follow the
result.
Order
[18]
The following order is made:
a.
The resolution adopted at the
shareholders meeting of the first respondent on 17 November 2021 is
set aside.
b.
The second and third respondents are to
pay the costs of the application.
Vally
J
Gauteng
High Court, Johannesburg
Dates
of hearing:
17
January 2023
Date
of judgment:
27
January 2023
For
the applicant: E
L Labuschagne
Instructed
by: Megan
Visser Attorneys
For
the 1
st
- 3
rd
respondents: B
D Stevens
Instructed
by: Morgan
Law Inc
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