Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 591South Africa
Carmody v Kudumela N.O. and Another (2022/17204;2022/2448) [2022] ZAGPJHC 591 (18 August 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
18 August 2022
Headnotes
on 4 November 2021 at which an extension was sought and granted for the submission of the business rescue plan. Further extensions were granted until 15 December, when Capitec, the largest creditor, declined a further extension. 11. Mr Kudumela’s attorneys informed Ms Carmody of the intention to bring an application for conversion at the beginning of May 2022. 12. The removal application was issued on 13 May 2022. The conversion application was served on 21 May 2022.
Judgment
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## Carmody v Kudumela N.O. and Another (2022/17204;2022/2448) [2022] ZAGPJHC 591 (18 August 2022)
Carmody v Kudumela N.O. and Another (2022/17204;2022/2448) [2022] ZAGPJHC 591 (18 August 2022)
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sino date 18 August 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO:2022/17204
2022/2448
REPORTABLE:
No
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: No
NOT
REVISED
18/08/2022
In
the matter between:
MATHILDA
CARMODY
Applicant
and
JUSTICE
EPHRAIM KUDUMELA. N.O.
First Respondent
And
MATSWAY
STEEL (PTY) LTD (in business rescue)
Second Respondent
(Registration
Number:2018235719/07)
and
JUSTICE
APHRAM KUDUMELA N.
O.
Applicant
and
MATSWAY
STEEL (PTY) LTD
(in business
rescue)
First Respondent
MATHILDA
CARMODY
Second Respondent
COMPANIES
AND INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
Third Respondent
COMMISSION
THE
AFFECTED PERSONS RELATING TO
MATSWAY
STEEL (PTY) LIMITED
(in business rescue)
Fourth Respondent
JUDGMENT
YACOOB
J
:
INTRODUCTION
1.
The applicant (“Ms Carmody”) in
case number 2022/17204 is a director and sole shareholder in Matsway
Steel (Pty) Ltd
(“Matsway”). Matsway is in business
rescue, and is the second respondent in case 2022/17204, and the
first respondent
in case 2022/2448. The applicant seeks the removal
of the business rescue practitioner, Mr Kudumela, on the basis of
inaction and
incompetence on his part, in terms of section 139(2) of
the Companies Act, 71 of 2008 (“the Act”).
2.
Mr Kudumela, in his capacity as business
rescue practitioner, seeks in case 2022/2448 the conversion of the
business rescue to liquidation
in terms of section 141(2)(ii) of the
Act, on the basis that there is no prospect that Matsway may
successfully be rescued.
3.
The removal application was brought on an
urgent basis. The conversion application is submitted to be urgent
should the removal
be found to be urgent. Taking into account the
chronology of events in this matter, I am not satisfied that it is
urgent. Nevertheless,
having read the papers and heard full argument,
I consider that it is in the interests of justice for me to hear the
matter, rather
than to cause the parties to incur further costs and
impose further on judicial resources in having this matter heard on
another
date.
4.
The removal application was issued and set
down before the conversion application, while the conversion
application was not set
down. Nevertheless the parties agreed that
both applications should be heard, although it was submitted by Mr
Fourie for Mr Kudumela
that the conversion application should be
heard first as it would determine all the issues. I ruled that both
applications be argued
together. The two applications are so
intertwined that there is no point in having them heard separately.
5.
The removal application having been
instituted first, I ruled that Ms van der Linde (for Ms Carmody)
should begin. Mr Fourie submitted
that it would make sense for the
liquidation application to be heard and determined before the removal
application was dealt with,
since if I found that the business rescue
should be converted to liquidation that would do away for the need
for a new business
rescue practitioner. This is true, but
logistically both applications had to be heard.
6.
On balance, it is clear that this court
must decide whether it is appropriate to continue business rescue
proceedings, because there
is a prospect of rescue, or whether there
is no prospect of rescue and Matsway must then be liquidated. Even if
Ms Carmody has
established that Mr Kudumela ought to be removed, this
does not mean that this court must make the order removing him, as
the court
has a discretion in terms of section 141(3) of the act. Nor
does it mean that the liquidation application cannot then succeed. If
I conclude that there is no point in continuing the business rescue,
and that the requirements for liquidation are present, it
is open to
me to order that the business rescue be converted into liquidation.
7.
I consider first the removal application,
and then the conversion application.
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
8.
Matsway offers steel finishing services of
various kinds. It was established in 2006 and started falling into
financial difficulties
in October 2018.
9.
Matsway was placed in voluntary business
rescue by way of a resolution taken on 11 October 2021, on the basis
that it was financially
distressed and that there was a reasonable
prospect of rescue. Mr Kudumela accepted appointment as business
rescue practitioner
on 14 October 2021 and the CIPC confirmation of
his appointment records his appointment date as 23 October 2021.
10.
A first meeting of creditors was held on 4
November 2021 at which an extension was sought and granted for the
submission of the
business rescue plan. Further extensions were
granted until 15 December, when Capitec, the largest creditor,
declined a further
extension.
11.
Mr Kudumela’s attorneys informed Ms
Carmody of the intention to bring an application for conversion at
the beginning of May
2022.
12.
The removal application was issued on 13
May 2022. The conversion application was served on 21 May 2022.
HAS A CASE BEEN MADE
OUT FOR REMOVAL OF THE PRACTITIONER?
13.
The facts set out below form the basis of
Ms Carmody’s contention that Mr Kudumela ought to be removed in
terms of section
139(2)(a), which allows the business rescue
practitioner to be removed on the grounds of “incompetence or
failure to perform
the duties of a business rescue practitioner”
of Matsway.
14.
On
3 November 2021 Matsway’s bank, which was then Mercantile and
is now Capitec,
[1]
complained
that it had not been informed of the business rescue and would
therefore no longer extend to Matsway the existing overdraft
facility. It is contended that Mr Kudumela failed in his duty to
inform the bank of the business rescue.
15.
At the first meeting of creditors on 4
November 2021 Mr Kudumela requested an extension for filing the
business rescue plan, maintaining
that there were still prospects of
rescue.
16.
At some point in November Capitec enforced
its cession over the book debts of Capitec, writing to Matsway’s
debtors and requiring
that payments be made into Matsway’s
Capitec account, while Mr Kudumela wrote to debtors asking that
payments be made into
Matsway’s Nedbank account.
17.
Mr Kudumela embarked on some negotiations
with Capitec, and also asked for a four-day extension for filing the
business rescue plan.
He was however only supplied with the
management accounts on 8 December 2021. He alleges that he
established then that Matsway
was hopelessly insolvent. He did not
then bring a conversion application. He even requested a further
extension for filing the
plan on 15 December, and Capitec declined.
Ms Carmody suggests that this is because Mr Kudumela alienated
Capitec and that this
was part of the reason the business rescue may
not succeed.
18.
Mr Kudumela employed a former salesperson
in a managerial position at Matsway.
19.
He then in January instituted an urgent
application seeking to interdict Capitec from enforcing its cession
of book debts, which
was found not to be urgent.
20.
At the end of March, Mr Kudumela suspended
Ms Carmody as a director, took her laptop away from her and prevented
her from accessing
Matsway’s premises.
21.
Throughout April, Ms Carmody’s
attorneys requested various documents from Mr Kudumela, only some of
which were provided. Mr
Kudumela’s attorneys then advised Ms
Carmody’s attorneys at the beginning of May that Mr Kudumela
would apply to convert
the business rescue to a liquidation. Ms
Carmody suggests that this was not a
bona
fide
application because if it was it
would have been brought in December when Mr Kudumela first saw the
management accounts. This is,
she submits, yet another example of Mr
Kudumela not doing his job.
22.
Ms Carmody received letters from two
creditors expressing dissatisfaction with the failure to present a
business rescue plan.
23.
Mr Kudumela failed to produce monthly
reports when the business rescue proceedings lasted longer than three
months, as he was obliged
to do in terms of section 132(3) of the
Act.
24.
Ms Carmody suggests that Mr Kudumela has
not responded to the allegations of incompetence and inaction that
are contained in her
founding affidavit, but rather has retaliated by
instituting the liquidation application. It is true that the
answering affidavit
contains very little by way of substantive
response to the removal application, and refers to the liquidation
application more
than a little. This does not necessarily mean that
the liquidation application was only brought in retaliation, or to
avoid removal.
25.
Mr Kudumela’s response to Ms
Carmody’s allegations is, essentially, that Capitec cut off
credit lines because Ms Carmody
signed for a new line of credit after
the business rescue without informing it of the business rescue, that
the business is factually
insolvent and that without
post-commencement finance, which Capitec has declined to provide,
there is no prospect of rescue. He
also suggests that the business
rescue has failed because Ms Carmody interfered in the process,
including herself informing customers
to make deposits into the
Nedbank account, and signing with Capitec for a facility without
informing them of the business rescue.
26.
He does not explain why, having become
aware that the business was insolvent in December 2021, he only
brought the liquidation application
in May 2022, seven months later.
In terms of section 141(2)(a)(ii) he is obliged to bring an
application to convert the business
rescue into proceedings. In fact,
in his answering affidavit in the removal application, he himself
acknowledges that the provision
is peremptory and he has no
discretion to seek another solution. The fact that section 132(3)
provides that either a court must
allow business rescue proceedings a
longer period than three months or the practitioner must provide
monthly reports if it lasts
longer than three months is an indication
that proceedings are not ordinarily intended to last longer than
three months, and in
any event a six month delay is certainly outside
the bounds of what may be considered permissible.
27.
According to Mr Kudumela he did not suspend
the Ms Carmody from being a director, he merely revoked her
authority. It is clear that
this is mere semantics. Ms Carmody was
prevented from being a director, the question is whether this was
justified. In addition
to the interference referred to above, Mr
Kudumela alleges that Ms Carmody paid large sums of money to herself
from Matsway’s
accounts, and did not allow anyone else to use
the invoicing software, the licenced copy of which was only on her
laptop.
28.
Mr Kudumela explains his failure to produce
monthly reports after the three-month period had expired by
contending that he was intending
to bring a conversion application so
there was no need to produce those reports. There is no authority for
that proposition, and
where the conversion application was brought
four months after the expiry of the three month period the failure to
produce reports
is certainly not justified. Reporting is intended to
ensure transparency and action, and where there was no business
rescue plan
and no report, creditors and interested parties would
certainly have cause to complain that they were not being kept
informed of
what was happening.
29.
It is clear that Mr Kudumela has not
complied with his obligations, timeously or at all. He has been
unable to provide satisfactory
explanations for his non-compliance.
30.
Section 139(2) gives the court a
discretion. A finding that Mr Kudumela has failed to perform his
duties does not automatically
mean that the court must order his
removal. In this particular case, if the liquidation application
demonstrates that there is
no prospect of rescue, the removal becomes
moot, as the prolonging of the business rescue will simply slow down
the death of the
company, rather than allowing it to be rescued.
SHOULD THE BUSINESS
RESCUE BE CONVERTED TO LIQUIDATION?
31.
The question, essentially, is whether there
is a prospect of rescuing Matsway.
32.
According to Mr Kudumela Matsway was
already insolvent before business rescue was embarked upon. The
management accounts demonstrated
this. The only prospect of rescue is
if post-commencement finance is provided, and Capitec has declined to
provide that. There
is no other investor on the horizon.
33.
Ms Carmody denies that Matsway is
hopelessly insolvent and also denies that Mr Kudumela is able to come
to such a conclusion. She
relies also on Mr Kudumela’s delay in
bringing the application for conversion, submitting that the
application is not
bona fide
or it would have been brought sooner. Of course the delay is not on
its own a reason to conclude that Matsway should not be liquidated.
34.
Ms Carmody’s answering affidavit
consists primarily of recriminations, blaming Mr Kudumela for the
failure of the business
rescue. It does not deal directly with the
prospects of rescue.
35.
There are however some relevant
allegations, namely that another company of which Ms Carmody is sole
shareholder (“SSD”)
has a property that will be sold, and
money provided to Matsway from that to apply to the Capitec debt, and
that there are three
companies which have agreed to act as
post-commencemnt financiers and to continue providing steel to
Matsway. There is also a company
that is interested in purchasing
machines from Matsway.
36.
However, the confirmatory affidavits
annexed from two of the companies Ms Carmody relies on only say that
they are willing to provide
steel, not that they would provide
post-commencement finance. The third affidavit does mention that it
will be willing to provide
post-commencement finance but not to what
extent.
37.
Mr Kudumela points out that SSD is in any
event a surety for the Capitec debt, and that the sale of its
property would not materially
change that situation, and that in any
event Capitec would need to approve the sale which is unlikely since
the sale contemplates
that SSD would only receive 75% of market value
for the property. He also points out that Capitec would attach all
receivables
until its debt is extinguished, so that the recovery of
Matsway will by stymied.
38.
I am satisfied that the only prospect of
rescue for Matsway is if post-commencement finance is procured, and I
am not satisfied
that there is sufficient evidence that sufficient
post-commencment finance is available.
39.
It is therefore appropriate that the
business rescue proceedings be converted to liquidation.
40.
It is evident from reading the affidavits
in both applications that there have probably been irregularities in
the business rescue
proceedings. The liquidator can investigate that.
COSTS
41.
The general rule is that costs follow the
results. Ms Carmody has been notionally successful in the removal
application, although
I do not make the order she sought. She seeks
costs against Mr Kudumela personally. Although Ms Carmody did not
obtain the relief
sought, I consider she should recover costs. The
primary reason is that Mr Kudumela’s answering affidavit had
very little
substance and was unhelpful to the court. It did not
consist of any real opposition. No reason was given why Mr Kudumela
should
not bear costs in his personal capacity and it would not be
just or equitable for MAtsway to bear those costs in light of my
findings.
42.
In the removal application, Mr Kudumela
asks that costs be in the liquidation but that costs be awarded
against any party that opposes
it. I consider that Ms Carmody should
pay costs of opposition, save for what is set out below.
43.
I found the heads of argument submitted by
Mr Fourie on Mr Kudumela’s behalf singularly unhelpful. They
were 90 pages long,
clearly not heads at all, and appeared to be some
kind of hybrid between heads and an affidavit, since they
occasionally referred
to Mr Kudumela in the first person. They
neither crystallised the issues nor provided any helpful structure or
authority. I do
not consider that costs should be recovered for that.
In my view those costs should be borne by Mr Kudumela personally,
since it
appears to be a document at least partly prepared by him,
for which I can see no reason.
CONCLUSION
44.
For the reasons set out above I make the
following order:
(a)
The removal application, case 2022/17204,
is dismissed, Mr Kudumela to pay the costs in his personal capacity.
(b)
The business rescue proceedings of the
first respondent are converted to liquidation proceedings in terms of
section 132(2)(a)(ii)
of the
Companies Act, 71 of 2008
, placing the
first respondent under final liquidation.
(c)
A copy of this order shall be forthwith
served on the respondent company at its registered office and be
published in the Government
Gazette and in the Beeld Newspaper.
(d)
A copy of this order is to be forthwith
forwarded to each known affected person by e-mail, where such email
address exists and is
known to the applicant or his attorney,
alternatively send by pre-paid registered post or hand delivered, and
(e)
That the costs of the application 2022/2448
are costs in the liquidation, save that:
a.
Ms Carmody shall bear costs consequent on
opposition, and
b.
Mr Kudumela in his personal capacity shall
bear the costs of the heads of argument filed on his behalf.
S.
YACOOB
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Appearances
Counsel
for the Applicant:
C Van Der Linde
Instructed
by:
Gittins Attorneys
Counsel
for the 1
st
Respondent:
J Fourie
Instructed
by:
Saltzman Attorneys
Date
of hearing:
08 June 2022
Date
of judgment:
18 August 2022
[1]
It is still the same entity.
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