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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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[2023] ZAGPJHC 1126
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## Bidvest Bank Limited v Waste Partner Investments (Pty) Ltd (55825/2021)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 1126 (5 October 2023)
Bidvest Bank Limited v Waste Partner Investments (Pty) Ltd (55825/2021)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 1126 (5 October 2023)
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sino date 5 October 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Case
No.: 55825/2021
NOT REPORTABLE
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
05/10/23
In
the matter between:
BIDVEST
BANK LIMITED
Applicant
And
WASTE
PARTNER INVESTMENTS (PTY) LTD
Respondent
JUDGMENT
Vally J
[1] This is an
application for leave to appeal. In the main matter the only issue
before court was one of costs. The applicant
had abandoned its main
claim in the matter but persisted with its subsidiary claim, namely
that it be awarded costs on an attorney
and client scale. I issued a
judgment that succinctly captured the facts, which are not in
dispute. The judgment concluded with
an order which read: the
application is dismissed with costs. The applicant is aggrieved
by the order and asks for leave
to appeal, to either the Supreme
Court of Appeal (SCA) or to a full bench of this court.
[2]
In the main
judgment I said that the applicant brought two applications
[1]
when it should have launched a single application seeking both
reliefs, alternatively, it should have consolidated the two
applications
and then secured the relief it sought by having the same
court consider both of their causes of action in one hearing. This, I
said, was the appropriate route to follow. In my view the merit of
the approach lies not only in the fact that it would be less
costly
for the parties but, moreover, it would result in the optimal
utilisation of the very limited but hugely sought after judicial
resources available in this Division.
[3]
The
applicant points out that the sequestration and the liquidation
applications had to be brought separately as the two applications
involve separate procedures, are governed by different statutory
regimes, and each debtor has a separate body of creditors.
The
legal obligation, it says, is derived from the common law as
enunciated in
Ferela,
[2]
where it was found that two different persons ought not to be
sequestrated in the same application. The court found some support
for its conclusion in the reasoning in
Breetveldt
.
[3]
This argument was not raised
in the main application. It is therefore necessary to give detailed
consideration to it here.
Kirkwood
Garage (Pty) Ltd v Lategan and Another
[4]
[4] Before dealing
with
Breetveldt
it is appropriate to record the approach of a
court in 1961 from the then Eastern Cape Division which records - as
if it is trite
- the procedural approach that should be followed by a
creditor who sues for the compulsory sequestration of two or more
debtors
whose liability for the debt is joint and several. The court
expressed the position in the following terms:
‘
In the first place
I think it was unnecessary to present two separate applications to
the Court in a matter of this character. It
has been held that in
cases of debtors whose liability to the creditor is joint and several
it is quite competent to join more
than one of these debtors in an
application for compulsory sequestration and if the application is
granted the practice is to order
that the costs of the sequestration
be apportioned between the estates so sequestrated. I refer to two
cases in which this view
has been taken. The first is the case of
Solomon
v Lotter and Another
,
1924 W.L.D. 205
, and the second is
Chellan
v Reddy and Another
,
1928 N.P.D. 387.
The decision in each of these cases was one of the
Full Bench of the respective Divisions. As far as I am aware the
correctness
of this practice laid down in these cases has never been
questioned and it appears to me to be quite unreasonable and
unnecessary
duplication of costs to have brought two separate
petitions in these matters, particularly having regard to the fact
that the papers
are swollen by the inclusion of these somewhat
lengthy minutes, the relevance of which is by no means clear to me at
the present
stage. Had I been disposed to grant an order for the
sequestration of the estates of the two respondents I would certainly
not
have allowed the costs of the two petitions to be included in the
costs of the sequestration. The order I would have made would
have
allowed the costs of one application only to be apportioned between
the two estates of the two respondents.’
[5]
Breetveldt
[5]
One can
safely accept that this was the state of the procedural law until
Breetveldt
and to an extent
Ferela
entered the stage. In
Breetveldt,
the court faced a call for the liquidation of ‘four separate
companies, under one and the same notice of motion’ and
held
that … ‘such a proceeding cannot be allowed except
possibly by the consent of all interested persons, or in the
case
where there is a complete identity of interests.’
[6]
This is because,
‘…
each
company has its own separate share capital, separate shareholders and
separate creditors, and the fusing of the interests of
all four
companies in one proceeding is confusing and prejudicial to persons
interested in only one such company. … If,
for example,
creditors in one or other of the companies in this case should wish
to intervene on the return day, or to suggest
a compromise under sec
103 of the Companies Act, there is no reason why they should have to
become involved in the affairs of three
other companies.’
[7]
[6] The
dictum
quoted above correctly identifies the divergent interests of some of
the creditors of the companies facing liquidation. However,
in my
view, it does not give any consideration to the fact that where two
or more debtor companies are facing a claim for their
liquidation
from the same creditor for the same debt, and their liability is
joint or even joint and several, they have an identity
of interest in
the debt. And, if one of them manages to liquidate the entire debt,
then the claim against the other would fall
away. This would be
equally applicable in circumstances where one debtor is a company
facing liquidation and the other a private
individual facing
sequestration.
Ferela
[7]
In
Ferela
,
the court was faced with an application for the sequestration of two
partners and the partnership. The court noted that a case
of
insolvency was made against the two partners but not against the
partnership. The court noted that as a matter of law, if the
partnership was sequestrated the individual members too are
sequestrated. At the same time, if no case is made out against the
partnership, then whether each of the partners can be sequestrated,
and whether they can be joined to an application where the
sequestration of the partnership is sought, becomes relevant. As no
case was made against the partnership, and as the applicant
indicated
that it sought the sequestration of each of the partners on grounds
separate from those for the sequestration of the
partnership, the
court was enjoined to consider the application to sequestrate the
estates of each of the two partners. The court
felt it necessary to
consider whether it was appropriate to join each of the partners in a
single matter under a single notice
of motion. The court examined the
previous cases
[8]
where the
court had no problem with the procedure where more than one party was
sought to be sequestrated in the same proceedings,
and found that the
reasoning for adopting this approach was not clearly and
unambiguously articulated. The court came to the conclusion
that the
matter should be decided in terms of Rule 10 of the Uniform Rules of
Court which attends to the issue of joinder. Sub-rule
10(3) allows
for more than one party to sue or be sued in a single matter if the
determination of the matter involves substantially
the same question
of law or fact. The court noted that there are three requirements
that have to be satisfied for a sequestration
order to be issued, (i)
the creditor has established a claim, (ii) the debtor has committed
an act of insolvency and lastly, (iii)
that there is reason to
believe that there would be an advantage to creditors if the debtor’s
estate is to be sequestrated.
In the case of both respondents the
first requirement was satisfied – they were both liable for the
same debt – but
as for the second and third requirements the
court was concerned that these were to be determined separately and
independently
of each of the respondents. To wit:
‘
The facts which
have to be investigated to decide whether each of the persons
committed an act of insolvency do not overlap in any
sense
whatsoever. But even more important is the fact that, as far as the
third requirement is concerned, one has to do with two
sets of
creditors, two different sets of assets, two different sets of
circumstances which will each have to be investigated in
order to
decide whether in that particular case there is the likelihood of an
advantage to creditors in respect of that particular
debtor. It could
therefore quite easily be that two completely different cases, both
as far as the act of insolvency or actual
insolvency and the
advantage to creditors are concerned, may have to be heard and
determined by the Court’
[9]
[8]
The court
was fortified
[10]
in its view
by the
dictum
in
Breetveldt
referred to in [5] above. However, while not explicitly endorsing or
rejecting the view that the procedure ‘cannot be allowed’,
it did say:
‘
I believe
that, if anything, the case of liquidation of companies, from the
point of view of joining them as respondents in one
application for
winding-up, is principally a stronger one in favour of joinder than
that of the sequestration of individuals.’
[11]
[9]
And so, the
court – bearing in mind that a sequestration achieves a
concursus
creditorum
[12]
– came to the conclusion that it would be ‘even more
inadvisable that they should ever be joined in an application
for their sequestration as respondents in one application.’
[13]
Thus, by holding that the procedure was ‘even more
inadvisable’ rather than ‘cannot be allowed’ the
court in
Ferela
was less robust and somewhat more ambiguous than that in
Breetveldt.
Business
Partners Ltd v Vestco Trading 87 (Pty) Ltd and Others
[14]
[10]
A case that
bears greater resemblance to the present one is
Business
Partners Ltd
.
There the applicant sought to liquidate the first respondent, a
private company, for its failure to pay a debt that was due and
owing, and sequestrate two individuals married in community of
property who stood as sureties and co-principal debtors for the
debt.
After exploring all the judgments referred to above the court noted
that two opposing approaches were adopted by the courts:
one captured
in
Breetveldt
and
Ferela
and the other in
Kirkwood
.
[15]
The court indicated that it understood the judgment in
Kirkwood
to say
that if an order is granted against more than one debtor then the
practice was ‘to apportion the costs of the proceedings
between
the estates to be sequestrated.’
[16]
Kirkwood
did not ‘purport to say that it was practice to join more than
one respondent in sequestration proceedings (although he did
state
that it is competent in certain circumstances).’
[17]
The court went further to dissociate itself from the criticism
mounted in
Ferela
against
Kirkwood,
namely
that the reasoning allowing for the seeking of the
sequestration of two debtors in one application was not clearly
and
unambiguously articulated. On the contrary, says the court in
Business
Partners
:
‘
(1) It is implicit
in what he [the judge in Kirkwood] said that he approved of the
approach in the two earlier cases cited that
it is competent to join
two debtors in one sequestration application if they were jointly and
severally liable to the applicant
on the debt in question.
(2) The learned
judge further considered that the approach had much to commend itself
by reason of the savings of costs that
would result, particularly
with regard to the duplication of the papers filed in the
applications before him.’
[18]
[11] Having said that,
the court in
Business Partners
said that while it saw merit in
the view espoused in
Kirkwood
there were considerations other
than the joint and several liability of two debtors for the same
debt, and the incidental saving
of costs that came into play when
deciding whether it is competent to bring a single application for
their respective sequestration
or liquidation. These relate to the
issues raised in
Breetveldt
(about the divergent shareholders
and their divergent interests, as well as the divergent creditors and
their divergent interests
in the case of companies) and in
Ferela
(about the establishment of a separate
concursus creditorum
for each sequestration). For this reason, says the court:
‘
I am
persuaded, because of the different requirements that require to be
satisfied, that there is in principle serious objection
to a single
application for the liquidation of a company and the sequestration of
an individual.’
[19]
[12] However, the court
did not endorse the view that a single application was not competent
unless there was ‘a complete
identity of interests’ of
the debtors. The court said:
‘
Accordingly,
subject to what follows I align myself with the approach followed in
Breetveldt,
Ferela
and
Caltex
Oil
. I
have, however, some difficulty with the stance that a complete
identity of interests is a
sine
qua non
for the valid joinder of more than one debtor in liquidation and/or
sequestration proceedings. One cannot readily conceive of a
situation
where there would in fact be a complete identity of interests between
debtors. Perhaps a preferable test would be that
mooted by counsel
for the applicant, viz a sufficiently substantial coincidence of
interests such as would practically or at least
substantially place
the case outside the objections to joinder that were adverted to in
the three cases referred to above and properly
bring the case within
the ambit of Rule 10.’
[20]
[13]
There are
two further judgments in this court on the issue. The first is
Bobroff
[21]
while the second is
Strutfast.
[22]
The court in
Bobroff
held that
Ferela
was wrongly decided. The court in
Strutfast
on the other hand, held that
Ferela
was correctly decided.
Analysis
[14]
Breetveldt
is
the only judgment where it was explicitly said that the joining of
more than one company in a single application seeking the
liquidation
of each one of them ‘cannot be allowed’ unless the
companies to be liquidated consent thereto.
Ferela
, simply
said it ‘is inadvisable’ to sequestrate more than one
individual in a single application.
Business Partners
read the
two judgments to say that, absent consent from each of the
respondents to be liquidated or sequestrated, none of the respondents
can be joined in a single application unless there is a complete
identity of interests between the respondents, and on that
understanding
disagreed with them. Instead, it held that as long as
there is ‘a sufficiently substantial coincidence of interests’
placing them ‘outside the objections to joinder’, a
single application seeking an order that each one is liquidated
or
sequestrated would be competent.
[15] All three judgments
correctly observe that the reasons for allowing an objection to the
joinder of all the respondents to a
single application is that the
interests of the creditors of each of the respondents are different.
Creditors of one of the parties
do not have any interests in the
affairs of the other parties. Therefore, they should not be dragged
into an application where
the liquidation or sequestration of that
other party is sought. Two observations regarding this approach are
apposite. Firstly,
the interests of those creditors are not taken
into account if the respondents consent to being joined to the single
application.
Secondly, in one of the cases mentioned,
Ferela
,
there was no objection by any of the respondents – the
application was unopposed. In the other two cases the objection to
the joinder was not from any of the creditor(s) of the respondents
but by the respondents themselves. If a creditor took the objection
then it could make sense to uphold the objection to the joinder
(assuming an appropriate costs order would not remedy any prejudice
that the creditor suffers). But this remedy is less readily available
if it is the respondents making the claim on behalf of their
creditors when the creditors themselves do not do so, especially if
the raising of the misjoinder point is really a dilatory tactic
raised by the respondents.
[16] It is important to
remember that we are dealing here with a procedural matter. As
mentioned
Breetveldt
is the only decision that prevents the
joinder of more than one respondent in a single application for
liquidation of each of the
respondents.
Business Partners
certainly saw the possibility of such a procedure being utilised, at
least in circumstances where there is ‘substantial coincidence
of interests’ between the respondents.
Ferela
did not
say that the joinder can never be allowed. In my view, it would be
wrong to hold that, as a matter of principle, the joining
of more
than one respondent in a sequestration or liquidation application is
not to be allowed. No rule to this effect can be established.
The
court must adopt a flexible and pragmatic approach to the matter, and
one that serves the interests of justice. That should
be the sole
consideration for the court. The interests of justice, it goes
without saying, takes note of the interests of all parties.
Thus,
whether two or more separate applications should be brought, or
whether a single one would be a more appropriate approach
in a
particular case, is fact-specific. Significantly, one of the elements
to be established in both sequestration and liquidation
applications
is the existence of a debt which is due and owing. Where two or more
debtors are sued on the same debt, and the defence
of each is
identical, then there is merit in bringing the claims against each
debtor in a single application split into two (or
more) parts: a
claim A being against debtor A and a claim B being against debtor B
(and a claim C against debtor C, etc). By bringing
a single
application the one issue common to all the respondents can be dealt
with once. This has the benefit of ensuring that
the optimal
utilisation of the limited resources of the court is achieved. Apart
from avoiding the duplication of hearings, the
risk of conflicting
judgments on the same issue is avoided. It is therefore not simply a
matter of convenience to the parties and
the court. It is a matter of
what serves the interests of justice best.
The present case
[17] I, therefore hold
that
in casu
, noting that separate requirements have to be met
for each of the orders to be granted in the two cases brought by the
applicant,
nothing prevented the applicant from bringing a single
application with two separate claims – Claim A being the
liquidation
of Waste Partners and Claim B being the sequestration of
Mr Moeng - setting out the factual substratum of their case for each
claim
separately. In the event that the liquidation proceeding is met
with a defence that the debt is not owed or not due, then that
defence would hold in the sequestration proceeding too.
[18] We are dealing with
the liquidation of one entity – the present respondent Waste
Partner (Pty) Ltd (Waste Partner) –
and the sequestration of an
individual – Mr Moeng. Mr Moeng is the sole shareholder
of the respondent. Whether the
respondent was his
alter ego
or
not is not clear but there is no doubt on the papers that he is the
controlling mind of the respondent. The debt against both
debtors is
identical - it is the debt of the respondent, for which Mr Moeng
stood surety and co-principal debtor. The defence to
the debt was
identical in both cases. There was only one reason to bring the
two applications; to secure full payment of
the debt. This was
achieved when the first application was called before court.
[19] In
Kirkwood
the court said that the saving of costs by bringing one application
was an important consideration. The court in
Business Partners
agreed thereto. Further, in
Kirkwood
it was said that
generally the practice was to issue a single order of costs to be
shared by both respondents. The court in
Business Partners
had
no problem with this. The court in
Ferela
said nothing on this
issue.
The test for leave to
appeal
[20]
The
applicant for leave to appeal has to satisfy the Court that
‘the appeal would have a reasonable prospect of success
or that
there are some other compelling reasons’
[23]
to grant leave. The ‘would have reasonable prospect of success’
test is more stringent than the test that prevailed
before the
amendment of s 17 of the Superior Courts Act. It must not just be a
mere possibility that another court would issue
a different order.
The prospect of success must be reasonably strong in order for leave
to be granted.
[21] This court has a
very wide discretion on the issue of costs in a matter. The only
inhibiting factor is that the court should
exercise the discretion
judicially. That requires the court to give due consideration to the
interests and conduct of all the parties
affected by its costs order.
This, I believe, was done. The applicant had recovered full payment
of the debt, and costs of application
on an attorney and client scale
in the first application. It had already been vindicated.
[22] For these reasons I
do not believe there is any prospect that another court would come to
a different conclusion. Costs should
follow the result.
Order
[23] The following order
is made:
a. The application
for leave to appeal is dismissed with costs.
Vally J
Gauteng High Court,
Johannesburg
Date of hearing: 2
August 2023
Date of judgment: 5
October 2023
For the applicants:
C van der Linde
Instructed by:
Du Toit Sanchez Moodley
For the respondent:
R V Mudau
Instructed by:
Makuta Attorneys
[1]
a sequestration proceeding as well as liquidation proceedings to
secure payment of a debt owed to it by the present respondent,
but
which was secured by virtue of a surety agreement concluded between
it and the only shareholder of the respondent
[2]
Ferela
(Pty) Ltd v Craigie
1980 (3) SA 167
(W) at 171F-H
[3]
Breetveldt
and Others v Van Zyl and Others
1972 (1) SA 304 (T)
[4]
1961 (2) SA 75 (E)
[5]
Id. at 76G-77A
[6]
Breetveldt
,
n 3, at 314F
[7]
Id. at 314F-H
[8]
These were:
Kirkwood
,
n 4 above, and the two cases mentioned therein as supportive
authority,
Solomon
v Lotter and Another
1924 W.L.D. 205
;
Chellan
v Reddy and Another
1928 N.P.D 387
[9]
Ferela
,
n 2, at 171D-E
[10]
Id. at 171G
[11]
Id. at 172C-D
[12]
A coming together of the all the creditors, resulting in the
establishment of the principle that the joint interests of the
creditors as a group takes precedence over the interests of the
individual creditors
[13]
Ferela
,
n 2, at 172C-D
[14]
2004 (5) SA 296
(SE)
[15]
Kirkwood
,
n 4
[16]
Business
Partners,
n 14 at [31]
[17]
Id
[18]
Id at [32]
[19]
Id at [33]
[20]
Id at [34]
[21]
Maree
and Another v Bobroff and Another
[2017] ZAGPJHC 116 (7 March 2017)
[22]
Strutfast
(Pty) Ltd v Uys and Another
2017 (6) SA 491
GJ
[23]
Section 17
of the
Superior Courts Act, 10 of 2013
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