Notes
Notes
Eduvos (Pty) Ltd (formerly Pearson Institute of Higher Education) is registered with the Department of Higher Education and Training as a private higher education institution under the
Higher Education Act, 101, of 1997. Registration Certificate number: 2001/HE07/008
Week 1:
Introduction
Personality
Principle The profits of the company belong to the company and not
its shareholders and only after the company has declared a
dividend may the shareholders claim that dividend;
The assets of the company are its exclusive property and the
shareholders have no proportionate proprietary rights
therein;
The Companies Act, 2008 provides for two types of
Companies:
Steps to incorporate a company
Complete a Notice of the Memorandum of File it together with the Pay the prescribed fee. The CIPC will assign a Issue a registration The date of
Incorporation; and Incorporation CIPC; and registration number to certificate to the incorporation on the
the company; and company. (The certificate is the date
registration certificate on which the company
is conclusive evidence comes into existence as
that all the a separate legal entity.
requirements for the
incorporation of the
company have been
complied with and that
the company is
incorporated from the
date stated in the
certificate)
Pre-Incorporation Contracts - Process
Capacity of a company: the sphere of actions ULTRA VIRES conduct: the conclusion of the ULTRA VIRES doctrine: refers to acts that fall
a company may legally perform. transaction is beyond its legal capacity. outside the scope of the company’s powers
as determined in the MOI.
When an act on behalf of the company falls outside its
main and ancillary objects, the company does not exist in
law and consequently such an act is not binding on the
company, it is then described as ultra vires.
Ultra Vires and the Companies Act
• In terms of Section 20 (1) of the Companies Act, 2008, no action of the company is void if the only
reason therefor is that the action was prohibited by a limitation, restriction or qualification in the MOI
or that a consequence of this form of limitation was that the directors who purported to act on behalf
of the company had no authority to authorize the company’s action.
• Section 20 (2) provides for the shareholder, by way of special resolution, to ratify any action taken by
the company that was inconsistent with or in breach of a specified limitation, restriction or qualification
contained in the MOI.
• Even though an ultra vires transaction will be binding on the company, the shareholders are provided
with recourse to claim back their losses from the person who acted beyond the scope of the company’s
capacity.
• Section 20(6) of the Companies Act provides that each shareholder has a claim for damages against any
person who fraudulently, or due to gross negligence, causes the company to do anything inconsistent
with the Companies Act or a limitation, restriction or qualification on the powers of the company as
stated in its Memorandum of Incorporation, unless ratified by special resolution in terms of section
20(2). This is in addition to the remedy provided in section 165.
Ultra Vires and the Companies Act
• If the company or directors have not as yet performed the planned action
(e.g. concluded the contract) that is inconsistent with a limitation or
qualification of the company’s powers contained in the Memorandum of
Incorporation, one or more shareholders, directors or prescribed officers of
the company may obtain a court order restraining (i.e. preventing) the
company or directors from doing so in terms of section 20(4) and (5).
• A third party who did not have actual knowledge of this limitation or
qualification and acted in good faith will, in such a case, have a claim for
any damages suffered as a result.
Constructive Notice and the Turquand Rule
• Doctrine of Constructive Notice: Third parties dealing with
a company are deemed to be fully acquainted with the
contents of the public documents of the company.
• The consequences of this doctrine could be detrimental to
someone dealing with the company, because the contract could
be a null and void contract if the company acted ultra vires.
• As such, the English courts developed the Turquand rule
to mitigate the harsh effects of the doctrine.
• Section 19 (4) of the Companies Act, 2008 partially
abolished the doctrine of constructive notice, third parties
contracting with the company are no longer be deemed to
have notice of public documents of company merely
because they have been filed with the CIPC or are
accessible for inspection at office of company.
Constructive Notice and the Turquand Rule
However, it is still applicable in terms of Section 19 (5) which
provides two exceptions.
1.A person is deemed to have knowledge of any provision of
company’s MOI in terms of S 15 (2) (b) (relating to special
conditions applicable to company and additional
requirements regarding their amendment). This means
that a third party dealing with a ring-fenced company is
deemed to have knowledge of the applicable restriction/s.
2.The second exception is Personal Liability companies. A
person is regarded as having received notice and
knowledge of the effect of 19 (3) i.e. that directors and
past directors are jointly and severally liable with the
company for debts of company contracted during their
periods of office.
Constructive Notice and the Turquand Rule
• - Corporate finance.
• - The two main forms of
corporate finance are:
• Debt (short-term, long-term
loans, debentures)
• Equity (shares)
• - the process of selling shares,
capital maintenance, and possible
restrictions on the sale of a share.
How does a company raise finance?
• Debt is money or assets obtained by a company when it does any of the following:
• obtains credit terms from its suppliers, effectively allowing the company to pay in the
• public or private company must still have 2 types of shares: authorised share capital & issued share capital
• authorised share capital: maximum nr of shares that the company is authorised by its MOI to issue
• issued share capital: amount of share capital raised by the company in return for the nr of shares issued by it
What are shares?
• What are shares?
• Section 35: share: one of the units in which the proprietary interest in a
profit company is divided
• securities have a much wider meaning than shares - include ordinary
shares, preference shares, stocks, depository receipts in public companies,
derivative instruments, bonds and debentures
• share is personal incorporeal movable property that is the measure of a
shareholder’s interest in a company
• In Short v Treasury Commissioners: share in a company doesn’t imply
ownership of a part of the assets or property of the company. A shareholder
is not a creditor of the company, he is essentially an investor
• Standard Bank of SA Ltd v Ocean Commodities Inc share consist of bundle
of personal rights entitling shareholder to a certain interest in the company,
its assets and dividends
What are classes of shares?
• What are classes of shares?
• Section 36: company’s MOI must state the classes of shares and the number of shares authorised to be issued
• The MOI must also set out w.r.t each class of shares, a distinguishing designation for that class and the preferences, rights, limitations and
other terms associated with that class
• The Companies Act contains an important exception that permits MOI to authorise blank shares with enhanced flexibility
• shareholders have 4 personal rights, comprising both financial and non-financial rights:
1. right to vote
2. right to information
3. right to share in profits of a company that have been duly distributed by the company (dividend)
4. right to share in the net surplus capital of a company on its winding-up
• A company may in its MOI confer different rights on shareholder, particularly in regard to payment of dividends or distributions and the return of
capital on a winding-up – this is what creates different classes of shares.
• Different classes of shares
shares
• company can’t have preference shares unless it also has
ordinary shares or some other class
• -as a general rule of construction, preference shares do not,
on a winding-up, enjoy a right to repayment of their capital in
priority to ordinary shareholders
• ORDINARY SHARES
• residual class of share and constituted the equity share capital of the company
• amount of dividend paid to ordinary shareholders is not fixed as for preference shares
• qualify for a dividend after a prescribed minimum dividend has been paid to ordinary shareholders
• usually issued to remunerate promoters of companies for their services in the formation and
incorporation of companies or as vendors’ shares
• CAPITALISATION SHARES:
• A company may have done well financially over the year, and have reserves to issue dividends. However,
the board may decide to use the saved money to expand the business (capitalize). Instead of issuing
dividends, the board will be able to issue shares to existing shares holders – this is called a capitalization
issue and these free shares are often called cap shares in the industry.
• Board of directors may approve the issuing of any authorised shares of the company as capitilsation
• shares on a pro rata basis to the shareholders of one or more classes of shares
• Issue of shares is not regarded as distribution and as such not subject to the solvency and liquidity test
Capitalisation
shares
• BOD can decide to offer to award a cash payment in lieu of a
capitilsation share
• the board is satisfied that the company would satisfy the solvency
and liquidity test
shares
• also applies to the power to increase the authorised share capital of the company (subject to any
limitation in the MOI)
• Issue of shares requires shareholder approval by special resolution where share are issued to:
where further shares are issued in a transaction or series of integrated transactions and voting power of the
new shares equals or exceeds 30% of voting power of all the shares of the class held before new issue of
shares issue must be approved by a special resolution
Private companies and
right of preemption
• Section 39
• Therefore, if a shareholder owns shares in a private company they may not sell
them to the public without first offering the shares to the existing shareholders in
the private company.
AIM:
Capital
Therefore, the following transactions were not allowed – these
were so called capital maintenance rues:
1. A company selling shares at less than (nominal) value
Maintenance 2.
3.
A company utilizing capital to pay out dividends
A company buying its own shares
4. A company giving assistance to a third party to buy
shares in the company.
The new 2008 Companies Act has abolished the capital
maintenance rules, but has attempted to protect creditors and
shareholders by means of the solvency and liquidity requirement.
The solvency and liquidity test must be
applied: a company satisfies
reasonably
• when a company wishes to provide the solvency and
S 4 of Companies Act foreseeable financial
financial assistance for the subscription of liquidity test at a
2008: circumstances of the
its securities in terms of S 44 particular time if,
company at the time-
• if a company grants loans or other considering all
financial assistance to directors and
others as (a)the assets of the (b)it appears that the
• contemplated in S 45 company, as fairly
company, as fairly
company will be able
• before a company makes any valued, equal or to pay its debts as
valued; and
distribution as provided for in S 46 exceed the liabilities they become due on
• if a company wishes to pay cash in of the the
lieu of issuing capitalisation shares in
terms of S 47 (ii)in the case of a
• if a company wishes to acquire its ordinary course of (i) 12 months after the distribution
own shares as provided for in S 48 business for a period date on which the test contemplated in
Content of the solvency and liquidity test: of- is considered; or paragraph (a) of the
company satisfies the test if it is both definition of
‘solvent’ = by reference to its assets and
liabilities
‘liquid’ = By reference to its future cash ‘distribution’ in
flows section 1, 12 months
following that
distribution
Financial assistance –
s44
• S 44
u Important because it is the date that determines u Where BOD does not give the record date, it is:
shareholders rights u the latest date by which the company
is required to give shareholders notice
u right to receive notice of a meeting of that meeting
u right to vote at a meeting u the date of the action or event
Calling of shareholders’ meetings
u BOD / any other person specified in MOI / rules may call a shareholder’s
meeting at any time
u Must be called when:
u MOI / Companies Act states that the BOD is required to convene a meeting and
refer a matter to a decision by shareholders
u when a meeting is demanded by shareholders
u must be signed by holders of at least 10% of voting rights on matter to be decided
u it must specify the specific purpose for which the meeting is proposed
u a company / shareholder may apply to court for an order setting aside a demand for a
meeting on the grounds that it is frivolous / already decided / vexatious
u shareholder may withdraw demand for meeting before start of meeting
u could result in the company cancelling meeting if percentage below required percentage
Notice of meetings continued…
u statement that shareholder can appoint a proxy u agree to waive notice of the meeting
in place of shareholder u ratify the defective notice
u participants required to provide proof of identity u A shareholder who is present at a
at the meeting
meeting is deemed to have received
or waived notice of the meeting
Postponement and adjournment of
meetings
u Proxy
u a person who is appointed to represent a shareholder at a meeting
u Companies Act allows a shareholder to appoint any individual as his / her proxy
u does not have to be a shareholder in a company
u must be in writing and signed by the shareholder appointing the person
u remains valid for one year after it was signed
u can appoint for a specific period of time
u can appoint two or more in respect of different types of shares
u proxy may delegate authority
u must deliver copy of proxy appointment form to company before proxy can act
u Voting power
u with respect to any matter is determined by the voting rights that may be exercised
in connection with any particular matter by a person as a percentage of all voting
rights
u Voting rights
u the rights of any holder of the company’s securities to vote in connection with a
matter
u MOI sets out voting rights
u voting rights differ among shareholders
u differ among transactions
u can also include voting rights held by the owner of a debt instrument
Week 4:
- fiduciary duty and duty of care, skill and diligence expected from directors in terms of the Companies
Act, 2008 as well as case law.
MEANING OF A
DIRECTOR –
Section 1
• A director is defined as a member of the board of a company as contemplated in
S66 or is an alternate director.
• S66 -
• proves that a person becomes a director only knew when that person has given his /
her consent to serve as a director after having been appointed / elected or
• The company’s MOI can implement some limitations in respect of the director’s power.
• PPWAWU National Provident Fund v Chemical, Energy, Paper, Printing, Wood and Allied Workers Union:
o Directors must act independently regardless of the views or decisions of those who appointed them
o A director is not the servant of agent of a shareholder who votes for or otherwise procures his
appointment to the board and in carrying out his duties and functions as a director, he is in law obliged
to serve the interests of the company to the exclusion of the interests of any such nominator, employer
or principal
MOI appointed
director
• Does not have appointed by the shareholders
• Holds all the same powers and functions as any other director
except as limited in the MOI
• Such a director has all the duties of and is subject to the same
liabilities as any other directors
Non-executive and executive director
• Executive director –
o a director who is also an employee
• Non-executive director
o are not employee of the company
• The Companies Act and King III endorse a unitary board structure
o this means that a company should have a single board of directors
consisting of both executive and non-executive directors sitting and
making decisions together at the same meeting
Managers and Directors
• Director does not have to be employee of o exercises general executive control over, and in
company the management of the whole or a significant part
of the company’s business and activities; or
• Differences contained in table 6.3 in textbook o regularly participates to a material degree in the
general executive control over, and management
of the whole or a significant portion of the
business and activities of the company
• A manager who is entrusted with important
functions could be a prescribed officer and be o It applies to a person who meets these
subject to many of a director’s duties, requirements irrespective of any title given by the
liabilities and qualifications. Differences are company to an office held by the person in the
not as absolute as stated in the textbook company or a function performed by the person
for the company
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
• According to King IV, the functions of the board of directors are:
o approve policy and planning that gives effect to the direction so provided,
o common law principles remain to the extent that they have not been narrowed by the 2008 Act
o created a statutory defence for directors in the form of the “business judgment test” which can be used by
directors to prove that they have not acted in breach of their duties
• This forms part of partially codified regime of directors’ duties which includes:
o fiduciary duty
o duty of reasonable care
o supplemented by other provisions addressing:
- conflict of interest (s 75)
- directors‘ liability (s 77)
- indemnities and insurance (s 78)
• must still be read in context of common law and these principles will continue to apply in the absence of any
contrary statutory provision
Fiduciary duty of directors
• Common law –
• Fiduciary duty to act in good faith to the benefit of the company as a
whole
• To avoid a situation where the director’s personal interest conflicts
with that of the company
• Companies Act confirms director is under a fiduciary duty and that he or she
must act with a certain degree of care, skill and diligence
• S76(3) provides that a director must exercise the powers and perform the
functions of a director:
b) with the degree of care, skill and diligence that may reasonably be
expected of a person –
ii. having the general knowledge, skill and experience of that director
FIDUCIARY DUTY AND DUTY
OF CARE, SKILL AND
DILIGENCE
• To determine whether a director as acted with the required degree of care, skill and diligence:
o either the director had no material personal financial interest in the subject matter of the decision (and had no
reasonable basis to know that any related person had a personal financial interest in the matter), he or she
disclosed the conflict of interest as required by S75 of the Act; and
o the director had a rational basis for believing and did believe that the decision was in the best interest of the
company
o Allows a director to show that he/she is not in contravention of his/her statutory duties
o S76(4)(b) provides that a director is entitled to rely on the performance of certain people or committees
o a director should not be held liable for decisions that lead to undesirable results where such decisions were
made:
o in good faith
o with care
o and on an informed basis
o which the directors believed were in the interest of the company
DIRECTORS’ PERSONAL FINANCIAL
INTERESTS
• S75 deals specifically with a director’s personal financial interest
• provides that if a director’s personal interest conflict with those of the company, the director should disclose the conflict of interest in the
manner described in S75
o if a director has a personal financial interest in respect of a matter to be considered at a meeting of the board OR
o knows that a related person has a personal financial interest in the matter
o the director must disclose the interest and its general nature before the matter is considered at the meeting
o - The director is compelled to disclose to the meeting any material information relating to the matter that is known to
the director
o may disclose any observations or pertinent insights relating to the matter if requested to do so by the other directors
• The meaning of a director has an extended meaning in this respect and includes an alternate
director, prescribed officer, member of the board committee and member of the audit committee.
LIABILITY OF DIRECTORS
• a company may recover loss, damages or costs sustained by • in any proceedings against a director
the company from a director under the following
circumstances (page 167 in textbook) • court may relieve the director
• either wholly or in part
• director will be jointly and severally liable with any other • from any liability set out in this section, on any terms the
person who is or may be hold liable for the same act court considers just if it appears to the court that:
• proceedings to recover any loss, damages or costs may not be • the director is or may be liable, but has acted honestly and
commenced more than three years after the act or omission reasonably; or
(giving rise to the liability) occurred • having regard to all the circumstances of the case, including
those connected with the appointment of the director, it
would be fair to excuse the director
• also gives a director a statutory defence – business judgment
test
• does not apply where the director exercised willful
misconduct or willful breach of trust
Indemnification of Directors
• S78 • Company may not directly or indirectly pay any fine that
may be imposed on the director of the company, or of a
• deals with indemnification and directors’ insurance related company, who has been convicted of an offence
in terms of any national legislation
• applies also to former directors of the company
• a company cannot undertake not to hold a director liable
for breach of fiduciary duties • Company may not indemnify a director in respect of
liability arising out of certain circumstances
• any provision that purports to relieve a director of a duty
is void
• company may advance expenses to a director to defend • page 170 of textbook
litigation in any proceedings arising out of the director’s
service to the company
• company can take out indemnity insurance to protect a • S 78 (8) - company can claim restitution form a director of
director against any liability or expenses for which the the company or of a related company for any money paid
company is permitted to indemnify a director by the company on behalf of that director in any manner
inconsistent with the restriction
• company can also take out indemnity insurance to
indemnify itself against any expenses that the company is
permitted to advance to a director or for which the
company is permitted to indemnify a director
Ineligible Disqualified
unrehabilitated insolvent
person prohibited by
public regulation
convicted / imprisoned
for theft / fraud / forgery
/ perjury
a person disqualified in
terms of a company’s
MOI
EXEMPTIONS TO DIRECTOR
DISQUALIFICATION
• S69 (11)
• gives a court a discretion to grant an exemption from being disqualified from
appointment as a director
• Following persons may apply to court for such an exemption:
• an unrehabilitated insolvent
• a person who was removed from an office of trust for dishonest
misconduct; or
• a person who was convicted of a crime with an element of dishonesty
• Ex parte application
• Must prove to court that he/she has been rehabilitated from his / her wrongful
ways and can be trusted with the responsibilities of directorship
• Examples on pages 177-178 of textbook
APPLICATION TO DECLARE A PERSON
DELINQUENT OR UNDER PROBATION
• S162 • grounds for delinquency application
• person consented to serve as a director, or acted in the
• A court can declare a person to be a delinquent or to be capacity of a director or prescribed officer, while he or
under probation she was ineligible or disqualified
• the person acted as a director while under probation and
in contravention of such order under the Companies Act,
• Following persons can apply for such an order: 2008 or under S47 of the CC Act
• a company • the person, while a director, grossly abused the position
• a shareholder of director
• a director • the person took personal advantage of information or an
opportunity contrary to S76 (2) the person intentionally
• a company secretary or prescribed officer of a company or by gross negligence inflicted harm upon the company
• a registered trade union that represents employees of or a subsidiary of the company contrary to S76 (2)(a)
the company • the person acted in a manner that amounted to gross
• any other representative of the employees of a company negligence, willful misconduct or breach of trust
• the Commission • the director engaged in unauthorised/reckless or
fraudulent activities
• the Takeover Regulation Panel
• the director failed to vote against a resolution taken at a
meeting although the company did not satisfy the
solvency and liquidity test
• the person acted in a manner materially inconsistent with
the duties of a director
Application for Delinquency
• Commission or the Takeover Regulation Panel • Setting aside Delinquency order
may rely on the following additional grounds:
• Person declared delinquent may apply to court as
• the person has repeatedly been personally subject follows:
to a compliance notice or similar enforcement
mechanism, for substantially similar conduct, in
terms of any legislation • to suspend the order of delinquency and substitute
• the person has at least twice been personally an order of probation with or without conditions,
convicted of an offence, or subject to an any time from three years after the order of
administrative fine or similar penalty in terms of delinquency was made
any legislation
• the person was a director of one or more • to set aside an order of delinquency at any time
companies or a managing member of one or more from two years after it was suspended
close corporations or controlled or participated in
the control of a juristic person, irrespective of
whether concurrently, sequentially or at unrelated
times, that were convicted of an offence or
subjected to an administrative fine or similar
penalty within a period of five years
• Case study : Kukama v Lobelo
VACANCIES ON THE BOARD
Criminal
sanctions still
exist for certain
matters
• Under the common law, it was accepted that the company itself must act to
have a wrong committed against it redressed.
• This was decided in Foss v Harbottle. In that case, two minority shareholders
alleged that property of the company had been misapplied and wasted by the
directors and that various mortgages were given improperly over the
company’s property.
• The minority shareholders, acting as the plaintiffs in this case, asked that the
guilty parties (the directors of the company) be held accountable to the
company and that a receiver be appointed. The court dismissed the claim
and held that when a company is wronged by its directors, it is only the
company that has standing to sue – not shareholders of the company.
• In effect, the court established the proper plaintiff rule, which states that a
wrong done to the company may be vindicated by the company alone. The
company itself must be the plaintiff, and not shareholders of that company.
The derivative action
ito s165
• a statutory derivative action ito s165 is a more certain
alternative to the common-law remedy.
• S165 provides that the persons who may use the
statutory derivative action are a shareholder, a
director (including a prescribed officer), a
representative of employees (normally a registered
trade union), or any other person with the leave
(permission) of the court.
• The remedy is typically available against an alleged
wrongdoer who is in control of the company.
The derivative action ito s165
• The following five steps need to be taken to use the s 165 derivative action:
1. The first step is for the person wishing to pursue the derivative action to serve a demand on
the company requiring it to commence or continue legal proceedings to protect the
interests of the company.
2. Unless the company successfully applies to court to set aside the demand on the grounds
that it is frivolous, vexatious or without merit, the company must appoint an independent
and impartial person or committee to investigate the demand and to report to the board
especially on whether or not it appears to be in the best interests of the company to
institute or continue with legal proceedings.
3. Within 60 business days of receiving the demand, the company must either initiate or
continue legal proceedings, or must serve on the person who made the demand a notice
refusing to comply with the demand.
4. if a notice refusing to comply is served on the person who made the demand, that person
may then apply to court for leave to bring or continue proceedings on the company’s
behalf.
5. To grant such leave, the court must be satisfied that the company (in dealing with the
demand and the report) has failed to comply with the statutory requirements and that the
applicant for leave is acting in good faith, that the proceedings will involve the trial of a
matter of material consequence to the company and that it is in the best interests of the
company that leave be granted.
If the shareholders of a company have ratified or approved any particular conduct of the
company, this does not prevent a person from making a demand or applying for leave under s
165, but the court may take the ratification or approval into account in making any judgment or
order
NB! Derivative action should not abuse court process
Remedies available to shareholders to protect
their own rights
• The second category concerns remedies
available to shareholders to protect their
own rights where shareholders are the
victims of oppressive or prejudicial
conduct by the company or a related
person.
• S163 offers relief from oppressive or
prejudicial conduct
• s161 allows for an application to protect
the rights of securities holders, and s164
provides for dissenting shareholders’
appraisal rights
Statutory remedies for
shareholders
• Section 163(1)(c) provides a new ground for relief, which is
when a director, prescribed officer, or other connected party
exercises or has exercised their authority in a way that
oppresses, unfairly prejudices, or disregarded the applicant's
interests.
• This defense is most likely to be invoked when a managing
director, executive director, or other person in charge of the
business abuses their authority and it would be difficult or
unnecessary to demonstrate that the director's actions were
company actions.
• Under s163 of the 2008 Act, the court may make an order if one
of the grounds is proved and if it is just and equitable to do so
Statutory remedies for
shareholders
• Section 163(2) a detailed description of the type of relief that the court
may give,
1. It could be in the form of interim or final relief, including an order
restraining the conduct complained of.
2. An order regulating the company’s affairs can direct the company
to amend its memorandum or create or amend a shareholders’
agreement or
3. The court may appoint replacement or additional directors or
declare any person delinquent or under probation.
4. The court may also order the varying or setting aside of a
transaction to which the company is a party and compensation for
the company or any other party to the transaction or agreement.
5. The court may also direct the rectification of the registers or
records of the company.
Statutory remedies for shareholders
• The purpose of s164 is to provide minority shareholders with a means of
protection against certain actions of majority shareholders, rather than against
actions of the directors.
four situations are covered by s164
1. The remedy is firstly available to shareholders who consider themselves
aggrieved through the company adopting a special resolution to amend its
Memorandum of Incorporation (MOI) by altering the preferences, rights or other
terms of any class of its shares in a manner that is materially adverse to the rights or
interests of the holders of that class of shares
2. Where a company is considering adopting a resolution to dispose of all or
greater part of its assets or undertaking (in terms of s 112 of the Companies Act,
2008
3. Where a company is considering, or an amalgamation or merger (in terms of s
113)
4. Where a company is considering or a scheme of arrangement (in terms of s 114).
NB! s164 does not apply to a transaction, agreement or offer pursuant to a business
rescue plan
Abuse of the separate juristic personality of a
company
• The third category concerns the remedy that effectively allows for the
lifting of the corporate veil and the imposition of personal liability in
instances where there has been abuse of the separate juristic
personality of a company.
• This remedy always existed at common law in South Africa, and the
2008 Act specifically provides for this remedy in s20.
• In terms of s 20(9) of the 2008 Act, whenever a court finds that the
incorporation of, or any act by or on behalf of, or any use of, a company
constitutes an ‘unconscionable abuse’ of juristic personality of the
company as a separate entity, the court may declare that the company
is deemed not to be a juristic person in respect of any right, obligation or
liability of the company, or of a shareholder or member of the company,
or of another person as specified in the declaration.
• Consequently, the court may give any further order it considers
appropriate in order to give effect to such declaration.
Enforcement of rights and ensuring compliance
with the Act
• The 2008 Act outlines four fundamental options for handling complaints about purported
Act violations or for the enforcement of rights, whether those rights are guaranteed by the
Act, a company's MOI, or other regulations
1. ADR
2. Apply to Companies Tribunal for adjudication (only for matters the CA allows)
3. APPLY TO High Court for a court order
4. File a compliant with the CIPC = Commission after investigating the complaint issuing a
compliance notice
other types of business enterprises
besides companies that exist in South
Africa.
Close Corporations
and business trusts.
partnerships.
Close Corporations
THE NATURE OF A CC:
MEMBERS OF CC CAN
DRAW UP AN ASSOCIATION MEMBERSHIP BETWEEN 1-
AGREEMENT WHICH IS A CC HAS MEMBERS NOT 10 NATURAL PERSONS –
CONTRACT THAT SETS OUT SHAREHOLDERS EMPHASIS ON SMALLER
RIGHTS & DUTIES OF BUSINESSES.
MEMBERS.
CLOSE CORPORATIONS
• A members interest is a personal right against the corporation, entitling the members to a proportionate
share in the aggregate members’ interests, to participate in a distribution of profits, and to share in the
distribution of the assets on liquidation, once all the creditors have been paid. Members interest is expressed
in a percentage
• The members of a CC must have an association agreement (written agreement) in place.
• CC ACT imposes 2 duties:
• Members of a CC have fiduciary duties:
• act honestly and in good faith
• Exercise powers and interest for the benefit of the cc
• Not exceed powers
• Avoid a conflict of interest
• Duty of care and skill
• Standard of care reasonably expected from a person of a member’s knowledge and experience
CESSATION OF MEMBERSHIP
• Section 36 order of court: a member can apply to court to have another member ceased to be a member:
• The conduct of the member is likely to have a prejudicial effect on the carrying on of the business
• Circumstances that make it just and equitable that he/she should cease to be a member.
• Conduct making it reasonably impossible for other members to associate with that person or carrying on of
the business
• Section 49: unfairly prejudicial conduct
• Occurs where a member is unfairly prejudiced by an act or omission by the corporation or members.
• Court must be satisfied such conduct reasonably exists & that it is just and equitable to intervene
CONTRACTING ON
BEHALF OF THE CC
• Every member of the cc qualifies as an agent of the cc
• Any act performed by a member of cc therefore binds cc, even where the act is
performed for the carrying on of the business of the cc, unless the member had no
power to act on behalf of the cc and the other person reasonably knew the member
had no such power.
• A member can be held liable for the debts of the CC in certain circumstances
• S 65 allows the court to ignore the existence of the CC as a separate legal person and
lift the corporate veil.
• A member can be held personally liable where there is gross abuse of the separate
legal personality of the CC
Definition of the term
‘partnership’
A partnership is a contract between two or more
persons, in terms of which each partner agrees to
contribute to the partnership business, which is
carried on for joint benefit of the parties and with
the object of making a profit.
Trusts beneficiaries.
§ Founder/Donor
§ Trustees and
§ Beneficiaries.
§ The creator of the trust is the founder. The founder places
assets under the control trustee/s. This can be done either
during the founder’s lifetime (an inter vivos trust) or on the
founders death (a testamentary trust-also known as a will trust).
The purpose of the exercise is to benefit third persons (the
beneficiaries).
Types of trusts
• Trusts therefore aim to protect the weak – beneficiaries, as well as A trust is recognized as a juristic person for the purposes of
safeguard the interests of others – the founder the Act.
• Ordinary Trust is where ownership AND control of trust assets lies Trusts and Close Corporations
with the trustees. However this is a non-beneficial ownership as
trustees are required to control and administer these assets on behalf A trustee of a trust can be a member of a CC in the capacity
of the beneficiaries. Trust property does not form part of the personal
estate of the trustee unless the trustee is a beneficiary. of a trustee.
• Bewind trust is where the beneficiaries have ownership of trust However, there are certain restrictions on allowing a trustee
assets but these are under the control of the trustees. (EXAMPLE: to be a member, such as the requirement that no juristic
Kanye bequeaths assets to North (minor child) but they are placed person can be a beneficiary of a trust.
under the control of the trustee
Close corporation may only have natural persons as
• A bewind trust is a trust where the founder makes a bequest to the members.
beneficiaries and vests the administration of the assets in the
trustees. The beneficiaries acquire ownership of the assets, while the Therefore the trustee himself/herself will be the member of
trustees only have the administrative control thereof
the CC and not the trust itself.
A juristic person cannot be a beneficiary of a trust
Legal nature of a trust
• A trust is either created by a contract or a
LEGAL NATURE testamentary document. A trust must be reduced
to writing.
AND
CONSEQUENCES Consequences of forming a trust
OF A TRUST
Trusts
• How to form a valid trust • Duties of trustee
• An intention of an obligation by the founder to create a trust A trustee must act with care, skill and diligence.
• The object of the trust must be lawful;
A trustee must open a separate trust account
• Trust property must be defined with certainty
Trustee must keep proper records
• A trust must have at least ONE beneficiary who is ascertained
or ascertainable; A trustee must not destroy documents and keep them for at
least 5 years
• Must be reduced to writing
A trustee must not expose the trust to undue risk.
• At least one trustee should be appointed either in terms of the
trust deed or if no appointment is made, the appointment A trustee must invest trust property productively.
must be made by the Master of the High Court. The Master
must give a trustee the authority to act. A trustee must account to the beneficiaries.
• Authorisation of trustees A trustee must act within the powers of the trust deed.
• The Trust Property Control Act provides that any person can only
act as a trustee once they have authorized by the Master to act as A trustees powers are restricted to the trust deed.
such.
• Trustee must receive written consent from the Master. If a trust deed makes no provision for a particular power then
• No legal consequences (actions are void) follow from the acts of a it is deemed that the trustee does not have that power – used
trustee who does not have authorisation. to protect trust assets and to minimise any risk.