Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 545South Africa
ABSA Bank Limited v Longchamp Turf Investments (PT) Ltd and Others (7753/2015) [2022] ZAGPJHC 545 (12 August 2022)
Headnotes
Longchamp had no business to be rescued and set aside the business rescue proceedings.[1] This outcome requires some explanation. Longchamp is a company which owns a piece of vacant land. It is the intention of its directors to establish a business or businesses on the site but that had not yet happened at the time Satchwell J heard the application hence her finding that there was no business to be rescued.
Judgment
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## ABSA Bank Limited v Longchamp Turf Investments (PT) Ltd and Others (7753/2015) [2022] ZAGPJHC 545 (12 August 2022)
ABSA Bank Limited v Longchamp Turf Investments (PT) Ltd and Others (7753/2015) [2022] ZAGPJHC 545 (12 August 2022)
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sino date 12 August 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO:
7753/2015
REPORTABLE: NO
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO
REVISED: NO
12/08/2022
In
the matter between:
ABSA
BANK
LIMITED
Applicant
And
LONGCHAMP
TURF INVESTMENTS (PT) LTD
First Respondent
KOTZE,
OLGA N.O
Second Respondent
COMPANIES
AND INTELLECTUAL
PROPERTY
COMMISSION
Third Respondent
PODLAS,
HILDA BETTY N.O
First Intervening Party
CAMBOURIS,
SHAWN N.O
Second Intervening Party
JUDGMENT
MANOIM
J:
Introduction
[1]
The applicant, Absa Bank Limited (ABSA)
brings this application for the final winding up of the first
respondent, Longchamp Turf Investments (Pty) Ltd (Longchamp). The
application is opposed by those described as the first and second
intervening parties, Betty Podlas and Shawn Cambouris. The reason
they do so is that they are trustees of the Reshawna Trust (Reshawna)
which is the sole shareholder of Longchamp. Cambouris is a director
of Longchamp. Reshawna it is relevant to mention is a family
trust.
Another member of the family is Emmanuel Cambouris. Although he is
not one of the intervenors, he is Podlas’ husband,
is also
involved in the business affairs of Longchamp, and has deposed to
affidavits in this matter relating to background facts.
For this
reason, when I refer to the family, that means the intervenors as
well as Emmanuel Cambouris. The family has other trusts
through which
they hold equity in other businesses, one of which is relevant to
this matter, as I discuss later.
[2]
The citing of the second respondent is now historic. The second
respondent was previously
appointed as the Business rescue
practitioner for Longchamp. However, as I go on to explain
Longchamp’s business rescue process
has been terminated by an
order of court. Accordingly, the second respondent has no further
interest in the matter.
[3]
This application was brought seven years ago. Considering this is a
winding up application,
that is an extraordinary long gestation
period. The delay is partly explained by the large number of
interlocutory applications
that have happened on the way leading to
its final hearing before me.
The basis for the
application
[4]
ABSA has two claims against Longchamp. The
first is in respect of what it terms a term loan agreement.
In 2008
ABSA extended a loan of R 10 million to Longchamp. As security for
the loan ABSA required Longchamp to mortgage a vacant
property it
owns in the Western Cape in that amount. It also required sureties
from various directors, but they are not pertinent
to this
application. Longchamp’s defence as I go on to explain is that
the bond is not repayable as it was induced by fraud
to enable ABSA
to get security for another but unrelated loan for which ABSA was not
secured.
[5]
The second claim is based on an overdraft
facility that ABSA extended to Longchamp. Initially the overdraft
was
not secured. By January 2009 Longchamp owed R 2 789 520 on the
facility and by February 2009, it was just over R 3 million.
ABSA
required security for the overdraft and so Longchamp registered
another bond over its property for R 5 million. It continued
to make
some payments on the overdraft until 2010. ABSA then called in the
overdraft which Longchamp was unable to repay. Whilst
the fact that
the overdraft has been secured by the R 5 million bond is common
cause the reason why this came about is not common
cause.
[6]
On Longchamp’s version the reason they had registered the bond
was so that the overdraft
facility could be increased to R 5 million.
ABSA, it alleges, had agreed to this, and having induced the
registration of the bond
now denies it. This representation Longchamp
alleges was fraudulent. ABSAs’ version is that because the
facility was not
secured, they needed to get better security
otherwise it would have been called in much earlier. There was on
ABSA’s version
never an agreement to extend the overdraft to R
5 million.
[7]
Longchamp failed to make payment of the amounts due in terms of both
the loan agreement
and the overdraft facility despite demands for it
to do so. As a result, ABSA first brought proceedings by way of
action to recover
the money in 2012. Longchamp defended the matter
but its defence at that stage was a bare denial.
[8]
Then on the eve of the commencement of the
trial, Longchamp applied for business rescue. The CIPC approved
the
resolution to place Longchamp in business rescue in October 2014. At
the same time the defendants in the action, which included
Longchamp,
sought a postponement, in order to amend their pleadings. The action
case has been overtaken by events and never proceeded.
[9]
ABSA then brought the present proceedings in
February 2015 to wind up Longchamp. This is the proceeding
still
before me.
[10]
On 18 February 2015 Absa served a demand in terms of section
345(1)(a) on Longchamp at is registered address'.
Receipt thereof is
admitted.
[11]
The amount outstanding as of 3 May 2016 in respect of the former was
R17 337 868.13 and, in respect of the
latter, the amount outstanding
as of 4 May 2016 was R5 992 811.89
[12]
It also brought a challenge to the business
rescue. This was eventually successful. Satchwell J held that
Longchamp had no business to be rescued and set aside the business
rescue proceedings.
[1]
This
outcome requires some explanation. Longchamp is a company which owns
a piece of vacant land. It is the intention of its directors
to
establish a business or businesses on the site but that had not yet
happened at the time Satchwell J heard the application hence
her
finding that there was no business to be rescued.
Point in limine
[13]
Longchamp raises as point in limine that ABSA had brought the winding
up application at the time
when the business rescue process had
already been instituted. This meant, it was argued, that the
application was in contravention
of the moratorium on the institution
of legal proceedings against companies in business rescue in terms of
section 134(1) of the
Companies Act 71 of 2008, (the Act).
[14]
That section states:
134 General moratorium
on legal proceedings against company
(1)
During business rescue proceedings, no legal
proceeding, including enforcement action, against the company, or in
relation to any
property belonging to the company, or lawfully in its
possession, may be commenced or proceeded with in any forum, except-
(a)
with the written consent of the practitioner;
(b)
with the leave of the court and in accordance with any terms
the court considers suitable;
(c)
…
[15]
But the intervenors have mischaracterised the liquidation
application. The original application
sought two types of relief.
First to terminate the business rescue process on the basis that no
business rescue plan had been published
within the requisite period,
and second for the liquidation of the company. This is competent
relief that does not contravene the
moratorium provision as it seeks
to make the latter relief contingent on the former. As it happens the
former was not required
as the court found that on the facts there
was no business to rescue hence the process to place Longchamp into
business rescue
was not competent.
[16]
As Van der Linde J observed in
BP
Southern Africa (Pty) Ltd v Intertrans Oil SA (Pty) Ltd and Others
[2]
“
Where
the main relief to be sought goes to the very status which invokes
the moratorium protection, it seems overly technical to
insist on two
distinct applications as opposed to one application with two (sets
of) prayers: one for permission, and one for the
substantive relief.”
[17]
Likewise, in this case when it was brought this application went to
the very heart of the status
of the business rescue application. The
application was therefore not one commenced in contravention of
section 134(1) and so the
point in limine fails.
Longchamp’s
defences in respect of the loan agreement
No original agreement
[18]
Longchamp raises as one of its defences that ABSA has failed to prove
that the mortgage agreement
attached to the application is the one
that was signed by the parties. ABSA has attached what it says is a
copy of the agreement
as the original was destroyed in a fire.
However, Longchamp has not suggested that this is not a genuine copy
of the agreement
and if not where it is inaccurate. This point too
must fail.
Fraudulent
misrepresentation
[19]
The main defence advanced, and the one which received the most
attention from both parties, was
Longchamp’ allegation that the
bond agreement was not binding on it because it had been induced by a
fraudulent misrepresentation
by the ABSA employee responsible for
arranging it.
[20]
The family behind Longchamp had previously had dealings with this
employee at ABSA, Lashner Ciorovich,
who was at the time a
‘Relationship Executive’ with ABSA Corporate and
Executive Bank. Ciorovich had arranged finance
for a company known as
Good Hope Diamonds (Kimberley Limited (GHD) which had offshore
investors as its shareholders as well as
the family, via another
trust known as the El Shaddai Trust. For various reasons due to
exchange control complexities, the security
that ABSA relied upon for
this transaction had been compromised. ABSA was thus exposed to an
increased risk of R 10 million that
was not secured.
[21]
Sometime in 2007 Podlas and Cambouris had met with Ciorovich and
another ABSA executive to discuss
the GHD problem. A proposal was
made that the security could be ‘improved’ using
Longchamp’s assets to do so.
The idea was that Longchamp would
loan R 10 million from ABSA and then bond its property as security.
The loan would then be paid
to the El Shadai Trust which in turn
would make payment on behalf of GHD. This is in fact what happened.
El Shaddai paid over two
cheques from this loan to extinguish the
unsecured debt.
[22]
At the same time the family had approached ABSA with a business
proposal in respect of Longchamp.
They wanted to construct a private
hospital on the empty property and asked ABSA to finance them with a
loan of R 450 million.
On Longchamp’s version, Ciorovich had
agreed to provide the financing, provided that the family could help
him increase the
security on the GHD financing using the mechanism
for payment I described above.
[23]
There is no agreement in the record that sets out the linkage between
these two arrangements.
But central to proving Longchamp’s case
is an email that Ciorovich had sent it, or purportedly sent it, on 26
February 2008
in which this arrangement is set out. Ciorovich wrote:
"Please can you
let me have an update from the attorneys on the position of Display
Gardens I have also approached credit and
Absa Capital finance for
your Hospital Project. Following perusal of the documents and
business plan they have decided to grant
up to R450 million for the
international Velddrif Medical Clinic. The documentation will be
sorted out as soon as the Good Hope
facilities have been arranged
accordingly and the bond taken over the land. They are happy with the
land valuation by the valuator."
[24]
According to the intervenors they only own 0.6 % of the share capital
in GHD. There is no reason
why they would have bonded a property of
an unrelated company when they were not obliged to. The reason they
advance for doing
so was the quid
pro quo
they got for getting
the bank out of this embarrassing situation of its own making. The
quid
pro quo
was that the bank had undertaken to advance them
a loan of R 450 million for their hospital venture which was to be
conducted under
the auspices of Longchamp.
[25]
The misrepresentation was according the intervenors:
“
As
already stated, ABSA misrepresented that the R450 million loan had
been approved and that as soon as the bond had been registered
and
the Good Hope Diamonds debt extinguished the R450 million loan would
be made available to Longchamp.”
[3]
[26]
But the intervenors do not stop there. They go on further to claim
the misrepresentation was:
“…
.
made intentionally by the Applicant [ABSA] knowing full well that it
never intended to finance the Hospital Project at all nor
was any
finance approved nor was any decision made as misrepresented by the
Applicant to finance the Hospital Project on payment
of the Good Hope
Diamonds loan by the 1st respondent.”
[4]
[27]
The funding for the hospital never came through but Longchamp entered
into the bond arrangement
and on paid most of the R 10 million to the
El Shaddai trust. ABSA contend that Longchamp itself had sought the
funding. Each party
has attacked the credibility of the other’s
version.
[28]
ABSA questions the credibility of the Longchamp version because of
the manner in which this defence
was raised. Only when the civil
action was ready to proceed to trial was it raised. This came about
because during discovery process
the email that Ciorovich had sent to
Podlas came to the attention of Longchamp’s legal team. Based
on this document at the
behest not of the client, but the attorney,
Longchamp decided to change its defence to the civil action which up
until then had
been a bare denial, to one of fraud.
[29]
But in a strange twist of events the credibility of ABSA’s
version is also in question.
Initially ABSA’s defence was to
accept the authenticity of the Ciorovich email but to put a different
interpretation on what
it meant. That changed later and ABSA then
suggested an error had been made by the attorney who should have
referred to the email
as the ‘purported email’. The
current version is that ABSA has no knowledge of the email and they
have searched for
it on their system and no record of it can be
found.
[30]
For present purposes I will accept that the email was sent by
Ciorovich on the date it purports
to have been made. The question
then is what to make of this most unusual set of facts. I will first
look at the relevant legal
tests and then apply them to the facts of
this case.
Legal Tests
[31]
The legal test is not controversial although applying it to the facts
sometimes may be more so.
In terms of the so-called ‘
Badenhorst
rule’
winding up procedures cannot be used to enforce a debt that is
disputed on
bona
fide
and reasonable grounds. In
Freshvest
Investments (Proprietary) Limited v Marabeng (Proprietary) Limited
[5]
the court described the application of the rule in this way.
"Consequently,
where the respondent shows on a balance of probability that its
indebtedness to the applicant is disputed on
bona fide and reasonable
grounds, the court will refuse a winding-up order. The onus on the
respondent is not to show that it is
not indebted to the applicant:
it is merely to show that the indebtedness is disputed on bona fide
and reasonable rounds."
[32]
However, the courts have also held that where the respondent's
indebtedness has,
prima
facie
,
been established, the onus is on it to show that this indebtedness is
indeed disputed on
bona
fide
and reasonable grounds.
[6]
In
this case Longchamp’s indebtedness is not in dispute. The onus
to show that the defence of fraud rests on the intervenors
to
demonstrate it is based on
bona
fide
and reasonable grounds.
[33]
It matters as well whether the order sought is one for final or
provisional liquidation. In
Kalil
the court said the test for
provisional liquidation only required a showing of a
prima facie
case by the applicant i.e., as Corbett JA put it:
“
Where
on the affidavits there is a prima facie case (i.e., a balance of
probabilities) in favour of the applicant, then, in my view,
a
provisional order of winding-up should normally be granted and save
in exceptional circumstances, the Court should not accede
to an
application by the respondent that the matter be referred to the
hearing of viva voce evidence. This does no lasting injustice
to the
respondent for he will on the return day generally be given the
opportunity, in a proper case and where he asks for an order
to that
effect, to present oral evidence on disputed issues.”
[7]
[34]
Does that mean the court out of caution when a
prima facie
case has been made out should prefer to grant a provisional rather
than a final order? In
Afgri
the court considered this and
held:
“
As
to the extent to which the courts will incline to taking the
precaution of first granting a provisional order of liquidation,
rather than a final one, it would seem that there is some degree of
regional variance and that the matter is perhaps even affected
by the
individual preferences among judges. The passage of time since the
original hearing of this matter and the full ventilation
of the
issues that has since taken place render it inappropriate for this
court now to substitute the order of the High Court with
a
provisional order. Above all, the appellant has satisfied the
requirements for the grant of a final order of liquidation, which
was
the relief that it had sought in the first instance. Following
Johnson v Hirotec (Pty) Ltd, it will be appropriate for this
court to
direct the issue of a final order.”
[8]
[35]
In
Johson
v Hirotec
,
the court in deciding to grant a final order for winding up, took
into account that the issues had been fully ventilated and that
the
respondent had “…
put
nothing forward to persuade us that further relevant facts would be
forthcoming if a rule nisi were issued.”
[9]
Analysis of the
factual issues
[36]
The intervenors case is that they would never have agreed to bond
Longchamp’s property
to benefit GHD, in which they had a
miniscule interest, unless they had been induced to do so by the
fraudulent representation
made by ABSA officials that if they did so,
ABSA would loan them R 450 million rand to fund their hospital
project. There are several
problems with this version.
[37]
Longchamp entered into the loan and bond for R 10 million in early
January 2008. No document
exists to confirm such an arrangement prior
to this. If this was the condition for Longchamp bonding the property
one would have
expected these to exist prior to the signing of these
documents. Second the amount of R 450 million is disproportionate to
the
value of the Longchamp property which was valued at the time at
some R 40 million. If it was already bonding R 10 million to the
loan
for GHD that meant that R 30 million was unbonded. (at best) or
one-fifteenth of the value of the loan. The intervenors do
not
mention any other security required. It beggars belief that they
could have thought the bank would agree to such a loan as
a quid
pro
quo
for providing R 10 million security to an unrelated
transaction.
[38]
Second, the failure by the intervenors to take any action about the
alleged misrepresentation
was never adequately explained. If they
were paying off a bond as they were for a time and had not had any
advance on the hospital
loan, why is there no further correspondence
in the record (apart from one letter of enquiry in early 2008 from
Podlas) indicating
their outrage that they had been duped. Third, why
was it their attorney on the eve of trial and not them who had raised
the issue
of the misrepresentation. Recall that the initial defence
to the action was a bare denial. He had not done so on any
instruction
from them but on his inference from the Ciorovich email.
Moreover, this was not a hidden communication that he had uncovered
which
his clients were unaware of. It was a communication addressed
to them.
[39]
Further the allegation made is that ABSA made the representation
knowing full well that it was
not going to do provide the R 450
million loan. There is no evidence of this other than a particular
reading attributed to Ciorovich’s
email. But that cannot be the
basis of their reliance as the Ciorovich email was sent after they
had already entered into the bond
and other security agreements for
the R 10 million. This means that if their case is correct there must
have been a prior representation.
But they have put up no evidence of
this. It is unlikely that entrepreneurs of the family’s
experience would not have had
their paperwork in order before
entering into the agreements. Nor is it likely that if they had had a
fraud perpetrated on them,
they would have needed their lawyers at
discovery stage in an action where payment was being required of
them, to explain this
to them. As the record shows they are
experienced in raising finances for their various endeavours and had
a long relationship
with ABSA. They continued making payments in
respect of this loan until 2009. They do not explain why they
continued to do so if
they had been defrauded based on
representations made as early as 2007.
[40]
Given the prior action, in which there was discovery, one might have
expected such documents
to have been produced or required, but apart
from the Ciorovich email there are none in the record. Nor is there
any indication
from the intervenors that if given an opportunity to
they could obtain such information.
[41]
These facts strongly indicate that the fraudulent representation
defence advanced is not
bona fide
and reasonable. It may well
be that ABSA’s clumsy attempt to distance itself from the
Ciorovich email is an indication that
there is something more going
on. But I have accepted the authenticity of the email for the
purposes of this decision. The fact
that the denial has lacked
credibility does not lead to an inference that therefore there is
some substance to the claim of a fraudulent
misrepresentation.
[42]
In any event even if my analysis of these facts is wrong, Longchamp
remains liable to ABSA for
enrichment. It is common cause that
Longchamp did not pay the full R 10 million over to the El Shadei
Trust and that a certain
amount R 92 300, remained with it. Even if
there was a fraud perpetrated on Longchamp, it is bound to make
restitution on this
amount which it has not done nor tendered to do
so. This constitutes a self-standing basis for having the firm wound
up. Longchamp’s
response was to allege that the claim for this
payment had prescribed. But the claim is not based on a debt due, but
a debt secured
by a mortgage bond for which the prescription period
is 30 years in terms of the Prescription Act.
[10]
The overdraft
[43]
Finally, there is the additional self-standing claim in respect of
the overdraft facility which
was also secured by a further mortgage
bond over the property in the amount of R 5 million. Here again a
fraudulent representation
is alleged. But this claim suffers the same
credibility problems as the other. There is no evidence in the record
that the overdraft
was induced because a higher limit was promised.
This suggestion is a post hoc creation by the intervenors once faced
with repayment
difficulties. ABSA has explained that it would have
called in the facility at an earlier date if they had not got this
security.
It was not intended to increase the facility to this
amount. There is no agreement or correspondence to support
Longchamp’s
version. Then to the extent this claim is also
defended on the basis that the claim has prescribed, this too must
fail as the claim
is based as well on the underlying mortgage bond
secured against the facility.
Conclusion
[44]
The applicant has established its claim in terms of
section 345
of
the
Companies Act.
[11
] None of
the defences to this claim are
bona
fide
and reasonable. For the reasons I have given there is no point in
granting a provisional order. The papers in this matter are prolix.
There are several supplementary affidavits and the facts have been
regurgitated on several occasions. The intervenors have had
ample
opportunity to put any new facts before the court if they had them.
Nor as noted in
Johnson
have, they sought to do so.
[45]
Adding to this is the fact that alleged misrepresentation if it
existed must have happened in
2007 early 2008 thus nearly fifteen
years ago. If this matter were to go to oral testimony (which in any
event the intervenors
have not sought) how reliable would that
testimony still be? It would be an injustice to ABSA if there was any
further delay in
this matter being brought to finality. It must be
born in mind that these winding up proceedings were first brought in
February
2015 - more than seven years ago. The business rescue
practitioner whilst in office has also reached the conclusion that
the business
rescue process was unlikely to prove successful and she
too had moved for winding up.
[46]
The rider attached to the well-known
Plascon-Evans
rule is
apposite in this case. As the SCA stated in its reformulation of that
rule in
National Director of Public Prosecutions v Zuma:
“
It
may be different if the respondent’s version consists of bald
or uncreditworthy denials, raises fictitious disputes of
fact, is
palpably implausible, far-fetched or so clearly untenable that the
court is justified in rejecting them merely on the
papers.”
[12]
[47]
A final order for winding up has been satisfactorily made out and is
accordingly granted. Costs
will follow cause as is the normal course,
but I see no reason to make a special award of costs.
ORDER:-
[48]
In the result the following order is made:
1.
The First Respondent is finally liquidated in the hands of the Master
of the High Court,
Johannesburg.
2.
The applicant’s costs of the application shall be costs in the
winding up.
N. MANOIM
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION
JOHNANNESBURG
Date of
hearing:
10 March 2022
Date of
judgment:
12 August 2022
Appearances:
Counsel for the
Applicant:
N J Horn
Instructed
by.
Tim Du Toit
Counsel for the First
Respondent
and
intervenors:
W B Boonzaaier
Instructed
by:
Potgieter and Associates
[1]
There
is no written judgment but this remark by the learned judge appears
common cause.
[2]
2017
(4) SA 592
at 27.
[3]
Record
page 52 -16.
[4]
Record
6-206 to 6-207.
[5]
[2016]
JOL 36911
(SCA).
[6]
See
AFGRI Operations Ltd v Hamba Fleet (Pty) Ltd
2022 (1) SA 91
(SCA) at
paragraph 6 which relies inter alia on Kalil v Decotex (Pty) Ltd and
Another 1988 (1) SA 943 (A).
[7]
Kalil,
supra, at 979.
[8]
Afgri,
supra, paragraph 19.
[9]
Johnson
v Hirotec (Pty) Ltd
[2000] ZASCA 131
;
2000 (4) SA 930
(SCA) paragraph 9.
[10]
Section
11(1)(a)(i).
[11]
This
relevant portion of this section states:
345(1) A company or
body corporate shall be deemed to be unable to pay its debts if-
(a) a
creditor, by cession or otherwise, to whom the company is indebted
in a sum not less than one hundred rand then
due-
(i) has
served on the company, by leaving the same at its registered office,
a demand requiring the company to pay
the sum so due; or
(ii)…
and the company or
body corporate has for three weeks thereafter neglected to pay the
sum, or to secure or compound for it to
the reasonable satisfaction
of the creditor; or
[12]
2009(2)
SA 277(SCA) par [26].
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