Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 184South Africa
Segal v Tuckett and Others (2020/3822) [2022] ZAGPJHC 184 (1 April 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
1 April 2022
Headnotes
33% of the equity of the firm or 400 shares, which, according to the agreement he sold for R 1.00 (one rand). The claim against the loan account was valued at R 2 300 000.00.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Segal v Tuckett and Others (2020/3822) [2022] ZAGPJHC 184 (1 April 2022)
Segal v Tuckett and Others (2020/3822) [2022] ZAGPJHC 184 (1 April 2022)
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sino date 1 April 2022
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO: 2020/3822
REPORTABLE: NO
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO
REVISED. NO
DATE:
1 April 2022
In the matter between:
RAEL
SEGAL
Applicant
And
BRYNALYN
ROLAND TUCKETT
1
st
Respondent
PANAMO
GLOBAL SOLUTIONS (PTY) LTD
2
nd
Respondent
EASTERN
FOUNDER
LIMITED
3
rd
Respondent
EQ
EMPORIUM (PTY)
LTD
4
th
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MANOIM J
Introduction
[1]
In this matter,
the applicant (“Segal”) claims
the
outstanding balance on the purchase price of shares in the second
respondent (“Panamo”) that he sold to the first
respondent (“Tuckett”). The second and third respondents
are companies that had all provided security for Tuckett’s
obligations, hence their inclusion in the claim
.
[2]
Tuckett, along with the other
respondents, resists this
claim. In turn Tuckett brings a counterclaim in which he seeks to set
aside and cancel the sale of shares and to reclaim from Segal
the
moneys he had paid thus far in respect of the sale.
[3]
The respondents
defences
are two-fold. Firstly
, they allege
they were sold a non-existent
merx
.
This is because the sale price was based on the value of Segal’s
loan account in Panamo. But, say the respondents, they
have since
discovered, despite Tuckett having already paid off part of the
purchase price, that the loan account no longer exists.
[4]
Second, as an additional self-standing
defence, they allege that because Panamo was assisting Tuckett buy
its own shares, this amounted
to financial assistance for which no
authorisation had been given as required by
section 45
of the
Companies Act, 71 of 2008
. Similarly, as I go on to explain,
the
respondents allege that Tuckett, was a related party in respect of
the other companies, and hence too,
financial assistance was not permissible without the requisite
authorisation. Tuckett’s case is
that
no such authorisation was granted.
But he went further in his
section 45
defence. This deficiency not
only condemned the validity of the surety granted by Panamo, and the
other surety respondents, but
also tainted the main transaction i.e.,
the sale of shares.
Background
[5]
At
the time of the sale of shares
it appears that Panamo had three shareholders. I say ‘appears’
as none of the parties confirms this. However, in an
email from
Tuckett, dated 9 November 2018, addressed to Segal and a Martin
Levick, and copying in his wife Penelope, Tuckett refers
to the
company having three shareholders.
[1]
[6]
This email
is what precipitated the sale. In it, Tuckett, who signs himself as
the Managing Director of Panamo, refers to an acrimonious
conversation he had had with Levick concerning how he (Tuckett) was
“
running
Panamo
”.
Tuckett took great offence to this. The upshot was that Tuckett
proposed that Levick and Segal sell their shares in the
business to
him.
[7]
On 18
March 2019 Segal and Tuckett entered into the sale of shares
agreement which is the subject matter of this litigation.
[8]
The sale
agreement is unusual in that the purchase price was based not on the
value of the shares, but on the value of Segal’s
loan account.
Segal, it records held 33% of the equity of the firm or 400 shares,
which, according to the agreement he sold for
R 1.00 (one rand). The
claim against the loan account was valued at R 2 300 000.00.
[9]
The
agreement then records that Tuckett would pay the R2 300 000.00
amount in various instalments over a period stretching
from March
2019 until it was fully paid off by December 2020.
[10]
At the
same time the second to fourth respondents stood surety for the
obligations of Tuckett in terms of the agreement. Tuckett
signed the
surety on behalf of Panamo and the third respondent, whilst Penelope
signed on behalf of the fourth respondent.
[11]
Tuckett
made the payments as and when they fell due in terms of the
instalment schedule, until 17 August 2019. Segal’s attorney
wrote several letters to Tuckett to put him on terms to pay. This led
to Tuckett requesting a meeting between his attorney at the
time and
those of Segal. Segal agreed to a without prejudice meeting being
held between the respective attorneys but required a
payment of R 50
000.00 to be made prior to the meeting as a “
gesture
of good faith
”.
This payment of R 50 000.00 was then made on 17 September 2019.
[12]
Since the
meeting was without prejudice there is no detail on what transpired
in the record. Suffice to say no further payments
were made and hence
Segal instituted this litigation in February 2020.
[13]
When he
filed his answering affidavit, Tuckett stated that he was
subsequently advised
(he
does not say when or by whom)
that the shareholders loan accounts as they were reflected in
Panamo’s accounts at the end of 2016 (February) had since been
“
capitalised
by the respective shareholders and accordingly they became assets in
the name of the second respondent [Panamo], alternatively
constitute
a share premium.”
[14]
He thus
denied that Segal had a credit loan account to sell him. Accordingly,
so he maintained, Segal had nothing to sell him and
the sale was thus
void.
[15]
In
the alternative, he alleged that Segal had fraudulently represented
to him that he had the credit loan account when in fact he
did not
have one. Tuckett says for tax reasons he wanted to purchase a loan
account and not shares so he could withdraw money without
a tax
implication, something he says he would not be able to do if he took
money out in the form of dividends.
[16]
To support
his allegations of the non-existent loan account, Tuckett seeks to
rely on two of Panamo’s annual financial statements.
According
to these financial statements both Segal and Levick had credit loan
accounts in Panamo in 2016. But in the 2017 these
are no longer
reflected in the financials. The same holds for the following year,
2018. In that year only Penelope is reflected
as having a credit loan
account with the company. Tuckett speculates that the loan accounts
may have been capitalised.
[17]
In a
replying affidavit Segal denies that this took place or if it did –
denies that it took place with his knowledge and
consent. Segal notes
that if the loans had been capitalised there should have been an
increase shown in the share capital of the
firm in the subsequent
financial statements, i.e., 2017 and 2018, but this is not reflected.
[18]
Segal
then attaches from 2016 a management account evidencing his credit
loan account.
[2]
[19]
Tuckett
does not explain the mechanics of how the credit loan accounts had
mutated into share capital if that is what happened.
This is
remarkable because unlike Segal, Tuckett is an insider. His wife
Penelope is the sole director of Panamo. She signed the
annual
financial statements. She also signed the suretyship for the fourth
respondent and gave a confirming affidavit to his answering
affidavit. In short, she would have been fully aware if the loan
accounts had vanished or been transmogrified by some feat of
accounting.
[20]
But there
is a second respect in which Tuckett is an insider. As the email I
quoted from earlier indicated, he described himself
as the managing
director and refers to his ‘running the company’. He too
must have known what was going on with finances
and if he did not, an
explanation was required.
[21]
Nor does
Tuckett explain how he acquired this information about the
disappearance of the loan account between the time he entered
into
the agreement (February 2019 and thus at time he must have been aware
of at least the 2017 annual financial statements) and
September 2019
when he stopped making payments.
[22]
Yet even
when he did, he gave no explanation at the time of why he had stopped
paying. He needed to do so. How had he found out
this information and
why had he, as an insider and his wife not known this before and then
acted upon it instead of waiting to
be sued and then counterclaiming.
The answering affidavit is the first time where he gave this
explanation.
[23]
The more
probable reason why he stopped paying is that he ran out of money to
do so. He had after all bitten off more than he could
chew. He says
in the email he would have to borrow money from his sister. The
generous payment period also suggests he needed time
to find the
money. Moreover, even when he experienced difficulties and the
respective lawyers met, he still paid out R 50 000 as
the good faith
gesture to secure the meeting.
[24]
I
therefore reject the explanation of Tuckett on this aspect as
improbable. He is liable for the payment of the balance of the
purchase price.
Suretyships
[25]
The
respondents rely on two defences in respect of the suretyships
although based on the same point of law.
[26]
Section 45 of
the Companies Act, 71 of 2008, (the ‘Act’) regulates the
circumstances under which a company can grant
financial assistance to
a director or related person.
[27]
Since
Tuckett is married to Penelope he is a related person as far as any
company of which she is a director is concerned.
[3]
She is according to Tuckett a director of the second and fourth
respondents. He is a director of the third.
[28]
The
respondents contend that none of the sureties (the second to fourth
respondents) had been entered into following proper compliance
with
the provisions of section 45. The sureties were thus void.
[29]
Proper
compliance with section 45(3) requires that if financial assistance
is given by a company to a related person, there must
be several
steps in place. These steps are mandatory. In brief they require that
a special resolution to this effect would have
been passed by its
shareholders within the previous two years and that the board is
satisfied that the financial assistance would
not adversely impact
the solvency and liquidity of the company, and is fair and
reasonable.
[30]
Segal
is not able to refute the fact that the second to fourth respondents
had never complied with these requirements in respect
of the
financial assistance given to Tuckett. However, he relied on section
20 of the Act; this is the statutory enactment of the
well-known
Turquand
Rule
which provides that an outsider is entitled to presume that a company
has followed all the necessary procedures required by the
Act unless
the person in the circumstances ought reasonably to have known the
company had not.
[4]
[31]
As far as
the second respondent, Panamo’s security is concerned, Mr.
Hoffman for Segal, conceded that he could not raise this
presumption
against a company of which he was at the time of the sale a
shareholder and thus an insider. I thus do not need to
pursue this
issue further. Accordingly, the second respondent cannot be held
liable on the suretyship for want of compliance with
section 45.
[32]
I return later
to a second argument raised by Mr. Saint for Tuckett in respect of
the section 45 implications for the sale agreement.
[33]
Tuckett is a
director and signed the surety on behalf of the third respondent. But
the third respondent is not a South African company.
Mr. Hoffman
argued that for this reason it was not subject to the strictures of
the Act citing the decision in the
Steinhoff
case. There Bozalek J held that:
“
On
the interpretation which I favour, section 45 ’s strictures
apply only to South African companies and are extended to foreign
companies only to the extent that such companies may not be the
recipient of financial assistance from South African companies
unless
the provisions of section 45 are met by the local company. Seen from
this perspective, interpreting section 45 (2) as extending
to foreign
companies makes sense, is in keeping with apparent purpose of section
45, provides a sensible and business-like meaning
to the subsection
and accords with those purposes of the Act highlighted above
.
“
[5]
[34]
This was not
disputed by Mr. Saint, and I agree that the third respondent cannot
rely on the section 45 defence. This means it has
no defence in terms
of the Act in respect of its liability in terms of the surety to
Segal.
[35]
The
fourth respondent is a South African company. Little is known about
it other than that Penelope is a director. Segal is an outsider
as
far as this company is concerned. Segal was entitled to rely on it
having performed the necessary formalities. There is a
proviso
in section 20(7) that this would not apply if the third party knew or
ought reasonably to have known that the company had failed
to
comply.
[6]
No reason has been
given by Tuckett or Penelope of why Segal should have known this.
[36]
I am satisfied
that the fourth respondent cannot rely on section 45 of the Act to
avoid liability for the suretyship.
[37]
In now turn to
the final argument made by Mr. Saint of the implications for
non-compliance with section 45 for the sale agreement.
[38]
He argued that
if the second respondent had not complied with section 45 this
vitiated the main agreement (i.e., the sale agreement)
as well.
[39]
He based on a
reading of section 45(6). This section states:
(
6)
A resolution by the board of a company to provide financial
assistance contemplated in subsection (2), or an agreement with
respect to the provision of any such assistance, is void to the
extent that the provision of that assistance would be inconsistent
with-
(a)
this section; or
(b)
a prohibition, condition or requirement contemplated in subsection
(4).
[40]
However, the
reference in that section to an agreement cannot be extended to
vitiate the main agreement. The main agreement is not
an agreement
that contemplates the provision of financial assistance by a company.
This takes it outside of the prohibition contemplated
in section
45(6).
[41]
The attempt to
hoist the voidness of the second respondent’s surety, an
ancillary agreement, to vitiate the main agreement
cannot succeed.
The policy underlying restrictions on a company giving financial
assistance, cannot be given an interpretation
that extends it, beyond
its prescripts, to apply to an agreement that the company was not
party to. I was not given any authority
where such an approach had
been followed in respect of a suretyship’s relationship to a
main agreement. This argument too
must fail.
[42]
Since the
first respondent is liable in terms of the main agreement the
counterclaim must fail.
Conclusion
.
[43]
The
first, third and fourth respondents are liable to the applicant. The
second respondent is not. As far as costs are concerned
the applicant
is entitled to his costs on an attorney-client scale, as provided for
in terms of both the main agreement and the
respective
suretyships.
[7]
There is no
reason to reduce these costs because although Segal was not
completely successful, he has been substantially. Although
interest
was claimed in the Notice of Motion none was claimed in terms of the
proposed draft order, so I must give the respondents
the benefit of
the doubt here.
ORDER
I
make the following order:
1.
The First, Third, and Fourth Respondents shall pay, jointly and
severally the one paying the others to be absolved, to the Applicant
the amount of R1 875 000.00;
2.
The First, Third, and Fourth Respondents shall pay, jointly and
severally the one paying the others to be absolved, the Applicant's
costs on an attorney and client scale; and
3.
The counterclaim is dismissed with costs.
N
MANOIM
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ and/or parties’ representatives by email
and by
being uploaded to CaseLines. The date and time for hand-down is
deemed to be 10h00 on
1
April 2022.
Date
of hearing:
9 February 2022
Date
of Judgment:
1 April 2022
Appearances:
Counsel
for the Applicant:
Adv J M Hoffman
Attorneys
for the Applicant: Swartz
Weil van der Merwe Greenberg Inc
011
– 4862850
rachael@swvginc.co.za
Counsel
for the Respondent: Adv F. Saint
Attorney
for the Respondent Bicaro, Bollo &
Marino Inc
011-
775 5800
[1]
Tuckett
describes Penelope Ann Tuckett as the director and proprietor of
various entities including the second and fourth respondents.
(Answering Affidavit paragraph 5)77-2. Since Segal and Levick were
two of the shareholders I assume that Penelope was the third.
In the
financial statements she is shown as having a loan account in the
company.
[2]
In
written heads of argument by Tuckett’s attorney he suggested
this account was for another company. But as Mr. Hoffman
pointed out
this was Panamo’s prior name as evidenced from CIPC records
that the respondents had filed.
[3]
In
terms of section 2(1)(a)(i) of the Act an individual is related to
another if they are married.
[4]
INSERT
[5]
Trevo
Capital Ltd and others v Steinhoff International Holdings (Pty) Ltd
and others
[2021]
4 All SA 573 (WCC)
[6]
For
the interrelationship between the two sections see for instance
Afrasia
Special
Opportunities Fund Pty Ltd v Royal Anthem Investments 130 Pt Ltd
2016 JDR 1366(WCC).
[7]
Paragraph
14.2 of the main agreement and paragraph 3.1 of the respective
suretyships.
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