Versatile Commodity Traders (Pty) Ltd v Upward Spiral Fuels (Pty) Ltd (2025/087617) [2026] ZAGPJHC 62 (3 February 2026)

80 Reportability

Brief Summary

Company Law — Winding-up — Provisional liquidation — Application for provisional winding-up of Upward Spiral Fuels (Pty) Ltd by Versatile Commodity Traders (Pty) Ltd — Respondent deemed unable to pay debts as statutory demand not complied with — Respondent's defenses regarding the existence of debt found to be unsubstantiated and lacking bona fide dispute — Court granting provisional winding-up order due to failure to demonstrate solvency and inability to pay debts.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


The proceedings were an application in the High Court (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg) for the provisional winding-up of a private company. The applicant, Versatile Commodity Traders (Pty) Ltd, sought a provisional liquidation order against the respondent, Upward Spiral Fuels (Pty) Ltd, primarily on the basis that the respondent was deemed unable to pay its debts in terms of section 344(f) read with section 345(1)(c) of the Companies Act 61 of 1973. The applicant also invoked the just and equitable ground in section 344(h), although that ground ultimately did not require separate determination.


The application was supported by an affidavit from the applicant’s chief executive officer and sole director. The judgment records that the application was served on the respondent, its employees and relevant trade unions, the Master of the High Court, and the South African Revenue Service, and that the applicant furnished the security contemplated in section 346(3) of the Companies Act 61 of 1973.


The respondent opposed the application and delivered an answering affidavit out of time. The court granted condonation for the late filing, noting the absence of prejudice, and considered the answering affidavit.


The dispute arose from a commercial relationship involving the supply of fuel on credit, with the applicant alleging a substantial unpaid balance arising from invoiced deliveries. The respondent disputed liability and quantum, contending that no enforceable credit agreement existed, that the accounts were inaccurate and unreconciled, and that it was not commercially insolvent.


2. Material Facts


The court accepted that the applicant conducted business as a wholesaler of fuel products and that during May 2022 the respondent approached the applicant for the purchase and supply of fuel. The court further accepted that on 16 May 2022 the parties concluded a written agreement regulating the supply of fuel on credit, including pricing, invoicing, and payment terms. A material contractual term recorded in the judgment was that invoiced amounts were payable within 14 days, failing which such amounts would be deemed correct and payable.


It was common cause that between 1 May 2022 and 14 March 2025 the respondent placed multiple orders for fuel which were delivered and invoiced. The applicant alleged that it delivered fuel to the value of R148,681,415.40, that payments received totalled R130,449,032.20, and that an amount of R18,232,383.15 remained outstanding. The last payment relied upon by the applicant was said to have been made on 1 April 2025.


The applicant relied on a written acknowledgement dated 17 May 2023, in which the respondent recorded an indebtedness exceeding R20 million. The judgment further records that, in partial reduction of that indebtedness, the respondent transferred immovable property to the applicant at an agreed value of R1,662,344.05 and transferred a vehicle (a KC Cobra) at an agreed value of R500,000, which were set off against the debt.


A further material fact was the issuing and service of a statutory demand. On 16 April 2025 the applicant caused a statutory demand to be delivered in terms of section 345(1)(a) of the Companies Act 61 of 1973 (as read with item 9 of Schedule 5 to the Companies Act 71 of 2008), calling on the respondent to pay R18,232,383.15. The sheriff served the statutory demand on 25 April 2025. The respondent did not comply within the prescribed period by paying, furnishing security, or otherwise satisfying the claim, and it did not respond to the demand.


On the respondent’s version, several facts were disputed, but the court treated the disputes as insufficiently substantiated to create a bona fide dispute on reasonable grounds. The respondent disputed the existence of a binding written credit agreement, characterising the document as a mere credit application that was not accepted. The respondent also alleged that the parties’ dealings were informal, included profit-sharing elements and non-invoice-based adjustments, and that the applicant’s invoices and transaction reports were inconsistent and not properly reconciled. The respondent nonetheless admitted purchasing fuel and making substantial payments, while denying that any amount remained owing and contending that any earlier acknowledgement of debt was outdated.


The respondent further denied commercial insolvency, alleging that management accounts demonstrated solvency, although the judgment records that such accounts were not produced on the papers and were only referred to in general terms.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal questions concerned the requirements for a provisional winding-up order in circumstances where the respondent alleged a dispute of indebtedness. In substance, the court was required to determine whether the applicant had established, at least prima facie on the affidavits, that it was a creditor with a due and payable claim and whether the respondent had shown that the debt was bona fide disputed on reasonable grounds.


Related to that enquiry, the court had to decide whether the respondent’s defences—particularly the denial of a binding agreement, the challenge to the correctness of the accounting, and the assertion that the debt had been settled—constituted a bona fide and reasonable dispute sufficient to defeat winding-up proceedings brought on the insolvency ground.


The court was also required to determine whether the respondent was unable to pay its debts, including whether it was commercially insolvent for purposes of section 345(1)(c), particularly in light of non-compliance with the statutory demand and the respondent’s reliance on unsubstantiated assertions of solvency.


A further issue was whether, once the statutory requirements were met, the court should nonetheless exercise its discretion to refuse provisional winding-up due to special or unusual circumstances. The applicant’s alternative reliance on the just and equitable ground raised a potential additional legal basis, but the court ultimately treated it as unnecessary to decide given the finding on inability to pay debts.


These issues involved a mixture of application of law to fact and evaluative judgment, particularly in assessing whether a purported dispute was bona fide and reasonable, and in exercising the discretion whether to grant provisional relief after the statutory threshold had been satisfied.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The court approached the opposition on the basis that, even in a provisional winding-up application, the key enquiry remained whether the respondent had demonstrated that the debt was bona fide disputed on reasonable grounds. The court relied on authority explaining that where an applicant establishes the existence of a claim on a prima facie basis with reference to the affidavits, the burden shifts to the respondent to show a bona fide dispute on reasonable grounds; if such a dispute is shown, the winding-up application must be dismissed. The court treated this as the appropriate framework rather than the general motion-proceedings approach invoked by the respondent.


On the preliminary objection to authority, the respondent challenged the applicant’s locus standi by arguing that the founding affidavit lacked a properly annexed resolution authorising institution of proceedings. The court rejected this point as technical and misconceived, emphasising that in motion proceedings a deponent need not be authorised to depose to an affidavit; rather, the institution and prosecution of proceedings must be authorised. The court also considered the objection to be immaterial to the substantive questions of the debt’s existence and the respondent’s ability to pay.


On the alleged absence of a binding written agreement, the court considered the respondent’s denial untenable. It relied on the fact that the written agreement bore the signature of the respondent’s managing director, and that he also bound himself as surety. The court further held that the sustained course of performance—orders placed, fuel delivered, invoicing, and substantial payments—was inconsistent with the claim that no contractual relationship existed. In addition, the court treated the respondent’s prior written acknowledgements of indebtedness and continued performance as contradicting the belated denial of contractual force.


Regarding the defence that the debt was settled in full or that the calculations were materially incorrect, the court found the assertions to be bald and unsupported. It noted the absence of proof of payment, a reconciliation, or contemporaneous accounting that could explain how a previously acknowledged indebtedness of this magnitude was extinguished. The court also viewed it as significant that the respondent did not dispute the debt when the statutory demand was served, and that the denial was raised only for the first time in the answering affidavit.


The court addressed the respondent’s reliance on the in duplum rule and held that it did not assist the respondent on these papers because, even if applicable, it limits recoverable interest and does not extinguish or reduce the capital debt. The court considered that, on either version, a substantial capital indebtedness remained.


The court likewise rejected the respondent’s reliance on alleged discrepancies between invoices and delivery notes. It characterised these allegations as general, unsupported by a coherent alternative reconciliation, and not accompanied by evidence that the fuel was not delivered or that invoices were disputed contemporaneously. Taking the defences cumulatively, the court held they were internally inconsistent, raised belatedly, and unsupported by objective evidence. It concluded that the respondent had not shown a bona fide dispute on reasonable grounds and that the applicant had established creditor status for an amount exceeding the statutory threshold.


On the issue of inability to pay debts, the court applied section 345(1)(c) and reasoned that the respondent had not paid the debt despite demand and had placed no meaningful evidence before the court demonstrating an ability to pay. The court endorsed the distinction between balance-sheet solvency and commercial insolvency, adopting the approach that the relevant question is whether the company can meet day-to-day liabilities as they fall due, with reference to liquid or readily realisable assets.


The court treated the respondent’s bare assertions of solvency as inadequate to displace the presumption arising from non-compliance with the statutory demand. The undertaking to produce management accounts at a later stage was not regarded as evidence of solvency. Drawing on authority emphasising that the best proof of solvency is payment of debts, the court held that the respondent’s failure to pay supported a finding of commercial insolvency on the papers.


Although the applicant also relied on section 344(h) (just and equitable), the court held that it was unnecessary to determine that ground separately because the statutory ground of inability to pay debts had been established and there was no independent factual basis requiring separate analysis under the just and equitable ground.


Finally, the court considered the discretionary element. It held that once statutory requirements for provisional winding-up are met, a court retains a discretion whether to grant the order, but that in the absence of special or unusual circumstances the discretion ordinarily favours granting provisional winding-up where a creditor has established a due and payable debt that the company cannot satisfy. The court found no countervailing considerations advanced by the respondent and reasoned that allowing continued trading in circumstances of commercial insolvency would prejudice creditors.


5. Outcome and Relief


The court granted a provisional winding-up order, placing Upward Spiral Fuels (Pty) Ltd under provisional winding-up in the hands of the Master of the High Court, Gauteng Local Division, Johannesburg.


A rule nisi was issued calling upon the respondent and other interested parties to show cause on 16 March 2026 why a final winding-up order should not be granted. The court directed service of the provisional order on the respondent, its employees (by affixing the order at the registered address), the South African Revenue Service, and the Master, and required publication to creditors by one notice in The Star newspaper.


The court ordered that the costs of the application would be costs in the winding-up.


Cases Cited


Gap Merchant Recycling CC v Goal Reach Trading 55 CC 2016 (1) SA 261 (WCC)


Total Auctioneering Services and Sales CC v Consolidated Auctioneers v Norfolk Freightways CC [2012] ZAGPJHC 211 (30 October 2012)


Kalil v Decotex (Pty) Ltd and Another 1988 (1) SA 943 (AD)


Reynolds NO v Mecklenberg (Pty) Ltd 1996 (1) SA 75 (W)


Ganes and Another v Telecom Namibia Limited 2004 (3) SA 615 (SCA)


Murray and Others NNO v African Global Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others 2020 (2) SA 93 (SCA)


De Waard v Andrew & Thienhaus Ltd 1907 TS 722


ABSA Bank Ltd v Rhebokskloof (Pty) Ltd and Others 1993 (4) SA 436 (C)


Legislation Cited


Companies Act 61 of 1973, sections 344(f), 344(h), 345(1)(a), 345(1)(c), and 346(3)


Companies Act 71 of 2008, item 9 of Schedule 5


Rules of Court Cited


Uniform Rules of Court, Rule 6


Held


The court held that the respondent failed to demonstrate that the applicant’s claim was bona fide disputed on reasonable grounds. The respondent’s challenges to authority, the existence of the agreement, and the accounting were treated as technical, belated, internally inconsistent, and unsupported by objective evidence, particularly in light of prior acknowledgements of indebtedness, the course of dealing, and the absence of a contemporaneous dispute when the statutory demand was served.


The court further held that, given the respondent’s non-compliance with the statutory demand and its failure to provide evidence of liquid or readily realisable assets to meet its obligations, the respondent was commercially insolvent and thus unable to pay its debts within the meaning of section 345(1)(c). Having found the statutory ground established, the court exercised its discretion to grant provisional winding-up, finding no special circumstances warranting refusal of the relief.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


A winding-up application based on inability to pay debts requires the court to consider whether the creditor has established its claim on a prima facie basis and, if so, whether the respondent has shown that the debt is bona fide disputed on reasonable grounds. If such a dispute is established, winding-up proceedings are not the appropriate mechanism for resolving the dispute and the application must be dismissed; if not established, the court may grant provisional relief.


In motion proceedings, the person deposing to an affidavit need not be authorised to depose; rather, the institution and prosecution of proceedings must be authorised. A purely technical objection to the deponent’s authority that does not engage with the existence of the debt or the ability to pay does not, without more, constitute a substantive defence in winding-up proceedings.


Commercial insolvency is concerned with whether a company can meet its liabilities as they fall due in the ordinary course, and not merely whether its assets exceed its liabilities on a balance-sheet basis. Non-payment of an admitted or established debt following a statutory demand, coupled with the absence of evidence of liquid or readily realisable assets sufficient to meet obligations, supports a finding that the company is unable to pay its debts.


The in duplum rule, even if applicable, limits recoverable interest and does not extinguish or reduce the underlying capital debt, and therefore does not necessarily create a bona fide dispute as to the existence of the capital indebtedness.


Once the statutory requirements for a provisional winding-up order are satisfied, the court retains a discretion whether to grant the order. In the absence of special or unusual circumstances, and where a due and payable debt is established and unpaid, the discretion ordinarily favours granting provisional winding-up to protect creditors from prejudice arising from continued trading while commercially insolvent.

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REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA



IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG

CASE NUMBER:2025-087617



In the matter between:

VERSATILE COMMODITY TRADERS (PTY) LTD APPLICANT

AND

UPWARD SPIRAL FUELS (PTY) LTD RESPONDENT

Heard: 29 October 2025
Delivered: 3 February 2026
Headnote: Company law – winding-up – provisional liquidation – debt not bona fide
disputed on reasonable grounds – statutory demand not complied with – deemed inability
to pay debts – discretion of court – no special circumstances shown – provisional winding-
up granted.

(1) REPORTABLE: YES / NO
(2) OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES / NO
(3) REVISED: YES / NO

3 February 2026 _________________________
DATE SIGNATURE

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JUDGMENT

WINDELL J:
Introduction
[1] This is an application for the provisional winding-up of the respondent, Upward
Spiral Fuels (Pty) Ltd . The application is brought by the applicant, Versatile Commodity
Traders (Pty) Ltd . The application is brought on the grounds that the respondent is
deemed unable to pay its debts in terms of section 344(f) read with section 345(1)(c) of
the Companies Act 61 of 1973 (the Act). The applicant also relies on the just and equitable
ground in terms of section 344(h) of the Act.
[2] The application is supported by an affidavit deposed to by Caleb David, together
with annexures thereto. The application was served on the respondent, its employees
and relevant trade unions, the Master of the High Court, and the South African Revenue
Service, in accordance with the applicable statutory requirements. The applicant has also
given sufficient security in terms of section 346 (3) of the Act.
[3] The applicant is a wholesaler of fuel products. During or about May 2022, the
respondent approached the applicant for the purchase and supply of fuel. On 16 May
2022 the parties concluded a written agreement in terms of which the applicant supplied
fuel to the respondent on credit. The agreement regulated pricing, invoicing, payment
terms and delivery, and provided that amounts reflected in tax invoices would be due and

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payable within 14 days, failing which such amounts would be deemed to be correct and
payable.
[4] Between 1 May 2022 and 14 March 2025 the respondent placed multiple orders
for fuel, which were duly delivered and invoiced by the applicant. Over this period the
applicant delivered fuel to the value of R148,681,415.40. It is alleged by the applicant that
payments made by the respondent totalled R130,449,032.20, leaving an outstanding
balance of R18,232,383.15. The last payment made by the respondent was on 1 April
2025.
[5] The applicant contends that the respondent’s indebtedness is admitted and not
genuinely in dispute. In support of this contention, it relies on a written acknowledgment
by the respondent dated 17 May 2023, in which the respondent recorded that it was
indebted to the applicant in an amount exceeding R20 million. Pursuant thereto, and in
partial reduction of that indebtedness, the respondent transferred immovable property to
the applicant at an agreed value of R1,662,344.05 and traded a vehicle, a KC Cobra, with
the applicant to the agreed value of R500,000. These amounts were set off against the
outstanding indebtedness, leaving a substantial balance still owing.
[6] Despite demand, the respondent failed to pay the outstanding amount. On 16 April
2025 the applicant caused a statutory demand in terms of section 345(1)(a) of the Act,
read with item 9 of Schedule 5 to the Companies Act 71 of 2008, to be delivered to the
respondent at its registered address, calling upon it to pay the amount of R18,232,383.15.
The statutory demand was served by the sheriff on 25 April 2025. The respondent did not

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respond to the demand, nor did it make payment, furnish security, or otherwise satisfy the
applicant’s claim within the prescribed period.
The applicant accordingly contends that, by reason of the respondent’s failure to comply
with the statutory demand and the absence of any evidence demonstrating an ability to
pay, the respondent is unable to pay its debts as contemplated in section 345(1)(c) of the
Act and is commercially insolvent. It is further alleged that the respondent has
commenced disposing of its assets, including advertising a tanker for sale, and that it
would be just and equitable in the circumstances for the respondent to be pla ced under
provisional winding-up.
Issues in dispute
[7] The respondent opposes the application and disputes both the existence and
quantum of the alleged indebtedness. The answering affidavit is deposed to by the
respondent’s managing director , Mr Zunur Mohammed ( Mr Mohammed). Although the
answering affidavit was delivered out of time, condonation for its late filing is granted and
the affidavit has been taken into account. No prejudice arose.
[8] As a preliminary matter, the respondent raises a point in limine, namely a
challenge to the applicant’s locus standi on the basis that the deponent to the founding
affidavit allegedly lacked a properly annexed resolution authorising him to institute the
application.
[9] The respondent further contends that there was no valid or binding written credit
agreement between the parties. It is alleged that the document relied upon by the
applicant constituted no more than a credit application which was never accepted and did

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not crystallise into an enforceable contract. On this basis, the respondent asserts that the
applicant cannot rely on the terms of that document, including those relating to payment,
interest, invoicing, or set-off.
[10] In amplification, the respondent avers that the parties conducted business on an
informal and evolving basis over several years. It alleges that fuel transactions were
structured in a manner whereby profits from resale were shared, and that payments and
credits were effected through various mechanisms, including mutual set -offs, asset
transfers, and other adjustments, rather than strict invoice -based settlement. The
respondent maintains that no agreed terms existed in relation to interest or credit
enforcement.
[11] The respondent disputes the accuracy of the applicant’s transaction reports and
invoices, contending that they contain inconsistencies, incorrect calculations, and
discrepancies between invoices and delivery notes. It asserts that a proper reconciliation
has not been furnished and that further documentation is required to determine the true
state of accounts between the parties.
[12] Although the respondent admits having purchased fuel from the applicant and
having made substantial payments, it denies that any amount remains outstanding. It
asserts that the alleged indebtedness was settled in full by 2023, alternatively that the
applicant’s calculations are materially incorrect. The written acknowledgement of debt
relied upon by the applicant is said to be outdated and no longer reflective of the parties’
true financial position.

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[13] The respondent also denies that it is commercially insolvent. It avers that its
management accounts demonstrate solvency and an ability to pay its debts as they fall
due. The respondent disputes that it has disposed of assets in a manner suggestive of
insolvency and denies having advertised any of its assets for sale as alleged.
[14] On these grounds, the respondent contends that the statutory demand was
unjustified, that the applicant has failed to establish an undisputed liquidated claim, and
that the application constitutes an abuse of process. It accordingly seeks the dismissal of
the liquidation application, together with a punitive costs order.
Bona fide and reasonable grounds
[15] Although the applicant seeks a provisional winding -up order, the enquiry remains
whether the respondent has shown that the applicant’s claim is bona fide disputed on
reasonable grounds.
[16] In Gap Merchant Recycling CC v Goal Reach Trading 55 CC, 1 Rogers J explained
that where the dispute concerns the respondent’s liability to the applicant, and the
applicant has shown, on a prima facie basis and with reference to all the affidavits, the
existence of its claim, the onus shifts to the respondent to d emonstrate that the debt is
bona fide disputed on reasonable grounds. If such a dispute is shown, the application
must be dismissed.

1 Gap Merchant Recycling CC v Goal Reach Trading 55 CC 2016 (1) SA 261 (WCC). See also Total
Auctioneering Services and Sales CC v Consolidated Auctioneers v Norfolk Freightways CC [2012]
ZAGPJHC 211 (30 October 2012) para 13, with reference to Kalil v Decotex (Pty) Lid and Another 1988
(1) SA 943 (AD) at 979G-H. See also: Reynolds NO v Mecklenberg (Pty) Ltd 1996 (1) SA 75 (W) at 80G
to 81A.

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[17] The respondent has failed to meet that threshold. Its preliminary challenge to the
applicant’s authority is technical and misconceived. The founding affidavit is deposed to
by the applicant’s chief executive officer and sole director, Mr David, who has per sonal
knowledge of the facts. It is well established that a deponent in motion proceedings need
not be authorised by the litigating party to depose to an affidavit; it is the institution and
prosecution of the proceedings that must be authorised.2 In any event, the objection does
not engage with either the existence of the debt or the respondent’s ability to pay it.
[18] The respondent’s denial of a binding agreement is equally untenable. The written
agreement bears the signature of the respondent’s managing director, Mr Mohammed,
who also bound himself as surety. The sustained course of dealing between the parties
— including the placement of orders, delivery of fuel, invoicing and substantial payments
— is inconsistent with the assertion that no contractual relationship existed. This denial
is further contradicted by the respondent’s prior written acknowledgements of
indebtedness and its continued performance under the agreement.
[19] The assertion that the indebtedness was settled in full is bald and unsupported.
No proof of payment, reconciliation, or contemporaneous accounting is produced to
explain how an admitted indebtedness exceeding R18 million was extinguished. The
contention is raised for the first time in opposition to these proceedings and is inconsistent
with the respondent’s failure to dispute the debt when the statutory demand was served.

2 Ganes and Another v Telecom Namibia Limited 2004 (3) SA 615 (SCA) para [19].

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[20] The respondent’s reliance on the in duplum rule also does not assist it. Even if
applicable, the rule limits the recovery of interest and does not extinguish or reduce the
underlying capital debt. On either party’s version, a substantial capital indebtedness
remains outstanding. The invocation of the rule therefore does not give rise to a bona fide
dispute as to the existence of the debt.
[21] Nor do the alleged discrepancies in invoices and delivery notes advance the
respondent’s case. The allegations are made at a high level of generality, are
unsupported by any coherent alternative reconciliation, and are not accompanied by
evidence that fuel was not delivered or that invoices were disputed at the time. The
respondent had not previously denied its liability and only sought to do so in its answering
affidavit. That denial is neither reasonable nor bona fide.
[22] Considered cumulatively, the defences advanced are internally inconsistent,
raised belatedly, and unsupported by objective evidence. The respondent’s reliance on
Rule 6 of the Uniform Rules and the Plascon -Evans principle is misplaced. Provisional
winding-up proceedings are governed by the Badenhorst rule as explained in Gap
Merchant Recycling,3 and not by the ordinary motion -proceedings approach to disputes
of fact. The respondent has failed to demonstrate that the applicant’s claim is bona fide
disputed on reasonable grounds. In these circumstances, the applicant has established
that it is a creditor of the respondent in an amount exceeding the statutory threshold.


3 Ibid footnote 1

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Respondent’s inability to pay its debts
[23] In terms of section 345(1)(c) of the Act, a company is deemed to be unable to pay
its debts if it is proved to the satisfaction of the court that it is unable to do so. In the
present matter, the respondent has not paid the admitted indebtedness to the app licant,
despite demand, and has placed no evidence before the court demonstrating an ability to
do so.
[24] In African Global, 4 the court explained that a company is commercially insolvent
when it cannot meet current demands or its day-to-day liabilities in the ordinary course of
business, irrespective of whether its assets exceed its liabilities. The enquiry is therefore
not directed at balance-sheet solvency, but at whether the company has liquid or readily
realisable assets available to meet its obligations as they fall due.
[25] Measured against this standard, the respondent has failed to rebut its deemed
insolvency. In De Waard v Andrew & Thienhaus Ltd,5 the court held:
‘Now, when a man commits an act of insolvency, he must expect his estate to be sequestrated.
The matter is not sprung upon him ... of course; the court has a large discretion in regard to
making the law absolute; and in exercising that discretion the condition of a man's assets and his
general financial position will be important elements to be considered. Speaking for myself, I
always look with great suspicion upon and examine very narrowly the position of a debtor who
says: "I am sorry that I cannot pay my creditor, but my assets far exceed my liability". To my mind

4 Murray and Others NNO v African Global Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others 2020 (2) SA 93 (SCA), with
reference to LAWSA Vol 4(3), (2 ed, 2014), para 74.
5 De Waard v Andrew & Thienhaus Ltd 1907 TS 722, quoted with approval in ABSA Bank Ltd v
Rhebokskloof (Pty) Ltd and Others 1993 (4) SA 436 (C) at 440F-44 and 447C-F.

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the best proof of solvency is that a man should pay his debts; and therefore I always examine in
a critical spirit the case of a man who does not pay what he owes’.
[26] Nowhere in the answering affidavit does the respondent demonstrate that it is able
to pay its debts as they fall due. Beyond a bare assertion of solvency, no evidence is
provided of access to liquid or readily realisable assets sufficient to meet its obligations.
The undertaking to produce management accounts at a later stage does not constitute
evidence of solvency and falls well short of what is required to displace the statutory
presumption.
[27] On the papers as a whole, the applicant has established that the respondent has
not paid the debt because it is unable to do so and that the respondent is commercially
insolvent within the meaning of section 345(1)(c) of the Act.
[28] Although the applicant also relied on the just and equitable ground in section
344(h) of the Act, it is not necessary to determine that ground separately. The applicant
has established a basis for provisional winding -up on the statutory ground of inability to
pay debts. In the absence of any independent factual basis requiring consideration under
section 344(h), the matter is appropriately disposed of on the insolvency ground alone.
[29] Once these statutory requirements for a provisional winding -up order have been
satisfied, the court retains a discretion whether to grant such an order. In the absence of
special or unusual circumstances, and where a creditor has established a due and
payable debt which the company is unable to satisfy, that discretion ordinarily falls to be
exercised in favour of granting a provisional winding -up order. No countervailing
considerations have been advanced. To permit the respondent to continue trading in

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circumstances of commercial insolvency would serve only to prejudice creditors. There is
accordingly no basis upon which this Court would be justified in refusing provisional relief.
[30] In the result the following order is made:
1. The respondent, Upward Spiral Fuels (Pty) Ltd, is placed under provisional
winding-up in the hands of the Master of the High Court, Gauteng Local
Division, Johannesburg.
2. A rule nisi is issued calling upon the respondent and all other interested parties
to show cause, if any, on 16 March 2026 why a final winding-up order should
not be granted.
3. Service of this provisional order shall be effected as follows:
3.1 on the respondent at its registered address by the sheriff;
3.2 on the employees of the respondent by affixing a copy of this order to a
notice board or to the main gate at the respondent's registered address by the
sheriff;
3.3 on the South African Revenue Service;
3.4 on the Master of the High Court;
3.5 on creditors of the respondent by one publication in The Star newspaper.
4. The costs of this application shall be costs in the winding up.

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_______________________________
L WINDELL
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng Division, Johannesburg
Delivered: This judgement was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected and is handed down electronically by circulation to the Parties/their legal
representatives by email and by uploading it to the electronic file of this matter on
CaseLines. The date for hand-down is deemed to be 3 February 2026.

Appearances
For the applicant: K Naidoo
Instructed by: Shaheed Dollie Inc
For the respondent: N K Ramsingh
Instructed by: Ureesh Dorasamy Attorneys.
Date of Hearing: 29 October 2025
Date of Judgment: 3 February 2026