- The Supreme Court of Appeal sided with Parch Properties after a lower court had issued a provisional sequestration order.
- Judges said the estate’s owners’ association tried to use insolvency law to collect debt instead of following proper legal procedures.
- The court called the application an abuse of process and confirmed that sequestration is not a substitute for proper debt enforcement.
Peter Mandla Maphanga successfully stopped the Blue Valley Golf and Country Estate Homeowners Association from taking his assets. The North Gauteng High Court in Pretoria dismissed the provisional sequestration order and told the association to pay his legal costs.
The case started when Maphanga fell behind on his estate levies. In 2019, the homeowners’ association obtained a default judgment for over R218 000. When the Sheriff tried to attach property, he found the Erf empty and noted a nulla bona return, stating no movable goods were available. Attempts to serve Maphanga at his job also failed.
Court finds serious irregularities
The judge noted that the association’s sequestration application was “full of irregularities.” The notice of motion, dated 15 September 2023, used an outdated 2018 case number. “A sequestration application is a separate proceeding and must be issued under its own case number,” the court explained.
The judge also pointed out that the association did not meet the requirements of Section 9 of the Insolvency Act. The founding affidavit lacked Maphanga’s identity number, date of birth, marital status, and details regarding whether the claim was secured. “These are not mere formalities,” the judge said. The law requires this information to be included in both the affidavit and the case heading.
The association failed to follow Section 9(4A), which states that the application must be given to the respondent’s employees, any trade unions representing them, and SARS. “The requirement to provide a copy of the application to the respondent’s employees, any trade unions representing them, and SARS is mandatory. If it is not done, the court cannot grant a final order,” the judgment stated.
No act of insolvency proven
The court noted that the sheriff never made a demand for payment, which is necessary to prove an act of insolvency under section 8(b) of the Insolvency Act. “There is no evidence in the sheriff’s return that a demand for payment was made to the respondent,” the judge reported.
The judge found no proof that Maphanga was truly insolvent. “The applicant has not provided reliable evidence to the court about the respondent’s total liabilities or assets,” the judgment continued. Without this evidence, the association could not show that Maphanga’s debts were greater than his assets.
Provisional order discharged
In the end, the court decided that the provisional sequestration order must be overturned. “The application is fundamentally flawed,” read the judgment. “The applicant has failed to prove any act of insolvency under Section 8(b) of the Act. Factual insolvency has also not been shown.”
The association was ordered to pay Maphanga’s legal costs, including attorney fees on scale B.
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