begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
>>
2023
>>
[2023] ZAGPJHC 340
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Franck v Dyke and Another (2021/34174)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 340 (14 April 2023)
Franck v Dyke and Another (2021/34174)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 340 (14 April 2023)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2023_340.html
sino date 14 April 2023
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or
witnesses
have
been redacted from this document in compliance with the law and
SAFLII
Policy
#### REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
Case
No: 2021/34174
NOT
REPORTABLE
NOT
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES
REVISED
14.04.23
In the matter between:
FRANCK, FRANCOIS
Applicant
and
DYKE,
CRAIG ANDREW
First
Respondent
DYKE, CRAIG ANDREA PAULINE
Second
Respondent
Neutral
Citation:
Franck v
Dyke and Another
(Case
No: 2021/34174)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 340 (14 April 2023)
JUDGMENT
ENGELBRECHT,
AJ
INTRODUCTION AND BACKGROUND
[1]
This is an
application for the estate of the first respondent, Mr Craig Andrew
Dyke (Mr Dyke), to be placed into provisional sequestration,
in the
hands of the Master of the High Court, and for associated and
consequential relief. The application is made by Mr
Francois
Franck (Mr Franck), on the basis of a
nulla
bona
return of service issued by the
Sheriff of this court on 16 April 2021, pursuant to a warrant of
execution of 28 February 2019.
[2]
The second
respondent (Mrs Dyke) is married to Mr Dyke, out of community of
property and profit and/or loss, with the exclusion
of the accrual
system, as contemplated in the
Matrimonial Property Act 88 of 1984
.
No substantive relief is sought against Mrs Dyke.
[3] The
nulla bona
return of
service that forms the basis of this application was the culmination
of a series of unfortunate events that started with
Mr Dyke being
engaged to do repair work on Mr Franck’s motor vehicle.
Mr Dyke held on to the vehicle in circumstances
where he asserted had
not been fully remunerated for repair work to another vehicle.
Mr Franck approached the court to secure
the return of his vehicle.
He obtained the order on 28 May 2018, and Mr Dyke was ordered to pay
Mr Franck’s costs.
Pursuant to the costs order, Mr
Franck’s attorneys on 20 February 2019 had a bill of costs
taxed, in the amount of R32 601.39.
On 28 February
2019, they caused a Warrant of Execution (the writ) to be issued.
After two failed attempts to execute the
writ, the Sheriff was
ultimately able to serve it on Mr Dyke on 28 November 2019. The
Sheriff made an inventory of the movable
property attached on that
day, but on or about 8 December 2019 Mrs Dyke made claim to the
movable property that had been attached.
She explained that Mr
Dyke had “…
long ago liquidated anything, he brought
in to the marriage”
and, as they were married out of
community of property, Mr Dyke had “
no claim on what is
left”.
Interpleader proceedings in respect of Mrs
Dyke’s claim were interrupted by the commencement of the
Covid-19 lockdown and
in April 2021 instructions were given to the
Sheriff to release the movable property from attachment. An
instruction was
given to re-serve the writ on Mr Dyke. This was
done on 16 April 2021, and the return of service recorded that “
Mr
Dyke informed me that he has no money or disposable assets wherewith
to satisfy the said Writ or any portion thereof. No
disposable
assets were either pointed out or could be found by me after diligent
search and enquiry. MY RETURN IS ONE OF
NULLA BONA. …
Defendant refused to sign a Nulla Bona”
.
[4] For the sake of completeness, I
record that Mr Dyke, for a period of more than three years, failed to
return the vehicle to
Mr Franck in accordance with the May 2018 order
and ultimately was held in contempt of court by my brother
Tlhotlhalemaje AJ, as
appears from a judgment of 16 September 2022
under case number 12317/2017. The judgment also records a
purported attempt
by Mr Dyke to have appealed the 28 May 2018 order
that formed the basis of the writ, but that process was never pursued
to finality
(leaving aside the procedural irregularities attributable
to the fact that Mr Dyke was unrepresented as he remains before this
court).
THE LAW
[5]
Section 10 of
the Insolvency Act 24 o 1936 (Insolvency Act) provides that:
“
If the
court to which the petition for the sequestration of the estate of a
debtor has been presented is of the opinion that prima
facie –
(a)
the
petitioning creditor has established against the debtor a claim such
as is mentioned in subsection (1) of section nine; and
(b)
the
debtor has committed an act of insolvency or is insolvent; and
(c)
there
is reason to believe that it will be to the advantage of creditors of
the debtor if his estate is sequestrated,
it may make an order sequestrating
the estate of the debtor provisionally.”
[6] In terms of section 11(1), “
If
the court sequestrates the estate of a debtor provisionally it must
simultaneously grant a rule nisi calling upon the debtor
upon a day
mentioned in the rule to appear and show cause why his or her estate
should not be sequestrated finally”
.
COMPLIANCE WITH THE REQUIREMENTS IN
THE PRESENT CASE
Standing of the applicant
[7] Mr Franck is a creditor of Mr Dyke
as contemplated in section 9(1) of the Insolvency Act. He has
an unsecured liquidated
claim against Mr Dyke in excess of the
prescribed amount. The requirement in section 10(a) is met.
Act of insolvency
[8]
Before me, it
is common cause that Mr Dyke committed an act of insolvency, as
contemplated in section 8(b) of the Insolvency Act,
in light of the
issue of the
nulla bona
return by the Sheriff. Moreover, in answer
to the application, the respondents stated on oath that Mr Dyke is
unable to pay
the amount due. The requirement in section 10(b) is
met.
Reason to believe that it will be
to the advantage of creditors of the estate is sequestrated
[9] The known creditors of Mr Dyke are
(i) Mr Franck; (ii) South African Home Loans Guarantee Trust (SA Home
Loans), the bond holder
in respect of an immovable property that Mr
Dyke owns together with his wife; and (iii) the City of Johannesburg,
in respect of
outstanding municipal charges. The amount
outstanding on the bond is not known. What is known, is that
the bond initially
registered in 2012 was in the amount of R730 000
(seven hundred and thirty thousand rands), and that Mrs Dyke has been
making
bond repayments since that time (
i.e.
for a period in
excess of 10 years), so that the indebtedness must have diminished by
some margin. As at September 2022,
the debt outstanding to the
City of Johannesburg was in excess of R300 000 (three hundred
thousand rands).
[10] Mr Dyke’s only known asset
is his undivided half share in the immovable property situated at Erf
[...] Vorna Valley Extension
25 (the property). The City of
Johannesburg municipal statement reflects the market value of the
property as R1 277 000.
An automated valuation
reflects an expected value of R1 750 000, with an estimated
low of R1 220 000 and an
estimated high of R2 050 000.
Based on oral submissions before me, the respondents asserted
that the state of the
property is not such that a high market value
can be attributed to it.
[11] The difficulty that presents
itself in the present case is that, quite apart from the ordinary
uncertainty concerning the amount
that could be realised from the
sale of the property in due course, the extent of debts owed to
creditors is uncertain and unknown.
These facts engage the
question whether there is reason to believe that the sequestration
will be to the advantage of creditors.
[12]
In
this assessment, I am guided by the judgment in
Meskin
& Co v Friedman:
[1]
“
Secs.
10 and 12 of the
Insolvency Act, 24 of 1936
, cast upon a petitioning
creditor the onus of showing, not merely that the debtor
has committed an act of insolvency
or is insolvent, but also that
there is 'reason to believe' that sequestration will be to the
advantage of creditors. Under
sec. 10
, which sets out the powers of
the Court to which the petition for sequestration is first presented,
it is only necessary that the
Court shall be of the opinion
that prima facie there is such 'reason to believe'. Under
sec. 12
, which deals with the position when the rule nisi comes
up for confirmation, the Court may make a final order of
sequestration
if it 'is satisfied' that there is such reason to
believe.
The phrase
'reason to believe', used as it is in both these sections, indicates
that it is not necessary, either at the first or
at the final
hearing, for the creditor to induce in the mind of the Court a
positive view that sequestration will be to the financial
advantage
of creditors
. At the
final hearing, though the Court must be 'satisfied', it is not to be
satisfied that sequestration will be to the advantage
of creditors,
but only that there is reason to believe that it will be so.
What is the
nature of the 'advantage' contemplated in these two sections?
Sequestration confers upon the creditors of the insolvent
certain
advantages (described by DE VILLIERS, J.P., in Stainer v Estate
Bukes
(1933 OPD 86
at p. 90) as the 'indirect' advantages)
which, though they tend towards the ultimate pecuniary benefit of the
creditors, are not
in themselves of a pecuniary character. Among
these is the advantage of full investigation of the insolvent's
affairs under the
very extensive powers of enquiry given by the Act.
In Awerbuch, Brown & Co v Le Grange
(1939 OPD 20)
, it
is suggested that this right of inquisition is in itself an advantage
such as is referred to in the sections, so that it is
sufficient to
make out a reasonable case for enquiry without showing that any
material benefit to the creditors is likely to result
from the
investigation. With great deference I venture to think that this
states the position more favourably to the petitioning
creditor than
is justified by the language of the sections. As the 'advantage' of
investigation follows automatically upon sequestration,
the
Legislature must, in my opinion, have had some other kind of
advantage in view when it required that the Court should have
'reason
to believe' that there would be advantage to the creditors. The right
of investigation is given, as it seems to me, not
as an advantage in
itself, but as a possible means of securing ultimate material benefit
for the creditors in the form, for example,
of the recovery of
property disposed of by the insolvent or the disallowance of doubtful
or collusive claims.
In my opinion, the facts put before the Court
must satisfy it that there is a reasonable prospect - not necessarily
a likelihood,
but a prospect which is not too remote - that some
pecuniary benefit will result to creditors.
It is not necessary
to prove that the insolvent has any assets. Even if there are none at
all, but there are reasons for thinking
that as a result of enquiry
under the Act some may be revealed or recovered for the benefit of
creditors, that is sufficient (see
e.g., Pelunsky & Co v
Beiles and Others
(1908, T.S. 370)
; Wilkins v
Pieterse
(1937 CPD 165
at p. 170); Awerbuch, Brown & Co
v Le Grange (supra); Estate Salzmann v van Rooyen
(1944 OPD
1)
; Miller v Janks
(1944 TPD 127)).
”
[13]
I
am guided, further, by the unanimous judgment of the Constitutional
Court in
Stratford and
Others v Investec bank Limited and Others:
[2]
“
[44]
The meaning of the term 'advantage' is broad and should
not be rigidified. This includes the nebulous 'not-negligible'
pecuniary benefit on which the appellants rely. To my mind,
specifying the cents in the rand or 'not-negligible' benefit in the
context of a hostile sequestration where there could be
many creditors is unhelpful. Meskin et al state that —
'the relevant
reason to believe exists where, after making allowance for the
anticipated costs of sequestration, there is a reasonable
prospect of
an actual payment being made to each creditor who proves a
claim, however small such payment may be, unless
some
other means of dealing with the debtor's predicament is likely to
yield a larger such payment. Postulating a test which is
predicated
only on the quantum of the pecuniary benefit that may be demonstrated
may lead to an anomalous situation that a debtor
in possession of a
substantial estate but with extensive liabilities may be rendered
immune from sequestration due to an inability
to demonstrate that a
not-negligible dividend may result from the grant of an
order.' [Footnotes omitted.]
[45] The
correct approach in evaluating advantage to creditors is for a court
to exercise its discretion guided by the dicta outlined
in Friedman.
For example, it is up to a court to assess whether the
sequestration will result in some payment to
the creditors
as a body; that there is a substantial estate from which the
creditors cannot get payment, except through sequestration;
or
that some pecuniary benefit will redound to the creditors.”
[14] In the present instance, the
estimated value of the property and the known facts concerning the
indebtedness of Mr Dyke do
provide the basis for concluding that
there is a reasonable prospect that there will be an advantage to
creditors, even if the
extent of the pecuniary advantage is not
capable of being positively determined. It does not appear to me that
there exist means
for creditors to obtain payment other than through
sequestration, given the assertion on oath by the respondents that Mr
Dyke does
not have other assets, that he is not gainfully employed,
and that he is unable to be gainfully employed given his health.
[15] That is sufficient a basis to
conclude that the requirement of
section 10(c)
is met. For that
reason, I do not deal with the submission that there is reason to
believe that there may be a further advantage
to creditors resulting
from the inquiry to follow in the sense that further assets may be
revealed due to Mr Dyke’s membership
of a close corporation.
It may be that such a benefit may be derived in due course, but on
the facts before me I am unable
to reach a conclusion in that
regard. As I have indicated, I do not need to, given my
findings in the previous paragraph.
DISCRETION
[16]
Section 10
postulates that a
court “
may”
– i.e. not “
must”
grant an order if the requirements of the provision are met. It
is accordingly an empowering provision that affords the court
a
discretion. It does not compel the court to grant the order if
all of the requirements are met.
[17] In circumstances where all of the
requirements are met, this court must accordingly decide whether to
exercise its discretion
to grant the order sought. That
discretion must be exercised judiciously. In
circumstances where all the requirements
for placing an estate under
provisional sequestration are met, the court should be slow to
exercise its discretion against the
grant of the order that is
sought. Ultimately, the discretion to be exercised must be
influenced by considerations of fairness
and justice, having regard
to all the facts and circumstances of the particular case.
[18] In the present case, there is a
complicating factor in the sense that Mrs Dyke is the co-owner of the
only known asset in Mr
Dyke’s estate. Although the
respondents are married out of community of property and with the
exclusion of the accrual
system, Mrs Dyke’s fate is bound up
with that of Mr Dyke. In order for any benefit to creditors to
be realised, the
property will in due course have to be sold and Mrs
Dyke will of course be affected by the sale of that asset.
[19] I have carefully considered the
facts placed before me, including the allegation that it has been Mrs
Dyke that has serviced
the bond for more than 10 years without the
assistance of Mr Dyke. These facts, however much sympathy they might
evince, do not
lead to the conclusion that the court’s
discretion ought to be exercised against the grant of the order
sought. This
court cannot ignore that Mr Dyke’s undivided
half share in the property is his only asset, and that the only
ostensible means
for Mr Dyke’s creditors to achieve any form of
payment from Mr Dyke lies in the sequestration process. Mrs
Dyke’s
position is simply not a factor that can be relied upon
to avoid the grant of the order. In any event, both Mr and Mrs
Dyke
will be afforded the opportunity to make submissions to the
court on why Mr Dyke’s estate should not be placed into final
sequestration.
[20] That said, I am not inclined to
make a costs order against Mrs Dyke in respect of her participation
in these proceedings.
It is appropriate for the costs of this
application to be costs in the sequestration.
ORDER
[21] In the circumstances, it is
ordered that:
21.1. The estate of the First
Respondent is provisionally sequestrated and his estate is placed in
the hands of the Master of the
High Court.
21.2. A rule
nisi,
returnable
on
24 July 2023 at 10h00
, is hereby issued, calling upon the
First Respondent and any other interested parties to appear in this
Court on and to show cause
on that date and at that time why the
First Respondent’s estate should not be sequestrated finally.
21.3. The provisional sequestration
order shall –
21.3.1. be published in
the Government Gazette and a newspaper circulating in Gauteng;
21.3.2. be served on the
First and Second Respondents;
21.3.3. be served on the
employees of the First Respondent (if any) and/or their trade union
representative(s) by
affixing
a copy of this order to the principal outer gate(s) at [...], Vorna
Valley, Midrand;
21.3.4.
be
served on the South African Revenue Services;
21.3.5.
be
served on the Master of the High Court;
21.3.6.
be
delivered by registered post or electronic mail, if the mail address
is known, to all known creditors of the First Respondent.
21.4. The aforesaid return day of the
rule
nisi
may be anticipated upon 24 hours’ written
notice to that effect being given to the Applicant.
21.5. The costs of the application
shall be costs in the sequestration of the First Respondent’s
estate.
MJ Engelbrecht
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected and is handed down electronically
by circulation to the
Parties/their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on
CaseLines. The date for
hand-down is deemed to be
on 14
April
2023.
Heard
on : 12 April 2023
Delivered:
14 April 2023
Appearances:
For
the applicant:
ADV
L Franck
For
the 1
st
& 2
nd
Respondent:
both
in person
[1]
1948
(2) SA 555
(W) at 558 to 559. Emphasis supplied.
[2]
2015
(3) SA 1
(cc) at paras 44 – 45. Footnotes omitted.
sino noindex
make_database footer start