Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 390South Africa
Wessels v Capitec Bank Limited and Others (2024/030523) [2024] ZAGPPHC 390 (22 April 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
22 April 2024
Headnotes
a savings account with Capitec Bank with account number 1[...] in which there is a balance of R102 879.11. Capitec had placed a precautionary security hold on the account.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Wessels v Capitec Bank Limited and Others (2024/030523) [2024] ZAGPPHC 390 (22 April 2024)
Wessels v Capitec Bank Limited and Others (2024/030523) [2024] ZAGPPHC 390 (22 April 2024)
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sino date 22 April 2024
SAFLII
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REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO:
2024/030523
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/NO
(3)
REVISED.
SIGNATURE
DATE: 22/4/2024
In
the matter between:
DIRKIE
CORNELIA
WESSELS
Applicant
and
CAPITEC
BANK LIMITED
First Respondent
ABSA
BANK
LIMITED
Second Respondent
ROWEN
BRENT
PETRUS
Third Respondent
JUDGMENT
LABUSCHAGNE
AJ
[1]
The applicant is a 67-year-old pensioner who was scammed
by
fraudsters who obtained control over her bank account and paid an
amount of R960 960.19 in 23 different transactions on
the same
day into bank accounts of the third respondent at Capitec Bank and
Absa Bank.
[2]
The two banks placed a precautionary hold on the accounts
of the
third respondent, but advised the applicant that they could not do so
indefinitely. Unless they were provided with a court
order extending
the hold, they would release the hold on the accounts, thereby
enabling the third respondent to continue transacting
on his bank
accounts.
[3]
In Part A proceedings the applicant seeks urgent relief
restraining
the two banks from releasing the current hold on the third
respondent’s bank accounts pending finalisation of
the
determination of relief sought in Part B. The relief sought in
Part B is repayment of the total of the deposits by the
third
respondent (R934 115) in an action envisaged to be instituted, as
part of the Part A proceedings, within ten days of the
granting of
the court order. The applicant also seeks costs against any
respondent opposing the relief in Part A.
[4]
Only the third respondent has opposed the relief.
He is a part
time cryptocurrency trader on the Binance platform.
THE
FACTS
[5]
During 2023 the applicant received an inheritance from the proceeds
of a sale of farmland
which she invested in a six-month fixed account
with Capitec Bank.
[6]
On 2 February 2024 she received an SMS from an unknown person,
stating:
“
Payment notification: Transaction
debited R11 700 on Takealot Ref-T[...]. Not you or report
call on 0[...].”
[7]
She was alarmed by the message as she had not ordered anything from
Takealot.
She called the number in the SMS and the call was
answered by a certain “Tessa Smit” speaking with an
Indian accent.
She advised that she was working with Capitec’s
Fraud Department and that her investment account was hacked and that
they
suspect that it was an inside job.
[8]
The applicant was instructed to go to a Capitec branch and to arrange
for a
transfer of her funds from her fixed account to a savings
account. The applicant was assured by the fraudster that she
was
being helped to secure her funds from people who were trying to
transact on her account and who were attempting to misappropriate
her
invested funds.
[9]
She was instructed to go to a Capitec branch for a transfer into her
savings
account. She was assured that the costs of moving the
funds between the accounts would be reimbursed by Capitec Bank.
[10]
The applicant was requested to advise “Tessa Smit” via
WhatsApp once the transaction
was done in order for her to commence
reversals of the transactions on her account.
[11]
The applicant went to the Centurion branch of Capitec and transferred
an amount of R1 026
590.23 into her savings account. She then
advised “Tessa” that it had been done. The latter
explained the
process of rectifying and reversing the fraud. In
order to do so the applicant was requested to permit the installation
of
an app called “AnyDesk” on her cell phone, which was
then installed. From there the fraudsters took control of
her
phone and she was unable to perform any functions on the device.
Soon afterwards she saw an amount of R3 500.00
being deposited
into an Absa account in the name of Tarryn Hill. The applicant
asked “Tessa” who this person
was, and she said it is the
account the hacker had paid her money into. She contended that
she was busy reversing the transaction
in order that it be returned
to her account.
[12]
Then the name of the third respondent appeared on her screen and also
an Absa account.
After this, more transactions were done to the
third respondent, as his name kept appearing on the notifications on
her screen.
The applicant was advised by the fraudster that
these transactions were happening on her account, but she was busy
with the “Nigerian
Fraud Department”. The telephone
conversation lasted a few hours, and once she hung up, a notification
came up on the
applicant’s phone which showed that she only had
R35.00 left in her account. It was at that stage that she
realised
that she had been scammed. She rushed to the Capitec
branch to obtain assistance, and her savings account was immediately
frozen, and the matter reported to the Bank’s Forensic
Investigations Department. The applicant was also advised to
lay a criminal charge at Lyttleton Police Station, which she did
under CAS40/02/2024, making an affidavit to the Police.
[13]
The transactions that took place on her account on 2 February 2024
demonstrate 23
transfers to the third respondent in the following
batches:
13.1
R44 000.00;
13.2
R26 500.00;
13.3
R41 000.00;
13.4
R43 500.00;
13.5
R26 500.00;
13.6
R44 600.00;
13.7
R44 700.00;
13.8
R44 800.00;
13.9
R44 900.00;
13.10
R32 700.00;
13.11
R44 992.00;
13.12
R44 987.00;
13.13
R40 501.00;
13.14
R44 717.00;
13.15
R44 919.00;
13.16
R44 999.00;
13.17
R44 888.00;
13.18
R44 777.00;
13.19
R44 666.00;
13.20
R44 555.00;
13.21
R44 925.00;
13.22
R43 989.00;
13.23
R18 000.00.
[14]
Absa Bank was informed by Capitec that the proceeds of fraudulent
crime were transferred
into accounts of their clients. The
applicant was informed that the third respondent holds a bank account
with Absa, being
account number 4[...].
[15]
Every one of the withdrawals from the applicant’s Capitec
account were transferred
directly into the third respondent’s
Capitec account. This is confirmed by an affidavit of Carolina
Petronelle Botha,
an employee of Capitec Bank made in terms of
section 236 of the Criminal Procedure Act. In the affidavit she
states that
she examined the entries in the accounting records and
documents of the bank and that it correctly sets out the attached
copies
of the third respondent’s banks statements. They
correlate with the withdrawals from the applicant’s Capitec
bank account.
[16]
The third respondent’s bank statements reflect that the opening
balance on that day
was in the region of R3 000.00. The
transfers from the applicant’s bank account then poured in.
On the day
in question, he transferred R26 500.00 and a further
R29 500.00 from his Capitec account to his Absa account with the
reference “Rowan Absa”. These transfers were made
from the third respondent’s Capitec account into his
Absa
account immediately after the funds of the applicant were transferred
into his Capitec account.
[17]
On 5 March 2024 the applicant was advised by Jannie Coetsee, a
Manager at Capitec Forensic
Investigation Department that they had
managed to trace and recover certain of the amounts and transactions
debited against her
Capitec savings account. The recovered
amounts were deposited into her savings account on 28 and 29 February
2024.
The total amount so recovered was R467 125.70.
[18]
The applicant was further advised that the third respondent held a
savings account with
Capitec Bank with account number 1[...] in which
there is a balance of R102 879.11. Capitec had placed a
precautionary
security hold on the account.
[19]
The applicant was however advised by Mr Coetsee that, unless a court
order was provided
within a few days, the hold on the bank accounts
would be released.
[20]
The applicant’s attempts to have the matter heard urgently
faltered twice.
In the first case it was struck from the roll
when her counsel failed to appear on 12 March 2024. That
application was withdrawn,
and the current application was launched.
However, the application was set down on a Wednesday, 3 April
2024, in the
urgent court when it should have been set down for
Tuesday, 2 April 2024. The court in the urgent judge declined
to hear
the matter due to the improper enrolment. The enrolment
was caused by counsel for the applicant having prior engagements on
2
April 2024 in Cape Town.
[21]
This is therefore the third occasion on which the matter serves
before
court. The respondent contends that the applicant is
abusing the court process and should be mulcted in special costs.
[22]
The applicant intends instituting action proceedings against the
third
respondent. In her founding papers she contends that she
intends instituting a
condictio furtiva
. The applicant
contends that the third respondent received the funds
mala
fide.
[23]
The third respondent is insisting that the banks release the hold,
contending
that the proceeds are his money, which he intends
utilising as he deems fit.
[24]
I am satisfied that the application is urgent and that, unless the
urgent
court were approached, the applicant would not obtain
substantial redress in due course.
[25]
As the interdict which the applicant seeks is anti-dissipatory, it is
a requirement to establish that the third respondent has the
intention of dissipating the assets with the intention of defeating
the applicant’s claim.
[26]
In
Poolman v Cordier and Others
[2017] ZANCHC 49
(at par [17])
Erasmus AJ said:
“
[17]
A Mareva injunction is a species of an interim interdict compelling a
respondent/defendant to
refrain from dealing freely with his assets
to which the applicant can lay no claim. The purpose thereof is
to prevent the
intended defendant, who can be shown to have assets
and who is about to defeat the plaintiff’s claim by dissipating
assets,
from doing so. To be successful, the applicant must
show that the respondent is wasting or secreting assets with the
intention
of defeating the claims of creditors."
[27]
In
Polly Peck International Plc v Nadir and Others (No. 2)
[1992] EWCA Civ 3
;
[1992]
4 All E.R. 769
(CA) 785 G – H the Court of Appeal said:
“
It is not the
purpose of a Mareva injunction to prevent a defendant acting as he
would have acted in the absence of a claim against
him.”
(See also
Evoke Reality (Pty) Ltd v Jacobus and Others
2023
(JDR) 3221 (GJ), para [34] to [35]).
[28]
It is therefore necessary to enquiry into whether the applicant has
established
mala fides
in the aforesaid sense.
[29]
The third respondent has admitted all the transactions are from the
transferring
of funds from the applicant’s account into the
accounts of the third respondent. It is common cause that the
applicant
was a victim of fraud and/or theft.
[30]
The third respondent is a cryptocurrency trader (albeit part time).
[31]
The third respondent contends that there was nothing sinister in the
large volume of cryptocurrency purchased. He contends that he
is an unsuspecting
bona fide
third party.
[32]
The applicant contends that the third respondent is not as
bona
fide
as he professes to be.
[33]
The applicant contends that the third respondent failed to verify the
identity of his client and failed to verify the source of funding.
These obligations, so argues the applicant, are imposed
by law.
[34]
Furthermore, the pattern of transactions emanating from the same
client
in a very short period of time under the threshold of
R45 000.00 should have raised red flags, thereby prompting the
third
respondent to make enquiries.
[35]
The third respondent disputes that the applicant can establish that
he
intends dissipating assets with the purpose of frustrating her
claim. The applicant, for example, does not allege that the
third respondent is the scamster. He contends that she has a
claim against the scamsters and not against him.
[36]
The third respondent contends that the applicant has willingly (and
blindly
so) allowed and facilitated vast sums of money to be paid
from her bank account to third parties and communicated with
scamsters
to release the funds. He contends that she should
have known that she was being scammed, as she admitted in retrospect.
[37]
The third respondent contends that, unbeknown to him, the scamsters
utilised
the applicant’s stolen funds to purchase
cryptocurrency from the third respondent. Once purchased, the
cryptocurrency
was transferred by the third respondent to the
“designated wallet”, i.e. the account held by scamsters
(but unbeknown
to the third respondent). The third respondent
therefore contends that he sold his cryptocurrency as part of a
legitimate
business activity, transferring value in receipt for the
purchase price.
[38]
The applicant fails to allege and substantiate that the third
respondent
is dealing with his assets with the intention of defeating
her claim.
[39]
The third respondent contends that the bank accounts in question are
his daily transactional accounts. He runs his part time
business through those accounts. His salary is paid from the
Capitec account number 1[...] as are his living expenses. He
pays from his Capitec account into his Woolworths credit card,
from
which he pays his accounts. He contends that he will be unable
to do so if the hold on the accounts is not uplifted
and he is not
enabled to access the funds to pay for ordinary living expenses,
including food and the like.
[40]
The respondent contends that, as a result of
commixtio
, the
applicant is unable to obtain an order preserving “
her
funds”
.
[41]
The respondent then set out his activities as a cryptocurrency
trader.
He has traded with more than 268 parties and has
facilitated more than 682 trades. He has sold cryptocurrency on
498 occasions
and in 184 occasions he has purchased cryptocurrency.
[42]
The respondent trades via a company known as Binance, which is an
international
company that operates the largest cryptocurrency
exchange platform in the world. There are more than 350
different cryptocurrencies
available for trading purposes. It
provides a platform for users to buy, sell and trade a variety of
cryptocurrencies.
[43]
The third respondent’s Binance nickname is “Pierty”.
He primarily trades on Binance through the buying and selling of
Tether Dollars. Tether is an asset backed cryptocurrency
stablecoin. Tether are digital tokens that represent a claim on
the underlying reserve of a fiat currency – US Dollar.
[44]
The respondent buys cryptocurrency and advertises it for sale in an
advertisement
that he posts on Binance’s P2P trading platform
or exchange (“Binance P2P”).
[45]
45.1
If a purchaser were interested in the advertised transaction, the
purchaser
would click on the advertisement and place an order.
The Tether Dollars are tradable and are transferred to the purchaser
via the platform.
45.2
As soon as a purchaser agrees to place an order, the currency they
intend to
purchase is held in Trust or security by Binance.
Binance acts as an intermediary and the buyer has 15 minutes to make
payment
for the specific purchase into the third respondent’s
bank account.
45.3
Should the buyer make payment within the 15 minutes, the buyer
returns to the
trading platform and marks the order as paid.
The respondent in turn logs into his bank account to confirm that the
money
is reflected there, that it matches the amount in Binance and
that the reference number for the payment is the same for the bank
and Binance payments.
45.4
The sale is completed when the third respondent goes to Binance to
confirm
that he has received the correct deposit. Once the
process has been completed, Binance releases the cryptocurrency that
it
holds in Trust or security to the buyer’s designated
cryptocurrency wallet, i.e. the buyer receives the cryptocurrency
that
it purchased from the third respondent, and he receives the
funds in turn.
[46]
The third respondent trusted Binance to verify the identity of the
purchaser.
The respondent contends that all the requirements in
terms of FICA were complied with by the very nature of registering
and doing
business on Binance. He states: “
It is
one of the reasons that I trade with Binance as it assures that all
the FICA requirements are met as all users of Binance
identities are
verified and copies of their IDs taken.”
[47]
The evidence establishes that the scamsters put the applicant through
all the steps required to register her identity on Binance without
her knowing that she was doing so. This included a photograph
taken
with movement of the head.
[48]
The facts of this matter indicate that the Binance platform assists
in
identifying persons who are being defrauded in money laundering
schemes but does not identify the fraudsters who are transacting
on
the Binance platform on behalf of such victims.
[49]
The third respondent’s acceptance that Binance had complied
with
all the FICA requirements loses sight thereof that the Binance
platform can itself be utilised by fraudsters to register their
victims as clients, whilst the fraudsters transact anonymously on the
Binance platform on their accounts.
CRYPTOCURRENCY
TRADERS AND FICA
[50]
The Financial Intelligence Centre Act defines “accountable
institution”
as a person referred to in Schedule 1. Item
22 of the Schedule 1 refers to cryptocurrency traders and states the
following:
“
A person who
carries on the business of one or more of the following activities or
operations for or on behalf of a client:
(a)
exchange of crypto asset for a fiat currency or vice versa;
(b)
exchanging one form of crypto asset for another;
(c)
conducting a transaction that transfers a crypto asset from
one crypt asset address or account to another;
(d)
Safeguarding or administration of a crypt asset or an
instrument enabling control over a crypto asset; and
(e)
Participation in and provision of financial services related
to an issuer’s offer or sale of a crypto asset,
where ‘crypto
asset’ means a digital representation of perceived value that
can be traded or transferred electronically
within a community of
users of the internet who consider it as a medium of exchange, unit
of account or store of value and use
it for payment or investment
purposes, but does not include a digital representation of a fiat
currency or a security as defined
in the
Financial Markets Act,
2012
.”
[51]
The obligations imposed on an accountable institution in terms of
FICA
include the obligation to develop, document, maintain and
implement a programme for anti-money laundering
(section 42(1)
of the
FICA). The Risk Management and Compliance Programme (RMCP) must
enable the accountable institution to identify, assess,
monitor,
mitigate and manage the risk that the provision by the accountable
institution of new and existing products or services
may involve or
facilitate money laundering activities
(section 43(2)(a)
of the
FICA).
[52]
The aforesaid RMCP must provide for the manner in which the
Institution
determines if a person is a prospective client, in the
process of establishing a business or entering into a single
transaction
with the institution- or is a client who has established
a business relationship or entered into a single transaction
(section
42(2)(b)).
[53]
More in point,
section 42(2)(d)
requires such RMCP to provide for the
manner in which, and the processes by which the establishment and
verification of the identity
of persons, whom the accountable
institution must identify in terms of
Part 1
of the FICA
Chapter, is performed in the institution.
[54]
Part 1
is a reference to the due diligence provisions in FICA, which
provide
inter alia
for the identification of clients
(section
21)
, the duty to keep record pertaining to a client or prospective
client
(section 22
and
section 22A)
and keeping of records for the
prescribed five-year period from date of termination of the business
relationship
(section 23(a)).
[55]
55.1
When an accountable institution engages with a prospective client to
enter
into a single transaction or to establish a business
relationship, the accountable institution must establish and verify
the identity
of the client.
55.2
If the client is acting on behalf of another person, the accountable
institution
must establish and verify the identity of that other
person and verify the client’s authority to establish the
business relationship
on behalf of that other person
(section
21(1)(a)
to (c)).
[56]
An accountable institution must report transactions to the Financial
Intelligence Centre with a client if, in terms of the transaction, an
amount of cash in excess of the prescribed amount (R49 999.00)
is received by the accountable institution from the client, or from a
person on behalf of the client, or from a person on whose
behalf the
client is acting
(section 28(4)
, read with Regulation 22B of the
Money Laundering and Terrorist Financing Control Regulations GNR1595
in GG24176 of 20 December
2002).
[57]
The duty to report transactions is not limited to transactions in
excess
of the threshold. There is also a duty in terms of FICA
to report suspicious or unusual activities (sec 29).
[58]
The third respondent received an order to purchase cryptocurrency for
R33 000.00 on 2 February 2024 from a person reflected on the
Binance platform as being the applicant. This was the first
time such an order was received. After this first transaction,
the “applicant” continued to purchase large volumes
of
currency. The third respondent says that there was nothing
sinister in this large volume, because he had reduced the price
of
the cryptocurrency that he had advertised. The “applicant”
requested the third respondent to restock his currency
to facilitate
the purchasers. Due to the volume being purchased, the
applicant reached the cap of R100 000.00 from and
to external
banks. The applicant then requested the third respondent to use
his Capitec Bank account, i.e. a different bank
account which he then
did.
[59]
Twenty-three transactions later, the orders and payments via the
Binance
platform totalled R934 115.00
[60]
Throughout this process the third respondent was unquestioning.
The fact that such a multitude of transactions came through under the
limit of R50 000.00 was in itself a red flag which obligated
the
third respondent to report the transactions to FICA as being
suspicious. His failure to verify the identity of his true
client in respect of the trades is the reason why these transactions
proceeded at all.
[61]
The third respondent as cryptocurrency trader cannot delegate his
obligations
to identify his client as required by FICA to Binance.
That platform cannot verify that the registered client is in fact the
person transacting on the Binance platform.
[62]
The third respondent is ostensibly washing hands of his obligations
in
terms of FICA and, in fact, blames the applicant for being
scammed.
[63]
A cryptocurrency trader in the position of the third respondent
should
foresee the risk of money laundering on a platform like
Binance and for that reason verify the identity of his clients.
The
risk of harm is there for all to see. He is ostensibly
indifferent to the consequences of his failure to comply with his
statutory duties to the public who trade on the platform with him as
cryptocurrency trader. Such indifference is lamentable.
[64]
Despite the aforesaid, the mere presence of
mala fides
in
receiving the funds by virtue of such indifference and in breach of
statutory duties, is not enough to establish the risk that
the third
respondent intends dissipating assets with the view to frustrating
the claim of the applicant.
[65]
In the absence of an allegation to this effect and evidence in
support
thereof, the applicant can therefore not establish a
prima
facie
right for the interdict sought.
[66]
In the light of the aforesaid finding, it is not necessary to
traverse
the remainder of the requirements for an interim interdict.
[67]
A trader in the position of the third respondent has duties to the
public
in terms of FICA to prevent money laundering. In an
appropriate case, such a trader may be held liable in delict.
It
is not necessary for me to make any pronouncements in this regard
in this matter.
[68]
Despite the application failing by virtue of the aforesaid, the third
respondent has clearly failed the applicant. His failure to
verify her identity and his indifference to her loss in these
circumstances is the reason why I make the cost order below:
1.
The application is dismissed.
2.
No order as to costs.
LABUSCHAGNE
AJ
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
Appearances
For
the applicant
Lily
Rautenbach
pta@lilyrautenbach.com
Instructed
by
Lily
Rautenbach Attorneys
Adv
G Kasselman
Circle
Chambers
For
the third respondent
Mr
M Schrueder
shaheid@schrueder.co.za
Schrueder
Incorporate Attorneys
c/o
Hurter Spies Attorneys
Adv
N Terblanche
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