Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 1134South Africa
Distedu Holdings (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs (28867/2019) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1134 (4 November 2024)
Headnotes
Summary: Plaintiff seeking to recover proceeds of moneys erroneously paid to incorrect recipient – moneys constituting municipal infrastructure grants of some R183 million – recipient, via its attorney, inter alia paid the 13th defendant R26 million of these funds – 13th defendant dissipating funds, some even after knowledge of its tainted source – plaintiff claims in terms of condictio ob turpem vel iniustam causa or general enrichment claim – exceptions taken – pleadings not vague and embarrassing and can be pleaded to - at pleading stage, case for possible acknowledgement of general enrichment claim made out – exceptions dismissed.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Distedu Holdings (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs (28867/2019) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1134 (4 November 2024)
Distedu Holdings (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs (28867/2019) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1134 (4 November 2024)
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sino date 4 November 2024
HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
CASE
NO: 28867/2019
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO.
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
04 NOVEMBER 2024
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
DISTEDU
HOLDINGS (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
MINISTER
OF COOPERATIVE GOVERNANCE
AND
TRADITIONAL AFFAIRS
Respondent
Summary:
Plaintiff seeking to recover proceeds of moneys
erroneously paid to incorrect recipient – moneys constituting
municipal infrastructure
grants of some R183 million –
recipient, via its attorney, inter alia paid the 13
th
defendant R26 million of these funds – 13
th
defendant dissipating funds, some even after knowledge of its tainted
source – plaintiff claims in terms of condictio ob
turpem vel
iniustam causa or general enrichment claim – exceptions taken –
pleadings not vague and embarrassing and
can be pleaded to - at
pleading stage, case for possible acknowledgement of general
enrichment claim made out – exceptions
dismissed.
ORDER
The
exception is dismissed with costs, such costs to include the costs of
two counsel, where employed.
JUDGMENT
The
matter was heard in open court and the judgment was prepared and
authored by the judge whose name is reflected herein.
Judgment
was handed down electronically by circulation to the parties’
legal representatives by email and by uploading it
to the electronic
file of this matter on Caselines. The date for handing-down is
deemed to be 04 November 2024
.
DAVIS,
J
Introduction
[1]
The plaintiff,
being the Minister of Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs
(the Minister) erroneously paid some R183 million
to the Greater
Sekhukhune Secondary Cooperative Ltd (the Coop) instead of to the
Greater Sekhukhune Municipality. The amount
paid over
constituted municipal infrastructure grants to which the Coop had no
right.
[2]
The Coop, via
its attorney, repaid some of the money, but paid the rest out to
various entities, including the 13
th
defendant, Distedu Holdings (Pty) Ltd (Distedu).
[3]
When the
Minister sought to recover the R26 million paid to Distedu, the
latter excepted to the Minister’s particulars of
claim.
The
pleaded claim against Distedu
[4]
It
is trite that, at an exception stage, a court and the parties are
bound to the factual allegations contained in the pleading
excepted
against
[1]
.
[5]
These
facts have been pleaded as follows: during July and August 2018 the
plaintiff erroneously made two payments totaling R 183 450 000.00
into the bank account of the Coop
[2]
.
Of this amount the Coop transferred R130 million to Boshoff
Attorneys
[3]
.
[6]
Pursuant
to the Coop and Boshoff Attorneys having been informed that the
payments had been made in error by the plaintiff, R50 million
was
recovered by a reversal of payment by FNB and R29 402 836.41
had been repaid by Boshoff Attorneys
[4]
.
[7]
In
the meantime however, the Coop had instructed Boshoff Attorneys to
transfer R38 163 109, 54 of the erroneously received
funds
to Distedu
[5]
.
[8]
The
transfer to Distedu was made “pursuant to the unlawful acts
and/or unlawful instructions” of the Coop
[6]
.
[9]
In
addition, the plaintiff had pleaded that “the said payment by
the Cooperative to Distedu was without legal cause”
[7]
.
[10]
During
December 2018 the plaintiff had obtained a court order in an attempt
to recover the unlawfully dissipated funds and it pleaded
that
Distedu had, at the latest become aware hereof a 11 January 2019
[8]
.
By that time, however, Distedu only had R649 044,70 of the money
left
[9]
.
[11]
Relying
on the
condiction
ob turpem vel iniustam causa
(a claim based upon a “wicked” or unlawful cause)
alternatively a general enrichment claim, the plaintiff pleaded that
Distedu had been unjustifiably enriched by the amounts it had
received and that the plaintiff had been impoverished by the same
amounts
[10]
.
The
exception
[12]
Exception was
taken on the basis that the plaintiff’s particulars of claim
was vague and embarrassing, alternatively that
it did not disclose a
cause of action against Distedu.
[13]
The grounds of
the exception have been formulated thus:
“
3
Plaintiff,
in order to substantiate its claim against the 13
th
defendant, based on the action pleaded, nowhere alleges:
3.1
That
the payment was not made in the bona fide and reasonable, but
mistaken belief that monies were not owed to the 13
th
defendant.
3.2
That
the error in making the payment was not reasonable.
3.3
That
the monies the 1
st
defendant paid to the 13
th
defendant was no due and/or not payable.
3.4
That
the moneys were paid in respect of or consequent upon an illegal or
void or immoral agreement.
3.5
That no
valid agreement existed or exists between the 1
st
and the 13
th
defendants alternatively that any agreement, if it existed, was void
or immoral.
3.6
That
the 13
th
defendant was enriched at the expense of the plaintiff or
3.7
That
the plaintiff was impoverished.
As
a consequence, it is not possible for [the 13
th
]
defendant to plead to the plaintiff’s particulars of claim
”
.
Evaluation
[14]
At
the outset, one can dispense with the complaints contained in the
above quoted paragraphs 3.5, 3.6 and 3.7. These complaints
were
simply unfounded: the absence of a valid agreement between the Coop
and Distedu had expressly been pleaded
[11]
and so had the enrichment and impoverishment
[12]
.
[15]
The exposition
of the facts could hardly have been pleaded clearer and the complaint
of vagueness and embarrassment is equally unfounded.
I find
that, on a reading of the plaintiff’s particulars of claim, all
the allegations against Distedu can be pleaded to
without
embarrassment.
[16]
If there may
be any doubt on this score, Distedu’s sole director had, in an
affidavit delivered in support of
Distedu’s
application for
condonation for the late delivery of its heads of argument, already
disclosed
Distedu’s
primary
defence. It is this: the moneys paid by the Coop to
Distedu
was partial payment
of the manufacturing and commissioning costs of a plant designed to
utilise marula fruit and manufacture products
therefrom, which work
had been done at the instance of the Coop. There is accordingly
no discernable reason why
Distedu
cannot deliver a plea
to this effect. Whether such a defence would, in view if the
circumstances of the case, if proven, be
sufficient, would be for the
trial court to decide.
[17]
Incidentally,
and in the interest of reaching finality in this interlocutory matter
the condonation sought by Distedu is granted.
[18]
This
leaves one with the consideration of the rest of the grounds of
exception. The fact that the payments to the Coop had
been made
in error, had expressly been pleaded
[13]
.
The complaints made in quoted paragraphs 3.1, 3.2 and 3.3. of the
exception all pertain to elements of the
condictio
indebiti
(which is a claim for recovery of a prior a payment made in the
bona
fide
and reasonable, but mistaken belief that it was owing)
[14]
.
[19]
The
facts of the matter however, closely resemble those in
First
National Bank of South Africa v Perry NO and Others
[15]
(
Perry
).
In that matter the appellant had instituted action for the recovery
of the proceeds of a forged cheque, not only from the
forger, but
also from those in whose hands the proceeds ended up.
[20]
The summary of
the facts and claims in
Perry
is to the found in paras [3] and [4] of the judgment as follows:
“
Briefly
stated, FNB’s case is that after the forged cheque was
laundered through the bank of a stockbroker, the latter issued
three
cheques on Dhamba’s instructions, which were paid, directly or
indirectly, to Nedbank, Standard and NRB to the credit
of either
Dhamba, the trust or Repsta … The relief sought against the
banks, Nedbank, Standard and NRB was payment of such
stolen funds as
were traced to each of them …
”.
[21]
The court then
went on to explain that the
condictio
indebiti
is based on the factual absence of a cause for the transfer of funds,
in the first instance, simply because there is none and in
the second
instance, because of a mistaken belief that there is one. By
contrast, in the case of the
condictio
ob turpem vel iniustam causa
,
there is a cause, but it is an unlawful one. The law does not
recognize it as a valid means of conferring title.
[22]
It appears
that this distinction also applies to the pleadings in this matter.
In the present case, the Minister similarly
relies on the
condictio
indebiti
for its claim against the Coop for moneys erroneously paid to it, and
relies on the “unjust cause” upon which the Coop
had
distributed and laundered funds to which it had no claim via its
attorneys to Distedu. It is on this basis that the plaintiff
claims from the Distedu the R649 044, 70 referred to in
paragraph [10] above.
[23]
It was in
similar circumstances as these that the Supreme Court of Appeal in
Perry
further concluded at [29] that in the same fashion whereby a
rei
vindicatio
seeks to recover identified stolen money, “
there
is a not dissimilar rule affecting the enriched possessor of stolen
goods who parts with them with the knowledge of the owner’s
claim … this rule that the enriched party may not with
impunity part with the goods after learning of the impoverished
party’s claim, supports the conclusion reached earlier that
once he gains such knowledge, he is liable to the extent of his
enrichment
”.
On that basis, the court found that a cause of action had been made
out against the receivers of funds. In
my view, the same
applies to the claim against Distedu.
[24]
Distedu’s
complaints referred to earlier might therefore have been applicable
to the pleaded case based on the
condictio
indebiti
,
had it been the in a similar position as the Coop. Those
complaints cannot be applicable to the pleaded case that the Coop
had, with knowledge of the fact that it had no claim to the monies,
misappropriated it and laundered it through its attorneys to
Distedu. Turpitude then not only attached to those who
laundered the funds but also to those who received it once they had
knowledge of the turpitude.
[25]
I consequently
find that the formulation of the claim as against Distedu, does not
suffer from the complaints based on a different
and inapplicable
cause of action.
[26]
In
addition to this, the Minister’s claim against Distedu is also
for recovery of the rest of the funds received, based on
a general
enrichment claim. Notably, although it had been referred to
during argument, exception had not been taken against
the particulars
of claim insofar as it envisaged this reliance on a general
enrichment claim and perhaps wisely so. While
it is trite that
no such claim has been generally accepted as yet in South Africa, it
has often been held that perhaps the time
has come to do so
[16]
.
[27]
In this
regard, it is equally notable that the plaintiff has pleaded that “…
it is just
and equitable and/or in the interest of justice and/or in the public
interest …
”
that Distedu be held liable for the total amount of tainted funds
which it had received. That, however, is a matter
for the trial
court to decide.
[28]
In the
premises, I find that none of the grounds of exception are valid.
The exception should therefore fail in its entirety.
Costs
[29]
I had
considered whether the costs of the exception should be ordered to be
costs in the cause, but in view of the fact that the
grounds of
exception were so materially misplaced and that it appeared that
Distedu could very well have pleaded to the particulars
of claim, I
find that the exception had merely resulted in an unnecessary delay
of the action. This has been exacerbated
by Distedu’s
dilatoriness in proceeding with its exception, as evinced by the late
delivery of its heads of argument, despite
having been compelled to
do so. Considering this, together with the lack of success of
the exception, I find, in the exercise
of the court’s
discretion, that costs should follow the event.
Order
[30]
Consequently, the following order
is made:
The
exception is dismissed with costs, such costs to include the costs of
two counsel, where employed.
N DAVIS
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng Division,
Pretoria
Date
of Hearing: 30 October 2024
Judgment
delivered: 04 November 2024
APPEARANCES:
For the Plaintiff:
Adv A J Lapan
Attorney for the
Plaintiff:
State Attorneys,
Pretoria
For the Defendant:
Adv H. F Geyer
Attorney for the
Defendant:
Becker Attorneys,
Polokwane
c/o
Phillip Venter Attorneys, Pretoria
[1]
Joubert (rea), LOTWSA, Vol 4 3d Edition at 193.
[2]
Par 10 of the Particulars of Claim.
[3]
Par 12 of the Particulars of Claim.
[4]
Par 15 of the Particulars of Claim.
[5]
Par 68 of the Particulars of Claim.
[6]
Par 69 of the Particulars of Claim.
[7]
Par 70 of the Particulars of Claim.
[8]
Par 71 of the Particulars of Claim.
[9]
Par 72 of the Particulars of Claim.
[10]
Par 37 of the Particulars of Claim.
[11]
Par 70 of the Particulars of Claim.
[12]
Par 73 of the Particulars of Claim.
[13]
Par 10 of the Particulars of Claim.
[14]
Iscor
Pension Fund v Jerling
1978 (3) SA 858
(T) and
Rahim
v Minister of Justice
1964 (4) SA 630
(A) at 634.
[15]
2001 (3) SA 960 (SCA).
[16]
Afrisure
CC and Another v Watson NO and Another
[2008] ZASCA 89
;
2009 (2) SA 127
(SCA), referring inter alia to
McCarthy
Retail Ltd v Shortdistance Carriers CC
2001 (3) SA 483
(SCA) at par [8].
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