Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 709South Africa
Farber and Others v Kgaboesele N.O and Others (2023/028612;2023/032790) [2023] ZAGPJHC 709 (15 June 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
15 June 2023
Headnotes
discretion to grant appropriate
Judgment
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 709
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Farber and Others v Kgaboesele N.O and Others (2023/028612;2023/032790) [2023] ZAGPJHC 709 (15 June 2023)
Farber and Others v Kgaboesele N.O and Others (2023/028612;2023/032790) [2023] ZAGPJHC 709 (15 June 2023)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2023_709.html
sino date 15 June 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Case Number: 2023/028612
(1) REPORTABLE: NO
(2) OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO
(3) REVISED: NO
DATE: 15 JUNE 2023
SIGNATURE
In the matter between:
MARK
MORRIS
FARBER
First Applicant
10 FIFE AVENUE BEREA
(PTY) LIMITED
Second Applicant
28 ESSELEN STREET
HILBROW CC
Third Applicant
39 VAN DER MERWE
STREET HILLBROW CC
Fourth Applicant
HILLBROW CONSOLIDATED
INVESTMENTS CC
Fifth Applicant
and
TUMISANG KGABOESELE
N.O.
(cited in his capacity
as the Business Rescue
Practitioner
of 266 Bree Street (Pty) Ltd)
First Respondent
266 BREE STREET
JOHANNESBURG (PTY) LTD
(In
business
rescue)
Second Respondent
TUHF
LIMITED
Third Respondent
THE COMPANIES AND
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
COMMISSION
Fourth Respondent
Case Number: 2023/032790
In the matter between:
TUHF
LIMITED
Applicant
and
266 BREE STREET
JOHANNESBURG (PTY) LTD
(In
business
rescue)
First Respondent
TUMISANG KGABOESELE
N.O.
(cited in his capacity
as the Business Rescue
Practitioner
of 266 Bree Street (Pty) Ltd)
Second Respondent
THE COMPANIES AND
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
COMMISSION
Third Respondent
Business rescue –
application to remove practitioner – counterapplication under s
141(2) of
Companies Act 71 of 2008
to discontinue business rescue and
place company into liquidation – powers of court under
s 141(3)
- whether court may extend business rescue plan after execution
thereof has failed – held discretion to grant appropriate
order
under
s 141(3)
does not permit court to impose extension of business
rescue contrary to wishes of creditors – company placed into
final
liquidation.
JUDGMENT
KEIGHTLEY, J
Introduction
[1]
This judgment encompasses two applications (with
counterapplications) involving many, although not all, of the same
parties.
They have an established track record of litigation
between them, some of which was dealt with through the Commercial
Court of
this Division, presided over by Senyatsi J. The issues
and facts raised in the present two applications are intertwined.
[2]
The initial, and main protagonist, is Mr Farber.
He is the first applicant under case number 2023/028612 (the Farber
application)
and is the sole member/shareholder/director and
controlling mind of the remaining applicants in that case. For
purposes of
this judgment, it is necessary only to highlight Hillbrow
Consolidated Investments CC (HCI) as his co-applicant, the remaining
co applicants being surplus to narrative requirements. Mr
Farber has two main adversaries in the litigation: Mr Kgaboesele
N.O., the appointed business rescue practitioner of a company, 266
Bree Street Johannesburg (Pty) Ltd (266 Bree), and TUHF Limited
(TUHF), 266 Bree’s main creditor.
[3]
266 Bree is a property holding company. It
owns immovable property in the inner city of Johannesburg known as
Metro Centre.
The property has residential and commercial
tenants, although it is common cause that it is currently operating
at a 40% occupancy
rate. Under a property management agreement
(the PMA) entered into between Mr Farber (representing 266 Bree) and
HCI (represented
by Mr Farber), HCI became the managing agent
responsible for securing leases, maintaining the building and the
collection of rentals.
[4]
Mr Kgaboesele is the third business rescue
practitioner to have been appointed following 266 Bree being placed
in business rescue
by Mr Farber, the sole director, on 27 July
2022. The two previous business rescue practitioners resigned
without achieving
anything by way of a business rescue plan. In
contrast, Mr Kgaboesele tabled a business rescue plan which was
adopted with
the support of TUHF. I will say more about the
business rescue plan later, suffice to say for present purposes that
it involved
the sale of 266 Bree’s immovable property within a
specified period of time, and the termination of the PMA with HCI.
Until very recently, Mr Farber and HCI opposed any interference with
the PMA and with HCI’s status as managing agent of Metro
Centre.
[5]
Mr Kgaboesele details the obstacles he has faced
in obtaining Mr Farber’s co operation in the business
rescue process.
He suggests that Mr Farber’s conduct is
in some respects fraudulent, particularly in the way he has
controlled the finances
of his different entities, including 266 Bree
and HCI. Mr Farber, in turn, accuses Mr Kgaboesele of colluding
with TUHF to
cause the business rescue plan to fail and to force 266
Bree into liquidation. I do not have to make any findings as
regards
whether Mr Farber is guilty of fraudulent conduct.
Suffice to say, however, that there is evidence of his lack of
transparency,
particularly on financial information, and obstructive
conduct in the business rescue proceedings.
[6]
The allegations of collusion formed the basis of
the Farber application. The applicants sought, initially by way
of urgent
relief: an interdict prohibiting Mr Kgaboesele from:
(1) acting as the business rescue practitioner; (2) taking any steps
to implement the business rescue plan; (3) selling 266 Bree’s
immovable property; or (4) enforcing a suspension or cancellation
of
the PMA. The application was opposed by both Mr Kgaboesele and
TUHF, and both filed counterapplications.
[7]
In his counterapplication Mr Kgaboesele seeks an
order discontinuing the business rescue proceedings and placing 266
Bree in provisional
liquidation in terms of section 141(2)(a)(ii) of
the Companies Act 71 of 2008 (the Act). TUHF’s
counterapplication
(the TUHF counterapplication) is for an order
holding Mr Farber and HCI in contempt of two court orders
granted by Senyatsi
J. In addition, it seeks an interim order,
pending the liquidation and appointment of a liquidator, essentially
prohibiting
Mr Farber and HCI from taking steps to collect rentals
from the tenants of 266 Bree or from interfering in any way in the
exercise
by TUHF of its rights.
[8]
The application under case number 2023/032790 (the
TUHF liquidation application) was instituted as an adjunct to the
Farber application.
It is a ‘belts and braces’
application intended to cover any shortfall that may occur in the BRP
liquidation counterapplication.
It seeks the same end as Mr
Kgaboesele’s application, save that TUHF contends for a final,
rather than a provisional order
of liquidation. Although not
cited as parties in the TUHF liquidation application, Mr Farber and
his co-applicants in the
Farber application sought leave to intervene
and filed answering affidavits opposing the relief sought. TUHF
took no issue
with Mr Farber’s intervention as an affected
party, being the sole shareholder of 266 Bree.
[9]
Had it not been for events that occurred when the
hearing commenced, this judgment would have been longer and more
detailed.
Surprisingly, on the day of the hearing the Farber
applicants filed new heads of argument in reply to those filed by the
respondents.
In them, and as counsel for the Farber applicants
confirmed in his oral submissions to court, the Farber applicants
accepted that:
“in light of the professed intention of Mr
Kgaboesele to seek the liquidation of 266 Bree Street and to not
continue
to implement the Business Rescue Plan … the relief
sought by the Applicants is for all intents and purposes moot”.
Mr Kgaboesele’s intentions were made perfectly clear in
his answering affidavit and counterapplication, which were filed
on 5
April 2023. The Farber applicants did not explain why it had
taken them five weeks to come to the realisation that their
relief
was moot. I say no more on their conduct at present but will
revisit the issue when I consider an appropriate costs
order.
[10]
I should add that the about-turn by the Farber
applicants on their application renders it unnecessary for me to make
a finding on
whether Mr Kgaboesele colluded with TUHF and thus failed
to carry out his duties as business rescue practitioner.
Nonetheless,
I find it necessary to record that the allegations of
collusion are singularly unconvincing. The fact of the matter
is that
TUHF holds by far the majority of the voting rights in the
business rescue proceedings. As such, it has the power to
determine
the vote on any business rescue plan. Mr Kgaboesele
can hardly be accused of acting in an unprofessional manner by
heeding
TUHF’s response to the proposed business rescue plan
and incorporating certain consequential amendments before putting the
plan to the vote.
[11]
Despite recognising that their original relief had
become moot, the Farber applicants did not abandon their opposition
to the liquidation
applications. Instead, they shifted the
focus of their opposition to s 141(3) of the Act, which gives the
court a discretion
to make an “appropriate” order (other
than placing the company concerned into liquidation) in an
application for the
discontinuation of business rescue proceedings.
The Farber applicants’ contention is that it would be
appropriate in
this case, instead of liquidating 266 Bree, to extend
the business rescue plan and allow for a further attempt to sell the
immovable
property. They contend that this would garner a
greater return for creditors than if the property were to be sold by
a liquidator.
They also propose the appointment of a new
business rescue practitioner.
[12]
The effect of the Farber applicants’
about-turn means that the issues before me have become relatively
simple:
12.1
Should the business rescue proceedings be
discontinued under s 141(2) of the Act and 266 Bree be placed in
either provisional or
final liquidation, or have the Farber
applicants established a case for me to exercise my discretion under
s 141(3) and to grant
the alternative
“
appropriate”
relief they contend for?
12.2
Has TUHF made out a proper case for the interim
interdict sought in their counterapplication?
12.3
Regarding the counterapplication for a declaration
of contempt, TUHF advised the court that they would seek, instead, a
declarator
that Mr Farber and HCI had breached the two Senyatsi
J orders. Are they entitled to this relief?
12.4
Finally, the issue of costs.
Should 266 Bree be
placed into liquidation?
[13]
Section 141(2)(a) provides that:
“
lf,
at any time during business rescue proceedings, the practitioner
concludes that
—
(a)
there is no reasonable prospect for the company to
be rescued, the practitioner must
—
(i)
so inform the court, the company, and all affected
persons in the prescribed manner; and
(ii)
apply to the court for an order discontinuing the
business rescue proceedings and placing the company
into
liquidation
.”
[14]
Mr
Kgaboesele
’
s
counterapplication is premised on his duties as business rescue
practitioner under this section. It is a peremptory provision.
Failure to act in its terms or to resign as business rescue
practitioner would constitute a breach of his duties.
[1]
For
this reason, Mr Kgaboesele stated his position plainly in his
affidavit. He is of the view that the business rescue plan
has
failed and can no longer be implemented; there is no reasonable
prospect of rescuing 266 Bree; and he has no intention to continue
to
conduct himself as business rescue practitioner once his obligations
under s 141(2)(a) are fulfilled.
[15]
The Farber applicants’ response to Mr
Kgaboesele relies on s 141(3) and, in particular, on that portion
underlined below:
“
(3)
A court to which an application has been made in terms of subsection
(2)(a)(ii) may make the order applied for,
or
any other order that the court considers appropriate in the
circumstances
.”
(Emphasis added.)
[16]
It is common cause that 266 Bree is at least
commercially insolvent. I should add that on the evidence
before me there is
every indication that it is also factually
insolvent. It is also common cause that TUHF is its largest,
and only secured
creditor. The debt to TUHF arises out of a
loan in the amount of R19 070 035 advanced to 266 Bree for
the acquisition
and refurbishment of Metro Centre. The loan is
secured by a mortgage bond registered over the property as well as
suretyship
agreements entered into by Mr Farber and his associated
entities.
[17]
In 2020 TUHF instituted an action against 266 Bree
for the recovery of the amount advanced under the loan agreement,
together with
interest. The action was opposed by Mr Farber and
the other sureties, who disputed 266 Bree’s, and hence their
indebtedness.
266 Bree initially defended the action but after
it was placed under business rescue Mr Kgaboesele decided to abide
the decision
of the court. On 21 April 2023 Senyatsi J made an
order in favour of TUHF directing 266 Bree to pay it an amount of
R34 331 854,
being the outstanding capital, interest and
penalties due and payable to TUHF. The sureties have sought
leave to appeal the
order of Senyatsi J. For purposes of the
present applications, they accept that 266 Bree is indebted for at
least the capital
amount of R19 070 035.
[18]
266 Bree is also indebted to other entities in the
Farber group: R1,7 million to 10 Fife Avenue; R6,4 million to 28
Esselen
Street; and R2 million to 39 Van der Merwe
Street. Further creditors include Egoli gas (approximately
R26 000)
and City of Johannesburg (R3,2 million).
According to Mr Kgaboesele, the amount owed to TUHF constitutes
70,59% of the total
debt. The Farber associated creditors
hold only 22.58% of voting rights between them.
[19]
As I indicated earlier, neither of the first two
business rescue practitioners devised a business rescue plan. On
9 January,
Mr Kgaboesele presented a draft plan to creditors.
TUHF indicated that it would not support the adoption of the plan,
raising
several concerns. Given TUHF’s indication that it
would not support the plan, it was not put to the vote.
[20]
On 23 January 2023 Mr Kgaboesele presented a
revised business rescue plan. He indicated that he foresaw no
reasonable prospect
of rescuing 266 Bree. Instead, the plan
proposed an orderly disposal of the assets of 266 Bree which would
result in a better
return to creditors and a more favourable outcome
than what would transpire from a liquidation. The value placed
on the property
by an independent valuer was
R19,4
million
. TUHF voted in favour of the
plan but only after proposing certain amendments. These
included that
Metro Centre
had to be sold
for the highest attainable value within 60 calendar days of
acceptance of the plan, subject to the approval of TUHF.
Further,
that registration of the transfer of the immovable property be
completed within 120 calendar days of acceptance
of the plan.
It was also conditional on the termination of the PMA with HCI.
The plan was adopted on 2 February 2023,
subject to the amendments.
[21]
The
deadline for the sale of Metro Centre in terms of the conditions
incorporated into the plan as amended was 3 April 2023.
It is
common cause that no sale was concluded by this date, a factor
crucial to
Mr
Kgaboesele
’
s
counterapplication. He and TUHF contend that the failure to
secure the sale of the property as directed under the plan means
that
the plan has failed. Consequently, business rescue proceedings
must be ended and 266 Bree placed into liquidation.
[22]
Despite the obvious logic and common sense of Mr
Kgaboesele and TUHF’s position, Mr Farber and his associated
applicants disagree.
They submit that in terms of the
provisions of
section 141(3)
of the
Companies Act the
court can grant
any order that is appropriate other than placing a company in
liquidation. This includes an order to extend
an existing
business rescue
plan and to appoint a new
business rescue
practitioner. They
contend that this can be done by order of court, without the consent
of creditors.
[23]
To this end, in his affidavit filed in reply and
in answer to the business rescue counterapplication, Mr Farber
introduced a report
obtained from one Mr Klopper who, he says, is an
independent and experienced business rescue practitioner.
According to Mr
Farber, Mr Klopper’s assessment of the
situation is that 266 Bree can be rescued. This could be
achieved, it is argued,
if Mr Klopper were to be appointed as the new
business rescue practitioner and given an opportunity to prepare and
publish a new
plan based on his report.
[24]
In the alternative, Mr Farber suggested that the
present plan could be extended, with additional time granted to
market the Metro
Centre more extensively to obtain a better sale
price than would be obtained on liquidation. Shortly before the
hearing,
Mr Farber filed a supplementary affidavit the purpose of
which, among other things, was to provide an additional valuation of
Metro
Centre from one Mr Sacks of Stonebloc Auctions. According
to Mr Farber, Mr Sacks is an experienced property broker with many
years of experience involving properties in the Johannesburg CBD.
Mr Farber says that the value placed on Metro Centre by
Mr Sacks, as
at 30 April 2023, was between R29 million and R32 million.
[25]
Despite
Mr Farber’s confidence in Mr Sack’s acumen as a property
broker, his report holds no weight as an expert opinion
as to the
property value of Metro Centre. The document attached to
the supplementary affidavit is not a valuation in
the proper sense.
It is, instead, a “Proposal to Auction” and a
“Market Estimate”. Mr
Sacks concludes that:
“[w]e are confident that we would be able to achieve between
R29 000 000 and R32 000 000
at auction.”
It is quite obviously a report prepared for purposes of persuading Mr
Farber to give Mr Sack’s
company the business of marketing
the property. Mr Sacks is not qualified as an expert property
valuer, nor is his report,
such as it is, made under oath. The
Supreme Court of Appeal very recently reminded us that in business
rescue matters a property
valuation must be provided by a qualified
expert under oath. Estimates such as that provided by Mr Sacks
are inadmissible.
[2]
So
much for Mr Farber’s optimism that the property could be sold
for up to R32 million if marketed by Mr Sacks. In fact,
Mr
Farber himself attempted to sell Metro Centre a year ago. The
only bids he secured were “ghost” bids, and
the highest
of these was R25 million. There is no realistic prospect of the
property being sold for substantially more if
266 Bree were to be
left in business rescue for a further six months. In any
event, a liquidator will have resources
at her disposal to obtain the
best possible selling price.
[26]
There is an additional difficulty underpinning the
Farber applicants’ contention that this court can extend the
existing business
rescue plan. The question arises whether it
is permissible for a court using its discretion under
s 141(3)
to
make an order extending a business rescue plan that has already
failed in its implementation? And if so, can the court
so order
without the matter being put to the vote by creditors, as the Farber
applicants contend?
Finally, if this
is permissible, would such an order be appropriate on the particular
facts of this case? These questions
appear not to have enjoyed
any attention from courts thus far, as none of the parties referred
me to any case law on the issues
raised.
[27]
The underlying purpose of
s 141(2)
would seem to
me to be that once it is clear to the business rescue practitioner
that business rescue has failed, steps must be
taken to bring the
process to an end. The proposition that the discretion under
s
141(3)
permits a court to grant an appropriate order in the form of
an extension of a business rescue plan that has failed in its
execution
is contrary to this underlying purpose as well as the
general scheme of business rescue under the Act.
[28]
The
statutory scheme lays down strict time and procedural constraints for
the business rescue process. Meetings of creditors
must be
conducted speedily, as must the compilation and publication of a
business rescue plan.
[3]
Critically,
the fate of a business rescue plan, and indeed, of business rescue
proceedings, hangs on the vote by creditors.
Under s 152(2), a
vote of support by the holders of more than 75% of the creditors’
voting interest is sufficient for the
plan’s approval.
[4]
Once
adopted, the plan is binding on the company and on all creditors.
[5]
On the
contrary, if it is not so approved, it is rejected, “and may be
considered further only in terms of s 153”.
The latter
section permits the preparation and publication of a revised rejected
plan only if the holders of voting interests approve.
Alternatively, the company may apply to set aside the result of the
vote on the basis that it was inappropriate.
[6]
Unless
action is taken to revise a plan, or to apply to court to set aside
the vote that it be rejected, the practitioner “must
promptly
file a notice of the termination of the business rescue
proceedings”.
[7]
[29]
What these sections highlight is that the
statutory scheme aims to bring finality to the fate of the company,
and its creditors,
one way or another, as speedily as reasonably
possible. If the plan is adopted, the company’s fate, and
those of the
creditors, upon whom it is binding, will be decided by
the plan. If it is rejected, and resort is not had to the
remedies
under s 153(1)(a), that is the end of the business rescue
process.
[30]
Also
apparent from these sections is that there is no express procedure in
terms of which an approved plan, which has failed in
its execution,
may be extended under the hand of a new practitioner. To read
into s 141(3) an implied power of the court
to permit using its
discretion ignores the importance of finality, which runs through the
sections I have referred to. Even
more importantly, it ignores
the rights of the creditors to decide the fate of the plan, and the
binding nature of the plan once
approved. In
Kransfontein
Beleggings
,
[8]
albeit
stated in a different context, the SCA held that:
“
A
business rescue plan can only be implemented if approved by the
prescribed majority of creditors in terms of
s 152
of the
Companies Act. The
court has no power to foist on creditors a
plan which they have not discussed and voted on at such a meeting.
”
[31]
By
parity of reasoning, the court has no power to foist onto the
majority of creditors an extension of a business rescue plan, that,
while initially supported, has now failed in its implementation. The
plan is now lifeless, and the court simply does not
have the power to
breathe life back into it. This is particularly so where, it is
common cause, TUHF holds sufficient voting
rights to determine the
approval or rejection of any business rescue plan. Even if it
were possible, in principle, of being
put to the vote again, TUHF has
made it clear in its affidavits that it will not vote in favour of an
extension or a new plan.
It cannot be that under its power to
make an “appropriate” order, this court can impose on
TUHF the extension of business
rescue proceedings which have no hope
of succeeding without TUHF’s support.
This
is consistent with what was stated in
Oakdene
,
[9]
albeit,
once again, that the court there was not addressing precisely the
same question as arises in this case. The court
emphasised the
principle that business rescue proceedings require the support of the
majority of creditors:
“
As
I see it, the applicant for business rescue is bound to establish
reasonable grounds for the prospect of rescuing the company.
If
the majority creditors declare that they will oppose any business
rescue scheme based on those grounds, I see no reason why that
proclaimed opposition should be ignored. Unless, of course,
that attitude can be said to be unreasonable or mala fide. By
virtue of
section 132(2)(c)(i)
read with section 152 of the Act,
rejection of the proposed rescue plan by the majority of creditors
will normally sound the death
knell of the proceedings.”
[32]
In this case, it cannot be said that in signaling
its intent not to support any further attempt at business rescue TUHF
is acting
unreasonably or
mala fide
.
One only need consider the proposals in Mr Klopper’s report to
understand that TUHF’s position is entirely reasonable.
He accepts that the debt level in respect of TUHF’s debt alone
“is quite simply unaffordable even if the company is
able to
fill its vacant lettable space in the short term”. He
also accepts that “the secured creditor (TUHF)
would need to
compromise its total debt by somewhere around R10 million” and
that the new principal debt would need to be
negotiated over a new
long-term loan “repayable over a period of 10 to 15 years”.
It is quite understandable
why TUHF is not willing to accept these
fundamental elements of a second attempt at business rescue. In
addition, it is simply
fanciful to consider that a fourth business
rescue practitioner would produce the magic wand necessary to succeed
where three others
have failed before him. There is also the
cost of extending business rescue proceedings in circumstances where
the creditors
effectively have borne the costs of three practitioners
already.
[33]
While Mr Farber denies that the first two business
rescue practitioners resigned because of his obstructive conduct, it
is difficult
to give credence to his denial. Neither of the
first two practitioners were willing to file affidavits but annexed
to Mr
Kgoboesele’s affidavit are letters from them indicting
that this is precisely why they resigned. Mr Kgaboesele’s
affidavit is replete with chapter and verse on the difficulties Mr
Farber and HCI caused for him. TUHF also details the lengths
to
which they went to undermine the orders previously granted by
Senyatsi J on an interim basis. The Farber applicants belatedly
suggested if business rescue did not succeed within a limited
extended period of 6 months, they would not oppose 266 Bree’s
liquidation thereafter. Unfortunately, the history of the
acrimonious litigation between the parties to date offers no real
guarantee that this would put an end to litigation.
[34]
The most import consideration of course is that,
quite simply, business rescue has failed. There is no realistic
prospect
of rescue even if, as Mr Klopper suggests in the
alternative, the property was to be marketed again for an extended
period of 6
months. I have already dealt with the so-called
valuation by Mr Sacks.
[35]
In the absence of support from TUHF, the
liquidation of 266 Bree is inevitable. There is no reason to
delay that inevitability
any longer. An additional reason to
liquidate the company is that on Mr Farber’s own admission,
historically 266 Bree’s
finances have not been separated
from those of his other entities. Mr Farber has exercised
control over the bank accounts.
HCI has accrued most of the
income every month through the PMA, leaving an insufficient balance
to pay its other running costs.
Mr Kgaboesele has had trouble
in securing Mr Farber’s co-operation to interrogate 266
Bree’s finances. A
liquidator will have broader powers to
examine and inquire into the company’s financial position,
vis-a-vis
the
other Farber entities.
[36]
I accordingly find that the business rescue in
respect of 266 Bree must be ended and the company placed under
liquidation.
[37]
The remaining question is whether the order of
liquidation should be provisional or final. While Mr
Kgaboesele’s application
was premised on a provisional order of
liquidation, he indicated at the hearing that if the court was
satisfied, as contended by
TUHF, that a case for final liquidation
had been established, then he would have no complaint with the grant
of a final order.
The requirements for a final order are indeed
satisfied. It is common cause that TUHF is the only secured
creditor and it
is also common cause that the amount of its claim is
at least R19 million. It has an order in its favour for
substantially
more, albeit subject to an application for leave to
appeal. 266 Bree has no employees, and all its creditors, and
the extent
of their claims are known. It only has one fixed
asset, being Metro Centre. Even Mr Klopper accepted that 266
Bree
does not have sufficient income to pay its running expenses
monthly. I see no reason why the present scenario is likely to
change materially between now and the confirmation of a provisional
order. In a case like this, there does not appear
to me
to be any purpose served by granting provisional liquidation.
My order makes provision for a final order of liquidation.
TUHF’s interim
interdict
[38]
In its counterapplication TUHF sought interdictory
relief pending the grant of a final winding-up order and the
appointment of a
liquidator with the necessary powers to take charge
of the Metro Centre and to collect rental. TUHF wants to
prohibit Mr
Farber and HCI from accessing the property for purposes
of collecting rentals; interfering with TUHF in respect of the
collection
of rentals; contacting tenants of the Metro Centre;
soliciting payment of rentals from tenants and interfering with
TUHF’s
right to collect rentals from tenants in any manner
whatsoever.
[39]
The context of the counterapplication for interim
relief involves the PMA entered into between Mr Farber and HCI in
terms of which
HCI was appointed as the managing agent for the Metro
Centre, in return for which it was paid a fee of R80 000 per
month.
One of its tasks was to manage the leases and collect
the rentals from tenants. Between August 2017 and October 2022,
266
Bree did not have its own bank account. The rentals were
collected by HCI and paid into its bank account. Both companies
are wholly owned and controlled by Mr Farber. He has a
substantial loan account with HCI which, at least at one point, was
in the region of some R11 million. HCI also acts as the
managing agent of Mr Farber’s other property-holding
companies and its bank account also received payments from their
tenants. TUHF was concerned that monies were being collected
but nothing was being paid over to 266 Bree. Instead, it
appeared that inter-company loans were established between the
entities. One of the clauses of the mortgage bond held by TUHF
over the Metro Centre was a cession by 266 Bree of all its
rights,
title and interest to any rents arising in respect of the property.
[40]
Based on its concerns, TUHF applied for what the
parties refer to as the preservation order. This order was
granted by Senyatsi
J in provisional form by agreement between the
parties on 18 July 2022. On 31 August 2022 it was granted in
final form.
A variation was granted by Senyatsi J on 7 December
2022 to make provision for Mr Kgaboesele as the relevant business
rescue practitioner.
The first business rescue practitioner
reported that he had not managed to obtain control over 266 Bree’s
bank account and
its financial affairs. The second business
rescue practitioner recorded in a letter that Mr Farber had also not
provided
him with basic financial information. The preservation
order thus provided that pending the finalisation of TUHF’s
action against 266 Bree, Mr Farber and HCI were directed to pay
the gross rental receipts into a designated attorney’s
trust
account, alternatively into an account opened by the practitioner in
266 Bree’s name. Under paragraph 3.5 of
the preservation
order TUHF was granted right of access to Metro Centre “for
purposes of inspection of the building and verification
of the rent
rolls and owners’ statements … at any time of day on
24-hours written notice” to Mr Farber and HCI.
Mr Farber
was also directed to provide unredacted bank statements to the
business rescue practitioner. Despite the preservation
order,
only R3000 of the rent collected thereunder was preserved as at
December 2022.
[41]
On 9 September 2022 TUHF was granted further
relief by Senyatsi J in the form of what the parties call the cession
order.
The purpose of the order was to give effect to TUHF’s
additional security under the mortgage bond agreement. The
cession
order provided that:
“
1.
(TUHF) is with immediate effect authorized to take cession of any
rental amounts payable by every
tenant
occu
pying
the immovable property known as Metro Centre …
to
266 BREE STREET JOHANNESBURG PTY LTD
…
1.
The Respondents sign all documents necessary to
facilitate the cession in 1 above failing which the Sheriff is
authorized to sign
all documents necessary to give effect to the
cession;
2.
The Respondents furnish TUHF, within 15 days of
this order, with the names and contact information of the Metro
Centre tenants …
.”
[42]
In its contempt counterapplication TUHF averred
that Mr Farber and HCI were in contempt of both the preservation
order and the cession
order. Although it no longer persists
with the contempt counterapplication, save in varied form, the
allegations of breach
are relevant to the interim interdict sought in
its counterapplication.
[43]
TUHF bases its counterapplication on its clear
right under the mortgage bond and under the cession order to the
collection of rentals
from tenants of the Metro Centre.
Despite this, says TUHF, Mr Farber has failed to sign the documents
necessary to facilitate
the cession, and he and HCI have failed to
provide the relevant details of the tenants under clause 3 of the
cession order.
TUHF is thus hamstrung in exercising its rights
under the cession order. TUHF accepts that once a liquidator is
appointed,
she will have the power and duty to collect the rentals.
However, until such time as the liquidation order is implemented
and
a liquidator is given those powers, TUHF wants to be able to exercise
its rights under the cession order without
hindrance
from Mr Farber and HCI.
[44]
Mr Farber’s position was that he and HCI
could not comply with both the preservation order and the cession
order at the same
time, as the former order obliged them to collect
rentals and pay them into the designated account. Mr Farber
also suggested
that he had confidence that the action would be
finalised in his favour and that TUHF should thus await the outcome
of the action
before enforcing the cession order.
[45]
Given the history of Mr Farber’s obstructive
conduct, as demonstrated in detail in the affidavits filed by Mr
Kgaboesele and
TUHF, it is difficult to accept the
bona fides
of this response. However, this is not
something I have to weigh in on, given that TUHF no longer persists
with its contempt
application. What is relevant though, is
whether TUHF has established a basis for an order confirming that it
is entitled
to collect the rentals, without interference from Mr
Farber and HCI, pending the appointment of a liquidator.
[46]
TUHF has a right under the cession order
immediately to take cession of the rentals. The order cannot be
read as being subject
to finalisation of TUHF’s action.
Whatever Mr Farber and HCI’s obligations were under the
preservation order,
clearly they cannot be used to avoid their
obligations under the cession order. This would be an
absurd situation.
There is no real defence to TUHF’s
quest for the interim interdict it seeks. The order is subject
to the condition
that it falls away once a liquidator is appointed.
However, until such time that this occurs, TUHF is entitled to the
protection
of its rights as outlined in its draft order.
A declaration of
breach?
[47]
As indicated earlier, TUHF initially sought an
order holding HCI and Mr Farber in contempt of the preservation order
and the cession
order. In respect of the preservation order,
TUHF averred that they had breached the order intentionally,
deliberately and
mala fides
by refusing to permit TUHF access to Metro Centre
for purposes of inspecting the building and verifying the rent rolls
as provided
for in the order. In respect of the cession order,
TUHF averred an intentional, deliberate and
mala
fide
breach by HCI and Mr Farber
because they had failed to take any steps to implement the cession as
directed under the order, and
despite demand by TUHF.
[48]
The initial position of the Farber applicants was
to seek to prevent Mr Kgaboesele from terminating the PMA with HCI.
However,
as I have already discussed, in their about-turn at the
commencement of the hearing, they abandoned this relief and accepted
that
HCI would no longer have anything to do with Metro Centre.
In addition, in their subsequent replying heads of argument, the
Farber applicants tendered access to TUHF without the attendance of
Mr Farber. This was contrary to the position they had
held to
that point. Their previous stance was that Mr Farber was
entitled to be present when TUHF inspected the property
and thus that
any inspection was subject to being conducted on a date suitable not
only to TUHF but also to Mr Farber.
[49]
TUHF accepted at the hearing that this changed
stance on the part of the Farber applicants meant that they had
effectively
purged their alleged contempt. However, TUHF
nonetheless sought an order declaring that Mr Farber and HCI had
breached the
preservation and cession orders by their conduct.
Breach of a court order is the first element of proving contempt.
Consequently, all the facts necessary to establish a breach (if I
reach that conclusion) are set out in the affidavits filed by
the
various parties. TUHF included a prayer for alternative relief
in its notice of motion in the counterapplication.
By seeking a
declaration of breach TUHF is not going outside of the facts averred
and the relief originally sought. All it
is doing is seeking
less than what it had originally asked the court to rule on. A
ruling on breach may at least be relevant
to the question of costs
and it may provide certainty for the liquidator in her dealings with
Mr Farber in the future. It
will also provide certainty for
TUHF for purposes of implementing the interim interdict. A
ruling on breach is thus not academic.
[50]
Mr Farber contended in the affidavits he deposed
to that he believed that, correctly interpreted, the preservation
order did not
give TUHF access without him being present and that the
date and time of inspection was subject to his agreement. I no
longer
need to consider whether Mr Farber was
bona
fide
in his belief that his
interpretation was correct. The simple question is whether it
was correct.
[51]
Under the preservation order, TUHF and its
representatives were “hereby granted right of access to Metro
Centre ….
at any time of day on 24 hours written notice”
to Mr Farber and HCI. The expressed right of access was not
conditional
on Mr Farber or HCI agreeing to the time and date of the
visit. On the contrary, the order includes the words “at
any
time” making it plain that any visit would be at a time and
date suitable to TUHF and not to Mr Farber or HCI. Mr Farber
was not entitled to refuse access because any suggested date or time
did not suit him. In doing so, he acted in breach of
the
preservation order.
[52]
As regards the cession order, it is common cause
that Mr Farber and HCI have taken no steps to comply with their
obligations to
sign whatever documents are necessary to give effect
to the order. Mr Farber says that he did not understand the
order to
be effective until Senyatsi J had handed down judgment in
the action instituted by TUHF. Again, his
bona
fides
are not in issue anymore,
although quite how Mr Farber could genuinely have held this belief in
the face of the plain terms of the
order is questionable. The
point is that whatever excuse there may have been for their inaction,
Mr Farber and HCI failed
to comply with the express terms of the
order. They were clearly in breach.
Costs
[53]
The issue of costs in this matter is complicated
by the fact that there are two applications (one by the Farber
applicants and one
by TUHF) and two counterapplications in response
to the Farber applicants’ application. In addition, there
are two
applications for the winding up of 266 Bree, which are
complimentary rather than competitive in nature, which applications
were
opposed, not by the company facing liquidation, as is often the
case, but by Mr Farber and his related entities.
[54]
As far as the Farber application is concerned, the
relief originally sought was largely abandoned at the eleventh hour,
with all
that remained being an ill conceived opposition to Mr
Kgaboesele’s s 141(2) application. The costs of the main
application should follow the result: the Farber applicants must bear
the costs of Mr Kgaboesele and TUHF. The question is
the
appropriate scale of costs. TUHF submitted that punitive costs
were warranted. The Farber applicants disagree.
In
my view, and costs being a matter for the discretion of the court, a
punitive scale is warranted. The Farber applicants’
application was premised on egregious allegations against Mr
Kgaboesele which were unwarranted. There was no merit at all
in
the allegation that he had colluded with TUHF and breached his
professional responsibilities in doing so.
[55]
What is more, Mr Kgaboesele had made it plain from
the time that he filed his answering affidavit that his view was that
he was
duty bound to act in accordance with s 141 and that, once his
duties in that regard were completed, he would no longer play any
role as business rescue practitioner. Despite this early
warning, the Farber applicants waited until the commencement of
the
hearing to announce that they no longer persisted with the relief
sought in their application. This was on the ostensible
basis
that the relief would be moot given Mr Kgaboesele’s stance.
They have never proffered an explanation as to why
they waited until
the last moment to change their stance, and why they elected instead
to file a replying affidavit and heads of
argument disputing Mr
Kgaboesele’s and TUHF’s denials of collusion. The
censure of the court is warranted by
the fact that it was not only Mr
Kgaboesele and TUHF who were prejudiced by the late about-turn by the
Farber applicants.
The court was also prejudiced as it was
required to prepare for hearing the matter, on a semi-urgent basis,
on the premise that
the main application would be persisted with.
For all these reasons, I conclude that a punitive costs order is
appropriate.
The Farber application should be dismissed with
costs, which costs should be borne on an attorney and client scale,
including the
costs of two counsel.
[56]
Regarding TUHF’s counterapplication, it has
largely succeeded, albeit that TUHF no longer persisted with the full
contempt
of court relief. This too, however, was largely the
result of a late change of stance by Mr Farber eventually accepting
that
HCI would fall out of the picture, and tendering access to TUHF
without his involvement. The explanation by Mr Farber and
HCI
for their failure to abide by and implement the cession order was
singularly unconvincing from inception. The Farber
applicants
must pay TUHF’s costs in the counterapplication. The only
reason why I do not order that this be done on
a punitive scale is
because I accept that Mr Farber and HCI ought to have been entitled
to oppose an application seeking criminal
sanctions for the alleged
contempt.
[57]
Finally,
the question arises as to what order of costs should be given in the
two liquidation applications. The first point
to note is that,
as I mentioned earlier, it was not 266 Bree, but the Farber
applicants who opposed the s 141 application and TUHF’s
separate application for the liquidation of the company.
According to the authors of
Henochsberg
,
usually, when a company opposes its own liquidation, the costs of the
liquidation application are costs in the liquidation.
[10]
However,
there is authority supporting the view that a court should direct
that the costs of an unsuccessful opposition to liquidation
be costs
in the winding up only where special circumstances exist. A
court may refuse so to direct in circumstances where
there was never
a reasonable prospect of the opposition proving successful.
[11]
[58]
On the issue of the two separate liquidation
applications, TUHF agreed that priority should be given to Mr
Kgaboesele’s application.
In other words, the order
should be granted on the basis of his application. I agree.
TUHF’s application was
instituted as a back-up in the event
that the application under s 141 for some reason proved
unsuccessful. In fact, in the
Farber applicants’ replying
heads of argument, filed at the proverbial door of the court, the
point was taken that Mr Kgaboesele’s
application was
doomed to fail as he had not given notice as required under s
141(2)(a)(i). This point was only dropped by
the
Farber applicants in the oral reply after Mr Kgaboesele was
given the opportunity to file additional heads of argument
to address
the issue. The complimentary application by TUHF for 266 Bree’s
winding up was thus not unreasonably instituted:
it may well have
been the application upon which winding up was granted at the end of
the day. TUHF’s intervention
through its separate
liquidation application was thus reasonable.
[59]
The most appropriate means of dealing with the
costs issue is for the Farber applicants to be directed to pay
the costs of
opposing both Mr Kgabosele’s and TUHF’s
application. The winding up of 266 Bree was inevitable after
the
attempt at business rescue failed. Their opposition never
had reasonable prospects of success. The balance of the costs
in respect of both Mr Kgaboesele’s and TUHF’s
applications should be costs in the liquidation.
Order
[60]
I make the following order:
1.
The Applicants' application under case number 028612/23 is dismissed
with costs,
to be paid jointly and severally the one paying the
others to be absolved, such costs to include those of two counsel,
and to be
paid on the attorney and client scale.
2.
It is declared that:
2.1
The First Applicant (Mark Morris Farber) and the Fifth Applicant
(Hillbrow Consolidated Investments
CC) were in breach of the court
order handed down by Senyatsi J on 31 August 2022 and date stamped 1
September 2022 in failing
to comply with paragraph 3.5 thereof;
2.2
Mark Morris Farber and Hillbrow Consolidated Investments CC were in
breach of the court order handed
down by Senyatsi J and date stamped
9 September (the Cession Order) in the respects identified in
paragraph 184 of the Third Respondent's
Answering Affidavit.
3
Pending the appointment of a liquidator(s) and he/she/them, being
afforded
the necessary powers to take charge of the property of the
Second Respondent (“266 Bree Street Johannesburg (Pty) Ltd”)
and collect rentals pursuant to their appointment and unless and
until such liquidator determines otherwise:
3.1
It is declared that the Third Respondent (TUHF) is entitled to act in
accordance with the Cession Order;
3.2
It is ordered that TUHF must account to the liquidator(s) for any
rental so collected;
3.3
Mark Morris Farber, and Hillbrow Consolidated Investments CC, or any
of their employees, agents or representatives
are interdicted and
restrained from:
3.3.1
Attending at and accessing Erf 1292 Johannesburg Township
Registration Division I.R, the
Province of Gauteng, with street
address 266 Lilian Ngoyi Street, Johannesburg (Metro Centre) for
purposes of collecting rentals
at Metro Centre;
3.3.2
Interfering with TUHF Limited, its employees,
agents or representatives in respect of the collection of rentals at
Metro Centre;
3.3.3
Contacting tenants of Metro Centre;
3.3.4
Soliciting payment of rentals from tenants at Metro Centre; and
3.3.5
Interfering with TUHF’s rights to collect
rentals from the tenants of Metro Centre in any manner whatsoever.
4
The business rescue proceedings in respect of the Second Respondent,
commenced
in terms of Part A, Chapter 6 of the Companies Act 71 of
2008 (the Act) are hereby discontinued.
5
The Second Respondent is placed under final winding-up in the hands
of the
Master.
6
The Applicants in Case number
028612/23 are
directed to pay the costs of TUHF’s counterapplication jointly
and severally the one paying the others to be
absolved, such costs to
include those of two counsel, and to be paid on a party and party
scale.
7
The costs of the First Respondent’s counterapplication for
relief under
s 141(2) of the Act, and of TUHF’s
application under case number
032790/23
(the TUHF application) are to be costs in the liquidation of the
Second Respondent, save that the Applicants under case number
028612/23 are directed to pay the costs of their opposition to the
aforesaid counterapplication and TUHF’s application jointly
and
severally the one paying the others to be absolved, such costs to
include those of two counsel, and to be paid on a party and
party
scale.
R M Keightley
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Date of
Hearing:
10-11 May 2023
Date of
Judgment:
15 June 2023
APPEARANCES
Case
Number: 2023/028612
For
the Applicants:
R
A Solomon SC
L
Hollander
Instructed
by:
SWVG
Inc Attorneys
For
the First and Second Respondents:
D
Mahon
K
Mitchell
Instructed
by:
Thomson
Wilks Inc
For
the Third Respondent:
A
C Botha SC
E
Eksteen
Instructed
by:
Schindlers
Attorneys
Case
Number: 2023/032790
For
the Applicants:
A
C Botha SC
E
Eksteen
Instructed
by:
Schindlers
Attorneys
For
the Respondents:
R
A Solomon SC
L
Hollander
Instructed
by:
SWVG
Inc Attorneys
[1]
The
Commissioner
for the South African Revenue Services v Louis Pasteur Investments
(Pty) Ltd
2021
JDR 0346 (GP) at para 53.
[2]
Commissioner
for the South African Revenue Service v Nyhonyha and Others
[2023] ZASCA 69.
[3]
See,
for example, s 147 (first meeting of creditors within 10 days of
appointment of practitioner) and s 150(5) (business rescue
plan must
be published within 25 days of appointment of practitioner).
[4]
Additional
requirements must be met if the plan alters the rights of holders of
any class of the company’s securities.
See s
152(3)(c)(i)-(ii).
[5]
Section
152(4).
[6]
Section
153(1)(a)(ii).
[7]
Section
153(5).
[8]
Kransfontein
Beleggings (Pty) Ltd
v
Corlink
Twenty Five (Pty) Ltd
[2017]
ZASCA 131
at para 18
.
See also
Booysen
v Jonkheer Boerewynmakery (Pty) Ltd & Another
2017
(4) SA 51(WCC)
at paras 66-7 in which it was held that a business
rescue practitioner has no power to amend an adopted plan after it
has been
adopted as this would undermine the statutory scheme and
the rights of creditors.
[9]
Oakdene Square
Properties (Pty) Ltd & Others v Farm Bothasfontein (Kyalami)
(Pty) Ltd
[2013]
ZASCA 68
;
2013 (4) SA 539
(SCA) at para 38.
[10]
Henochsberg
on the Companies Act 61 of 1973
at
p 731.
[11]
See
Henochsberg
,
above,
loc
cit
.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Farber and Others v Kgaboesele NO and Others (2023/028612) [2023] ZAGPJHC 854 (1 August 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 854High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
Feigin and Another v Butkow (2023/102299) [2025] ZAGPJHC 979 (1 October 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 979High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
South African Board of Sheriffs v Cibe (000219/2023) [2024] ZAGPJHC 583 (21 June 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 583High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
South African Securitization Program (RF) Limited and Others v Maxidor SA (Pty) Ltd and Others (2022/8473) [2024] ZAGPJHC 669 (25 July 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 669High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
South African Roadies Association v National Arts Councils of South Africa and Others (2023/076030) [2024] ZAGPJHC 936 (20 September 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 936High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar