Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1080South Africa
Powergroup SA (Pty) Limited v Karadeniz Holdings Limited and Others (2023/084314) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1080 (27 September 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
27 September 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Powergroup SA (Pty) Limited v Karadeniz Holdings Limited and Others (2023/084314) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1080 (27 September 2023)
Powergroup SA (Pty) Limited v Karadeniz Holdings Limited and Others (2023/084314) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1080 (27 September 2023)
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sino date 27 September 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG LOCAL DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO:
2023/084314
/2023
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
DATE:
27 SEPTEMBER 2023
SIGNATURE
In the matter between:
POWERGROUP
SA (PTY) LIMITED
Applicant
and
KARADENIZ
HOLDINGS LIMITED
First
Respondent
KARPOWERSHIP
SA (PTY) LIMITED
Second
Respondent
MINISTER
OF MINERAL RESOURCES AND ENERGY
Third
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MIA J:
[1]
When the matter appeared before me on 19 September 2023 the applicant
sought an order
seeking:
“
1. The applicant’s
non-compliance with the rules relating to service and process is
condoned and this application is permitted
to be considered on an
urgent basis in terms of Rule 6(12) of the Uniform Rules of Court.
2. The respondents are hereby
interdicted and restrained from:
2.1. taking any steps to transfer,
acquire, sell or in any manner deal with the Powergroup Subscription
Shares and Ordinary Shares
until the finalisation of the arbitration
dispute referred on 21 August 2023 to the Arbitration Foundation of
South Africa; and
2.2. taking any further steps in terms
of the Shareholders’ Agreement pursuant to the Call Option
Exercise Notice issued by
the First Respondent in terms of Clause 12
of the Shareholders’ Agreement.
3. It is directed that any decision to
transfer the equity of Powergroup cannot take place without the prior
consent of the Minister
of Mineral Resources and Energy.
4. The directors of the First
Respondent are interdicted and restrained from exercising any powers,
or taking any steps, in terms
of clause 12.9 of the Shareholders’
Agreement.
5. The aforesaid relief in prayers 2
to 3 above shall operate as an interim interdict pending the final
determination of an expedited
arbitration referral to the Arbitration
Foundation of South Africa.
6. The respondents are ordered to pay
the costs of this application including the costs occasioned by the
employment of two counsel.
7. Granting the applicants such
further and/or alternative relief as may be just in the
circumstances.”
[2]
The application was opposed by the first and second respondents.
There was no appearance
for the third respondent. The matter was
postponed until 22 September 2023 to enable counsel for the first and
second respondents
to file heads of argument by 20 September 2023 and
to accommodate his appearance in another urgent matter in the same
week. The
applicant requested the matter be heard on 21
September 2023 as a meeting was about to take place where their
shares would be transferred
as envisaged in the notice of motion. The
first and second respondents’ counsel was not available. The
matter proceeded on
22 September 2023. In the interim, the
respondents did transfer the shares of the applicant to the first
respondent. The
applicant filed an amended notice of motion and
seeks an order as follows:
“
1.
The applicant’s non-compliance with the rules relating to
service and process is condoned and this application is permitted
to
be considered on an urgent basis in terms of Rule 6(12) of the
Uniform Rules of Court
2. The respondents are hereby
interdicted and restrained from:
2.1. taking any further steps to
transfer, acquire, sell or in any manner deal with the Powergroup
Subscription Shares and Ordinary
Shares until the finalisation of the
arbitration dispute referred on 21 August 2023 to the Arbitration
Foundation of South Africa;
2.2. taking any further steps in terms
of the Shareholders’ Agreement pursuant to the Call Option
Exercise Notice issued by
the First Respondent in terms of Clause 12
of the Shareholders’ Agreement; and
2.3. in any way limiting the rights,
benefits or interests of the applicant pursuant to the Shareholders’
Agreement.
3. The directors of the First
Respondent are interdicted and restrained from exercising any powers,
or taking any steps, in terms
of clause 12.9 of the Shareholders’
Agreement.
4. The First Respondent is interdicted
from negotiating, concluding and entering into any agreement with any
party in terms which
are in conflict with the provisions of the MOI,
the Shareholders Agreement and the Implementation Agreement.
5. The First Respondent, alternatively
the Respondents, is ordered to reinstate the applicant’s
ordinary shares pursuant to
its Call Option Exercise Notice dated 11
August 2023.
6. The aforesaid relief in prayers 2
to 5 above shall operate as an interim interdict pending the final
determination of an expedited
arbitration referral to the Arbitration
Foundation of South Africa.
7. The respondents are ordered to pay
the costs of this application including the costs occasioned by the
employment of two counsel.
8. Granting the applicants such
further and/or alternative relief as may be just in the
circumstances.
PART B: FINAL RELIEF BE PLEASED TO
TAKE NOTICE that the applicants intend to make application to the
above Honourable Court on a
date to be decided by the Registrar of
this Court for an Order in the following terms:
1. It is declared
that the Memorandum of Incorporation and the Shareholders Agreement
concluded between the Applicant
and the First Respondent is
unconstitutional, unlawful, of no force or effect and is set aside.
1.1 In the alternative, it is
declared that clause 2.1.24, clause 12, clause 15.4 of the
Shareholder’s Agreement and
clause 6.8.3 of the Memorandum of
Incorporation are unconstitutional, unlawful, of no force or effect
and they are set aside.
2. It is declared
that the First Respondent is bound to make a contribution of R350
million on behalf of the Applicant
in respect of the tender.”
[3]
The relief is partly related to the arbitration proceedings and
partly based on constitutional
relief sought in Part B. The applicant
maintains that the constitutional relief is not part of the relief
sought in arbitration
and is required. The relief it seeks on an
urgent basis is to restore its position to the state prior to the
transfer of shares
and specifically to reinstate its shares as well
as to declare the agreement unlawful and unconstitutional.
[4]
The background to the application is the following. The applicant and
the second respondent
entered into various agreements including a
memorandum of incorporation (MOI) and a shareholders agreement. The
applicant contends
that the agreements constitute contraventions of
the law and fronting if they are not amended and are in violation of
the
Broad-Based Black Economic Empowerment Act, 2003
. The agreement
refers to the applicant’s shareholding of 49% and the applicant
states that its beneficial interest is 24%.
It complains that it has
no access to financial information and operations of the company
which is wholly controlled by the first
respondent. In this context,
the first respondent has now demanded an amount of 2,5 million for
working capital whilst no explanation
is furnished why the funds are
required and what specifically it is will be utilised for.
[5]
The applicant states that, in the face of the unlawful and
unconstitutional nature
of the MOI which permits the first respondent
to make key decisions with its 51% shareholding, it now seeks to
elevate Dr. Anna
Mokgokong and Community Investment Holdings, the
entity she has an interest in. The applicant contends that Dr.
Mokgokong has significant
interests in government tenders and is
politically connected. Neither Dr. Mokgokong nor Community Investment
Holdings were joined
in the proceedings.
[6]
On 27 February 2023, the Chief Executive Officer of the first
respondent sent out
a proposed Board resolution and draft Funding
Notice in terms of clause 13.2.3 of the Shareholders agreement. In
response, the
applicant requested financial information and
rectification of the 12 million US dollar loan from Mr Karadeniz to
the respondents.
In addition, it requested disclosure of all
lenders and financiers approached for additional funding as well as
disclosure of all
third parties that had engaged with Mr Karadeniz
relating to the replacement of the applicant as a new BBBEE partner
with the first
respondent. In view of Mr Karadeniz having been the
financier to date the applicant had expected that Mr Karadeniz would
be providing
funds to the second respondent, in terms of previous
loan agreements, subject to a repayment date commensurate with the
flow of
funds from the senior debt facility. If Mr Karadeniz was not
providing the funding, the directors were still required to exhaust
the processes in the Shareholders Agreement and the MOI. This was
ignored and a funding notice requesting additional funding was
issued. The applicant informed the first respondent that the notices
for funding were unlawful and indicated the reasons they contended
it
was so. They maintain their concerns were not addressed.
[7]
Mr Karadeniz engaged with them to offer their shares to a third party
for amounts
between R3 million to R26 million, in order to bring
funding into the project where the applicants had not put up funds. A
meeting
took place on 22 June 2023 at the Palazzo Hotel between
representatives of the applicant, the first respondent and Mr. Joe
Madungandaba
and Mr. Linda Cibe of Community Investment Holdings. Mr.
Cibe made an offer to the applicants to dilute their shareholding to
accommodate
Mr. Madungandaba and Dr. Mokgokong. On 11 August 2023,
the first respondent issued a notice to exercise their call options
under
clause 12 of the shareholders' agreement. This, the applicant
contends, is an ulterior motive intended to remove them and is
unlawful
as it is in breach of the undertaking given to the
Department of Mineral Resources and Energy to fund activities of the
project
in the amount of R1 billion. They maintain the exercise of
the call option is in breach of commitments made in terms of section
9 of the Constitution, the
Broad-Based Black Economic Empowerment Act
2003
, and the Implementation Agreement.
[8]
Of significance is the applicant’s reliance on statements made
in its supplementary
affidavit. The first is that the Implementation
Agreement provides in clause 17 that,
“
17.1 For the duration of
the term, the seller shall procure that there be no change in the
seller (or in any company of which
the seller is a subsidiary)
without the prior written approval of the Department.
17.2 For the period
commencing on the signature date and ending on the date which falls
five (5) years after the commercial
operation date, the seller
shall procure that there is no:
17.2.1 dilution, sale, assignment,
cession, transfer exchange, renunciation or other disposal of
the whole or any party
of the Equity; or
17.2.2. dilution, sale, assignment,
cession, transfer exchange, renunciation or other disposal of
the whole or any party
of the
Issued share capital of and/ or the
shareholder loads in and to a conduit shareholder,
Without the prior written approval of
the Department.”
The applicants contend that the first
respondent’s plan to replace them with a new BEE partner is
contrary to the Implementation
plan and is unlawful. The respondents
by invoking clause 12 of the agreement and purchasing their shares
without following the
process to obtain funding, is also contrary to
the Implementation Plan.
[9]
Counsel for the applicant argued that the first and second
respondents have entered
into an agreement with BHI Energy Property
(Ltd) to develop projects to meet the demand for electricity, fuel
through powerships.
Counsel referred to an unsigned copy in the
applicant’s possession. The project is the same tender that the
applicant and
the second respondent were awarded. The applicant
invites the first respondent to produce the signed copy thereof. It
suggests
that the first and second respondents used the applicant to
obtain the tender and are now scheming to remove it from the project.
The parties with whom the respondents are said to be conspiring have
not been joined to the proceedings.
[10]
Moreover, counsel for the applicant argued that the agreement
constituted fronting and was unconstitutional
and should be set
aside. This, it was argued, only a court could do.
[11]
Counsel for the first and second respondents argued that the
applicant was incorrect on a number
of points. It seeks to set aside
the Shareholding agreement on the basis that it is contrary to the
BBBEE Act and constitutes fronting,
however, the applicant was a
party to the agreement which it contends is unlawful in many respects
and was content to benefit from
the agreement which it now says
constitutes fronting. The respondents deny that the agreement is
unlawful or that the relief sought
is urgent. Counsel argued that the
application amounted to forum shopping as the initial application was
set down before Pullinger
AJ. The applicant removed the matter from
the roll and proceeded to arbitration. Once the arbitrator determined
the aspect of urgency,
the applicant was not happy with the
arbitrator and proceeded back to court to make out a case for
urgency. Counsel maintains that
the issue will be addressed in
arbitration as the applicant refers to their recourse in arbitration,
suggesting that they are content
to address part of the dispute
through arbitration.
[12]
Counsel argued furthermore that the Implementation Agreement is yet
to be signed and the details
are not disclosed as required between
the parties. The respondents will need to take various steps to
transfer the applicant’s
shares and hand over to a third party
after obtaining the Minister of Mineral and Resources's (the
Minister) consent in terms of
the agreement to comply with the
Implementation Agreement. The Implementation Agreement has not yet
been signed by the Project
companies who have not been joined in the
proceedings. Changes to the Bid Project are subject to the decision
of the third respondent
once the respondent has furnished an
explanation regarding the circumstances which have changed. The
Ministers’ discretion
regarding the changes and approval
thereof appears to be crucial in the circumstances before any changes
can be finalised and the
project can be given the green light.
[13]
Counsel for the respondent submitted that the reference to the
negotiation with BHI being a clandestine
and calculated plot is
incorrect. The project requires a fund-contributing partner to reach
commercial close and whilst the applicant
contributed R98 and could
not contribute funds it was referred to the BHI who could support it
in this regard. The referral was
not clandestine and was
solution-driven to ensure the project could go ahead. The applicants
have not raised the funds required.
Counsel argued that it was in
fact the respondents who stand to lose substantial funds
approximately 700 million if commercial
close is not reached. The
consent of the Minister required for the transfer of shares would
also be dealt with before the arbitrator,
Counsel argued.
Furthermore, with concern he submitted that the applicant’s
“state capture on steroids” argument
is reckless and no
case is made out on the papers. More importantly, he continued the
statement made was without merit. He submitted
that the shareholding
agreement does not amount to fronting, and whilst the agreement has
certain clauses which the first respondent
had invoked, if the
applicants are correct in their argument then they are not entitled
to any shares. He pointed out that the
applicants on their version
will have been participating and seek to benefit from an unlawful
agreement and if they succeed in
setting aside the unlawful agreement
they cannot gain the shares they say they should receive.
[14] On
the irreparable harm, he argued that the transfer of shares has
occurred whilst an interdict
is for future conduct. On the test for
an interim interdict, counsel argued that the applicant has an issue
with regard to their
right, irreparable harm in view of the issue
being dealt with in arbitration and the balance of convenience not
favouring the applicant.
Consequently, counsel argued the matter
should be struck off with punitive costs, alternatively that the
application should be
dismissed with costs.
[15] The
applicant seeks an interim interdict and must establish a clear right
or a prima facie right,
that there is a well-grounded apprehension of
irreparable harm if the interim relief is not granted and that the
balance of convenience
favours the grant of an interim interdict.
[16] The
harm which the applicant seeks to prevent namely the transfer of
shares has already occurred.
They call it a corporate hijack which
they say must be interdicted until the matter is resolved by a court
or in arbitration. The
arbitration proceedings are pending. An
interdict will not assist in restoring the shares which have been
transferred. An interdict
can only be called upon to restrict or bar
future conduct. On the respondents’ version, the issue of the
transfer of shares
is not an urgent matter. The transfer according to
the first and second respondent must be approved by the third
respondent in
any event. There is no dispute that the third
respondent, the Minister has to approve this transfer. The applicant
has already
referred a dispute to arbitration prior to approaching
this court and intends for some aspect of the dispute to be addressed
in
arbitration. The issue with regard to the transfer of shares
is not relief to be granted urgently where the shares have been
transferred. There is no harm that can be averted with an interdict
as sought by the applicant.
[17] The
relief sought in Part B of the amended notice of motion is not
urgent. To the extent that
there are parties that are affected and
have an interest such as the companies who form part of the project
as referred to by counsel,
they may need to be joined. It is
premature to grant relief herein without their input where their
interests may be affected. The
Implementation Agreement has not been
signed. The parties forming part of the implementation project are
not all before this court.
There may be issues to be ventilated
ahead. Part B may be considered for later determination. The issue
with regard to the transfer
of shares is not relief to be granted
urgently where the shares have been transferred. The applicant has
not persuaded me that
an interim interdict is warranted.
[18] I
turn to the question of costs. Counsel for the applicant argued that
the interdict be granted
and the respondents be mulcted with costs
because of the fraudulent conduct of the first and second respondent
who unlawfully appropriated
the applicant’s shares. The costs
to include the costs of two counsel. Counsel for the respondents
argued that the application,
at the very least, was not urgent and
should be struck off with costs on the attorney and client scale,
alternatively that the
application be dismissed with costs similarly
on the attorney and client scale. Whilst the case is not made out for
an interim
interdict, the applicant should not be dissuaded from
pursuing constitutional rights. Access to courts is a right well
protected.
If the applicant seeks to have the matter determined in
court it should not be shown the door by way of a punitive costs
order.
The first and second respondents were aware the matter was to
be heard on 22 September 2023. The date was arranged to accommodate
heads of argument to be filed as well as the respondents' counsel who
was appearing in another matter in the urgent court. The
respondents’
conduct appears to be to disregard the court process.
[19]
In the circumstances, I grant the following order:
1. The application
is struck off with costs reserved.
S C MIA
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH
AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Appearances:
For
the Applicant:
T
Ngcukaitobi SC,T Ramogale & N Ruhinda
Instructed
by Mabuza Attorneys
For
the First and Second Respondent:
A
Botha SC
Instructed
by Werksmans
Heard:
22
September 2023
Delivered:
27
September 2023
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