Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 854South Africa
Farber and Others v Kgaboesele NO and Others (2023/028612) [2023] ZAGPJHC 854 (1 August 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
1 August 2023
Headnotes
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
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Farber and Others v Kgaboesele NO and Others (2023/028612) [2023] ZAGPJHC 854 (1 August 2023)
Farber and Others v Kgaboesele NO and Others (2023/028612) [2023] ZAGPJHC 854 (1 August 2023)
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sino date 1 August 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Case Number: 2023/028612
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.
LEAVE TO APPEAL
JUDGMENT
KEIGHTLEY, J
1. This is an application
for leave to appeal against the whole of my judgment and order
encompassing the two applications referenced
above and the
counter-applications pertaining to them.
2. In paragraph 1 of my
order I dismissed the Applicants’ (under case number 028612/23)
application with costs on an attorney
and client scale. I refer
to this as the costs order. In paragraph 2, I declared that Mr
Farber and Hillbrow Consolidated
Investments CC were in breach of two
court orders granted by the learned Senyatsi J. I refer to this
as the declaratory order.
In paragraph 3, I granted interim
relief permitting TUHF (the respondent in this application for leave
to appeal) to exercise certain
powers under one of the Senyatsi J
orders and interdicting Mr Farber and Hillbrow Consolidated
Investments CC from interfering
in the exercise of those powers.
I refer to this as the interim interdict. Finally, in
paragraphs 4 and 5, I made an
order discontinuing the business rescue
proceedings in respect of 266 Bree Street Johannesburg (Pty) Ltd (266
Bree) and placing
it under final liquidation. I refer to this
as the liquidation order.
3. Mr Farber and his
associated entities are the applicants in the application for leave
to appeal. They appeal against each
of these orders. I
will deal with the grounds of their intended appeal by dealing first
with the application in respect of
the liquidation order, thereafter
the interim interdict, then the declaratory order, and finally the
costs order. First,
I record the recognised test for granting
leave to appeal.
The test for granting
leave to appeal
4.
Under s17(1)(a) of the Superior Courts Act, leave to appeal may only
be given where the Judge is of the opinion that the appeal
(i) would
have a reasonable prospect success or (ii) there is some other
compelling reasons why the appeal should be heard, including
conflicting judgments on the matter under consideration. The
test for granting leave under this section is well settled.
The
question is not whether the case is arguable or another court may
come to a different conclusion.
[1]
Further,
the use of the word ‘would’ in s 17(1)(a)(i) imposes a
more stringent and vigorous threshold test than that
under the
previous Supreme Courts Act, 1959. It indicates a measure of
certainty that another court will differ.
[2]
The
Mont
Cheveaux
test
was endorsed by a Full Court of this Division in the unreported case
of
Zuma
& Others v the Democratic Alliance & Others.
[3]
5. This test means that:
‘
An
applicant for leave to appeal must convince the court on proper
grounds that there is a reasonable prospect or realistic chance
of
success on appeal. A mere possibility of success, an arguable case or
one that is not hopeless, is not enough. There must be
sound,
rational basis to conclude that there is a reasonable prospect of
success on appeal.
’
[4]
6. An applicant for leave
to appeal may assert, in the alternative, that there are other
compelling reasons why the appeal should
be heard. For example,
as the section notes, inflicting judgments, or, I venture to add, an
important point of law that warrants
attention by a higher court.
First ground of
appeal: the liquidation order
7. As I noted in my main
judgment, the entire course of litigation culminating in the
liquidation order was precipitated by an application
by Mr Farber and
his associated entities, who sought an interdict preventing the
appointed business rescue practitioner in respect
of 266 Bree, Mr
Kgaboesele, from acting as the business rescue practitioner and from
implementing the business rescue plan which
had been adopted.
Mr Kgaboesele counter-applied, under s 141(2)(a)(ii) of the Companies
Act 71 of 2008 (the Act) for an order
discontinuing business rescue
proceedings and placing 266 Bree in liquidation.
8. My main judgment
records the eleventh-hour turn-about by the applicants who abandoned
the main relief they had sought.
They instead sought an order,
based on s141(3) of the Act, on the basis that I had a discretion
under that section to grant any
appropriate relief, including an
order to extend the business rescue plan and appoint a new business
rescue practitioner whose
task would be to sell the immovable
property owned by 266 Bree. I refer in this regard to
paragraphs 9 - 11 of my judgment.
9. Mr Hollander, who
appeared for the applicants in the application for leave to appeal
sought to persuade me that the interpretation
of s 141(3) raised an
important question of law which had not as yet, as I noted in my
judgment, enjoyed consideration by any other
court. This, he
submitted was a compelling reason to grant leave to appeal to the
Supreme Court of Appeal.
10. I dealt with this
issue in paragraphs 13 - 37 of my judgment. In paragraph 27, I
found that:
‘
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.’
And in paragraph 31, I
found that:
‘
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.’
11. It is these finding
that Mr Hollander submitted raised an important legal question giving
rise to compelling reasons to grant
the application for leave to
appeal. He says that there is a need for the Supreme Court of
Appeal to apply its mind to the
issue of whether the power of a court
to grant ‘any other order (it) consider appropriate in the
circumstances’ includes
the power to extend business rescue
proceedings, and a business rescue plan, in circumstances where the
existing plan has failed.
12. I am not persuaded by
these submissions. My primary reason for this is because my
rejection of the applicant’s attempt
to secure an endorsement
for the extension of business rescue, and to keep the failed business
rescue plan alive, did not hinge
solely on my interpretation of s
141(3). It is so that my interpretation of that section did not
support the wide powers
contended for by the applicant.
However, and critically, in paragraph 31, I went on to say that:
‘
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.’
13. What this shows is
that my ultimate refusal to grant the relief sought by the applicants
was based on my analysis of the facts
of the case at hand. I
expressly considered whether,
assuming an alternative
interpretation was sound
, the relief sought would be an
‘appropriate’ exercise of my discretion in the case
before me. In other words,
if the matter were to be
reconsidered by another court, it would not be necessary for that
court to determine whether my interpretation
of s 141(3) was correct
or not. The appeal, in all likelihood, could and would be
determined on the relevant facts, and not
my interpretation of the
law. The interpretation issue raised by the applicants does not
constitute a ‘compelling reason’
to permit an appeal to
the Supreme Court of Appeal.
14. As the whether there
is a likelihood of another Court reaching a conclusion different to
mine on the facts, I am not persuaded
on this score either. My
judgment discusses in full the relevant facts pertaining to the
question of whether an extension
of the business rescue process would
be likely to render a better return for creditors. I gave full
reasons for rejecting
the applicants’ submissions based on
those facts. Mr Hollander sought to persuade me that there was
evidence that Mr
Kgaboesele had not done enough to market the
property and that another court would find that if a further
opportunity were to be
given to a new business rescue practitioner to
do so, the property might be sold. At best for the applicants,
and for the
detailed reasons provided in my judgment, the submission
gives rise to nothing more than an outside chance that, on these
facts,
another court would find that the sale of the property by a
new business rescue practitioner would be possible, and that it would
yield a better return for creditors than a sale by a liquidator.
An outside chance of success on appeal does not meet the
test for
granting leave.
The second ground: the
interim interdict
15. I deal with the
interim interdict in paragraphs 38 - 46 of my main judgment. Mr
Hollander did not raise any new issues
in the application for leave
to appeal. He submitted that there is a reasonable prospect
that another Court would find that
TUHF failed to establish that it
had a
prima facie
right to the relief because it was not
possible for Mr Farber to comply with both of the relevant Senyatsi J
orders at the same
time. TUHF’s right under the cession
order granted by Senyatsi J gave it a clear right immediately to take
cession
of rentals. That was sufficient basis on which to grant
the interdictory relief sought. The motive for Mr Farber’s
failure to recognise this right and to act accordingly leading up to
the applications ultimately was not a relevant factor. I do
not
believe the there is any reasonable prospect of another Court holding
differently.
The third ground: the
declaratory order
16. This issue is dealt
with in paragraphs 47 - 52 of my main judgment. The applicants
submit that the original relief sought
by TUHF was to hold the
applicants in contempt of the Senyatsi J orders. As noted in
paragraph 48 of my main judgment, the
original relief was rendered
unnecessary due to Mr Farber’s amended stance adopted in the
additional heads of argument filed
on the morning of the hearing.
Mr Farber no longer insisted that he needed to be present when TUHF
attended at the premises,
and he no longer sought to hold Mr
Kgaboesele to the PMA with Hillbrow Consolidated Investments CC.
TUHF pointed out in its
submissions to the court at the hearing of
the main matter that this changed stance had the effect of purging
any contempt on the
part of the applicants. In those
circumstances, it was not necessary to proceed to seek the contempt
relief.
17. In the
application for leave to appeal, the applicants again submitted, as
they had done at the hearing, that once TUHF
no longer sought an
order of contempt, I ought to have simply dismissed their application
and not granted relief in an amended
form, namely, a declarator to
the effect that the applicants had breached the orders in question.
18. I found that:
‘
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.’
On the facts that were
before me, I do not believe that there is a realistic prospect that
another court would find differently.
The fourth ground:
Costs order
19. The applicants take
issue with my order dismissing their application with an attorney and
client costs order. I should point
out that none of the other orders
attracted punitive costs. I made a point in paragraphs 54 and
55 of my judgment of detailing
why, in the exercise of my discretion,
I concluded that a punitive costs order was warranted. Further
support for the reasons
for the exercise of my discretion in awarding
punitive costs can be found in paragraph 9.
20. Mr Hollander
submitted that mere criticism of the conduct of a litigant was not
sufficient to warrant a punitive costs order.
As is apparent
from my judgment, my punitive costs award was not based simply on
benign criticism of the applicants’ conduct.
Their
conduct was untenable: they initiated the entire process of
litigation on an urgent basis on grounds they subsequently
abandoned.
The complexity of the issues raised, in part because
of the applicants’ original application, persuaded the Deputy
Judge
President to allocate the matter for special hearing. The
applicants’ abandonment of their primary case came at the
very
last minute, in fact, on the morning of the hearing at considerable
inconvenience not only to the other parties, but indeed
the court.
Mr Kgaboesele was accused of egregious conduct as a business rescue
practitioner, only for these allegations to
be side-lined to being of
peripheral relevance to the applicants’ amended relief.
Contrary to what Mr Hollander submitted,
there was no explanation why
the applicants did not change their stance earlier.
21. It is trite that
costs are a matter for the Court’s discretion. In making
an appropriate order of costs a Court
exercises a true discretion.
While an appeal against a costs award is not prohibited, exceptional
circumstances should exist
before an appellate court will interfere.
It is not simply a question of whether another Court would have
decided differently,
were it placed in my shoes. The question
is whether another Court would find that I failed to exercise my
discretion judicially
in awarding punitive costs. It is not
unusual for punitive costs awards to be made against litigants where
their conduct
is such as to undermine the administration of justice
by putting the court and other parties to considerable
inconvenience.
I am not persuaded that another Court would find
that I acted injudiciously in making a punitive costs award (in part
only, I should
add) given the conduct of the applicants.
21. For all of these
reasons, I find that there are no prospects of success on appeal, nor
is there another compelling reason for
me to grant leave.
Order
[1]
I make the following order:
The application for leave
to appeal is dismissed with costs.
R M Keightley
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Date of Hearing: 27 July
2023
Date of Judgment: 01
August 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]
R v
Nxumalo
1939
AD 580
at 588
[2]
Mont
Cheveaux Trust v Goosen
[20014] SALCC 20 (3 November 2014);
Notshokuvo
v S
[2016] ZASCA 112
(7 September 2016))
[3]
Case
no: 19577/09, dated 24 June 2016
[4]
MEC
for Health, Eastern Cape v Mkhitha
2016
JDR 2214 (SCA)
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