Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 219South Africa
Structra Group (Pty) Ltd v Van Niekerk and Others (06923/2019) [2022] ZAGPJHC 219 (11 April 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
11 April 2022
Headnotes
jointly and severally liable for they did not bind themselves jointly and there was no agreement to that effect. There is further a dispute of fact as what was purchased by the respondents and that it was not explicitly stated that the fifth respondent will remain as part of the group of the companies of the applicant. The respondents by conduct made their
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Structra Group (Pty) Ltd v Van Niekerk and Others (06923/2019) [2022] ZAGPJHC 219 (11 April 2022)
Structra Group (Pty) Ltd v Van Niekerk and Others (06923/2019) [2022] ZAGPJHC 219 (11 April 2022)
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sino date 11 April 2022
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 06923/2019
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
11/04/22
In
the matter between:
STRUCTRA
GROUP (PTY) LTD
APPLICANT
And
VAN
NIEKERK, DIRK ANTON
FIRST RESPONDENT
GOUWS,
WILLEM FREDERICK JAKOBUS
SECOND RESPONDENT
VAN
DER WESTHUIZEN, GERHARD FRANCOIS
THIRD RESPONDENT
TOBUN
AND TOBUN (PTY) LTD
FOURTH RESPONDENT
ONE
STEEL ENGINEERING (PTY) LTD
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 11
th
of April 2022
TWALA
J
[1]
In this application, the applicant sought an order against the first
to the fifth
respondents in the following terms:
1.1
That the first to fifth respondents be and hereby are ordered to pay
the sum of R2 000 000 (Two
Million Rand) to the applicant;
1.2
Interest at the current Nedbank prime overdraft rates from 1 May 2018
to date of final payment, which current
rate is 10.25%;
1.3
That clause 17.1 of the Agreement be rectified by replacing the word
“Purchasers” where it appears
in the first sentence with
the word “Company”;
1.4
That, in the event of the first to fourth respondents failing to make
payment of the sum of R2000 000 together
with interest thereon within
7 (Seven) days hereof, or such period as this Honourable Court may
deem meet, the applicant is entitled
to apply, in terms of clause
17.1 of the Sale of Shares Agreement dated 25 May 2018 (“the
Agreement”), the value of
the assets as listed in Annexure Ä”
to this Notice of Motion to the reduction and/or satisfaction of sum
in prayer 1
hereof, in which event such assets shall remain the
property of the applicant;
1.5
Costs of the application on the attorney and client scale.
[2]
Initially the application was only opposed by the first, second and
third respondents.
However, the third respondent later filed his
notice of withdrawal of his opposition of the applicant’s claim
after concluding
a settlement agreement with the applicant. Judgment
by default had already been entered against the fourth respondent
prior to
the hearing of this case. No relief is sought against the
fifth respondent – hence it did not participate in these
proceedings.
Furthermore, at the hearing of this matter, the
applicant indicated that it does not persists with its alternative
prayer as set
out in the notice of motion.
[3]
For the sake of convenience in this judgment, I propose to refer to
the first and
second respondents as the respondents and shall refer
to the other parties by name where it is necessary to refer to them.
I also
propose to concentrate my efforts on the parties that are
relevant in this judgment, which is the applicant and the first and
second
respondents.
[4]
The applicant is Structra Group (Pty) Ltd, a company with limited
liability duly registered
and incorporated in terms of the relevant
company laws of the Republic of South Africa with registration number
2007/025670/07
with its registered address at 21 Merriman Avenue,
Vereeniging.
[5]
The first respondent is Mr Dirk Anton van Niekerk, and adult
businessman and director
of the fifth respondent of 58 Lebombo
Street, SE8, Vanderbijlpark.
[6]
The second respondent is Mr Willem Frederick Jakobus Gouws, an adult
businessman and
director of the fifth respondent of 15 Duggie Morkel
Street, Unitaspark, Vereeniging.
[7]
The genesis of this case is that the applicant and the first to the
fourth respondents
concluded a Sale of Shares Agreement on the 25
th
of May 2018 whereby the applicant, represented by its director Mr
Lourens Alexander Booysen and the first to third respondents
representing themselves and the fourth respondent represented by Mr
Kudusi Popoola Tobun, sold the whole of its fifty-three point
zero
three percent (53.03%) shares in the fifth respondent to the first to
fourth respondents for the total sum of R2 000 000.
[8]
It is undisputed that the agreement provided the respondents with a
payment holiday
of six (6) months from the effective date which was
the 1
st
of May 2018 for payment of the purchase price in
the sum R2000 000 which became due and payable on the 1
st
of November 2018. Thereafter the purchase price was to be redeemed
with interest over a period of sixty (60) months. On the 1
st
of November 2018 the respondents failed to make payment of the said
sum of R2 000 000 or any part thereof to the applicant.
On
the 7
th
of January 2019 the respondents started the
voluntary winding proceedings and placed the fifth respondent in the
hands of the Master
of the High Court. To date the respondents have
failed to pay the sum of R2 000 000 – hence these
proceedings.
[9]
The respondents contended that
the applicant is not entitled to the relief it seeks for
it has
failed to join the liquidators of the fifth respondent in these
proceedings. The fifth respondent, so the argument went,
was placed
in liquidation on the 7
th
of January 2019, a month before
these proceedings were instituted and therefore the liquidators
should have been joined as a party
since they have an interest in
this matter. Furthermore, so it was contended, the applicant
committed fraud by misrepresenting
its financial statements and
financial situation. The contract between the parties was concluded
in May 2018 and fraud was discovered
by an independent reviewer, AFS
Audit was employed by the respondents and produced the review report
in September 2018.
[10]
It was contended further that the respondents require rectification
of the contract since it
does not state the individual percentages of
the shares bought by each of the respondents. Furthermore, so the
argument went, the
respondents cannot be held jointly and severally
liable for they did not bind themselves jointly and there was no
agreement to
that effect. There is further a dispute of fact as what
was purchased by the respondents and that it was not explicitly
stated
that the fifth respondent will remain as part of the group of
the companies of the applicant. The respondents by conduct made their
election to resile from the contract in September 2018. In December
2018 the respondents resolved to place the fifth respondent
in
liquidation under the hands of the Master of the High Court.
[11]
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 the contract is
tainted with
fraud or a particular clause in the agreement is
unreasonable and or so prejudicial to a party that it is against
public policy.
[12]
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.
”
[13]
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.”
[14]
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.”
[15]
It is necessary at this stage to restate the relevant clauses of the
agreement between the parties
to put matters in the correct
perspective:
“
Clause
2 Interpretation
2.1
In this agreement, unless the context otherwise indicates:
2.1.1
……………..
2.1.3
‘Effective date’ means 1 May 2018.
2.1.7
‘the Purchasers’ means Dirk Anton Van Niekerk, identity
number: [....], WFJ Gouws, identity number: [....],
GF van der
Westhuizen, identity number: [....], Tobun and Tobun (Pty) Ltd,
Registration number: 2015/028671/07 (hereinafter referred
to as the
Purchasers).
2.1.8
‘the Purchase Price’ means the sum of R2 000 000
(Two Million Rand) plus the Settler’s outstanding
loan account
as at the effective date.
2.1.9
‘the shares’ means 53.03% (Fifty-Three pint Zero Three
Percent) of the issued share capital of the Company.
[16]
In clause 5 the agreement deals with the purchase price and the
payment thereof and provided
the following:
5.
Payment of the Purchase Price
5.1
The purchase price shall be R2 000 000 (Two Million Rand)
plus the outstanding loan account
of the Seller as at the effective
date, payable as set out hereunder.
5.2
The purchasers will have a 6 (six) month payment holiday, starting on
the effective date being 1 May
2018. Therefore, the purchasers shall
make their first payment no later than 1 November 2018. Interest in
this 6 (six) month period
will apply and be calculated at the current
Nedbank prime overdraft rates.
5.3
Thereafter the amount will be redeemed over a 60 (sixty) month
period, calculated at the same interest
rate as set out in Clause
5.2.
5.4
It is recorded that the 53.03% (Fifty-three point zero three percent)
shares that the Purchasers will
become entitled to in terms of this
Agreement shall formally be registered in his name on the effective
date.
[17]
In clause 9 the agreement deals with the possession and control of
the benefits arising therefrom
and provides as follows:
9.
Possession, Control and Risk
9.1
All benefits in and to the subject matter shall pass to the
Purchasers with effect from the Effective
Date, and possession of the
shares shall be given to and taken by the Purchasers on the Effective
Date, from which date all risks
in such shares and effective control
and authority there over, subject to the warranties in terms of this
Agreement, shall pass
to the Purchasers and the Seller shall be
released of all liabilities towards the Seller’s bankers.
9.2
……………………………
[18]
I do not agree with the respondent that the applicant failed to join
the liquidators of the fifth
respondent and therefore is not entitled
to the relief it seeks. The applicant is suing the respondents based
on the sale of shares
agreement and the fifth respondent was not a
party to the agreement. The liquidators have no interest in this
matter since they
are not parties to the contract. Furthermore, the
applicant does not seek any relief against the fifth respondent but
only against
the respondents based on the agreement of the sale of
shares concluded between the parties. The fifth respondent did not
own the
shares but individual members owned the shares in the fifth
respondent.
[19]
Moreover, the applicant has abandoned its alternative claim which was
in relation to the ownership
of the property which belonged to the
company, being the fifth respondent. With regard to the alternative
claim, the applicant
was bound to join the liquidators of the fifth
respondent for it involved the property of the fifth respondent. I
hold the view
therefore that there was no reason for the applicant to
cite the fifth respondent in the first place nor to join the
liquidators
in these proceedings.
[20]
There is no merit in the argument that there is a dispute of fact
which necessitates that this
matter be referred to trial. It is clear
and plain from the agreement that the applicant sold and the
respondents bought fifty-three
point zero three percent (53.03%) of
the shares in the fifth respondent. The resolution taken in 2017 to
donate twelve percent
(12%) of the shares in the fifth respondent to
Bokamoso Ba Basadi Trust bears no relevance in this case. The
applicant sold (100%)
one hundred percent of its shares in the fifth
respondent, which is (53.03%) of the shares in the fifth respondent.
The shares
were bought by the respondents and how they were to
distribute them amongst themselves was a matter left to the
respondents and
of no concern to the applicant.
[21]
It is now settled that a contract tainted by fraud or fraudulent
misrepresentation made knowingly
that it was false or made recklessly
to induce the other party to enter into a contract, can be voided by
the injured party and
it (the injured party) may proceed to recover
damages from the other party. However, the onus of proof is on the
party alleging
that there was misrepresentation and that such
misrepresentation induced it to enter into the contract. Had it known
the exact
facts, it would not have concluded the contract. Once the
injured party has proven the existence of the fraudulent
misrepresentation,
then it has to make an election whether to resile
from the contract or to continue with the contract.
[22]
In
Namasthethu Electrical (Pty) Ltd v City of Cape Town and
Another (case no: 201/2019)
[2020] ZASCA 74
(29 June 2020)
the
Supreme Court of Appeal had an opportunity to deal with the effects
of fraudulent misrepresentation that induced a party to
enter into a
contract and made the following observation:
“
Paragraph
29: It is trite that fraud is conduct which vitiates every
transaction known to the law. In affirming this principle,
this
court, in Esorfranki Pipelines (Pty) Ltd, referred with approval to
Lord Denning’s dicta in Lazarus Estates Ltd v Beasley,
when he
said:
‘
No
court in this land will allow a person to keep an advantage which he
has obtained by fraud. No judgment of a court, no order
of a
Minister, can be allowed to stand if it has been obtained by fraud.
Fraud unravels everything. The court is careful not to
find fraud
unless it is distinctly pleaded and proved; but once it is proved it
vitiates judgments, contracts and all transactions
whatsoever ……’”
[23]
I do not understand the respondents to be disputing the applicant’s
contention that the
review report they place reliance upon is not on
the letterhead of the company purporting to be issuing the report and
does not
bear the signature of the author thereof. Furthermore, the
company that prepared the review report or the person who compiled
the
said report is not a company of auditors or an auditor and it is
not independent as contended for by the respondents since the alleged
author of the report is the husband of the accountant of the fifth
respondent. The respondents do not seem to dispute these contentions
of the applicant. I am of the firm view therefore that the
respondents have not proven the authenticity of the review report
and
therefore its contents are not of any assistance to this Court.
[24]
However, even if I were to accept that there was fraudulent
misrepresentation made by the applicant
to induce the respondents to
conclude the contract, it is plain that the respondents exercised
their right to make an election
whether to resile from or abide by
the contract and they chose to abide by the contract. In the end it
is the respondents who took
full responsibility and placed the fifth
respondent in voluntarily winding up in the hands of the Master of
the High Court. The
argument that the respondents resiled from the
contract by conduct is misplaced since the respondents in their
answering affidavit
contend that, notwithstanding the financial
situation of the company as alluded to by the independent review
report, they kept
on trying to proceed with the business and made
arrangements with the creditors.
[25]
Given that the respondents elected to abide by the agreement of the
parties, the ineluctable
conclusion is therefore that they are bound
by all the terms of the agreement. The sale of shares agreement
between the parties
is clear, plain and unambiguous that on the
effective date all the benefits in and possession of the shares shall
pass and be given
to and taken by the respondents. From the effective
date, all risks in such shares and effective control and authority
there-over,
shall pass to the respondents and the applicant shall be
released from all liabilities towards the applicant’s bankers.
It
is therefore clear that the possession and control of the shares
passed to the respondents on the effective date in terms of the
agreement and they are therefore liable for payment for the shares.
[26]
As indicated in the preceding paragraphs, the courts are enjoined to
hold parties to their contract
and this case is no exception. The
respondents made their election to abide by the contract and they are
in breach of the contract
since they failed to meet the terms of the
agreement by not paying the applicant the agreed sum of R2 000 000
for the
fifty-three point zero three percent shares of the applicant
in the fifth respondent. It is my respectful view therefore, that the
applicant has succeeded in its case against the respondents and is
entitled to the relief it seeks as against.
[27]
In the circumstances, I make the following order:
1.
That the first and second respondents are ordered to pay the
sum of R2 000 000 (Two Million Rand) to the applicant;
2.
That the first and second respondents are to pay interest on the said
sum of R2 000 000
at the current Nedbank prime overdraft
rates from 1 May 2018 to date of final payment;
3.
The first and second respondents are liable, jointly and severally
the one paying the other
to be absolved, to pay the costs of this
application.
TWALA
M L
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION
Date
of Hearing:
14
th
of March 2022
Date
of Judgment:
11
th
of April 2022
For
the Applicant:
Advocate C.E Thompson
Instructed
by:
H J van
Rensberg Inc
Tel: 016 933 4030
desiree@hjvrlaw.co.za
For
the Respondent: Advocate
G.W Raath
Instructed
by:
J.C Uys
Attorneys
Tel: 067 143 2321
Uysconsult2@gmail.com
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