Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 844South Africa
HR Computek (Pty) Ltd v Dr WAA Gouws (Johannesburg) (Pty) Ltd and Others (2019/38193) [2023] ZAGPJHC 844; 2023 (6) SA 268 (GJ) (12 July 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
12 July 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Rescission of compulsory winding-up order by company -Directors of company retain power to cause company to rescind such an order without co-operation of the liquidators - Dicta suggesting that rescission of such order only permissible in terms of section 345 of the Companies Act not correct.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## HR Computek (Pty) Ltd v Dr WAA Gouws (Johannesburg) (Pty) Ltd and Others (2019/38193) [2023] ZAGPJHC 844; 2023 (6) SA 268 (GJ) (12 July 2023)
HR Computek (Pty) Ltd v Dr WAA Gouws (Johannesburg) (Pty) Ltd and Others (2019/38193) [2023] ZAGPJHC 844; 2023 (6) SA 268 (GJ) (12 July 2023)
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FLYNOTES:
COMPANY – Winding up –
Rescission
–
Provisional and final orders granted in company’s absence –
Directors of company retain power to
cause company to rescind such
an order without co-operation of the liquidators – Dicta
suggesting that rescission of
such order only permissible in terms
of section 345 of the Companies Act 61 of 1973 not correct –
Reasoning in Praetor
v Aqua Earth Consulting
[2017] ZAWCHC 8
was
sound.
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
REPORTABLE
CASE NO: 2019/38193
In the matter between –
HR
COMPUTEK (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
DR WAA GOUWS
(JOHANNESBURG) (PTY) LTD First
Respondent
YOLANDI ANN
MES
Second Respondent
JOHANNES HENDRICK DU
PLESSIS N.O.
Third
Respondent
MARIAN OELOFSEN N.
O.
Fourth Respondent
WELCOME NORMAN
N.O.
Fifth Respondent
MASTER OF THE HIGH
COURT, JHB
Sixth Respondent
Summary:
Rescission
of compulsory winding-up order by company
-Directors
of company retain power to cause company to rescind such an order
without co-operation of the liquidators - Dicta suggesting
that
rescission of such order only permissible in terms of section 345 of
the Companies Act not correct.
Proof
of authority to act for company
-
if put up – ought to be acceptable proof- Copy of extract of
alleged resolution signed only by general manager, an unrehabilitated
insolvent, not acceptable proof.
JUDGMENT
COPPIN J:
[1]
The applicant seeks to rescind an order placing it under provisional
liquidation and
granted in its absence on 2 November 2019, and
placing it under final liquidation and granted in its absence on 6
January 2020.
The application is only opposed by the first
respondent, which alleges that it is a creditor of the applicant and
at whose behest
the liquidation orders were granted.
[2]
The application is not opposed by the second respondent, who is the
sole director
of the first respondent, and the other respondents,
namely the 1
st
to 5
th
respondents, who were
appointed as the joint liquidators of the applicant pursuant to the
grant of the orders as aforementioned.
The sixth respondent is the
Master of the High Court.
[3]
In its founding papers the applicant, through its sole director, Mr
Harry Tremorio
Chakala (Mr Chakala), avers that its rescission
application has been brought in terms of “the common law read
with Rule 42”
of the Uniform Rules. It alleges, essentially,
that the liquidation orders ought to be set aside since they were
obtained, in its
absence and without proper notice to it, but, more
particularly, because they were obtained fraudulently.
[4]
The first respondent essentially denies the allegations and seeks the
dismissal of
the application. Both sides have raised
in
limine
points against each other. The two prominent points raised by the
first respondent against the applicant are the following: Firstly,
that the application for rescission of the winding-up orders could
only be brought in terms of section 354 of the Companies Act
[1]
;
and that, in terms of that section, the applicant itself cannot bring
an application to set aside the liquidation orders. And
secondly,
that in any event, Mr Chakala, who caused the application to be
brought in the name of the applicant, never obtained
the consent of
the joint liquidators cited herein, to do so, and that the applicant,
therefore also for that reason lacked the
necessary
locus
standi
.
[5]
The applicant also raised a point at the outset against the first
respondent, which,
basically is the following: that it has not been
proved that the first respondent, i.e. the company, Dr WAA Gouws
Johannesburg
(Pty) Ltd, is properly before the court because: (a) the
copy of the extract of a resolution attached to the answering
affidavit
and intended, essentially, to prove that fact, was not
signed by the chairperson of the meeting where that resolution was
adopted
(i.e. as envisaged in section 73(8) of the Companies Act
[2]
)
but was only signed by Dr Gouws, the deponent to the answering
affidavit. It is not disputed that Dr Gouws, is an unrehabilitated
insolvent. As such he is disqualified from sitting on the first
respondent’s board and in any event did not obtain the consent
of the trustee of his insolvent estate to do what he had done in
order to involve the first respondent as a party in this matter.
According to this point, the only shareholder and board member of the
first respondent is the second respondent who, herself, had
never
confirmed that such a resolution had been adopted.
[6]
The applicant accordingly submitted that it was clear that Dr Gouws
had appointed
himself as the first respondent’s representative;
that his self-appointment was invalid, null and void; that the First
respondent’s
purported opposition to this application was
invalid, null and void, and that the supplementary and answering
affidavit purportedly
delivered on its behalf in these proceedings
should accordingly be struck out and the matter should proceed on an
unopposed basis.
[7]
In light of the nature of those points I ordered that they be dealt
with first and
separately from the merits of the rescission
application. This judgment accordingly only deals with those points
and the consideration
of the merits has been deferred.
Locus standi
[8]
The first respondent essentially relies on
dicta
in
Impac
Prop CC v THF Construction CC
[3]
(
Impac
)
to the effect that an application for rescission of a winding up
order had to be brought in terms of section 354 of the Companies
Act
because of what had been held by the Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA) in
Ward
v Suit and Others: In Re Gurr v Zambia Corporation Ltd
[4]
,
and submits that the decision in
Storti
v Nugent and Others
[5]
(
Storti
),
to the effect that a rescission of a winding up order may also be
brought in terms of the common law, was wrongly decided, because,
the
court in
Storti
was not referred to and had no regard for the decision in
Ward
.
There are also
dicta
in
Ragavan
& Another v Kal Tire Mining Services SA (Pty) Ltd &
Another
[6]
(
Ragavan
)
to the same effect as those in
Impac
,
namely, that an application for the rescission of the winding up
order of a company can only be brought in terms of section 345
of the
Companies Act.
[9]
For its alternative argument on the point, the first respondent
essentially relies
on
dicta
in
Praetor
and Another v Aqua Earth Consulting CC
[7]
(
Praetor
),
and ultimately on what was held in
O’Connell
Manthe & Partners v Vryheid Minerale Edms Bpk
[8]
(
O’Connell
),
on the assumption that upon the winding up of the applicant the
powers of Mr Chakala, as its director, were divested and that
he
could not cause the applicant to bring the application for rescission
without the authorisation or consent of the joint liquidators.
Furthermore, that since such consent had not been sought, or given,
the applicant could not bring the application.
[10]
The response of the applicant to those arguments is, in brief, the
following. (a) The SCA in
Ward
did not hold that the
rescission of the liquidation of a company had to be brought in terms
of section 345 and could also not be
brought in terms of the common
law or Rule 42 and that the
dicta
in
Impac
(and
Ragavan
) to that effect are wrong; (b) that those
dicta
are in any event not binding and were effectively
obiter
; (c)
that the decisions in
Storti
and
Praetor
were correct
on the point; and that (d) in any event, in a compulsory
winding up the directors of the company, notwithstanding
the effect
of the liquidation upon their positions as such, retain the
power to cause the company, without the co-operation
of the
liquidator, to not only appeal against the grant of the liquidation
order, but also to rescind such an order (although the
position of a
company that is wound up voluntarily is different and is governed by
section 353 of the Companies Act).
Discussion
[11]
The argument advanced by the first respondent appears to be based on
a misreading of the following
dictum
in
Ward
[9]
:
“In order to have the final winding up order set aside the
appellants were obliged to invoke the provisions of section 354(1)
of
the Act. I shall assume without deciding that they have
locus
standi
to do so.
”
[12]
Taken out of its proper context this appears to have been interpreted
to mean that the only recourse
anyone (i.e. including a party, or a
company such as the applicant) has to rescind a final order of
liquidation granted in its
absence is through section 354(1) of the
Companies Act. But that is not a correct interpretation of that
dictum
.
[13]
In
Ward
the application to rescind the liquidation orders made
in that case in respect of the Zambia Airways Company, was brought by
its
joint liquidators who had been appointed in Zambia pursuant to
the its voluntary liquidation in that country. After the company
had
been voluntarily wound up by its shareholders on 4 December 1994 in
Lusaka, Zambia, (which led to the appointment of the joint
liquidators), an employee of the company in Johannesburg, who had a
claim against it for severance pay, brought an application
in this
court for the compulsory winding up of that company in terms of
section 344 (g) of the Companies Act. A provisional order
was granted
which was made final on 28 February 1995. The provisional liquidator
who had been appointed pursuant to the provisional
order proceeded to
liquidate the company’s South African estate. Six months after
the grant of the provisional order in this
court, the two liquidators
appointed pursuant to the Zambian liquidation order, brought an
application in this court in terms of
which they,
inter-alia
,
sought to set aside the provisional and final orders of liquidation
granted by this court. The matter went on appeal to the SCA,
and it
is in that context that the SCA in that matter stated, effectively,
that they were obliged to bring the application for
such decision in
terms of section 354 of the Companies Act.
[14]
In terms of section 354 any liquidator, creditor or member of a
company that is wound up, has
standing to bring an application to
stay or set aside such winding up. The section specifically provides
as follows:
“
354
Court
may stay or set aside winding-up
– (1) The Court may at any time after the commencement of a
winding-up, on the application of
any
liquidator, creditor or member
,
and on proof to the satisfaction of the Court that all proceedings in
relation to the winding-up ought to be stayed or set aside,
make an
order staying or setting aside the proceedings…”
(Emphasis
added)
[15]
The “liquidator, creditor or member” envisaged in that
section need not be “a
party affected by” the winding-up
proceedings, or the order made pursuant thereto, in order to have
standing to apply for
the stay of the proceedings or for the
rescission of the winding-up order. The foreign liquidators of the
company in
Ward
were not parties to the actual winding-up
proceedings in this court (although there had been full disclosure of
the Zambian winding-up
and the appointment pursuant thereto in the
papers in the application brought in this court) and they may have
been precluded from
bringing the application for rescission in this
court in terms of Rule 42 or the common law. Those remedies seem to
be confined
to the parties affected by the order of winding up. But
they clearly had standing in terms of section 354 of the Companies
Act.
[16]
It is furthermore unlikely that the court in
Ward
would have (effectively) summarily and by implication ruled that a
company itself was precluded from bringing an application to
rescind
its winding-up through a decision of its directors, and without the
co-operation of the liquidators, and would simply have
ignored
settled law concerning the residual powers of directors in that
regard in a compulsory winding-up
[10]
.
[17]
Section 354(1) of the Companies Act, excludes a company (i.e., under
compulsory winding-up) from
bringing the application envisaged in
that section itself. Whether through its directors and without the
co-operation of its liquidator(s),
or otherwise. But, if by virtue of
their residual powers the directors of such a company may cause it to
rescind a provisional
or final liquidation order without the
cooperation of the liquidators, then the company can clearly only do
so in terms of the
common law, or, presumably, also in terms of
Uniform Rule 42.
[18]
What the courts held on this point in
Storti
and in
Praetor
(that followed
Storti
on that point) is that the company through its board of directors may
only apply for a rescission of the winding-up order on common
law
grounds. In
Praetor
the court (per Binns-Ward J) held as follows: “
The
effect of the winding up order was to divest the first applicant of
his function as the company’s director and to vest
them instead
in the liquidator(s). That raises the question whether the current
application by the company, ostensibly at the instance
of Mr Praetor,
qua
sole director, has been competently instituted. It appears to be
generally accepted that the company’s directors have what
have
been described as ‘residual powers’ to act on the
company’s behalf in causing it to oppose the confirmation
of
the rule in a provisional winding up, or to appeal against a winding
up order. A useful collection of the relevant jurisprudence
was put
together by Gautschi AJ in
Storti
v Nugent and others
2001 (3) SA 783
(W), at 795G – 796C; see in particular,
O’Connell
Manthe & Partners Inc v Vryheid Minerale (Edms) Bpk
.
1979 (1) SA 553
(T) at 555H – 558E.
”
[19]
And, more particularly, Binns-Ward J went on to hold as follows: “
It
seems to me that there is no rational basis to distinguish the
standing of a board of directors to appeal in the company’s
name against a winding-up order from its standing similarly to apply
to set aside such an order obtained without its knowledge.
Indeed, in
Storti
supra,
loc. cit.,
it
was stated that ‘a company has the right to rescind… a
winding-up order.’ It is clear from that context that
the
learned judge had in mind that the application to rescind would be
mounted by the company at the instance of its board, not
its
liquidators. I am willing to accept therefore that the second
applicant as standing to bring the rescission application, although
it would probably have been correct in such circumstances to have
cited it without the words ‘in liquidation’ after
its
name.
”
(Footnotes
omitted)
[20]
To the authorities cited in
Storti
and
Praetor
maybe added the Australian authority referred to in
National
News (Pty) Ltd v Samalot Enterprises (Pty) Ltd
[11]
,
where it was held that a company may through its board apply for the
setting aside of an order for its winding -up
[12]
.
[21]
The court in
Praetor
essentially adopted the same reasoning as
in
O’Connell
, where the court reasoned that since a
company against whom a final winding up order was granted may appeal
against the grant of
such an order through its board of directors and
without the co-operation of the liquidator, there is no reason why a
company in
that manner cannot oppose the confirmation of a
provisional winding-up order. By parity of reasoning the court in
Praetor
held that there was no reason in logic why a company
in that same manner cannot apply for the setting aside or rescission
of the
winding-up order.
[22]
The courts in
Storti
and
Praetor
did not err in their conclusions on that point. As observed in
Impac
[13]
and
explained in
Klass
v Contract Interiors
[14]
,
the analysis, interpretation and meaning given by the court in
Storti
to section 354 was “eclipsed” by the SCA’s analysis
and interpretation of that section in
Ward
.
The primary issue in
Storti
was whether section 354 could be invoked for the purposes of
rescinding a winding-up order on the grounds that it should not have
been granted in the first place. Gautschi AJ in
Storti
held that it could not be invoked for that purpose and that the
Insolvency Act and the common law could possibly be invoked in
such
an instance.
[23]
On the other hand, the SCA in
Ward
held, in effect, that
section 354 is wide enough and could be invoked for that purpose,
i.e. to rescind a winding-up order on the
basis that it should not
have been granted in the first place. The court in
Storti
did
not refer to
Ward
seemingly because, although reported after
Ward
, the judgment in
Storti
was delivered before the
judgment in
Ward
had been reported.
[24]
The reasoning in
Praetor
is sound. There is no reason in logic why the company cannot, through
its directors, and without the co-operation of its liquidators,
apply
to set aside the liquidation order that had been granted in its
absence. After all, it is able to appeal against the grant
of such an
order in that manner and to take all the necessary steps to oppose
the confirmation of a provisional liquidation order
[15]
.
The SCA in
Ward
did not preclude a company from doing so, and perhaps more
fundamentally, did not deal with that issue at all. The
dicta
in
Impac
and
Ragavan
,
and other matters, to the contrary, or suggesting the contrary, are,
with respect, not correct, and are, in any event,
orbiter
.
[25]
It follows that in this matter the applicant could validly bring this
application for rescission,
through Mr Chakala, its sole director and
shareholder, without the co-operation of the liquidators.
[26]
In any event, in this matter the liquidators were cited as
respondents, but none of them opposed
the applications or objected to
its being brought without their consent or corporation, arguably
indicating acquiescence or assent
thereto.
[27]
For those reasons the point in limine, raised by the first respondent
concerning the
locus standi
of the applicant, is dismissed.
The opposition of the
first respondent
[28]
Turning to the point raised by the applicant concerning the standing
of the first respondent
in these proceedings. This calls for a
decision whether enough had been placed before this court to warrant
the conclusion that
it the first respondent that is opposing the
application and not some unauthorised person, in this instance Dr
Gouws, doing so
on its behalf
[16]
.
[29]
In an affidavit titled “First Respondent’s Supplementary
& Answering Affidavit”,
filed by attorneys, Mashabane &
Associates Inc., purportedly on behalf of the First Respondent, Dr
Gouws, the deponent to the
affidavit states, inter alia: “I am
the general manager of the first respondent and [I] am duly
authorised to depose to this
affidavit on its behalf as is evident
from the resolution attached hereto as annexure ‘AA1’…”
[30]
Annexure AA1 purports to be a resolution of the First Respondent. It
reads as follows:
RESOLUTION
MINUTES
OF THE BOARD OF DR.WAA GOUWS (JOHANNESBURG)(PTY)LTD
(“THE
COMPANY”) HELD AT JOHANNESBURG ON 1 OCTOBER 2021.
1.
It
was resolved to oppose the application of HR Computec(Pty)LTD to set
aside the winding up order obtained by the company.
2.
It
was further resolved that Willem Andries Adrianus Gouws be authorised
to sign all documents and do whatever else is required
to give effect
to 1. Above.
3.
Finally,
it was resolved that Malesela Ngoasheng of Mashabane & Associates
be appointed as the company’s attorneys of
record.”
[31]
The document then bears the signature of “WAA GOUWS”
above the following words “Certified
a true extract”. It
is further apparent that the document is a copy. It bears a
certification that it is a true copy of the
original, i.e., a copy of
the extract.
[32]
It is not disputed that the second respondent, Yolandi Ann Mes, is
the sole shareholder and director
of the first respondent, and hence
its only board member. She did not file any affidavit in these
proceedings, let alone an affidavit
confirming any of those facts.
[33]
Section 73(8) of the Companies Act provides as follows: “Any
minutes of a meeting, or a
resolution, signed by the chair of the
meeting, or by the chair of the next meeting of the board, is
evidence of the proceedings
of that meeting, or adoption of that
resolution, as the case may be.”
[34]
In the event of an extract of the minutes (or an extract of the
resolution) being submitted as
proof that such a resolution was taken
and the company has a registered company secretary, the company
secretary may sign the extract
in place of the chairperson
[17]
.
[35]
Dr Gouws as an un-rehabilitated insolvent is disqualified from being
a company director
[18]
,
including from chairing a meeting of the first respondent’s
board, and similarly, from being a company secretary
[19]
.
He has also not been exempted from the application of any provision
of section 69 (8)(b) of the Companies’ Act, as contemplated
in
subsection (11) of that section.
[36]
Dr Gouws’ knowledge of the adoption of such a resolution is it
best hearsay, since he could
not participate in its adoption. In any
event, because of non-compliance with section 73(8) of the Companies
Act the extract appended
to the answering affidavit as proof that the
company had passed a resolution, inter-alia, to oppose the
applicant’s application
for rescission, and authorising Dr
Gouws to cause the application for rescission to be opposed and to
appoint attorneys to represent
it, is not evidence of the proceedings
of that meeting of the adoption of such a resolution, for all the
aforementioned reasons.
[37]
Dr Gouws’ say so is insufficient. Since his authority derives
from the document that he put up, which
does not meet the legal
requirements, one cannot conclude that he had been empowered by the
first respondent, as he contends. Accordingly,
the first respondent’s
opposition to the application has not been proved to have been valid
or authorised, nor had it been
shown that the attorney for the first
respondent had been properly authorised to act on its behalf. Since
the very existence of
a valid resolution is in issue, and since the
same had not been produced thus far, despite the point having been
raised by the
applicant in its replying affidavit that had been
delivered as long ago as November 2021, and since Dr Gouws, clearly,
if not,
in all probability, instructed the attorneys in this matter
on such purported basis, it may not have been sufficient for the
applicant
to have proceeded in terms of Rule 7.
[38]
The point raised by the applicant concerning the first respondent’s
standing is thus upheld,
but it does not appear appropriate to at
this juncture summarily strike out the purported opposition and
answering affidavit by
the first respondent without furnishing a
further opportunity for the said attorneys to deliver proper proof of
their authorisation
and mandate to act for and on behalf of the first
respondent in this matter
[20]
.
The proof envisaged would include the delivery of a valid resolution
passed by the First respondent in accordance with its Articles
of
Association and the Companies Act
[21]
.
[39]
Even though the applicant has arguably been substantively successful
in respect of the points
dealt with in this matter, given the
circumstances of this matter, in particular the position of the first
respondent, it is considered
appropriate to reserve the question of
costs for now.
[40]
In the result the following order is made:
1.
The point
in
limine
in respect of the
locus
standi
of the applicant is dismissed;
2.
The point regarding the
opposition on behalf of the First respondent is upheld.
3.
Krige Attorneys or any
other attorney purporting to act on behalf of the first respondent
are to deliver proper and acceptable proof of its mandate and
authority to act on behalf of the first respondent within 10(ten)
court days of the handing down of this order.
4.
In the event of the
non-compliance with paragraph 3 hereof, the applicant, if so advised,
may apply for the striking out of the notice of opposition and
affidavits filed for the first respondent in this matter.
5.
The costs are reserved.
__________________________________________
P
COPPIN
Judge
of the South Gauteng Local Division
APPEARANCES:
FOR THE
APPLICANT:
DZ Kela
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Ndumiso Voyi Attorneys
FOR THE FIRST
RESPONDENT: A van der Walt
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Krige Attorneys Inc.
DATE HEARD: 17
May 2023
JUDGMENT DATE: Date
judgment emailed to parties
deemed
to be 12 July 2023.
[1]
i.e.
of Act 61 of 1973 which was retained and continues to be applicable
as envisaged in Schedule 5 Item 9 of the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
.
[2]
Act
71 of 2008.
[3]
(40906/16)
[2019] ZAGPJHC 497 (5 December 2019).
[4]
1998
(3) SA 175 (SCA).
[5]
2001
(3) SA 783
(W).
[6]
(40723/2018)
[2019] ZAGPPHC 455 (12 August 2019) paras 14 and 15.
[7]
(162/2016)
[2017] ZAWCHC 8
(15 February 2017).
[8]
1979
(1) SA 553
(TPD) at 558C-D.
[9]
See
at 180F.
[10]
See,
inter
alia
,
O’Connell
and the authorities cited there.
[11]
(1986)
10 ACLR 741
SC (NSW) at 742.
[12]
See
also Joubert
LAWSA
Vol 4 Part 3 (2
nd
Edit) par 123 fn.21.
[13]
At
par 10.
[14]
2010
(5) SA 40
(WLD) par 49.
[15]
See
O’Connell
(above).
[16]
See,
inter
alia
,
Mall
(Cape) (Pty) Ltd v Merino Ko-Operasie Bpk
1957 (2) SA 347
(C) at 352A;
Cambridge
Plan AG v Moore
1987(4) SA 821 (D) at 833B-D
;
Tattersall v Nedcor Bank Ltd
[1995] ZASCA 30
;
1995 (3) SA 222(A)
at 228F-H.
[17]
PA
Delport
Henochsberg
on the
Companies’ Act 71 of 2008
Vol
1 (Lexis Nexis) Issue 9 p 292.
[18]
Section
69(8)(b)(i)
of Act 71 of 2008.
[19]
Section
84(5) of Act 71 of 2008.
[20]
See,
inter alia,
FirstRand
Bank v Fillis
2010 (6) SA 565
(ECP) at 569A.
[21]
See
Mall
(above);
Lancaster
101 (RF) (Pty) Limited v Steinhoff International Holdings
[2021] 4 ALL SA 810
(WCC) par 69.
sino noindex
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