{"title":"To Be or Not to Be? The Role of Private Enquiries in the South African Insolvency Law","authors":"Y. Joubert, J. Calitz","doi":"10.4314/PELJ.V17I3.02","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"This article analyses the role of the so-called private examinations in our South African insolvency law and deals with the question of whether or not section 417 of the Insolvency Act (Act 24 of 1936) is adequately and effectively framed in order to fulfill its intended purpose in South African law. The contribution also points out that although the scrutiny of private examinations is not novel; it is argued that further exploration of the subject is justified by virtue of the fact that robust and innovative legislative changes have been experienced in the South African corporate landscape. Although the section has already passed the test of lawfulness and constitutionality, the aim is to ascertain whether the section serves a legitimate purpose and is essential and relevant in a democratic society. This is done by considering the South African law relating to South African private examinations and includes academic texts and judicial interpretation. Both section 417 of the Companies Act (Act 61 of 1973) and the matter of Kebble v Gainsford in particular are discussed. A brief comparative analysis of a similar provision in the Insolvency Act of the United Kingdom (UK), namely section 236 of the Insolvency Act 1986 is also included. Finally recommendations are made on aspects where the section may be enhanced by reform which in part relies on the premise that South African insolvency law in toto is desperately in need of an overhaul. The article concludes that it is vital that section 417 be retained in a new insolvency regime as there is a greater awareness of the interdependence between companies and the society in which they function, and it is submitted that there should be an increased responsibility in the insolvency process on the reasons why companies have failed. The accessibility of the section to practitioners, the inquisitorial nature of the proceedings, the wide scope of the section and the effective sanctions should examinees not comply together combine to make a formula that has over the years proved impervious to circumvention and it therefore fulfills its function with prudent efficiency.","PeriodicalId":120850,"journal":{"name":"African Law eJournal","volume":"38 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2014-08-28","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"African Law eJournal","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.4314/PELJ.V17I3.02","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 1
Abstract
This article analyses the role of the so-called private examinations in our South African insolvency law and deals with the question of whether or not section 417 of the Insolvency Act (Act 24 of 1936) is adequately and effectively framed in order to fulfill its intended purpose in South African law. The contribution also points out that although the scrutiny of private examinations is not novel; it is argued that further exploration of the subject is justified by virtue of the fact that robust and innovative legislative changes have been experienced in the South African corporate landscape. Although the section has already passed the test of lawfulness and constitutionality, the aim is to ascertain whether the section serves a legitimate purpose and is essential and relevant in a democratic society. This is done by considering the South African law relating to South African private examinations and includes academic texts and judicial interpretation. Both section 417 of the Companies Act (Act 61 of 1973) and the matter of Kebble v Gainsford in particular are discussed. A brief comparative analysis of a similar provision in the Insolvency Act of the United Kingdom (UK), namely section 236 of the Insolvency Act 1986 is also included. Finally recommendations are made on aspects where the section may be enhanced by reform which in part relies on the premise that South African insolvency law in toto is desperately in need of an overhaul. The article concludes that it is vital that section 417 be retained in a new insolvency regime as there is a greater awareness of the interdependence between companies and the society in which they function, and it is submitted that there should be an increased responsibility in the insolvency process on the reasons why companies have failed. The accessibility of the section to practitioners, the inquisitorial nature of the proceedings, the wide scope of the section and the effective sanctions should examinees not comply together combine to make a formula that has over the years proved impervious to circumvention and it therefore fulfills its function with prudent efficiency.
本文分析了所谓的私人考试在我国南非破产法中的作用,并讨论了《破产法》(1936年第24号法)第417条是否得到充分和有效的框架,以实现其在南非法律中的预期目的。文章还指出,尽管对私人考试的审查并不新鲜;有人认为,由于南非公司领域已经经历了强有力和创新的立法变革,因此有理由进一步探讨这一主题。虽然该条款已经通过了合法性和合宪性的检验,但其目的是确定该条款是否具有合法目的,是否对民主社会至关重要和相关。这是通过考虑与南非私人考试有关的南非法律来实现的,包括学术文本和司法解释。《公司法》(1973年第61号法案)第417条和Kebble v Gainsford案特别进行了讨论。本文还对联合王国《破产法》中的一项类似规定,即《1986年破产法》第236条进行了简要比较分析。最后,就本节可以通过改革加强的方面提出建议,改革部分依赖于南非全部破产法迫切需要彻底改革的前提。文章的结论是,在新的破产制度中保留第417条是至关重要的,因为人们对公司与其所处的社会之间的相互依存关系有了更大的认识,并且有人提出,在破产程序中应该对公司失败的原因承担更大的责任。该部分对从业人员的可及性、诉讼程序的询问性质、该部分的广泛范围以及应试者不遵守的有效制裁共同构成了一个多年来被证明是不可规避的公式,因此它以审慎的效率履行其职能。