Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 501South Africa
Orion Real Estate Limited v ERF 195 Elma Park Limited and Others (3708/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 501 (17 May 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
17 May 2023
Headnotes
under title deed number T036416/2015 (“the property”), to the first respondent.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Orion Real Estate Limited v ERF 195 Elma Park Limited and Others (3708/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 501 (17 May 2023)
Orion Real Estate Limited v ERF 195 Elma Park Limited and Others (3708/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 501 (17 May 2023)
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sino date 17 May 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO:
3708/2021
NOT REPOTRABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
In
the matter between:
ORION
REAL ESTATE LIMITED
Applicant
And
ERF
195 ELMA PARK LIMITED
(In
liquidation)
First
Respondent
DONOVAN
THEODORE MAJIEDT N.O.
Second
Respondent
HARRY
KAPLAN N.O.
Third
Respondent
FUSI
PATRICK RAMPOPORO N.O.
(in
their capacities as the joint provisional liquidators of ERF 195
ELMA PARK LIMITED)
Fourth
Respondent
THE
MASTER OF HIGH COURT – JOHANNESBURG
Fifth
Respondent
THE
BODY CORPORATE ELMA PARK
Sixth
Respondent
SBD
INVESTMENTS (PTY) LIMITED
Seventh
Respondent
Neutral
citation:
Orion Real Estate Limited v ERF
195 Elma Park Limited and 5 Others
(Case No:
3708/2021) [2023]
ZAGPJHC
501 (17 May 2023)
JUDGMENT
This
judgment is deemed to be handed down upon uploading by the Registrar
to the electronic court file.
Gilbert AJ:
1.
The
applicant applied under this case number to convert the liquidation
proceedings in respect of the first respondent to business
rescue
proceedings in terms of section 131 of the Companies Act, 2008,
together with ancillary relief.
2.
The
applicant cited the liquidators of the first respondent as further
respondents.
3.
The
sixth respondent, who is a body corporate and a creditor of the first
respondent, as an affected party applied for and was granted
leave to
intervene in these proceedings. The sixth respondent opposed the
conversion of the liquidation proceedings to business
rescue
proceedings, raising various objections as to why it contended that
business rescue proceedings would not be appropriate.
4.
During
the course of Mr Bezuidenhout’s argument on behalf of the
applicant motivating for business rescue, one of the benefits
put
forward by the applicant should the first respondent be placed into
business rescue was that the applicant would procure the
transfer of
a property, being Erf 257 Elma Park Extension 2 Township (“Erf
257”) to the first respondent and so facilitate
the business
rescue proceedings. The applicant had previously in a letter from its
attorneys made a tender that it was
inter alia
“
willing to consider throwing Erf 257 into the
proverbial pot of the business rescue
”
for
purposes of advancing the business rescue.
5.
This
tender was made consequent upon the sixth respondent in its answering
affidavit raising as an objection that a major obstacle
to any
business rescue, and for purposes of unlocking value in respect of
the first respondent’s assets, was that this property
needed to
be “
returned
”
to
the first respondent.
6.
What
had transpired is that after the winding up application for the
first respondent had been launched, but before a provisional
order
was granted, the applicant, who was then still in control of the
first respondent, had transferred Erf 257 from the first
respondent
to one of its subsidiary companies, SBD Investments (Pty) Limited
(“SBD Investments”). The provisional
liquidators
once they were appointed initiated proceedings in terms of section
341(2) of the Companies Act, 1973 seeking that this
property be
returned to the insolvent estate of the first respondent. As far as I
can gather from the papers, no opposing papers
have been filed in
relation to those section 341(2) proceedings. Upon the launch of
these business rescue proceedings, those section
341(2) proceedings
in any event would have been suspended.
7.
The
importance of Erf 257 to any successful business rescue, as would
appear to be common cause between the parties, is that this
property
would constitute the necessary parking lot for purposes of making
parking available to in particular the commercial retail
sectional
title units that make up potentially, in value, a large part of the
first respondent’s assets.
8.
The
first respondent’s main assets are sectional title units in the
Elma Park sectional title scheme, consisting of two retail
commercial
units as well as seventeen residential units. The balance of the
units in the sectional title scheme are residential
units which are
owned by various other parties. As stated, in order to unlock value
in respect of the commercial retail units,
it is necessary for Erf
257 to be transferred to the first respondent so that the first
respondent, as the developer of the scheme,
would then have that
available for the necessary parking for the operation of the
commercial retail units. Precisely what the fate
would be of this
property once transferred to the first respondent (such as must it be
transferred to the sixth respondent as the
body corporate and/or
notarially tied to the erf on which the sectional title scheme is
situated) is something that would have
to be taken up by a business
rescue practitioner, alternatively should the first respondent revert
to liquidation, by the liquidators,
or otherwise.
9.
I
during the course of Mr Bezuidenhout’s argument raised with him
various difficulties in converting the liquidation to business
rescue
proceedings, one of which was that it was not clear from the
applicant’s attorneys’ letter that the applicant
was
actually making Erf 257 available to a potential business rescue, or
was only expressing a possibility that it may do so.
10.
Mr
Bezuidenhout, after standing the matter down to take instructions,
clarified that Erf 257 would be made available on condition
that the
first respondent was placed into business rescue, thereby enabling
the business rescue practitioner to have the property
at his disposal
in advancing the business rescue. To the extent necessary, SBD
Investments as the transferee and present registered
owner of Erf 257
was agreeable to being joined to these proceedings so that it would
be party to an order requiring it to transfer
the property to the
first respondent.
11.
This
tender removed one of the major obstacles standing in the way of a
potentially successful business rescue. This tender, once
repeated
and clarified during the course of the hearing before me by the
applicant and its subsidiary, SBD Investments, opened
a pathway
for engagement between the applicant’s and sixth respondent’s
respective counsel as to whether in these evolving
circumstances
consensus could be reached as to whether the first respondent should
now be placed in business rescue.
12.
Having
stood the matter down to enable the applicant and sixth respondent to
engage with each other, they were able to agree upon
a consent order,
which I granted. The order that I granted, by consent between the
applicant, the sixth respondent and the seventh
respondent, was as
follows:
12.1.
SBD
Investments is joined to the proceedings as the seventh respondent.
12.2.
The
liquidation proceedings of the first respondent under Master’s
reference number T935/16 is hereby converted to business
rescue
proceedings as contemplated in Chapter VI of the
Companies Act, 71 of
2008
.
12.3.
Mr
Jacobus Michiel van Tonder is appointed as the interim senior
business rescue practitioner of the first respondent;
12.4.
The
seventh respondent is ordered and directed to transfer the property
ERF 257, ELMA PARK EXTENTION 2
TOWNSHIP, REGISTRATION DIVISION I.R., PROVINCE OF GAUTENG, held under
title deed number T036416/2015
(“the property”), to the
first respondent.
12.5.
Should
the seventh respondent fail to do so, the sheriff for the area within
which the property is located is authorised to sign
all documents and
to do all things necessary to give effect to the transfer of the
property.
12.6.
The
costs of the transfer of the property shall be costs in the business
rescue.
13.
I
was informed that attorneys for the applicant did contact the
attorneys for the liquidators, who had previously filed a notice
to
abide, to ascertain whether the liquidators had any objection to the
proposed consent order, and no objection was forthcoming.
14.
What
the parties were unable to reach agreement on was the incidence of
costs of these proceedings, and so required me to decide
the issue of
costs. I reserved judgment in that regard.
15.
The
applicant submitted that it had been substantially successful in
that, after all, it had been seeking a conversion to business
rescue
and that this had been achieved. It accordingly submitted that it
would be appropriate that its costs be costs in the business
rescue
of the first respondent.
16.
Mr
Campbell for the sixth respondent countered that the applicant should
not be permitted to recover any costs from the business
rescue
proceedings and that rather the applicant should pay the sixth
respondent’s costs. Amongst his submissions were that
until
Mr Bezuidenhout’s engagement with the court and which
elicited the clarified tender by the applicant and its subsidiary,
SBD Investments, to “
return
”
Erf 257 to the first respondent, it was unlikely that
there would have been any success in the application given the
difficulties
that the court had raised with Mr Bezuidenhout during
the course of his argument.
17.
Various
other submissions were made by each of the counsel in support of
their respective positions in relation to costs.
18.
What
I did find persuasive was Mr Bezuidenhout’s submission that
once there was to be a conversion to business rescue, whatever
the
route taken to reach that consensus, to order one or other of the
parties to pay the other’s costs rather than that the
parties’
costs be costs in the business rescue would continue to fuel the
friction between the parties and would serve as
an obstacle to a
successful business rescue.
19.
In
my view, the applicant now, having through its subsidiary the seventh
respondent tendered the return of Erf 257, has a real vested
interest
in advancing the business rescue proceedings, rather than making use
of those proceedings as a dilatory tactic.
20.
An
order that the sixth respondent’s costs also be costs in the
business rescue would also give impetus to the sixth respondent
cooperating in respect of a successful business rescue as the
likelihood of it recovering its costs would be heightened by a
successful
business rescue. A successful business rescue is unlikely
to entail anything less than the costs of this application being paid
in due course.
21.
Should
the business rescue proceedings fail and be superseded by a
liquidation order, then the parties’ costs as costs of
business
rescue should have the appropriate preference in the insolvency
ranking as provided for in Chapter 6 of the
Companies Act.
22.
>In
my discretion, it is appropriate that both the costs of the applicant
as well as the costs of the sixth respondent be costs
in the business
rescue of the first respondent.
23.
In
giving my reasons for this order, I have avoided dealing with the
various objections that the sixth respondent has raised as
to the
conduct of the applicant to date, both in leading up to the
winding up and during the course of the winding up
of the
first respondent. Given the consent order that has been reached, I
deliberately refrain from doing so but this is not to
say that the
sixth respondent’s concerns were without merit.
24.
It
is hoped that in light of the consent order which now obliges the
applicant through its subsidiary, the seventh respondent, to
transfer
Erf 257 to the first respondent that this is a first, and
hopefully landmark, step taken in the right direction to
resolving
the disputes that have arisen between the parties and which now that
the liquidation proceedings have been converted
to business rescue
proceedings, will result in a successful rescue of the first
respondent.
25.
I
express my gratitude to the counsel and attorneys for the applicant
and the sixth respondent for their constructive engagement
during the
course of the hearing before me to enable the consent order to be
agreed and made.
26.
In
the circumstances, and in respect of the costs of the application, I
order that:
26.1.
the
applicant’s costs are to be costs in the business rescue of the
first respondent;
26.2.
the
sixth respondent’s costs are to be costs in the business rescue
of the first respondent.
Gilbert AJ
Date of hearing: 11
May 2023
Date of judgment (on
costs): 17 May 2023
Counsel
for the Applicant and
Seventh
Respondent:
W
J Bezuidenhout
Instructed
by:
Van
Deventer Dlamini Inc.
Counsel
for the Sixth Respondent:
A
G Campbell
Instructed
by:
Karnavos
Attorneys
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