Barnard N.O and Another v Mathura and Another (39335/19) [2020] ZAGPPHC 46 (31 January 2020)

80 Reportability
Insolvency Law

Brief Summary

Insolvency — Sequestration — Requirements for final sequestration order — Applicants, as liquidators of JVSS Holdings (Pty) Ltd, sought a final sequestration of respondents’ joint estate, which was provisionally sequestrated — Respondents raised points in limine regarding security for fees and material disputes of fact — Court found that necessary security had been set and that disputes of fact did not preclude the application — Applicants established a liquidated claim exceeding R100,00 against the respondents, who were found to have received payments from the insolvent estate post-liquidation — Final sequestration order granted as it was to the advantage of creditors.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


This matter concerned an application for the final sequestration of the joint estate of two natural persons. The proceedings were brought in the High Court of South Africa, Gauteng Division, Pretoria, as motion proceedings of the kind contemplated by the Insolvency Act 24 of 1936.


The applicants were Jacolien Frieda Barnard N.O. and Kghashane Christopher Monyela N.O., acting jointly in their capacities as the duly appointed liquidators of JVSS Holdings (Pty) Ltd (in liquidation). The respondents were Mr Vikah Mathura and Mrs Jagruth Jantilal Mathura, married in community of property, such that the application implicated their joint estate.


A provisional sequestration order had previously been granted, with the matter thereafter enrolled for final determination on 27 January 2020. The return date had been extended in the interim. The applicants sought confirmation of the rule nisi and a final order. The respondents opposed final sequestration and raised preliminary objections, including an objection related to security and an objection that the matter involved material disputes of fact.


The general subject-matter of the dispute was whether the applicants, as liquidators of a company in liquidation, had established the statutory requirements for the final sequestration of the respondents’ joint estate, based on allegedly void dispositions and other post-liquidation payments made from the company’s bank account.


2. Material Facts


It was common cause that the applicants were the appointed liquidators of JVSS Holdings (Pty) Ltd (in liquidation), and that the first respondent had been the Chief Executive Officer of JVSS. It was also common cause that the respondents were married in community of property, meaning their property interests were administered as a joint estate for purposes of sequestration.


It was further common cause that a final liquidation order in respect of JVSS was granted on 22 March 2018, and that after the liquidation of JVSS, payments were made from JVSS’s bank account.


Among the post-liquidation payments, the court recorded that funds from JVSS’s account were used to pay the first respondent’s attorneys, Wright Rose-Innes, in respect of the first respondent’s legal costs. The applicants had also instituted proceedings against Wright Rose-Innes for repayment of those funds. The court treated the diversion of funds to settle the first respondent’s personal attorney costs as a basis upon which the first respondent could be liable, while recognising that the amount could not be recovered twice.


The court accepted as fact (based on the exposition of payments and the answering affidavit) that amounts were paid from the JVSS account to the first respondent personally after the liquidation of JVSS. The payments identified were:


14 April 2018: R1 250.00; 28 April 2018: R400.00; 2 May 2018: R80.00; 3 May 2018: R155 000.00; 4 May 2018: R30 000.00; and 1 June 2018: R2 000.00, totalling R188 730.00.


The first respondent did not deny that these payments were made to him after liquidation. The disputed aspect was the first respondent’s explanation for why the payments should not be treated as recoverable by the liquidators. He alleged that monies paid into the JVSS account were paid in for his own benefit (including a pension fund pay-out and alleged funds from Undivista (Pty) Ltd), with the company purportedly acting as an agent or receiver of those funds for his personal benefit.


The court treated as significant that the bank statement entries reflected a reference to “Jayeshkumar Patel” rather than Undivista (Pty) Ltd, and that there was no confirmatory affidavit from Undivista (Pty) Ltd substantiating the alleged earmarking of funds for the first respondent’s personal benefit. The court further noted an absence of evidence that the monies were held in a segregated or trust account, or that JVSS was restricted from using funds deposited into its account; instead, the funds were treated as having been commingled with the company’s monies.


On the question of insolvency by conduct, it was common cause that the liquidators sent a letter of demand dated 30 October 2018 (claiming repayment of identified payments totalling R187 400.00) and a further demand by email dated 23 November 2018. It was not in dispute that the first respondent responded by email on 28 November 2018 and again on 29 November 2018, stating that he was engaging third parties to arrange funds and that he would discuss an amicable settlement once funds became available. The court treated the emails as conveying an acknowledgement of indebtedness and inability to pay.


On the procedural objections, the court found from the electronic case record that the required security for fees and charges had been set prior to the hearing at which the provisional sequestration order was granted. The respondents had also filed an answering affidavit late, but the court held that the question of condonation had become moot in light of the later procedural steps and filing timelines provided for in subsequent court orders.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal questions were whether the applicants established the statutory requirements for a final sequestration order, namely whether they had shown:


A claim entitling them to apply for sequestration, including whether they held a liquidated claim meeting the statutory threshold.


That the respondents were actually insolvent or had committed an act of insolvency, with particular focus on whether the respondents’ correspondence constituted an act of insolvency under section 8(g) of the Insolvency Act 24 of 1936.


That there was reason to believe sequestration would be to the advantage of creditors.


The dispute involved a combination of application of law to fact (for example, whether admitted post-liquidation payments and correspondence met statutory tests), and evaluative judgment (for example, whether there was reason to believe sequestration would advantage creditors). The court also had to address procedural questions concerning alleged material disputes of fact in motion proceedings and a point in limine relating to security.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The court first addressed the preliminary points. On the security point, it held that the record showed the necessary security for fees and charges had been set before the provisional order was granted, and the objection was therefore not sustained on the facts.


On the alleged disputes of fact, the court emphasised that sequestration applications are brought on motion as prescribed by section 9 of the Insolvency Act 24 of 1936, and that not every asserted dispute amounts to a material dispute requiring dismissal or referral to oral evidence. The court referred to the Plascon-Evans approach to factual disputes in motion proceedings and also noted that where truly material disputes exist, the respondent should apply for viva voce evidence to be heard. No such application had been brought.


Regarding the late answering affidavit, it was common cause that the answering affidavit had not been filed timeously and that a provisional order had been granted in circumstances where the respondents had failed to file timeously. However, the court held that condonation had become moot because the subsequent orders regulating the further steps in the matter (including a direction for a replying affidavit) meant that the answering affidavit was before court in the relevant time frame for purposes of showing cause on the return date, and the applicants had suffered no prejudice by being afforded an opportunity to reply.


On the first substantive requirement, the court identified the threshold that a creditor must establish: a liquidated claim of not less than R100.00, and it considered whether the papers established indebtedness in an amount exceeding that figure. Although the respondents criticised the notion that an applicant could allege a much higher indebtedness but succeed on proof of a smaller amount, the court treated the statutory threshold as decisive and also observed that creditors must still prove their claims in the insolvent estate after sequestration.


The court then limited its focus to void dispositions rather than broader allegations of voidable transactions, referring to the distinction in the Companies Act 61 of 1973. It accepted that the liquidated claim need not be due and payable at institution, provided it had accrued, and reiterated that in motion proceedings it was bound to consider the respondents’ version together with admitted facts in the applicants’ affidavit.


Applying these principles, the court accepted that post-liquidation payments to the first respondent personally were established on the papers. While the first respondent attempted to characterise the deposits as being for his personal benefit and JVSS as a mere recipient or agent, the court found the explanation unsubstantiated in material respects, particularly due to the lack of a confirmatory affidavit from Undivista (Pty) Ltd and the absence of documentary support demonstrating earmarking or segregation of funds. The court was not prepared to accept the first respondent’s bald assertions as creating a genuine, bona fide material dispute requiring oral evidence.


The court reasoned further that, as the funds were in JVSS’s bank account and commingled with the company’s funds, JVSS (and after liquidation, its liquidators) held the personal right against the bank to the credit in the account. After liquidation, it was for the liquidators to determine the status of claims against the company, and directors had no right to meet claims after liquidation; the court therefore treated post-liquidation payments as irregular and unauthorised.


The court applied the principle that a disposition of property after a company has been placed in liquidation is void (not merely voidable) unless a court orders otherwise, and that liquidators are obliged to recover void payments. It noted as significant that the respondents had not sought a court declaration that the payments were not void, and it also relied on the correspondence in which the first respondent had indicated willingness to settle once funds were obtained. On this basis the court held that the R188 730.00 was established, determinable, and flowed from a statutory recovery obligation, and thus constituted a liquidated claim for purposes of section 9 of the Insolvency Act.


On the second substantive requirement, the court held that the evidence did not substantiate a finding of factual insolvency. It nevertheless observed that the applicants lacked detailed knowledge of the respondents’ liquidity, and that the respondents had not produced financial statements or asset valuations to rebut the allegation. The court treated the respondents’ bald denial as leaving uncertainty regarding their ability to pay, which fed into the analysis of an act of insolvency.


The court then found an act of insolvency under section 8(g) of the Insolvency Act based on the undisputed email responses. It interpreted the emails as acknowledging indebtedness, confirming that payment was due, and most importantly communicating inability to pay rather than unwillingness to pay.


On the third requirement, the court considered whether there was reason to believe sequestration would advantage creditors. It accepted that advantage may be indirect, including the possibility that an insolvency enquiry and investigation could reveal or recover assets or impeachable dispositions. It referred to authority stating that it is not necessary to prove existing assets if there are reasons to think an enquiry may reveal recoverable assets.


The court also considered that the provisional order had been advertised and that no creditor had come forward to oppose. It held that once a provisional order has been granted, the onus rests on the respondents to persuade the court that they are not insolvent and that sequestration would not be to the advantage of creditors. In the context of the first respondent’s irregular dealings with company funds, and the respondents’ unsubstantiated explanations and bare denial of advantage, the court found sufficient cause for a strong suspicion that assets and/or impeachable transactions might be discovered, thereby satisfying the “reason to believe” threshold.


5. Outcome and Relief


The court confirmed the rule nisi and granted a final sequestration order placing the joint estate of the respondents in the hands of the Master.


The court ordered that the applicants’ costs of the application would be costs in the sequestration.


Cases Cited


Amod v Khan 1947 (2) SA 432 (N)


Dunlop (Pty) Ltd v Brewitt 1999 (2) SA 580 (W)


Kalil v Decotex (Pty) Ltd and Another [1988] 2 All SA 159 (A)


Meskin v Friedman 1948 (2) SA 555 (W)


Muller NO & Another v Community Medical Aid Scheme (901/2010) [2011] ZASCA 228 (30 November 2011)


Plascon-Evans Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd [1984] ZASCA 51; 1984 (3) SA 623 (A)


Wackrill v Sandton International Removals (Pty) Ltd and Others 1984 (1) SA 282 (W)


Legislation Cited


Insolvency Act 24 of 1936 (as amended), including section 8(g) and section 9


Companies Act 61 of 1973, including section 417


Rules of Court Cited


No specific rule of court was cited by name in the judgment; the matter was treated as motion proceedings and approached through the application of the Plascon-Evans principle to factual disputes on affidavit.


Held


The court held that the applicants, as liquidators of JVSS Holdings (Pty) Ltd (in liquidation), established a liquidated claim against the respondents exceeding the statutory minimum, based on post-liquidation payments made from the company’s bank account to the first respondent personally, which the court treated as void dispositions recoverable by liquidators.


The court held that, although factual insolvency was not established on the papers, the first respondent’s emails in response to demands amounted to an act of insolvency in terms of section 8(g) of the Insolvency Act 24 of 1936, because they conveyed an acknowledgement of indebtedness and an inability to pay.


The court held further that there was reason to believe sequestration would be to the advantage of creditors, including through indirect advantage by enabling investigation and possible recovery of assets or impeachable dispositions, and that the respondents had not displaced the basis upon which the provisional order had been granted.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


A creditor seeking a final sequestration order must establish a claim entitling it to apply, show actual insolvency or an act of insolvency, and show reason to believe sequestration will be to the advantage of creditors. The statutory threshold for a liquidated claim (as discussed in the judgment) is treated as decisive, and the claim need not be due and payable provided it has accrued.


Sequestration proceedings are brought on motion in accordance with the procedural route contemplated by section 9 of the Insolvency Act 24 of 1936, and factual disputes are assessed using the Plascon-Evans approach. Not every asserted dispute constitutes a material dispute warranting dismissal or referral to oral evidence; where oral evidence is required, a respondent is expected to seek an appropriate order for viva voce evidence.


A written communication by a debtor acknowledging indebtedness and conveying an inability to pay, rather than a mere unwillingness, may constitute an act of insolvency in terms of section 8(g) of the Insolvency Act 24 of 1936.


A disposition of property after liquidation of a company is treated in the judgment as void and recoverable by liquidators unless a court orders otherwise; liquidators are obliged to collect the property of the company and recover void payments, and a determinable statutory recovery claim may satisfy the requirement of a liquidated claim for sequestration purposes.


The “advantage to creditors” requirement may be satisfied by indirect advantage, including the reasonable prospect that an insolvency enquiry and investigation may reveal or recover assets or impeachable transactions. After a provisional sequestration order, the judgment treats the respondent as bearing the onus to persuade the court that final sequestration should not be granted, including on advantage to creditors.

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[2020] ZAGPPHC 46
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Barnard N.O and Another v Mathura and Another (39335/19) [2020] ZAGPPHC 46 (31 January 2020)

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
DIVISION, PRETORIA
(1)
REPORTABLE:
YES
/NO
(2)
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
YES
/NO
(3)
REVISED:
YES
/NO
CASE
NO: 39335/19
31/1/2020
In
the matter between:
JACOLIEN
FRIEDA BARNARD N.O.

FIRST APPLICANT
KGHASHANE
CHRISTOPHER MONYELA N.O.

SECOND APPLICANT
(Acting
in their joint capacities as the duly appointed
Liquidators
of JVSS HOLDINGS (Pty) Ltd (In Liquidation).
Master
reference T2684/14)
And
MR
VIKAH MATHURA

FIRST RESPONDENT
(Identity
number [….])
(Married
in community of property)
MRS
JAGRUTH JANTILAL MATHURA

SECOND RESPONDENT
(Identity
number [….])
(Married
in community of property)
JUDGMENT
Coram,
Van
der Schyff J
Introduction
[1]
The
joint estate of the respondents was provisionally sequestrated on 18
May 2019. The return date was extended, and the matter
was enrolled
for final determination on 27 January 2020.
[2]
The
applicants seek a final sequestration order whereas the respondents
oppose the granting of a final order.
[3]
The
respondents raised two points
in
limine.
The first being that
according to the founding affidavit the applicants have not set
security for payment of fees and charges necessary
for the
prosecution of the sequestration as contemplated in the Insolvency
Act; the second that the application is rife with sharp
material
disputes of fact.
[4]
It
is evident from the documents filed electronically on caselines that
the necessary security had been set for the payment of fees
and
charges prior to the application being heard on 18 May 2019 and the
provisional order being granted.
[5]
The
second point cannot be decided
in
limine
but can only be decided after
the parties' respective affidavits and the facts set out therein have
been considered in the context
of the well-known Plascon-Evans
principle. It is trite that not every professed dispute of fact will
meet the bar of being regarded
as a material dispute of fact that may
lead to an application being dismissed or referred to oral evidence.
Sight should also not
be lost of the fact that
section 9
of the
Insolvency Act 24 of 1936
as amended, here after the
Insolvency Act,
prescribes
the procedural route that is to be followed when a
sequestration application is brought. As a result, sequestration
applications
must be brought on motion. Where material disputes of
fact exist, a respondent must apply for
viva
voce
evidence to be heard.
[1]
No such application was brought.
Late filing of the answering
affidavit
[6]
It
is common cause that the respondents failed to file their answering
affidavit timeously which resulted in the Court granting
a
provisional sequestration order.
[7]
The
applicants contend that the late filing of the respondents '
answering affidavit should not be condoned. In light of the fact
that
the order granted on 18 September 2019 calls on the respondents to
show cause on or before the return date of 16 October 2019
as to why
the provisional sequestration order should not be made final, and in
light of the fact that the subsequent order granted
on 16 October
2019 provides for the applicants to file a replying affidavit, I am
of the view that the issue of condonation became
moot. The answering
affidavit, which was filed before the return date stipulated in the
order of 18 September 2019, embodies the
respondents' case as to why
the provisional order should not be made final. It was delivered
within the stipulated time period
and nothing remains to be condoned.
By being afforded the opportunity to file a replying affidavit the
applicants were not prejudiced
at all.
Requirements to succeed with the
application
[8]
For
the applicants to succeed with this application they have to (i)
establish a claim which entitles them to apply for the sequestration

of the respondents' estate, (ii) show that the respondents are either
actually insolvent or have committed an act of insolvency,
and (iii)
show that there is reason to believe that the sequestration of the
respondent's joint estate will be to the advantage
of creditors.
(i)
Did the applicants establish a
claim which entitles them to apply for the sequestration of the
respondents' estate?
[9]
It is common cause that the applicants
are the appointed liquidators of JVSS Holdings (Pty) Ltd (In
Liquidation), hereafter referred
to as JVSS. The first respondent was
the Chief Executive Officer of JVSS, and he is married in community
of property to the second
respondent.
[10]     The
applicants essentially contend that the respondents are indebted to
them in their capacity as liquidators
of JVSS. They indicate that the
cause of the indebtedness is twofold, namely (i) voidable payments
made to entities wherein the
respondents have an interest and
payments made to the respondent personally after the provisional
liquidation of JVSS, and (ii)
and payments made to and on behalf of
the first respondent and other entities wherein the respondents have
an interest after the
date of the liquidation of JVSS.
[11]     I
pause to note that it is evident from the papers filed of record,
that the extent of the amount supposedly
appropriated by the first
respondent is disputed. In light of the fact that a creditor merely
needs to establish the existence
of a liquidated claim of not less
than R100,00 I am of the view that this requirement will be met if,
on the papers filed, it is
evident that the respondents are indebted
to the applicants in an amount exceeding R100,00.
[12]     This
view was vehemently contested by counsel acting for the respondents
who argued that it is unfair
for an applicant to state in the
founding affidavit that a debtor owns R600 000,00, and to then argue
that the requirement has
been met if a claim of R100,00 is proven.
[13]
However, it is trite that all creditors must still prove their claims
against the insolvent estate
once a final sequstration order is
granted. The respondents were provided with the information of
alleged payments made to and
in the interest of the respondents. The
respondents could answer to every allegation. The statutory
requirement of the necessity
to prove a liquidated claim of R100,00
is non­ negotiable.
[2]
[14]     Due
to the inherent difference between voidable and void dispositions
provided for in the Companies
Act, No 61 of 1973, I will only
consider the reference to void dispositions in determining whether
the applicants succeeded to
prove a claim against the respondents.
[15]     The
liquidated claim need not be due and payable at the date of
instituting the proceedings. It is
sufficient if the claim has
accrued.
[16]
Since the Court was approached on
motion, I am bound to consider the facts as stated by the respondents
together with the admitted
facts in the applicant's affidavit in
determining whether it can be found that the respondents' joint
estate is indebted to the
applicants in their capacity as liquidators
of JVSS.
[3]
[17]
I pause to note that I am of the view
that the applicants excessively inflated this application with
information which, although
it might be relevant to an inquiry in
terms of section 417 of the Companies Act, were irrelevant for
purposes of this application.
The respondents likewise inflated the
answering affidavit with a host of irrelevant information.
[18]
It is common cause that the final
liquidation order of JVSS was granted on 22 March 2018.
[19]
It is likewise common cause that
payments were made to different entities after JVSS was liquidated,
amongst others:
a.
Funds from JVSS's account were used to
remunerate the first applicant's attorneys Wright Rose-Innes for the
first respondent's legal
costs. The applicants instituted legal
proceedings against Wright Rose-Innes for repayment of these
payments. It was surmised that
as a result of proceedings being
instituted against Wright Rose-Innes for these funds, that these
payments cannot form part of
any 'liquidated claim' that the
applicants might have against the respondent. This contention cannot
be correct. The funds were
diverted to pay the first respondent's
personal debts to his attorney, and as a result the first respondent
is liable to repay
those, regardless of whether the recipient is also
obliged to repay or not. The only principle is that the amount cannot
be recovered
twice.
b.
I am, however, of the view that payments
that were made to other entities that are independent legal
personae
wherein the respondent holds direct
interests, cannot be considered to constitute 'liquidated claims' of
the applicants against
the respondents in the absence of proof that
the payments were made on behalf of or in the interest of the
respondents.
c.
The applicants surmise that payments
have been made from JVSS's account to the first respondent personally
after the date of liquidation.
From the exposition of payments made
to the first respondent after the final liquidation order of JVSS was
granted, it appears
that the following amounts were paid to the first
respondent personally:
i.
14.04.2018-
R1 250,00
ii.
28.04.2018-
R400,00
iii.
02.05.208 –
R80,00
iv.
03.05.2018 –
R155 000,00
v.
04.05.2018 –
R30 000,00
vi.
01.06.2018 -
R2000,00
R188 730,00
[20]
The first respondent does not deny that
payments were made to him from the JVSS account after the company was
placed in liquidation.
He avers, however, that the amounts paid out
to him represent money that although it was paid into JVSS's account,
was paid into
the account for his personal benefit and use. He states
that he paid his own pension fund pay-out into JVSS's account and
that
he received financial assistance from another company, Undivista
(Pty) Ltd. He stated in his answering affidavit that funds paid
by
Undvista (Pty) Ltd were earmarked for his personal use. He explains
that JVSS acted as his agent and "was only a
solitionis
causa adjectus
to receive such
funds".
[21]
The respondents' argument is essentially
that the funds paid by Undivista (Pty) Ltd, and his pension funds
were not the property
of JVSS and thus not subject to appropriation
by the applicants. However, the payments as reflected on the bank
statements does
not indicate a payment made by Undivista (Pty) Ltd
but contains the reference "Jayeshkumar Patel". In
addition, no confirmatory
affidavit commissioned on behalf of
Undivista (Pty) Ltd substantiates the averment that the money was
paid into JVSS's account
for the sole personal benefit of the first
respondent. In the absence of a confirmatory affidavit it cannot be
accepted that the
bald statement made by the first respondent to this
effect establishes a material and
bona
fide
dispute of fact capable of
being decided only after
viva voce
evidence has been heard.
[22]
The first respondent had a claim for all
the funds in JVSS's bank account when JVSS was liquidated. The facts
before the Court do
not indicate that funds had been placed into a
separate trust account for the first respondent use. There is no
evidence indicating
that, if not for its liquidation, JVSS was in any
manner restricted from utilising the funds deposited, or that it was
paid into
an account earmarked specifically to benefit the first
respondent. All funds were commixed with the insolvent company's
funds.
As a result, JVSS's liquidators had a personal right
vis
a vis
its
bank to the corresponding credit in its account.
[4]
[23]
Once the company was liquidated it was
for the liquidators to decide whether claims against the company
should be accepted or not,
and whether such claims were preferent or
concurrent. Whatever the case, the insolvent company's directors had
no right to meet
any claims after liquidation, with the result that
the payments were irregular and unauthorised.
[24]
As far as the first respondent's
payments into the JVSS account is concerned, it is evident that the
first respondent advanced several
loans to JVSS. These loans position
the first respondent as a creditor of JVSS. The absence of a
confirmatory affidavit commissioned
on behalf of Wright-Innes Rose
confirming that the payments made by JVSS was made in relation to
personal legal expenses of the
first respondent is glaring and
likewise relegates the averment that the money paid into the JVSS
account was for the first respondent's
personal use, to a bald
unsubstantiated statement.
[25]
It is trite that the disposition of
property after a company has been placed in liquidation is not
voidable, but void. In the absence
of a Court ordering otherwise, the
disposition of property after liquidation is
ipso
facto
void. A liquidator who is
obliged to collect all the property of the company in liquidation, is
obliged to recover void payments.
Void payments are recoverable and
thus due.
[26]
I pause to note that it is significant
that the respondents never approached a Court for a declaration that
the payments are not
void. The respondents answer to this is that
they were not aware of the fact that JVSS was liquidated and as a
result missed the
"window period" within which such an
application could be made. However, they did not dispute the fact
that the payments
were void, and thus recoverable, when the
liquidators engaged in correspondence with them to reclaim the void
payments. On the
contrary, in the correspondence preceding the
sequestration application, the first respondent indicated his
willingness to settle
the dispute amicably once he obtained
sufficient funds.
[27]
Based on the facts admitted in the
answering affidavit the amount of R188 730,00 represents the amount
that the liquidator attempted
to recover from the first respondent as
being void payments. The amount is established and easily
determinable. The liquidator's
obligation to recover the amount stems
from statute, and the nature of their claims is thus not contractual
but statutory. I am
of the view that this defines the liquidators'
claim against the first respondent as a liquidated claim for purposes
of
section 9
of the
Insolvency Act.
(ii
)
Are the respondents factually insolvent
or was an act of insolvency committed?
[28]
The facts before me do not substantiate
a finding that the joint estate of the respondents is factually
insolvent. I pause to note,
however, that an averment to this effect
was made in the founding affidavit.
[29]
It is evident that the applicants do not
have any knowledge of the respondents ' liquidity and was not able to
substantiate factual
insolvency. However, the respondents did not
present the Court with financial statements or information regarding
their immovable
property or the value of their movable assets to
rebut the averment. Their bald denial in this regard leaves a
question mark regarding
their ability to meet the applicants' demand
and lends weight to the contention that an act of insolvency was
committed.
[30]
It remains to be determined whether an
act of insolvency was committed:
a.
It is common cause that the liquidators
of JVSS delivered a letter of demand, dated 30 October 2018, to the
first respondent. In
this letter of demand, they explained that they
became aware of the fact that the first respondent received payments
from JVSS
(In Liquidation) after the date of liquidation. In this
letter they claim back 4 payments made to the first respondent
totalling
an amount of R187 400,00.
b.
A second letter of demand, dated 23
November 2018, was sent by e-mail.
c.
The first respondent answered on 28
November 2018 and stated
"
Please note that I am still engaging with third parties to arrange
for funds. Those funds could be imminent. As soon
as
those funds are available, I will
contact Barn Trust and Tintingers to discuss and amicable
settlement".
d.
On 29 November 2018, in response to an
e-mail wherein the first applicant indicated that a sequestration
application is imminent,
the first respondent stated:
"As
advised in my email dated 28 November 2018, I am still engaging with
third parties to arrange for funds. The amount does
not constitute a
meagre sum. As soon as those funds are available, I will contact Barn
Trust and Tintingers to discuss and amicable
settlement. This will be
in the interest of creditors".
[31]
The
undisputed content of the emails referred to above indicates an
acknowledgement that the first respondent owes the amount, that

payment is due and most importantly, that he is not able to pay the
debt. The emails convey a message of inability to pay rather
than an
unwillingness to pay. This meets the requirements of
section 8(g)
of
the
Insolvency Act.
(iii
)
Is there reason to believe that the
sequestration will be to the advantage of creditors?
[32]
The
applicants contend that the advantage that might be obtained in an
insolvency inquiry and the subsequent investigation constitute
a
sufficient benefit to substantiate the granting of the final
sequestration order.
[33]
The respondents contested the averment
that the sequestration would be to the advantage of creditors. They
averred that since the
applicants were not able to indicate the
extent of dividends which would be available to creditors, that the
Court cannot find
that there is reason to believe that the
sequestration will be to the advantage of creditors.
[34]
In
Amod
v Khan
1947 (2) SA 432
(N) 438,
Hathorn JP stated that
"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 an enquiry under the Act,
some assets may be revealed or recovered for the benefit of
creditors, that is sufficient."
Sequestration
can thus afford indirect advantages to creditors,
[5]
and an applicant need not always show an immediate financial benefit
when the interests of creditors are determined.
[6]
[35]
It is instructive to take cognisance of
a remark by Van Blerk:
[7]
" In practical terms, however,
if
a
respondent
has
assets [that]
are
so
insignificant
in value that after the discharge of the costs associated with the
sequestration, there would be no dividend to pay
to the general body
of creditors, then it
is
unlikely,
in the extreme, that he or she would be wasting the time, money and
effort to oppose the application."
[36]
I also consider that the provisional
sequestration was advertised as prescribed and no creditor came forth
to object to the sequestration
of the respondents.
[37]
Once a provisional order has been
granted, the onus rests upon the respondents to persuade the court
that they are not insolvent
and that it is not to the advantage of
creditors to issue a final sequestration order. When the provisional
sequestration order
was granted the Court found that a
prima
facie
case has been made out that in
the circumstances of this case, there is reason to believe that the
sequestration will be to the
advantage of creditors. The respondent's
bare denial on this important aspect, in the context created by the
first respondents
irregular dealings with the company's funds to the
prejudice of the corporate entity's creditors and an explanation
unsubstantiated
by supporting facts or affidavits, provide sufficient
cause for the strong suspicion that assets and/or voidable
transactions may
be discovered. This in turn establishes reason to
believe that the sequestration will be to the advantage of creditors.
ORDER
As a result, the following order
is made:
1.
The
rule
nisi
issued on 18 September 2019 is
confirmed and the joint estate of the respondents, Vikash Mathura and
Jagruthi Jantilal Mathura,
is hereby finally sequestrated and placed
in the hands of the Master;
2.
The applicants ' costs of this
application shall be costs in the sequestration.
Elmarie
van der Schyff
Judge
of the High Court, Pretoria
Counsel for the
applicants:
Adv SJ van Rensburg SC
Instructed
by:

Tintingers Incorporated
Counsel for the
respondent:          Adv
JC Viljoen
Instructed
by:

JJR Botha Attorneys
Date
of the hearing:

27 January 2020
Delivered:

31 January 2020
[1]
Wackrill v Sandton International Removals (Pty) Ltd and Others
1984 (1) SA 282
(W) at 2858 -D, referred to with approval by the
Supreme Court of Appeal in
Kalil v Decotex (Pty) Ltd and Another
[1988] 2 All SA 159 (A).
[2]
Although two applicants are cited, they both act in their capacities
as liquidators of JVSS, and thus represent one entity.
[3]
Plascon-Evans Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984
(3) SA 623
(A) 634E- 635D.
[4]
Muller NO
&
Another v Community Medical Aid Scheme
(901/2010) [2011) ZASCA 228 (30 November 2011) par 15.
[5]
LC Kanamugire " The Requirement of Advantage to Creditors in
South African Insolvency Law - a Critical Appraisal"
MJSS
2013, 4(13),
19-36, 25.
[6]
Meskin v Friedman
1948 (2) SA 555
(W) 559;
Dunlop (Pty)
Ltd v Brewitt
1999 (2) SA 580 (W).
[7]
P van Blerk
Precedents for applications in civil proceedings,
2018, JUTA, 582.