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1984
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[1984] ZASCA 25
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Afrovan (Pty) Ltd v Wellsted (Pty) Ltd (215/82) [1984] ZASCA 25 (26 March 1984)
215/82 N.v.H.
AFROVAN (PTY) LTD
and
JACK WELLSTED (PTY) LTD
MILLER, JA
215/82 N.v.H.
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(APPELLATE DIVISION)
In the matter between :
AFROVAN (PTY)LTD Appellant
and
JACK WELLSTED (PTY)LTD Respondent
CORAM: MILLER, TRENGOVE, CILLIé,
JJA,
et GALGUT, HOWARD, AJJA
HEARD: 12 MARCH 1984
DELIVERED: 26 MARCH
1984
JUDGMENT
MILLER, JA :-
The appellant company was incorporated in December 1971 with an authorized
share capital of
4 000 /
2 4 000 shares of R1-00 each. It owed its formation to the
decision of six removal contractors to form a "consortium" of such contractors
for the purpose of co-ordination of removals throughout the Republic of South
Africa and for "the joint development and mainte =
nance of the standards of
operation of the individual members of the consortium". Each of the six con =
tractors, of whom the respondent
company was one, subscribed for and was
allotted 500 shares in the appellant. Each of the members became entitled by
virtue of such
shareholding to use the name, Afrovan, in association with its
own name for purposes of advertising its business as a removal contractor.
At the /
3 At the time of the occurrences which gave rise to this litigation, the
respondent was still a member, holding 500 shares, together
with six other
members who were all engaged in the business of furniture removers and
carriers.
It is common cause that after incorporation, when the appellant had
become known for its activities as the controlling medium of the
consortium,
it's board found it necessary to amend the Articles of Association, more
particularly in order to vest the board with
powers relating to the shareholding
of members including transfers of members' shares, and to make provision for
better control by
the board of the activities of members
of the / . . . .
4
of the consortium. Art 36 bis thus found its
way
into the Articles of Association. We are primarily
concerned in this case
with the provisions of para (b)
of the article, but it is, I think, desirable
to
reproduce the whole of art 36 bis. It reads:-
"(a) Shares may only be allotted to, registered in the name of, or held by a
registered furniture remover or carrier. Should any
shareholder, thus qualified,
cease at any time to hold the necessary qualifi= cations, the shares held by
such share= holder shall
immediately revert to the control of the directors. The
directors shall be empowered to dispose of the reversionary shareholding
to whom
they think fit, at what in their opinion is the best obtainable price, whereupon
the directors shall account to the disqualified
shareholder for the amount of
the price received less the costs of
disposal.
(b) /
5
b) In the event of there being a change in
the ownership of the major
domestic share=
holding of a member company, or of the
beneficial
ownership of a member firm not
being a company, such change shall
be
reported to the directors of the company
who may direct the member to
surrender its
shareholding in the company to the control
of the directors, who shall be entitled to
dispose thereof as set out in the previous sub-clause
but included in the powers of the directors
in terms of this clause shall be the power
to re-allocate the shareholding in this
company to the said member company, on such
terms as the directors may deem it desirable
to impose.
(c) Should any member resign or be expelled or
forbidden from operating
within the group,
the shares in this company held by that
member shall automatically revert to the control of the Directors as set out in
sub-clause (a) above.
(d) Immediately a member's shares are required
to revert to the control of
the directors
he may not continue advertising his membership of this company or using the name
of the
company / ....
5 A
company, and the directors shall be free to advertise publically that the
member has withdrawn from the Group.
(e) Any decision relating to the establishment or imposition of power to
expel any member shall be reserved for decision at a Special
General Meeting of
the Company only, and a resolution so to expel, except as provided in Article 86
(bis) (a), or a resolution authorising
the Directors to exercise an unlimited
power to expel any member or direct any shareholder to allow its shares to
revert to the control
of the Directors shall only be passed on a unanimous vote
by all shareholders entitled to attend the Special General Meeting."
The /
6
The shares in the respondent company
(which I shall
henceforth call "Wellsted" - and the appellant company, "Afrovan") were at the
time of the incorporation of Afrovan
held by members of the Kaye family. Denis
Kaye ("Kaye") was a director of Wellsted and also of Afrovan and he represented
Wellsted
on the Afrovan board.-
It appears that during September 1979 Kaye and other members of the Kaye
family, without giving notice thereof to Afrovan, transferred
their shareholding
in Wellsted to "a family holding company" called Pickfords Holdings (Pty) Ltd
("Pickfords"). The reason for not
reporting such transfer to Afrovan in terms of
para (b)
of art /
7
of art 36 bis was, according to Kaye, that Pickfords being a
holding company of the Kaye family, the shares were, despite transfer
to
Pickfords, still "beneficially owned" by members of the Kaye family. The
suggestion which I think is implicit in that explanation
is that although there
may have been, in form, a change in the ownership of the major domestic
shareholding of Wellsted by virtue
of the transfer to Pickfords, it was not such
a "change" as was envisaged in para (b) of art 36 bis because the Kaye family,
through
Pickfords, were for practical purposes still at the helm of Wellsted.
About a year later, the Unisec Group Ltd acquired 80% of Pickford's
shares, thus
gaining control of Pickfords.
Thereafter /
8
Thereafter, towards the end of December 1980,
Kaye informed Afrovan that the controlling shareholding
in Wellsted had been transferred to the Unisec Group
Ltd. There is uncertainty concerning the precise
form of this communication; Kaye's recollection appears
to be that he reported to Pettit, the executive
officer of Afrovan, that the Unisec Group Ltd had
acquired "the Wellsted business". What is not in dispute,
however, is (i) that at the time of that communication
Afrovan was wholly unaware of the previous transfer of
the Kaye family's shareholding to Pickfords; (ii) that whatever the exact
terminology used by Kaye was, the information he intended
to convey, actually
conveyed
and was /
9
and was understood to have conveyed to Afrovan in
December 1980 was,that there had been a change in the
ownership of the major domestic shareholding of
Wellsted, by virtue of the disposal and transference
of the controlling
shareholding to the Unisec Group Ltd. A result of the passing of this
information to Afrovan was that a meeting
of the directors ("the board") of
Afrovan was held on 11 February 1981. The minutes of the meeting reveal that one
of the objects
of such
meeting was to deal with an application by Wellsted "to retain the Afrovan
franchise" notwithstanding
"the sale of Wellsted's business to Unisec".
(A similar application was made by another member of
the /
10
the consortium, Reid's Transport (Pty) Ltd, which
had also effected a change in its shareholding such as
is referred to in art 36 bis (b).)
Kaye was present at the meeting and according to the minutes apparently
supported Wellsted's application to retain the Afrovan franchise
by explaining
to the board "the nature of " the company which had purchased the shares, "and
its intent".
It is common cause that thereafter Kaye (and the representative
of Reid's Transport (Pty) Ltd) left the meeting, by agreement, to
enable the
remaining members of the board freely to discuss the merits of the respective
applications and, no doubt, to arrive at
decisions /
11 decisions thereon. After what is described in the minutes
as a "long discussion" the board announced that their decision was that
Wellsted's shares in Afrovan were to be placed under the control of Afrovan to
enable it to deal with them in terms of art 36 bis
(b); i.e., to allocate them
to other carriers. Wellsted would also be required to cease to use the name
"Afrovan" in association
with its own name in the carrying on of its removal
business and to remove from vehicles, equipment, and other objects all signs
of
association with Afrovan. Kaye immediately said that his company (Wellsted)
"would not accept the decision of the board, would
not discontinue advertising
Afrovan and would contest the matter legally".
When /
12
When reaching its decision to exercise the
powers
given to it by art 36 bis (b), the Afrovan
board was still wholly unaware of the fact that Kaye
and family had previously transferred their shareholding
in Wellsted to Pickfords and that the shares acquired by
Unisec were
shares in Pickfords. This information was,
however, supplied to Afrovan in a lengthy telex message
some fifteen days after the, board's decision to act in
terms of art 36 bis (b) had been announced. it was
alleged in the telex message that the sale of shares to
Unisec was not a
sale of shares in Wellsted but a sale
of Pickford's shares and that therefore
art 36 bis (b)
did not apply. Afrovan was not persuaded by this
argument /
13 argument and insisted upon severance of Wellsted's ties with Afrovan.
Wellsted refusing to meet Afrovan's requirements, the latter
applied on notice
of motion in the Cape Provincial Division for an order (I summarize) directing
Wellsted to surrender and to deliver
to Afrovan its shareholding in that company
to be dealt with "as prescribed" in art 36 bis (b); interdicting Wellsted from
advertising
its membership of Afrovan, and directing Wellsted to remove from its
vehicles and other objects all references to its association
with Afrovan.
The application was opposed by Wellsted on several grounds, some of which
have since fallen away. In the main, apart from attacks
upon the procedure
followed /
14 followed at the meeting of 11 February, Wellsted's
contention was that what had been considered by Afrovan's board was the
transaction
by which Unisec acquired the shares and because the shares acquired
by Unisec were in fact not Wellsted's shares, but Pickfords,
the invocation by
the board of the terms of art 36 (bis) (b) was not permissible. The Court (VAN
DEN HEEVER, J) rejected this contention
(and the other grounds of opposition
relating to the applicants' authority to act and the alleged procedural
irregula= rities) and
granted the orders prayed. Afrovan then appealed to the
Full Court of the Cape Provincial Division. The appeal was upheld, the Court
concluding that
although /
15
although Afrovan might have been entitled to invoke art 36 bis
(b) in respect of the transfer of the Wellsted shares to Pickfords,
that
transaction had not been before the board at all, and that the transaction
whereby the Unisec Group acquired Pickford's shares
could not justify the
invocation of art 36 bis (b) against Wellsted. The orders granted by VAN DEN
HEEVER, J, were accordingly set
aside. The Full Court refused Afrovan's
application for leave to appeal against its decision to this Court, whereupon
Afrovan successfully
petitioned the Chief Justice for leave to appeal.
In argument before us Mr Hoberman, for Wellsted, conceded that the
transference of shareholding in Wellsted
from /
16 from the Kaye family to Pickfords represented "a change in the
ownership of the major domestic shareholding" of Wellsted and that
the Afrovan
board would have been entitled to invoke art 36 bis (b) against Wellsted had
that transaction come to its notice. It
is unnecessary to express any opinion on
the correctness of that con= cession. Having made that concession counsel went
on to contend
(as the Full Court had in effect held) that the transfer of shares
to Pickfords not having been . brought to the notice of the board,
its
consideration at the meeting of 11 February was necessarily limited to the
transaction by which Unisec acquired the shares and
that that transaction fell
beyond the scope of the
relevant /
17 relevant article because its subject matter was Pickfords', not
Wellsted's, shares.
The board, however, did not know on 11 February, when it
came to its decision, that the shares acquired by Unisec were Pickfords'
shares,
not Wellsted's. The information available to the board was what Kaye himself had
reported to it, and that was that Unisec
had acquired Wellsted's business; in
other words, that control of the major shareholding in We listed had gone over
to Unisec. The
meeting on 11 February was called because Kaye, acting on behalf
of Wellsted, had applied for leave to retain "the Afrovan franchise".
Considered
in its context, such application clearly signified that it was
acknowledged /
18
acknowledged by Wellsted that a change in its major
domestic shareholding had taken place and that it was
for the Afrovan board to consider and decide whether
or not the provisions of art 36 bis (b) should be
enforced against it. It was not suggested by Wellsted's
counsel what the board, confronted by such an application and acknowledgement
by one of its members, could and
should have done other than to consider the application
and give its
decision thereon.
It is well to remember that the Articles of
Association of the company
"have the same force as a contract between
the company and every member as such to
observe their provisions".
(Gohlke /
19
(Gohlke and Schneider and Another v Westies Minerale
(Edms)Bpk and and Another 1970(2) SA 685 (A) at p 692, per
TROLLIP, JA.)
Also, the articles
"should be regarded as a business document and should be construed so as to give
them reasonable business efficacy, where a construction
tending to that result
is admissible on the language of the article
...."
(Hohmes and Another v Keyes (Lord) and Others
(1958)
2 All ER 129
at p 138, per JENKINS, L J.) The board
was obliged to
consider the application on the footing
that it was conceded by the applicant, a member of the
consortium, that
there had been a change in the ownership
of the major domestic shareholding
of such member.
The /
20 The board had also to be alive to the purpose and aims
of art 36 bis and of its duty to serve them within
the framework of the
articles. Such purpose and aims, as has already been indicated, included the
achievement and maintenance of high
standards in the service rendered by
individual members of the consortium, so that the word "Afrovan" would serve as
a badge signifying
excellence when used by any member of the consortium in
conjunction with its own name. The maintenance of high standards by members
would obviously depend largely upon the quality of the management and control of
such members. A change in the ownership of the major
shareholding of any company
member would involve a
change /
21
change in the control of such company; The
information
which the board had from its Wellsted member was that
the controlling shareholding of the company had indeed
passed to another, viz, Unisec. In the Court of first
instance, VAN DEN HEEVER, J, when dealing with an
argument that the
members of the board did not apply
their minds to the correct transaction, observed that
the application to retain the Afrovan franchise
"was based on a transfer of the Kaye's control of Wellsted to Unisec regardless
of the route by which this had occurred. Under the
circumstances the directors
applied their minds, correctly, to the situation presented to
them".
I am in full agreement with that
summation.
I might add that if, at the meeting of 11 February, Kaye had
divulged /
22
divulged that the shares had first passed from
the family to Pickfords and that Unisec had thereafter acquired 80% of
Pickfords' shares,
he would merely have been stating the reason for his
acknowledgement that there had been a change in the ownership of the major
domestic
shareholding of Wellsted, the control of which had thus passed to
Unisec. The provisions of art 36 bis would be no less applicable
because the
full reasons for the correct conclusion that there had been such a change were
not divulged by Kaye to the board.
In my judgment the Full Court erred in over= ruling the decision of the Court
of first instance that
the /
23 the relevant article was applicable in the circumstances of this
case.
Having so concluded, the Full Court found it unnecessary to consider
the other defences raised by Wellsted. In this Court only one
of the alternative
defences previously raised was persisted in and that was to the effect that the
board had not, prior to announcing
its decision on 11 February, given Kaye a
proper or fair hearing. This defence rests on a platform which is very flimsy
indeed. As
I have mentioned, Kaye was present at the meeting and it is not
disputed that he was given and took advantage of an opportunity to
address the
board in support of Wellsted's
application /
24 application. The terse note in the minutes of the
meeting shows that Kaye "indicated the nature of" the company to which control
of Wellsted had passed and the "intent" of such company. It is clear from the
form of the minutes that the other member (Reid's Transport)
applying for
similar relief was given a similar opportunity, and also took advantage thereof.
The contention that Kaye did not have
a fair hearing stems from the circumstance
that after he and the other applicant had left the room, the board decided the
fate of
his application in his absence and informed him of the result when he
returned. As I understood the argument on behalf of Wellsted,
it was that Kaye
ought
to have /
25
to have been afforded a further opportunity of
addressing the board on his return to the room in which the meeting was
held.
There is no substance in such a contention. Kaye left the room, after
addressing the board, apparently at the suggestion of the board
and with his
full concurrence. The purpose of vacating the room was clearly to enable the
members of the board to discuss the problem
freely, without the possibly
inhibiting factor of the presence of a member whose acts and interests were to
be discussed and adjudicated
upon. This, I have no doubt, is a by no means
unusual procedure when the conduct or interest or obligation of a
member /
26
member of a board or council or institution is to
be considered and decided upon by his fellow members. If Kaye in fact had in
mind
that on his return to the room he would be given a further opportunity of
addressing the board before it gave its decision, I do
not think that he was
justified in holding such a belief. Nor do I accept that it is likely that he
had that in mind. His willingness
to leave his fellow-members to discuss the
matter in private reflects his understanding that the nature of their private
discussions
need not be revealed to him. And if they were not to be revealed to
him on his return to the room, in what respect could he have
intended to address
the board further?
There /
27
There is nothing to show that he was inhibited by
the board in regard to his explanations and address prior to his leaving the
members
of the board to consider the case in private. Moreover, even if Kaye
believed that he was to be given a further opportunity of addressing
the board,
there is nothing to show that he asked for such an opportunity or that he was
prevented from saying anything further.
It was suggested in argument that
Kaye's explanations prior to vacating the room were limited to the "nature and
intent" of the Unisec
company and that it may have been understood by Kaye that
thereafter there would be an opportunity of further discussion or argument
con=
cerning /
28
cerning the retention of the Afrovan franchise.
Again, this is extremely unlikely. Everyone concerned knew that there was only
one
issue in the application, and that was whether Wellsted should be permitted
to retain its shares and the Afrovan franchise; and this
was inextricably bound
up with the nature and intent of the company to which the control of Wellsted
had shifted. No reason comes
to mind for splitting
that whole into two distinct parts for purposes of
single consideration of the issue before the board. On the
papers it has not been shown that Wellsted was denied
a fair hearing.
The /
29 The appeal is allowed with costs, which shall include costs in respect of
two Counsel. The order of the Court a quo (the Full Court)
is set aside and
there is substituted therefor an order dismissing the appeal to it with
costs.
S MILLER JUDGE OF APPEAL
TRENGOVE, JA )
CILLIé, JA ) CONCUR GALGUT, AJA ) HOWARD, AJA )