Ex Parte Aboodla in Re Absa Bank Limited v Patel (29586/2019) [2019] ZAGPJHC 447 (18 September 2019)

80 Reportability
Insolvency Law

Brief Summary

Insolvency — Sequestration — Application for leave to intervene — Applicant claiming creditor status — Applicant failed to prove creditor relationship with debtor — Court dismisses application for leave to intervene and grants final sequestration order. Applicant, Katija Bibi Abdoola, sought to intervene in Absa Bank Limited's sequestration application against Jacinta Lucy Patel, asserting she was a creditor due to a property sale agreement. The court found Abdoola did not substantiate her claim as a creditor, lacking evidence of a sale agreement or proof of payments made by Patel. Consequently, the court ruled that Abdoola's intervention was unjustified, leading to the granting of the final sequestration order in favor of Absa Bank.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


This was an application for final sequestration brought by Absa Bank Limited against the respondent, Jacinta Lucy Patel. The matter also included an ancillary application by Katija Bibi Abdoola for leave to intervene in order to oppose the sequestration.


The procedural history was that on 16 April 2019 Joubert AJ granted a provisional sequestration order and issued a rule nisi calling upon interested parties to show cause why a final order should not be granted on 23 May 2019. The return date was extended multiple times, and the matter ultimately served before Sibuyi AJ on 12 September 2019, with judgment delivered on 18 September 2019.


The general subject-matter was insolvency law and procedure, specifically whether a third party could intervene as an alleged creditor in sequestration proceedings, and whether the statutory requirement of advantage to creditors was satisfied for a final sequestration order under the Insolvency Act 24 of 1936.


Although Patel had not filed papers opposing the final sequestration, her attorney attended the hearing and sought to oppose. The court permitted limited participation on the condition that submissions be confined strictly to papers filed after the provisional order, and afforded the other parties an opportunity to respond.


2. Material Facts


The court dealt first with Abdoola’s procedural request for condonation for the late filing of her replying affidavit. The delay was approximately five weeks, was not opposed, and the court considered it in the interests of justice to permit the affidavit so that issues could be fully ventilated.


In support of intervention, Abdoola alleged that she was an unsecured creditor of Patel. Her version was that in 2004 she and Patel co-owned immovable property in Parkhurst (the “Parkhurst property”) and were co-mortgagees under a bond registered with Absa Bank. She further alleged that in 2007 she sold her 50% share in the Parkhurst property to Patel for R850,000, and that Patel thereafter made periodic payments, leaving an outstanding balance of R750,000. Abdoola also alleged that she used Patel’s property (the property implicated in the sequestration) as her primary residence.


The court treated key aspects of Abdoola’s alleged creditor status as not proved on the papers. The court found that there was no sale agreement attached or otherwise proved evidencing the alleged sale of the 50% share. The court further found that the payments relied upon as reflecting repayment were not shown to have been made by Patel and appeared instead to have been made by “Ebrahim” to Abdoola’s account, and the references suggested maintenance-type payments (including items such as DStv, cellular phone, and Vodacom) rather than payments towards a purchase price debt. The court also considered it highly improbable on Abdoola’s version that the original bond could have been cancelled and a new bond registered in Patel’s name without Patel paying the purchase price for Abdoola’s 50% share, and noted that Abdoola could not explain why transfer would have occurred without payment.


In relation to the sequestration requirements, the parties conducted the argument on the basis that the requirements of section 12(1)(a) and section 12(1)(b) of the Insolvency Act were satisfied (a qualifying claim and insolvency/act of insolvency). The dispute focused on section 12(1)(c), namely whether there was reason to believe that final sequestration would be to the advantage of creditors. Absa Bank relied materially on the fact that Patel owned a high-end residential immovable property in Parkhurst, from which value could potentially be realised for creditors and/or from which further assets might be revealed through insolvency enquiries.


3. Legal Issues


The court was required to determine two central questions.


The first was whether Abdoola should be granted leave to intervene in the sequestration proceedings. This turned on whether she had shown that she was a creditor (and thus had the necessary direct and substantial interest) and whether the application to intervene was made seriously rather than frivolously, including whether she advanced a prima facie defence relevant to the main relief.


The second was whether Absa Bank had established the statutory requirement that there was reason to believe that sequestration would be to the advantage of creditors, as required for a final order under section 12(1)(c) of the Insolvency Act.


The dispute concerned the application of legal requirements to the facts presented on affidavit, including evaluative determinations about whether the facts supported creditor status for intervention and whether they supported the statutory threshold of “reason to believe” advantage to creditors.


4. Court’s Reasoning


On condonation, the court considered the length of the delay, the absence of opposition, and the interests of justice. Given that the delay was not excessive and that allowing the affidavit would facilitate a fuller ventilation of disputes, condonation was granted.


On intervention, the court approached the matter by reference to both Rule 12 of the Uniform Rules of Court and the common law requirements for intervention. It stated the test as requiring proof of a direct and substantial interest in the subject matter of the litigation that could be prejudicially affected by the judgment, and that the application must be brought seriously (not frivolously), with allegations constituting a prima facie defence to the main relief. The court emphasised that a “direct and substantial interest” is a legal interest in the subject matter, and that a mere financial interest is indirect and insufficient.


The court also noted that insolvency procedure is sui generis, and that intervening creditors may be permitted to intervene at any stage, including to oppose sequestration or to seek discharge of a rule nisi. The court stated that in insolvency matters the court takes a practical view while bearing in mind the interests of the general body of creditors.


Applying these principles, the court held that Abdoola had failed, on a balance of probabilities, to prove that she was a creditor of Patel. The absence of a proven sale agreement was treated as a fundamental deficiency. The alleged payments were not accepted as proof of repayment of a purchase price debt, particularly where the payments appeared to have been made by a third party and bore references consistent with maintenance-related expenses rather than instalments on a purchase price. The court also considered Abdoola’s explanation regarding transfer and bond changes without payment to be improbable and inadequately explained.


The court further accepted Absa Bank’s submissions that Abdoola’s account demonstrated a lack of bona fides and that the intervention was brought to delay Patel’s sequestration. While this evaluative view went beyond documentary proof, it was grounded in the improbabilities and inconsistencies identified, and in the court’s assessment that Abdoola’s allegations (including that she believed Absa Bank’s attorneys would pay her the purchase price) were not credible on the papers. The court recorded that counsel for Abdoola ultimately did not persist with an argument based on her alleged residence rights, and the court noted that such an argument would not establish a legal interest in sequestration proceedings, as that type of interest would more properly arise in eviction proceedings.


Even on the alternative assumption that Abdoola were a creditor, the court indicated that the circumstances were such that final sequestration would still be justified on the advantage-to-creditors requirement.


On advantage to creditors, the court set out section 12 of the Insolvency Act and noted that Absa Bank bore the onus of demonstrating that there was reason to believe sequestration would be to the advantage of creditors. The court applied the test from Meskin & Co v Friedman 1948 (2) SA 555 (W), namely that the facts must establish a reasonable prospect (not necessarily a likelihood, but not too remote) that some pecuniary benefit will result to creditors. The court further relied on Stratford and Others v Investec Bank Ltd and Others 2015 (3) SA 1 (CC), where the Constitutional Court endorsed the Friedman approach and explained that courts should exercise a discretion informed by whether sequestration will result in some payment to creditors as a body, whether there is a substantial estate from which creditors cannot get payment except through sequestration, or whether some pecuniary benefit will redound to creditors.


The court rejected the contention that Absa Bank relied merely on bald allegations. It accepted that Absa Bank’s belief was based on the existence of a valuable, high-end immovable property owned by Patel, which grounded a reasonable belief that sequestration could yield benefit, including through statutory enquiries potentially revealing or recovering assets. The court reasoned that at the final stage it need not be satisfied that advantage will in fact occur, but only that there is reason to believe it will. It found Absa Bank’s belief not unreasonable and the prospects not too remote, thereby satisfying the Friedman standard. The court also relied on the Stratford formulation that there was a substantial estate from which creditors could not obtain payment except through sequestration, which it regarded as an additional basis justifying a final order.


Having found the requirements in section 12(1)(a)–(c) satisfied on the basis argued, the court concluded that the sequestration application had to succeed.


On costs, the parties were recorded as agreeing that the costs of the intervention application should follow the result.


5. Outcome and Relief


The court granted condonation for the late filing of Abdoola’s replying affidavit.


The application by Abdoola for leave to intervene in the sequestration proceedings was dismissed with costs.


The estate of Jacinta Lucy Patel was placed under final sequestration.


Cases Cited


Fullard v Fullard 1979 (1) SA 368 (T).


Uys and Another v Du Plessis (Ferreira Intervening) 2001 (3) SA 250 (C).


Maritz t/a Maritz & Kie Rekenmeester v Walters and Others 2002 (1) SA 689 (C).


Trust Wholesalers and Woollens (Pty) Ltd v Mackan 1954 (2) SA 109 (N).


Meskin & Co v Friedman 1948 (2) SA 555 (W).


Stratford and Others v Investec Bank Ltd and Others 2015 (3) SA 1 (CC).


Legislation Cited


Insolvency Act 24 of 1936, section 9(1).


Insolvency Act 24 of 1936, section 12(1).


Rules of Court Cited


Uniform Rules of Court, Rule 12.


Held


The court held that Abdoola failed to establish, on the papers, that she was a creditor of Patel and thus failed to show a direct and substantial legal interest justifying intervention in the sequestration proceedings. The court further held that Absa Bank had shown facts giving rise to reason to believe that final sequestration would be to the advantage of creditors, particularly given the existence of a valuable immovable property and the principles governing the advantage enquiry as articulated in Friedman and endorsed in Stratford. Final sequestration was accordingly granted, and intervention refused with costs.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


A party seeking leave to intervene must show a direct and substantial interest in the subject matter that may be prejudicially affected by the judgment; this requires a legal interest, and a merely financial interest is insufficient.


In insolvency proceedings, intervention practice is sui generis. A creditor may be granted leave to intervene at any stage to oppose sequestration or to seek discharge of a rule nisi, and the court adopts a practical approach informed by the interests of the general body of creditors.


For final sequestration under section 12(1) of the Insolvency Act, the petitioning creditor must establish a qualifying claim and insolvency/act of insolvency, and must further show reason to believe that sequestration will be to the advantage of creditors.


The advantage requirement is satisfied where the facts show a reasonable prospect (not too remote) of some pecuniary benefit to creditors, including where assets may be revealed or recovered through enquiries under the Insolvency Act. This approach, articulated in Meskin & Co v Friedman 1948 (2) SA 555 (W), is endorsed by the Constitutional Court in Stratford and Others v Investec Bank Ltd and Others 2015 (3) SA 1 (CC), which confirms that courts exercise a discretion in evaluating advantage and may consider whether creditors can obtain payment only through sequestration or whether sequestration will yield some collective benefit.

About SAFLII
Databases
Search
Terms of Use
RSS Feeds
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
>>
2019
>>
[2019] ZAGPJHC 447
|

|

Ex Parte Aboodla in Re Absa Bank Limited v Patel (29586/2019) [2019] ZAGPJHC 447 (18 September 2019)

SAFLII Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE
N0. 29586/2019
In
the application for leave to intervene of:
KATIJA
BIBI
ABDOOLA                                                                                           Applicant
AND
In
the sequestration application of:
ABSA
BANK
LIMITED                                                                                             Applicant
and
PATEL:
JACINTA
LUCY                                                                                      Respondent
(Identity
No. […])
(Married
out of community of property)
JUDGMENT
Sibuyi,
AJ:
INTRODUCTION
1.
In this matter Absa Bank Limited (“Absa Bank”) brought an
application to sequestrate the respondent, Jacinta Lucy
Patel
(“Patel”). On 16 April 2019 Joubert AJ granted an order
placing the estate of Patel under provisional sequestration
and
directed any other respondent or party who wished to avoid such order
to advance reasons why the court should not grant a final

sequestration order on 23 May 2019.  The
rule nisi
was
extended a few times until the 12
th
of September 2019 when
the application finally came before me. At this stage Katija Bibi
Abdoola (“Abdoola”) had brought
an application for leave
to intervene and oppose the sequestration application.
2.
Though a number of factual disputes are raised on the papers, at the
commencement of argument the parties agreed that the court
has to
determine and rule on two main issues: (a) whether or not leave to
intervene should be granted on the basis that Abdoola
is a creditor
to Patel, and (b) whether or not there is advantage to creditors
justifying the granting of a final sequestration
order. I must
mention that the attorney for Patel, without having filed papers to
oppose the final sequestration, to everybody’s
surprise,
attended the court hearing and insisted that he must be allowed to
oppose the sequestration application on behalf of
Patel. I allowed
him to participate on condition that whatever argument he was going
to make must strictly be confined to the papers
filed after the
granting of the provisional sequestration order. The attorney made
short submissions after all the parties has
concluded their
arguments. I gave counsel for the other parties an opportunity to
respond to any submission made by the attorney.
Only Counsel for Absa
Bank used the opportunity.
CONDONATION
3.
Abdoola seeks condonation for the late filing of her replying
affidavit. The application for condonation was not opposed. The

replying affidavit is about 5 weeks late. The delay is not very
excessive. I am of the view that it will be in the interest of

justice to grant condonation to allow full ventilation of issues
between the parties. The condonation application must therefore

succeed.
APPLICATION
FOR LEAVE TO INTERVENE
4.
The application for leave to intervene by Abdoola is based on the
submission that Abdoola is an unsecured creditor of Patel.
In the
application to intervene Abdoola also opposes the granting of the
final sequestration order only on the basis that there
is no
advantage to creditors.
5.
The first issue I had to determine is whether Abdoola is a creditor
to Patel.  Abdoola alleges that she is a creditor to
Patel
because in 2004 she co-owned a property known as ERF […]
Parkhurst Township (“the Parkhurst property”)
with Patel.
Patel and herself were co-mortgagees of a bond on the Parkhurst
property. The bond on the Parkhurst property was registered
with Absa
bank. Later during 2007 Abdoola sold her 50% share of the Parkhurst
property for R850 000-00 to Patel. Since 2007
Patel periodically
paid towards the R850 000-00 and the outstanding amount is
currently standing at R750 000-00. Abdoola
alleges that she is
using Patel’s property (the property being the subject matter
of this sequestration application) as her
primary residence. In
summary, Abdoola’s direct and substantial interest in the
matter is alleged to be arising from the
above facts.
6.
On the balance of probabilities, I find that Abdoola failed to prove
that she is a creditor to Patel. I now give reasons for
this finding.
7.
Firstly, Abdoola failed to attach and or prove any 50% share sale
agreement between herself and Patel.
8.
Secondly, though she alleges that Patel made periodic payments
towards the 50% share debt, there is no proof of such payments
on the
papers before me. The payments relied upon by Abdoola were paid by
Ebrahim to Abdoola’s account. Although it is not
clear on the
papers, Abdoola and Ebrahim are somehow related. On scrutiny, the
payments seem to be maintenance monies paid during
the period between
August 2017 and May 2019. They were paid for Dstv, Cellular phone,
Vodacom, etc. The other haphazard payments
with the reference “std”
and amounting to about R14000-00 in total, could be for any other
maintenance expense/s but
not payment of the 50% share debt. The
payments randomly range between R1000-00 to R3000-00. However, none
of these payments are
referred to as payment towards the 50% share
debt. Nor could they be mathematically linked to the acknowledgment
of debt agreed
monthly payment of R3500-00.
9.
Thirdly, Abdoola alleges that after selling her 50% share on the
Parkhurst property to Patel, the original bond was cancelled,
and a
new bond was registered in the name of Patel without Patel paying the
purchase price for the 50% share. This is highly improbable.
On the
papers and during argument Abdoola could not explain why the property
was registered and transferred into the name of Patel
without Patel
paying the 50% share purchase price to Abdoola.
10.
Lastly, I agree with submissions on behalf of Absa Bank that
Abdoola’s story shows that she is dishonest, not
bona fide
,
and that she is bringing the leave to intervene application solely to
delay the sequestration of her daughter, Patel. In addition
to what
is stated herein above, Abdoola seems to be oblivious of the fact
that Patel is highly indebted to Absa Bank, and the sequestration

application against Patel. She alleges that she believed that the 50%
share purchase price would be paid to her by the attorneys
of Absa
Bank. This allegation is beyond any comprehension. Further, in the
light of the facts already dealt with above, it is not
correct that
Patel periodically made payments to her and or that her livelihood is
dependent on the full amount owed to her by
Patel. These are
desperate untruths.
TEST
FOR INTERVENTION
11.
Generally, a party seeking to intervene in court proceedings can
either do so in terms of Rule 12 of the Uniform Rules of Court,
or in
terms of the common law. A party seeking leave to intervene must
prove that:
(a) He or she has a
direct and substantial interest in the subject-matter of the
litigation which could be prejudiced by the judgment
of the court;
and
(b) the application is
made seriously and is not frivolous, and that the allegations made by
the applicants constitute a prima facie
defence to the relief sought
in the main application. A 'direct and substantial interest'
means a legal interest in the subject-matter
of the action which
could be prejudicially affected by the judgment of the court (
my
emphasis
). A mere financial interest is only an indirect interest
in such litigation and is insufficient.
12.
The
practice in insolvencies is unique as it is neither a pure
intervention nor a substitution and is
sui
generis
from a procedural point of view
[1]
. It
is trite that an intervening creditor may be given leave to
intervene at any stage, either to oppose a sequestration or

to have a
rule
nisi
discharged
[2]
.
A creditor may also intervene when an applicant for
a sequestration order does not proceed with his application
or
does not succeed therein. The court takes a practical view in
these matters and also bears in mind the interests of the general

body of creditors
[3]
.
13.
In this matter Abdoola failed to prove that she is creditor and her
application for leave to intervene ought to be dismissed.
Counsel for
Abdoola, correctly so, never persisted with the argument that she is
entitled to intervene because she considers Patel’s
property to
be her primary residence. Such argument was bound to fail because
that does not establish her legal interest in the
subject matter of
the sequestration application. Such legal interest could only arise
during eviction proceedings.
14.
Even if I were to find that Abdoola is a creditor, for reasons stated
herein below, the circumstances of this matter are such
that a final
sequestration order will still be justified.
ADVANTAGE
TO CREDITORS
15.
It is contended on behalf of Absa Bank that should Abdoola be refused
leave to intervene, there is no opposition to the grant
of a final
order of sequestration and the court must grant the final
sequestration order sought. Counsel for Abdoola argued that
Absa Bank
failed to allege and prove benefit to creditors and hence I must
dismiss the petition for sequestration and set aside
the order of
provisional sequestration.
16. Section 12 of the
Insolvency Act, 24 of 1936 (“the Act”), entitled
“Final sequestration or dismissal
of petition
for sequestration”, provides:

(1) If at the
hearing pursuant to the aforesaid rule nisi the court is
satisfied that —
(a) the petitioning
creditor has established against the debtor a claim such as is
mentioned in subsection (1) of section nine;
and
(b) the debtor has
committed an act of insolvency or is insolvent; and
(c) there is reason to
believe that it will be to the advantage of creditors of the debtor
if his estate is sequestrated, it may
sequestrate the estate of the
debtor.
(2) If at such hearing
the court is not so satisfied, it shall dismiss the petition for
the sequestration of the estate
of the debtor and set aside
the order of provisional sequestration or require further
proof of the matters set forth
in the petition and postpone the
hearing for any reasonable period but not sine die.

17.
The parties
argued the matter on the basis that the first two requirements under
subsections 12(1)(a) and 12(1)(b) of the Act are
met. The point of
contention was whether there is reason to believe that final
sequestration will be to the advantage of creditors.
Absa Bank bears
the onus of demonstrating that there is reason to believe that final
sequestration will be to the advantage of
creditors
[4]
. In Meskin
& Co v Friedman 1948(2) SA 555 (W) the court held: “
The
facts put before the Court must satisfy it that there is a
reasonable prospect — not necessarily a likelihood, but
a
prospect which is not too remote — that some pecuniary benefit
will result to creditors. It is not necessary to prove that
the
insolvent has any assets. Even if there are none at all, but there
are reasons for thinking that as a result of enquiry under
the
[Insolvency] Act some may be revealed or recovered for the benefit of
creditors, that is sufficient”
[5]
.
18.
In
Stratford And Others V Investec Bank Ltd And Others
2015 (3) SA 1
(CC), the Constitutional Court endorsed the Friedman test and stated
the following: “
The
correct approach in evaluating advantage to creditors is for a court
to exercise its discretion guided by the dicta outlined

in Friedman. For example, it is up to a court to assess
whether the sequestration will result in some payment
to
the creditors as a body; that there is a substantial estate from
which the creditors cannot get payment, except through sequestration;

or that some pecuniary benefit will redound to the creditors

[6]
.
19.
It was
contended on behalf of Absa Bank that given that Patel owned a
high-end residential immovable property situated in Parkhurst,
it is
highly unlikely that she is not possessed of any further assets which
could be unearthed during the enquiry under the Act
and realized for
the benefit of her creditors. Counsel for Abdoola baldly contended
that this alone is not enough to prove that
there will be any
advantage to creditors. At this stage of the hearing, though I must
be “satisfied”, I need not be
satisfied that
sequestration will be to the advantage of creditors, but only that
there is reason to believe that it will be so
[7]
(
my
emphasis)
.
A bald allegation in the papers that sequestration will be to the
advantage of creditors of the debtor does not suffice. Absa
Bank’s
belief is based on the existence of the high-end valuable property
belonging to Patel and not on bald allegations.
Such belief is not
unreasonable, and the prospects are not too remote. Therefore, I am
satisfied that Absa Bank, as per the reasoning
in Friedman case, has
established
prima
facie
proof of facts giving rise to a reasonable belief.
20.
Further, in this matter, as per the Stratford Constitutional Court
decision quoted above, “
there is a substantial estate from
which the creditors cannot get payment, except through sequestration

(
my emphasis)
. And, this also justify a final sequestration
order.
21.
In the light of the above, I am satisfied that —
(a) Absa Bank, as the
petitioning creditor, has established against Patel a claim under
subsection (1) of section 9 of the Act;
(b) Patel has committed
an act of insolvency and or is insolvent; and
(c) there is reason to
believe that it will be to the advantage of creditors of Patel’s
estate is sequestrated.
22.
Hence, the sequestration application must succeed.
COSTS
23.
The parties agreed that the costs in the application for leave to
intervene should follow the results.
THE
ORDER
24.
I make the following order:
a) The late filing of the
replying affidavit in the application for leave to intervene is
condoned;
b) The application for
leave to intervene by KATIJA BIBI ABDOOLA in the application for
sequestration of JACINTA LUCY PATEL brought
by ABSA BANK LIMITED is
dismissed with costs.
c) The estate of the
respondent (JACINTA LUCY PATEL) is placed under final sequestration.
___________________
HW Sibuyi
Acting Judge, High Court
Johannesburg
For the applicant: Adv.
R. Scholtz
Instructed by: Lowndes
Dlamini Attorneys
For the respondent: Yusuf
Bhamjee Attorneys
For the Intervening
Applicant: Adv. MZF Suleman
Instructed by: Sulemans
Attorneys
Matter argued: Thursday,
12 September 2019.
Judgment delivered on:
Wednesday, 18 September 2019
[1]
See
Fullard v Fullard 1979(1) SA (T), at 372B.
[2]
See Uys
and Another v Du Plessis (Ferreira Intervening)
2001
(3) SA 250
(C)
at
252; Fullard v Fullard
1979
(1) SA 368
(T)
at
371F – 372G. See also Maritz t/a Maritz & Kie
Rekenmeester v Walters and Others
2002
(1) SA 689
(C)
where
it was accepted that the intervening party would have locus standi
to oppose the sequestration if it could be
found that he
was a credtor.
[3]
See
Fullard, at 372B
[4]
See
Trust Wholesalers and Woollens (Pty) Ltd v Mackan
1954
(2) SA 109
(N)
at
112C – D.
[5]
See
Friedman, at 559.
[6]
See
para 45
[7]
See
Friedman, at 558.