Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 407South Africa
Africa Wide Mineral Prospecting and Exploration (Pty) Ltd v Platinum Group Metals (RSA) (Pty) Ltd and Others (31329/2018) [2022] ZAGPJHC 407; 2023 (1) SA 98 (GJ) (14 June 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
14 June 2022
Headnotes
Summary:
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Africa Wide Mineral Prospecting and Exploration (Pty) Ltd v Platinum Group Metals (RSA) (Pty) Ltd and Others (31329/2018) [2022] ZAGPJHC 407; 2023 (1) SA 98 (GJ) (14 June 2022)
Africa Wide Mineral Prospecting and Exploration (Pty) Ltd v Platinum Group Metals (RSA) (Pty) Ltd and Others (31329/2018) [2022] ZAGPJHC 407; 2023 (1) SA 98 (GJ) (14 June 2022)
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sino date 14 June 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
Number:
31329/2018
REPORTABLE:
YES
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
In the matter between:
AFRICA
WIDE MINERAL PROSPECTING AND
Plaintiff
EXPLORATION (PTY) LTD
and,
PLATINUM
GROUP METALS (RSA) (PTY) LTD
First Defendant
ROYAL
BAFOKENG PLATINUM LIMITED
Second Defendant
MASEVE
INVESTMENTS 11 (PTY) LTD
Third Defendant
ROYAL
BAFOKENG RESOURCES (PTY) LTD
Fourth Defendant
JUDGMENT
Summary:
Companies
Act of 2008
– Scheme of Arrangement under
sections 114
and
115
.
Held
- when a scheme of arrangement between a company and its members is
approved under
section 115(2)(a)
, its legal effectiveness is derived
from the terms of the statute and it cannot be altered or affected by
rights which a party
may have had were it not for the statute.
Held
- subject only to the provisions of
sections 115(3)
to (6), the
scheme of arrangement comes into force on approval and may be
implemented by the Board of the company.
Held
– Any challenge by a shareholder which entails, either directly
or indirectly, an attack against the resolution approving
the scheme,
regardless of the form of such challenge, can be brought only under
section 115.
FISHER J:
Parties
and introduction to dispute
[1]
The
plaintiff (‘Africa Wide’) and the first defendant (‘PTM’)
were the shareholders of the third defendant
(‘Maseve’).
Maseve owns the Maseve Mine, situated near Rustenburg, North West
Province.
[2]
Maseve
was incorporated in 2008 by Africa Wide and PTM. Their respective
shareholding has been adjusted over time as a consequence
of Africa
Wide’s failure to make certain capital contributions to the
joint venture. At the time of the transactions in issue
in this case,
PTM held 82.9% of the issued shares in Maseve and Africa Wide held
17.1%.
[3]
Both
PTM and Africa Wide are, themselves, wholly owned subsidiaries. PTM's
parent-company is Platinum Group Metals Limited, registered
in Canada
(‘PTM Canada’) and Africa Wide's parent-company is
Wesizwe Platinum Limited (‘Wesizwe’).
[4]
Wesizwe's
shareholders include a consortium in which the Jinchuan Group Ltd and
the China-Africa Development Fund (‘CADF’)
are involved.
[5]
This
case deals with a scheme of arrangement under section 115 of the 2008
Companies Act
(‘the Act’). The scheme was aimed at
transferring the entire shareholding of Maseve to the Royal Bafokeng
and entailed
the expropriation of the shareholding of Africa Wide.
The scheme has been implemented which has resulted in the transfer of
the
shareholding in Maseve to the second defendant (‘RB
platinum’). RB Platinum owns 100% of the shareholding of the
fourth
defendant (‘RB Resources’) which conducts a mining
business.
[6]
The
plaintiff seeks to collapse the scheme on the basis that it attacks
an agreement in terms of which Maseve sold its ore processing
plant
to RB Resources. This plant transaction was entered into
simultaneously with a transaction for the sale of the shareholding
of
Maseve to the second defendant (‘RB Platinum’) and the
approval of the scheme.
[7]
It
is not in dispute that this plant transaction is fundamental to the
scheme. The defendants say that it is part of the scheme;
the
plaintiff says it is a separate agreement.
[8]
The proper characterization of the
plant transaction is central to both the plaintiff’s cause of
action and a special plea
raised by the defendants to the effect that
the plaintiff’s claim is statutorily barred by the operation of
section 115
of the Act.
[9]
It
is is thus important to understand the nature and composition of the
scheme of arrangement. To do so, it is necessary closely
to examine
the relationships between the parties and the facts leading up to how
the scheme was devised and its approval and implementation.
For the
most part these facts are common cause.
The
scheme of arrangement
[10]
The Shareholders’
Agreement between PTM and Africa Wide makes provision for each
shareholder to appoint one director to the
Board of Maseve for every
complete 10% of the shares held. From about December 2016, the
PTM-nominated directors were, inter alia,
Messrs Michael Jones and
Frank Hallam; the Africa Wide-nominated director was Mr Mogale
Mothomogolo.
[11]
The Memorandum of
Incorporation (MOI) of Maseve and the Shareholders Agreement each
contain similar provisions which have as their
purpose the protection
of the minority shareholder - Africa Wide. The protections are of the
usual type and relate to the following
matters:
·
the sale or disposal of substantially the
whole of the assets or undertaking of Maseve;
·
a material change in the business or
objects of Maseve;
·
a material transaction outside of the
normal course of Maseve's business.
[12]
Article 32 of
the MOI requires ‘the unanimous approval of the Shareholders’
for resolutions which relate to these issues
and clause 10.1 of the
Shareholders’ Agreement provides for the unanimous ‘prior
written consent’ of shareholders.
[13]
From about
November 2016, Maseve experienced serious financial difficulties. PTM
and PTM Canada had lent in excess of R4 billion
to Maseve in the form
of shareholder loans. PTM and PTM Canada had been compelled to secure
a portion of these funds and had funded
Maseve without any
contributions from Africa Wide. The Maseve mine and its assets were
pledged as indirect security for a loan
of US$84 million. This loan
was secured by PTM Canada by way of a pledge of 100% of its shares in
PTM. These loans and advances
had to be serviced by Maseve so that
PTM Canada could meet its obligations to the lenders. This led to a
shortage of running funds.
[14]
The shortage of
funds meant that Maseve could not undertake the substantial capital
expenditure required for it to trade in a commercially
viable manner.
Poor production at the mine meant lower than expected revenue flow
which, in turn, meant that Maseve was not able
to service its debt
obligations.
[15]
Essentially
Maseve was commercially insolvent. PTM and PTM Canada obtained some
grace from their lenders, but those lenders required
assurances that
there would be repayment by 31 October 2017. Failing this payment or
concrete assurances that it would be paid,
there was a real risk of
foreclosure against the security.
[16]
This intractable
predicament left Maseve and PTM with limited options. PTM could
remain a partner in Maseve and obtain additional
funding from
Maseve's shareholders, including Wesizwe, Jinchaun and CADF.
Alternatively, PTM would have to dispose of its interest
in Maseve to
settle the obligations to the lenders.
[17]
From about March
2017 to about May 2017, there were extensive exchanges between PTM,
Wesizwe, and Wesizwe's shareholders, for the
purposes of discussing
various funding proposals. PTM says that during this period it was
apparent that Wesizwe had no serious
interest in expediting or
advancing the funding proposals.
[18]
In the meantime,
PTM initiated steps aimed at introducing an amendment to Maseve's MOl
to facilitate a possible sale of the shares.
In
June 20I7, a special resolution of shareholders was adopted, amending
the MOI by adding Article 10.7.
[19]
The special
resolution was passed by round robin. On 6 June 2017 PTM signed the
special resolution. It was sent to Mr Mothomogolo
on the same day. On
21 June 2021 he sent an email stating that he voted against the
special resolution. The special resolution
was, however, carried with
PTM's vote, and there is no dispute that it was properly adopted.
[20]
The new Article
10.7 read as follows:
"10.7 If a third
party offers to purchase all (but not less than all) the
Shareholders’ equity on identical pro rata
terms, and provided
that Shareholders holding at least 80% (eighty percent) of such
Equity accept such offer in respect of the
Equity held by them, then
all the Shareholders shall be obliged to and shall be deemed to have
accepted the offer of the third
party in respect of their Equity.
Each of the Shareholders irrevocably and in rem suam appoints the
other Shareholder/s as its
attorney and agent to do all such things
as may be necessary to comply with the provisions of this clause."
This
is a type of clause commonly called a ‘drag along’
clause.
[21]
On 15 June 2017,
PTM prepared a document headed ‘Business Outlook’ which
set out the challenges for solvency facing
Maseve. This was presented
and discussed at a board meeting held on the same day. During the
meeting, the Board (including Mr Mothomogolo)
unanimously resolved
that, in the event that the Maseve Mine was no longer able to be
funded sufficiently by PTM Canada, Maseve
‘... is authorised to
close the mine and sell assets, at management’s discretion and
as might be necessary to meet
obligations and manage the path towards
a reasonable wind down or transaction, and if a transaction exceeds a
threshold wherein
shareholder approval is required, such approval
will be sought.’
[22]
The Royal Bafokeng
had by this stage indicated its interest in Maseve. RB platinum had
made an initial written offer during March
2017 to acquire all of
Maseve's assets. PTM rejected this offer on the basis not only of the
unsatisfactory price, but also because
it was not prepared to dispose
of Maseve's assets in isolation but wanted to dispose of its
shareholding in Maseve. This is significant
as I will deal with
later.
[23]
The Royal
Bafokeng then proposed a transaction in terms of which it offered to
purchase all of the shares in Maseve.
[24]
Given the drag
along clause such a sale of shares could not have been resisted by
Africa Wide. A problem was however posed by the
fact that the lenders
were threatening imminent foreclosure on the securities. This urgency
to obtain some liquidity from the transaction
led to a
reconfiguration of the original offer to buy the shares.
[25]
This
reconfiguration of the transaction lies at the heart of this case.
The facts surrounding the motivation for the structure ultimately
agreed to thus require close consideration. I move to deal with this
aspect of the case.
The
facts relating to the structure of the transaction.
[26]
As
I have said the intention was to dispose of the shareholding. This
could have been achieved by means of a straightforward share
purchase
agreement. But there was a sticking point: any sale of shares
transaction would have to be made subject to ministerial
consent in
terms of section 11 of the Mineral and Petroleum Resources
Development Act, 2002 (‘the MPRDA’)
[1]
.
It is notorious that achieving such consent can take time. There was
little or no reason to assume that the approval would not
be
forthcoming; the only real question was how long it would take.
[27]
The urgent flow of
funds and access by RB Platinum to the plant were crucial objectives
in the transaction. In order to speed up
the process of getting as
much cash up front as possible, it was decided to split the
transaction into two parts. The first part
would be the sale of the
plant to RB Resources which required the use of the plant in its
business and the payment of funds under
the plant sale; the second
part would be the sale of shares transaction. This structure allowed
for payment up front of some of
the funds whilst the section 11
consent was awaited on the share transaction.
[28]
Mr Hallam testified
for PTM as to the evolution of this structure. His evidence as to the
progression of the transaction through
the various draft iterations
of the term sheet which ultimately described the transaction is
instructive as to the true intention
behind the split transaction.
[29]
It is evident from
an early draft term sheet that a loan was initially contemplated to
secure the flow of funds. This structure
however changed in the next
draft where the transaction is now reflected for the first time as
being split into the two transactions.
[30]
Mr Hallam
explained that it had been impossible to set up the loan structure
necessary to get the money to PTM in time. He explained
that when the
possibility of a secured loan was discussed it was discovered that
this was unworkable because it would require inter-creditor
agreements. So a different concept structure was explored which would
ultimately achieve the same end of the acquisition of shares
and
assets.
It
was thus agreed simply to split
the transaction into two and pay a large amount up front (reflected
as being for the plant) and
the rest (reflected as being for the
shares) later when the necessary section 11 approval was obtained.
This was ultimately the
structure adopted in the signed term sheet of
6 September 2017.
[31]
Mr
Hallam testified that the price negotiated for Maseve was US$ 70
million. Initially the plant transaction price was reflected
at US$
60 million and the share transaction consideration was pegged at
US$10 million. This split later changed to a US$ 58 million
/ US$ 12
million split.
[32]
The structure meant
that Maseve would get the cash purchase price attributed to its
assets ($58 million), and pass it on to PTM
in repayment of
shareholder loans and RB Platinum, through RB Resources, obtained the
concentrator plant which it could immediately
start using for its
normal processing requirements.
[33]
Mr Nicholas
Stevenson who was called by the second to fourth defendants. Mr
Stevenson is a director of Questco (Pty) Ltd, a corporate
advisory
firm and he has been a corporate advisor to RB Platinum for in excess
of ten years. He advised on the transaction in issue.
He also
testified to the evolution of the transaction from share purchase to
split transaction and his evidence accorded with that
of Mr Hallam in
all material respects.
[34]
Significantly
then, the evidence redounds to the conclusion that the purchase price
was actually a price agreed for the shares.
The split between shares
and plant was not based on true value but on a fictional
apportionment of the purchase consideration for
the shares. Mr Hallam
testified that his objective was to negotiate for as much money up
front as possible.
[35]
On 6 September 2017
PTM and RB Platinum signed the final term sheet which outlined the
proposed transactions and how they interrelated.
[36]
Wesizwe and
Jinchuan were also participating in discussions for the possible
purchase of Maseve. They fully understood the urgent
need for funds
but were not taking the actions required. When it became clear that
there was an attractive offer on the table from
the Royal Bafokeng,
Wesiswe was galvanised to present its own offer. Thus, there was
competitive bidding between Wesizwe and Royal
Bafokeng. Wesizwe was
actively participating in the bidding and it was understood that any
proposed transaction was not aimed at
a piecemeal disposal of some
assets but at the acquisition of Maseve in its entirety. This emerges
clearly from the evidence of
Mr Hallam.
[37]
On 9 November 2017,
a meeting of the Board of Maseve was held and offers from both
Wesizwe and Royal Bafokeng were discussed. It
was unanimously decided
that the due to the high degree of uncertainty and conditionality of
the Wesizwe offer the Board was unable
responsibly to consider it.
[38]
the following
resolutions in relation to the Royal Bafokeng offer were however
unanimously approved:
‘ …
the
Royal Bafokeng Platinum offer dated September 6, 2017 as described
herein with Phase 2 being subject to the approval of a scheme
of
arrangement and further subject thereto that the Board shall be
entitled to consider any better offer with equal or greater
certainty, that may be made before execution of the Royal Bafokeng
Platinum transaction.’
‘ …
that
R Michael Jones andlor Frank R Hallam be and are duly authorised to:
~ retain, on behalf of the Company[ Maseve], an independent
expert to
compile a report for the purposes of the scheme of arrangement
take
all steps to negotiate and finalise the Sale of Business Agreement
and an agreement in regard to the implementation of Phase
2 with
Royal Bafokeng Platinum on terms substantially as proposed in the
term sheet and to sign all agreements and other documents
as may be
necessary to implement this resolution; on receipt of the independent
persons' report, to convene meetings of the Board
and the
Shareholders to consider and vote on the scheme of arrangement.’
[ Emphasis added.]
[39]
The thrust of these resolutions is a
clear understanding that the agreements would be negotiated
and
concluded in tandem.
[40]
The fact that these resolutions where
passed unanimously by the Board, which included Mr
Mothomogolo
is important. It shows that, at this early stage in the process aimed
at achieving the approval of the scheme, the plaintiff was
aware of
the transaction including its structure.
[41]
Notwithstanding his integral
involvement in relation to approval relating to the transaction
Mr
Mothomogolo
was not called by the plaintiff
to give evidence.
[42]
On 23 November 2017
the two agreements as envisaged in the term sheet and the resolution
above were concluded to give effect to
the transaction with the Royal
Bafokeng. These were:
·
an agreement called a sale of business agreement
between Maseve, PTM and RB Resources (‘the SOB Agreement’)
which allowed
for the transaction in terms of which RB Resources
would acquire Maseve's concentrator plant, five immovable properties
and certain
related assets held by Maseve at a purchase price of
US$58 million (‘the plant transaction’);
·
an agreement called the Scheme Implementation
Agreement between Maseve, PTM and RB Platinum (‘the Scheme
Implementation Agreement’)
which provided that, following
compliance with sections 114 and 115 of the Act, RB Platinum would
acquire 100% of the issued shares
in Maseve from PTM and Africa Wide
and, in return, PTM and Africa Wide would receive shares in RB
Platinum.
[43]
It is significant
that, in line with the two-phase structure, the agreements are
inter-related on their terms as follows:
i.
It
is recorded in the preamble to the SOB Agreement that RB Platinum
intended to acquire PTM’s and Africa Wide’s shares
in
Maseve ‘
subject to and after the
implementation of the plant transaction’;
ii.
it
is a suspensive condition of the SOB Agreement that Africa Wide’s
shares be purchased either by agreement (which it was
anticipated
would not occur) or by
a scheme of
arrangement
; and
iii.
the
Scheme Implementation Agreement expressly stated in paragraph C of
its preamble that it was being concluded ‘
subject
to and following the implementation of the Plant Transaction.’
(Emphasis added.)
[44]
Mr Hallam testified
that, because the plant transaction was merely a device, the value of
the plant transaction (US$58 million)
did not in any way represent
the value of the plant sold. He explained that it was an arbitrary
figure arrived at pursuant to the
negotiations in terms of which Mr
Hallam was trying to get as much of the overall price of US$70
million paid up-front. This was
confirmed by the evidence of Mr
Stevenson and
was not challenged on behalf of the plaintiff.
[45]
Professor
Harvey Wainer, who was the financial expert ultimately relied on by
both parties, explained that the determination as
to plant value was
necessarily subject to substantial arbitrariness and subjectivity due
to the allocation of value between assets
and mineral rights being
set by the parties for the purposes of convenience rather than
actuality. He explained that the allocation
is not a ‘measure
of the true economic fair value of the two elements.’ He
confirmed that the arbitrariness of the
allocation of values applied
to both the transaction values and the financial statements. He
explained that the percentages and
values set out in his report were
subject to the arbitrary nature of the allocations.
[46]
Prof
Wainer’s evidence was thus to the effect that the percentages
used in order to determine the plaintiff’s case on
the minority
protections are unreliable and not founded in reality.
[47]
There is also no
indication in the terms of the agreements evidencing the transaction
that RB Platinum intended to alter Maseve's
core business of mining.
[48]
The plaintiff
called Mr Robert Croll, a mining engineer of 40 years’
experience to testify as to how, in his professional
opinion, the
nature of the business of Maseve was or would have been affected by
the plant transaction. His evidence did not add
much to the debate.
The central inquiry raised by the evidence was whether Maseve could
be seen to be conducting the same business
once it had no plant. Mr
Croll said that the disposal of the plant profoundly altered the
business; the defendants disagreed that
the business, which was
mining, had changed in a manner proscribed in the minority protection
clauses.
[49]
It is not in
dispute that the scheme was implemented. On 22 December 2017 a
round-robin board resolution was circulated to approve
all the steps
statutorily required under the Act for the coming into force of
schemes of arrangement. The resolution was approved,
although Mr
Mothomogolo voted against it. Following this, a shareholders' meeting
was held on 12 January 2018 to approve the scheme
of arrangement. It
was approved by special resolution in terms of the provisions of
section 114(1)(c) and 115(2) of the Act. Consequently,
all steps
required by the
Companies Act to
implement a scheme of arrangement
under
sections 114
and
115
were taken. Mr Mothomogolo attended the
meeting. His dissenting vote, against the resolution, was recorded.
[50]
The
first iteration of the SOB Agreement had contained the condition that
Africa Wide approve the transaction. It was later decided
that Africa
Wide was unlikely to give its approval and that this condition should
be removed.
[51]
The removal was
effected in February 2018. This entailed the defendant’s
removal of clause 3.1.5 of the SOB Agreement which
provided for the
approval of Africa Wide and the replacement therewith of the
following clause:
"the board of
directors of Maseve having convened a meeting of shareholders of
Maseve to consider a proposal to implement a
scheme of arrangement in
terms of
section 114
of the
Companies Act in
terms of which PTM (RSA)
and Africa Wide shall sell the PTM (RSA) Sale Equity and the Africa
Wide Sale Shares to RB Plat substantially
on the terms proposed in
the Scheme Agreement, the Maseve shareholders have approved the
Scheme and if any of the Maseve shareholders
voted against the
resolution to approve the Scheme, such resolution not requiring court
approval in terms of
Section 115(3)
or (4) of the
Companies Act "
[52
]
The defendant
argues that suspensive conditions, in respect of both the SOB
Agreement and the Scheme Agreement, were thus regarded
as having been
met and the transaction was finalised on 26 April 2018. The
finalisation and unconditionality of each agreement
was formally
agreed in separate written documents, which were signed by the new
shareholder of Maseve, RB Platinum.
[53]
Prior to and
leading up to the litigation, valuations were obtained by all parties
as to the shares and assets. The upshot of these
valuations is that
the price ultimately obtained for the share transaction as a whole
cannot be said to be unfair and I do not
understand this to be the
plaintiff’s case.
[54]
Against these facts, I move to deal in
more detail with the issues to be decided.
Issues
[55]
The defendants
raise, in the first instance, that the plaintiff has not proved its
case in that it has been unable to show on the
facts that minority
protections in the MOI and the shareholder agreements have been
triggered.
[56]
They
raise further that, even if the plaintiff has shown, on the facts,
that the SOB Agreement fell within any of the categories
of
transaction that required unanimous shareholder approval, the
approval of the scheme of arrangement carried statutory authority
under section 115 of the Act and cannot be attacked on the basis
pleaded.
[57]
Estoppel is also
raised as an alternative defence on the basis that the other points
fail. In light of my findings it is unnecessary
to consider this
defence.
[58]
I move to deal with the first issue
being whether the plaintiff has proved its case.
Has
the plaintiff proved its case?
[59]
The plaintiff’s
case has involved the parties entering into expert and factual
inquiries as to value of the plant, the nature
of the business
conducted by Maseve, the percentage of assets or undertaking disposed
of, and whether the disposals under the SOB
Agreement were such that
they brought about a change in the business.
[60]
In light of the
unchallenged facts relating to the fact that the two part transaction
was no more than a device to achieve payment
up-front, these
inquiries are, to my mind, redundant.
[61]
The protections
accorded to minority shareholders have, as their general purpose, the
protection from asset stripping and the devaluing
of the business of
the company in other ways.
[62]
In this case it has
been established that the true intention of the SOB Agreement was
neither to dispose of the plant in a vacuum
nor to change the nature
of the business of Maseve. Neither did it have either effect.
[63]
A court
must look at the substance and purpose of an agreement in order to
determine its true nature for a particular purpose.
[2]
[64]
A court will give
effect to the true intention of the device and not enter into
artificial inquiries as to value and purpose which
have no foundation
in the reality of the transaction.
[65]
In this case
it was understood that the clear intention of the parties to the SOB
agreement was not the sale of the plant, leaving
the plaintiff a
disadvantaged minority shareholder, but the ultimate and inevitable
transfer of the shares in accordance with the
scheme of arrangement.
[66]
When this is
accepted, it is clear that the plaintiff neither needed nor was it
entitled to the minority protections. The fact is
that the scheme
entailed that the existing shareholders would not be the shareholders
when the plant transaction was effected.
[67]
The plaintiff’s
attempt at characterising the SOB Agreement as having separate force
and effect has led to artificial inquiries
as to value of the plant,
whether the plant transaction amounted to a disposal of substantially
the whole of the business, whether
it amounted to a material change
in the business and whether it was a material transaction outside the
normal course of the mining
business.
[68]
It has
resulted also in semantic remonstrations as to whether the new
shareholders under the scheme could bring the agreement to
force and
effect by giving their subsequent approval. It led also to unhelpful
assertions as to the significance of the difference
between the
protection clause in the MOI (clause 32) as opposed to the equivalent
clause in the shareholder’s agreement (clause
10.1) the latter
referring to ‘unanimous prior written consent’ and the
former only to ‘unanimous approval’
and how this
difference should be squared.
[69]
Much of the trial
was taken up by unhelpful examinations and excursus as to the text of
the agreements in issue, their date of execution
and other
circumstances in an attempt to discern whether they were two parts of
the same ‘unitary’ transaction or
two separate
transactions.
[70]
These
inquiries do not serve the point. As I have said, the question turns
on the true purpose of the transaction which was ultimately
an
arrangement for the transfer of the shares.
[71]
Once
it is accepted that the SOB Agreement was intended to be an integral
and indivisible part of the offer and acceptance implicated
in the
ultimate acquisition of the shares by RB Platinum, the implication of
the drag along clause is that the share transfer could
be stymied by
minority dissent. The fact that the intention of the SOB Agreement
was no more than to facilitate the end –
which was the share
transaction- means that the plaintiff was forced thereby to go along
with all of it.
[72]
Clearly, there may
be cases where a transfer of assets takes place prior to or as part
of a scheme of arrangement where such transfer
is nefarious. This was
not the case here.
[73]
The true inquiry,
in all instances, is the intention of the parties in the context of
the scheme. In this case the share transfer
could have taken place as
a normal share transaction aided by the drag along clause. The
purpose of the resort to the separate
agreement was to obtain
liquidity before the share transfer. It would serve no purpose to
allow Africa Wide to invoke minority
protections for the purpose only
of attempting to scupper the scheme.
[74]
The plaintiff’s hypothetical
argument to the effect that the plant transaction could not
have been
reversed if the share transaction failed, does not take account of
the fact that it was never established that this was
a possible
outcome. In truth there was no reason for the share transaction to
fail.
[75]
This hypothetical approach also fails
to take account of the clear intention of the parties
as expressed in
the term sheet and the fact that the terms of both agreements are
interdependent.
[76]
The plaintiff’s also shows a
cynical disregard of the predicament of PTM as its fellow
shareholder
who had paid all the bills of Maseve on borrowed money. It also seeks
to ignore that Maseve was commercially insolvent.
[77]
The somewhat arch suggestion in the
cross examination of Mr Hallam that ‘ Maseve was not
in the
business of selling concentrator plants’ ignores the fact that
Maseve was insolvent and needed liquid funds if it
was to survive.
[78]
To my mind, an inevitable impression
of ‘sour grapes’ is created when one sees that
ultimately
there was a bidding war to buy the company by Wesiswe – which,
on any version, made an offer that was ‘too
little to late’.
[79]
I thus find that
the plaintiff has failed to establish its case on the evidence. This
notwithstanding, I will deal also with the
statutory plea in that it
is independently dispositive of the case.
The
statutory special plea
[80]
The question posed
by this plea is whether a scheme can be challenged outside of the
machinery prescribed by the statute or, put
differently, whether the
plaintiff’s claim which is based on common law is barred by the
statute
[81]
In answering this
question, it is helpful to look at the purpose of schemes of
arrangement and the evolution of the company law
relating thereto.
[82]
The concept of the
‘
Scheme of Arrangement’
is a feature of company law in many jurisdictions the world over. The
scheme of arrangement evolved to take account of the difficulty
of
minority resistance to fundamental proposals made in the interests of
a company and, essentially, as a mechanism for obtaining
or
compelling consent of the minority where it is withheld for reasons
which are irrational or self-serving.
[83]
Whilst its
precise nature is difficult to define because each scheme has its own
identity and hallmarks, a scheme generally involves
the imposition of
majority rule as a way to sustain the company’s continued
survival or assist in its profitability. A scheme
can allow for
fundamental changes, including the expropriation of shares.
[84]
The statutory
structure under sections 114 and 115 of the Act enables the coming
into force of schemes of arrangement and, most
significantly for this
case, sets out, in some detail, how they may be attacked.
[85]
The defendants
argue that it would be counter to the purpose of the legislation –
which is driven by the need for expedition
- to allow access to the
usual compendium of common law remedies to attack a scheme. In other
words, the legislation accepts that
time is of the essence in these
matters and that scope for undue interference must be curtailed if
schemes are to serve their commercial
purpose.
[86]
A central feature of the process is
that the scheme becomes binding on all the members regardless
of
opposition thereto. Majority rule will be imposed provided there is
no manifest unfairness.
[87]
In the 1973
Companies Act, schemes
of arrangement achieved this binding status by
a process of court approval (sanctioning). Sections 311 and 312 of
the 1973 Act
provided that once so sanctioned schemes were binding on
the company and its members.
[88]
A court was
enjoined by the provisions of section 311 to have regard to the
margin of majority in the vote as well as the Master’s
report
when deciding whether to approve a scheme or not.
[89]
Under the 2008 Act
the Board’s right to implement the scheme does not depend on
court sanction.
[90]
Section 115(1)
of
the
Companies Act provides
in relevant part as follows:
‘
115,
Required approval for transactions contemplated in Part
—(I)
Despite
section 65
, and any provision of a company's Memorandum of
Incorporation, or any resolution adopted by its board or holders of
its securities
to the contrary, a company may not dispose of, or give
effect to an agreement or series of agreements to dispose of, all or
the
greater part of its assets or undertaking, implement an
amalgamation or a merger, or implement a scheme of arrangement,
unless—
(a)
the disposal, amalgamation or merger, or scheme of arrangement—
(i)
has been approved in terms of this section...’
[91]
The section goes
on, in
section 115(2)
, to describe the nature of the approval
contemplated in
section 115(1)
as follows:
‘
(2)
A proposed transaction contemplated in subsection (I) must be
approved—
(a)
by a special resolution
adopted
by persons entitled to exercise voting rights on such a matter, at a
meeting called for that purpose and at which sufficient
persons are
present to exercise, in aggregate, at least 25% of all of the voting
rights that are entitled to be exercised on that
matter, or any
higher percentage as may be required by the company's Memorandum of
Incorporation, as contemplated in
section 64
(2).
(b)
by the court,
to
the extent required in the circumstances and manner contemplated in
subsections (3) to (6)"
[My
emphasis]’
[92]
The defendants
argue that the effect of subsection (b) is that, when a scheme of
arrangement is approved under
section 115(2)
, its legal effectiveness
is derived from the terms of the statute and cannot be altered or in
any way affected by rights which
a party may have had were it not for
the statute, for example in a general meeting that has nothing to do
with the scheme or, as
in this instance, by attacking another
agreement that relates to the scheme. They argue that, subject only
to the provisions of
sections 115(3)
to (6), the scheme comes into
force on approval and may be implemented by the Board. Such approval,
they argue replaces the binding
effect the court sanction
required under the 1973 Act.
[93]
The current
provisions require the approval of the court only if it is asked for
in the limited circumstances contemplated in subsections
(3) to (6).
[94]
Under the
statute, the company is entitled, without more, to implement a
properly approved scheme of arrangement unless there is
a challenge
brought under the Act. Subsection (3) reads as follows:
"(3) Despite a
resolution having been adopted as contemplated in subsections (2)(a)
and (b) a company may not proceed to implement
that resolution
without the approval of a court if—
(a)
the resolution was opposed by at least 15%
of the voting rights that were exercised on that resolution and
within five business
days after the vote, any person who voted
against the resolution requires the company to seek court approval;
or
(b)
the court, on an application within 10
business days after the vote by any person who voted against the
resolution, grants that
person leave, in terms of subsection (6), to
apply to a court for a review of the transaction in accordance with
subsection (7).’
[95]
Thus,
in sum - the statute provides that a scheme no longer requires court
sanction in the normal course. The company is only placed
in a
position where it is forced to obtain court approval if the special
resolution is passed by a margin of 85% or less of the
voting
members. If this majority is exceeded (ie 86% or more) there is no
scope for requiring the company to seek court approval.
If the
threshold is exceeded and the company is required to seek court
approval the company has 10 days to seek court approval
for which it
must bear the costs or it can decide to treat the approval of the
scheme as a nullity
[3]
.
[96]
Thus, in the
same way that the 1973 Act imposed reference to majority margins, the
new Act prescribes the same considerations, albeit
in a more
formulaic way.
[97]
An analysis of the difference between
the approval inquiry under section 115(3)(a) and the review
process
under section 115(3)(b) is beyond the scope of this judgment but it
seems to that a court would not grant its approval
of the scheme
under section 115(3)(a) if there was any basis for review raised.
However, even if there were no grounds for review
made out in the
context of the approval process under subsection (3)(a) the court’s
approval could still be withheld from
the company. As I have said, if
the resolution is passed by a slim margin this will be a relevant
factor which a court will weigh
up in deciding on whether to approve
the scheme or not.
[98]
The statute precludes the review of
the scheme transaction without the court’s leave.
And this must
be sought within 10 business days.
[99]
The respective five and ten day limits
within which court approval can be required or leave
to bring a
review can be sought are peremptory and there is no provision for
their extension. The effect of their expiration is
akin to the
prescription of the right to challenge the scheme. The intention of
the statute is that there be commercial certainty.
[100]
Sections 115(6) and (7) imposes on a disaffected
shareholder who wishes to bring a review of the approval under
subsection (2) the burden of first of showing that he is acting in
good faith and that he has a cause of action. These constraining
provisions read as follows:
‘
115(6) On an
application contemplated in subsection (3)(b), the court may grant
leave only if it is satisfied that the applicant—
(a)
is acting in good faith;
(b) appears prepared and
able to sustain the proceedings; and
(c) has alleged facts
which, if proved, would support an order in terms of subsection
(7)
(7) On
reviewing
a resolution
… the court may set aside
the resolution
only if—
(a
) the resolution
is manifestly unfair to any class of holders of the company’s
securities; or
(b) the vote was
materially tainted by conflict of interest, inadequate disclosure,
failure to comply with the Act, the Memorandum
of Incorporation or
any applicable rules of the company, or other significant and
material procedural irregularity.’(Emphasis
added.)
[101]
Thus , not only does the disaffected shareholder have to
show that he does not bring the review as a delaying
tactic, but he
can only succeed in the review on limited grounds being manifest
unfairness or a vote which is materially tainted
by the type of
unlawfulness contemplated in the section.
[102]
Clearly the intention of this legislative structure is
to weed out unjustified obstruction to the scheme and
to do this at
an early stage.
[103]
The
defendants submit that, on the clear language of section 115, there
is no remedy for a dissenting shareholder other than these
limited
challenges.
[104]
The plaintiff submits that section
115 does not expressly exclude reliance on existing common law rights
and that any interpretation
of section 115 such as to exclude any
extra-statutory relief should be rejected on the basis of the
presumptions against alteration
of existing law and deprivation of
existing rights.
[105]
The
plaintiff places reliance on the case of
Fedlife
Assurance Ltd v Wolfaardt
[4]
which
involved
a determination of whether the legislative scheme in the
Labour
Relations Act of 1995
precluded a common law claim for damages for
breach of an employment contract. The court applied the presumption
against legislative
alteration of existing law and held that a
statute
will be construed as limiting existing rights only if that appears
expressly or by necessary implication.
[5]
[106]
The
plaintiff argues that there is no such express exclusion or
implication in the statutory scheme in
section 115
and that such an
exclusion cannot be read into the statute. I disagree. In my view,
the legislative scheme which emerges from
sections 114
and
115
is
such that its purpose appears exclusionary of alternative process.
[107]
Like all modes of
interpretation, the application of the presumption on which the
plaintiff seeks to rely is now informed by the
Constitution. The
question thus is whether the statutory structure is consistent with
the spirit, purport and objects of the Bill
of Rights.
[108]
The need for schemes of
arrangement in company law is well established. Such schemes are
widely recognized as being necessary to
protect commercial rights. It
seems to me that if schemes of arrangement were susceptible to the
unconstrained vagaries of review
litigation, its purpose –
which is, at its core to preclude, minority interference –
would not be achieved. By analogy
with the position in the 1973 Act,
once the resolution has been taken and a review of the resolution is
not brought in terms of
section 115, the resolution cannot be
reviewed in the same way as court approval under the 1973 Act could
not later be attacked
on the basis of an illegality which was not
raised during the approval process.
[109]
In any event
, this is not, as it was
in
Fedlife,
a case where the section provides a remedy, leaving open the question
whether other remedies remain. It is a case where the section
authorises the implementation of the scheme unless the specified
remedy is followed.
Thus the position here is distinguishable
from
Fedlife.
[110]
The
question of whether the statute precludes extra-statutory forms of
attack on an approved scheme has recently been comprehensively
considered by the Western Cape Division of the High Court (per
Binns-Ward J) in the matter of
Sand
Grove Opportunities Master Fund Ltd and Others v Distell Group
Holdings Ltd and Others
[6]
(‘
Sand
Grove
’).
[111]
In refusing an application for
the amendment of a case involving a scheme of arrangement which
amendment sought to introduce a challenge
to the resolution approving
the scheme, the learned Judge said the following:
‘
The
terms of s 115(7)(b) give as two of the grounds on which a court can
review and set aside a resolution in terms of s 115(2)(a)
its having
been 'materially tainted' by (i) 'failure to comply with the Act (ii)
any 'other significant and material irregularity'.
Those grounds
broadly encapsulate the very bases upon which the applicants seek to
apply for declarators that the meeting was unlawfully
constituted,
and the decision taken at it accordingly void.
It
would defeat the purpose of the carefully framed restrictions subject
to which a review challenge can be mounted under s 115
of the Act
were the courts to entertain such challenges brought in a different
format outside the limitations of the provision.
[7]
[
Emphasis added]
[112]
With respect, I agree with these findings and I align
myself with the careful reasoning adopted by the learned
Judge in
relation to this question.
[113]
The statutory machinery which brings
a scheme into effect would be rendered unworkable if a court
challenge could be brought, at
any time, outside of the statutory
machinery. The scheme would be implemented and rights flowing from
that implementation brought
into force. The question of how to
reverse a transaction where rights had vested in the company and in
third parties could prove
intractable or even impossible.
[114]
I am persuaded that the
Legislature, in formulating the machinery to bring into force and
effect a scheme of arrangement, decided
to forgo the court sanction
provided for in the 1973 Act in favour of a less cumbersome and
expensive process which allowed for
the scheme to have force and
effect unless challenged within the periods allowed and in accordance
with the prescripts of the section.
[115]
The plaintiff submits
Sand
Grove
is wrong. It submits that this
cannot be a correct interpretation of the section because that would
mean that if fraud was later
discovered in relation to a resolution,
this fraud would not be actionable to set aside the scheme. This
submission is akin to
an exception proving the rule. A fraud would,
of necessity, entail a breach of the Act. It seems also that such a
fraud would involve
the culprit acting
in
fraudem legis
– which comes with
its own set of principles. It is furthermore unhelpful to speculate
on hypothetical scenarios involving
fraud which are not in issue
here.
[116]
A challenge, which could have
been brought under section 115, but is not brought under that section
because there has been a delay
in bringing it, cannot be permissible
because it is framed as a common law challenge, when in substance it
is a late challenge
under section 115.
[117]
The plaintiff has attempted to escape
the statutory stranglehold imposed by subsection 115(3) by attempting
to cast its attack as
being, not against the scheme but against the
SOB Agreement, which brings it back to its argument that the SOB
Agreement is not
part of the scheme.
[118]
The argument goes that, because
the SOB Agreement was not between Maseve and its shareholders it
cannot be interpreted as part of
the scheme. The consequence of this,
says the plaintiff, is that the SOB Agreement cannot be dealt with
under the Act and thus
must be dealt with as a separate challenge to
what it refers to as ‘the substantive invalidity of the
scheme’. It contends
that it does not seek to impugn the scheme
on any of the grounds available under section 115 of the Act. But, it
argues, if the
SOB Agreement is set aside this will have the
consequence that the scheme fails. It is this consequence that it
ultimately seeks.
[119]
This is a semantic argument which
pays no heed to the versatile nature of the concept of a scheme of
arrangement.
[120]
In terms of section 114(1) the board
may propose any ‘any arrangement between the company and
holders of any class of its
securities’. There is nothing in
the section which prevents a proposed scheme being made conditional
on an agreement entered
into by the company with a third party or,
for that matter, any other agreement or event which lends
functionality to the scheme.
[121]
The
Act does not provide a definition of a ‘scheme of arrangement'.
The only element that is required to make a scheme a ‘scheme
of
arrangement’ under section 114 is that it must be ‘any
arrangement between the company and holders…of its
securities’.
[122]
The
versatility of schemes of arrangement under section 311 of the 1973
Act received the approval of the Appellate Division (as
it then was)
in
Namex
(Edms) Bpk v Kommissaris van Binnelandse Inkomste.
[8]
This
case involved a
scheme
of arrangement entered into by the liquidators of an insolvent
company. The Court noted:
‘
ln
die sakewereld het art 311 skemas veel nut en waarde en met die oog
daarop behoort ons howe nie 'n enge vertolking aan die bepalings
van
die artikel te gee nie.
[9]
[123]
It is clear from this decision that
the Court regarded schemes of arrangement as versatile commercial
vehicles for a variety of
transactions, and the Court cautioned
against limiting their scope.
[124]
A scheme of arrangement may contain
reference to a variety of conditions which fall outside the scope of
the actual agreement between
the company and its shareholders as
contemplated by the scheme. Whether this is the occurrence of an
event or the conclusion of
an agreement by strangers to the scheme,
is irrelevant.
[125]
The argument also fails to take account of the fact of
the approval under the statute. Even on the approach of
the
plaintiff, the scheme was approved in purported compliance with the
legislative requirements and it is accordingly enforceable
by and
against the scheme participants in terms of s 115(9) unless
reviewed and set aside.
[126]
As
Binns-Ward J aptly put the position in
Sand
Grove
when making an analogy with an administrative review - ‘ …
the
point is that the forms in which challenges to reviewable decisions
can be brought are manifold. Whatever the form, in essence
it remains
an application for review.
[10]
[127]
regardless of how a challenge is cast, if it
entails either directly or indirectly an attack against
the
resolution
approving the scheme then it can only be brought under
section 115.
[128]
The corollary to the argument that the action is not a
review of the resolution is that the resolution stands.
Conclusion
[129]
I agree with the defendants that the
plaintiff’s case, properly stated, is that the resolution was
wrongly adopted because
it was ‘materially tainted’ by a
failure to ‘comply with the Memorandum of Incorporation or any
applicable rules
of the company.’
[130]
The attack on the resolution
falls squarely within the type of challenge contemplated in section
115(7)(b).
[131]
The only avenue of review was under section 115(7)(b).
The fact that such review was not brought means that it
cannot be
brought and is thus statutorily barred.
[132]
In any event, and even if this were not the case, the
plaintiff has not shown, on the facts, that the minority
protections
in the MOI and the Shareholders agreement are implicated by the
transaction.
Costs
[133]
There is no reason why the costs
should not follow the result
Order
[134]
I thus make the following order:
1. The plaintiff’s
claim is dismissed.
2. The plaintiff is to
pay the costs of the first defendant and the second to fourth
defendants, such costs to include the costs
of two counsel, where
employed, and the costs of qualifying prof Wainer and leading his
evidence.
FISHER
J
HIGH
COURT JUDGE
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Date
of hearing:
1- 2 March 2022
Supplementary
Heads delivered
: 29 April and 03 May 2022
Judgment
delivered:
14 June 2022.
APPEARANCES:
For
the plaintiff:
Adv M M Antonie SC.
Adv
M J Cooke.
Instructed
by:
Werksmans Attorneys.
For
the 1
st
Defendant:
Adv J P V McNally SC.
Adv A W T Rowan.
Instructed
by:
Cliffe Dekker Hofmeyr Inc.
For
the 2
nd
, 3
rd
&
4
th
Defendants:
Adv F A Snyckers SC.
Adv L Sisilanna.
Instructed
by:
Bowman Gilfillan Inc.
[1]
Section 11 reads as follows:
"11.
Transferability and encumbrance of prospecting rights and mining
rights.—(1) A prospecting right or mining right
or an interest
in any such right, or a controlling interest in a company or close
corporation, may not be ceded, transferred,
let, sublet, assigned,
alienated or otherwise disposed of without the written consent of
the Minister, except in the case of
change of controlling interest
in listed companies."
[2]
See:
Roshcon
v Anchor Auto Body Builders and Others
2014
(4) SA 319
(SCA) at 332-334;
Atlas
Packaging
v Palierakis
(JA108/14)
[2015] ZALAC 97
(21 October 2015).
[3]
Section
115(5).
[4]
[2001] ZASCA 91
[5]
At para 16.
See
also
Stadsraad
van Pretoria v Van Wyk
1973
(2) SA 779
(A)
at 784 D-H)
[6]
(6378/2022)
[2022] ZAWCHC 46
(13 April 2022
).
[7]
Id
at para 94.
[8]
1994
(2) SA 265 (A).
[9]
See Namex at 294E — F per Goldstone JA; Smalberger JA and
Nicholas AJA concurring. Translated: ‘in the business world,
section 311 schemes have much utility and value and in view of this,
our Courts should not give a narrow interpretation to the
provisions
of the section.’
[10]
Sand
Grove -n 5 -para 92.
sino noindex
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