Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 1096South Africa
Innscor Distribution (Pty) Ltd v Heunis (A270/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1096 (23 October 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
23 October 2024
Headnotes
in Pretoria (Magistrate T J Ndwandwe presiding).
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Innscor Distribution (Pty) Ltd v Heunis (A270/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1096 (23 October 2024)
Innscor Distribution (Pty) Ltd v Heunis (A270/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1096 (23 October 2024)
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sino date 23 October 2024
SAFLII
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Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE
NO.: A270/2022
(1)
REPORTABLE:
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: [Y/N]
(3)
REVISED: [Y/N]
(4)
Signature:
Date: 23/10/24
In
the matter between:
INNSCOR
DISTRIBUTION (PTY) LTD
Appellant
And
JACOBUS
JOHANNES JURGENS HEUNIS
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MYBURGH
AJ
1.
This matter comes before us on appeal from
the regional magistrates’ court for the regional division of
Gauteng, held in Pretoria
(Magistrate T J Ndwandwe presiding).
2.
The key facts are, and were at all material
times, common cause. They can conveniently be summarised as follows:
2.1.
The appellant, which was the plaintiff in
the court of first instance, is a Zimbabwean company which is
involved in the importation
of commodities into that country. The
first defendant was a South African company, Bay Drive Trading 64
(Pty) Ltd (“Bay Drive”).
That company was based in
Durban. As the name suggests, it was involved in trading
activities – more specifically commodities.
The current
respondent, who was the second defendant in the court below, is an
attorney who practices as such from premises in
Pretoria. Bay Drive
has, since the commencement of the proceedings in the magistrates’
court, been deregistered. It is accordingly
not a party to this
appeal.
2.2.
The respondent had relationships with Bay
Drive and a Mr Hodoul, who appears to have been the controlling mind
of that company,
which pre-dated the events which gave rise to the
litigation between the parties.
2.3.
During the latter part of 2012, or perhaps
early in 2013, Mr Hodoul informed the respondent that Bay Drive had
in mind to become
involved in a transaction which involved the
purchase and on-sale to the appellant of a quantity of sugar.
The two of them
discussed the use of the respondent’s trust
account for the purpose of securing the purchase price, which
proposal the respondent
was amenable to. The respondent also gave Mr
Hodoul some advice. Precisely what advice is unclear, but also not
important.
2.4.
In the course of discussions between the
appellant and Bay Drive concerning the purchase of sugar by the
appellant from that company
it was accepted that the use of a trust
account (described as an “escrow” account) administered
by an attorney would
be an acceptable way of securing the payment of
the purchase price.
2.5.
Consequent on this the respondent, acting
on the instruction of Bay Drive, addressed a letter, on his firm’s
letterhead, to
the appellant on 14 February 2013, the material
portion of which read, ”
We hereby
confirm that we manage the Escrow account of Bay Drive Trading 64
(Pty) Ltd whereof the details are as follows: Nedbank
of South
Africa, Account Number 7[...], SWIFT CODE: N[...] .”
(“the escrow account”)
2.6.
On
the following day Bay Drive sent an email to the appellant in which
it was stated
inter
alia
that, “
Bay
Drive Trading has opened an Escrow account in the name of J. Heunis
Trustee Attorney for any funds received
”
[1]
and
“
Bay
Drive Trading will and confirms that they have available 120 tons IC
45 (4 Trucks) for despatch via your agent from Durban
.”
2.7.
On the same day, and pursuant to a request
contained in the last-mentioned email, the appellant sent a letter to
Bay Drive in which
it confirmed its order for the 120 tons of sugar.
That letter, which was co-signed by the plaintiff’s managing
director and
group financial director also recorded that “
We
also confirm that on receipt of an invoice we will process the funds
to be transferred into an Escrow account in the name of
J. Heunis
Trustee Attorney, provided no Vat is charged for export and a SADC
Certificate accompanies the documents for cross border
export
.”
2.8.
Three days later, which is to say on Monday
18 February 2013, Bay Drive addressed an email to the appellant,
copied to the respondent
which,
inter
alia
, contained the following
recordals:
i.
The sum required for 120 tons at
USD643 p.t. is S77160. (seventyseven (sic) thousand one hundred and
sixty); and
ii.
This sum would be held by our Attorney
and only released when your agent confirms with our representative on
site that the 120 tons
of sugar has been loaded onto your trucks
together with the certificates of proof that the sugar is of
Brazilian Origin and accompanied
with the SGS certificate
.
2.9.
On the following day, 19 February 2013, Bay
Drive sent an invoice to the appellant in the amount of USD77160. The
narrative recorded
that it was in respect of 120 metric tons of
refined white sugar.
2.10.
On 20 February 2013 the appellant paid the
agreed amount of USD77160.00 into the account which the respondent
had designated.
2.11.
The
respondent caused the United States Dollars to be converted into
South African Rands, which were paid into another account on
which he
was authorised to transact. Why exactly this was done is unclear;
however it is also not important
[2]
.
According to the respondent’s evidence the rand amount
received into his trust account was “in the region
of
R670 000”.
2.12.
On
22 February 2013 the respondent caused an amount of R402 192 to
be paid to a third party, Goldkeys International (Pty) Ltd
(“Goldkeys”). This was done on the telephonic instruction
of Mr Hodoul.
[3]
2.13.
On
Monday 25 February the respondent received another telephone call
from Mr Hodoul who instructed him to pay a further amount
of
R201 096.00 to Goldkeys. The respondent complied with this
instruction.
[4]
2.14.
Only 3 truckloads of sugar, the combined
weight/mass of which amounted to 90 metric tons were despatched –
i.e. there was
a shortfall of 30T.
2.15.
On 26 February 2013 Bay Drive addressed an
email to the appellant in which it acknowledged the shortfall (which
it attributed to
logistical issues) and stated that “the
balance of the funds deposited against the 4
th
truck will be refunded through the appropriate banking channels”.
2.16.
In the months that followed, correspondence
passed between the appellant and Bay Drive in relation to the
outstanding quantity of
sugar. Notwithstanding numerous undertakings
on the part of Bay Drive, the balance was never despatched. The
appellant also did
not receive any refund.
2.17.
On 18 July 2013 the appellant addressed an
email to the respondent in which it requested him to confirm that it
continued to hold
25% of the amount which had originally been
deposited into what was described as the “
Escrow
Trust account in the name of Bay Drive Trading.”
That
appears not to have elicited any response.
2.18.
On 11 November 2013, by which time the
appellant had run out of patience, Ms Jackson of the appellant
telephoned the respondent
with a view to obtaining a refund. She
followed up with and email in which she briefly set out the history
of the matter and recorded
that the appellant required the balance of
the monies which she believed to have been retained in the escrow
account repaid to
it.
2.19.
The respondent replied saying he would
“take instructions” and revert.
2.20.
In fact, neither a refund nor any
substantive responsive was forthcoming.
3.
The appellant accordingly proceeded to
institute action against Bay Drive and the respondent in the
magistrates’ court from
which this appeal arises. In terms of
its particulars of claim, as amended, the current appellant advanced
two alternative causes
of action: one in contract and one in delict.
The claim in contract was based on an alleged term (presumably tacit)
to the effect
that the respondent would be obliged to refund monies
corresponding to the value of any sugar that was not despatched –
calculated
in accordance with the rate stipulated in the mandate. In
the alternative, the appellant relied on the breach of a legal duty
of
care – i.e., a claim in delict. The relief claimed was
payment of USD 19 290.00, being the value of the outstanding
quantity of sugar at the stipulated rate of USD643 per metric ton.
4.
In his plea the respondent admitted having
received the money in issue and that he managed the account into
which it was deposited
but otherwise denied all of the plaintiff’s
allegations and put it to the proof of its case. Amongst the
allegations which
were expressly denied were the existence of a
contractual relationship between him and the plaintiff (i.e., the
current appellant)
and that he owed any duty of care to the
plaintiff. He furthermore pleaded that he had at all times
administered the account in
accordance with the instructions of Bay
Drive “
as agreed between the
plaintiff and the first defendant
”.
5.
Two witnesses testified at the trial: a Ms
Jackson on behalf of the plaintiff/appellant, and the respondent, Mr
Heunis. As we have
already dealt with the core common cause facts, it
is not necessary to deal with Ms Jackson’s evidence. The
respondent’s
evidence can conveniently be summarised as
follows:
5.1.
He understood the word “escrow”,
to be a synonym for “trust” and hence understood
that what was required
of him was to hold the purchase price in trust
pending fulfilment of the condition stipulated in what he referred to
as his mandate.
5.2.
He could not receive foreign currency into
his trust account. He accordingly opened a separate account with
Nedbank (i.e., the account
designated in his letter of 14 February
2013) with Nedbank.
5.3.
Upon,
or immediately following, receipt of the funds into the designated
account they were converted into South African Rands, which
were paid
into his trust account, from which he was able to disburse moneys.
[5]
The
funds, when converted, yielded approximately R670 000.00.
5.4.
Both of the abovementioned payments to
Goldkeys were made on the telephonic instruction of Mr Hodoul. The
first of the instructions
was received during the morning of Friday
22 February 2013 and the second was received on the morning of 25
February 2013. In dealing
with these instructions the respondent
initially stated that Mr Hodoul had expressly told him that the
purchaser’s agent
(who was never identified) had confirmed and
that a portion of the funds should be released. However, he later
conceded that he
did not have a clear recollection of the
conversations and said that the essence of what Mr Hodoul had
conveyed to him was that
everything was in order and that he should
therefore release a portion of the funds to Goldkeys.
5.5.
He did not, at the time, know exactly how
much sugar had been despatched or why the two payments were required
to be made to Goldkeys.
He also did not personally take any steps to
ascertain whether the required confirmation had in fact been given as
he did not understand
the mandate to require that of him. He simply
accepted, based on what Mr Hodoul had told him, that the stipulated
condition had
been fulfilled – for which purpose 120 metric
tons of sugar would have needed to have been loaded. That being the
case, the
funds, on his understanding, belonged to Bay Drive and fell
to be dealt with according to that company’s instructions.
5.6.
A balance of approximately R70 000.00
remained in the transactional account after the second
payment to Goldkeys.
5.7.
Acting on further instructions from Mr
Hodoul the respondent made a number of further payments which
included a payment to Bay Drive.
Those payments, together with bank
charges, completely depleted the funds in the account.
6.
To
complete the picture, the facts were that Goldkeys which was Bay
Drive’s supplier, insisted on receiving payment before
allowing
the sugar to be loaded onto the respondent’s trucks.
[6]
Email
correspondence, which was copied to the respondent, passed between
the parties in relation to that issue. It is not clear
that the
respondent in fact read any of the emails. The only relevance for
present purposes is that it is clear that loading had
not yet even
begun when the respondent released the first payment. Indeed,
respondent’s counsel repeatedly put it to Ms Jackson
in the
course of cross-examination that, as a matter of fact, payment had to
precede loading. While that may have been, and indeed
clearly was,
Goldkey’s position, that was a matter between Bay Drive and
Goldkeys. There is absolutely no indication that
the appellant ever
agreed to amend the terms of the mandate to allow drawdowns so as to
enable Bay Drive to satisfy its obligations
to Goldkeys – which
is clearly what occurred.
7.
The magistrate found for the current
respondent and accordingly dismissed the claim with costs. As the
judgment is an extremely
terse one, we will not comment on it
directly. Instead we will deal with the applicable legal principles
and whether, on a proper
application thereof, the claim fell either
to be upheld or to be dismissed. We do so in the paragraphs which
follow.
8.
Turning to the legal issues, that a party
who holds moneys in trust owes fiduciary obligations to the depositor
is so well settled
as to be trite. He/she is obliged to deal with the
funds strictly in accordance with his/her mandate, with due regard to
the competing
interests of the depositor and whoever may become
entitled to receipt of the funds upon the happening of the stipulated
event.
Indeed, it is established that the nature of the obligation is
so onerous that the trustee may be held liable even if the funds
are
lost as a result of a fraud perpetrated upon him/her. These
obligations apply
a fortiori
in the case of attorneys by virtue of the fact that they are officers
of the court and persons whose ordinary business specifically
includes the handling of trust moneys. The law reports are replete
with authorities to this effect. The denial of the existence
of an
obligation towards the appellant (which was not persisted with in
argument before us) was thus untenable – as indeed
was the
denial of a contractual relationship between the appellant and the
respondent. As the respondent’s counsel did not
persist in
these lines argument on appeal we will say no more in this regard.
9.
What was required of the respondent was
that he should deal with the funds which had been placed under his
control strictly in accordance
with the mandate. While it might be so
that he would, in practice, first have been contacted by a
representative of the seller
(who was his client), what was required
of him was to take all reasonable steps to ensure that the condition
stipulated in the
mandate had in fact been fulfilled before releasing
any portion of the funds. The condition which had to be met was that
the purchaser’s
agent had confirmed that the stipulated
quantity of sugar (120T) had been loaded onto the purchaser’s
trucks together with
the necessary certificates of origin and what
the parties described as “the SGS certificate”. The
position of the respondent
was akin to that of a banker when dealing
with a letter of credit payable against presentation of bill of
lading – i.e. while
he was not required to satisfy himself that
the stipulated tonnage had in fact been loaded, he was required to
take proper (i.e.,
diligent) steps to satisfy himself that the
purchaser’s agent had indeed given the necessary confirmation.
The fact
that he happened to be based in Pretoria whereas the sugar
was to be loaded at the port of Durban is neither here nor there in
this context. Neither is the fact that the mandate did not identify
the purchaser’s agent or stipulate a mode of communication.
The
respondent had only to pick up the telephone or, better still, send
an urgent email.
10.
As we have already indicated, what in fact
triggered Mr Hodoul’s instructions to the respondent was
Goldkeys’ insistence
on receipt of payment before loading. Had
the respondent read the email correspondence then he would have been
aware of those facts.
He however testified that he was not so aware,
and we are prepared to accept that that evidence was truthful and
hence that the
respondent acted in good faith. That is however
ultimately immaterial for present purposes. What is relevant is that
the
respondent did not act strictly in accordance with the mandate.
He also did not conduct himself with the requisite degree of care
in
dealing with the funds which had been entrusted to him. If he made
even the simplest of enquiries, then he would have ascertained
that
the stipulated condition had not been fulfilled. What exactly
would have occurred if he had sought instructions from
the appellant
cannot be said with certainty. On a conspectus of the evidence it
seems probable that the appellant would have
been prepared to
authorise payment in tranches against delivery of the sugar onto the
trucks. However, one thing that is clear
is that the appellant would
not have authorised the release of funds in excess of the value of
sugar actually loaded, calculated
at the agreed rate. Indeed, the
very purpose of placing the purchase price in trust was to guard
against the risk of non-delivery
of all or part of the goods
associated with the transaction and consequent financial loss.
11.
Whether one categorises the respondent’s
negligent conduct as a breach of a contractual term implied by law
(which we believe
it to have been), or simply a breach of legal duty
of care, the result is the same – i.e., the respondent is
liable to compensate
the appellant for its loss.
12.
It
was argued on behalf of the respondent that any amount that may be
awarded to the appellant should be in South African currency
and
should be computed with reference to the Rand amount which the
conversion yielded – i.e., a portion of R670 000.00.
In
our view these arguments are without merit. It is settled law that
our courts are empowered to order payment in foreign currency.
The
only question which arises is whether it is appropriate to do so. The
answer to that question falls to be determined on a case-by-case
basis with reference to the facts of the matter under
consideration.
[7]
In
casu
,
the matter is one which concerns international trade as opposed to a
domestic transaction. The transaction was, moreover (as is
the norm
in international trade), denominated in foreign currency – viz.
United States Dollars, and the funds which were
deposited into what
was described as the escrow account were in that currency. The loss
was moreover “felt” in United
States Dollars, not South
African Rands. These considerations being so, the appellant is
entitled to an award in U S Dollars.
13.
The appellant entrusted the respondent with
USD77 160.00, being the agreed purchase price of a consignment
of 120 metric tons
of sugar at USD643 per metric ton. The respondent
released the full amount in circumstances where only 90 metric tons
were despatched.
The appellant has accordingly suffered a loss equal
to the value of the tonnage of sugar which was not despatched (30T)
at the
stipulated price of USD643/T, that is to say
USD19 290,00. That is also the amount which would, on the
probabilities,
have remained in the escrow account if the respondent
had sought and obtained the appellant’s authority to effect
payment
for the quantity of sugar which was in fact despatched. It is
settled law that a judgment debtor is entitled to discharge a
judgment
debt expressed in foreign currency by paying the creditor an
amount of rands sufficient to enable the creditor to purchase the
stipulated amount of foreign currency from a licensed foreign
currency dealer on the date of payment. We will accordingly say
nothing
further in this regard.
14.
In its particulars of claim, as amended,
the appellant (as plaintiff) sought interest at the rate of 9 percent
per annum from 25
February 2015, being the date upon which it
demanded payment from the respondent. The claim for interest was
disallowed in
Standard Chartered
;
however, that was because the plaintiff’s claim for interest
was advanced as one for special damages – which the court
found
not to be competent. Such considerations do not arise
in
casu
given that interest is claimed on
the ordinary basis rather than in terms of an agreement or as a
special head of damages. Claims
for interest in similar matters were
allowed in
Elgin Brown and Hamer (Pty)
Ltd v Dampskibsselskabet Torm Ltd
1988 (4) SA 671
(N) and also in
Barclays Bank of
Swaziland Ltd v Mnyeketi
[1992] 3 All
SA 901
(W). Although neither of those decisions is binding on us,
their correctness has not been questioned in any other judgment that
we are aware of; nor was that done in argument before us. We
accordingly consider the approach adopted in those matters to be
correct.
15.
As to costs, it was not argued that the
normal rule (viz. that costs should follow the result) should not
apply, nor are we aware
of any consideration which militates against
its application. The appellant is accordingly entitled to costs.
The order in the court
below is accordingly set aside and substituted with the following
order:
1.
The respondent is ordered to pay the
appellant an amount of USD 19 290.00 plus interest thereon
calculated at the rate of 9%
per annum reckoned from 25 February
2015.
2.
The respondent may discharge its
indebtedness to the appellant in terms of the preceding paragraph by
paying to the appellant an
amount of South African Rands sufficient
to enable the appellant to purchase the stipulated amount of
USD19 290.00 net of
commissions and charges (which will, in that
event, be for the respondent’s account) from a licensed foreign
exchange dealer
on the date of payment.
3.
The respondent is ordered to pay the
appellants costs.
4.
The respondent shall also pay the costs of
this appeal, as taxed or agreed.
G S MYBURGH
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
M P KUMALO
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
(I
agree and it is so ordered)
Appearances:
For
the appellant:
Adv
B Manning
Instructed
by:
Fullard
Mayer Morrison Inc
For
the respondent:
Ad
L Van der Merwe
Instructed
by:
Du
Plessis & Eksteen Inc
[1]
As will appear from what follows, this was not true. Although an
account was opened (at some time), it was not a trust account
in the
name of the respondent.
[2]
In
his evidence in chief the respondent stated that the money was paid
into his trust account; however that was clearly not the
case. The
account was held in the name of Bay Drive.
[3]
This payment was made from another account of Bay Drive Trading 64
(Pty) Ltd with Nedbank (account number 1[...]) and the
authoriser is recorded as having been the respondent.
[4]
Payment was made from the same bank account and again the voucher
records that the authoriser was the respondent.
[5]
This evidence appears not to have been completely true given that
the transactional/current account in issue was in the name
of Bay
Drive (see fn 3
supra
);
however nothing turns on that for present purposes.
[6]
The trucks appear to have been those of a contractor rather than the
appellant’s own trucks; however nothing turns on that.
[7]
Standard Chartered Bank of Canada v Nedperm Bank Ltd
[1994] 2 All SA
524
(A).
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