Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 997South Africa
Koekemoer and Another v Virtual Benefit Solutions Tech (Pty) Ltd and Another (2023/082132) [2023] ZAGPJHC 997 (7 September 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
7 September 2023
Headnotes
Summary
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Koekemoer and Another v Virtual Benefit Solutions Tech (Pty) Ltd and Another (2023/082132) [2023] ZAGPJHC 997 (7 September 2023)
Koekemoer and Another v Virtual Benefit Solutions Tech (Pty) Ltd and Another (2023/082132) [2023] ZAGPJHC 997 (7 September 2023)
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sino date 7 September 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO: 2023 –
082132
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES
In the application by
KOEKEMOER,
HENDRIK LAMBERT
First Applicant
AMILKE
HOLDINGS (PTY) LTD
Second Applicant
And
VIRTUAL BENEFIT
SOLUTIONS TECH (PTY) LTD
First
Respondent
AMILKE
SOUTH AFRICA (PTY) LTD
Second
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MOORCROFT AJ:
Summary
Reconsideration of
interim interdict in terms of Rule 6(12)(c) – de novo hearing
No case made out by
applicants – application brought on behalf of applicant that
was not a party to the agreement relied upon
and not entitled to
cancel the agreement
Order
[1] In this matter
I make the following order:
1.
The order
granted on 18 August 2023 is discharged;
2.
The
application is dismissed;
3.
The
applicants are ordered to pay the costs of the first respondent,
jointly and severally the one paying the other to be absolved.
[2] The reasons for
the order follow below.
Introduction
[3] This matter
came before me in the Urgent Court and in terms of rule 6(12)(c) of
the Uniform Rules on 28 August 2023. I
was called upon to reconsider
an interim interdict granted in the Urgent Court.
The
interim interdict was granted
ex
parte
on
18 August 2023,
[1]
with a rule
nisi
calling
on the respondents to show cause on 4 October 2023 why an order
declaring that the agreement between the second applicant
and the
first respondent had been cancelled on 10 August 2023 should not be
made together with orders for the delivery up of goods,
stock and
records, and intellectual property, and ancillary relief. The interim
interdictory relief provided
inter
alia
that
the first respondent be interdicted from disposing of the second
respondent’s assets, accessing the second respondents
premises,
accessing, and copying or using any of the second respondent’s
incorporeal assets including the intellectual property.
The second
respondent was in turn interdicted from disposing of its assets. The
Sheriff of the High Court was authorised to enter
the business
premises of the second respondent. As will be shown below, it is a
mystery why the applicants sought an interdict
to permit the Sheriff
to access the second respondent’s premises as the second
applicant is the sole shareholder of the second
respondent and the
first applicant is the guiding force behind the second respondent.
The second respondent was at all times at
liberty to allow the
Sheriff into its premises.
[4]
The
first respondent filed an affidavit in support of an application in
terms of rule 6(12)(c) for a reconsideration of the order.
The rule
provides that “
a
person against whom an order was granted in such person’s
absence in an urgent application may by notice set down the matter
for reconsideration of the order.”
The
sub-rule envisages a rehearing of the application
[2]
and a court will have regard to all the papers filed of record and
not only to the papers filed by the applicant in the initial
application.
The rehearing is not a
review of the initial order. The application is heard
de novo
and the onus is not affected by the fact that the initial order was
granted. The court now has the benefit of argument on behalf
of
respondents as well as in most cases answering affidavits and
replying affidavits.
[5]
While preparing this
judgment I extended an invitation to all parties to submit written
argument by 5 September 2023 on the subject
of
locus
standi
as
it became apparent that neither side dealt with his aspect
sufficiently in argument. The applicant accepted the invitation and
filed written argument on 5 September 2023, together with a notice by
the second respondent abiding the relief sought by the applicants
and
a resolution by the second respondent in support of the application
and appointing the applicants’ attorneys to also
act for the
second respondent. I do not find it necessary to decide whether these
two documents are properly before me and would
not allow the
documents without entertaining argument from the first respondent.
[3]
[6]
The
first applicant and the two respondents entered into a tripartite
written sale of business agreement
[4]
on 15 March 2023. On 3 April 2023 they entered into a second
agreement
[5]
(styled the
‘restated and amended agreement’) with a view to amending
certain clauses of the agreement. I refer in
this judgment to the
agreement as it was amended.
The
second applicant is referred to as the sole shareholder of the second
respondent in the agreement.
[6]
[7]
As
will be shown below the applicants misconstrued the agreement. It is
alleged in paragraph 20
[7]
of
the founding affidavit that the first respondent and the second
applicant concluded the agreement. The agreement was in reality
concluded by the second respondent and not by the second applicant.
What was sold, was the business of the second respondent as
defined,
not the ownership of the second respondent i.e. its shares.
[8]
The
second applicant does not have
locus
standi
to sue on the agreement. The
first respondent would have
locus standi
but it is not seeking any relief and is not cited
as an applicant.
The first applicant was
not the seller and was a party to the agreement because the agreement
contained restraint of trade provisions
binding on the first
applicant as well as the second respondent.
[9] The applicants
approached the Urgent Court on an
ex parte
basis in reliance
on an agreement that simply does not exist.
In the
draft order handed up in court on 18 August 2023 the applicants
sought and obtained an interim order aimed at a final order
declaring
that the agreement “
between the
second applicant and the first respondent”
was
validly cancelled. The second applicant was however not a party to
the agreement and the seller was not the second applicant
as alleged,
but the second respondent.
[10]
On
reading the agreement it is clear that it was the second respondent
and not either of the applicants that was potentially entitled
to
cancel the agreement because of non-payment. It is not alleged or
shown that the first respondent breached the agreement in
respect of
any obligation owed to the first applicant and no right to cancel
accrued to the first applicant to cancel the agreement.
The second
applicant could never have the right to cancel the agreement as it
was not a party to it.
The two applicants
therefore lacked
locus standi
to bring the application and the
application must fail for this reason.
[11]
The
agreement provided for the sale
[8]
of the business conducted by the seller (the second respondent) to
the purchaser (the first respondent). The business is described
[9]
as the operation of a medical technology company specialising in the
manufacture of portable medical technology devices. The business
is
comprised of sale assets defined in the agreement.
[10]
It is important to note that the sale was not a sale of shares and
that ownership of the shares in the second respondent did not
change
hands.
[12]
The
first respondent was already in possession of the sale assets by 1
December 2022.
[11]
The
agreement records that the purchaser had already been placed in
possession and control of the business at signature date as
a means
of familiarising the purchaser with the operation of the
business.
[12]
The
agreement provided for the second respondent’s liability for
debts incurred prior to the transfer of the business.
[13]
[13]
The
agreement became effective on the closing date, being the first
business day following the date on which the last of the conditions
precedent were fulfilled.
[14]
These conditions had to be fulfilled by 3 April 2023.
[15]
it is common cause that the conditions were fulfilled and the closing
date was therefore Tuesday, 4 April 2023. One of the conditions
was
that the second applicant as sole shareholder of the second
respondent pass special resolutions as required by section 112
and
section 115
of the
Companies Act, 71 of 2008
.
[14]
In
terms of the agreement the seller (the second respondent) and the
first applicant who was the guiding force behind the second
respondent were bound by a restraint of trade clause.
[16]
During the restraint period of three years the first applicant and
second respondent were restrained from working in the same industry
and competing with the first respondent.
[15]
The
purchase price of $5,563,000
[17]
was payable in 18 equal monthly instalments
[18]
commencing on 4 April 2023.
[19]
No party had the right to defer, adjust or withhold any payment due
to the other in terms of or arising out of the agreement or
set off
or by way of a counterclaim.
[20]
[16]
It is
common cause that the first respondent made some payments but did not
pay all amounts as they fell due. It is also common
cause that the
first respondent was in breach of the agreement. On 6 May 2023 the
first respondent’s attorneys addressed
a letter to the
applicants’ attorneys indicating that the first respondent
“
would
make up for the missed payment at the end of the term of the contract
by adding an extra month thereto.”
[21]
This
was of course an attempt to amend the agreement.
[17]
Clause
25 provides that in the event of a breach of obligations by either
party the aggrieved party shall have the right after giving
seven
days’ notice in writing and if the breach is then persisted
with to cancel the agreement, to seek specific performance,
to claim
damages, or to exercise other rights available to it in law.
[22]
The reference to “
either
party”
in clause 25 would seem to be a reference to the
first and second respondents as purchaser and seller as it is
difficult to see
how the first applicant would be entitled to give
notice of a breach by the first respondent. The first respondent’s
obligations
were to the second respondent and not to the first
applicant, and the second applicant was not the party to the
agreement and could
not act in terms thereof.
[18]
On 1
August 2023
[23]
the
applicants’ and second respondent’s attorney wrote to the
first respondent’s attorney on behalf of the second
respondent,
recording that only $30,000 had been paid towards the indebtedness.
The attorney demanded that the breach be rectified
within seven days
failing which the second respondent would institute legal action for
an order of specific performance and damages,
or cancel the agreement
and claim damages. The confusion in the minds of the applicants in
respect of the identity of the seller
appears from paragraph 26 of
the founding affidavit
[24]
where is alleged that the demand was made on behalf of the second
applicant. It is clear from the letter itself that the attorney’s
client is identified as the second respondent.
[19]
Payment
was not forthcoming and on 10 August 2023 the second respondent
purportedly cancelled the agreement in writing
[25]
and reserved the right to claim damages. I need not decide whether
the first respondent could remedy its default within 7 days
by paying
the outstanding instalments or whether the full purchase price was
now payable as stated in the letter of demand, and
nor would it be
proper to make an
obiter
comment
on the question whether the second respondent was now entitled to
cancel.
[20]
In
the founding affidavit it is alleged
[26]
that the second applicant cancelled the agreement. It bears
repetition that the second applicant had no right to cancel the
agreement
as it was not a party to the agreement.
[21]
For
the reasons set out above I make the order in paragraph 1.
J MOORCROFT
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION
JOHANNESBURG
Electronically
submitted
Delivered: This judgement
was prepared and authored by the Acting Judge whose name is reflected
and is handed down electronically
by circulation to the Parties /
their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to the
electronic file of this matter
on CaseLines. The date of the judgment
is deemed to be
7 SEPTEMBER 2023
.
COUNSEL
FOR THE APPLICANTS:
M H NIEUWOUDT
INSTRUCTED
BY:
COETZEE ATTORNEYS
COUNSEL FOR THE FIRST
RESPONDENT:
K
M BOSHOMANE
INSTRUCTED
BY:
LANHAM-LOVE GAILBRAITH
VAN REENEN ATTORNEYS
DATE
OF ARGUMENT:
28 AUGUST 2023
(additional written argument filed by applicants on 5 September
2023)
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
7
SEPTEMBER 2023
[1]
Caselines 01-126.
[2]
See Van Loggerenberg
Erasmus:
Superior Court Practice
RS
20, 2022, D1-86D to 89 and
Afgri
Grain Marketing (Pty) Ltd v Trustees for the time being of Copenship
Bulkers A/S (in liquidation)
[2019]
3 All SA 321
(SCA) paras 12 to 14.
[3]
The second respondent now makes common cause with the applicants.
[4]
Caselines 01-25.
The
agreement provides for arbitration in terms of the expedited rules
of the Arbitration Foundation of Southern Africa in clause
24. The
clause contains the ‘usual’ proviso that the arbitration
clause does not preclude any party from access to
court for interim
relief in respect of urgent matters, and there is a second proviso
in terms of which the parties shall have
the right to approach the
High Court in the ordinary course in order to utilize the provisions
of
rule 6
and
rule 8.
[5]
Caselines 01-82.
[6]
Clause 2.2.2, Caselines 01-29.
[7]
Caselines 01-13.
[8]
Clause 3, Caselines 01-33 and clause 6, Caselines 01-38.
[9]
Clause 2.2.4, Caselines 01-29.
[10]
Clause 2.2.33, Caselines 01-32.
[11]
Clause 3.3, read with clause 2.2.38, Caselines 01-33 and
clause 8.1, Caselines 01-40.
[12]
Clause 3.2, Caselines 01-33.
[13]
Clause 9, Caselines 01-41. These liabilities are referred to
as retained liabilities.
[14]
Clause 2.2.7, Caselines 01-29.
[15]
Clause 5 as amended, Caselines 01-36 and 01-85.
[16]
Clause
20, Caselines 01-53.
[17]
Clause 7.1, Caselines 01-38.
[18]
In other words, $309,056 per month.
[19]
Clause 7.2, Caselines 01-39.
[20]
Clause 7.8, Caselines 01-40.
[21]
Para
31 of founding affidavit, Caselines 01-102 and 01-141.
[22]
Clause 25, Caselines 01-59.
[23]
Caselines 01-87.
[24]
Caselines 01-
16.
[25]
Caselines 01-90.
[26]
Para 29 of founding affidavit, Caselines 01-16.
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