Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 368South Africa
Voltex (Pty) Ltd v Bidvest South Africa Retirement Fund and Others (038191/2025) [2025] ZAGPPHC 368 (29 April 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
29 April 2025
Headnotes
by the first respondent, pending the finalization of this application and the application to be instituted by the applicant within 30 days of granting of an order.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Voltex (Pty) Ltd v Bidvest South Africa Retirement Fund and Others (038191/2025) [2025] ZAGPPHC 368 (29 April 2025)
Voltex (Pty) Ltd v Bidvest South Africa Retirement Fund and Others (038191/2025) [2025] ZAGPPHC 368 (29 April 2025)
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sino date 29 April 2025
SAFLII
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(Gauteng Division,
Pretoria)
Case no:038191/2025
(1) REPORTABLE:
YES
/ NO
(2) OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES:
YES
/ NO
(3) REVISED.
DATE: 29 APRIL 2025
SIGNATURE
Judgment Reserved: 8
APRIL 2025
Judgment handed down: 29
APRIL 2025
In
the matter between:
VOLTEX
(PTY) LTD
APPLICANT
AND
BIDVEST
SOUTH AFRICA
RETIREMENT
FUND
FIRST RESPONDENT
ADRIANUS
PLOMP
SECOND RESPONDENT
LORNA
ANNE PLOMP
THIRD RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
STRIJDOM, J
1.
In this matter the applicant seeks the
following relief:
1.1
The first respondent is interdicted and
restrained from making payment of any portion of the second and third
respondent’s
pension interest, which is held by the first
respondent, pending the finalization of this application and the
application to be
instituted by the applicant within 30 days of
granting of an order.
2.
At the commencement of this application I
ruled that the matter is urgent.
3.
The empower provision that the applicant
relies on for the institution of this application is section
37D(1)(b)(ii)(bb) of the Pension
Fund Act 24 of 1956 (“the
Act”).
4.
Section 37D(1)(b)(ii)(bb) of the Act
provides:
“
(1)
A registered fund may:
(a)
…
(b)
deduct any amount due by a member to the
member’s employer on the date of retirement, the date on which
the member ceases
to be a member of the fund or the date on which the
member’s employment with a participating employer in a
retirement fund
is terminated in accordance with the Income Tax Act
and the Tax Administration Act, 2011 (Act 28 of 2011), in respect of
compensation,
including any legal costs recoverable from the member
in a matter contemplated in subparagraph (ii), in respect of any
damage caused
to the employer by reason of any theft, dishonesty,
fraud or misconduct by the member, and in respect of which
(ii) judgment has been
obtained against the member in any Court, including a Magistrate’s
Court, and includes a compensation
order granted in terms of section
300 of the Criminal procedure Act, 1977 (Act no 51 of 1977.)
(bb)
suspend a savings withdrawal benefit where the employer has not
obtained a
judgment contemplated in paragraph (b)(ii), and the
withdrawal will result in there being insufficient remaining value to
comply
with the pending order, if granted, for a period of 12 months
pending the judgment by any Court including a Magistrate’s
Court.”
5.
In addition to the provisions of section
37D(1)(b)(ii)(bb) of the Act, the Court will have regard to the
provisions of the Bidvest
South Africa Pension Fund Guide to
Acknowledgement of Debt and Retained Benefits (“the Guide”).
6.
The
background facts which gave rise to these proceedings are briefly
these. The applicant, a supplier and distributor of
electrical
and related industrial products across South Africa, employed
the second respondent as a production manager, and
the third
respondent as a depot manager within its operations. Both held
positions of trust and operational control, including
responsibilities over inventory, dispatch, and internal controls
designed to safeguard the applicant’s stock and financial
integrity.
[1]
7.
Following internal investigations, both the
second and third respondents were charged with multiple counts of
theft, fraud, dishonesty,
and gross misconduct, including
manipulation of sales and returns processes, misappropriation of
stock through duplicate credit
notes, and deliberate concealment of
stock losses.
8.
The second respondent pleaded guilty to
certain charges and was found guilty of the remainder of the charges
brought against him.
The second respondent was summarily
dismissed on 25 February 2025.
9.
The third respondent was also found guilty
of all charges brought against her and has subsequently been
dismissed.
10.
Since
the fraud and/or theft has been discovered the applicant has
uncovered a combined loss of approximately R1 728 468,00
in
respect of the second respondent and approximately R1 337 091,00
in respect of the third respondent.
[2]
11.
The respondents raise the following
objections to the relief sought:
11.1
That the applicant has not complied with
the internal procedures of the first respondent;
11.2
That the application is premature as no
judgment has been obtained against the second and third respondents;
11.3
That the second and third respondents will
suffer financial hardship if their pension benefits are withheld.
12.
It
is trite that an applicant seeking interim interdictory relief must
satisfy the requirements set out
in
Setlogelo v Setlogelo
.
[3]
Prima Facie Right
13.
It was submitted by the second and third
respondents that there is currently no judgment against the
respondents, no compensation
order in terms of
section 300
of the
Criminal Procedure Act, 51 of 1977
, and the respondents have not
admitted liability. It was further argued that the applicant
has failed to indicate that it
has suffered financial loss at the
hands of the respondents.
14.
In my view, the applicant’s prima
facie right is founded in the statutory entitlement under
section
37D(1)(b)(ii)(bb)
of the
Pension Funds Act 24 of 1956
. This
provision creates a statutory right in favour of an employer to
recover damages caused by theft or fraud by its employee.
Although it contemplates recovery after judgment, it does not
preclude a party from approaching the Court for interim relief to
preserve that recoverable benefit.
15.
It is trite that
section 37D
requires a
civil judgment to authorize the Fund to deduct and pay the benefit to
the employer. The applicant seeks to preserve
the fund interest
to ensure that the remedy contemplated in
section 37D
is not
frustrated. The relief sought is to preserve the funds pending
a judgment. The applicant has already laid a
criminal charge
against the second and third respondents and intends to institute
civil proceedings.
16.
In
Highveld
Steel and Vanadium Corporation Ltd v Oosthuizen
[4]
the Court confirmed that a statutory right under
section 37D
, once
pleaded and grounded in facts, constitutes a sufficient prima facie
right for interim interdictory purposes.
17.
The Court highlighted the following
principles regarding interim interdictory relief:
17.1
Purpose of Withholding Benefits:
The withholding of
pension benefits serves as a protective measure to ensure that the
employer can recover damages if the employee
is found liable.
17.2
Balancing Competing Interests:
The Court stressed the
need to balance the employer’s right to recover losses with the
potential prejudice to the employee
who may urgently need access to
their pension benefits and could ultimately be found innocent.
Exercise of Discretion:
Pension funds must exercise their discretion with care, considering
the strength of the employer’s
claim and the circumstances of
the case. Conditions may also be imposed to ensure fairness.
18.
To give effect to the purpose of
section
37D
, its wording must be interpreted purposively to include the power
to withhold payment of a member’s pension benefits pending
the
determination or acknowledgement of such member’s liability.
19.
In my view a pension fund may lawfully
withhold benefits where there is a credible, fact-based claim for
recovery of losses, and
that interim interdictory relief is
appropriate to preserve the employer’s rights while the issue
of liability is adjudicated.
Apprehension of
Irreparable Harm
20.
For the second and third respondent it was
contended that they are without income and that they are dependent on
the pension benefit
for living and medical expenses.
21.
It was submitted by the applicant that it
faces a clear and imminent risk of irreparable harm if the interdict
is not granted.
22.
The pension benefits held by the first
respondent are the only identified, accessible and liquid assets from
which the applicant
may seek to satisfy a judgment to be obtained in
due course. If the funds are paid out, there is a real risk
that the applicant
will suffer irreparable harm, as no other
enforceable means of recovery have been identified.
23.
The
respondents (second and third respondents) have not disclosed any
assets. Their version in the answering affidavit
[5]
is evident of their lack of income and reliance on these funds for
survival. These allegations reinforce the risk of dissipation.
Balance of
Convenience:
24.
It was contended on behalf of the second
and third respondents that the third respondent has a severe medical
condition that required
her to undergo a colostomy, which required
her to remove her kidney as a integral component of their monthly
expenditures and the
respondents are obliged to contribute towards
medical aid coverage.
25.
It was further submitted that in light of
the third respondent’s dismissal, both respondents will suffer
a loss of income
and pension benefits which will render it imperative
to terminate their medical aid subscription.
26.
In this matter the applicant seeks only to
preserve the funds until such time as it obtains judgement. If
the applicant fails
in its civil action, the funds remain intact and
will be released to the second and third respondents. If the
relief is refused
and the funds are paid out in the interim, the
applicant’s statutory remedy under
section 37D
may be
permanently frustrated.
27.
The financial hardship that the second and
third respondent will suffer must be weighed against:
27.1
The serious nature of the misconduct they
were found guilty of;
27.2
The quantum of the losses;
27.3
The lack of any indication that they hold
alternative assets.
28.
The second and third respondent have
advanced no substantial factual rebuttal to the core allegations,
relying instead on procedural
defences.
29.
In my view the potential loss of R3 million
for the applicant outweighs the prejudice to the respondents.
No Adequate
Alternative Remedy
30.
It was argued by counsel for the second and
third respondent that the applicant failed to follow the first
respondent’s internal
processes, particularly those outlined in
the Guide to Acknowledgement of Debt and Retained Benefits.
31.
“
It
is clear that the grant of an interdict is a discretionary remedy.
One of the main factors which the Court is enjoined
to take into
account in deciding whether to exercise its discretion is whether
there is any other remedy open to the applicant
which can adequately
protect him in his rights.”
[6]
32.
The first respondent has stated that it
cannot guarantee the preservation of the second and third
respondent’s pension benefit
unless directed to do so by a
Court order.
33.
The Guide to Acknowledgement of Debt and
Retained Benefits is an internal document published by the first
respondent, setting out
administrative steps for employers to request
the temporary withholding of a member’s pension benefit.
The guide is
not prescriptive, does not override the provisions of
the
Pension Funds Act, and
cannot confer rights or compel the Fund to
withhold benefits in the absence of a Court order. In my view
it does not provide
an adequate or enforceable alternative remedy in
law.
34.
It was submitted by the applicant that it
can recover its loss once judgment is obtained. In the absence
of the relief now
sought, the applicant would face the real prospect
of succeeding in its claim but being left with an empty judgment.
35.
It was stated in the Highveld Steel
judgment that: “… a practical problem threatens the
efficacy of the remedy afforded
by the section … Furthermore,
it has to be accepted as a matter of logic that it is only in a few
cases that an employer
will have obtained a judgment against its
employee by the time the latter’s employment is terminated
because of the lengthy
delays in finalizing cases in the justice
system. The result therefore is that an employer will find it
difficult to enforce
an award made in its favour by the time judgment
is obtained against him.”
36.
I conclude that the absence of an adequate
or enforceable alternative remedy is clearly established by the
applicant.
37.
In the result the following order is made:
1.
The applicant’s non-compliance with
the Uniform Rules of Court pertaining to forms and service is
condoned, and the matter
is heard as one of urgency.
2.
The first respondent the Bidvest South
Africa Retirement Fund, is interdicted and restrained from making any
payments, whether by
way of a lump sum, monthly annuity, or
otherwise, to:
2.1
The second respondent, Mr Adrianus Plomp
(membership number: 2[...]; and
2.2
The third respondent, Ms Lorna Anne Plomp
(membership number: 2[...]);
from the first
respondent’s fund or any associated benefit or entitlement,
pending the final determination of the action proceedings
to be
instituted by the applicant within 30 (thirty) days from the date of
this order.
3.
The second and third respondents are
ordered to pay the costs of the application on a party and party
scale B, jointly and severally,
the one paying the other to be
absolved.
4.
JJ STRIJDOM
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH-AFRICA,
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
APPEARANCES:
For
the applicants:
Adv
LK van der Merwe
Instructed
by:
Orelowitz
Inc Attorneys
For
the first to sixth respondents:
Adv
CR Dames
Instructed
by:
NDBV
Inc Attorneys
[1]
Caselines:
02-162 to 172
[2]
Caselines:
02-18 para 32 to 34
[3]
1914
AD 221
[4]
2009
(4) SA 1 (SCA)
[5]
Answering
affidavit: Caselines para 92; 02-153
[6]
Johannesburg
Consolidated Investment Co Ltd v Mitchmore Investments (Pty) Ltd and
Another
1971 (2) SA 397
(WLD) 404 E-F
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