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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Edery N.O v Brands 2 Africa Proprietary Limited and Others (2021/58016)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 85 (3 February 2023)
Edery N.O v Brands 2 Africa Proprietary Limited and Others (2021/58016)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 85 (3 February 2023)
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sino date 3 February 2023
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NUMBER:
2021/58016
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: YES
DATE:
3 February 2023
SIGNATURE:
In
the matter between:
DA
EDERY N.O.
Applicant
and
BRANDS
2 AFRICA PROPRIETARY LIMITED
First Respondent
CR
CLEMENCE
Second Respondent
THE
COMPANIES AND INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
COMMISSION
Third Respondent
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties' and/or the parties' representatives by email and by
being
uploaded to Case Lines. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to
be 10h00 on 3 February 2023
.
JUDGMENT
WANLESS
AJ
Introduction
[1]
In this application one DEBRA ANN EDERY, an adult female
(“the
Applicant”)
seeks certain relief in terms of section 163 of
the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
(“the Act”)
.
The Applicant does so in her capacity as a shareholder in the company
BRANDS 2 AFRICA (PTY) LIMITED which is the First Respondent
in the
application
(“the Company”).
[2]
The relief sought by the Applicant and as set out in the Applicant’s
Notice of Motion, reads as follows:
“
1.
That the applicant’s
non-compliance with the rules of court concerning forms, service and
time periods otherwise applicable be condoned, that such rules be
dispensed with and that this application be heard and adjudicated
upon as an urgent application in terms of uniform rule 6(12).
2.
That:
2.1
Jacob Edery, or such other person nominated by the applicant from
time to time
(“the Nominated Director”)
and another person as nominated by the South African Institute of
Chartered Accountants
(“the Independent Director”)
,
be appointed as directors of the first respondent
(“the
Company”)
;
2.2
The Company shall pay the reasonable fees of
the Nominated Director and the Independent Director as
well as
reimburse them in respect of all costs reasonably incurred by them in
pursuance of their appointment; and
2.3
The appointment of the Nominated Director
and the Independent Director to the board of the Company
shall be:
2.3.1
with effect from
an order granted in
terms of this application; and
2.3.2
pending, and endure until
the
finalisation of an action which is to be instituted by the applicant,
for
final
relief, within 10 days from the date
of an order being granted.
3.
That the second respondent be
ordered to pay the costs of this application.
4.
Such further and/or
alternative relief as may be required.
[1]
[3]
One CRAIG CLEMENCE, an adult male
(“Craig
”) is the
Second Respondent. Craig is a shareholder of the Company and
presently the sole director thereof. The Third Respondent
is the
COMPANIES AND INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY COMMISSION against whom the
applicant seeks no relief in the application. Both the Company
and
Craig oppose the application and the relief sought by the Applicant.
Background
[4]
In the opinion of this Court the relevant history for present
purposes
and to provide pertinent background in respect of this
matter, is as follows:-
4.1
at all material times the Applicant was married to one PIERRE ALBERT
EDERY,
an adult male
(“Pierre”)
;
4.2
Craig was appointed a director of the Company on or about the 12
th
of June 2013;
4.3
on or about the 1
st
of August 2014, Pierre was employed by
the Company on a permanent basis (prior to this date the Company
utilised his services on
an
ad hoc
basis);
4.4
on or about the 1
st
of September 2014, Pierre became a 10%
shareholder in the Company when shares in that amount were given to
him by Craig for no
consideration;
4.5
Pierre was appointed a director of the Company on or about the 1
st
of March 2015;
4.6
during or about April 2020, Craig and Pierre made an offer to Wild
Rose Capital
Holdings (Pty) Ltd
(“Wild Rose”)
which was the majority shareholder in the Company to purchase the
shares owned by Wild Rose and this offer was accepted;
4.7
during or about May 2020, Pierre was diagnosed with bladder cancer;
4.8
on or about the 4
th
of May 2020, Wild Rose exited the
Company and the shareholding in the Company was then held on the
basis that Craig had a 53% shareholding
and Pierre had a 47%
shareholding;
4.9
during or about the period August 2020 to July 2021, Pierre underwent
various
surgeries and chemotherapy sessions in respect of his bladder
cancer;
4.10
on the 23
rd
of July 2021 Pierre passed away;
4.11
the Applicant was appointed as executrix of Pierre’s deceased
estate on or about the 27
th
of August 2021;
4.12
on or about the 14
th
of December 2021 the Applicant
instituted an urgent application in this Court for the relief as set
out in the Applicant’s
Notice of Motion referred to above;
4.13
on the 8
th
of February 2022, when the matter was to be
heard by this Court on the urgent roll, it was removed therefrom with
costs reserved.
[5]
All of the aforegoing facts are either common cause between the
parties
or are not seriously disputed by them. Of course, as will
become evident later in this judgment, there are a number of other
matters
which have taken place in respect of which the Applicant and
Craig have presented to this Court their own very different versions.
These will be dealt with at appropriate stages later in this
judgment.
The
Applicant’s case
[6]
The Applicant’s case and the argument presented before this
Court
on behalf of the Applicant as to why this Court should grant
the Applicant the relief that she seeks in terms of section 163 of
the Act, can be broadly summarised as follows. At the heart of the
matter, so the Applicant contends, is a minority shareholder
in the
Company (the Applicant as the executrix of Pierre’s deceased
estate is presently a 47% shareholder) who wants to sell
those shares
at a fair and reasonable price but is being prevented from pursuing
such a buy-out as a consequence of the unfairly
prejudicial and
oppressive conduct of Craig (the majority shareholder).Thus, says the
Applicant, she is entitled to the relief
sought in terms of section
163 of the Act which will enable her to obtain the necessary
information to value the shares and sell
them.
Craig’s
case
[7]
Craig’s opposition to the relief sought by the Applicant is
based,
broadly speaking, upon two grounds. In the first instance, it
was submitted that, having regard to the
real
purpose of the
litigation in this matter, namely the expressed intention of the
Applicant to ensure that there is a “commercial
divorce”
and that she sell the shares in the Company for a reasonable price,
it is incorrect to attempt to utilise subsection
163(2)(f)(i) of the
Act and request this Court to appoint additional directors to the
Company in order to do so. More particularly,
it was submitted on
behalf of Craig that it is impermissible for the Applicant to attempt
to use the provisions of this subsection
to gain control of the
Company as a “stepping stone” towards the
real
relief sought, namely the obtaining of information from the Company
to assist in the sale of those shares. In this regard, it was
submitted that the Applicant has other remedies, including other
relief in terms of section 163 of the Act, at her disposal to
utilise
should she be correct in her assertions that the Company and/or Craig
are guilty of the oppressive or unfair conduct as
set out in
subsections 163(1)(a);(b) or (c) of the Act and/or are not
co-operating in her efforts to value and sell the 47%
shares she now
owns in the Company. Secondly, it was submitted that even if the
Applicant
was
entitled to seek the relief she had sought in
terms of section 163 of the Act (which was denied), she had in any
event failed to
prove that she had satisfied the requirements of that
section of the Act to enable this Court to grant the said relief.
The
law
[8]
Section 163 of the Act reads as follows:
163
Relief from oppressive or prejudicial conduct or from abuse of
separate juristic personality of company
(1)
A
shareholder
or a director of a company may apply to a court for relief
if
-
(a)
any act or omission of the company, or a related person, has had a
result that is
oppressive or unfairly
prejudicial
to, or that unfairly
disregards the interests of, the applicant;
(b)
the business of the company, or a related person, is being or has
been carried on or conducted
in a manner that is
oppressive
or unfairly prejudicia
l to, or that
unfairly disregards the interests of, the applicant; or
(c)
the powers of a director or prescribed officer of the company, or a
person related
to the company, are being or have been exercised in a
manner that is
oppressive or unfairly
prejudicial
to, or that unfairly
disregards the interests of, the applicant.
(2)
Upon considering an application in terms
of subsection (1), the court
may
make any interim or final order it considers fit, including-
(a)
an order restraining the conduct
complained of;
(b)
an order appointing a liquidator, if
the company appears to be insolvent;
(c)
an order placing the company under
supervision and commencing business rescue proceedings in terms of
Chapter 6, if the court is
satisfied that the circumstances set out
in section 131 (4)
(a)
apply;
(d)
an order to regulate the company's
affairs by directing the company to amend its Memorandum of
Incorporation or to create or amend
a unanimous shareholder
agreement;
(e)
an order directing an issue or
exchange of shares
;
(f)
an order-
(i)
appointing directors
in
place of or
in addition to all or any of
the directors then in office
; or
(ii)
declaring any person delinquent or
under probation, as contemplated in section 162;
(g)
an order directing the company or any
other person to restore to a shareholder any part of the
consideration that the shareholder
paid for shares, or pay the
equivalent value, with or without conditions;
(h)
an order varying or setting aside a
transaction or an agreement to which the company is a party and
compensating the company or
any other party to the transaction or
agreement;
(i)
an order requiring the company, within
a time specified by the court, to produce to the court or an
interested person, financial
statements in a form required by this
Act,
or an accounting in any other form
the court may determine;
(j)
an order to pay compensation to an
aggrieved person, subject to any other law entitling that person to
compensation;
(k)
an order directing rectification of the
registers or other records of a company; or
(l)
an order for the trial of any issue as
determined by the court.
(3)
If an order made under this section directs the amendment of the
company's Memorandum of
Incorporation-
(a)
the directors must promptly file a notice
of amendment to give effect to that order, in accordance with section
16 (4); and
(b)
no further amendment altering, limiting or negating the effect of the
court order may be
made to the Memorandum of Incorporation, until a
court orders otherwise.
(4)
......
[2]
The
election of this Court to set out all of the provisions of section
163 of the Act in this judgment and not just the provision
upon which
the Applicant relies, particularly in respect of the relief that the
Applicant seeks
(subsection
163 (2)(f)(i) refers)
is intentional. It has not been done simply to burden this judgment
unnecessarily. As can be seen therefrom (and as will be dealt
with at
the applicable stage in this judgment) the potential remedies
available to an Applicant who has satisfied the requirements
of
subsections 163(1)(a);(b) or (c), are numerous and wide-ranging
in nature.
[3]
[9]
A summary of the applicable legal principles in this matter is set
out
hereunder. In so doing, this Court shall attempt to set out
clearly the manner in which our courts have interpreted and applied
the meaning of the words “
conduct that is oppressive, or
unfairly prejudicial to, or that unfairly disregards the interests
of, the applicant”
when called upon to interpret and apply
the provisions of subsections 163(1)(a);(b) and (c) of the Act in
various commercial situations.
[10]
The
jurisprudence developed in terms of section 252 of the Companies Act
61 of 1973
(“the
old Act”)
which was the equivalent of section 163 of the Act, can also be
considered when determining what constitutes “
oppressive
or unfairly prejudicial conduct
”.
[4]
As is clear from the section, subsections (1) to (3) thereof afford
shareholders and directors the right to approach the Court
for relief
from oppressive or prejudicial conduct
(“unfairly
prejudicial”).
[5]
[11]
In the opinion of this Court (and as glaringly obvious as this may
be) it is imperative
to note that there is a clear distinction
between subsections (1) and (2) of section 163 of the Act. Subsection
(1) sets out the
oppressive or prejudicial conduct in respect of
which an applicant can approach a court for relief and subsection (2)
sets out
the powers of the court in the event of the court deciding
to come to the assistance of an applicant by granting some form of
relief.
What is essential to note, however, is the important
qualification contained in subsection (1) by the use of the
legislator of
the single word “
if”
at the
end of the first sentence in subsection (1) and directly preceding
subsections (a); (b) and (c).In light thereof, it is
clear that:-
(i)
the oppressive or prejudicial conduct of which the applicant
complains must fall within the meaning of the provisions of
subsection (1);
(ii)
the onus of proving that the oppressive or prejudicial conduct of
which
the applicant complains falls within the meaning of the
provisions of subsection (1) is, as a general proposition, incumbent
upon
the applicant;
(iii)
it is also incumbent upon the applicant to prove that the respondent
has,
as a fact, carried out the oppressive or prejudicial conduct;
and
(iv)
in the event of the applicant failing to discharge the onus incumbent
upon
the applicant of proving that the conduct complained of falls
within subsection (1) and that the respondent has actually carried
out such conduct, then the applicant has not passed the “first
hurdle” (so to speak) and subsection (2) does not come
into
operation.
[12]
However, even in the event of the applicant in an application in
terms of section 163 of
the Act successfully discharging the said
onus, this does not bring an end to the matter. This is because, in
terms of subsection
(2), a court considering an application in terms
of section 163 “
may”
make any interim or
final order it considers fit, including the orders as set out in
subsections (a) to (l) inclusive thereof.
In the premises, the court
has a discretion, to be exercised judicially, whether or not to grant
the applicant relief and, if so,
the nature of that relief.
[13]
The
interpretation and application of section 163 of the Act has received
considerable judicial attention by our courts over the
years.
“
Oppressive”
conduct has been held to be,
inter
alia
,
“
unjust
or harsh or tyrannical”
or “
burdensome,
harsh, wrongful”
or which “
involves
at least an element of lack of probity or fair dealing”
or “
a
visible departure from the standards of fair dealing and a violation
of the conditions of fair play on which every shareholder
who
entrusts his money to a company is entitled to rely”
.
As can be seen from the aforegoing, these definitions represent
widely divergent concepts of “
oppressive”
conduct.
[6]
Another definition
of “
oppressive
“
conduct is that conduct of this nature denotes conduct that is
“
burdensome,
harsh and wrongful”
and that such conduct would include lack of probity or good faith and
fair dealing in the affairs of a company to the prejudice
of some
portion of its members.
[7]
[14]
As to the
nature of and the manner in which the conduct must be applied to
qualify as being “
oppressive”
within the meaning of the section, this was clearly set out in the
matter of
Garden
Province Investment v Aleph
(Pty)
Ltd
[8]
where it was held:
‘
It
seems to me that a minority shareholder seeking to invoke the
provisions of s 252(1) of the Companies Act must establish
not
only
that a particular act or omission of a company results in a state of
affairs which is unfairly prejudicial, unjust or inequitable
to him,
but that the particular act or omission itself was one which was
unfair or unjust or inequitable. Similarly, looking at
the
second part of the section,
where the complaint relates to the manner of conduct of the business,
it is the manner in which the affairs have been conducted
as
well as
the result of the conduct of the business in that manner which must
be shown to be unfairly prejudicial, unjust or inequitable.
In the
Afrikaans version the word "unfairly" is translated as
"onredelike" and in point of fact it was the
Afrikaans
version of the Act which was signed. The word "unfairly",
therefore, whether it qualifies only the word "prejudicial"
or whether it qualifies the words "prejudicial, unjust or
inequitable" means therefore "unfairly" in the sense
of "unreasonably", and it seems to me that the use of the
word "unfairly" in this sense in the section fortifies
my
belief that the section relates
both
to the manner and nature of the conduct as well as to the results or
effect of that conduct. When one looks at the second part
of the
section it is stated explicitly that the manner in which the affairs
of the company are being conducted must be shown to
be unfairly
prejudicial, unjust or inequitable.”
[9]
[15]
Probably
the
locus
classicus
in dealing with what constitutes “
oppressive
or unfairly prejudicial conduct”
in the context of section 163 of the Act, is the matter of
Grancy
Property Ltd v Manala and Others
.
[10]
In
Grancy
,
the Supreme Court of Appeal
(“SCA”)
[11]
referred to its earlier decision in the matter of
Louw
v Nel
[12]
where it had held
[13]
the
following:
“
The
combined effect of ss (1) and (3) is to empower the court to make
such order as it thinks fit for the giving of relief, if it
is
satisfied that the affairs of the company are being conducted in a
manner that is unfairly prejudicial to the interests of a
dissident
minority. The conduct of the minority may thus become material in at
least the following two obvious ways. First, it
may render the
conduct of the majority, even though prejudicial to the minority, not
unfair.
Second,
even though the conduct of the majority may be both prejudicial and
unfair, the conduct of the minority may nevertheless
affect the
relief that a court thinks fit to grant under ss 3.
An
applicant for relief under s 252 cannot content himself or herself
with a number of vague and rather general allegations, but
must
establish the following: that the particular act or omission has been
committed, or that the affairs of the company are being
conducted in
the manner alleged, and that such act or omission or conduct of the
company's affairs is unfairly prejudicial, unjust
or inequitable to
him or some part of the members of the company; the nature of the
relief that must be granted to bring to an
end the matters complained
of; and that it is just and equitable that such relief be granted.
Thus, the court's jurisdiction to
make an order does not arise until
the specified statutory criteria have been satisfied.’
(Citations omitted)”
[14]
[16]
It was further held in
Grancy
that:
[26]
According to Prof FHI Cassim
et al
the extensive nature of the
remedy for which s 163 provides is underscored by the inclusion of
the element of unfair disregard
of the applicant's interests. I agree
with this view for it derives support from a judgment of this court
in
Utopia Vakansie-Oorde Bpk v Du Plessis
1974 (3)
SA 148
(A) at 170H – 171D where it was stated that the
concept of 'interests' (in the context of s 62
quat
(4) of the
1926 Companies Act) is much wider than the concept of 'rights'.
Accordingly there is much to be said for the proposition
that s 163
must be construed in a manner that will advance the remedy that it
provides rather than limit it.
[27]
In concluding on this particular aspect of the case it bears mention
that in determining whether
the conduct complained of is
oppressive, unfairly prejudicial or unfairly disregards the
interests of Grancy,
it
is not the motive for the conduct complained of that the court must
look at but the conduct itself and the effect which it has
on the
other members of the company
(see eg
Livanos
v Swartzberg and Others
1962
(4) SA 395
(W) at 399).
[15]
[17]
With regard
to,
inter
alia
,
the manner in which a court should determine whether or not an
applicant has shown that he or she is entitled to the relief sought
in terms of section 163 of the Act, Van Der Linde J, in the matter of
De
Villiers v Kapela Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others
[16]
held the following:
[17]
[28]
The applicant need only establish a
prima
facie
right, although open to doubt.
She must show that on her version,
together with the allegations of the respondents that she cannot
dispute, she should obtain relief
at the trial. If, having regard to
the respondents' contrary version and the inherent probabilities
serious doubt is then cast
on the applicant's case, the applicant
cannot succeed
.
[29]
This well-tried approach was significantly qualified by a full bench
of this court in Ferreira
v Levin, NO and Others; Vryenhoek and
Others v Powell, NO and Others. Ferreira, which received the
imprimatur of the Constitutional
Court, materially lowered the
bar set by Gool. The latter required that on the asserted case the
applicant
"should"
obtain
final relief at trial; the former requires only
"a"
prospect
of success, albeit
"weak."
[30]
The correct perspective, however, of these ostensibly dichotomous
positions is, in my view, captured
by Holmes, J (then) in Olympic
Passenger Service (Pty) Ltd v Ramlagan, approved by
Holmes, JA in Erikson Motors (Welkom)
Ltd v Protea Motors, Warrenton,
and Another, in turn followed by Ferreira, and approved by the
Constitutional Court:
"It
thus appears that where the applicant's right is clear, and the other
requisites are present, no difficulty presents itself
about granting
an interdict. At the other end of the scale, where his prospects of
ultimate success are nil, obviously the Court
will refuse an
interdict. Between those two extremes fall the intermediate cases in
which, on the papers as a whole, the applicants'
prospects of
ultimate success may range all the way from strong to weak. The
expression 'prima facie established though open to
some doubt' seems
to me a brilliantly apt classification of these cases. In such cases,
upon proof of a well-grounded apprehension
of irreparable harm, and
there being no adequate ordinary remedy, the Court may grant an
interdict – it has a discretion,
to be exercised judicially
upon a consideration of all the facts. Usually this will resolve
itself into a nice consideration of
the prospects of success and the
balance of convenience – the stronger the prospects of success,
the less need for such balance
to favour the applicant: the weaker
the prospects of success, the greater the need for the balance of
convenience to favour him.
I need hardly add that by balance of
convenience is meant the prejudice to the applicant if the interdict
be refused, weighed against
the prejudice to the respondent if it be
granted."
[31]
The concept is then that
"a
prima facie right, though open to some doubt"
conveys
that the strength of the right is allowed to fluctuate from strong to
weak: if it is strong, the other requirements
for an interim
interdict may be weak; if it is weak, the other requirements for an
interim interdict may be strong.
[32]
The perspective of the meaning of
"a
prima facie right, although open to some doubt"
,
as collected by Ferreira from Erikson Motors and Olympic Passenger
Service and approved by the Constitutional Court, seems to
me to
render, in the context of the strength of the prima facie right,
future reliance on Webster and Gool otiose; they remain
pertinent, of
course, in the context of factual disputes on the affidavits. The
remedy remains
"an
extraordinary
remedy
within the discretion of the Court,"
as
Erikson Motors underscored, but that is a description apt for the
entire discretion-exercising process, not only the first
element of
it.
[18]
[18]
In
Grancy
the SCA
cited with approval the important point made by Professor FHI
Cassim
[19]
as follows:
[20]
“
Despite the
wide ambit of s 163, it must be borne in mind that the conduct of the
majority shareholders must be evaluated in light
of the fundamental
corporate law principle that, by becoming a shareholder, one
undertakes to be bound by the decisions
of the majority
shareholders. . . . Thus not all acts which prejudicially affect
shareholders or directors, or which disregard
their interests, will
entitle them to relief — it must be shown that the conduct is
not only prejudicial or disregardful
but also that it
is
unfairly
so.”
[21]
[19]
Further,
more than 50 years ago, the erstwhile Appellate Division, in the
matter of
Sammel
and Others v President Brand Gold Mining Co Limited
[22]
stated:
“
First,
some general principles that are relevant. By becoming a shareholder
in a company a person undertakes by his contract to
be bound by
the decisions of the prescribed majority of shareholders, if those
decisions on the affairs of the company are
arrived at in accordance
with the law, even where they adversely affect his own rights as a
shareholder (cf. secs. 16 and 24).
That principle of the supremacy of
the majority is essential to the proper functioning of companies.
[23]
[20]
As held by
Rogers J in the matter of
Visser
Sitrus (Pty) Ltd v Goede Hoop Sitrus (Pty) Ltd and Others
[24]
:
“
What
is important to emphasise, however, is that it is not enough for an
applicant to show that the conduct of which he complains
is
‘prejudicial’ to him or that it ‘disregards’
his interests. The applicant must show that the prejudice
or
disregard has occurred ‘unfairly’. ‘Oppression’
likewise connotes an element at least of unfairness
if not something
worse”.
[25]
[21]
The matter
of
Lourenco
and Others v Ferela (Pty) Ltd and Others
[26]
sets out some important principles which are particularly pertinent
to the present matter. Firstly, when dealing with what it is
necessary for an applicant to show in order to establish a cause of
action under section 252 of the old Act the Court held
[27]
that:
“
It
is clear that to establish a cause of action in terms of s 252 of the
Companies Act it is
not sufficient to
make a number of general allegations
.
In respect of a particular company the applicant must establish the
following:
(1)
an act or omission by the company
itself,
which is unfairly prejudicial,
unjust or inequitable to the applicant or to some part of the members
of the company or that the
affairs of the company are being managed
in a manner unfairly prejudicial, unjust or inequitable to the
applicant or some
part of the members of the company;
(2)
the
nature of
the relief
which must be granted to
bring an end to the matters complained of; and
(3)
that
it is
just
and equitable
that such relief be granted.”
[28]
What
conduct does the Applicant complain of to entitle her to the relief
sought?
[22]
The conduct relied upon by the Applicant in her affidavits placed
before this Court and
dealt with by her Counsel in argument, are the
following:
22.1
Craig’s refusal to recognise and implement a written agreement
that the Applicant contends
was entered into between Pierre and Craig
during or about May 2020;
22.2
Craig’s secret and unlawful appointment of his wife as a
director of the Company;
22.3
Craig’s offer to purchase Pierre’s shares from the
deceased estate at a value that
the Applicant contends is a fraction
of the actual value of those shares;
22.4
Craig’s refusal to grant to the Applicant access to the
Company’s financial information
to enable her to undertake a
valuation of Pierre’s shares;
22.5
Craig’s insistence with compliance with the Company’s
Memorandum of Incorporation
(“MOI”)
and the Act in
circumstances where the Applicant contends the parties did not
previously have regard thereto;
22.6
Craig’s objection to the appointment of the deceased estate’s
nominee as a director
as being contrary to the affairs of the Company
being carried out in the nature of a quasi-partnership as before.
Whether
the relief sought is interim or final, together with the issues of
onus and the resolution of disputes of fact in motion
proceedings
when dealing with an application in terms of section 163 of the Act
[23]
It will be
necessary to consider each of the grounds relied upon by the
Applicant in this application and as set out above. When
doing so,
both parties have submitted to this Court that when deciding this
matter, this Court must apply the well-established
principles in
Plascon-Evans
Paints Limited v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
[29]
to determine whether or not the Applicant is entitled to the relief
sought on motion proceedings. In this regard, it was submitted,
on
behalf of the Company and Craig, that the relief sought by the
Applicant, although framed as interim relief, was in fact final
relief in nature and should be regarded as such. This was so, it was
submitted, because in the event of this Court granting to
the
Applicant the relief sought, namely the appointment of two directors
to the Company, this issue would not be revisited either
by this
Court or by the Court hearing the action to be instituted by the
Applicant which would form part of any order granted by
this
Court.
[30]
In the opinion of
this Court, it would appear clear that the relief sought is indeed
interim relief both in form and in nature.
As a matter of form, it is
interim since, as is clear from the wording of the Notice of Motion,
not only is a clear distinction
drawn between the relief sought as
interim relief and the final relief by way of the action to be
instituted by the Applicant but
the appointment of the two directors
to the Company commences from the date of any order granted by this
Court and comes to an
end upon the finalisation of the action. In the
premises, the relief is clearly interim in nature and there is no
need for any
provision in any order to have the appointments
reconsidered or set aside. Even if this was not the case, this Court
is certain
that the Company or Craig, as parties to such an action,
would be quite entitled to raise such an issue on the pleadings in
the
action should there be any doubt in respect thereof and seek an
appropriate order from the court determining the action as to the
continued appointment of any directors of the Company as a result of
an order of this Court.
[24]
That said, it is further the opinion of this Court that it is
ultimately unnecessary to
decide whether the relief sought by the
Applicant is interim or final relief. This is because, in the first
instance, as set out
above, the parties are in agreement that the
principles as enunciated in
Plascon-Evans
should apply in the
present matter. Whether the parties are, strictly speaking, correct
in this regard (the principles in
Plascon-Evans
deal with
final and not interim relief) is also not, in the opinion of this
Court, an obstacle to this Court determining whether
or not the
Applicant has proven that she is, on motion proceedings, entitled to
the particular relief she seeks in terms of section
163 of the Act.
Whilst
Plascon-Evans
remains authoritative in the present
matter as to how this Court should deal with a dispute of fact in
motion proceedings the ultimate
manner in which this Court determines
whether or not the Applicant has discharged the onus incumbent upon
her to prove that she
is entitled to the relief in terms of section
163 of the Act, will be in line with the authorities already cited in
this judgment.
In doing so, this Court will, at all times, be fully
aware of the fact that the nature of the relief sought in any
particular matter
(such as, for example, an interim interdict in
De
Villiers v Kapela Holdings (Pty) Limited and Others
) in terms of
section 163 of the Act may, to one extent or another, have an effect
on the manner in which a court will examine the
evidence before it
when determining the success or failure of an applicant. At the end
of the day, this Court will adopt an approach
in line with the
established principles of our law pertaining to both motion
proceedings and applications in terms of section 163
of the Act.
Craig’s
refusal to recognise and implement a written agreement that the
Applicant contends was concluded between Pierre and
Craig during or
about May 2020
[25]
With regard to this complaint by the Applicant, there is a clear
factual dispute
on the application papers. The Applicant contends
that the written agreement that provides,
inter alia
, for a
shareholder holding more than 45% of the shares in the Company to
nominate one person for appointment as a director and
provides for
equal voting rights between Pierre and Craig
(“the
agreement”)
was signed by Pierre on 5 May 2020 and then by
Craig on 27 May 2020.In the answering affidavit, Craig, under oath,
disputes the
authenticity of his signature and denies signing the
agreement. He further states that he believes that the signature
purporting
to be his is a forgery. The explanation provided by Craig
in the answering affidavit is that although Pierre did present him
with
the document for signature during or about May 2020 and that
Pierre was attempting to pressurise him to sign the said document,
he
refused to do so. Craig further states, under oath, that the first
time he saw the agreement purportedly signed by both himself
and
Pierre, was when a copy thereof was provided to his attorneys by the
Applicant’s attorneys on the 6
th
of September 2021.
[26]
It was submitted by Adv Gilbert, who appeared on behalf of the
Company and Craig, that
this factual dispute, particularly as it
relates to Craig’s version, cannot be rejected as far-fetched
or fanciful. In this
regard, he puts forward a number of reasons in
support of this submission. In the first instance, he makes the point
that the Applicant,
as executrix of the deceased estate, has no
personal knowledge pertaining to Craig’s signature on the
agreement. Indeed,
it must be noted that she never claims to have any
such personal knowledge. In the premises, it was submitted that the
Applicant’s
averments pertaining thereto and as contained in
the founding affidavit, constitute hearsay evidence.
[27]
At this stage of the judgment, it is apposite for this Court to make
mention of the fact
that there appears, in the application papers, to
be indications of no less than two interlocutory applications between
the parties.
On or about the 26
th
of January 2022 the
Company and Craig issued a Notice that they would make application,
at the hearing of this matter, for the
striking out of certain
paragraphs of the Applicant’s founding affidavit. There are no
other documents or affidavits relating
to this Notice. Then, on or
about the 17
th
of March 2022, the Applicant issued a
Notice of Motion, together with a founding affidavit, in terms of
which the Applicant sought
that, at the hearing of this matter, the
very same paragraphs in the founding affidavit that the Company and
Craig sought to have
struck out as hearsay, be admitted into evidence
in terms of section 3 of the
Law of Evidence Amendment Act 45 of
1988
(“the Evidence Act”).
No further documents
or affidavits appear to have been filed in respect of this
interlocutory application. When the matter was argued
before this
Court, no mention was made (to the very best of this Court’s
recollection) to either interlocutory application
or to the fact that
it would be necessary for this Court to decide whether or not the
evidence tendered by the Applicant and contained
in the paragraphs of
the founding affidavit referred to above, constituted hearsay
evidence. Most importantly, this Court was never
asked to decide
whether such evidence should be excluded on the basis of it being
hearsay or whether it should be admitted in terms
of section 3 of the
Evidence Act. In light of the decision that this Court has reached in
this matter, it is the opinion of this
Court that it is unnecessary
to make a finding as to the admissibility of that evidence as
proffered by the Applicant in the founding
affidavit.
[28]
It was
further submitted that the Applicant’s own version, even if
accepted, is inherently contradictory. In this regard,
it is the
Applicant’s version that one COHEN
(“Cohen”),
at that time Pierre’s attorney, was requested by Pierre, on the
6
th
of May 2020, to draft an agreement reflecting that Pierre and Craig
would have equal voting rights and that Cohen, having done
so, then
sent a draft thereof to Pierre on the 12
th
of May 2020. It was pointed out by Adv Gilbert that the aforegoing is
supported by emails which form part of the application papers.
In
light of the aforegoing, it was impossible for Pierre to have signed
the agreement on 5 May 2020, as averred by the Applicant.
This,
submits Counsel, seriously calls into doubt the Applicant’s
entire version of events and facts as placed before this
Court by way
of her affidavits. Further and in this regard, it must be noted that
when this discrepancy was pertinently raised
in the answering
affidavit it was not addressed by the Applicant in reply other than
to state “…
the
discrepancy between the dates of 5 May 2020 and 12 May 2020 have no
material bearing on this application, or the status of the
agreement.”
[31]
[29]
Against this version as provided by the Applicant, it was submitted
that the version of
Craig is far more probable and thus cannot be
rejected as being far-fetched or fanciful. In this regard, it is
common cause between
the parties that the sale of 51% of the shares
of the Company by Wild Rose to Pierre and Craig took place on 4 May
2020. In terms
of that agreement Craig would own 53% and Pierre would
own 47% of the shares in the Company. It was submitted that if it had
been
the intention to have equal voting rights, then the sales
agreement with Wild Rose would simply have reflected an equal
shareholding
in the Company. It did not and there was a deliberate
split of 53% to 47% which, it was submitted, negates the contentions
of the
Applicant and reflects a deliberate intention for there not to
be equal voting rights (which obviously supports Craig’s
version).
[30]
Moreover, it was the Applicant’s version that she was told by
Pierre that despite
the disproportionate shareholding reflected in
the sale agreement with Wild Rose, Pierre and Craig had nonetheless
agreed to have
an equal say in the running of the Company and equal
voting rights in respect thereof. This however is not borne out by
the documentary
evidence. The email sent by Pierre to Cohen on the
6
th
of May 2020 wherein he requests Cohen to draft an
agreement reflecting such equality does not show that he and Craig
had reached
agreement in respect thereof. Rather, it was submitted on
behalf of the Company and Craig that the wording and tone of that
email
clearly illustrate that no such agreement had been reached and
that it was Pierre’s “wish” that it had been so.
It
was submitted by Adv Gilbert that if there had indeed been a
preceding agreement reached between Pierre and Craig prior to the
6
th
of May 2020 the email would have read very differently. It would
simply have stated that agreement had been reached and that Pierre
now wished to have that agreement reduced to writing.
[31]
Further and in regard to the two emails exchanged between Pierre and
Cohen, as dealt with
above, it is important to note that Craig was
not copied into either email by Pierre or by Cohen. It was submitted
on behalf of
the Company and Craig that if indeed an agreement had
been reached between Pierre and Craig, as alleged by the Applicant,
then
Craig would have been part of the email trail since he would
have been a willing party to an agreement which was in the process
of
being reduced to writing.
[32]
A considerable amount of the Applicant’s case with regard to
the agreement as to
equal voting rights depends upon this Court
accepting the email trail between Pierre, Craig and representatives
of the Company’s
bankers during the period 21 to 26 August
2020.On this issue, Adv Gilbert makes the important point that Craig
has explained, under
oath, that he simply did not notice, in the long
exchange of emails between Pierre and the aforesaid representatives
of the Bank,
where he
was
copied into certain emails, that
Pierre had represented to the Bank that there were equal voting
rights between the two of them.
Craig further points out in the
answering affidavit that none of the documents furnished to the Bank
and which are attachments
to the chain of emails reflecting the
alleged equal voting rights were actually signed by him or that he
was even requested to
sign them. The actual page reflecting the
alleged equal voting rights is signed by Pierre only and then emailed
by Pierre directly
to the Bank. It is noted by this Court that the
Applicant failed to attach any confirmatory affidavits from the
representatives
of the Bank who were involved in the said email trail
or affidavits from them possibly explaining whether or not there were
any
discussions which took place with either Pierre or Craig outside
of the emails which may have assisted this Court in deciding the
matter.
[33]
To Craig’s credit, he obtained the expert evidence and a report
from a handwriting
expert which he provided to the Applicant’s
attorneys prior to the Applicant filing her replying affidavit. This
expert was
unable to provide an opinion as to whether the disputed
signature on the agreement was Craig’s or not. Adv Gilbert made
the
submission that the very fact that this report is inconclusive,
is indicative of the genuine dispute of fact which exists between
the
parties on this particular issue.
[34]
Having regard to the aforegoing, it was submitted on behalf of the
Company and Craig that,
in the context of conduct which the Applicant
contends falls within the ambit of section 163, Craig’s conduct
in refusing
to recognise the agreement which he disputes that he
signed, cannot constitute unfairly prejudicial conduct.
Craig
secretly and unlawfully appointed his wife as a director of the
Company
.
[35]
The explanation for the aforegoing is, once again, to be found in the
answering affidavit.
Here Craig states that he appointed his wife as
the second director of the company, three days before Pierre died, at
the request
of the Company’s Bank, who preferred there to be
two directors in case anything happened to Craig as the sole director
which
could leave the Company “rudderless”. It must be
noted that no confirmatory affidavit from a representative of the
Bank is attached to the answering affidavit.
[36]
Craig goes on to explain that once he had taken legal advice, his
wife offered to and then
did resign as a director of the Company on
the 12
th
of November 2021. Reference is made in the
answering affidavit that prior thereto, on the 15
th
of
October 2021, Craig’s attorneys addressed a letter to the
Applicant’s attorneys wherein it was recorded that Craig’s
wife would resign and that a second director could be appointed as
envisaged by the provisions of section 68 of the Act. It was
also
stated in the answering affidavit that the appointment of his wife
was never intended to be a secret and that a simple company
search
would have shown that she had been appointed as a director of the
Company.
[37]
In the premises, it was submitted that there is no merit to this
complaint which was rectified.
It was further submitted that Craig
had made it clear that he was happy to convene a shareholders’
meeting where a second
director could be elected.
Craig’s
offer to purchase Pierre’s shares from the deceased estate at a
value that the Applicant contends is a fraction
of the actual value
of those shares
[38]
Adv Gilbert
submitted that there is no obligation upon Craig to buy the shares
owned by the deceased estate, especially at a value
which the
Applicant has unilaterally ascribed to those shares. It was further
submitted that the Applicant’s dissatisfaction
at the value
offered by Craig for the minority shareholding can be addressed as
part of what was described as the “usual”
buy-out order
pursuant to which Craig could be compelled to purchase the shares
owned by the deceased estate at a market related
value and as
determined by an independent third party valuer.
[32]
This is assuming of course that the Applicant can make out a case for
that relief in the action to be instituted, as catered for
in the
order sought in the present matter and dealt with by the Applicant in
her affidavits.
[39]
It should be noted that the conduct complained of by the Applicant
under this heading is
closely linked to the complaint that Craig has
refused to grant her access to the financial information of the
Company to enable
her to undertake a valuation of Pierre’s
shares. On behalf of the Company and Craig, it was submitted that
Craig’s
offer to purchase the shares in the Company owned by
the deceased estate at a value considered by the Applicant to be too
low,
cannot constitute unfairly prejudicial conduct within the
meaning of section 163 of the Act.
Craig’s
refusal to grant to the Applicant access to the Company’s
financial information to enable her to undertake a
valuation of
Pierre’s shares.
[40]
In response
to this complaint, it was submitted on behalf of the Company and
Craig that there is no general principle in our corporate
law that a
company or the majority shareholder is required to make information
available to a minority shareholder to enable the
minority
shareholding to be valued.
[33]
Further, it was submitted by Adv Gilbert that, in the present matter,
no case had been made out by the Applicant for such access
to
information merely on the basis that the Applicant seeks such
information to enable the value of the deceased estate’s
minority shareholding to be determined and particularly where the
necessary provision can be made for such information to be furnished
as part of the usual-form buy-out order.
[41]
With regard
to the aforegoing, it was pointed out by Counsel that our courts have
recognised that they have an unfettered discretion
as to the method
of fixing the price of such shares, which should be a fair price
determined objectively and provided that an applicant
formulates the
appropriate relief to enable such a discretion to be exercised.
[34]
This informs the usual form order that is typically granted in a
buy-out, which provides for a determination of a fair price of
the
relevant shareholding by way of a particular methodology, usually at
the instance of an independent third-party valuer who
has access to
all the necessary financial information.
[42]
In support
of his argument, Adv Gilbert relied on the matter of
Geffen
and Others v Martin and Others
[35]
where it was held,
inter
alia
,
that:
“…
.with
regard to the question of access to bank accounts, no basis was
suggested as to why a shareholder had an entitlement to a
daily
viewing of the company’s bank accounts.”
[36]
Following
thereon, it was further submitted that the Applicant had accepted
that she had been provided with and had access to the
financial
statements of the Company for the 2020 and 2021 financial years.
These financial statements were provided to the Applicant
by Craig’s
attorneys on the 7
th
of September 2021.The attention of
this Court was drawn by Adv Gilbert to the fact that the said
financial statements had been
signed off by the Company’s
auditor.
[43]
Arising
from the aforegoing, it was further submitted that the failure of the
Applicant in the present matter to adduce evidence,
such as by way of
an expert accountant, challenging the veracity of the financial
statements for purposes of at least making a
preliminary
determination of the value of the minority shareholding, militates
against the relief she seeks being just and equitable.
[37]
Without setting out a basis in her founding affidavit, submits Adv
Gilbert, as to why these annual financial statements cannot
be relied
upon, the Applicant cannot complain that she has been provided with
insufficient information so as to entitle her to
any further
information, let alone the invasive relief sought in the Notice of
Motion which goes well beyond access to information.
[44]
Finally, it was submitted that, in any event, should the Applicant’s
true
complaint be that she needs access to information, then
the relief sought should have been crafted to obtain such information
rather
than the invasive appointment of no less than two extra
directors to the Company’s board of directors which is directly
contrary
to the majoritarian principle.
Craig’s
insistence with compliance with the Company’s Memorandum of
Incorporation
(“MOI”)
and the Act in
circumstances where the Applicant contends the parties did not
previously have regard thereto
[45]
At the outset, it was submitted on behalf of the Company and Craig
that Craig’s insistence
upon compliance with the MOI cannot in
and of itself constitute unfairly prejudicial conduct.
[46]
In support thereof, it was also submitted that there was nothing
unfair in Craig adopting
the position that once his relationship with
Pierre ended upon Pierre’s death, he was not bound to appoint
Pierre’s
widow or his widow’s nominee as a director who
would then simply slot into where Pierre once was. Also, it was
submitted
that to the extent that the Company’s MOI and the
provisions of the Act support Craig as the majority shareholder in
adopting
that position, he cannot be faulted.
Craig’s
objection to the appointment of the deceased estate’s nominee
as a director as being contrary to the affairs
of the Company being
carried out in the nature of a quasi-partnership as before.
[47]
In the first instance, it is pointed out by Adv Gilbert that on the
application papers
before this Court the Company and Craig dispute
the averments made by the Applicant that the Company is/was a
quasi-partnership
or conducted its business on that basis whilst
Pierre was alive. As set out in the answering affidavit, Craig
explains that (as
is common cause in this matter) Pierre was not part
of the Company at inception; only joined the Company during 2014 and
then only
as a very small shareholder, holding 10% of the shares in
the Company which were given to him by Craig for no consideration.
[48]
Counsel for the Company and for Craig takes the argument further and
submits that, even
if it is assumed (in the Applicant’s favour)
that the company was in the nature of a quasi-partnership the conduct
complained
of, namely the failure of Craig to accept a new “partner”,
cannot constitute unfairly prejudicial conduct. This must
be so, it
is submitted, because:
48.1
it is so
that the exclusion by a majority shareholder of the participation of
a minority shareholder in the affairs of a company
that is in effect
a quasi-partnership may, where the excluded shareholder had a
legitimate expectation to participate in those
affairs, found relief
under section 163.
[38]
However, it was submitted, on the facts of the present matter, that
Craig did not unfairly exclude Pierre from participation in
the
affairs of the Company. Rather, it was Pierre’s death and
preceding illness that gave rise to his exclusion and not any
identified conduct of Craig; and
48.2
once a
partner dies that is the end of the partnership
[39]
and the executrix of the deceased partner’s estate cannot
simply appoint someone to slot in as the new partner.
[49]
In the premises, it was submitted on behalf of the Company and Craig
that the Applicant’s
attempt to found unfairly prejudicial
conduct based upon a quasi-partnership where the partnership has
ceased to exist upon the
death of the alleged quasi-partner, is
fundamentally flawed.
Has
the Applicant overcome the “first hurdle” in the
application by proving unfair prejudicial conduct on behalf of
Craig
and thereby satisfying the requirements of subsections 163(1) (a);(b)
or (c) of the Act ?
[50]
In order to answer this question, it is necessary to consider the
grounds relied upon by
the Applicant and decide whether, on the
evidence placed before this Court and the facts as averred by the
Applicant on motion
proceedings, which are either accepted or not
genuinely disputed by the Company and Craig, the Applicant has
discharged the onus
incumbent upon her to prove that Craig is guilty
of unfairly prejudicial conduct towards her within the meaning of
same in terms
of section 163 of the Act.
[51]
Those grounds relied upon by the Applicant in this matter have
already been dealt with
in some detail in this judgment. Suffice it
to say, this Court accepts the majority (if not all) of the
submissions made by Counsel
for the Company and Craig in respect of
these grounds, qualified by a few observations of this Court, as
dealt with hereunder.
[52]
The first
observation which this Court wishes to make, pertains to the
complaint that Craig has failed to recognise and implement
the
agreement. Whilst this Court agrees with the submissions made on
behalf of the Respondent that,
inter
alia
,
the Applicant’s version that she was told by Pierre that
despite the disproportionate shareholding reflected in the sale
agreement with Wild Rose, Pierre and Craig had nonetheless agreed to
have an equal say in the running of the Company and equal
voting
rights in respect thereof is not borne out by the documentary
evidence,
[40]
it would be
remiss of this Court if it were not to be noted that what cannot be
disputed is the existence of other documentary
evidence. This other
documentary evidence consists of the emails leading up to the
agreement coming into existence; the agreement
itself and the emails
between the parties during the period 21 to 26 August 2020. In the
opinion of this Court, these documents
could
possibly
show an increasing mistrust on behalf of Pierre towards Craig and the
manner in which Pierre possibly conceived that Craig was
conducting
the affairs of the Company. Of course, these fears would only have
been heightened by the fact that Pierre was terminally
ill and wished
to do everything he possibly could to secure the future of his
family, including the Applicant (which also provides
a
possible
explanation as to why Pierre may have told the Applicant that Craig
had agreed to equal voting rights). The fact that things may
have
already started to sour between Pierre and Craig and that Pierre was
concerned therewith, is also supported by the assertions
in the
answering affidavit made by Craig to the effect that Pierre had
presented the agreement to him during May but he had refused
to sign
it.
[53]
The difficulty with these facts when considering whether the
Applicant has discharged the
onus incumbent upon her, is that (a)
this Court did not understand it to be the Applicant’s case
that the agreement was somehow
being “created” by Pierre
to protect his minority shareholding in the Company (rather, it was
always the Applicant’s
case that Pierre and Craig had actually
agreed to equal voting rights) and (b) it ultimately takes the
dispute of fact pertaining
to the issue of whether or not Craig did,
as a fact, enter into the agreement with Pierre, no further. It is
nevertheless important
to note that this Court has considered these
facts in this judgment.
[54]
A further observation made by this Court is that, as noted earlier in
this judgment, Craig
had appointed his wife as a director of the
company prior to Pierre’s death. On Craig’s version, this
was at the request
and suggestion of the Company’s Bank (the
appointment of another director). No independent evidence was placed
before this
Court in support thereof. However, despite the aforegoing
and any possible inferences that may be drawn therefrom that even
shortly
before Pierre’s death, Craig may have been taking steps
to ensure that his control of the Company was not somehow usurped,
it
cannot be said that Craig’s conduct in this regard constitutes
unfairly prejudicial conduct towards the Applicant.
[55]
The final observation which this Court wishes to make is that from
the information placed
before it during the course of this
application, it would appear,
prima facie
, that the price
offered by Craig to purchase the shares of the deceased estate is far
lower than that which the said shares may
ultimately be valued at.
This was not seriously challenged by Craig in the answering
affidavit. However, once again, this does
not satisfy the requirement
of the Act in proving that Craig’s conduct was unfairly
prejudicial towards a minority shareholder.
This must be so, for all
of the reasons as dealt with earlier in this judgment and as set out
hereunder. Whilst the attempts by
Craig to purchase the shares of
Pierre’s deceased estate at a value which appears to be far
less than what those shares are
really worth may perhaps be regarded
as questionable if judged on a purely moralistic standard, they fall
well short of constituting
conduct which could be classified as being
unfairly prejudicial towards the Applicant as envisaged in terms of
section 163 of the
Act.
[56]
Having
considered all of the grounds relied upon by the Applicant in support
of her application in terms of subsection 163(1) of
the Act, it is
the finding of this Court that the Applicant has failed to prove, on
a balance of probabilities, that either the
Company or, in
particular, Craig, has carried out any conduct which is unfairly
prejudicial towards the Applicant. This is so since
the conduct
complained of is not unfairly prejudicial within the meaning of the
provisions of subsections 163(1)(a);(b) or (c)
of the Act. It is
certainly not oppressive. The aforegoing is applicable in respect of
the conduct complained of by the Applicant
which is accepted by the
Respondent and in light of which there is no material dispute of
fact. In those instances where there
are
material disputes of fact (in respect of whether the agreement
was entered into by Craig and whether Craig accepted that
he and
Pierre had equal voting rights despite the fact that Pierre was a
minority shareholder, this being allegedly evidenced by
the email
correspondence between Pierre. Craig and representatives of the
Company’s Bankers) this Court holds that these
disputes are
genuine and
bona
fide
disputes of fact
[41]
and that
the versions put forward by Craig are not so far-fetched and fanciful
to be rejected by this Court on the affidavits before
it. In the
premises, where such disputes of fact exist, this Court must accept
the versions put forward by Craig.
[57]
In light of the findings by this Court, it is not necessary for this
Court to decide whether
or not the contents of the Applicant’s
founding affidavit, contained in certain paragraphs thereof and as
referred to earlier
in this judgment, constitute hearsay evidence and
should be struck out, or should be entered into evidence, in the
interests of
justice, in terms of section 3 of the Evidence Act.
Whether the averments of the Applicant constitute hearsay evidence or
not,
they are insufficient to assist the Applicant in discharging the
onus incumbent upon her.
[58]
Ultimately,
the failure of the Applicant in this application is as a result of an
incorrect understanding and misinterpretation
of the statutory
requirements of section 163 of the Act. This is so, particularly when
applied to the facts of this case. None
of the grounds complained of
by the Applicant could remotely provide a basis for this Court to
grant relief to the Applicant, as
a minority shareholder, in terms of
section 163 of the Act. Moreover, the failure of the Applicant to
succeed in this application
must also rest on her inability to
properly recognise and appreciate the corporate law principle of
majoritarian control.
[42]
The
Applicant has failed to discharge the onus incumbent upon her to
prove that any conduct by the Company or Craig can be said
to be
unfairly prejudicial towards the Applicant whether one considers the
relief sought by the Applicant in this application to
be interim or
final in nature. In coming to this decision this Court is guided and
assisted by the principles as enunciated in,
inter
alia
,
De
Villiers
,
Grancy
,
Sammel
and
Lourenco
.
[59]
In the premises, this application should be dismissed. Moreover, even
in the event of this
Court being incorrect and the Applicant having
succeeded in proving that Craig had carried out conduct which is
oppressive or unfairly
prejudicial or unfairly disregards the
interests of the Applicant, the Applicant would still not have been
successful in this application,
for the reasons more clearly set out
hereunder.
In
the event of this Court being incorrect in holding that the Applicant
has failed to prove unfairly prejudicial conduct on behalf
of the
Company or Craig, did the Applicant show that the relief she seeks is
appropriate to bring an end to the matters complained
of and that it
would have been just and equitable for this Court to grant that
relief ?
[60]
A number of important facts in the present matter need to be noted in
considering whether
the Applicant had demonstrated that she was
entitled to the relief sought if she had crossed the “first
hurdle” and
had proved that this Court could, in the exercise
of its discretion, grant the Applicant relief in terms of subsection
163(2) of
the Act. These facts are:
58.1
the nature of the relief sought;
58.2
the reasons why the Applicant sought the particular relief that she
did.
The
nature of the relief sought
[61]
The applicant seeks the appointment of two further directors to the
Company (in addition
to Craig who is presently the sole director),
one being Jacob Edery, or such person nominated from time to time by
the Applicant
(“referred to by the Applicant as the
Nominated Director”)
and the other being a person nominated
by the South African Institute of Chartered Accountants
(“referred
to by the Applicant as the Independent Director”)
. This
relief is presumably fashioned on the relief provided for in
subsection 163(2)(f)(i) of the Act. The said subsection has
been set
out earlier in this judgment. Nevertheless, it deserves repeating
herein. It provides:
“
Upon
considering an application in terms of subsection (1), the court may
make any interim or final order it considers fit, including
an order
appointing
directors
in place of or
in
addition to all or any of the directors then in office
.”
[43]
[62]
Whilst
subsection 163(2) of the Act determines that the Court
may
make
any
(interim or final) order “
it
considers fit
”
and continues to provide some examples of the powers that the Court
may exercise, the Court’s powers are not limited
to those as
set out in subsections (a) to (l).
[44]
The discretion of the Court to grant appropriate relief where it is
warranted, has been recognised to be fairly wide.
[63]
However, in the present matter before this Court, it is imperative to
note that in seeking
the relief that the Applicant has sought, no
reliance was placed by the Applicant at any stage in the proceedings
to either seek
alternative relief from this Court or to alter the
relief sought in any manner or form. In addition thereto, it was
never
suggested by the Applicant, either in the application papers
before this Court or during the course of argument by Counsel acting
on behalf of the Applicant, that this Court should, or could, grant
to the Applicant relief in any other form should this Court
have
deemed that the relief sought by the Applicant was not appropriate.
The
reasons why the Applicant sought the relief that she did.
[64]
It was stated by the Applicant, in the founding affidavit, that
having regard to the present
circumstances, it is impossible for
herself (as the present minority shareholder in the Company) and
Craig (as the majority shareholder
in the Company) to continue as
co-shareholders in the Company. In the premises, on the Applicant’s
own version the Applicant
contends that there should be what is often
referred to as a “commercial divorce”. This is further
clear from the entire
tenor of the application; the complaints levied
against Craig and the relief it is stated would have been sought in
the action
to be instituted had the Applicant been successful in this
application.
[65]
Having
regard to the aforegoing, it would appear to this Court to be fairly
obvious that the relief that the Applicant
should
have sought was that Craig, as the majority shareholder, buy-out the
deceased estate as the minority shareholder. Whilst not specifically
mentioned as a power in subsection 163(2), it is a form of relief
which our courts have frequently granted.
[45]
Reference has already been made in this judgment to the manner in
which buy-out orders may be made by the courts to effect commercial
divorces, including safeguards to ensure fairness to all parties in
the giving of effect thereto.
[66]
In addition to the aforegoing, it would appear to this Court that, in
light of the Applicant’s
complaints and the fact that it was
incumbent upon the Applicant to seek appropriate relief that would
bring an end to the matters
complained of, there were yet still other
subsections contained in subsection (2) which may have been of
greater assistance to
the Applicant in this matter.
[67]
Subsection
163(2)(e) provides for “
an
order directing an issue or exchange of shares”.
This subsection has been seen as an alternative to the Court ordering
a buy-out of shares but still directing an exchange of shares
for
cash and in the appropriate case money compensation for oppressed
shareholders.
[46]
A further
subsection which appears to this Court to be particularly on point,
especially having regard to the Applicant’s
complaints of not
having been provided with sufficient information to carry out a
valuation of the Applicant’s shares, is
subsection 163(2)(i) of
the Act. This subsection allows the Court to make an
order
“requiring the company, within a time specified by the court,
to produce to the court or an interested person financial
statements
in a form required by this Act,
or
an accounting in any other form the court may determine
”.
[47]
It was
common cause that financial statements were provided to the
Applicant. If the Applicant contended that the information contained
therein was insufficient for the purposes of valuing the Applicant’s
shares then it would appear to this Court that it would
have seemed
fairly obvious that appropriate relief should have been sought in a
form of accounting put forward in the application
papers which would
have put an end to the Applicant’s complaints. This form of
relief, if granted, would also have put an
end to the necessity of
(presumably) the Applicant having to institute the action as
contemplated in the Applicant’s Notice
of Motion.
[68]
However, as is clear from both the Applicant’s Notice of Motion
and the Applicant’s
affidavits, the Applicant, despite averring
that the purpose of the application is a “stepping stone”
to obtaining
the necessary information to value the shares of the
deceased estate and that it will be necessary for the Applicant and
Craig
to obtain a “commercial divorce”, does not seek a
forced buy-out by Craig of the deceased estate’s minority
shareholding
(with appropriate ancillary relief). Rather, the
Applicant seeks what Adv Gilbert has described as the “invasive”
relief
of the appointment of two directors to the Company which could
effectively deprive Craig of control of the Company (despite the
fact
that he would remain the majority shareholder in the Company which,
once again, would be in conflict with the majoritarian
principle).
[69]
It was at this stage of the argument that the question was posed,
quite rightly so, by
Counsel for the Company and Craig, as to why the
Applicant had sought the relief in the form that she did, when more
circumscribed
relief could have achieved the purpose of access to
information or why any relief at all was necessary as a precursor to
seeking
the usual-form buy-out order. In this regard. It was
submitted by Adv Gilbert that the Applicant had a second objective in
seeking
the invasive relief that she did and which would have had the
effect of depriving Craig of control of the Company. That objective,
he submits, is to attempt to use the relief sought in terms of
section 163 of the Act
in terrorum
(as an “
instrument
of oppression”
) against Craig as the majority shareholder
to force him to acquire the deceased estate’s shares at a
greater value than warranted.
[70]
Adv Gilbert
then proceeded to draw the attention of this Court to numerous
examples of the Applicant’s conduct during the
history of this
matter which he submits supports his submissions that the institution
of this application in terms of section 163
of the Act was nothing
more than an instrument of oppression. This Court is acutely aware of
the cautionary note issued by the
Supreme Court of Appeal in
Grancy
[48]
where
it was accepted that whilst the Court has a very wide jurisdiction
and discretion in applications of this nature the Court
must however
be carefully controlled in order to prevent the section of the Act
from itself being used as a means of oppression.
In addition thereto,
this Court is also alive to the well-established principles (as also
relied upon by Adv Gilbert during the
course of argument) in
corporate law that an aggrieved shareholder should, in general,
attempt to resolve any internal disputes
by way of internal domestic
remedies before approaching the Court for equitable relief.
[71]
In light of the decisions reached by this Court in respect of both
the fact that the Applicant
has failed to discharge the onus
incumbent upon her to show that the conduct of either the Company or
Craig satisfies the requirements
of subsection 163(1) of the Act and
the decision in respect of the relief sought by the Applicant in
terms of subsection 163(2)
of the Act, this Court deems that it is
unnecessary for it to attempt to unravel possible reasons for the
Applicant’s election
to request the relief in the form that she
did. This decision is fortified by the fact that the Company and
Craig do not seek an
order for punitive costs against the Applicant
in this matter.
[72]
Had the
Applicant proved, on a balance of probabilities, that the Company or
Craig had been guilty of conduct which was unfairly
prejudicial and
oppressive towards Pierre’s deceased estate as a minority
shareholder in the Company in terms of subsection
163(1) of the Act
it is nevertheless clear that this Court would not, in the exercise
of its discretion, have granted the Applicant
the relief sought being
the appointment of the Nominated Director and the Independent
Director. This is simply because the relief
that an applicant seeks
must be appropriate to bring an end to the matters complained of and
it would be just and equitable to
grant that relief.
[49]
[73]
As is clear from that set out above the Applicant, despite having had
the opportunity to
do so and for reasons only known to herself, chose
relief that was entirely inappropriate; did not necessarily put an
end to the
conduct complained of; was merely a step in the procedure
to the final relief ultimately sought by the Applicant and would
certainly
not have been just and equitable. With regard to the last
factor, it would not have been just and equitable, on the facts
before
this Court, to grant the relief sought, thereby effectively
depriving the major shareholder of control of the Company which, on
the present information before this Court, is not in any financial
danger but in fact appears to be doing rather well. In this
regard,
no case was made out by the Applicant that the Applicant was
suffering any financial prejudice as a result of the Company’s
affairs being mishandled or neglected in any manner whatsoever by
Craig. Once again, as with the difficulties faced by the Applicant
in
failing to discharge the onus in respect of subsection 163(1) of the
Act, it is the opinion of this Court that the Applicant,
in
approaching the relief sought in terms of subsection 163(2) of the
Act, has failed to truly appreciate the corporate principle
of
majoritarian control.
[74]
In the premises, this Court holds that even had the Applicant
overcome the “first
hurdle” in this application, the
Applicant would nevertheless have been unsuccessful in this
application in failing to demonstrate
that this Court should exercise
its discretion in her favour and grant her the relief as sought.
Under the circumstances, even
in the event of this Court being
incorrect in dismissing the application in the first instance the
application was doomed to fail.
Costs
[75]
It is trite that costs fall within the discretion of the Court.
Moreover, it is trite that
unless unusual circumstances exist, costs
normally follow the result. No such circumstances have been brought
to the attention
of this Court. In the premises, there is no reason
why the order for costs should not follow the normal course and the
Applicant
be ordered to pay the costs of the application.
[76]
The Company and Craig have asked that this Court also make an order
that the Applicant
pay the costs incurred when the matter was removed
from the Urgent Roll, those costs having been reserved. In light of
the fact
that these costs were incurred in the course of the
litigation; the application would have been set down on the Urgent
Roll by
the Applicant before being removed; the fact that this Court
cannot find any grounds of urgency on the application papers before
it and that there was no real opposition to paying these costs from
the Applicant in the event of the application being dismissed,
this
Court is of the opinion that these costs should also be paid by the
Applicant.
Order
[77]
In the premises, this Court makes the following order:
1.
The Application is dismissed;
2.
The Applicant is to pay the costs of the application, such costs
to
include the costs occasioned by the removal of the application from
the urgent roll on the 8
th
of February 2022.
B.C.
WANLESS
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Johannesburg
Heard
:
17
October 2022
Judgment
:
3
February 2023
Appearances
:
For
Applicant
:
A
Subel SC (with P Lourens)
Instructed
by
:
Werksmans Attorneys
For
First and Second
Respondents
:
BM
Gilbert
Instructed
by
:
Peter Le Mottée Attorneys
[1]
Emphasis
added.
[2]
Emphasis
added.
[3]
Subsections
163(2)(a) to (l) inclusive of the Act.
[4]
Henochsberg
on the Companies Act (“Henochsberg”), commentary on
section 163 of the Act; Grancy Property Limited v
Manala and Others
2015 (3) SA 313
(SCA) at paragraph 22; Count Gothard SA Pilati v
Witfontein Game Farm (Pty) Ltd and Others
[2013] 2 All SA 190
(GNP)
paragraph 17.12;Peel Hamon J&C Engineering (Pty) Ltd
[2013] 1
All SA 603
(GSJ) at paragraph 43; Omar v Inhouse Venue
Technical Management (Pty) Limited and Others
2015 (3) SA 146
(WCC)
at paragraph 4; De Villiers v Kapela Holdings (Pty) Limited and
Others (42781/2015)
[2016] ZAGPJHC 278 (14 October 2016)
at
paragraph 75.
[5]
Henochsberg,
commentary on section 163 of the Act (hereafter referred to as
“Henochsberg”).
[6]
Aspek
Pipe Co (Pty) Ltd v Mauerberger
1968 (1) SA 517
(C) at 525H-526E.
[7]
Scottish
Co-operative Wholesale Society Ltd v Meyer [1959] A 324 HL at 342.
[8]
1979
(2) SA 525
(D) at 531.
[9]
Emphasis
added.
[10]
2015
(3) SA 313 (SCA).
[11]
At paragraph [25].
[12]
2011
(2) SA 172 (SCA).
[13]
At paragraph [23].
[14]
Emphasis added.
[15]
Emphasis
added.
[16]
(42781/2015)
[2016] ZAGPJHC 278 (14 October 2016).
[17]
At
paragraphs [28] to [32].
[18]
Emphasis
added
.
[19]
Prof
FHI Cassim et al in Contemporary Company Law, 2
nd
Edition (2012) at pages 771-772
[20]
At
paragraph [32].
[21]
Emphasis
is that of the SCA.
[22]
1969
(3) SA 629 (AD).
[23]
At
678H, cited with approval in, for example, Garden Province
Investment and others v Aleph (Pty) Limited
1979 (2) SA 525
(D) at
534B/C, which in turn was cited more recently in Modisane and
Another v Prime Portfolio Investment SA (Pty) Limited
[2015]
ZAGPJHC
265 (12 November 2015).
[24]
2014
(5) SA 179 (WCC).
[25]
At
paragraph 55.
[26]
1998
(3) SA 281 (TPD).
[27]
At
295F-G.
[28]
Emphasis
added.
[29]
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984
(3) SA 623
(A) at 634E-G.
[30]
Cipla
Agrimed (Pty) Ltd v Merck Sharp Dohme Corporation and Others
2018
(6) SA 440
(SCA) at paragraph 47; Andalusite Resources (Pty) Ltd v
Investec Bank Limited and Another
2000 (1) SA 140
(GJ) at paragraph
22.
[31]
Subparagraph
33.5 of the replying affidavit.
[32]
Knipe v
Kameelhoek (Pty) Ltd
2014 (1) SA 52 (FB).
[33]
Clutchco
(Pty) Ltd v Davis
2005 (3) SA 486 (SCA).
[34]
Knipe
at paragraph 33.
[35]
[2018]
1 All SA 21 (WCC).
[36]
At
paragraph 69.
[37]
Geffen
at paragraph 66.
[38]
Barnard
v Carl Greaves Brokers (Pty) Ltd and others
[2007] ZAWCHC 2
;
2008 (3) SA 663
(C),
para 45 and 46 citing the well-known speech of Lord Hoffman in
O-Neill and Another v Phillips and Others
[1999] UKHL 24
;
[1999] 2 All ER 961
(HL).
See also, more recently in this Division, De Sousa and another v
Technology Corporate Management (Pty) Ltd and others 2017
(5) SA
(GJ), para 128 and 332.
[39]
J
Henning Perspectives on the Law of Partnership (2014) Juta at p 166:
“Since a partnership is constituted intuitu personae,
in other
words the delectus personarum is regarded as one of the main
considerations on which an agreement of partnership rests,
any
change in membership destroys the identity of the firm. If a partner
retires or dies, or a new partner is admitted, this
brings about a
dissolution of the existing partnership at common law.”
[40]
Paragraph
[30] ibid.
[41]
Room
Hire Co (Pty) Ltd v Jeppe Street Mansions (Pty) Ltd
1949 (3) SA 1155
(T); Khumalo v Director-General Co-operation and Development
[1990] ZASCA 118
;
1991
(1) SA 158
(AD) at 167G.
[42]
Lourenco;
Grancy.
[43]
Emphasis
added.
[44]
Grancy
at paragraph 29; Henochsberg.
[45]
Omar v
Inhouse Venue Technical Management (Pty Limited and Others
2015 (3)
SA 146
(WCC) at paragraph 50; Freedom Stationery (Pty) Limited and
Others v Hassam and Others
2019 (4) SA 459
(SCA) at paragraph 28;
Gatenby v Gatenby and Others
1996 (3) SA 118
(E);Henochsberg.
[46]
Muller
v Lilly Valley (Pty) Limited
[2012] 1 All SA 187
(GSJ) paragraphs 40
and 41; Gushman NO and Another v Traut NO and Others
[2013] JOL
30862
(FB) at paragraph 29; Scottish Co-operative Wholesale Society
Ltd v Meyer
1959 AC 324
(HL) at paragraph 89; Henochsberg.
[47]
Emphasis
added.
[48]
At
paragraph 32.
[49]
Louw at
paragraph 23; Lourenco.
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