Gupta firms lose legal battle against business rescue

In 2018, eight of the Gupta family’s companies were placed in voluntary business rescue after the country’s banks closed their accounts.


Two Gupta-owned companies are back in business rescue after the Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA) this week overruled moves to terminate the process.

In 2018, eight of the Gupta family’s companies were placed in voluntary business rescue after the country’s banks closed their accounts.

Kurt Knoop and Johan-Louis Klopper were appointed as business rescue practitioners (BRPs) for a number of those companies, including Islandsite Investment and Confident Concept.

But after their relationship with Oakbay Investments – the holding company for the Guptas’ businesses in SA – turned sour, Chetali Gupta (Atul Gupta’s wife and a shareholder in both companies) went to the High Court in Pretoria and got an order for Knoop and Klopper to be removed.

They responded by lodging an appeal, which would have suspended the removal order had a special execution order to make it immediately enforceable not then been secured.

Again, the BRPs lodged an appeal. But again, the court ruled its order would stand in the interim. They were subsequently removed and two new BRPs were appointed to replace them.

And last month, the new BRPs moved to terminate the business rescue processes under way at both Islandsite Investments and Confident Concept.

On Thursday, however, the SCA reinstated the suspension of the removal order. And it declared the removal of Knoop and Klopper – together with the appointment of the new BRPs and the notices of termination of business rescue they had issued – invalid, pending the finalisation of the matter.

Judge Malcolm Wallis, who wrote the SCA’s ruling, highlighted that the high court had declined to suspend its special execution order without being asked to, or having heard, arguments.

Wallis said the Superior Court’s Act was “clear and emphatic”.

He said: “An execution order is suspended pending an urgent appeal by the aggrieved party.”

Wallis found the high court had “no power and no authority” to make the decision it did and described it as inexplicable.

“The order was void. The correct position is therefore that the ‘termination’ of the business rescue of these two companies was effected by two people who were not the BRPs duly appointed and in office at the time,” he said.

“They had no right or power to terminate the business rescue, however much they may have believed that they did. The termination was accordingly invalid and void. As a result, both companies remain in business rescue,” Wallis added.

He ruled that Islandsite and Confident Concept would remain in business rescue – under the supervision of Knoop and Klopper – until the matter was finalised.

Rudi Kraus of BDK Attorneys, which represented Guptas, said yesterday afternoon he could not comment on short notice.

But Bouwer van Niekerk, the director of Smit Sewgoolam Attorneys, which represented Knoop and Klopper, said: “Our clients are vindicated by the judgment and relieved that the previous injustice that they had to suffer has been corrected.

“They now look forward to finishing the job that they started.”

bernadettew@citizen.co.za

For more news your way, download The Citizen’s app for iOS and Android.

For more news your way

Download our app and read this and other great stories on the move. Available for Android and iOS.