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[2004] ZASCA 26
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Nel N.O and Another v Master of the High Court Eastern Cape and Others (A9/03) [2004] ZASCA 26; 2005 (1) SA 276 (SCA) (1 April 2004)
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Last Updated: 4 September 2004
THE SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL
OF SOUTH
AFRICA
CASE NO: A9/03
In the matter between
BRIAN BASIL NEL N.O. First Appellant
MICHAEL DE VILLIERS N.O.
Second Appellant
and
THE MASTER OF THE HIGH COURT
EASTERN CAPE
First Respondent
ABSA BANK LTD
First Intervening Respondent
THE STANDARD BANK OF SOUTH
AFRICA
LTD
Second Intervening Respondent
BOE BANK LTD
Third Intervening Respondent
FIRSTRAND BANK LTD
Fourth Intervening Respondent
NEDCOR BANK LTD
Fifth Intervening Respondent
CORAM: HOWIE P,
HARMS, ZULMAN JJA, JONES, VAN HEERDEN
AJJA
HEARD: 9 MARCH
2004
DELIVERED: 1 APRIL
2004
Summary: Liquidator’s remuneration –
reduction of by Master for ‘good cause’ – interpretation of s
384(1)
and (2) of Companies Act 51 of 1973 – ambit of court’s powers
to review such ruling by Master
JUDGMENT
VAN HEERDEN AJA
[1] This appeal turns primarily on the proper interpretation of s 384(1) and
(2) of the Companies Act 51 of 1973 relating to the determination
by the Master
of the High Court of the ‘reasonable remuneration’ to which a
liquidator is entitled for his or her services
as such. It raises the question
of the nature and extent of the Master’s powers to reduce or increase such
remuneration if,
in the Master’s opinion, there is ‘good
cause’ for so doing, as well as the ambit of the court’s powers
under
s 151 of the Insolvency Act 24 of 1936, read with s 339 of the Companies
Act, to review a ruling by the Master in this regard.
[2] The
remuneration to which the liquidator of a company is entitled is regulated by s
384 of the Companies Act, the relevant provisions
of which read as
follows:
‘(1) In any winding-up a liquidator shall be entitled to a
reasonable remuneration for his services to be taxed by the Master
in accordance
with the prescribed tariff of remuneration . . .
(2) The Master may reduce
or increase such remuneration if in his opinion there is good cause for doing
so, and may disallow such
remuneration either wholly or in part on account of
any failure or delay by the liquidator in the discharge of his
duties.’
[3] The ‘prescribed tariff of remuneration’ is
provided for in Annexure CM104 to regulation 24 of the Regulations for
the
Winding-up and Judicial Management of Companies. In the case of a liquidator
‘appointed to liquidate the company’,
as in the present case, the
tariff of remuneration is the same as that which applies in the case of a
trustee of an insolvent estate
in terms of s 63(1) of the Insolvency Act, ie
Tariff B as contained in the Second Schedule to this Act (‘the
tariff’). In terms of the tariff, the liquidator’s
remuneration is
determined on the basis of specified percentages of various different items,
such as, for example, ten per cent on
the gross proceeds of movable property
(other than shares or similar securities) sold, or on the gross amount collected
under promissory
notes or book debts, or as rent, interest or other income;
three per cent on the gross proceeds of immovable property, shares or
similar
securities sold, life insurance policies and mortgage bonds recovered and the
balance recovered in respect of immovable property
sold prior to liquidation;
one per cent on money found in the estate; six per cent on sales by the
liquidator in carrying on the
business of the company in liquidation, or any
part thereof.
[4] The appellants are the joint liquidators of Intramed
(Pty) Limited (in liquidation) (‘Intramed’). Purporting to act
in
their capacity as liquidators, the appellants applied to the High Court (Eastern
Cape Division) to review and set aside a ruling
made by the first respondent,
the Master of that Court, reducing the prescribed tariff remuneration for their
services as liquidators
to the sum of R3 250 000. They sought an order declaring
that they were entitled to remuneration in the amount of R21 049 941.74,
calculated in accordance with Tariff B of the Second Schedule to the Insolvency
Act. In the alternative, the appellants requested the court itself to fix their
remuneration.
[5] The intervening respondents are five major South
African banking institutions, all of which are substantial creditors of Intramed
or of its holding company, Macmed Health Care Limited (in liquidation)
(‘Macmed’), or of both companies. These respondents
were granted
leave to be joined as parties to the review application. They supported the
Master’s ruling.
[6] The court a quo (per Froneman J, Pillay
AJ concurring) dismissed the appellants’ application and ordered that the
costs of such application
and of the joinder application be paid by the
appellants personally. Hence the present appeal, brought with the leave of the
court
below. The appellants do not, however, contest the order joining the
intervening respondents as parties to the review
proceedings.
Background
[7] Intramed was a wholly-owned
subsidiary of Macmed. Macmed was provisionally wound up on 15 October 1999, and
the provisional order
was made final on 9 November 1999. The first appellant
was appointed as one of six liquidators of Macmed and was subsequently nominated
by Macmed’s major creditors to be the ‘lead liquidator’ in the
Macmed estate. The affairs of Macmed were inextricably
interlinked with those of
its approximately 45 operating subsidiaries, including Intramed, and the
winding-up of Macmed led in turn
to the winding-up of these subsidiary companies
over a period of approximately six weeks.
[8] Intramed was placed in
liquidation, provisionally on 29 November 1999 and finally on 16 February 2000.
It is common cause that
Intramed was a well-run company and that it traded
profitably as a going concern. It was one of only two companies in South Africa
which manufactured large volume parentals such as intravenous fluids, oncology
products and other pharmaceuticals and appears to
have been of strategic
importance to the South African medical industry. Its liquidation resulted from
large debts which it had
incurred, especially to Macmed, in respect of the
initial acquisition of its business and also as surety for certain liabilities
of Macmed.
[9] On the liquidation of Intramed the appellants were
appointed as its liquidators. After investigating Intramed’s affairs,
the
appellants decided not to liquidate its business but to continue trading, with a
view to selling the business as a going concern
in due course. After trading
for some months, the appellants succeeded in selling Intramed’s business
as a going concern for
R154 300 000, the suspensive conditions to this sale
being fulfilled by 31 July 2000. The sale price thus achieved was approximately
R60 million more than a much earlier offer which the third intervening
respondent, BOE Bank Limited, had ‘pressurised’
the appellants to
accept.
[10] The first Intramed liquidation and distribution account was
lodged with the Master during July 2000. In this account the appellants
claimed
liquidators’ remuneration of R21,2 million allegedly calculated in terms
of the tariff. By means of a query sheet
dated 20 July 2000, the Master advised
the appellants that he was of the opinion that there was good cause to reduce
this remuneration
in terms of s 384(2) of the Companies Act. The relevant part
of the query sheet read as follows:
‘It is evident from the
comments in the joint liquidators report that the above Company was a profitable
and well-run Company,
which had to be placed under winding-up order only because
of guarantees signed in favour of two financial institutions for loan
obligations of its ultimate holding company, Macmed Healthcare Limited, which
Company was placed under winding-up order on 15 October
1999.
In addition to
the above, the books of account of the Company were written up to the date of
liquidation and audited financial statements
were prepared to that date. All of
the above is usually absent in the normal liquidation and therefore the
liquidators did not have
as many onerous duties as is normal in a liquidation of
this magnitude.
In addition to the above the liquidators advertised the sale
of the business, which included an immovable property, as a going and
profitable
concern to prospective buyers and also advertised in the press. It is apparent
that only three prospective buyers responded
to the above and the highest offer
of R154,3 million was then accepted. The liquidators’ fee of ± R15,4
million as a
result of the aforementioned transaction obviously forms a
lion’s share of the total fee of R21,2 million.
In the circumstances I
am of the opinion that there is good cause to reduce the liquidators’
remuneration of R21,2 million in
terms of section 384(2) of the Companies Act.
However, before I do this I hereby afford you the opportunity to motivate the
fee
bearing in mind the favourable conditions of this liquidation and the
infrastructure that was intact.’
[11] Following a series of
discussions and letters between the Master and the appellants, the latter
submitted an amended first liquidation
and distribution account on 11 September
2000, claiming liquidators’ remuneration in the sum of R18 521 736,74. The
decrease
in the remuneration claimed was due to the fact that the appellants,
‘without prejudice and subject to [their] rights’,
had recalculated
their remuneration by claiming only 3% of the proceeds of the sale of the
immovable property, and not 10% as reflected
in the previous account. The
appellants had initially claimed 10% in respect of the sale of this property as
they regarded it as
part of Intramed’s business which was sold as a going
concern.
[12] On 19 September 2000, the Master advised the appellants
that a final decision would be taken in respect of the appellants’
fees
after the amended first account had lain for inspection, but before
confirmation. During October 2000, the Master required
the appellants to
provide him with details – or at the very least an estimate – of the
time spent by them in the administration
of the Intramed estate. In response,
the appellants adopted the stance that they had not kept time records as they
were not required
by law to do so and that they were unable to furnish the
Master with any estimate of the time spent by them ‘other than to
state
that we [the liquidators] have both been fully involved and committed to this
assignment for a period of ten and a half months’.
[13] Also during
October 2000, various banks, including the intervening respondents (‘the
banks’), lodged an objection
with the Master in respect of the amount of
the fee claimed by the appellants in the amended first account. Subsequently,
during
November 2000, the appellants made detailed written representations to
the Master, setting out a full account of all aspects of their
administration of
the Intramed estate and requesting the Master to tax their remuneration in
accordance with the prescribed tariff.
[14] On 6 February 2001, the
Master made a ruling in regard to an interim fee. He advised the appellants
that he was of the opinion
that there was good cause to reduce their
remuneration in terms of s 384(2) of the Companies Act and directed them to
limit their
remuneration in the first account to R2 million and to carry forward
to the final account the difference between this amount and
the amount claimed
by them according to the tariff. The Master further advised the appellants that
the quantum of their remuneration
would be ‘considered and fixed once the
administration of the estate has reached finality and all the work done by the
Liquidators
has been assessed and the value of further assets to be accounted
for is known’.
[15] The appellants amended the first account in
accordance with this direction. In the interim, initial and further written
representations
on the issue of the appellants’ remuneration were
submitted to the Master by the banks. These were forwarded to the appellants
who
were given the opportunity to reply. They did not avail themselves of this
opportunity. During May 2001, the appellants requested
the Master finally to
determine their remuneration and,
on 29 May 2001, the Master made the
following ruling in regard to the appellants’ remuneration, which ruling
was relayed to
the appellants on 28 June 2001:
‘In the
circumstances I hereby fix a total remuneration for the work done and still to
be done by the Liquidators at an amount
of R3 250 000.00; provided that their
remaining duties are carried out to my satisfaction. This amount should still
be in excess
of 1% of the eventual total projected asset situation in the estate
and in my view adequately remunerates them for the amount of
work and complexity
of work that they have done and must still do in this estate.’
[16]
The appellants responded to this ruling by submitting a second liquidation and
distribution account to the Master on 3 July 2001,
claiming liquidators’
remuneration in the total amount of R21 049 941.74. This was followed by the
institution of the abovementioned
review proceedings in the court a
quo.
The statutory framework
[17] Section 384 of the
Companies Act and the statutory provisions governing the ‘prescribed
tariff of remuneration’ for
liquidators have been set out
above.[1] It was common cause that,
in their administration of the Intramed estate, there was no failure or delay by
the appellants in the
discharge of their duties and that the essential question
for determination was therefore the nature and ambit of the
Master’s
powers, in terms of s 384(2) of the Act, to reduce (or increase)
a liquidator’s remuneration ‘if, in his opinion, there
is good cause
for doing so’. The court a quo analysed the provisions of s 384 and
held, in effect, that the dominant provision of this section is the entitlement
of the liquidator
to ‘a reasonable remuneration’ for ‘his
services’ in terms of subsection (1). Any reduction or increase
in the
liquidator’s remuneration by the Master in terms of subsection (2) must
still result in a reasonable remuneration for
the liquidator’s services.
This being so, the words ‘such remuneration’ in subsection (2) must
be read as referring
to the ‘prescribed tariff of remuneration’
mentioned in subsection (1), viz the amount of remuneration arrived at by
applying the tariff.
[18] In attacking the findings of the court below,
the appellants attempted to attach significance to the fact that the (signed)
Afrikaans
text of s 384 differs from the English text. Relying on the phrase
‘redelike vergoeding vir sy dienste wat getakseer moet word deur
die Meester volgens die voorgeskrewe skaal van vergoeding’ (my emphasis)
in subsection 384(1), the appellants appeared
to contend that the Master is
obliged without more to apply the tariff; that remuneration and, on
determined on the basis of the tariff is per se reasonable, and that
a
liquidator is entitled to receive exactly what the tariff provides in all cases,
save only for a ‘disallowance’ in
terms of the second part of
subsection (2) for failure or delay in the discharge of his or her duties.
According to counsel for the
appellants, remuneration determined according to
the tariff acts as an incentive to liquidators to recover as much as possible
for
an estate, while remuneration ‘determined on a time basis’ may
in certain instances actually operate as a disincentive
to liquidators and will
not always be for the benefit of the estate. Thus, so counsel contended, it is
artificial to draw ‘an
imaginary line’ between ‘reasonable
remuneration’ and ‘the prescribed tariff of remuneration’
referred
to in s 384 (1).
[19] This argument is plainly incorrect. As pointed out by counsel for the intervening respondents, the Master, as a statutory functionary, is not free to choose whether or not to tax the liquidator’s remuneration – the Master must tax in accordance with the tariff (s 384(1)), but having done so, may reduce or increase the amount arrived at by applying the tariff if, in his or her discretion, there is ‘good cause’ to do so. The dominant provision in s 384(1) remains that the remuneration to which a liquidator is entitled is remuneration for work or services rendered, not a set commission, and that it must be reasonable. The determination of ‘reasonable remuneration’ by the Master involves, in the first instance, ‘taxation’ in accordance with the tariff, which includes the categorisation of assets under the various tariff items in order to apply the (percentile-based) tariff to each of the items thus identified. The tariff serves as a point of departure for the determination of the appropriate fee. However, once taxation is complete, the Master has a flexible discretion to increase or decrease the amount of remuneration arrived at by the previous application of the tariff – the jurisdictional fact for the exercise of this discretion is the forming by the Master of the opinion that ‘good cause’ exists for doing so. On this approach, there is no difference in meaning between the phrase ‘getakseer moet word’ and the corresponding phrase ‘to be taxed’.
[20] It is also clear that the discretion vested in the Master
by s 384(2) is a wide one.[2] I agree
with the argument advanced both by the Master and by the intervening respondents
that, in taxing a liquidator’s remuneration
for services rendered, the
Master has a duty to satisfy himself or herself as to the reasonableness of the
remuneration arrived at
by the application of the tariff. This means that
where, in the Master’s view, there is ‘good cause’ for
departing
from the tariff, the Master has the power to do so. The concept of
‘good cause’ is very
wide[3] and there is nothing in s 384
of the Act which indicates that it should be interpreted so as to exclude
any factor which may be relevant in determining what constitutes
reasonable remuneration for a liquidator’s services in the circumstances
of each case.[4] Obviously, what
factors are relevant will vary from case to case, but may certainly
include aspects such as the complexity of the estate in question, the degree
of
difficulty encountered by the liquidator in the administration thereof, the
amount of work done by the liquidator and the time
spent by him or her in the
discharge of the duties involved. If, in the winding-up of a company, particular
difficulties are experienced
by the liquidator because of the nature of the
assets or some other similar feature connected with the winding-up, this would
undoubtedly
constitute ‘good cause’ entitling the Master to
increase the tariff remuneration. On the other hand, in a situation
where, having regard to all the relevant factors, the Master forms the
view that
the remuneration calculated according to the tariff is excessive in relation to
the work done or the responsibility involved,
this would likewise entitle the
Master – and the Master will be obliged – to depart from the tariff
figures by decreasing the tariff remuneration to an amount which would be
reasonable in the circumstances.[5]
[21] The analysis by the court a quo of the relevant provisions
of s 384 is, in my view, entirely consistent with the approach set out above. I
am not persuaded that
Froneman J erred in his interpretation of these statutory
provisions. Nor do I agree with counsel that there is any difference of
consequence between the meaning and ambit of the phrase ‘good cause’
used in the English text of s 384(2) and that of
the corresponding phrase
‘gegronde redes’ used in the Afrikaans text. The evaluation by the
court below of the exercise
by the Master of his discretion under s 384(2) in
the circumstances of the present case, and the various attacks launched by the
appellants on the court’s findings in this regard, will be discussed at a
later stage in this judgment.
The nature and basis of the review
sought
[22] In terms of s 151 of the Insolvency Act, read together with s
339 of the Companies Act[6]
-
‘...any person aggrieved by any decision, ruling, order or
taxation of the Master...may bring it under review by the
court...’
South African courts have long accepted that the review
envisaged by s 151 of the Insolvency Act is the ‘third type of
review’ identified more than a hundred years ago in Johannesburg
Consolidated Investment Co v Johannesburg Town
Council,[7] ie where Parliament
confers a statutory power of review upon the court. In the Johannesburg
Consolidated Investment Co case, Innes CJ
stated,[8] with reference to this kind
of review, that a court could –
‘...enter upon and decide the
matter de novo. It possesses not only the powers of a court of review in
the legal sense, but it has the functions of a court of appeal with the
additional privileges of being able, after setting aside the decision arrived
at..., to deal with the matter upon fresh evidence...’.
[23] Thus,
when engaged in this third kind of review, the court has powers of both appeal
and review with the additional power, if
required, of receiving new evidence and
of entering into and deciding the whole matter afresh. It is not restricted in
exercising
its powers to cases where some irregularity or illegality has
occurred.[9] However, while it is
sometimes stated that the court’s powers under this kind of review are
‘unlimited’ or
‘unrestricted’,[10] this
is not entirely correct. The precise extent of any ‘statutory review type
power’ must always depend on the particular
statutory provision concerned
and the nature and extent of the functions entrusted to the person or body
making the decision under
review.[11] A statutory power of
review may be wider than the ‘ordinary’ judicial review of
administrative action (the ‘second
type of review’ identified by
Innes CJ in the Johannesburg Consolidated Investment Co
case),[12] so that it combines
aspects of both review and
appeal,[13] but it may also be
narrower, ‘with the court being confined to particular grounds of review
or particular
remedies’.[14]
[24] It
was submitted on behalf of both the Master and the intervening respondents that,
in taxing the remuneration of a liquidator
under s 384 of the Companies Act, the
Master performs a function akin to that performed by a Taxing Master of the High
Court or the
Supreme Court of Appeal in his or her capacity as the official
entrusted with the taxation of bills of costs in litigious matters.
The test on
review in relation to decisions of the Taxing Master should therefore, so it was
contended, be equally applicable to
a review of a decision of the Master when he
or she performs the function of taxing the remuneration due to a liquidator.
This test
has recently been re-affirmed by the Constitutional Court in
President of the Republic of South Africa and Others v Gauteng Lions Rugby
Union and Another[15] in the
following terms:
‘[13] It is settled law that when a court reviews
a taxation it is vested with the power to exercise the wider degree of
supervision
identified in the time-honoured classification of Innes CJ in the
JCI case [Johannesburg Consolidated Investment Co v Johannesburg Town
Council 1903 TS 111]. This means
“...that the Court must be
satisfied that the Taxing Master was clearly wrong before it will interfere with
a ruling made by
him ... viz that the Court will not interfere with a ruling
made by the Taxing Master in every case where its view of the matter
in dispute
differs from that of the Taxing Master, but only when it is satisfied that the
Taxing Master’s view of the matter
differs so materially from its own that
it should be held to vitiate his ruling.” [Ocean Commodities Inc
and Others v Standard Bank of SA Limited and Others 1984 (3) SA 15 (A) at
18F-G. See also the discussion by Botha J in Noel Lancaster Sands (Pty)
Limited v Theron and Others 1975 (2) SA 280 (T) at 282D-283D for a
discussion of the nature and limits of the judicial function in this
context.]
This dictum has not only been re-affirmed fairly recently by
the SCA in JD van Niekerk en Genote Ing v Administrateur, Transvaal [1994
(1) SA 595 (A)] but has been approved and followed by the Namibian Supreme Court
in Hameva and Another v Minister of Home Affairs, Namibia [1997 (2) SA
756 (Nms)].
[14] To this there is a qualification, however. Not all decisions
by the Taxing Master are equally insulated from judicial interference.
In some
instances, for example, where the dispute relates to the quantum of fees
allowed by the Taxing Master, the Courts are slow to interfere with the Taxing
Master’s assessment. But there are other
cases
“...where the
point in issue is a point on which the Court is able to form as good an opinion
as the Taxing Master and perhaps,
even a better opinion.” [Per Millin
J in Wellworths Bazaars Limited v Chandlers Limited and Others 1947 (4)
SA 453 (T) at 457 in fin.]
The prime example of such cases is where
the Court has better knowledge of the particular question than the Taxing
Master, for instance
where a point as to admissibility of a segment of evidence
is determined by the Court and subsequently bears materially on costs
items in
dispute.’[16]
[25] On
the other hand, counsel for the appellants argued that there is a marked
difference between a ruling by the Taxing Master
on taxation and the exercise by
the Master of his or her discretion, in terms of s 384 of the Companies Act, to
reduce or increase
the remuneration of a liquidator. I must admit that I fail to
see what this ‘marked difference’ is. The appellants appear
to
approach this matter on the basis that the court’s powers when reviewing a
ruling by the Master in this regard are unrestricted
and that it is not
necessary to find that the Master was ‘clearly wrong’, the enquiry
simply being whether the Master’s
conclusion was right or wrong. I
disagree. As I have indicated
above,[17] it is important to have
regard to the nature of the functions entrusted to the person whose decision is
under review. In my view,
there is no reason to draw any distinction between
the test on review in relation to decisions of a Taxing Master and that
applicable
to a review of a decision of the Master when he or she performs the
function of taxing the remuneration due to a liquidator. In both
cases, where
the dispute concerns the quantum of remuneration allowed, the court
should be slow to interfere.
[26] This is not, however, the end of the
matter. The only ground of review specifically articulated by the appellants in
their founding
papers reads as follows:
‘It will, at the hearing of
this application, be argued that the Respondent [the Master] erred in fixing the
liquidators’
remuneration based on an assumption of the time spent by the
liquidators in the administration of the estate and that the Respondent
should
have had regard to the tariff when fixing the liquidators’
remuneration.’
The appellants make no reference whatsoever in their
founding papers to the provisions of the Promotion of Administrative Justice
Act
3 of 2000 (‘the AJA’). The date of commencement of the AJA was 30
November 2000 and it was therefore in operation
at the time that the
Master’s final ruling was made on 29 May 2001. In his answering
affidavit, the Master alleges that it
was incumbent upon the appellants
pertinently and clearly to bring their review application within the provisions
of the AJA. The
relevant paragraphs of the answering affidavit are in the
following terms:
‘22. I contend that the provisions of the AJA are
indeed applicable to this review, and that accordingly in terms of the
provisions
of Section 6 thereof the review must be judged within the terms of
that section particularly Sub-section 2 thereof. The principles
and procedures
of the AJA must be satisfied . . .
23. Presumably the Applicants [the
appellants] do not and will not allege that the administrative decision that was
taken by me falls
within any reviewable context other than that referred to in
Section 6(2)(h), which must, to be reviewed, constitute the exercise of
a power which is: “ . . . so unreasonable that no reasonable person
could have so exercised the power or performed the function . . . ”,
alternatively that I have acted capriciously or arbitrarily.
24. Indeed
in answering the founding papers in this matter I must confess to some
difficulty in appreciating the actual basis upon
which the review is brought,
based on the broad “unfocussed” allegations contain in the
founding papers . . . .
. . . .
27. It ought to be said that I do not
understand the Applicants to be alleging bias, that the action was procedurally
unfair or was
constituted by an error of law, that I acted with any ulterior
purpose or motive or took into account irrelevant considerations or
alternatively failed to consider relevant considerations. No bad faith is
alleged believing [sic: leaving?] only unreasonableness
as the supposed basis of
the application.’
In the replying affidavit, the appellants,
dealing with the Master’s reference to the AJA, baldly state the
following:
‘As is apparent from what is set out in the founding
affidavit, the respondent [the Master] took into account irrelevant matters
because of the unauthorised and unwarranted dictates of creditors and purported
creditors, and acted arbitrarily and capriciously.’
Moreover, in
response to the Master’s detailed exposition in his answering affidavit of
the various factors and circumstances,
over and above the time spent by the
liquidators, taken into consideration by him in making his ruling, the
appellants simply persist
with the contention that assumptions made by the
Master in regard to the time spent by them in the administration of the Intramed
estate were the only basis for the Master’s ruling. They dismiss
summarily, as an ‘afterthought’, the Master’s allegation of
the other factors considered by him in coming to his eventual finding.
[27] The court a quo dealt with the provisions of the AJA as
follows:
‘The AJA seeks to give effect to the fundamental right
to lawful, reasonable and procedurally fair administrative action and
the right
to be given written reasons, entrenched in s 33 of the Constitution. It is, in
a certain sense, a codification of the
principles relating to the second kind of
review referred to by Innes CJ in the JCI case . . . . Previously those
principles derived their authority from the constitutionally allowed inherent
common-law jurisdiction
or competence of the superior courts. They now find
their authority in the written Constitution (Pharmaceutical Manufacturers
Association of South Africa: In re Ex parte President of the
Republic of South Africa and Others [2000] ZACC 1; 2000 (2) SA 674 (CC)). The third kind of
review, however, derives its existence from specific statutory enactments that
provide for powers of review
far wider than the powers of the first two kinds of
review (compare the remarks of Innes CJ at 116-117 of the JCI case). This
kind of review thus incorporates constitutional review (based previously on the
common law and now on the written Constitution),
but also extends it beyond
constitutional review grounds. The extension does not offend the constitutional
separation of powers,
because it is the legislature that expressly authorises
the courts to go further than the constitutional review founded upon that
separation of powers.
To the extent that a review under s 151 of the
Insolvency Act (applicable to companies by virtue of s 339 of the Companies Act)
is based on constitutional review, it must fall within the codified categories
of review under the AJA. To the extent that it goes beyond constitutional
review (something that, by definition, implies no conflict
with the grounds of
constitutional review), it falls outside the ambit of the AJA or, perhaps, it
resorts under the catch-all category
of “action . . . otherwise. . .
unlawful” in s 6(2)(i) of the AJA.
As mentioned earlier,
the only specific basis for review set out in the liquidator’s papers is
the alleged misconceived reliance
by the Master on a time-related assessment to
determine the liquidators’ remuneration. This may conceivably amount to a
ground
under s 6(2)(d) (“materially influenced by an error of
law”) or s 6(2)(e) (“taking irrelevant considerations
into account”). In argument, however, reliance was also placed on the
extended ‘appeal-type’ power of review. In either case the nature
and extent of the Master’s power to fix the remuneration of a liquidator
is crucial to determine the outcome of the review
application.’
[28] To my mind, there is certainly something to be
said for the view that, in attacking the Master’s ruling, the appellants
should have formulated their grounds of review so as clearly to bring such
grounds within the purview of those enumerated in s 6(2)
of the AJA. The
Master’s ruling in this case would certainly seem to fall within the ambit
of the definition of ‘administrative
action’ in s 1(i) of the AJA,
viz
‘ . . any decision taken, or any failure to take a decision, by
–
(a) an organ of state, when –
(i) exercising a power in terms of the Constitution or a provincial constitution; or
(ii) exercising a public power or performing a public function in term of any legislation; or
(b) a natural or juristic person, other than an organ of state, when exercising a public
power or performing a public function in terms of an empowering provision,
which adversely affects the rights of any person and which has a direct,
external legal effect . . .’.
[29] By giving ‘legislative
form and detail to the fundamental principles of administrative law entrenched
in s 33 of the
Constitution’,[18] the AJA
introduced a new era in South African administrative law, placing the control of
administrative power – including the
judicial review of administrative
action – largely on a statutory
footing.[19] As is evident from the
abovequoted passage from the judgment of Innes CJ in the Johannesburg
Consolidated Investment Co
case,[20] the third (wider)
kind of review appears to have more to do with the powers of the court of review
and the evidence which such court
may take into consideration rather than with
the grounds of review. It can therefore be argued that the ‘material
disparity’
ground of review referred to by the Constitutional Court in the
Gauteng Lions Rugby Union
case[21] now also falls within
the grounds of review listed in s 6(2) of the AJA. There is, however, another
view, namely that there is a
very real possibility that some actions by
administrative officials may fall outside the ambit of the definition of
‘administrative
action’ in s 1(i) and hence not be governed
by the AJA.[22] The breadth (or
narrowness) of the sphere of application of the AJA and the precise relationship
between the Constitution, the AJA
and the common law are issues that will
undoubtedly exercise South African courts for some time to
come.[23] However, as I am
satisfied, for the reasons set out below, that the appellants have not made out
a case either under the AJA or
under the wider ‘appeal-type’ of
review, it is neither necessary nor desirable to say anything further in this
regard.
The exercise of the Master’s discretion
[30] As
indicated above, I am of the view that the Master’s approach to the nature
of his functions under s 384(2) of the Companies
Act is the correct one and
that, in the exercise of his duties in this regard, he has to consider each
case on its own facts
and properly exercise his discretion under s
384(2) so as to ensure that the remuneration calculated according to the tariff
is reasonable and justifiable in the light of the actual services rendered by
the liquidator or liquidators concerned. In determining
whether there is
‘good cause’ for reducing the tariff remuneration, the Master is
perfectly entitled to have regard,
inter alia, to the fact that such
remuneration –
‘. . . is seen to be disproportionate to the
value of the work done in the particular estate or where the property is of a
very high value and calculation of the remuneration according to tariff has an
inflationary effect which results in a remuneration
which is seen to be
excessive in the circumstances or induces a sense of
shock.’[24]
[31] I
agree with the finding of the court a quo that, while it is neither
desirable nor possible to define ‘good cause’ in this regard, the
Master’s opinion as
to what constitutes good cause must have as its
purpose the determination of a reasonable remuneration for the
liquidators’ services:
‘This implies some objectively
determinable limits to the exercise of the Master’s discretion informing
his or her opinion.
If the factors that lead the Master to the opinion are not
rationally related to the object of determining a reasonable remuneration
for
services rendered or done by the liquidator, the exercise of the discretion will
not be proper and may, on those objectively
justifiable grounds, be set aside on
review’.
[32] In the court a quo, the appellants contended
that it was impermissible for the Master at all to take into account the
amount of time spent by them in the fulfilment of their duties in administering
the Intramed estate in order
to decide whether there was good cause for the
reduction of the tariff remuneration. In argument before this court, the
appellants
tempered this submission to a certain (albeit limited) extent, but
still insisted that the Master had ‘put the cart before
the horse’
by first calculating the time that would have been spent, according to him, on
the performance of their task by
the appellants; then deciding that good cause
existed for the reduction of the appellants’ remuneration; and then
awarding
an amount more or less in accordance with his time-based calculation.
[33] According to the appellants, the reasons given by the Master for
his final ruling, the events leading up to the exercise of his
discretion in
making such ruling, and the methodology adopted by him illustrated that he, from
the outset and at all times, approached the matter on the basis that the
appellants should be paid per hour for the work done by them. Following
this
approach, so it was contended, the Master compared the amount of the
remuneration assumed to be appropriate on this ‘time
basis’ with the
tariff amount which induced a sense of shock in him, whereupon he decided that
good cause existed for the reduction
of the appellants’ remuneration.
[34] The voluminous papers before us clearly show that this
‘slant’ placed by the appellants upon the Master’s approach
is
not factually correct. As indicated above, the question of a possible reduction
of the appellants’ tariff remuneration was
first raised by the Master in
his query sheet dated 20 July
2000.[25] In that document, the
Master noted various factors which, in his view, cumulatively indicated that
there may be ‘good cause’
to reduce the appellants’
remuneration in terms of s 384(2) of the Companies Act. The time spent by the
appellants in the
administration of the Intramed estate was not one of the
factors specifically mentioned. Both at this time, and on several subsequent
occasions, the appellants were given the opportunity to motivate their tariff
remuneration and to comment on the various written
representations received by
the Master from the banks in substantiation of their objections to this tariff
remuneration. Moreover,
as will be discussed in further detail below, the
appellants are not correct in suggesting (apparently as a further ‘string
to their bow’) that the Master took the approach that a liquidator who
properly performs his or her functions in terms of the
Companies Act should
forfeit some of the tariff remuneration to which such liquidator is entitled
simply by virtue of the size of the estate concerned, irrespective of the
actual degree of care, skill, diligence and competence with which
the
liquidator’s duties have been performed.
[35] The court a
quo correctly held that the appellants’ stance that the Master’s
ruling was ‘based on assumptions made by First Respondent
[the Master] in
regard to time spent by the liquidators in the administration of the Intramed
estate’ and that the time factor
was, in essence, irrelevant, was an
untenable proposition. As pointed out by Froneman J, the appellants are only
entitled to a
‘reasonable remuneration’ for their
services in terms of s 384(1). The time spent by them in rendering these
services is, at the very least, one of the factors that may legitimately
be taken into consideration by the Master in deciding whether there is good
cause for the reduction
of the tariff remuneration. It is clearly not the
only factor to be considered and, depending upon the circumstances of
each particular case, it may not be the most important factor, but
a
consideration thereof is clearly rationally related to the object of determining
a reasonable remuneration for services rendered.
The appellants’ attempt,
in both their founding and replying papers, to contest the Master’s
averment that the issue
of time was not the only factor taken into account by
him in making his final ruling, is not convincing. The facts on the papers
indicate that the Master considered a relatively wide range of other factors
relevant to the administration by the appellants of
the Intramed estate in
coming to his final assessment. To my mind, therefore, the court a quo
was correct in finding that the appellants had not made out any case on the
papers for the setting aside of the Master’s ruling
on
‘constitutional review grounds under the AJA’ for having regard to
the time spent by the appellants in the administration
of the Intramed estate as
one of the factors to be taken into account in determining whether good cause
for reduction of the tariff
remuneration existed.
[36] What then of the
appellant’s argument that the Master was in any event wrong or clearly
wrong in his conclusion that good
cause for a reduction of the tariff
remuneration did exist in this case? In this regard, counsel for both the
Master and for the
intervening respondents contended that a determination of the
extent of the services rendered by a liquidator necessarily involves
an
assessment of the time and effort expended by the liquidator in winding-up the
estate concerned. The fee prescribed by the tariff
must be assessed for
reasonableness by way of a critical assessment of such prescribed fee in the
light of the time and effort expended
by a liquidator, taking into account
(inter alia) the degree of complexity of his or her duties in the
winding-up. I agree with this submission and it is borne out by the approach
adopted by this court in Collie NO v The
Master.[26] The appellants
submitted that, before the Master may ‘move away’ from the
tariff remuneration, either by increasing or reducing such remuneration, the
circumstances of the case concerned must be
‘extraordinary’,
‘exceptional’ or ‘entirely different to the general run of
cases’. In this regard,
the appellants relied quite heavily on what they
called the ‘swings–and–roundabouts’ principle,
emphasising
the following dictum of Beaumont J in the 1908 case of
In Re Insolvent Estate A.
McWilliam:[27]
‘I am strongly of opinion that the fee which has been charged is quite
out of proportion to the work which has been done. It
seems to be out of reason
that where the work is exactly the same whether the land is worth £50 or
£5 000, in the one case
the trustee should get a fee of 25s and in the
other £125; but we have to remember that in all these estates the trustees
have
to take the fat with the lean – in some portions of the
administration they may lose money, and in others perhaps gain.
The law
states very distinctly that in the case of immovable property 2½ per cent
is to be considered as a reasonable fee to
be charged – it makes no
difference what the value of the land is. Before the Court can exercise its
discretion and alter that
rate, I think it should be satisfied that there is
something entirely different in this case to the general run of cases. I am
unable
to say that the circumstances of this case are different from those in
any other case where land is sold by a trustee, and therefore
it would, in my
opinion, be unwise to interfere. The fact of our interfering would at once
create great uncertainty as to the proper
charge to be made, and we should
continually applied to, to exercise our discretion, and to modify or vary
charges which had be made
by trustees. Trustees would be in uncertainty –
the public would be in uncertainty, and the trustees might possibly feel
themselves
pressed to reduce their charges, or to face litigation . . . ’.
[37] This ‘swings–and–roundabouts’ principle is
apparently based on the premise that an insolvency practioner
may administer a
substantial number of small and relatively unprofitable insolvent estates, but
will, from time to time, be appointed
to administer a large and particularly
profitable estate, where the size of the liquidator’s percentile-based fee
calculated
in accordance with the tariff will ‘compensate’ him or
her for the relatively poor returns on the numerous ‘unprofitable’
estates which he or she administers. I agree with the submission made by
counsel both for the Master and for the intervening respondents
that this
‘swings–and-roundabouts’ principle is unsupported by any
authority since the 1908 decision in the McWilliam
case[28] and is, more
importantly, an untenable and unjustifiable proposition. There is no legal or
other reason why creditors in large estates
should, albeit indirectly, fund the
administration of smaller, less profitable estates.
[38] The appellants
maintained that it would be quite impossible for them to furnish the Master with
even an estimate of the time
spent by them in administering the Intramed estate.
Moreover, they argued, it is common cause that the Master did not require them
to keep any record of time spent by them in winding-up the estate at the time
that they accepted their appointments, nor at any other
stage prior to the
dispute regarding their remuneration arising. According to the appellants, the
Master considered the necessity
for time records as a material and extremely
important factor in assessing the remuneration to which they were entitled and,
incorrectly,
adopted the approach that he could not adequately comply with his
obligation to confirm the relevant account unless he had been referred
to
estimates of time kept by the appellants. The answer to these complaints is a
simple one: while the appellants were not under
any legal or other duty to keep
time records regarding the fulfilment by them of their duties in administering
the estate, it is
clear from the correspondence exchanged between them and the
Master that this was not what the Master required of them. The Master did
not demand that he be furnished with time sheets, but rather requested details
regarding
the time and effort spent by the appellants in administering the
estate – at the very least an estimate of the time spent on
the various
administrative duties performed by the appellants in this regard. The
appellants, in response, declined to furnish the
Master with even an estimate of
the time spent by them, seeking to justify their fees by reference to the broad
general categories
of work performed by them in the winding-up of the Intramed
estate without attempting properly to detail the ambit and extent of
their
involvement or the time which they devoted to the winding-up. Contrary to what
is suggested by the appellants, it is clear
from the papers that the Master did
not seek to place any onus on the appellants to justify the fee claimed
by them in the amended liquidation and distribution account by furnishing him
with time
sheets or records. What the Master did, quite properly, was to give
the appellants various opportunities to furnish him with details
of facts and
circumstances relevant to the exercise of his discretion.
[38] In their founding papers, the appellants complain that ‘neither
the respondent [the Master] nor the creditors [the banks]
have the remotest idea
of the actual time spent and do not even venture a suggestion in this
regard’. In his answering affidavit, the Master points out –
quite logically – that this was precisely why he initially sought
guidance
from the appellants themselves in this regard by requesting them to furnish him
with estimates of the time spent. However,
because of the appellants’
failure to do so, the Master ‘was then obliged to make my own informed
estimate of the time
factors and deny that I do not have a good idea what result
this renders’. The appellants complained that the manner in which
the
Master ultimately calculated their remuneration was nothing more than a
‘thumb suck, based on imaginary hours and on imaginary
hourly rate to
which the Master added a totally arbitrary amount in respect of work, as yet
unknown, still to be done in future’.
This complaint too is not
well-founded. As regards the amount added by the Master in respect of work to be
done by the appellants
in the future, the court a quo correctly pointed
out that the final ruling was insisted upon by the appellants themselves despite
the fact that, in terms of his
interim ruling dated 6 February 2001, the Master
had advised the appellants that the final quantum of their remuneration
would be fixed upon finalisation of the liquidation, once all the work done by
the appellants had been assessed
and the value of further assets to be accounted
for was known.[29] In this interim
ruling, the appellants had been directed to limit their remuneration in the
first account to R2 million, but to
carry forward to the final account the
difference between this amount and the amount claimed by them according to the
tariff. By
insisting upon a final ruling, the appellants to my mind precluded
themselves from complaining, as they sought to do before us, that
the remaining
work includes extensive, substantial and complex litigation, which is unlikely
to be finalised in the immediate foreseeable
future. For the finality of the
Master’s ruling, the appellants have only themselves to blame.
[39]
As regards the other complaints levelled by the appellants against the
Master’s final ruling, I am of the view that both
the ruling itself, as
also the preceding correspondence between the parties, indicates that the Master
ultimately based his assessment
on a generous allowance for the time spent by
the appellants for the full period of their appointment, in addition to making
allowance
for work still to be done in winding-up the balance of the estate. As
submitted by counsel for the Master, the Master’s allowance,
by virtue of
the rate applied to the time estimate, takes into account the appellants’
seniority,[30] their expertise as
insolvency practitioners and the complexity of the matter. In determining the
extent of the remuneration finally
awarded, the Master allowed for 15 months
spent on the administration of the Intramed estate − this being double the
7½
month period which had expired from the date of liquidation to the date
of filing of the first liquidation and distribution account
− an average
of 2½ hours per day, 22 days per month at an hourly remuneration of R1800
per hour for each appellant. This
figure totalling R2 970 000 was then
increased to R3 250 000, taking into account the further work that had to be
undertaken
by the appellants in carrying out their remaining duties. As pointed
out by the court a quo, the appellants did not take the trouble of
contesting the merits of the Master’s decision on its own terms, adopting
an ‘all-or-nothing
approach’. They failed to join issue with the
Master’s time estimates or the adequacy or reasonableness thereof. They
did not dispute the appropriateness of the hourly tariff applied by the Master
having due regard to their expertise as insolvency
practitioners and to the
remuneration of comparably experienced professionals and businessmen engaged in
affairs of comparable complexity
and importance. The application of an hourly
rate to the Master’s assessment of a reasonable time and effort which
should have
been expended by the appellants in winding-up the estate was further
subjected by the Master to a test of reasonableness in relation
to the criterion
of a percentage of the total projected assets. The amount of remuneration
derived by the application of the rate
to the time estimate by the Master was
evaluated by him to result in a remuneration which would still be in excess of
1% of the eventual
total projected asset situation in the Intramed estate and
which would, in his view, adequately remunerate the appellants for the
amount of
work and the complexity of the work done by them. Even on a wider
‘appeal-type’ review, it cannot be said
that the Master was wrong in
the exercise of his discretion in terms of s 384(2). As pointed out by the
court a quo –
‘...the banks’ representations to
the Master showed that the prescribed tariff remuneration was far in excess of
ordinary
commercial remuneration for that kind of endeavour. On these facts I do
not think one can make a finding that the Master was wrong
informing the opinion
that good cause for the production of the tariff remuneration
existed.’
[40] The appellants argued in the court a quo, and
persisted in this argument before this court, that the words ‘such
remuneration’ in s 384(2) of the Companies Act,
which may be reduced or
increased by the Master in exercise of his discretion, refer only to the
percentages allowed in the tariff and do not, on any interpretation, import the
reasonable fees to which other professionals
would be entitled for similar work.
Since the Master is directed in the first instance to tax the liquidators’
remuneration
in accordance with the tariff, he or she is obliged to follow that
course when reducing the remuneration – he or she must look
at the tariff
and reduce it accordingly.
[41] The grounds upon which the court
a quo rejected this argument are, in my view, entirely
correct:
‘The taxation process involves, amongst other things, the
categorisation of assets in order to determine what prescribed tariff
applies to
the particular asset. Sometimes disputes arise about the correctness of the
Master’s categorisation of assets in
the taxation . . . ., but those are
disputes still falling squarely within the ambit of the taxation process in
s 384(1). It
is only once the taxation process in this form is complete, namely
the category of item established and the prescribed tariff for
that item
identified, that it become possible for the Master to consider whether good
cause exists for the reduction of the already
prescribed tariff for the already
established category. Without that having been established first, the
application of s 384(2)
is impossible. There would be no “such
remuneration” to reduce or increase. Only with the tariff for a
particular item established, is the Master able to consider whether
“such remuneration” should be reduced on good cause. In so
doing the tariff may serve as a guideline, but other factors such as the amount
of
work done, may also be considered. . .
There is nothing in the wording of
s 384(2) of the Companies Act that prescribes how the Master should determine
the extent to which
the remuneration taxed in accordance with the prescribed
tariff under s 384(1) should be reduced. The Master may do this in a number
of
ways, provided that his method is rationally connected to the purpose of
determining a reasonable remuneration for the liquidators’
services . . .
Applying that the approach to the facts, no fault can be found with the
Master’s assessment . . .’
Costs
[42] As I have
indicated above, the appellants purported to bring their review application in
their capacity as the duly appointed
joint liquidators of Intramed, contending
that they were duly authorised in such capacity to institute the review
proceedings. As
correctly pointed out by the Master in his answering affidavit,
the appellants failed to annex any evidence which supported this
contention.
The review proceedings were in fact proceedings which should obviously have been
brought by the appellants in their
personal capacity and not in their capacity
as joint liquidators − the proceedings relate to their entitlement to
remuneration
and not to a matter falling within the ambit of their role as
liquidators of the Intramed estate. As contended by counsel for both
the Master
and the intervening respondents, the appellants were simply seeking to secure a
higher fee for their services than that
fixed by the Master. In so doing, they
were acting in their personal capacities and not in any sense in the interests
of the creditors
of the Intramed estate. Indeed, the appellants were − and
still are − acting against the interests of the creditors,
solely for
their own benefit.[31] This
being so, there is no reason whatsoever why the costs of the review application
or of the appeal should be borne by the company
in liquidation
.
Order
[44] In the circumstances, the following order is
made:
The appeal is dismissed with costs, including the costs consequent
upon the employment of two counsel where applicable, such costs
to be paid by
the appellants in their personal capacities jointly and severally.
____________________
VAN HEERDEN
AJA
Concur:
HOWIE P
HARMS JA
ZULMAN
JA
JONES AJA
[1] See paras [2] – [3]
above.
[2] See Thorne v The
Master 1964 (3) SA 38 (N) at
49F-H.
[3] See, for example,
Cohen Brothers v Samuels 1906 TS 221 at
224.
[4] See Collie NO v The
Master 1972 (3) SA 623 (A) at 630D-E; Rennie NO v The Master; Glaum NO v
The Master 1980 (2) SA 600 (C) at 618D-F; Gore and Another NNO v The
Master 2002 (2) SA 283 (E) at 293G-H; Elliot Brothers (East London) (Pty)
Ltd v The Master 1988 (4) SA 183 (E) at
190G-H.
[5] See Ex Parte
Wells NO: In Re Auto Protection Insurance Co Ltd 1968 (2) SA 631 (W) at
634A-B, where Galgut J commented that there may well be occasions when the
prescribed tariff may be ‘over-generous and
may allow remuneration in
excess of the value of the actual work done. It may well be that there is a
large property centrally situated
in one of the bigger cities of the Republic
which has to be sold and the act of selling it may not involve a great deal of
work.
To allow a remuneration of 2½ per cent on the proceeds of such sale
may in some circumstances constitute an overpayment of
remuneration. Similar
considerations may well apply if the moveable assets are of a very high value or
if the amount of cash found
is large.’
[6] Section 339 of the Companies
Act makes the provisions of (inter alia) s 151 of the Insolvency Act
applicable mutatis mutandis to the winding-up of a
company.
[7] 1903 TS
111.
[8] At
117.
[9] See, for example,
Gilbey Distillers & Vintners (Pty) Ltd and Others v Morris NO and
Another [1990] ZASCA 134; 1991 (1) SA 648 (A) at 655H-656A; Millman and Another NNO v
Pieterse and Others 1997 (1) SA 784 (C) at 789A-C; Van Zyl NO v The
Master 2000 (3) SA 602 (C) at 606C-607G; Gore and Another NNO v The
Master above (n 4) at 288C-289B, and the other authorities referred to in
these cases.
[10] See
Johannesburg Consolidated Investments Co above (n 7) at 117, Thome v
The Master above (n 2) at 49B-C; De Hart NO v The Master 1971 (3) SA
399 (O) at 372A; M S Blackman, R D Jooste & G K Everingham Commentary on
the Companies Act Volume 3 (2002)
14-325.
[11] See Van Zyl NO v
The Master above (n 9) at 607 G-H where Griesel J stated the following:
‘In considering this question I bear in mind that the Master is
the
official entrusted by the Legislature with the administration of all insolvent
estates (as, indeed, of all other estates as well),
including companies in
liquidation. As such the Master’s rulings ordinarily deserve some
deference’.
[12] Above (n
7) at 115-116.
[13] One of the
instances of this ‘wider’ form of statutory review specifically
mentioned by Innes CJ in the Johannesburg Consolidated Investment Co case
was s 105 of the Insolvency Law 13 of 1895 by which ‘the remuneration
allowed to a trustee by the Master may be reviewed
by the Court upon the
petition of the trustee or any person interested’, the learned Chief
Justice remarking (at 116-117) that
‘it would be absurd to attempt to
review a trustee’s remuneration if the grounds of interference were
confined to those
mentioned in sec 19 of the Proclamation [the Administration of
Justice Proclamation 14 of 1902, dealing with the grounds of judicial
review of
the proceedings of lower courts – grounds now set out in s 24 of the
Supreme Court Act 59 of 1959] or to those irregularities
and illegalities which
would alone justify the intervention of Courts, say, in regard to the
proceedings of a Licensing
Board.’
[14] See Cora
Hoexter with Rosemary Lyster (edited by Iain Currie) The New Constitutional
and Administrative Law Volume II: Administrative Law (2002)
67.
[15] 2002 (2) SA (CC) paras
[13]-[14] at 73C-74A, footnotes
included.
[16] See also Price
Waterhouse Meyernel v Thoroughbred Breeders’ Association of South
Africa 2003 (3) SA 54 (SCA) para [25] at
63E-F.
[17] In para [23].
[18] See Iain Currie &
Jonathan Klaaren The Promotion of Administrative Justice Act Benchbook
(2001) para 1.1.
[19] See
Hoexter et al op cit (n 14) 66-67. See also Bato Star Fishing (Pty)
Ltd v The Minister of Environmental Affairs and Tourism and Others (Case CCT
27/03, unreported decision of the Constitutional Court delivered on 12 March
2004, paras [22]-[25].
[20] See para [22] above.
[21] Above para
[24].
[22] See Du Bois v
Stompdrift-Kamanassie Besproeiingsraad 2002 (5) SA 186 (C) at
192G–193A and the other authorities there cited, in particular Cora
Hoexter ‘The Future of Judicial Review in
South African Administative
Law’ (2000) 117 SALJ 484 at 514 et seq.
[23] See the Bato Star
Fishing case op cit (n 19) paras [21], [22] and [25]; see also
Hoexter et al op cit (n 14) 66-67, 87-89, 110-113; also GE Devenish, K
Govender & D Hulme Administrative Law and Justice in South Africa
(2001) 177-178, 424-427; Johan de Waal, Iain Currie & Gerhard Erasmus
The Bill of Rights Handbook 4ed (2001) 497 et
seq.
[24] See the
Master’s ruling in respect of an interim fee dated 6 February 2001,
Annexure ‘BN 52’ to the appellants’
founding papers.
[25] See para [10]
above.
[26] Above (n 4) at 627B,
read with 629H-630H.
[27] 29 NLR
42 at 43-44.
[28] In any event, the principle
appears to have been rejected, at least by implication, by this court in the
Collie case, above (n 4). This case concerned the application of s
51(3)(a) of the Administration of Estates Act 66 of 1965, which empowers
the Master, when in any particular case there are special reasons for doing so,
to reduce or increase the remuneration
of an executor calculated in accordance
with (inter alia) the prescribed tariff. There too, the Master had
indicated that the fees calculated according to the tariff ‘appear to be
excessive’ and had requested ‘motivation or representations why same
should not be reduced’ at (627D). There too,
part of the answer given by
the executor was that ‘many of the smaller estates are distinctively
unprofitable and are dealt
with by us largely as a public service. Very
infrequently an estate of the calibre of the present one is handled and this
helps to
balance our costs as professional executors’ (at 627F). It is
evident from the rest of the reported judgment that this argument
did not find
favour with the court which held that the Master had correctly fixed ‘a
fee as remuneration for an executor’s
services taking into account work
done and the circumstances of the case, with the tariff as a guideline (at
629B-D).
[29] See above para
[14].
[30] In Stubbs v
Johnson Brothers Properties CC and Others 2004 (1) SA 22 (N) at 28B-D, Magid
J pointed out that the actual experience and seniority of a legal
practitioner who appears in a matter, rather than the experience and seniority
required of the legal practitioner to present the case, is not relevant
to the assessment of a proper fee to be allowed on taxation. This would
probably
also apply to the taxation of a liquidator’s remuneration. However, in the
present case, the appellants have certainly
not been prejudiced in any way by
the Master’s having taken their actual seniority and level of experience
into account, in
their favour, in determining an appropriate remuneration for
them.
[31] See Rennie NO v The
Master; Glaum NO v The Master above (n 4) at 605C-D; Gore and Another NNO
v The Master above (n 4) 5 at 294F-I.