Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1133South Africa
Edmunds and Another v Supreme Mouldings Investments (Pty) Ltd and Another (2021/36175) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1133 (9 October 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
5 June 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Edmunds and Another v Supreme Mouldings Investments (Pty) Ltd and Another (2021/36175) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1133 (9 October 2023)
Edmunds and Another v Supreme Mouldings Investments (Pty) Ltd and Another (2021/36175) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1133 (9 October 2023)
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sino date 9 October 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO:
2021/36175
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
09/10/23
In
the matter between:
EDMUNDS,
NEIL JOHN
First
Applicant
SCHULTZ,
FRANZ JOSEPH
Second
Applicant
And
SUPREME
MOULDINGS INVESTMENTS (PTY) LIMITED
First
Respondent
SUPREME
MOULDINGS (PTY) LIMITED
Second
Respondent
JUDGMENT ON
APPLICATION FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL
This
judgment is deemed to be handed down upon uploading by the Registrar
to the electronic court file.
Gilbert AJ:
1. The applicants
seek leave to appeal my decision handed down on 5 June 2023.
Although the application for leave
to appeal was timeously launched
on 27 June 2023, it was only last month, September 2023, that I was
approached for dates for the
hearing of the application. The
application was heard within some two weeks of the approach.
2.
The Supreme
Court of Appeal in
Ramakatsa
and Another v African National Congress and Another
[1]
sets out the test as to whether there is a reasonable prospect of
success on appeal as envisaged in section 17(1)(a) of the
Supreme Courts Act, 2013:
“
Leave
to appeal may only be granted where the judges concerned are of the
opinion that the appeal would have a reasonable prospect
of success
or there are compelling reasons which exist why the appeal should be
heard such as the interests of justice. …
I am mindful of the
decisions at high court level debating whether the use of the word
‘would’ as opposed to ‘could’
possibly means
that the threshold for granting the appeal has been raised. If
a reasonable prospect of success is established,
leave to
appeal should be granted. ... The test of reasonable prospects
of success postulates a dispassionate decision
based on the
facts and the law that a court of appeal could reasonably arrive
at a conclusion different to that of the trial
court. In other words,
the appellants in this matter need to convince this Court on proper
grounds that they have prospects
of success on appeal.
Those prospects of success must not be remote, but there must exist a
reasonable chance of
succeeding.
A sound rational basis for
the conclusion that there are prospects of success must be
shown to exist
.”
3. The main grounds
upon which the applicants submit that I erred are that:
3.1. I erred in finding
in that there does not appear to have been any discernible
prejudicial effect caused by the impugned irregular
transactions on
the value of Supreme Mouldings, and in turn on the value of
Investments and the applicants’ minorities shareholding
in
Investments;
3.2. I erred in “
in
looking at actions and/or facilities and/or ‘upside of the
benefits’ and/or ‘wider commercial view’ outside
the oppressive or prejudicial conduct complained of to determine the
effect of such oppressive or prejudicial conduct towards the
applicants”.
4. These two
grounds, which are related, essentially are that I should have
confined myself to what the applicants contended
was the negative
effect that the impugned transactions had on the value of Supreme
Mouldings, and therefore indirectly on their
shareholding in
Investments as the holding company of Supreme Mouldings, and that I
should not have looked at the upside the impugned
transactions had on
Supreme Mouldings, and therefore indirectly on their shareholding in
Investments. The applicants may not have
posited their challenge as
starkly as this, but this is what it amounts to.
5. I am not of the
opinion that this is a sound rational basis for the conclusion that
there are prospects of success of
appeal. In my view, this
blinkered approach advanced by the applicants to look only at the
negative consequences that the impugned
transactions may indirectly
have had on their shareholding in Investments is unsustainable, for
the reasons given in my judgment,
such as in paragraphs 24 to 29 and
33.
6.
As a
fallback position, the applicants submitted that, if a ‘wider
commercial view’, is to be taken, I in any event
erred by not
taking into account other reasons why the conduct complained of may
be unfairly prejudicial. But in doing so the applicants
lose sight of
what they plead in their founding affidavit is the effect of the
conduct of which they complain, which is negative
effect the impugned
transactions that took place in Supreme Mouldings had on their
minority shareholding in Investments.
[2]
The applicants cannot under the rubric of the court taking a ‘wider
commercial view’ bring into account other reasons
why the
conduct complained of may be unfairly prejudicial. I considered the
‘wider commercial view’ in assessing whether
the conduct
complained of is unfairly prejudicial in the manner described by the
applicants, which is the effect of the impugned
transactions on the
value of their minority shareholding in Investments.
7. Many of those
factors that the applicants list that I should have taken into
account in adopting a ‘wider commercial
view’, as well as
the remaining grounds set out in the application for leave to appeal,
conflate the applicants’ interests
as minority shareholders in
Investments, which is what the case is about, with what their
interests may have been as minority
shareholders in Supreme
Mouldings where the impugned conduct occurred, but which is not what
the case is about. Although the applicants
as minority shareholders
in Investments accepted that they would have to show that the
impugned conduct impacted indirectly on
their minority shareholding
in Investments, they appear to lose sight of this in their grounds
for leave to appeal, which raise
issues that may have affected them
as minority shareholders in Supreme Mouldings, but not in
Investments.
8. These further
grounds in the application also seek to focus on the impugned conduct
in and of itself – being the
relevant financing transactions
failing to comply with
section 45
of the
Companies Act, 2008
–
rather than the indirect effect of that impugned conduct on the value
of their minority shareholding in Investments, which
is what their
case is about.
9. The applicants’
also submitted that I had erred, such as in paragraphs 11 and 32 of
my judgment, in finding that
a jurisdictional requirement for relief
under
section 163(1)
was whether it would be just and equitable
to grant the relief. The applicants submit that consideration of what
was just and equitable
only arises when considering what form of
relief is to be granted under
section 163(2).
The applicants’
submission continued that in taking the ‘wider commercial view’
I had and in particular in considering
the ‘upside’ of
the impugned conduct had had on the value of their minority
shareholding in Investments, that was not
something I should have
done when considering whether a case had been made out, particularly
in an assessment of whether it would
be just and equitable to grant
relief.
10. I am not of the
opinion that this is a sound rational basis why there is a reasonable
prospect that an appeal court would find
that I had erred when
considering whether the jurisdictional requirements for
section
163(1)(a)
had been met, and in considering the factors that I did in
deciding whether the impugned conduct was unfairly prejudicial in
relation
to the value of the applicants’ minority shareholding
in Investments.
Section 163(1)(a)
refers not merely to any act or
omission of the company but to an act or omission that “
has
a result that is oppressive or unfairly prejudicial to, or that
unfairly disregards the interests of, the applicant
”. It is
the result of the conduct that must be considered, and that result
cannot be considered in isolation of those issues
which the
applicants submit I should not have considered.
11. As to whether I had
erred in finding that a jurisdictional requirement is that it must be
found that it is just and equitable
for relief to be granted, in my
judgment I referred to paragraph 23 of
Louw and Others v Nel
2011
(2) SA 172
(SCA) as support for this requirement. While it may be so
that that paragraph could be read as requiring a consideration of
what
is just and equitable only in relation to the specific form of
the relief to be granted (and I am by no means persuaded that this
is
the correct reading of the judgment), the factors that I considered
would in any event be considered in an assessment of whether
the
conduct was
unfairly
prejudicial or
unfairly
disregarded the interests of the applicants. I am not of the opinion
that there is a reasonable prospect that an appeal court would
find
that a consideration of what was unfair must be done without a
consideration of “
the upside of the benefits
”
brought about by the impugned transactions and the “
wider
commercial view
” of the effect of the impugned transactions
on the value of the applicants’ minority shareholding in
Investments.
12. As to the submission
during argument by the applicants that the legal issue - whether the
just and equitable requirement belongs
to an assessment of whether a
case has been made out for relief under
section 163
, or whether it
only has a place in relation to the form of the relief to be granted
- is something worthy of consideration on appeal,
apart from this not
being a ground of appeal in the application for leave to appeal, on
the facts of this case it would make no
difference, for the reasons
set out above. This legal issue does not constitute a compelling
reason for leave to appeal to be granted,
in this matter.
13. The application for
leave to appeal is dismissed with costs, the applicants to pay the
costs, jointly and severally.
Gilbert AJ
Date of hearing:
27 September 2023
Date of judgment: 9
October 2023
Counsel for the
applicants:
Adv G V Meijers
Instructed by:
Louw Louw Inc
Representative for the
respondents:
K J van Huyssteen
(Attorney)
Fluxmans Attorneys
[1]
[2021] ZASCA 31
para 10. My emphasis.
[2]
See
paragraph 16 of my judgment.
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