Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 223South Africa
W Capital Finance (Pty) Ltd and Another v GP Venter Attorneys Inc and Another (79444/2019) [2024] ZAGPPHC 223 (11 March 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
11 March 2024
Headnotes
in trust by the defendants, which monies is due and payable on demand. Notwithstanding the issuing of the
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## W Capital Finance (Pty) Ltd and Another v GP Venter Attorneys Inc and Another (79444/2019) [2024] ZAGPPHC 223 (11 March 2024)
W Capital Finance (Pty) Ltd and Another v GP Venter Attorneys Inc and Another (79444/2019) [2024] ZAGPPHC 223 (11 March 2024)
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sino date 11 March 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
Number:
79444/2019
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
DATE: 11 March 2024
SIGNATURE:
JANSE VAN NIEUWENHUIZEN J
W
CAPITAL FINANCE (PTY) LTD
First Plaintiff
B
P GEACH
and
Second Plaintiff
GP VENTER ATTORNEYS
INC
First
Defendant
GP
VENTER
Second
Defendant
JUDGMENT
JANSE
VAN NIEUWENHUIZEN J:
INTRODUCTION
[1]
The first plaintiff, W Capital Finance (Pty) Ltd, an erstwhile client
of the first
and second defendant’s, claims payment of an
amount of R 584 209, 94 with interests and costs from the first
and second
defendants.
[2]
The first defendant is G P Venter Attorneys Incorporated, a personal
liability company,
and the second defendant, George Philippus Venter,
is an attorney and director of the first defendant. In view of the
provisions
of
section 19(3)
of the
Companies Act, no 71 of 2008
, I
will refer to the first and second defendants as “the
defendants” or as cited. The amount claimed by the first
plaintiff is monies held in trust by the defendants, which monies is
due and payable on demand. Notwithstanding the issuing of the
summons, the defendants have failed and/or neglected to pay the
amount to the first plaintiff.
[3]
The second plaintiff, Brenton Patrick Geach, is a senior counsel at
the Pretoria Society
of Advocates and claims an amount of R 298 908,
00 from the defendants for the rendering of professional services.
[4]
The defendants defended the action, and the second defendant
instituted a counterclaim
against the first plaintiff. The claim is
for fees due as a result of professional services rendered to the
first plaintiff in
the amount of R 1 078 620, 56.
Pleadings
1. Issues
common cause
[5]
A rather strange phenomena emerged during the cause of the trial.
Although most of
the allegations in the first plaintiff’s
particulars of claim are common cause between the parties, Eugene
Watson (“Watson”),
the witness that testified on behalf
of the first plaintiff, gave a version that is in total contradiction
to the common cause
facts. Watson’s evidence and version
resulted in a trial running for 5 days.
[6]
Notwithstanding the aforesaid, the first plaintiff did not seek an
amendment of its
particulars of claim. In the result, the matter will
be adjudicated on the common cause facts in respect of the respective
claims
of the parties as it appears from the pleadings and the
evidence led at trial.
First plaintiff’s
claim and second defendant’s counterclaim
[7]
It is common cause between the first plaintiff and the defendants
that:
7.1
during or about 2011 the first plaintiff, being represented by
Watson, engaged the services
of the second defendant to act as its
attorney in a litigious matter between the first plaintiff and Dykes
Van Heerden Incorporated
and Dykes van Heerden, which mandate was
accepted by the second defendant;
7.2
it was an express, alternatively implied, further alternatively tacit
term of the mandate
that the second defendant would act on behalf of
the first plaintiff and would:
7.2.1 recover
the amounts that Dykes van Heerden Incorporated and Dykes van Heerden
were obliged to pay to the first
plaintiff;
7.2.2 be
entitled to reasonable renumeration for his legal services;
7.2.3 upon
recovery pay over the monies to the first plaintiff on demand;
7.3
in accordance with the mandate to represent the first plaintiff, the
first defendant acted
as attorneys of record in the action of the
first plaintiff against Dykes van Heerden Incorporated and Dykes van
Heerden;
7.4
the first plaintiff was successful in both the action and the
subsequent appeal and as a
result thereof, Dykes van Heerden
Incorporated and Dykes van Heerden became obliged to pay to the first
plaintiff the capital sum
of R584 209,94 together with interest
and costs on a party and party scale;
7.5
during or about June 2015, the sum of R 1 168 419, 88 was
paid by Dykes van Heerden
Incorporated and Dykes van Heerden to the
defendants. The amount is made up of the capital sum of R 584 209,
94 and interest
in the same amount;
7.6
on or about 14 July 2016 the defendants paid the capital sum to the
first plaintiff;
7.7
on 24 November 2016, Watson, representing the first plaintiff, and
the second defendant
agreed that the second defendant may hold the
interest in the trust account of the first defendant, pending:
7.7.1
taxation by the Taxing Master of the party and party costs payable by
Dykes van Heerden; and
7.7.2 payment
of such costs to the second defendant.
7.8
the costs payable to the first plaintiff by Dykes van Heerden
Incorporated and Dykes van
Heerden were taxed by the Taxing Master on
8 December 2017 in the amount of R 371 067, 53, which amount
included counsel’s
fees;
7.9
the costs were paid to the defendants on or about 13 December 2017.
[8]
The first plaintiff raised a special plea of prescription to the
second defendant’s
claim for payment of his legal fees. Mr
Snyman SC, counsel for the plaintiffs, to his credit, did not persist
with the special
plea.
Second plaintiff’s
claim
[9]
It is common cause that the second plaintiff rendered professional
services in the
matter between the first plaintiff and Dykes van
Heerden Incorporated and Dykes van Heerden and that he rendered an
account in
the amount of R 298 908, 00.
2.
Issues in dispute
Second plaintiff’s
claim
[10]
The second defendant denies that he instructed the second plaintiff
as counsel in the matter
between the first plaintiff and Dykes van
Heerden Incorporated and Dykes van Heerden. The second defendant
pleaded that the second
plaintiff was appointed by the first
plaintiff, there and then being represented by Watson.
[11]
Should the court find that the second plaintiff was appointed by the
second defendant, the second
defendant raised a special plea of
prescription against the second plaintiff’s claim.
Second defendant’s
counterclaim
[12]
Although it is common cause that the first plaintiff is liable to pay
reasonable renumeration
to the defendants, a dispute arose in respect
of the reasonableness of the defendants’ bill of costs and as a
result, the
bill needs to be taxed by the Taxing Master. For reasons
I will allude to
infra
, the bill had still not been taxed when
the trial concluded.
[13]
The second defendant, therefore, prayed for an order that the order
directing the defendants
to pay the amount of R 584 209, 94 with
interest to the first plaintiff be suspended until the bill had been
taxed.
Evidence
[14]
The second plaintiff confirmed that he is a senior counsel and
testified that he had been practising
as an advocate at the Pretoria
Association of Advocates for more than 30 years.
[15]
The second plaintiff denied that he was instructed by Watson on
behalf of the first plaintiff
and testified that he met Watson for
the first time during a consultation that was held at the offices of
the second defendant
on 2 March 2011. He was present when Watson
instructed the second defendant in the matter between the first
plaintiff and Dykes
van Heerden Incorporated and Dykes van Heerden.
The second defendant suggested that the second plaintiff be
instructed as counsel
in the matter and Watson did not raise any
objection.
[16]
The second plaintiff, with reference to a brief cover containing
instructions from the second defendant
in respect of the matter,
testified that he was instructed by the second defendant. The second
plaintiff, furthermore, testified
that the second defendant had
briefed him extensively in the past in various other matters.
[17]
The second plaintiff also referred to his statements of account,
which statements were at all relevant
times addressed and submitted
to the first defendant.
[18]
Finally, the second plaintiff testified that he, in all his years of
practice, has never accepted instructions
directly from a client.
Advocates are, in terms of the rules regulating the profession,
prohibited from accepting instructions
directly from a client.
[19]
The second plaintiff’s evidence was confirmed by Watson and Mrs
Swart, a costs consultant who
was also present at the consultation in
the second defendant’s office on 2 March 2011. I pause to
mention, that the aforementioned
three witnesses made a favourable
impression on the court and their evidence in respect of this issue
was satisfactory in all respects.
[20]
The second defendant testified and confirmed his version that the
second plaintiff was appointed by
Watson on behalf of the first
plaintiff. The second defendant, however, had difficulty in
explaining why his firm issued instructions
to the second plaintiff
and accepted his statements of account without protest, if the second
plaintiff was indeed appointed by
the first plaintiff. The second
defendant’s evidence in this regard was most unsatisfactory.
[21]
I take judicial notice of the fact that counsel is as a rule
appointed by an attorney and not a client.
[22]
Having had regard to the evidence in its totality as well as the
probabilities inherent in the two
conflicting versions, I have no
hesitation in rejecting the second defendant’s version.
[23]
In the result, the first and second defendants are liable for the
payment of the professional fees
claimed by the second plaintiff.
Special plea:
prescription
[24]
Having found that the defendants are liable for the payment of the
second plaintiff’s professional
fees, it is necessary to have
regard to the defendant’s special plea of prescription.
[25]
The special plea of prescription is based on the following
allegations:
25.1
the claim for the payment of fees is in respect of services rendered
for the period 3 July 2011 to 10 June
2014;
25.2
the applicable period of prescription is three years;
25.3 a
period in excess of three years has expired prior to the institution
of the claim.
[26]
It is common cause that the summons was issued on 24 October 2019,
being more than three years
after 10 June 2014.
[27]
In his particulars of claim, the second plaintiff made the following
averment in respect of the
due date for the payment of his fees:
“
3.4.2 The
fees plus VAT would become due, owning and payable to the Second
Plaintiff by the Second Defendant
only
upon taxation
in the event that the
First Plaintiff was successful, of the party and party bill of costs
against DYKES VAN HEERDEN INCOPORATED
and/or DYKES VAN HEEREN; and in
the event that the First Plaintiff was not successful, of the
attorney and client bill of costs.”
(own
emphasis”)
[28]
In his evidence the second plaintiff confirmed the aforesaid
agreement. The second defendant
did not dispute the second
plaintiff’s evidence in this regard.
[29]
The second defendant, however and without amending his special plea,
made a turnabout during
cross-examination and referred the second
plaintiff to a pro forma tax invoice submitted by the second
plaintiff to the defendants
on 15 August 2013 in the amount of R
275 566, 50. The invoice is in respect of the Dykes matter and
at the bottom of the invoice,
the following appears: “
This
account is payable on or before 31 December 2013”
.
[30]
The second defendant also referred to a further invoice dated 10 June
2014 in the amount of R
14 107, 50 that contained a similar
note, to wit: “
This account is payable on or before the
end of September 2014”
.
[31]
It is common cause between the second plaintiff and the second
defendant that the second plaintiff
refused to do any further work on
the Dykes matter after the leave to appeal application was
successful. The second plaintiff testified
that he refused to do
further work for the defendants in all matters that he was briefed
in, because the defendants did not pay
his accounts.
[32]
The evidence referred to
supra
was firstly not relied upon by
the defendants in their special plea and secondly, the second
defendant’s failure to deny the
term relied upon by the second
plaintiff during his evidence resulted in the term of the agreement
being admitted.
[33]
The fact that the second plaintiff demanded payment prior to the date
of taxation does not change
the term of the agreement. In the event
that the second plaintiff issued summons prior to the taxation of the
account, the defendants
were at liberty to plead that the summons is
premature.
[34]
The bill of costs was taxed on 8 December 2017 and the claim would
have been extinguished by
prescription on 8 December 2020.
[35]
Summons was served prior to 8 December 2020 and the second
plaintiff’s claim has not prescribed.
Suspension of order
[36]
When the trial commenced on 15 January 2024, the second defendant
indicated that the bill of
costs would be taxed by the end of January
2024. In the result, the relief claimed by the second defendant has
become academic.
Although the second defendant’s claim stands
to be dismissed for this reason, I will deal with the costs of the
counter claim
infra.
Interest
[37]
Mr Snyman submitted that interest on the capital amount should run
from 19 September 2016. In
support of this submission, Mr Snyman
relied on a letter from Pieterse & Curlewis addressed to the
defendants on 19 September
2016, in terms of which the defendants,
according to Mr Snyman, was instructed to invest the interest and
costs collected from
Dykes van Heerden until the dispute in respect
of the mandate had been resolved.
[38]
The letter is written in Afrikaans and, in order to do justice to the
parties, it is necessary
to quote the relevant portion as it was
written:
“
Dit is ons
instruksies om hiermee u te versoek om onverwyld en binne sewe dae
vanaf datum hiervan ‘n volledige rekonsilisaie
in terme waarvan
al bovermelde berekeing
(sic!)
gestipuleer
en uiteengesit aan ons te voorsien vir voorlegging aan ons kliënt.”
[39]
The only instruction from the first plaintiff that is conveyed in the
letter, is a request that
a reconciliation of all amounts received by
the defendants in respect of the Dykes matter be delivered to
Pieterse & Curlewis
within 7 days from the date of the letter.
[40]
Neither the first nor the second plaintiff alleged or proved that the
parties agreed to interest
mora ex re
and in the result
interest will only start running once a proper demand for payment has
been made (
mora ex persona).
[41]
Neither the first nor the second plaintiff alleged or proved that
proper demand was made prior
to the issuing of the summon and I will
accept that demand was made when the summons was served on the
defendants.
Costs
[42]
The defendants filed their notice of intention to tax the bill of
costs on 28 June 2018. On 24
August 2018, the first plaintiff filed a
notice of intention to oppose the taxation. The objection reads as
follows:
“
That the
Attorney of Record and the Plaintiff concluded a fee agreement on the
8
th
of March 2011 and that the Attorney of Record would limit his charges
to the fees taxed against the defendant PLUS R 50 000,
00 as an
attorney own client fee.
The Advocate appointed
by the Plaintiff agreed to taxed cost PLUS R 50 000, 00.
THAT the taxed cost
had already been recovered from the opponents.”
[43]
Due to the dispute raised by the first plaintiff in respect of the
fee agreement between the
parties, the Taxing Master could not tax
the bill until the dispute had been resolved between the parties or
until there is an
order of court.
[44]
As stated
supra
summons was issued on 24 October 2019. In the
particulars of claim the first plaintiff alleged that the second
defendant would “
be entitled to taxed party and party costs
as reasonable renumeration for his legal services.”
[45]
On 17 February 2020 the first plaintiff served a notice of intention
to amend the particulars
of claim by deleting the words “
taxed
party and party costs as”
.
[46]
The amendment was affected on 5 March 2020 and on 25 May 2020 the
defendants delivered their
plea to the amended particulars of claim.
The defendants admitted that it was a term of the mandate that the
second defendant will
be entitled to reasonable renumeration for his
legal fees. It was, therefore, common cause from 25 May 2020 that the
first plaintiff
had to pay reasonable renumeration for the legal
services rendered by the second defendant.
[47]
The objection to the bill of costs was, however, not withdrawn. To
the contrary, the first plaintiff
insisted on running a 5-day trial,
in circumstances where there were virtually no disputes between the
first plaintiff and defendants
on the pleadings. The defendants, in
turn, did not object to the leading of irrelevant evidence and
participated wholeheartedly
in the entire running of the trial.
[48]
Both parties are at fault for the unnecessary costs that was incurred
and in the exercise of
my discretion, I find that the first plaintiff
and the defendants will be liable for their own costs, both in
respect of the claim
and counter claim.
[49]
The second plaintiff was successful, and costs should follow the
cause.
ORDER
The following order is
issued:
1.
The first and second defendants are ordered,
jointly and severally, the one paying the other to be absolved, to
pay:
1.1
an amount of R 584 209, 94 to the first
plaintiff with interest
a temporae morae
from
date of judgment to date of payment;
1.2
an amount of R 298 908, 00 to the second
plaintiff with interest
a temporae morae
from
date of judgment to date of payment;
1.3 the costs of the
second plaintiff.
2.
The second defendant’s counter-claim is
dismissed.
N. JANSE VAN
NIEUWENHUIZEN
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
DIVISION,
PRETORIA
DATES
HEARD:
1, 2 March 2023 & 15,
16 and 17 January 2024
DATE
DELIVERED:
11
March 2024
APPEARANCES
For the
Plaintiff’s:
Advocate M Snyman
SC
On
behalf of the First Plaintiff
Instructed by:
Danie Prinsloo
Attorneys
On
behalf of the Second Plaintiff
Instructed by:
Louw Le Roux Inc
For the
Defendant’s:
Mr GP Venter in
person
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