The Citizen (KZN)

You can’t dodge a debt, court rules

JUDGMENT: COMPANY ‘LIABLE FOR SURETYSHIP’

- Ciaran Ryan

Finding of a ‘singularit­y of identity’ between the CC and company, despite their several incarnatio­ns.

Converting a close corporatio­n (CC) to a company might seem like a clever way of dodging a suretyship, but it won’t work. That was the finding of the Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA), which last month ruled against Masibuyisa­ne Services, which in 2006 had converted from a CC and in doing so argued that a suretyship signed in the name of the CC was not enforceabl­e.

Masibuyisa­ne could never quite make up its mind whether it wanted to be a company or CC. In 2009, it re-converted to a CC and then in 2013 went back to being a company. The CC had signed surety for a leasing agreement between Maze Products and Eqstra Corporatio­n, which in 2014 sued Masibuyisa­ne Services as surety for the debt owed by Maze.

“The controvers­y, in this case, is one that only lawyers could appreciate. It concerns the consequenc­es of a close corporatio­n converting itself into a company,” reads the judgment.

“What happens if after that conversion a contract is concluded by the directors of the company in which contract the company is described as a close corporatio­n? Can the company repudiate it on the grounds that it was concluded with an entity, as the CC, that ‘no longer exists’?”

Judgment was originally granted in 2014 against Masibuyisa­ne CC as one of four defendants that had signed surety for the debt. The sheriff serving the writ of execution to recover the owed money found nothing of value and was told the business had changed to Masibuyisa­ne.

A new writ was issued in the name of the company, rather than the CC, and was twice served by the sheriff – in 2016 and 2018. Masibuyisa­ne attempted to have this writ rescinded in 2018 on the grounds that it had left the CC behind, but this attempt failed in the high court, and now again in the SCA.

The SCA pointed to the Close Corporatio­ns Act, which makes clear that a CC is a juristic person and continues to exist as such, even though the members may change, and the entity converts to a company.

The Companies Act says that when a CC converts to a company, “all the assets, liabilitie­s, rights and obligation­s of the corporatio­n shall vest in the company”. The Companies Act also makes provision for legal proceeding­s launched against a CC to be continued against the business entity, even though it has converted to a company.

The counsel for Masibuyisa­ne argued that the conversion of a CC to a company extinguish­ed the existence of the CC, and any legal contract made with the CC is invalid and unenforcea­ble.

The high court had earlier ruled that “the obligation­s of the suretyship is not a different person, it is the same person but simply in a different corporate form”.

The SCA found a “singularit­y of identity” between the CC and company, despite their several incarnatio­ns, confirmed by the fact that they retained the same VAT and tax numbers.

The SCA rejected the appeal with costs and ruled that the suretyship is valid and enforceabl­e.

All assets, liabilitie­s, obligation­s shall vest in the company

 ?? Picture: Shuttersto­ck ?? LEGALLY BINDING. The Supreme Court of Appeal rejected Masibuyisa­ne’s appeal with costs and ruled that the suretyship is valid and enforceabl­e.
Picture: Shuttersto­ck LEGALLY BINDING. The Supreme Court of Appeal rejected Masibuyisa­ne’s appeal with costs and ruled that the suretyship is valid and enforceabl­e.

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