• Liquidators recovered a Toyota Land Cruiser worth R1.2 million, which was registered to Kanivest 3214 CC. The respondent had been allowed to use the vehicle exclusively under a Rule 43 order. 
  • The court decided that once a company is liquidated, its assets belong to the liquidators. Temporary orders from divorce proceedings cannot change this. 
  • This judgment strengthens the rights of creditors. It also explains how Section 84 of the Insolvency Act applies when recovering assets. 

The dispute started with a situation that is all too common in South Africa. A close corporation fell apart during personal difficulties. Kanivest 3214 CC was first wound up voluntarily, then finally liquidated. 

Among its assets was a Toyota Land Cruiser VX-R. It was acquired under an instalment sale agreement with Wesbank. The vehicle was not parked in a corporate lot. It was in the possession of the estranged wife of the managing member. She had been granted exclusive use under a Rule 43 order during divorce proceedings.  

This overlap between corporate collapse and matrimonial conflict set the stage for a legal standoff. The liquidators were appointed to recover and realise assets for creditors. They demanded the return of the vehicle. The respondent refused. She cited her Rule 43 entitlement and prior judgments that dismissed the corporation’s rei vindicatio claim.  

Rule 43, interim relief or judicial overreach  

Rule 43 of the Uniform Rules of Court provides interim relief in matrimonial matters. It covers maintenance, custody, and use of assets. These orders remain in effect until final divorce rulings are issued.  

In this case, the respondent had been granted exclusive use of the vehicle. The corporation and its liquidators were not part of those proceedings.  

The South Gauteng High Court in Johannesburg drew a clear line. Rule 43 orders are binding in matrimonial contexts. But they cannot override statutory obligations under insolvency law. Once liquidation begins, corporate assets leave the control of the entity. They vest in the liquidators.  

The respondent’s continued possession of the vehicle was unlawful. She had no legal entitlement under corporate or insolvency law.  

Liquidators’ mandate, creditors before comfort  

Section 84 of the Insolvency Act was central to the judgment. It governs assets acquired under instalment sale agreements. The vehicle was still subject to Wesbank’s financial interest. It had to be surrendered to the creditor. Only then could any surplus be distributed.  

The liquidators had a clear duty. Recover the vehicle. Settle the debt. Protect the interests of all creditors. The court reaffirmed that liquidators are not bound by prior judgments. Especially those in which they were not parties. Their mandate is statutory. It is not discretionary.  

Allowing Rule 43 to obstruct asset recovery would undermine the Insolvency Act. It would also threaten the integrity of the liquidation process.  

Who owns what in matrimonial chaos  

The judgment addressed ownership and possession in matrimonial disputes. The respondent’s exclusive use did not mean legal ownership. The court distinguished between personal entitlement and corporate title.  

Vindicatory claims must be assessed within the correct legal framework. This divide between personal use and corporate ownership has long troubled South African law.  

The ruling brings much-needed clarity that possession granted under matrimonial relief, such as exclusive use of an asset during divorce proceedings, cannot override ownership in a liquidated estate. This precedent establishes that creditor rights and statutory mandates take precedence over interim matrimonial arrangements.  

Going forward, courts may be less inclined to allow asset entanglement to persist, fundamentally reshaping how divorce-related possession claims are weighed against liquidation law. 

Conviction.co.za  

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Multiple award-winner with passion for news and training young journalists. Founder and editor of Conviction.co.za

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