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[2011] ZASCA 199
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Gazit Properties (Pty) Ltd v Botha NO and Others (873/2010) [2011] ZASCA 199; 2012 (2) SA 306 (SCA) (23 November 2011)
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THE SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF
SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Case No: 873/2010
In the matter between
GAZIT PROPERTIES (PTY) LTD
…......................................................
APPELLANT
and
DEON MARIUS BOTHA N.O.
….............................................
FIRST
RESPONDENT
IZAK JOHANNES BOSHOFF N.O.
…................................
SECOND
RESPONDENT
WERGELE STAFFORD MACKENZIE N.O.
….......................
THIRD
RESPONDENT
Neutral citation:
Gazit Properties v Botha
N.O.
(873/10)
[2011] ZASCA 199
(23 November 2011)
Coram: HARMS AP, HEHER, SNYDERS, SHONGWE and MAJIEDT
JJA
Heard: 7 NOVEMBER 2011
Delivered: 23 NOVEMBER 2011
Summary: Insolvency – interpretation and
application of s 29(1) of
Insolvency Act 24 of 1936
– meaning
of the phrase ‘in the ordinary course of business’ –
payment made in terms of valid underlying
contract by due date
unaffected by illegality of the insolvent’s business.
______________________________________________________________
ORDER
______________________________________________________________
On appeal from:
North Gauteng High Court,
Pretoria (Kruger AJ, sitting as court of first instance):
1. The appeal is upheld with costs.
2. The order of the court below is set aside and
substituted with the following:
‘
The plaintiff’s claim is
dismissed with costs’.
______________________________________________________________
JUDGMENT
______________________________________________________________
MAJIEDT JA (HARMS AP, HEHER, SNYDERS and SHONGWE JJA
concurring):
[1] This is an appeal against the judgment of Kruger AJ,
sitting in the North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria, in terms of which
certain
payments (dispositions) made by an insolvent company to the
appellant (as defendant) were set aside in terms of the provisions of
s 29(1) of the Insolvency Act 24 of 1936, (the Act) and whereby the
appellant was ordered to repay the said monies to the respondents
(as
plaintiffs). The appeal is with the leave of the court below.
[2] The respondents sued as joint liquidators of
Malokiba Trading 19 (Pty) Ltd (Malokiba), a company in liquidation,
which ostensibly
had conducted business as bridging financiers in
respect of fixed property transactions. Malokiba borrowed money from
members of
the general public as investors and lent same out for the
financing of transfer costs or estate agents’ commission or
bridging
finance in respect of fixed property transactions, prior to
the registration of transfers. These transactions would occur on the
back of valid transfers of fixed property. This was how Malokiba’s
business was held out to potential investors but the reality
was
different. It turned out that Malokiba often accepted investments and
lent out money without back-up property transfers. The
outcome was an
inevitable debacle whereby new investors’ funds were used to
pay out earlier investors and, when insufficient
new investment funds
were received, the entire scheme collapsed.
[3] The appellant, Gazit Properties (Pty) Ltd (Gazit),
was one such investor, having lent and advanced a total sum of R5
million
to Malokiba. Written loan agreements were concluded between
Gazit and Malokiba in respect of this money. In terms thereof Gazit
would receive interest of 2.5 per cent of the capital loan monthly
and the agreements would remain in force for an indefinite period,
subject to cancellation by any party after the expiry of three months
and on 45 days’ notice. Gazit exercised its right of
cancellation accordingly and the full capital and interest were paid
by Malokiba.
[4] The amount in issue, R3 050 355, is in respect of
payments made by Malokiba within the six-month period preceding its
liquidation.
The parties entered into a pre-trial agreement whereby
Gazit admitted that immediately after every payment, Malokiba’s
liabilities
exceeded its assets; that every payment had the effect of
preferring Gazit as a creditor above Malokiba’s other
creditors;
and that every payment to Gazit constituted an alienation
of its assets by Malokiba. The parties also agreed that Malokiba did
not intend to prefer Gazit above other creditors in making these
payments and that the only issue which the court had to determine
related to the liquidators’ claim under s 29(1) of the Act and
was whether the payments to Gazit were made in the ordinary
course of
business. Section 29(1) reads as follows:
‘
Every
disposition of his property made by a debtor not more than six months
before the sequestration of his estate . . . . which
has had the
effect of preferring one of his creditors above another, may be set
aside by the Court if immediately after the making
of such
disposition the liabilities of the debtor exceeded the value of his
assets, unless the person in whose favour the disposition
was made
proves that the disposition was made in the ordinary course of
business and that it was not intended thereby to prefer
one creditor
above another.’
[5] The gist of Gazit’s case was that Malokiba had
repaid the loans in accordance with its obligations in terms of valid
underlying
loan agreements in the ordinary course of business. The
liquidators, on the other hand, contended that the payments were not
made
in Malokiba’s ordinary course of business, since its
business was tainted. Three bases were advanced in the particulars
for
trial, namely:
(a) that Malokiba had contravened s 11(1) of the Banks
Act 94 of 1990 in that it procured loans from the general public to
be lent
out further, without being registered as a bank;
(b) that the interest rate paid by Malokiba to investors
exceeded the maximum allowed under Government Notice 1135 of 1999
(published
in
Government Gazette
20169 of 1999) and issued
under s 26(6) of the Consumer Affairs (Unfair Business Practices) Act
71 of 1988, meaning, presumably,
that Malokiba conducted an unlawful
harmful business practice; and
(c) that Malokiba’s business constituted a
prohibited pyramid scheme in terms of the same notice, with new
investors’
funds being utilised to make interest payments to
existing investors.
[6] At the trial the liquidators expressly abandoned
ground (c) and did not raise the allegation under (b). It was, in
particular,
never alleged that the interest rate paid under the loan
agreements with the appellant was unlawful. Before us the liquidators
also did not rely on (b). The focus was the contravention of the
Banks Act and, in spite of the particulars for trial, on the
allegation
that the appellant and other investors had been misled in
lending money to the company and that the appellant had been repaid
from
money sourced from new investors. Before us the liquidators put
their case as follows:
‘
It is clear that the loan
agreements are tainted and cannot be regarded as genuine loans in
view of the evidence to the effect that
the appellant had been
deceived to make investments, ostensibly earmarked for specific
property transactions, whilst this was not
the true situation; the
appellant failed to adduce any evidence to negate the conclusion that
it had been paid by funds sourced
from new investors.’
[7] The high court, in adopting the argument of the
liquidators, laid heavy emphasis on the fundamental contamination
(‘fundamentele
kontaminasie’) of the transaction whereby
Malokiba repaid the loans to Gazit. Such contamination, held Kruger
AJ, was to
be found in Malokiba’s contravention of the Banks
Act followed by (’opgevolg deur’) a transaction not made
in
the ordinary course of business because, he said, it was a
transaction ‘wat gebuk [gegaan het] onder die bewese omringende
wanpraktyke’ namely that Malokiba had entered into loan
agreements under false pretences. The underlying premise, which is
to
focus on the nature of the insolvent’s general business
practices, is in my judgment misplaced and concentrating on the
‘tainted’ nature of Malokiba’s general business
model is to misapply the provisions of s 29(1). What it requires
is a
close scrutiny of the dispositions itself, viewed against the
background of its causa.
[8] The general test of what constitutes a disposition
in the ordinary course of business is well established. In
Estate
Wege v Strauss
1932 AD 76
the matter
concerned a transaction between a professional bookmaker (Strauss)
and his client (Wege) and this court had to determine
whether the
transaction had been concluded in Strauss’s ordinary course of
business. Wessels ACJ found that in the special
type of business of
that kind it is not normal for a bookmaker to permit the settlement
of betting debts to stand over for an unlimited
period of time and
that the late payment therefore was not done in Strauss’s
ordinary course of business. He said that
‘
if
a debtor pays a debt in accordance with the stipulations of his
contract, then such payment is
prima facie
made in the ordinary course of business’. This
means that one first has to have regard to the nature of the
obligation in
terms of which the disposition or payment was made.
This was made clear by Van Winsen JA in
Hendriks
NO v Swanepoel
1962 (4) SA 338
(A) at 345B
when he said the following:
‘
Die
Hof benader die vraag of ‘n transaksie in die gewone loop van
sake geskied het, objektief wanneer hy hom afvra of, in
ag genome die
voorwaardes van die ooreenkoms en die omstandighede waaronder dit
aangegaan is, die bedoelde ooreenkoms een is wat
normaalweg tussen
solvente besigheidsmense aangegaan sou word.’
The same approach was adopted in
Amalgamated Banks of
South Africa Bpk v De Goede & ‘n ander
1997 (4) SA 66
(SCA) at 78C-D where FH Grosskopf JA said the test under s 29(1)
involved the question whether the underlying transaction was one
‘met
gebruiklike terme wat gewone besigheidsmense normaalweg onder die
gegewe omstandighede sou aangegaan het.’
[9] Gazit accepted that it bore the onus of proving that
the payments had been made by Malokiba in the ordinary course of its
business.
It led evidence, as did the liquidators. It is not
necessary to detail and discuss the evidence. On the common cause
facts and
on the admissions by Gazit in the pre-trial agreement
mentioned above, Gazit’s loans had been repaid by Malokiba in
accordance
with the terms of the parties’ loan agreements, ie
by due date and on the terms as stipulated in the loan agreements. It
is eminently a case of solvent business people entering into an
agreement whereby the one lends and advances money to the other
and
the latter in turn agrees to repay that loan with interest over a
period of time and the capital in full by the end of the
agreement
(whether that end occurs by the effluxion of time or on notice or by
some other event, as is stipulated in the loan agreement).
This means
that since Gazit was vested with a contractual right to be repaid as
soon as it cancelled the loan agreements in accordance
with the terms
of cancellation, Malokiba concomitantly had a contractual obligation
to make the repayment.
[10] The liquidators, as mentioned,
relied on the fact that in accepting deposits from the general public
and lending same out to
others, Malokiba had conducted the business
of a bank in contravention of s 11(1) of the Banks Act and that this
some way or other
tainted the loan agreements
.
The fact that Malokiba did
contravene the Act does not mean that the loan agreements were not
normal agreements within the terms
of the
Amalgamated
Banks
dictum quoted
above.
There
is nothing in the Act that leads to such a conclusion, see
Oilwell
v Protec
2011
(4) SA 394
(SCA)
para 19.
To the contrary, the
provisions of s 83(1) of that Act, which empower the Registrar of
Banks to direct the recipient of money unlawfully
obtained while
unlawfully carrying on the business of a bank to repay such money,
lead ineluctably to the opposite conclusion.
[11] In any event, on the assumption that the loans were
on this ground void, the money had to be repaid by the company on
demand.
This is not a case where the
par
delictum
-rule could find any application. No
evidence was tendered that the investors, in particular Gazit, knew
that Malokiba’s business
was illegal. As Conradie JA put it in
a different but analogous context in
Fourie N
O v Edeling N O
[2005] 4 All SA 393
(SCA) par
13 (that matter concerned undue preference to creditors in terms of s
30(1) of the Act, but contextually the position
is no different than
the present matter):
‘
The
scheme never had the least entitlement to repay investors’
money until the date which had supposedly been agreed as the
due date
for repayment. The perpetrators of the scheme knew the investments to
be illegal. There is, on the other hand, no evidence
that any of the
investors knew their investments to be tainted, nothing from which to
infer that any one of them acted
ex
turpi causa
.
That being so, no question arises of relaxing the [
par
delictum
]
rule . . . . Upon receipt of a payment the scheme was liable promptly
to repay it to the investor who had a claim for it under
the
condictio
ob iniustam causam.
’
[12] That brings me to the other instances of
‘fundamental contamination’. The first is that Malokiba
misled Gazit in
entering into the loan agreements as to the purpose
for which the money would be put to use. I fail to understand the
relevance
of this point. Gazit was entitled, had it become aware of
the misrepresentation, to cancel the contracts. But until cancelled,
it remained valid and enforceable and payment in its terms
(especially by the guilty party) could never be regarded as not being
in the ordinary course of business.
[13] The last point of contamination relates to the fact
that Malokiba did not have money to repay the loan unless it utilised
the
money raised through misrepresentations from new investors. The
fact that Malokiba’s liabilities may have exceeded its assets
at the time of payment is irrelevant –
Hendriks NO v
Swanepoel
, supra, at 345C;
Pretorius’ Trustee v Van
Blommenstein
1949 (1) SA 267
(O) at 276. Nor does it matter where
the funds to make the payment had been procured from. There is no
authority which counsel
could refer us to which has the effect that
the source of payment is material to an enquiry whether a disposition
was made in the
ordinary course of business. Payment of a debt with
stolen money does not taint the payment. This is not a case where in
making
the dispositions or payments Malokiba committed an offence or
acted in fraud of the rights of third parties –
Du Plooy NO
v National Industrial Credit Corporation Ltd
1961 (3) SA 741
(W)
at 744C-D.
[14] Much reliance was placed by the liquidators on this
court’s recent judgment in
Janse van Rensburg NO v Botha
[2011] ZASCA 72.
That case concerned a disposition to one of the
Krion scheme investors, which the scheme’s liquidators sought
to have set
aside under s 29(1) of the Act. They were successful. But
counsel wrongly contended that that case is on all fours with the
present
case. The issues in that case were set out in para 3 of the
judgment. Disposition in the ordinary course of business was not one
of them.
[15] In summary therefore, Malokiba duly complied with
its contractual obligation to repay the loans to Gazit, which had
become
due when Gazit cancelled the loan agreements in accordance
with its terms. The tainted nature of Malokiba’s business is
irrelevant
to the fact that such repayment was made in Malokiba’s
ordinary course of business. The high court therefore erred in
upholding
the liquidators’ claim in terms of s 29(1) of the
Act.
[16] The appeal is upheld with costs. The order of the
court below is set aside and substituted with the following:
‘
The plaintiff’s claim is
dismissed with costs.’
___________
S A MAJIEDT
JUDGE OF APPEAL
APPEARANCES:
Counsel for appellants : P ELLIS SC
Instructed by : KMG & Associates Incorporated,
Brooklyn
Lovius Block Attorneys, Bloemfontein
Counsel for respondents : J G WASSERMAN SC (with him P A
SWANEPOEL)
Instructed by : Tintingers Incorporated, Pretoria
Symington & de Kok, Bloemfontein