Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 543South Africa
Malebye Motaung Mtembu Attorneys v Ntozini and Others [2023] ZAGPPHC 543; 22775/2021 (11 July 2023)
Headnotes
by Mtembu in its trust account on behalf of Eskom when stolen by Ntozini through fraudulent means – Whether the firm, who is not the owner of funds, has an interest in stolen funds and recovery thereof – Mtembu remains duty bound to account to its client for misappropriated funds that were ultimately not utilised for benefit of client – Direct and substantial interest in subject matter of application established by firm – Locus standi established – Application succeeds – Legal practice Act 28 of 2014, s 86(4).
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
>>
2023
>>
[2023] ZAGPPHC 543
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Malebye Motaung Mtembu Attorneys v Ntozini and Others [2023] ZAGPPHC 543; 22775/2021 (11 July 2023)
Malebye Motaung Mtembu Attorneys v Ntozini and Others [2023] ZAGPPHC 543; 22775/2021 (11 July 2023)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPPHC/Data/2023_543.html
sino date 11 July 2023
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
FLYNOTES:
PROFESSION – Trust
account –
Possession of
funds
–
Claim for
restitution of funds – The funds were held by Mtembu in its
trust account on behalf of Eskom when stolen by
Ntozini through
fraudulent means – Whether the firm, who is not the owner of
funds, has an interest in stolen funds
and recovery thereof –
Mtembu remains duty bound to account to its client for
misappropriated funds that were ultimately
not utilised for
benefit of client – Direct and substantial interest in
subject matter of application established by
firm – Locus
standi established – Application succeeds – Legal
practice Act 28 of 2014, s 86(4).
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO:
2021/22775
REPORTABLE: NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED
Date: 11/07/2023
A Maier-Frawley
In
the matter between:
MALEBYE
MOTAUNG MTEMBU ATTORNEYS
Applicant
And
ONGA
NTOZINI
First
Respondent
FIRST
NATIONAL BANK LTD
Second
Respondent
STANDARD
BANK OF SOUTH AFRICA LTD
Third
Respondent
ABSA
LTD
Fourth
Respondent
L
MBANJWA INCORPORATED
Respondent
ZAZI
NTOZINI
Sixth
Respondent
LETHABO
GAILELE
Seventh
Respondent
BUSISIWE
PHELEU
Eighth
Respondent
ST.
STITHIAN COLLEGE
Ninth
Respondent
REALTY
1
Tenth
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MAIER-FRAWLEY J:
1.
The
applicant is a firm of attorneys who previously employed the first
respondent in the position of candidate attorney.
[1]
In such position, the first respondent inter alia conducted
litigation on behalf of clients of the applicant.
2.
The fifth respondent is the first respondent’s
attorneys of record in these proceedings. The fifth respondent holds
an amount
of R118 000.00 in its trust account on behalf of the first
respondent, which amount the first respondent tendered in his
answering
affidavit to pay to the applicant in partial satisfaction
of its claim for the recovery of funds that had been stolen by the
first
respondent. The fifth respondent filed a notice to abide the
court’s decision in this matter and no order for costs was
sought
against the fifth respondent in the applicant’s amended
notice of motion filed of record.
3.
The
applicant initially sought relief in terms of its amended notice of
motion filed of record.
[2]
However, at the conclusion of oral argument tendered at the hearing
of the matter, certain claims, amongst others, those against
the
third and fourth respondents (relating to stolen funds that the first
respondent had transferred into his Standard bank account
and into
the eighth respondent’s Absa Bank account respectively) and
those against the ninth and tenth respondents were abandoned,
with no
order for costs being sought against the second to tenth respondents.
4.
Only the first respondent opposed the application.
None of the other respondents participated in these proceedings.
5.
The relevant undisputed or unrefuted background
factual matrix is uncontentious. By his own admission, the first
respondent hatched
a fraudulent plan to misappropriate monies
belonging to a client of the applicant. The applicant was mandated to
represent Eskom
in litigation instituted against it by one Grace
Nzimande. The first respondent was in charge of the matter,
ostensibly under the
supervision of his principal, Ms Malebye, the
deponent to the applicant’s affidavits.
6.
In furtherance of his devious plan, the first
respondent advised Eskom to settle the action instituted against it
in the amount
of R3.6 million. Eskom agreed to do so. To that end,
the first respondent drafted a bogus settlement agreement, inter alia
setting
out the terms of payment of the amount of R3.6 million by
Eskom to Ms Nzimande, one of which called for Eskom to pay the said
sum
directly to Ms Nzimande and into her designated bank account. The
first respondent himself signed the fabricated settlement agreement,
purporting to be the Plaintiff. He then forwarded same to Eskom for
authorisation, thereby falsely and intentionally representing
to
Eskom that Ms Mzimande had accepted the proposed settlement and had
signed the agreement as plaintiff. In truth and reality,
Ms Nzimande
had no knowledge of the purported settlement, nor the contents of the
settlement agreement, which she had also not
signed. Likewise, Eskom
was blissfully unaware that no settlement had in fact been agreed to
with Ms Nzimande. It is common cause
that the settlement amount was
authorised by Eskom, however, it is unclear from the papers as to why
the first respondent had in
fact himself also signed the settlement
agreement on behalf of Eskom. However, nothing turns on that fact.
7.
It is at this point that the first respondent’s
devious plan went somewhat awry, Whilst the fabricated settlement
agreement
provided for payment of the settlement amount to be made
directly to the plaintiff, Ms Nzimande, the fact that Eskom chose not
to do so is evidenced by its deposit of that sum into the applicant’s
trust account, ostensibly for onward distribution by
the applicant of
such sum to the plaintiff on behalf of the applicant’s client
(Eskom). I imagine that the first respondent
had to think fast about
how to overcome this hurdle, which he seemingly had no difficulty in
doing. When asked by his principal
to inform her of the plaintiff’s
designated account number, he forged a letter on a First National
Bank (FNB) letterhead
in which the bank account number and account
holder details of an account represented therein to be that of Ms
Nzimande, were certified.
Unbeknown to Ms Nzimande, FNB or Ms Malebye
of the applicant, the account number listed in the forged letter
belonged to the account
held by the first respondent at FNB. Upon
receipt of the forged letter and on 21 December 2020, Ms Malebye duly
transferred the
sum of R3.6 million into the designated account,
being the first respondent’s bank account, having been deceived
by the first
respondent into believing that she was effecting payment
to the plaintiff in settlement of the action as mandated by Eskom.
8.
The upshot of the aforegoing is that Eskom was
deceived by the first respondent into agreeing to effect payment to
the plaintiff
in settlement of the plaintiff’s claim in the
action. Eskom deposited the settlement amount into the applicant’s
trust
account for such purpose. The funds were provided by Eskom to
the applicant under the false pretence of a non-existent settlement
agreement that was fabricated by First Respondent with the intention
of misappropriating the monies for his personal benefit. Ms
Malebye
of the applicant, in turn, having likewise been deceived into
believing that the settlement of the action was genuine and
valid,
effected payment of the funds provided to the applicant by Eskom into
an account that was intentionally and falsely represented
by the
first respondent to be that of the plaintiff, whilst the bank account
was in truth and in fact that of the first respondent.
9.
After
the first respondent’s account at FNB was credited with the sum
of R3.6 million, he transferred a portion of the stolen
funds into
the bank accounts of the 6
th
,
7
th
and
8
th
respondents.
He also used part of the stolen funds to settle personal debts and to
purchase assets. Between the
date
of the deposit (21 Dec 2020) and 13 March 2021, he had utilised
and/or dispersed an amount of approximately R2.6 million.
10.
After the theft and fraud was discovered by the
applicant, during March 2021, the applicant sought and obtained an
interim order,
amongst others, freezing the funds standing to the
credit of the first respondent’s bank account held at FNB and
interdicting
him from accessing, withdrawing, or transferring the
funds standing to the credit of his account. The 2
nd
respondent (FNB) was also ordered to release the
first respondent’s bank statements to the applicant. Upon
receipt of the
bank statements, the applicant was able to trace
various transfers of the stolen funds made by the first respondent to
various
parties, including the 6
th
,
7
th
and
8
th
respondents,
as alluded to in paragraph 9 above. On 9 April 2021, a final order
was granted in favour of the applicant. In terms
of that order, the
applicant was directed to institute legal proceedings for the
recovery of the stolen funds within 20 days from
date of such order.
This ultimately culminated in the launch of these proceedings.
11.
In the
answering affidavit, the first respondent admitted having ‘unlawfully
appropriated the sum of R3.6 million from Eskom
under false
pretences.’ Implicit in such admission is the concession that
the first respondent knew that he was not entitled
to the stolen
funds.
[3]
In his heads of
argument, the first respondent admitted to having defrauded Eskom of
the sum of R3.6 million and that the funds
in the various accounts
listed in the notice of motion originated from the R3.6 million that
he defrauded Eskom of. It is not in
dispute that the first respondent
had, after receipt of the amount of R3.6 million in his FNB account,
transferred a portion of
the stolen funds into his personal bank
account held at Standard Bank, as well as into the sixth and seventh
respondents’
respective bank accounts at FNB, including the
eighth respondent’s Absa bank account.
[4]
12.
On the
unrefuted version of the applicant, Eskom did not want to be involved
in this matter, as evidenced by an email addressed
by Krishan
Chaithoo of Eskom to the applicant, in which he stated that ‘the
matter regarding recovery is between your company
and your employee.
Eskom should not be involved in this.’
[5]
As the applicant is still Eskom's attorneys of record, and as monies
were given to the Applicant by Eskom in relation to a settlement
that
was a fabrication by the First Respondent, the applicant avers that
it is the responsibility of the Applicant to recover the
monies and
pay it to Eskom.
First Respondent’s
opposition
13.
Although the first respondent raised various
points
in limine
in
his answering affidavit in opposition to the relief sought by the
applicant, only one was ultimately pursued at the hearing of
the
matter, which is that the applicant lacks
locus
standi
in the matter and therefore, so
the argument went, Eskom ought to have been joined as a party to the
proceedings. As regards the
merits of the applicant’s claim for
return of the stolen funds, which funds, as was common cause, have
been identified, traced
and retained in the bank accounts of the 1
st
,
6
th
and
7
th
respondents,
the first respondent offers no defence apart from the suggestion that
he has been sued by the wrong persona.
Lack
of locus standi
14.
The
first respondent relies on the contents of
clause
3.1(i) of the fabricated settlement agreement which provides that
'Eskom
shall
in
respect of the Settlement Amount and within 10 (ten) Business Days
after Signature Date,
make
payment
by
way of electronic funds transfer
to
Grace's designated account
,
without any deduction or set off of the sum of R3,600 000.00.
’
(emphasis added)
15.
The first respondent
submits in his heads of argument that ex facie the above provision,
Eskom did not include its attorneys (applicant)
’as agents for
the settlement’. In other words, the applicant’s trust
account was not the mandated account for
payment, nor did Ms
Nizimande designate the applicant’s account as the account for
payment. Thus, he submits that ‘
the
Applicant was never mandated to receive into its trust account the
sum of R3.6 million. As such it never became the lawful possessor
of
the funds. There was never an intention on the part of Eskom that the
funds would go to the trust account of the Applicant.
This is evident
from the afore-cited paragraph 3.1.1of Annexure MMM5.’
This
submission is a repeat of what is contained in paragraph 12.4 of the
answering affidavit, save that in the answering affidavit
the first
respondent went on to contend that ‘
There
is therefore no basis for the Applicant to state that it was
entrusted
with the sum of
R3.6 million by Eskom’.
16.
In my
view, the first respondent has wholly misconstrued the issue of legal
standing. The
l
ocus
standi
challenge
is not brought on the basis that the applicant had insufficient
interest in the relief sought.
Locus
standi in iudicio
concerns
the
sufficiency and directness of a litigant’s interest in
proceedings which warrants his/her/it’s title to prosecute
the
claim asserted. In
Four
Wheel Drive Accessory Distributors CC v Rattan NO
2019
(3) SA 451
(SCA), par 7, the court held that ‘
Generally,
the requirements for
locus
standi
are
these. The plaintiff must have an adequate interest in the subject
matter of the litigation, usually described as a direct interest
in
the relief sought; the interest must not be too remote; the interest
must be actual, not abstract or academic; and it must be
a current
interest and not a hypothetical one.’
17.
The
fabricated settlement agreement in question cannot be relied on in
support of the contention that the applicant lacks
locus
standi
on
the basis that the applicant was not mandated in terms of the
impugned agreement to receive the funds comprising the settlement
amount. Apart from the fact that the entire document had been
fabricated and the plaintiff’s signature forged by the first
respondent, including the fact that no settlement had in reality been
concluded, there was also, for obvious reasons, no meeting
of the
minds between Ms Nzimande and Eskom. In consequence, the agreement
was not legally valid and of no force and effect.
[6]
18.
Reliance
was placed by the first respondent on the case of
Leysath
[7]
for
the submission that it was incumbent upon the applicant to prove that
the funds were ‘
entrusted’
to
it by Eskom, as ‘entrustment’ according to the first
respondent, was a ‘necessary part’ of the applicant’s
case. He submitted that ‘
if
the Applicant wants to be declared a lawful possessor of trust funds
it must prove that such funds were entrusted to it.’
19.
Leysath
involved
a claim by the appellant, a practicing advocate,
in
terms of section 26(a) of the Attorneys Act, 53 of 1979
[8]
for
recovery
from
the Attorneys Fidelity Fund,
money
that was held in trust on his behalf by the attorneys’ firm, M
F Martins Costa Attorneys (Costa Attorneys), as cover
for his fees
and which had been misappropriated by the firm. The Supreme Court of
appeal held that t
he
appellant was required to prove, by advancing such claim, that: (a)
he had suffered pecuniary loss; (b) by reason of theft committed
by
Mr Costa; (c) of money entrusted by or on the appellant’s
behalf; (d) in the course of Mr Costa’s practice.
20.
The case of
Leysath
offers no support to the first
respondent on the
locus standi
point
or non-joinder point. Firstly, it is distinguishable on its facts and
secondly, it involved an entirely different cause of
action.
21.
The
present case (that is, pursuant to the abandonment of certain claims
by the applicant) involves, amongst others, a claim by
the applicant
against the bank (FNB) for the restitution to it of funds that were
held by the applicant in its trust account on
behalf of Eskom at the
time that the funds were ultimately stolen by the first respondent
through fraudulent means. Such a claim
lies against the bank that is
enriched by the receipt of stolen funds and is therefore under a duty
to restore the traceable proceeds
of the stolen money.
[9]
Such a claim is brought by way of one of the condictions.
22.
In
Nissan,
[10]
a case
that concerned credit balances on bank accounts
,
the
court found that a bank which credited its customer’s account
is not liable to pay the amount to the customer if the customer
came
to the money by theft or fraud. In that case the customer knew that
it was not entitled to the money credited to its account.
Its
appropriation of it subsequently amounted to theft. As far as the
credit balance remaining on the account was concerned the
court said
the following:
‘
I
agree … that our law would be deficient if it did not provide
a remedy for recovery of stolen money direct from the bank
which
received that money to the credit of the thief’s account, for
as long as the amount stands to the credit of the thief.’
23.
In
Lombard,
[11]
the
court explained, in relation to what was said in
Nissan,
as
follows:
“
The
implication is that the amount standing to the thief’s credit
may be recovered by condiction, but not the amount that
discharged a
debt owed by the thief to the bank.
Nissan
was
concerned with a credit balance on the perpetrator’s account.
The bank had no duty to account to its customer. Nor did
the customer
have a contractual or other right to the stolen funds.
The
bank, by remaining in possession of the funds without any
corresponding liability to account to its customer, was enriched and
liable to make restitution to the owner
.
Generally, where a customer deposits money in his account the
customer becomes entitled to repayment but this is so only where
the
instruction given to the bank to collect or pay on his account
pursuant to the general bank and customer contract is enforceable,
not where it is
contra
bonos mores
.
The effect of
Nissan
is
that where a thief deposits stolen money into his account any
instruction disposing of the funds is unenforceable. Hence, there
is
no obligation on the bank to account to the customer. Consequently,
the
bank
retaining
the funds could well be enriched because it is not liable to account
to its customer, but retains the funds.
The
account holder, well knowing that he is not entitled to the funds,
would thus not have been entitled to dispose of the funds
credited to
his account because any act of disposition would have been tantamount
to the
ft.”
[12]
(emphasis
added)
24.
In
Crots
,
[13]
the Supreme Court of Appeal held that the
condictio
furtiva
is
a delictual action for the recovery of patrimonial loss as a result
of theft. It is available to an owner or anyone who has an
interest
in the stolen thing, against a thief or his heirs.
25.
The question then arises as to whether the
applicant, who is not the owner of the funds, nonetheless has an
interest in the stolen
funds and the recovery thereof.
26.
In
respect of monies deposited in the trust account of an attorney’s
practice by a client (the trust creditor) the practice
exercises
exclusive control over the funds as trustee, agent or stakeholder or
in any other fiduciary capacity.
[14]
The nature of a trust account has been discussed in several cases. I
need mention only a few. In
Wypkema
v Lubbe
2007
(5) SA 138
(SCA) the court endorsed what hadbeen said about the
nature of an attorney’s trust account in
Fuhri,
[15]
namely,
that trust creditors have no control over the attorney’s trust
account; ownership in the money in the account vests
in the bank or
other institution in which it has been deposited (
S
v Kotze
1965
(1) SA 118
(A) at 124); and it is the attorney who is entitled to
operate on the account and to make withdrawals from it (
De
Villiers NO v Kaplan
1960
(4) SA 476
(C); The only right that trust creditors have, is the
right to payment by the attorney of whatever is due to them, and to
that
extent they are the attorney’s creditors. Such right to
payment arises from the relationship between the parties and has
nothing to do with the way in which the attorney handles the money in
his account. The court in
Wypkema
thus
endorsed the proposition that the attorney has full control and
responsibility concerning trust account monies. Significantly,
the
court held that ‘when an attorney draws a cheque on his trust
account, he exercises his right to dispose of the amount
standing to
the credit of that account and does so as principal and not in a
representative capacity.’
27.
An
attorney however remains obliged to account to his client for trust
funds and does so as principal.
[16]
An attorney who holds an amount of money in his trust account on
behalf of a client is obliged to use it for no other purpose than
instructed by the client.
[17]
28.
The
applicant remains duty bound to account to its client for the
misappropriated funds that were ultimately not utilised for the
benefit of the client, specifically in circumstances where the client
had not authorised use of the trust funds for payment to
the first
respondent personally. The fact that the applicant was defrauded by
the first respondent into believing that payment
was being made in
respect of a genuine settlement and into the plaintiff’s
account,
[18]
will not release
the applicant from its obligation, as principal, to account to its
client for the funds.
[19]
In
my view, the applicant has established a direct and substantial
interest in the subject matter of the application, including
the
declaratory relief sought. The applicant’ case has always been
that ‘by virtue of the money being in trust, then
the firm is
solely responsible for the money, and the manner in which it is paid
over’ and that
the
first respondent was well aware that ‘without the mandate given
by Eskom to the applicant, it would not have been possible
to succeed
in the unlawful transaction.’
29.
As
regards the declaratory relief sought, it is trite that the grant of
declaratory relief is discretionary.
[20]
The jurisdictional prerequisites for the grant of declaratory relief
were discussed in
Cordient
Trading.
[21]
30.
From
the various authorities quoted above,
ultimately
the capital amount deposited by a client into the trust account of an
attorney remains the property of the client. The
applicant never
contended otherwise.
The
attorney merely is a custodian of the trust funds
and
invests or uses the money, as principal, in terms of the client’s
wishes. The applicant took possession of funds entrusted
by Eskom to
it when payment was made by its client into the applicant’s
trust account
[22]
and
it is the applicant who thereafter retained control over the funds,
to be used only by it albeit as instructed by the client.
The
applicant has established that
it
is a person interested in an ‘existing, future or contingent
right or obligation’. The declaratory relief will also
be
binding on interested parties such as the first respondent, the
applicant, Eskom and the 3
rd
,
4
th
,
6
th
and
7
th
respondents.
31.
I am persuaded that the applicant has established
its locus standi in these proceedings and its entitlement to the
reduced relief,
including the declarator sought in paragraph 1 of the
draft order handed up to court at the hearing of the matter. As
regards the
declarator and further order sought in paragraphs 2.1 and
2.2 of the draft, I am not persuaded that such relief is necessary
having
regard to the relief provided for in paragraphs 2.4 to 2.7 of
the draft order.
32.
As regards the issue
of costs, the first respondent sought to oppose these proceedings on
unjustifiable grounds. Although he did
not pursue other technical
points raised in his answering affidavit, it is clear that he
misconceived the legal basis upon which
the applicant exercised legal
standing in this matter. He ought never to have opposed these
proceedings and the applicant should
therefore not be out of pocket
for the costs it occurred in vindicating its claim. I see no basis to
depart from the general rule
that costs are to follow the result.
33.
Accordingly the following order is granted:
ORDER
:
26.1 It
is declared that an amount of R3,600 000.00 (Three million and six
hundred thousand rand) paid into the
Applicant’s Nedbank Trust
account number 101[…] on 17 December 2020 by Eskom Holdings
Soc Limited was in the lawful
possession of the Applicant until 21
December 2020 when the applicant paid such amount to the first
respondent’s First National
Bank Account Number 627[…];
26.2
The Second Respondent is ordered to forthwith transfer the frozen
funds in an amount of R1,061 827.61 (one
million sixty one thousand
eight hundred and twenty seven rand and sixty one cents) plus
interest, (being the balance of standing
credit in the First
Respondent’s FNB Account, number 627[…]) to the
Applicant’s Nedbank Trust Account Number
101[…];
26.3
The Fifth Respondent is ordered to forthwith transfer the sum of
R118 000.00 (which amount is held on
behalf of the first
respondent in the Trust Account of Mbanjwa Inc Attorneys at First
Rand Bank, Account number 000[…])
to the Applicant’s
Nedbank Trust Account Number 101[…]in accordance with the
first respondent’s tender to pay
same to the applicant;
26.4
The Second Respondent is ordered to forthwith transfer funds in the
amount of R400,000.00 (Four hundred thousand
rand) plus interest,
(being the balance of standing credit in the Sixth Respondent’s
FNB Account, number 625[…]) to
the Applicant’s Nedbank
Trust Account Number 101[…];
26.5
The Second Respondent is ordered to forthwith transfer funds in the
amount of R400,000.00 (Four hundred thousand
rand) plus interest,
(being the balance of standing credit in the Seventh Respondent’s
FNB Account, number 625[…])
to the Applicant’s Nedbank
Trust Account Number 101[…];
26.6
The First Respondent is ordered to pay the costs of this application;
26.7
There shall be no order of costs against the Second, Third, Fourth,
Fifth, Sixth, Seventh, Eighth, Ninth
and Tenth respondents.
AVRILLE MAIER-FRAWLEY
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT,
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Date of hearing:
11 April 2023
Judgment
delivered 11
July 2023
This judgment was
handed down electronically by circulation to the parties’ legal
representatives by email, publication on
Caselines and release to
SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be have been at
10h00 on 11 July 2023.
APPEARANCES:
Counsel
for Applicants:
Ms
R Baboolal-Frank (advocate)
Instructed
by:
Malebye
Motaung Mtembu Attorneys
For
Third Respondent:
Ms
L. Mbanjwa (attorney)
Attorneys
for first respondent:
L.
Mbanjwa Incorporated Attorneys
[1]
After his articles of
clerkship expired, the first respondent remained employed at the
applicant, performing professional legal
duties as candidate
attorney as he had yet not yet completed all the relevant competency
examinations in order to qualify for
admission as an attorney of the
High Court.
[2]
The
relief the applicant sought included
declaratory
orders; payment of amounts standing to the credit of the first,
sixth, seventh and eighth respondents’ bank
accounts held
either at FNB, Standard Bank or Absa Bank; payment of the sum of
R118 000.00 held by the fifth respondent
in its trust account
on behalf of the first respondent; a claim against the ninth
respondent for the repayment of tuition fees
that had been paid by
the first respondent from the proceeds of funds stolen by him; a
claim against the tenth respondent in
respect of rental that had
been paid by the first respondent from the proceeds of funds stolen
by him; and claims for the return
or attachment of movable assets
that had been purchased by the first respondent from the proceeds of
funds stolen by him.
[3]
This is consistent with
what is stated in par 16.1 of the answering affidavit , where the
following was said: ‘
I
never denied stealing the money, and ever since the theft was
discovered, I and my family…pleaded with Ms Malebye to
allow
us access to…Eskom’
to
‘
make
submissions on how to repay the money to Eskom.’
In
par 16.4, the first respondent went on to state that ‘
I
accept full responsibility to assist Ms Malebye in returning the
money back to her client…”
[4]
The applicant
subsequently discovered that there are no longer funds standing to
the credit of the first respondent’s Standard
Bank account or
the eight respondent’s Absa Bank account, and it is for that
reason that the claims against Standard Bank
and Absa Bank for the
restitution of the stolen funds deposited by the first respondent
into those bank accounts, were abandoned.
[5]
Per annexure ‘MMM18’
to the applicant’s papers.
[6]
A
valid contract is created provided that two or more persons
seriously and deliberately give their consent to be contractually
bound in a lawful undertaking. Once created, the legally valid
contract gives rise to iusta causa debendi, that is, the legal
ground from which the duty to render performance arises. Performance
carried out in fulfilment of a valid contractual obligation
is said
to be rendered with iusta causa, whilst performance made in the
absence of a valid contract may, by contrast, be said
to have been
rendered sine causa,
in
which case an action (condictio) arises for the recovery of what was
given or done sine causa or turpis causa or iniusta causa.
[7]
Leysath
v Legal Practitioners' Fidelity Fund Board of Control
(770/2021)
[2022] ZASCA 115
(28 July 2022) at par 24.
In any event, in
British
Kaffrarian Savings Bank Society v Attorneys, Notaries and
conveyancers Fidelity Gaurentee Fund Board of Control
1978
(3) SA 242
(E),
it
was said that ‘entrustment’ comprises two elements
namely: ‘(a) to place in the possession of something,
(b)
subject to a trust. As to the latter element, this connotes that the
person entrusted is bound to deal with the property
or money
concerned for the benefit of others . . .’.
In
the context of the factual matrix of this case, monies deposited by
Eskom were entrusted to the Applicant, and, as soon as
the monies
were paid into the applicant’s trust account, it became the
possessor of the funds and it was only the Applicant
who could
further deal with such funds, for it was the applicant who then
retained control of the funds and only the applicant
could use the
funds for the directed purpose of the funds.
[8]
Section
26
(
a)of
the Attorneys Act reads as follows:
‘
Subject
to the provisions of this Act, the fund shall be applied for the
purpose of reimbursing persons who may suffer pecuniary
loss as a
result of –
(a)
theft
committed by a practising practitioner, his candidate attorney or
his employee, of any money or other property entrusted
by or on
behalf of such persons to him or to his candidate attorney or
employee in the course of his 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.’
[9]
See:
FirstRand
Bank Limited v The Spar Group Limited
[2021]
ZASCA 20.
There the SCA reiterated what courts had previously held,
namely, that that it is the bank (not the thief) that is enriched by
the receipt of stolen funds and is therefore under a duty to restore
the traceable proceeds of the stolen money to the claimant.
If
stolen money is paid into a bank account to the credit of the thief,
the thief has as little entitlement to the credit representing
the
money so paid into the bank account as he would have had in respect
of the actual notes and coins paid into the bank account
[10]
Nissan
South Africa (Pty) Ltd. v Marnitz NO and Others (Stand 186 Aeroport
(Pty) Ltd. Intervening)
(27/2004)
[2004] ZASCA 98
;
[2006] 4 All SA 120
(SCA); (1 October 2004), paras
16 & 28.
[11]
Absa
Bank Ltd v Lombard Insurance Company Ltd, Firstrand Bank Ltd v
Lombard Insurance Company Ltd
2012
(6) SA 569
(SCA), par 14.
[12]
In
FirstRand
Bank Limited v The Spar Group Limited
[2021]
ZASCA 20
, the court remarked that it is a key feature of the regime
developed in the
Perry
,
Nissan
and
Lombard
cases
that the claim to the credit balance in the thief’s bank
account lies against the bank rather than the thief herself.
In the
absence of any indebtedness to its client, his bank is enriched by
the receipt of the funds.
In par 63, the following
was said:
“
It
must be acknowledged, as
Perry
NO’s
case
illustrates, that there is no small measure of difficulty in
determining what
condictio
would
be of application. But the general principle is clear. Once the bank
has no liability to its customer in respect of the
deposits made,
the bank is enriched. The bank owns the deposits, and its assets
have increased at the expense of the third party,
whose funds were
deposited. The third party is thereby impoverished. Absent an order
upon the bank to make payment to the third
party, the court would
countenance the bank’s unjust enrichment. The recognition of
this unjust state of affairs has led
our courts to recognise a
remedy against the bank to pay to the third party the amount
standing to the credit of its customer’s
account, as was done
in
Joint
Stock.
That
remedy is, in this case, appropriate too.
As
pointed out in
First National
Bank of Southern Africa Ltd v Perry NO and Others
(100/99)
[2001] ZASCA 37
;
[2001] 3 All SA 331
(A)
(26 March 2001)
at par 24, “...
I
think that the
Digest
provides an
appropriate point of departure
.
Book 12
title 5 is devoted to this
condictio
.
D 12.5.6 in the Watson edition attributes the following to Ulpian:
“
Sabinus
always said the early jurists were right in holding that the
condictio
would
go for anything in someone’s hands on an unlawful basis.
Celsus shares that view.”
[13]
Crots
v Pretorius
2010
(6) SA 512
(SCA) par 3. See
John
Bell & Co Ltd v Esselen
1954
(1) SA 147
(A
)
for
the requirements of the claim, and further discussed in
First
National Bank of southern Africa Ltd v East Coast Design CC and
others
2000
(4) SA 137 (D).
[14]
Section 86(4) of the
Legal practice Act, 28 of 2014.
[15]
Fuhri
v Geyser and Another
1979
(1) SA 747
(N) at 749 C-E
[16]
See:
Potgieter
v Capricorn Beach Homeowners Association and Another
[2012]
ZAWCHC 66.
[17]
See:
Frikkie
Pretorius Inc and Another v Glass
2011
(2) SA 407
KZP at par 19 and authority there cited. See too:
Law
Society of the Cape of Good Hope v Appie
(549/11)
[2011] ZANCHC 34
(25 November 2011), where the following was said:
“
The
principle emerging from our jurisprudence is that
the
utilisation of the funds in a trust account without the authority of
the person on whose behalf the funds are held for purposes
which do
not benefit the beneficiary and in circumstances where the
beneficiary or the benefactor has not authorised such use
amounts to
misappropriation of trust money, which in turn is a form of theft or
even fraud. See
Law
Society of the Cape of Good Hope v Budricks
supra
at 17G-H;
Cape
Law Society v Parker
2000
(1) SA 582
(C) at 586I-J and the definition of theft and or
misappropriation in
Law
Society, Cape v Koch
1985
(4) SA 379
(C)
at 382C-I
.”
[18]
The
first respondent’s denial that he defrauded the applicant is
untenable. He falsely misrepresented that a genuine settlement
had
been concluded in terms of which the applicant’s client had
agreed to make payment to Ms Nzimande, The misrepresentation
was
false and made deliberately, and induced the applicant to transfer
trust funds to the first respondent pursuant to his forgery
of the
FNB letter in which he certified his own bank account as the
designated account for payment. That this unlawful conduct
is what
induced the applicant to erroneously pay the funds into the wrong
account, to its prejudice, permits of no dispute. The
first
respondent intended that result and was well aware that he had no
entitlement to the funds
[19]
See
Fourie
v Van der Spuy and De Jongh Inc. and Others
(65609/2019)
[2019] ZAGPPHC 449;
2020 (1) SA 560
(GP) (30 August 2019) par 31 and
the authority cited in par 21 of that judgment.
[20]
Section 21(1)(c) of the
Superior Courts Act, which provides:
“
Persons
over whom and matters in relation to which Divisions have
jurisdiction
21
(1)
A
Division has
jurisdiction over all
persons residing in or being in, and in relation to all causes
arising and all offences triable within,
its area of jurisdiction
and all other matters of which it may according to law take
cognizance, and has
the power –
(c)
in its
discretion,
and at the instances of any interested person, to
enquire into and determine any existing, future, or contingent right
or obligation,
notwithstanding that such person cannot claim any
relief consequential upon the determination.” (Emphasis
added)”
As pointed out by the
Constitutional court in
JT Publishing (Pty) Ltd & Another v
Minister of Safety & Security:
[20]
“
I
interpose that enquiry because a declaratory order is a
discretionary remedy, in the sense that the claim lodged by an
interested
party for such an order does not in itself oblige the
Court handling the matter to respond to the question which it poses,
even
when that looks like being capable of a ready answer. A
corollary is the judicial policy governing the discretion thus
vested in the Courts, a well-established and uniformly observed
policy which directs them not to exercise it in favour of deciding
points that are merely abstract, academic or hypothetical ones. I
see no reason why this new Court of ours should not adhere
in turn
to a rule that sounds so sensible. Its provenance lies in the
intrinsic character and object of the remedy, after
all, rather than
some jurisdictional concept peculiar to the work of the Supreme
Court or otherwise foreign to that performed
here
.”
[21]
Cordiant
Trading CC v Daimler Chrysler Financial Services (Pty) Ltd
2005
(6) SA 205
(SCA)
para 16-18, where the following was said:
“
[16]
Although the existence of a dispute between the parties is not a
prerequisite for the exercise of the power conferred upon
the High
Court by the subsection, at least there must be interested parties
on whom the declaratory order would be binding. The
applicant in a
case such as the present must satisfy the court that he/she is a
person interested in an ‘existing, future
or contingent right
or obligation’ and nothing more is required (
Shoba
v Officer Commanding, Temporary Police Camp, Wagendrif Dam
1995
(4) SA 1
(A)
at 14F)...
[17]
It seems to me that once the applicant has satisfied the court that
he/she is interested in an ‘existing, future or
contingent
right or obligation’, the court is obliged by the subsection
to exercise its discretion. This does not, however,
mean that the
court is bound to grant a declarator but that it must consider and
decide whether it should refuse or grant the
order, following an
examination of all relevant factors...
[18]
Put differently, the two-stage approach under the subsection
consists of the following. During the first leg of the enquiry
the
court must be satisfied that the applicant has an interest in an
‘existing, future or contingent right or obligation’.
At
this stage the focus is only upon establishing that the necessary
conditions precedent for the exercise of the court’s
discretion exist. If the court is satisfied that the existence of
such conditions has been proved, it has to exercise the discretion
by deciding either to refuse or grant the order sought. The
consideration of whether or not to grant the order constitutes the
second leg of the enquiry.”
[22]
See fn 7 above. See too:
Incorporated
Law Society, Transvaal v Viljoen
1958
(4) SA 115
(T) where the court held that when trust money is handed
to a firm, it is the duty of the firm to keep it in possession and
to
use it for no other purpose than that of the trust. In the
context of the present case, this means that trust monies held by
the applicant were for the purpose directed by its client - Eskom.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
M T Makhubele Enterprises CC and Others v Business Partners Limited and Others [2023] ZAGPPHC 166; 11789/19 (6 March 2023)
[2023] ZAGPPHC 166High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar
Mthembu obo S.S.Z v RAF [2023] ZAGPPHC 462; 81106/2017 (9 June 2023)
[2023] ZAGPPHC 462High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar
Malebana v Road Accident Fund (27833/2016) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1353 (10 December 2024)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 1353High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar
N.T Makhubele Enterprises CC and Others v Business Partners Ltd and Others (30109/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 559 (27 July 2022)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 559High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar
Maphalle v South African Police Service and Others (B38945/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 875 (17 November 2022)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 875High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar