Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 122South Africa
Ngcongo and Another v Voltex (Pty) Ltd In re: Voltex (Pty) Limited v IEC Contractors CC and Another (9813/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 122 (7 March 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
7 March 2022
Headnotes
judgment in the action proceedings and IEC and the sureties filed an affidavit resisting summary judgment which set out a defence in similar terms to that raised in this application. In essence it is pleaded that IEC had made payments to Voltex totalling approximately R 3.5 million during the period December 2019 to September 2020 which taken together with credits due totalling an amount of approximately R 1. 3 million put IEC into a credit balance. Thus, the defence boils down to an accounting exercise.
Judgment
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## Ngcongo and Another v Voltex (Pty) Ltd In re: Voltex (Pty) Limited v IEC Contractors CC and Another (9813/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 122 (7 March 2022)
Ngcongo and Another v Voltex (Pty) Ltd In re: Voltex (Pty) Limited v IEC Contractors CC and Another (9813/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 122 (7 March 2022)
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sino date 7 March 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
Number: 9813/2021
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
NO
In the matter between:
SICELO
BENARD NGCONGO
First Respondent
IEC
CONTRACTORS
CC
Second Respondent
INDUSTRIAL
ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS
And,
VOLTEX
(PTY)
LIMITED
Respondent
In re:
VOLTEX
(PTY)
LIMITED
Applicant
And,
IEC
CONTRACTORS
CC
Respondent
INDUSTRIAL
ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS
JUDGMENT
FISHER J
Introduction
[1]
The first and second applicants for rescission, Mr
Ngcongo and IEC seek to rescind a final liquidation order
obtained
by the respondent, Voltex by default. Voltex contends that
there is an amount of in excess of R 3.8 million owing to it by IEC
on account for goods sold and delivered. The defence raised by
applicants is one of payment of all sums claimed.
Procedural
Background
[2]
On 3
June 2021, Voltex obtained the final winding up order of IEC on the
basis that IEC is unable to pay its debts, in terms of
section
69(1)(a) and 69(1)(c)of the Close Corporations Act (the Act).
[1]
[3]
On 14 June 2021, IEC Mr Ngcongo, as its sole registered
member, launched an application in two parts. Under part A an urgent
stay
of execution of the winding up order was sought. This order was
granted urgently on 25 June 2021 subject to arrangements regarding
the filing of papers and the expeditious adjudication of the
rescission application. Under part B, Mr Ngcongo and IEC seek
the rescission of the winding up order before this court. The
application is brought under the common law.
[4]
Voltex
opposes the application. It argues that the applicants have failed to
establish any of the essential elements entailed in
showing the
necessary good cause for rescission: explanation for the
default, that the application is bona fide, that
IEC has a bona
fide defence which prima facie carries some prospect of success.
[2]
This latter element entails IEC showing, prima facie, that it is
factually and commercially solvent.
[5]
I move to deal with the background to the liquidation with
specific reference to IEC’s treatment of each of these
requirements
for showing good cause for the rescission.
Historical
Background
[6]
The parties have traded with each other in a business
relationship which has spanned more than 17 years. Voltex has
supplied IEC
with electrical components and related goods. The
relationship has operated on the basis that the goods are ordered on
credit in
accordance with overarching credit agreements which have
been renewed over the years. The last renewal was in 2019.
[7]
It appears that the parties traded without serious
dispute until the end of 2019. Voltex alleges that over the period
December
2019 to November 2020, IEC purchased goods from the
applicant to the total value of in excess of R3. 8 million for which
it has
not paid. It emerges from correspondence which I will deal
with later that over this period IEC began to have cash-flow
difficulties.
[8]
0n 11 January 2021 Voltex caused a demand in terms of section
69 of the Act to be delivered.
[9]
This letter was responded to on 2 February 2021 by IEC through
its attorney, Mr Erol Goss who delivered a reply in which IEC denied
liability and indicated that the threatened application for
liquidation would be opposed.
[10]
Voltex,
then delivered a summons for the debt. The action was opposed, notice
of intention to oppose being filed on 02 March 2021.
The action is
instituted is against IEC as principle debtor and against sureties
for the debt in guise of Mr and Mrs Vardopoulos
who were the
erstwhile registered members and Mr Ngcongo who became the registered
member after the resignation of the Vardopouloses.
[11]
The
plea raised in the action on behalf of IEC is a mixture of
allegations that payment has been made in respect of certain amounts,
a denial that some goods were delivered; and allegations that credits
were due to be passed in respect of certain amounts, inter
alia, for
goods returned. In addition the Vardopouloses contend that they
have been released from their suretyship obligation.
[12]
The
application for the winding up was issued on 26 February 2021
and served on IEC's registered and principal addresses
on 18 March
2021.
[13]
The application was never
emailed to IEC’s attorney by Voltex’s attorney,
Mr
Orelowitz notwithstanding that Mr Goss had come on record in relation
to the section 69 process and agreed to service of process
by way of
email. This omission is an extraordinary lapse of collegiality and
has served no purpose other than the delay caused
by this
application.
[14]
Voltex
applied for summary judgment in the action proceedings and IEC and
the sureties filed an affidavit resisting summary judgment
which set
out a defence in similar terms to that raised in this application. In
essence it is pleaded that IEC had made payments
to Voltex totalling
approximately R 3.5 million during the period December 2019 to
September 2020 which taken together with credits
due totalling an
amount of approximately R 1. 3 million put IEC into a credit balance.
Thus, the defence boils down to an accounting
exercise.
Explanation
for default
[15]
The
winding up application was delivered by the sheriff at the offices of
IEC which is the principal place of business. Delivery
was duly
taken by a receptionist employed by IEC, Ms Mashabele. She accepted
the papers through a gate at the premises. It is alleged
that the
documents were then locked in a cupboard by Ms Mashabela who then
left that day for Polokwane on compassionate leave and
forgot to
mention the delivery of the application.
[16]
Whilst
Voltex says this is improbable, I have no reason to reject the
version given under oath by Ms Mashabele and according
I accept that
the failure to oppose the application was not deliberate.
Bona
fide defence
[17]
As I
have said the defence is, in essence that, on an accounting exercise
conducted on the running account, IEC does not owe any
amount to
Voltex. On the basis that the onus to show payment rests with the
person alleging payment, IEC is obliged to show payment.
To my mind
this would require IEC going further than a mere statement that
payment has been made. To show the necessary good cause
it must put
forward evidence which tends to establish that the payment was indeed
made.
[18]
I now
turn to consider whether IEC has done enough to establish that
payment of the indebtedness has been made.
[19]
The
assertion of payment must be looked at in the context of the dealings
between the parties as to the indebtedness. It stands
to reason that
if the debt claimed had not been paid there would be an engagement
between the parties as to such indebtedness.
After all, the parties
have had a business relationship which spans decades. If nearly R4
million were owed one would expect something
to be said about it.
[20]
Voltex
says that indeed there has been substantial engagement as to this
debt. It accuses IEC of being selective in its reference
to the
correspondence – focussing as it does on the letter of 2
February 2021 which was written in formal response to the
section 69
letter and which essentially constitutes a bare denial of liability.
[21]
Voltex
chronicles the following correspondence as to the debt. On 9
September 2020, Mr Dimitri Vardopoulos addressed an email to
Susan
Wessels, a legal assistant in Voltex's head office legal department.
The letter, on the face of it, seeks to explain the
non-payment of
amounts due. The introductory paragraph of the letter reads:
"I
am writing, as you requested, to further explain IEC's situation. I
had given Mr Green [ Voltex's Managing Director] a payment
plan and
we had every Intention to pay Voltex the monies against our
account, as proposed.
Unfortunately,
for reasons including Covld19, IEC has not been paid the invoices we
were relying on to make these payments.’
(Emphasis added)
[22]
Mr
Vardopoulos then sets out, the difficulties IEC has had with several
of its own debtors. Towards the end of the email Mr
Vardopoulos
states as follows:
"We
have work to continue with, but without access to our account,
carrying on with these projects will prove problematic.
Should we
not be able to resume working, repaying our account appears
unfeasible.
We Implore Mr Baig [Mr Ahmed Baig, a Director of
Voltex and the Regional Manager of Voltex Gauteng] and Voltex
management to lift
the hold on our account, as soon as possible,
please.
Susan,
I would gladly speak directly to Mr Baig in this regard, if he would
prefer, and grant me an appointment.’ (Emphasis
added)
[23]
Thus
as at September 2020 there is a written acknowledgment from Mr
Vardopolous that there was money outstanding that IEC was not
able to
pay. This is never dealt with by IEC and is a gaping hole in its
case.
[24]
On
6 October 2020, after further fruitless interaction between the
parties, Ms Wessels addressed an email to Mr Vardopoulos
in which she
made the following request:
"As
per discussion with Ahmed, I refer. Please supply us with a payment
proposal on the overdue amount of R3,894,106.44 with
Atlas Group [a
trading division of Voltex]. We need this proposal before any meeting
can be scheduled please’.
Mr
Vardopoulos response on 7 October 2020 was aggressive and not only
for having put most of the email in uppercase. Mr Vardopoulos
first laments the fact that he has been unable to meet with Mr Baig.
He then makes the following statement:
"VOLTEX
OWE ME CREDITS. IT SEEMS TO ME, YOU AND BAIG ARE NOT TAKING ME
SERIOUSLY WITH THIS MATTER. He continues in the email
listing various
aspects on the account which he contends need to be rectified. In the
penultimate paragraph he says: "PLEASE
UNDERSTAND, I HAVE PROOF
AN (sic) BACKING THESE ISSUES.".
[25]
Yet,
even in the founding papers in this application, none of that ‘proof
and backing’ has surfaced. In any event, Mr
Vardopoulos, in the
last sentence gives an undertaking:
"I
NEED TO SEE HIM [ Mr Baig] IN PERSON. UNTIL THEN, I WILL CONTINUE TO
MAKE THE PAYMENTS I AM CURRENTLY MAKING."
[26]
Voltex
alleges that the only amount that was paid towards this debt over the
period September 2019 to November 2020, was an
amount of R20 000,00
which was paid on 6 January 2021.
[27]
Mr
Vardopoulos wrote a further letter on 8 October 2020. Apparently
somewhat chastened, he commences with an apology and then
states as
follows:
"
I'd
like to offer, if it might help, me signing personal surety against
the outstanding IEC account. I am pledging to make every
effort to
reduce the amount as quickly as possible (as done previously). It
will be my personal undertaking.
(Emphasis added)
[28]
Thus,
as at late 2020, it was clear that Mr Vardopolous acknowledged that
there was a substantial amount owing and offered to give
a personal
undertaking that he would reduce the indebtedness.
[29]
The
correspondence and negotiations of time for payment is all conducted
by Mr Vardopolous – who seems heavily invested in
the matter of
payment. Mr Ngcongo is heard from only as a deponent to the
litigation.
[30]
The
deponent to the affidavits filed on behalf of Voltex, Ms Stacey
Duncan is the Legal General Manager of Voltex. She makes
a
supplementary affidavit to deal with Mr Ngcongos’s
protestations that there is nothing owing to Voltex and that all has
been paid. She is assisted in this by ms Lilashine Moonsamy, who is a
senior debtors’ administrator employed by Voltex. Ms
Moonsamy’s
testimony reflects an accounting exercise undertaken by her. She is
able to confirm that she has undertaken an
accounting – which
is attached to her affidavit which shows that whilst payments have
been made on account over time, an
amount of in excess of R 4 million
( which probably impermissibly includes legal costs) remains
outstanding. Importantly this accounting
exercise puts paid to the
vague assertions of payment which Mr Ngcongo has been put to. Why a
senior accounts employee would lie
under oath as to such a
substantial amount outstanding is not explained on behalf of IEC.
Neither is an attempt made to give Mr
Vardopolous’ version as
to what appear to be his desperate attempts to seek the indulgence of
senior management of Voltex
in order to put in place a payment plan
in respect of admitted arrear amounts.
[31]
The
spread sheet accounting which is put forward by Ms Moonsamy appears
cogent. It takes account of payments made on the account
and shows
that there is a balance due in accordance with the amount claimed by
Voltex.
[32]
Rather
than properly to join issue with the accounting and the
correspondence, IEC ostensibly led by Mr Ngcongo attempts to
obfuscate
as to the payments due. This is unfortunate.
[33]
Section
58 of the Act stipulates that the members of a corporation shall
within six months after the end of every financial year
of the
corporation cause annual financial statements in respect of that
financial year to be
produced
. The section
sets the minimum content of the annual financial statements, and
stipulates that it must be approved and signed by
or on behalf of
members holding at least 51% of the member’s interest.
[34]
Mr
Ngcongo's failure to present any annual financial statements, invites
the inference that such financial statements would not
support the
contention that IEC is solvent.
[35]
Reliance
by courts on proper financial disclosure by corportation is a
hallmark of the type of inquiry which is to be undertaken
here. In
Storti v
Nugent
[3]
the Court stated as follows:
‘
It
is difficult to see how one can show a Court with any degree of
confidence that a company is solvent, without the audited financial
statements. Although I look at this stage only at the allegations in
the founding affidavit, and treat them as being correct for
the
purposes of deciding whether the founding affidavit discloses a cause
of action, I consider that a Court would be very reluctant
to accept
the say-so of a director as to the financial position of a company In
the absence of audited financial statements, particularly
where there
has been criticism since 1994 of the failure to produce same, and the
solvency or insolvency of the company depends
entirely on whether one
takes into account the action for damages’.
[4]
[36]
Having
not shown payment, IEC takes the route of attempting to explain with
reference to internal accounting records that it is
not factually
insolvent and is able to meet its debts as they fall due. Again, this
does not explain the correspondence by Mr Vardopolous
seeking
indulgence and to be allowed a ‘payment plan’. These
lacunas persist notwithstanding that the parties have
adopted a
somewhat free approach to the filing backwards and forwards of
supplementary affidavits. I have allowed the affidavits
as it is the
interests of the applicants that they be given a full opportunity to
make their case and thus that the respondent
be allowed to counter
the attempts at showing payment.
[37]
The
form taken in purported substantiation of the alleged solvency is
reference to rudimentary documents which are alleged to be
trial
balances for the years ending 2020 and 2021. Why trial balances are
relied on instead of financial statements is not explained.
In any
event reference to these trial balances reveals the following:
·
According to the 2020 trial balance
IEC had R474.70 in its bank
account at the end of that financial year, and an additional R630
000.00 which is called "POS
cash control".
·
The balance of the debit
value of IEC's business for that year
was reflected in "shareholders/directors/members loans".
·
According to the trial balance
for the period ending 2021, the
members loans had increased from approximately 12.4 million in 2020
to approximately R21.3 million.
[38]
Voltex
makes the point that the extent and increase in these members loans
suggest that large sums are being taken out of IEC. Mr
Ngcongo is
reflected as having taken more money out of the entity on loans than
reflected profits allow for. There are also no
trade debtors
reflected – which suggests that there is no cash-flow.
The trial balances reflect that, on paper, IEC
has a single asset,
namely a loan account in terms of which Mr Ngcongo owes it
approximately R22 million. The business is evidently
cash starved,
and there has been no return of monies to IEC by Mr Ngcongo, or even
an undertaking to do so and this notwithstanding
that the
correspondence between the parties shows that IEC has not been able
to pay its debts.
[39]
The
business is reflected as having generated a profit over these periods
(more than R 7 million for the year ended 2020 and more
than R 5
million for the year 2021). But there is no indication of where these
profits were applied. Mr Ngcongo is reflected as
having a loan which
has grown by nearly nine million year on year. This suggests alarming
movement in member’s loans which
is not explained.
[40]
In
its supplementary answering affidavit, Voltex sought to present the
evidence of Mr Ivor Davkin, a chartered accountant, as an
expert to
give testimony as to the poor financial position which the trial
balances show. Advocate Shepstone for IEC correctly
makes the point
that Mr Davkin is in no better position than this court to make these
observations. I have thus not given regard
to this evidence in my
determination of this matter.
[41]
I
find that IEC has not established that it is solvent.
[42]
Ms
Duncan raises a troubling aspect as to the position of Mr Vardopoulos
at IEC. She says that Mr Ngcongo is known to Voltex as
a driver
employed by IEC. From the correspondence referred there can be no
doubt that Mr Vardopoulous has retained a central role
in IEC. Mr
Ngcongo explains that Mr Vardopoulos is a salaried employee of IEC
and assists him as a ‘technical advisor’.
He says the
driver referred to is his brother. This is not verified by way of an
affidavit. Voltex alleges that this is a case
of fronting and that Mr
Ngcongo is not the real member. In Voltex's answering affidavit, it
was explained that Mr and Mrs Vardopoulos
were the members of IEC
until 2016 when they resigned and Mr Ngcongo became the sole member.
Mr Vardopolous appears in the correspondence
above to exhibit an
interest in the business which is more than that of salaried
employee.
[43]
The
limitations of IEC’s case obviously being apparent to IEC it
has sought resort to a technical defence as to service. It
is alleged
that there was no proper service on the employees of IEC and that, on
this basis, the application for liquidation should
have succeeded.
I
move now to deal with this defence.
No
proper service on the employees
[44]
IEC
takes issue with the manner of service on the employees. The
complaint is that the sheriff did not enter the property and look
for
a notice board. It is alleged that only gave one copy to Ms
Mashabela through the gate.
[45]
The
sheriff, Mr Johan Lessing in an affidavit which was filed to explain
more fully his method of service states the following:
‘
On
18 March 2021, I attended, to serve the Notice of Motion and Founding
Aflidavit on IEC Contractors CC (IEC) as well as the Employees
of
IEC, at IEC registered address, situated at 12 Van der Merwe Street,
Brenthurst Brakpan and its principal place of business
situated at 27
Boyd Street, Brenthurst, Brakpan.
IEC's
registered address was locked and used only for parking. The offices
of IEC are located at Its principal place of business
which Is
situated across the road from its registered address.
The
premises did not have a notice board. Therefore, 'I gave one copy to
Phlndile and I also left a copy of the Application at the
front gate.
I
informed. Mrs Phindile Mashabela that one copy of the Application was
for the employees and the other copy was for IEC. I explained
to Mrs
Phindile Mashabela the nature of the contents and she accepted
service of the Application on before (sic) of IEC as well
as the
employees.’
[46]
It
is obligatory for the applicant for a winding-up order to
furnish a copy of the application papers to the persons
mentioned
in
s 346(4A)
of the previous Companies Act.
When
dealing with employees the section refers to three possible ways of
doing this. The first is by placing the papers on
a notice board at
the premises where they work and to which they have access. The
second and third are by affixing a copy of the
application papers to
the front gate of the premises where the employees work, if access to
the premises cannot be obtained, or
to the front door of the premises
from which the business was conducted at the time of the application.
[47]
I am
satisfied that the method of service on the employees adopted by the
sheriff – i.e. the service of the application on
an employee
and the leaving of a copy of the application at the gate of the
property with the express explanation to the employee
served that the
copy at the gate is for the employees’ attention is
is
satisfactory and reasonably likely to make them accessible to the
employees. This is all that is required for compliance with
the
section.
[5]
Conclusion
[48]
IEC
has not made out a case which goes any way to showing that payment
has been made in millions of rands for the relevant period
such that
these payments have extinguished the indebtedness which was admitted
in writing during late 2020.
[49]
The
rudimentary ‘trial balances’ which are attached to the
founding affidavit in a purported attempt to show solvency
emerge as
no more than an attempt at obfuscation.
Order
[50]
In
the circumstances I make the following order:
The
application for rescission is dismissed with costs which includes the
costs of Part A of the application.
FISHER
J
HIGH
COURT JUDGE
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Date
of Hearing:
20 January 2022.
Judgment
Delivered:
March
2022
APPEARANCES:
For
the Applicant
: Adv
RS Shepstone.
Instructed
by
:
Errol Goss Attorneys.
For
the Respondent
:
Adv A Bester SC.
Instructed
by
:
Orelowitz Incorporated.
[1]
Act 69 of 1984.
[2]
See
Colyn
v Tiger Food Industries Ltd t/a Meadow Feed Mills (Cape
)
2003 (6) SA 1
(SCA) para 11;
Chetty
v Law Society, Transvaal
1985
(2) SA 756
(A) at 764) — 7650;
De
Wet and others v Western
Bank
Ltd
1979 (2) SA 1031
(A) at 1042F — 1043A.
[3]
2001 (3) SA 783 (W).
[4]
Id at 808 H-J.
[5]
EB
Steam Company (Pty) Ltd v Eskom Holdings Soc Ltd
(979/2012)
[2013] ZASCA 167
;
[2014] 1 All SA 294
(SCA) (27 November 2013) at
para 19.
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