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[2022] ZAMPMBHC 71
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Sinokhule Development Consultants (Pty) Ltd v Mbombela Housing Association (4937/2021) [2022] ZAMPMBHC 71 (25 August 2022)
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(MPUMALANGA DIVISION,
MBOMBELA)
CASE NO: 4937/2021
REPORTABLE: NO
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: YES
REVISED: YES
25/08/2022
In the matter between:
SINOKHULE
DEVELOPMENT CONSULTANTS (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
MBOMBELA
HOUSING
ASSOCIATION
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MASHILE J:
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This is an Application for the provisional winding-up of the
Respondent (“MHA”) in terms of Section 343(1)(a) of the
Companies Act, 61 of 1973 (“the Act”). Item 9 of Schedule
5 of the
Companies Act, 71 of 2008
, provides that all insolvent
companies will be liquidated under Chapter 14 of the Act. The basis
of the application is that MHA
is unable to pay its debts as and when
they arise as contemplated in Section 344(f) of the Act.
[2]
Briefly, MHA opposes the application on the ground that the agreement
that it concluded
with the Applicant (“Sinokhule”)
anticipates that any amount that it owes to Sinokhule will only
become due and payable
upon it receiving payment from SHRA.
Accordingly, continues the argument, since MHA has not received any
payment from its sources,
payment is not due, notwithstanding the
fact that it owes the amount to Sinokhule. On the other hand, and as
a preliminary point,
Sinokhule has raised the fact that the
resolution on which the deponent to the answering affidavit relies
for his authority is
signed by him alone aside his claim that he has
been authorised by all the directors of MHA.
FACTUAL MATRIX
[3]
The terse background against which the liquidation application
arises is fully canvassed below. T
he facts upon
which this claim is founded are generally common cause. In a letter
dated 20 October 2020, MHA appointed Sinokhule
as Project Managers
for the development of a Social Housing Development of Mbombela
Housing Association in Sonheuwel Extension
12. The appointment letter
was subsequently followed by a conclusion of a written agreement
between the parties on 29 October 2020.
The agreement was for the
pre-feasibility stage of the project. In terms of the agreement
Sinokhule was to provide required services
and render reports to MHA
to enable it to settle its submission to SHRA.
[4]
All quotations and appointments would form part of the submission of
MHA to SHRA.
Once the funding from SHRA has been approved, a fee
claim for services rendered could be submitted. In terms of the
letter of appointment
MHA would advise the professional team in
writing once the above approval has been received. According to the
letter of appointment
it was only at that stage that formal invoices
could be submitted to MHA. Certain payments were to be made by MHA to
Sinokhule
on specific intervals during the subsistence of the
agreement. Additionally, MHA had agreed to make payment of certain
retainer
amounts to Sinokhule. I proceed to describe the intervals
below:
4.1
Stage 1 Inception (5%)
R61 334.98
;
4.2
Stage 2 Concept and Viability (25%)
R306 674.89
;
4.3
Stage 3 Design Development (25%)
R306
674.89;
4.4
Stage 4 Documentation and Procure (15%)
R184 004.93
;
4.5
Stage 5 Contract Admin and Superv (25%)
R306 674.89
; and
4.6
Close-out (5%)
R61 334.98
.
TOTAL
R1 226 699.56
.
[5]
It is not disputed that Sinokhule has discharged its obligations
arising in terms
of the agreement. MHA on the other hand, admits that
it has failed to effect payment to Sinokhule and that at least an
amount of
R61 334.98
remains due and payable. MHA does
not dispute having received invoices containing the amounts claimed
by Sinokhule. On 18 August
2021 and noting that MHA was not making
payment, Sinokhule caused a letter of demand for payment in terms of
Section 345(1)(a)(i)
of the Act to be served by the sheriff at the
registered address of MHA. The sheriff served the letter on 24 August
2021.
[6]
On the basis of the above, Sinokhule states that:
6.1 MHA
is unable to pay its debt after service upon it of a demand in
accordance with the Provisions of Section
344 and 345;
6.2 MHA
is unable to pay its debt as provided for in Section 345(1)(c) as it
is indebted to Sinokhule in an amount
of not less than one hundred
rand, which amount is due and payable.
[7]
The demand aforesaid in terms of Sections 344 and 345 of the Act
notwithstanding,
MHA has still not paid the amount it owes to
Sinokhule nor has it in the alternative, provided security for the
amount nor has
it compounded for the said amount. In consequence,
Sinokhule submits that in terms of Section 345(1)(a)(i) of the Act,
MHA ought
to be deemed to be unable to pay its debts.
ISSUES
[8]
There are three issues that stand for determination. First is the
point in
limine
concerning the admissibility of the answering
affidavit. This was brought about as a result of the answering
affidavit signed by
one director despite the allegation that
authority has been given to the deponent by his co-directors. Second
is that whether or
not MHA is commercially insolvent. Requiring it to
be placed under provisional liquidation, as Sinokhule believes it
should. Third,
whether or not the submission of the invoices by
Sinokhule was premature in terms of the provisions of the agreement.
LEGAL
FRAMEWORK
[9]
Section 344(f) of the Act is headed: Circumstances in which company
may be wound-up
by Court. It provides that a company may be wound-up
by a Court if
the
company is unable to pay its debts as described in section 345.
Section 345(1) and (2) of the Act in relevant parts describes
when a
company or body corporate shall be deemed unable to pay its debts. It
lays down that:
(a)
a
creditor, by cession or otherwise, to whom the company is indebted in
a sum not less than one hundred rand then due –
(i)
has
served on the company, by leaving the same at its registered office,
a demand requiring the company to pay the sum so due; or
(ii)
in
the case of any Body Corporate not incorporated under this Act, has
served such demand by leaving it at its main office or delivering
it
to the secretary or some director, manager or principal officer of
such body corporate or in such other manner as the Court
may direct,
and the company or body corporate has for three weeks thereafter
neglected to pay the sum, or to secure or compound
for it to the
reasonable satisfaction of the creditor; or
(iii)
…
(iv)
it
is proved to the satisfaction of the Court that the company is unable
to pay its debts.
(2)
In
determining for the purpose of subsection (1) whether a company is
unable to pay its debts, the Court shall also take into account
the
contingent and prospective liabilities of the company.”
[10]
Sinokhule seeks the provisional liquidation of MHA on the ground of
commercial insolvency because
it is unable to pay its debts. It is
therefore necessary to draw a distinction between factual and
commercial insolvency. The former
refers to an instance where the
liabilities of a Respondent debtor exceed its assets. Commercial
insolvency, on the other hand,
denotes a situation where a Respondent
debtor is illiquid that it cannot pay its debts. This is aside from
the fact that the assets
of such a Respondent debtor exceed its
liabilities. See,
Boschpoort
Ondernemings
(Pty)
Ltd
v
Absa
Bank
Ltd.
[1]
[11]
In
Afgri
Operations
Limited
v
Hamba
Fleet
(Pty)
Limited
[2]
the
Court stated that a Court’s discretion must be exercised
judicially and must not lose sight of the specific principle
that
generally, an unpaid creditor has a right,
ex
debito
justitiae
,
to a winding-up order against the Respondent company that has not
discharged that debt. W
here
it is common cause between the parties, as is the position in this
matter, that MHA has failed to liquidate an established
debt or one
that it has admitted, the discretion of this Court whether to grant
the application or not is limited. See, Afgri Operation
limited
supra
at
Para 12
.
Accordingly,
the discretion of a Court to refuse to grant a winding-up order in
circumstances where an unpaid creditor applies is
very limited and
infrequently exercised. It will only be applied in special or unusual
circumstances.
[12]
It was further stated in the Afgri Operations Limited case
supra
that
the question of onus is important. The onus of proving that the
Respondent is indebted rests with the Applicant. Once the
Respondent’s indebtedness to the Applicant for a winding-up
order has,
prima
facie
,
been established, it becomes incumbent upon the Respondent to show
that this indebtedness is indeed disputed on
bona
fide
and reasonable grounds. If one accepts the test set out in the
English cases upon which the Respondent has relied, the Respondent
would have to show that its counterclaim was “genuine”.
[13]
Winding-up proceedings are not to be used to enforce payment of a
debt especially in those instances
where a debt is disputed on
bona
fide
and
reasonable grounds. Where there has been a
prima
facie
establishment
of a Respondents indebtedness, the onus is on it to demonstrate that
this indebtedness is indeed disputed on
bona
fide
and
reasonable grounds. See,
Afgri
Operations Limited supra and Kyle & Others v Maritz and Pieterse
Incorporated
[3]
.
ANALYSIS
VALIDITY
OF THE ANSWERING AFFIDAVIT
[14]
Sinokhule has put in issue the legal status of the answering
affidavit. It does so as the deponent
claims to be acting on behalf
of MHA. MHA is a non-profit making organisation (“NPO)”
run by a board of directors.
The resolution from which the deponent
ostensibly derives his authority to represent MHA is signed by him
alone bringing into doubt
his authority emanating from a manifestly
invalid resolution that cannot possibly allow him to depose to the
affidavit on behalf
of MHA.
[15]
Uniform Rule of Court 7(1) provides that:
“
Subject to the
provisions of sub rules (2) and (3) a power of attorney to act need
not be filed, but the authority of anyone acting
on behalf of a party
may, within
10
days
after it has come to the notice of a party that such person is so
acting, or with the leave of the court on good cause shown
at any
time before judgment, be disputed, whereafter such person may no
longer act unless he satisfied the court that he is authorised
so to
act, and to enable him to do so the court may postpone the hearing of
the action or application.”
[16]
The resolution is
ex
facie
defective as it is signed by one director, the deponent, who claims
that he has been authorised by his co-directors. The point
is how can
he claim to have been given authority when the other directors
constituting the board, which is responsible for the
discharge of
duties and obligations of MHA did not sign it? Rule 7(1)
supra
is explicit and unambiguous that the deponent in circumstances such
as in
casu
would not have authority. In short, the answering affidavit is
invalid and should be declared pro-non
scripto
and the application should be regarded as unopposed and an order in
favour of Sinokhule granted.
[17]
Ordinarily, the conclusion above should be the end of the road for
MHA. That said and while I
am persuaded that the affidavit is invalid
as a result of the resolution signed by the deponent alone, a
challenge to authority
should generally comply with Rule 7(1) in that
it ought to be served within 10 days of a party becoming aware of the
lack of authority.
I have no knowledge of when Sinokhule became aware
of the lack of authority and in any event, Sinokhule did not deliver
a notice
in terms of Rule 7(1) notifying MHA of the issue.
[18]
I proceed to deal with the merits of the application merely as a
matter of caution in case I
find myself forced to grant leave to
appeal on the point in
limine
.
Were that to happen, I might deprive the court of appeal of the views
and opinion of this Court on the merits of this application.
It is
solely against that background that I continue to have regard to the
merits herein below.
IS
MHA UNABLE TO PAY ITS DEBTS
[19]
Here the issue is whether or not MHA is unable to pay its debts as
and when they arise as envisaged
in Section 345 of the Act. Sinokhule
has met all the jurisdictional factors mentioned in Section 345 and
these are the following:
19.1
Sinokhule must be a creditor of MHA;
19.2
MHA is indebted to Sinokhule in an amount well in excess of
R100.00
as it has admitted that it owes Sinokhule an amount of at least
R61 334.98
,
which is due and payable;
19.3
Sinokhule has served a demand at the registered address of MHA
calling upon it to settle the amount by which it is indebted;
19.4
MHA disputes neither the service nor the manner in which the demand
was served upon it;
19.5
MHA
has
for three weeks since the service of the demand neglected to pay the
sum, or to secure or compound for it to the reasonable
satisfaction
of Sinokhule;
19.6
MHA is unable to pay its debts.
[20]
On a consideration of the above alone, Sinokhule is entitled to the
order it seeks, provisional
liquidation of MHA. It must be recalled
that where a debtor has admitted indebtedness to a creditor and
inability to pay, the Court
has virtually no discretion to exercise
in favour of the debtor but to grant the order as prayed for. See,
the Afgri Operations
Limited case
supra.
The
assertion of MHA that the invoices of Sinokhule were prematurely
presented to it as the agreement stipulates that they should
only be
submitted on approval of funding by SHRA cannot find favour with this
Court. I agree with Counsel for Sinokhule that MHA
is not being
bona
fide
and reasonable as required by Afgri Operations Limited and Kyle and
Others cases
supra
as
it hides behind the clause without any demonstration of submission of
the quotations and appointments to SHRA. The difficulty
with the
contention advance by MHA is that it is possible for it to sit on the
invoices for an inordinate amount of time even to
the extent of
jeopardizing prescription of the claim of Sinokhule while the latter
has incurred expenses to execute on the mandate.
SUBMISSION
OF INVOICES ONLY AFTER APPROVAL OF FUNDING BY SHRA
[21]
Besides, it is clear that the agreement that the parties concluded
relates to a pre-feasibility
stage of the project, which would then
enable MHA to finalise all its documents for submission to SHRA.
Sinokhule has executed
on its contractual obligations insofar as it
has enabled MHA to perfect its documents for submission. MHA does not
show that it
has submitted the documents to SHRA and that funding is
awaiting approval. In this sense therefore MHA is not being
bona
fide
and
reasonable. Sinokhule is entitled not to be satisfied by the mere
citation of the clause pertaining to invoices without more.
[22]
I must accept the submission by Counsel for Sinokhule that
provisional liquidation is not the
end of the road for MHA. It still
has opportunity to go back to the drawing boards and to come back on
the return date of the rule
nisi to show why it ought not to be
finally liquidated. MHA should regard the return date as a possible
new bill of health on its
continued existence. As such, it must
endeavour to show why the rule
nisi
should
not be confirmed.
[23]
In the result, the application succeeds and I make the following
order:
1.
MHA is placed under Provisional Liquidation in the hands of the
Master of the High Court.
2.
A
rule
nisi
returnable on 24 October 2022 is granted.
3.
MHA and any other interested party are called upon on the return day
to show reason why:
3.1
A final Liquidation Order should not be granted;
3.2
The cost of this application should not be cost in the administration
of the liquidation of MHA;
3.3
The Provisional Liquidation Order should not be served by the Sheriff
on MHA at its registered office;
3.4
The Provisional Liquidation Order should not be served on the office
of the South African Revenue Service;
3.5
The Provisional Liquidation Order should not be sent by registered
mail to all known creditors with
claims of more than R5 000.00
against MHA;
3.6
The Provisional Liquidation Order should not be published in one
edition of the “Lowvelder Herhald”
and “Die Beeld”;
B A MASHILE
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
MPUMALANGA DIVISION,
MBOMBELA
This judgment was
handed down electronically by circulation to the parties and/or
parties’ representatives by email. The date
and time for
hand-down is deemed to be 25 August 2022 at 10:00.
APPEARANCES:
Counsel for the
Plaintiff: Adv
HF Fourie
Instructed
by:
Cronje,
De Waal – Skhosana Inc
Counsel for the
Respondent:
Mr D
Gama
Instructed
by:
D
Gama Attorneys
Date of
Judgment:
25
August 2022
[1]
[2014]
1
All
SA
507
(SCA)
at Para 16
[2]
[2017]
JOL
37585
(SCA)
at Para 12
[3]
2002
(3) ALL SA 223
(T) AT 13