Body Corporate Elma Park v Erf 195 Elma Park Ltd (22421/2013) [2016] ZAGPPHC 873 (22 September 2016)

78 Reportability
Insolvency Law

Brief Summary

Winding-up — Application for winding-up of company — Body corporate seeking winding-up of member for non-payment of levies — Respondent alleged to be commercially insolvent and unable to meet debts — Court required to determine if debt is bona fide disputed — Holding that the Applicant established locus standi as creditor; however, the Respondent's bona fide dispute regarding the debt precluded the granting of a winding-up order.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


This matter concerned an opposed application for the winding-up (liquidation) of a company brought by a sectional title body corporate. The applicant was The Body Corporate Elma Park and the respondent was Erf 195 Elma Park Ltd, a member of the body corporate and the developer which had opened the sectional title register for the scheme.


The application followed the delivery of a statutory demand under section 345 of the Companies Act 61 of 1973 for alleged arrear levies. The respondent opposed the liquidation and delivered an answering affidavit (together with a counter-application, which was not ultimately pursued at the hearing). Various further procedural steps occurred over time, including extensive exchanges of documents under Rule 35(12), the issue of separate civil summons proceedings by the applicant for payment of levies, and a separate arbitration-related application launched by the respondent in another division (in which judgment had been reserved). The court recorded that these parallel processes were not shown to bar the liquidation application from proceeding on the papers before it.


The general subject-matter was a dispute arising from a mixed-use sectional title scheme (commercial “retail” units and residential units) and, in particular, the respondent’s alleged non-payment of levies and related charges due to the body corporate. The body corporate alleged that the respondent was commercially insolvent and that liquidation was justified on that ground (and also advanced a “just and equitable” basis, though the court ultimately did not decide that aspect for purposes of the provisional order).


2. Material Facts


The respondent acquired the property comprising the scheme in 1996 and, as developer, opened the sectional title register in April 2008 for a mixed-use scheme in a 22-storey building known as the Orion Building in Edenvale. The scheme comprised a retail section (two non-residential units on two floors) and a residential section (20 floors of residential units occupied by approximately 200 tenants).


A material feature of the scheme was the registered participation quota allocation. On the papers accepted by the court, the two non-residential units (units 1 and 2) were each allocated 40% participation quota, while the residential units together made up the remaining 20% allocated across those units according to floor area. The respondent owned the retail units and additional units in the scheme, and on its own version this resulted in it being liable for approximately 84% of the total levies.


There were disputes between the parties about various matters (including revenue relating to an advertising wrap, use of common area for a car wash business, and branding display), but the court treated the monetary values of those disputes as not material to determining indebtedness for purposes of the winding-up application. The court instead focused on whether the applicant had established, at least prima facie, that the respondent was a creditor-debtor in respect of levies, and whether any defence raised a bona fide dispute on reasonable grounds.


A further material history concerned electricity charges. After a change in managing agent in July 2012, the respondent asserted it should be credited because it had paid electricity for common areas directly to the local authority. A settlement agreement was reached around August 2012 dealing with the calculation of electricity payments and permitting set-off against levies. Notwithstanding settlement attempts, the applicant’s evidence was that the respondent remained in arrears on its levy account and that the arrears increased over time due to intermittent or short payments.


The respondent’s defences, as relied upon in this application, were principally that the levy apportionment was disproportionate and inequitable because the scheme’s rules and participation quotas did not “ring-fence” expenses between the retail and residential components, and that the apportionment was said to stem from a “patent error” when the scheme was established. The court treated it as important that no effective steps had been taken by the respondent—despite having been the developer—to amend the management rules or participation quotas, and that the counter-application relating to calling a meeting (apparently aimed at changes to rules/quotas) was not pursued and, on the respondent’s concession, could in any event have been pursued without a court order.


The court also treated as material the respondent’s own documentation and statements regarding the quantum of levies potentially due. The respondent’s answering papers included a calculation reflecting “total levies potentially due” by the respondent of R2 920 227.84 as at the end of June 2014 (after certain deductions). Additionally, the respondent had averred in its answering affidavit that it was in a position to pay amounts it admitted were due and certain arrears owed to the municipality and that such amounts would be paid before the hearing, but it did not specify the admitted amount nor provide proof of payment.


On insolvency, the court relied on the respondent’s balance sheet for the year ended 30 June 2013 showing assets exceeding liabilities (suggesting balance-sheet solvency), but considered the cash-flow statement indicating minimal cash and that operating activities resulted in a net cash loss, with ending cash only being realisable due to loans from group companies. The court regarded this as supporting the applicant’s allegation that the respondent could not meet debts from its own income and was dependent on group financing.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal questions were whether the applicant had established a case for a provisional winding-up order on the basis that the respondent was unable to pay its debts in terms of the statutory liquidation regime, and in particular whether the applicant had shown locus standi as creditor in circumstances where the respondent contested indebtedness for levies.


A closely related issue was the application of the principle that liquidation proceedings should not be used to enforce payment of a debt where the debt is bona fide disputed on reasonable grounds (the so-called Badenhorst rule), and how this interacts with the applicant’s prima facie burden at the provisional stage.


The dispute therefore principally concerned the application of legal principles to the facts, namely whether the respondent’s asserted defences to the levy claims constituted a genuine and reasonable dispute, and whether the respondent was commercially insolvent notwithstanding apparent balance-sheet solvency. To a more limited extent, a value judgment was implicated in relation to the “just and equitable” ground; however, the court expressly did not decide that issue for purposes of granting the provisional order.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The court approached the matter on the basis that, for a provisional winding-up order, an applicant need only establish its case prima facie. It recognised that where a respondent denies the applicant’s status as creditor, liquidation is ordinarily inappropriate if the alleged debt is bona fide disputed on reasonable grounds, because winding-up proceedings are not designed for resolving genuine disputes about indebtedness. The court referred to authorities summarising the Badenhorst rule and also endorsed the more developed formulation that, even if locus standi as creditor is established, liquidation relief should not be granted where the respondent simultaneously shows a bona fide and reasonable dispute of the claim.


Against that legal framework, the court evaluated whether the respondent’s defences were both genuine and reasonable. The respondent’s primary contention was that the levy burden was inequitable due to the lack of ring-fencing between retail and residential expenses and that this arose from an original “patent error” not reflecting the intended apportionment. The court regarded this defence as undermined by several considerations apparent from the record. The respondent, as developer, had itself established the scheme and participation quotas, and had not taken steps over an extended period to procure amendments to the rules or participation quotas. The counter-application aimed at compelling a meeting was not pursued, and it was conceded that the rules themselves permitted the calling of such a meeting without court intervention. In that setting, the court treated refusal to pay levies calculated in accordance with the registered participation quotas and rules as neither a valid nor reasonable basis to deny liability for purposes of liquidation proceedings.


The court also relied on aspects of the respondent’s own conduct and documentation as inconsistent with a bona fide and reasonable dispute. It referred to an email in which the respondent’s legal services manager dealt with cost apportionment in a manner accepting that the respondent would contribute around 85% of a cost through its levy liability. It further emphasised that the respondent’s answering affidavit contained a broad assertion that it would pay amounts it admitted were due before the hearing, yet it did not identify the admitted amount and provided no proof of payment, notwithstanding that the answering affidavit was deposed to long before the hearing. The court considered that this manner of pleading and the absence of concrete payment evidence counted against the genuineness and substance of the dispute.


In addition, the court treated as significant that the respondent’s own calculation annexed to its answering affidavit reflected that levies “potentially due” amounted to R2 920 227.84, which exceeded the amount initially demanded under section 345. The court took this as further support for the applicant’s prima facie creditor status and as inconsistent with a position that no debt was due.


Regarding the special levy, the respondent contended it was invalid because (on its understanding) a special levy for “luxurious improvements” would require a unanimous resolution. The court recorded the applicant’s explanation (in correspondence placed before it) that the special levy was linked to implementing a rational fire design and meeting safety standards, amid threats of legal action by the local authority and withdrawal of insurance cover. While the judgment did not turn on a full determination of the special levy’s legal validity in isolation, the court treated the respondent’s stance (on the papers as presented) as part of the broader conclusion that the respondent had not shown a bona fide and reasonable basis to resist levy liability for purposes of the liquidation application.


On insolvency, the court distinguished between balance-sheet solvency and commercial insolvency. Even though the respondent’s 2013 balance sheet suggested assets exceeded liabilities, the court focused on the cash-flow statement showing very low cash at both beginning and end of the year, a net cash loss from operations, substantial finance costs, and that ending cash depended on loans from group companies. From this, the court inferred that the respondent could not pay debts as they became due from its own resources and was dependent on group funding, which the court characterised as effectively “borrowing from Peter to pay Paul.” It therefore found the respondent to be commercially insolvent within the meaning of sections 344(f) and 345(1)(c) of the Companies Act 61 of 1973.


As to the “just and equitable” ground, the court noted that the typical categories supporting such relief were not present on the facts as discussed. It recorded the applicant’s argument that the respondent’s non-payment impaired the body corporate’s ability to manage the scheme and maintain services, but stated that, given the findings already made on creditor status, lack of a bona fide dispute, and commercial insolvency, it was unnecessary to decide the just-and-equitable basis at that stage; that issue could be addressed on the return day if necessary.


5. Outcome and Relief


The court granted a provisional winding-up order placing the respondent under provisional liquidation. It issued a rule calling upon interested persons to show cause why a final winding-up order should not be granted on 24 November 2016.


The court ordered service of the provisional order on the respondent at its registered address and on the South African Revenue Service, and directed publication once in the Government Gazette and in The Star newspaper. The judgment, as provided, did not include a distinct costs order in the final order paragraphs.


Cases Cited


Orestisolve (Pty) Ltd v NDFT Investment Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Another 2015(4) SA 449 (WCC). Kalil v Decotex (Pty) Ltd 1988(1) SA 943 (AD). Hulse-Reutter v HEG Consulting Enterprises (Pty) Ltd 1998(2) SA 208 (C). Badenhorst v Northern Construction Enterprises (Pty) Ltd 1956(2) SA 346 (T). GAP Merchant Recycling CC v Goal Reach Trading 55 CC 2016(1) SA 261 (WCC). Sammel v President Brand Gold Mining Co Ltd 1969(3) SA 629 (A). Rand Air (Pty) Ltd v Ray Bester Investments (Pty) Ltd 1985(2) SA 345 (W). Express Model Trading 289 CC v Dolphin Ridge Body Corporate 2015(6) SA 224 (SCA).


Legislation Cited


Companies Act 61 of 1973, including sections 344(f), 345(1)(c), and the section 345 demand procedure. Sectional Titles Act (as referenced in relation to participation quotas, trustees’ obligations, and insurance requirements).


Rules of Court Cited


Uniform Rules of Court, Rule 35(12).


Held


The court held that the applicant body corporate had prima facie established locus standi as a creditor in respect of arrear levies calculated according to the scheme’s existing management rules and registered participation quotas. It held that the respondent’s defences—centred on alleged inequity and a purported original error in apportionment—did not amount to a bona fide dispute on reasonable grounds, particularly given the respondent’s longstanding failure to pursue amendment mechanisms and the indications in its own papers that a substantial amount of levies was potentially due.


The court further held that, despite apparent balance-sheet solvency, the respondent was commercially insolvent, because its cash flow and reliance on loans from group companies showed an inability to pay debts as they fell due. On that basis, the court granted a provisional winding-up order and issued a rule nisi for the return date.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


A court considering a provisional winding-up application requires the applicant to establish its case prima facie, not on a final balance of probabilities. Where the respondent contests the applicant’s status as creditor on the basis that the debt is disputed, liquidation proceedings should not be used as a mechanism to enforce payment of a debt that is bona fide disputed on reasonable grounds; winding-up is not a forum designed to determine genuine disputes about indebtedness.


The “Badenhorst rule” operates as a controlling principle in liquidation proceedings: even where an applicant can show creditor status, winding-up relief may be refused where the respondent shows that the claim is genuinely and reasonably disputed. The interrelationship between genuineness (bona fides) and reasonableness is such that a substantial (reasonable) dispute will rarely coexist with an absence of bona fides, and the court is entitled to scrutinise the nature and support for the alleged dispute on the papers.


Commercial insolvency is distinct from balance-sheet insolvency. A company may be commercially insolvent where, notwithstanding that its assets exceed its liabilities, it is unable to pay its debts as they become due in the ordinary course of business. Evidence of minimal cash resources, operating cash losses, and dependence on ongoing external or group-company loans may support a finding of commercial insolvency for purposes of sections 344 and 345 of the Companies Act 61 of 1973.

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[2016] ZAGPPHC 873
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Body Corporate Elma Park v Erf 195 Elma Park Ltd (22421/2013) [2016] ZAGPPHC 873 (22 September 2016)

IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
22/9/2016
CASE
NO: 22421/2013
Before
His Lordship Mr Acting Justice Davis
Heard
on 14 September 2016
Judgment
delivered: 22 September 2016
In
the matter between:
THE
BODY
CORPORATE  ELMA
PARK
Applicant
and
ERF
195 ELMA PARK
LT
D
Respondent
JUDGMENT
DAVIS,
AJ:
[1]
This is an application by a body corporate for the winding-up of an
allegedly defaulting member thereof.
[2]
CHRONOLOGICAL
BACKGROUND:
The
hearing of this matter on this court's opposed motion court roll on
14 September 2016 was preceded by a number of historical
and
procedural facts of which the Respondent's counsel has during
argument furnished me with a useful chronology. Reading from
this
together with the papers,  I extract the following:
2.1
1996 - The Respondent acquires the land and the buildings which
comprise the scheme.
2.2
April 2008 - The Respondent opens the sectional title register for a
"mixed
use
scheme" .
I
interpose to state that the property which makes up the scheme is a
22 storey skyscraper located in Edenvale and which is commonly
known
as the
"
Orion Building" .
The
sectional title scheme was opened by the Respondent as developer
after the property had been revamped, reconstructed and refurbished

to the extent where it since then comprises a retail section in turn
comprising of two floors of commercial units, some of which
are let
or are available as shops and offices and a residential section
comprising of 20 floors of residential units occupied by

approximately 200 tenants.
2.3
16 January 2012 - A settlement agreement was reached in respect of a
financial reconciliation
and some set-off between the parties of
amounts due and payable by the Respondent.
2.4
13 December 2012 - The Applicant's notice in terms of Section 345 of
the Companies Act,
No. 61 of 1973, is delivered containing a demand
in the amount of R 1 392 780,64.
2.5
16 January 2013 - The Respondent's attorney responds to the Section
345 demand.
2.6
16 April 2013 - The application for winding-up is launched.
2.7
4 August 2014 - The answering affidavit and counter-application is
delivered.
2.8
14 May 2015 - The replying affidavit and answering affidavit to the
counterclaim is delivered.
2.9
14 November 2016 - The Applicant issues summons out of the Gauteng
High Court Local Division
Johannesburg in case no. 2241/2015 seeking
payment of R30 159 064,43 from the Respondent in respect of levies.
2.10
4 February 2016 - The Respondent delivers a replying affidavit to the

Applicant's answering affidavit in the counter-application.
2.11
4 March 2016 - The Respondent launches an application to refer the
disputes
between the parties to arbitration in the Gauteng High Court
Local Division Johannesburg in case no. 4941/2016.
2.12
7 March 2016 - The Respondent launches an urgent application for a
stay
of the liquidation application and has it set down for 22 March
2016.
2.13
7 March 2016 - The Applicant's notice of motion to set aside the
replying
affidavit in respect of the counter-application as an
irregular step is delivered.
2.14
15 March 2016 - The urgent application for a stay of the winding-up

application is struck from the roll for want of urgency.
2.15
22 March 2016 - The winding-up application is postponed and costs
are
reserved.
2.16
7 September 2016 - Judgment is reserved in case no. 4941/2016 in
the
Gauteng High Court Local Division Johannesburg.
2.17
14 September 2016 - The opposed winding-up application is heard.
[3]
FURTHER
PROCEDURAL   MATTERS:
3.1
Although the previous application for a stay of the winding-up
application is
technically still
"alive",
counsel
for the Respondent confirmed that it is not proceeded with by the
Respondent.
3.2
No particulars have been placed before the court as to the detail of
the disputes
between the parties which is the subject matter of a
request for referral to arbitration and  it is not alleged that
those
comprised the same disputes which form the subject matter of
this winding-up application. The reservation of judgment in respect

of this referral is therefore not a bar to this application
proceeding.
3.3
No reliance was placed on the replying affidavit to the Applicant's
answering affidavit
in the counter-application and the issue of the
late delivery thereof as an irregular step need not be adjudicated
on. So far the
status of the papers and the disputes.
3.4
Further requests and answers in terms of Rule 35(12) were also
exchanged resulting in hundreds
of pages of bank statements and other
invoices forming part of the papers.
3.5
The first point
in
limine
regarding the
authority of the Applicant to litigate in these proceedings was not
pressed on with and no dispute was raised  as
to compliance with
the formal aspects of the application and service thereof.
[4]
APPLICANT'S
CAUSE
OF
ACTION:
4.1
The Applicant alleges that the Respondent, as the owner of 19 of the
98 units in the scheme
is indebted to it in an amount in excess of
that claimed in the Section 345 notice as outstanding levies and that
the Respondent
is commercially insolvent in that it is unable to meet
its debts, including the claim of the Applicant as and when they
become
due and that it may only able to do so by way of financing
from its holding company. The Applicant further alleges that it is
just
and equitable in the circumstances that the Respondent be wound
up.
4.2
In addition to the chronology already mentioned, a summary of the
history on which the Applicant
relies is the following:
4.2.1
As developer the Respondent appointed a surveyor to survey the
individual
units in the scheme with a view to establishing the
participation quota of each unit. The participation quota which was
approved
in terms of the Sectional Title Act and which formed part of
the current Surveyor-General Sectional Title documents (SG No. 01509

of 2007) provide that the two non-residential units, numbers 1 and 2
("the
retail
section" ),
have each been allocated a 40% participation quota percentage
whilst the remaining 98 residential units
("the residential
section" )
have varying participation quota
percentages allocated depending on the floor area of each unit, the
total of which comprises the
remaining 20% of the participation
quota.
4.2.2
The purchasers of residential units, of which the Applicant's
deponent, being one
of its trustees is one, relied on the
participation quota as well as the other advertisements and marketing
furnished by the Respondent
to the effect that the scheme would be a
"Manhattan
style
living
with uninterrupted
views" .
4.2.3
The uninterrupted views were for a substantial period
of time indeed
interrupted as the Respondent had an advertising wrap of some 13
storeys in height wrapped around the building.
This was later deemed
a life-threatening hazard by the Regional Manager: Emergency Services
of the Local Authority and removed
and there is an outstanding
dispute as to the apportionment of the revenue generated herefrom by
the Respondent to the Applicant.
A similar dispute also rages
pertaining to the letting out of common area in the scheme by the
Respondent to a
"car
wash business"
as well
as a further display of the Orion brand on the sides of the building.
None of the monetary values of these disputes play
a role in the
determining the Respondent's indebtedness for purposes of this
application.
4.2.4
After the managing agent initially employed by the
Respondent was
replaced in July 2012 with the current managing agent, the issue of
levies was investigated. In defence of its non-payment
of levies, the
Respondent
inter alia
alleged that it had to be credited due
to electricity usage paid by it for the common areas of the scheme
directly to the local
authority.
4.2.5
The issue of calculation of the electricity was put
to bed in August
2012 when a settlement agreement was reached in terms whereof a
calculation was made of such electricity payments
and the Respondent
was entitled to set-off thereof against its outstanding levies. There
is some dispute further as to non-payment
by the Respondent of an
amount calculated in terms of the settlement agreement regarding
electricity payments and the Applicant
alleges that it is threatened
with electricity cut-offs by the Ekurhuleni Local Authority. There
was also another attempted settlement
which has failed to result in
payment by the Respondent.
4.2.6
The Applicant's deponent stated that, notwithstanding the two
settlement agreements,
the Respondent remained in arrears with its
levy account and owed the Applicant almost R3 million and annexed the
Respondent's
statements of account indicating how this total amount
was arrived at.
4.2.7
There is some dispute as to whether the Respondent had previously at
an annual general
meeting through its legal manager acknowledged its
indebtedness to the Applicant in circumstances where the Respondent's
deponent
denies this but  simply  states  that  the
acknowledgement  was  that R100 000,00 per month

would be paid as an
"interim
monthly payment”
until final resolution of the dispute. Despite this, the
Applicant stated that sporadic short-payments resulted in the
Respondent
falling deeper and deeper into debt with the Applicant.
[5]
THE
TEST
FOR
A
PROVISIONAL
WINDING-UP
ORDER:
5.1
It is trite that, for purposes of the granting of a provisional
winding-up order,
the Applicant need only
prima
facie
prove its case.
See
inter
alia:
Orestisolve
(Pty)
Ltd
v
NDFT
Investment
Holdings (Pty)
Ltd and
Another
2015(4) SA 449 (WCC).
5.2
In circumstances such as the present, where the Respondent denies the
Applicant's
status as creditor, the test has, traditionally, been
summarised with reference to,
inter
alia,
Kalil
v Decotex (Pty)
Ltd
1988(1)
SA  943  (AD)  at  980,
Hulse-Reutter
v
HEG
Consulting
Enterprises
(Pty)
Ltd
1998(2)
SA 208 (C) as follows  by the learned author  Meskin  in
Henochsberg
on
the   Companies
Act
at  the discussion of Section 344:
"
Winding-up proceedings
ought not to be resorted
to in order by means
thereof
to
enforce
payment
of
a
debt,
the
existence
of
which
is
bona fide disputed by  the
company on
reasonable grounds; the procedure
for
winding-up
is not
designed
for
the resolution
of disputes
as to the existence
or
non-existence
of
a
debt   (the
'Badenhorst   rule   after
Badenhorst    v
Northern
Construction
Enterprises
(Pty)
Ltd
1956(2)
SA  346  (T)
at
347-348')...
It
is
submitted
that
where
the
debt
is
disputed
and hence the
Applicant's
locus standi  as  creditor,  the  application
will
be
dismissed (if
the
dispute
is
bona
fide
and
on
reasonable grounds)
not
because
the
Applicant
lacks
locus
standi,
but
because
winding-up proceedings
are
inappropriate
for the purpose
of
determining
whether
or
not
he
does."
5.3
The more developed test is that, even where an applicant
has
established his
locus
standi
as creditor,
he should not be entitled to the remedy sought in circumstances where
the respondent could at the same time establish
that the claim was
disputed on
bona fide
and reasonable grounds. The
Badenhorst-rule thus seems to constitute a self-standing and possibly
flexible principle. See the
Orestisolve-case
supra
and
GAP
Merchant
Recycling
CC
v
Goal
Reach
Trading
55
CC
2016(1) SA 261 (WCC).
5.4
Once the Applicant has crossed the hurdle of
locus
standi
as creditor and where his application is not opposed by other
creditors,  the court's discretion is very narrow, for an unpaid

creditor who cannot obtain payment and who brings his claim within
the Act is as against the company entitled
ex
debito
justitiae
to a winding-up order. See
inter
alia
Sammel
v
President
Brand
Gold
Mining
Co
Ltd
1969(3) SA
629 (A) at 662.
5.5
It is therefore necessary to examine the Respondent's contentions to
evaluate
whether  the  debt   is
bona
fide
disputed   on
reasonable grounds. The reasonableness of a defence will
generally indicate the
bona
tides
of it
being raised since the requirement of
bona
tides
is satisfied if the company genuinely wishes to contest the claim
and believes it has reasonable prospects of success (the
Orestisolve­
case
supra).
[6]
THE
RESPONDENT'S
DEFENCES:
6.1
The Respondent contends that the origin of the dispute
"is
to
be found
in
the
disproportionate
manner
in
which
levies
and
other
charges are
presently
apportioned
amongst
owners of units in the scheme" .
6.2
The Respondent says that the inequitable levy structure arose from a
patent error which
occurred when the scheme was initially
established. The Respondent alleges (correctly) that the present
management rules of the
scheme and the participation quotas do not
provide for a
"ring-fencing"
or separation of
expenses (and contributions) as between the retail and the
residential sections of the scheme. The Respondent contends
that the
amounts to be paid by the Respondent are unrealistically high when
compared to those paid by owners of the residential
sections
particularly when usage of common facilities such as a boiler water
heater and lifts are considered. The Respondent's
counsel was at
pains to point out that the defence was not a
"
unfairness
complaint”
but an
allegation that the original intention of apportionment of
participation quotas was not followed through when the scheme
was
established.
6.3
The result of the Respondent's ownership of the retail section and a
number of units in
the residential section is that it is liable for
84% of the total levies.
6.4
In making the abovementioned submissions, the Respondent appears to
lose sight that at no
stage since the establishment of the scheme and
the inception of the participation quotas have any steps been taken
by the Respondent
for the amendment of the management rules of the
scheme or the participation quotas determined and established
initially by it
as developer.
6.5
The current counter-application for an order compelling the holding
of a special general
meeting presumably with a view to amend the
rules or participation quotas has not previously been set down nor is
it contended
that such a meeting should first take place and in fact
the counter-application was not proceeded with. It was also conceded
that
the management rules themselves make provision that such a
meeting can be called without an order of court and could in fact
have
been called or insisted on by the Respondent at any time prior
to the launching of the winding-up application.
6.6
In fact, when a security palisade was installed at the expense of the
Applicant, the Respondent's
manager:  Orion Group Legal
Services, dealt with the apportionment of the cost thereof as follows
in an e­ mail dated
19 June 2012:
"
I
have
discussed
the
topics
below
with the
director
of
Erf
195 Elma
Park
Ltd,
Franz Gmeiner
and
my
instructions
are
the
following:

In
respect
of
the
palisade
fencing
around
Erf
257: Erf 195 Elma Park
Ltd (the
owner of Erf 257)
does not
require
a
fence around his  property
but
will
not object to the
body corporate
erecting
a
fence
around
Erf
257
at
the
expense
of
the body
corporate
(which
will
entail
that
Erf
195
Elma
Park
will
contribute
around
85%
of the fence
through
its
lev
y
).

The amounts
owing
in
respect
of
section 1
and
the
residential
sections
-
still
to be determined
finally
-
can be
paid
at
instalments
of R100 000,00 per
month
at the prime
interest rate."
(my
emphasis)
6.7
In view of the aforementioned concession and the long-standing
existing apportionment of
levies in accordance with the registered
participation quota of units in the scheme, the issue of the
"patent
error",
the
"inequitable
levy
structure"
and the refusal to pay without having
taken any steps for the reapportionment of the participation quotas
is therefore neither a
reasonable nor a valid defence.
6.8
If there is any further doubt as to the Applicant's
locus
standi
as creditor  and the  Respondent's
liability,  it has been dealt with  as   follows
by the Respondent
in paragraph 19 of its abovenamed director's
answering affidavit:
"I
can confirm that the Respondent is in a position to pay all amounts
which it admits are due and payable to the Applicant
as well as the
arrears owed to Ekurhuleni and that such amounts will be paid prior
to the hearing of this application."
Nothing
has been placed before this court as to what amount the Respondent
"admits"
or that anything has been paid. At the
hearing of the application it was complained of on behalf of the
Respondent that the court
is called upon to decide the issue of
winding-up on
"historical
figures".
Despite this complaint, nothing has been added to the
abovementioned paragraph to
"update"
the figures
despite the answering affidavit having been deposed to as long ago as
4 August 2014.
6.9
If one has further regard to the previous broken promises of regular
payment and apply the
principle that the probabilities are that,
unless otherwise indicated, a
status quo
will continue
to exist, then the Respondent has not furnished any evidence or
reasonable grounds upon which it can be found that
the arrears
complained of when the Applicant had launched the application had
since been paid.
6.10
The manner in which the Respondent formulated its abovementioned
promise
further gives rise to doubt as to its
bona
tides.
If a party says that he will pay what he admits is due, it is
reasonable to expect such a party to state what that admission or
amount is.  The interwovenness of the issues of
bona
fides
and reasonableness referred to above are
explained as follows by Rogers J in the
Orestisolve
-case
at [13]:
"Including
or
excluding
bona
tides
as
a
distinct
requirement
is
unlikely
in
practice to
lead
to
different
results
because
bona tides
(genuineness)
is on any
reckoning
not
on
their
own sufficient
and
because
a
finding
that
the
claim
is
disputed
on
substantial
(i.e. reasonable) grounds could rarely
coexist with a finding that the company is not bona fide in
disputing the claim."
In
not stating what amount is admitted or what has been paid leaving a
disputed balance, smacks both of a lack of genuineness and

substantial grounds.
6.11
The Respondent also cannot claim that it was unable to do the
abovementioned
calculation as, in response to the Section
345 notice, the Respondent through its attorneys stated the
following:
"
Our client denies that it is indebted
to your
client in the sum of R1 392 780,64
or any amount
of whatsoever nature
at
this
juncture.    Our
client
is
presently
computing   and
analysing whether
your
client  is
due
an
y
amount
.
Due
to  the
disputes
which
arose
between
our
client
relating
to
the
levies  and
the electrical
consumption
charged
by
your
client
...
our  client
denies
that it is obliged
at this
juncture
to secure
or compound the
amount
claimed
by
your
client
whilst
such
amount
is disputed
and  whilst  involved  in  negotiations
with your  client."
(again
my emphasis)
6.12
Since the aforementioned statements have been made papers have been
exchanged
and extensive answers and documentation furnished in terms
of Rule 35(12). Despite this, no calculation has been forthcoming
indicating
that nothing is due.
6.13
In fact, a calculation annexed to the Respondent's answering
affidavit
states the following:
"
Total levies as at end June 2014

R16 932 385. 74
Less
special levy and interest thereon

R  8 424 835. 74
Less
electricity paid to Ekurhuleni
R
3 262 859.
55
Less
electricity charged by BEG

R  1 967 115.43
Less
amounts owed to Orion
R         357 347.18
Total
levies potentially
due
by
Orion
R 2 920 227.84
"
6.14
The abovementioned amount is higher than the amount initially claimed

in the Section 345 notice and the Applicant stated that, due to the
Respondent's ongoing default, the outstanding levies continued
to
increase.
6.15
The Respondent's denial of liability for the special levy referred to

in the above calculation is also questionable. The Respondent
contends that  after the  institution  of the  present

proceedings the special levy was raised on 13 June 2013 at an annual
general meeting from which the Respondent was absent. The
Respondent
states that it is advised that if the amount to be raised by way of a
special levy is intended to be utilised for any
luxurious improvement
of the common property then it would be invalid unless it has been
approved by members of the Applicant by
way of a unanimous
resolution. The Respondent's deponent states that in the
circumstances he is
"led
to
the
inescapable
conclusion
that
the
special
levy
was
no
more
than
a
stratagem
on the part
of the trustees aimed
at
the
harassment
of
the
Respondent.
The Respondent therefore
disputes
the
validity
of
the
special
levy
and
has
made
no payment
in
respect
thereof"
6.16
However,  in a letter to the  Respondent the following
was
stated regarding the special levy:
"The
special levy was implemented by the trustees of the scheme who were
legally and duly elected. As you are aware the responsibility
and
legal obligation of the Act is carried over to the trustees and it is
their fiduciary responsibility to ensure adherence with
the
requirements of the Act.
The
main
reason
for
the special
levy
is in
order
to
ensure
that
the Rational Fire Design is done and
implemented which should
have
been done prior
to occupation and which was not done by
the developer
and is
a
legal requirement.
In general
the
building fails safety
standards. Your client
has
since
October
2012
when
Ekurhuleni
first started
threatening
with legal
action not achieved
anything
substantial. The
local
authority
indicated it
cannot
wait
any longer,
is ready
to take legal
action
against
the body corporate
(which includes all the members) and the insurer has withdrawn cover.
Insurance
cover
is
a
requirement
in
terms
of
the Sectional
Title
Act."
[7]
Considering all the above, I find:
7.1
That the Applicant has
prima facie
established its
locus
standi
as creditor of the Respondent;
7.2
The Respondent is liable to the Applicant for the arrears and
outstanding levies
calculated in terms of the existing management
rules and participation quota of the scheme; and
7.3
The Respondent has not
bona
fide
disputed
the aforementioned liability on reasonable grounds.
[8]
AD
INSOLVENCY:
8.1
The latest balance sheet produced by the Respondent is for the year
ended 30
June 2013. It shows that the Respondent is solvent in that
its assets of some R127 million exceed its liabilities of some R67
million
leaving equity of some R60 million.
8.2
However, when one has  regard to the cash-flow  statement,
it
indicates that the Respondent had cash at the beginning of
the year of  some  R3 993,00   and  total
cash
at  the  end  of  the  year
of R1 755,00.   It also suffered a nett cash loss
from
operating activities in the amount of R2 303 679,00 of which R1
654 309,00 constituted finance costs. Its total cash at the end
of
the year was only realisable from its nett financing activities which
included the proceeds from loans from group companies
in an amount of
some R5 327 790,00.
8.3
The above statements therefore confirm the Applicant's allegations
that the
Respondent is unable to pay its due debts from its own
income and can only survive on loans from its group or holding
companies.
This effectively amounts in the proverbial
"borrowing
from Peter
to pay
Paul” .
8.4
I therefore find that the Respondent is commercially insolvent within
the meaning
of Sections 344(f) and 345(1)(c) of the Companies Act.
[9]
JUST
AND
EQUITABLE:
9.1
None of the generally identified categories that would enable a court
to exercise
its discretion to wind up a company on the basis that it
is just and equitable to do so exist, namely the disappearance of a
company's
substratum, the illegality of the objects of  the
company and fraud committed in connection therewith, deadlock
in the
management of the company, circumstances similar to winding-up
of a partnership with regard to small companies and oppression of

minority shareholders. See the discussion on this topic in the
discussion  of  Section  344  of  the
Companies  Act  in  Meskin
et  al
Henochsberg   on
the
Companies
Act
and
Rand
Air
(Pty)
Ltd
v Ray Bester
Investments
(Pty)
Ltd
1985(2) SA 345 (W).
9.2
Presently the Applicant argues that it is a body corporate and that
it retains its
locus
standi
to collect
outstanding levies and therefore would be a contingent creditor of
the Respondent despite payments from time to time
(see
Express
Model  Trading
289
CC
v
Dolphin Ridge
Body
Corporate
2015(6) SA 224 (SCA))
and that  as a result of the failure of the Respondent as a
member of the  body corporate to make
payments of levies owing,
basic services to the Applicant's building are being disrupted and
the Applicant is unable to plan the
management of the scheme and
failing in its duties imposed by the Sectional Titles Act. The
Applicant says all this is brought
about by the Respondent's lack of
bona
t
ides
and  recalcitrant
attitude and therefore that it should be just and equitable to wind
the Respondent up.
9.3
In view of the conclusions I have already reached as set out earlier
in this
judgment, I need not make a finding on this aspect which can,
if needs be, be more fully addressed at the hearing of the return
day
of the provisional order which I intend granting.
[10]
Having considered all the abovementioned aspects and having read the
voluminous papers filed of record and having considered
the arguments
of counsel and their useful heads of argument for which they are
thanked, I make the following order:
10.1
The Respondent company is hereby placed under provisional winding-up;
10.2
All persons who have a legitimate interest are called upon to furnish
reasons why this court should
not order the  final winding-up of
the Respondent on the 24th day of November 2016;
10.3
A copy of this order is to be served on the Respondent at its
registered address and on the South African
Revenue Services and
published once in the Government Gazette and in the Star newspaper.
______________________
N
DAVIS
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
Date
of hearing:                14
September 2016
Judgment
delivered:          22
September 2016
Counsel
for Applicant:       Adv A G Campbell
Attorneys
for Applicant:     Bennett  McNaughton
Attorneys
c/o Paul du Plessis
Attorneys
568 Norval Street
Moreleta Park
Pretoria
Counsel
for Respondent:     Adv L M Grenfell
Attorneys
for Respondent:  Ross Munro Attorneys
c/o John Tribelhorn
Attorneys 1st Floor
4 Sanwood Park
379 Queens Crescent
Lynnwood
Pretoria