Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 1773South Africa
KPMG Services (Pty Limited) SA v Maguwada and Others (22014/19) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1773 (28 August 2023)
Headnotes
at (201-211) that an exception to a pleading of it being vague and embarrassing involves two primary considerations namely;
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## KPMG Services (Pty Limited) SA v Maguwada and Others (22014/19) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1773 (28 August 2023)
KPMG Services (Pty Limited) SA v Maguwada and Others (22014/19) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1773 (28 August 2023)
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sino date 28 August 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
no.
:
22014/19
(1)
REPORTABLE:
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
28 August 2023
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
KPMG
SERVICES (PTY LIMITED) SA
And
NDITSHENI
NELLY MAGUWADA & 59 OTHERS
In re:
NDITSHENI
NELLY MAGUWADA & 59 OTHERS
KPMG
SERVICES (PTY LIMITED) SA
Applicant
/ Excipient
First
to Sixtieth Respondents
First
to Sixtieth Plaintiffs
Defendant
Coram:
Dlamini J
Date
of hearing:
17 May 2023
Date
of delivery of judgment:
28 August 2023
The
Judgment is deemed to have been delivered electronically by
circulation to the parties’ representatives via email and
the
same shall be uploaded onto the caselines system.
JUDGMENT
DLAMINI
J
[1]
This is an exception
application brought by the defendant against the plaintiff’s
second amended Particulars of Claim.
TEST FOR EXCEPTION
[2]
In dealing with the
exception it is trite that the pleadings must be looked at as a
whole. An excipient must show that the pleading
is excipiable on
every possible interpretation that can reasonably be attached to it.
[3]
The test on exception
is whether on all reasonable readings of the facts pleaded, no cause
of action maybe be made out.
[4]
The well-established
principle of our law is that the
onus
rest upon the excipient who alleges that a summons discloses no cause
of action or is vague and embarrassing. The duty rest upon
the
excipient to persuade the court that the pleading is excipiable on
every interpretation that can reasonably be attached to
it.
[5]
In
H
v Fetal Assessment Center,
[1]
the Court said
"The
test on an exception is whether, on all possible readings of the
facts, no cause of action may be made out. It is for
the excipient to
satisfy the court that the conclusion of law from which the plaintiff
contends cannot be supported on every interpretation
that can be put
upon the facts.”
[6]
The trite principle of
our law is that an excipient is obliged to confine his complaint to
the stated grounds of his exception,
[7]
The
test applicable in deciding exceptions based on vagueness and
embarrassment are now well established and have been consistently
applied by our Courts. In
Trope
v South African Reserve Bank,
[2]
it was held at (201-211) that an exception to a pleading of it being
vague and embarrassing involves two primary considerations
namely;
7.1 whether
it is vague, and;
7.2 whether
it causes embarrassment of such a nature that the excipient is
prejudiced
[8]
The
Trope
decision was approved in
Jowell
v Bramwell –Jones,
[3]
at 899-903. In the Jowell – judgment it was also held that it
was incumbent upon a plaintiff to plead a complete cause of
action
that identifies the issues upon which it seeks to rely and on which
evidence will be led in an intelligible, lucid form
that allows the
defendant to plead to it.
BACKGROUND FACTS
[9]
The matter has a long
history. The plaintiffs who are all former employees of Venda
Building Society “VBS” Mutual Bank
brought a claim
against the defendant KPMG Services (Pty) Ltd "KPMG"
claiming damages arising out of an alleged
negligent audit by KPMG
for the financial statements of VBS for the year ending 2017.
Initially, in what I shall for the sake of
convenience refer to as
Maguwada v KPMG 1
,
the defendant filed an exception to the plaintiff's Particulars of
Claim.
[10]
On 10 May 2021, this
Court in
Maguwada v
KPMG1
upheld the
defendant’s exception based on wrongfulness and granted the
plaintiffs leave to amend their Particulars of Claim.
[11]
The plaintiffs filed a
conditional direct application for leave to appeal to the
Constitutional Court. On 22 September 2021, the
Constitutional Court
dismissed this application for direct appeal.
[12]
On 26 January 2022, the
plaintiff's leave to appeal in
Maguwada
v KPMG 1
was
dismissed by the Court.
[13]
Not satisfied with the
Court’s decision, the plaintiffs applied for leave to appeal to
the Supreme Court of Appeal.
[14]
On 28 February 2022,
the Supreme Court of Appeal dismissed the plaintiff's leave to
appeal.
[15]
On 9 June 2022, the
plaintiffs filed their amended Particulars of Claim.
[16]
On 8 July 2022, the
defendant filed its exception to the plaintiff's second amended
Particulars of Claim.
LIABILITY OF AUDITORS
[17]
The principles relating
to the liability of auditors are now well established and have been
pronounced upon in numerous judgments.
[18]
Negligent
misstatements by auditors have been held by our courts not to be
wrongful for the purposes of the claims for pure economic
loss. In
Hlumisa
Investments
Holdings(RF) Ltd and Another v Kirkinis and Others
.
[4]
this principle was eloquently explained thus "
It
is universally accepted in common-law countries that auditors ought
not to bear liability simply because it might be foreseen
in general
that audit reports and financial statements are frequently used in
commercial transaction involving the party for whom
the audit was
conducted (and audit reports completed) and third parties. In
general, auditors have no duty to third parties with
whom there is no
relationship or where the factors set out in the Standard Chartered
Bank
case
… are absent
.”
See also,
Magudwa
v KPMG Services (Pty) Limited
2021 (1) SA 442
(GJ).
Cape
Empowerment Trust Ltd v Fisher Hoffman Sithole SA
2021 JDR 0920.
[19]
The law is clear in
this regard, auditors owe their legal duties to the companies
they audit and not to the company's shareholders.
To do so will in my
view, as was held in
Hlumisa
supra, “
expose
the auditors to liability in an undeterminable amount for an
undeterminable time to an undeterminable class.”
The
Court went on and held “
that
if an action were to be granted to claim compensation from
wrongdoers, the Bank's creditors would demand the same facility
and
particularly”
as
in our present case if it [the company] is insolvent.
[20]
The plaintiff's claim
against the defendant is a delictual claim to recover pure economic
loss. Primarily, this claim is based on
the alleged duty which the
plaintiffs claim KPMG as the statutory auditor of VBS
owed to the plaintiffs.
[21]
It is so that claims
for pure economic loss are not
prima
facie
wrongful, and
the law of delict does not allow for the recovery of pure economic
loss as a general rule. The plaintiff in such
a claim bears the onus
of proving the wrongfulness of the conduct.
[22]
In upholding the
defendant's first exception this Court in
Maguwada
v KPMG
1
at [30] held as follows “The court is of the firm view
that to recognise the claim of the employees would go against
the
caution raised by the SCA in Fourway Haulage mentioned above where
the SCA held that “[t]
he
first policy consideration is the law’s concern to avoid the
imposition of liability in an indeterminable amount for an
indeterminable time to an indeterminable clas
s,
and that liability
would be more readily imposed for a single loss of a single
identifiable plaintiff occurring but once and which
is unlikely to
bring in its train multiplicity of action.”
[23]
The Court went on and
held at [31] that
"
When applying the above principles and case law. I am of the view
that just on the exception of wrongfulness the facts pleaded,
as I
have outlined above, for the reasons stated, the excipient /defendant
owes the plaintiffs no legal duty in law and the plaintiff's
claim is
convoluted and prejudicial to the excipient and untenable at the
level of law.
[24]
Taking into account all
the circumstances of this case, I agree with the above Court’s
finding. This Court is bound by this
decision as confirmed by the
SCA. This should thus have been the end of this case. However, for
the sake of brevity and completeness,
I shall deal with the rest of
the defendant’s exceptions.
WRONGFULNESS
[25]
It is contended by the
defendant that auditors do not owe a legal duty not to cause pure
economic loss to the employees of the entities
to which they provide
auditing services. That there is no allegation of a special
relationship between the defendant and the employees
of the VBS as no
facts have been pleaded by the plaintiffs to support such an
allegation.
[26]
In resisting the
exception, the plaintiffs contend that they relied upon the positive
act of the defendant of deliberately giving
material misstatements in
the auditor's report which did not fairly present the VBS financial
statement, in instances where
the plaintiffs would believe that
VBS financial position was healthy. In sum, the plaintiffs insist
that in considering the financial
reports the defendant owed the
plaintiffs a legal duty and therefore the conduct of Mr. Malaba is
wrongful. That public policy
consideration and the Constitution
justify adapting or extending common law delict pertaining to the
liability of auditors.
[27]
This contention by the
plaintiffs is meritless and stands to be dismissed. The principles
relating to the liability of auditors
are now well settled and have
been endorsed by numerous judgments, see
Hlumisa
Investment Holdings (RF) Ltd and Another v Kirkinis and Others
2020
(5) SA 419
(SCA). The trite principle of our law is that negligent
misstatements by auditors are not wrongful for the purposes of
claims
for pure economic loss. Auditors owe their legal duties
to the companies they audit and not to the company's shareholders
and
not the company's employees as held by the Court in
Maguwade
v KPMG 1.
Accordingly, the defendant’s exception must succeed.
FACTUAL CAUSATION:
SECOND GROUND
[28]
In this regard it is
contended by the plaintiffs, that defendant knew that the plaintiffs
as minority shareholders of VBS will rely
on their regulatory audit
opinion and unqualified audit report in laboring under the impression
that VBS's financial position was
healthy and that their jobs were
secured. Therefore insist the plaintiffs, that if the defendant had
filed a correct regulatory
report, VBS would not have been liquidated
and consequently the plaintiffs would have not suffered harm in the
form of emotional
shock and loss of earning capacity.
[29]
In this regard, it is
submitted by the defendant that the plaintiffs do not allege material
facts upon which it is claimed that
placing VBS under curatorship in
July 2017 would have prevented its liquidation and thereby saved the
plaintiff's employment. Further,
the plaintiffs have not made
the necessary allegations that KPMG was the factual cause of their
loss of earnings capacity and their
emotional shock.
[30]
In my view, the
defendant’s exception must succeed, the plaintiffs have not set
out succinctly the necessary averments how
the defendant was the
factual cause of their loss of earning capacity and the resultant
emotional shock. The mismanagement and
fraudulent conduct that
resulted in the collapse of VBS as it is apparent, was caused by its
erstwhile management, and not the
submission of financial reports by
the KPMG.
LEGAL CAUSATION: THIRD
GROUND
[31]
It is insisted upon by
the defendant that the plaintiff's particulars of claim make no
factual allegation that seeks to establish
the proximity of KPMG's
conduct to the loss that the plaintiffs allegedly suffered. Thus the
harm is too remote in relation to
the defendant to be found to be
liable in delict.
[32]
The relevant submission
by the plaintiffs is to the effect that the emotional shock and loss
of employment are a result of the conduct
of Mr. Mashaba who ought to
have presented the correct financial position of VBS to the
shareholder, the Reserve Bank, and the
employees of the audited
Mutual Bank. Consequently, insists the plaintiffs that all the
plaintiffs will not be able to secure employment
in the banking
sector owing to the defendant failing to discharge its duty and
filling incorrect financial reports.
[33]
The plaintiff's
submissions in this regard are unsustainable. The settled law in this
regard is that auditors owe their duty to
the shareholders of the
company sitting in its general meeting. There is no legal nexus
between the failure of the defendant to
submit the financial reports
and the loss of employment suffered by the plaintiffs. The
defendant’s exception should thus
stand.
EMOTIONAL SHOCK:
FOURTH GROUND
[34]
In their amended
particulars of claim, the plaintiffs have pleaded that when they
heard the event that led to the perpetration of
fraud by the
executives of VBS as contained in the VBS Mutual Investigation Report
to the Prudential Authority, they suffered a
detectable psychiatric
injury because of their close connection with VBS. This they further
contend was a result of Mr. Mashaba
expressing an unqualified audit
report.
[35]
The defendant insists
that the plaintiffs have not pleaded the material facts upon which
they allege that they have suffered the
emotional shock of a
sufficiently serious nature to affect the general health of VBS
employees and to require treatment.
[36]
The plaintiff's
submission in this regard has no merit, the plaintiffs have not with
sufficient particularity, pleaded how it could
have been expected of
an auditor that by simply conducting his auditing duties, this would
have resulted in the employees of that
company suffering emotional
shock. The exception is allowed.
LOSS OF EARNING
CAPACITY: FIFTH GROUND
[37]
The defendant contends
that the damages for loss of earning capacity by the plaintiffs are
not competent, in the sense that it was
not reasonably foreseeable to
the defendant that the employees of the company that it audited would
be rendered incapable of working
again and further that the
plaintiffs have not pleaded the material facts upon which they allege
it was reasonably foreseeable.
[38]
The plaintiffs submit
that their claim for damages for loss of earning capacity resulted
from damages to the plaintiff's property
in the form of loss of
earning capacity and psychological harm in the form of emotional
shock. As a result, the plaintiffs contend,
that they will now be
unable to secure employment in the banking sector as a result of the
alleged misstatements of VBS's financial
standing by KPMG.
[39]
The defendant's
exception must succeed, simply because the plaintiffs have not
pleaded with sufficient clarity, the material facts
upon which they
allege that it was reasonably foreseeable to the defendant that the
employees of the company that it audited, purely
by conducting its
audit that such employees will be rendered incapable of working
again.
DEVELOPMENT OF COMMON
LAW
[40]
The plaintiffs seek the
development of common to the extent that auditors are not only
accountable to the audited Mutual Bank but
that such accountability
should extend to the Prudential Authority and the employees of the
audited Mutual Bank as the employees
of the bank have no other remedy
in the event of liquidation. That, this Court is requested to develop
the question of whether
the auditors are liable to employees who
happened to be the shareholders of VBS.
[41]
No case has been made
by the plaintiffs that this Court should develop the common law to
hold auditors liable to employees of the
companies that they audit.
This much has been confirmed by this Court in
Maguwade
v KPMG.
This legal
position is now settled as confirmed by the Supreme Court of Appeal.
See also
Hlumisa,
Axiam
, and
Cape
Empowerment.
[42]
Taking into account all
the circumstances that I have mentioned above, It is thus my view
that the plaintiff’s particulars
of claim lack the averments
necessary to sustain a cause of action for the relief of the
plaintiff's claim against the defendant.
The defendant’s
exceptions are allowed.
I make the following
order.
ORDER
1.
The defendant's
exceptions are upheld.
2.
The plaintiffs are
granted leave to amend their particulars of claim within 30 days of
the date of this order.
3.
Should the plaintiffs
fail to amend their particulars of claim, their claims against the
defendant are struck out.
DLAMINI
J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Date
of hearing:
17
May 2023
Delivered:
28
August 2023
Applicant
/ Excipient
:
Steven
Budlender SC
Adv.
Michael Mbikiwa
Instructed
by:
BOWMAN
GILFILLAN INC
For
the Respondents
:
SO
Ravele Inc, Makhado
[1]
2015
(2) SA 193 (CC)
[2]
1992
(3) SA 208 (T)
[3]
1988
(1) SA 836 (W)
[4]
2020
(5) SA 419
(SCA)
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