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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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[2023] ZAGPJHC 141
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## Rocky Park Farming Group (Pty) Ltd and Another v Rocky Park Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others (2022/2807)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 141 (15 February 2023)
Rocky Park Farming Group (Pty) Ltd and Another v Rocky Park Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others (2022/2807)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 141 (15 February 2023)
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sino date 15 February 2023
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO: 2022/2807
Reportable:
No
Of
interest to other judges:
No
Date:
15 February 2023
In
the matter between:
Rocky
Park Farming Group (Pty) Ltd
First
Applicant
Sinelizwi
Fakade
Second
Applicant
And
Rocky Park Holdings
(Pty) Ltd
First
Respondent
(Reg
No.: 2018/388603/07)
Foxvest Group (Pty)
Ltd
Second
Respondent
Warwick
Marshall Blamey
Third
Respondent
The
Companies and Intellectual
Property
Commission
Fourth
Respondent
In Re:
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:
Leave to Appeal
Vally
J
Introduction
[1]
The applicants, Rocky Park Farming (Pty) Ltd (Rocky Park) and Mr
Sinelizwi Fakade
(Mr Fakade) in this application for leave to appeal
were the second and third respondents respectively in the main
application.
They seek leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of Appeal
(SCA) against an order issued on 27 January 2023. Their case is that
I
erred in issuing the order. Instead, according to them, I should
have dismissed the application with costs. The order I issued was
that ‘the resolution adopted at the shareholders meeting of the
first respondent on 17 November 2021 is set aside’
and ‘the
second and third respondents are to pay the costs of the application’
[2]
They contend that there is a reasonable prospect that the SCA would
come to
the conclusion that the resolution was properly proposed –
either by a single shareholder of the first respondent or by the
directors of the first respondent – and thereby would set aside
my order in its entirety. Their contentions are based on
two bases:
(i) that there was no need for two shareholders to propose the
resolution, and, (ii) in any event that the resolution
was proposed
by the Board of Directors and not a shareholder. In either case, the
resulting order would be a dismissal of the application
with costs.
[3]
Section 61
of the Companies Act 71 of 2008 (Act) attends to the issue of
shareholders meetings. Subsection (1) thereto allows for
the board of
a company to call a shareholders meeting at any time. It empowers the
board with a discretion to call a shareholders
meeting. However,
subsection (3) compels the board to call such a meeting where it is
demanded by a shareholder, who specifies
the purpose of the meeting
and who holds more than 10% of the voting rights.
[1]
[4]
The facts in this case are simple, straightforward and
uncontroversial. Rocky
Park called (the word used by it was
‘requisitioned’) a shareholders meeting of the first
respondent, Rocky Park Holdings
(Pty) Ltd (Holdings). The call was
directed to the second applicant in the main application, Mr BIamey.
The call was accompanied
by a letter setting out the purpose of the
meeting. The purpose it said was to discuss and pass a resolution
removing Mr Blamey,
as a director of Holdings. Mr Blamey, in a letter
to Mr Fakade, the other director of Holdings, indicated that he
consents to the
meeting being called. Mr Fakade issued a notice of
shareholders meeting and delivered it to Foxvest Group (Pty) Ltd
(Foxvest) the
first applicant in the main application and Mr Blamey.
[5]
On these facts there is no doubt that the meeting was called by Rocky
Park in
terms of ss 61(1) read with ss 61(3).
[6]
The meeting was held with only one shareholder, Rocky Park, present.
Neither
of the two directors - Mr Fakade and Mr Blamey were present.
The resolution was passed. On these facts it cannot under any
circumstances
be doubted that the resolution could only have been
proposed by a single shareholder. I found that this was in
contravention of
ss 65(3) of the Act and therefore unlawful and
invalid.
[7]
Accepting the facts set out in [5] and [7] above, Mr Stevens for
Rocky Park
and Mr Fakade submit that the resolution was regular. This
contention was not raised at the main hearing. His submission at
leave
to appeal stage was that as the meeting was called in terms of
s 61 there was no need for the resolution to be proposed by two
shareholders, i.e. that the provisions of s 65 of the Act does not
apply and my finding that it applied was erroneous. There is
therefore a reasonable prospect that the SCA would set aside my
order. I disagree for the reasons that follow.
[8]
Section 61 attends to the issue of shareholders meetings and no more.
It says
nothing of shareholders resolutions. The issue of
shareholders resolutions is the specific focus of s 65 of the Act.
Subsection
65(3) deals with the issue of resolutions proposed by
shareholders. And, it lays down peremptory requirements that have to
be met
for the proposed resolutions to be lawful and valid.
[9]
In this
case, s 61 was utilised for the calling of a shareholders meeting. It
had to be complied with by Rocky Park if it, as a
shareholder, wanted
to call a shareholders meeting. Rocky Park could not, even if it
wanted to, invoke s 61 to propose a resolution
for consideration at
the meeting. Section 61 is simply not amenable for that purpose.
Apart from the fact that the wording of the
two sections – 61
and 65 – are clear in this regard, i.e. in regard to the
distinct subject matter that each of them
attends to, there is the
provision of ss 57(2) of the Act which concerns the governance of
companies. It clarifies that s 65 thereof
does not apply in a case
where a profit making company has only one shareholder:
[2]
it specifies that where there is ‘only one shareholder’
in a profit making case then sections 59 to 65 do not apply.
In all
other circumstances, those sections apply. By specifying ‘only
one shareholder’ the legislature reveals an intention
to
exclude all situations where there is more than one shareholder in a
profit making company. As there are two shareholders here,
by dint of
application of ss 57(2), the provisions of s 65, especially ss 65(3)
the resolution had to be proposed by both of them.
[10]
Thus, I hold, that this novel argument, mounted at application for
leave to appeal, that s 65 of the
Act has no application in this
matter is completely devoid of any merit.
[11]
Realising that s 61 of the Act is of no assistance to Rocky Park’s
and Mr Fakade’s case,
Mr Stevens then contended that the
question of whether the law requires a minimum of two shareholders to
propose a resolution or
not is irrelevant in this case, as the
impugned resolution was proposed by the directors. In support of this
contention he drew
attention to the notice of a meeting of Holding’s
shareholder issued by Mr Fakade and delivered to both Foxvest and Mr
Blamey.
Mr Fakade signed the notice in his capacity as director of
Holdings. He was correct to issue the notice, especially since Mr
Blamey
– his co-director - agreed to the meeting being called.
But the issuing of the notice of the meeting is not the same as
proposing
a resolution. It was never the case of Rocky Park and Mr
Fakade that the resolution was proposed by the directors. It could
never
have been, for the facts against such claim are simply
unassailable. The submission is factually incorrect. Why Mr Stevens
made
it is unclear.
[12]
Finally, Mr Stevens submitted that as Foxvest and Mr Blamey also
sought to have Holdings liquidated,
and as this relief was not
granted, Rocky Park and Mr Fakade should have been awarded costs of
that part of the application. His
submission in essence was that I
should have dismissed the application to have Holdings liquidated and
ordered Foxvest and Blamey
to pay the costs. The submission is
legally untenable. Foxvest and Blamey brought a single application
seeking two distinct forms
of relief. Both sets of relief were
fundamental. They succeeded in acquiring one of them. That
constitutes substantial success.
On the principle of costs follow the
result, they were, thus, entitled to their costs.
[13]
The findings in the main application were based on uncomplicated,
unassailable facts and on legal principles
that allow no room for
doubt or debate. Accordingly, I hold that there is no prospect that
another court would come to a different
conclusion.
[14]
There is also no compelling reason to grant leave to appeal. The
facts are plain and simple and the
law leaves no room for doubt.
[15]
The application for leave to appeal is dismissed with costs.
Vally
J
Gauteng
High Court, Johannesburg
Dates
of hearing: 6
February 2023
Date
of judgment: 15
February 2023
For
the applicants
(respondents
in leave to appeal): E L Labuschagne
Instructed
by: Megan
Visser Attorneys
For
the 1
st
- 3
rd
respondents
(applicants
in leave to appeal): B
D Stevens
Instructed
by: Morgan
Law Inc
[1]
Subsections 61(1) and (3) read:
’
61
Shareholders meetings-
(1)
The board of a company, or any other person specified in the
company’s Memorandum of Incorporation
or rules, may call a
shareholders meeting at any time.
(2) …
(3)
Subject to subsection (5) and (6), the board of a company, or any
other person specified in a company’s
Memorandum of
Incorporation or rules, must call a shareholders meeting if one or
more written or signed demands for such a meeting
are delivered to
the company, and –
(a)
each such demand describes the specific purpose for which the
meeting is proposed; and
(b)
in aggregate, demands for substantially the same purpose are made
and signed by the holders, as of
the earliest time specified in any
of those demands, of at least 10% of the voting rights entitled to
be exercised in relation
to the matter proposed to be considered at
the meeting.’
[2]
Subsections 57(1) and (2) which are relevant here reads:
’
57 Interpretation
and restricted application of Part
(1)
In this Part, “
shareholder
” has the meaning set
out in section 1, but also includes a person who is entitled to
exercise any voting rights in relation
to a company, irrespective of
the form, title or nature of the securities to which those voting
rights are attached.
(2)
If a profit company, other than a state-owned company, has only
one shareholder
-
(a) that
shareholder may exercise any or all of the voting rights pertaining
to that company on any
matter, at any time, without notice or
compliance with any other internal formalities, except to the extent
that the company’s
Memorandum of Incorporation provides
otherwise; and
(b)
sections
59 to 65 do not apply to the governance of that company.
’
(Underlining supplied.)
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