Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 1089South Africa
Kukard N.O and Others v ABSA Bank Limited and Others (115284/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1089 (23 October 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
23 October 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Kukard N.O and Others v ABSA Bank Limited and Others (115284/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1089 (23 October 2024)
Kukard N.O and Others v ABSA Bank Limited and Others (115284/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1089 (23 October 2024)
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sino date 23 October 2024
###### REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
###### IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
###### GAUTENG DIVISION
PRETORIA
GAUTENG DIVISION
PRETORIA
CASE NO: 115284/2023
DOH: 2 SEPTEMBER
2024
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES /
NO
(2) OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/
NO
(3)
REVISED.
SIGNATURE
DATE:
23/10/2024
COLLEEN MICHELLE
KUKARD N.O.
First Applicant
HILLBROW INN (PTY)
LTD
Second Applicant
JOUBERT PARK MAXIME
HOTEL (PTY) LTD
Third Applicant
MAXIME HOTEL (PTY)
LTD
Fourth Applicant
NEW WORLD HOTELS (PTY)
LTD
Fifth Applicant
JESHCO (PTY)
LTD
Sixth Applicant
DREAM WEAVER TRADING
139 (PTY) LTD
Seventh Applicant
WARWICK PAUL VAN DEN
BERG N.O.
Eighth Applicant
DARRYL HURWITZ
N.O.
Nineth Applicant
-and-
ABSA BANK
LIMITED
First Respondent
ACCESS BANK OF SOUTH
AFRICA LIMITED
Second Respondent
STANDARD BANK OF SOUTH
AFRICA LIMITED
Third
Respondent
In
re:
COLLEEN
MICHELLE KUKARD N.O.
First Plaintiff
HILLBROW
INN (PTY) LTD
Second Plaintiff
JOUBERT
PARK MAXIME HOTEL (PTY) LTD
Third Plaintiff
MAXIME
HOTEL (PTY) LTD
Fourth Plaintiff
NEW
WORLD HOTELS (PTY) LTD
Fifth Plaintiff
JESHCO
(PTY)
LTD
Sixth Plaintiff
DREAM
WEAVER TRADING 139 (PTY) LTD
Seventh Plaintiff
WARWICK
PAUL VAN DEN BERG N.O.
Eighth Plaintiff
DARRYL
HURWITZ N.O.
Nineth Plaintiff
-and-
JEFF
PILLAY
First Defendant
ABSA
BANK LIMITED
Second Defendant
ACCESS
BANK OF SOUTH AFRICA LIMITED
Third Defendant
STANDARD
BANK OF SOUTH AFRICA
LIMITED
Fourth Defendant
REGISTRAR
OF DEEDS, POLOKWANE
Fifth Defendant
REGISTRAR
OF DEEDS, JOHANNESBURG
Sixth Defendant
REGISTRAR
OF DEEDS, CAPE TOWN
Seventh Defendant
This
Judgment was handed down electronically and by circulation to the
parties’ legal representatives’ by way of email
and shall
be uploaded on caselines. The date for hand down is deemed to be on
23 October 2024.
JUDGEMENT
MALI J
1.
There are two interlocutory applications involved herein, the
applicants
who are the plaintiffs in the action brought application
for early discovery in terms of Rule 35 (1) of the Uniform Rules of
Court.
Rule 35 (1) application is only against the first and the
third respondent.
2.
Rule 35 (1) of the Uniform Rules of Court provides that:
“
Any party to
any action may require any other party thereto, by notice in writing,
to make discovery on oath within 20 days of all
documents and tape
recordings relating to any matter in question in such action (whether
such matter is one arising between the
party requiring discovery and
the party required to make discovery or not) which are or have at any
time been in the possession
or control of such other party. Such
notice shall not, save with the leave of a judge, be given before the
close of pleadings.”
3.
The first respondent is not opposing the application, whereas the
third
respondent is opposing it. The applicant seeks early discovery
in order for the applicant to amend her particulars of claim. In
the
event Rule 35 (1) is granted the applicant seeks postponement in
order to allow her time to file the amendment of her particulars
of
claim.
4.
The second application pertains to the exception to the plaintiffs’
particulars of claim in terms of Rule 23 of the Uniform Rules of
Court and has been brought by the 2
nd
and 3
rd
respondents, who are third and fourth defendants in the action. The
2
nd
and 3
rd
respondents will be referred as
Access Bank and Standard Bank respectively.
5.
Access Bank and Standard Bank are the banking institutions which
granted
the loans to some of the plaintiffs, allegedly at the
instance of the first defendant (“Mr. Pillay”) in the
main action.
Mr. Pillay was employed as the plaintiffs’
Financial and Human Resource Director and Chief Accountant. In these
proceedings
the applicant does not seek any order against Mr. Pillay,
however his name features prominently.
6.
As the facts are intertwined, I allowed both applications to be
ventilated
fully without giving the ruling on postponement. The
highlight of the applicant’s argument and the concession made
on her
behalf is that in the event exceptions are found to be good,
it would not be necessary to grant the Rule 35 (1) as the outcome
will achieve the same purposes, viz. allowing the applicant to amend
the particulars of claim. I therefore commence with exceptions.
7.
Rule 23 of the Uniform Rules of court provides
that:
“
(1)
Where any pleading is vague and embarrassing or lacks averments which
are necessary to sustain an action or defence as the case
may be, the
period allowed for filing any subsequent pleadings delivers an
exception therefore and may set it down for hearing
in terms of
paragraph (f) of Sub rule (5) of Rule (6). Provided that where the
party intends to take exception that a pleading
is vague and
embarrassing he shall within the period allowed aforesaid by notice
afford his opponent an opportunity of removing
the cause of complaint
within 15 days, provided further that the party exception shall
within 10 days from the date on which a
reply to much notice is
reserved or from the date on which such reply is due, deliver his
exception.”
8.
The court
should be persuaded that upon every interpretation which the pleading
in question can reasonable bear, no cause of action
arises.
[1]
Furthermore, an exception must go to the root of the claim or
defence.
[2]
In suitable cases, legitimate inferences may be drawn regarding the
meaning of the particulars in the court’s endeavour to
look
benevolently at pleading instead of over–critically, care must
be taken to not push such benevolence to the length by
altering the
language of a pleading, by reading in what is not there, by ignoring
what is and such make out a cause of action for
the plaintiff which
is not apparent from the pleadings.
[3]
9.
The courts
must adopt a sensible and not overly technical approach in assessing
pleadings to which exceptions have been raised.
The court went on to
borrow from the imagery of Miller J in
Davenport
Corner Tea Room (Pty) Ltd
v
Joubert
1962
(2) SA 709(D) 715 H
[4]
,
the court stated:
“
Furthermore, an
exception must go to the root of the claim or defence.
[5]
In
suitable cases legitimate inferences may be drawn regarding the
meaning of the particulars in the Court’s endeavour to
look
benevolently at pleading instead of over –critically, care must
be taken to not push such benevolence to the length
by altering the
language of a pleading, by reading in what is not there, by ignoring
what is and such make out a cause of action
for the plaintiff which
is not apparent from the pleadings
.”
[6]
ACCESS BANK’S
EXCEPTION
10.
Access Bank takes an exception to the plaintiff’s particulars
of claim firstly, that
there is no pleaded connection between the
loans and alleged theft by Mr Pillay. The plaintiffs seek contractual
damages from Access
Bank in claim C. At paragraph 5.1 of the
particulars of claim, the plaintiffs plead that during March 2010,
Jeshco (the sixth plaintiff)
and the Group 5 Property Trust (not
cited in the action) concluded an oral agreement with Access Bank in
terms of which Jeshco
and the Group 5 Property Trust opened banking
accounts at Access Bank
(“the oral agreement”).
11.
At paragraph 5.5 the plaintiffs allege that it was a tacit term of
the oral agreement that
Access Bank would, without negligence,
exercise the general level of skill, care and diligence possessed and
exercised by a banker
and financial services provider during the
management and administration of their bank accounts. The plaintiffs
allege that the
first defendant, Mr Pillay, was employed as the
plaintiffs’ “financial and human resources director and
chief accountant”.
At paragraphs 3.3 to 3.6 and 3.8 to 3.11,
the plaintiffs allege that Mr Pillay falsely represented to Access
Bank that he had the
required authority and mandate to represent
Jeshco and the Group 5 Property Trust.
12.
At paragraph 5.6, the plaintiffs allege that “between 5 May
2013 and 13 August 2021”,
Mr. Pillay, acting pursuant to this
alleged false misrepresentation, applied for and concluded loan
agreements in the name of Jeshco
and Group 5 Property Trust (“the
loan agreements”). At paragraph 5.8 the plaintiffs plead
that Access Bank breached
the alleged oral agreement, inter alia, by
allegedly failing to make proper enquiries to determine Mr Pillay’s
authority
to represent Jeshco and Group 5 Property Trust. At
paragraph 3.5, the plaintiffs plead that the loans were used to “pay
for
the running expenses” of the plaintiffs’ businesses.
The plaintiffs further allege, at paragraph 3.5, that Mr Pillay
subsequently “misappropriated and stole” from the
plaintiffs’ “cash income” derived from the
operation
of their businesses. The plaintiffs admit that they used
the loans to their benefit, to fund the “running expenses”
of their businesses.
13.
From the above it is not clear how Access bank acted with
negligence, failed to exercise the general level of skill,
care and diligence possessed and exercised by a banker and financial
services provider during the management and administration of the
plaintiffs’ bank accounts. The plaintiffs do not allege
that Mr
Pillay stole the funds advanced to the plaintiffs in terms of the
loan agreements. There is therefore no connection on
the pleadings
between (i) the conclusion of the loan agreements; (ii) Access Bank’s
alleged breach of contract; and (iii)
Mr Pillay’s alleged
theft of funds from the plaintiffs’ “cash income”.
There is no allegation that
Mr. Pillay was not authorized by the
plaintiffs.
14.
On the plaintiffs’ version the funds were utilized in running
the businesses of the
plaintiff. As to how and whether the money was
stolen by Mr. Pillay raises no connection with Access Bank. I
conclude that
the particulars of claim lack averments necessary to
sustain a cause of action. Access Bank is prejudiced in formulating
its plea,
as there is no clarity to the case it is required to meet.
15.
The second ground raised is the claim for special damages allegedly
arising from the same
allegations as above. The applicant states “
Any
alleged losses sustained by the plaintiffs as a result of Mr Pillay’s
alleged thefts are “special damages”.
16.
The plaintiffs do not allege that such damages were or ought
reasonably to have been within
the contemplation of the parties at
the time the oral agreement was allegedly concluded. It is not
clear how Access Bank
would have control over the funds which were
already in one of the plaintiffs’ accounts. There is no legal
basis put forward
by the plaintiffs that the Bank or lender must
exercise control over the funds it has deposited to the borrower’s
account.
The applicant says if it was not for Access bank
having approved the loans there would not have been any money for Mr
Pillay
to steal. There is no allegation against Access Bank
pertaining to reckless or untoward landing to the 6
th
plaintiff.
17.
In the result the particulars of claim are bad in law and lack
averments necessary to sustain
a cause of action, alternatively, are
vague and embarrassing.
18.
The third ground advanced by Access Bank is that the oral agreements
and loan agreements
are unrelated. The plaintiffs’ claim is
founded in an alleged breach of an alleged oral agreement concluded
during the opening
of current accounts in 2010.
19.
The alleged breach occurred in the conclusion of subsequent and
separate loan agreements
between Access Bank with Jeshco and Group 5
Property Trust, individually. It is not apparent from the particulars
of claim, nor
is it alleged, how the subsequent loan agreements are
related to the alleged oral agreement. On the facts alleged in the
particulars
of claim, the loan agreements are,
ex facie
,
entirely separate and unrelated to the oral agreement with the result
that there is no legal basis for the plaintiffs’ claim
against
Access Bank.
20.
Having regard to the above, the particulars of claim are bad in law
and lack averments necessary
to sustain a cause of action,
alternatively, are vague and embarrassing.
21.
The fourth ground is that the particulars of claim allege the
calculation of damages. At
paragraph 5.10 of the particulars of
claim, the plaintiffs allege that as a result of Access Bank’s
breach of contract, they
have suffered contractual damages in the
amount of: (i) R5 309 383.00 in respect of Jeshco;
comprising loans of
R1 628 124.00 and R3 681 258.00 granted by Access
Bank to Jeshco; and R12 428 77.00 in respect of Group 5 Property
Trust; comprising
loans of R1 856 562.00 and R10 572 210.00 granted
by Access Bank to Group 5 Property Trust.
22.
It is not apparent from the particulars of claim how the claimed
damages were sustained
by the plaintiffs; the claimed damages have
been calculated by the plaintiffs and that the damages flow from Mr.
Pillay’s
alleged theft of the plaintiffs’ “cash
income”.
23.
The role of Group 5 Property Trust has not been alleged at all. Group
5 Property Trust is
mentioned in relation to the first plaintiff as
follows:
“…
Kukard
claims in this action in her capacities, duly appointed by the Master
of the High Court, Johannesburg, as trustee for the
time being of:
1.1.2.1 the Group 5
Property Trust (IT2380/2009); and
1.1.2.2 the Group 5
Commercial Property Trust (IT2381/2009);”
24.
The calculation of damages claimed from the Access Bank does not
sustain a cause of action.
Therefore, the particulars of claim fall
to be struck.
25.
Lastly the pleading on the cancellation of mortgage bonds is linked
with the averments made
in the first ground of exception. At
paragraph 5.11 of the particulars of claim, the plaintiffs allege
that Access Bank is “obliged”
to “cause the
cancellation” of the bonds registered in favour of Access Bank.
The plaintiffs do not plead any right
of cancellation, sourced in
contract or otherwise. Moreover, the plaintiffs do not plead
that they have returned the loan
amounts advanced to them or that
restoration is impossible, nor do the plaintiffs tender return of the
loan amounts to Access Bank.
26.
For the same reasons advanced in upholding the first exception, that
there is no connection
between the loans advanced by Access Bank and
the allegations of theft against Mr. Pillay. It is concluded that the
particulars
of claim are bad in law and lack averments necessary to
sustain a cause of action.
STANDARD
BANK ‘S EXCEPTION
27.
Firstly, the relevant plaintiffs’ claim against the fourth
defendant as described
in paragraph 6 of the particulars claim (i.e.
Claim D) is based upon an alleged breach of an oral agreement
concluded between the
second to fifth plaintiffs and the Group 5
Property Trust, and the fourth defendant as appears
inter alia
from paragraphs 6.1, 6.8, 6.11 6.12 and 6.13 of the particulars of
claim.
28.
The relevant plaintiffs plead in paragraph 6.12 of the particulars of
claim that as a direct
consequence of the breach of contract, the
fourth defendant approved the loans applied for by the first
defendant (“Mr Pillay”)
and that, as pleaded in paragraph
6.13 of the particulars of claim, such breach of contract resulted in
the second to fifth plaintiffs
and the Group 5 Property Trust
suffering damages.
29.
No averments are made in the particulars of claim as to anything that
was done or occurred
pursuant to the approval of the loans applied
for by Mr. Pillay (whether unauthorised or not by the second to fifth
plaintiffs
and the Group 5 Property Trust) that would have resulted
in any damages having been suffered.
30.
For example, no averment is made that any monies were advanced to
and/or received by the
second to fifth plaintiffs and the Group 5
Property Trust pursuant to the loans so approved. In any event, even
if monies had been
advanced by the fourth defendant to the second to
fifth plaintiffs and the Group 5 Property Trust, a fact which has not
been alleged,
no averments are made in the particulars of claim as to
why that would have resulted in the second to fifth plaintiffs and
the
Group 5 Property Trust suffering any damages.
31.
The allegation that Mr Pillay may have applied for loans and which
loans may have approved
by the fourth defendant does not in and of
itself give rise to damages. In the circumstances, the particulars of
claim lack averments
to sustain an action against the fourth
defendant for damages.
32.
The second complaint by fourth defendant is that the relevant
plaintiffs plead in paragraph
6.12 of the particulars of claim that a
consequence of the alleged breach of contract is that the fourth
defendant caused the registration
of the mortgage bond annexed as
annexure “E1” to the particulars of claim.
33.
Annexure “E1” is a mortgage bond registered at the
instance of the trustees
for the time being of the Group 5 Property
Trust in favour of the fourth defendant on 26 February 2010 and
pursuant to a power
of attorney granted on 10 November 2009, a copy
of which power of attorney is annexed to the mortgage bond “E1”.
34.
The alleged breach by the fourth defendant as is pleaded in paragraph
6.11 of the particulars
of claim as arising in the granting of the
loans by the relevant plaintiffs in paragraph 6.9 of the particulars
of claim to have
applied for by Mr. Pillay between 5 May 2013 and 13
August 2021.
35.
The mortgage bond “E1” was registered before that period
(i.e. before 5 May
2013), more particularly on 26 February 2010 and
pursuant to a power of attorney on 10 November 2009. The impugned
conduct and
breach described in the particulars of claim only
occurred after the registration of the mortgage bond “E1”.
36.
In the circumstances, the particulars claim lack averments necessary
to sustain an action
against the fourth defendant for the
cancellation of the mortgage bond annexed as “E1” in the
particulars of claim.
37.
Lastly the mortgage bond annexed as “E2” to the
particulars of claim is a mortgage
bond registered at the instance of
the trustees of the Group 5 Commercial Property Trust in favour of
the fourth defendant.
38.
The relevant plaintiffs plead that as a direct consequence of the
breach of contract pleaded
in paragraph 6 of the particulars of claim
that
inter alia
the fourth defendant caused the registration
of the mortgage bond “E2” and so the first, eighth and
ninth plaintiffs
seek in prayer 4.6 that such mortgage bond be
cancelled.
39.
No averments are set out in paragraph 6 or elsewhere in the
particulars of claim which relate
to any breach of contract by the
fourth defendant insofar as the Group 5 Commercial Property Trust is
concerned, i.e. such averments
as are made in paragraph 6 of the
particulars of claim relate to the second to fifth plaintiffs and to
the Group 5 Property Trust,
as distinct from the Group 5 Commercial
Property Trust. One cannot find a cause of action pleaded in relation
to the cancellation
of the mortgage bond “E2”. In result
the particulars of claim lack averments necessary to sustain an
action against
for the fourth defendant for such relief.
40.
Having regard to above, the application for exceptions by the third
and the fourth defendants
must succeed. In the result it is not
necessary to deal with Rule 35 (1) application. In the result the
following order ensues:
ORDER
1
The plaintiffs’
postponement application is dismissed.
2
The third and fourth defendant’s
exceptions are upheld.
3
The plaintiffs are granted 15 court days from the date of this order
to amend their particulars
of claim.
4
Should the plaintiffs fail to deliver a notice of amendment in
respect of the aforementioned
exception within 15 court days from the
granting of this order, or should the notice of amendment fail to
remove the causes of
complaint referred to in the third and fourth
defendant’s notice of exception, then the third and fourth
defendant shall
be entitled to set the matter down on notice to the
plaintiffs, on the same papers, duly supplemented, to seek an order
striking
out the plaintiffs’ claim and dismissing the action
with costs.
5
The plaintiffs are jointly and severally liable for the costs of the
third defendant of the
postponement application and the exception,
including the costs of two counsel, on scale C in terms of Uniform
Rules 67A(3) and
69.
6.
In respect of the fourth defendant the costs of counsel on scale C,
to be paid by the first to
fifth plaintiffs and the eighth and ninth
plaintiffs, jointly and severally.
N.P. MALI
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
APPEARANCES:
Third
Defendant’s Counsel:
Adv.
C McConnachie
chris@chrismcconnachie.com
Adv.
Z Raqowa
raqowaz@gmail.com
Instructed
by:
Lawtons
Inc. p/a Lawtons Africa
Veronica.vurgarellis@lawtonsafrica.com
Tebogo.maunye@lawtonsafrica.com
Fourth
Defendant’s Counsel:
Adv.
B M Gilbert
bmgilbert@group621.co.za
Instructed
by:
Claassen
Inc
nicoc@claassinc.co.za
Counsel
for the Plaintiffs:
Adv.
H. Jacobs SC
fcl@clubadvocates.co.za
Adv.
F. Lambrecht
fcl@clubadvocates.co.za
Instructed
by:
Riekert
Terblanche Attorneys
terblanche@prok.co.za
c/o
Wiese & Wiese Attorneys
[1]
Pets-Warehousing and Sales cc v Dowsink Investment CC 2000 (3) 833
AT 839 G-H
[2]
Vermeulen v Goose Valley Investments (pty) Ltd [2001] 3 ALL SA 350
(A).
[3]
Van Zyl v Crause
1945 OPD 168
at 170.
[4]
Telematrix v Advertising Standards Authority
[2006] ALL SA 6
(SCA)
at paragraph 3.
[5]
Above (2)
[6]
Above (3)
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