Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 160South Africa
Barbaglia v Barbaglia and Others (18493/2021; 21928/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 160 (22 March 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
22 March 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Barbaglia v Barbaglia and Others (18493/2021; 21928/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 160 (22 March 2022)
Barbaglia v Barbaglia and Others (18493/2021; 21928/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 160 (22 March 2022)
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sino date 22 March 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 18493/2021
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
22
MARCH 2022
In
the matter between:
SILVANA
IDA BARBAGLIA
APPLICANT
And
MICHAEL
ANTINIO VINCENZO BARBAGLIA
FIRST RESPONDENT
PABAR
(PROPRIETARY) LIMITED
SECOND RESPONDENT
CHARL
EDWARD ANDERSON N.O.
THIRD RESPONDENT
GREGORY
MASSIMO BARBAGLIA
FOURTH RESPONDENT
LEONARD
PULE N.O.
(In
his capacity as the Master of the High
Court,
Johannesburg as defined by the
Administration
of the Estate Act, 66 of 1965)
FIFTH RESPONDENT
Case
No: 21928/2021
SILVANA
IDA BARBAGLIA
APPLICANT
And
MICHAEL
ANTINIO VINCENZO BARBAGLIA
FIRST RESPONDENT
PABAR
(PROPRIETARY) LIMITED
SECOND RESPONDENT
CHARL
EDWARD ANDERSON N.O.
THIRD RESPONDENT
GREGORY
MASSIMO BARBAGLIA
FOURTH RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
Delivered:
This judgment was
prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is reflected and is
handed down electronically by circulation to
Parties / their legal
representatives by email and by uploading it to the electronic file
of this matter on Case Lines. The date
of the judgment is deemed to
be the 22
nd
of March 2022
TWALA
J
[1]
The disputes in the Barbaglia family which arose after the death of
Mr Barbaglia who
died on the 10
th
of December 2020, the
husband of the applicant to whom she was married in community of
property. Such disputes have led to the
applicant launching three
applications before this Court against the same respondents save for
the Master of the High Court. I
propose to deal with the two
applications under the above case numbers together in this judgment
since the facts and the relief
sought therein are closely and or
inter-related. The case against the Master has already been dealt
with separately.
[2]
In the application under case number 21928/2021, the applicant seeks
an order that
the first respondent, alternatively the second
respondent, represented by the first respondent, be directed to
restore the status
quo ante which existed prior to the alteration of
the share register of the second respondent on or about the 17
th
of February 2021 by restoring the applicant’s name to the
second respondent’s share register as the holder of two shares
(1%) and the name of Vincenzo Barbaglia as the holder of 168 shares
(84%) in the second respondent. Furthermore, the applicant
seeks an
order for costs against the first respondent.
[3]
In the application under case number 18493/2021, the applicant seeks
the following
order:
3.1
That, in accordance with the provisions of section 163(2)(f)(i) of
the Companies Act, 71 of 2008 (“the
Companies Act&rdquo
;), the
applicant, and or the fourth respondent (“Gregory”), be
appointed as directors of the second respondent (“Pabar”),
together with an independent director, in place of the current sole
director of Pabar, the first respondent (“Michael”),
alternatively, that the applicant, and or Gregory, together with an
independent director be appointed as directors of Pabar in
addition
to Michael (‘the
section 163
relief”).
3.2
That the
section 163
relief remains in force from the date of the
granting of the order set out in 3.1 above to the date on which the
joint estate of
the applicant and her late husband, Vincenzo
Barbaglia (“Mr Barbaglia”), (“the joint estate”)
is finally
wound up, or the date on which Pabar is sold or disposed
of, by way of a sale of 100% of the shares in Pabar, or the sale of
its
business, or final winding up, or the date on which the applicant
ceases to be a shareholder in Pabar, whichever occurs first.
3.3
That Pabar be compelled to furnish the applicant with copies of the
following documents on a monthly basis,
and for so long as the
applicant remains a shareholder in Pabar, namely:
a.
Pabar’s general ledger;
b.
Pabar’s bank statements;
c.
Pabar’s payment breakdowns;
d.
Pabar’s turnover reports;
e.
Pabar’s income statements;
f.
Pabar’s cash flow projections;
g.
Pabar’s management accounts.
3.4
That the disposal, alienation, or encumbrance of any of Pabar’s
assets, as appear on its balance sheet,
other than in the ordinary
course of business, is prohibited from the date of the granting of
the order sought in prayer 3.2 above
to the date on which the joint
estate is finally wound up, or the date on which Pabar is sold or
disposed of, by way of a sale
of 100% of the shares in Pabar or the
sale of its business, or final winding up, or the date on which the
applicant ceases to be
a shareholder in Pabar, whichever occurs
first.
3.5
That Michael is prohibited from using Pabar’s resources to pay
for his personal legal fees from the
date of the grant of the order
sought in this prayer 3.4, to the date on which the joint estate is
finally wound up, or the date
on which Pabar is sold or disposed of,
by way of a sale of 100% of the shares in Pabar, or the sale of its
business, or final winding
up, or the date on which the applicant
ceases to be a shareholder in Pabar, whichever occurs first.
3.6
That Michael is required to: (i) provide a reconciliation of the
personal legal fees paid by Pabar on his
behalf from the date of Mr
Barbaglia’s death, being 10 December 2020, to date; and (ii)
repay to Pabar the personal legal
fees paid by Pabar on his behalf
from the date of Mr Barbaglia’s death to date, and within
thirty (30) calendar days from
the granting of this order.
3.7
That the first respondent is to pay the costs of this application,
save in the event that any other respondent
opposes the relief sought
in this application, in which event that the costs of this
application are to be paid by the first respondent
and any such
opposing respondent, or respondents, in equal proportions.
[4]
The applicant is the widow of the late Vincenzo Barbaglia (“the
deceased”)
who died on the 10
th
of December 2020,
and to whom she was married in community of property for more than 64
years.
[5]
The first respondent is Michael Antonio Vincenzo Barbaglia, an adult
businessman who
is the oldest of the two sons born of the marriage
between the applicant and the deceased. He is currently the sole
director and
shareholder in the second respondent.
[6]
The second respondent is Pabar (Proprietary) Limited, with
registration number: 1967/011760/07,
a limited liability private
company duly incorporated in accordance with the company laws of the
Republic of South Africa, and
with its registered address situated at
7 Fransen Street, Chamdor, Krugersdorp, Gauteng (“Pabar”).
[7]
The third respondent is Charl Edward Andersen N.O an adult male
businessman who is
cited in his official capacity as the current
appointed executor of the estate of the deceased, and with his place
of employment
at 7 Fransen Street, Chamdor, Krugersdorp.
[8]
The fourth respondent is Gregory Massimo Barbaglia an adult male
businessman who is
the second son born of the marriage between the
applicant and the deceased residing at Sunset Towers, Short Road,
Morningside.
[9]
The fifth respondent is Leonard Pule N.O in his capacity as the
Assistant Master of
the High Court, Johannesburg, (“the
Master”), situated at 66 Marshall Street Johannesburg.
[10]
It is only the first and second respondents who filed their
opposition to both these applications.
There is no relief sought
against the further respondents and they are not participating in
these proceedings except for the third
respondent having filed a
notice to abide with the decision of this Court. I propose to refer
to the parties as the applicant and
to the first and second
respondents as respondents in this judgment. Where necessary, I will
refer to the other respondents by
name as indicated above.
[11]
The genesis of these cases is that the applicant is the widow of the
Late Mr Vincenzo Barbaglia,
(“the deceased”)
, whom
she married by proxy in Omegna, Italy on the 9
th
of May
1957. At the time of their marriage, the deceased was domiciled in
South Africa and accordingly their marriage was in community
of
property. The marriage between the applicant and the deceased was
blessed with two sons who are the first and fourth respondents
in
these proceedings.
[12]
It is undisputed that the deceased during his life time established
Pabar as the main family
business which was regarded as the treasury
in the family, financing the establishment of other business
interests in the family.
At the time of his death, the deceased and
the applicant were the registered shareholders of Pabar holding
eighty-five percent
(85%) of the shares in Pabar. The remaining
fifteen (15) percent of shares in Pabar were held by the first
respondent who it is
alleged to have acquired the shares as a
donation in 2012. The first respondent has been working with the
deceased in Pabar for
more than four decades. Pabar is a valuable
asset in the joint estate of the deceased and the applicant being
valued at R44 million
in a joint estate with a total value of more
than R80 million.
[13]
During the years preceding July 2014 the deceased and the applicant
would revise their joint
will every year and Mr Banchetti, their long
standing attorney would assist them with the drafting and or to
effect the amendments
of the will, if any. In July 2014 the deceased
was diagnosed with mild dementia which diagnosis was changed in 2016
to that of
severe dementia. On the 26
th
of September 2019
Advocate Grace Goedhart SC was appointed Curatrix ad Litem for the
deceased and on the 9
th
of October 2019 Advocate Jenifer
Cane SC was appointed Curatrix Bonis to the deceased. On the 19
th
of October 2019 the appointment of the curatrix bonis was extended to
the joint estate of the applicant and the deceased.
[14]
The deceased died on the 10
th
of December 2020 and this
resulted in the termination of the curatorship of the joint estate.
On the 14
th
of December 2020 the curatrix bonis addressed
a letter to the attorneys for the applicant, Bove Attorneys
Incorporated (Ms Bove),
enclosing copies of five Wills of the
deceased which she had in her possession. During the period as the
curatix bonis of the joint
estate, Advocate Cane SC advised the
family that she did not intend on relying on documents signed after
July 2014 since the deceased
was diagnosed with dementia as she
regards them to be invalid. The applicant and the deceased were the
only two directors of Pabar.
[15]
The first and fourth respondents were working in Pabar with the first
respondent being more on
the operational side and the fourth
respondent managing the finances and other administrative work of
Pabar. At all times the family
business was run on a tripartite
relationship/partnership between the applicant and the deceased as a
unit and the first and fourth
respondents as two individuals. The
applicant resigned as a director of Pabar when the curator bonis took
charge of the joint estate
and appointed the first respondent and Mr
Frank Pellegrini, an independent director, as directors in Pabar on
the 31
st
of March 2020. The curatrix bonis directed that
the directors of Pabar and Pabar should at all times furnish the
fourth respondent
with the financial information of Pabar so that he
can have full insight into Pabar’s financial position and
wellbeing and
to give him access to the premises of Pabar on a daily
basis during working hours.
[16]
Before the appointment of the curatrix bonis, both
the first and fourth respondents earned salaries from
Pabar. With
time as the family business empire diversified, the fourth respondent
attended to the other businesses of the family
but continued his
involvement in the financial affairs and administration and attended
at the premises of Pabar. This happened
until Mr Pellegrini resigned
as director on the 13
th
of January 2021 after the death of
the deceased. The first respondent did not resign as director of
Pabar when the curatorship
of the estate terminated at the death of
the deceased. During her tenure Advocate Cane SC commissioned a
valuation report on Pabar
which report was compiled by the firm
Strydoms Incorporated. The report found that the first respondent has
expended a sum of more
R7 million to fund his personal legal fees
from the coffers of Pabar.
[17]
On the 15
th
of January 2021 the applicant was appointed by
the Master of the High Court as the Executrix in the estate of the
deceased. On
the 25
th
of January 2021 the attorneys for
the applicant addressed a letter to the attorneys of the first and
fourth respondents informing
them of her appointment as executrix in
the estate of the deceased. However, without her knowledge or
consent, on the 17
th
of February 2021 the first respondent
unilaterally caused the share register of Pabar to be altered by
removing the applicant and
the deceased as the shareholders and made
himself a hundred percent (100%) shareholder in Pabar. It only came
to the attention
of the applicant on the 14
th
of April
2021 that the share register of Pabar has been altered when the first
respondent filed its answering affidavit in opposition
to an
application brought against him by the fourth respondent under case
number 16659/2021.
[18]
In the letter of the 25
th
January 2021 addressed to the
attorneys of the first and fourth respondent by the applicant’s
attorneys, it was further stated
that the first respondent’s
funding of his personal legal fees through Pabar should cease
immediately. On the 22
nd
of March 2021 the first
respondent deprived and refused to give access to the fourth
respondent into Pabar’s premises and
financial documents.
Furthermore, he caused Pabar to cease paying the fourth respondent’s
monthly salary. He refused and
caused Pabar, against the arrangement
of the curatrix bonis, not to pay the legal fees of the applicant. He
paid an amount from
Pabar’s account in the sum R400 000 as
security for costs in an action wherein Pabar is not a party. He
increased the
overdraft facility of Pabar to over R11 million without
consulting the applicant who has signed personal sureties on behalf
of
Pabar. It is this conduct of the first respondent that
necessitated to launching of these proceedings.
[19]
It is trite that in order for the applicant to succeed with an
application of the mandament van
spolie, it must allege and prove
that it was in peaceful and undisturbed possession of the property
and that it was deprived of
such possession unlawfully. Furthermore,
it is trite that the primary purpose of spoliation is to prevent
self-help – thus
preventing people from taking the law into
their own hands. The cause for possession or that it is wrongful or
illegal is irrelevant,
as that would go to the merits of the dispute.
[20]
In
Ngqukumba v Minister of Safety and Security and Others (CCT
87/13) [2014]- ZACC 14;
2014 (7) BCLR 788
(CC);
2014 (5) SA 112
(CC);
2014 (2) SACR 325
(CC) (15 May 2014)
the Constitutional Court
stated the following:
“
Paragraph
10: the essence of the mandament van spolie is the restoration before
all else of unlawfully deprived possession to the
possessor. It finds
expression in the maxim ‘spoliatus ante omnia restituendus est’
(the despoiled person must be restored
to possession before all
else). The spoliation order is meant to prevent the taking of
possession otherwise than in accordance
with the law. Its underlying
philosophy is that no one should resort to self-help to obtain or
regain possession. The main purpose
of the mandament van spolie is to
preserve public order by restraining persons from taking the law into
their own hands and by
inducing them to follow due process.”
[21]
The respondents contended that the applicant and the estate of the
deceased were not in possession
of the shares as at the 17
th
of February 2021. The applicant and the deceased signed an agreement
on the 3
rd
December 2015 wherein they transferred their
shares into the name of the first respondent. The applicant and the
deceased, so it
is contended, signed the share certificates on the
3
rd
of December 2015 transferring their shares into the
name of the first respondent. By signing the share certificate, the
applicant
expressly consented to the transfer of the shares. What
happened on the 17
th
of February 2021 was in fact an
update of the share register of Pabar which the respondents are
required to do in terms of the
provisions of the
Companies Act, 71 of
2008
. The names of the applicant and the deceased were still on the
share register on the 17
th
February 2021, but they were
not in possession of the shares since they transferred them on the
3
rd
of December 2015 already.
[22]
It is on record that the applicant was surprised to learn that the
first respondent is a hundred
percent shareholder of Pabar because
she has never relinquished her one percent share in Pabar. She has
never consented to her
share or that of the deceased being
transferred nor did she sell or donated her share to anyone in Pabar.
She denies that she signed
the documents the first respondent is
relying upon. She admits having been presented with these documents
at her home some time
back to sign same but she refused and did not
sign them. She is surprised that some signature that looks like hers
appears on the
document. The reasons she did not sign these documents
was because it purported to hand over everything in Pabar to the
first respondent
whereas it has been their wish and agreement with
the deceased that their entire estate should devolve upon their two
sons in equal
shares when they are both dead.
[23]
Given that on the 31
st
of July 2020 the first respondent,
through its attorneys of record, addressed a letter to the curatrix
bonis advising that it does
not intend on relying on the agreements
of 2015 and or 2016, it is telling that he would six months later and
after the death of
his father, without any notice or consultation
with his mother and brother who are part of the tripartite
relationship/partnership
as far as Pabar is concerned, in a
clandestine fashion alter the share register of Pabar. The first
respondent through his attorneys
stated in the letter that the
agreements of 2015 were not given effect to as a consequence of the
request by applicant. Moreover,
he was aware of the ongoing dispute
with regard to, not only these documents, but also the manner in
which he alleges to have acquired
the fifteen percent (15%)
shareholding in Pabar in 2012.
[24]
I do not agree with the first respondent’s reliance on the
share certificate that is alleged
to have been signed in 2015 whereas
the agreement is alleged to have been signed in 2016 due to an error
that occurred on the 2015
agreement regarding the number of shares of
the applicant and the deceased. The share certificate is a product of
the agreement
and not the other way round. At first there must be an
offer and acceptance for the agreement to come into force and
thereafter
the share certificates may be signed in order to transfer
the shares into the name of the transferee. Now, in this instance,
the
first respondent even acknowledges that the applicant refused to
sign the documents and that he only discovered later when the
documents were given to him by the applicant’s domestic worker,
Ms Zhou, that they have been signed by the applicant.
[25]
The further difficulty which the first respondent has is the manner
in which it received the
documents and the date upon which he
received them from Ms Zhou in relation to the date upon which he
altered the share register.
According to his testimony, he received a
note from Ms Zhou with the documents which note stated that Ms Zhou
received the documents
for safe-keeping from the deceased and that
she was giving him these documents but by the time he receives them,
she will be out
of the country and will be in her home in Zimbabwe.
However, it is undisputed that Ms Zhou was working for applicant and
that she
only left for her home country on the 5
th
of
April 2021 whereas the first respondent altered the share register on
17
th
of February 2021. It is my respectful view therefore
that he could not have relied on the documents he received from Ms
Zhou to
alter the share register of Pabar.
[26]
In
Tigon Ltd v Bestyet Investment (Pty) Ltd
2001 (4) SA 634
(N)
the Court stated the following:
“
It
seems to me that a distinction (not always recognised) may be drawn
between the share itself, which is an incorporeal moveable
entity,
and bundle of personal rights to which it gives rise. The argument
that we are here dealing with purely personal rights
to which the
protection of the mandament van spolie does not extend is, therefore,
not correct. The incorporeals, consisting of
the shares, are, by
statute, movable property and possession is exercised by the holder
negotiating, pledging, bequeathing or otherwise
dealing in the
shares. The holder also exercises possession by being registered in
the register of members and thereby being able
to vote and receive
dividends. Mr Brett’s submission that the removal of a
shareholder’s name from the register leaves
the rights of such
holder intact and unaffected cannot be correct. The holder has been
denied all the benefits of registration
as a member. Tigon went a
step further, however, and cancelled or expunged the very issue of
the shares, effectively depriving
the holder of all rights of
beneficial use.”
[27]
Furthermore, there is no merit in the contention that the applicant
by signing the share certificate
expressly consented to the transfer
of her share in Pabar. It should be recalled that the applicant has
categorically denied putting
her signature on those documents and
contended further that, because she is married in community of
property with the deceased,
the deceased could not have transferred
his shares without her consent. She would not have agreed to the
transfer of the shares
because it has always been their (the deceased
and herself) intention and agreement that both their sons should
inherit from their
estate in equal shares. Even if, for a moment, I
was to accept that she signed the share certificate as contended by
the respondents,
she signed a share certificate in relation to her
only share in Pabar and not on the share certificate in respect of
the shares
of the deceased. However, in terms of the Matrimonial
Property Act the deceased still needed her written consent to cede
his shares
to the first respondent in Pabar.
[28]
Section 15
of the
Matrimonial Property Act, 88 of 1984
provides as
follows:
“
15.
Powers of spouses
(1)
Subject to the
provisions of subsections (2), (3) and (7), a spouse in a marriage in
community of property may perform any juristic
act with regard to the
joint estate without the consent of the other spouse.
(2)
Such a spouse
shall not without the written consent of the other spouse –
(a)
……………
..
(b)
………………
(c)
Alienate, cede
or pledge any shares, stock, debentures, debenture bonds, insurance
policies, mortgage bonds, fixed deposits or any
similar assets, or
any investment by or on behalf of the other spouse in a financial
institution, forming part of the joint estate;
(d)
…………………………
(3)
A spouse shall
not without the consent of the other spouse –
(a)
…………………
(b)
…………………
.
(c)
Donate to
another person any asset of the joint estate or alienate such as
asset without value, excluding an asset of which the
donation or
alienation does not and probably will not unreasonably prejudice the
interest of the other spouse in the joint estate,
and which is not
contrary to the provisions of subsection (2) or paragraph (a) of this
subsection.”
[29]
Worse still for the first respondent is that paragraph 4 of the
purported agreement of the sale
of shares provide that the applicant
and the deceased are selling their combined eighty-five percent (85%)
ordinary shares of R1
each to the first respondent for a total sum of
R29 750 000. Paragraph 5 of the agreement provides for the
first respondent
to pay the R29 million purchase price with monthly
instalments of R250 000 over a period of sixty months or until
the death
of the longest living between the applicant and the
deceased. Although the first respondent places so much reliance on
these agreements,
he has failed to demonstrate that he has performed
and discharged his obligations in terms of these agreements and made
a payment
to the applicant and the deceased in the sum of R29 750 000
or any part thereof.
[30]
I am fortified in the applicant’s consistency in denying that
she signed these documents
or that she disputes that the signature
appended on these documents is hers. Paragraphs 6 and 7 of the
agreements state that both
the deceased and the applicant indicated
and undertook in their own free will, without any pressure or duress
on the part of any
party and after having taken independent legal
advice, to bequeath to Michael (the first respondent) the amounts due
to them at
their respective dates of death. The applicant is on
record that her wish and agreement with the deceased was that
everything in
Pabar would devolve upon their two sons in equal
shares, being the first and fourth respondents. This is the apparent
theme that
runs through the three joint wills of the deceased and the
applicant as they always updated or amended the joint will every
other
year.
[31]
The respondents contended further that the share register was altered
in terms of the law as
is provided for in
section 51
of the
Companies
Act. This
argument is misplaced and the respondents misconstrue the
purpose of the section. I agree that in terms of section 51 of the
Act,
a company must enter in its securities register every transfer
of any certificated securities and such certificate is proof that
the
named security holder owns the securities, in the absence of evidence
to the contrary. However, this section cannot be said
to empower the
first respondent to take the law into its own hands and alter the
share register without a proper recourse to legal
process.
[32]
In
George Municipality v Vena
1989 (2) SA 263
(A)
which case
was quoted with approval by the Constitutional Court in the Ngqukumba
case quoted above, the Appellate Division then
held the following:”
“
That
any Act purporting to alter the fundamental principle of our “law
that a person should not be disturbed in his possession
of property
without recourse to legal process would have to be narrowly construed
in view of the fundamental importance of that
principle of law.”
[33]
It is quite astonishing that the first respondent would question and
challenge the marital regime
of the marriage of his parents which was
even concluded before he was born. It is however, on record that the
first and fourth
respondents, as the children of the deceased and
because of their tripartite relationship in the family business, were
served with
the papers when the applicant brought an application to
appoint a curator ad litem and a curator bonis to the person of the
deceased.
Both the first and fourth respondents did not oppose the
application including the application extending the curator bonis’
powers to administer the joint estate of the deceased and the
applicant. The court found that the matrimonial regime of the
applicant
and the deceased was that of a marriage in community of
property. I therefore agree with the applicant that this point has
been
adjudicated upon and need not be considered in these
proceedings.
[34]
Because of the marriage in community of property between the deceased
and the applicant as was
confirmed by a court order on the 19
th
of October 2019, the applicant would still be entitled to her
half-share in the estate of the deceased even if the will of the
26
th
of September 2017 was to be accepted as the last will of the
deceased upon which the first respondent places reliance for his
conduct.
It follows therefore inescapably that the applicant is the
owner of half the shares which were registered in the name of the
deceased
together with her one percent shareholding prior to being
despoiled by the first respondent on the 17
th
of February
2021. The contention therefore that she has a one percent
share-holding and can be disposed of by being paid R220 000
is
meritless and misplaced.
[35]
I hold the view therefore that the applicant has discharged the onus
placed upon her in that
she has demonstrated and proved that she and
the estate of the deceased were in possession of the shares of Pabar
until they were
despoiled by the first respondent on the 17
th
of February 2021. I am of the respectful view therefore that the
inescapable conclusion is that the applicant is entitled to the
relief that she seeks in terms of the notice of motion.
[36]
It is on record that this matter served before the Urgent Court on
the 11
th
of May 2021 when it was struck from the roll for
lack of urgency and the issue of costs was reserved for determination
in this
hearing. Although the case was struck off the roll on the
11
th
of May 2021, it was not an issue that there were no
merits in the matter. The applicant has now been found to be
successful in
its case against the first and second respondents on
the same papers as they served in the urgent Court. It is my
respectful view
therefore that there is nothing in this case that
suggests a deviation from the normal rule that the costs should
follow the results.
[37]
In the circumstances, I make the following order:
1.
The first respondent alternatively, the second respondent represented
by the first respondent,
is directed to restore the status quo ante
which existed prior to the alteration of the share register of the
second respondent
on or about the 17
th
of February 2021 by
restoring the applicant’s name to the second respondent’s
share register as the holder of two shares
(1%) and the name of
Vincenzo Barbaglia as the holder of 168 shares (84%), in the second
respondent;
2.
The first respondent is ordered to pay the applicant’s costs of
the application and
the costs of the 11
th
of May 2021
including the costs of two counsel.
[38]
I now turn to deal with the application under case number 18493/21
which is brought in terms of
section 163
of the
Companies Act which
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)
……………………
..
(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.
[39]
The first respondent contended that the applicant does not have locus
standi to bring this application
against him for she is neither a
director nor shareholder in the second respondent. I am unable to
agree with the first respondent
in this regard. The applicant has
demonstrated in the spoliation application under case number:
21928/21 that she was a holder
of one percent (1%) of the shares in
Pabar and that she was despoiled by the first respondent on the 17
th
of February 2021. Furthermore, the applicant demonstrated that she
was married in community of property to the deceased who was
the
owner of eighty-five percent (85%) of the shares in Pabar before his
death, and therefore she is entitled to her half-share
in the estate
of the deceased including his shares in Pabar. Based on the findings
of this Court in case number 21298/2021 and
its order directing the
first respondent to restore the applicant’s name and that of
the deceased in the second respondent’s
share register, the
applicant has the necessary locu standi to bring this action.
[40]
The applicant contended that the first respondent has been
undermining her shareholding for some
time now. He firstly started by
claiming that he is a fifteen percent (15%) shareholder in Pabar
which he obtained in 2012. He
gives two different versions as to how
he obtained the fifteen percent shares in Pabar – that he
bought the shares from the
deceased and when he failed to produce
proof of how he purchased them – he then claimed that it was
donated to him by the
deceased. The applicant vehemently denies
knowledge of the donation and avers that, as she was married in
community of property
to the deceased, she did not consent to the
donation.
[41]
In the second instance, the first respondent challenges the marital
regime of the applicant and
the deceased and avers that their
marriage is out of community of property as they were married in
terms of the laws of Italy which
provided for marriages concluded
before 1975 to be out of community of property. This contention of
the first respondent has been
resolved by the Court order of the 19
th
of October 2019 when the applicant’s marriage was declared to
be in community of property. This issue is therefore settled
and need
not be determined by this Court. The first respondent was cited in
those proceedings and never filed his opposition nor
has he made any
attempt to appeal the decision of the 19
th
of October
2019.
[42]
In the third instance, the first respondent place reliance on the
contested will of the deceased
dated the 26
th
of September
2017 in which will the deceased bequeathed the whole of Pabar to the
first respondent. The applicant has launched
an action contesting the
validity of the will for the applicant and the deceased has for years
concluded a joint will which they
amended almost every year. But the
thread that flowed from these joint wills was that their two sons
will inherit their joint estate
in equal shares. Moreover, the will
of the 26
th
September 2017 was concluded by the deceased
alone and during the period when he was suffering from severe
dementia. The first
respondent only produced this will after the
death of the deceased and to the curator bonis. However, he did not
discuss or inform
the applicant and or the fourth respondent about
this will.
[43]
It is further contended by the applicant that the first respondent,
although he worked for Pabar
for more than four decades, he was never
a director or de facto director as he avers. He was only appointed a
director by the curatrix
bonis on the 31
st
of March 2020,
and to avoid him having absolute control of Pabar and using it as his
fiefdom, Mr Frank Pellegrini, an independent
director, was appointed
as a non-executive director. The curatrix bonis’ instructions
were that Pabar should pay the legal
fees of the applicant and that
the first respondent should account for the more than R7 million he
has expended for his personal
legal fees from the coffers of Pabar.
Furthermore, that the directors should give the fourth respondent
access to the premises
and to the books of account of Pabar. However,
the first respondent has resisted and refused to do this since the
departure of
Mr Pellegrini.
[44]
The applicant further complained that the first respondent has
continued to use the resources
of Pabar to pay his personal legal
expenses and has been running Pabar, as if he is the sole
shareholder, for his own benefit.
He did not resign as director of
Pabar when the curatorship of the estate terminated at the death of
the deceased. As a sole director,
so it is contended, in March 2021
the first respondent’s attorneys sent a letter to the fourth
respondent advising him that
his access to Pabar’s premises and
to its financial information is terminated. Furthermore, the letter
informed the fourth
respondent that his salary as well from Pabar,
which he has been receiving for years for the work he has been doing
for Pabar and
other businesses of the family, was terminated. This
brought the way in which Pabar has been run for years to an end.
[45]
As a consequence of the first respondent’s conduct, so the
argument went, the applicant’s
rights as a shareholder have
been completely ignored and as things stand she has no insight or
control as to how Pabar is run.
In a short space of time the rights
of the applicant as a shareholder have been usurped by the first
respondent with the assistance
of the third respondent who is the
executor nominated by the contested will of the deceased dated the
26
th
of September 2017. The first respondent continues to
abuse the resources of Pabar and has paid a sum of R400 000 out
of its
coffers being security for costs in a matter involving one of
the businesses he partnered with the fourth respondent of which Pabar
has no interest and now Pabar is experiencing financial strain.
[46]
The applicant complained further that the curatrix bonis instructed
the third respondent to reflect
his personal expenses and legal fees
in the business loan account, but there is no detail of the loan
account since it is not populated
in the books of Pabar. Since Pabar
is experiencing financial strain, the first respondent had to borrow
money from one of the family
businesses to pay the staff salaries of
Pabar. The first respondent has, so it was contended, deliberately
prevented payment of
the legal fees for the applicant to prevent her
from obtaining legal advice about the goings on in Pabar.
Furthermore, the first
and third respondents brought an application
against the applicant to prevent her from making enquiries about the
overseas properties
which belong to her joint estate with the
deceased.
[47]
It is now well established that the court has the power and wide
latitude in the exercise of
its discretion to make an order which it
deems fit if it is satisfied that the affairs of the company are
being conducted in a
manner which is oppressive or abusive and
unfairly prejudicial to the interests of applicant who is a
shareholder or director or
a related person of the company. For the
applicant to succeed in the relief she seeks, she must establish that
the conduct complained
of has been committed, that the conduct of the
director or the affairs of the company are conducted in a manner that
is unfair,
prejudicial, unjust and inequitable to her interests and
that it is just and equitable to bring an end to such conduct by
granting
her the relief sought.
[48]
Section 163(2)
of the
Companies Act provides
as follows:
(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)
…………………………
f) an order –
(i)
appointing directors in place of or in addition to all or any of the
directors then in office;
or
(ii)
……………..
[49]
In
Louw v Nel
2011 (2) SA 172
(SCA)
the Supreme Court of
Appeal dealt with the provisions of the then
section 252
which is the
equivalent of the present section163 and stated the following:
“
The
combined effect of subsections (1) and (3) is to empower the court to
make such order as it thinks fit for the giving of relief,
if it is
satisfied that the affairs of the company are being conducted in a
manner that is unfairly prejudicial to the interests
of the dissident
minority. The conduct of the minority may thus become material in at
least the following two obvious ways. First,
it may render the
conduct of the majority, even though prejudicial to the minority, not
unfair. Second, even though the conduct
of the majority may be both
prejudicial and unfair, the conduct of the minority may nevertheless
affect the relief that a court
thinks fit to grant under subsection
3. An applicant for relief under
s 252
cannot content himself or
herself with a number of vague and rather general allegations, but
must establish the following: that
the particular act or omission has
been committed, or that the affairs of the company are being
conducted in the manner alleged
and that such act or omission or
conduct of the company’s affairs is unfairly prejudicial,
unjust or inequitable to him or
some part of the members of the
company; the nature of the relief that must be granted to bring to an
end the matters complained
of; and that it is just and equitable that
such relief be granted. Thus, the court’s jurisdiction to make
an order does not
arise until the specified statutory criteria have
been satisfied.”
[50]
In
Grancy Property Limited v Manala (665/12)
[2013] ZASCA 57
(10
May 2013)
in which the case of Nel above was quoted with
approval, the Supreme Court of appeal stated the following:
“
In
concluding on this particular aspect of the case it bears mention
that in determining whether the conduct complained of is oppressive,
unfairly prejudicial or unfairly disregards the interests of Grancy,
it is not 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.”
[51]
I do not agree with the contentions of the first respondent that
Pabar, as a treasury which paid
everything for the family businesses
and Noble Land, had an interest in the winding up of Noble Land.
Pabar was not cited as a
party in the proceedings of Noble Land and
therefore had no interest in the proceedings. However, if Pabar has
an interest in Noble
Land – hence it paid the legal fees, it is
for the first respondent to give details as to how much of the R7
million was
expended on legal fees on behalf of Pabar in the Noble
Land action and he has failed to do so. Furthermore, the curatrix
bonis
instructed the first respondent to give details of legal fees
paid by Pabar in its books of account, but it is on record that
nothing
has been populated in the loan account with regard to the
legal fees paid on behalf of the first respondent by Pabar. The
applicant
does not know, even now, as to how much the first
respondent has expended over and above the R7 million for legal fees
for he is
continuously involved in litigation against the applicant
and the fourth respondent.
[52]
The first respondent contended that the applicant was never involved
in the running of the business
of Pabar although she has been a
director all these years. It was contended further that, as an
elderly person, there is no need
for her to be furnished with the
books of account and financials of Pabar. Furthermore, that she is
only a one percent shareholder
and should not interfere with the
running of Pabar otherwise the first respondent could pay her out the
value of her share in Pabar
which is about R220 000 as per the
valuation done in December 2020.
[53]
The first respondent, so it was argued, paid the legal fees during
the tenure of the curatrix
bonis with its consent and the R400 000
paid as security for costs in the Noble Land case was made before Mr
Pellegrini resigned.
Although Pabar is not cited as a party in the
case of Noble Land, Pabar has an interest in Noble Land for, as a
treasury of the
family, it funded the acquisition of Noble Land. The
curatrix bonis confirmed that the applicant should approach Pabar to
pay for
its legal fees but that it should be recorded in the loan
account of the applicant so that it is paid back to Pabar. At the
moment,
so the argument went, the applicant’s monthly expenses
in the sum of R186 314.83 are paid by Pabar and she is entitled
to this amount because she is the widow of the deceased.
[54]
Much as Pabar is a private company with limited liability and is
owned and run by the family
who operate on the bases of consensus or
agreeing with each other rather than on strict principles of company
law, it is not open
to one director of the company to conduct himself
or the business of the company in an unfair and prejudicial manner to
the interests
of the other shareholders. It is of no consequence how
many shares the minority shareholder holds in the company, her
interests
deserve to be protected and taken into consideration at all
times. It seems to me that the first respondent ignores and
disregards
the fact that the applicant by her marriage in community
of property to the decease, is entitled to a half-share of the estate
of the deceased and therefore has a significant shareholding in
Pabar.
[55]
The age of a shareholder is of no relevance when it comes to her
rights if they are affected
by the conduct of the director or are
disregarded in the manner in which the business of the company is
conducted. It should be
recalled that the curatrix bonis appointed Mr
Pellegini, an independent person, as a director of Pabar to reign in
the first respondent
in the conduct of the affairs of Pabar. The
directors were at the time directed to allow the fourth respondent
access to the financial
records of Pabar and to its premises. Since
the first respondent has been the sole director after the resignation
of Mr Pellegrini
he has flatly refused to give the fourth respondent
access to any thing in Pabar. The conduct of the first respondent in
this regard,
by extension deprives the applicant access to
information about the business of Pabar which she shared with the
fourth respondent.
[56]
The first respondent does not concern itself with the issue that the
applicant has signed personal
surety on behalf of Pabar. He does not
make issue about increasing the overdraft facility of Pabar to more
than R11 million. He
is not interested in the exposure of the
applicant to that extent and continues to shut her out of the
business of Pabar as he
avers that she has never sat her foot at
Pabar even when the deceased was still alive. It is on record that
the fourth respondent
has been working for Pabar and was
concentrating on the management of its finances. Since the first
respondent became the sole
director after the resignation of Mr
Pellegrini, he has used Pabar as his fiefdom and has shut out both
the applicant and the fourth
respondent. He has refused to convene a
shareholders meeting or to discuss the affairs of Pabar with the
applicant and or the fourth
respondent.
[57]
It is my considered view therefore that that the conduct of the first
respondent is manifestly
oppressive, unfairly prejudicial and
disregards the interests of the applicant as a shareholder of the
second respondent. It therefore
ineluctably follows that the
applicant has established a case that, it is just and equitable to
grant her the relief sought in
terms of section 163 of the Act.
[58]
Although the first respondent should also have resigned as director
of Pabar when the curatrix
bonis’ term of office came to an
end, however he continued on the basis that he has been made an heir
to inherit everything
in Pabar in terms of the will of the 26
th
of September 2017. I do not understand the applicant to be having
serious issues with the first respondent remaining a director
and she
does not persist that she or the fourth respondent be appointed as
directors of Pabar. Furthermore, the first respondent
has not shown
any discomfort about the independent persons suggested for
appointment as the co-directors in Pabar to look after
and protect
the interests not only of the applicant but that of Pabar as well. It
is therefore my respectful view that there is
no reason for the first
respondent to bother if his conduct or the manner in which the
business of Pabar is conducted is not unfairly
prejudicial and unjust
and inequitable to the interests of the applicant and Pabar.
[59]
This matter was initially enrolled in the Urgent Court, however the
court struck it off the roll
for lack of urgency and the issue of
costs was reserved for determination in this Court. The first
respondent contended that it
was entitled to the costs of the 28
th
of April 2021 for it was brought to court on urgent basis and had to
prepare and file its papers under extreme circumstances and
the
matter did not proceed.
[60]
I understand that the matter did not proceed in the Urgent Court on
the 28
th
of April 2021 but that does not mean there was no
merit in the matter. I have now found in favour of the applicant and
I am not
persuaded that I should deviate from the general rule that
costs follow the result. I am of the respectful view that the
circumstances
of this matter dictate that the applicant should get
her costs for bringing this application. The applicant is faced with
a terrible
situation with her eldest who is full of vigour in his
attempt to take over or denude a major asset in her joint estate with
her
husband of its value for his personal benefit. The applicant and
the deceased built the wealth for their children and wanted them
to
share equally, but greed has creeped in and the first respondent
wants everything for himself.
[61]
In the circumstances, I make the following order:
1.
The first respondent is
declared to have exercised his duties as a director of the second
respondent in a manner which is oppressive,
unfairly prejudicial to,
and which unfairly disregards the interests of the applicant and
shareholder in the second respondent;
2.
Pursuant to the order in 1 above:
2.1
The first respondent is prohibited from the date of this order, and
in accordance with the provisions
of section 163(2)(a) of the Act,
from using the second respondent’s funds, assets, or resources,
whether in his capacity
as a purported shareholder or director of the
second respondent, to pay any legal fees for which he is personally
liable and/or
which are rendered, directly or indirectly, for his
personal benefit;
2.2
Mr Sean Hirschowitz, failing which Mr Carlos Pedregal, failing which
Mr Eric Moss, is appointed as a
director of the second respondent
until such time as the estate of the late Mr Vincenzo Barbaglia (the
deceased) is finally wound
up or the second respondent’s
business, or the majority of its shares, are sold, whichever occurs
soonest;
2.3
The second respondent is directed to furnish the applicant with
copies of the following documents on
a monthly basis for so long as
the applicant remains a shareholder in the second respondent:
2.3.1 Pabar’s
general ledger;
2.3.2 the bank
statements for all bank accounts held by Pabar;
2.3.3 a schedule of
payments made by Pabar in each month;
2.3.4 Pabar’s
turnover reports;
2.3.5 Pabar’s
income statements;
2.3.6 Pabar’s cash
flow projections; and
2.3.7 Pabar’s
management accounts.
2.4
Other than in the ordinary course of business, any disposal,
alienation, or- encumbrance
of any of Pabar’s assets, as appear
on its balance sheet, is prohibited from the date of this order to
the date on which,
whichever occurs earliest:
(i)
The deceased’s estate is finally wound up;
(ii)
Pabar is sold or disposed of, by way of a sale of 100% of shares in
Pabar, or the sale of its
business; or
(iii)
Pabar is finally wound up; or
(iv)
the date on which the applicant ceases to be a shareholder in Pabar.
2.5
The first respondent is required to: (i) provide a reconciliation of
the personal legal fees paid by
Pabar on his behalf from the date of
Mr Barbaglia’s death, being 10 December 2020, to date; and (ii)
repay to Pabar the personal
legal fees paid by Pabar on his behalf
from the date of Mr Barbaglia’s death to date, and within
thirty (30) calendar days
from the granting of this order.
3.
The first respondent is to pay the costs of this application and the
costs of the 28
th
of April 2021 including the costs of two
counsel
TWALA
M L
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION
Date
of Hearing:
23
rd
and 24
th
February 2022
Date
of Judgment:
22
nd
March 2022
For
the Applicant:
Advocate AE Franklin SC
Advocate FR McAdam
Instructed
by:
Bove Attorneys Incorporated
Tel: 011 485 0424
vickyb@boveattorneys.co.za
For
the First and Second
Respondent:
Advocate J Peter SC
Advocate C Dittberner
Instructed
by:
Werkmans Attorneys
Tel: 011 535 8000
ivonwildenrath@werkmans.com
For
the Third Respondent: Lawtons Africa
Tel: 011 775 6373
Arnold.shapiro@lawtonsafrica.com
charland@pabar.co.za
For
the Fifth Respondent:
Bowmans Attorneys
Tel: 011 669 9555
Tim.gordon-grant@bowmans.com
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