Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 382South Africa
Body Corporate of Candice Glades v Derrocks Attorneys and Another (2021 / 4629) [2022] ZAGPJHC 382 (6 June 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
6 June 2022
Headnotes
in Old Mutual, which ought to have been used towards the settlement of the overdraft facility.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Body Corporate of Candice Glades v Derrocks Attorneys and Another (2021 / 4629) [2022] ZAGPJHC 382 (6 June 2022)
Body Corporate of Candice Glades v Derrocks Attorneys and Another (2021 / 4629) [2022] ZAGPJHC 382 (6 June 2022)
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sino date 6 June 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
CASE
NO: 2021 / 4629
(1)
REPORTABLE: Not
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: Not
(3)
REVISED.
6
June 2022
In
the matter between:
NEDBANK
LIMITED
Applicant
and
LIBERTY
MOON INVESTMENTS 82 (PTY) LTD
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MOLAHLEHI
J
Introduction
[1]
This is an application in which the applicant seeks a final
winding-up order of the respondent. The order is sought in
terms of
section 69 of the Close Corporation Act 69 of 1984, read with section
345 (1) (a) of the Companies Act, 61 of 1973 (“the
Company's
Act”).
[2]
The respondent opposed the application on the basis that it is not
indebted to the applicant. It further submitted, that
the applicant
was not entitled to the relief sought because the liquidation
application has been suspended consequent the business
rescue
application.
The
parties.
[3]
The applicant, Nedbank Limited, is a company incorporated in terms of
the Companies Act, a bank established in terms of
the Banks Act 24 of
1994, and a credit provider registered in terms of the National
Credit Act, 54 of 2005 (“the NCA”).
[4]
The respondent Liberty Moon Investment 82 Property Limited (“Liberty
Moon”), is a company registered in terms
of the Companies Act.
It is also part of the association of entities that conducted their
banking business with the applicant.
The group consist of the
following:
1.
Eldo Supermarket SA CC;
2.
Midnight Star Trading 437 CC;
3.
Boundary Supermarket SA CC;
4.
Alamo Square Trading 62 CC
5.
Alamo Square trading 63 CC; and
6.
Ennerdale Super SA CC.
Background
facts
[5]
It is common cause that the respondent and the associated entities
operated various accounts and, from time to time, had
overdraft
facilities with the applicant.
[6]
According to the applicant, the respondent and the other entities
exceeded their overdraft limits at some point. In seeking
to address
this problem, the applicant offered to restructure the overdraft
facility of the respondent. The offer, which was an
overdraft
facility, was in the sum of R730 000. 00. The facility was made
available subject to the conditions set out in clauses
7 and 9 of
annexure FA3. The essential terms of the agreement as set out in the
founding affidavit are as follows:
“
18.1.
An overdraft facility of R730 000.00 (Seven Hundred and Thirty
Thousand Rand) was approved in favour of the respondent, together
with a Nedbond facility of R5000000.00 (Five Million Rand). The
Nedbond facility was never implemented as the respondent failed
to
provide the documentation stipulated in clause 3.7.2of "FA3";
18.2. The overdraft facility was subject to review and
repayable on
demand at the applicant's discretion in accordance with normal
banking practice.
18.3.
The Applicant would be entitled to debit the account with any fees
identified in annexure "FA3.'
18.4.
The interest rate would be linked to the applicant's publicly quoted
prime lending rate ("the prime rate"). The
maximum penalty
rate would be equal to the ruling rate of the South African Reserve
Bank repurchase rate ("the repo rate plus
14%").
18.5.
The Applicant would be entitled to charge a penalty interest rate in
the event of the overdraft facilities being exceeded.
[7]
The agreement further provides grounds upon which the applicant could
demand immediate payment from the respondent. The
relevant clauses
provides as follows:
“
18.8.1
if the respondent did not pay on the due date any amount payable in
terms of the facility;
18.8.2
if the respondent did not comply with any requirement relating to the
financial
covenants set out in annexure FA3.
18.8.3
if the respondent or any
security provider committed a breach of any of the terms and
conditions set out in annexure "FA3";
18.8.4
if the respondent or any security provider committed a breach of any
of the
terms and conditions set out in any agreement entered into
between the Applicant and Respondent;
18.8.5
if a representation or warranty that was made or given or deemed to
be made
or given by the respondent in connection with annexure "FA3"
was incorrect or misleading in any respect when made or given.”
[8]
In paragraph 22 of its founding affidavit, the applicant contends
that despite its compliance with the terms and conditions
of the
agreement, the respondent failed to comply with clauses 7, 8 and 9 of
the agreement. The overdraft was cancelled, and payment
was demanded
from the respondent.
[9]
The applicant avers that the respondent used and withdrew from the
overdraft facility even before compliance with the
provisions of
clauses 7, 8 and 9 of the agreement.
[10]
The other agreement between the parties was a loan agreement
concluded on 6 October 2015 for R10 million, referred to
as the
Nedbank bond.
[11]
In light of the above, the applicant, on 20 November 2020, instituted
proceedings against the respondent for breach of
the agreement. The
matter did not proceed in court; the parties have reached a
settlement agreement in which the respondent was
to pay the Nedbank
sum of R413 507.56 for the bond facility by 30 November 2020.
Furthermore, the respondent was to pay the balance
in fifty equal
instalments by 31 December 2020. According to the applicant, the debt
under the Nedbank facility was R6 253 783.44.
[12]
The respondent disputes the debt and contends that it never drew down
on the restructure overdraft facility and further
that the applicant
is indebted to it for R 470 000. 00 for overcharging the group.
[13]
The respondent further contends that the applicant has liquidated the
proceeds of the unit trust investment held in Old
Mutual, which ought
to have been used towards the settlement of the overdraft facility.
Legal
principles and analysis
[14]
It is also trite that a company that is unable to pay its debt in
terms of section 344 of the Companies Act may be wound-up.
The
respondent may resist the winding-up application by showing that the
winding-up is disputed on
bona
fides
grounds.
[15]
It is trite that the process of winding up in terms of the Companies
Act is initiated by issuing the statutory letter
of demand in terms
of section 345 (1) (a) of the Companies Act. In terms of sub-section
(c) of the section, the applicant has to
satisfy the court that the
respondent cannot pay its debt. See
Kowarski
v Time Clothing (Pty) Limited.
[1]
[16]
In my view, the facts before this court reveal that the respondent is
indebted to the applicant and has failed to liquidate
the same upon
the demand to do so by the applicant. The contention by the
respondent that the applicant is indebted to it in the
sum of R470
000.00 does not appear to be plausible. The applicant's version is
that the amount was not due to the respondent but
instead to one of
the entities in the group, Boundary Super Market. The amount was
refunded to that company on 25 June 2020.
[17]
The claim that the applicant is indebted to the respondent for the
Old Mutual unit trust proceeds is also unsustainable.
The respondent
does not disclose the amount paid out from the unit trust, and thus
the alleged indebtedness of the applicant has
not been established.
The applicant avers that it did not liquidate the unit trust proceeds
as those proceeds had already been
pledged to another institution.
[18]
The other defence raised by the respondent relates to the indulgence
agreement between the parties, which it contends
cannot serve as part
of this application because, at the time this arose, the section 345
letter had already been issued. This
does not assist the respondent
because all it does is confirm that the respondent cannot pay its
debts.
[19]I
proceed to deal with the effect of the application for the
business rescue on this application. It is common cause that
the
application was brought to the attention of this court from the bar
on 28 February 2022. The information came to light soon
after the
matter was mentioned for hearing on that day.
[20]
The business rescue application was instituted by Leeu Projects
and Consulting (Pty) Ltd (“Leeu”), one of
the creditors
of the respondent. It was uploaded onto case lines under the present
case number. The immediate issue that arose
consequent this was
whether the provisions of section 131(6) of the Companies Act were
triggered.
[21]
The parties in the business rescue application are not before
this court, and neither have they sought any intervention
in this
application.
[22]
An application to place a company under
the process of business rescue is governed by section 131(1) of the
Companies Act. The implication
of such an application to the
liquidation proceeding that may have commenced at the time that the
business rescue application is
made, as set out in section 131(6) of
the Companies Act is as follows:
“
(6)
If liquidation proceedings have already been commenced by or against
the company at the time an application is made in terms
of subsection
(1), the application will suspend those liquidation proceedings until
-
(a)
the court has adjudicated upon the application; or
(b)
the business rescue proceedings end if the court makes the order
applied for.’’
[23]
The issue that has arisen in this matter following the information
about the business rescue application, which was instituted
in the
Pretoria High Court, is whether that application was "made"
within the meaning of section 131(6) of the Companies
Act.
[24]
As a general rule, an application to place a company under
liquidation is immediately suspended as soon as an application
for
business rescue is made. However, the suspension would only happen
where section 131(6) requirements have been satisfied. Failure
to
meet the requirements would mean that the court would proceed to
determine the liquidation application despite the business
rescue
application purported; thus, the fundamental requirement for a
business rescue application to cause the suspension of a
liquidation
application is that it has to be shown that the requirements of
section 131 (6) of the Companies Act have been satisfied.
[25]
The high court decisions
in dealing with whether the business rescue application “made”
has the effect of suspending the liquidation proceedings
have adopted
two divergent approaches.
The
approach that was adopted in
Taboo
Trading 232 (Pty) Ltd v Pro Wreck Scrap Metal CC and Others,
[2]
was that:
“
A
business-rescue application is thus only to be regarded as having
been made once the application has been lodged with the registrar,
has been duly issued, a copy thereof served on the Commission, and
each affected person has been properly notified of the application.”
[26]
In
Blue
Star Holdings (Pty) Ltd v West Coast Oyster Growers CC,
[3]
the
court adopted a different approach to the above and held that:
“
Applying
this functional approach to section 131 (6), it is obvious that in
this case the lodging of the application with the Registrar
for the
issue thereof, constituted the “making” of the
application and the commencement of proceedings to place the
company
under business rescue (as opposed to the commencement of business
rescue
per se
).”
[27]
These approaches were noted by the Supreme Court of Appeal (“the
SCA”) in
Lutchman
N.O. and Others v African Global Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others;
African Global Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others v Lutchman
N.O. and
Others
[4]
,
the SCA in that case, categorised the two approaches as follows:
“
There
are conflicting high court judgments on when a business rescue
application is 'made' within the meaning of s 131(6) of the
Companies
Act. What some considered constituting the 'making' of a business
rescue application are the issue, service and prescribed
notification
thereof, and others the mere lodging of the business rescue
application with the registrar and the issue thereof.”
[28]
The SCA, in that judgment aligned itself and adopted as the correct
approach the interpretation that says that suspension
of the
liquidation proceedings that are already commenced is triggered when
a business rescue application has been "issued,
served on the
company and the Commission, and each affected person must be notified
of the application in the prescribed manner,
to meet the requirements
of s131(6)… ."
[29]
In interpreting the word "made" and what is envisaged by
the provisions of section 131 (6) of the Companies
Act the SCA
held:
[5]
“
The
word 'made' is the past participle of the word 'make'. The dictionary
meaning of the verb 'make' includes 'bring about or perform;
cause'.
But, as was said in
Natal Joint Municipality Pension Fund v
Endumeni Municipality
, '[m]ost words can bear several different
meanings or shades of meaning and to try to ascertain their meaning
in the abstract,
divorced from the broad context of their use, is an
unhelpful exercise'. And in
Plaaslike Oorgangsraad,
Bronkhortspruit v Senekal
, ‘. . . dat mens jou nie moet
blind staar teen die swart-
op-wit woorde nie
, maar probeer
vasstel wat die bedoeling en implikasies is van dit wat gesê
is. Dit is juis in hierdie proses waartydens die
samehang en
omringende omstandighede relevant is.
That
is also true of the words ‘application is made’ in s
131(6), ‘apply’ in s 131(1) and ‘applies’
in
s 132(1)(b) of the Companies Act. However, on a proper
interpretation of the word ‘made’ in isolation, in the
context of s 131 as a whole (especially subsections 131(1) to (3)),
in the context of the Companies Act as a whole (especially
the nature
and purpose of business rescue proceedings vis-à-vis those
of winding up proceedings as well as s 132(1)(b)),
and the apparent
purpose to which s 131(6) is directed, its meaning becomes clear: The
business rescue application must be issued,
served on the company and
the Commission, and all reasonable steps must have been taken to
identify affected persons and their
addresses and to deliver the
application to them, to meet the requirements of s 131(6) in order to
trigger the suspension of the
liquidation proceedings.”
[30]
It is apparent that the purpose of section 131(3)] of the Companies
Act is to ensure that each of the persons or entities
mentioned
therein have to be afforded an opportunity to participate in the
business rescue application; they have the right to
either support or
oppose the application.
[31]
In the present matter, the shareholders or creditors of the
respondents, any union representing the employees of the
respondent
or individual employees were entitled to participate in the business
rescue application. Participation could entail
either opposing or
supporting it. It further follows creditors such as the City of
Johannesburg, the South African Revenue Services
and the Spar were
entitled to have been notified of the institution of the business
rescue application.
[32]
It is apparent from the proper reading of the Companies Act that the
right to participate by the affected persons envisaged
in section
131(3) is fundamental and forms an integral part of the business
rescue application.
[33]
As indicated earlier, one of the grounds upon which the respondent
opposes the relief sought by the applicant is that
the liquidation
application is suspended by the business rescue application. It is
important to note that the business rescue application
was brought,
as mentioned earlier, to the attention of this court on the day of
the hearing, namely 28 February 2022. On that date,
the court was
informed that Leeu, one of the creditors of the respondent,
instituted business rescue proceedings. The proceedings
were
instituted on 22 February 2022, and was uploaded on Caselines without
any notice to the respondent or the court.
[34]
I agree with the applicant's counsel that the manner in which the
respondent dealt with the issue of the business rescue
application is
not satisfactory. The proper approach would have been for the
respondent to have applied for the postponement of
these proceedings
or stay thereof to place the application before the court properly
and allow the respondent to interrogate whether
the business rescue
application met the requirements of section 131(6) of the Companies
Act.
[35]
I now turn to the issue of whether the provisions of section 131(6)
of the Companies Act has been triggered by the business
rescue
application in the present matter. It is important to note that at
the time the
Lutchman
decision was handed down, judgment in the present matter had already
been reserved.
[36]
The respondent's counsel in the supplementary heads of argument
contended that it could never have been the intention
of the
legislature that strict compliance with the provisions of section
131(6) was required. This proposition is clearly unsustainable
in
light of the decision in
Lutchman
.
In this respect, the SCA, in its judgment in paragraph 39,
specifically states the following:
“
The
service and notification requirements set out in s131(2) of the
Companies Act are not merely procedural steps. According to
Taboo
,
[t]hey are substantive requirements, compliance with which is an
integral part of making 'an application for an order in terms
of s
131(1) of the Companies Act'. Strict compliance with those
requirements is required because business rescue proceedings can
easily be abused. As this court noted in
Pro-Wiz
, '[i]t
has repeatedly been stressed that business rescue exists for the sake
of rehabilitating companies that have fallen on hard
times but are
capable of being restored to profitability or, if that is impossible,
to be employed where it will lead to creditors
receiving an enhanced
dividend. Its use to delay a winding-up, or to afford an opportunity
to those who were behind its business
operations not to account for
their stewardship, should not be permitted.”
[37]
As stated earlier, this matter was served before this court on 28
February 2022. The case then stood down to 1 March
2022. In between,
the respondent uploaded a service affidavit deposed to by Leeu's
attorneys of record indicating that notice of
the business rescue
application was subsequent to the hearing of the 28 February 2022
served on the City of Johannesburg as a creditor
of the respondent.
The service affidavit was consequent to the affidavit of the
applicant's attorneys of record, wherein it was
stated that the City
of Johannesburg was not notified about the business rescue
application. This means that at the time this matter
was served
before this court on 28 February 2022, there was noncompliance with
the requirements of notification to the City of
Johannesburg and the
South African Revenue Services.
[38]
The applicant's attorneys further aver in her affidavit that Spa
Group Limited, another creditor of the respondent (owed
a significant
sum of R41 million), has not been notified about the business rescue
application.
[39]
In light of the above, I find that the business rescue application
has not triggered the requirements of section 131
(6) of the
Companies Act and thus cannot serve as a basis to suspend the present
application.
[40]
In conclusion, I find that the applicant has satisfied the
requirements of the winding-up of the respondent.
Order
[41]
In the circumstances the following order
is made:
1.
The respondent be placed under final
liquidation in the hands of the Master of the above Honourable Court;
2.
That the costs of this application be
costs in the administration of the respondent's estate.
E
MOLAHLEHI
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Johannesburg
Representation
For
the applicant:
Counsel M De Oliveira
Instructed
by:
KWA Attorneys
For
the respondent:
Counsel: AJ Venter
Instructed
by:
Witz Incorporated
Hearing
date:
28 February 2022
Delivery
date:
6 June 2022
[1]
2010
JDR 1178 (ECG).
[2]
2013
(6) SA 141 (KZP).
[3]
(2544/2013)
[2013] ZAWCHC 136
;
2013 (6) SA 540
(WCC) (23 August
2013).
[4]
(1088/2020;1135/2020)
[2022] ZASCA 66
(10 May 2022) at 24.
[5]
Ibid
at 27.
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