Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 173South Africa
ABSA Bank Limited v Go On Supermarket (Pty) Limited (The Spar Group Limited intervening) (9442/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 173 (24 March 2022)
Headnotes
Summary: Urgent application – General notarial bond over movable property – Perfecting of – Effect of debtor placed under business rescue – Business Rescue Practitioner consenting to the perfection of general notarial bond over movables – creditor obtains possession by leaving debtor in control and possession – pledge perfected – symbolic transfer of possession sufficient to constitute a pledge – real right established – application granted to limited extent.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## ABSA Bank Limited v Go On Supermarket (Pty) Limited (The Spar Group Limited intervening) (9442/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 173 (24 March 2022)
ABSA Bank Limited v Go On Supermarket (Pty) Limited (The Spar Group Limited intervening) (9442/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 173 (24 March 2022)
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sino date 24 March 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO
:
9442/2022
DATE
:
24
th
march 2022
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
REVISED:
In
the matter between:
ABSA
BANK
LIMITED
Applicant
and
GO
ON SUPERMARKET (PTY)
LIMITED
First Respondent
THE
SPAR GROUP
LIMITED
Intervening Party
Coram:
Adams J
Heard
: 15
March 2022 – The ‘virtual hearing’ of this Urgent
Application was conducted as a videoconference on
Microsoft
Teams
.
Delivered:
24
March 2022 – This judgment was handed down electronically by
circulation to the parties' representatives by email, by being
uploaded to
CaseLines
system and by release to SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is
deemed to be 10:00 on 24 March 2022.
Summary:
Urgent application – General notarial bond over
movable property – Perfecting of – Effect of debtor
placed under
business rescue – Business Rescue Practitioner
consenting to the perfection of general notarial bond over movables –
creditor obtains possession by leaving debtor in control and
possession – pledge perfected – symbolic transfer of
possession sufficient to constitute a pledge – real right
established –
application granted to limited
extent.
ORDER
(1)
The intervening party is granted leave to intervene in this urgent
application.
(2)
The applicant’s non-compliance with the rules of this Court in
respect
of time periods and service of processes, is condoned and
compliance with such rules are dispensed with and this application is
enrolled as an urgent application in terms of Uniform Court Rule
6(12).
(3)
Subject to the Spar Group Limited’s pledge and real right of
possession
over all the assets and equipment as contained in annexure
A to the Special Notarial Bond BN9369/2018 held by and in favour of
the Spar Group Limited, the applicant is authorised to perfect its
security of pledge under General Covering Notarial Bond BN16/43750,
limited to the amount of R6 000 000, in respect of those
assets of the respondent that are not the subject of the Spar
Group’s
Special Notarial Bond BN9369/2018, situated at the respondent’s
premises at shop 12 and 13, Lyndhurst Superspar,
Lyndhurst Square
Shopping Centre, corner Drome and Pretoria Road, Lyndhurst, Gauteng,
2192 or wherever else situated.
(4)
The Sheriff of the High Court is authorised to attach and take a
written
inventory of and value so much of such moveables and
stock-in-trade situated at the premises, limited to the value of
R6 000 000
(‘the attached assets’) and
thereafter hand such written inventory to the applicant’s
attorneys and the Business
Rescue Practitioner.
(5)
This order of perfection in respect of the movables and
stock-in-trade
shall vest with the applicant a continuing real right
of attachment over such attached assets, subject to the conditions
that:
5.1
The applicant itself shall not take physical possession or remove
such attached
assets;
5.2
The Business Rescue Practitioner is allowed to use the attached
assets in its
day-to-day trading activities of the respondent, while
in business rescue.
(6)
Notwithstanding that provided for in paragraph 4 above, the Business
Rescue
Practitioner is nominated as and will at all times act as the
applicant’s agent for the purposes of the applicant exercising
control and physical possession of and over the attached assets.
(7)
The applicant may not, without the leave of the Court or with the
written
consent of the Business Rescue Practitioner, sell, alienate
and/or dispose of the attached assets.
(8)
Each party shall bear his own costs.
JUDGMENT
Adams J:
[1].
In this urgent application, the
applicant (Absa) applies for an order perfecting its security in
terms of a general notarial bond.
The general notarial bond is held
by Absa to the value of R6 000 000 in respect of certain of
the respondent’s
moveable property. The respondent is at
present under business rescue and the duly appointed Business Rescue
Practitioner (the
BRP) is Mr Knoop, who was appointed as such on
14 February 2022.
[2].
On 4 March 2022, the BRP consented, in
writing, to Absa bringing this application. He also expressly
consented to Absa perfecting
the security held by it in terms of the
general notarial bond, subject to certain conditions, notably that
Absa would not take
possession of the attached property, but leave it
in his possession, which would allow him to continue the business of
the respondent.
Additionally, the BRP does not oppose the urgent
application and he has in fact filed a notice to abide.
[3].
Absa alleges that this application is
urgent because on 4 March 2022, they were informed by the BRP of the
Spar Group Limited’s
intention to perfect their notarial bonds
over certain general and specific moveable property of the
respondent. By applying for
the relief in this urgent application, so
Absa avers, it seeks to be vigilant in the protection of its
interests and rights. A
vigilant creditor who seeks to apply to
perfect his right of pledge first before another, so it was submitted
on behalf of Absa,
does not make the act unjust or inequitable, even
where he is the holder of a later bond of security.
[4].
Secondly, Absa contends that the
application is urgent because certain of the assets of the
respondent, which are subject to the
applicant’s general
notarial bond, are perishable stock in trade goods. So, if they were
to wait in the ordinary course,
those goods would go off and hold no
value for the respondent. Furthermore, it is alleged by Absa that the
respondent presently
trades on a cash basis, the Spar Group having
cancelled its line of credit. This is, amongst other grounds, the
foundation for
the respondent resolving to enter business rescue, but
are also grounds for Absa to secure its position if business rescue
is unsuccessful,
and liquidation ensues.
[5].
Importantly, so Absa submits, the
respondent is financially distressed and reasonably unlikely that it
will be able to pay its debts
as and when they fall due in the next
six months. Therefore, so the argument goes, the respondent may very
well not be able to
fulfil its obligations to Absa under the
overdraft even whilst under business rescue.
[6].
Therefore, so the argument is concluded,
Absa, which is entitled to protect its rights of pledge embodied in
the general notarial
bond and perfect it, should be granted the
relief prayed for in this urgent application, which it will not get
in the ordinary
course because the time periods for the formulation
and development of a business rescue plan are truncated in the
Companies Act,
71 of 2008 (‘the
Companies Act&rsquo
;).
[7].
I find myself in agreement with these
submissions on behalf of Absa. In any event, applications to perfect
securities in terms of
notarial bonds are, by definition, urgent. I
therefore find that Absa’s application is urgent.
[8].
As indicated above, the BRP consented to
Absa perfecting its security in terms of the general notarial bond
subject to the following
conditions: Absa is not to take physical
possession of the assets or removing the assets; and that the BRP is
entitled to use the
assets in the day-to-day trading of the
respondent; and that the BRP shall act as Absa’s nominated
agent for the purpose
of having physical control and possession of
the assets.
[9].
The intervening party (the Spar Group),
on the other hand, applies for leave to intervene and, once admitted,
it seeks an order
striking the application from the roll,
alternatively, an order dismissing the main application with costs.
It contends that the
Court’s endorsement by way of a perfection
order is not necessary in the present situation which amounts to a
proposed voluntary
surrender subject to certain conditions. If the
Court is amenable to granting a perfection order, then, so the Spar
Group contends,
the formulation of the relief claimed is deficient in
a number of respects in that it
inter
alia
infringes on their vested
rights arising from their own special and general notarial bonds and
from contracts reserving ownership
in stock-in-trade.
In
sum, Spar Group contends that Absa’s application for an
interdict should fail as being bad in law.
[10].
As regards the application to intervene
in terms of Uniform Rule of Court 12, read with
Rule 6(14)
, the
Spar Group avers that it is the major creditor of the respondent (in
business rescue), it being indebted to the Spar Group
in the sum of
an amount in excess R17 000 000, being in respect of its
trade debt. Therefore, so the Spar Group contends,
on ordinary
principles, it should be granted leave to intervene because it has a
direct and substantial interest in the subject
matter of the main
application.
[11].
I find myself in agreement with the Spar
Group’s submissions in that regard. The point is that the Spar
Group has rights in
and to the respondent's movable property, which
stand to be adversely affected by the Order sought in this
application. These rights
are derived by virtue of the Special
Notarial Bond registered in favour of the Spar Group over certain
identified movable assets
of the respondent and the contractual
reservation of ownership in its favour in respect of all goods sold
and delivered to the
respondent for as long as the respondent
continues to hold the goods in stock.
[12].
Moreover, in terms of
section 145(1)(b)
of the
Companies Act, each
creditor is entitled to participate in any
court proceedings arising during business rescue proceedings. For all
of these reasons,
I am of the view that the Spar Group has made out a
case for leave to intervene in this urgent application. I therefore
intend
granting an order to that effect.
[13].
As for their opposition to the
application itself, the Spar Group alleges that, as a wholesaler, it
supplies groceries and other
household goods to the respondent which
carries on a retail supermarket business under the Spar brand name.
In the course of this
trading relationship, the respondent was
granted credit facilities subject to the operation of their standard
terms of sale and
the obtaining of securities for the credit
facilities, in particular the registration of notarial bonds over the
movable property
of the respondent. As already indicated, the
respondent’s indebtedness to the Spar Group at present amounts
to a sum in excess
of R17 000 000.
[14].
On the other hand, so the Spar Group
contends, the respondent’s indebtedness to Absa is
insignificant if compared to the indebtedness
to the Spar Group.
[15].
The Spar Group also contends that,
because they and ABSA are competing creditors laying claim, in terms
of their general notarial
bonds, to the same movable property of the
respondent, the BRP should not have afforded Absa the opportunity to
launch its perfection
application before the Spar Group was brought
into the picture. Absa’s application was launched on 8 March
2022 and the Spar
Group was only informed thereof by the BRP on 10
March 2022.
[16].
The Spar Group also opposes Absa’s
application for a perfection order on the basis that it is not
founded upon a breach by
the respondent of the terms of the general
notarial bond and the ABSA's entitlement to foreclose. Rather, so the
Spar Group contends,
Absa seeks a perfection order based solely on
the ostensible consent given in writing by the BRP.
[17].
There is, in my view, no merit in these
contentions by the Spar Group. The respondent’s indebtedness to
Absa is secured by
a notarial bond registered in favour of Absa over
the movable property of the respondent. In terms of the notarial
bond, Absa is
entitled to ‘foreclose’ in the event
inter
alia
of the respondent being placed
under judicial management. Business rescue proceedings is, in my
view, a form of judicial management.
Absa is therefore entitled to
foreclose in terms of the bond and the fact that the Spar Group has a
claim of a personal nature
against the respondent makes no difference
to Absa’s entitlement to proceed in terms of the bond.
[18].
As
was held in
Contract
Forwarding (Pty) Ltd v Chesterfin (Pty) Ltd and Others
[1]
,
a perfection clause entitles the holder of the bond to take
possession of the movables over which the bond has been registered.
Such a clause amounts to an agreement to constitute a pledge and will
be enforced at the instance of the bondholder, whereupon
the creditor
obtains a real right of security.
[19].
At para 6, Harms JA held as follows:
‘
Real
rights are stronger than personal rights and in the case of
conflicting real rights the principle
prior tempore potior iure
applies. The right in question, a pledge, is a real right, which is
established by means of taking possession and not by means
of an
agreement to pledge. The bondholder who obtains possession first
thereby establishes a real right. If I may be permitted
some more
Latin:
vigilantibus non dormientibus iura subveniunt
, meaning
that the laws aid those who are vigilant and not those who sleep.
(Both principles provide a safer guide to the correct
answer than the
Court below's “just and equitable” principle. The fact
that it is “fortuitous” that the
vigilant person perfects
his rights first does not make the act either unjust or inequitable.)
… ... … The fact that
Chesterfin's bond contained a
provision prohibiting Eurotile from pledging or hypothecating its
movables without Chesterfin's consent
also has no effect on Contract
Forwarding's position unless the latter knows of it. In the absence
of Contract Forwarding's knowledge,
Eurotile's breach of its contract
with Chesterfin does not affect the former's position.’
[20].
As per the ratio in
Contract
Forwarding
, I am of the view that
Absa is entitled and permitted to take possession of the pledged
goods with a view to perfecting its bond.
[21].
Also at para 14, the court had the
following to say:
‘
There
is no rule that provides that symbolical transfer of possession (like
the handing over of keys) is not sufficient to constitute
a pledge.
It is different with
constitutum possessorium
, a method of
delivery that presupposes that the goods remained under the physical
control of the debtor. That simply did not happen
in this case.’
[22].
On the basis of this authority, I
reiterate that, in my view, the Spar Group’s grounds of
opposition to Absa’s application
are devoid of merit.
[23].
In the event that the above Honourable
Court is amenable to grant a perfection order in favour of Absa, so
the Spar Group contends,
the Court should not grant Absa the relief
claimed as formulated by them because such formulation is defective
in that Absa cannot
obtain a perfection order in respect of assets
belonging to the respondent which are already the subject matter of
the Spar Group’s
special notarial bond. There is merit in this
contention by the Spar Group. However, during the hearing of
arguments before me,
Mr Marais, who appeared on behalf of Absa,
conceded as much, but proposed that any order granted by me should
take into account
this fact. The suggestion by Mr Marais was that the
assets which are the subject of the special notarial bond in favour
of the
Spar Group be expressly excluded from the perfection order.
That, in my view, takes care of that ground of objection.
[24].
The Spar Group also contends that the
Absa cannot obtain a perfection order in respect of the movable
assets in the respondent’s
possession, in respect of which the
Spar Group has contractually retained ownership. This consists of
stock supplied by the Spar
Group. Also, so the Spar Group submits,
Absa cannot obtain a perfection order in respect of the balance of
the respondent's trading
stock as trading stock is a circulating
asset and the pledge will be destroyed the moment the respondent
disposes of the trading
stock. The proposed court order, so the
argument goes, cannot vest Absa with a continuing real right of
attachment over such attached
assets as this depends on continuous
possession and control being exercised by or on behalf of ABSA. For
the reasons mentioned
above, these contentions stand to be rejected.
The point is that Absa has the right to perfect its security in terms
of the notarial
bond.
Costs
[25].
The general rule in matters of costs is that the successful party
should be given her or his
costs, and this rule should not be
departed from except where there are good grounds for doing so.
[26].
In casu
, it is so that Absa has been substantially successful
in its application. The BRP did however not oppose the application
and he
in fact gave notice of his intention to abide. Therefore,
there cannot possibly be a costs order awarded against the
respondent.
[27].
As for the costs as between Absa and the intervening party, as
correctly pointed out by Mr Strydom,
who appeared on behalf the Spar
Group, they have a measure of success in that property in respect of
which they enjoy security
in terms of a special notarial bond is to
be excluded from a perfection of the notarial bond in favour of Absa.
I therefore believe
that the correct costs order to be awarded is one
in terms of which each party is to bear his own costs.
[28].
I therefore intend granting a costs order to that effect.
Order
[29].
Accordingly, I make the following order: -
(1)
The intervening party is granted leave to intervene in this urgent
application.
(2)
The applicant’s non-compliance with the rules of this Court in
respect
of time periods and service of processes, is condoned and
compliance with such rules are dispensed with and this application is
enrolled as an urgent application in terms of Uniform Court
Rule
6(12).
(3)
Subject to the Spar Group Limited’s pledge and real right of
possession
over all the assets and equipment as contained in annexure
A to the Special Notarial Bond BN9369/2018 held by and in favour of
the Spar Group Limited, the applicant is authorised to perfect its
security of pledge under General Covering Notarial Bond BN16/43750,
limited to the amount of R6 000 000, in respect of those
assets of the respondent that are not the subject of the Spar
Group’s
Special Notarial Bond BN9369/2018, situated at the respondent’s
premises at shop 12 and 13, Lyndhurst Superspar,
Lyndhurst Square
Shopping Centre, corner Drome and Pretoria Road, Lyndhurst, Gauteng,
2192 or wherever else situated.
(4)
The Sheriff of the High Court is authorised to attach and take a
written
inventory of and value so much of such moveables and
stock-in-trade situated at the premises, limited to the value of
R6 000 000
(‘the attached assets’) and
thereafter hand such written inventory to the applicant’s
attorneys and the Business
Rescue Practitioner.
(5)
This order of perfection in respect of the movables and
stock-in-trade
shall vest with the applicant a continuing real right
of attachment over such attached assets, subject to the conditions
that:
5.3
The applicant itself shall not take physical possession or remove
such attached
assets;
5.4
The Business Rescue Practitioner is allowed to use the attached
assets in its
day-to-day trading activities of the respondent, while
in business rescue.
(6)
Notwithstanding that provided for in paragraph 4 above, the Business
Rescue
Practitioner is nominated as and will at all times act as the
applicant’s agent for the purposes of the applicant exercising
control and physical possession of and over the attached assets.
(7)
The applicant may not, without the leave of the Court or with the
written
consent of the Business Rescue Practitioner, sell, alienate
and/or dispose of the attached assets.
(8)
Each party shall bear his own costs.
L
R ADAMS
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Johannesburg
HEARD
ON:
15
th
March 2022 –
as a
videoconference on
Microsoft Teams
.
JUDGMENT
DATE:
24
th
March 2022 – judgment handed down
electronically
FOR THE
APPLICANT:
Adv B S W Marais
INSTRUCTED
BY:
De Vries Incorporated, Sandton
FOR THE
RESPONDENT:
Adv Desai
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Petker & Associates Incorporated, Hyde Park, Johannesburg
FOR
THE INTERVENING PARTY: Advocate
Francois Strydom
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Moss Marsh & Georgiev , Johannesburg
[1]
Contract
Forwarding (Pty) Ltd v Chesterfin (Pty) Ltd and Others
2003 (2) SA 253
(SCA).
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