Marx v Coalition Trading 561 CC (Nedbank Limited) (4889/2021) [2022] ZAFSHC 125 (26 April 2022)

80 Reportability
Insolvency Law

Brief Summary

Liquidation — Final liquidation order — Application for final liquidation of close corporation — Respondent's failure to pay admitted debt — No bona fide dispute raised regarding indebtedness — Statutory presumption of inability to pay debts not rebutted — Intervention by creditor justified. Respondent, Coalition Trading 561 CC, was placed under provisional liquidation on 11 November 2021 due to failure to pay R2 495 329.73 owed to applicant, Karien Catherine Maria Marx, following a sale agreement. Respondent did not appear or contest the application at the extended return date. Court confirmed the rule nisi for final liquidation, finding no genuine dispute over the debt and that the respondent was commercially insolvent.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


This was an application for the final liquidation of a close corporation in the High Court of South Africa, Free State Division, Bloemfontein. The proceedings arose from an unpaid creditor’s attempt to obtain a final winding-up order after a provisional order had already been granted.


The applicant was Karien Catherine Maria Marx, a creditor of the respondent. The respondent was Coalition Trading 561 CC, the close corporation sought to be liquidated. Nedbank Limited participated as an intervening creditor after being granted leave to intervene.


Procedurally, the respondent was provisionally liquidated on 11 November 2021, and a rule nisi was issued calling upon interested parties to show cause on the return date why a final liquidation order should not be made. The respondent delivered a notice of intention to oppose and filed an answering affidavit. Nedbank launched an unopposed intervention application and was admitted as an intervening creditor on 24 February 2022. On the extended return date, the respondent filed no heads of argument and made no appearance, and its attorneys withdrew as attorneys of record during the hearing.


The dispute concerned whether the respondent should be placed under final liquidation on the basis of its alleged inability to pay its debts, in circumstances where the applicant alleged a liquidated indebtedness arising from a business sale agreement and relied on statutory deeming provisions following service of a demand.


2. Material Facts


The applicant’s claim arose from a written agreement (subject to a non-variation clause) in terms of which the applicant sold a business as a going concern, known as Pop Snax, to the respondent on 9 September 2019. The purchase price was R3 500 000.00, payable by a deposit of R750 000.00 and thereafter by 10 monthly instalments of R247 500.00 each, the first being due on or before 9 October 2019 and thereafter on or before the 9th of each successive month.


It was common cause on the papers that the respondent paid the deposit and a further amount of R403 487.91, but thereafter failed to make further payments as contemplated by the agreement. The court treated the respondent’s failure to pay as a material breach, and noted that the respondent admitted being in breach.


In addition to the unpaid balance of the purchase price, the applicant alleged further indebtedness connected to the respondent’s conduct after the sale. The respondent acquired goods on the applicant’s accounts from suppliers, and the applicant was constrained to pay those suppliers; the judgment recorded that at least one supplier had obtained judgment against the applicant for indebtedness incurred by the respondent. The applicant also alleged that the respondent failed to reimburse it for stock and raw materials sold to the respondent, which the respondent utilised and sold without paying.


On 3 August 2021, the applicant caused the sheriff to serve a statutory demand in terms of section 69 of the Close Corporations Act 69 of 1984 at the respondent’s registered office, and also served the demand on the respondent’s auditors. The sheriff’s return recorded unsuccessful attempts to reach the respondent’s sole member telephonically. The respondent did not pay, secure, or compound for the amount claimed to the applicant’s satisfaction within the stipulated period, and did not dispute the claim after service of the demand.


Although the respondent attempted to resist liquidation, the court found that the bases advanced (insofar as they could be discerned) were vague. The respondent appeared to suggest that the applicant’s conduct after breach, including repossession of certain equipment to which ownership had been reserved, made it impossible for the respondent to trade, and it also appeared to invoke the notion that the applicant was enforcing a “penalty” by repossessing while still claiming the full outstanding purchase price. The court recorded that the respondent did not clearly articulate a counterclaim and did not provide concrete financial information demonstrating solvency or the ability to pay.


The intervening creditor’s affidavit was treated as supporting the conclusion that the respondent was commercially insolvent.


3. Legal Issues


The primary legal question was whether the applicant had established grounds for a final liquidation order against the respondent close corporation, including whether the respondent was unable to pay its debts within the meaning of the applicable statutory framework.


A central issue concerned the application of the “Badenhorst rule”, namely whether the respondent’s indebtedness was disputed on bona fide and reasonable grounds, such that liquidation proceedings should not be used as a mechanism to enforce payment of a genuinely disputed debt. This required the court to evaluate whether any dispute raised by the respondent was genuine and sufficiently articulated to meet the applicable threshold.


A further issue concerned the statutory mechanism by which inability to pay is established, particularly the use of the section 69 demand procedure (read with the winding-up provisions in the companies legislation) and whether the respondent had rebutted the resulting inference or presumption of inability to pay. This involved an application of law to fact, informed by an evaluative assessment of the respondent’s explanations and the absence of financial evidence.


Finally, the court had to determine costs consequences, including the appropriate treatment of costs in liquidation administration and whether the intervening creditor’s further costs should be awarded on the attorney and client scale.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The court approached the matter on the footing that section 69 of the Close Corporations Act 69 of 1984 creates circumstances in which a close corporation is deemed unable to pay its debts, and that it is settled that section 69 must be read together with sections 344 and 345 of the Companies Act 61 of 1973. On the facts, the court accepted that the debt claimed in the statutory demand was due and payable, and that the demand had been served, with the respondent having failed to pay, secure, or compound for the debt to the creditor’s reasonable satisfaction within the prescribed period.


The court applied the Badenhorst principle that winding-up proceedings should not be used to enforce payment of a debt that is genuinely disputed on bona fide and reasonable grounds. However, once prima facie indebtedness is established, the evidential burden shifts to the respondent to demonstrate that the indebtedness is indeed disputed on bona fide and reasonable grounds. The court considered the respondent’s version and found that, on the respondent’s own account, it had materially breached the sale agreement by failing to make the required payments. The court concluded that the respondent’s grounds for disputing the indebtedness were neither bona fide nor genuinely advanced, particularly because the allegations were expressed in vague terms and were not supported by a coherent counterclaim or a properly articulated defence.


In dealing with the respondent’s apparent reliance on a “penalty” argument associated with repossession of equipment (in respect of which ownership had been reserved), the court held that the respondent was required to deal with this contention with sufficient clarity to show that the liability was genuinely disputed. The respondent failed to do so. The court treated the absence of particularity and the vagueness of the “penalty” allegation as undermining any attempt to show a bona fide dispute for purposes of resisting final liquidation.


The court also relied on authority confirming that the discretion to refuse a winding-up order where an unpaid creditor applies for liquidation is narrow and exercised only in special or unusual circumstances. The court referenced the reaffirmation that an unpaid creditor generally has a right, ex debito justitiae, to a winding-up order where the debt has not been discharged, and noted that a counterclaim, even if invoked, must be shown to be genuine and does not automatically preclude winding-up.


On insolvency, the court found that the respondent had not rebutted the statutory inference or presumption of inability to pay debts. Despite conducting several businesses, the respondent provided no meaningful evidence of its financial position. The court further accepted the intervening creditor’s evidence as supporting the conclusion that the respondent was commercially insolvent, and treated commercial insolvency as an established ground justifying liquidation. In that connection, the court relied on authority holding that the deeming provisions concerning inability to pay debts may be used to establish insolvency and that factual solvency is not, in itself, a bar to winding-up where commercial insolvency is shown, although factual solvency remains a relevant factor.


Finally, on procedure and the evidential record, the court applied the practical approach that, in opposed sequestration matters, an applicant may rely on all papers before court, including those of an intervening creditor, and similarly an intervening creditor may rely on allegations made by an applicant. The court regarded these principles as equally applicable to liquidation proceedings and proceeded on the combined record, including Nedbank’s intervention material, particularly given the respondent’s non-appearance and failure to advance argument.


5. Outcome and Relief


The court confirmed the rule nisi issued on 11 November 2021 and placed the respondent under final liquidation.


The court ordered that the costs of the application, including any reserved costs, would be costs in the administration of the liquidation of the respondent.


The court further ordered that the intervening creditor’s costs, over and above the costs order previously granted by Mathebula J on 24 February 2022, would also be costs in the administration of the liquidation, awarded on the attorney and client scale, including all costs orders that had stood over.


Cases Cited


Badenhorst v Northern Construction Enterprises (Pty) Ltd 1956 (2) SA 346 (T).


Kalil v Decotex (Pty) Ltd and Another 1988 (1) SA 943 (A) ([1987] ZASCA 156).


Afgri Operations Ltd v Hamba Fleet (Pty) Ltd 2022 (1) SA 91 (SCA).


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


Nathan & Co v Sheonandan 1963 (1) SA 179 (N).


Orestisolve (Pty) Ltd t/a Essa Investments v NDFT Investment Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Another 2015 (4) SA 449 (WCC).


Steinberg v Lazard 2006 (5) SA 42 (SCA).


Boschpoort Ondernemings (Pty) Ltd v Absa Bank Ltd 2014 (2) SA 518 (SCA).


The judgment also referred to Fullard v Fullard (citation not set out in the provided text).


Legislation Cited


Close Corporations Act 69 of 1984, in particular section 69 and the reference to section 66 as the conduit for the application of relevant companies winding-up provisions to close corporations.


Companies Act 61 of 1973, in particular sections 344 and 345.


Companies Act 71 of 2008, in particular Schedule 5 item 9(1), and a contextual reference to Chapter 6 Part A (business rescue) as a consideration noted as not relevant on the facts.


Rules of Court Cited


No specific rules of court were cited in the judgment text provided.


Held


The court held that the applicant established a proper case for final liquidation because the respondent’s indebtedness was prima facie established and the respondent failed to demonstrate a bona fide and reasonable dispute as contemplated by the Badenhorst rule. The respondent’s attempts to characterise the applicant’s post-breach conduct as a “penalty” were found to be inadequately particularised and insufficient to create a genuine dispute of liability.


The court held further that the respondent failed to rebut the statutory basis for concluding that it was unable to pay its debts, and that the evidence, including that of the intervening creditor, supported a finding of commercial insolvency, which justified liquidation even if factual solvency were assumed.


The intervention by Nedbank was held to have been justified, and costs were ordered to follow the liquidation-administration approach, with the intervening creditor’s further costs awarded on the attorney and client scale as costs in the administration of the liquidation.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The judgment applied the principle that liquidation proceedings are not to be used as debt-collection mechanisms where the alleged indebtedness is genuinely disputed on bona fide and reasonable grounds (the Badenhorst rule). Where indebtedness is prima facie established, the respondent bears an evidential burden to show that the dispute meets this standard.


The judgment reaffirmed that an unpaid creditor generally has a right, ex debito justitiae, to a winding-up order where the debt remains unpaid, and that the court’s discretion to refuse such relief is narrow and only exercised in special or unusual circumstances.


The judgment applied the principle that a counterclaim (or an asserted set-off-type contention) does not, merely by being raised, defeat liquidation; it must be shown to be genuine, and the court retains a limited discretion in the face of an admitted or clearly established unpaid debt.


The judgment applied the statutory approach that a close corporation may be deemed unable to pay its debts under section 69 of the Close Corporations Act 69 of 1984, read with the winding-up provisions in companies legislation, and that the deeming or inability-to-pay provisions may be used to establish insolvency for liquidation purposes.


The judgment applied the principle that commercial insolvency constitutes a ground justifying liquidation and that factual solvency is not, in itself, a bar to winding-up where commercial insolvency is shown, although factual solvency remains relevant to the overall evaluation.

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[2022] ZAFSHC 125
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Marx v Coalition Trading 561 CC (Nedbank Limited) (4889/2021) [2022] ZAFSHC 125 (26 April 2022)

IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
FREE
STATE DIVISION, BLOEMFONTEIN
Case
No: 4889/2021
In
the matter between:
KARIEN
CATHERINE MARIA MARX
Applicant
and
COALITION
TRADING 561 CC
Respondent
and
NEDBANK
LIMITED
Intervening
Creditor
JUDGMENT
BY
:
SNELLENBURG,
AJ
HEARD
:
14
APRIL 2022
REASONS
DELIVERED
:
26
APRIL 2022
[1]
After hearing arguments in this matter the rule nisi, issued on 11
November 2021,
was confirmed on the extended return date and placed
the respondent under final liquidation with an order that the costs
of the
application are to be costs in the administration of the
liquidation of the respondent. I also ordered that the intervening
creditors
costs, over and above the order as to costs granted by
Mathebula J on 24 February 2022, are to be costs in the
administration of
the liquidation of the respondent on the scale as
between attorney and client which order shall include all orders as
to costs
that have stood over.
[2]
These are the reasons for my order.
[3]
The respondent was provisionally liquidated on 11 November 2021. A
rule nisi was simultaneously
issued, calling upon all interested
parties to advance reasons why a final order of liquidation should
not be granted on the return
date.
[4]
On 12 January 2022 the respondent gave notice of its intention
[1]
to oppose the application and appointed Messrs Noge Attorneys
[2]
as its attorneys of record. On the same day the respondent served its
answering affidavit.
[5]
On 11 February 2022, Nedbank Limited issued an application seeking
leave to intervene
in the main liquidation application. The
application was not opposed, and Nedbank was admitted as intervening
creditor on 24 February
2022.
[6]
The respondent did not file any heads of argument nor was there any
appearance on
its behalf on the extended return date, regardless of
it being aware that the application would serve for adjudication.
[7]
After the matter was called and during an adjournment that was
granted to the applicant
to liaise with the respondent’s
attorneys, the respondent’s attorneys sent a notice of
withdrawal as attorneys of record
to the applicant’s attorneys
which was handed up when the proceedings resumed. The respondent was
aware, as stated, that
the application served for adjudication. In
light thereof I heard arguments on behalf of the respondent and
intervening creditor
and made the orders referred to above.
[8]
The respondent is indebted to the applicant for payment of the amount
of R2 495 329.73.
The applicant’s claim against the respondent
stems from the sale by the applicant of a business as running concern
known
as Pop Snax to the respondent on 9 September 2019. The parties’
respective rights and obligations are governed by a written
agreement
which is subject to a non-variation clause.
[9]
In terms of the agreement of sale the respondent would purchase the
business for the
amount of R 3 500 000.00 which was payable as
follows: a deposit in the amount of R 750 000.00 and thereafter the
balance of the
purchase price would be payable by means of 10 monthly
installments of R 247 500.00, the first instalment to be paid before
or
on 9 October 2019 and thereafter before or on the 9
th
of every month until the full amount has been paid.
[10]
The respondent paid the deposit and a further amount of R403 487.91
in reduction of the purchase
price but thereafter failed to make any
further payments. In addition, the respondent acquired goods on the
applicant’s accounts
from suppliers. The applicant was
constrained to pay the suppliers. To this end for example the one
supplier had already obtained
a judgment against the applicant for
the indebtedness incurred by the respondent. The respondent also
failed to reimburse the applicant
for stock and raw materials which
were sold to it by the applicant and which the respondent utilised
and sold. The respondent failed
to pay the applicant for the stock
and raw materials.
[11]
On 3 August 2021 the applicant caused the Sheriff to serve a
statutory demand in terms of
section 69
of the
Close Corporations Act
69 of 1984
[the Act] on the respondent. The applicant also caused the
Sheriff to serve the aforesaid demand on the respondent’s
auditors.
The Sheriff recorded in the return of service that he
unsuccessfully attempted to contact the respondent’s sole
member telephonically
on 3 occasions. The respondent did not make
payment or secure or compound for the amount owed to the applicant’s
satisfaction,
nor did it dispute the claim after service of the
demand.
[12]
Section 69
[3]
of the Act
provides for circumstances under which a close corporation is deemed
unable to pay its debts.
Section 69
, in relevant parts provides:

(1) …. a
corporation shall be deemed to be unable to pay its debts, if-
(a)
a creditor, by cession or otherwise, to whom the corporation is
indebted
in a sum of not less than two hundred rand then due has
served on the corporation, by delivering it at its registered office,
a
demand requiring the corporation to pay the sum so due, and the
corporation has for 21 days thereafter neglected to pay the sum
or to
secure or compound for it to the reasonable satisfaction of the
creditor; or
(b)
……; or
(c)
it is proved to the satisfaction of the Court that the corporation
is
unable to pay its debts.
(2)
In determining for the purposes of subsection (1) whether a
corporation is unable to pay its debts,
the Court shall also take
into account the contingent and prospective liabilities of the
corporation.”
It
is settled that
section 69
of the Act must be read with sections 344
and 345 of the Companies Act 61 of 1973 [“old Companies Act”].
[13]
The debt claimed by the applicant by means of statutory demand was
due and payable.
[14]
In terms of the 'Badenhorst rule' winding-up proceedings are not to
be used to enforce payment
of a debt that is disputed on bona fide
and reasonable grounds.
[4]
“Where, however, the respondent's indebtedness has, prima
facie, been established, the onus [evidential burden] is on it
to
show that this indebtedness is indeed disputed on bona fide and
reasonable grounds.”
[5]
[15]
In
Afgri
Operations Ltd v Hamba Fleet (Pty) Ltd supra
[6]
,
Willis JA on behalf of a unanimous bench reaffirmed the specific
principle that, “generally speaking, an unpaid creditor
has a
right, ex debito justitiae, to a winding-up order against the
respondent company that has not discharged that debt”
[7]
and that in practice, the discretion of a court to refuse to grant a
winding-up order where an unpaid creditor applies therefor
is a very
narrow one that is rarely exercised and then in special or unusual
circumstances only.
[8]
[16]
In opposed sequestration applications the applicant may rely on all
the papers before Court,
including those of an intervening creditor.
Likewise, the intervening creditor may rely on factual allegations
made by the unsuccessful,
tardy or withdrawing applicant.
[9]
No reasons are apparent why these principles would not apply equally
to liquidation proceedings and they are in fact so applied
in
practice. After all, the Court takes a practical view in such
matters.
[17]
On the respondent’s own version it materially breached the
agreement by failing to make
the requirement payments. Its grounds
for disputing its indebtedness to the applicant is neither bona fide
nor do they appear to
be genuine. The respondent does not go so far
as to rely on a counterclaim, although it appears to contend that the
applicant would
have made it impossible to trade after it breached
the agreement by taking possession of certain equipment with regards
whereto
the applicant reserved its ownership. It also appears, in the
vaguest of terms, to rely on the fact that the applicant is enforcing

a penalty against it by exercising the right to repossess the
equipment of which it reserved ownership whilst claiming the full

outstanding purchase price.
[18]
In
Afgri Operations Ltd v Hamba Fleet (Pty) Ltd supra
the
Court emphasised that mere recourse to a counterclaim will not, in
itself, enable a respondent successfully to resist an application
for
its winding-up. The counterclaim must also be shown to be genuine.

The existence of a
counterclaim which, if established, would result in a discharge by
set-off of an applicant's claim for a liquidation
order is not, in
itself, a reason for refusing to grant an order for the winding-up of
the respondent but it may, however, be a
factor to be taken into
account in exercising the court's discretion as to whether to grant
the order or not.”
[10]
The discretion to refuse
a winding-up order where it is common cause that the respondent has
not paid an admitted debt is, notwithstanding
a counterclaim, a
narrow and not a broad one.
[11]
[19]
None of the grounds raised by the respondent, insofar as they can be
discerned, satisfied the
‘Badenhorst rule’. The test for
a final order of liquidation differs from that which applies to a
provisional order
[12]
. I am
satisfied that no genuine bona fide dispute exists that would justify
dismissal of the application.
[20]
The respondent admits being in breach.
[21]
Insofar as the respondent’s affidavit is capable of being
understood to rely on the fact
that the applicant is imposing a
penalty, the respondent was constrained to lucidly deal with this
issue in order to establish
that the liability is bona fide disputed.
The respondent failed to do so.
[13]
Suffice it to say that the respondent’s reference to the
penalty lacks particularity and is referred to in the vaguest of

terms.
[22]
The respondent has not rebutted the statutory presumption that it is
not able to pay its debts.
Although the respondent conducts several
businesses, it failed to advance any evidence regarding its financial
position. It appears
to no longer be conducting the business it
purchased from the applicant whilst still using some of the assets
that formed part
of the business, the ownership of those assets which
were reserved by the plaintiff.
[23]
The intervening creditor’s affidavit also establishes that the
respondent is indeed commercially
insolvent.
[14]
“That a company's commercial insolvency is a ground that will
justify an order for its liquidation has been a reality of
law which
has served us well through the passage of time.”
[15]
[24]
In
Boschpoort Ondernemings (Pty) Ltd v Absa Bank Ltd
supra,
the Supreme Court of Appeal authoritatively held
that the deeming provisions concerning the inability to pay its
debts, contained
in s 345 of the old Companies Act may be used to
establish the insolvency of a company. The Court held that a
commercially insolvent
company may be wound up in accordance with
chapter 14 of the old Companies Act, as is provided for in subitem
9(1) of schedule
5 of the new Companies Act and that factual solvency
in itself is not a bar to an application to wind up a company in
terms of
the old Companies Act on the ground that it is commercially
insolvent. It will however always be a factor in deciding whether a

company is unable to pay its debts.
[25]
Even if the respondent was factually solvent, the same would not be a
bar to the liquidation
of the respondent on the basis that it is
commercially insolvent.
[26]
In the circumstances the applicant has made a proper case for
confirmation of the rule nisi and
an order for final liquidation of
the respondent.
[27]
The intervention by Nedbank was justified in the circumstances.
[28]
In the premises the following
ORDER
was made:
1.
The rule
nisi, issued on 11 November 2021, is confirmed and the respondent be
and is herewith placed under final liquidation.
2.
The costs
of the application, including any reserved costs, are to be costs in
the administration of the liquidation of the respondent.
3.
The
intervening creditor’s costs, over and above the order as to
costs granted by Mathebula J on 24 February 2022, are to
be costs in
the administration of the liquidation of the respondent on the scale
as between attorney and client which order shall
include all orders
as to costs that have stood over.
SNELLENBURG,
AJ
On
behalf of the applicant

:
Adv G.S. Janse van Rensburg
Instructed
by

:

Ettienne Visser Inc
Bloemfontein
On
behalf of the Intervening Creditor  :

Adv S. Tsangarakis
Instructed
by

:  Rossouws Attorneys
Bloemfontein
On
behalf of the respondent:

No appearance.
[1]
The notice was
dated 11 January 2021.
[2]
Messrs Modise &
Modise Attorneys, Bloemfontein was appointed as the respondent’s
correspondent attorney.
[3]
Section 66 of the Act provides that
the laws mentioned or contemplated in item 9 of Schedule 5 of the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
[“new
Companies Act&rdquo
;], read
with the changes required by the context, apply to the liquidation
of a corporation in respect of any matter not specifically
provided
for in that Part or in any other provision of the Act.
[4]
Badenhorst v Northern
Construction Enterprises (Pty) Ltd
1956 (2) SA 346
(T) at 347 –
348 and Kalil v Decotex (Pty) Ltd and Another
1988 (1) SA 943
(A) ([1987] ZASCA 156) at 980D. Also see Afgri Operations Ltd v
Hamba Fleet (Pty) Ltd
2022 (1) SA 91
(SCA) par 6.
[5]
Afgri Operations Ltd v Hamba Fleet
(Pty) Ltd, supra, par 6.
[6]
Afgri Operations Ltd v Hamba Fleet
(Pty) Ltd, supra, par 12.
[7]
The Court did
remark that
different
considerations may apply where business rescue proceedings are being
considered in terms of part A of chapter 6 of the
Companies Act 71
of 2008
. Such considerations are not relevant to these proceedings.
[8]
Afgri Operations Ltd v Hamba Fleet
(Pty) Ltd, supra, par 12 and legal precedent referred to in footnote
16 of the judgment.
[9]
Uys
and Another v Du Plessis (Ferreira Intervening)
2001 (3) SA 250
(C); Fullard v Fullard (supra at 372A); and Nathan & Co v
Sheonandan 1963 (1) SA 179 (N).
[10]
Par 7.
[11]
Afgri Operations Ltd v Hamba Fleet
(Pty) Ltd, supra par 13.
[12]
Orestisolve (Pty) Ltd t/a Essa
Investments v NDFT Investment Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Another
2015
(4) SA 449
(WCC).
[13]
The onus of proving the actual
prejudice suffered by the creditor, for purposes of reducing a
penalty, rests on the debtor. See
Steinberg v Lazard
2006 (5)
SA 42
(SCA). In order to rely on this ground to dispute the
liability, the respondent is not required to produce evidence or
even to
show that it will be successful in an action, but the basis
for the reliance on the penalty and the effect on the disputed
liability
must at least be set out with sufficient clarity so that
the Court can determine whether a genuine dispute of fact would
exist
when the court must determine whether a final liquidation
order must be granted. In casu the reliance on a penalty, even if
accepted
for sake of argument that it would cover the balance of the
purchase price, does not constitute a defence to the full amount

claimed by the applicant.
[14]
Boschpoort Ondernemings (Pty) Ltd v
Absa Bank Ltd 2014 (2) SA 518 (SCA).
[15]
Boschpoort Ondernemings (Pty) Ltd v
Absa Bank Ltd, supra, par 17.