Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 598South Africa
Nobilatus Projects 23 (Pty) Limited v Improfin (Pty) Limited (20272/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 598 (30 May 2023)
Headnotes
“…. It is well established under the Plascon-Evans rule that where in motion proceedings dispute of fact arises on the affidavits, a final order can be granted only if the facts averred in the applicant's affidavit, which have been admitted by the respondent together with the facts alleged by the latter, justify such order. It may be different if the respondent's version consists of bald or uncreditworthy denials, raises fictitious disputes of fact, is palpably implausible, far-fetched or so clearly untenable that the court is justified in rejecting them merely on the papers.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Nobilatus Projects 23 (Pty) Limited v Improfin (Pty) Limited (20272/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 598 (30 May 2023)
Nobilatus Projects 23 (Pty) Limited v Improfin (Pty) Limited (20272/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 598 (30 May 2023)
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sino date 30 May 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
I
N
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case no.:
20
272/2021
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES
REVISED
31.05.23
In
the matter between:
NOBILATUS PROJECTS
23 (PTY) LIMITED
APPLICANT
And
IMPROFIN (PTY)
LIMITED
RESPONDENT
Coram: Dlamini J
Neutral Citation
:
Nobilatus Projects 23 (Pty) Limited vs
Improfin (Pty) Limited
(Case No: 20272/2021) [2023] ZAG JHC 598 (30 May 2023)
JUDGMENT
DLAMINI J
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This is a liquidation application brought by the
applicant for a final winding-up of the respondent based on its
inability to pay
its debts.
[2]
In its notice of motion, the applicant pursues the
following relief;-
2.1 That the
respondent be placed under final winding-up in the hands of the
Master of the High Court.
2.2 That the cost
of this application be ordered to be cost in the winding-up.
[3]
It
is trite that winding-up proceedings are not to be used as means to
enforce payment of a debt that is disputed on
bona
fide
and
reasonable grounds.
[1]
However,
where the respondent’s indebtedness has been
prima
facie
established,
the
onus
is
on the respondent to show that his indebtedness is indeed disputed on
bona
fide
and
reasonable grounds.
[2]
The
respondent disputes its indebtedness to the applicant on numerous
grounds. Primarily, the respondent raises various points
in
limmine
and
alleges that the exists material disputes of facts in this matter and
that same could not be determined in applications.
[4]
In
the winding-up application, the applicant seeks the final winding-up
of the respondent, Improfin (Pty) Limited (Improfin)
on the
ground that it is unable to pay its debts as and when they fall due,
in accordance with the provision of section 344(f),
as read with
section 345 of the Companies Act,
[3]
as amended.
[5]
Section 345 titled “When company deemed
unable to pay its debts” provides;-
(1)
A company or body corporate shall be deemed to
be unable to pay its debts if;-
(a)
A creditor, by cession or either wise, to whom
the company is indebted in a sum not less than one hundred rands then
due;-
(i)
Has served on the company, by leaving the same
at its registered office, a demand requiring the company to pay the
sum due; or
(ii)
In the case of any body corporate not
incorporated under this Act, has served such demand by leaving it at
its main office or delivering
it to the secretary or some director,
manager, or principal officer of such body corporate or in such other
manner as the Court
may direct, and the company or body corporate has
for three weeks thereafter neglected to pay the sum, or to secure or
compound
for it to the reasonable satisfaction of the creditor”.
[5]
In determining for the purpose of subsection (1)
whether a company is unable to pay its debts, the Court shall also
take into account
the contingent and prospective liabilities of the
company.
BACKGROUND FACTS
[6]
The applicant testified that it entered into two
loan agreements with the respondent.
[7]
The first loan agreement was concluded on 10
December 2051 between the respondent and Kamal Bhimma, wherein Bhimma
loaned the respondent
an amount of R10 092 018.09.
[8]
The second loan agreement was concluded on 17
March 2016 and the sum of R9,24 million was advanced to the
respondent.
[9]
That, on 17 March 2016, a company known as
K2015351259 (Pty) Ltd, bound itself as surety and co-principal debtor
in favour of Bhimma
for all the indebtedness of the respondent and
agreed to the registration of a covering mortgage bond over its
properties as security
for the payment of the loan.
[10]
The applicant avers that on 17 March 2016, itself,
K2015 and Bhimma concluded a written assignment in terms of which,
Bhimma ceded
and assigned all his rights, title, and interest under
the second loan and suretyship to the applicant including his rights,
title,
and interest against K2015 arising from the bond registered
over the property of K2015 to secure the indebtedness toward Bhimma.
[11]
The applicant and Bhimma on 28 January 2021,
concluded a written deed of cession, in terms of which Bhimma
ceded, transferred,
and made over to the applicant all his rights,
title, and interest in and to any amount due and owing by the
respondent in terms
of the first loan.
[12]
The applicant avers that the respondent has failed
to make payment in terms of the loan agreements.
[13]
As a result, the applicant demanded that the
respondent make payment of the outstanding balance in letters of
demand dated 4 March
2020 and 14 December 2020. The applicant submits
that the aforesaid letter of demand constituted notice in terms of
section 345
of the Companies Act, to the effect that the respondent
will be deemed to be unable to pay its debts.
[14]
In
its reply, the respondent aver that there are various material
disputes of facts in this present application. The respondent
disputes the existence of the alleged debt and as such the
applicant's
locus
standi
as
the creditor. Further, the respondent denies receipt of the statutory
demand in terms of Section 345 of the Companies Act.
[4]
[15]
According to the respondent, the applicant and the
third party have issued a summons in this Court under case number
8503/ 2021
against the respondent as the First defendant and the
surety K2015351259 as the Second defendant. The respondent aver that
this
action relates to the same alleged debt that the applicant
relies upon in the winding-up application. This says the respondent
point to the fact that the applicant was fully aware that the claims
instituted through action procedure, were defended before the
issuing
of the winding-up application.
[16]
Further, the respondent has in the above action
joined the Register of Deeds, Pretoria, to set aside the surety
mortgage bond, on
the basis that the applicant did not acquire any
rights in terms of the first loan agreement in that debt was
extinguished through
prescription, before the alleged cession taking
place on 28 January 2021.
[17]
In
its replication, in the aforementioned action, the applicant raised
the defence of interruption of prescription as envisaged
in section
14 of the Prescription Act.
[5]
This fact also, according to the respondent raises material dispute
of fact.
[18]
The respondent disputes the mandate and the
authority of the undertakings and acknowledgments of the debts that
were made on its
behalf.
[19]
The question to be answered is whether the exist
material disputes of facts in this matter and if so whether the
applicant should
have proceeded by way of action instead of
application.
[20]
The applicant in sum submits that the respondent’s
grounds of opposition are without merit, and are not
bona
fide
. Further, the respondent's
indebtedness is not disputed on
bona
fide
and reasonable grounds.
[21]
The
principles relating to the existence of material disputes of facts
are now well established and have been set out in several
cases. To
succeed in obtaining relief in motion proceedings, the applicant
remains bound to the Plascon-Evans
[6]
test
in that it must demonstrate that the facts in the answering affidavit
together with the admitted facts from the founding affidavit,
justify
the relief sought. The trite principle is that an applicant in motion
proceedings should stand and fall by their founding
papers.
[22]
In
National
Director of Public Prosecution v Zuma
[7]
with
reference to the case of
Plascon-Evans
Paints Ltd v Van Reebeck Paints (Pty) Ltd,
it
was held that “…. It is well established under the
Plascon-Evans rule that where in motion proceedings dispute of
fact
arises on the affidavits, a final order can be granted only if the
facts averred in the applicant's affidavit, which have
been admitted
by the respondent together with the facts alleged by the latter,
justify such order. It may be different if the respondent's
version
consists of bald or uncreditworthy denials, raises fictitious
disputes of fact, is palpably implausible, far-fetched or
so clearly
untenable that the court is justified in rejecting them merely on the
papers.
[23]
If an applicant should have realised when
launching the application that a serious dispute of fact incapable of
resolution on the
papers was bound to develop, the process of court
commencing action shall be by summons.
[24]
In my view, the respondent's assertion of the
existence of material disputes of facts has merit. This is so,
because the applicant
has under case number 8503/21 instituted action
against the same respondent on the same grounds that are being
alleged by the applicant
in his winding-up application. The defendant
in the above mention action, who is the respondent in this
application has raised
various reasonable and
bona
fide
defences, the nature of which
could not be decided on application.
[25]
Further, the respondent has disputed its liability
to the applicant and has brought a counter application to have the
mortgage bond
declared void ab initio and has joined the Register of
Deeds, Pretoria in that regard.
[26]
Furthermore, the respondent has raised a defence
of prescription, in that the applicant's claim had prescribed.
Therefore, it is
trite that the determination of whether prescription
exists is essentially a dispute of fact and law. That it is a
fact-based inquiry
that requires viva voce evidence.
[27]
Also, the respondent disputes and deny the
acknowledgments and or undertakings that were made on its behalf and
alleges that the
respondent did not give authority to the deponent to
sign the acknowledgments on its behalf. The determinitation is to
whether
the deponent, had authority to bind the application is a fact
based enquirey that relies in orall evidence.
[28]
It is thus my view that facts in dispute between
the parties do not justify the order prayed for and the applicant
should have proceeded
by way of summons and not application.
[29]
In all the circumstances mentioned above, I am
satisfied that the respondent's
point in
limmine
should be upheld and the
application must be dismissed.
ORDER
1.
The order that I signed dated 17 October 2022 is
made an order of this Court.
DLAMINI J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Date
of Request For Reasons:
16 January
2023
Delivered: 31 May
2023
For
the Applicant:
Adv.
AG South SC
south@clubadvocates.co.za
Adv.
L W de Beer
advlwdebeer@hotmail.com
For
the Respondent
:
M
Jacobs
advmjacobs@gmail.com
[1]
See
Badenhorst v Northen Construction Enterprises (Pty) Ltd 1956 (2) SA
346 (T)
[2]
In
Kali v Decotex (Pty) Ltd the Court said “… an
application for liquidation should not be resorted to in order to
enforce a claim which is
bona
fide
disputed
by the company. Consequently, where the respondent shows on a
balance of probability that its indebtedness to the applicant
is
disputed on
bona
fide
and
reasonable grounds, the Court will refuse a winding-up order. The
onus
on
the respondent is not to show that it is not indebted to the
applicant; it is merely to show that the indebtedness is disputed
on
bona
fide
and
reasonable grounds
[3]
61
of 1973
[4]
ibid
[5]
Act
68 of 1969
[6]
1984
(3) SA 623 (A)
[7]
(573/08)
[2009] ZASCA 1
(12 Jan 2009)
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