Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 906South Africa
Transnet Second Defined Benefit Fund v Wood (21875/21) [2022] ZAGPJHC 906 (10 November 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
10 November 2022
Headnotes
Summary of the extent of the claims
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
>>
2022
>>
[2022] ZAGPJHC 906
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Transnet Second Defined Benefit Fund v Wood (21875/21) [2022] ZAGPJHC 906 (10 November 2022)
Transnet Second Defined Benefit Fund v Wood (21875/21) [2022] ZAGPJHC 906 (10 November 2022)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2022_906.html
sino date 10 November 2022
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO:
21875/21
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
NO
10/11/2022
In
the matter between:
TRANSNET
SECOND DEFINED BENEFIT FUND
Applicant
And
ERIC
ANTHONY
WOOD
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MANOIM
J:
Introduction
[1]
This is an application brought by the Transnet Second Defined Benefit
Fund (“Fund”)
[1]
to
provisionally sequestrate the respondent, Eric Anthony Wood
(“Wood”).
[2]
The
application is based on two claims. They involve the actions of
certain entities that Wood allegedly controlled, or together
with
others, influenced to the detriment of the Fund, with whom they
enjoyed a fiduciary relationship. The claims are substantial
and
amount to over R 110 million. These amounts are alleged to have been
paid out to Wood personally or to entities he controls,
from two
groups of companies he worked for, the Regiments Group and later, the
Trillian Group.
[2]
The first claim is in respect of certain bond transactions that
Wood’s entity
Regiments Fund Managers, had performed on behalf
of the Fund. The second claim is in respect of the payment of fees
that were paid
out from an account of the Fund controlled by
Regiments, despite the fact that the payment was owed by Transnet. It
is important
at this early stage to emphasise that the Fund and
Transnet despite their common name are separate legal entities,
governed separately.
[3]
This is not the only action featuring the Fund and Wood. In a
separate and related
action, the Fund seeks payment of these claims
as well as other claims. From now on I will refer to this action as
the parties
have as the “
pending
action.
”
[3]
The
parties
[4]
The Fund is a defined benefit Fund.
[4]
In simple terms it is responsible for the payment of retirement
benefits to erstwhile employees of Transnet. As part of its
activities,
it invests moneys for its members to get a return. But
because it has to meet future payments to its members it has to
ensure that
it is protected against future risk and has the resources
to meet its future payments. For this reason, it is prudent for it to
have as part of its assets financial instruments that limit its
future risk.
[5]
This is where Wood comes into the picture. Wood is a specialist bond
trader. He has
a PhD in Management and Finance. He has worked in this
industry for many years and has held several prestigious positions in
his
career, including at Investec Bank, where he headed up their
fixed income and fixed income derivative trading business. He was
also at some stage appointed to the board of the Bond Exchange of
South African and was the Chairman of the Primary Dealers
Association.
Part of his career has focussed on the bond trading
needs of public sector clients including Transnet. He explains in his
answering
affidavit, by way of background, how the fixed income
derivative business subsequently expanded to include trading and
interest
rate swaps and swap options. These financial instruments
become relevant to this case.
[6]
In August 2004 Wood became a director of a company known as Regiments
Capital Pty
Ltd (“Regiments Capital”). Regiments Capital
had two subsidiaries which are relevant to this matter. Regiments
Fund
Managers Pty Ltd (“Regiments Fund Managers”) and
Regiments Securities Limited (“Regiments Securities”).
The three companies together constitute the Regiments Group. At the
material times for this matter, Wood was a director of all
three of
these companies. His family trust known as the Zara W trust had, and
apparently still has, a 32% shareholding in Regiments
Capital. In
February 2016 Wood left Regiments to join a company known as Trillian
Capital. But he remained a director of Regiments
until October 2016
although he claims he was then forced to resign. This departure to
Trillian becomes relevant to his defence
in this matter.
Requirements
for a provisional sequestration order
[7]
In terms of section 10 of the Insolvency Act, 24 of 1936 (“the
Act”),
a court may make an order to provisionally sequestrate
the estate of a debtor if it is of the opinion that prima facie:
a.
That the
creditor has a liquidated claim;
[5]
b.
That debtor
has committed an act of insolvency or is insolvent;
[6]
and
c.
There is reason to believe that it will be to the advantage of
creditors if the
estate of the debtor is sequestrated.
Fund’s
relationship with Regiment.
[8]
The Fund commenced its relationship with Regiments Fund Managers when
the latter won
a tender to become its advisor. Regiments Fund
Managers set out all the members of its team together with a
description of their
expertise in its bid document. From this it is
clear that Wood was the most qualified member of team.
[7]
The appointment process was not a smooth one. Initially the
appointment of Regiments Fund Managers was turned down as its fee
structure was higher than originally provided for in its bid
document.
[8]
[9]
Eventually in July 2015, Regiments Fund Managers was appointed to
manage the Liability
Driven Investment (“LDI”) portion of
the Fund, for a three-year period. But despite the fact that the Fund
decided
to appoint Regiments in July 2015, the parties only entered
into a management agreement to govern their relationship in October
2015. I will refer to this agreement from now on as the mandate. Why
the Fund changed its mind to appoint Regiments is the subject
of some
speculation by the Fund’s deponent, but it is not something
relevant for me to consider in the present matter. It
suffices to say
that at a meeting of the Fund’s board on 1 October 2015 the
Chairman of the Fund’s Board, Mr. Shane
made the following
observation:
“
The Chairman
confirmed that all previous challenges with Regiments had been
resolved and advised the Board that Mr E Wood from Regiments
would be
overseeing the Fund's mandate as Principal Strategist. He confirmed
that Mr Wood is considered the most experienced bond
and fixed
interest strategist in the South African market.”
[9]
[10]
A reservation that the Funds’ actuaries, Towers Watson, had
about the fee structure with
Regiments, was noted by the Fund’s
board but not accepted. Towers Watson had recommended that the fee
structure be changed
to create a “
better
alignment of interest between the parties
.”
[10]
The
issues to be determined
[11]
There is no dispute that the nature of Regiments Fund Management’s
relationship to the
Fund was a fiduciary one. The Fund’s case
is that Regiments Fund Management acted in breach of this fiduciary
and hence any
profits it made pursuant thereto can be disgorged.
Since Wood had acted on behalf of the Fund in respect of the relevant
acts for
which it claims, and he can be shown to have personally
benefited from these unlawful acts, the Fund is entitled to have
these
moneys disgorged. Since according to the Fund, he will be
unable to repay these amounts because he is insolvent, it is in the
interests
of creditors that his estate is provisionally liquidated.
But Wood contends there was no breach of this duty because Regiments
always operated in terms of the mandate. This means he contends that
the Fund had consented to the actions performed. He also contends,
contrary to what is alleged by the Fund, that it in fact benefitted
from the actions taken on its behalf.
[12]
The Fund disputes whether the terms of the mandate that give prior
consent to Regiments apply
to the type of actions subsequently taken
by it. Also controversial is whether the individuals who worked for
Regiment’s
on Fund investments, owed it fiduciary obligations.
The argument here being that it was Regiments which owed this duty.
The Fund
alleges that the fiduciary obligations extends to the
individuals as well, hence this application against Wood. Wood for
his part
disputes this. He contends that without going behind the
corporate veil, which the Fund has not sought to do, it cannot hold
him
liable for claims it might have against Regiments. I deal with
this aspect later. Finally, Wood contends that much of the material
that the Fund relies on its papers is hearsay and falls to be struck
out.
How
the claims have come about
[13]
In around 2014, Transnet had entered into an agreement to purchase
1064 locomotives from two
Chinese manufacturers. Regiments claims to
have advised Transnet on this transaction.
[11]
To partly finance this purchase Transnet raised a loan of R 12
billion from several banks, referred to as the “club loan”.
The size of this club loan exposed Transnet to future financial risk
if interest rates rose.
[14]
In May 2015 Regiments Capital drafted a proposal to Transnet
recommending that it enter into
what it termed a financial risk
management strategy. Wood states that the advice given to Transnet
was done on “
an arm’s length basis
” and “
in
the client’s best interest
.” Here by the client, he
means Transnet. Pursuant to this advice Transnet decided on 3
December 2015 to hedge the club loan
by engaging in interest rate
swaps.
[15]
As was explained in a memorandum dated 3 December 2015 from
Transnet’s then Group Treasurer,
Phetolo Ramosebudi:
“
As part of the
progression to relieve pressure on the CIC ratio, thereby managing
the cost of interest expense and short to medium
term liquidity, a
conversion of R15 billion fixed rate debt (bonds) need be swapped to
CPI linked debt early in the new year. This
should be in line with
the appropriate accounting treatment.”
[12]
[16]
There is a dispute of fact around how Transnet was persuaded to
follow this advice. This revolves
around the views of a Transnet
official Smit who initially advised the company against these
transactions.
[13]
Later he
changed his mind and approved the scheme. On the Fund’s version
this was because undue influence was put on him.
On Wood’s
version, Smit came around to the view that this was a good
investment. In other words, it was a subsequent appreciation
of the
logic of the deal, not undue influence from others, that led to his
change of mind. I need not go into which version is
correct. The
significance of the change for the purpose of the present matter is
that Wood was central to interacting with Smit
on this aspect as the
correspondence which Wood himself puts up shows.
[17]
Thus far the narrative has to do with Transnet and not the Fund.
Recall that the Fund and Transnet
are separate entities. The reason
the Fund enters the picture is that it was advised to purchase
interest rate swaps pursuant to
the transactions Transnet was being
advised to enter into to reduce the latter’s risk. I will deal
with these interest rate
swaps first as they are the subject matter
of the fees claim.
Fees
claim
[18]
The peculiar feature of the transactions was how Regiments charged
Transnet its fees for its
services in performing these transactions.
There is no dispute about the amount of the fees (R 229 million) nor
is there any dispute
that this was a fee due for payment by Transnet
to Regiments Capital, not the Fund. But through its control over the
Fund’s
investment account, Regiments Fund Manager was able to
pay out this fee to its associate company Regiments Capital. The Fund
thus
ended up paying a fee for services rendered to Transnet and
meant to be paid by it.
[19]
Wood justifies this payment in two ways. Firstly, Regiments Fund
Manager was entitled in terms
of its mandate from the Fund, to deduct
fees from an account it controlled on its behalf to make payment for
its services. Second,
and more importantly, he argues the Fund has
been compensated for this payment by receiving in turn bonds, whose
value in the long
term will equal if not exceed the transferred
amount. The suggestion was that these bonds gave an additional
benefit of 20 basis
points.
[14]
In effect what he argues is that when the two transactions are viewed
together there has been no theft. The net position of the
Fund is
that it has at worst, over the long term, been compensated and at
best been more than compensated. I discuss later the
implications of
this explanation.
[20]
The explanation given for this 20 basis point advantage is both
obscure and arcane. For this
reason, I must quote certain portions of
Wood’s explanation verbatim:
[21]
He states in the answering affidavit that Transnet had agreed to pay
Regiments Capital “
a
fee equal to 20 bp to be added to the yield of the interest rates
swaps and paid by Transnet over the life of the interest rate
swaps”
[15]
[22]
How this came to the Fund is explained as follows:
“
The Applicant
[“the Fund”] accordingly trading certain interest rate
swaps with Transnet, and in addition the fund purchased
a financial
instrument being the present value of the future 20 bp fees which
Transnet owed and agreed to pay its advisors (“Regiments
Capital”).
[16]
(I note that the sentence does not make sense grammatically.
presumably a word or words are missing.)
[23]
He then makes the claim that in fact the Fund not only was repaid in
kind in this way but obtained
a net benefit:
“
In addition to
purchasing this amortising instrument (the present value of the 20 bp
cash flows), the fund made approximately R
490 million profit from
having traded the interest rate swaps.”
[17]
[24]
As support for this last contention, he attaches to his affidavit a
presentation made by Regiments
(seemingly in 2016) in which a graph
of various scenarios is presented, followed by rows of figures of
three financial quarters;
there are also three columns; the first
contains figures of returns for what is termed the previous strategy,
the second the new
strategy, and the third contains a conclusion
comparing both outcomes. According to the author of the slide, his
conclusion is
that at that point in time: “
Net
of fees the fund is R 490 million rand better off”
.
[18]
[25]
Put in less technical language what is being contended for is that
the Fund paid Regiments Capital
fees, which were owed to Transnet -
an amount of R 229 million but in return received a financial
instrument whose present value
exceeded the fees deducted and gave it
a handsome future benefit as well.
[26]
But what was in fact happening was that one Regiments entity (“Fund
management”)
was using its power over the bank account of its
client (“the Fund”) to pay the fees that were owed by
another client
(“Transnet”) for work done by another
Regiments entity (“Capital”). The quid pro quo is that
the Fund whose
account was debited in a determined cash amount
received in return a financial instrument of variable value,
repayable over time,
that allegedly compensated for and exceeded the
value of the fees debited. It is not hard to see without a necessary
appreciation
of high finance that there was something very wrong
about this arrangement. It was as the Fund’s counsel put it
“
manufactured
”. The Regiments entities had
procured a situation where the Fund’s certain money was
bartered for uncertain financial
paper. The Fund has also gone into
the motives that Regiments had for extracting this fee from the Fund
to serve another purpose.
It is not necessary for me to go into this
issue which is collateral to what I have to consider in this matter.
[27]
Wood goes on to state that apart from the fact that on his version
the Fund suffered no loss
from this arrangement, that it had in any
event consented to it. As evidence of this, he attaches to his
affidavit a letter from
Gary Pita, who at that time was the Group
Financial Officer of Transnet. The letter is dated 29 July 2016 and
is addressed to the
Chairman of the Fund. According to Wood the
purpose of the letter was to “…
record that due
process had been observed and followed”
. First Pita refers
to a meeting held in May 2016 between Transnet, the Fund, and the
latter’s attorneys, ENS Africa. Pita
says he is writing the
letter
to “… give due consideration to the questions
raised by the [Fund] at the meeting.”
He goes on to state:
“
During the
process of approving TSDBF as a trading counterparty, Transnet
considered the position of TSBDF as a pension fund as
counterparty
and the potential conflict of interest concerns that this may raise.
After due consideration of all the information
available to us we
concluded that the transactions would not give rise to a conflict of
interest (…)”
[19]
[28]
But if anything, this letter, and the meeting it refers to, shows
that the Fund was indeed concerned
about the conflict of interest and
had raised this. The fact that Pita did not see it that way is no
indication that this was accepted
by the Fund. Again, it is worth
repeating that Transnet and the Fund are separate entities with
separate interests. Wood also claims
that Roger Rudolph, a lawyer
from ENS Africa who represented the Fund, was aware of the fee
arrangement. In an affidavit attached
to the Fund’s replying
affidavit Rudolph denies knowing about the arrangement.
[20]
[29]
There is thus no direct evidence from Wood that the Fund had
consented to the fee payment being
deducted from its account and
hence nothing to contradict the version of the Fund that it had not
consented. The evidence put up
by Wood far from furthering his own
case rather supports the probabilities that the Fund’s version
on this point is correct.
[30]
What is evident from the papers is that part of the payment of the
fees found its way into accounts
controlled by Wood. The Fund has
engaged in the equivalent of a treasure hunt as it has followed the
payments made into Regiments
bank account until they found their way
into the accounts of what it terms Wood controlled entities (family
trusts) and then some
of it into his personal bank account.
[31]
In relation to the fees the trail goes in this way. R 229 million
rand was taken out of the Fund’s
Nedbank account by Regiments
Fund Managers and paid to Regiments Securities.
[21]
In turn, some of this money was paid to other entities and according
the Fund was eventually used to secure a loan from the Bank
of Baroda
to purchase the Optimum Coal Company. That transaction is not
pertinent to the present application. What is pertinent
is the amount
paid out from the R 229 million that eventually landed up in accounts
of Wood and his entities.
[32]
The Fund states that it can trace that R20 881 240.21 that went to
two of Wood’s entity
accounts known as Zara W and
Tantacode.
[22]
These payments
made from a Trillion account reflect in emails from Trillion, as
Wood’s share of the fee. The first payment
of R6 389 469.21 was
made to an account called Numibrite on 15 March 2016. Numibrite was
the previous name of Zara W. This is an
entity controlled by Wood.
[33]
On 7 April 2016, a second amount of R14 491 771.00 was also recorded
as Wood’s share of
the fee. This amount was then broken up as
follows: R 10 million of was transferred to the same Numibrite / Zara
W account, whilst
the remaining R 4 million was credited to Wood’s
loan account with Trillian. This is evident from an email dated 7
April
2016, from Tebogo Leballo who was then the Chief Financial
Officer of the Regiments (later moving to the same position at the
Trillian
Group) to one Marc Chipkin of the Trillian Group, where he
makes the following request:
“
Hi Marc from
Eric (sic) portion of the swap money, please transfer out R10 491 771
instead of R14 491 711. Please note Trillian
is keeping R 4 million
as working capital loan from Eric. Please transfer R10 491 771
to the following account”
.
[23]
The account details are then given. The account name is described as
“
Numibrite
Pty Ltd Trading as Zara W”.
Leballo has filed a confirmatory affidavit in this matter.
[24]
[34]
Regiments itself entered into a settlement agreement for the Fund in
which it accepted liability
of for repayment of part of the R 229
million. The fund holds Wood liable for the balance which it says
amounts to R123,402,437.54,
with interest on it running from November
2019. However, the disgorgement sought in the present case is
confined to the R20 881
240.21.
[35]
Wood has not seriously contested the trail of payments. For this
reason, I have not gone into
greater detail on the money trail all of
which are included in the founding papers. The Fund’s legal
team at my request have
prepared a schedule of the payment trail and
where these are referred to the in the papers. I have attached this
schedule to these
reasons as an annexure. (It refers in the schedule
to the fees appropriation as theft).
[36]
Wood then says on the breakup between Regiments and himself (i.e.,
leading to his departure to
Trillian) he became entitled to payment
of his past fees. Whatever may have been the arrangements between the
two firms, the issue
is whether there was an entitlement to the fees
charged in the first place. On this issue the Fund has set up at the
least a prima
facie case that there was no such entitlement for it to
be paid by the Fund. I deal with Wood’s other defences once I
have
dealt with the bond churning allegations as some of these
defences overlap.
Bond
Churning
[37]
As mentioned earlier Regiments Fund Managers advised the Fund to
enter into extensive bond trading
transactions. The Fund instructed a
financial expert, Tanja Tippet, an adjunct professor from the
University of Cape Town, whose
expertise lies in liability driven
portfolio management (LDP) to review these trades. She described them
as “bond churning”.
She does so advisedly. Bond churning
is not a neutral term to describe trading. According to a definition
on the United States
Security Exchange Website:
“
When a broker
engages in excessive buying and selling (
i.e..
trading)
of securities in a customer’s account without considering the
customer’s investment goals and primarily to
generate
commissions that benefit the broker, the broker may be engaged in an
illegal practice known as churning.”
[25]
[38]
According to the Investopedia website:
“
Churning
is the illegal and unethical practice by a broker of excessively
trading assets in a client's account in order to
generate
commissions”.
[39]
It goes on to state:
“
While
there is no quantitative measure for churning, frequent buying and
selling of stocks or any assets that do little to meet
the client's
investment objectives may be evidence of churning.”
[26]
[40]
Wood was the Fund’s key advisor in respect of the bond
transactions. He does not dispute
that this advice was given but
defends his position by saying that the bond trading was done to the
advantage of the Fund. Regiments
through Regiments Capital had
advised Transnet on the need to hedge the club loan. This had created
the context for the need for
Transnet to enter into bond swaps.
Regiments other subsidiary, Regiments Fund Manager, was in the
fortunate position of being the
Funds’ advisor. Using this
position, it had advised the Fund to become a counter party to
Transnet’s trades.
[41]
Tippet’s evidence is that these trades constituted bond
churning and hence an abuse. Before
I consider Tippet’s
evidence, I must consider an objection to using it raised by Wood’s
counsel. He argued that the
Tippet affidavit could not be relied on
in this matter as it had been used in a separate proceeding. It is
correct that her affidavit,
which was an annexure to the founding
affidavit, had been used in another matter involving the Fund and
Wood. However, in the replying
papers Tippet provides a further
affidavit in which she confirms that the information in the affidavit
is equally pertinent to
this matter and then she responds to the
criticisms raised by Wood in his answering affidavit. I am satisfied
that I can rely on
it for the purpose of this matter.
[42]
Tippet examined transactions that Regiments Fund Manager had
undertaken on the Fund’s behalf
on the following dates:
a.
On 4
December 2015 there were five transactions for the sale by the Fund
of an aggregate of 3 800000000 R186 bonds and a purchase
by the Fund
of an aggregate of 2 720 000 000 R186 bonds (all of which settled on
9 December 2015).
[27]
b.
On 7 March 20016 Regiments Fund managers entered into similar
multiple transactions
amounting to the sale by the Fund of an
aggregate of 6 377 500 000 R186 bonds and the purchase by the Fund of
an aggregate of 7000000000
R186 bonds (all of which settled on 10
March 2016);
c.
On 30 March 2016 the following transactions were entered into (both
of which
settled on 4 April 2016):
i.the purchase of 3 080
000 000 R186 bonds from Regiments Securities at a price of R109.99
per bond; and
ii.the sale of 4 700 000
000 R186 bonds to Regiments Securities at a price of R106.80 per
bond.
d.
During April 2016 the following transactions were entered into both
of which
settled on the same date, 13 April 2016:
i.8 April 2016 the sale
of 2 815 000 000 R186 bonds to Regiments Securities at a price of
R107.07 per bond; and
ii. 11 April 2016 the
purchase of 1 715 000000 R186 bonds from Regiments Securities at a
price of R109.62 per bond.
[43]
In all the transactions that Tippet analysed referred to above,
Regiments Fund Managers bought
or sold the bonds with Regiments
Securities as the counterparty, and in each of the transactions which
she attempts to pair, the
Fund bought the bonds at a higher price
from Regiments Securities than it sold back to them. Put simply, in
each of the trades
with Regiments Securities, the Fund bought and
sold at a loss while Regiments Securities gained.
[44]
She concludes that the aggregate net cost to the Fund, and thus the
corresponding profit made
by Regiments Securities in consequence of
these trades, was an amount of R348 577 524.77 made up as follows:
a.
R58 639 395.66 for the 5 December trades;
b.
R101 596 960.50 for the 7 March trades;
c.
R132 593 418.00 for the 30 March trades; and
d.
R55 747 750.50 for the April trades.
[45]
Tippet explains that in her view;
a.
There was no sound portfolio management reason for the Fund to have
concluded
the transactions which involved buying and selling large
volumes of R186 bonds in trades on the same day; and
b.
The bid
offer spreads were excessively wide and would have resulted in wasted
costs for the Fund which would have been realised
costs to the Fund
at the time of the trades.
[28]
[46]
Her conclusion is then
that
“(…) based on the available information, it is
reasonable to assume that the costs/losses incurred by the Fund
due
to the excessive bond trading by Regiments Fund Managers would have
resulted in a profit for Regiments Securities Limited on
the
day
.”
[29]
[47]
Wood does not dispute that these trades took place at the time and
prices described by Tippet.
What he does do, is dispute her
conclusion and he offers his own explanation to justify the trades.
His starting point is that
the Fund needs to adopt a liability driven
investment or LDI strategy. This is what he says he was implementing
when he conducted
the trades. I will refer to this as the LDI
defence. Wood explains that a portfolio such as the Fund has to take
measures to protect
itself against future liabilities. It has to be
able to pay out pension benefits when they fall due. If interest
rates were to
fall the Fund may have insufficient assets to meet
future pension liabilities. This is referred to technically as a
fund’s
‘delta risk’ i.e., “
sensitivity of
the portfolio (assets and liabilities to shifts in interest rates.”
In short Wood says the trades were made to protect the Fund from its
delta risk.
[48]
He explains that when the Fund was given what he refers to as the
opportunity to quote on the
Transnet swaps, it had to balance its
delta by engaging in the trades that it then did.
[49]
Tippet accepts that LDI is an appropriate strategy for a fund to
adopt to reduce its delta risk;
so, she has no dispute with Wood on
this point on strategy. However, she does not accept his rationale on
how this was implemented.
In her replying affidavit she responds to
Wood’s justification in forthright terms:
“
I
accept that an R186 bond transaction (whether it is a buy transaction
or a sell transaction for a Fund) would have an effect on
the "delta
risk" in the portfolio. I do not, however, accept that Regiments
Fund Managers was transacting in order to
address the "delta
risk" arising from the interest rate swaps. Had they been doing
so they would have calculated the
delta risk in the portfolio taking
into account the impact of the anticipated swap transactions, and
then worked out:
·
whether to buy or sell R186 bonds; and
·
what number of R186 bonds to buy or sell;
and
·
how best to execute the required buy
transaction or the required sell transaction.
But
that is not what they did. What they did was both to buy and sell on
the same day very large volumes of R186 bonds at prices
that were
prejudicial to the Fund and caused Regiments Securities to make a
corresponding amount of revenue.”
[50]
To sum up the debate between Wood and Tippet; Wood justifies
Regiments Securities buying and
selling, by invoking the general
policy behind an LDI strategy. But that is to miss the point. It is
the excessive number of trades,
coupled with the profits made by
Regiments Securities that constitute the breach of the fiduciary duty
owed to the Fund. Moreover,
the fact that the two entities within the
Regiments Group, advised both Transnet and the Fund about mitigating
their respective
risks at the same time created a conflict of
interest which caused a loss to the Fund. Nor is it acceptable that
the Fund may at
some time in the future benefit from these trades.
This prospective gain, if there ever is one, does not eliminate the
blatant
conflict of interest exercised by Regiments Fund Management
which had fiduciary obligations to the Fund, its client.
[51]
I now turn to the money trail. The Fund alleges that Regiments
received R 348 million from it
in respect of the profits it generated
for itself from the bond churning transactions.
[30]
Out of this amount,
R90
150 940.00 was paid at Wood's instance, to two of Wood's companies
(Tantacode and Zara W).
Payments of this amount were broken down as follows; R36 523 404 was
paid into the Tantacode account; R33 701 653 into the Zara
W account,
and a further R19 925 883 was paid into the same Zara W bank account.
Subsequently Wood paid himself R 46 523 404 from
the Tantacode and
Zara W accounts. The breakdown here was that R 36 523 404 was paid
from the Tantacode account (thus the same
amount that had been paid
into it) and R 10 million was paid from the Zara W account. The Fund
has attached all the bank statements
that support this document
trail. Again, these payments are set out in the attached schedule.
Wood’s
response to the payment trail
[52]
Wood’s response to the payment trail, both in respect of the
fees and the bond churning
is brief. First, he offers a bare denial,
but he does not make clear what it is that he is denying. The second
is that none of
the claims are liquidated. The third is that payments
were made to corporate entities (by this I understand him to mean
Regiments)
and that they were made in terms of the agreement. What
emerges from this is that apart from the initial bare denial the
document
trail is not placed in dispute.
[53]
I now deal with the remaining defences raised by Wood which are
raised in respect of both the
claims.
Claims
not liquidated claims
[54]
In terms of section 9 of the Act read with section 10(a), as I have
noted, the claims must be
liquidated. Wood contends they are not,
although he gives no reasons why they are not. According to Mars a
claim is liquidated
if it is certain, legal, and valid and has not
prescribed.
[31]
Moreover
according to Mars, a theft can constitute a liquidated claim where
the evidence shows that it gave rise to a fixed and
determined
claim.
[32]
The amounts claimed
in terms of what the Fund has traced through the respective payments
and accounts are fixed and determined
and thus constitute liquidated
claims.
The
Fund consented to the payments.
[55]
The Fund’s case is that Regiments, as its fund manager, as well
as its key individuals,
such as Wood, owed it fiduciaries duties.
These duties include the duty to act honestly, with due skill, care,
and diligence and
in the interests of the client, to avoid or at the
very least to mitigate, any conflict of interests and to disclose to
the client
in writing any actual or potential conflict of interest
with the Fund. It also includes the obligation not to make secret
profits.
Regiments and Wood breached these duties which are not only
owed to them at common law but also are owed to them in accordance
with the provisions of the Financial Advisory and Intermediary
Services Act 37 of 2002 (“FAIS Act”), and the General
Code of Conduct for Authorised Financial Services Providers and their
Representatives contained in Regulations promulgated under
section 15
of the FAIS Act.
[56]
Wood does not dispute that Regiment Fund Managers was the agent of
the Fund. Rather his case
is that in terms of the mandate between the
Fund and Regiments all his actions were authorised. He relies on the
following paragraphs
in the mandate:
Firstly
paragraph 7.2 which states:
“
Regiments shall
have the full power and discretion and shall be entitled, without
prior approval or consent of the Client, to deal
with the portfolio
in whatever manner it deems necessary or appropriate to achieve the
Client’s objectives.”
[57]
He also relies on paragraph 16.4 which states:
“
Subject
to Applicable Law
Regiments may, when acting as agent for
the Client, or dealing on a fiduciary basis with the Client, deal
with or through, or make
use of the services of any Regiments’
Associates. Regiments Associates shall be entitled to retain any
fees, profits or other
consideration arising from such dealings or
from the use or provision of such services as though Regiments was
not acting as such
agent or fiduciary”
(Note, in the
answering affidavit the underlined words are left out of the portion
quoted. I regard this omission of the proviso
as significant)
[58]
I do not interpret either of these clauses, in particular 16.4, which
is the more far reaching,
to suggest that this means the Fund has
consented to Regiments Fund Manager’s contracting out of its
fiduciary duties which
it might otherwise have to it. The mandate was
signed in advance of the actions giving rise to the claims. This
means, on Wood’s
version, it must be interpreted to imply that
the Fund gave a prior, unrestricted authorisation to its agent to;
(i) pay another’s fees, in return for payment in kind as
a quid pro quo; and (ii) in relation to the bond trading, consent
to
a conflict of interest that benefited its agent’s associated
company by accruing profits from trading at the expense of
the Fund.
On either of these two scenarios, it would require the most
extraordinary reading of the agreement to conclude that the
Fund had
contracted in advance to consent to such actions. Plainly our law
which holds fiduciary duties in the highest regard would
not lightly
come to such a conclusion.
[59]
In the leading case of
Robinson
v Randfontein Estates Gold Mining Co Ltd
[33]
Innes J expressed this
duty in the following way:
“
Where one man
stands to another in a position of confidence involving a duty to
protect the interests of that other, he is not allowed
to make a
secret profit at the other's expense or place himself in a position
where his interests conflict with his duty. The principle
underlies
an extensive field of legal relationship. A guardian to his ward, a
solicitor to his client, an agent to his principal,
afford examples
of persons occupying such a position….
It
prevents an agent from properly entering into any transaction which
would cause his interests and his duty to clash. If employed
to buy,
he cannot sell his own property; if employed to sell, he cannot buy
his own property; nor can he make any profit from his
agency save the
agreed remuneration; all such profit belongs not to him, but to his
principal. There is only one way by which such
transactions can be
validated, and that is by the free consent of the principal following
upon a full disclosure by the agent.”
[34]
[60]
More recently the Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA) in
Phillips
v Fieldstone Africa (Pty) Ltd and Another
[35]
confirmed that
Robinson
v Randfontein
is still our law. As Heher JA put it:
“
The defences
open to a fiduciary who breaches his trust are very limited: only the
free consent of the principal after full disclosure
will suffice
(Robinson v Randfontein Estates GM Co Ltd (supra, loc.cit.)”
[36]
[61]
Thus, from these cases it emerges that while consent can validate
what might otherwise be a breach
of a fiduciary duty, that consent
must be “
free”
and upon “
full
disclosure by the agent.
”
There is no evidence in this case that the second element of full
disclosure, was given in this case in relation to either
of the
claims. Such was the blatant self-interest of the Regiments entities
in this matter that full disclosure required a detailed
explanation
of the actions, why they were in the Fund’s interests and what
the nature of the agent’s benefit was. From
the record it is
not apparent beyond the terms of the agreement that such disclosure
was ever given. What Wood seeks to do instead
is invoke a post facto
justification that his and Regiments’ actions made the Fund
better off than it might otherwise have
been.
[37]
There is no attempt to suggest that properly disclosed, the
consequences of these actions as the Fund now appreciates them, were
disclosed to it at the time the actions being undertaken.
[62]
Moreover, in this case, there are a number of factors which made the
duty to make full disclosure
so compelling. First the nature of the
transactions was complex. The Fund’s board ought to have been
fully appraised of what
the risks entailed in the interest rate swaps
and bond trading would expose it to. There is no evidence in the
record that this
was ever done. A perfect example of the opaque
nature, is Wood’s response to the fees complaint, in this
paragraph in the
answering affidavit, where he attempts to justify
the fact that the Fund would in the long term be better off:
“
A large portion
of the profit has been reserved so that it will accrue over the life
of the transaction (CVA of 17 basis points
~R 19 million (and Basis
spread of 40 basis points (~R 135 million) as would be the most
prudent approach in the circumstances.”
[38]
[63]
Second the interests of Transnet and the Fund did not coincide.
Transnet’s risk mitigation
strategy did not require exposing
the Fund to absorb it. The Regiments Group with its role as advisor
to both could never have
resulted in a satisfactory discharge of its
fiduciary duties to the Fund without at the very least the fullest
disclosure of how
it operated and how the Group benefited. Nor as I
discussed earlier does Transnet’s approval of the transactions
having any
bearing on the matter as the Fund is a separate entity.
Transnet cannot consent on behalf of the Fund to validate
transactions
that breach Regiments Fund Managers fiduciary duties to
the Fund.
[64]
Lastly the Fund is not a commercial enterprise with an appetite for
risk taking. It is a pension
fund with a duty to look after the
interest of some 40 000 pensioners. It could not adopt a cavalier
approach to risk. Those advising
it had a fiduciary duty to take the
nature of their client into account. This again imposed on them the
highest duty to account
transparently. Wood as a key figure in these
events and the one with the greatest technical expertise must accept
his share of
responsibility for this failure. The fact that others in
Regiments may also have been involved does not avail him.
No
privity of contract between the Fund and Wood
.
[65]
Wood contends that even if there had been a breach of fiduciary
duties, the Fund dealt with the
Regiment entities, not himself. He
argues that since no attempt had been made by the Fund to lift the
corporate veil, the claims,
to the extent that they exist, do not lie
against him. However, as the Fund’s counsel correctly contends
both claims are
for disgorgement. The basis of the claims are for a
breach of a fiduciary duty.
[66]
In
Volvo
(SA) (Pty) Ltd v Yssel
[39]
the court was asked to consider the same issue of privity of
contract:
“
Mr CJ Nel, who
appeared on behalf Mr Yssel, submitted that, by virtue of the
successive written agreements between Volvo and Highveld,
and the
lack of any privity of contract between Volvo and Mr Yssel, the
relationship between Volvo and Mr Yssel was not susceptible
to
fiduciary duties. I do not agree. It is clear, in my view, from the
authorities cited above, that the absence of contractual
privity
between two parties does not preclude the existence of a fiduciary
relationship between them.”
[67]
On appeal to the (SCA) the court a quo’s approach was approved.
The court explained that:
“
Contractual
duties owed by one party to another will no doubt often go a long way
towards defining whether the relationship is one
of trust but
contractual privity is not indispensable to such relationships, as
correctly observed by the court below.”
[40]
[68]
This defence too must fail.
Wood
no longer employed by Regiments when moneys paid out
[69]
Wood contends that he was no longer employed by Regiments from 1
March 2016. I will accept for
purposes of this application that this
is factually correct. The relevance for him of this date is that
payment into his or his
entities accounts, took place after this
date. But as the Fund correctly contends in relation to the
disgorgement claims, this
fact is irrelevant and does not constitute
a defence. This is because the actions that led to these payments
(the fees deduction
and the advice to engage in bond churning) had
all taken place before he left Regiments for Trillian. Nor were there
activities
without causal connection. The interest rate swaps advice
led to the need for the bond churning. All this had occurred whilst
he
was still at Regiments. Whilst some bond churning transactions had
occurred after he had left Regiments for Trillian, this does
not
detract from the fact that it flowed from advice and a strategy he
had advised upon prior to his departure and presumably why
he was
then rewarded for it by Regiments thereafter.
[70]
Put differently the fact that the flow of funds occurred at a later
date does not detract from
the fact that the basis for which they
became payable had been constructed whilst Wood was with Regiments
and as a result of his
active participation whilst with
Regiments.
[41]
The Fund seeks
disgorgement of his earnings. The fact that they were paid to him
after he had left Regiments is of no moment. He
received the benefit.
Striking
out
.
[71]
Wood filed a striking out application after having filed his
answering affidavit. This is unusual
as a matter of practice in
itself, but I will accept that the striking out was at least
foreshadowed in the answering affidavit.
The striking out application
relates to facts which Wood contends are hearsay in this matter. More
specifically he objects to factual
averments in the founding
affidavit which advance a conspiracy theory allegedly between Wood
and various other individuals from
Regiments, Transnet and some
outside of both these organisations. This was advanced to explain how
Regiments was able to achieve
its objectives because outside parties
were able to influence insiders in Transnet, to agree to their plan
for self-enrichment.
Although these allegations are well-known and in
the public domain because, inter alia, of their airing in the Zondo
Commission
of Inquiry into State Capture, I accept that for the
purpose of this case, they constitute hearsay. As can be seen from
the analysis
of the facts in this matter I have not had regard to
them. Nor have I taken into account allegations concerning the
funding of
the Optimum Mine through a company connected with some of
these outside parties. I have confined myself to the fees and bond
churning
claims. I therefore do not need to consider the striking out
application any further because these allegations have not been
relied
on to the prejudice of Wood in this application.
Summary
of the extent of the claims
[72]
In summary the disgorgement claims comprise R90 150 940.00 in respect
of the bond churning claims,
and R20 881 240.21 in respect of the
fees claim. The total claimed is thus R111 032 180.21, which the Fund
asserts Wood is liable
to disgorge, together with interest on that
amount of more than five years at the prescribed rate.
[42]
Is
Wood insolvent
[73]
In the founding affidavit the Fund sets out extensive facts as to why
Wood is insolvent. The
Fund estimates his liabilities exceed R530
million. Most of this amount is accounted for by the Fund’s
claim against him
in the principal action (circa R313 million) and a
claim by SARS R 220 million which is the subject of a preservation
order.
[74]
Wood has dealt with this not by placing these facts in dispute but by
deflecting them. He disputes
being insolvent because he argues the
Fund has no claim against him in law. In his counsel’s heads of
argument this is the
only contention raised in respect of this
question.
[43]
But once I have
found that the Fund has a prima facie case for these claims, this
defence falls away. He also placed in dispute
whether the Fund’s
allegation that SARS has a large claim against him had been
established. But even if that is placed in
doubt, he does not make
out a case that if these claims are established, he is able to meet
them. In short, this aspect of the
case had not been seriously
contested.
Advantage
to creditors
[75]
I now deal with the last requirement of the
Insolvency Act namely
that sequestration will be of advantage to creditors. This threshold
is not set particularly high as the SCA explained in
CSAR
v Hawker Air Services (Pty) Ltd:
[44]
“
The question is
whether the Commissioner has established that sequestration would
render any benefit to creditors, given that the
partnership is now
defunct. The answer seems to lie in those decisions that have held
that a Court need not be satisfied that there
will be advantage to
creditors in the sense of immediate financial benefit. The Court
needs to be satisfied only that there is
reason to believe —
not
necessarily
a likelihood, but a prospect not too removed — that as a result
of investigation and enquiry assets may be unearthed
that will
benefit creditors
.”
[45]
The
test for relief
[76]
Finally, I turn to the question of whether a provisional
sequestration order should be granted.
Although there are disputes of
facts on certain issues on the papers, the test for granting a
provisional sequestration order is
the same as for a provisional
winding up order. That test has been set out by Corbet JA in
Kalil
v Decotex (Pty) Ltd and Another
[46]
“
Where
on the affidavits there is a prima facie case (i.e., a balance of
probabilities) in favour of the applicant, then, in my view,
a
provisional order for winding-up should normally be granted ... This
does no lasting injustice to the respondent for he will
on the return
date generally be given the opportunity, in a proper case and where
he asks for an order to that effect, to present
oral evidence on
disputed issues. "
[77]
While courts have some sympathy with respondents in considering a
bona fide defence and giving
them the benefit of the doubt, the court
still has to be satisfied that defence is raised on bona fide and
reasonable grounds.
[47]
But
the approach of courts is not to lightly come to such a conclusion if
the facts raised are not bona fide.
[48]
[78]
I am satisfied that the defences raised are not bona fide and that
the Fund has made out a prima
facie case, and that the requirements
of section 10 of the Act have been established.
ORDER:-
[79]
In the result the following order is made:
1.
That the estate of ERIC ANTHONY WOOD (Identity number: [....]) be
placed under
provisional sequestration;
2.
That a rule nisi be issued calling upon any interested party to
appear before
the above Honourable Court on 28 February 2023, to show
cause why:
a.
a final sequestration order should not be granted; and
b.
the costs of this application should not be costs in the
sequestration
of the estate of the respondent.
3.
Directing that the order be served on: -
a.
the Respondent, at [....] J [....] P [....], S [....], Sandton,
Johannesburg;
b.
the South African Revenue Service, Johannesburg;
c.
the employees of the Respondent, if any; and
d.
all registered trade unions representing the employees of the
Respondent, if any.
N. MANOIM
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION
JOHNANNESBURG
Date of hearing: 25
August 2022
Date of judgment: 10
November 2022
Appearances:
Counsel for the
Applicant:
A Bham SC
M Chaskalson SC
N Luthuli
Instructed by.
ENSafrica
Counsel for the
Respondent:
E L
Theron SC
Instructed by:
Fairbridges Wertheim Becker
[1]
The
Fund is a retirement Fund established in terms of section 14B of the
Transnet Pension Fund Act, 62 of 1990.
[2]
The
application is deposed to by Peet Maritz the principal officer of
the Fund. His authority to do so is not placed in dispute.
See
answering affidavit paragraph 24.1. Rather Wood takes issue as to
whether all the allegations made are within his own personal
knowledge. I deal with the allegations of hearsay later in these
reasons.
[3]
See
Founding affidavit paragraph 14.
[4]
The
Fund has more than 40 000 members and their widows, or widowers or
dependents, who receive pensions from the Fund. They have
an average
age of 79 and receive on average a pension of R 4000 from the Fund.(
Founding Affidavit paragraph 112).
[5]
Section
10(a) read with section 9(1).
[6]
In
the papers the Fund had also relied on certain alleged acts of
insolvency by Wood. However, these were not pursued in the heads
of
argument or in the oral submissions made on behalf of the Fund, so I
need not consider them further.
[7]
The bid document contained what was termed a “Team Skills
Matrix”. This awarded points to the members of the team
in
terms of the skills listed. Wood scored highest for most of the
skills listed and in particular, highest for “Portfolio
management” (See PM 16 Annexure to the Founding affidavit in
particular on Case Lines 001-366)
[8]
See
PM 18, minute of Fund board meeting dated 2 December 2014. Case
lines001-379
[9]
Annexure
PM 24, Case Lines 001-403.
[10]
PM 24, supra 001-404.
[11]
See
EW 5 009-195 where Regiments states it was the transaction advisor
for the procurement and that it also advised on capital
raising and
acted as the “Risk Management advisor”.
[12]
Annexure
PM 1 to the Founding affidavit.
[13]
Annexure
PM3 read with Paragraph 22 of the Founding affidavit
[14]
See
letter dated 29 July 2016 from Gary Pita the Group CFO of Transnet
to Shane, the Chairperson of the Fund where the twenty
basis points
is mentioned. Case Lines 009-114
[15]
Answering
affidavit paragraph 69.3.
[16]
Ibid, paragraph 69.4.
[17]
Ibid,
paragraph 69.8.
[18]
Ibid,
Annexure EW 8A.
[19]
Pita
letter, supra.
[20]
Rudolph
in his confirmatory affidavit states that he first got to know of
the payments from the Fund’s bank account ( i.e.,
the fees
payment) on 10 May 2016 when he was told of this by Andrea Taylor
from Willis Towers Watson, who said she had identified
the payments
to Regiments Securities when studying the Fund’s bank
statements. Rudolph says ENS was not consulted at any
time about the
swap payments prior to them being made. He says the bond churning
transactions only came to light after press
report in 2018 in
conjunction with the dismissal of former Finance Minister Nene. Case
Lines 010-15.
[21]
On
August 2017, the Fund instituted action against Regiments, Trillian,
and their directors, inter alia Wood for misappropriation
of the R
229 million. The Fund and Regiments entered into a settlement in
which it received partial payment of this money. It
still holds Wood
liable for R 123 402 437.54, plus interest on that amount
since 21 November 2019. ( See Founding affidavit
paragraph 57.5)
[22]
Founding affidavit paragraph 17.2 read with paragraphs 51.3 and 51.9
Wood
is
a trustee of the Zara Trust. See his affidavit in the related
proceeding Case Lines 010-124.
[23]
Case
Lines 001-434.
[24]
Numibrite
was the previous name of Zara W Pty Ltd. ( Founding affidavit
paragraph 5.4).
[25]
See
investor.gov website of the United States Security Exchange
Commission.
[26]
https://www.investopedia.com/terms/c/churning.asp.
[27]
Tippet
affidavit paragraphs 13-14 Case lines 001-451 to 001-453.
[28]
Tippet
affidavit supra, paragraph 17.
[29]
Tippet
affidavit, supra, paragraph 17.5.
[30]
Founding affidavit, paragraph 5.2.
[31]
See
Mars,
Law
of Insolvency in South Africa,
Tenth
Edition, at paragraph 18.21.
[32]
Mars,
supra.
[33]
1921
AD 168.
[34]
Supra,
at 177-178.
[35]
2004 (3) SA 465 (SCA).
[36]
Supra
at 479.
[37]
In
Modise
and Another v Tladi Holdings [Pty) Ltd
[2020] ZASCZ 112 the SCA held that: “
The
no conflict rule does not require an actual conflict to be
established; only that a reasonable person would think that there
was a real sensible possibility of conflict. In the same vein the
no-profit rule applies even if the company would not itself
have
made a profit, in other words, even if the director has not profited
at the company's expense.”
at
paragraph 36.
[38]
Answering
affidavit paragraph 28.9.
[39]
[2008] 3 All SA 488 (W).
[40]
Volvo
(Southern Africa) (Pty) Ltd v Yssel
[2009] 4 All SA 497
(SCA) at 503.
[41]
See
replying affidavit paragraph 39.
[42]
Founding
affidavit paragraph 63. See also the Annexure hereto for the more
detailed breakdown.
[43]
See
respondent’s heads of argument paragraph 41.
[44]
2006 (4) SA 292 (SCA).
[45]
Hawker
Air Services
,
supra, paragraph 29.
[46]
1988 (1) SA 943
(A) at 979B-C.
[47]
Investec
Bank Ltd v Lewis
2002 (2) SA 111
(C) 119F-H.
[48]
See for instance the approach taken in
CSAR
v Hawker Air Services (Pty) Ltd
[2006] ZASCA 51
;
2006 (4) SA 292
(SCA) para [18].
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Transnet SOC Limited v Santam Limited (30445/2014) [2022] ZAGPJHC 918 (9 November 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 918High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
Transnet Limited v ERF 152927 Cape Town (PTY) Ltd : In re: ERF 152927 Cape Town (PTY) Ltd v Transnet Limited (35967/2010) [2022] ZAGPJHC 542 (29 July 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 542High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
Transnet SOC Limited v Regiments Capital (PTY) Limited and Others :In re: Transnet SOC Limited v Regiments Capital (PTY) Ltd and Others :In re: Transnet SOC Limited v Trillian Asset Management (PTY) Ltd and Others: In re: Transnet SOC Limited v Trillian Capital Partners (PTY) Ltd and Others: In re: Transnet SOC Limited v Regiments Capital (PTY) Ltd and Others (2018/41666; 2018/44041; 2018/44043; 2018/44359) [2022] ZAGPJHC 702 (19 September 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 702High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
Transnet SOC Ltd v Santam Ltd (30445/2014) [2023] ZAGPJHC 879 (7 August 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 879High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
Transnet SOC Ltd v Totalenergies Marketing South Africa (Pty) Ltd and Others (2022/007321) [2023] ZAGPJHC 941 (23 August 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 941High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar