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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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[2022] ZAGPJHC 598
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## Breadline Africa RSA (NPC) and Another v Bhana (2022/3648)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 598 (24 August 2022)
Breadline Africa RSA (NPC) and Another v Bhana (2022/3648)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 598 (24 August 2022)
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sino date 24 August 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
Case
No. 2022/3648
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
NO
24
AUGUST 2022
In
the matter between:
Breadline
Africa RSA (NPC)
1
st
Applicant
Marion
Wagner- Snyders
2
nd
Applicant
And
Farzeen
Bhana
Respondent
JUDGMENT
Thupaatlase
AJ
Introduction
[1]
This is an unopposed application directing that the respondent to be
declared a delinquent director in terms of Section 162(5)
(c)
[1]
of the
Companies Act, 71 of 2008
and further directing that
respondent pays costs of this application.
[2]
The first applicant is a registered NPC with registration number
2006/015075/08. The first Applicant is the genesis of many
primary
juristic entities of a larger international public benefit
organisations called Breadlines Africa (BLA) and was established
in
1993.
[3]
The stated object of the first applicant is to undertake a range of
activities and projects including the provision of funding
and other
practical assistance in order to address conditions of poverty.
[4]
The second applicant is one of the directors of the first applicant.
She deposed to a founding affidavit in support of this
application.
The application is unopposed. The respondent was personally served
with a notice of this application on 09
th
February 2022.
Evidence
[5]
The affidavit of the second applicant provides in graphic details the
conduct of the respondent which it is argued, warrants
that she
should be declared a delinquent director. The affidavit reveals that
during her interview for a position to the board
of BLA, she
presented a falsified CV. The CV gave a list of University
qualifications from Wits University and London School of
Economics
and other post graduate qualifications. Upon investigations it was
established that she didn’t have any of those
qualifications.
She also presented a false reference.
[6]
The respondent attended international board meetings of BLA and made
false presentations about the work she claimed to be doing
in
furtherance of the aims and objectives of the first respondent. The
respondent also presented a doctored invoice to try and
defraud the
first applicant. The scheme of fraud perpetrated by the respondent
also involved false emails.
Legal
Framework
[7]
Section 162 (5) (c) of the Companies Act, 71 of 2008 (the Act) read
with sections 76 (2)
[2]
,
76(3)
[3]
and 77(3)
[4]
of the Act provides the requirements to be satisfied in order to
succeed in an application to declare a director a delinquent
director.
[8]
As already indicated the affidavit in support of the application was
deposed to by the second applicant who is a director of
the first
applicant. Section 162 of the Act gives a very wide range of persons’
locus standi
to can apply to court to declare a director
delinquent, this include a director of the company. The second
applicant therefore
has the requisite
locus standi
to bring
the present application.
[9]
The question of legal standing is critical to be determined. It is
because ‘
in
the light of the extensive range of persons who are empowered to
apply to court to disqualify a director from holding office
under
section 162 (2) of the Act, it becomes important to guard against
abuse of the section. This because frivolous and vexatious
applications may be lodged by persons with locus standi
[5]
’
.
Upon reading of the founding affidavit, I am satisfied that legal
standing has been established and that the applicant is not
motivated
by malice and further she is not frivolous or vexatious.
[10]
In order for an applicant to succeed in obtaining a declaration of
delinquency, very serious misconduct must be demonstrated.
In the
judgment of
Lewis Group Ltd v Woolman and Others
2017
(2) SA 547
(WCC) at para [18] the following is stated in this regard
:
‘It follows that for a company or any of its shareholders to
succeed in obtaining a declaration of delinquency in respect
of any
of the company’s directors or former directors, they must
demonstrate very serious misconduct by the person concerned.
The
relevant causes of delinquency entail either dishonesty, wilful
misconduct, or gross negligence. Establishing so-called ‘ordinary’
negligence, poor business decision making or misguided reliance by a
director on incorrect professional advice will not be enough.’
[11]
It is also important to understand the rationale for the enactment of
this provision. In the case of
Gihwala and Others v Grancy
Property Ltd and Others
2017 (2) SA SSA 337 (SCA) at para
[142] the court held that ‘
In order to assess these
arguments, it is appropriate first to examine the purpose of section
162 (5). Contrary to the submissions
on behalf of Mr Gihwala and Mr
Manala, it is not a penal provision. Its purpose is to protect the
investing public, whether sophisticated
or unsophisticated, against
the type of conduct that leads to an order of delinquency, and to
protect those who deal with companies
against misconduct of
delinquent directors.’ See also
Msimang NO and
Another Katuliiba and Others
[2013] 1 SA 580
(GSJ)
where
the judge of this division expressed the same viewpoint.
[12]
The question whether the grounds of complaint, considered in the
context of the evidence contain in the founding affidavit
in the
current proceedings, make out a sustainable case capable of
supporting the order sought in terms of section 165 (3) will
be
considered presently to the extent necessary. It also important to
note that the respondent has not opposed the application
and the
facts as stated in the founding affidavit are not disputed.
[13]
The correct legal position is therefore that a director must be
declared delinquent director if such a director has by gross
negligence inflicted harm on the company. It is correct that if any
of the grounds set out in section 162 are satisfied, a court
is
obliged to make an order declaring a person to be a delinquent
director, thereby disqualifying him or her from office. This
is made
clear by the word ‘must’ used in section 162(5). The use
of the word makes it mandatory for the court to declare
a director if
the evidence establishes such conduct.
[14]
A court has no discretion but to declare a director acting in the
manner contemplated in
s 77(3)
(b)
of the
Companies Act 71
of 2008
to be a delinquent director in terms of
s 162(5)
(c)
(iv)
(bb)
. The consequence of an order of delinquency is that such
a person is disqualified from being a director of the company. See
Rabinowitz v Van Graan and Others
2013 (5) SA
315
(GSJ)
[15]
The evidence shows that the respondent breach the trust, wilfully
misconducted herself and abused her position as director
of the
company. In the process as per
Section 162
(c) (1) and (iv) (aa) she
also breached various aspects of Sections 76 and 77 of the Act. In
particular Sections 76(2) (a); 76
(3); 77 (2) and 77 (3).
[16]
The respondent owed a duty not only to the first applicant but also
to the international board on which she served. The respondent
acted
in the most egregious manner towards the first applicant. This is
illustrated by her attempt to defraud the first applicant
in both
February 2020 and June 2020 by presenting false invoices. In seeking
her own personal benefit in this fraudulent manner,
the respondent
grossly misused her position as a director. This conduct falls
squarely within
section 162
(5) (c) of the
Companies Act, 2008
. The
action involved gross abuse of the position as director. See
Gihwala
at para [138].
[17]
It is my considered view that the conduct of the respondent fell
short of the standard expected of a director to such an extent
that
it amounts to wilful misconduct, breach of trust and a gross abuse of
her position as a director. The conduct of respondent
not only
amounts to a serious breach of her fiduciary duty as a director of
the first applicant but also led to breach of trust
between herself
as a director and the first respondent.
[18]
While no monetary harm was done to the first and its board, the
reputational harm and risk was immense. The respondent intentionally
and fraudulently manufactured documents to procure payment from the
first applicant, for another company of which she is the sole
director.
[19]
I find that there can be no justification for the respondent’s
aforesaid conduct. The relief sought in the Notice of
Motion is
warranted as measure to protect the first applicant, its clients as
well as the general public from the conduct of the
respondent. It
needs mentioning that the first applicant is a non-profit
organization that relies on donor funding. The integrity
of the first
applicant is its agency to ensure that funds are donated in order to
fulfil its objectives.
[20]
I accordingly grant the following order:
20.1 The Respondent is
declared a delinquent director in terms of the provisions of
section
162
(5)(c) of the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
.
20.2 The Respondent is
ordered to pay the costs of this application.
T
Thupaatlase
Acting
Judge
Heard
on: 02 August 2022
Judgment
Delivered: 24 August 2022
APPEARANCES:
For
the Applicant
Attorneys:
Shepstone & Wylie Attorneys
Counsel:
Advocate Dale Lubbe
For
the Respondent
: No Appearance
[1]
(5) A court must make an order declaring a person to be a delinquent director if the person
(c) while a director —
(i) grossly abused the position of director;
(ii) took personal advantage of information or an opportunity, contrary to
section 76(2)(a)
;
(iii) intentionally, or by gross negligence, inflicted harm upon the company or a subsidiary of the company
contrary to
section 76(2)
(a);
(iv) acted in a manner —
(aa)
that amounted to gross negligence, wilful misconduct or breach of trust in relation to the performance of the director’s
functions within, and duties to, the company; or
(bb) contemplated in
section 77(3)(a)
, (b) or (c);
[2]
(2) A director of a company must —
(a)not use the position of director, or any information obtained while acting in the capacity of a director — (i) to gain an advantage for the director, or for another person other than the company or a whollyowned subsidiary of the
company; or
(ii) to knowingly cause harm to the company or a subsidiary of the company;
[3]
3) Subject to subsections (4) and (5), a director of a company, when acting in that capacity, must exercise the powers and perform the
functions of director —
(a) in good faith and for a proper purpose;
(b) in the best interests of the company; and
(c) with the degree of care, skill and diligence that may reasonably be expected of a person —
[4]
(3) A director of a company is liable for any loss, damages or costs sustained by the company as a direct or in
direct consequence of the director having —
(c) been a party to an act or omission by the company despite knowing that the act or omission was calculated to defraud a creditor,
employee or shareholder of the company, or had another fraudulent purpose;
[5]
R Cassim “A Comparative Discussion of Judicial
Disqualification of Directors under South African
Companies Act”
Journal
of African Law
,
65 Vol. 65 No. 1 (2021) page 92
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