Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 302South Africa
Mohala Moifo Attorneys Incorporated v Makwe Fund Managers Proprietary Limited (2022/13230) [2023] ZAGPJHC 302 (3 April 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
3 April 2023
Headnotes
in deciding whether or not a company carrying on business should be wound-up as commercially insolvent, the crisp question that a court is called upon to answer is whether or not the company has liquid assets or readily releasable assets available to meet its liabilities as they fall due to be met in the ordinary course of business and thereafter to be in a position to carry on normal trading. Once the Court finds that the Company cannot meet demands on it from creditors, the Court may, and should, grant the order that the company is wound up. The implications of liquidation are that the Company or business will cease to operate.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Mohala Moifo Attorneys Incorporated v Makwe Fund Managers Proprietary Limited (2022/13230) [2023] ZAGPJHC 302 (3 April 2023)
Mohala Moifo Attorneys Incorporated v Makwe Fund Managers Proprietary Limited (2022/13230) [2023] ZAGPJHC 302 (3 April 2023)
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sino date 3 April 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
CASE NO:
2022/13230
(1) REPORTABLE: NO
(2) OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
(3) REVISED: NO
DATE: 3 April 2023
SIGNATURE:
In
the matter between:-
MOHALA
MOIFO ATTORNEYS INCORPORATED
APPLICANT
and
MAKWE
FUND MANAGERS PROPRIETARY LIMITED
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
Mazibuko
AJ
Introduction
1.
This is an opposed application for the final
winding up of the respondent in terms of
section
345(1)(c) read with section 344(f) of the Companies Act 61 of 1973
("the Act").
2.
The applicant is a company with a registered and trading address in
Brooklyn,
Pretoria.
3.
The respondent is a financial services provider company with a
trading address
in Sunninghill, Johannesburg.
Factual
matrix
4.
On 24 June 2020 and 9 July 2020, the applicant
deposited an amount of R1 275 000.00, and R151 666.87,
respectively,
into the respondent’s bank account.
5.
On 29 July 2020, the applicant and the respondent concluded a mandate
agreement
(agreement). In terms of which (a) the respondent would
invest and manage the applicant’s funds, (b) the funds would be
paid
to the applicant upon notice given to the respondent.
6.
On 18 January 2021, the applicant sent notice to withdraw the
R1 275 000.00.
On 2 February 2021, the applicant requested
to withdraw R59 858.87 with interest, leaving a balance of
R92 808.00, which
would continue generating interest.
7.
The respondent paid R59 858.87 to the applicant on 3
March 2021.
8.
The applicant sent the respondent an Acknowledgment of debt (AOD) for
them to
sign and return to the applicant. The respondent did not sign
the said AOD.
9.
On 22 April 2021, the applicant gave notice of the withdrawal of the
entire amount.
The respondent did not make the payment after the
expiry of the given notice period. On 26 May 2021, he undertook to
make a payment
of R300 000.00 on 28 May 2021.
10.
In July 2021, the applicant sent an email to the respondent attaching
a Section 345 of the
Companies Act letter of demand.
11.
On 6 August 2021, the parties had a meeting, and the respondent
undertook to make immediate
payment.
12.
On 17 August 2021, the respondent requested a three months indulgence
to make payment in
full and final settlement. The applicant did not
accept the settlement proposal.
13.
On 28 September 2021, the parties agreed that the respondent would
immediately pay R250
000.00 and another R250 000.00 in November 2021.
The remaining amount was to be paid in January 2022. On 30
November 2021,
the second instalment became due and payable. However,
no payment was made by the respondent.
14.
On 8 December 2021, the respondent paid R100 000.00, which was R150
000.00 short of the
November instalment. The applicant gave the
respondent until 17 January 2022 to pay the outstanding amount. The
respondent did
not make the payment.
15.
In May 2022, the applicant commenced the liquidation proceedings
against the respondent
pursuant to the respondent’s alleged
failure to pay the applicant a sum of R1 426 666.87,
payments made in respect
of the JSE investment.
Applicant’s case
16.
On behalf of the applicant, it was argued that the respondent be
finally wound up as it
is unable to pay its debts.
Respondent’s case
17.
The respondent raised two
points in limine
; (a) the settlement
agreement represented a loan agreement. (b) The applicant should have
instituted proceedings to prove its claim
against the respondent
before launching the liquidation proceedings.
18.
The application is resisted on the following, as stated by the
respondent in its answering
affidavit; (a) the monies demanded by the
applicant are not due, owing and payable as they were invested and
lost in the Johannesburg
Stock Exchange (JSE). (b)The settlement
agreement is void ab initio. (c) The applicant has no locus standi to
institute the proceedings
as the debt is not due, owing and payable.
Issues
19.
The issue for determination is whether merits exist on the raised
points in
limine
. Further, whether the applicant has made out
a case that the respondent is commercially insolvent in the sense
that it is unable
to meet its day-to-day liabilities in the ordinary
course of business.
Legal
principles
20.
Section 345(1) of the Companies Act 61 of 1973 (the Act) provides:
“
(1)
A company or body corporate shall be deemed
to be unable to pay its debts if
-
(c)
it is proved to the satisfaction of
the court that the company is unable to pay its debts
."
21.
“
Section
344(f) provides, “A company
may
be wound up by the Court if- the
company is unable to pay its debts
as described in section 345.”
22.
The Courts have held that in deciding whether or not a company
carrying on business should
be wound-up as commercially insolvent,
the crisp question that a court is called upon to answer is whether
or not the company has
liquid assets or readily releasable assets
available to meet its liabilities as they fall due to be met in the
ordinary course
of business and thereafter to be in a position to
carry on normal trading. Once the Court finds that the Company cannot
meet demands
on it from creditors, the Court may, and should, grant
the order that the company is wound up. The implications of
liquidation
are that the Company or business will cease to operate.
Points
in limine
:
(a) The settlement agreement
23.
It was argued on behalf of the respondent that the settlement
agreement represented a loan
agreement between the parties. The
settlement agreement was concluded on 28 September 2021.
24.
The relevant paragraphs of the settlement agreement are as follows:
“
3.1.
MMA made payment of the first and second Investments to Makwe
pursuant to the Mandate agreement.”
“
4.1.
Makwe hereby acknowledges that it is currently indebted to MMA in the
amount of the indebtedness.”
25.
In terms of the Mandate agreement, (a) the respondent would earn 2%
for the brokerage, exchange
and administration fees, taxes, levies,
custodian and bank charges or any other costs. (b) Any of the parties
would be entitled
to terminate the mandate agreement by giving 30
days’ written notice. Upon termination, all costs and fees
relating to the
mandate agreement would immediately become payable.
(c) The applicant undertook not to hold the respondent liable in the
event
of any loss or damage that may be incurred or suffered as a
result thereof unless such loss and damage are as a result of gross
negligence or wilful misconduct of the respondent.
26.
At the time payments were made to the respondent by the applicant on
24 June 2020, the mandate
agreement was not in place as it was
concluded on 29 July 2020. However, the applicant paid the said
monies more than a month prior.
It is unclear what mandate or for
what purpose the monies were paid to the respondent before the
mandate agreement. It will be
accepted that when the mandate
agreement was concluded, only then was the respondent given the
mandate to invest and manage.
27.
The applicant contends that the debt owed by the respondent emanates
from the settlement
agreement, not the mandate agreement. However,
the settlement agreement makes reference to the mandate agreement,
and the settlement
agreement is not an addendum to the mandate
agreement. The mandate agreement was concluded after the payments
were made.
28.
The respondent agreed with the applicant that the monies paid were
later invested at a fee
for the benefit of the respondent.
29.
The respondent, through its counsel, argued that the said settlement
agreement is void
ab initio
as the claimed amounts do not form
part of the mandate agreement. The respondent further raised that it
was coerced into concluding
the settlement agreement. It is not clear
on what basis the respondent was coerced into concluding the
settlement agreement. I
could not find any evidence from the papers
filed of record suggesting that the respondent was coerced.
30.
On the evidence, it cannot be true that the payments were made
pursuant to the mandate agreement
for the reasons already discussed
in that payments were made before the mandate agreement. Therefore,
the argument that the respondent
was to invest the monies in terms of
the mandate agreement cannot assist the applicant. The mandate
agreement does not make a provision
for retrospective effectiveness.
31.
It is not clear on what basis the respondent is of the view that the
settlement agreement
represented a loan agreement. On the other hand,
the applicant places its reliance on the settlement agreement, which
settlement
agreement refers to the mandate agreement concluded after
payments were already made to the respondent. No cogent facts were
placed
before the court that the settlement agreement was a loan
agreement.
b. Institution of legal proceedings
before the winding up application
32.
The respondent raised its second point in
limine
, arguing that
the applicant needed to institute legal proceedings proving its claim
prior to bringing an application to wind it
up.
33.
The Court may wind up a company if it is unable to pay its debts as
described in section
345 of the Act.
34.
It was argued that the monies in issue do not form part of the
mandate agreement, though
it is referred to in the settlement
agreement. However, it is stated that the funds were paid pursuant to
the mandate agreement,
which was not in place and, therefore, not
enforceable.
35.
It is not clear at what stage the funds were invested, and that
raises the following questions;
(a) was it immediately upon receipt
by the respondent or after the conclusion of the mandate agreement?
If it was after the conclusion,
it might be that the instruction was
explicit that the funds needed to be invested into the less volatile
portfolio. However, where
it was before, the question would be (b) In
which portfolio would the investment be made? (c) Was there an
indemnity clause applicable?
There exist material issues of dispute
that require to be well-ventilated during oral evidence, as they are
not clear from the
papers filed of record. For these reasons, it is
justified that the application cannot succeed.
The final winding up
36.
In terms of section 345, the court would grant an order winding up a
company where it is
satisfied that the applicant has proven that the
company is unable to pay its debts. In
casu
, the respondent
denies that it owes the applicant. It stated that it invested the
applicant’s monies, and they were lost
in the JSE market
because of the volatile and risky nature of the stock market.
37.
Conversely, the applicant argues that the mandate was to invest in a
conservative investment
which would allow growth at a low level of
equity exposure and volatility. It then makes reference to paragraph
5.6 of the mandate
agreement, which states that the respondent would
maintain records of all transactions and advice taken on behalf of
the applicant.
In this instance, the applicant must prove the
respondent was negligent or dishonest.
38.
Section 344 of the Act provides that the court is vested with the
power to
liquidate a company. It may grant or
dismiss any application under section 346, adjourn the hearing
thereof, conditionally or unconditionally,
or make any interim order
or any other order it may deem just.
39.
The respondent has not paid its debts despite demand. It is so that
liquidation implies
that the business will cease to operate. In my
view, a notification not only to the trade unions, employees, SARS
and the Master
of the High Court but also to other interested parties
like creditors and investors is essential.
40.
Notwithstanding the application for a final winding up of the
respondent, there was no notice
to other interested parties, which I
found to be important in
casu
when one has regard to the
respondent’s type of business. It is also not clear how the
final winding up of the respondent
would benefit other interested
parties, which could be other creditors and/or investors of the
respondent. What is clear is that
the respondent did not pay the
applicant according to its demand. The respondent denied its
indebtedness towards the applicant,
notwithstanding paragraph 4 of
the settlement agreement providing that the respondent acknowledges
its indebtedness to the applicant.
41.
It is trite that
once the Court finds that the company cannot
pay its creditors, it follows that it is entitled to, and should,
hold that it cannot
pay its debts and wind up the company. However,
in
casu
I find that there are material disputes of facts. The
respondent denies its indebtedness to the applicant. It contests that
the
fact that it has not paid the applicant does not necessarily mean
it cannot pay its debts. These issues may be well-ventilated in
a
trial court.
For the reasons already mentioned, I
find that no cogent facts were placed before the court that the final
winding up of the respondent
will be just and equitable.
42.
With regard to costs, on filing this application, the applicant
became aware of the disputes
of facts according to the
Plascon
Evans
principle. The disputes were clear from the respondent’s
answering affidavit. The applicant’s replying affidavit did
not
assist much as more issues became apparent.
43.
Consequently, the application cannot succeed. The
following
order is granted;
Order:
1.
The
application for winding up is dismissed with costs.
N. MAZIBUKO
Acting Judge of the High Court of
South Africa
Gauteng Division, Johannesburg
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties' representatives by email being uploaded to Case Lines.
Representation
For the applicant:
ADV K Mashishi
Instructed by:
Edward Nathan
Sonnenberg Inc
For the first
respondent:
ADV T Mhlanga
Instructed by:
Ngcobo D Attorneys
Hearing
date:
31 January 2023
Delivery date:
3 April 2023
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