THE SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL
OF SOUTH AFRICA
Reportable
CASE NO : 559/04
In the matter between :
GOLD FIELDS LIMITED First Appellant
PIETER CHRISTIAAN VAN ASWEGEN Second Appellant
and
HARMONY GOLD MINING COMPANY LIMITED First Respondent
THE SECURITIES REGULATIONS PANEL Second Respondent
THE JOHANNESBURG STOCK EXCHANGE Third Respondent
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Before: MPATI AP, STREICHER, FARLAM, NUGENT JJA & COMRIE AJA
Heard: 24 NOVEMBER 2004
Delivered: 26 NOVEMBER 2004
Summary: Offer to exchange shares in pu blic companies – whether an offer for
subscription to the public for purposes of s 145 of the Companies Act 1973.
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J U D G M E N T
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NUGENT JA
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NUGENT JA:
[1] Gold Fields Limited and Harm ony Gold Mining Company Limited
are both public mining companies who se shares (or their equivalent) are
listed on securities exchanges in this country and abroad.
[2] Gold Fields has 1 billion author ised ordinary shares of which
491 806 265 have been issued. Harmony wi shes to acquire those shares. It
has thus made an offer that is in two parts. The first part aims at acquiring a
maximum of 34.9% of the shares by no later than 26 November 2004. The
second part, which is dependent upon various conditions being fulfilled,
aims at thereafter acquiring the balance.
[3] Pared of its various conditions – none of which are material to the
issues that arise in this appeal – the offer is quite simple: Harmony has
offered to issue and exchange 1. 275 Harmony shares for one Gold Fields
share. Its purpose dictates that the of fer is made only to persons who are
able to deliver Gold Fields shares – certificated Gold Fields shareholders –
whose identity will change from time to time bearing in mind that there is a
regular trade in the shares. Upon accepta nce of the offer, and the surrender
of Gold Fields shares (which must occur simultaneously) the shareholder
becomes entitled in due course to be allotted new shares in Harmony.
[4] Gold Fields contends that the Harmony offer constitutes ‘an offer to
the public for the subscription of sh ares’ as contemplated by s 145 of the
Companies Act 1973, which, because it is not accompanied by a prospectus
(that it is not accompanied by a prospect us is not disputed) is prohibited by
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the terms of that section. It applie d to the Johannesburg High Court for a
declaratory order to that effect and for related relief. The application was
dismissed by Goldblatt J. This appeal is with the leave of that court.
[5] The second appellant – a business man who has a small holding of
Gold Fields shares – joined in the application and in this appeal but his
presence takes the matter no further. The Securities Regulations Panel and
the Johannesburg Stock Exchange we re cited as respondents for any
interest that they might have in the ma tter but they have played no part in
these proceedings.
[6] The learned judge in the court a quo concluded that the offer was
neither one for the ‘subscription of shares’, nor was it ‘made to the public’,
and thus that it was not prohibited by s 145. Both those findings were
challenged in this court.
[7] The features of the offer are na turally dictated by its purpose, which
is, on the one hand, to acquire the Gold Fields shares, and on the other
hand, to finance the acquisition by issuing Harmony shares that will be
taken up by acceptors of the offer.
[8] A person who undertakes to take up shares (which is what the Gold
Fields shareholders who accept th e offer are required to do) might
ordinarily be described as a subscriber, for one of the meanings attributed
to the verb by the Shorter Oxford Eng lish Dictionary is ‘to promise over
one’s signature to pay (a sum of money) for shares in an undertaking’ – the
words in parenthesis indicating that that part of the definition is not
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universally applicable. But the effect of the proposed exchange of shares in
the present case is that the consideration being given for the right to take up
Harmony shares is the Gold Fields shares themselves rather than cash, and
in Government Stocks and Other Secur ities Investment Co Limited v
Christopher [1956] 1 All ER 490 (Ch) Wynn-Pa rry J held that the word
‘subscription’ in the comparable provi sion of the English Companies Act
meant ‘taking or agreeing to take shar es for cash’ and not in exchange for
other shares. The learned judge found support for that conclusion in the
judgments of Kekewich J and the Court of Appeal in Arnison v Smith
(1889) 41 Ch 348, the judgments in The Chicago Railway Terminal
Elevator Co v The Inland Revenue Commissioners (1900) 84 LT 71 and
Brown v Inland Revenue Commissioners (1900) 84 LT 71, and from what
was said to be one of th e ordinary meanings of the word. The decision in
that case persuaded the court below to the same conclusion.
[9] I share the view of Hampel J in Broken Hill Proprietary Co Ltd v
Bell Resources Ltd [1984] 8 ACLR 609 (SC of Vict oria) that the decisions
referred to in Christopher’s case do not support the construction that was
placed on the meaning of ‘subscription’, and I have drawn attention to the
dictionary meaning which does not requi re the considerati on to be in cash
(although that is usual). Moreover, there is a clea r indication from those
sections of the Companies Act that de al with the issue and allotment of
shares in return for a consideration other than cash (s 76(1) and (2), s 77(2),
s 92, s 165(3)) that the draftsman did not intend the word to bear that
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restricted meaning, for it is difficu lt to see how the subscription and the
allotment would then coincide.
[10] A considered judicial opinion from another jurisdiction on the
meaning of a word or phrase is natura lly to be accorded some weight but it
is not decisive, and furthermore, th e statute itself discloses that the
draftsman did not accord it that mean ing. If the ultimate conclusion that
was reached in Christopher’s case (that an offer to exchange shares was not
an offer to the public fo r subscription) was the correct one (and in my view
it was) then it must be borne in mind that the conclusion rested on more
than one ground. In my view a subscription for shares, as that word is used
in the Act, is an undertaking to take up shares, not only for cash, and the
real difficulty for Gold Fields lies el sewhere than in the meaning of that
word.
[11] I can add nothing usef ul to what has been sa id in earlier cases as to
the meaning of 'public' (there is no suggestion that the word is used in s 145
in any special sense). In S v V 1977 (2) SA 134 (T) at 137 Franklin J (citing
S v Rossouw 1 and Tatem Co v Inland Revenue Commissioners 2 to similar
effect) said that
‘[t]he ordinary meaning of the word ‘public’ is the community as a whole rather than
the community as an organised body’.
[12] I think it is unhelpful, and pot entially misleading, to attempt to
determine by inference what is include d in an ‘offer to the public’ by
1 1968 (4) SA 380 (T) 385C-D
2 [1941] 2 All ER 616 (CA)
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referring to the inclusions and exclusio ns in s 142 (the definition of an
‘offer to the public’) and s 144 resp ectively, for those inclusions and
exclusions might just as well have be en inserted to avoid uncertainty. The
better approach, in my view, is to ask whether the present offer can
properly be said to have been made to the public as that term is ordinarily
understood.
[13] To qualify as an offer to the public it would seem to me that the
terms of the offer would at least need to be capable of be ing offered to and
accepted by the public at large. That is not to say that every offer in such
terms is necessarily an offer to the public. Nor is it to say that an offer must
necessarily be made to the public at large in order to qualify (s 142 makes it
clear that it might be made to only a section of the public). But an offer that
is made to the public would necessarily be in terms that would enable it to
be made to and accepted by the public at large, a nd it could thus be made
with indifference to a ny random section of the pub lic. An offer to sell
shares, for example, in return for ca sh, is capable of being made to the
public at large, and might thus be ma de as much to that section of the
public that resides in Bloemfontein as to the section of the public that
resides in Upington.
[14] But that will not be so where the offer aims at acquiring specific
private property – as in this case – for the terms of su ch an offer must
necessarily be such that it is directed to, and is capable of being accepted
by, only the owner of the property. Th e offer, in its terms, will not be
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capable of being extended to the public at large, or even to a random
section of the public. That the owner of the property might live amongst us
in society does not mean th at the offer is addressed to him as a ‘section of
the public’. On the contra ry, he is addressed in th e peculiar capacity – not
shared by the public at large – of ow ner of specific limited property. And
an offer of that kind does not become an offer to the public, or even to a
section of the public, by a process of multiplication when it is extended to
the acquisition of similar property in th e hands of other owners. That there
is a ‘rational connection’ between the of fer and the characteristic that sets
the group apart ( Corporate Affairs Commission (SA) v Australian Control
Credit Union (1985) 157 CLR 201 (HC); TNT Australia (Pty) Ltd v
Normandy Resources NL (1989) 15 ACLR 99 (SC)) hardly needs saying
for the characteristic is inherent in the offer itself.
[15] But, it was submitted on behalf of Gold Fields, the offer in this case
is in truth made to, and capable of being accepted by, the public at large,
because any member of the public is ab le to purchase one or more shares
on a stock exchange and take advantage of the offer. I th ink that is to
misconstrue the nature of the offer. It might be that any member of the
public is able to acquire a Gold Field s share, but until he does so the offer
is not made to him. In sofar as members of the public might have been
invited by Harmony to acquire Gold Fiel ds Shares that is no more than an
invitation to qualify for the offer.
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[16] An offer that aims to acquir e specific private property would not
achieve its purpose if it was made to the public for no reason but that the
property is in private hands. The offe r in the present case is in that
category. It is not made to the public but to share holders in Gold Fields
who are not, in that capacity, a mere section of the public at large.
[17] The appeal is dismissed with costs, including the costs of two
counsel, such costs to be paid by the appellants jointly and severally.
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R W NUGENT
JUDGE OF APPEAL
MPATI AP)
STREICHER JA)
FARLAM JA) CONCUR
COMRIE AJA)