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[2014] ZAFSHC 17
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Van Zyl v Engelbrecht N.O. (3885/2012) [2014] ZAFSHC 17; 2014 (5) SA 312 (FB) (27 February 2014)
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
FREE STATE DIVISION, BLOEMFONTEIN
Case No.: 3885/2012
In the matter between:
JACOB
JOHANNES VAN
ZYL
.............................................................
Applicant/Defendant
and
JOHAN
FRANCOIS ENGELBRECHT
N.O
........................................
Respondent/Plaintiff
CORAM:
LEKALE, J
HEARD ON:
20
FEBRUARY 2014
JUDGMENT BY:
LEKALE, J
DELIVERED ON:
27 FEBRUARY 2014
INTRODUCTION
AND BACKGROUND:
[1] This is an opposed motion
for payment of costs attendant on an application for separation of
trial issues launched by the applicant
in terms of Rule 33(4) of
Uniform Rules of Court.
[2] The applicant is the
defendant in an action instituted by the respondent in his capacity
as the liquidator of a company of which
the applicant was a director.
In that action the respondent, as the plaintiff, effectively seeks to
hold the applicant, as the
defendant, liable for the debts of such a
company.
[3] In resisting the
claim the applicant,
inter alia
,
raised a special plea of prescription which he desired to have
adjudicated separately from the merits of the action. The respondent
could, however, not cosent to separation of issues and on the 5
th
December 2013 the applicant launched a Rule 33(4) application in
terms of which it prayed for separation of issues and payment
of
associated costs by the respondent. The respondent, on his part,
filed opposing papers on the 10
th
December 2013 and the 17
th
December 2013.
[4] On the 20
th
December 2013 an application seeking to place the company under
supervision and commencing business rescue proceedings in terms
of
section 131(1) of Companies Act 71 of 2008 (the Act) was launched in
the North Gauteng High Court by an affected party. On the
15
th
January 2014 the applicant filed his replying affidavit in the Rule
33(4) application. On the 24
th
January 2014 the respondent
acceded to separation but did not tender costs. An order was,
eventually, secured by agreement between
the parties separating the
issues and reserving the question of costs for argument on the 20
th
February 2014. It is that question of costs which now serves before
me.
[5] The respondent
opposes the motion for costs on,
inter
alia
, the ground that following the
issue and service of a section 131(1) business rescue application the
liquidation proceedings were
suspended in
terms
of section 131(6) of the Act and, as such, he cannot be held liable
for the costs of an application heard after the fact of
such a
suspension. In his view an appropriate order is one which
either allows costs to stand over for later adjudication
pending the
outcome of the business rescue application or directs that costs be
costs in the cause.
DISPUTE:
[6] The parties are,
effectively, at variance on whether or not the action between them is
a step in the liquidation proceedings
so as to bring it within the
firing line of the provisions of section 131(6) of the Act. The
applicant contends that the respondent
is liable for the costs of the
application for separation of issues while the latter, on his part,
maintains that he cannot be
saddled with such costs because his
position as a liquidator got suspended when the business rescue
application was launched.
CONTENTIONS FOR THE
PARTIES:
[7] Ms Van Rhyn submits,
inter alia
,
that the provisions of section 131(6) of the Act do not strike at and
hamper the collection of debts in favour of a company in
liquidation
because such collections are for the benefit of such a company.
In her view only proceedings against such a company,
as well as its
property, gets suspended as evidenced by section 133 of the Act which
places a general moratorium on legal proceedings
against a company
placed under business rescue proceedings. In her opinion the
fact that the respondent took steps in the
separation application
after the business rescue application had been launched, opens him up
for costs of such an application.
She contends, further, that
the action between the parties concerns damages and is, as such, not
in the nature of collection of
debts owing to the company.
[8] Mr Benade contends,
on behalf of the respondent, that the suspension comes into effect by
operation of law and the respondent,
qua
liquidator, cannot, in law, assume the
powers which the law does not confer upon him. He, further, retorts
that damages are a species
of a debt and in claiming the same the
liquidator is engaged in collecting an asset belonging to the
company.
APPLICABLE LEGAL
PRINCIPLES:
[9] Section 131(6) of the Act
provides that:
“
(6)
If liquidation proceedings have already been commenced by or against
the company at the time an application is made in terms
of subsection
(1), the application will suspend those liquidation proceedings
until-
(a)
the court has adjudicated upon the application; or
(b)
the business rescue proceedings end, if the court makes the order
applied for.
”
[10] The parties are correctly
in agreement that the words “
liquidation proceedings
”
have been held to
“
refer
to a process that consists of the collection of the assets, realising
and reducing them to money, dealing with proof of creditors
by
admitting or rejecting
them, and
distributing the net proceeds after providing for costs and expenses
by the liquidator to the persons entitled thereto.
Thus, the words
'liquidation proceedings' have to do with the process that is
overseen by the liquidator and the master in winding-up
and not the
legal proceedings before a court of law in order to obtain such
order.
”
(See:
Absa Bank Ltd v Summer Lodge (Pty) Ltd
2013 (5) SA 444
(GNP) at paragraph [12].)
[11]
Section 136(4) of the Act provides that:
”
(4)
If liquidation proceedings have been converted into business rescue
proceedings, the liquidator is a creditor of the company
to the
extent of any outstanding claim by the liquidator for any
remuneration due for work performed, or compensation for expenses
incurred, before the business rescue proceedings began.
”
APPLICATION
OF LEGAL PRINCIPLES AND FINDINGS:
[12] It is common cause
between the parties that the respondent is and was the appointed
liquidator of a company in liquidation
as at the 20
th
December 2013 when an application seeking to place that company under
business rescue proceedings was launched.
[13] It is further not in
dispute that, by virtue of the provisions of section 131(6) of the
Act the liquidation proceedings were
suspended when the said
application for business rescue proceedings was served, filed and all
affected persons were notified of
the same.
[14] It is clear from the
provisions of section 131(6) read with section 136(4) of the Act that
suspension of liquidation proceedings
entails suspension of the
office of the liquidator with the result that no collection of,
inter
alia
, assets by the liquidator can take
place during that period. As Ms Van Rhyn correctly submits,
this allows for a company
in liquidation to be placed under business
rescue proceedings. The liquidator will still be able to get paid and
compensated if
the company is eventually placed under business rescue
proceedings insofar as he is regarded as a creditor of the company in
such
circumstances. Contentions for the applicant to the effect that
claims for the company are exempt from the provisions of section
131(6) of the Act because such claims stand to benefit the company
and, as such, they serve to resuscitate it are, with respect,
without
merit for the legislature would have made an express provision
therefor if it was its intention to do so. A claim
in favour of
a company under liquidation does not necessarily and without further
ado stand to benefit it. Such a claim may
succeed or fail and,
if it eventually fails, it pushes an already financially distressed
company into further financial doldrums.
The fact that a claim is in
favour of a company in liquidation does not
per
se
signify its success.
[15] Mr Benade is correct in
his submission that a claim for damages is, in fact, a claim for
recovery of a debt because it is a
claim in favour of the company for
something allegedly owing to it. It is, as such, a step in the
liquidation process and
it is implicated by the provisions of section
136(6) of the Act. In my judgment all legal proceedings instituted by
the liquidator
in the liquidation proceedings, which are pending as
at the date an application for business rescue proceedings is made
against
a company under liquidation, get automatically suspended when
such an application is made. Any steps taken by the liquidator in
such proceedings after such an application is made, are futile and of
no legal consequence. Such steps, in my view, may be ratified
by the
liquidator himself at the end of the suspension period as
contemplated by section 131(6)(a) and (b) of the Act or possibly
by
the appointed business rescue practitioner where liquidation
proceedings were converted into business rescue proceedings.
[16] An appropriate order in
the circumstances of the instant matter is, in my view, one which
allows costs to stand over for determination
at a later stage pending
finalisation of the business rescue application.
ORDER:
[17] The question of costs
stands over for later adjudication pending the outcome of the
business rescue application.
L.
J. LEKALE, J
On behalf of applicant/defendant: Adv Ben Pretorius
With
him:
Adv
Ilse van Rhyn
Instructed by:
Christo Dippenaar Inc
BLOEMFONTEIN
On
behalf of respondent/plaintiff: Adv H.J. Benade
Instructed by:
Symington & De Kok
BLOEMFONTEIN