2
February 2025. Kruger Ranch now applies to me for a stay of the winding-up
order, pending the final determination of the rescission application.
2 The application was enrolled in my urgent court on 13 January 2026, Kruger
Ranch having averred that it only became aware of the winding-up order on
26 November 2025. The case for urgency is in many respects dubious, not
least because it is impossible to credit the claim that the winding-up order only
came to Kruger Ranch’s attention some nine months after it was made.
However, counsel for the respondents ultimately accepted that the application
should be treated as urgent, if only because its manifest lack of merit rendered
it in the interests of justice that it be dismissed rather than struck from the roll.
3 The stay and rescission applications are both prosecuted on Kruger Ranch’s
behalf by one of the company’s former directors, a Mr. Clinton Kruger. Ms.
Denichaud, who appeared for the first respondent, Absa Bank, took the
preliminary point that Mr. Kruger could not bring such an application on Kruger
Ranch’s behalf, since the final winding-up order had divested him of the power
to act for the company. Assuming Kruger Ranch could apply for the rescission
of the order winding it up, the company could only do so if assisted by its
liquidator, in whom control of the company is vested as a matter of law.
4 Ms. Denichaud submitted that, if Mr. Kruger wanted to reverse the winding-up
order, he was required to bring an application under section 354 (1) of the
Companies Act 61 of 1973. That provision entitles any “liquidator, creditor or
member” of a company being wound up to apply to have the winding-up order
set aside. Ms. Denichaud submitted that Mr. Kruger’s failure to bring the
3
applications for stay and rescission under that section meant that the stay
application had to be dismissed on that ground alone.
5 Such was the intuitive appeal of this submission that Ms. Simelane, who
appeared for Kruger Ranch, conceded the point when I put it to her at the
outset of her argument. That might have been the end of the case, had Mr.
Lautré, who appeared for the third respondent, Kruger Ranch’s liquidator, not
drawn our attention to the decision of the Supreme Court of Appeal in Dr WAA
Gouws (Johannesburg) v HR Computek (Pty) Ltd 2025 (6) SA 89 (SCA)
(“Gouws”). In that matter, the Supreme Court of Appeal decided that a
company can, after all, bring an application to set aside orders for its own
winding-up, and that its erstwhile directors may do so on its behalf without the
consent or the assistance of the company’s appointed liquidator.
6 Both Mr. Lautré and Ms. Denichaud were critical of the decision in Gouws, but
neither of them submitted that I could ignore it . Ms. Denichaud’s attempts to
distinguish this case from Gouws on the facts were thoughtful but
unconvincing. I am constrained to conclude, on the authority in Gouws, that
the stay application is properly before me. Having gratefully adopted Mr.
Lautré’s submissions on the point, Ms. Simelane set out her case on the
merits.
7 That case is exceptionally weak. Its essence is that service of the application
for winding-up was defective, since Kruger Ranch was served at its registered
address rather than at its principal place of business. Ms. Simelane relied on
a Sheriff’s return that suggests that Kruger Ranch no longer operated from its
registered address at the time the winding-up application was served. There
4
is no substance to this point. Service on a company’s registered address is
good service. If a company vacates its registered address, it has the
responsibility either to ensure that its registered address is updated on the
relevant public register, or to ensure that process delivered to its registered
address will be brought to its attention. Kruger Ranch does nothing in its
papers to set out the circumstances that would have prevented process
served on its registered address from coming to its attention. Nor does Kruger
Ranch expressly aver, in either its stay or rescission application, that the
founding papers in the winding-up application did not in fact come to its or its
directors’ attention.
8 Ms. Simelane submitted that the winding -up order should never have been
granted, since the debt Absa Bank relied upon to obtain it had prescribed at
the time the winding-up application was instituted. The debt in question was a
loan Absa advanced to Kruger Ranch in August 2019. The term of the loan
was to run until 1 November 2026. Kruger Ranch defaulted on the loan on 16
April 2024. Ms. Simelane submitted that the “debt” embodied in the loan fell
due when the loan was advanced. That being so, the debt prescribed in
August 2022.
9 This is manifestly wrong. The full outstanding amount repayable on the loan
fell due when Absa called the loan up on default. This could only have
happened after the default occurred, on 16 April 2024. Assuming that the
amount due under the loan agreement was an ordinary debt, Absa’s claim for
it would have prescribed on 17 April 2027 at the earliest. Ms. Denichaud
pointed out that the loan amount was in fact secured by a mortgage bond,
5
meaning that it would only have prescribed after 30 years, but I need not
consider that issue. The debt had plainly not prescribed at the time the
winding-up application was brought.
10 The other submissions advanced in support of the rescission application were
similarly lacking in substance. It was suggested that the loan amounted to
reckless credit under the National Credit Act 34 of 2005. But this overlooks the
fact that the Act does not apply to the loan, because Kruger Ranch is a juristic
entity, whose turnover exceeds the relevant amount the Act prescribes. It was
contended that Kruger Ranch was factually solvent at the time it was wound
up, but no evidence of that proposition was presented in support of it. It was
argued that winding-up order was invalid because summons had not been
issued claiming the debt upon which the order was founde d. B ut no such
summons was necessary. The winding-up application was founded upon
Kruger Ranch’s undisputed failure to answer a statutory notice issued under
section 345 (1) (a) of the Companies Act, calling upon it to settle the debt it
owed to Absa.
11 In all these circumstances there can be no prima facie right to the rescission
of the winding up order, and accordingly no basis on which to stay its
execution. The stay application will be dismissed.
12 Both Ms. Denichaud and Mr. Lautré asked me to order Mr. Kruger, the
deponent to Kruger Ranch’s founding affidavit, to pay the costs of this
application in his personal capacity, on the attorney and client scale. It was
argued that Mr. Kruger had litigated in bad faith, and that his true intent was
not to stay or rescind the winding-up order, but to hold the winding-up process
7
electronic file of this matter on Caselines, and by publication of the judgment to the
South African Legal Information Institute. The date for hand-down is deemed to be 19
January 2026.
HEARD ON: 13 January 2026
DECIDED ON: 19 January 2026
For the Applicant: Ms Simelane
(Trust Account Advocate)
For the First Respondent: C Denichaud
Instructed by Jay Mothobi Inc
For the Third Respondent: T Lautré
Instructed by Oosthuizen Caine Inc