Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 586South Africa
Jurgens and Others v Botha (2019/24007) [2022] ZAGPJHC 586 (22 August 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
22 August 2022
Headnotes
banking accounts and enjoyed overdraft facilities. Jurgens, on the other hand, did not sign surety or provide any other form of security for the fulfilment by the companies of their obligations to the bank or other creditors.
Judgment
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## Jurgens and Others v Botha (2019/24007) [2022] ZAGPJHC 586 (22 August 2022)
Jurgens and Others v Botha (2019/24007) [2022] ZAGPJHC 586 (22 August 2022)
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sino date 22 August 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO:
2019/24007
Reportable:
No
Of
interest to other Judges: No
Revised:
No
Date:
22/08/2022
In
the matter between:
JACO
CORNELIUS JUHL JURGENS
First Applicant/
(1
ST
Respondent in counterclaim)
BOTHA
AND JURGENS INC t/a RUIMSIG MEDIESE
SENTRUM
& DIABETIESE KLINIEK
Second Applicant/
(2
nd
Respondent in counterclaim)
BOTHA
AND JURGENS INCt/a RUIMSIG MEDIESE
SENTRUM
& DIABETIESE KLINIEK
Third Applicant/
(3
rd
respondent in counterclaim)
and
CHRISTOFFEL
JACOBUS BOTHA
Respondent/
(Applicant
in counterclaim)
J
U D G M E N T
MAIER-FRAWLEY
J:
1.
Pursuant
to the launch of a main application in the urgent court, an order was
made by consent between the first applicant and the
respondent on 23
July 2019.
[1]
2.
The first applicant (hereinafter ‘Jurgens’)
and the respondent (hereinafter ‘Botha’) are medical
doctors
who were previously employed together with other medical
practitioners in the two medical practices conducted under the
vehicle
of the second and third applicants (hereinafter, ‘the
companies’ or the second and third applicants respectively).
3.
Jurgens and Botha are co-directors and 50%
shareholders in each of the companies. For convenience, they will be
referred to jointly
as ‘the parties’ in the judgment,
save where the context requires otherwise.
4.
At
a certain point in time, the business and personal relationship
between Jurgens and Botha began to sour, resulting in Botha
discontinuing working together with Jurgens in the two practices and
taking up employment with Healthworx in Krugersdorp for purposes
of
continuing practice as a medical doctor. To that end, and for the
sake of peace, Botha handed over the reins of the management
of the
practices
[2]
- hitherto
conducted by them jointly under the auspices of the second and third
applicants - to Jurgens, but retained his directorship
and
shareholding in the companies. These steps did not alleviate the
discord that continued to brew between them, as is apparent
from the
contents of a letter addressed by Botha to Jurgens on 27 August
2017,
[3]
which discord
ultimately culminated in the urgent application referred to above, in
which proceedings both parties accused one
another
inter
alia
of
withdrawing funds or making payments from the bank accounts of the
practices and misappropriating such amounts, each for their
own
personal gain.
[4]
5.
Pragmatism prevailed during the course of
those proceedings and the parties were able to reach an agreement
which was made an order
of court by V/d Linde J in the urgent court
on 23 July 2019 (‘the order’). Regrettably, any semblance
of agreeability
or hope for future peaceable business relations
between the parties was short lived.
6.
It is not in dispute that Botha had stood
surety for the obligations of the second and third applicants to
creditors, including
Absa Bank, where the respective companies held
banking accounts and enjoyed overdraft facilities. Jurgens, on the
other hand, did
not sign surety or provide any other form of security
for the fulfilment by the companies of their obligations to the bank
or other
creditors.
7.
In
these proceedings,
[5]
Jurgens
accuses Botha of having breached the terms of the order. He seeks,
amongst others, an order declaring Botha to be in contempt
of court
and further interdictory relief and in the alternative, the committal
of Botha to jail for a period of one year, suspended
on certain
conditions. Botha has likewise accused Jurgens of breaching the terms
of the order, and in a counterclaim launched by
him in these
proceedings, he seeks an order declaring Jurgens to be in contempt of
court together with a committal order along
the same lines as that
sought by Jurgens, suspended on certain conditions. Each party seeks
a costs order against the other on
the scale as between attorney and
own
client.
8.
Jurgens alleges that Botha breached the
order in two respects:-
8.1.
By withdrawing his suretyship in a letter
addressed by his attorney to Absa Bank, dated 17 October 2017;
(‘
withdrawal of suretyship’
)
and
8.2.
By effecting electronic payment from the
bank account of the second applicant to Caxton Publishers in respect
of the cost of two
advertisements placed for purposes of filling
posts for the employment of medical doctors at the two practices
conducted by the
second and third appliaants. (‘
payment
of advertising costs’
).
9.
Botha
alleges that Jurgens breached the order in two respects:
[6]
9.1.
By securing payment, on a recurring monthly
basis as from January 2021 from the bank account of the second
applicant, in respect
of an increase in rental payable by the second
applicant to the landlord (Manatech (Pty) Ltd) (“Manatech’)
in respect
of premises leased by the second applicant from Manotech,
with Jurgens acting both in his capacity as co-director of Manotech
[landlord]
and co-director of the second applicant [tenant]
(‘
increase in rental
’);
and
9.2.
By securing repayment to him on 1 July 2021
of an amount of R639 500.00 by way of electronic transfer of funds
from the bank account
of the second applicant to a personal account
of Jurgens, being in respect of a personal loan made by Jurgens to
the second applicant
sometime prior to the launch of the urgent court
proceedings (‘
repayment of loan’)
.
10.
In relation to the allegations aforesaid,
both Jurgens and Botha deny that their actions amounted to a breach
of the provisions
of the order, however, if it were to be found that
same contravened the order, both aver that they did not do so
wilfully or with
mala fides.
In limine point
11.
Botha contends,
in
limine,
that Jurgens lacks authority to
represent the Second and third applicants in his application against
Botha. Botha and Jurgens are
co-directors of the second and third
applicants. Botha did not consent to the launch of the application by
the second and third
applicants.
12.
The
power to act on behalf of a company vests in the board of dirctors
and not a single director.
[7]
13.
On 24 March 2020, a notice in terms of rule
7 was delivered on behalf of Botha in which he disputed the authority
of CVM attorneys
to act on behalf of the second and third applicants.
No response was received to this notice. Jurgens has accordingly
failed to
establish the requisite locus standi in respect of the
second and third applicants. The second and third applicants ought
more
appropriately to have been cited as respondents in their
capacity as t interested parties.
14.
For purposes of judgment, I will regard the
application as having been brought by Jurgens in his personal
capacity against Botha.
Discussion
Relevant legal
principles
15.
The
requirements of contempt of court where a committal order is sought
are trite. An applicant must prove, beyond a reasonable
doubt:- (i)
the existence of the order; (ii) service of the order on the
respondent or that the respondent obtained notice thereof;
(iii) that
the respondent has not complied with the order; and (iv) that this
was done wilfully and
mala
fide.
[8]
Once the applicant has proved the order, service or notice thereof
and non-compliance, wilfulness and
mala
fides
are
assumed and the respondent bears an evidential burden to advance
evidence that establishes a reasonable doubt as to whether
his or her
non-compliance is/was wilful and
mala
fide
.
[9]
16.
The first two of the requirements above are
not implicated in these proceedings. What is in issue is whether or
not the actions
of Botha on the one hand and Jurgens on the other
hand amounted to a breach of any of the provisions of the order and
if so, whether
the breach was committed both deliberately and
mala
fide
.
17.
In
Fakie
supra,
[10]
the
court stated the following:
“
The
test for when disobedience of a civil order constitutes contempt has
come to be stated as whether the breach was committed ‘deliberately
and mala fide’
. A deliberate
disregard is not enough, since the non-complier may genuinely, albeit
mistakenly, believe him- or -herself entitled
to act in the way
claimed to constitute the contempt. In such a case good faith avoids
the infraction
. Even a refusal to
comply that is objectively unreasonable may be bona fide (though
unreasonableness could evidence lack of good
faith).
These requirements –
that the refusal to obey should be both wilful and mala fide, and
that
unreasonable non-compliance, provided it is bona fide, does
not constitute contempt
– accord with the broader
definition of the crime, of which non-compliance with civil orders is
a manifestation. They show
that the offence is committed not by mere
disregard of a court order, but by the deliberate and intentional
violation of the court’s
dignity, repute or authority that this
evinces.
Honest belief that non-compliance is justified or proper
is incompatible with that intent
. ” [Footnotes
omitted] (emphasis added)
18.
Whether a breach of the order was committed
by either Botha or Jurgens in turn depends on an interpretation of
the order.
19.
A
passage that has become a standard for interpreting contracts is the
oft quoted extract from the case of
Endumeni.
[11]
More
recently, the passage has been explicated by Unterhalter AJA in
Capitec
Bank Holdings,
[12]
as follows:
“
[25]
…
The much-cited passages from
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality (
Endumeni)
[13]
offer
guidance as to how to approach the interpretation of the words used
in a document.
It
is the language used, understood in the context in which it is used,
and having regard to the purpose of the provision that constitutes
the unitary exercise of interpretation
.
I would only add that the triad of text, context and purpose should
not be used in a mechanical fashion. It is the relationship
between
the words used, the concepts expressed by those words and the place
of the contested provision within the scheme of the
agreement (or
instrument) as a whole that constitutes the enterprise by recourse to
which a coherent and salient interpretation
is determined. As
Endumeni
emphasised, citing well-known cases, ‘[t]he inevitable point of
departure is the language of the provision itself’.
[14]
[26]…
Endumeni
is
not a charter for judicial constructs premised upon what a contract
should be taken to mean from a vantage point that is not
located in
the text of what the parties in fact agreed. Nor does
Endumeni
licence
judicial interpretation that imports meanings into a contract so as
to make it a better contract, or one that is ethically
preferable.”
(footnotes included) (emphasis added)
20.
The order in question reads, in relevant
part, as follows:
“
1.
The First Applicant
[Jurgens]
and the First Respondent
[Botha]
is
(sic)
interdicted and restrained from
conducting any banking or financial transactions in respect of the
bank account held by the Second
and Third Applicants
[the companies]
and will not open any
further bank accounts;
2.
The First Applicant
[Jurgens]
is
interdicted from diverting any income and business from the Second
and Third Applicants;
3.
Mynardt Boshoff Professional Accountants of Tax Accounting
Secretarial Financial Services
and/or a duly
(sic)
representative of the said company is
ordered (authorised) to:
3.1
attend the practices of the Second and Third Applicants when same is
necessary in order
to confirm all cash transactions and cash deposits
and the billing of patients of the Second and Third applicants and
all other
financial documentation required by him;
3.2
determine the nature of and the amount of any and all expenses to be
paid on a bi-weekly
basis with the assistance and co-operation of
Renita van der Merwe;
4.
In the event of a dispute as to the nature of and the amount and
identity of the creditors
to be paid, Mynardt Boshoff personally will
liase with Nick Claasens of Nick Claasens Financial Management in
order to determine
the said amount to be paid and the validity of
such payment;
5.
The First Applicant will receive on a monthly basis his monthly
salary, calculated at 50% of his fees generated and no profit sharing
will be paid in the interim or any personal expenses of the First
Applicant or First Respondent unless agreed in writing by the
First
Applicant and the First Respondent
.”
21.
It is common cause that Renita V/d Merwe
was employed as the financial manager in the medical practices of the
second and third
applicants. It is also common cause that Mynardt
Boshoff (‘
Boshoff’
)
was generally looking after the interests of Botha whilst Nick
Claasens (‘
Claasens’
)
was generally looking after the interests of Jurgens. They were
appointed because Claasens was initially instructed to conduct
an
investigation into Botha’s conduct and Boshoff was instructed
by Botha to look after his interests.
22.
The second and third applicants each held
bank accounts at Absa Bank. These accounts were referred to in the
papers as ‘
accounts 1 and 2’
.
23.
It is convenient to deal first with Botha’s
alleged breach of the order, as contended for by Jurgens.
Case for Jurgens in
relation to Botha’s alleged breach of the order
Re Withdrawal of
suretyship
24.
It is common cause that Botha caused his
attorney (Scholtz) to address a letter to Absa Bank on 17 October
2019, in which the following
was said:
“
We
are acting for and on behalf of DR CHRISTOFFEL JACOBUS BOTHA …
who stood surety and provided security by way of an immovable
property, NO. 1 DE BEER STREET, STRAND, for and on behalf of the
indebtedness of the aforesaid two practises including but not
limited
to the overdraft accounts of the aforesaid account numbers. This
withdrawal of surety is for any and all accounts at ABSA
for and on
behalf of Dr Botha.
We
place on record that at the date and time of presentation of this
letter and instruction hereof, both the accounts are in credit.
Our
client hereby withdraws his surety in respect thereof, which includes
his surety on the overdraft as from 17 October 2019 and
advise the
bank accordingly.
We
place on record that should th[e] accounts be allowed to proceed into
overdraft, our client will not be held responsible due
to the
negligence of the bank to comply with this letter.
Finally,
it is our instructions that we have been advised that Dr Jurgens are
(sic) of the intention to liquidate the aforesaid
Companies and our
client refuses to be liable for debts of the Company.”
[15]
25.
It is not in dispute that the withdrawal by
Botha of his suretyship, coupled with his letter of 4 December 2019,
eventually led
to the bank terminating the companies’ overdraft
facilities.
26.
The
thrust of the orders made by his Van der Linde J is that both Jurgens
and Botha were interdicted from and restrained from conducting
any
banking or financial transaction in respect of any of the bank
accounts held by the Second and Third Applicants and from opening
any
further bank accounts, as envisaged in par 1 of the order.
Furthermore, Mynhardt Boshoff Professional Accountants were to attend
to the practices of the Second and Third Applicants and were tasked
to (i) confirm certain cash transactions/deposits and the billing
of
patients and to (ii) authorise or approve ‘
the
nature of and the amount of any and all expenses to be paid’,
as envisaged in
par 3 of the order. In other words, Mynhardt Boshoff (Botha’s
agent) had to consent to business related expenses
being paid before
such expenses could be paid.
27.
The case made out by
Jurgens in his founding affidavit is that in terms of Scholtz’s
letter to Absa Bank (referred to in par
20 above), Botha’s
attorney instructed Absa Bank to withdraw the overdraft facilities in
respect of accounts 1 and 2. In
his replying affidavit he referred to
Scholtz’s letter of 4 December 2019, in which Botha informed
the bank that he did not
consent to the grant of overdraft facilities
or loans whereby the moveable property of the practices would be used
as security
to cover any overdraft facilities in respect of the
practices
.
28.
Jurgens contends that the withdrawal by
Botha of the suretyship and his instruction to the bank to terminate
the overdraft facilities
on the accounts of the second and third
applicants amounts to the
conduct
by him of a
banking or financial
transaction
that is prohibited by
paragraph 1 of the order. In this regard, he relies on a literal
interpretation based on dictionary meanings
of the words ‘conduct’,
‘financial’ and ‘transaction’ to support the
construction contended
for by him. He argues that the effect of
Botha’s withdrawal of his suretyship, namely, that the
overdraft facilities would
be and in fact were terminated by the
bank, a consequence which was in the contemplation of Botha, coupled
with his further action
in instructing the bank to cancel the
overdraft facilities on the bank accounts of the companies or not to
allow the companies
to have overdraft facilities in future, amounted
to the conduct of a financial or banking transaction as envisaged in
paragraph
1 of the order. Jurgens averred that Botha’s actions
aforesaid were malicious and mala fide, in that the termination of
overdraft
facilities seriously curtailed the freedom to obtain a loan
from the bank and disenabled the companies from conducting business
for which a loan or a loan facility would be required.
29.
Dictionary
definitions of the word ‘
conduct
’
or ‘
conducting
’
include, inter alia, a person’s consent
to
and performance of a transaction;
Conducting
in
relation to a business, means operating, carrying on, engaging in,
doing or pursuing a business transaction
.
[16]
Definitions
of the word ‘
conduct
’
from the Oxford languages,
[17]
include,
inter
alia
:
‘To
organize and carry out, manage or direct, or be in control of’.
30.
Dictionary
definitions of the word ‘
transaction
’
include,
inter
alia
,
‘
a
communicative action or activity involving two parties or things that
reciprocally affect or influence each other’;
[18]
‘
a
piece of business that is done between people’;
[19]
‘
The
act of conducting or carrying out (business, negotiations,
plans)’;
[20]
31.
The
Collins English dictionary defines ‘
financial
transaction’
as: ‘a piece of business, for example
an
act of
buying
or
selling something,
relating
to or involving money.
[21]
32.
Seen from a purely literal perspective, it
could be argued that par 1 of the order prevented any communicative
action involving
money in respect of the bank accounts of the
companies. However, when the relevant background circumstances are
considered for
purposes of determining the intention of the parties,
it appears that par 1 of the order was designed to prevent either
party from
performing unapproved transactions such as transfers,
payments or withdrawals on the bank accounts of the companies for an
illegitimate
purpose, i.e., for the personal benefit of the one party
at the expense of the other, in the context of both parties having
previously
allegedly withdrawn and/or misappropriated funds from the
business accounts for personal gain. This interpretation is
corroborated
by par 3 of the order in terms whereof payment of
legitimated business expenses, as verified and approved by Mynhardt,
could be
effected at the instance of either party.
33.
Botha was the only surety in respect of the
overdrafts and his immovable property was encumbered to secure
payment of any overdraft
liability. In this context and bearing in
mind that Botha was entitled in law to give notice of the withdrawal
of his suretyship,
Botha’s action of withdrawing his suretyship
at a time when the accounts were in credit can hardly be said to fall
within
the purview of paragraph 1 of the order. It did not amount to
a transaction involving the payment, transfer or withdrawal of money.
The fact that it may have resulted in the recall of the overdraft
facilities, with money potentially being at stake, does not alter
that fact.
34.
Botha
denies having instructed the bank to cancel the second and third
respondents’ existing overdraft facilities. He withdrew
his
suretyship at a time when the bank accounts of the companies were in
credit. His reason for doing so is explained in his letter
of 17
October 2019, namely, because he did not want to be held personally
liable in terms of his suretyship for the liabilities
of the
companies in circumstances where Jurgens had professed the intention
to liquidate the companies and, as further explained
in the answering
affidavit, in the context of not being included in the management of
the businesses under circumstances where
he had steadfastly been
refused access to certain records
[22]
he contended he required for purposes of protecting his interests.
35.
Botha also alleges that he was advised that
nothing contained in the order precluded him from withdrawing his
suretyships. This
evidence is corrobotated in the confirmatory
affidavit of Scholtz. In this regard, Botha’s evidence was as
follows:
“
I
bona fide believed that the withdrawal of my suretyships would not
amount to the conduct of any banking or financial transactions
in
respect of any bank account held by the Second and Third Applicants,
which is prohibited in the Court Order. In the Urgent Application
the
Applicants relied on the alleged unlawful withdrawals and payments
made by me from the banking accounts of the Second and Third
Respondents which withdrawals and payments allegedly benefited me. t
is clear from the context of the founding affidavit in the
Urgent
Application that the Applicants' sole intention was to prevent me
from making such transfers or payments from the Second
and Third
Applicants' bank accounts. The question of the withdrawal of my
suretyships was never raised in the Applicants' founding
affidavit in
the urgent application.”
36.
Jurgens did not dispute having warned on
more than one occasion that he intended to liquidate the companies.
He acknowledges in
his papers that one of the consequences of signing
a surety is that once an entity is liquidated, the creditor can call
upon payment.
37.
I am not persuaded that Jurgens has proved
beyond a reasonable doubt that Botha deliberately transgressed par 1
of the court order,
but even if I am wrong in this regard, I conclude
that Botha has set out sufficient facts to prevent the conclusion,
beyond reasonable
doubt, that he acted
mala
fide.
Botha’s payment
of advertising costs
38.
Jurgens’ complaint is that Botha had
placed two advertisements in a local newspaper in order to fill
vacant positions that
arose after medical doctors employed in the
practices of the second and third applicants had resigned.
39.
It is common cause that Botha had caused
payments in the sums of R6 575.24 and R6 434.48 to be made
from one of the banking
accounts in question. He did so without first
seeking the approval or authorisation from Mynhardt of such expenses,
which constituted
constitute legitimate business expenses, which
Mynhardt subsequently ratified.
40.
Even if I were to accept that these
expenses comprised legitimate business expenses, there can be no
gainsaying the fact that Botha’s
unilateral actions aforesaid
were prohibited by and fell foul of par 1 of the order.
41.
Botha’s explanation in this regard is
that the resignation of the doctors from the two practises affected
the monthly number
of consultations and thus the amount of income to
be generated in the practices, and by extension, Botha’s
financial interest
in the companies. As Jurgens had made no attempt
to fill the vacant positions, he took it upon himself to advertise
the vacancies
during September 2019.
42.
Botha’s evidence is the following:
“
Realizing
that the First Applicant has no intention to fill these positions and
realizing the detrimental effect it has on the two
practices and on
my financial interests in the First and Second Applicants, I during
September 2019 decided to place two advertisements
in the Krugersdorp
News and Roodepoort Northsider newspapers in which the vacant
positions were advertised. … By agreement
with the publishers
we would qualify for a discount and one third of the price if payment
had been made immediately. When the accounts
rendered by Caxton
Newspapers were not paid, I took it upon myself to make these
payments. In the process I made two transfers
from one of the
business accounts in the amounts of R6 575.24 and R6 434.48…
I
did not hide the fact that I had made these two payments. On 17
September 2019 Scholtz Attorneys inter alia advised Carol Van
Molendorff Attoneys in a letter that I have placed an advertisement
and that I shall be conducting interviews. …I remain
a
director of both companies. By law I have a duty to act in good
faith, for a proper purpose and in the best interests of the
Second
and Third Applicants. I at all times believed that I was acting in
good faith and for a proper purpose and in the best interests
of the
Second and Third Applicants as required by
section 76(3)
of the
Companies Act, 71 of 2008
and that I had a duty towards the Second
and third applicant to do so...These expenses had been incurred for
the benefit of the
practices of the Second and Third Applicants. It
was in the interests of both the Second and Third Applicants that the
vacancies
be filled. I managed to secure a substantial discount
should payment be made speedily. However, the First Respondent
deliberately
delayed payment of these amounts and in order to avail
ourselves of the discount, I made payment...After these payments had
been
made and upon the First Applicant questioning the validity of
these payments, I discussed the matter with Mynhardt Boshoff, who
confirmed that these payments are business related and should be
paid.”
43.
Jurgens disputes that it was necessary to
fill the vacancies. Whether or not he is correct is not the issue in
these proceedings.
The issue is whether or not Botha’s evidence
is sufficient to dispel an assumption of wilfulness and
mala
fides
. Accepting that Mynhardt
subsequently ratified the payments as being a legitimate business
expense, and although the amounts involved
in respect of advertising
costs were small, Botha’s actions should not be trivialised and
did not entitle him to disregard
the order. I am unable, however, to
find that he acted
mala fide
in seeking to sustain the financial well-being of the practices for
the benefit of both shareholders. This leads to the ineluctable
conclusion that contempt has not been established beyond a reasonable
doubt.
Case for Botha in
relation to Jurgens’s alleged breach of the order
Re Increase In Rental
44.
It
is not in dispute that Jurgens, acting in his capacity as co-director
and 50% shareholder of Manatech, being the landlord in
respect of
premises occupied by the second applicant as tenant, concurred with
the decision of his co-director (one, Roelof Venter)
that rental
payable by the practice should increase from R22 220.49 to
R45000.00 per month, commencing on 1 January 2020.
In his capacity as
co-director of the lessee, Jurgens acceded to the increase in rental
without the knowledge or consent of Botha.
Payment of rental had
previously always been effected by way of monthly debit order.
[23]
45.
Botha’s
complaint is that payment of increased rental amounted to a financial
transaction in respect of the bank account of
the second applicant
and that Jurgens breached par 3.2 of the order in that Boshoff was
not asked to determine and approve the
amount of the increased
rental. He was merely informed thereof in an email sent by Renita Van
der Merwe on 21 December 2020.
46.
According to Botha, e
ither
Jurgens or Van der Merwe must have increased the debit order from R22
220.69 to R45 000.00. If it was Van der Merwe, she would
have done so
on the instructions of Jurgens. In either event, Jurgens increased or
caused the adjustment of the debit order whilst
knowing that he was
interdicted and restrained from conducting any banking or financial
transactions in respect of any bank account
of the Second Applicant
in terms of paragraph 1 of the order. By increasing the monthly
rental by more than 100%, the First Respondent
gained a personal
financial benefit, through his shareholding in Manatech, to the
detriment of the Second Applicant.
47.
According to
Jurgens, Venter was the person who was running the business of
Manatech and it is he who took all financial decisions.
In a letter
dated 10 December 2020, he informed the second applicant that the
monthly rental payable by the second applicant would
increase to
R45 000 per month as from 1 January 2021, and called upon the
directors of the second applicant to provide suretyships
in respect
of the company’s rental payment obligations. According to
Jurgens, the rent payable by the second applicant had
not increased
since 2011 and an increase was implemented with a view to bring the
rental charged in line with comparative rentals
being charged in
respect of premises such as those occupied by the second applicant.
These allegations were confirmed by Venter
in a confirmatory
affidavit.
48.
Jurgens denies having
acted in breach of the court order. His evidence is to the effect
that Mynardt was not required to authorise
or approve an increase in
rent required by the landlord in circumstances where nothing
contained in the relevant lease agreement
precluded the landlord from
increasing the rental and nothing therein contained either obliged it
to negotiate any increase or
the amount thereof with the lessee.
Mynardt would not have been able to prevent the increase in rent,
although nothing prevented
him from approaching the directors of
Manatech to request them not to increase the rent. He did not do so,
but accepted the increase
or at least did not voice his objection
thereto or dissatisfaction therewith. According to Jurgens, ‘it
does not matter who
caused the increase in the debit order as such
increase simply followed the decision to increase the rent.’ In
any event,
Jurgens avers that it was Renita v/d Merwe who caused the
debit order to be adjusted at the bank. She does not ever put monthly
recurring payments such as rent in respect of the premises of the
second and third applicants on a list that was given to Boshoff
monthly by her for his approval. She would forward the invoices
received from creditors during the course of the month to Boshoff
for
his approval. These allegations were confirmed by V/d Merwe in a
confirmatory affidavit. Jurgens alleges that no dispute was
raised in
respect of the increased rental until the counter-claim was launched
in May 2021, some three months after Botha had acquired
knowledge of
the increase in rent.
49.
Jurgens sought to distance himself from the
decision to charge increased rental by Manatech and the payment of
increased rental
to be made by the second applicant. On the objective
facts, however, he was in control of the management of the practice
and would
have had to accede to an increase in rental on behalf of
the second applicant. Any suggestion by Jurgens to the effect that
V/d
Merwe caused the debit order to be adjusted without his knowledge
or instructions, is far-fetched. As Jurgens himself alleged, if
the
tenant was unhappy with the extent of the increase imposed by the
landlord, such tenant would have had to find other premises
from
which to trade.
50.
I am inclined to agree with Botha that an
increase of more than 100% in rental amounts to a financial
transaction in respect of
the bank account of the second applicant,
not only because it involved a change of the existing bank debit
order in respect of
the monthly rental payable but because it
resulted in payment of increased expenditure by the practice, which
was to be debited
against the bank account of the practice on a
monthly basis. In my view, it matters not that it was to be a
recurring payment.
The increased rental comprised a new business
expense and it required Boshoff’s approval in terms of par 3.2
of the order.
Yet Boshoff’s approval was not sought, in
contravention of the order. He was simply advised of the increase,
that it would
be implemented as from January 2021, and the amount
thereof.
51.
The issue then arises as to whether the
order was deliberately contravened with
mala
fides.
Even if I were to accept that
Jurgens authorised the adjustment of the debit order pursuant to the
increase in rental, neither
party provided a copy of the relevant
lease agreement in their papers. It is thus not possible to find that
Jurgens’ allegations
regarding the landlord’s unilateral
entitlement to increase the rent are incorrect. According to Jurgens,
he genuinely (albeit
mistakenly) believed that the increase in rent
did not require Boshoff’s approval, firstly, because his
approval was not
required or ever previously sought in respect of
monthly recurring payments which were not put on the list that is
given by V/d
Merwe to Boshoff as envisaged in par 3 of the order.
Secondly, because Jurgens believed that Boshoff would not have been
empowered
to determine the legal validity of the increase in rent or
to prevent it from being put into effect by the landlord. Whilst it
is correct that Boshoff’s approval in respect of the increased
rental payable was not sought, it seems doubtful that he would
have
had the power to do anything about it other than to verify the
landlord’s decision as it pertained to the nature of
the
expense and the amount of the expense. He was indeed informed of the
increase and the amount thereof. Botha first obtained
knowledge of
the increased rental payment in mid-January 2021 when he perused the
relevant bank statement, but did not at that
juncture raise a dispute
such as to require Boshoff to liase with Claasens in terms of par 4
of the order. Although Boshoff confirmed
that he would not have
authorised the increased rental payment, had his approval been
sought, he also did not object to or prevent
the payment from going
through. In these circumstances, I conclude that Botha has not
established beyond a reasonable doubt that
Jurgens breached the order
deliberately and with
mala fides
and there can thus be no finding of contempt of court in respect of
this complaint.
Re Repayment of Loan
52.
This complaint relates to a payment in the
amount of R639 500.00 that was made from the bank account of the
second applicant
to the personal bank account of Jurgens. According
to Jurgens, this was a repayment of a loan he had made to the second
applicant
in April 2019, i.e., prior to the grant of the order on 23
July 2019, and at a time when the practice needed funds in order to
pay its business expenses, including staff salaries. Jurgens states
that the amount was required by him at the time because he owed
money
to SARS.
53.
On 23 June 2021 Van der Merwe requested
Boshoff to approve the repayment of the loan by the second applicant
to Jurgens. Boshoff
took the view that he lacked authority to approve
or ratify any transaction which occurred prior to June 2019, stating
that his
task was to authorise (or refuse) payment of business
expenses arising after June 2019. V/d Merwe then approached Claasens
on the
matter.
54.
Having verified the loan with reference to
documents provided by Van der Merwe, and having satisfied himself as
to the nature of
the transaction, i.e. the repayment of a short-term
loan to Jurgens as creditor of the second applicant, Claasens then
authorised
the transaction and informed Van der Merwe that she may
proceed to make payment to Jurgens.
55.
Repayment of the loan to Jurgens, which
took place by means of a transfer of funds from the bank account of
the second applicant
to a personal account of Jurgens, undoubtedly
amounts to a banking or financial transaction as envisaged in par 1
of the order.
Botha’s complaint is that despite Boshoff not
authorising the payment, the payment was nonetheless effected, in
breach of
par 3.2 of the order, and in circumstances where Claasens
lacked the authority to authorise payment of any expense on a proper
construction of par 4 of the order.
56.
There is no dispute between the parties
that par 3.2 of the order required Boshoff to determine the nature of
any and all business
related expenses of each practice and the amount
of any and all business expenses owing to creditors of each practice,
with the
assistance and co-operation of Van der Merwe.
57.
In his heads of argument, counsel for Botha
submits that the fact that Boshoff’s approval for the loan
expense was sought,
is confirmation that Jurgens knew that the
approval of Boshoff was required therefore. Despite the knowledge
that Boshoff did not
authorise payment, the payment was nevertheless
made. He submits that on a proper construction of par 4 of the order,
no authority
was bestowed on Claasens to authorise any payment. He
further submits that Jurgens, in the absence of approval from
Boshoff, wilfully
decided to continue with the transaction well
knowing that this would amount to a breach of the terms of the order.
58.
It bears mention that Jurgens disputes that
he approached either Boshoff or Claasens for approval for the
repayment of the loan.
He states that Van der Merwe did so of her own
accord, a fact that is confirmed by her in her confirmatory
affidavit. There is
nothing to refute the evidence of Jurgens that he
had loaned and advanced funds to each practice; that he was a
legitimate creditor
of each practice in respect of the loans; and
that the second and third applicants were liable to repay same to
him.
59.
Jurgens’s evidence is to the effect
that he understood that Boshoff had absolved himself from the matter
on the basis that
it fell outside the scope of his authority, as a
result of which Van der Merwe then approached Claasens for approval
to repay the
loan. I cannot conclude that either Jurgens or Van der
Merwe acted mala fide in approaching Claasens. Van der Merwe could
not herself
authorise payments in terms of the order. Boshoff could
do so but exempted himself from even considering the request for
approval
in relation to what was ostensibly demonstrated by Van der
Merwe to be a legitimate debt, owed by the second applicant to a
known
creditor (Jurgens), in respect of an apparent authentic loan
transaction. Even if I were to accept that Van der Merwe approached
Claasens with the acquiescence and collaboration of Jurgens or that
Jurgens was the driving force behind the repayment, it is clear
from
a contextual reading of Jurgens’ affidavit in conjunction with
Van der Merwe’s affidavit, that it did not occur
to either of
them that Van der Merwe was doing anything wrong by approaching
Claasens to sanction the repayment of the debt. Nor
did they do so
whilst knowing that Claasens was not empowered to authorise payment
in terms of par 4 of the order, as contended
for by Botha. In other
words, even if the actions of Van der Merwe are to be imputed to
Jurgens, I cannot find, on the evidence
put up by Jurgens, that he
deliberately disobeyed the order or that he did so with
mala
fides
. The order is silent about what
is to happen in circumstances where Boshoff believes he has no
authority to participate in the
exercise of determining the nature
and amount of an expense that arises for payment, particularly in
circumstances where there
appeared to be no dispute about the nature
of the expense, the amount of the expense or the identity of the
creditor to be paid.
60.
It is common cause that Boshoff’s
approval was sought for the repayment of the loan. On the evidence
submitted by Jurgens,
there was clearly a genuine intention and
effort to comply with the terms of the court order. Far from refusing
to authorise payment,
Boshoff merely declined to consider the request
at all, adopting the view that any decision on the matter fell
outside the scope
of his authority, simply because the loan in
question had been advanced prior to June 2019.
61.
On a proper construction of par 4 of the
order, in the event of a dispute arising as to the nature of a
expense incurred by the
second or third applicants or the amount
thereof or the identity of the creditor to be paid, Boshoff is to
liaise
with
Claasens in order to determine the amount to be paid and the validity
of such payment. The clause in my view clearly envisages
a resolution
of the dispute by agreement between Boshoff and Claasens regarding
the authenticity of the expense and the amount
that is required to be
paid to a verified creditor in respect of such expense. In other
words, in the event of a dispute, Boshoff
is not empowered to
unilaterally act for purposes of authorising (or refusing to
authorise) payment. He has to confer with Claasens
(as opposed to V/d
Merwe) for purposes of resolving the dispute in order to settle the
issue of whether the expense is to be paid
and if so, the amount
thereof and/or the identity of the creditor who seeks payment and/or
the validity of the debt, before he
is empowered to authorise
payment.
62.
In all the circumstances, I am not
persuaded that Botha has established a case for contempt of court on
the part of Jurgens. Put
differently, Jurgens has set out sufficient
facts to prevent the conclusion that he acted
mala
fide
in procuring repayment of his loan
from the second applicant in the circumstances under which it
occurred.
63.
For all the reasons given, both the
application for contempt of court by Jurgens and the
counter-application by Botha both fall
to be dismissed. As neither
party succeeded in obtaining relief, I consider it fair and just for
each party to pay their own costs.
64.
Although Jurgens sought an order that Botha
be interdicted from ‘
directly
or indirectly providing any instructions to any third party,
including but not limited to Mynhardt Boshoff Professional
Accountants of Tax Accounting Secretarial Financial Services in
respect of any banking or financial transactions in respect of
any
bank account held by the Second and/or further Applicants’,
this relief was not seriously pursued at the hearing of the
matter
and I am not persuaded that such relief is warranted on the facts of
the matter.
65.
Accordingly, the following order is
granted:
ORDER:
1
Both the application instituted by the
first applicant (Jaco Cornelius Juhl Jurgens) and the
counter-application instituted by the
respondent (Christoffel Jakobus
Botha) are hereby dismissed.
2
Each party is to pay his own costs.
AVRILLE
MAIER-FRAWLEY
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT,
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Date
of hearing:
10 May 2022
Judgment
delivered
22 August 2022
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ legal representatives by email, publication on
Caselines and release to SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is
deemed to be have been at 10h00 on 22 August 2022.
APPEARANCES:
Counsel
for Applicants:
Adv. JJW Hayes
Attorneys
for Applicants:
CVM Attorneys
Counsel
for Respondent
Adv MA Kruger
Attorneys
for Respondent:
Scholtz Attorneys
[1]
The
main application was instituted by the 3 applicants in these
proceedings against the respondent cited in these proceedings
together with 3 others. In Part B of the urgent application, Jurgens
sought inter alia, an order declaring Botha as a delinquent
director, alternatively, that he be removed as a director of the
companies. Part A was for interdictory relief which culminated
in
the order to which these proceedings relate
[2]
This
appears from annexures ‘L’ at p010-37 a letter dated 28
July 2017, which was written on the letterhead of the
second
applicant and which was signed by both Jurgens and Botha in their
capacity as directors. It reads as follows:
“
Dr
Jaco Botha sal vanaf 28 Julie 2017 geen verdure besluite neem jeens
finansies of personeel van Jurgens & Botha Inc of Botha
&
Jurgens Inc nie.
Jaco
Botha het ooreengekom om nie enige betalings of transaksies uit
enige bankrekening wat verband hou met enige bogenoemde praktyke
aan
te gaan nie
.”
[3]
See:
Annexure “M’ at p 010-38, being the letter dated 27
August 2017 addressed by Botha to Jurgens in which Botha
pointed out
that he had not abdicated his responsibilities as a director in the
companies by virtue of annexure ‘L’,
and in which he
reiterated that he retained a financial interest in the operations
of the companies for purposes of ensuring
that they remained
profitable, not least of all because his personal assets were on the
line in relation to the security provided
by him for the overdraft
and other obligations of the companies. To this end, he requested
that Jurgens at least keep him informed
of any decisions taken by
Jurgens that involved personnel and finances in the practices.
[4]
Botha
had signing powers on the bank accounts of the practices and
authorisation
to
conduct electronic transactions, for example, to effect electronic
payments, on the accounts. He did not relinquish such signing
powers
and authority but continued to make payments/perform transactions on
the accounts, which led to the accusations made by
Jurgens against
him in the urgent application.
[5]
The
main application for contempt was brought by Jurgens and the
companies against Botha. The counter-application was brought
by
Botha against Jurgens and the companies.
[6]
Whilst
t
wo
other instances of breach were alleged in the counter-claim, these
were not pursued at the hearing of the matter.
[7]
See:
section 66
of the
Companies Act, 71 of 2008
;
Ganes
and Another v Telecom Namibia Ltd
2001
(3) 615 (SCA) at paras 18-19.
[8]
See:
Fakie
N.O. v CCII Systems (Pty) Ltd
[2006] ZASCA 52
;
2006
(4) SA 326
(SCA) at par 42 (“Fakie’);
Pheko
v Ekurhuleni City
2015
(5) SA 600
(CC) at par 36 (‘;
Secretary,
Judicial Commission v Zuma
2021
(5) SA 327
(CC) at par 37.
[9]
Id,
Fakie
and
Pheko.
[10]
Id
Fakie,
paras
9 &10.
[11]
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
2012
(4) SA 593
(SCA)
(
Endumeni
),
para 18 at p. 603F, where the following was said:
“
Whatever
the nature of the document, consideration must be given to
the
language used in the light of the ordinary rules of grammar and
syntax; the context in which the provision appears; the apparent
purpose to which it is directed; and the material known to those
responsible for its production.
Where
more than one meaning is possible, each possibility must be weighed
in the light of all these factors. The process is objective
,
not subjective.
A sensible
meaning is to be preferred to o
ne
that leads to insensible or unbusinesslike results or undermines the
apparent purpose of the document
.”
(emphasis
added)
[12]
Capitec
Bank Holdings Ltd and Another v Coral Lagoon Investments 194 (Pty)
Ltd and Others
2022
(1) SA 100
(SCA) at paras 25, 26 & 51.
[13]
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni
Municipality
[2012]
ZASCA 13
;
[2012]
2 All SA 262
(SCA);
2012
(4) SA 593
(SCA)
(
Endumeni
)
at 18
[14]
Endumeni,
par 18.
[15]
This
was followed by a further letter addressed by Scholtz to the bank,
dated 4 December 2019, in which he informed the bank on
behalf of
Botha that “
Dr
Botha does not Consent for you to grant an overdraft and/or any
loans to Dr Jurgens, Botha & Jurgens Inc. and Jurgens &
Botha Inc. More specifically, our client does not agree that the
moveable property of the practices be used as security to cover
any
overdraft facilities in respect of said practices.
”
[16]
See;
https://www.lawinsider.com/dictionary/conducting
[17]
See:
https://www.google.com/search?rlz=1C1CHBD_enZA910ZA910&q=Conduct+meaning&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwiiz6v3-tL5AhVDmqQKHd-KDrAQ1QJ6BAgyEAE&biw=1280&bih=913&dpr=1
[18]
Per
The
Merriam-Webster dictionary
[19]
Per
The Oxford Learner’s dictionary:
https://www.oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com/definition/american_english/transaction#:~:text=%2Ftr%C3%A6n%CB%88z%C3%A6k%CA%83n%2F,transactions%20between%20companies%20commercial%20transactions
[20]
Per
Wiktionary
[21]
See:
https://www.collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english/financial-transaction
[22]
A
list of the records in question are set out in par 24 of the
answering affidavit.
[23]
That
the increase in rental would likely redound to the benefit of
Jurgens financially, given his shareholding in Manatech, whilst
at
the same time likely impacting adversely upon him financially, given
his shareholding in the second applicant, seems fairly
obvious.
sino noindex
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