Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 300South Africa
AD Trade Belgium SPRL Private Limited v Central Bank of Guinea and Others (57858/2021) [2024] ZAGPPHC 300; [2024] 2 All SA 806 (GP) (5 April 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## AD Trade Belgium SPRL Private Limited v Central Bank of Guinea and Others (57858/2021) [2024] ZAGPPHC 300; [2024] 2 All SA 806 (GP) (5 April 2024)
AD Trade Belgium SPRL Private Limited v Central Bank of Guinea and Others (57858/2021) [2024] ZAGPPHC 300; [2024] 2 All SA 806 (GP) (5 April 2024)
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sino date 5 April 2024
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I
N
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 57858/2021
REPORTABLE
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES
REVISED
DATE:
05/04/2024
In
the matter between:
AD
TRADE BELGIUM SPRL PRIVATE
LIMITED Applicant
and
THE
CENTRAL BANK OF
GUINEA First
Respondent
THE
REPUBLIC OF GUINEA
Second
Respondent
THE
STANDARD BANK OF SOUTH
AFRICA Third
Respondent
SOUTH
AFRICAN RSERVE
BANK Fourth
Respondent
AND
THE
STANDARD BANK OF SOUTH AFRICA
Applicant
and
AD
TRADE BELGIUM SPRL PRIVATE LIMITED
First
Respondent
THE
CENTRAL BANK OF THE REPUBLIC OF GUINAE
Second
Respondent
THE
REPUBLIC OF GUINAE
Third
Respondent
SOUTH
AFRICA RESERVE BANK
Fourth
Respondent
In
re:
AD
TRADE BELGIUM SPRL PRIVATE
LIMITED Plaintiff
and
THE
CENTRAL BANK OF
GUINEA First
Defendant
THE
REPUBLIC OF GUINEA
Second
Defendant
THE
STANDARD BANK OF SOUTH
AFRICA Third
Defendant
SOUTH
AFRICAN RSERVE
BANK Fourth
Defendant
JUDGMENT
Marx
du Plessis, AJ
Introduction
[1] On
22 November 2017 the International Chamber of Commerce, International
Court of Arbitration made an
award (
the arbitration award
)
against The Republic of Guinea (
Guinea
) in favour of
the Ad Trade Belgium SPRL Private Limited (
Ad Trade
).
[2] The
arbitration award was made an order of court on 15 November 2018
under case number 48487/2018.
[3] During
November 2021 Ad Trade issued summons against Guinea, The Central
Bank of Guinea (
the Central Bank
), Standard Bank of
South Africa (
Standard Bank)
and the South African
Reserve Bank (
SARB
) for,
inter alia
, declaratory
relief and payment of the amounts owed to it by Guinea in terms of
the arbitration award. Only the first defendant,
The Central Bank,
has defended the action and delivered a plea.
[4] Standard
Bank is cited as the third defendant in Ad Trade’s action under
case number 48487/2018.
Standard Bank has not entered
appearance to defend the action and has not delivered a plea.
Standard Bank has however delivered
a discovery affidavit.
[5] On
20 June 2023 Ad Trade caused a request for further particulars to be
delivered to Standard Bank and
to which Standard Bank delivered a
response.
[6] In
Standard Bank’s response to Ad Trade’s request for
further particulars, Standard Bank
by and large states that the
information and/or documentation sought is no longer in Standard
Bank’s possession or that the
information sought by Ad Trade is
irrelevant alternatively not required for purposes of preparing for
trial further alterantively
not a permissible interrogatory.
[7] Ad
Trade being dissatisfied with Standard Bank’s response launched
an application for an order
compelling Standard Bank to deliver to it
the further particulars requested. Standard Bank opposes the relief
sought.
[8] After
receipt of Ad Trade’s replying affidavit, Standard Bank
launched an application to strike
out certain paragraphs in Ad
Trade's replying affidavit, asserting that the content of these
paragraphs raise new matter and/or
make out a case in reply.
[9] In
response to Standard Bank’s application to strike out, Ad Trade
launched and application for
leave to deliver a supplementary
affidavit setting out the reasons why the allegations sought to be
struck from its replying affidavit
were not disclosed in the founding
affidavit, disclosing certain bank account statements discovered by
Standard Bank and reporting
the sale of a property belonging to
Guinea. This application too was opposed by Standard Bank.
[10] The
application to strike out, the application for leave to file a
supplementary affidavit and the application
to compel delivery of the
further particulars proceeded to argument before me over a period of
two days.
Standard
Bank’s application to reopen
[11] Shortly
before handing down the judgment in respect of the application to
strike out, the application
for leave to file a supplementary
affidavit and the application to compel delivery of further
particulars, I was requested by Standard
Bank not to do so as
Standard Bank sought to place further material before me.
[12] The
parties engaged one another regarding the nature and extent of the
further material to be placed
before me in an attempt to reach an
agreement on these aspects. No agreement could be reached.
[13] In
view of the delay that had already occurred, I proceeded to direct
that Standard Bank, having indicated
its intention to do so, was to
launch its intended application for the reopening of the application
to compel before me by no later
than 13 October 2023, failing which I
would deliver my judgment in respect of the applications argued
before me.
[14] Standard
Bank proceeded to deliver its application to reopen the application
to compel before me, which
Ad Trade opposed. The matter proceeded to
argument before me on 7 December 2023.
[15] In
terms of the application to reopen, Standard Bank seeks leave to
“
file supplementary submissions in regard to the relevance
of, and the bearing upon the first application of the application
instituted
by the first respondent on 2 August 2023, in which the
first respondent seeks to compel further particulars from the second
respondent.”
(sic)
[16] It
appears from Standard Bank’s founding affidavit, and the
documents uploaded onto the Caselines
court file, that Ad Trade
requested further particulars for trial from The Central Bank, and
that when The Central Bank failed
to deliver the particulars
requested, Ad Trade launched an application to compel delivery of the
further particulars against The
Central Bank.
[17] This
event, the launching of an application to compel further particulars
against The Central Bank,
appears to be what motivated Standard Bank
to launch its application to reopen and which forms the basis of the
further material
it seeks leave to place before me.
Test
for reopening of a hearing
[18] Whether
or not to allow the reopening of a matter falls within the discretion
of the court. This discretion
is to be exercised judicially and upon
consideration of all relevant factors and is a matter of fairness to
both parties.
[1]
[19] The
relevant factors to be considered include the following:
“
(i) The
reason why the evidence was not led timeously.
(ii) The
degree of materiality of the evidence.
(iii) The
possibility that it may have been shaped to relieve the pinch of the
shoe.
(iv) The
balance of prejudice, i.e. the prejudice to the plaintiff if the
application is refused, and the
prejudice to the defendant if it is
granted. This is a wide field. It may include such factors as the
amount or importance of the
issue at stake; the fact that the
defendant's witnesses may already have dispersed; the question
whether the refusal might result
in a judgment of absolution, in
which event whether it might not be as broad as it is long to let the
plaintiff lead the evidence
rather than to put the parties to the
expense of proceedings de novo.
(v) The
stage which the particular litigation has reached. Where judgment has
been reserved after all evidence
has been led on both sides and, just
before judgment is delivered, the plaintiff asks for leave to lead
further evidence, it may
well be that he will have a harder row
to hoe, because of factors such as the increased possibility of
prejudice to the defendant,
the greater need for finality, and the
undesirability of throwing the whole case into the melting pot again,
and perhaps also the
convenience of the court, which is usually under
some pressure in its roster of cases. On the other hand, where a
plaintiff closes
his case and, before his opponents have taken
any steps, asks for leave to add some further evidence, the case is
then still in
medias res as it were.
(vi) The
healing balm of an appropriate order as to costs.
(vii) The
general need for finality in judicial proceedings. This factor
is usually cited against the
applicant for leave to lead further
evidence. However, depending on the circumstances, finality might be
sooner achieved by allowing
such evidence and getting on with the
case, than by granting absolution and opening the indeterminate way
to litigation de
novo in all its tedious amplitude.
(viii) The
appropriateness, or otherwise, in all the circumstances, of visiting
the remissness of the attorney
upon the head of his client.”
[2]
Form
of the further material
[20] When
reading the application to reopen, it is unclear whether Standard
Bank intends to place further
material before me by way of
supplementary affidavit or supplementary submissions in the form of
heads of argument.
[21] The
deponent to Standard Bank’s founding affidavit, who is Standard
Bank’s attorney of record,
states that Standard Bank seeks the
reopening of the application to compel delivery of further
particulars before me as it wishes
to place supplementary submissions
before me regarding “
pertinent and important developments
that occurred after the hearing of the compelling application and
which bear materially upon
the issues for determination by this Court
in the first application to compel
.”.
[22] Standard
Bank then proceeds to summarise the background facts leading to the
institution of its application
to reopen and in doing so refers to
the correspondence exchanged between itself and Ad Trade in an
attempt to reach an agreement
regarding the further material to be
placed before me. Copies of the correspondence relied on by Standard
Bank is attached to the
founding affidavit.
[23]
In referencing the correspondence exchanged between the parties, the
deponent to the founding affidavit,
states that “
I note that
this is an important issue which Standard Bank wishes to, and
requires an opportunity to, address in the
supplementary
affidavit
it seeks to file
.’.
[24] Throughout
the correspondence exchanged between the parties’ reference is
made by Standard Bank
to the need to place relevant submissions
before the court relating to the application to compel against The
Central Bank. Standard
Bank, in one of its letters, states that the
filing of further affidavits are unnecessary. This is contrary to its
assertion in
the founding affidavit that it is necessary to file a
supplementary affidavit.
[25] It
was only during argument, and in response to a question directed at
him regarding the form and manner
in which the new material was to be
placed before me, that counsel for Standard Bank confirmed that
Standard Bank sought leave
to file supplementary submissions in the
form of heads of argument. The purpose of which is to bring further
information arising
from the application to compel The Central Bank
to deliver further particulars to the attention of the court.
Nature
and scope of the supplementary submissions
[26] Standard
Bank argues that the supplementary submissions it seeks to place
before me are essential to
the proper adjudication of the application
to compel before me for the following reasons:
[26.1] It
will inform the proper interpretation and application of the
provisions of Rule 21 of the Uniform
Rules of Court to the
application before me, particularly in view of the fact that Standard
Bank is an inactive litigant who has
elected to abide by the decision
of the court in the main action.
[26.2] Ad
Trade’s request for further particulars was delivered to The
Central Bank prior to delivery
of The Central Bank’s discovery
affidavit. Ad Trade therefore could and should have launched an
application to compel the
delivery of further particulars against The
Central Bank instead of Standard Bank.
[26.3] The
fact that Ad Trade instituted an application to compel the delivery
of further particulars against
The Central Bank implies that the
information and documentation sought from Standard Bank is in fact
documentation and information
within the possession of The Central
Bank.
[26.4] The
Central Bank’s response to Ad Trade’s request for further
particulars, and its attitude
to whether the particulars sought by Ad
Trade is strictly necessary to enable Ad Trade to prepare for trial,
is relevant and material
to the application before me.
Request
for further particulars directed to The Central Bank
[27] In
developing its argument, Standard Bank relies on the delivery of a
request for further particulars
to The Central Bank by Ad Trade and
it tabulates 14 items which it contends overlap in these requests for
further particulars addressed
to it and The Central Bank
respectively.
[28] These
overlaps relate to,
inter alia
:
[28.1] The
purpose for which The Central Bank was opening the accounts.
[28.2] The
source and/or origin of the funds held in these accounts as well as
the nature of deposits into
these accounts.
[28.3] The
relationship between The Central Bank and its known depositors, who
are identified in the respective
notices, as well as their
particulars.
[28.4] Funds
received by The Central Bank from Phoenix Cit FZE and the
relationship between it and The Central
Bank.
[28.5] The
listed signatories to the accounts of The Central Bank of the
Republic of Guinea.
[28.6] Permission
from the SARB to open the accounts identified in the respective
notices.
[28.7] The
nature of documents the banks previously possessed in relation to the
accounts, and particulars
of what became of these documents.
[28.8] Documents
submitted to the SARB relating to the accounts and funds deposited
into or paid from the
accounts.
[28.9] Balance
of payments documents.
[28.10] The
names and details of Standard Bank employees who managed Standard
Bank’s relationship with
The Central Bank.
[28.11] The
account numbers of any accounts Guinea have with Standard Bank.
[28.12] Documentation
in relation to the signatories to the accounts of The Central Bank as
well as a list
of past signatories.
[29] Standard
Bank argues that the overlap is considerable and that under these
circumstances it would be
appropriate for Ad Trade to request and
compel delivery of these particulars from The Central Bank, a party
actively participating
in the main action.
[30] Ad
Trade’s request for further particulars addressed to Standard
Bank consists of 30 questions,
the majority of which are unrelated to
the request for further particulars addressed to The Central Bank.
The request for further
particulars addressed to The Central Bank
comprises no less than 58 questions, at least 12 of which have
sub-questions and most
of which are unrelated to the request for
further particulars addressed to Standard Bank.
[31] Standard
Bank’s argument based on the overlap in the requests for
further particulars addressed
to it and The Central Bank loses sight
of the fact that further particulars which do not overlap in the
requests directed to Standard
Bank and The Central Bank are still
sought from both Standard Bank and The Central Bank.
[32] The
request for further particulars addressed to The Central Bank was
delivered on or about 17 April
2023, well before the application to
compel against Standard Bank was argued before me on 16 and 17 May
2023.
[33] At
the time the application to compel was argued before me, this request
for further particulars fell
within the knowledge of Standard Bank
and an application by Ad Trade for an order compelling The Central
Bank to deliver the further
particulars sought fell within the
contemplation of Standard Bank.
[34] This
is clear from the arguments made before me by Standard Bank at the
hearing of the application to
compel. The arguments advanced by
Standard Bank and to which I refer are briefly summarised as follows:
[34.1] Standard
Bank has no case to answer or present at the trial of the main action
and can therefore not
be compelled to provide further particulars as
requested by Ad Trade.
[34.2] Ad
Trade has delivered a request for further particulars to The Central
Bank and in view thereof,
Ad Trade launched the application to compel
Standard Bank to deliver the further particulars requested
prematurely.
[34.3] The
request for further particulars was correctly delivered to The
Central Bank and Ad Trade ought
to allow the proceedings against The
Central Bank for the delivery of the further particulars sought to be
finalised.
[34.4] The
fact that the requests for further particulars addressed to Standard
Bank and The Central Bank
overlap, and that the particulars sought
from The Central Bank is far more extensive than the particulars
sought from Standard
Bank, is an indication that the particulars are
correctly sought from The Central Bank and that Ad Trade clearly has
other remedies
available to it other than compelling Standard Bank to
produce the further particulars sought by Ad Trade.
[35] As
I understand it, Standard Bank’s contention is that the request
for further particulars directed
to The Central Bank and the
application to compel the delivery of further particulars against The
Central Bank, as well as the
effects thereof on the application to
compel against it, is a new development which occurred after I had
heard argument in the
application to compel before me.
[36] For
the reasons appearing from paragraphs [29] to [35] above, I do not
agree.
The
application to compel further particulars against The Central Bank
[37] It
was further argued by Standard Bank that The Central Bank’s
response to and its attitude in
relation to Ad Trade’s requests
for further particulars is another new development in respect of
which it seeks to submit
supplementary submissions.
[38] According
to Standard Bank, The Central Bank’s response and attitude to
Ad Trade’s request
for further particulars is material to the
adjudication of the application to compel before me, particularly in
view of the novel
issue raised by Standard Bank in the application to
compel before me.
[39] This
novel issue being whether or not Standard Bank, a party who has
elected to abide by the decision
of the court in the main action, can
be compelled to deliver further particulars in terms of Rule 21 of
the Uniform Rules of Court.
(I deal with this argument hereinbelow.)
[40] Standard
Bank did not disclose The Central Bank’s response to Ad Trade’s
request for further
particulars, and simply argued that the views and
attitude of The Central Bank, an active litigant in the main action,
as to whether
the particulars sought by Ad Trade are strictly
necessary for trial, is material and relevant to the application to
compel before
me.
[41] As
stated above, I have access to The Central Bank’s response to
Ad Trade’s request for
further particulars. The Central Bank
responded to Ad Trade’s request for further particulars simply
by stating that ‘
These contentions are noted
.’ or:
“
The
plaintiff’s requests:
1. are
irrelevant to the disputed issues;
2. do
not seek particularity in relation to any averment made in the first
defendant’s plea;
3. concern
matters in respect of which the plaintiff bears the onus;
4. amount
to the putting of interrogatories;
5. are
not strictly necessary for the preparation for trial; and
6. constitute
and abuse of the process of court.”
[42] The
Central Bank has not provided any of the further particulars sought
by Ad Trade and has not stated
why it is of the view that the
particulars sought by Ad Trade are irrelevant to the disputed issues
or not strictly necessary for
the preparation of trial.
[43] Without
The Central Bank providing the basis for its reasoning, the attitude
of The Central Bank to
the particulars sought by Ad Trade cannot be
ascertained or determined with any degree of certainty. Any argument
that Standard
Bank wishes to advance in relation to The Central
Bank’s attitude to the further particulars sought by Ad Trade
will be nothing
other than conjecture and, in my view, cannot
appropriately impact on the application before me.
Discussion
[44] In
the proper exercise of my discretion, I am enjoined to consider the
nature and materiality of the
new matter sought to be placed before
me, and why this material was not placed before me timeously.
[45] I
am also obliged to consider any prejudice either of the parties may
suffer as a result of allowing
or refusing the introduction of such
new or further material.
[46] In
determining what would be fair to all concerned, the materiality,
relevance and effect of the new
material sought to be introduced as
well as the stage the litigation has reached when the application to
introduce such new material
is made, plays a significant role.
[47] The
application to reopen comes before me after conclusion of the
argument in the application to compel
before me and shortly before
judgment was handed down.
[48] In
its application and the annexures thereto, Standard Bank simply
states that the supplementary submissions
it seeks to place before me
are relevant and material and will support and strengthen its case.
[49] Standard
Bank fails to identify and describe the supplementary submissions it
seeks leave to place before
me, save for the submissions in respect
of the request for further particulars and the application to compel
against The Central
Bank, which I have specifically addressed under
separate headings hereinabove. These submissions relate to arguments
already advanced
before me, and it appears that Standard Bank seeks
to elaborate and expand on the arguments already advanced before me
in an attempt
to support and strengthen its case.
[50] Any
other supplementary submissions relating to the application to compel
launched against The Central
Bank were insufficiently identified by
Standard Bank in its application.
[51] In
the absence of Standard Bank identifying or outlining any other
supplementary submissions it seeks
to make in relation to the
application to compel launched against The Central Bank, I am unable
to determine, as is required, whether
such supplementary submissions
are in fact material and relevant to the application before me, and
to what degree.
[52] The
degree of materiality of the supplementary submissions directly
impacts the assessment of prejudice
to the parties which in turn
informs the question of fairness to the parties.
[53] The
application before me which Standard Bank seeks to reopen is an
interlocutory application to compel
the delivery for further
particulars which has already been argued before me over a period of
two days.
[54] Allowing
Standard Bank to place supplementary submission before me on aspects
already addressed before
me in argument, and which were sufficiently
ventilated, will simply have the effect of allowing the parties to
reargue the matter
before me. This is not justified under the
circumstances.
[55] For
these reasons I decline to reopen the hearing before me.
Application
to strike out and application for leave to file supplementary
affidavit
Application
to strike out
[56] Standard
Bank has applied for paragraphs 5 to 12 of Ad Trade’s replying
affidavit in the application
to compel further particulars to be
struck out on the grounds that these paragraphs raise new matter
alternatively make out a case
in reply.
[57] In
response to Standard Bank’s notice of application to strike
out, Ad Trade launched and application
for leave to file a
supplementary affidavit. Standard Bank opposes this application.
[58] Paragraph
5 of the replying affidavit refers to two authorised signatories to
The Central Bank’s
bank accounts with Standard Bank, this list
having been provided by Standard Bank in the process of discovery.
[59] In
the remaining paragraphs, paragraphs 6 to 12 of the replying
affidavit, Ad Trade raises the following:
[59.1] The
jailing and prosecution of the two authorised signatories, referred
to in paragraph 5 of the replying
affidavit, for alleged corrupt
activities;
[59.2] Standard
Bank’s refusal to answer questions in relation to these and
other signatories; and
[59.3] The
far-reaching obligations which Standard Bank, in its view, has to
ensure
the propriety of its clients and their transactions and the resultant
duty to respond to questions posed to Standard Bank
by creditors of
its clients.
[60] The
inclusion of the allegations in paragraphs 5 – 12 of Ad Trade’s
replying affidavit is
explained by Ad Trade in the supplementary
affidavit it seeks leave to file. It is also explained therein that
Ad Trade only became
aware of the jailing and prosecution of the
authorised signatories on 14 December 2022, after filing its founding
affidavit, and
shortly before the filing of its replying affidavit on
11 January 2022.
[61] Standard
Bank had the opportunity to respond to the allegations set out in Ad
Trade’s supplementary
affidavit and it did so, only to the
extent that it considered necessary.
[62] The
general rule is that an applicant must make out a case for the relief
it seeks in its founding affidavit.
[3]
This ensures that a respondent is informed of the case it is required
to meet and to allow a respondent to answer to the case against
it.
This in turn results in a proper ventilation of the disputed issues
and the resolution of such disputes in an orderly manner.
[4]
[63] A
court may, in the exercise of its discretion, which discretion is to
be exercised judicially, allow
new matter in a replying affidavit.
[5]
New matter will not be allowed when no case has made out in the
founding affidavit at all.
[64] As
appears from the commentary in Erasmus, a court, in exercising this
discretion, should have regard
to:
[64.1] whether
all the facts necessary to determine the new matter raised in the
replying affidavit were
placed before the court;
[64.2] whether
the determination of the new matter will prejudice the respondent in
a manner that could not
be put right by orders in respect of
postponement, costs, or allowing the respondent to file a further
affidavit addressing the
new matter raised in reply;
[64.3] whether
the new matter was known to the applicant when the application was
launched; and
[64.4] whether
the disallowance of the new matter will result in an unnecessary
waste of costs.
[6]
[65] In
its founding affidavit Ad Trade explains that the action between
itself and the various defendants
concerns the nature of the
relationship between Guinea and the funds held in the accounts of The
Central Bank, which accounts it
holds with Standard Bank.
[66] Ad
Trade states that Standard Bank, as an accountable financial
institution in terms of the Financial
Centre Intelligence Act 38 of
2001 (
FICA
), has a duty to know and understand its
client and the particulars of the various large transactions which
Standard Bank transacted
on behalf of the Central Bank, and to answer
questions in relation to its clients and these transactions, which
questions are posed
to it by a judgment creditor of its client.
[67] From
the timeline and explanation provided by Ad Trade, it is apparent
that Ad Trade became aware of
the jailing and prosecution of the
authorised signatories after filing its founding affidavit. This
information regarding the signatories
could therefore not have been
disclosed in the founding affidavit.
[68] Standard
Bank’s failure to respond to Ad Trade’s request for
further particulars in relation
to the authorised signatories and the
duties which rest on Standard Bank as an accountable financial
institution in terms of the
provisions of FICA, have been disclosed
and addressed by Ad Trade in the founding affidavit.
[69] Save
for the averments in relation to the jailing and prosecution of the
authorised signatories, the
content of paragraphs 5 to 12 of the
replying affidavit does not introduce new material. In these
paragraphs, Ad Trade has simply
expanded on its contentions in the
founding affidavit.
Application
to file supplementary affidavit
[70] In
so far as Ad Trade’s application to file a supplementary
affidavit is concerned, Ad Trade seeks
to place the bank statements
of the accounts held by The Central Bank, which were discovered by
Standard Bank, and to which reference
is made in the application to
compel, before the court.
[71] These
bank statements are not new to Standard Bank and the introduction
thereof is not prejudicial to
Standard Bank.
[72] Additionally,
Ad Trade seeks to inform the court of the sale of a property owned by
Guinea in partial
satisfaction of the debt owed to Ad Trade by
Guinea.
[73] Standard
Bank was afforded an opportunity to respond to the allegations
contained in Ad Trade’s
supplementary affidavit, which it did,
only to the extent that it considered necessary.
[74] Standard
Bank’s supplementary answering affidavit, filed in response to
Ad Trade’s supplementary
affidavit, contains no answer to the
allegations relating to the sale of a property owned by Guinea.
[75] Permitting
the filing of further affidavits falls within the discretion of this
court. Any prejudice
Standard Bank may have suffered has been allayed
by the fact that Standard Bank has had the opportunity to answer to
the allegations
set out in the supplementary affidavit, which
Standard Bank did.
[76] In
the absence of any prejudice to Standard Bank and in view of the
nature of the material sought to
be introduced by way of the
supplementary affidavit, I see no reason why leave to file the
supplementary affidavit should not be
granted.
Application
to compel further particulars
[77]
Ad
Trade seeks to compel Standard Bank to provide
an
adequate response to its request for trial particulars in terms of
the provisions of Rule 21 of the Uniform Rules.
[78]
The
relevant provisions of Rule 21 provide as follows:
“
(1)
Subject to the provisions of subrules (2) to (4) further particulars
shall not be requested.
(2)
After the close of pleadings any party may, not less than 20 days
before trial, deliver a notice requesting only such further
particulars as are strictly necessary to enable him or her to prepare
for trial. Such request shall be complied with within 10
days after
receipt thereof.
(3)
…
(4)
If the party requested to furnish any particulars as aforesaid fails
to deliver them timeously or sufficiently, the party requesting
the
same may apply to court for an order for their delivery or for the
dismissal of the action or the striking out of the defence,
whereupon
the court may make such order as to it seems meet.”
[79] The
rule allows any party to request such further particulars that are
strictly necessary to enable
it to prepare for trial. The purpose
being to prevent surprise at trial and to inform the requesting party
of the case it has to
prove at trial.
[7]
[80] In
determining what particulars fall within the scope of Rule 21, and
whether the particulars sought
are strictly necessary to enable a
party to prepare for trial, one would ordinarily look at the
pleadings.
[8]
[81] The
pleadings however do not always contain sufficient information to
determine whether or not a party
may be taken by surprise and what
the other party intends to prove. When this is the case, it is
permissible to go beyond the pleadings
and to look at matter forming
part of the record.
[9]
[82]
Ad
Trade’s action
is
for declaratory relief relating to ownership of and claims to the
funds held in the accounts of The Central Bank. Ad Trade seeks
that
it be declared that:
1.1 The
Central Bank holds the funds on behalf of Guinea; alternatively
1.2 Guinea
holds a claim to the funds; further alternatively
1.3 Guinea
is the beneficial owner of the funds; further alternatively
1.4 The
Central Bank owes a debt to Guinea subject to attachment by
the
plaintiff; further alternatively
1.5 The
separate legal personalities of the Central Bank and Guinea fall
to
be disregarded.”
[83] The
action therefore concerns the ownership of, and Guinea’s rights
to and its relationship to
the funds held in the bank accounts of The
Central Bank which accounts are held at Standard Bank.
[84]
The
requests for further particulars directed to Standard Bank relate to
the following:
[84.1]
The
purpose of The Central Bank opening its accounts and the legal and
compliance steps taken by Standard Bank in the process of
opening The
Central Bank’s accounts.
[84.2]
The
origin, source and/or nature of deposits into and payments from
The Central
Bank’s accounts.
[84.3]
The
relationship between The Central Bank and various identified entities
to who payments were made from The Central Bank’s
accounts and
who deposited funds into The Central Bank’s accounts.
[84.4]
Who
certain payments made from The Central Bank’s accounts were
intended for, these payments being identified in the request
for
further particulars.
[84.5]
Information
and account details of the entities listed in the request for further
particulars, these entities having received funds
from or having
deposited funds into the account of The Central Bank.
[84.6]
Why
the accounts were used as conduit for the disbursement of foreign
currency.
[84.7]
Legal
and compliance steps taken by Standard Bank in relation to a €200
million transaction as well as the reason for the deposit
into the
account of The Central Bank, the purpose of the funds and the
particulars of the transaction resulting in the deposit.
[84.8]
Whether
Standard Bank provides banking facilities to the signatories to the
Central Bank’s accounts and/or to Guinea.
[84.9]
Whether
SARB’s permission to open the accounts were requested, and if
so, documents in relation to the request.
[84.10]
The
nature of documents Standard Bank did not disclose and which it no
longer has in its possession in relation to The Central Bank
and/or
Guinea and/or the signatories and/or the transactions into and out of
the accounts.
[84.10]
Documents
submitted to SARB relating to transactions into and out of The
Central Bank’s accounts.
[84.11]
The
names of individual employees who manged the relationship between
Standard Bank and The Central Bank and the division of Standard
Bank
that handled the transactions listed on the bank statements provided.
[84.12]
The
period of time for which Standard Bank retains old records of its
clients.
[84.13]
The
submission of suspicious transaction reports.
[84.14]
A
list of past authorised signatories, documentation in relation to the
authorised signatories and whether Standard Bank considers
any of the
signatories Politically Exposes Persons.
[85] Standard
Bank responded to each of Ad Trade’s requests for further
particulars in one of the following
ways:
[85.1] The
information requested is no longer in its possession due to an
effluxion of time;
[85.2] The
particularity sought are irrelevant, alterantively not required for
the purposes of preparing
for trial, further alternatively in an
impermissible interrogatory;
[85.3] The
information requested is not in its possession;
[85.4] The
information in its possession has been discovered.
[86]
Standard
Bank opposes the relief sought by Ad Trade on the grounds that:
[86.1]
Where
it had answers to provide to Ad Trade it did so;
[86.2]
Where
it had no knowledge of the information requested, it stated so;
[86.3]
All
the information in its possession had been discovered; and
[86.4]
It
complied with the request of Ad Trade in so far as it is required to.
Any information or documentation not provided was not provided
as it
is either no longer in Standard Bank’s possession, due to an
effluxion of time, or Ad Trade is not entitled thereto
as the
information and documentation sought
are
irrelevant, alternatively not required for the purposes of preparing
for trial further alternatively not permissible interrogatories.
[87]
Before
me Standard Bank argued that:
[87.1]
Ad
Trade was not entitled to compel it to deliver further particulars
for trial as it is a non-partisan litigant who has indicated
that it
intends abiding by the decision of the court in the main action.
[87.2]
Its
position as a defendant who has not delivered a plea is akin to that
of a defendant who has filed a plea of bare denial.
[87.3]
The
particulars sought by Ad Trade are entirely irrelevant to Ad Trade’s
cause of action.
[88] Before
I turn to the question of relevance, and whether the particulars
sought by Ad Trade are strictly
necessary for trial, it is apposite
to consider Standard Bank’s arguments regarding its position as
defendant in the main
action, and whether the provisions of Rule 21
apply to it as a non-partisan litigant, who has not filed a plea.
Application
of Rule 21 to non-partisan litigants
[89] The
background to Ad Trade’s action evinces a dispute regarding the
ownership of money held by
The Central Bank in its accounts with
Standard Bank. The ownership of these funds is obscure.
[91] The
purpose of the Uniform Rules of Court is to facilitate litigation,
not to create obstructions.
[10]
[92] Whether
further particulars may be sought by one party from another, between
who there is no
lis
,
was considered in the matter of
Control
Instruments Finance (Pty) Ltd (In liquidation) v Mercantile Bank
Ltd.
[11]
Josman
J stated the following:
“
A
further alternative would be to consider whether the third defendant
might not be entitled to request particulars for trial from
the first
defendant notwithstanding the absence of any lis between
them. Rule 21(2) deals with the situation after the
close
of pleadings and provides that 'any party may . . . deliver a
notice requesting only such further particulars as are
strictly
necessary to enable him to prepare for trial' (emphasis added). The
Rule does not specify from whom the particulars may
be requested and
neither expressly sanctions nor forbids a request for particulars for
trial between two parties such as the first
and the third defendants
in this case. Considering the purpose of furnishing further
particulars and considering the spirit of
the Uniform Rules of Court
I can see no reason why the third defendant might not require the
first defendant to disclose the information.
Mr Suttner referred
me to the case of Geduld Lands Ltd v Uys and Others
1980
(3) SA 335
(T)
in
which the plaintiff had sued one defendant and that defendant had
joined certain third parties against whom it claimed an indemnity.
Such joinder took place in terms of Rule 13. Myburgh J held that this
did not create a lis between the plaintiff and
the third
parties and accordingly the plaintiff was not entitled to request
further particulars for the purposes of pleading from
the third
parties. In my opinion, this case takes the matter no further since
it was not dealing with a request for further particulars
for the
purposes of preparing for trial, which serves an entirely different
purpose from particulars for the purposes of pleading.
”
[93] The
opinion and interpretation of Rule 21(2) expressed by Josman J in the
matter of
Control
Instruments Finance (Pty) Ltd (In liquidation)
were endorsed and applied by Willis J in the matter of
Pangbourne
Properties (Pty) Ltd v Van der Merwe du Toit & others.
[12]
[94]
I
have carefully considered the judgments of Josman J and Willis J,
being mindful of the submissions made by Standard Bank in respect
thereof, and that set out above. I consider myself bound by these
judgments, and I see no reason to deviate therefrom.
[95]
The
provisions of Rule 21 entitle any party to proceedings to direct a
request for further particulars to any other party to those
proceedings. The provisions of Rule 21 therefore find application to
Standard Bank who views itself as a non-partisan litigant.
Is
Standard Bank’s position akin to that of a defendant who has
deliver a bare denial plea
?
[96] In
principle, a party cannot be required to give particulars in relation
to a mere denial, in other
words, where a party has denied an
allegation, such a party cannot be required to give particulars of
any aspect it has placed
in issue by the denial.
[13]
[97]
It
may however be that when a party denies an averment, such a denial
may imply a positive averment. In such a case, further particulars
may be sought in relation to thereto.
[98]
Standard
Bank argues that its decision not to file a plea places it in a
position akin to that of a defendant who has filed a bare
denial
plea. It further argues that Ad Trade requests further particulars
from it in relation to allegations made by other parties.
This, in my
view and having found that Rule 21 applies to all parties to
litigation, is permitted when the party from whom the
particulars are
sought is able to provide such particulars, and provided that such
particulars are strictly necessary for trial
preparation.
[99]
A
denial is the express contradiction of an allegation of fact in the
opponent’s pleading. Standard Bank has not delivered
a plea and
can therefore not be said to have placed any of the averments made in
the particulars of claim in issue. In circumstances
where a denial is
not clear, a court may hold that certain facts were not put in issue.
[100]
In
circumstances where Standard Bank has not placed any of Ad Trade’s
averments in issue, Standard Bank cannot argue that
is excused from
giving further particulars in respect of those averments. This is so
especially in circumstances where Standard
Bank has adhered to Ad
Trade’s request to deliver a discovery affidavit and has
responded to Ad Trade’s request for
further particulars, albeit
insufficiently according to Ad Trade.
[101]
Standard
Bank, in responding to Ad Trade’s request for further
particulars, did not deny that Ad Trade was entitled to direct
a
request for further particulars to it in view of its election not to
file a plea and that it therefore made no allegations in
respect of
which Ad Trade could direct such a request for further particulars to
it. This was only raised by Standard Bank in its
answering affidavit
in the application to compel it to deliver further particulars.
[102]
In
considering Standard Bank’s discovery affidavit and Standard
Bank’s involvement in the main action, it disclosed
transaction
reports, certificates of balance and a list of authorised signatories
to Ad Trade.
[103]
Standard
Bank, although it has to a limited extent participated in the main
action, is not an adversary of Ad Trade in the main
action. It has
willingly participated in the process of discovery and delivered a
response to Ad Trade’s request for further
particulars.
[104]
As
stated above, the provisions of Rule 21 are available to any party to
proceedings and does not expressly prohibit a party, such
as Ad
Trade, from requesting further particulars from a party such as
Standard Bank, who has not filed a plea but has elected to
participate in the proceedings.
[105]
The
purpose of Rule 21 is to prevent surprise, and for the parties to be
informed of the case the other parties are going to advance
and prove
at trial.
[106]
If
Standard Bank, as a party to the proceedings, can provide the further
particulars sought by Ad Trade, and these particulars are
strictly
necessary for trial preparation, I see no reason why Ad Trade cannot
request further particulars for trial from Standard
Bank, even when
it has not filed a plea.
Are
the particulars sought strictly necessary for trial preparation?
[107]
Having
found that Ad Trade can request further particulars from Standard
Bank and that Standard Bank can, in terms of the provisions
of Rule
21, be compelled to deliver such particulars, if the particulars
sought are strictly necessary for trial, the only questions
remaining
are whether the particulars sought are strictly necessary for trial
and whether, in my discretion, Standard Bank ought
to be compelled to
deliver the requested particulars to Ad Trade.
[108]
Ad
Trade pleads the following in paragraph 10 of its particulars of
claim:
“
10.
[The
Central Bank] holds funds on behalf of [Guinea] in the accounts
alternatively
[Guinea] holds a claim to the funds in the accounts further
alternatively
[Guinea} is the beneficial owner of the funds in the accounts
further
alternatively [the Central Bank] owes a debt to [Guinea] subject to
attachment
by the plaintiff furth alternatively:
10.
1
[Guinea]
and [the Central Bank] use the accounts in order to defeat
the
claims of creditors of [Guinea];
10.
2
Such
conduct constitutes an abuse of the separate legal personalities
of
the first and second defendants; and
10.3
The
court may disregard the separate legal personalities of [Guinea]
and
[The Central Bank].”
[109]
The
Central Bank denies these averments and in general terms pleads that
it is an independent authority with its own legal standing
and what
its functions are.
[110]
From
the pleadings, it is evident that Ad Trade’s claim turns on the
ownership of, and Guinea’s rights to and its relationship
with,
the funds held in the accounts of The Central Bank.
[111]
Knowing
where the funds in the accounts of The Central Bank originates from,
what purpose the funds are held in the accounts for,
for what purpose
money flows into and out of the accounts, and who controls these
funds on behalf of The Central Bank is pivotal
to the determination
of Ad Trade’s claim and the issues in dispute in the main
action.
[112]
From
The Central Bank’s bank statements, which Standard Bank
disclosed to Ad Trade, Ad Trade was able to ascertain that large
amounts of money were deposited into and disbursed from The Central
Bank’s accounts.
[113]
Pursuant
hereto, Ad Trade directed a request for further particulars to
Standard Bank. Standard Bank responded to this request and
did not
provide the further particulars for the reasons already set out in
paragraphs 86 and 87 hereinabove.
[114]
In
it answering affidavit, Standard Bank elaborates hereon, stating that
it owes a duty of confidentiality to its clients and where
it is no
longer in possession of the requested documents, it said so, where it
did not know the particulars requested, it stated
so, and it
discovered all available information in its possession.
[115]
Standard
Bank expressed the view that the particulars sought would result in
the disclosure of evidence and, in view of the fact
that Ad Trade is
the plaintiff and therefore bears the onus in relation to its claim,
it is not entitled to delivery of the particulars
sought.
[116]
Standard
Bank further asserts in it answering affidavit that any duty to know
and understand its clients, and any duty imposed upon
it in terms of
FICA, is a duty it owes to the State and not Ad Trade.
[117]
A
party may be ordered to provide further particulars if such
particulars are necessary to enable the requester to know the nature
of the evidence it will have to lead at the trial.
[14]
[118] A
request for further particulars which may involve the disclosure of
evidence does not disentitle
the requester from delivery of such
particulars in the event that the requester will be embarrassed and
prejudiced in the preparation
for trial if the further particulars
sought are not provided.
[15]
[119] Standard
Bank has denied being in possession of many of the particulars
requested by Ad Trade. It has
stated this in its response to Ad
Trade’s request for further particulars and in its affidavit
opposing the application to
compel it to deliver the further
particulars requested.
[120] South
Africa is a member of the Financial Action Task Force (
FATF
)
and as such, the South African Financial Intelligence Centre (
FIC
)
regularly publishes FATF policies.
[121] FATF
has compiled a set of international best practices in preventing
money laundering,
[16]
which
includes heightened scrutiny of accounts managed by politically
exposed persons and in higher risk countries.
[122] FATF
also recommends customer due diligence to ensure knowledge of
beneficial ownership of funds and
the nature of the banking
relationship, ongoing scrutiny of transactions taking place during
the banking relationship, ongoing
record-keeping, and processes to
ensure adequate, accurate and up-to-date information on the
beneficial ownership and control of
legal persons.
[123] FICA
prescribes conduct that constitutes money laundering and makes
provision for various control measures
which have the objective of
enabling the suppression, detection, and investigation of money
laundering.
[124] These
measures are based on three basic principles of money laundering
detection and investigation,
namely that:
[124.1] Intermediaries
in the financial system must know with whom they are doing business;
[124.2] Record
must be kept of transactions through the financial system; and
[124.3] Transactions
which could possibly involve money laundering must be reported to the
investigating
authorities.
[125] Guidance
provided by the FIC is authoritative and all accountable institutions
must apply guidance
issued by the FIC or demonstrate an equivalent
level of compliance with the relevant obligations under FICA. The
authorised signatories
to The Central Bank’s accounts, as
appears on the list of authorised signatories provided by Standard
Bank, are politically
exposed persons and Standard Bank is obliged to
comply with the abovementioned FATF policies.
[126] Standard
Bank, who by its own admission is as an accountable institution, is,
in terms of FICA obliged:
[126.1] In
terms of section 21C(a)(ii) thereof to monitor transactions
throughout the course of its relationship
with the respondent,
including the background and purpose of all complex and unusual large
transactions which have no lawful purpose;
[126.2] In
terms of section 21(1)(a) and (b) thereof to establish and verify the
identity of the client (and
specifically if the client is acting on
behalf of another person, establish and verify the identity of that
other person); and
[126.3] To
report electronic transfers of funds into and out of South Africa
above a certain threshold and
size. It is not disputed that numerous
transfers of funds in excess of such threshold took place on the
accounts of The Central
Bank.
[127]
In
terms of section 22 of FICA, Standard Bank is required to keep a
record of its client’s identity and the identity of persons
on
behalf of whom its client acts. It is also obliged to keep records
of:
[127.1] The
nature of transactions;
[17]
[127.2] The
parties to transactions;
[18]
[127.3] The
name of the person who obtained information about the client’s
identity and on whose behalf
the client is acting;
[19]
[127.4] Identity-verification
documents.
[20]
[128]
In
terms of Section 23 of FICA, Standard Bank is obliged to retain
account opening documents for at least five years after the
termination of its relationship with The Central Bank. The
relationship between Standard Bank and The Central Bank has not been
terminated.
[129] Section
31 of FICA requires Standard Bank to report foreign exchange
transactions above a particular
threshold, together with the
prescribed particulars of the transactions.
[130] All
the transactions in the accounts of The Central Bank are foreign
exchange transactions above the
prescribed threshold, and accordingly
Standard Bank, being FICA compliant, would have reports regarding all
of the transactions
it transacted on The Central Bank’s
accounts.
[131] Despite
these obligations imposed on Standard Bank in terms of FICA, Standard
Bank, who by its own
admission is FICA compliant, states under oath
that it discovered and provided Ad Trade with all the documents and
information
in its possession and/or that the particulars sought by
Ad Trade are no longer in its possession due to an effluxion of time.
[132] Standard
Bank argues that its obligations under FICA do not create rights in
the hands of Ad Trade.
Whether or not FICA creates such rights is
irrelevant for purposes of a request for further particulars in terms
of Rule 21 of
the Uniform Rules of Court. This is so because Ad
Trade, as a party to pending litigation in which Standard Bank is a
defendant,
is entitled to request further particulars from Standard
Bank, and it becomes entitled to delivery of the further particulars,
when it is established that the particulars requested is strictly
necessary for trial preparation.
[133] Standard
Bank only discovered the following documents:
[133.1] A
1-page Bankers Almanac & Due Diligence Repository results for the
Banque Centrale de la République
de Guinée;
[133.2] An
11-page transaction report for account number 0[…] in the name
of Banque Centrale de la
République de Guinée for the
period 1 November 2013 to 28 March 2022;
[133.3] A
2-page transaction report for account number 0[...] in the name of
Banque Centrale de la République
de Guinée for the
period 7 November 2012 to 20 January 2017;
[133.4] A
4-page transaction report for account number 0[...] in the name of
Banque Centrale de la République
de Guinée for the
period 1 November 2013 to 28 March 2022;
[133.5] A
certificate of balance for accounts 0[...] and 0[...] as at 31 March
2022; and
[133.6] An
undated list of authorised signatories for the Banque Centrale de la
République de Guinée.
[134] Standard
Bank submitted in its answering affidavit, under oath, that it is
FICA compliant. This submission
was repeated before me in argument.
[135] In
view of the obligations imposed on Standard Bank in terms of FICA,
and Standard Bank’s compliance
therewith, Standard Bank cannot
genuinely assert that the particulars sought by Ad Trade are not in
its possession.
[136] Generally,
statements in discovery affidavits of documents are conclusive with
regard to the documents
that are in the possession of the party
deposing to such an affidavit.
[137] Before
a court will go behind statements contained in affidavits regarding
documents of which production
is sought, the allegations must be
shown to be wrong to a reasonable degree of certainty. In the matter
of
Makate
v Vodacom (Pty) Ltd
[21]
,
Spilg J reaffirmed this principle:
“
[16]
The contents of a discovery affidavit are regarded prima facie to be
conclusive with regard to the existence of documents and
accordingly
a court will be reluctant to go behind the affidavit.
See
Swissborough
Diamond Mines (Pty) Ltd and Others v Government of the Republic of
South Africa and Others
1999
(2) SA 279 (T)
at
317E – G. The courts require a sufficient degree of
certainty that the documents exist (see Continental Ore
Construction v Highveld Steel & Vanadium Corporation Ltd
1971
(4) SA 589
(W); and Federal Wine and Brandy Co Ltd v
Kantor
1958
(4) SA 735 (E)
at
749A – B ('a degree of conviction approaching
practical certainty'). This is hardly surprising. The
consequence
of a court order being de facto impossible to implement
exposes the offending party to contempt proceedings for not procuring
something
he did not have in the first place, and exposes the order
to ridicule. Accordingly it is necessary to be circumspect before
directing
production in the face of a denial of a document's
existence.
[17]
Nonetheless it is also recognised that a party cannot rely on his
denial under oath of a document's existence if, for instance,
mala
fides can be shown (Swissborough at 321E), or the discovery
affidavit itself, a document referred to in discovery, the
pleadings
or an admission evidences the document's existence to the
requisite degree (Federal Wine at 749G – H).
Similarly,
statutory or professional obligations, such as tax legislation or
basic accounting requirements, regarding the retention
of the records
may also suffice if no acceptable explanation is provided for their
non-production.”
[138] Ad
Trade has established, with sufficient certainty, that Standard Bank
is, at the very least, in possession
of:
[138.1] particulars
regarding the identity of its client and documents verifying the
identity of its client
and the identity of the party on whose behalf
the client is acting.
[138.2] reports
and particulars of all electronic funds into and out of South Africa
above the threshold
published by FIC;
[138.3] records
in respect of (1) the nature of the transactions on the accounts of
The Central Bank; (2)
the particulars of the parties to these
transactions; and (3) the names of the person who obtained
information about the client’s
identity and about the identity
of the party on whose behalf the client is acting;
[138.4] account
opening documents in relation to The Central Bank’s accounts;
[138.5] reports
in respect of all foreign exchange transactions, which in the case of
The Central Bank will
include all its transactions, as well as
particulars of these transactions.
[139] These
documents, despite Standard Bank’s claims, are not protected
from disclosure as a result
of alleged confidentiality.
[140] It
remains to be determined
whether
the particulars sought by Ad Trade are strictly necessary for trial
preparation. If the particularity sought is required
by Ad Trade to
properly prepare for trial, its production must be ordered.
[141]
As
established from the pleadings, and as already stated above, Ad
Trade’s claim turns on the ownership of, and Guinea’s
rights to and its relationship with, the funds held in the accounts
of The Central Bank.
[142]
Who
the funds in The Central Bank’s accounts were received from, to
who the funds were disbursed, what the purpose of these
funds are,
and the identities of the signatories and Standard Bank employees
directly dealing with The Central Bank’s accounts,
are
particulars that are relevant to the disputes in the main action, and
which are strictly necessary for Ad Trade trial preparation.
[143]
The
particulars sought in paragraphs 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 13,
15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28 and
30, including
subparagraphs, of Ad Trade’s request for further particulars
will disclose information about the relationship
between Guinea and
the funds in The Central Bank’s accounts.
[144]
Should
these particulars be provided to Ad Trade now, it will be in a
position to determine the source and purpose of these funds
and
transactions, and it will be in a position to determine which
witnesses to call in relation thereto and what evidence it has
to
secure for trial.
[145]
Having
to elicit this information at the trial will inevitably result in a
postponement of the trial as Ad Trade will be unsure
of which
witnesses to call or subpoena and will only be provided with
particulars during the course of the trial which it and the
other
parties would not yet have had the opportunity to peruse, consider
and prepare on. The particulars sought, should it be provided
now,
will in all likelihood also limit the duration of the trial.
[146]
There
is little doubt that Ad Trade is entitled to the information
requested in paragraphs
2,
3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 13, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 22, 23, 24,
25, 26, 27, 28 and 30, including subparagraphs,
of its request for further particulars
in order to enable it to prepare for, and to prevent surprise, at
trial.
[147]
I
grant the following order:
1.
The
application to reopen is dismissed, with costs.
2.
The
application to strike out is dismissed, with costs.
3.
Ad
Trade Belgium SPRL Private Ltd is granted leave to file its
supplementary affidavit in the application to compel delivery of
further particulars. Ad Trade Belgium SPRL Private Ltd and Standard
Bank are each to pay its own costs.
4.
Standard
Bank is ordered to furnish Ad Trade Belgium SPRL Private Ltd with an
answer to paragraphs
2,
3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 13, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 22, 23, 24,
25, 26, 27, 28 and 30, including subparagraphs,
of its request for further particulars
dated 20 June 2022 within 15 (fifteen) days of this order.
5.
Standard
Bank is to pay the costs of the application to compel the delivery of
further particulars, including the costs of two counsel.
Z
MARX DU PLESSIS
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Pretoria
Date
of Hearing:
16 and 17 May 2023 and 7 December
2023
Judgment
delivered: 5. April
2024
Attorneys
for applicant:
Primerio
Law Incorporated
Counsel
for applicant:
F
Joubert SC
Z
Joubert
Attorneys
for respondent:
Edward
Nathan Sonnenbergs Incorporated
Counsel
for respondent:
P
Ngcongo
[1]
Mkwanazi
v Van der Merwe and another
1970 (1) SA 609
(A) at p 616B
[2]
Mkwanazi
v Van der Merwe and another
1970 (1) SA 609
(A) at p616G –
617D
[3]
Titty’s
Bar and Bottle Store (Pty) Ltd v ABC Garage (Pty) Ltd
1974 (4) SA
362
(T) at 368H–369B; Global Environmental Trust v Tendele
Coal Mining (Pty) Ltd (Centre for Environmental Rights and others
as
amici curiae)
[2021] 2 All SA 1
(SCA) at paragraph [96]
[4]
Triomf
Kunsmis (Edms) Bpk v AE & CI Bpk en Andere 10984 (2) SA 261
[5]
Finishing
Touch 163 (Pty) Ltd v BHP Billiton Energy Coal South Africa Ltd
2013
(2) SA 204
(SCA) at 212B–C; Mostert v FirstRand Bank Ltd t/a
RMB Private Bank
2018 (4) SA 443
(SCA) at 448D–F
[6]
RS
22, 2023, D1 Rule 6-29
[7]
Ruslyn
Mining & Plant Hire (Pty) Ltd v Alexkor Ltd
[2012] 1 All SA 317
(SCA) at para 18
[8]
Hardy
v Hardy
1961 (1) SA 643
(W) at 646; Guardrisk Insurance Company Ltd
v IFS Risk Consultants CC (unreported, GP case no 11799/2021 dated 7
November 2022)
at paragraph [12]
[9]
Schmidt
Plant Hire (Pty) Ltd v Pedrelli
1990 (1) SA 398
(D) at 402 –
403
[10]
Control
Instruments Finance (Pty) Ltd (In liquidation) v Mercantile Bank
Ltd: In re Mercantile Bank Ltd v M M Laubscher Rustasie
(Pty) Ltd
and other
2001 (3) SA 645
(C) at 649F
[11]
2001
(3) SA 645 (C)
[12]
Unreported
Judgment (29968/08) [2012] ZAGPJHC 253 (17 October 2012)
[13]
PJ
v HJ (unreported, FB case number A55/2022 dated 10 November 2022 –
decision by the full bench) at par [16]
[14]
Smith
v Clark
1935 NPD 459
; Hardy v Hardy
1961 (1) SA 643
(W) at p 646
[15]
Annandale
v Baits
1956 (3) SA 549
(W) at p 551
[16]
International
Standards on Combating Money Laundering and the Financing of
Terrorism and Proliferation, FATF, accessed at
https://www.fatfgafi.org/content/dam/recommandations/pdf/FATF%20Recommendations%202012.pdf.coredownload.inline.pdf
[17]
S
22(2)(f)
[18]
S
22(1)(f)
[19]
S
22(1)(h)
[20]
S
22(1)(i)
[21]
2014
(1) SA 191
(GSJ)
sino noindex
make_database footer start
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