Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 502South Africa
Du Bruyn v South African Fraud Prevention Service NPC and Another (027429/2024) [2024] ZAGPPHC 502 (27 May 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
31 May 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Du Bruyn v South African Fraud Prevention Service NPC and Another (027429/2024) [2024] ZAGPPHC 502 (27 May 2024)
Du Bruyn v South African Fraud Prevention Service NPC and Another (027429/2024) [2024] ZAGPPHC 502 (27 May 2024)
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sino date 27 May 2024
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
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SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
number: 027429/2024
Date
of hearing: 29 April 2024
Date
delivered: 31 May 2024
(1)
REPORTABLE:
YES
/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHERS JUDGES:
YES
/NO
(3)
REVISED
DATE:
31/5/24
SIGNATURE:
In
the matter of:
MANIE
THEUNIS DU
BRUYN
Applicant
and
SOUTH
AFRICAN FRAUD PREVENTION SERVICE NPC
First Respondent
NEDBANK
LTD
Second Respondent
JUDGMENT
SWANEPOEL
J:
[1]
This application was brought urgently on 25 March 2024, but was
referred to the normal
opposed roll for determination. The first
respondent is a non-profit company which is registered with the
National Credit Regulator
in terms of
section 43
of the
National
Credit Act, 34 of 2005
. It maintains a fraud data base, and it
partners with financial institutions with a view to providing
information to the finance
industry relating to fraud, financial
crime and identity theft. The first respondent's partners post
information relating to confirmed
instances of fraud to the data
base, which other financial institutions can then access when
considering prospective clients.
[2]
The second respondent is a commercial bank which placed an adverse
report regarding
the applicant on the first respondent's data base on
3 July 2017, under listing SH0211662. It did so pursuant to two home
loan
applications that the applicant submitted on 28 February 2017
and 13 May 2017 respectively, which the second respondent believed
contained false information. The applicant alleges that he became
aware of the listing six years later. The listing records the
applicant's name and identity number, the fact that the listing had
been placed by second respondent, and it said the following:
"The applicant
submitted fraudulent salary advices in support of two homeloan
applications.
(03) False employer
details- (04) Forged or incorrect payslip."
[3]
When the applicant became aware of the listing, he filed a dispute
with the first
respondent on 19 July 2023. The second respondent
provided applicant with reasons for the listing. It stated that the
applicant
had submitted a home loan application on 28 February 2017
which he subsequently withdrew that had contained false information
relating
to the applicant's employment and his residential address. A
second application was submitted on 13 May 2017 the veracity of which
the second respondent equally challenged. The second respondent also
alleged that the applicant had submitted fabricated supporting
documents, including salary advices, in support of the home loan
applications.
[4]
On 17 August 2023 the dispute was dismissed on the grounds that the
first respondent
believed that credible evidence had been received
which justified the listing.
[5]
Subsequently, the applicant sought legal advice, and on 17 November
2023 the applicant's
attorney wrote to both respondents. The attorney
alleged that the was listing was incorrect inasmuch as it stated that
the applicant
had provided false employment details and forged or
incorrect pay slips, and she demanded the removal of the listing. The
letter
attempted to address the specific complaints of the second
respondent, which were the following:
[5.1] That the applicant
had stated on the applications that he resided at 3[...] O[...]
Street, Waterkloof, and had been residing
at that address for 10
years, and that his pay slips reflected that as his residential
address;
[5.2] That there were
discrepancies relating to the applicant's employment period with his
then employer;
[5.3] The employment code
on the salary advices differed from the employment code on the
application form;
[5.4] The employer's
contact details on the salary advice were that of the applicant;
[5.5] The company with
which applicant was employed did not operate from the address
provided on the applications.
[6]
The applicant's attorney submitted a letter to the first respondent,
written by the
applicant's employer, one Ms Gomes, who attempted to
explain the discrepancies relating to the period of employment, the
discrepancy
relating to the employer's address, as well as the reason
why the employer's contact details were also those of the applicant.
It also explained the reasons why the employer's business address was
no longer in use. The details of the explanation are not relevant
to
this judgment.
[7]
What is relevant to this judgment is that it is common cause that the
applicant alleged
in the applications that at the time of submitting
the applications he resided at 3[...] O[...] Street Waterkloof and
that he had
been at that address for ten years. That was not true, as
the applicant had already left that address in 2012, and had not
resided
there in the four years before he submitted the applications.
Relating to this discrepancy the applicant's attorney explained as
follows:
"It is our
instruction that our client resided at 3[...] O[...] Avenue,
Waterkloof for several years, whereafter he vacated
the property
during 2012. Our client, out of habit and due to an innocent
oversight, detailed this address when he commenced employment
with
NAS and as a result the same address was innocently detailed on the
application forms."
[8]
The respondents did not accept the applicant's explanation, and
refused to remove
the listing. The applicant then launched this
application urgently, seeking the following relief:
[8.1] An order that the
first respondent's retention of the listing on its database under no.
SH00211662 is unlawful, invalid and
incorrect;
[8.2] An order that the
listing by the second respondent is unlawful, invalid and incorrect;
[8.3] An order that the
listing be removed from the first respondent's database;
[8.4] Costs against the
second respondent on the attorney/client scale, and in the event of
opposition by first respondent, that
the respondents shall pay the
costs jointly and severally.
[9]
The first respondent abides the decision of the court. The second
respondent opposed
the urgent application on the merits, but it also
took the point that the application was not urgent. The urgent court
obviously
agreed with the second respondent, which resulted in the
matter being postponed to the opposed roll.
[10]
I have purposely not delved into the allegations regarding the
applicant's term of employment,
his employer's contact details, nor
his employer's business address. Those discrepancies have been
explained by the applicant's
employer, and, although the explanations
are somewhat suspicious, I have no basis upon which to reject them.
[11]
However, what is common cause between the
parties is that the applicant provided a false residential
address on
both applications. The explanation given by the applicant, that he
had made a bona fide error out of force of habit
when he not only
provided his old address to his employer during 2016, but also to
second respondent in two separate home loan
applications thereafter,
is preposterous and is rejected. The applicant had not resided at
that address for some four years. He
surely knew where he was
residing in 2016 and 2017.
[12]
The first respondent's Code of Conduct refers to two types of fraud
that may be listed on the
data base; firstly, 'convicted fraud', in
cases where the perpetrator has been convicted of fraud by a court,
and, secondly, 'confirmed
fraud' which is where an
"SAFPS
Channel Partner client has fully investigated the incident and
confirmed that a fraud was indeed perpetrated, with retention
of all
the evidence that will suffice to open a case of fraud at the SAPS if
so desired by the Channel Partner Client."
[13]
The second respondent alleges that the listing was
justified as the applicant had committed a 'confirmed
fraud'. The
applicant says that a mere misrepresentation does not amount to
fraud. The applicant says that the second respondent
must show that
he had the intent to mislead the second respondent, and that the
misrepresentation was made in bad faith.
[14]
Fraud Is the unlawful and intentional making of a misrepresentation
to another, which prejudices,
or has the potential to prejudice, the
other person.
[15]
There is no question that the applicant misrepresented his address. I
reject the contention that the representation was made
out of
'habit'. Such an explanation is simply not tenable. There is no doubt
that should a lender be provided with misleading information
regarding an aspect as crucial as the residential address of the
potential borrower, the lender is at least potentially at risk
of
prejudice. Such conduct is unlawful.
[16]
A court cannot see into a perpetrator's mind. It is not often that a
perpetrator expresses his intentions when he commits an
offence, and
thus the presence or absence of intent often has to be deducted from
the circumstances. In this case it is hard to
understand what
innocent explanation there may be for the applicant's use of an
address which he had left four years before. The
explanation given by
the applicant's attorney is a work of fiction, and its absurdity
supports the view that there is really no
innocent explanation. In
these circumstances I find that the applicant intentionally tried to
mislead the second respondent.
[17]
Consequently, I find that the listing was correct inasmuch as it
stated that the pay slips contained
incorrect information,
Consequently, the application must be dismissed.
[18]
The costs of 25 March 2024 were reserved for determination by this
Court. I see no reason why
those costs should not follow the result.
[19]
In the circumstances the application must fail, and I make the
following order:
[19.1] The application
is dismissed with costs.
SWANEPOEL
J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION PRETORIA
COUNSEL FOR THE
APPLICANT:
Adv. F Joubert
ATTORNEY FOR THE
APPLICANT:
Carmia
Greyvenstein Attorneys
COUNSEL
FOR THE SECOND
RESPONDENT:
Adv N Ndlovu
ATTORNEY
FOR SECOND
RESPONDENT:
Cliffe Dekker
Hofmeyer Inc
DATE HEARD:
29 April 2024
DATE OF
JUDGMENT:
27 May 2024
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