Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 2031South Africa
Plus 94 Research (Pty) Ltd v Kgatla (112040/2023) [2023] ZAGPPHC 2031 (8 December 2023)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Plus 94 Research (Pty) Ltd v Kgatla (112040/2023) [2023] ZAGPPHC 2031 (8 December 2023)
Plus 94 Research (Pty) Ltd v Kgatla (112040/2023) [2023] ZAGPPHC 2031 (8 December 2023)
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sino date 8 December 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO: 112040/2023
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE: 8/12/2023
NAUDE AJ
In
the matter between:
PLUS 94 RESEARCH (PTY)
LTD
Plaintiff
and
TEBOGO
MAMPHOKA
KGATLA
Respondent
This matter has been
heard in terms of the Directives of the Judge President of this
Division dated 25 March 2020, 24 April 2020,
and 11 May 2020. The
judgment and order are accordingly published and distributed
electronically.
JUDG
E
MENT
NAUDE
AJ:
1.
In this urgent
sequestration application, the respondent filed her opposing
affidavit on Monday the 13
th
of November 2023 after the roll had closed on Thursday 9 November
2023 at 12:00. A replying affidavit was delivered on the day
of the
hearing of 14
th
November 2023. The matter stood down to 15:00 to afford the
respondents legal team to consider the reply and take instructions.
At 15:00 it was indicated that the respondent was ready to argue the
matter.
2.
The applicant handed
the court the certificate of evidencing that security had be set and
proof of service at the Master and Receiver
of revenue.
3.
The respondent
proceeded to argue two points i
n
limine
being lack
of urgency and lack of
locus
standi
. The
locus
standi
challenge
was on the basis of the applicant not being a creditor or having a
liquidated claim.
4.
I found the continuous
risk of dissipation of assets to the detriment of a body of creditors
was sufficient for the matter to be
dealt with on an urgent basis.
The applicants evidence that an investigation into cash flow problems
revealed that the applicant
was conducting a lifestyle that did not
accord with her income. The inability to repay amounts received was
confirmed in writing.
This was indicative of the dissipation of
assets.
5.
The applicant during
its investigation had brought a court application for the bank
statements of the respondent at Standard Bank.
A cost order was
granted against the respondent in favour of the applicant. It was
confirmed during argument that these were the
respondent’s
statements. The respondent was in an administrative position employed
by the applicant. Her salary was paid
into a different account than
this Standard Bank account.
6.
The applicant, in its
founding papers tendered the bank statements of the respondent and
those of a Director of the applicant a
Ms. Nompumelelo Udemba. The
tender of the bank statements was not utilized by the respondent or
her legal advisors.
7.
These bank statements
were analyzed. An amount of R 1 203 320.00 had been paid into this
Standard Bank account from the account
of Ms. Udemba during the
period covered by the initial investigation. This period ran from
March 2022 to June 2023.
8.
The dates of these
payments into this Standard Bank account followed payments to service
providers of the applicant. The one service
provider was Mr. Oswell
Fana of VL Logistics or Ventured Logistics. It was not disputed that
Mr. Fana is the partner of Mrs Udemba’s
daughter, Ms. Pinky
Nlega. The other service provider was a Mr. Reginald Ayanda Mtshali
of Reginalds Services and Sizabantu Brothers
(Pty) Ltd. The
applicant determined that he was the partner of Ms. Udemba. These
facts were not dealt with by the respondent
and are deemed to be
admitted.
9.
The analysis of the
bank statements of Ms. Udemba (director) and the respondent
(administrator of the applicant) was set out in
an annexure. Ms.
Udemba’s bank statements had also been obtained. The analysis
showed that Ms. Udemba had received in excess
of R 8 million rand
from the service providers and Ms. Pinky Nlega. Ms. Udemba in turn
paid the respondent. There were further
substantial amounts received
by the respondent into her Standard Bank account from other sources
linked to fraudulent transactions,
which are unnecessary to deal
with.
10.
The analysis of the
transactions linked to the bank statements was denied. The previously
tendered bank statements were attached
to the replying papers.
11.
During argument I asked
for an example of such an alleged fraudulent flow of money to the
respondent with reference to the documents
before court.
12.
I was referred to an
invoice dated the 10
th
of October 2022 in the amount of R 110 000. The invoice was from
Ventured Logistics. The account holder mentioned in the invoice
was
Mr. O. Fana with a current account at Standard Bank.
13.
The invoice was for
three purported trips to Johannesburg. The amounts for each trip was
R 20 000. (from Mpumalanga), R 45 000 (from
Upington) and R 45 000
(from Bloemfontein).
14.
There was a signature
of Director N. Nlega on the invoice. The applicant contends that the
FOE (Field Operation Executive) who also
signed the invoice was the
respondent. The respondent admits that she signed the invoices as
part of her work obligations.
15.
The contradicted
evidence is that these invoices were then processed and paid by the
applicant to the account indicated on the invoice.
16.
On the same day (10
October 2022) Ms. Nompumelelo Udemba received payment into her
Standard Bank account of R 110 000 with the reference
on the bank
statement “Oswell”. It was submitted that this referred
to Mr. Oswell Fana.
17.
I was then referred to
various substantial payments following this payment into the
respondents account with a payment reference
of “Mpumi”.
It was submitted that investigation showed these payments came from
Nompumelolo Udemba’s account.
18.
During the argument it
was correctly conceded that the respondent had not dealt with the
analysis made with reference to her bank
statements. No submissions
in response to the example of the flow of funds presented in court
was made on behalf of the respondent.
19.
A total of R 1 477
000.00 worth of deposits in to her account, were identified which the
respondent did not respond to. This larger
amount included payments
from other service providers. The submission was made that the bank
statements were only received by the
legal team attached to the
replying affidavit. These were admitted as being the statements of
the respondent. The statements were
tendered in the founding papers.
When this was pointed out the objection was not persisted with.
20.
The respondent’s
counsel tried to argue that the applicant was not a creditor because
the transactions between the applicant
and service providers or
family members were lawful. The argument was developed that such
service providers were allowed to do
what they wish with their
lawfully earned money.
21.
The applicant referred
the court to the standard rate of remuneration for transport of R 700
– R1 800 per person per trip
that Ms. Udemba and the Respondent
were supposed to use.
22.
The applicant went on
to show that the respondent in email correspondence without authority
increased these amounts to above R 1800.
Further invoices such as the
one referred to above inflated such transport expenses to between R
20 000 and R 45 000 per trip per
day. In the opposing affidavit there
was no meaningful response to these emails and the extremely high
invoices.
23.
It was further conceded
that the opposing papers did not explain the substantial amounts that
had been paid in to the respondent’s
bank account flowing from
these inflated invoices. Transactions based on inflated invoices
involving suppliers that are not at
arm’s length do not qualify
to be labelled as lawful transactions.
24.
I am satisfied that the
applicant has shown that it has a claim for a loss in a liquidated
amount more than the statutory amount
referred to in Section 9 of the
Insolvency Act. The applicant therefore has
locus
standi
to bring the
application.
25.
On behalf of the
respondent it was also contended that the fraud need to be proven in
separate criminal or civil procedings where
the liquidation of the
claim would take place. It was submitted that a separate action
should have been instituted before the fraud
had been proven.
26.
In the matter of Ganes
and Another v Telecom Namibia Ltd. [2004] all SA 609 (SCA) at P616
the court dealt with similar claims against
an employee as follows:
[25]As an
employee of the respondent and in the absence of an agreement to the
contrary the first appellant owed the respondent
a duty of good
faith. This duty entailed that he was obliged not to work against the
respondent’s interests; not to place
himself in a position
where his interests conflicted with that of the respondent; not to
make a secret profit at the expense of
the respondent; and not to
receive from a third party a bribe, secret profit or commission in
the course of or by means of his
position as employee of the
respondent.
3
[26] The
employer may claim from an employee any bribe, secret profit or
commission received by him from a third party without the
consent of
the employer in the course of his employment or by means of his
position as employee.
4
The
English law is to the same effect. In
Chitty
on Contracts
28
th
ed
vol 1 para 30-172 the English Law is stated thus:
‘
Where an
agent receives from a third party a bribe, secret profit or
commission in connection with his principal’s affairs
his
principal is entitled to claim it; the same principle holds in regard
to the relationship of employer and employee.’
27.
The respondent in her
opposing papers emphasized that the investigation was not complete.
It is clear that the applicant stated
that a limited period of time
had been investigated. This has had shown that R 1 477 000 had been
deposited into the Respondent’s
Standard bank account. The
Applicants evidence was that this number might increase if access was
obtained to accounts held at Capitec.
28.
The applicant after
obtaining the cost order and showing that at least R 1 477 000 had
flowed to the Respondent, wrote a letter
dated the 17
th
of October 2023. In the letter a proposal was made that a reduced
amount be repaid to settle the claim.
29.
The Respondent
instructed her attorneys to respond to this settlement proposal as
follows:
“
2
Our instructions are
that our client is currently unemployed after her unfair dismissal
from her employment and does not have the
financial means to pay the
quantum proposed by your client, nor can she afford to compensate
their legal fees”
30.
The Respondent
contended that as this response was written without prejudice the
court was not permitted to accept this as evidence
of an act of
insolvency. In dealing specifically with Section 8 (g) of the
Insolvency Act the Respondent admitted her instruction
to write the
letter but stated that the subject matter did not relate to a debt
but rather a settlement offer.
31.
The Applicant referred
the court to
ABSA
Bank Limited v Hammerle Group (Pty) Ltd
2015 (5) SA 215
(SCA)where the appellate court in Par 13 stated:
[13]
It is true that
as a general rule, negotiations between parties which are undertaken
with a view to a settlement of their disputes
are privileged from
disclosure. This is regardless of whether or not the negotiations
have been stipulated to be without prejudice.
However, there are
exceptions to this rule. One of these exceptions is that an offer
made, even on a ‘without prejudice’
basis, is admissible
in evidence as an act of insolvency. Where a party therefore concedes
insolvency, as the respondent did in
this case, public policy
dictates that such admissions of insolvency should not be precluded
from sequestration or winding-up proceedings,
even if made on a
privileged occasion.
32.
The liability for the
cost order was not disputed. The full extent of the cost order was
still subject to taxation. The Respondent
had specifically stated
that she could not compensate the legal fees.
33.
The denial of the
analysis of the money that flowed into the Respondent’s bank
account was not meaningful where the bank statements
relied upon were
not requested. The unchallenged flow of funds from the Applicant to
the Respondent required an explanation.
34.
In the absence of any
explanation of these substantial amounts flowing into her account, I
can conclude that the Applicant has a
liquidated claim for the
repayment of these amounts.
35.
The written statement
that she does not have the financial means to pay a reduced portion
of a debt is an act of insolvency.
I make the following
order.
1)
That the estate of the
Respondent be placed under provisional sequestration.
2)
That the Respondent be
called upon to advance the reasons, if any, why the Court should not
order a final sequestration of the estate
of the Respondent, on the
return date of 18 March 2024 at 10:00 or/as soon thereafter as the
matter may be heard.
NAUDé AJ
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