Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1097South Africa
Wescoal Mining (Pty) Ltd Another v Mkhombo NO and Other (2023-079991) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1097; 2024 (2) SA 563 (GJ) (2 October 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
2 October 2023
Headnotes
Summary
Judgment
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## Wescoal Mining (Pty) Ltd Another v Mkhombo NO and Other (2023-079991) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1097; 2024 (2) SA 563 (GJ) (2 October 2023)
Wescoal Mining (Pty) Ltd Another v Mkhombo NO and Other (2023-079991) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1097; 2024 (2) SA 563 (GJ) (2 October 2023)
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sino date 2 October 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
)
#### Case
No.2023-079991
Case
No.
2023-079991
REPORTABLE
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
REVISED
02/10/23
In the matter between:
WESCOAL
MINING (PTY) LTD
First
Applicant
SALUNGANO
GROUP LTD
Second
Applicant
And
PHAHLANI
LINCOLN MKHOMBO NO
First
Respondent
ARNOT
OPCO (PTY) LTD
Second
Respondent
NDALAMO
COAL (PTY) LTD
Third
Respondent
MASHWAYI
PROJECTS (PTY) LTD
Fourth
Respondent
Summary
Companies Act 71 of 2008
– Business rescue – Meaning of “creditor” for
the purposes of business rescue in Chapter 6 of the Act –
“creditor” where it appears in Chapter 6 means a creditor
who was a creditor of the company in business rescue at the
time that
the business rescue proceedings commenced.
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J:
1
The second respondent, Arnot, owns and operates a coal mine in
Middleburg. The mine taps into the largest known coal reserve in
Africa. Arnot’s mine itself sits on 190 million tons of
“thermal” coal – that is, coal that can be burned
as fuel to power turbines, as opposed to metallurgical coal, which is
used to produce coke for smelting iron and steel. These resources
notwithstanding, Arnot is in business rescue, under the stewardship
of the first respondent, Mr. Mkhombo.
2
The first applicant, Wescoal, and the second applicant,
Salungano, are creditors of Arnot. Wescoal is also Salungano’s
wholly-owned
subsidiary. The applicants approach me on an urgent
basis to confirm that a business rescue plan voted on and adopted on
a preliminary
basis at a meeting called by Mr. Mkhombo on 28 July
2023 is valid, binding and enforceable. The substance of that plan is
that
Arnot (and the mine it controls) is to be sold to the third
respondent, Ndalamo.
3
Ndalamo, while cited as a respondent, seeks leave to intervene
as an applicant, and joins in the relief Wescoal seeks. Mr. Mkhombo,
and, by extension, Arnot itself, oppose the application. The fourth
respondent, Mashwayi, also opposes the application. Mashwayi
is a
cessionary of various of Arnot’s creditors and a lessee of some
of Arnot’s rail allocation.
4
Wescoal and Salungano wish to enforce the plan presented to
the 28 July meeting because they expect to derive a significant
financial
benefit from it. Ndalamo obviously wants the plan to go
through because it wants to purchase Arnot’s mine. Mashwayi
opposes
the application because it expects to derive little or no
benefit from that sale.
Urgency
5
The matter was placed on my urgent roll for Tuesday 19
September 2023.
The record runs to 4000 pages
(although this was compressed at my direction, and most of the
material in the record turned out to
be irrelevant to the issues I
ended up having to decide).
The applicants also make a
far-reaching claim about the interpretation of the business rescue
provisions of the Companies Act 71
of 2008 (“the
Companies
Act&rdquo
;).
6
Ordinarily, given the size of the record and the complex legal
issue at the heart of the dispute, I would have been reluctant to
entertain this type of case on an urgent basis, and it is far from
ideal that the factual and legal issues sought to be raised
should be
decided on straightened timeframes as part of a busy urgent roll.
Still, counsel who appeared before me were agreed that
the matter is
urgent, insofar as the validity of the business rescue plan presented
to the 28 July meeting must be determined as
soon as possible, or at
any rate before 15 October 2023, in order to prevent the collapse of
any attempt to rescue Arnot as a going
concern. The sums of money
involved are staggering, and the well-being of hundreds, if not
thousands, of people hinges on the outcome
of the business rescue
process.
7
It was on that basis that I decided to consider the matter on
an urgent basis. I am grateful to counsel for their assistance in
navigating the papers and for their understanding of the fact that it
was not possible for me to absorb the volume of material their
attorneys and clients generated before the matter was heard.
The 28 July meeting
8
Section 152
(2) (a) of the
Companies Act requires
that, to be
approved at a meeting called for that purpose, a business rescue plan
must be supported by the holders of at least
“75% of the
creditors’ voting interests that were voted”. Votes are
allocated according to the value of a particular
creditor’s
claim. That claim must be proved to, and accepted by, the business
rescue practitioner before the commencement
of the meeting at which
the plan is considered.
9
At the 28 July meeting, a business rescue plan was proposed,
involving the sale of Arnot to Ndalamo. There was a vote. It
initially
appeared as though the statutory threshold of 75% had been
reached, and the plan was declared to have been adopted. In the days
following the meeting, however, Mr. Mkhombo began to fear that a
mistake had been made, and that the tally of votes for and against
the adoption of the plan had not been properly calculated. As those
calculations were quite complex, Mr. Mkhombo had the vote tally
forensically re-evaluated. The upshot of that exercise was that, in
fact, the votes cast in favour of the plan did not reach the
75%
threshold. Mr. Mkhombo accordingly revoked the earlier declaration
that the plan had been adopted, and sought to make arrangements
for a
further meeting to reconsider a business rescue plan. Although the
further meeting has been pushed back a number of times,
I am told
that Mr. Mkhombo now intends to hold the meeting on 15 October 2023.
10
Everybody accepts that the initial tally of votes was
erroneous, and that the revised figures demonstrate that the 75%
threshold
was not achieved. All things being equal, therefore, the
plan failed, and the business rescue process ought to continue in
terms
of
section 153
of the
Companies Act, which
deals with what
happens when a plan is rejected after a vote held in terms of
section
152
(2).
1cm; line-height: 150%">
11
Other things, though, are not equal. The applicants contend
that (a) Mashwayi’s votes against the plan should not have been
counted in the first place and that (b) if Mashwayi’s votes are
excluded from the tally, the business rescue plan did achieve
the 75%
threshold, even on the revised calculations Mr. Mkhombo had
performed.
12
The central dispute in this case accordingly concerns whether
Mashwayi’s votes should have been counted. There is no dispute,
though, that, if Mashwayi’s votes should not have been counted,
the plan presented at the 28 July meeting would have been
adopted by
at least 75% of the creditors’ voting interests that were
voted.
13
Mr. Botha, who appeared together with Mr. Mohapi for the
applicants, originally contended that Mashwayi was not a creditor of
Arnot
at all, and so should not have been permitted to vote on that
basis. That contention was based on arguments about interpretation
of
a lease agreement to which Arnot and Mashwayi are parties, and about
whether the cessions of other creditors’ claims to
Mashwayi
were valid and effective at the time of the 28 July meeting. These
contentions were not ultimately persisted with, however.
14
The basis on which Mr. Botha ultimately pressed the
applicants’ case was that Mashwayi only became a creditor of
Arnot after
the business rescue process commenced. On a proper
interpretation of the business rescue provisions of the
Companies
Act, so
the argument goes, “post-commencement creditors”
such as Mashwayi are not “creditors” with “voting
interests” in the approval or rejection of a business rescue
plan. As a matter of law, therefore, Mashwayi’s votes
should
not have been counted.
15
It is not in dispute that Mashwayi is a post-commencement
creditor (Mashwayi describes itself as such in its papers), but
whether
that means it may not vote in a meeting held under section
152 of the Act is hotly disputed. And it is to that issue that I now
turn.
The status of
post-commencement creditors in proceedings to approve a business
rescue plan
16
Section 145
(1) of the
Companies Act gives
a “creditor”
of a company in business rescue the right to participate in business
rescue proceedings, the right to
notice of every material decision or
proceeding comprising the business rescue process, and the right to
participate in court proceedings
arising out of the business rescue
process. Participation maybe “formal” or “informal”.
One formal mode
of participation – set out separately in
section 145 (2) (a) of the Act – is the casting of a vote to
approve, amend
or reject a business rescue plan called under section
152 of the Act.
17
Section 128
of the
Companies Act defines
a number of terms
germane to business rescue proceedings. It does not, however, define
the term “creditor”. I cannot
say why the drafters of
the
Companies Act decided
not to define that term. It seems a bit
like passing a law that governs elections without bothering to say
who is entitled to vote
in them. Creditors are “affected
persons” in
section 128
, but they are lumped together in that
category with other classes of person, such as employees and
shareholders.
18
The question that naturally arises is whether the Act intends
to extend
the rights enumerated in section 145 –
including the right to vote in a meeting called under section 152 –
only to the
company’s existing
creditors at the
commencement of the business rescue process, or whether someone to
whom the company under business rescue incurs
obligations during the
business rescue process also acquire section 145 rights, including a
say in whether a business rescue plan
should be adopted.
19
The question must be answered by an act of interpretation. The
effect of the statute must be determined by a consideration of the
ordinary grammatical meaning of its text, the context in which a
particular provision appears and the purpose of that provision
read
in light of the overall purpose of the statute in which it appears
(
Road Traffic Management Corporation v Waymark Infotech (Pty) Ltd
2019 (5) SA 29
(CC), paragraph 29). In a case like this, it is
particularly important that the meaning ascribed to the statute is
“sensible
and businesslike”, but only if a sensible and
business-like construction is consistent with the words actually used
(
Natal Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
2012 (4) SA 593
(SCA), paragraph 18).
20
It seems to me that, evaluated as a whole in conformity with
these rules of interpretation, the business rescue provisions of the
Companies Act assign
voting interests under section 152 of the Act
only to creditors who were creditors of the entity under business
rescue at the time
the business rescue process commenced.
21
There are several indications of this in the text of the
statute. The first is the definition of “affected persons”
in section 128. By rolling creditors into a broader category of
“affected persons”, it seems to me that the Act means
to
refer to creditors who have an interest in the business rescue
process that is meaningfully comparable to those of other “affected
persons”: unions, employees and shareholders. These are persons
who are “affected” by the commencement of the
business
rescue process itself. The purpose of the statute seems to me to be
to draw these affected persons into a process directed
at the rescue
rather than the liquidation of the company. While only creditors get
a vote at a meeting called under section 152,
the purpose of the
statute is to encourage different classes of stakeholders affected by
the commencement of the process to engage
with each other to achieve,
insofar as this is possible, the rescue or rehabilitation of the
business.
22
This is in conformity with the overall purpose of business
rescue: to preserve the social value of a business as a going concern
and to avoid the destruction of that value that would come about if
the company was liquidated. If just any creditor could vote
an
interest at a section 152 meeting (even a creditor who, like
Mashwayi, appears to have come onto the scene on the eve of the
meeting itself), there would be little to stop speculators or asset
strippers preying on business rescue proceedings, blocking
the
adoption of appropriate business rescue plans, and forcing
liquidations where they could be avoided. I do not for a moment
ascribe these motives to Mashwayi, but I am keenly aware that
Mashwayi appears to have bought up debt from Arnot’s other
creditors at least in part to give it standing in the business rescue
process. That, it seems to me, is inconsistent with the underlying
purpose of the process and the statute itself.
23
Section 150 (2) (a) (ii) of the Act requires that a business
rescue plan contains “a complete list of the creditors of the
company when the business rescue proceedings began”. The
express exclusion of post-commencement creditors only makes sense
if
those creditors have no voteable interest in the plan. If
post-commencement creditors were meant to have such an interest,
there would surely have to be some attempt to account for them in the
business rescue plan. There is no indication in the Act that
there
ought to be account taken of any type of creditor other than those
who existed at the time the company went into business
rescue.
Post-commencement creditors are left out altogether. The plan is not
required to say anything to or about them.
24
Where the Act could have made clear that post-commencement
creditors may vote an interest, it fails to do so. Section 135 of the
Act deals with post-commencement finance. Section 135 (3) of the Act
provides that creditors that advance finance to a company
in business
rescue are accorded a preferent claim against the company. Under
section 135 (4) that claim retains its preference
even if the company
is liquidated. Section 135 does not, however, provide for a
post-commencement financier to vote an interest
at a section 152
meeting. The implication seems to me to be clear: post-commencement
finance creditors are rewarded with enhanced
security, not a say in
whether the business rescue plan should be adopted.
25
That purpose appears to have been carried through in section
152 (4) of the Act, which provides that a business rescue plan, once
adopted, binds all the creditors of a company whether or not they
attended the meeting, whether or not they voted at the meeting,
and
whether or not they proved their claim before the meeting. A business
rescue plan will almost inevitably provide for the compromise
of some
creditors’ claims. Sections 150 (2) (b) (i) and (ii) of the Act
provide for the business rescue plan to include a
moratorium on the
fulfilment of a company’s obligations and the complete release
of a company from its obligation to pay
at least some of its debts.
It would make no sense to afford a post-commencement financier a
preferent claim against the company
under section 135 of the Act, if
that claim could be suspended or extinguished under the business
rescue plan. No sensible post-commencement
financier would put up
with that. What they would expect (and what the statute affords them)
is a preferent claim against the company
whatever the business rescue
plan says. In other words, the business rescue plan serves as a
reason why they can be confident that
the company will be able to
make good in its debt: not a basis on which the company can
compromise its obligation to repay that
debt.
26
It also strikes me that section 135 of the Act does not
describe post-commencement financiers as “creditors” at
all,
but as “lenders”. The word choice is significant. It
indicates that post-commencement financiers are not to be treated
as
the type of “creditor” to which the business rescue
provisions of the Act address themselves.
27
I would of course have liked more time to consider this issue,
but that is a luxury I do not have. While the Constitutional Court
has warned against finally deciding legal issues in urgent
applications for interim relief, the court made clear that “this
is not an invitation to judges considering urgent interim interdicts
to avoid deciding legal questions which – with the necessary
diligence – are capable of definitive decision” (
Eskom
Holdings SOC Ltd v Vaal River Development Association (Pty) Ltd
2023
(4) SA 325
(CC), paragraph 250). This is, of course, an
application for final relief, and I will leave it to others to assess
my diligence.
But, taken together, I think that the provisions I have
explored and to which I have sought to give meaning place the issue
beyond
any serious doubt. Creditors who vote an interest at a section
152 meeting must be pre-commencement creditors. The Act, at least
by
necessary implication, places post-commencement creditors in a
different category and, where it extends protection to their
interests, it does so in a different way.
The validity of the 28
July meeting
28
Mr. Maritz, who appeared together with Mr. Viljoen for
Mashwayi, contended that all of this is academic, because the 28 July
meeting
had been called unlawfully, and was a nullity for that
reason. That contention rested on the requirement, under section 151
(2)
of the Act, that the business rescue practitioner gives all
affected persons notice of the date, place and time of the meeting,
an agenda of that meeting, and a summary of the rights of affected
persons to participate in and vote at the meeting. This must
be done
at least five days before the meeting.
29
It is common cause that Mr. Mkhombo did not accept proof of
Mashwayi’s claim until the day before the 28 July meeting. It
follows, Mr. Maritz says, that Mashwayi did not have the statutory
notice to which it was entitled.
30
The difficulty with this submission is that it does not follow
from the fact that Mr. Mkhombo only accepted proof of Mashwayi’s
claim the day before the meeting that Mashyai did not have five days’
notice of it. If Mashwayi was an affected person, it
was an affected
person whether or not Mr. Mkhombo said so. My attention has not been
drawn to any allegation that Mashwayi did
not know the meeting was
coming, or that it was not timeously placed in possession of the
material required by section 151 (2).
It is of course true that Mr.
Mkhombo could not have sent the material to Mashwayi five days before
the meeting, as the letter
of the statute requires, because he did
not accept that Mashwayi was an affected person at that point. But it
seems plain on a
conspectus of all the facts that Mashwayi must have
known about the meeting five days in advance, and that the purpose of
the statute
was achieved. Plainly, then, there was substantial
compliance with section 151 (2).
Joinder of
Ndalamo
31
This brings me to Ndalamo’s application for leave to
intervene as the third applicant. Ndalamo is of course cited as the
third
respondent in these proceedings. As the prospective purchaser
of Arnot under the terms of the business rescue plan, it plainly has
a direct and substantial interest in the relief the applicants seek.
That relief “cannot be sustained and carried into execution”
without affecting Ndalamo’s rights (
Amalgamated Engineering
Union v Minister of Labour
1949 (3) SA 637
(A) at 653).
32
I am not convinced, however, that Ndalamo would have had the
standing to seek relief as an applicant in these proceedings had
Wescoal
and Salungano chosen not to do so. The question is not
without some complexity, since the Act itself contains detailed
provisions
dealing with various categories of parties’ standing
in business rescue proceedings, and in litigation arising out of
them.
I prefer not to express a view on how the standing Ndalamo
claims interacts with these provisions, and it seems to me that there
is no need for me to do so. Ndalamo came to court and had its say,
and the relief it would have sought as an applicant is being
sought
by two other parties, who have been substantially successful.
The relief to be
granted
33
With the possible exception of Mr. Mkhombo and Arnot, the
parties all flirted in argument with the proposition that decisions
taken
by a business rescue practitioner in terms of the Act
constitute “administrative action” for the purposes of
the Promotion
of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000 (“PAJA”).
In the end, though, the parties were content for me to decide the
matter without reference to PAJA.
34
I think that was wise. Even of PAJA turns out to apply to
decisions taken in the context of business rescue proceedings, the
central
question in this case – whether the business rescue
plan was adopted on 28 July 2023 by the qualified majorities of
creditors
entitled to vote that section 152 requires – does not
seem to me to turn on any “decision” taken in terms of
the
Companies Act. It
follows from my analysis of the facts and the
Act that the plan was so adopted. This was not because of a
“decision”
anyone has taken, but because of the common
cause fact that, if Mashwayi’s votes are discounted, more than
“75% of
the creditors’ voting interests that were voted”
favoured adoption of the plan.
35
Mr. Symon, who appeared together with Mr. Cremen for Arnot and
Mr. Mkhombo, made a series of careful and helpful submissions on the
relief that should flow from this. He criticised the applicants’
conduct in seeking to short-circuit the business rescue
proceedings
and usurp the business rescue practitioner’s power to determine
the pace and progress of those proceedings.
36
Mr. Symon was particularly critical of the idea that I could
reverse-engineer the outcome of the 28 July 2023 meeting by
disqualifying
Mashwayi and declaring what the result of the 28 July
meeting would have been had Mashwayi’s votes been discounted.
37
I had a great deal of sympathy for those submissions.
Ultimately, however, it seems to me that my power to declare the law
encompasses
the power to declare what the proper consequences of the
correct application of that law are. In other words, I am empowered –
and I think bound – to give effect to the statute.
38
Were there any dispute about what the proper application of
the statute as I have interpreted it meant for the outcome of the
meeting,
I would have simply declared that Mashwayi could not vote an
interest at a meeting under section 152, and I would then have
allowed
Mr. Mkhombo to take whatever lawful steps are available to
him in light of that declaration.
39
However, there is no such dispute. Everyone accepts that, but
for Mashwayi’s votes against it, the plan reached the required
statutory threshold. I have found that Mashwayi’s votes should
not have been counted. It follows from this that on a proper
application of the statute, the plan did reach the required statutory
threshold. There is no reason why I should not say so, and
make an
order setting out the legal consequences which flow from that
conclusion.
Order
40
For all these reasons –
40.1 The parties’
non-compliance with the Uniform Rules concerning forms, service and
time periods is condoned, and this matter
is heard as one of urgency
in terms of Uniform Rule 6 (12).
40.2 It is declared that
“Option B” of the Business Rescue Plan placed before the
meeting in terms of section 151 of
the Companies Act 71 of 2008 held
on 28 July 2023 ("the 28 July Plan") was duly approved and
finally adopted in accordance
with section 152 of the Act, in that –
40.2.1 it was supported
by the holders of more than 75% of the creditors' voting interests
that were voted; and in that
40.2.2 the votes in
support of the proposed plan included at least 50% of the independent
creditors' voting interests that were
voted.
40.3 The third
respondent's offer made in terms of Option B is declared to have been
accepted.
40.4 The first respondent
is ordered to implement the Business Rescue Plan and give effect to
the third respondent’s bid.
40.5
The second and fourth respondents are
directed, jointly and severally, the one paying the other to be
absolved, to pay the costs
of this application, including the costs
of two counsel.
S D J WILSON
Judge of the High Court
This judgment is handed
down electronically by circulation to the parties or their legal
representatives by email, by uploading
to Caselines, and by
publication of the judgment to the South African Legal Information
Institute. The date for hand-down is deemed
to be 2 October 2023.
HEARD ON: 21
September 2023
DECIDED ON: 2
October 2023
For the Applicants:
A Botha SC
SL Mohapi
Instructed by
Mkhabela Huntley
For the First and
S Symon SC
Second Respondents:
C Cremen
M Seti-Baza
Instructed by
Cox Yeats
For the Third Respondent:
I Miltz SC
D Block
Instructed by
Webber Wentzel
For the Fourth
Respondent:
NGD Maritz SC
JC Viljoen
Instructed by
Liebenberg Malan Mofolo
Inc
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