Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 198South Africa
Barbaglia v Barbaglia and Others (16659/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 198 (4 April 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
4 April 2022
Headnotes
by the first respondent who held fifteen percent (15%) which it is alleged he had acquired as a donation in 2012 and the remaining one percent (1%) is held by the third respondent. However, until February 2021 the deceased and the third respondent were the only directors in Pabar.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Barbaglia v Barbaglia and Others (16659/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 198 (4 April 2022)
Barbaglia v Barbaglia and Others (16659/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 198 (4 April 2022)
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sino date 4 April 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 16659/2021
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
04/04/2022
In
the matter between:
GREGORY
MASSIMO BARBAGLIA
APPLICANT
And
MICHAEL
BARBAGLIA
FIRST RESPONDENT
PABAR
(PROPRIETARY) LIMITED
SECOND RESPONDNET
SILVAN
BARBAGLIA
THIRD RESPONDENT
SILVANA
BARBAGLIA N.O.
FOURTH RESPONDENT
CHARL
EDWARD ANDERSON N.O.
FIFTH 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 4
th
April 2022
TWALA
J
[1]
The bitter disputes between the two siblings in the Barbaglia family
which arose before
and after the death of Mr Barbaglia who died on
the 10
th
of December 2020, has led the applicant, the
youngest son of the Barbaglias to launching this application before
this Court in
which he seeks the following order:
1.1
Ordering that an interim interdict be issued against the first and
second respondents in terms of which they
are:
1.1.1 interdicted from
disposing of, alienating or encumbering any of the second
respondent’s, that is, Pabar (Pty) Ltd’s,
assets other
than in circumstances where the disposition, alienation or
encumbrance is required in the ordinary course of business;
and
1.1.2 compelled to
furnish the applicant on a monthly basis with Pabar’s following
records:
1.1.2.1
the general ledger;
1.1.2.2
bank statements;
1.1.2.3
payment breakdowns;
1.1.2.4
turnover reports;
1.1.2.5
income statements;
1.1.2.6
cash flow projections; and
1.1.2.7
management accounts.
1.1.3 compelled to
respondent to any of the applicant’s queries relating to the
financial records and business activities
of Pabar within 5 working
days of receipt of the query;
1.1.4. compelled to
permit the applicant access during normal business hours to the
business premises of Pabar in order for the
applicant to exercise the
rights in 1.1.2 and 1.1.3 of this order;
1.1.5 interdicted from
using pabar’s funds to pay for the first respondent’s
personal legal fees and expenses and or
legal fees and expenses which
are rendered directly or indirectly for the first respondent’s
personal benefit.
1.2
Ordering that the interim interdict will operate with immediate
effect pending the final determination of
the relief sought under
case number 8931/2021;
1.3
Ordering the first respondent to desist from preventing Pabar to
comply with the terms of the settlement agreement
concluded between
Pabar and the applicant on 5 September 2018 in terms of which Pabar
is to pay the applicant his monthly salary
pending the final
determination of case number 2018/42568;
1.4
Ordering Pabar to comply with the terms of the settlement agreement
concluded between it and the applicant
on 5 September 2018 in terms
of which Pabar is to pay the applicant his monthly salary pending the
final determination of case
number 2018/42568;
1.5
Costs, such costs to include the costs consequent upon the employment
of two counsel.
[2]
The application is opposed by the first respondent who has filed
substantial opposing
papers. Since there is no order sought against
the third, fourth and fifth respondents, save for the second
respondent, they did
not participate in these proceedings –
hence I propose to refer only to the applicant and the respondent
when referring to
the first respondent in this judgment.
[3]
As alluded above, the applicant is Gregory Massimo Barbaglia and
adult businessman,
the youngest son of the third respondent and a
brother of the first respondent.
[4]
The first respondent is Michael Barbaglia, the sibling of the
applicant and an adult
businessman who is employed by, and at the
moment the sole shareholder and director of Pabar, the second
respondent in this case.
[5]
The second respondent is Pabar (Pty) Ltd
(“Pabar”)
,
a private company duly incorporated and registered in terms of the
company laws of the Republic of South Africa, having its principal
place of business at 7 Fransen Street, Chamdor, Krugersdorp, Gauteng
and carrying on business as a manufacturer of metal pressing
products
and other products.
[6]
The third respondent is Silvana Barbaglia, an adult retired female
who is the shareholder
in the second respondent and is the mother of
both the applicant and the first respondent. She is the widow of the
decease the
late Mr Vincenzo Barbaglia who at the time of his death
was the eighty-four percent (84%) shareholder in the second
respondent.
[7]
The fourth respondent is Silvana Barbaglia N.O., cited in her
official capacity as
the duly appointed executrix in the estate of
her deceased husband, the late Mr Vincenzo Barbaglia who died on the
10
th
of December 2020.
[8]
The fifth respondent is Charl Edward Anderson N.O., an adult male
businessman cited
herein in his alleged official capacity as the
appointed executor of the deceased estate of the late Mr Vincenza
Barbaglia.
[9]
It is common cause that the late Vincenzo Barbaglia was married to
the third respondent
in community of property in Italy on the 9
th
of May 1957 by proxy and their marriage was blessed with two sons,
the applicant and the respondent. A bitter battle has arisen
between
the two siblings with regard to how the estate of their parents
should devolve upon them.
[10]
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 for the family.
At the time of his death, the deceased was
a registered shareholder of Pabar holding eighty-four percent (84%)
of the shares in
Pabar. The remaining sixteen (16%) percent of the
shares in Pabar were held by the first respondent who held fifteen
percent (15%)
which it is alleged he had acquired as a donation in
2012 and the remaining one percent (1%) is held by the third
respondent. However,
until February 2021 the deceased and the third
respondent were the only directors in Pabar.
[11]
Both the applicant and the respondent worked for Pabar and from
approximately 1994 the applicant
scaled down his involvement in Pabar
as he devoted most of his time in the other family businesses as the
empire of the Barbaglias
expanded and the family diversified.
Although the applicant got involved in the other businesses of the
family, he continued his
involvement in the financial management and
administration in Pabar. He continued to receive his salary from
Pabar as he attended
to the affairs and premises of Pabar on a daily
basis. Although the directors of Pabar over the years remained to be
the deceased
and the third respondent, Pabar was run for the benefit
of three parties and as a partnership amongst the three partners,
i.e.
the deceased and the third respondent as a unit, the applicant
and the respondent as the other two individuals (the tripartite/
partnership relationship).
[12]
In July 2014 the deceased was diagnosed with mild dementia which
diagnosis progressed to severe
dementia in 2016. 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. The Court
recognised the marital regime of the
deceased and the third respondent as that of a marriage in community
of property – hence
the appointment of the curatrix bonis to
their joint estate.
[13]
During her 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 by the deceased after July 2014 since the deceased
was diagnosed with dementia
as she regards them to be invalid. 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 three attorneys representing the applicant, the
respondent and the
third respondent respectively enclosing copies of
five Wills of the deceased which she had in her possession.
[14]
The third respondent resigned as a director of Pabar when the curator
bonis took charge of the
joint estate and appointed the 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 furnish the
applicant with the financial
information and records of Pabar so that
he can have full insight into Pabar’s financial position and
wellbeing and that
he should be given access to the premises of Pabar
during working hours. The applicant was furnished with the financial
documents
of Pabar and given access to the premises during working
hours until Mr Pellegrini resigned as director on the 13
th
of January 2021 after the death of the deceased.
[15]
During her tenure as curatrix bonis of the joint estate, 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 had expended
a sum of more than R7 million to fund
his personal legal fees from the coffers of Pabar. Furthermore, it
was discovered that the
respondent had paid a sum of R400 000 as
security for costs from the coffers of Pabar in a case where Pabar
was not cited
as a party but involves the respondent and the
applicant in the winding up of Noble Land which is one of their
companies. Advocate
Cane SC further directed that the respondent
should reflect in the financial records of Pabar as to how much he
owes Pabar in respect
of moneys expended on his personal legal fees.
[16]
On the 22
nd
of March 2021through a letter from its
attorneys the respondent has shut out and denied the applicant access
to Pabar’s premises
and has refused to furnish him with the
financial records of Pabar saying that he is the sole director and
shareholder in Pabar.
The respondent has stopped and prevented Pabar
from paying the monthly salary of the applicant which he has been
receiving since
he was working for Pabar and the other family
businesses. It is this conduct of the respondent which galvanised the
applicant into
launching these proceedings to interdict and prevent
the first respondent from continuing with his mission to disregard
the interests
of the other partners in Pabar.
[17]
It is contended by the respondent that the applicant is neither a
director nor a shareholder
in Pabar and therefore he is not entitled
to the financial records of Pabar. He is not entitled to gain access
into the premises
of Pabar for he is not even an employee of Pabar.
Furthermore, so the argument went, the respondent denies that there
is a family
partnership involving Pabar and that whatever monies that
were paid to the applicant by Pabar were through the generosity of
their
parents. It is further contended that in the alternative, the
partnership has been dissolved and therefore the applicant is not
entitled to receive any salary for he is no longer rendering any
services to Pabar.
[18]
The respondent contended further that the partnership action under
case number 8931/2020 has
not yet been determined since the cause of
action has come to an end. The applicant did not receive the
financial records of Pabar
over a period of thirty-four years as
contended, but only in December 2020 when the valuation of Pabar was
done in order to determine
the amount the respondent was to pay in
order to buy the interest of the applicant from Pabar. The breakdown
of the partnership
started in 2011 and the partnership was dissolved
in 2013. The respondent contended therefore that the cause of action
of the applicant
arose in 2013 when the partnership was dissolved or
the latest on the 15
th
of January 2018 when the respondent
made a settlement proposal to the applicant. The cause of action has
therefore, so it was argued,
become prescribed on the 14
th
of January 2021.
[19]
It is trite that the purpose for an interdict pendente lite is the
preservation of the status
quo ante or the restoration thereof
pending the final determination of the parties’ rights; it does
not affect or involve
the determination of such rights. Furthermore,
it has long been established and decided in a number of judgments
that the requirements
for an interim interdict are; (a) a clear or
prima facie right even if it is open to some doubt; (b) a
well-grounded apprehension
of irreparable and imminent harm if the
interim relief is not granted; (c) the balance of convenience must
favour the grant of
the interdict and (d) the applicant must have no
other or adequate remedy in the circumstances.
[20]
In
National Treasury and Others v Opposition to Urban Tolling
Alliance and Others
[2012] ZACC 18
the Constitutional Court
stated the following:
“
Paragraph 50
Under the Setlogelo test, the prima facie right a clamant must
establish is not merely the right to approach a court
in order to
review an administrative decision. It is a right to which, if not
protected by an interdict, irreparable
harm
would ensue. An interdict is meant to prevent future conduct and not
decisions already made. Quite apart from the right to
review and to
set aside impugned decisions, the applicants should have demonstrated
a prima facie right that is threatened by an
impending or imminent
irreparable harm. The right to review the impugned decisions did not
require any preservation pendente lite.”
[21]
It is urged upon this Court not to concern itself with the
determination of whether a partnership
existed between the parties or
not for that is a matter for determination by the trial court.
However, since the first hurdle the
applicant has to jump is whether
he has a prima facie right which deserves the protection of this
Court, the Court is urged to
consider certain facts which are
pertinent in the manner in which the family businesses are conducted
of which Pabar forms part.
There is no dispute between the parties
that negotiations in an attempt to settle the dissolution of the
partnership have been
ongoing for a considerable time but has not
yielded any results.
[22]
I do not understand the respondent to be disputing that the applicant
has been for a considerable
time attending to the financial
management and other administrative work at Pabar and that his
monthly salary was paid by Pabar
for his services in the family
businesses. The respondent does not deny that the applicant was
enjoying access to the premises
on a daily basis. However, he avers
that since the partnership has been terminated the applicant is not
entitled to gain access
to the financial records of Pabar and to its
premises for his services are no longer required. I do not agree with
the contention
of the respondent for it ignores the fact that the
partnership assets which include Pabar have not been distributed
accordingly
as the dissolution of the partnership has not yet been
finalised. Therefore, the applicant could only have managed the
finances
and attended to the other administrative work at Pabar by
accessing the books of account or financial records of Pabar.
[23]
I am unable to agree with the respondent that Pabar is company and
that it is run strictly in
accordance with the company laws of the
Republic and was not a party to any partnership agreement nor that it
formed part of the
assets of the partnership as alleged by the
applicant. On the document titled the ‘Road Map Agreement
Between Michael Barbaglia
(“Mike”) and Gregory Barbaglia
(“Greg”)’ attached to the letter from the attorneys
of respondent
dated the 15
th
of January 2018, the
following is stated:
“
Paragraph 1:
The parties have agreed to part ways and divide and share all the
Barbaglia assets equally and fairly on the basis
that they will
become the equal beneficial co-owners of all the Barbaglia assets
including Pabar, Cronos, Stand 31, Primoris, Boble
Land, Baglios, GM
Brothers and Douglasdale (or its proceeds),
[24]
It is clear from this Road Map document that the respondent
acknowledged the existence of partnership
between the parties which
included Pabar as an asset of the partnership. It is therefore
incorrect for the respondent to say that
there is no partnership that
existed or that Pabar as a company was not part of the partnership
agreement nor does Pabar form part
of the assets of the partnership.
There is no merit in the argument that if there was a partnership
which involved Pabar, the applicant
must establish if it is a
partnership which is in relation to the ownership of shares in Pabar
and would be entitled to those shares
or its value but not in Pabar
as a company or business entity for Pabar was not part of the
partnership agreement nor was it part
of the assets thereof.
[25]
The Road Map document continues on paragraph 2 thereof to set out the
steps to be taken in order
to facilitate the division of the
Barbaglia assets as soon as reasonably possible as follows:
“
2.1
STEP 1
2.1.1 the joint
valuation commenced by Shaun Coetzee and Carlo Lotter is to be
continued with, and be completed, without delay and
on or before
Friday, 26 January 2018. The valuations are to be conducted on the
basis of valuing two primary lots and the remaining
assets being sold
as follows –
2.1.1.1
Lot1: being Pabar Proprietary Limited, Cronos Investment Proprietary
Limited, Stand 31 Chamdor Proprietary Limited and Primoris Properties
CC; Lot 2: ………………
[26]
It is therefore my considered view that it is of no moment that the
applicant was not a director
or shareholder in Pabar which would
entitled him to bring this action. The conduct of the parties created
a partnership relationship
and Pabar was listed as one of the assets
of the partnership. However, the respondent raises the issue that in
the alternative
the applicant’s cause of action had become
prescribed since the partnership was terminated in 2013
alternatively, on the
14
th
of January 2021 since the last
negotiations were on the 15
th
January 2018 based on the
letter from the attorneys of the respondent addressed to the
applicant which enclosed a proposed road
map or mechanism to resolve
the partnership dispute between the parties.
[27]
It is now opportune to discuss the provisions of the
Prescription
Act, 68 of 1969
. In terms of
s10(1)
‘a debt shall be
extinguished by prescription after the lapse of the period which in
terms of the relevant law applies in
respect of the prescription of
such debt’.
Section 10(2)
provides that when a principal debt
is extinguished by prescription, so are any subsidiary debts such as
suretyships.
Section 11
lists the periods of prescription –
ranging from three to thirty years – for a variety of types of
debts.
Section 12
(1) provides that prescription begins to run as
soon as the debt is due, however subject to certain exceptions.
[28]
Section 13
of the Act sets out a number of circumstances that delay
the running of prescription as it provides as follows:
“
Section 13.
(1)
If –
(a)
…………………………
(d)
the creditor and debtor are partners and the debt is a debt which
arose out of the partnership
relationship; or
(i) the relevant
period of prescription would, but for the provisions of this
subsection, be completed before or on, or within one
year after, the
day on which the relevant impediment referred to in paragraph (a),
(b), (c), (d), (e), (f), (g) or (h) has ceased
to exist,
the period of
prescription shall not be completed before a year has elapsed after
the day referred to in paragraph (i).
(2)
……………………………
[29]
Section 14
of the
Prescription Act provides
the following:
“
14. (1)
The running of prescription shall be interrupted by an express or
tacit
acknowledgement of liability by the debtor.
(2)
If the running of prescription is interrupted as contemplated in
subsection
(1), prescription shall commence to run afresh from the
day on which the interruption takes place or, if at the time of the
interruption
or at any time thereafter the parties postpone the due
date of the debt, from the date upon which the debt again becomes
due.”
[30]
In
Investec Bank Limited v Erf 436 Elandspoort (Pty) Ltd and
Others (410/2019) [2020]
ZASCA 104 (16 September 2020)
the Supreme Court of Appeal
quoted with approval from the case of
Cape Town Municipality v
Allie NO 1981 (2) SA (C)
wherein the Court identified what it
described as a number of self-evident aspects of the
s14
of the Act
as the following:
“
Firstly, I do
not think the acknowledgment of liability need amount to a fresh
undertaking to discharge the debt. ‘I admit
I owe you R100’is
manifestly an acknowledgement of a liability to pay R100 but it is
not a fresh or new undertaking to pay
it …
Secondly, full weight
must be given to the Legislature’s use of the word ‘tacit’
in
s 14(1)
of the Act. In other words, one must have regard not only
to the debtor’s words, but also to his conduct, in one’s
quest for an acknowledgment of liability. That, in turn, opens the
door to various possibilities. One may have a case in which the
act
of the debtor which is said to be an acknowledgment of liability, is
plain and unambiguous. His prior conduct would then be
academic. On
the other hand, one may have a case where the particular act or
conduct which is said to be an acknowledgment of liability
is not as
plain and unambiguous. In that event, I see no reason why it should
be regarded in vacuo and without taking into account
the conduct of
the debtor which preceded it. If the preceding conduct throws light
upon the interpretation which should be accorded
to the later act or
conduct which is said to be an acknowledgment of liability, it would
be wrong to insist upon the later act
or conduct being viewed in
isolation. In the end, of course, one must also be able to say when
the acknowledgment of liability
was made, for otherwise it would not
be possible to say from what day prescription commenced to run
afresh…….
Thirdly, the test is
objective. What did the debtor’s conduct convey outward? I
think that this must be so because the concept
of a tacit
acknowledgment of liability is irreconcilable with the debtor being
permitted to negate or nullify the impression which
his outward
conduct conveyed, by claiming ex post facto to have had a subjective
intent which is at odds with his outward conduct…..
Fourthly, while
silence or mere passivity on the part of the debtor will not
ordinarily amount to an acknowledgment of liability,
this will not
always be so. if the circumstances create a duty to speak and the
debtor remains silent, I think that a tacit acknowledgment
of
liability may rightly be said to arise …..
Fifthly, the
acknowledgment must not be of a liability which existed in the past,
but of a liability which still subsists.”
[31]
Given that the negotiations to finalise the dissolution of the
partnership continued between
the parties and a road map or mechanism
was proposed or suggested by the respondent on the 15
th
of
January 2017, it is my respectful view that the applicant’s
cause of action did not become prescribed in 2016 nor on the
14
th
of January 2021 as contended by the respondent. By making the
proposal towards the finalisation of the dissolution of the
partnership
and that a valuation of the assets of the partnership
should occur, it is my respectful view that the debt has not become
due and
owing and therefore prescription has not started to run. I
hold the view that the parties had not yet determined the amount that
is owing and therefore the debt has not been determined and cannot be
said to have become due and owing.
[32]
Furthermore, even if I were to accept that the debt has been
determined and prescription has
started running, it is my considered
view that the cause of action of the applicant did not become
prescribed on the 14
th
of January 2021 as contended by the
respondent since the debt between the parties arose from a
partnership relationship. This is
so because according to the
provisions of
s13
of the Act debts between partners which arose in a
partnership relationship become prescribed a year after the
three-year period
of prescription has expired.
[33]
It follows irresistibly therefore that there was a partnership
between the three parties being
the deceased and the third respondent
on the one hand and the applicant and the first respondent as
individuals. Because of the
partnership relationship which in other
court papers is called a universal partnership, the applicant enjoyed
access to the premises
of Pabar and attended to the financial
management and did administrative work at Pabar and earned a monthly
salary for his work
not only at Pabar but in the other businesses of
the family. It is therefore my respectful view that the applicant has
succeeded
in establishing that he has a prima facie right although it
is open to doubt as it is a subject of a dispute in other proceedings
in this court.
[34]
The respondent does not dispute that Pabar has expended a sum of more
than R7 million in legal
fees on behalf of the respondent. What he
avers is that part of that money was paid because Pabar had an
interest in those proceedings.
However, the difficulty is that the
respondent does not disclose how much has been expended on behalf of
Pabar from the amount
in excess of R7 million. It is on record that
the curatrix bonis in the joint estate of his parents, Advocate Cane
SC instructed
him to disclose the legal fees paid for by Pabar on his
behalf in the loan account but he has failed to populate the legal
fees
in the financials of Pabar. It is also on record that the
overdraft facility of Pabar has been increased to over R11 million
without
consulting the third respondent who has signed personal
surety for Pabar.
[35]
Furthermore, it seems the respondent has no concern that Pabar is
currently experiencing financial
strain. This is borne by the fact
that the respondent took an unauthorised loan in the sum of about
R110 000 from the account
of Noble Land and avers that it was to
assist Pabar to pay staff salaries or wages. However, the respondent
did not hesitate to
pay R400 000 out of the coffers of Pabar as
the security for costs in a litigation matter that went on appeal
although Pabar
was not a party that action.
[36]
I am unable to disagree with the applicant that the respondent is
denuding Pabar as an asset
of the partnership for his own benefit and
at the expense of the applicant and the third respondent who may find
an empty shell
when the respondent conduct is not prevented or
prohibited. Worse of all, the respondent refuses the applicant and
the third respondent
access to the financial records of Pabar and up
to this day they don’t know what is going on with an asset of
the partnership.
It is on record that there are several litigation
proceedings going on between the respondent and the applicant and the
third respondent.
The applicant and the third respondent do not know
as things stand as to who is paying the legal fees for the respondent
in all
these proceedings for he has insulated himself from the other
partners.
[37]
I find myself in disagreement with the respondent’s contention
that the applicant should
approach the CCMA to claim his monthly
salary for he is no longer employed at Pabar. Furthermore, that the
payments which the applicant
had received from Pabar were not meant
to be a monthly salary as an employee but were gratuitous payments
which were made through
the generosity of their parents. It is on
record that the applicant was not only doing work for Pabar to earn
the monthly salary
but was working in the other businesses of the
partnership as well but his monthly salary was carried by Pabar since
it was an
agreement between the partners that they will all draw
monthly salaries from Pabar.
[38]
There is no merit in the argument that the partnership has been
terminated and therefore the
applicant is not entitled to receive a
salary for he is no longer rendering any services to the partnership.
The fact of the matter
is that the dissolution has not yet been
finalised and the partnership asset is being used and continues to
generates an income
not only for the respondent but for all the
partners until the dissolution is completed. It is not open to the
respondent to unilaterally
decide to terminate the monthly amount
that Pabar has been paying the applicant for years without consulting
the other partners
about it.
[39]
In August 2018 the applicant launched urgent application proceedings
against the first and second
respondents wherein it demanded payment
of his monthly salary after his salary was stopped by the two
respondents. These proceedings
culminated in a settlement agreement
being concluded between the parties. For the purposes of the
discussion that will follow,
it is now necessary to consider the
terms and conditions of the agreement as contained in the letter from
the respondent’s
attorneys dated the 5
th
of
September 2019 which offer was accepted by the applicant under cover
of a letter from his attorneys dated the 6
th
of September
2019.
[40]
The paragraphs that are of relevance in setting the terms of the
agreement are paragraph 3 which
provides as follows:
“
3.
We have now had an opportunity to take instructions from our client
in respect of the revised proposal
terms set out in your letter and,
with a view to reaching a resolution without the need to approach the
urgent court, our client’s
revised proposal is as follows –
3.1
solely in terms of the relief sought in paragraph 1.1. and 1.2 of
your client’s notice of motion
in his urgent application, and
without admitting any fault or liability on our client’s behalf
or part, or for that matter
that there is any merit whatsoever in
your client’s application (be it in respect of the issue of
urgency and/or the merits
of the application and/or otherwise), we
are instructed to record that our client hereby tenders, on a without
prejudice basis,
payment of the monthly amount of R150 000 (less
PAYE) including the amounts for July and August 2018 together with
your client’s
additional amounts as set out in Annexure A to
the founding affidavit (collectively the “monthly payment”),
subject
to the terms and caveats set out below. This tender is made
in good faith, with full reservation of our client’s rights and
without admitting any liability whatsoever on the part of our client
to make such payments, but in order to amicably resolve, on
an
interim basis at least, inter alia the present impasse and the
alleged need for your client to seek urgent relief on 11 September
2018;
3.2
the tender for the monthly payment(s) in 3.1 above is subject to the
following terms and caveats:
3.2.1 the
monthly payment(s) will endure until a final determination is made in
the action proceedings referenced in paragraph
1.3 in his notice of
motion alternatively unless otherwise agreed in writing by the
parties and/or ordered by a Court;
3.2.2 your
client must launch and serve the action proceedings threatened in
paragraph 1.3 of his notice of motion within
70 (calendar) days of 11
September 2018 – the 90 day period set out in paragraph 1.3 in
the notice of motion is, on any score
unreasonable and too long;
3.2.3 …………….
3.2.4 should
your client not launch and serve the threatened action proceedings
within the said 70 day period, then the payment
undertaking in 3.1
above will ipso facto, and without more, lapse.”
[41]
The applicant’s complaint is that the payment of his monthly
salary was terminated by the
respondent on the basis of a letter from
his attorneys dated the 22
nd
of March 2021. This is after
Mr Pellegrini had resigned as director of Pabar and the respondent
had appropriated the hundred percent
(100%) shareholding in Pabar to
himself and became a sole director without any consultation with the
other partners of the family
business. The respondent contended that
he had given the applicant six months’ notice that the monthly
salary is to be terminated
and this notice was contained in the
respondent’s plea in the action proceedings instituted by the
applicant as agreed upon
on the 6
th
of September 2018.
[42]
It is a trite principle of our law that the privity and sanctity of a
contract should prevail
and the Courts have been enjoyed in a number
of decisions to enforce such contracts. Parties are to observe and
perform in terms
of their agreement and should only be allowed to
deviate therefrom if it can be demonstrated that a particular clause
in the agreement
is unreasonable and or so prejudicial to a party
that it is against public policy or that the interests of justice
dictates otherwise.
[43]
In
Mohabed’s Leisure Holdings (Pty) Ltd v Southern Sun Hotel
Interests (Pty) Ltd (183/17)
[2017] ZASCA 176
(1 December 2017)
the
Supreme Court of Appeal reaffirmed the principle of the privity and
sanctity of the contract and stated the following:
“
paragraph 23
The privity and sanctity of contract entails that contractual
obligations must be honoured when the parties have entered
into the
contractual agreement freely and voluntarily. The notion of the
privity and sanctity of contracts goes hand in hand with
the freedom
to contract, taking into considerations the requirements of a valid
contract, freedom to contract denotes that parties
are free to enter
into contracts and decide on the terms of the contract.
”
[44]
The Court continued and quoted with approval a paragraph in
Wells
v South African Alumenite Company
1927 AD 69
at 73
wherein the
Court held as follows:
“
If there is one
thing which, more than another, public policy requires, it is that
men of full age and competent understanding shall
have the utmost
liberty of contracting, and that their contracts, when entered into
freely and voluntarily, shall be held sacred
and enforced by the
courts of justice.”
[45]
Recently the Constitutional Court in
Beadica 231 and Others v
Trustees for the Time Being of Oregon Trust and Others CCT 109/19
[2020] ZACC 13
also had an opportunity to emphasized the
principle of pacta sunt servanda and stated the following:
“
paragraph 84
Moreover,
contractual relations are the bedrock of economic activity and our
economic development is dependent, to a large extent,
on the
willingness of parties to enter into contractual relationships. If
parties are confident that contracts that they enter
into will be
upheld, then they will be incentivised to contract with other parties
for their mutual gain. Without this confidence,
the very motivation
for social coordination is diminished. It is indeed crucial to
economic development that individuals should
be able to trust that
all contracting parties will be bound by obligations willingly
assumed.
Paragraph
85 The fulfilment of many of the rights promises made by our
Constitution depends on sound and continued economic development
of
our country. Certainty in contractual relations fosters a fertile
environment for the advancement of constitutional rights.
The
protection of the sanctity of contracts is thus essential to the
achievement of the constitutional vision of our society. Indeed,
our
constitutional project will be imperilled if courts denude the
principle of pacta sunt servanda.”
[46]
The agreement between the parties is clear, plain and unambiguous
that the payment of the monthly
amount or salary of the applicant
shall endure until a final determination is made in the action
proceedings unless otherwise agreed
upon in writing by the parties or
ordered by a court. None of the three conditions have been met. It is
therefore not open to the
respondent to say he has given notice to
terminate the payment of the monthly salary of the applicant for the
proceedings envisaged
in the agreement are taking long to be
finalised since the applicant is not prosecuting the action with any
zest or enthusiasm.
[47]
It is my considered view therefore that, as long as there is no
agreement between the parties
to terminate the monthly amount or
salary of the applicant or a court order to that effect, the
applicant is entitled to payment
of his monthly salary and the
respondent must pay the monthly salary until the conditions as agreed
upon have been met. The respondent
cannot simply resile from the
agreement by giving notice when the terms of the agreement clearly
provide for the mechanism to be
followed if payment of the monthly
salary of the applicant were to be terminating.
[48]
It is disconcerting that the respondent
has appointed himself as the sole director and appropriated to
himself hundred percent of
the shares in Pabar without discussing it
or consultation with his other partners in the business. He has
expended more than R7
million from the coffers of Pabar for his
personal legal fees and has failed to reflect the full extent of his
legal fees in the
loan account. He has shut out and insulated
himself, refused and denied his partners in the business any access
to its financial
records or information and to its premises. It is of
no comfort to the applicant that the respondent would not run down
Pabar for
it is his life and livelihood. The respondent has
demonstrated that he can destroy and is currently denuding the value
of Pabar
as he is increasing its overdraft facility to more than R11
million without even informing and or consulting the person who
signed
personal surety for such facility. On the other hand, he
obtained an unauthorised loan from the other partnership business to
provide
for salaries of staff.
[49]
I am of the respectful view therefore that the applicant has met the
requirements for an interim
interdict in that he has established that
he has a clear right although it is subject for determination in a
dispute before this
court. He has demonstrated the reasonable
apprehension of harm to his right being that the respondent is
denuding the value of
the asset of the partnership which is Pabar and
that he does not have a satisfactory remedy in due course for nothing
will left
of Pabar if the respondent is not prevented from his
conduct. There is no prejudice to be suffered by the respondent since
he will
remain part of Pabar as long as he accounts to the applicant
by furnishing him with the financial records and information and
gives
the applicant access to the premises of Pabar as it has been
the case for more than three decades.
[50]
In the circumstances, I make the following order:
1.
That an interim interdict is issued against the first and second
respondents in terms of
which they are:
1.1
interdicted from disposing of, alienating or encumbering any of the
second respondent’s, that
is, Pabar (Pty) Ltd’s, assets
other than in circumstances where the disposition, alienation or
encumbrance is required in
the ordinary course of business; and
1.2
compelled to furnish the applicant on a monthly basis with Pabar’s
following records:
1.2.1 the general
ledger;
1.2.2 bank
statements;
1.2.3 payment
breakdowns;
1.2.4 turnover
reports;
1.2.5 income
statements;
1.2.6 cash flow
projections; and
1.2.7 management
accounts.
1.3
compelled to respond to any of the applicant’s queries relating
to the financial records and business
activities of Pabar within 5
working days of receipt of the query;
1.4.
compelled to permit the applicant access during normal business hours
to the business premises of Pabar in
order for the applicant to
exercise the rights in 1.1.2 and 1.1.3 of this order;
1.5
interdicted from using pabar’s funds to pay for the first
respondent’s personal legal fees
and expenses and or legal fees
and expenses which are rendered directly or indirectly for the first
respondent’s personal
benefit.
2.
That the interim interdict will operate with immediate effect pending
the final determination
of the relief sought under case number
8931/2021;
3.
That the first respondent desists from preventing Pabar to comply
with the terms of the settlement
agreement concluded between Pabar
and the applicant on 5 September 2018 in terms of which Pabar is to
pay the applicant his monthly
salary pending the final determination
of case number 2018/42568;
4.
That Pabar complies with the terms of the settlement agreement
concluded between it and the
applicant on 5 September 2018 in terms
of which Pabar is to pay the applicant his monthly salary pending the
final determination
of case number 2018/42568;
5.
The first respondent is to pay the costs of this application, such
costs shall include the
costs consequent upon the employment of two
counsel.
TWALA
M L
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION
Date
of Hearing:
21
st
and 22
nd
February 2022
Date
of Judgment:
4
th
of April 2022
For
the Applicant:
Advocate S Symon SC
Advocate P Cirone
Instructed
by:
Bowmans Attorneys
Tel: 011 669 9555
Tim.gordon-grant@bowmans.com
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 and Fourth
Respondent:
Bove Attorneys Incorporated
Tel: 011 485 0424
vickyb@boveattorneys.co.za
For
the Fifth Respondent: Charl
Anderson NO
e-mail:
charland@pabar.co.za
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