Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 990South Africa
Mouton and Others v 8 Mile Investments 503 (Pty) Ltd and Another (21545/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 990 (1 September 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
1 September 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Mouton and Others v 8 Mile Investments 503 (Pty) Ltd and Another (21545/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 990 (1 September 2023)
Mouton and Others v 8 Mile Investments 503 (Pty) Ltd and Another (21545/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 990 (1 September 2023)
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sino date 1 September 2023
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 21545/2022
NOT
REPORTABLE
NOT
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES
NOT
REVISED
01/09/23
In
the matter between:
KAREL
PETRUS MOUTON, ANDRE MOUTON and
PETRUS
CORNELIUS NORVAL
Applicants
And
8
MILE INVESTMENTS 503(PTY)LTD &
ATTENTUS
ACCOUNTING AND TAX SOLUTIONS CC
Respondents
JUDGMENT
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties' legal representatives by e-mail. The date
and time for
hand-down is deemed to be 10h00 on the 1st of September 2023.
BADENHORST
AJ
[1]
The applicants
seek an order allowing inspection of the “signed annual audited
financial statements relating to 2019-2020
together with the bank
statements and issued invoices for 2019 and 2020” and various
other financial records of the first
respondent company, 8 Mile
Investments 503 (Pty) Limited (“the company”).
[2]
The applicants
rely on Section 26 of the Companies Act, 71 of 2008 ("the Act")
as well as an agreement between the shareholders
of the company.
[3]
The applicants
are the trustees of the Kapem Trust (‘the trust’) which
holds 5% of the shares in the company, having
acquired them from a
third party in 2009.
[4]
The
application is opposed and accordingly raises the question whether
the company is under a legal duty (statutory and/or contractual)
to
produce the requested financial records for inspection by the trust.
[5]
Section 26 (in
relevant part) provides as follows:
“
26
Access to company records
(1)
A
person who holds or has a beneficial interest in any securities
issued by a profit company, or who is a member of a non-profit
company, has a right to inspect and copy, without any charge for any
such inspection or upon payment of no more than the prescribed
maximum charge for any such copy, the information contained in the
following records of the company:
(a)
The company's Memorandum of Incorporation and any amendments to it,
and any rules made by the company, as mentioned in section
24 (3)
(a);
(b)
the records in respect of the company's directors, as mentioned in
section 24 (3) (b);
(c)
the reports to annual meetings, and
annual
financial statements, as mentioned in section 24 (3) (c) (i) and
(ii);
(d)
the notices and minutes of annual meetings, and communications
mentioned in section 24 (3) (d) and (e), but the reference in
section
24 (3) (d) to shareholders meetings, and the reference in section 24
(3) (e) to communications sent to holders of a company's
securities,
must be regarded in the case of a non-profit company as referring to
a meeting of members, or communication to members,
respectively; and
(e)
the securities register of a profit company, or the members register
of a non-profit company that has members, as mentioned
in section 24
(4)….
(4)
A person may exercise the rights set out in subsection (1) or (2), or
contemplated in subsection (3)-
(a)
for a reasonable period during business hours;
(b)
by direct request made to a company in the prescribed manner, either
in person or through an attorney or other personal representative
designated in writing; or
(c)
in accordance with the Promotion of Access to Information Act, 2000
(Act 2 of 2000).
(5)
Where a company receives a request in terms of subsection (4) (b) it
must within 14 business days comply with the request by
providing the
opportunity to inspect or copy the register concerned to the person
making such request….
(7)
The rights of access to information set out in this section are in
addition to, and not in substitution for, any rights a person
may
have to access information in terms of-
(a)
section 32 of the Constitution;
(b)
the Promotion of Access to Information Act, 2000 (Act 2 of 2000); or
(c)
any other public regulation.
(8)
The Minister may make regulations respecting the exercise of the
rights set out in this section
.”
[underlined]
[6]
Section 30
(3)(c) of the Act provides (in relevant part) that:
“
30
The
annual financial statements
of a company must-…
(c)
be approved by the board and signed by
an authorised director
;…”
[underlined].
[7]
The
respondents deny that the shareholders agreement (relied on by the
trust) “
was
ever finally accepted and concluded by all intended
parties”
(paragraph 7.1 of the answering affidavit). No replying affidavit was
filed and respondent’s version prevails
in any event under the
Plascon
Evans Rule.
It follows that any reliance placed on the shareholders’
agreement is doomed to fail.
[8]
In its heads
of argument, the trust abandoned large sections of the relief claimed
in the notice of motion and, instead, attempted
in
its heads of argument
to
advance
a
new claim for the following:
“
8.1.
The first respondent is ordered to comply with the applicant's notice
in terms of
section 26
of the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
dated 2 March
2021 by providing or making available to copy, the following
particulars to the applicant, within a period of five
(5) days of the
order:-
8.2.
The first respondent's signed financial statements
to the
applicants as is required by
Sections 24
and
26
the Act for the
period 2019-2021;
8.3.
Each party to pay its own costs, alternatively, in the event that the
first respondent persists with its opposition, that the
first
respondent pay the cost of the application.
In
addition, should this Honourable Court be so inclined:
8.4.
That the first respondent provides or make available to copy, the
accounting records for 2022 and the current financial year
to which
it is entitled in terms of Section 24 (3) (c) (ii),
In
the alternative to 8.3 above, should this Honourable Court be so
inclined:
8.5.
The first respondent allows the applicants to inspect the books of
the first respondent in terms of clause 25 of the first
respondent's
shareholder agreement, subject to the reasonable restrictions as to
the time and manner of inspecting or copying same
that may be imposed
by the first respondent for the past seven (7) years as mentioned in
Section 24 (3) (c) (i), (ii) and (iii)
of the Act;
8.6.
The notices and minutes of annual meetings, communications and
resolutions for the past seven (7) years as mentioned in Section
24
(3) (d), (e) and (f) of the Act
.”
[9]
The
applicant’s extraordinary attempt to effect substantial
amendments to the relief claimed
in
its heads of argument
is obviously not countenanced by the rules and practice of this
Court. To entertain such a blatantly irregular procedure would
be to
invite chaos in the civil procedure of the courts which has been
developed over many years and for sound reasons.
[10]
At
no stage was a notice of amendment delivered as required by the rules
and practice of this Court and I am not prepared to entertain
the
irregular process proposed by the applicant. There is moreover no
foundation pleaded in the papers to sustain the proposed
(irregular)
amendment which is, accordingly futile and without consequence.
[11]
At the
hearing, the applicant reduced its claim to only the following:
a.
Production of
tThe signed financial statements (of the first respondent) for the
2021 financial year; and
b.
Costs.
[12]
Counsel for
the respondent directed my attention to a letter which his attorney
addressed to applicant’s former attorney on
19 October 2022 to
which the signed financial statements for the 2021 financial year
were attached. There is no evidence of any
complaint raised to the
effect that what was attached to that letter was unsatisfactory (for
example because the signature was
not made at the appropriate place
in the statement or otherwise).
[13]
On this basis,
it appears that the only remaining document still demanded, was
already sent to the applicant’s former attorney
in October
2022.
[14]
There is a
further problem confronting the applicant: as appears from the (as
yet unamended) notice of motion, the relief claimed
in this matter
remains for the “signed
annual
audited
financial statements” [underlined] to be made available for
inspection. Respondent has convincingly demonstrated that it
is not
required to produce
audited
financial statements,
a
fact which counsel for the applicant – correctly –
accepts.
[15]
Counsel for
the applicant contended that the reduced claim (for signed
statements) is included in the prayer in the notice of motion,
i.e.
that is a
lesser claim. But this is not so – there is a significant
difference between financial statements that are signed
and ones that
are signed
and
audited.
[16]
The result is
that the application is ill conceived and cannot succeed.
[17]
I accordingly
make the following order:
The
application is dismissed with costs.
C
H J BADENHORST
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
JOHANNESBURG
APPEARANCES
DATE
OF HEARING: 28 August 2023
DATE
OF JUDGMENT: 1 September 2023
APPLICANTS’
COUNSEL:
Adv.
J. Hartman
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Pagel
Schulenburg Inc Attorneys
RESPONDENT’S
COUNSEL :
Adv
J Lubbe
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Van
der Merwe Greyling Attorneys
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