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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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[2022] ZAGPJHC 241
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## Voltex (Pty) Limited t/a Atlas Group v Resilient Rock (Pty) Limited (2021/29872)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 241 (26 April 2022)
Voltex (Pty) Limited t/a Atlas Group v Resilient Rock (Pty) Limited (2021/29872)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 241 (26 April 2022)
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sino date 26 April 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
CASE
NO: 2021/29872
REPORTABLE:
YES
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
REVISED
YES
26
April 2022
In
the matter between:
VOLTEX
(PTY) LIMITED T/A ATLAS
GROUP
Applicant
(REGISTRATION
NUMBER 1964/006740/07)
and
RESILIENT
ROCK (PTY)
LIMITED
Respondent
(REGISTRATION
NUMBER 2011/118259/07)
Heard:
27 January 2022
Judgment:
26 April 2022
JUDGMENT
MOVSHOVICH
AJ:
Introduction
1.
This is an application for the winding up
of the respondent on the basis of the latter's inability to pay its
debts. The applicant
places reliance on section 345(1)(c) of
the Companies Act, 1973.
2.
The applicable principles are as follows:
2.1
a
liquidation application is not a mechanism to obtain payment of
disputed debts. As such, if the respondent shows that the
debt
is genuinely and reasonably disputed, the application for winding up
should generally fail,
[1]
even
if it is likely (on a balance of probabilities based on the pleaded
cases) that the applicant will succeed in establishing
its claim on
the merits.
[2]
This is the
import of the
Badenhorst
principle or rule.
[3]
2.2
It
has been suggested that the
Badenhorst
principle may only be applicable in applications for provisional
liquidation, not final liquidation.
[4]
This is said to be so because in applications for final relief, the
Plascon
Evans
principle is applicable. It is indeed trite that a court is
obliged to apply
Plascon
Evans
and is thus required to decide the matter on the basis of the
respondent's factual version together with such facts in the
applicant's
papers as the respondent does not substantively dispute
(unless the respondent's version is palpably implausible, not
bona
fide
or clearly untenable).
[5]
But
Plascon
Evans
is concerned largely with rules of procedure and evidence; not the
substantive requirements for an application to succeed.
It
seems to me that the
Badenhorst
principle is not a rule of procedure of evidence, but relates to
substantive requirements: ie, what a party must establish to make
out
a claim or establish a defence. In this context, the
Badenhorst
principle is applicable as much to provisional winding-up as to final
winding up.
2.3
How one goes about satisfying these
substantive requirements and on what evidence the Court can base its
conclusions is a matter
of process and procedure, including
Plascon
Evans
.
Plascon
Evans
may, of course, make it more
difficult for an applicant to overcome the
Badenhorst
principle on motion. To state that at the provisional
liquidation stage the
Badenhorst
principle applies and the application should generally be dismissed
if there is a dispute as to liability on
bona
fide
and reasonable grounds, but to
hold that what is required at final stage is simply proof of the
indebtedness on the balance of
probabilities (with the possibility of
establishing this by way of a referral to oral evidence) may
paradoxically impose a
lower
standard of proof of debt at the final liquidation stage than at the
provisional stage. This seems to me undesirable and
not
consonant with the authorities. At least the same and possibly
higher substantive requirement in relation to the debt
should be
imposed at the final liquidation stage.
2.4
An
applicant for liquidation also bears the burden of satisfying the
Court that the respondent company is unable to pay the aforesaid
debt: that is, it must establish the respondent's commercial
insolvency.
[6]
In this
regard, a mere failure to pay, without more, is not co-extensive with
an inability to pay and, in the absence of
a statutory deeming
provision such as section 345(1)(a) of the Companies Act, 1973, an
inference of an inability from a failure
is inherently
problematic.
[7]
2.5
In
considering whether to grant a final order of liquidation, the Court
should also apply the
Plascon-Evans
principle.
[8]
2.6
Even
where the requisites for a winding-up order are established, the
Court retains a discretion to refuse it, but the discretion
is a
narrow one, to be exercised judicially in "
special
or unusual
"
circumstances.
[9]
3.
The current liquidation application
presents several of the challenges foreshadowed in the authorities.
I first set forth
the background before analysing how the above
principles play out in the case.
Factual background
4.
The applicant and the respondent concluded
an agreement in or around September 2020. A credit application was
filled out by the
applicant's representative with the respondent's
details and then signed by the respondent's Mr Sam Comfort Mhlaba on
21 September
2020 ("
the credit
application
"). That
application was not countersigned by the applicant and in fact
appears to have no place for counter-signature.
The application
provided certain terms for the purchase of goods by the respondent
from the applicant, including delivery, transfer
of risk and payment
of the purchase price. Clauses 11 and 12 provided that the
payment terms are 30 days from the statement
date unless otherwise
agreed in writing, and required the respondent to object to any item
on a statement from the applicant within
10 days of the statement's
dispatch.
5.
Clause 19 also provided that the terms set
forth in the application contain the entire agreement between the
parties which may only
be amended by the written and signed further
agreement of the parties.
6.
Whilst the respondent acknowledges the
above context of the credit application, it states in the answering
affidavit that it was
"
never the
intention or agreement of the parties that the respondent would pay
within 30 days from the date of the applicant's statements
to the
respondent
". The applicant
alleges that the agreement to supply goods to the respondent was
concluded orally on 21 September 2021
at the same time as the credit
application was signed and, in this regard, "
it
was expressly agreed that the electrical goods to be supplied by the
applicant were exclusively for [a property development in
Randfontein
[("
the project
")]
pursued by the respondent, which was a property developer].
[The credit application] was signed on the basis of and
pursuant to
this [oral] agreement. It was further agreed that any debt due
by the respondent to the applicant in respect
of such electrical
goods as may be supplied and delivered by the applicant to the
respondent would not be payable until the monies
due to the
respondent in respect of the project were released. Such monies
are presently being held in Trust by Adams &
Adams Attorneys
."
"The respondent thus concluded that "
[t]he
alleged debt is not due, owing or payable.
"
7.
The respondent's representative states that
he had no hand in completing the credit application (contrary to the
applicant's averments)
and merely initialed and signed on the credit
application as he was "instructed" by the applicant's
representative, Mr
Mervin Cameron, to do so.
8.
There is thus a dispute as to the contents
and circumstances surrounding the conclusion of the agreement between
the parties.
Given that the dispute also concerns payment terms
in respect of the invoiced amounts, the dispute is germane to the
claim made
by the applicant. It needs to be determined whether
a
bona fide
and reasonable basis has been laid by the respondent for disputing
the indebtedness.
9.
In support of its version of the agreement,
the applicant also relies on certain correspondence exchanged between
the parties in
April 2021. On 16 and 29 April 2021, the
applicant wrote to the respondent to request payment of
R 17,384,712.60.
It also signaled in that correspondence
that alternative payment arrangements could be made. It appears
that on 29 April
2021, there was then a meeting held between the
applicant and respondent's representatives regarding the aforesaid
amount.
Pursuant to that meeting, the respondent sent through a
proposal to settle the amount in three monthly instalments from May
to
July 2021, and apologising for the inconvenience of a "delayed"
payment. The respondent avers that the correspondence
is
privileged and inadmissible as it was part of settlement
negotiations. The applicant on the other hand contends that the
correspondence was simply an acknowledgment of liability, and an
undertaking to pay the acknowledged debt in instalments.
Analysis
10.
Given that these are motion proceedings,
where evidence cannot be weighed up for its probabilities when
considering final relief,
and where in provisional liquidation
proceedings all that is required of the respondent is to set forth a
bona fide
and reasonable basis for resisting the claim for indebtedness, I
cannot come to the conclusion that the 30 April 2021 letter is
admissible. In any event, in its terms, while it recognises the
"outstanding" amount of R 17,384,712.60, it
says
nothing about whether the amount is payable. The key issue in
dispute are the
payment
terms
originally and bindingly agreed. Moreover, the letter expressly
states that the respondent "
propose[s] to settle the
outstanding amount
" in a particular sequence.
11.
In my view, the respondent's version of the agreement between
the parties is indeed improbable. If it were true, then the
applicant would effectively have agreed to defer payment for
potentially a substantial and indeterminate period, until the funds
for the project became available, which may, possibly, never have
come to pass. The credit application form also appears
relatively clearly to state the payment terms, and it would be odd
for those terms to be signed and different terms to be orally
agreed
beforehand or at the same time as the signature.
12.
But
it may also be that one should not read too much into the signature
of a standard form credit application (which was not even
counter-signed by the applicant) as it could not possibly reflect
anything that was actually agreed orally just prior to its
signature.
It is unclear how the
Shifren
clause
[10]
in the credit
application subsists alongside the oral agreement between the
parties, but these are not insuperable obstacles in
light of remedies
such as rectification, the importance of context in interpretation,
and the fact that the credit application
would have to be interpreted
and understood against the background of what had been discussed and
agreed. Moreover, if the
terms were strictly 30 days, it is
unclear why the applicant continued to supply the goods without demur
to the respondent until
February 2021.
13.
I do
not think it is appropriate or possible for me to resolve the
disputes in favour of the applicant on the papers. Although
the
respondent's version is questionable and improbable in several
respects, I am of the view that it is sufficient to constitute
a
bona
fide
and reasonable basis for disputing the payment terms (and thus the
claimability) of the debt. I am fortified in my view by
what
Megarry J stated in
John
v Rees
[1970] Ch 345:
"
As
everybody who has anything to do with the law well knows, the path of
the law is strewn with examples of open and shut cases
which,
somehow, were not; of unanswerable charges which, in the event, were
completely answered; of inexplicable conduct which
was fully
explained; of fixed and unalterable determinations that, by
discussion, suffered a change
."
[11]
14.
In addition to the above, and importantly, the applicant has
presented no direct evidence that the respondent is unable to pay its
debts. The onus in this regard (on a balance of probabilities)
rests on the applicant. No notice under section 345(1)(a)
was
sent. The applicant has also not proffered any evidence of the
respondent's creditors, debtors, assets or liabilities.
15.
All that the applicant mustered in its founding papers is the
allegation that given the facts as set forth above (and in particular
the respondent's failure to pay on the instalment dates set out in
the 30 April 2021 letter), the Court should draw an inference
of an
inability to pay the debts. I am not satisfied that the letter
is admissible, but I also do not think its content would
assist the
applicant. The mere failure to pay on agreed dates is in itself
not evidence of an inability to pay, particularly
where there is no
evidence that the
proposed
payment dates set forth in the 20
April 2021 letter were agreed by the applicant. Moreover, while
it is debatable whether
the respondent
's version
of the original agreement as to payment terms is probable, I do not
think that on the papers it may be concluded that
its view of
claimability of the debt was not at the relevant times genuinely
held. If that is so, then its failure to pay
the debt gives
rise to no inference of insolvency. After all, it genuinely
believed it had no obligation to do so.
Drawing a far-reaching
inference as to commercial insolvency requires more.
16.
In all the circumstances, the liquidation
application falls to be dismissed. The applicant, if it
believed it was entitled
to payment, should have launched court
proceedings specifically seeking the enforcement of its debt (by way
of action or otherwise).
Liquidation proceedings were
inappropriate.
17.
There is no reason why the usual principle
concerning costs should not apply, with costs following the result.
Order
18.
I thus make the following order:
18.1
the application is dismissed with costs.
Hand-down
and date of judgment
19.
This judgment is handed down electronically
by circulation to the parties or their legal representatives by email
and by uploading
the judgment onto Caselines. The date and time
for hand down of the judgment are deemed to be 15:15 on 26 April
2022.
VM
MOVSHOVICH
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
Applicant's
Counsel:
N Segal
Applicant's
Attorneys: Orelowitz
Inc Attorneys
Respondent's
Counsel: BP Geach SC
Respondent's
Attorneys: Rina Rheeders Attorneys
Date
of Hearing:
27 January
2022
Date
of Judgment:
26 April 2022
[1]
Kalil v
Decotex (Pty) Ltd
1988 (1) SA 943 (A).
[2]
Payslips
Investment Holdings CC v Y2K Tec Ltd
2001
(4) SA 781 (C), 783.
[3]
See
a recent pithy restatement of the principle in
Freshvest
Investments (Pty) Ltd v Marabeng (Pty) Ltd
[2016] ZASCA 168
(24 November 2016), paras [1] and [11].
[4]
Orestisolve
(Pty) Ltd t/a Essa Investments v NDFT Investment Holdings (Pty) Ltd
2015
(4) SA 449 (WCC).
[5]
National
Scrap Metal v Murray & Roberts
2012
(5) SA 300
(SCA); and
Wightman
t/a JW Construction v Headfour (Pty) Ltd
2008 (3) SA 371 (SCA).
[6]
Corner
Shop (Pty) Ltd v Moodley
1950
(4) SA 55
(T), 59 - 60;
Standard
Bank of South Africa Ltd v R-Bay Logistics CC
2013 (2) SA 295
(KZD), para [24].
[7]
Corner
Shop
(
ibid
,
60); and
Meyer
& Kie v Maree
1967 (3) SA 27
(T).
[8]
Afgri
Operations Limited v Hamba Fleet (Pty) Ltd
2022
(1) SA 91
(SCA), para [9]
[9]
Ibid
,
paras [12] and [13].
[10]
SA
Sentrale Ko-op Graanmaatskappy Bpk v Shifren en ander
1946 (4) SA 760
(A).
[11]
At
402. Cited with approval by the Supreme Court of Appeal in
National
Scrap Metal v Murray & Roberts
2012 (5) SA 300
(SCA), para [22].
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