Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1483South Africa
Black Sheep Capital (Pty) Ltd v Du Toit and Others (2021/35297) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1483 (21 December 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
21 December 2023
Headnotes
100% of the shares. Mr Du Toit represented H & H in respect of the sale of the business. Black Sheep alleges that Mr Du Toit gave express and tacit warranties about the ownership and title to the shares in H & H. [5] The first written agreement was subject to suspensive conditions. Black Sheep claims that the condition in Clause 2.1.1 was not fulfilled after the signature date, nor was it fulfilled by 25 March 2020, and had still not been fulfilled at the time of instituting the proceedings. The suspensive conditions read as follows —
Judgment
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## Black Sheep Capital (Pty) Ltd v Du Toit and Others (2021/35297) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1483 (21 December 2023)
Black Sheep Capital (Pty) Ltd v Du Toit and Others (2021/35297) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1483 (21 December 2023)
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sino date 21 December 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
Case
No: 2021/35297
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED
DATE:
21
December 2023
SIGNATURE:
IN
THE MATTER BETWEEN:
BLACK
SHEEP CAPITAL (PTY) LTD
PLAINTIFF/RESPONDENT
AND
WERNER
DU TOIT
1
st
DEFENDANT/EXCIPIENT
LUCY
MATSAKANE HUMAN
2
nd
DEFENDANT/EXCIPIENT
H
& H SPECIALISED SERVICES
3
rd
DEFENDANT/EXCIPIENT
(PTY)
LTD
THE
COMPANIES AND
4
th
DEFENDANT
INTELLECTUAL
PROPERTY
COMMISSION
JUDGMENT
SIWENDU
J
[1]
The court is asked to determine an exception to the amended
particulars of claim delivered
by the plaintiff on 14 September 2021,
following an action instituted against the defendants. The
all-encompassing complaint centres
on the formulation of the cause of
action. It is alleged that the particulars of claim (a) lack the
necessary averments to sustain
a cause/s of action, and/or (b) are
irregular and do not comply with Rule 18(4) of the Uniform Rules
and/or (c) are vague and embarrassing.
[2]
The background to the action, follows a series of commercial
transactions involving
the sale of the business of H & H
Specialized Services (Pty) Ltd (H & H), cited as the third
defendant in the proceedings.
The fourth defendant is the Companies
Intellectual Property Commission (CIPC). No relief is sought against
CIPC. The main protagonists
are described below, in tandem with the
background.
[3]
On 13 February 2020, the plaintiff, Black Sheep Capital (Pty)(Ltd)
(Black Sheep),
represented by Mr Hendrik Bezuidenhout (Mr
Bezuidenhout) concluded a sale of business agreement and acquired H &
H as a going
concern for R 16 250 000.00 (Sixteen
Million Two Hundred and Fifty Thousand Rand). I refer to this
agreement
as the first written agreement.
[4]
The first defendant, Mr Werner Du Toit (Mr Du Toit), as the sole
shareholder in H
& H held 100% of the shares. Mr Du Toit
represented H & H in respect of the sale of the business. Black
Sheep alleges that
Mr Du Toit gave express and tacit warranties about
the ownership and title to the shares in H & H.
[5]
The first written agreement was subject to suspensive conditions.
Black Sheep claims
that the condition in Clause 2.1.1 was not
fulfilled after the signature date, nor was it fulfilled by 25 March
2020, and had still
not been fulfilled at the time of instituting the
proceedings. The suspensive conditions read as follows
—
“
2.1
This agreement is subject to the fulfilment of the following
suspensive conditions, namely that:
2.1.1
the landlord of the premises granting to the Purchaser [an] offer to
purchase on terms and conditions acceptable to the Purchaser;
Annex
11
2.1.2
Annexures 2-11 to be completed and signed by both parties;
2.1.3
a Deed of Cession of the Seller's loan account and other claims
against the Business to the Purchaser, duly signed by the
Seller;
2.1.4
a Letter of Resignation by existing Director, addressed to the
Company, confirming the Seller’s resignation from the
employment of the Company with effect from the effective date; and
re-employment contract as International Operations & Sales
Manager
, Annex 12
2.1.5
a New Sale of shares agreement for 40% of the shares in the Business
(Company) to be entered with the seller or his nominee
Annex
“10
”’”.
[6]
It is alleged that simultaneously with, but separately from, the
first written agreement,
Mr Du Toit and Mr Bezuidenhout concluded ‘an
oral, alternatively a tacit real agreement’ (the second oral
agreement)
to sell the H & H business to Black Sheep. In other
words, the same
merx
was sold in a transaction involving the
same parties. As a result, Mr Du Toit transferred 100% of the shares
in H& H to Black
Sheep for a consideration of R12 000 000.00
(Twelve Million Rand). The consideration was payable on demand. Black
Sheep
acknowledged that the purchase price has not yet been paid but
tendered the payment to Mr Du Toit in the particulars of claim.
[7]
On 14 February 2020, H& H issued Black Sheep with a share
certificate numbered
7, duly signed by Mr Du Toit. Mr Du Toit
purportedly then bought back 40% of the 100% shares he had sold to
Black Sheep from H
& H, represented by Mr Bezuidenhout for
R6 500 000. 00 (Six Million Five Hundred Thousand Rand) I
refer to this as
the subsequent transaction 1.
[8]
The second defendant in the action is Ms Lucy Matsakane Human (Ms
Human). She acquired
the shares in H & H after the subsequent
transaction 1 above. She bought 40 % of the shares from Mr Du Toit
(subsequent transaction
2) for R12 000 000. 00 (Twelve
Million Rand) and 60% of the shares from Black Sheep for
R18 000 000.00(Eighteen
Million Rand) (subsequent
transaction 3). Leaving for the moment aside any questions about the
validity of the sale, or any conditions
attaching thereto, Ms Human
was rendered the sole shareholder in H & H. It is alleged these
subsequent transactions occurred
with the knowledge of Mr Du Toit.
[9]
In sum, Black Sheep claims there were three subsequent sale
transactions, after the
first written agreement and the “oral
alternatively a tacit real agreement”, namely:
(a)
the 40% share buyback by Mr Du Toit from Black Sheep,
(b)
the sale of the above 40% of the shares by Mr Du Toit to Ms Human and
(c)
the sale of the remaining 60% of the shares by Black Sheep to Ms
Human. Based on these transactions, Ms Human effectively holds
100%
of the shares in H & H.
[10]
Black Sheep does not rely on the first written agreement in the
action, but on the oral agreement
and seeks an order in the following
terms —
(a)
declaring and confirming that the first written agreement and the
subsequent sale agreements entered after the written sale
agreement
are not enforceable and are
void ab initio
;
(b)
determining its rights in terms of Section 161(1)
(a)
of the Companies Act 71 of 2008 (Companies Act)
[1]
;
(c)
declaring that it is a lawful shareholder of 100% of the shares in H
& H and;
(d)
An order in terms of
Section 163(2)(k)
of the
Companies Act
[2
]
directing the H & H to rectify its securities register to reflect
that Black Sheep lawful owner of the shares.
[11]
In support of the relief it seeks, Black Sheep alleges that the share
certificate issued to it
by H & H under the hand of Mr Du Toit,
is evidence of the existence of the second oral agreement on which it
relies. It claims
that its existence is “underscored” by
the fact that Mr Du Toit purported to purchase back 40% of the shares
in H&
H from it and to sell these shares to Ms Human. If its
claim that the subsequent agreements are unenforceable succeeds, it
will
hold 100% of the shares in H & H.
[12]
Black Sheep further alleges that as the holder of the security in H &
H, it was unaware of
the need to comply with
Section 51(6)(a)
of the
Companies Act
[3
], which is
detrimental to its rights. The portion of the particulars of claim
dealing with the further basis to set aside the subsequent
agreements
states that
—
“
18.
It is common cause between the parties, alternatively it hereby
becomes common cause between the parties, that the agreements
referred to in paragraph 17 are void ab initio and unenforceable. For
greater clarity, it is pleaded that the First and Second
Defendants
have averred in the proceedings under Gauteng Local Division,
Johannesburg case number 2021/25163 that the aforesaid
agreements are
void ab initio and unenforceable, which averments the Plaintiff has
accepted, alternatively hereby accepts.’
19.
At the time that the Third Defendant, represented by the First
Defendant, issued share certificate number 7, the Plaintiff,
being a
holder of securities of the Third Defendant, and/or the First
Defendant and/or the Third Defendant was unaware of the need
of
compliance with Section 51(6)(a) of the Companies Act 71 of 2008
("the Act").”
The
Exception
[13]
The defendants contend as a prelude that Black Sheep claims it
acquired the shares in H &
H based on the second oral agreement.
Black Sheep agrees that it divested itself of the shares and on this
version, it has no claim
for the shares. Their exception is mounted
on both the grounds envisaged in Rue 23(1) of the Uniform Rules of
Court.
[14]
However, the basis for the exception which occupied the hearing is
that Black Sheep baldly and
vaguely alleges in the particular of
claim that the subsequent agreements are void
ab initio
and
unenforceable. The defendants contend that this is a legal conclusion
reserved for a court to make. Black Sheep failed to plead
the factual
basis on which the conclusion is based. The submission is in essence
that it does not assist Black Sheep to merely
plead a conclusion of
law, or an opinion, or an inference. It is required to plead the
facts giving rise to and or the basis on
which it says these
subsequent agreements are void
ab initio
. It has not done so.
[15]
Allied to the above complaint is that Black Sheep relied on
“purported averments’’,
made by the defendants in
other court proceedings under case number 2021/25163, to contend that
the question of voidness is common
cause. Black Sheep does not
specify the details of these averments or where the averments are
made in those proceedings.
[16]
The basis for the opposition by Black Sheep is that
a
ll
that is required of it is to plead the material fact upon which it
relies.
It
contends that it is entitled to proceed
based on the common cause issue in those proceedings.
It complains that
the
defendants conflate the requirement to plead
facta
probanda
with
facta
probantia.
[17]
Black Sheep submits that s
ince
the
question of the
voidness
of the agreements is common cause as pleaded in the other
proceedings, the defendants are free to admit or deny this. The
particulars
provide sufficient information for them to plead. It
states that:
“
As
a matter of fact, the manner of pleading adopted by the Plaintiff is
more risk-laden for the Plaintiff as it is seriously limiting
the
grounds upon which it can seek relief at trial.”
It
states in elaboration that —
“
They
can, in denying the allegation even plead why they are of the view
that the agreements are not void ab initio should they choose
to do
so in stark conflict with their under- oath version in the
application proceedings referred to in the particulars of claim.”
Analysis
[18]
It is necessary to first deal with the primary purpose of pleadings,
articulated in several court
decisions,
[4]
namely,
to define the issues for the other party and for the court to
adjudicate on the issues so defined. What is required is stated
in
Rule
18(4)
[5]
of the Uniform Rules.
The court in
Nel
and Others NNO v Mcarthur and Others
[6]
(Nel)
clarified
that there are two separate requirements inherent in the rule, as
follows —
“
The first is that
the pleader must set out the material facts upon which it relies
for its claim and the second is that these
material facts must be set
out with sufficient particularity to enable the opposite party to
reply thereto.”
[19]
Later, in the
Minister
of Safety and Security v Slabbert
[7]
the Supreme Court of Appeal held that —
“
A party has a duty
to allege in the pleadings the material facts upon which it relies.
It is impermissible for a plaintiff to plead
a particular case and
seek to establish a different case at the trial. It is equally not
permissible for the trial court to have
recourse to issues falling
outside the pleadings when deciding a case.”
[20]
Indeed, t
he
distinction between
facta
probanda
and
facta
probantia
is well-known and derives from another often-cited decision
in
McKenzie
v Farmers' Co-operative Meat Industries Ltd
[8]
where the Court held that
facta
probanda is
—
''. . . 'Every fact that
it would be necessary for the plaintiff to prove, if traversed, in
order to support his right to the judgment
of the Court. It does
not comprise every piece of evidence which is necessary to prove each
fact, but every fact which is necessary
to be proved. . ..'''
[21]
The exception pivots on whether the pleading as it stands,
which is based on alleged common cause facts in other proceedings not
before the court is excipiable?
[22]
T
he
trite principle for dealing with exceptions is that ‘no
facts may be adduced by either party and an exception may
thus
only be taken when the defect objected against appears
ex
facie
the
pleading itself.
[9]
The court
accepts the allegations as true.
Pleading
must be considered as a whole,
not
to be dealt with in an over-technical manner but looked at
benevolently instead of over-critically at a pleading.
Only facts need to be pleaded; conclusions of law need not be
pleaded.
[10]
[23]
It bears mentioning that the utility of the requirement to set out
material facts is not only
to define the issues between the parties
but to prevent litigation by ambush.
In
Trope
v South African Reserve Bank
[11]
(Trope)
,
the court emphasized that —
“
It
is, of course, a basic principle that particulars of claim should be
so phrased that a defendant may reasonably and fairly be
required to
plead thereto. This must be seen against the background of the
further requirement that the object of pleadings is
to enable each
side to come to trial prepared to meet the case of the other and not
be taken by surprise
.
”
[24]
Counsel for Black Sheep
submitted that the Court should apply
the approach in
Inzinger v Hofmeyer and Others.
The crux of
the question is whether the defendants are severely prejudiced. In
that case, the court held that —
“
Vagueness
amounting to embarrassment and embarrassment in turn resulting in the
prejudice must be shown. Vagueness would invariably
be caused by a
defect for incompleteness in the formulation and is therefore not
limited to an absence of the necessary allegations
but also extends
to the way in which it is formulated. An exception will not be
allowed, even if it is vague and embarrassing unless
the excipient
will be seriously prejudiced if compelled to plead against which the
objection lies”.
[25]
In my view,
the submission by Black Sheep that the defendants
can plead by either an admission or a denial of the common cause
allegation must
be viewed against the decision in
Trope
and
the reciprocal obligation on a defendants imposed by Rule 18(5) that
—
“
18
(5) When in any pleading a party denies an allegation of fact in the
previous pleading of the opposite party, he or she shall
not do so
evasively, but shall answer the point of substance”.
The
defendants are required to “
give
a fair and clear answer to every point of substance raised by a
plaintiff in his declaration or particulars of claim, by frankly
admitting or explicitly denying every material matter alleged against
him
.”
[12]
[26]
To return to the problem, from the pleadings as they stand, t
he
relief Black Sheep seeks is predicated on a declaration
of voidness of the subsequent sale agreements. The real issues
therefore involve the validity of the subsequent sale agreements.
As
argued by Counsel for the defendants, the question of invalidity is a
conclusion of law and not a fact
[13]
.
[27]
The question posed to Black Sheep was on which
pleaded facts must this question of voidness be decided and or
inferred? In answer,
B
lack Sheep contends that it has accepted
the material factors as stated by the defendants in the other
proceedings. It submitted
that Black Sheep does not need to plead the
grounds upon which it says the “common cause fact exist.”
The defendants
merely need to confirm or deny “there is
commonality.” Black Sheep has taken a “calculated risk”
to prove
those common cause facts at the trial or it will not be
entitled to relief, so the argument went.
[28]
The reliance on f
acts
incorporated by reference to reports or some other matter is
eschewed.
[14]
This Court in
Keith
Ackerman and Another v Gideon Jacobus Schmidt
[15]
stated
that —
“
To
annex numerous e-mails to the particulars of claim, hardly provides a
clear and concise statement.”
[29]
T
he difficulty is that Black Sheep does
not identify the common cause facts it relies on. Importantly, the
relief it seeks, involves
multiple agreements. Black Sheep is not a
common party to all the subsequent agreements. To illustrate the
difficulty of relying
on common cause admissions made in some other
proceedings, some of the agreements attached to the particulars of
claim have not
been executed by any of the parties to it.
What
was in the contemplation of or known to the parties for the purpose
of the proceedings at hand is a matter of fact going to
the
determination of the issues. It cannot be ascertained by a reference
to “common cause facts” allegedly admitted
in a matter
not before the court, and on facts not disclosed or identified.
Contrary to restricting the scope of disputed facts, the
approach by Black Sheep widens the scope of unknown facts.
[30]
The argument by Black Sheep also overlooks the second leg of
the rule pertaining to pleadings, namely that Black Sheep must set
out the material facts “
with sufficient particularity
”
to enable the defendants to plead.
There is no
discernible factual basis on which to find the agreements void and to
set the agreements aside. Instead, the risk
of a litigation by
ambush together with an inability to comply with
Rule 18(5)
is evident. The defendants will be
seriously prejudiced. Since I determine the issue on the basis
that the pleadings are vague
and embarrassing, that means the defect
can be cured.
[31]
There is no reason why the costs should not follow the result.
[32]
Accordingly, I make the following order
—
a.
The exception is upheld.
b.
Leave is granted to the plaintiff to amend its particulars within 10
days of the order.
c.
The plaintiff is ordered to pay the costs of the application.
NTY SIWENDU
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ legal representatives via email, and release to
SAFLII. The date and time for hand down is deemed to be 21 December
2023 at 10: am.
Date
of hearing:
17 October 2023
Date
Delivered:
21 December 2023
Appearances:
For the Excipients/
Defendants:
Adv
Natalie Marshall
Instructed by:
Pretorius Davies
Inc
For the Respondent/
Plaintiff:
Adv
Charles Thompson
Instructed by:
W J Bezuidenhout
Inc
[1]
Section 161 (1) (a) states that: “A
holder
of issued securities of a company may apply to a Court for
—
(a)
an order determining any rights of that
securities holder in terms of this Act, the company’s
Memorandum of Incorporation,
any rules of the company, or any
applicable debt instrument.
[2]
Section 163 (2) states that: “Upon
and
considering an application in terms of subsection (1), the court may
make an interim or final order it considers fit including
—
(k) an order directing
rectification of the registers or other records of a company;”
[3]
Section
51(6)(a) states that: “A company may make an entry
contemplated in subsection (5) only if the transfer _ (a) is
evidenced by a proper instrument of transfer that has been delivered
to the company.”
[4]
Molusi
and Others v Voges No and Others
2016 (3) SA 370 (CC)
[5]
''Every pleading shall contain a clear and concise statement of the
material facts upon which the pleader relies for his claim,
defence
or answer to any pleading, as the case may be,
with
sufficient particularity to enable the opposite party to reply
thereto.
''
[6]
2003 (4) SA 142
(T) at 146D
[7]
[2009] ZASCA 163; [2010] 2 All SA 474 (SCA).
[8]
1922 AD 16
at 23
[9]
Herbstein
and Van Winsen
5
th
Ed, 2009 p 630
[10]
Jowell
v Bramwell-Jones and Others
1998
(1) SA 836
(W) at 903B.
[11]
1992 (3) SA 208
(T)
at
210G-H
[12]
FPS
Ltd v Trident Construction (Pty) Ltd
1989(3)
SA 537 at 542A-B. See also Uniform Rule 22(2) and (3)
[13]
Claasen
v Bester
2012 (2) SA 404
at para 11.
[14]
D
oyle
v Sentraboer (Co-operative) Ltd
1993 (3) SA 176 (SE)
at 181E–F.
[15]
[2019]
JOL 41179
(GP)
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