Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 19South Africa
IG Chem (Pty) Ltd and Another v Makoya Investments Zambia Limited (29879/2016) [2022] ZAGPJHC 19 (19 January 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
19 January 2022
Headnotes
the declaration that is made by a Court brings into existence debts that had not existed before and simultaneously enables the debts immediately to be enforced to the ordinary process of execution. Applied to the present facts, the debt will only arise or be brought into existence once the declaration under s20(9) of the Act is made and therefore any contention that the claim is prescribed lacks merit.
Judgment
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## IG Chem (Pty) Ltd and Another v Makoya Investments Zambia Limited (29879/2016) [2022] ZAGPJHC 19 (19 January 2022)
IG Chem (Pty) Ltd and Another v Makoya Investments Zambia Limited (29879/2016) [2022] ZAGPJHC 19 (19 January 2022)
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# IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
# GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO
: 29879/2016
DATE
:
2022.01.17
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES : NO
REVISED
In
the matter between
IG
CHEM (PTY) LTD & ANOTHER
and
MAKOYA
INVESTMENTS ZAMBIA LIMITED
J
U D G M E N T
DIPPENAAR
,
J
:
This is an action which was commenced
in the Commercial Court, for declaratory relief under section 20(9)
of the Companies
Act 71 of 2008 (“the Act”). Judgment has
already been granted against the first defendant. In the present
proceedings,
judgment is sought against the second defendant. No
relief is sought against the third defendant. Where appropriate, the
second
and third defendants will collectively be referred to as “the
defendants”.
Section 20(9)
of the Act provides as follows:
“
If on application by an
interested person or in any proceedings in which a company is
involved, a Court finds that the incorporation
of the company, any
use of the company or any act by or on behalf of the company
constitutes an unconscionable abuse of the juristic
personality of
the company as a separate entity, the Court may:
(a) Declare that the
company is to be deemed not to be a juristic person in respect of any
right, obligation or liability
of the company or of a shareholder of
the company or in the case of a non
profit
company this portion is not relevant; and
(b)
make any further order the Court considers appropriate to give effect
to a declaration contemplated in paragraph (a)”.
In the present matter, on the morning
of the hearing, Mr Venter, the third defendant and the sole
director of the second defendant,
delivered a consent to judgment by
the second defendant, which has been uploaded onto CaseLines at
section 0 1 to 2.
Mr Venter also under oath confirmed that
he was duly authorised to represent the second defendant and was duly
authorised to consent
to judgment on its behalf. I am advised that
the second and third defendant’s attorneys of record withdrew
by way of notice
dated 1 December 2021.
As
the plaintiffs sought declaratory relief, evidence was presented by
various witnesses. Plaintiff’s’ counsel, Mr Myburgh
further presented detailed argument in support of plaintiff’s
case and referred to various documents which the defendants
had in a
pre-trial conference admitted to be what they purport to be. Various
documents were also referred to which had been obtained
under
subpoena from the accountant of the second defendant.
The
relief sought by the plaintiffs has a narrow ambit and pertains to
the lifting of the corporate veil pertaining to an amount
of
R1 607 186, 25 paid as a deposit into the bank account of
the second defendant.
As
a starting point, in the pleadings the defendants had raised the
issue of prescription and I am of the view that in those
circumstances,
I need to deal with that issue in this judgment. In
argument the plaintiff relied on
Gericke v Sack
1978 (1) SA821
(A) as authority for the proposition that the onus of proof would be
on the defendant to prove such prescription.
Having consented to
judgment, no evidence was led on behalf of the defendants.
I am not of the view that the
prescription plea has any merit and can be dismissed on a legal
basis. I do not think it necessary
to delve into the long factual
history of the matter, although on the facts, as an obiter comment I
might add that I am persuaded
that the claim has not prescribed. The
plea of prescription can be disposed of on a legal basis as having no
merit, based on the
judgment of Nugent JA, writing for the Supreme
Court of Appeal in
Duet and Magnum Financial Services CC and
Liquidation v Koster
2010 4 All SA 154
(SCA), paragraph 13.
Although
Duet
dealt with prescription in the context of
voidable dispositions under the Insolvency Act, I agree with the
plaintiffs’ argument
that the declaratory order sought under
section 20(9) is analogous to declaratory relief which may be
sought in relation to
voidable dispositions under sections 26
to 31 of the Insolvency Act or under section 424 of the old
Companies Act
of 1973.
In
Duet
, the Supreme Court of
Appeal held that the declaration that is made by a Court brings into
existence debts that had not existed
before and simultaneously
enables the debts immediately to be enforced to the ordinary process
of execution. Applied to the present
facts, the debt will only arise
or be brought into existence once the declaration under s20(9) of the
Act is made and therefore
any contention that the claim is prescribed
lacks merit.
Turning
to the requirements under
section 20(9)
of the
Companies Act of
2008
, I have been referred to
City Capital SA Property Holdings
Limited v Chavonnes Badenhorst and Clair Cooper & Others
2018
(4) SA 71
(SCA) (“
City Capital”
) and I
specifically refer to paragraphs 29 and paragraph 30, which deals
with the requirement of “unconscionable abuse”
of the
juristic personality.
In paragraph 29, it is stated that
“unconscionable in the Oxford English Dictionary includes:
Showing no regard for conscious,
unreasonably, excessive, egregious,
blatant, unscrupulous”. The court went on to state:
“
It is in
my view undesirable to attempt to lay down any definition of
unconscionable abuse. It suffices to say that the unconscionable
abuse of the juristic personality of a company, as in the meaning of
section 20(9)
of the 2008 act includes the use of or an act by a
company to commit fraud or for a dishonest or improper purpose or
where the
company is used as a device or facade to conceal the true
facts. Thus where the controllers of various companies within a group
use those companies for a dishonest or improper purpose and in that
process treat the group in a way that draws no distinction
between a
separate juristic personality of the members of the group, as
happened in this case, this would constitute unconscionable
abused of
the juristic personality, the constituent members, justifying an
order under
section 20(9)
of the 2008 act.”
I agree with the plaintiff’s
argument that the facts in this matter illustrate just such conduct
and that the plaintiffs have
established unconscionable abuse of the
juristic personalities of the first and second defendants.
I
was further referred to the judgment of Binns-Ward J in
Ex Parte
Gore and Others NNO
2013 (3) SA 382
(WCC) (“
Gore
”),
which I agree, supports the plaintiffs’ case and pertains to
circumstances similar to the present.
Various
witnesses testified in this matter, including Mr Indiveri, the
director of the plaintiffs and Mr De Villiers, the financial
manager
of the first and second plaintiffs. Both Mr Indiveri and Mr De
Villiers confirmed the contents of the detailed witness
statements
delivered. Mr de Villiers dealt extensively with the
relevant facts which confirmed that the importation of
the material
took place through the second defendant, rather than the first
defendant and that the first defendant did not nor
could it comply
with its obligations under the supply agreement concluded between it
and the plaintiffs.
Mr Taljaard,
who was subpoenaed and was the erstwhile attorney of the second and
third defendants, confirmed that Mr Venter,
the third defendant
conducted his business activities through the second defendant. The
relevance of his evidence is further that
he is a trustee of the
Tanabi Family Trust, which the defendants had contended owns the
shares of the second defendant. Mr Taljaard
was unaware of the
dishonest attempt by Mr Venter to change and back date the share
certificate of the second defendant during
2018 and during the course
of this litigation. He confirmed that the Tanabi Trust had no assets
or financial records and was effectively
dormant.
The
evidence of Mr Taljaard directly refutes the contents of the
second defendant’s plea that its shareholding was never
held by
the Mr Venter, but rather that it was held by the Trust. This
evidence was also supported by the evidence and documentation
presented by Mr Barnard, who was the accountant for Mr Venter’s
entities, who testified and produced various documents
under
subpoena.
It
appears that Mr Venter went so far as to instruct his
accountants to effectively commit a fraud by trying to backdate the
shareholder certificates. As indicated by Mr Barnard, the
shareholding was never in fact changed. The evidence supports the
plaintiff’s
version of improper, untoward and abusive conduct
on the part of the second defendant.
The
defendants’ denial that Mr Venter was the sole shareholder of
the second defendant was thus false and the evidence established
that
he was the sole controlling mind of both the first and second
defendants.
Mr
Barnard’s evidence established that the first defendant never
had any books of account, never had any financial records
and never
submitted any VAT returns. On the facts I am satisfied that the
plaintiffs established that the first defendant in fact
never traded.
The evidence further established that the first defendant could not
produce any banking account. All assets were
in the name of the
second defendant, all funds flowed through the second defendant. I
conclude that the evidence established that
the first defendant was
effectively a device used to conceal the true facts.
I
further agree with the plaintiff’s argument that the ultimate
concession by Mr Venter and the second defendant in the
consent
to judgment indicates that the version proffered by the defendants in
the pleadings simply has no merit.
I
am further satisfied that the conduct here in issue, as
particularised in the particulars of claim and in the eloquent
argument
presented by Mr Myburgh, is supported by the oral and
documentary evidence which was led in the matter. It is also
supported
by the contents of the witness statements.
Considering
all the facts and applying the principles enunciated in
Gore
and
City Capital
I am satisfied that the plaintiffs have made
out a proper case for relief under section 20(9) of the Act and that
they are entitled
to the declaratory relief sought.
In
relation to the costs, the normal principle is that costs follow the
result. There is no basis to deviate from this principle.
Mr Myburgh
in detail illustrated the large amount of work which the erstwhile
senior and junior counsel involved in the matter
had done in order to
get this matter trial ready and ultimately to discover the true facts
and the untoward conduct of Mr Venter
in relation to the share
certificates and the like. Under those circumstances I am satisfied
that an order including the costs
of two counsel, where employed,
should be granted.
I
therefore
grant an order in terms of the draft marked X, which is
initialled and dated and which appears on CaseLines under
section 0,
at pages O3 to O4.
…………………………
..
DIPPENAAR,
J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
DATE
DELIVERED
: 17 January 2022
DATE
JUDGMENT REVISED
:
19 January 2022
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