Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 371South Africa
South Africa Enterprise Development (PTY) Ltd v Kerani BTW CC (2021/7285) [2022] ZAGPJHC 371 (1 June 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
1 June 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## South Africa Enterprise Development (PTY) Ltd v Kerani BTW CC (2021/7285) [2022] ZAGPJHC 371 (1 June 2022)
South Africa Enterprise Development (PTY) Ltd v Kerani BTW CC (2021/7285) [2022] ZAGPJHC 371 (1 June 2022)
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sino date 1 June 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 2021/7285
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:NO
REVISED:
NO
1
June 2022
In
the matter between:
SOUTH
AFRICAN ENTEPRISE DEVELOPMENT (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
KERANI
BTW CC
Respondent
JUDGMENT
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 the hand down is deemed
to be 1 June 2022.
BALOYI
AJ:
[1]
This is an application in which the
applicant seeks the liquidation of the respondent in terms of
sections 66(1) and 69(1)(a) of
the Close Corporation Act No. 69 of
1984, read with sections 344(f) and 345 of the Companies Act No 61 of
1973. The application
is opposed by the respondent. Before I discuss
as set out below, I must apologise to the parties for the delay in
rendering the
judgment and do so without attempting to explain the
delay, well aware that any explanation should excuse the delay
[2]
The applicant’s affidavit deposed to
by David Pimstein, the Chief Executive Officer, describes the
applicant as a company
which invests in specialised companies with a
view to taking equity and funding the companies with the company ZAR
X (Pty) Ltd
(“ZAR X”) being one such company. The
applicant and the respondent each owns 24% and 16% shares
respectively ZAR X.
The other shareholders are Public Investment
Corporation Limited, Government Employee Pension Fund, Black and
White Innovations
and JGW Family Trust. Mr Geoffrey Martin Cook is
the respondent’s sole member.
[3]
The applicant seeks the liquidation of the
respondent on the ground that it is commercially insolvent, having
failed to honour a
contractual obligation to pay the share purchase
price in accordance with a share sale agreement in terms of which the
applicant
agreed to sell and the respondent agreed to purchase the
applicant’s shares in ZAR X. The applicant seeks the
liquidation
of the respondent on the ground that it is unable to pay
its debts and as a creditor as contemplated in section 345 of the
Companies
Act, 1973 and on the ground that liquidation is just and
equitable in accordance with section 68(d) of the Close Corporation
Act,
read with section 344(h) of the Companies Act, 1973.
[4]
The relevant facts as set out in the
founding affidavit may be summarised as follows.
[5]
On 10 September 2020, the applicant and the
respondent, represented by Mr Cook, concluded a share sale agreement
in terms of which
the applicant sold to the respondent its entire
shareholding in ZAR X for the price of three million five hundred
rand (R3 500 000)
(the agreement was signed by the
respondent on 8 August 2020). The sale agreement is subject to the
fulfilment of certain suspensive
conditions to be fulfilled on or
before 22 September 2020 and the agreement states that it shall
become effective on “
the first
Business Day after the fulfilment of the last of the Conditions
”
.
The suspensive conditions are:
5.1
The remaining shareholders waive any
pre-emptive, come along, tag along or similar rights which they may
have in regard to the Sale
Shares (clause 2.1.1).
5.2
Any required Shareholder and Board approvals necessary to give effect
to the
sale agreement are obtained (clause 2.1.2).
5.3
Any required regulatory approvals necessary to give effect to the
sale agreement
are obtained (clause 2.1.3).
[6]
Clause 3.1 provides that “
on
and with effect from the Effective Date …
”
,
the applicant sells to the respondent the shares and, in terms of
clause 3.2 the risk in and ownership and benefit of the shares
will
pass to the respondent on the Effective Date.
[7]
Clause 6, under the heading “
Implementation
and Delivery
”
prescribes the
obligations with which each party must comply on the Effective Date.
This includes that the applicant shall, against
compliance by the
respondent with specified obligations, including payment of the
purchase price, deliver to the respondent the
original share
certificate together with a proper instrument of transfer in
accordance with section 51(6)(a) of the Companies Act
(clause
6.1.2.1.1).
[8]
The respondent was unable to comply with
any of the suspensive conditions within the time stipulated in the
agreement and, following
numerous agreed extensions to the date for
fulfilment of the suspensive conditions, by letter dated and signed
by the parties on
9 November 2020, the parties agreed that any
suspensive conditions which remain unfulfilled on or before 10:00, 30
November 2020
shall be deemed to have been fulfilled, failing which
they are waived with effect from that date, and that the respondent
indemnifies
and holds the applicant harmless against any loss,
liability or damages suffered as a result of the deemed fulfilment or
waiver
of the suspensive conditions. The parties further agreed that
to the extent that the share sale agreement may have lapsed, they
agreed that they conclude and revive the sale agreement as amended by
specified correspondence exchanged between the parties during
September 2020 and October 2020. Thus, with this agreement, the
“Effective Date” of the sale agreement became the first
business day after 30 November 2020, the date when the parties each
would discharge their obligations agreed in clause 6.1.
[9]
It came to pass that the conditions were
not fulfilled on 30 November 2020 and that the respondent was unable
and failed to pay
the sale price on the Effective Date and after
numerous extensions of the date for payment of the sale price and, in
a letter dated
12 January 2021, the applicant’s attorneys
served on the respondent a letter of demand in terms of section
69(1)(a) of the
Close Corporation Act 69 of 1984, in terms of which
the applicant made demand that the respondent pay the purchase price
within
21 days of delivery of the letter. This application is the
culmination of the respondent’s failure to make payment as
demanded
in the letter.
[10]
The applicant seeks the liquidation of the
respondent on the basis that the purchase price is a debt that is due
and payable to
it by the respondent and that the respondent is
commercially insolvent.
[11]
In its answer affidavit opposing the
application, the respondent disputes that it is indebted to the
applicant, that the debt is
due and payable. It does on the grounds,
inter alia
,
that the share sale agreement never came into effect for
non-fulfilment of the suspensive conditions, including absence of ZAR
X shareholder and directors’ approval and absence of regulatory
approval, required in terms of section 67 of the Financial
Markets
Act, Act No. 19 of 2012. I return to this issue.
[12]
The respondent further contends that the
sale agreement provides a dispute resolution mechanism, namely
mediation and arbitration,
and as a result, the court lacks
jurisdiction. This is easily disposed on the basis that the relief
claimed by the applicant is
not one capable of mediation and or
arbitration. The applicant does not seek specific performance,
namely, that the respondent
be ordered to comply with the contract.
Rather, the applicant seeks the respondent’s liquidation, a
remedy which is not competent
in mediation or arbitration.
Accordingly, this defence does not avail the respondent and must
fail.
[13]
The respondent’s defence that the
debt on which the applicant relies for the relief claimed is not due
and payable on the
other hand requires different treatment. In its
replying affidavit, the applicant admits or at least does not deny
that the transfer
of shares as contemplated by the parties cannot be
given effect to without regulatory approval. Further, it does not
dispute that
the transfer of share is subject to approval by the
directors of ZAR X - it is common cause that both these conditions
have not
been complied with. The applicant however contends that the
suspensive conditions, including approval of the directors of ZAR X
and the regulators (clause 6.2), are deemed fulfilled alternatively
waived by virtue of the agreement of the parties that I have
referred
to above. I do not agree.
[14]
The requirement that the share sale must be
approved by the regulatory authorities is prescribed in section 67 of
the Financial
Markets Act under the heading “
Limitation
on control of and shareholding or other interest in market
infrastructure
”
. Section 67(1)
defines who is an “associate” for the purposes of the
section. Section 67(3) prescribes that “
a
person may not, without prior approval of the Authority, acquire or
hold shares or any other interest in a market infrastructure
if the
acquisition or holding results in that person, directly or
indirectly, alone or with an associate, exercising control within
the
meaning of subsection (2) over the market infrastructure.
”
A person controls a market infrastructure within
the meaning of section 67(2) if the person controls a market
infrastructure,
inter alia
,
that is a company, if that person, alone or with associate, holds
shares in the market infrastructure of which the total nominal
value
represents more than 15% of the nominal value of all the issued
shares thereof (s67(2)(a)(i); is directly or indirectly able
to
exercise or control the exercise of more than 15% of the rights
associated with securities of that company (67(2)(a)(ii). Section
67(4) prescribes that “
a person
may not, without prior approval of the registrar, acquire shares or
any other interest in a market infrastructure in excess
of that
approved under subsection (3).
”
A
“market infrastructure” includes an exchange licenced
under section 9 (sec 1). It is common cause that ZAR X is a
market
infrastructure.
[15]
The respondent holds more than 15% shares
in ZAR X and the applicant concedes, or at least does not dispute,
that approval in accordance
with section 67 is required. Sections
67(3) and 67(4) are peremptory in their terms and the respondent has
no discretion to opt
out of its requirements, as the parties
purported to do with the agreement that the condition to obtain
regulatory approval is
deemed fulfilled alternatively is waived. The
parties had no such power, and their agreement has no legal effect in
the light of
the peremptory terms of subsections (3) and (4). It is,
for the purposes of this application and the relief claimed by the
applicant,
irrelevant that the respondent was aware of these hurdles
to the completion of the transaction, as the applicant alleges, and
either
led the applicant down the garden path or has become
opportunistic in the face of the application for liquidation.
[16]
Without the approval required by section
67, the applicant was never in a position to give transfer of the
shares and the respondent’s
obligation to pay the purchase
price has not arisen.
[17]
Section 69(1)(a), Close Corporation Act,
provides that a corporation shall be deemed unable to pay its debts
if a creditor to whom
it is indebted in a sum not less than two
hundred rand (R200.00) then due has served on the corporation at its
registered office
a demand to pay the sum so
due
and the amount remains, after expiry of twenty one (21) days, unpaid,
unsecured or uncompounded for to the satisfaction of the
creditor.
Accordingly, to succeed in the relief claimed, an applicant must show
that the amount owed is due.
[18]
In the light of the peremptory provisions
of section 67(3) and (4) of the Financial Markets Act, Without the
prescribed approval,
payment to the applicant is not due, or as the
Appellate Division (as it then was) put it in
The
Master v IL Back & Co. Ltd and others
1983 (1) SA 983
(A)
,
the amount is not immediately claimable by the applicant in the
absence of the obligatory approvals or put differently, to be
due
“
the debt must be one in respect
of which the debtor is under an obligation to pay immediately
”
(at 1004F-G). The absence of approvals of the
shareholders and directors of ZAR X has the same consequence.
[19]
If the absence of the obligatory approvals
is an impediment to the completion of the transaction, it cannot be
that the respondent
was under an obligation to pay the purchase price
with the commensurate obligation of the applicant to give transfer of
the shares.
The obligation would only arise when the obligatory
approvals are procured or granted. It is only then that the
respondent would
become liable to immediately pay the purchase
prices. This occasion had not yet arisen at the time of the
institution of this application.
[20]
On the facts, the applicant has not shown
that the respondent is indebted to it and that the debt is due and
payable within the
meaning of section 69(1)(a) of the Close
Corporation Act. The applicant therefore cannot succeed in the relief
claimed.
[21]
I accordingly make the following Order:
1.
The application is dismissed with costs.
MS
BALOYI
ACTING
JUDGE
Date
of Hearing:
9 November
2021
Judgment
Delivered:
1 June 2022
APPEARANCES:
For
the Plaintiff:
Adv JE Smit
Instructed
by:
Fluxman Inc Attorneys
For
the Defendant:
Adv K Naidoo
Instructed
by:
Kapdi Twala Inc t/a Dentons
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