Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 594South Africa
Seal A Deal CC t/a Makhafola Khaflind Transport and Another v Attorney Fidelity Fund Board and Another (30326/2018) [2024] ZAGPPHC 594 (10 June 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
10 June 2024
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
>>
2024
>>
[2024] ZAGPPHC 594
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Seal A Deal CC t/a Makhafola Khaflind Transport and Another v Attorney Fidelity Fund Board and Another (30326/2018) [2024] ZAGPPHC 594 (10 June 2024)
Seal A Deal CC t/a Makhafola Khaflind Transport and Another v Attorney Fidelity Fund Board and Another (30326/2018) [2024] ZAGPPHC 594 (10 June 2024)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPPHC/Data/2024_594.html
sino date 10 June 2024
IN THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETONIA
1. REPORTABLE: No
2. OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO
3. REVISED: YES
10
June 2024
CASE
NO :
30326/2018
In the matter between:
SEAL
A DEAL CC t/a MAKHAFOLA KHAFLINS TRANSPORT
1
st
Applicant
TAU
DANIEL
MAKHAFOLA
2
nd
Applicant
AND
ATTORNEY
FIDELITY FUND BOARD
1
st
Respondent
LEGAL
PRACTICE
COUNCIL
2
nd
Respondent
This judgment is
handed down electronically by circulation to the parties’
representatives by email, publication on the CaseLines
System and
release to SAFLII. The date for hand down is 10 June 2024.
JUDGMENT
ERASMUS AJ
INTRODUCTION
1.
At first glance of the matter, it seems as
if the matter turns on a narrow issue of whether the first and/or
second Respondents
are liable for the amount claimed by the first and
second Applicants.
2.
During March 2021 the first and second
Applicants approached the Court for relief in terms of which they, in
summary, are seeking
an order that: -
2.1
The first and second Respondents are
ordered to make payment in the amount of R1 126 401.27;
2.2
Interest on the said amount at the rate of
11.27% from 30 September 1999 to date of payment; and
2.3
That the first and second Respondents be
ordered to pay the costs of this application on the scale as between
attorney and own client.
3.
The claim by the Applicants pertains to the
alleged entrustment of monies which the Applicants allege where
entrusted and paid into
the trust account of Snijman and Mullen
Attorneys over the span of three payments during 1999. Attorney
Martin Louis Barnard (“
Barnard”)
was the sole practitioner of the firm at the time in question. The
monies were allegedly kept in a trust bearing account for the
purposes of a sale agreement. The sale agreement did not materialise.
They are now reclaiming the amount that was allegedly entrusted
to
Barnard.
4.
The
claim in this case therefore arose prior to the commencement of the
Legal Practice Act
[i]
(“
the
Legal Practice Act
”).
5.
The
first and second Applicants indicated that the matter should be
decided under the provisions of the Attorneys Act
[ii]
(“
the
Attorneys Act
”),
read together with the provisions of section 39 (2) of the
Constitution, 1996 (“
the
Constitution
”).
The Attorney’s Act has been repealed by the Legal Practice Act,
which came into operation on 1 November 2018.
6.
The Legal Practice Act does not have
retroactive effect, and claims against the Legal Practitioner’s
Fidelity Fund (“
the LPFF
”)
arising before 1 November 2018, are to be determined in terms of the
Attorneys Act. This is not a contentious issue.
7.
Therefore, since the claim by the first and
second Applicants arose prior to the commencement of the Legal
Practice Act, the claim
is to be dealt with substantively in terms of
the provisions of the Attorneys Act. This, again, is not disputed by
the first and/or
second Respondents.
8.
Both the Attorney Fidelity Fund Board (the
first Respondent) and the South African Legal Practice Council (the
second Respondent)
opposed the claim. The first and second
Respondents dispute the factual and legal premises underpinning the
relief sought by the
first and second Applicants. I will later herein
deal with the basis of opposition by the respective Respondents.
9.
This is in a nutshell the case before me.
As stated, it seems like a crisp issue.
10.
There are, however, several point
in
limine
arguments raised by the first
and/or second Respondents that first need to be addressed. In
consideration of these issues, it is
clear that the questions before
me are not crisp. I intend to deal with these points
in
limine
first.
ISSUES TO BE
DETERMINED
11.
The first question that needs consideration
and determination is the nature and form in which this application is
brought as. The
second Respondent, relying on the case number, this
seems to be an interim application.
12.
The second point
in
limine
that needs consideration is the
juristic personality of the first Applicant. Does the fist Applicant
still exist and can it proceed
with the claim.
13.
The third point
in
limine
that needs to be determined,
which argument is closely knitted to the second point
in
limine
is the question of the first and
second Applicants
locus standi
.
14.
The fourth point
in
limine
that needs determination is the
claim by the first Respondent that the claim by the first and second
Applicants prescribed.
15.
The fifth aspect that needs attention, it
needs to be determined whether the Applicant has established all the
requirements of section
26 (a) of the Attorneys Act.
FACTUAL MATRIX ON
WHICH THE FIRST AND SECOND APPLICANTS APPROACH THE COURT
16.
Attorney Martin Louis Barnard (“
Barnard”)
practised as a single attorney under
the name and style of Snijman and Mullen Attorneys. This firm was
situated in Vereeniging.
17.
According to the Applicants, an amount of
R1 000.00 was paid into the trust account of Snijman and Mullen
Attorneys on 22 June
1999. In an attempt to proof that the payment
was indeed made, a receipt dated 22 June 1999 was attached to the
founding affidavit
(“
the 22 June
1999 receipt”
). The details on
the 22 June 1999 receipt, in summary, are as follows: The receipt
number of the 22 June 1999 receipt is 037016.
An amount of R1 000.00
was received from Makhafola Kaflins Transport in re “
Makhafola
Khaflins A3 Seal A Deal CC”.
18.
The Applicants further stated that on 23
June 1999 a further amount of R500 000.00 was paid into the
trust account of Snijman
and Mullen Attorneys. The Applicants
attached a further receipt (“
the
23 June 1999 receipt
”) and the 23
June 1999 receipt (Receipt Number 037062) reflects that monies were
received from FNB VNG in re “
FNB
A3 Seal A Deal CC”.
19.
The instruction to the attorney was that
the money should be invested in terms of Rule 78 of the Attorneys
Act.
20.
On 31 July 1999 a statement was issued, and
the total invested amount was R908 476.67, with the balance
brought forward of
R501 288.72. Reliance is placed on a NBS
Statement dated 31 July 1999 (“
the
31 July 1999 statement”
) in order
to proof that the amount was indeed paid to Snijman and Mullen
Attorneys. On the proper consideration of the 31 July
1999 statement
it is clear that the Account Number reflected on this statement is
9001662324. The statement reflects “
Mnr
K M Makhafola KM – Rule 78 c/o HELEEN VAN BILJON”
as the client. On further consideration of the 31 July 1999
statement, it was clear that the balance brought forward was an
amount
of R501 288.72 and on 31 July 1999 a deposit was made by
Snijman & Smullen in the amount of R400 000.00. The Call
Interest is reflected as R7 187.95 and the closing balance was
an amount of R908 476.67.
21.
The first and second Applicants in their
founding affidavit then stated that a further deposit in the amount
of R400 000.00
was made on 15 September 1999. In substantiation
of this allegation, reliance is placed on a receipt of 15 September
1999 (“
the 15 September 1999
receipt
”). On consideration of
the receipt, it is indicated that the amount of R400 000.00 were
received from FNB VNG (Receipt
Number 040423) in re “
FNB
A3 Seal a Deal CC
”.
22.
In substantiation of the allegation of the
total amount that was allegedly entrusted to Snijman and Mullen
Attorneys by 30 September
1999 by the Applicants, reliance is placed
on a statement dated 30 September 1999 (“
the
30 September 1999 statement”)
.
The total amount that is reflected on the statement is an amount of
R1 126 401.27. This again is a NBS statement. On
the 30
September 1999 statement the account number is reflected as 4[…]and
the account is in the name of Snijman and Mullen
Attorneys. The date
of the investment is further reflected as 28 September 1999.
23.
The first and second Applicants indicate
that an amount of R80 000.00 was withdrawn from this account as
per the handwritten
note of 19 November 1999. This note is indeed
reflected in the statement of 30 September 1999. No further evidence
is provided
as to the purpose of this withdrawal.
24.
It is alleged by the first and second
Applicants that these amounts were entrusted to Snijman and Mullen
Attorneys for purposes
of purchasing an immovable property that was
rented by the Applicants at the time (1999). As it is already stated
above, it is
alleged that the attorney, Barnard, was instructed to
invest the whole amount in terms of Rule 78 of the Attorneys Act. The
first
and second Applicants failed to attach a copy of the lease
agreement and the sale agreement to the founding papers. No evidence
is placed before me regarding these two contracts save for what I
have already stated.
25.
Barnard passed away on 2 September 2006.
The first and second Applicants indicated that the passing of Barnard
was on a date prior
to the immovable property being purchased.
26.
On 27 September 2006 (“
the
27 September 2006 court order”)
the Court appointed Johan van Staden (“
Van
Staden”
or “
the
curator bonis”)
as the curator
bonis
for
Barnard’s practice and trust banking account. The curator
bonis
executed his duties in terms of the 27 September 2006 Court order.
27.
Several claims were received by the curator
bonis
against Barnard’s trust banking account and the amount
available in trust was not enough to satisfy the trust creditor’s
claims. In this process, the curator
bonis
established that at the time of Barnard’s death a substantial
trust deficit existed in his bookkeeping.
28.
At the time, the curator
bonis
did not receive a claim from the first and/or second Applicants.
29.
As a result of the obvious trust deficit in
Barnard’s trust banking account, and on 15 May 2013, the amount
that was available
in the trust account, the amount of R1 104 902.53,
was paid to the LPFF.
30.
According to the Applicants they were never
contacted by the curator
bonis
.
It was left to the attorney of the Applicants to contact the first
and second Respondents. On 14 January 2013 a letter was send
to the
Law Society of Northern Provinces indicating that an amount of
R900 000.00 was invested in terms of Rule 78 of the
Rules of the
Law Society and an enquiry was made if the money is still in trust.
31.
Subsequent to the aforementioned enquiry,
and on 25 January 2013, the Law Society of Northern Provinces, and
under the hand of Mrs
E Veldsman, informed the attorneys of the
Applicants that a curator
bonis
was
appointed. They were also advised that a claim need to be submitted
against the Attorneys Fidelity Fund. The process was set
out in the
correspondence and proof of the payment was requested.
32.
The second Applicant proceeded to take the
necessary steps to claim the amount from the Attorneys Fidelity Fund.
The affidavit that
was provided in substantiation of the claim is
attached to the founding affidavit. The annexures to this affidavit,
however, is
omitted from the application.
33.
This application for the payment was faxed
to the first Respondent on 1 February 2013.
34.
On 21 February 2013 it was communicated to
the attorneys for the Applicants that the claim is rejected. The
basis for the rejection
is recorded as follows in the correspondence
dated 8 February 2013: “
Kindly be
advised that your client’s claim cannot be sustained by the
Fund as it is excluded by virtue of the provisions of
Section
47(1)(g) of the Attorneys Act 53 of 1979.”
35.
On 27 February 2013 the Law Society of
Northern Provinces also informed the attorney for the Applicants as
follows: “
We could not find record
of a Section 78(2A) account held for your client, and will suggest
that you consider your clients remedies
herein.”
36.
Various further correspondence was
exchanged between the parties. For the purposes of this claim it is
not necessary that I deal
with the contents of these letters in this
judgment. It does not really take the matter any further and does not
assist the Applicants
in proving their alleged claim against the
Respondents.
FIRST POINT
IN
LIMINE -
INTERLOCUTORY APPLICATION BEFORE COURT
37.
The first point
in
limine
raised by the second Applicant
is that the application seems to be as an application that is brought
at an intermediate stage,
setting or giving directions with regard to
some preliminary or procedural question that has arisen in the main
dispute between
the parties.
38.
This point does not really take the matter
any further and it does not assist the parties in resolving the
dispute that exist between
them. If the application is determined on
this point
in limine
,
the Applicants may approach the Court on the same papers only with a
new case number. The matter will therefore only be dragged
out.
39.
The rule of law rests on the principle of
finality. This point will not bring any finality to the litigation.
40.
In order to rather bring finality in the
litigation in this Court, I will entertain the application on the
other points
in limine
and merits. These aspects will bring finality to the matter in this
Court. With this I do not find that the point was incorrectly
brought. It will only delay the finalisation of the application.
SECOND POINT
IN
LIMINE
– THE JURISTIC PERSONALITY OF THE FIRST APPLICANT
41.
The first point taken by the first
Respondent is that the first Applicant lacks juristic personality in
light of the fact that it
is liquidated. It therefore follows that
the first Applicant cannot bring this application.
42.
The founding affidavit is silent in the
status or any further detail of the first Applicant.
43.
In its answering affidavit, the second
Respondent raises the question of the juristic personality of the
first Applicant. The first
Respondent states that:
43.1
According to the records of the Company and
Intellectual Property Commission (“CIPC”), no closed
corporation with the
name Seal a Deal exists;
43.2
CIPC have a record of a similar closed
corporation with the name Seal A Deal Seven CC;
43.3
Seal a Deal Seven CC is, according to the
records of CIPC, a closed corporation in liquidation.
44.
The first Respondent also emphasised this
point in its opposing affidavit.
45.
On closer inspection of the CIPC search
attached to the Answering Affidavit of the second Respondent, and
with reference to Seal
A Deal Seven CC: -
45.1
This closed corporation was registered on 7
May 1999;
45.2
The second Applicant became a member of
Seal A Deal Seven CC on or about 15 July 2002;
45.3
Seal A Deal Seven CC is placed in Voluntary
Liquidation on 21 January 2011.
46.
It is only once the Respondents placed
before the Court the necessary evidence that the first Applicant
(even though some dispute
exist about the correct name of the entity)
is in liquidation that the Applicants deal with this aspect. The
aspect of the liquidation
is something, in my view, the second
Applicant had to address in the founding affidavit.
47.
I have to add that the explanation in the
Replying Affidavit is far from satisfactory as to the exact
circumstances for the voluntary
liquidation and the process that was
followed subsequent to the voluntary liquidation.
48.
The importance of this aspect is in light
of the fact that liquidation is a process in which the company is
brought to an end. Also,
the assets and property of the company are
redistributed to the creditors and owners. The purpose of liquidation
is to ensure that
all the company’s affairs have been dealt
with and all its assets realised. When this has been done, the
liquidator will
apply to have the company removed from the
registered. This means that it ceases to exist.
49.
What is troublesome is the fact that no
evidence is placed before me regarding the process of liquidation.
The best evidence that
was placed before me is the fact that no
liquidator has been appointed.
50.
The fact that the process was voluntary and
the fact that no liquidator has been appointed does not mean that the
Close Corporation
retains its juristic personality.
51.
I agree with this point raised by the
Respondents. This brings and end to the matter for the first
Applicant. The only issue is
the issue of costs with which I will
deal herein later.
THIRD POINT
IN
LIMINE - APPLICANTS BEFORE THE COURT: THE LACK OF
LOCUS STANDI
52.
The further point
in
limine
raised by the first and second
Respondents is that of
locus standi
of the first and second Applicants.
53.
I have already dealt with the status of the
first Applicant. It ceased to exist. The question arises who can act
on behalf of the
first Applicant. The argument goes much wider than
the mere signing of a resolution confirming that the second Applicant
can proceed
with the matter. The Closed Corporation does not fall in
the hands of the members any longer.
54.
The argument by the second Applicant that
he can sign affidavit for his own personal claim is also misplaced in
as far as it relates
to his response to the point
in
limine
raised. The point raised is not
the authority to sign an affidavit, but the
locus
standi
of the Applicants. The authority
to sign an affidavit is something that stands to be challenged with
Rule 7. That is not the argument.
55.
I therefore have to return to the basics.
56.
Locus
standi in iudicio
concerns
the sufficiency and directness of a litigant’s interest in
proceedings which warrants his or her title to prosecute
the claim
asserted. In
Four
Wheel Drive Accessory Distributors CC v Lesheni Rattan NO
[iii]
the SCA scrutinised the
locus
standi
of the Appellant. The SCA again considered the requirements for
locus
standi
The SCA confirmed the requirements being that the party approaching
the Court must have adequate interest in the subject matter
of the
litigation; the interest must not be to remove; the interest must be
actual and the interest must be current (not hypothetical).
57.
It
is for the applicant to allege and proof
locus
standi
.
The second Respondent correctly referred to the matter of
Gross
v Pentz
[iv]
where it was held that it
is for the party instituting proceedings to allege and prove that he
/ she has the necessary
locus
standi
.
The question arises if the second Applicant did enough in his
founding affidavit to convince me that the Applicants have the
necessary
locus
standi
to proceed with the claim.
58.
In his founding affidavit the second
Applicant describes himself as “
I
am the applicant and a former member of the 1
st
applicant and currently residing at ….”
.
No further particulars of the first Applicant are provided. Later in
his founding affidavit, the second Applicant makes mention
of the
first Applicant and himself as “
The
1
st
and 2
nd
applicants are as appear hereinabove.”
59.
The status of the first Applicant is not
disclosed in the founding affidavit. This is an important aspect and
the status of the
first Applicant and its
locus
standi
to bring this application had to
be canvassed in the Founding Affidavit.
60.
The Respondents argue that the second
Applicant has no
locus standi
to act on behalf of the first Applicant.
61.
The second Applicant on its turn argued
that in light of the fact that it was a voluntary liquidation, that
he can still act on
behalf of the first Applicant.
62.
I
do not agree with the argument of the second Applicant. On the
liquidation of the Closed Corporation the members lost any and
all
control over the Closed Corporation, except to the extent authorised,
in the case of members’ winding up, by the liquidator
or by the
members.
[v]
63.
The second Applicant did not place any
proof before the Court that there is compliance with this exception.
Such exception is not
even alleged. The argument that he
retained the necessary
locus standi
based on the fact that it was a voluntary liquidation and that no
liquidator was appointed, is misplaced.
64.
The second Applicant takes the stance that
neither the first Applicant nor himself is required to provide the
Court or the Respondents
with such a resolution for the simple reason
that the first Applicant has been liquidated and secondly as the
witness of the Court
and further having an interest in the matter he
(the second Applicant) it is not required that he be authorised his
deposition
of any legal document. I am of the view that the second
Applicant is correct in this contention in as far as it relates to
his
own application – in order to sign an affidavit on his own
behalf. This, however, does not mean that he has the necessary
locus
standi
. He, however, is in my view
incorrect in as far as it relates to the authority of the first
Applicant. Something more is needed.
65.
It is also striking that the liquidator is
not before me proceeding with the claim on behalf of the first
Applicant. I have already
dealt with the fact that no liquidator is
appointed for the first Applicant.
66.
The question, however, arises, what should
happen with the application by the first Applicant. Adv Kwinda who
acted on behalf of
the first and second Applicants insisted that the
application should be granted in favour in the first and second
Applicants. Both
the Respondents requested that the application be
dismissed and that referred to the claim by both the first and second
Applicants.
67.
In
the heads of argument by the first Respondent, however, reference was
made to the legal position regarding the continuation or
commencement
of legal proceedings. Continuation is subject to the notice to the
liquidator. Adv Kwinda on behalf of the Applicants
confirmed that no
liquidator was appointed on behalf of the first Applicant. His
justification for the failure to appoint a liquidator
was in light of
the fact that the liquidation was voluntarily. I do not agree with
the argument of the Applicants. Be it a voluntarily
process, be it a
liquidation as a result of a Court Order, the process is clearly
stipulated in the Close Corporation Act
[vi]
read with the Companies Act.
[vii]
A liquidator must be appointed.
68.
There is therefore no liquidator who can
receive notice of the proceedings. No postponement of this
application will rectify this
issue. During the argument it was also
clear that no liquidator is in the process of being appointed. It is
also clear that there
is not intention to appoint a liquidator. Such
adjournment was also not requested.
69.
I therefore agree with the first and second
Respondents that the first Applicant is not before the Court. No
locus standi
has been proven.
70.
This again brings and end to the claim by
the first Applicant. The claim by the first Applicant therefore
stands to be dismissed
on this basis alone.
71.
The question that goes hand in hand with
the
locus standi
of the first Applicant, is the
locus
standi
of the second Applicant. The
second Applicant in substantiation of his right to reclaim the money,
the following arguments are
made:
71.1
The first Applicant was voluntarily
liquidated by the second Applicant;
71.2
The second Applicant was the owner of the
first Applicant;
71.3
The fact that payments were effected by the
first Applicant.
72.
It is common cause that the first Applicant
is in liquidation. As already stated, this means that the members
lost total control
over the Closed Corporation. On the consideration
of the evidence that was placed before me, it is clear that the
deposits that
were allegedly made into the trust account was not made
by the second Applicant. There are also no allegations placed before
me
indicating on what basis the second Applicant obtained the right
to claim this amount. No such allegations were made, and no such
evidence was placed before me. The fact that he was a member at the
time does not mean that he is entitled to these payments. The
payments had to be collected (if the liquidator could prove the
claim) and all creditors had to be paid first. There is no automatic
right.
73.
The second Applicant therefore also failed
to place any evidence before me proving that he indeed has the
necessary
locus standi
.
Therefore, on this basis alone, the claim of the second Applicant
should fail.
PRESCRIPTION OF THE
CLAIM
74.
The second point
in
limine
I am called to consider is the
question of prescription. The first Respondent contends that any
claim that the fist and/or second
Applicants may have, has become
prescribed.
75.
Section
10(1)(a)
of
the
Prescription
Act
[viii]
provides
that
a
debt
will be extinguished by prescription after the lapse of the period
which in terms of the relevant law applies in respect of
the
prescription of such debt. In the case of other debt not provided for
in
section
11
,
the prescription for debt is three years. Section 12(1) of
the
Prescription
Act states
that
prescription will commence to run as soon as the debt is due.
76.
At
the outset, in
Jugwanth
v Mobile Telephone Networks (Pty) Ltd
[ix]
,
the
Court stated that:
“
It
is settled law that a person invoking prescription bears a full onus
to prove it. In Gericke v Sack, Diemont JA explained:
‘
[It]
was the respondent, not the appellant, who raised the question of
prescription. It was the respondent who challenged the appellant
on
the issue that the claim for damages was prescribed this he did by
way of a special plea five months after the plea on the merits
had
been filed. The onus was clearly on the respondent to establish this
defence.
In
Macleod v Kweyiya, this Court endorsed that principle in ringing
tones:
‘
This
court has repeatedly stated that a defendant bears the full
evidentiary burden to prove a plea of prescription, including the
date on which a plaintiff obtained actual or constructive knowledge
of the debt. The burden shifts to the plaintiff only if the
defendant
has established a prima facie case.’’’
77.
It is therefore the first Respondent that
bears the onus to proof that the claim has prescribed.
78.
One of the aspects I need to determine, in
order to place this claim in the four brackets of the Prescription
Act, is to determine
if monies that was deposited in a trust account
is a debt.
79.
In
determining this question, we have to consider the position as it was
set out in
Drennan
Maud & Partners v Town Board of the Township Pennington
.
[x]
Here
the court described a debt as:
“
In
short, the word “debt” does not refer to the “cause
of action”, but more generally to the claim. In deciding
whether a ‘debt’ has become prescribed, one has to
identify the “debt”, or, put differently, what the
“claim” was in the broad sense of the meaning of that
word.”
80.
In
Du
Toit and Others v Du Toit-Smuts & Partners and Another
[xi]
the Honourable Judge Mashile, facing almost similar facts, held that
a deposit was a debt. I align myself with the view held by
the
Honourable Judge Mashile.
81.
What now needs to be considered is when
prescription started to run.
82.
In
List
v Jungers
[xii]
,
the
Court stated that there is a difference between when a debt comes
into existence on the one hand and when it becomes recoverable
on the
other, although these dates may coincide. A debt is due “…
when
the creditor acquires a complete cause of action for the recovery of
the debt, that is, when the entire set of facts which
the creditor
must prove in order to succeed with his or her claim against the
debtor is in place or, in other words, when everything
has happened
which would entitle the creditor to institute action and to pursue
his or her claim.”
[xiii]
83.
The
Court in
Frieslaar
NO and Others v Ackerman and Another
[xiv]
held
that:
“
An
obligation to do something undertaken in terms of a contract, when
the contract is silent as to the time of performance, is a
debt which
becomes immediately claimable or eligible at the instance of the
creditor. Thus prescription commences to run from the
date on which
the contract was concluded….”
84.
There can be no doubt that the debt started
to run, on a worst case scenario for the first and second applicants,
on the date which
the sale agreement was cancelled. That date is not
placed before me.
85.
On the best case scenario for the
applicants I have to consider the argument by the first Respondent.
The argument is as follows:
on 31 January 2013 the second Applicant
lodged a claim against the first Respondent for reimbursement of the
sum of R1 126 401.27
being the funds that was allegedly
deposited into the trust account of Snijman and Smullen Attorneys.
According to the first Respondent,
the debt was therefore owing and
already payable or immediately claimable or immediately eligible the
will of the Applicants on
31 January 2013. The claim of the first
Applicant was repudiated on 8 February 2013 on the basis that the
claim was excluded by
virtue of the provisions of section 47 (1) (g)
of the Attorneys Act. The claim by the first and second Applicant was
only instituted
on 10 March 2021. There is therefore a lapse of 7
years. The argument by the first Respondent is that the three-year
period of
prescription applies in respect of any debt, save where an
Act of Parliament provides otherwise. It is further argued that
prescription
has never been interrupted.
86.
I cannot fault the argument of the first
Respondent. There is sufficient evidence before me to proof that the
claim has prescribed.
87.
Based on this argument alone, the matter
should end here as the claim has prescribed. The application, based
on this argument alone,
stands to be dismissed with costs.
WAS MONIES
ENTRUSTED TO SNIJMAN & SMULLEN_ATTORNEYS AS CONTEMPLATED IN THE
ATTORNEYS ACT
88.
Even though it is not necessary in light of
the fact that the application should fail on the point already dealt
with above, I will
not proceed and deal with the merits of the
application.
89.
Before I deal with the claims against the
respective respondents, a good starting point will be to determine of
any proof was place
before me indicating that money was indeed
entrusted to the attorneys. In my view, and especially in light of
the fact that it
is not common cause that monies were paid into the
trust account of the attorney, it is important to first determine if
money was
entrusted to Snijman and Smullen Attorneys as contemplated
in section 26 (a) of the Attorneys Act.
90.
It
is trite that where money is paid into the trust account of an
attorney, it does not follow that such money is in fact trust
money.
The Supreme Court of Appeal in
Industrial
& Commercial Factors v Attorney Fidelity Fund
[xv]
dealing similarly with
the question of entrustment, remarked as follows:
“
When
an attorney misappropriates money in his trust account, more often
than not he is stealing money which he had received to hold
for or on
behalf of clients. It would be starling indeed if no liability on the
part of the fidelity fund arose in such circumstances.
Yet such
liability can arise only if it can be found that the money stolen was
entrusted by or on behalf of the client.
”
91.
It
is trite that the test to prove entrustment comprises two elements,
namely (a) place in possession of something, (b) subject
to a trust.
As to the latter element, that of trust, this connotes that the
person entrusted is bound to deal with the property
or money
concerned for the benefit of others.
[xvi]
92.
I will now turn and consider the evidence
that was placed before me.
93.
If I for a moment accept that the first and
second Applicants proved that they have the necessary
locus
standi
and if I for a moment accept
that the claim has nor prescribed, the question arises whether the
Applicants achieved to place sufficient
facts before me in order to
prove that the amount claimed by them was indeed paid into the trust
account as alleged by them. This
is the first element that the
Applicants need to prove. This is the possession element.
94.
I have already summarised the facts the
Applicants approached this Court on herein above. The question is
whether these allegations
are sufficient. During argument I invited
Adv Kwinda who acted on behalf of the Applicants to clarify certain
issues. He was unable
to do so. And at this point I need to pause and
state that the most basic principles of the law of evidence are not
met.
95.
On the careful consideration of the
allegations made by the Applicants in their founding affidavit, the
following aspects regarding
the payments are troublesome and left
without any explanation:
95.1
The Applicants alleged that three payments
were made to be kept on an interest bearing account. Firstly an
amount of R1 000.00,
secondly an amount of R500 000.00 and
lastly an amount of R400 000.00. These amounts were paid on
three separate dates.
95.2
In the affidavit that was provided to the
Law Society of the Northern Provinces during February 2013 no mention
was made of the
R1 000.00. It may be a small amount, but the
amount of R1 000.00 is taken into consideration by the
Applicants in the
amount claimed. I cannot turn a blind eye to this
discrepancy especially in light of the fact that the Applicants
claimed the same
amount during February 2013 than the amount that
they are claiming in the proceedings before me. This difference
between the two
versions were left unanswered in the founding
affidavit;
95.3
What is further striking is that on 14
January 2013 when the attorneys for the first Applicant enquired
about the investment, reference
was made to only R900 000.00 and
not the amount that was claimed in the affidavit of February 2013.
95.4
Reliance is placed on the 31 July 1999
statement. No explanation was provided for the discrepancy in the
client in whose favour
the investment was held as is reflected on the
statement and the identity of the Applicants before me.
95.5
In further consideration of the 31 July
1999 statement, a payment of R400 000.00 is reflected. This is
clearly received on
13 July 1999. Yet, the Applicants rely on a
R400 000.00 payment of 30 September 1999. No explanation was
provided for the
difference between the dates on which the
R400 000.00 was allegedly received. If two payments of
R400 000.00 was then
received, the claim amount would have been
different. This discrepancy between the documents the Applicants are
relying on is glaring.
95.6
There is a difference between the account
numbers for the 31 July 1999 statement and the 15 September 1999
statement. The difference
between the two account numbers is left
unanswered. This is an important aspect especially if one considers
the normal banking
process for fixed deposits. There is no relevant
documents placed before me confirming that the amount that is
reflected in the
31 July 1999 statement was transferred to the
account number that is reflected on the 15 September 1999 statement.
I fail to understand
on what basis it is alleged that these two
amounts are the same amounts.
95.7
On the version of the Applicants an amount
of R80 000.00 was withdrawn during November 1999. This amount is
clearly not taken
into consideration in the amount claimed by the
Applicants. The purpose of this withdrawal is left unexplained. The
reason why
this amount is not taken into account is left unexplained.
95.8
Further, the claim that was lodged during
February 2013 was only in then name of the first Applicant and not in
the name of both
the first and second Applicants. This is striking.
96.
Based on these discrepancies alone the only
conclusion I can come to is that the Applicants failed to place any
evidence before
the Court substantiating their allegation that the
monies were paid into the account of Snijman and Smullen Attorneys.
This requirement
therefore have not been met.
97.
I also cannot turn a blind eye for the fact
that the Law Society of the Northern Provinces could not find any
proof of this alleged
investment. This is an aspect that was
addressed in the correspondence between the respective parties. No
evidence is placed
before me to prove the contrary.
98.
I am of the view that the first and second
Applicants failed to place any evidence before me substantiating the
first element. It
is clear that some monies were paid into the trust
account of Snijman and Smullen Attorneys, but with the evidence
placed before
me I cannot come to the conclusion that the monies that
were placed in possession of Snijman and Smullen Attorneys was first
of
all placed in their possession by the first Applicant and further
that it was placed in the possession of Snijman and Smullen Attorneys
for the purpose as alleged by them.
99.
The applicants therefore fail to cross the
first hurdle.
100.
What
requires to be established is the second element of “trust”,
which as it has been held, connotes that the person
entrusted is
bound to deal with the property or money concerned for the benefit of
others. That is, the person entrusted is bound
to hold and apply the
property [money] for the benefit of some person or persons or for the
accomplishment of some special purpose.
[xvii]
101.
It
has been further held that the issue of entrustment has to be judged
in the light of the intention of the person making the payment
to the
attorney or the attorney’s employee, not the intention of the
attorney of the attorneys employee.
[xviii]
102.
The Applicants make an unsubstantiated
statement that the monies were paid into the account of the attorneys
to be held pending
a sale agreement of immovable property.
103.
No explanation is provided in the
affidavits filed what happened to the sale agreement. A copy of the
lease agreement and the sale
agreement is not attached to the
affidavits. This creates doubt as to the real purpose on which the
amounts were allegedly paid
into the account of Snijman and Smullen
Attorneys.
104.
On the version of the applicants, the
payments were made in 1999. The affidavits are silent when the
purported sale was to be concluded.
According to the allegations by
the Applicants, the amounts were paid in 1999. They only learned of
the demise of Barnard during
approximately January 2013. The
affidavits are silent on what happened between 1999 and 2013. It is
unclear if any follow ups were
made by the Applicants. No explanation
is given for the lapse of 14 years between the payments being made
and the date on which
the Applicants learned about the passing of
Barnard. It is unthinkable that a party will leave money in
possession of another without
making the necessary follow-ups
especially if the reason for the money be kept in trust has fallen
away.
105.
There is a big
lacuna
in the versions of the Applicants.
106.
In my view, the Applicant’s also
failed to place sufficient facts before the Court to meet the second
requirement as is required.
107.
The Applicants therefore failed to meet the
requirements for the repayment of monies and the application should
fail.
THE CASE AGAINST
THE ATTORNEY FIDELITY FUND BOARD
108.
At the outset, and in order to consider the
claim against the first Respondent, being the Attorneys Fidelity
Fund, it is important
to understand the purpose of this fund. I will
therefore first turn to the function of the fund and the purpose of
this fund.
109.
The Attorney Fidelity Fund is established
in terms of section 25 of the Attorneys Act as the Attorneys Fidelity
Fund and continues
to exist in terms of section 53 (1) of the Legal
Practice Act as the Legal Practitioners Fidelity Fund.
110.
In the Heads of Argument that was filed on
behalf of the first Respondent, it was emphasized that the fund was,
amongst others,
established for
inter
alia
the following purposes and
objectives:
110.1
Paying
expenses incurred by the Board in investigating and establishing the
validity of claims in respect of which it is liable;
110.2
Paying all
expenses and legal costs incurred by the Board for the purpose of
recovering money form the persons whose wrongful conduct
gave rise to
the claim;
110.3
Refunding
the costs or any portion thereof incurred by a claimant in
establishing a claim or attempting to recover the whole or
a portion
of the claim from the person whose wrongful conduct gave rise to the
claim;
110.4
Paying
legal expenses incurred in defending a claim made against the Fund,
or otherwise incurred in relation to the Fund; and
110.5
Paying
costs relating to the detection or prevention of theft of trust
money.
111.
In order to succeed in their case, the
Applicant had to establish the requirements of section 26 (a) of the
Attorneys Act, namely
(a) theft committed by a practitioner, his or
her candidate attorney or his or her employee; (b) of any money or
other property
entrusted by or on behalf of such a person to him or
her or to his or her candidate attorney or employee; (c) in the
course of
his or her practice or while acting as executor or
administrator in the estate of a deceased person or as a trustee in
an insolvent
estate or in any other similar capacity.
112.
I have dealt with the aspect of entrustment
herein above. The Applicants failed to meet this requirement.
113.
The applicants, in the affidavit dated 29
January 2013 stated in paragraph 2.9 that the deponent could not
specifically established
that the fund have been stolen. A rider was
added shifting the blame to the Law Society.
114.
I cannot come to conclusion that this
requirement have been met.
115.
The first Respondent raises a defence in
terms of section 47 (1) (g) of the Attorneys Act. Section 47 (1) (g)
of the Attorneys Act
provides that:
“
The
fund shall not be liable in respect of any loss suffered … by
any person as a result of the theft of money which a practitioner
has
been instructed to invest on behalf of such person …”
116.
This subsection is a statutory exception to
the Fund’s general liability in terms of section 26 of the
Attorneys Act.
117.
I cannot find fault with this defence
raised by the Fund.
118.
The claim against the first Respondent
therefore cannot succeed.
THE CASE AGAINST
THE SOUTH AFRICAN LEGAL PRACTICE COUNCIL
119.
The second Respondent raises the issue that
the claim against them is misplaced based on the fact that the second
Respondent is
not liable to reimburse monies which were paid into the
an attorneys trust banking account, and which were misappropriated.
120.
In substantiation of the version by the
second Respondent, they again confirm that the records of Barnard did
not reflect either
of the Applicants as trust creditors and not were
there open trust investment account on behalf of the applicants, nor
was there
even a file relating to the applicants.
121.
The records of Barnard also speaks to the
contrary as during this time the alleged amount was paid, the
cumulative balance of any
trust investment dropped to as low as
R139 471.88.
122.
There is simply no cause of action against
the second Respondent and the claim against the second Respondent
should fail.
CONCLUSION
123.
I agree with the argument by the second
Respondent that the Applicants approached the Court on vague and
inaccurate allegations
regarding an alleged entrustment of funds.
124.
As is illustrated above, the Applicants
failed to place any evidence before the Court proving that the funds
held by the Council
belongs to them.
125.
On their own version they cannot make any
positive statement that the money was stolen.
126.
There is not sufficient evidence to find in
the favour of the Applicants.
ORDER
127.
The following order is therefore made:
127.1
The
application is dismissed;
127.2
The first
and second applicants are to pay the costs of the first respondent,
jointly and severally, the one paying the other to
be absolved on the
scale between attorney and client, including the costs of senior
counsel where so employed;
127.3
The first
and second applicants are to pay the costs of the second respondent,
jointly and severally, the one paying the other to
be absolved, on
the scale between attorney and client.
BY ORDER
Appearance on behalf of
the 1
st
and 2
nd
Applicants
: Adv T C Kwinda
Appearance on behalf of
the 1
st
Respondent
:
Adv G Hulley SC
Appearance on behalf of
2
nd
Respondent :
:
Mr Liam Groome
[i]
No
28 of 2014
[ii]
No
53 of 1979
[iii]
2018
JDR 2203 (SCA)
[iv]
1996
(4) SA 6147
(A) at 632D
[v]
Section
67(1) of the Closed Corporation Act read with
Section 80
(8) of the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
[vi]
Act
69 of 1984
[vii]
Act
71 of 2008
[viii]
Act
68 of 1969
[ix]
[2021]
4 All SA 436 (SCA)
[x]
[1998]
ZASCA 29
;
1998 (3) SA 200
(SCA) at para 212F - J
[xi]
Unreported
Judgment (4748/2021) [2023] ZAMPMBHC 22 (12 April 2023)
[xii]
1979
(3) SA 106
(A) at 121C - D
[xiii]
See
Truter
& Another v Deysel
[2006] ZASCA 16
;
2006 (4) SA 168
(SCA) at para 15
[xiv]
[2018]
ZASCA 3
at para 31
[xv]
[1996]
ZASCA 84
;
1997 (1) SA 136
(SCA) at p 1508-C
[xvi]
See
Industrial
and Commercial Factors (Pty) Ltd v Attorneys Fidelity Fund Board of
Control
[1996] ZASCA 84
;
1997 (1) SA 136
(A) at 114B – O;
Attorneys
Fidelity Fund Board of Control v Mettle Property Finance (Pty) Ltd
2012 (3) SA 611
(SCA) at 614 - 615
[xvii]
Estate
Kemp and Others v McDonald’s Trustee
1915
AD 491
at 499
[xviii]
See
Redel
Finance Services (Pty) Ltd v Attorneys Fidelity Fund
(16833/2007)
[2010] ZAWCHC 407
(24 May 2010) para [22]
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Seal A Deal CC t/a Makhafola Khaflins Transport and Another v Attorney Fidelity Fund Board and Another (30326/2018) [2024] ZAGPPHC 850 (27 August 2024)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 850High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)100% similar
Roadseal (Pty) Ltd v Maduludi (Pty) Ltd and Another (7914/2020) [2025] ZAGPPHC 474 (15 May 2025)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 474High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)98% similar
Seale and Others v City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality and Another (2023/078684) [2023] ZAGPPHC 754 (25 August 2023)
[2023] ZAGPPHC 754High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)97% similar
Seale and Another v City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality and Another (Leave to Appeal) (2023-078684) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1149 (8 September 2023)
[2023] ZAGPPHC 1149High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)97% similar
Pro Secure (Pty) Ltd v Mogale City Local Municipality and Others (2025-043172) [2025] ZAGPPHC 479 (16 May 2025)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 479High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)97% similar