Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 64South Africa
TP v DN (21859/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 64 (1 February 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
1 February 2022
Headnotes
given the level of distrust between the parties and the risk of bias, an independent body is to appoint the liquidator. 15. Counsel for the respondent submitted that the parties, although married out of community of property, with the accruals to apply, shared a “joint estate.” It was submitted that there should be an equal division of the profits from the proceeds of the sale and the accrual can only be determined upon dissolution of the marriage in terms of the provisions of the Matrimonial Property Act 88 of 1984.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## TP v DN (21859/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 64 (1 February 2022)
TP v DN (21859/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 64 (1 February 2022)
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sino date 1 February 2022
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
No. 21859/2021
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
REVISED:
Date:
07/02/2022
IN
THE APPLICATION BETWEEN
T[....]
P[....]
Applicant
and
D[....]
N[....]
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MAHOMED
AJ,
# INTRODUCTION
INTRODUCTION
1.
This is an application for the appointment
of a liquidator to sell immovable property which the parties
purchased together and is
the only asset in their partnership. The
application is for the dissolution of a partnership. The parties are
married out of community
of property with accruals. The applicant
seeks an order for the appointment of Ms Symes as liquidator to sell
the property and
manage debts of the partnership. The respondent
brings a counterapplication for the division of a joint estate and
the appointment
of an independent liquidator to be appointed by the
Chairman of the Johannesburg Society of Advocates who must sell the
property
that the parties own jointly.
2.
The parties are in an acrimonious
relationship, and they cannot agree on the price or person/s who
should sell the only asset in
the partnership.
3.
It is common cause that the applicant
services the bond and levies on the property. The parties agree that
the property is to be
sold however they are deeply divided on the
price it is to be sold for and the person appointed to sell the
property. This dispute
has been ongoing for a long while therefore
the termination of this partnership will benefit both parties.
4.
The applicant has paid toward the bond
throughout their marriage, whilst the respondent, it is alleged,
takes no responsibility
for the property, and suffers no
inconvenience for as long as the bond is in place. The respondent was
to pay the levies and insurance
costs on the property; however, he
has abandoned this duty along the way. The evidence is that he has no
incentive to expedite
the finalisation of this matter and has been
obstructive in finalising the sale.
5.
Furthermore, the parties cannot agree on
the appointment of a liquidator, as they distrust one another and
therefore any appointments
of a liquidator, made by the other.
# THE EVIDENCE
THE EVIDENCE
6.
Mr Janeke appeared for the applicant and
submitted that the parties owned the property jointly in a
partnership and the division
of the proceeds must be managed
according to the principles of partnership.
7.
He submitted that the residue (profit) from
the sale of the property should be divided by reference to whichever
of the parties
paid more than their 50% toward the property.
8.
The applicant has identified a Ms Symes, to
act as liquidator, whom counsel confirms is available to act if
appointed. Mr Janeke
submitted that a delay in the appointment
further burdens the applicant. He alleged Ms Symes has worked in the
field and is qualified
to act as such.
9.
Mr Janeke further submitted that the
liquidator shall have all the normal powers to act as has been
confirmed in various cases in
our courts. See:
MILLS
v MILLS SAFLII
2008 ZAWCHC 121
, S v S
2018 (6) SA 528
WCC 27 JUNE
2018 ,
including the power to obtain
the best price for the property and the power to adjust amounts due
according to their respective
contributions above their 50%
obligations in terms of the partnership.
10.
Mr Janeke submitted further that the
disbursements costs must be ordered to be paid from the respondent’s
adjusted share.
In amplification thereof,
10.1.
He submitted that the property has grown in
value as the bond is reduced, entirely by the applicants paying for
this bond.
10.2.
It was not disputed that the respondent
“colluded” with a potential buyer to set the purchase
price.
10.3.
Furthermore, Mr Janeke proffered that the
respondent was obstructive when he insisted on unrealistic
commissions charges by agents,
who were unable to meet his demands,
and the property remains the applicant’s responsibility and is
still to be sold. The
applicant has been frustrated in her attempts
to sell the property and has simply given up in her search for a
buyer.
11.
The respondent’s version is that the
parties had agreed that the applicant would pay the bond and he would
pay for the levies
and insurances on the property. Based on those
terms the applicant received a higher salary from the family business
and he, the
respondent drew a lower amount, with the difference in
salary having been factored in to ensure equal contributions.
12.
The evidence is that the applicant has been
obstructive in settling on a sale price. It was not disputed that the
applicant turned
down offers for higher amounts that were put to her
for approval. Counsel for the respondent, Ms Rambachan -Naidoo,
submitted that
the applicant failed and refused to make a reasonable
sound business decision, during what can be easily called “a
buyer’s
market.”
13.
Furthermore, it was submitted on behalf of
the respondent, that the applicant failed to disclose to him that she
had leased the
property and collected rentals, which she had made
payable into her mother’s account. This diverting of income due
to the
partnership was not disputed. The respondent is of the view
that the applicant cannot be trusted to make the best decisions for
their joint estate.
14.
The respondent submitted that he has lost
his faith in applicant and therefore cannot agree to her choice of
liquidator. The respondent
prays for an order wherein the Chairman of
the Johannesburg Society of Advocates should appoint a liquidator.
14.1.
In this regard I was referred to the case
of
M v M 82156/14 [2017] ZAGPPHC 1080.
2018 (3) SA 225
GP (20 November 2017),
where the court held that given the level of distrust between the
parties and the risk of bias, an independent body is to appoint
the
liquidator.
15.
Counsel for the respondent submitted that
the parties, although married out of community of property, with the
accruals to apply,
shared a “joint estate.” It was
submitted that there should be an equal division of the profits from
the proceeds
of the sale and the accrual can only be determined upon
dissolution of the marriage in terms of the provisions of the
Matrimonial Property Act 88 of 1984
.
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
16.
The parties are clearly in an acrimonious
relationship to a point where they act to their prejudice.
# THE MATRIMONIAL PROPERTY
THE MATRIMONIAL PROPERTY
17.
The parties each agreed to contribute
toward the purchase of their property for a profit and it was a
lawful agreement. These are
the
essentialia
of a partnership. They effectively
purchased property within a partnership arrangement. Their marital
regime does not accommodate
a joint estate, as was submitted by
counsel for the respondent, but a commercial partnership.
18.
The Matrimonial Property Act 84 of 1988
defines “joint estate” as
“
the
joint estate of a husband and a wife married in community of
property.”
19.
The parties in casu are married in terms of
an antenuptial contract with accruals. I agree with counsel for the
applicant they do
not share a joint estate within the meaning of this
Act.
20.
It is common cause that the partnership
must be dissolved, and the property sold to realise a benefit to them
both. The property
is their former marital home and is currently
vacant.
21.
The evidence is that one party contributed
more than the other and therefor an adjustment to reflect their
percentage contributions
is the only just and fair method to
calculate their ultimate profits from the sale.
22.
In
ROBSON v
THERON
1978 (1) SA 841
A,
the court
stated that for purposes of distribution of the partnership assets an
account must be drawn up to determine what each
partner “owed
the partnership” and thereafter determine what is due to each
partner by that partnership.
# APPOINTMENT OF LIQUIDATOR
APPOINTMENT OF LIQUIDATOR
23.
Given the level of acrimony and distrust
between the parties, it would serve them best to ensure an unbiased
and reliable means
to dispose of their partnership asset.
24.
The decision in
M
v M
, supra, is instructive and against
the conspectus of the evidence before me, I am of the view that it is
appropriate in the circumstances
to order that the Chairman of the
Johannesburg Society of Advocates, be called upon to appoint an
independent liquidator in this
matter, on behalf of the parties.
# COSTS
COSTS
25.
Counsels made submissions on the issue of
who is to pay costs of the liquidation and the reasons they proffered
were based on the
behaviour and attitude of the other party in this
matter.
26.
In my view both parties were equally
responsible for the slow pace and unnecessarily convoluted path that
this simple matter was
dragged along.
26.1.
Accordingly, I am of the view that each
party is to share equally the cost of the dissolution of the
partnership and the sale of
this property.
26.2.
There is only one asset to realise, its
price often easily determined on current market trends, it ought not
to have taken up a
court’s limited valuable resources to
resolve the dispute.
26.3.
Moreover, the parties could have resolved
issues by resorting to the effective use of R41 A, which must be
taken more seriously,
particularly in such disputes between persons
who, share relationships. In
casu
they are parents to their child.
26.4.
Counsel for the respondent submitted a
simple cost-effective method could have been to place names into a
hat and one name pulled
out, which could also have avoided this long
delay, which the applicant complained has caused her much financial
hardship.
# POWERS OF THE LIQUIDATOR
POWERS OF THE LIQUIDATOR
27.
As to the powers of the liquidator, our law
is clear and provides for the various bodies with an oversight role
to ensure that a
party’s interests are protected.
28.
I have noted that each of parties in their
orders set out the powers of the liquidator, which are similar.
28.1.
The Liquidator shall have the following
powers and functions:
(a)
To take control over the estate of the
partnership between the parties and to assume all powers as
administrator thereof.
(b)
To accumulate details of all liabilities of
the partnership.
(c)
To sign and execute any document or deed in
respect of the immovable property of the partnership thereby enabling
transfer of the
immovable property situated at
[....]
Breakfree Estate, Mimosa Road, Summerset, Midrand being Erf [....]
Summerset: Extension 18.
(d)
To realise the immovable property at the
price that he/she deems fit to be the true market value of asset
either by public auction
or private treaty;
(e)
To engage the services of any suitably
qualified person or persons to assist in determining the proper value
or whereabouts of any
assets of the partnership and to pay such
person or persons the reasonable fees which may be charged by
her/him;
(f)
To apply to this Court for any further
directions as he/she shall or may consider necessary;
(g)
To institute legal proceedings against any
person for the delivery to her/him of any assets, in the partnership
in whatever Court
it shall be appropriate to bring such proceedings;
(h)
To instruct and appoint attorneys and/or
counsel to institute proceedings on his/her behalf for the purpose of
obtaining delivery
of any such assets alleged to be vested in the
partnership and to obtain such other or alternative relief as the
circumstances
may require, the costs of Counsel and/or attorneys to
be paid by the partnership in accordance with the principals set out
in
Muller v The Master and Others
,
1992(4) SA 277 (T);
(i)
To pay the liabilities of the partnership;
(j)
To pay his/her reasonable fees and to
apportion such fees between the parties in the same proportion as
they are entitled to the
assets of the partnership;
28.2.
The division of the net assets shall be
subject to the protection of the rights and claims of secured and
preferent creditors of
the partnership.
28.3.
Any losses suffered by the partnership as a
result of the wrongful behaviour of either of the parties or any
previous liquidator
in dissipating the assets (if applicable), shall
be borne exclusively by such party and a distribution and division of
the assets
of the partnership or the proceeds thereof, as the case
be, shall accordingly be subject to adjustment in accordance with
his/her
discretion.
28.4.
The liquidator is entitled and authorised
to compensate a party from the proceeds of the sale of the property
for all expenses paid
by such party in excess of their obligations to
contribute 50% of all expenses to the partnership as a preferent
claim against
the proceeds thereof, as the case may be, which shall
accordingly be subject to adjustment in accordance with his/her
discretion.
I
make the following Order:
1.
The counterapplication in this matter is
dismissed.
2.
The Chairman of the Johannesburg Society of
Advocates is to within thirty (30) days of this Order, appoint a
liquidator to attend
to the sale of the party’s asset in their
partnership.
3.
That the partnership existing between the
applicant and the respondent in respect of the fixed property
situated at
“
[....]
Breakfree Estate, Mimosa Road, Sumerset, Midrand being Erf [....]
Sumerset: Extension 18”
is
hereby dissolved.
4.
The cost of liquidation is to be paid by
each party in equal shares.
5.
Each party is to pay their own costs.
_______________________
S
MAHOMED
Acting
Judge of the High Court
This
judgment was prepared and authored by Acting Judge Mahomed. It is
handed down electronically by circulation to the parties
or their
legal representatives by email and by uploading it to the electronic
file of this matter on Caselines. The date for hand-down
is deemed to
be 7 February 2022.
Date
of Hearing:
19
January 2022
Date
of Judgment:
7 February 2022
Appearances:
For
Applicant:
Mr C
Janeke
On
behalf of
Chris Janeke Attorneys
Tel:
011 915 5801
Email:
sonelda@chrisjaneke.co.za
For
Respondent:
Adv N Rambachan-Naidoo
Instructed
by:
Van Rhyns
Attorneys Inc
Cell:
082 778 9387
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