Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 92South Africa
Valencia Holdings 13 (Pty) Limited and Others v Armitage N.O. (A5043/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 92 (23 February 2022)
Headnotes
Summary: Company law – Companies Act 71 of 2008, s 163 – oppressive conduct and conduct that is unfairly prejudicial to shareholder – proceedings against company and its directors – action for relief by shareholder against directors of, and fellow shareholders in company – arising from loans advanced to shareholders in terms of agreement between all shareholders –
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Valencia Holdings 13 (Pty) Limited and Others v Armitage N.O. (A5043/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 92 (23 February 2022)
Valencia Holdings 13 (Pty) Limited and Others v Armitage N.O. (A5043/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 92 (23 February 2022)
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sino date 23 February 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO
:
A5043/2020
DATE
:
23 February 2022
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
REVISED:
In
the matter between:
VALENCIA
HOLDINGS 13 (PTY) LIMITED
First Appellant
GREEN
,
SHAUN MICHAEL
Second Appellant
SMITH
,
MARK DOUGLAS
Third Appellant
HOY
,
RONALD JAMES
Fourth Appellant
STANBRIDGE
,
DEREK NORMAN
Fifth Appellant
RODITIS
,
ALEXANDER ELIAS
Sixth Appellant
and
ARMITAGE
,
MICHELLE NO
Respondent
Coram:
Fisher
J, Adams J
et
Malindi J
Heard
: 8
November 2021 – The ‘virtual hearing’ of the Full
Court Appeal was conducted as a videoconference on
Microsoft
Teams
.
Delivered:
23
February 2022 – This judgment was handed down electronically by
circulation to the parties' representatives
via
email, by being uploaded to
CaseLines
and by release to SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed
to be 10:00 on 23 February 2022.
Summary:
Company law –
Companies Act 71 of 2008
,
s 163
–
oppressive conduct and conduct that is unfairly prejudicial to
shareholder – proceedings against company and its
directors –
action for relief by shareholder against directors of, and fellow
shareholders in company – arising from
loans advanced to
shareholders in terms of agreement between all shareholders –
Section
162
of the
Companies Act – declaring
directors as delinquent –
the principles discussed –
ORDER
On
appeal from:
The Gauteng Division
of the High Court, Johannesburg (Matojane J sitting as Court of
first instance):
(1)
The appellants’ appeal against paragraphs 1.1, 1.2, 1.3, 1.4
and
1.6 of the order of the court
a quo
is upheld, with costs,
including the costs of the application for leave to appeal and the
costs consequent upon the employment
of two Counsel, one being a
Senior Counsel.
(2)
The respondent’s cross-appeal is dismissed with costs,
including
the costs of the application for leave to appeal and the
costs consequent upon the employment of two Counsel, one being a
Senior
Counsel.
(3)
The above paragraphs 1.1, 1.2, 1.3, 1.4 and 1.6 of the order of the
court
a quo
are set aside and in its place is substituted the
following: -
‘
(a)
The plaintiff’s claims are dismissed, with costs’.
JUDGMENT
Adams
J (Fisher J
et
Malindi J concurring):
[1]
As a general rule, a shareholder in a company
contracts and undertakes to be bound by the decisions of the majority
of shareholders,
even where such decisions adversely affect his own
rights as a shareholder, provided those decisions on the affairs of
the company
are lawful. In that regard, an act of the company that is
oppressive or unfairly prejudicial to, or that unfairly disregards
the
interests of a shareholder, is outlawed. Similarly, the powers of
a director of a company cannot and should not be exercised in
a
manner that is oppressive or unfairly prejudicial to or that unfairly
disregards the interests of a shareholder.
[2]
These
are the principles in issue in this appeal. In particular, we are
required to decide whether conduct on the part of the first
appellant
[1]
(‘Valencia’)
through its directors, the second to fifth appellants
[2]
,
and the sixth appellant
[3]
, in
granting interest-free loans to the second to fifth respondents,
amounted to such unlawful conduct.
[3]
In
the court
a
quo
,
the respondent
[4]
, who acts
herein in her capacity as executrix in the estate of her late
husband, Mr Alan Armitage (‘the deceased’),
contended
that such conduct indeed amounted to an oppressive act, which, in any
event, unfairly prejudiced her and disregarded
her interest as a
shareholder. The court
a
quo
(per Matojane J) agreed with the respondent and granted judgment
separately against the second to fourth appellants in her favour
for
compensation by the second to fifth appellants in several amounts,
totalling R6 768 900, which equates to the total
proceeds
of a life assurance policy taken out in favour of these appellants on
the life of the deceased.
[4]
In sum, the court
a
quo
held that Valencia and its
remaining four directors, the second to fifth appellants, unfairly
discriminated against the respondent
as she was not treated equally
like other shareholders. Equity and fairness, so the court
a
quo
concluded, demand that the
second to fifth respondents pay compensation to the respondent in the
total sum of R6 768 900,
against which the respondent
should deliver in negotiable form the appropriate percentage of her
share in Valencia.
[5]
The court
a
quo
, however, dismissed the
respondent’s claim for an order declaring the second to sixth
appellants, delinquent directors.
[6]
The appellants appeal against the judgment and
the order of the court
a quo
in terms of which the second to fifth appellants were separately
ordered to make payment to the respondent of amounts totalling
R6 768 900. The respondent cross-appeals against the court
a quo’s
refusal to declare the second to sixth appellants as delinquent
directors. Both the appeal and the cross-appeal are with the leave
of
the court
a quo
.
[7]
The questions to be answered in the appeal and
the cross appeal are the following: (1) Is the respondent entitled to
the relief
granted in her favour against the first to fifth
appellants? And (2) Should the court
a
quo
have declared the said
appellants as delinquent directors or placed them on probation?
[8]
These issues are to be decided against the
factual backdrop as set out in the paragraphs which follow. The facts
which are material
to the issues to be decided in this appeal are, in
my view, by and large common cause if regard is had to the pleadings
in the
court
a quo
and the evidence led on behalf of the parties. In that regard, the
parties relied only on expert evidence in support of their respective
cases. The opinions of the expert witnesses naturally relied and were
premised on documentary evidence, which, more often than
not, was not
contested by the other side.
[9]
The deceased, who passed away on 12 December
2013, was a shareholder in and a director of Valencia until the date
of his death.
Seventy-five percent of the shares in Valencia was
owned by the parties in this litigation as follows: the second
appellant (‘Mr
Green’) – 7.5%; the third respondent
(‘Mr Smith’) – 27.33%; the fourth respondent
(‘Mr
Hoy’) – 27.33%; the fifth respondent (‘Mr
Stanbridge’) – 5.33%; and the deceased – 7.5%. The
remaining 25% shares in Valencia are held by Justice Khumalo, Pamela
Promise Mallela and Sisi Dlamini, who were not involved in
the
dispute between the parties and who played no role in this
litigation.
[10]
On the 30 September 2011 all of the
shareholders in Valencia concluded a written shareholders’
agreement, which regulates
their relationship as shareholders of the
said company. The directors of Valencia are Mr Smith, Mr Hoy and
Mr Stanbridge,
and, as already indicated, the deceased was also a
director up to and until the date of this death on 12 December 2013.
Up to 20
July 2018, Mr Green was also a director, whereas Justice
Khumalo, Pamela Promise Mallela and Sisi Dlamini occupied positions
as
directors until 23 March 2016.
[11]
Valencia had two wholly owned subsidiaries,
namely MDS International Skills (Pty) Ltd (‘MDS Skills’)
and MDS NDT Consultants
(Pty) Ltd (‘MDS Consultants’).
The second to sixth appellants are all directors of both these
subsidiaries, as was
the deceased until the date of his death on 12
December 2013.
[12]
The second to fifth appellants and the
deceased, as shareholders of Valencia, took out and contributed to a
life indemnity insurance
policy on each other’s lives. On the
death of the deceased, the life indemnity insurance policy paid out
the amount of R6 768 900,
which was distributed in
proportion to their shareholding to Messrs Green, Smith, Hoy and
Stanbridge, as the beneficiaries of the
policy.
[13]
In the court
a
quo
, the respondent in her action
essentially sought an order compelling Messrs Green, Smith, Hoy and
Stanbridge to buy the 7,5% shareholding
of the deceased in Valencia
for the full amount of the indemnity insurance policy pay-out, that
being R6 768 900, together
with interest on this amount
from the date on which the proceeds of the policy were paid out.
[14]
The court
a quo
rejected the respondent’s claim for the said sum based on an
alleged oral agreement concluded during 2012 between the second
to
fifth appellants and the deceased. The court found that there was no
evidence in support of the alleged oral agreement, the
existence of
which, so the court
a quo
found, was belied by the non-variation clause in the shareholders’
agreement, which contained no such provision on which
the respondent
could base a claim for payment of the proceeds of the life assurance
policy.
[15]
What the shareholders’ agreement did
provide was that the proceeds from the insurance pay-out would be
used by the surviving
shareholders to purchase the shares of the
deceased and that the purchase and sale of the shares would be
governed by the relevant
clauses (clause 19) in the agreement, which
included provisions relating to the valuation of the shares. The
claim by the respondent
based on the express provisions of the
shareholders’ agreement was also rejected by Matojane J, as,
according to him, the
respondent did not make out a case for the
relief if regard is had to the express provisions of the agreement.
The simple point,
as held by the court
a
quo
, is that the disposal of the
shares of the deceased was regulated by and should have occurred in
accordance with the provisions
of the shareholders’ agreement,
which required that the shares in Valencia were to be sold to the
remaining shareholders
at fair value to be determined by the auditors
in accordance with further provisions in the shareholders’
agreement. The
procedures prescribed by the shareholders’
agreement were not followed, which meant that the respondent could
not rely on
the said agreement for the relief sought. Accordingly,
the respondent’s claim based on the written shareholders’
agreement
was refused by the court
a
quo
.
[16]
We need not concern ourselves with these
findings by the court
a quo
,
as the respondent does not appeal these rulings.
[17]
The respondent was however successful with her
claim advanced on the basis of the provisions of
section 163
of the
Companies Act, Act
71 of 2008 (‘the
Companies Act&rsquo
;),
premised on oppressive and/or prejudicial conduct on the part of
Valencia through Messrs Green, Smith, Hoy and Stanbridge. The
case of
the respondent was that an appropriate order to make good the alleged
oppressive and/or prejudicial conduct inflicted on
the deceased was
that Messrs Green, Smith, Hoy and Stanbridge be ordered to pay to the
deceased estate the amount of R6 768 900,
together with
interest thereon.
[18]
The Court
a quo
agreed with the respondent and, in terms of
s 163(2)(j)
of the
Companies Act, ordered
the second to fifth appellants to purchase the
shares of the deceased in Valencia for the amount of R6 768 900,
together
with interest thereon.
[19]
It was the respondent’s case that the
following conduct on the part of Valencia and its directors
constitutes conduct that
is oppressive, unfairly prejudicial and that
disregards the interests of the deceased. Firstly, so the respondent
alleged, Valencia
and Messrs Green, Smith, Hoy and Stanbridge
granted, maintained and increased interest free loans to themselves
from the financial
year ended 29 February 2013 to 29 February 2016,
which loans, so the respondent contends, were improper and in
contravention of
s 45(3)(a)
and (b) of the
Companies Act.
Secondly
, so the respondent contended, during the time that the loans
were granted to Messrs Green, Smith, Hoy and Stanbridge, no
interest-free
loans were granted to the respondent, and, to add
insult to the injury, Valencia was at the same time servicing a loan
from Investec
Bank, which as and at 28 February 2014, was standing at
R3 319 709.43. Lastly, it was alleged by the respondent
that
the loans were advanced and maintained notwithstanding that
Valencia had been advised that the loans were improper and contrary
to the provisions of the
Companies Act.
>
[20]
The case of the respondent was therefore that
the aforegoing conduct complained of collectively constituted the
oppressive and/or
unfairly prejudicial conduct as envisaged in
section 163(1)
of the
Companies Act, Act
71 of 2008 (‘the
Companies Act&rsquo
;). It was accordingly necessary for the
respondent to prove all of the conduct complained of, which she did
by reference to common
cause facts. In that regard, it was not
disputed by the appellants that interest-free loans were granted to
the second to fifth
appellants over the period from 29 February 2012
to 28 February 2016.
[21]
Additionally, the evidence also showed that the
deceased himself enjoyed the benefits of interest free loans from
2012 all the way
up to 2016. The balance on his loan account at the
end of each financial year was as follows: 2012 – R222 680;
2013
– (Cr R594 245); 2014 – R990 221; 2015 –
R1 025 293; 2016 – R1 025 293; and
2017 –
R Nil. Comparing these figures to the loan accounts of the other
shareholders, produce the following results in relation
to their loan
indebtedness as at 29 February 2016: Mr Smith – R12 221 635;
Mr Hoy – R13 047 970; and
Stanbridge –
R2 239 989.
[22]
The main gripe of the respondent is that since
the 2013 financial year, there has been exponential increases in the
loan accounts
of the second to fifth appellants, whilst she, as a
shareholder, received no such benefits. The increases were as
follows: Mr Smith’s
loan had increased to R12 221 685,
having been R5 833 876 in February 2013, R8 918 780
in February
2014 and R11 622 555 in February 2015; Mr Hoy’s
loan account had increased to R13 047 970, having been
R5 666 667 in February 2013, R8 622 838 in
February 2014 and R14 275 979 in February 2015; and Mr
Stanbridge’s loan had increased to R2 239 989, having
been R1 507 026 in February 2013, R2 120 366
in
February 2014 and R2 166 824 in February 2015.
[23]
It may be apposite at this juncture to point
out that the respondent’s starting point is the 2013 financial
year ending February
2013. This, in my view, is a wrong approach. The
starting point should in fact be the 2014 financial year, ending
February 2014,
because during the most part of that financial year
the deceased was still a member of Valencia and was still enjoying
the benefits
of his own shareholder’s loan. This approach makes
a big difference to the perceived prejudice to the respondent in that
the amounts advanced to the appellants during the 2015 and 2016
financial years are substantially less than the amounts complained
of
by the respondent.
[24]
This approach renders the following results
relating to the extent of the increases in the loan accounts of the
appellants subsequent
to the death of the deceased. During 2015, Mr
Smith’s loan account increased by R2 703 775 and by
R599 080
during 2016; Mr Hoy’s loan account increased by
R5 653 144 during 2015 and decreased by R1 228 009
during
2016; During 2015, Mr Stanbridge’s loan account
increased by R46 458 and by R73 165 during 2016; Mr Green’s
account increased by R1 218 215 during 2015 and remained
the same during 2016, therefore no increase; The loan account
of the
deceased had increased by R35 072 during 2015 and remained the
same during 2016.
[25]
Therefore, the total amount of the loans
advanced to the appellants during the 2015 financial year was the sum
of R7 220 231
and R964 571 during the 2016 financial
year.
[26]
The deceased passed away on 13 December 2013,
and therefore, so the appellants contend, he could no longer borrow
monies from Valencia.
The point about the respondent’s case is,
as held by the court
a quo
,
that by granting interest-free loans to the second to fifth appellant
after the death of the deceased, instead of declaring dividends,
Valencia unfairly benefitted the second to fifth appellants to the
prejudice of the respondent. The appellants’ retort is
to the
effect that, during his lifetime, the deceased did not complain about
the granting of interest-free loans to the shareholders.
In fact, so
it is alleged by the appellants, he participated in the scheme and he
himself had a loan account which had a debit
balance up to the 2016
financial year.
[27]
Section 163
of the
Companies Act provides
as
follows:
‘
163
Relief from oppressive or prejudicial conduct or from abuse of
separate juristic personality of company
(1)
A shareholder or a director of a company
may apply to a court for relief if –
(a)
any act or omission of the company, or a
related person, has had a result that is oppressive or unfairly
prejudicial to, or that
unfairly disregards the interests of, the
applicant;
(b)
the business of the company, or a
related person, is being or has been carried on or conducted in a
manner that is oppressive or
unfairly prejudicial to, or that
unfairly disregards the interests of, the applicant; or
(c)
the powers of a director or prescribed
officer of the company, or a person related to the company, are being
or have been exercised
in a manner that is oppressive or unfairly
prejudicial to, or that unfairly disregards the interests of, the
applicant.
(2)
Upon considering an application in terms
of subsection (1), the court may make any interim or final order it
considers fit, including-
(a)
an order restraining the conduct
complained of;
(b)
an order appointing a liquidator, if the
company appears to be insolvent;
(c)
an order placing the company under
supervision and commencing business rescue proceedings in terms of
Chapter 6, if the court is
satisfied that the circumstances set out
in
section 131
(4) (a) apply;
(d)
an order to regulate the company’s
affairs by directing the company to amend its Memorandum of
Incorporation or to create
or amend a unanimous shareholder
agreement;
(e)
an order directing an issue or exchange
of shares;
(f)
an order - (i) appointing directors in
place of or in addition to all or any of the directors then in
office; or (ii) declaring
any person delinquent or under probation,
as contemplated in
section 162
;
(g)
an order directing the company or any
other person to restore to a shareholder any part of the
consideration that the shareholder
paid for shares, or pay the
equivalent value, with or without conditions;
(h)
an order varying or setting aside a
transaction or an agreement to which the company is a party and
compensating the company or
any other party to the transaction or
agreement;
(i)
an order requiring the company, within a
time specified by the court, to produce to the court or an interested
person financial
statements in a form required by this Act, or an
accounting in any other form the court may determine;
(j)
an order to pay compensation to an
aggrieved person, subject to any other law entitling that person to
compensation;
(k)
an order directing rectification of the
registers or other records of a company; or
(l)
an order for the trial of any
issue as determined by the court.
(3)
… … …’.
[28]
In
Grancy
Property Ltd v Manala and Others
[5]
,
the SCA held that, in determining whether the conduct complained of
is oppressive, unfairly prejudicial or unfairly disregards
interests,
it is not the motive for the conduct complained of that the court
must look at but the conduct itself and the effect
which it has on
the other members of the company. In that matter, Petse JA also
referred, with approval, to the following extract
from F H I
Cassim:
Contemporary
Company Law, 2
nd
Edition
(2012) at pg 771-2:
‘
Despite
the wide ambit of
s 163
, it must be borne in mind that the conduct of
the majority shareholders must be evaluated in light of the
fundamental corporate
law principle that, by becoming a shareholder,
one undertakes to be bound by the decisions of the majority
shareholders …
… Thus not all acts which prejudicially
affect shareholders or directors, or which disregard their interests,
will entitle
them to relief – it must be shown that the conduct
is not only prejudicial or disregardful but also that it is unfairly
so.’
[29]
Thus, so the SCA held, it is not enough for an
applicant to show that the conduct of which he complains is
‘oppressive’
or ‘prejudicial’ to him or that
it ‘disregards his interests’. The applicant must
demonstrate that the
‘oppression’, ‘prejudice’
or ‘disregard’ has occurred ‘unfairly’.
Importantly,
as contended by the appellants, a minority shareholder
cannot complain of conduct that was carried out with his acquiescence
or
agreement, and still less of something done with his co-operation
or collaboration. Moreover, a complaining shareholder is not allowed
to engage
section 163
as a surrogate for the enforcement of
contractual rights.
[30]
This then brings me to the questions whether in
this case the respondent has established conduct of the nature
contemplated in
s 163
of the
Companies Act and
whether she was
entitled to the relief that she was granted by the court
a
quo
. As I have already indicated,
the sum total of the allegations made by the respondent against the
appellants is that during the
2014, 2015 and 2016 financial years
they advanced to themselves additional personal loans from Valencia,
without affording to her
the same benefits
as
a
shareholder. It bears emphasising
that during most of the 2014 financial year, the deceased himself was
still a shareholder in
Valencia and he also enjoyed the benefits of
an interest-free loan from Valencia, the balance of which stood as at
February 2014
at R990 221. The loans complained of were in
addition to sums standing to the credit of their loan accounts at the
end of
the 2014 financial year, which were as
follows
:
As and at the end of February 2016 the balances on the loan accounts
of all of the shareholders were as follows: Mr Smith –
R12
221 635; Mr Hoy – R13 047 970; Stanbridge –
R2 239 989; and the deceased – R990 2221.
[31]
Applying the above principles to the facts
in
casu
, I am not satisfied that the
court
a quo
was correct in holding that the respondent made out a case for the
relief she sought in her action. The totality of the allegations
made
by the respondent cannot, to my mind, translate into conduct which
can be said to be oppressive or unfairly prejudicial to
her or
unfairly disregarded her interest as a shareholder. The point is
simply that the conduct complained of cannot possibly be
said to be
unfair conduct contemplated in
s 163
if the deceased had agreed to
same. It is inconceivable that the grant and maintenance of
interest-free shareholders’ loans,
which the deceased had
consented to and participated in, could constitute conduct which can
be described as oppressive, unfairly
prejudicial or unfairly
disregarded the interests of the deceased.
[32]
In
that regard, I find myself in agreement with the following
ratio
decidendi
in
Irvin
and Johnson Ltd v Oelofse Fisheries Ltd; Oelofse v Irvin and Johnson
Ltd and Another
[6]
:
‘
But
it is idle to contend that the conduct complained of amounted to
oppression. Oppression is something done against a person’s
will and in his despite. It is not something done with his
acquiescence or consent, and still less something done with his
co-operation.
He chose voluntarily to risk the position in which he
finds himself. Accordingly, petitioner fails to establish any
'oppression'
and cannot invoke
sec 111
bis
.’
[33]
In short, as submitted by Mr Subel, who
appeared together with Ms Cirone, for the appellants, the respondent
cannot complain of
oppression in respect of conduct that the deceased
consented to, participated in and acquiesced in. This conduct cannot
be alleged
to be ‘oppressive’, ‘unfairly
prejudicial’ or ‘unfairly disregarding’ the
respondent’s
interests. Moreover, the deceased concluded a
shareholders’ agreement with his co-shareholders in terms of
which he specifically
agreed to the manner in which he would be
obliged to dispose of his shareholding in Valencia. The respondent is
therefore not entitled
to conveniently use an oppression remedy for
the ulterior purpose of avoiding compliance with the terms of the
shareholders’
agreement.
[34]
Moreover, the deceased, who is a 7.5%
shareholder in Valencia, cannot and should not be allowed to enforce
a contractual arrangement
between the shareholders in terms of which
the proceeds of a life assurance policy were to be used to buy back
his shares, in circumstances
where such a contractual arrangement was
found not applicable on the proven facts. In other words, the relief
available to a shareholder
in terms of
s 163
is not an alternative
cause of action to a claim based in contract.
[35]
I am therefore of the view that the court
a
quo
erred in finding that the
respondent had established the allegations that the appellants
conducted themselves in a manner which
was oppressive or unfairly
prejudicial to the respondent or that unfairly disregarded her
interest.
[36]
The appeal should therefore succeed.
The
Cross-Appeal
[37]
In the particulars of claim the respondent
sought an order that Green, Smith, Hoy, Stanbridge and Roditis be
declared delinquent
directors, alternatively, that they be placed
under probation.
[38]
This claim by the respondent to have the second
to sixth appellants declared delinquent directors, was based by and
large on the
same grounds on which she based her claim for payment of
the amount of R6 768 900, notably the fact that, instead of
declaring dividends regularly, the appellants generously extended to
themselves personal loans with regular monotony.
[39]
Additionally, so it was contended by the
respondent, these appellants failed to prepare on an annual basis
Annual Financial Statements
(AFS’s) for Valencia for the years
ended 28 February 2015 to 28 February 2018. Also, they did not ensure
that the AFS’s
were timeously reviewed by an auditor, approved
by the board of directors and approved by the shareholders.
[40]
As rightly contended by the appellants, as
regards this complaint, no evidence was led by the respondent and
this complaint can
and should be dismissed summarily.
[41]
As regards the complaint that these appellants
caused Valencia to advance to them interest free loans when the
respondent received
no such benefit and at a time when Valencia was
insolvent, the appellants reiterated their contention that the
respondent did in
fact have the benefit on an interest free
shareholder’s loan account. This, so the appellants allege, was
conceded by the
respondent. Moreover, so it was submitted by Mr
Subel, no evidence was led on the alleged insolvency of Valencia. I
find myself
in agreement with these contentions. The respondent’s
expert witness specifically distanced himself from any reliance on
the alleged insolvency of Valencia.
[42]
There was also a complaint that the appellants
misrepresented to interested parties that a dividend had been
declared and paid during
the 2015 financial year, when no such
dividend had been paid. The dividend had in fact been declared on 1
April 2016 and reflected
in the February 2015 AFS of Valencia. The
AFS were authorised for issue by the directors on 1 June 2016 and in
circumstances where
the AFS recorded the dividend declared. These AFS
were not approved by Valencia’s external accounting reviewer.
This dividend
recordal was then changed in a later version of the
2015 AFS that then recorded the dividend as an event occurring after
the reporting
period. The appellants’ expert witness, Prof
Wainer, explained that this was a common accounting error and that
the error
had no effect on the integrity of the financial statements.
This explanation is a very plausible explanation and, as contended by
the appellants, cannot possibly be a ground to having them declared
delinquent directors.
[43]
The further complaints were that the
appellants, with knowledge that the 28 February 2015 AFS had material
errors therein, obstructed
the auditor from providing information to
the respondent, which it had expressly and deliberately undertaken to
furnish, and that
they caused Valencia to oppose legal proceedings at
a substantial cost. As rightly contended by the appellants, there was
no evidence
led in support of these complaints. The only evidence
advanced was in relation to legal fees incurred by MDS Skills. The
fact of
the matter is that no legal fees were paid by Valencia. Koski
was also forced to concede in cross-examination that there was no
auditing or accounting provision that required Valencia’s
attorneys to bill Valencia for the legal work that it did on its
behalf.
[44]
Lastly, the respondent complained that the
second to sixth respondents contravened
section 45
of the
Companies
Act in
relation to Valencia and the subsidiary companies.
[45]
Section 45
of the
Companies Act provides
that
‘
45
Loans or other financial assistance to directors
(1)
In this section, 'financial assistance'
(a)
includes lending money, guaranteeing a
loan or other obligation, and securing any debt or obligation; but
(b)
… … …
(2)
Except to the extent that the Memorandum
of Incorporation of a company provides otherwise, the board may
authorise the company to
provide direct or indirect financial
assistance to a director or prescribed officer of the company or of a
related or inter-related
company, or to a related or inter-related
company or corporation, or to a member of a related or inter-related
corporation, or
to a person related to any such company, corporation,
director, prescribed officer or member, subject to subsections (3)
and (4).
(3)
Despite any provision of a company's
Memorandum of Incorporation to the contrary, the board may not
authorise any financial assistance
contemplated in subsection (2),
unless
(a)
the particular provision of financial
assistance is
(i)
pursuant to an employee share scheme
that satisfies the requirements of
section 97
; or
(ii)
pursuant to a special resolution of the
shareholders, adopted within the previous two years, which approved
such assistance either
for the specific recipient, or generally for a
category of potential recipients, and the specific recipient falls
within that category;
and
(b)
the board is satisfied that
(i)
immediately after providing the
financial assistance, the company would satisfy the solvency and
liquidity test; and
(ii)
the terms under which the financial
assistance is proposed to be given are fair and reasonable to the
company.
(4)
… ... …
(5)
If the board of a company adopts a
resolution to do anything contemplated in subsection (2), the company
must provide written notice
of that resolution to all shareholders,
unless every shareholder is also a director of the company, and to
any trade union representing
its employees
(a)
within 10 business days after the board
adopts the resolution, if the total value of all loans, debts,
obligations or assistance
contemplated in that resolution, together
with any previous such resolution during the financial year, exceeds
one-tenth of 1%
of the company's net worth at the time of the
resolution; or
(b)
within 30 business days after the end of
the financial year, in any other case.
(6)
A resolution by the board of a company
to provide financial assistance contemplated in subsection (2), or an
agreement with respect
to the provision of any such assistance, is
void to the extent that the provision of that assistance would be
inconsistent with
(a)
this section; or
(b)
a prohibition, condition or requirement
contemplated in subsection (4).
(7)
If a resolution or agreement is void in
terms of subsection (6) a director of the company is liable to the
extent set out in
section 77
(3) (e) (v) if the director
(a)
was present at the meeting when the
board approved the resolution or agreement, or participated in the
making of such a decision
in terms of
section 74
; and
(b)
failed to vote against the resolution or
agreement, despite knowing that the provision of financial assistance
was inconsistent
with this section or a prohibition, condition or
requirement contemplated in subsection (4).’
[46]
The
loans complained of were shareholders’ loans. The purpose of
section 45
is to protect the shareholders. This was held by the SCA,
with reference to the predecessor to
s 45
, that being s 226 of the
Old
Companies Act, in
Neugarten
and Others v Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd
[7]
.
In
that matter, the SCA agreed with the High Court’s view that the
clear purpose of
s 226
‘is to prevent directors or managers of
a company acting in their own interests and against the interests of
shareholders
by burdening the company with obligations which are not
for its benefit but are for the benefit of another company and/or for
the
benefit of its directors and/or managers’.
[47]
The appellants’ short answer to the
respondent’s complaint relating to
s 45
, was that the said
section does not apply to shareholders’ loans. In any event, so
the argument on behalf of the appellants
went, if the shareholders’
conduct contravened
section 45
, then it was conduct that the deceased
participated and was complicit in. As was conceded by the
respondent’s expert witness,
Koski, Valencia had been granting
its shareholders loans from its inception. I agree with this
contention.
[48]
The point is that, in my view, there is nothing
untoward about interest-free shareholders’ loans. In Valencia
all the shareholders,
including the deceased, agreed to manage the
business of Valencia in this manner and they agreed that they would
have interest-free
shareholders’ loans which would be set off
by dividends.
[49]
For all of these reasons, I am of the view that
the court
a quo
was correct in its finding that the respondent had not made out a
case to have the second to sixth appellants declared delinquent.
The
cross-appeal therefore stands to be dismissed.
Conclusion
[50]
In sum, I am of the view that the conduct
complained of by the respondent in relation to the appellants are not
the type of conduct
which entitled the respondent to an order in
terms of
s 163
of the
Companies Act. Similarly
, the respondent has
not, in my view, made out a case for a delinquency declaration.
[51]
The court
a quo
was therefore not correct in granting judgment against the second to
fifth appellants. It was however correct in dismissing the
claim to
have the appellants declared delinquent directors.
[52]
Consequently, the appeal must succeed and the
cross-appeal should fail.
Costs
of Appeal
[53]
The general
rule in matters of costs is that the successful party should be given
his costs, and this rule should not be departed
from except where
there are good grounds for doing so. See:
Myers
v Abramson
[8]
.
[54]
I can think of no reason to deviate from the general rule.
[55]
The respondent should therefore pay the costs of the appeal of the
appellants. And the
respondent should also pay the appellants’
costs of the cross-appeal
Order
[56]
In the result, the following order is made: -
(1)
The appellants’ appeal against paragraphs 1.1, 1.2, 1.3, 1.4
and
1.6 of the order of the court
a quo
is upheld, with costs,
including the costs of the application for leave to appeal and the
costs consequent upon the employment
of two Counsel, one being a
Senior Counsel.
(2)
The respondent’s cross-appeal is dismissed with costs,
including
the costs of the application for leave to appeal and the
costs consequent upon the employment of two Counsel, one being a
Senior
Counsel.
(3)
The above paragraphs 1.1, 1.2, 1.3, 1.4 and 1.6 of the order of the
court
a quo
are set aside and in its place is substituted the
following: -
‘
(a)
The plaintiff’s claims are dismissed, with costs’.
________________________________
L
R ADAMS
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng
Local Division, Johannesburg
HEARD
ON: 8
th
November 2021 – in a ‘virtual hearing’ during a
videoconference on
Microsoft Teams
.
JUDGMENT
DATE: 23
rd
February 2022 – judgment handed down electronically
FOR
THE FIRST, SECOND, THIRD,
FOURTH,
FIFTH AND SIXTH
APPELLANTS: Adv
Arnold Subel SC, together with Adv Paolo Cirone.
INSTRUCTED
BY: Knowles
Hussain Lindsay Inc, Sandton
FOR THE
RESPONDENT: Advocate
Adrian Botha SC, with Advocate A D Theart
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Brian Kahn Incorporated, Johannesburg
[1]
The first defendant in the court
a
quo
.
[2]
The second, third, fourth and fifth defendants in the court
a
quo
.
[3]
The sixth defendant in the court
a
quo
.
[4]
The plaintiff in the court
a
quo
.
[5]
Grancy
Property Ltd v Manala and Others
2015 (3) SA 313
(SCA).
[6]
Irvin
and Johnson Ltd v Oelofse Fisheries Ltd; Oelofse v Irvin and Johnson
Ltd and Another
1954 (1) SA 231 (E).
[7]
Neugarten
and Others v Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd
1989 (1) SA 797 (A).
[8]
Myers v
Abramson
,1951(3)
SA 438 (C) at 455
sino noindex
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