Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 309South Africa
Ryan and Others v Groenendaal and Others (12142/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 309 (13 April 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
13 April 2022
Headnotes
with Investec Bank pending the adjudication of an opposed motion application instituted under case number 2021/27590 (the main application). [2] On 14 April 2022, I determined that the application should be heard as one of urgency and granted the alternative order (with reasons to follow) that:
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
>>
2022
>>
[2022] ZAGPJHC 309
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Ryan and Others v Groenendaal and Others (12142/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 309 (13 April 2022)
Ryan and Others v Groenendaal and Others (12142/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 309 (13 April 2022)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2022_309.html
sino date 13 April 2022
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
Number: 12142/2022
REPORTABLE:
YES
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
REVISED.
NO
20
April 2022
In the matter between:
LIESEL
VENETIA RYAN
First Applicant
AFRICAN
RENEWABLE DEVELOPMENTS
(PROPRIETARY)
LIMITED
(Registration
number: 2019/387461/07)
Second Applicant
CHRISTOPH
HENNING EHLERS
Third Applicant
and
BRYAN
JAMES GROENENDAAL
First Respondent
BLUE
CRANE BREEZE (PROPRIETARY) LIMITED
Second Respondent
(Registration
number; 2019/534629/07)
INVESTEC
BANK LIMITED
Third Respondent
JUDGMENT [Reasons]
SIWENDU
J
Introduction
[1]
On 12 April 2022, the applicants launched an urgent application in
terms of Rule 6(12)
of the Uniform Rules of Court. They sought
interim interdictory relief concerning a business account of the
second respondent held
with Investec Bank pending the adjudication of
an opposed motion application instituted under case number 2021/27590
(the main
application).
[2]
On 14 April 2022, I determined that the application should be heard
as one of urgency
and granted the alternative order (with reasons to
follow) that:
“
The
first respondent be and is hereby permitted to make the necessary and
required withdrawals and/or payments from the Investec
Account (being
the Bank Account with the following details: Account Name: Blue Crane
Breeze (Pty) Ltd; Account Number: [....];
Branch Code: [....];
Account Type: Current Account; Branch: Investec Bank Limited, 100
Grayston Drive) for the second respondent’s
reasonable and
necessary business expenditure and/or expenses, but only upon receipt
of written confirmation from the applicants
(or the applicants’
attorneys of record) enabling the first respondent to do so, pending
the determination and adjudication
of the opposed motion proceedings
instituted in this Court (under case number 2021/27590).
The
Parties and Background
[3]
As is apparent from the relief, the urgent application was launched
in the context
of a pending opposed motion application for the
winding up of the second respondent. There are disagreements between
the applicants
and the respondents (
as shareholders
) about the
running of the business of the second respondent, Blue Crane Breeze
(Proprietary) Limited (Blue Crane Breeze) [ emphasis
added].
[4]
Blue Crane Breeze, the company whose banking account is in dispute is
a special purpose
vehicle (SPV) incorporated to exploit opportunities
in the Independent Power Production (IPP) and renewable energy
sector. It sought
to develop wind farms, with either Eskom or the
private sector as off takers.
[5]
Consistent with the SPV structure, the first applicant Liesel Venetia
Ryan(Ryan) is
the sole shareholder of Africa Renewable Development
(Pty) Ltd (Afrendev). Afrendev is a majority shareholder in Blue
Crane Breeze,
holding 51% of its issued shares. Afrendev is the
second applicant. The third applicant is Chrilstoph Henning Ehlers
(Ehlers),
a director of the Afrendev. Afrendev and Ryan in particular
are second respondents in the main application for the winding up.
[6]
The first respondent, Bryan James Groenendaal is a 49% shareholder in
Blue Crane Breeze.
Currently, he is the sole director of Blue Crane
Breeze. On 9 June 2021 Groenendaal initiated the pending main
application for
winding-up of Blue Crane Breeze under case number
2021/27590 as alluded to above. Groenendaal opposed this urgent
application not
in his personal capacity but in his capacity as the
sole director of Blue Crane Breeze.
[7]
It is not necessary to traverse the intricacies of the issues save to
point out that
Groenendaal secured an exclusivity agreement with
owners for the purpose of the wind farm project in Mpumalanga.
Previously, Ryan
was a director of Blue Crane Breeze until November
2020 when she resigned.
[8]
The co-operation agreement is thin on the details of the commercial
arrangements between
the applicants and the respondents. However, it
is common cause that, Afrendev is a majority shareholder and a funder
and has a
loan account in Blue Crane Breeze, and Groenendaal is the
minority shareholder.
[9]
It is also common cause that on 13 August 2021, Ryan and Afrendev (a
major shareholder
of Blue Crane Breeze) opposed the main application
for the winding up of Blue Crane Breeze launched by Groenendaal. Ryan
and Afrendev
have instituted a counter-application to the main
application in terms of section 163(2)(e) of the Companies Act 71 of
2008 (the
Companies Act). In
the counter-application, Ryan and
Afrendev seek an order that Groenendaal sells his shares in Blue
Crane Breeze to Afrendev for
R1 388 64.00. To the extent that
Groenendaal rejects the purchase price of R1 388 364.00, then the
purchase price would be determined
by a third party.
[10]
The relief Ryan and Afrendev seek in the counter application is based
on allegations of prejudicial
and oppressive conduct by Groenendaal
in the running of the affairs of Blue Crane. Once more, it is not
necessary to delve into
the intricacies of the allegations save to
note that Mr Van Tonder (for the applicants), as confirmed in Ryan’s
affidavit
asked the court to take regard of the allegations in the
counter application which could not be annexed to these papers in
view
of the Directives applicable to Urgent Applications.
[11]
It was a further common cause at the hearing of the urgent
application that Groenendaal does
not oppose the counter–application
to sell his shares to Afrendev. Mr Williams (for Groenendaal)
confirmed that he has consented
to the transfer of his shares. For
reasons unexplained, he has delayed the prosecution of the main
application. On 17 November
2021, the applicants had to apply to
Court to compel him to file Heads of Argument. I was informed during
the hearing that, instead
of filing the Heads of Arguments, he has
opposed the interlocutory application to compel him to do so.
[12]
The applicants say what hastened the need for an urgent application
is that Groenendaal, as sole
director of Blue Crane Breeze,
instructed Investec Bank to transfer all the funds/monies currently
held within the Investec Account
to a new and unknown bank account of
Blue Crane Breeze. They fear (as already articulated, to some extent,
in Afrendev’s
counter-application) that if the instruction is
carried out, Groenendaal will be in a position to unlawfully
dissipate or spirit-away
Blue Crane Breeze's monies/funds or
unlawfully misappropriate Blue Crane Breeze's monies/funds.
[13]
Ryan says these permutations negatively affect Blue Crane Breeze, its
operations, its liquidity
and ultimately its shareholders of which
Afrendev is the largest. Afrendev is also Blue Crane Breeze's largest
creditor - by way
of a shareholders’ loan - which constitutes,
in part, the monies/funds currently held in the Investec Account. The
Investec
Account was opened by the applicants, on behalf of Blue
Crane Breeze, during November 2019. To the best of the applicants’
knowledge, there is an amount of R432 080.47 held within the Investec
Account.
[14]
The applicants seek a mechanism that will permit them exercise
oversight over the monies currently
held within the second
respondent's bank account, pending the adjudication and determination
of the main application, while ensuring
in the meantime that the
necessary and required business expenses of the second respondent are
satisfied.
[15]
The urgent application before me and the pending main and
counter applications are not the
first disagreements between the
parties. Before Ryan resigned, the applicants launched urgent interim
interdictory relief against
Groenendaal and Green Building Africa on
22 October 2021, which urgent application was enrolled for hearing on
28 October 2021.
[16]
I glean from the papers that there are allegations that despite being
the director of Blue Crane
Breeze, Groenendaal wearing a different
hat as the sole director, Editor and publisher of GBA Digital Media
(Pty) Ltd t/a Green
Building Africa ("Green Building Africa")
sought to publish an article which, according the applicant, would
have placed
Blue Crane Breeze and the applicants in a negative light.
Ultimately, Groenendaal and the applicants reached a settlement on 27
and 28 October 2021 where both Groenendaal and Green Building Africa
confirmed and undertook (towards the applicants) that they
would not
publish the intended article which resolved the interdict.
Opposition
[17]
Groenendaal’s main contentions against the relief are twofold.
He disputes the urgency
of the application. He also argues that the
applicants lack
locus standi
to seek the relief before the
court. In addition, he says that the applicants lack the
prima
facie
right which entitles them to the relief.
[18]
He contends that the dispute about the bank account arose after the
applicants resigned because
Groenendaal had requested the termination
of Ryan’s mandate as signatory to the bank account. The issues
regarding the bank
account have been ongoing since December 2020.
[19]
Mr Williams also asserts that Groenendaal’s status as the sole
director of Blue Crane Breeze
is not affected. As the sole director,
he should not be restricted from having a free reign and unfettered
access and use to the
bank account. The bank is complying with a
lawful instruction to move the bank account to a new account.
[20]
The foundation for the argument that the applicants have no
prima
facie
right
to the relief they seek is that our law recognises a clear
distinction between directors and shareholders
[1]
.
Directors control and manage the affairs and assets of the company.
They do not control and manage the affairs and assets of the
company's members.
[21]
In developing this line of argument, Mr Williams contended that the
main application deals exclusively
with the shareholding in Blue
Crane Breeze. He contends that the position is supported by the
provisions of the companies act and
the court’s decision in
De
Bruyn v Steinhoff International Holdings NV and Others.
[2]
He
says it is a misconceived notion that the applicants, as
shareholders, are entitled to have oversight over the monies held
within
Blue Crane Breeze." I return to this argument later in
the judgment.
Urgency
[22]
What persuaded me to determine the matter as one of urgency is that
on 30 January 2022, Groenendaal
directed an electronic mail to Ryan
advising that he had initiated steps with the third respondent to
remove her as a signatory
on the Investec Account.
[23]
The removal would give Groenendaal sole the rights as signatory to
the Investec account. I understand
that at first, Investec Bank
declined to execute the instruction. Despite her resignation, Ryan
had remained the co-signatory to
the Investec account. Even though Mr
Williams submitted to the court that the dispute about
“transaction-ability” on
the account is not new, the
events that followed are not in disputed. Ryan states that nothing
happened after Investec’s
refusal to act on Groenendaal’s
instruction.
[24]
She stated that after the January exchange, she believed that
Groenendaal would not be able to
exercise any control over the
Investec Account while she remained an authorised signatory. This was
not disputed and there is no
plausible reason not to accept this
explanation.
[25]
The lull was short lived because on 22 March 2022 at 11:15, Ryan
received an electronic mail
from Investec’s Geeta Bhagwandas,
in further response to Groenendaal's electronic mail of 30 January
2022. It reads as follows:
“
As
you are aware, there has been an ongoing dispute relating to this
account and to date the Bank has not received a court order
providing
direction to the parties.
The
Bank has made a decision to close the account and all facilities of
the Company. Any credit balances will be transferred to
the Company's
new bank account.
”
[26]
It seems without her knowledge Investec Bank made a decision to close
account. As I understand
it, the fear is that as the above
email states, the credit balance in the Investec Account would be
"transferred to the Company's new bank account"
controlled by Groenendaal to her exclusion. Investec does not oppose
the application. On 25 March 2022, it confirmed that it will
abide
any decision made by the Court. As stated above, Groenendaal does not
dispute issuing this instruction because he considers
it a lawful
instruction issued in his capacity as a director of Blue Crane
Breeze.
[27]
In my view, the trigger event of 22 March 2022 and the new tac by
Groenendaal which altered the
basis for the disagreement from one
about signatories and transacting rights on the Investec Account to
one about a unilateral
change of Blue Cranes Breezes’ Business
Bankers. These facts drove me to conclude that the application is
urgent.
Locus
Standi
[28]
The disputed contentions centre on
locus standi
and the
prima facie
rights of the applicants as a shareholder. The
debate about the standing of the applicants falls to be considered
first before the
merits. It also seems to me that Groenendaal pressed
on that issue because he was aware that once resolved, interim relief
would
most likely follow.
[29]
Mr Van Tonder (for the applicants) argued that t
he
application is predicated on the pending main application for the
winding - up alluded to above, in which the applicants, as
majority
shareholders and respondents, counter apply to prevent the winding-up
of Blue Crane Breeze. The declaratory relief they
seek in the counter
application is in terms of
section 163
(2) (e) of the
Companies Act,
based
on allegations about Groenendaal’s oppressive and
prejudicial conduct. The applicants have an interest in Blue Crane
Breeze
and the transfer of Groenendaal's shares in terms of
section
163(2)(e)
of the
Companies Act. He
contends that I should adopt a
broad approach to their standing based on the above and the
Constitutional Court’s decision
in
Giant
Concerts CC v Rinaldo investments
(Pty)
Ltd and Others
[3]
. There the
court said:
“
The
own-interest litigant must, therefore, demonstrate that his or her
interests or potential interests are directly affected by
the
unlawfulness sought to be impugned.
…
Standing is not a
technical or strictly-defined concept. And there is no magical
formula for conferring it. It is a tool a court
employs to determine
whether a litigant is entitled to claim its time,and to put the
opposing litigant to trouble….
Each
case depends on its own facts. There can be no general rule covering
all cases. In each case, an applicant must show that he
or she has
the necessary interest in an infringement or a threatened
infringement. And here a measure of pragmatism is needed.”
[30]
Mr Van Tonder contends that the pending main application, and the
applicants' protectable interest
therein, is the proximate cause for
the institution of this urgent application requesting interim
interdictory relief. Ryan says
the applicants have a
prima facie
right
to protect Blue Crane Breeze's monies/funds pending the
determination and adjudication of the opposed main application.
[31]
I have considered the resistance mounted by Groenendaal. I agree that
the segregation of the
rights and duties between the company, the
directors and shareholders in our law and under
Companies Act cannot
be refuted.
Mr Williams cited the
decision in
De Bruyn v Steinhoff
International Holdings NV and Others
in
opposition. I agree that the decision confirms the long standing
common law principle that entrenches a segregation between the
company, the directors and the shareholders.
[32]
Something Mr Williams does not raise forcefully is that the in
De
Bruyn
the court also recognises that even though there is no
general duty owed by director to shareholders, directors
may
owe fiduciary duties to shareholders in special circumstances in
addition to their fiduciary duties owing to the company. It states
that:
“
What
is required for directors to owe duties to shareholders has been
described as a special factual relationship subsisting between
the
directors and the shareholders. There is no closed list of these
special factual relationships. A fiduciary duty owed by directors
to
shareholders has been recognised in certain cases where directors
have persuaded outside shareholders to sell their shares in
the
company to the directors. In family companies where shareholders
reposed trust and confidence in a family member and sought
advice and
information, a fiduciary duty was recognised. So too, in
circumstances where directors had made representations to
shareholders to secure options, undertaking to sell the shares of
shareholders, the directors assumed a position of agency and were
accountable to the shareholders”.
[33]
Firstly,
De Bruyn
deals
with a JSE listed company where regulation
requires
such segregation in duties and integrity of the listing depends on an
equal treatment of all shareholders.
In
this instance Blue Crane Breeze is a privately held SPV its shares
jointly held by the second applicant (represented by Ryan)
and
Groenendaal. From inception, until the disagreements surfaced, there
had been an overlap in the roles between the shareholders
and the
directors. Ryan and Groenendaal were not put in office as directors
through a vote. They were directors appointed in their
representative
capacity as shareholders
.
For this reason, their authority as a Board
derived from the respective joint shareholding rather than some other
external or independent
authority.
[34]
I find that Mr. Williams also mischaracterizes the true dispute. In
my view, the dispute about
the management of the Bank Account is
quintessentially a shareholder dispute. It is clear from the papers
that the affairs of Blue
Crane Breeze, in particular, the Investec
Bank Account was managed jointly by an arrangement between Ryan and
Groenendaal as shareholders
rather than their respective positions as
directors. The joint management of the Investec account was by
agreement and persisted
even after Ryan resigned. As shareholders,
they were free to come to such an arrangement about the affairs of
Blue Crane Breeze.
[35]
In my view, the essence of the relief the applicants seek is to
reinstate a position
ante.
It
essentially restores an earlier agreement, arrangement and practice
between them before Groenendaal’s unilateral action
[4]
.
On this score, the circumstances of this case differ materially, and
the above factors render
De
Bruyn
distinguishable.
What is more is that in view the concession by Groenendaal to sell
the shares in Blue Crane Breeze, once the valuation
dispute is
resolved, he is not likely to remain a director of Blue Crane Breeze.
[36]
Even if I am wrong on this, in
Gihwala
& Others v Grancy Property Ltd & Others,
[5]
a
case not referred to by the parties, the Supreme Court of Appeal
stated that the relationship between shareholders and the directors
they have put into office involved a 'bond of trust'. Even if not put
in office by Ryan and Afrendev
,
per se
,
given the SPV structure and the representative capacity in which he
acts,
Groenendaal
owes
a fiduciary duty to Blue Crane not to act to its detriment. It was
not contended on his behalf that he gave an undertaking
not to do so
given the disagreements.
[38]
The counter application which he does not opposed is replete with
allegations that, now as the
sole director in the SPV, he has
breached the duty he owes to Blue Crane Breeze. I find the
'bond
of trust’
referred to in
Gihwala
extends to him as
the remaining director a duty to uphold earlier agreements, conduct
and practices with shareholders.
[37]
Given the special factual relationship of the SPV, the pending
litigation, the risk and the financial
exposure Afrendev and the
applicants are likely to suffer, it is pragmatic and fitting to grant
the applicants requisite standing
to protect their interest in Blue
Crane Breeze.
Interdictory Relief
[38]
The trite requirements for an interim interdict are well established
and I need not regurgitate
them here. Given the finding on the
standing of the applicants, I also find they have established
,
their prima facie right to relief based on the recent conduct and the
unopposed counter application.
[39]
I agree with the assertion that t
he balance of
convenience favours the applicants. If the valuation dispute is
resolved, there are no prospects that Groenendaal
would remain a
director of Blue Crane Breeze. If the court does not grant the
applicants relief, the applicants as major shareholders
and funders
of Blue Crane Breeze and Blue Crane Breeze stand to suffer
irreparable financial harm. It is no answer to say as Mr
Williams
suggests, that they must once more enter into yet another parallel
shareholder spat to challenge to composition of the
board.
[40]
It is for the above reasons that I granted the applicants the interim
relief which does no more
than reinstate an earlier arrangement
between them. I made no order as to costs because, Groenendaal did
not oppose the application
in his personal capacity but on behalf of
Blue Crane Breeze. I find it would not be appropriate to burden the
company with costs.
T. SIWENDU J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
LOCAL 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 20 April 2022.
Heard on:
13
April 2022
Reason for the Order:
20
April 2022
Counsel
for the Applicants:
Adv.
L Van Rhyn van Tonder
Instructed
by:
C.
F. Krause, Krause Incorporated
Counsel for the
Respondent: Mr
Williams
Instructed
by:
B. MacGregor,Malherbe,Rigg and Ranwell
inc.
[1]
Section
66(1)
of the
Companies Act.
[2]
2022
(1) SA 442
(GJ) at para 136 Unterhalter J holds that: In general,
directors of a company owe fiduciary duties to the company and not
to
its members. This is an incident of the
Salomon
principle
that a company is distinct from its members. Directors control and
manage the affairs and assets of the company. They
do not control or
manage the affairs or assets of the members. It is this legal
relationship between the directors and the company
that requires
that the fiduciary duties of directors are owed to the company. That
this is so is a matter of high and durable
authority. A director is
a trustee for the company and is required as a result to show the
utmost good faith towards the company.
[3]
2013
3 BCLR 251
(CC) at par. 28 —29 and par. 41 —43.
[4]
Section
15(7)
of the
Companies Act permits
agreements between shareholders
about the affairs of a company.
[5]
2017 (2) SA 337
at
para
144.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
South African Transport and Allied Workers Union v South African Securitisation Programme (RF) Ltd and Others (2020/ A5066) [2022] ZAGPJHC 66 (7 February 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 66High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)98% similar
South African National Civil Organisation v Ramosie and Others (7016/2019) [2022] ZAGPJHC 323 (6 May 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 323High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)98% similar
South African National Parks v Madyayimile Trading CC and Another (1995/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 619 (23 August 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 619High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)98% similar
South African Municipal Workers Union National Medical Scheme (SAMUMED) v City of Ekurhuleni and Others (5068/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 701; [2022] 4 All SA 878 (GJ) (25 August 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 701High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)98% similar
South Africa Enterprise Development (PTY) Ltd v Kerani BTW CC (2021/7285) [2022] ZAGPJHC 371 (1 June 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 371High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)98% similar