Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 530South Africa
Mwaba v Fischer N.O. and Others (2018/16100) [2022] ZAGPJHC 530 (4 July 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
4 July 2022
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
>>
2022
>>
[2022] ZAGPJHC 530
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Mwaba v Fischer N.O. and Others (2018/16100) [2022] ZAGPJHC 530 (4 July 2022)
Mwaba v Fischer N.O. and Others (2018/16100) [2022] ZAGPJHC 530 (4 July 2022)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2022_530.html
sino date 4 July 2022
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO: 2018/16100
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
REVISED:
04/07/2022
In the matter between:
EMMANUEL
CHOLA MWABA
Applicant
And
JACQUES
ANDRIES FISCHER N.O.
First Respondent
MARYKE
LANDMAN N.O.
Second Respondent
STANDARD
BANK OF SOUTH AFRICA LTD
Third Respondent
MASTER
OF THE HIGH COURT, JOHANNESBURG
Fourth Respondent
JUDGMENT
MAHOMED
AJ
#
# INTRODUCTION
INTRODUCTION
1.
This matter was on my opposed roll in January 2022, when it
was
postponed for the applicant to serve his papers on the liquidators
whom he cited in these proceedings.
1.1.
The applicant served his papers on the liquidators and the parties
thereafter approach the DJP, of this division
for a special
allocation. The matter appeared before me again, for determination of
this application.
2.
This is an application to rescind and set aside the final order
for
the winding up of African Management Communication (Pty) Ltd (“AMC”),
which was granted by my brother Sutherland
J on 11 May 2018
.
3.
The applicant was the sole director and the sole shareholder
in AMC,
which operated a business as conference organisers and publishers of
magazines.
4.
This rescission is brought in terms of the common law based
on
allegations of fraud and perjury, read with s 354(1) of the Companies
Act 69 of 1973.
5.
The applicant submitted that the third respondent obtained the
order
for liquidation fraudulently and alleged it had misled the court in
the liquidation proceedings.
6.
The applicant contends that the third respondent relied on the
allegation that “it had learnt only on 20 April 2018, that AMC
was using a Nedbank account to receive its book debts which
it had
ceded to the third respondent as security.”
6.1. He
submitted that the allegation was incorrect and was it was decisive
when the order for final liquidation
of AMC, was made on 11 May 2018.
7.
The first and second respondents, are the joint liquidators
of the
AMC, they submitted that they have no interest in the outcome of this
application and participated in these proceedings
only to assist this
court with an explanation / report on the progress in the winding up
of the liquidated estate.
8.
The third respondent opposes the application on several grounds,
which it contends, if raised in limine are dispositive of the
applicant’s contentions and argument.
# BACKGROUND
BACKGROUND
9.
The applicant is indebted to the third respondent under several
credit facilities.
10.
The third respondent holds, as security for the indebtedness;
10.1. Four covering bonds
over the AMC’s immovable property, a home situated in Hyde
Park, Johannesburg, and
10.2. A cession of book
debts, concluded on 19 November 2013.
11.
On 21
November 2017 the applicant, Mwaba passed a resolution and placed the
AMC under business rescue. Four months later, the duly
appointed
business rescue practitioner resigned, due to a disagreement on the
viability of AMC under business rescue.
[1]
Thereafter, Mwaba continued to manage and operate the AMC, without
having appointed another business rescue practitioner, as is
required
by the Companies Act.
12.
The evidence it that whilst “he managed” the business
rescue process
Mwaba instructed debtors to pay invoices into a
Nedbank account, in breach of the cession of 2013 and absent a
business rescue
practitioner.
13.
The third respondent obtained a final winding up order on an urgent
basis.
14.
The applicant seeks to rescind and set aside this order, he argued
that the
third respondent lied when it submitted to the court that it
had learnt of the AMC’s Nedbank account and the diverting of
book debts for the first time on 20 April 2018. He submitted that the
account was in place long before that date and its employees
were
aware of the practise for a long while.
14.1. He argued that
effectively, the third respondent “permitted” the
practise.
15.
Prior to the application for rescission being launched, Mwaba through
the AMC
sought leave to appeal the order of winding up which was
refused, he then sought leave to the SCA, followed by a
reconsideration
to the President of the SCA and approached the
Constitutional court on two occasions, when all courts, having
considered his allegations
of fraud and perjury, refused him leave to
appeal. The National Prosecuting Authority has declined to prosecute
in the matter.
16.
The liquidators have applied for eviction which is opposed and that
matter is
pending.
# THE APPLICANT’S
CASE
THE APPLICANT’S
CASE
17.
The applicant raised two preliminary points when he submitted that
his initial
service on the attorneys who represented both the
liquidators and the third respondent was good service. However, the
third respondent
argued that the attorneys were not the same
attorneys for the liquidators in these proceedings, they were the
same attorneys in
the eviction proceedings. They were cited in these
papers and must be served.
18.
Advocate van Tonder appeared for the applicant and proffered that the
third
respondent and the liquidators had colluded and that the
liquidators’ affidavit was filed simply to bolster the case for
the third respondent, and should not be admitted. He argued his
client is prejudiced by the content of the affidavit. He argued
that
the affidavit is not an explanatory affidavit but in effect an
answering affidavit. Its effect is only to weaken the applicant’s
right to bring a rescission application
19.
Furthermore, he argued that the liquidators had from February 2022 to
file their
affidavit. They did not file papers then because they had
initially decided not to but have however changed their approach.
20.
Mr Scholtz appeared for the 1
st
and 2
nd
respondents and submitted that the court must note that it is four
years since the order was granted and the liquidators have covered
substantial ground in the liquidation during that time. Their inputs
are relevant, particularly in that this court must be apprised
of the
full facts for it to exercise its discretion on the granting of this
order for rescission.
21.
Furthermore, the court must note that despite the directives of the
DJP on the
filing of further affidavits, this is not a “further
affidavit” from the liquidators. The affidavit is not one that
requires a court to “grant leave to file.”
21.1. It is their only
affidavit and that its purpose is not to reply to the application,
but rather to explain the winding up process
to date in this matter.
He proffered that his clients have no interest in the outcome of this
application.
21.2. He argued there is
no purpose in serving the papers if the applicant aims to prevent any
reply or response.
22.
Mr Scholtz also alerted the court to correspondence sent to the
applicant inviting
him to respond, to his client’s affidavit.
No response was forthcoming, and it is fair to assume that he had no
response.
23.
Mr Scholtz submitted that the applicant could have even applied for a
postponement
of this hearing if he did indeed suffer prejudice.
24.
He submitted that the purpose of an explanation is to inform the
court of the
progress of the liquidation process:
24.1. that substantial
expenses have been incurred,
24.2. certain assets have
been sold,
24.3. dividends have been
paid,
24.4. claims have been
proved and therefore the winding up process is at an advanced stage.
25.
Counsel contended that in the circumstances, the rule 30 notice is of
no more
and it must be disregarded.
25.1. He proffered that
the application favours only the applicant with no regard for the
creditors, and the expenses incurred to
date.
26.
Mr De Oliveira appeared for the third respondent and submitted his
client agreed
with the submissions made on behalf of the liquidators.
27.
He argued that the Mr van Tonder has caste aspersions on the third
respondent’s
attorneys and against the liquidators and
submitted that it is all speculation. No inference must be drawn.
27.1. He argued that if
there are no positive proved facts from which an inference can be
made, then it is mere speculation.
27.2. He argued further
that the applicant has perempted his right to seek a rescission as
his actions demonstrated that he accepted
the judgment for
liquidation.
27.2.1.The applicant
purchased assets from the liquidated estate. He therefor considered
the liquidation valid and accordingly has
perempted his right to
appeal, as he considers himself bound to the judgment.
28.
In reply Mr van Tonder placed on record that his client objected to
paragraphs
26 and 27 of the liquidators affidavit, which referred to
his unsuccessful attempts to appeal the liquidation order, and
further
to paragraphs 36 and 37 of their affidavit which referred to
the eviction orders having been granted and the applicant’s
attempts to appeal that order have been unsuccessful.
29.
Mr van
Tonder submitted, however, that as a counter or a reply to the 1
st
and 2
nd
respondents’ affidavit, the applicant seeks to present two
letters which his client had written to the Master dated 3 December
2019 and 29 January 2020
[2]
.
29.1. The first letter
was a complaint against the Master for his failure to cooperate with
the applicant to furnish him with documents
to lodge his claim for
his salary.
29.2. The second was a
request to suspend the liquidation process due to a criminal
complaint he laid against the third respondent.
30.
Mr van Tonder proffered that the applicant in his letter demonstrated
that he
did not accept the liquidation as valid as proffered by
counsel for the third respondent.
31.
Both counsels for the respondents submitted that the letters cannot
serve as
evidence, they are not evidence under oath, and merely
letters.
# THE RESCISSION
APPLICATION
THE RESCISSION
APPLICATION
32.
The applicant applies for a rescission of the judgment, which placed
the AMC
in Liquidation in 2018.
32.1. The application is
brought in terms of the common law read with s354 of the Companies
Act.
32.2. Mr van Tonder
submitted that the applicant seeks a rescission of the judgment on
grounds that the judgment was granted on
incorrect facts which the
third respondent presented to the court.
32.3. It was argued that
the court based on those submissions ordered the liquidation of AMC
and if the correct facts were presented
to the court, it would not
have granted the order for liquidation, at that time.
32.4. He submitted that
the third respondent misled the court when it submitted at the
liquidation hearing, that it was only on
20 April 2018, that it
became aware of the applicant’s account with Nedbank, into
which it was receiving payments in respect
of book debts, which it
had ceded to the third respondent as security.
# INTENT TO MISLEAD
INTENT TO MISLEAD
33.
Mr van
Tonder referred the court to email correspondence which the applicant
sent on 17 February 2011
[3]
,
addressed to a Mabena, an employee of the third respondent, in which
he referred to the transfers from AMC Nedbank account to
Standard
Bank account and annexed a Nedbank statement for February 2011.
33.1.
Counsel
proffered that over the years other employees of the bank were aware
of the existence of the account, including one Pillay
whose
affidavit, which formed the basis of the criminal charges, is dated
25 February 2020.
[4]
33.2.
In a s 205
inquiry, Cappilati an employee of the third respondent confirmed that
the third respondent knew of the Nedbank account
before 20 April
2011.
[5]
34.
Counsel argued that the third respondent was a party to the fraud, it
knowingly
made the statement , with intent to mislead in its papers
in the liquidation and that the email correspondence, and the
affidavit
of Pillay referred to above was proof that the third
respondent knew of the existence of the account and “permitted”
the applicant to divert payments which he received for book debts
even after they were ceded to the third respondent.
34.1. The banks employee
Jalile confirmed in her affidavit for the liquidation that she
oversaw the AMC’s account and the
details of the account was
within her personal knowledge.
34.1.1.It was submitted
that she lied when she stated in her affidavit that she learnt of the
Nedbank account and the diversion
of book debts for the first time at
a meeting of creditors held on 20 April 2018 at a meeting of
creditors.
34.1.2.The applicant
submitted that Jalile’s intention to mislead was established
when she persisted with her statement that
the third respondent did
not know of the account before 20 April 2018 even after he stated
this in his answering papers in the
liquidation application.
35.
Mr van Tonder submitted that it not unusual for a bank to “permit”
the use of payments received for book debts, as trading funds, for
the running of the business.
35.1. It does not follow,
that as soon as the debts are paid they are to be paid over to the
cessionary. The cessionary is to effect
the cession in order that the
book debts be paid over to it.
35.2. He submitted that
the third respondent had never effected the cession and that it only
raised a complaint when it noted that
the AMC had applied for
business rescue.
36.
Counsel further referred the court to
s 332(1)
of the
Criminal
Procedure Act of 1977
, which provides that intent by a servant to
advance the interests of a corporate entity, is seen as the entity’s
intent.
37.
The
applicant submitted that it is evident from the record of the
proceedings and the judgment that this ‘diversion of receipt
of
book debts into the Nedbank account” formed a decisive and
essential ground
[6]
, for the
granting of the order of winding up.
38.
It was argued therefor that the court would not have granted the
order when
it did, but for the third respondent’s misleading
the court on the true facts.
39.
Mr van Tonder argued further that it should not be that the third
respondent
should arbitrarily be allowed to freeze access to funds,
which it was relying on to revitalise the AMC. The ethos of business
rescue
is to help along a company in distress. The third respondent
refused to release funds to pay the essential disbursements of the
AMC.
40.
The business rescue practitioner was forced to resign because the
third respondent
refused to release funds to pay his fee.
# THE THIRD RESPONDENT’S
SUBMISSIONS
THE THIRD RESPONDENT’S
SUBMISSIONS
41.
Mr D Oliviera submitted that the application is an abuse of process
and yet
another attempt at delaying the inevitable, that the
applicant must vacate the home he occupies rent free for the past
four years.
The home is the main asset in the insolvent estate, and
he occupies and delays finalisation of the liquidation process at the
expense
of his client and the general body of creditors.
41.1. The evidence is
that after two months of liaising with the liquidators the applicant
presented for the first time a lease
agreement which he alleged he
concluded had with the AMC for lease of the house he occupies. The
terms of the lease is for a period
of nine years at a rental of R500
a month.
41.2. Counsel argued that
in contrast the mortgage bond repayments prior to the liquidation
were at R63 000 per month and the
court must see this as another
tactic by the applicant to frustrate the efforts of the third
respondent and the finalisation of
the winding up.
41.3. The evidence is
that the home is in the luxury suburb of Hyde Park in Johannesburg.
# THE COMPANIES ACT SECTION
354(1)
THE COMPANIES ACT SECTION
354(1)
42.
Mr De Oliveira submitted that for the setting aside a final winding
up order,
the applicant is required in terms of s354(1) of the
Companies Act 1973, to prove to the satisfaction of the court that
all proceedings
in relation to the winding up ought to be stayed or
set aside. The court has a wide discretion to set aside the order
either on
the grounds that the order should never have been granted
at all or that events after the order justify a setting aside.
42.1. Counsel argued that
if the order ought never to have been granted at all, the applicant
must show special or exceptional circumstances
for the setting aside.
42.2.
He referred
the court to
WARD
AND ANOTHER v SMIT AND OTHERS: IN RE GURR v ZAMBIA AIRWAYS
CORPORATION
,
[7]
Scott JA stated,
“
the object of the
section is not to provide for a rehearing of the winding up
proceedings …
…
an applicant
under the section must show that there are special or exceptional
circumstances which justify the setting aside of
the winding up
order, he or she is required to furnish, in addition, a satisfactory
explanation for not having opposed the granting
of the final order or
appealed against the order. Other relevant considerations would
include the delay in bringing the application
and the extent to which
the winding up had progressed.”
42.3. Counsel submitted
there are no special or exceptional circumstances that justify a
setting aside of the order and the applicant
does not raise any
either.
# RESCISSION COMMON LAW /
FRAUD
RESCISSION COMMON LAW /
FRAUD
43.
Mr De Oliviera submitted that an applicant who seeks a rescission of
a judgment
at common law must show:
43.1. The application was
bona fide
43.2. That he was not in
wilful default for failing to appear at the time the order was
granted and
43.3. That he has a bona
fide defence which he will advance at the trial.
44.
Counsel submitted that the facts do not support an application for
rescission
at common law, relying on fraud.
45.
The applicant has alleged a fraud, he must prove:
45.1. The successful
litigant was a party to the fraud.
45.2. The evidence was in
fact incorrect.
45.3. The fraud was made
deliberately and with the intent to mislead.
45.4. The facts presented
diverged to such an extent from the true facts that the court would,
if the true facts were place before
it, have given an judgment other
than that which it granted , it was induced by the incorrect facts
submitted.
46.
The third respondent denied that it made a false statement and that
Jalile intentionally
misled the court, to obtain the order.
47.
Mr De Olivera submitted that on 20 April 2018 at the creditors
meeting the third
respondent learnt for the first time that the AMC
was diverting book debts to be paid into its Nedbank account, when
the applicant
directed debtors to pay into AMC’s Nedbank
account, whilst AMC was in business rescue, without a business rescue
practitioner
and in breach of the cession. The applicant was managing
the business rescue process himself.
48.
Counsel submitted the facts set out above was the basis for the
decision to
place AMC in liquidation.
49.
It was further submitted that the cession was complete and effective
as at the
initial agreement. This meant that the applicant was to pay
over the monies it received for book debts upon receipt thereof to
the third respondent.
50.
Mr De
Oliveira argued that the facts which the applicant relies on may have
triggered the urgency but denied that they were the
substantive basis
for placing the AMC in liquidation.
[8]
51.
The facts were not proven to be wrong. The applicant cannot simply
allege the
evidence was made with intent to mislead the court. The
applicant has not produced any cogent evidence to support his
contentions.
52.
Ms Jalile learnt the facts set out in 46 above, as a recoveries
manager at the
time, she was required to depose to the affidavit on
an urgent basis, she could not have been expected to know all that
had transpired
over the years in AMC’s account or applied a
forensic eye to its documents on file. She deposed that the facts
were “
according to my knowledge
.” It was submitted
the applicant has failed to prove that she intended to mislead the
court.
52.1.
It was
argued there was no causal connection between the alleged
fraud/perjury and the judgment. Counsel referred the court to
MINISTER
OF LOCAL GOVERNMENT AND LAND TENURE AND ANOTHER v SIZWE DEVELOPMENT
AND OTHERS: IN RE SIZWE DEVELOPMENT v FLAGSTAFF MUNICIPALITY
.
[9]
52.2. Mr De Oliviera
argued that the submissions made by the third respondent did not
diverge so markedly from the true facts, that
a court would not have
made a winding up order. The applicant’s true intention is not
to set aside the order but to delay
the eviction proceedings and
prolong his unlawful occupation of the property.
# TIME BAR
TIME BAR
53.
The third respondent submits that the application was launched over
three years
after the order was made and that a reasonable time has
elapsed. Furthermore, the applicant failed to apply for condonation
and
no substantial explanation for the delay has been put to this
court for the delay.
53.1. The argument
proffered by the applicant that he did not have the evidence to prove
the fraud any earlier, must be rejected
as he had known all along, it
being the entire basis of his argument through several courts, that
Jalile had misled the court as
to her knowledge of the existence of
the Nedbank account and is guilty of perjury.
53.2. Service of the
application on the 1
st
and 2
nd
respondents was
also out of time, almost nine months after the application was
launched, and no condonation was sought for this
either. The
applicant was not entitled to assume that service on the third
respondents attorneys was sufficient service, because
in casu, the
liquidators are represented by a different attorney.
# PEREMPTION
PEREMPTION
54.
In response to the 1
st
and 2
nd
respondents’
affidavit, counsel for the third respondent submitted that the
applicant has on the facts perempted any right
to seek a rescission
of the winding up order.
54.1. Counsel submitted
that the applicant purchased assets from the insolvent estate of AMC.
54.2. He offered to
purchase the immovable property he occupies.
54.3. He voluntarily
released a motor vehicle owned by AMC to auctioneers appointed to the
liquidators, which was financed by the
third respondent.
55.
Accordingly,
it was argued, his conduct amounts to his having accepted the
liquidation order. He demonstrates an intention not to
assail a
factual position. Mr De Oliviera relied on
L
v THE CENTRAL AUTHORITY FOR THE REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA AND
ANOTHER,
[10]
and
VENMOP
275
PTY
LTD
,
[11]
QOBOSHIYANE
NO and OTHERS
,
[12]
also in relation to rescission
NKATA
.
[13]
# THE COURT’S
DISCRETION
THE COURT’S
DISCRETION
56.
Mr D
Oliviera submitted that this court has a discretion whether to set
aside a judgment given by another court. See
COLYN
[14]
and
MABUZA
.
[15]
57.
He submitted that the order ought not to be set aside, given that
almost 4 years
have passed since the order was granted and the
applicant has failed to show any special or exceptional circumstances
as required
by the Companies Act 1073, to set it aside.
57.1. Furthermore, the
court must consider the advanced stage that winding up has reached,
57.2. Furthermore, that
despite six attempts before other courts, who have considered his
complaints of fraud and perjury, he has
been unsuccessful in his
attempts to set this order aside.
57.3. Counsel proffered
that the applicant is not in good faith as he again places skittles
in the way of the eviction proceedings
by claiming he has a lease
agreement in place with AMC for its property which he occupies. He
submitted the applicant is
acting in bad faith and has to know he has
come to the end of the line.
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
58.
Earlier I set out the submissions by the parties in regard to
admission of the
1
st
and 2
nd
respondents’
affidavit, although opposed, I am of the view that given the
inordinate delay in bringing of this application
and the requirements
in
Ward
, infra, that this court “must consider all facts
on the winding up process” to date, the affidavit is admitted.
58.1. Mr van
Tonder’s request to allow two letters be admitted as a reply to
the affidavit is granted, in the spirit
of effective resolution of
the dispute between the parties.
59.
The applicant prays for a rescission and setting aside of an order
for liquidation
of his company AMC which was granted on 11 May 2018.
60.
He argued that the court granted that order only on the misleading
submissions
made by the third respondent, and had the court known the
true facts, it would not have ordered for its liquidation when it
did.
He submitted that the third respondent knew of this Nedbank
account at least since 2017.
61.
He submitted that the court relied on the third respondent’s
submission
that it “learnt only on 20 April 2018 of its
diverting payments for book debts which were ceded to it, into a
Nedbank account.”
It was submitted further that it was on
this fact alone that the court ordered its final winding up.
62.
I considered the judgment of my brother Sutherland, as he was then
and noted:
“
Thus, on the
grounds of a diversion of funds the applicant was wholly justified in
moving urgently.”
[16]
63.
In my view the applicant is incorrect when it contends that the fact
of its
diversion of money to another account, was the basis of the
order for liquidation.
64.
It was a
point the court relied on for an urgent order.
[17]
I do not read it to mean that the diversion of funds and the
existence of the account is the substantive basis for the liquidation
order.
65.
On reading
further it is clear that the viability of the AMC was fully
considered and that the applicant presented a weak case,
for its
revival and continued existence. The court referred to the
applicant’s supporting information as a “
wish
list
.”
[18]
It is noteworthy that the business rescue practitioner resigned as
that he did not see the AMC as viable for any resuscitation
as a
business. The court took those facts into consideration as appears in
the judgment.
66.
The judgment reads further:
“
Accordingly, in
the absence of a concrete set of facts upon which to found an
assessment that the respondent is indeed viable and
the fact that
none is forthcoming the resistance to the winding up application must
fail.”
67.
Upon a
further reading of the
[19]
judgment there were no facts that permitted even a provisional order
being granted. Therefore whether on the date or in the future,
based
on the papers before it, the court would have granted the same order.
The respondent, the applicant in casu, failed to prove
the viability
of the business.
68.
The applicant conveniently chooses only parts of the judgment to
argue its case.
69.
Section 354 (1) of the Companies Act 1973, provides,
“
A court may at
any time after the commencement of a winding up, on the application
of any liquidator, creditor, or member and on
proof to the
satisfaction of the Court that all proceedings in relation to the
winding up ought to be stayed or set aside, make
an order staying or
setting aside the proceedings or for the continuance of any voluntary
winding up on such terms and conditions
as the court may deem fit.”
70.
In
WARD
AND ANOTHER v SMIT AND OTHERS : IN RE: GURR v ZAMBIA AIRWAYS
CORPORATION LTD
[20]
, the court confirmed that
the section does not contemplate a rehearing or an appeal, but,
“…
an
applicant under the section must not only show that there are special
or exceptional circumstances which justify the setting
aside of the
winding up order, he or she is ordinarily required to furnish, in
addition, a satisfactory explanation for not having
opposed the
granting of the final order or appealed against the order. Other
relevant considerations would include the delay in
bringing the
application and the extent to which the winding up had progressed.”
71.
The applicant has not presented this court with any special or
exceptional circumstances
or any evidence of events after the order
was granted which may justify its setting aside. The crux of Mr
Pillay’s affidavit,
the only evidence that “surfaced”
after the order was granted, was known to the applicant at the
hearing of the liquidation
matter.
72.
The
applicant brings this application almost three years later and fails
to even apply for condonation for the late application.
There are no
details of the delay and the reasons thereof, except for the
submission that he obtained Mr Pillay’s affidavit,
only a few
years later. In
NKATA
v FIRSTRAND BANK LIMITED,
[21]
supra, the court stated,
“ …
Like all
discretionary remedies, rescission under ruled 41(1) must be brought
within a reasonable period of time. … The same
applies to
rescission at common law (see Roopnarian v Kamalapathy &Another
1971 (3) SA 387
(D) at 391 B-D). what is reasonable will depend on
the circumstances of the case…, but the 20 day period laid
down in rule
31(2) (b) provides some guidance as a starting point.
The reason for the time-limit is that there must be finality in
litigation
and that prejudice can be caused if rescission is not
promptly sought.”
73.
I agree with Mr De Oliviera that the applicant has relied on the
fraud and perjury
argument all along and that Pillay’s
affidavit, which he procured recently, does not set out anything was
unknown to him
earlier.
74.
The applicant has not set out a satisfactory explanation for the
delay in seeking
rescission and the winding up process has reached an
advance stage that many creditors suffer prejudice at this late stage
of the
winding up.
74.1. Besides I am of the
view he has failed to prove the necessary intention to mislead. There
is no evidence to support his allegation
before this court.
74.2. Ms Jalile deposed
to the affidavit “to the best of her knowledge” and on an
urgent basis, she could not be expected
to know all details of a
customer. It is noteworthy that the applicant relied on an email
dated in 2011, when he informed the third
respondent of his Nedbank
account and his diverting of book debts into that account.
74.3. I perused the
email, apart from noting the transfer of monies from Nedbank into
Standard bank account for AMC, it was not
clear to me that the funds
were payment of book debts, which were ceded to Standard Bank and
transferred to it.
74.4. Moreover, the third
respondent’s main concerns were the fact that there was no
business rescue practitioner in place
at the time and that the
diversion was on instructions of the applicant whilst the AMC was in
business rescue and in breach of
the cession.
75.
In any event, I do not hold the view that the court relied on that
statement
alone, when it ordered the final winding up of the AMC as
contended by the applicant, as I mentioned earlier.
76.
It is noteworthy that the winding up process has reached an advanced
stage as
submitted by the liquidators.
77.
The court notes that apart from the second meeting of creditors
having been
held, certain claims have been proved and interim
dividends were paid.
78.
I noted that the applicant, purchased certain assets in the
liquidated estate,
he voluntarily surrendered a vehicle owned by AMC
to the auctioneer representing the liquidators and he offered to
purchase the
main asset in the insolvent estate, the home he is
living in.
79.
It is clear he accepted the liquidation. It is illogical that he
should want
to set aside the liquidation order against that backdrop.
80.
Years later the applicant wishes to set aside an order he clearly
accepted,
81.
In terms of s 354(1) the progress of the winding up process is an
important
consideration in the determination of the setting aside of
the order.
82.
I noted that the liquidators have had to expend large sums of money
in the furnishing
of security.
83.
I agree with Mr De Oliviera that the applicant’s aim is only to
delay
the eviction proceedings and continue to occupy the home, the
main asset in the insolvent estate. The application appears
to
serve only the applicant at the expense of the general body of
creditors and the insolvent estate.
84.
The applicant has an option to start up another business, although Mr
van Tonder
argued that he had built up a client base in this
business, no such evidence is before this court and therefor this
argument is
unsustainable.
85.
In
L
v THE CENTRAL AUTHORITY FOR THE REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA AND
ANOTHER
,
[22]
Wepener J, stated:
“
A person is said
to acquiesce in something if such person by unequivocal conduct,
knowing of his or her rights, inconsistently acts
with the intention
to the contrary and shows that the acquiesced to a set of facts. If
such a person has clearly and unconditionally
acquiesced in and
abided by a situation he or she cannot thereafter challenge it.”
86.
The same
principles apply in regard to an application for rescission. See
SPARKS v
DAVID POLLACK & Co. (PTY) LTD
,
[23]
“
the
principles of peremption apply not only to appeals but also to the
remedy of rescission. The general principle is that no person
can be
allowed to take up two positions inconsistent with one another , or
as commonly expressed to blow hot and cold, to approbate
and
reprobate
.”
87.
The applicant denied that he had perempted his rights and referred
the court
to correspondence in which he requested the liquidators to
stop the winding up process, as he had laid a charge of fraud against
the third respondent. It was argued that that is proof that he had
not accepted the order and did not acquiesce.
88.
I am of the view it is a weak argument to raise in the face of
objective facts
set out by the liquidators which was not disputed.
89.
Having considered the conspectus of the evidence before me and
particularly
the reasons for the granting of the order of winding up,
and am of the view this application cannot succeed.
# COSTS
COSTS
90.
In my view in the face of the peremption argument, which succeeds on
objective
facts, the protracted litigation of this matter can only be
described as an abuse of process.
91.
The applicant has had his right constitutional right to a fair
hearing, he has
been to several courts as mentioned earlier, none of
which found any merit in his argument.
92.
The application was brought inordinately late, and the applicant’s
argument
that Mr Pillay’s evidence was not available any
earlier is without merit, for the reasons I set out earlier. His last
ditch
attempt being the lease for R500 per month, to obstruct the
eviction proceedings is a mala fides and once again prevents the
finalisation
of a matter.
93.
I am satisfied that punitive costs are appropriate in the
circumstances.
Accordingly,
I make the following order:
1)
The application is dismissed with costs on the attorney and client
scale.
MAHOMED
AJ
This
judgment was prepared and authored by Acting Judge Mahomed. It is
handed down electronically by circulation to the parties
or their
legal representatives by email and by uploading it to the it to the
electronic file of this matter on Caselines. The date
for hand-down
is deemed to be 4 July 2022.
Heard
on:
29 March 2022
Judgment
delivered:
4 July 2022
APPEARANCES
For
Applicant:
Advocate B van Tonder
Instructed
by :
For
1
st
and 2
nd
respondents:
Advocate Scholtz
Instructed
by :
Jason Michael Smith Inc
Ref: K Burg
For
Third Respondent:
Advocate M De Oliviera
mdeoliveira@law.co.za
Instructed
by:
Jason Michael Smith Inc
[1]
Caselines 008-4, judgement on liquidation
[2]
Caselines 041- 43 to 46.
[3]
Caselines 002-106
[4]
Caselines 002-220
[5]
Caselines 001-47 to 48 par 103
[6]
Caselines 001-25
[7]
1998 (3) SA 175
(SCA) AT 181
[8]
Caselines 030-13 par 24
[9]
1991 (1) SA 677
TK at 680 B
[10]
(24108/2016) [2018] ZAGPJHC 12 (20 February 2018) par 12
[11]
2016 (1) SA 78
(GJ) at para 25
[12]
2013 (3) SA 315
SCA at par 3
[13]
2014 (2) sa 412 (WCC) at par 27
[14]
2003 (6)SA 1 SCA par 5
[15]
2015 (3) SA 369
GP par 21
[16]
Caselines 008-3 lines 21-22
[17]
Caselines 008 -4 lines 20 -22
[18]
Caselines 008-5 lines 17-20
[19]
Caselines 008-6 lines 20 - 23
[20]
1998 (3) SA 175
SCA at 181 B-D
[21]
Nkata supra par 27
[22]
(24108/2016) [2018] ZAGPJHC 12 (20 February 2018)
[23]
1963 (2) SA 491
T at 496 D-F, Nakata v First National Bank Ltd
2014
(2) SA 412
(WCC) at par 30
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Mwaba v Jacques Andries Fischer NO and Others (2018/16100) [2022] ZAGPJHC 940 (25 November 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 940High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
Mwaba v Standard Bank Insurance Brokers (Pty) Limited and Another (2025/234612) [2025] ZAGPJHC 1330 (10 December 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 1330High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
Mabeo v Master of The High Court, South Gauteng RE: Estate Late: Phefeni Richard Ngwenya and Others (1354/2019) [2022] ZAGPJHC 534 (8 August 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 534High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
Mvambi v S (A113/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 157 (4 February 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 157High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
Mabena v Ramonaka and Others (7921/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 261 (28 March 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 261High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar