Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 18South Africa
Willow Investments (Pty) Ltd v Sanlam Private Wealth (Pty) Ltd and Another (44726/18) [2022] ZAGPPHC 18 (3 January 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
3 January 2022
Headnotes
by Shaneil Financial Management CC (Shaneil) to an investment account held by Goodall & Bourne Assurance (Pty) Ltd (Goodall) to be unauthorised;
Judgment
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## Willow Investments (Pty) Ltd v Sanlam Private Wealth (Pty) Ltd and Another (44726/18) [2022] ZAGPPHC 18 (3 January 2022)
Willow Investments (Pty) Ltd v Sanlam Private Wealth (Pty) Ltd and Another (44726/18) [2022] ZAGPPHC 18 (3 January 2022)
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sino date 3 January 2022
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 44726/18
REPORTABLE: NO
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO
REVISED: NO
Date: 3 January 2022
In the matter between:
WILLOW INVESTMENTS (PTY)
LTD
PLAINTIFF
and
SANLAM PRIVATE WEALTH
(PTY) LTD
FIRST DEFENDANT
CONSTANTIA LIFE
LTD
SECOND RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
Van der Schyff J
# Introduction
Introduction
[1]
The plaintiff issued summons in June 2018
seeking the following relief:
i.
A declarator that the transfer of R2 043
865.19 by the first defendant from an
investment account held by Shaneil
Financial Management CC (Shaneil) to an investment account held by
Goodall & Bourne Assurance
(Pty) Ltd
(Goodall) to be unauthorised;
ii.
An order directing the first defendant to
reverse the said transfer;
iii.
Payment of the sum of R2 043 865.19
calculated at the interest rate applicable to cash investments held
by the first defendant calculated
from 1 October 2011 to date of
final payment, and
iv.
Costs of suit.
[2]
The summons was served on the first
defendant on 4 July 2018.
[3]
An interesting feature of this litigation
is that the first defendant did not lead any evidence but relied
extensively on three
judgments handed down respectively by the
Gauteng High Court and the Supreme Court of
Appeal in the sequestration application of Mr. Gungudoo’s joint
estate, as well
as a report filed by Deloite that was submitted in
evidence in the said sequestration application. Mr. Gungudoo was
the sole member of Shaneil and is the sole
shareholder of the plaintiff (Willows). Counsel for the plaintiff
stated that the plaintiff
accepts that Mr. Gungudoo gave his
version regarding the events that preceded
and led to the sequestration application
in
the affidavits filed in that application, and that the courts
rejected his version. A question arising from the first defendant’s
reliance on the previous judgments and findings of fact made by the
courts concerned, is whether these judgments have evidentiary
value
in these proceedings. This question will be addressed below to the
extent that it is necessary.
# The facts
The facts
[4]
The core facts underpinning this litigation
are common cause. The evidence of Mr. Gungudoo and Mr. Mohammed was
led on behalf of
the plaintiff. No evidence was led by the first
defendant (SPW). The second defendant, previously Goodall, did not
enter the fray.
[5]
As stated above, Mr. Gungudoo is the sole
shareholder of the plaintiff and he was the sole member of Shaneil.
Shaneil had a broker
account with Sanlam Private Investment, now
Sanlam Private Wealth (SPW). Mr. Gungudoo was also the
investment manager of Hannover Group
Reinsurance (Pty) Ltd and Hannover Reinsurance Africa Ltd (Hannover).
Goodall was a subsidiary
of Hannover.
[6]
During August 2009, Mr, Gungudoo resigned
as the investment manager of Hannover. Hannover commenced with an
application to sequestrate
Mr. Gungudoo’s joint estate. From
the three judgments relied on by SPW, it is apparent
that Hanover alleged that Mr. Gungudoo,
amongst others, engaged in fraudulent unauthorised trading activities
as a result of which
it suffered losses. Shaneil was utilised as the
vehicle through which these transactions were conducted. Since Mr.
Gungudoo’s resignation, trading
activities on the Shaneil account seized. Mr. Gungudoo testified that
by August 2009 all Shaneil’s
shares were sold, all collateral
repaid and the account reflected a balance
of R1 803 326.16 to Shaneil’s credit.
[7]
Mr. Gungudoo’s joint estate was
provisionally sequestrated on 31 August 2010 and
finally sequestrated on 21 April 2011.
Tsoka J, when he granted the order for Mr. Gungudoo’s
sequestration, held that Mr.
Gungudoo traded on behalf of his alter
ego,
Shaneil.
Certain shares, held by Hannover were transferred to Shaneil on Mr.
Gungudoo’s instructions. This, the learned judge
found,
amounted to a misappropriation of the shares. In addition, the court
found that Mr. Gungudoo competed with his employers
through Shaneil
and that he was:
‘
unafraid
to change documents to misrepresent that Shaneil not only is a close
corporation but also that it is a public company,
and
that it is a subsidiary of the First
Applicant [Hannover Reinsurance
Group
Africa (Pty) Ltd].’
As a result of what Tsoka
J described as a ‘deliberate misrepresentation’, Mr.
Gungudoo, through Shaneil, was able to
engage in short trades to the
prejudice of Hannover. When losses occurred it was passed to the
Hannover accounts, and when profit
was made it was passed to
Shaneil’s account. Funds were transferred on Mr. Gungudoo’s
instructions from the Hannover
accounts to the Shaneil account, and
the court found that this was a misappropriation of the Hannover
entities’ assets. The
Hannover companies divested themselves in
2005 of one of their subsidiary company known as Goodall and Bourne
Assurance (Pty) Ltd,
now Constantia Life Ltd, the second defendant.
Mr. Gungudoo, however, continued to trade on behalf of the company.
Tsoka J found
Mr. Gungudoo’s explanation that he continued
trading on the authority of a representative of SPW is implausible,
and
mala fide
. The Supreme Court of Appeal upheld Tsoka J’s
order.
[8]
Mr. Gungudoo’s member’s
interest in Shaneil was an asset in the joint insolvent estate. The
monthly investment reports
for the Shaneil account provided by SPW
from August 2009 consistently reflected a growing credit balance, as
interest was added
on a monthly basis. Mr. Gungudoo testified during
cross-examination that he
was
informed after his sequestration that his account with SPW was
suspended and
frozen.
During October 2011 Mr. Gungudoo received Shaneil’s monthly
investment
report
for the month ending on 30 September 2011. He noted an entry
reflected on
the
report ‘Journal REV OF UNAUTHORISED TRF OF FUNDS’. The
report indicated that the amount of R2 043 865.189 was removed
from
the Shaneil account,
and
the account reflected a nil balance.
[9]
Mr. Gungudoo testified that he phoned SPW
after receipt of the report to enquire about the transfer of the
funds. He asked to speak
to Ms. Sally Jeeva and assumed
the lady he spoke to was Ms. Jeeva. She
informed him that the funds were moved from the Shaneil account to a
suspense account because
he was sequestrated. It is, now, common
cause between the parties that SPW unilaterally reversed the credit
balance from the Shaneil account and
credited the Goodall account.
[10]
On 2 March 2015 a special resolution was
taken by the trustees of Mr. Gungudoo’s
insolvent estate for Shaneil to be wound
up, and on 21 November 2017 a court order
to this effect was granted. Neither
Hannover nor Goodall or SPW submitted any claims in the insolvent
estates of Mr. Gungudoo or
Shaneil.
[11]
During cross-examination it was put to Mr.
Mohamed, the plaintiff’s attorney who also
represented
the
trustees
in
his
insolvent
estate
and
Shaneil
(In
Liquidation), that the trustees of the
Gungudoo insolvent estate were informed by email of the fact
that the Shaneil account reflected a nil
balance on 1 December 2011. Mr. Mohamed
denied any knowledge of this email or the
content thereof. The same information was not put to Mr. Gungudoo
when he testified. This
email correspondence forms part of the bundle
of discovered documents, and no objection was raised on behalf
of the plaintiff regarding the
consideration of this email correspondence in evidence.
Both counsel dealt with this correspondence
during closing argument and in these circumstances it is considered
to form part of
the body of evidence, particularly because the
parties agreed at the commencement of the hearing that all discovered
documents are what they purport to be.
[12]
Mr. Mohammed testified that he made
enquiries regarding the Shaneil account with
SPW from June 2014. He first enquired on
behalf of the trustees of Mr. Gungudoo’s
insolvent estate, and later, during 2015,
on behalf of Shaneil (In Liquidation). SPW was slow to respond but he
was eventually informed
on 2 September 2015 that there
is a nil balance on the account. Email
correspondence from SPW dated 2 September
2015 reflects that ‘all instructions
given on/for the account were received from Mr. S. Gungudoo.’
[13]
Shaneil’s liquidators refused to
pursue a claim against SPW for the reversal of the amount of R2 043
865.19 from the Shaneil
account to the Goodall account. Mr. Gungudoo
was rehabilitated on 17 January
2018.
The claim against SPW was ceded
to
the plaintiff, who was incorporated on 14 May 2018, with Mr. Gungudoo
as its sole
shareholder,
against payment of R10 000.00, on 28 May 2018.
# The parties’
general contentions
The parties’
general contentions
[14]
The plaintiff claims that SPW was not
entitled to make any unauthorised transfers from the Shaneil account.
This transfer, it claims,
constituted a breach of the provisions of
the mandate agreement which entitles Shaneil to a reversal of such
transfer and/or to
damages and/or to payment of its investment.
[15]
SPW’s stance, as put forward by its
counsel, is that it was entitled to transfer any funds from the
Shaneil account without
any instructions based solely on the fact
that
Tsoka J
found that the Shaneil account was used for unauthorised transactions
and
the
misappropriation of other entities’ assets.
[16]
SPW raised a special plea of prescription.
It claims that the reversal of the unauthorised transactions from the
Shaneil account
to the Goodall account occurred
on or about 30 September 2011. On 31
October 2011, alternatively 1 December 2011, alternatively 3 July
2015, Shaneil (In Liquidation)
had knowledge of the facts from which
the debt in question arose and of the identity of the debtor
involved. The
claim
was thus due and payable. In the alternative SPW claims that Shaneil
could have acquired the knowledge on 31 October 2011,
alternatively 1
December 2011,
alternatively
3 July 2015 by exercising reasonable care. By virtue of
s 12
of the
Prescription Act, 68 of 1969
, Shaneil is deemed to have such
knowledge by that date. The plaintiff’s summons was served on
SPW on 4 July 2018 more than
three years after the date upon which
the alleged claim became due, and in the premise SPW claims that the
plaintiff’s claim
prescribed.
[17]
Against this background, the two main
issues that need to be determined are: (i) whether the first
defendant was entitled to reverse
the amount standing to the credit
of the Shaneil account during September
2011; and (ii) whether the plaintiff’s claim
has prescribed. The first defendant’s
counsel indicated at the onset of the trial that the validity of the
cession was no
longer in dispute.
# Was the first defendant
entitled to reverse the amount standing to the credit of the Shaneil
account during September 2011?
Was the first defendant
entitled to reverse the amount standing to the credit of the Shaneil
account during September 2011?
[18]
Mr. Gungudoo testified that Shaneil,
represented by himself, provided SPW, the broker, with a
‘non-discretionary mandate’.
He did not authorise the
transfer of the funds in the Shaneil account. SPW acknowledged in the
plea filed, that the Shaneil
account
reflected a credit balance in the amount of R2 035 635.64 on 26
August 2011. SPW however attributed this credit balance
to
‘allocations made to the Shaneil
account from unauthorised and illegal
transactions on the accounts of the second defendant and Hannover
Africa perpetrated by Gungudoo.’
SPW pleaded that it reversed
the unauthorised and illegal transactions on the Goodall account by
debiting the Shaneil account and crediting
the Goodall account, and denied that it required authorisation by Mr.
Gungudoo to reverse
the unauthorised and illegal transactions.
[19]
Plaintiff’s counsel submitted that it
is irrelevant what Mr. Gungudoo might or might not have done as an
unauthorised representative
on the Goodall or Hannover accounts.
Those claims are either claims by Goodall or Hannover against Mr
Gungudoo and neither Goodall
nor Hanover pursued any claims in the
insolvent estates of Mr. Gungudoo or Shaneil. Plaintiff’s
counsel submitted that SPW
failed to
adduce
any evidence in this court that any of the transactions in the
Shaneil account
was
in any way unlawful, illegal or unauthorised.
[20]
SPW’s counsel submitted that the
plaintiff alleged that a term of its mandate to SPW
was that SPW was not entitled to make
unauthorised transfers from the Shaneil account and that all
unauthorised transfers made from
the Shaneil account would be
reversed on demand. Counsel submitted that the claim is one for
breach of contract, and in particular,
for the breach of the transfer
term. Although the SPW admitted the express terms of the mandate, it
denied the terms alleged in
the particulars of claim in so far as
they are tacit or implied. The transfer term, is not an
express term. The only express term to
which Mr. Gungudoo was referred to in his evidence in chief is the
term stipulating that
the mandate given to SPW is non- discretionary,
which means that Shaneil rather than SPW would determine which shares
to trade
in. In terms of this term, SPW would require Mr. Gungudoo’s
instruction before using funds to acquire shares. The transfer
of the
funds out of the
Shaneil
account in September 2011 was however not done for the purpose of
acquiring shares. It was not a trading transaction and
therefore the
express term to
which
Mr. Gungudoo testified is irrelevant. Counsel submitted that SPW was
entitled
to make
a reversal transfer without authorisation if it had reason to believe
that the funds were stolen or the proceeds of fraud.
This is so,
counsel submitted, because it cannot contractually be expected of SPW
to make itself an accessory after the fact by
permitting Shaneil to
use those funds for trading. Thus the transfer term does not
form part of the mandate.
[21]
SPW’s counsel explained that the
remarkable background to this claim is that Mr, Gungudoo has been
found to have committed
theft and fraud, using Shaneil as his vehicle
for doing so. Through the present action, counsel submitted, Mr.
Gungudoo
is
seeking the court’s assistance to gain access to the proceeds
of his crimes, using
the
special-purpose vehicle of Willow. This court cannot legitimately be
asked to make such an order because ‘no court in
this land will
allow a person to keep an advantage which he has obtained by fraud.’
Counsel contended that the transfer term,
if it existed, was
unravelled by Mr. Gungudoo’s and Shaneil’s fraud. Any
contractual obligation that SPI might otherwise
have had is
unenforceable against it
‘at
the behest of the fraudster’.
[22]
SPW did not lead any evidence to explain
why the Goodall account, and not a Hannover account, was credited
when the transactions
were reversed. Even if the judgment handed down
when Mr. Gungudoo’s joint estate was finally sequestrated,
and the subsequent judgment of the Supreme
Court of Appeal, are considered as evidence that establishes that the
funds in the Shaneil
account were proceeds of unlawful, irregular and
unauthorised transactions, an aspect dealt with below, Tsoka
J and the Supreme Court of Appeal
considered that both the Hannover entities were
prejudiced and suffered damages. SPW,
however, credited only
the
Goodall account
and
failed to provide an explanation for this decision.
[23]
A question to be answered is whether the
judgment handed down by Tsoka J has any evidentiary value in these
proceedings. Neither
counsel addressed this question
pertinently although the plaintiff’s
counsel submitted that ‘the first defendant failed to
adduce any evidence that any of the
transactions in the Shaneil account, i.e. any of
the buying and selling in the Shaneil
account was in any way unlawful, illegal or unauthorised’,
while the first defendant’s
counsel relied heavily on the
findings made
by
the court in the sequestration litigation. In considering this
question I had regard
to
the following:
i.
In
Illinois
Steel Co. v Industrial Commission
[1]
it
was held that a judgment is not evidence of a fact recited in it
where no question of
res
iudicata
is involved;
ii.
In
Hollington
v Hewthorn & Co Ltd
[2]
it
was held that a finding of a criminal court did not have any
probative value in a subsequent civil action and was inadmissible
evidence;
iii.
In
Yusaf
v Bailey and Others
[3]
Vieyra
J stated:
‘
It
will be noted that in coming to this conclusion I have
not taken into consideration the conviction
previously referred to. Counsel submitted that
this
conviction
was
prima facie
evidence
of the truth of the allegations
set
out in the innuendo. For this contention he relied on
the statement in Gatley on the
Law
of Libel
, 5th ed., para. 1089, and the
cases there cited, viz.
In re Crippen
,
1911 P. 108
, followed in
Mash
v. Durley
(1914)
1 K.B. 1.
The leading English case on the
matter not however mentioned by Gatley is
Hollington v F. Hewthorn & Co. Ltd.
,
1943 K.B. 587
, in which the cases relied upon by counsel were
considered and overruled. Reference was also made in the judgment to
Leyman v Latimer
,
(1878) 3 Ex. D. 352
, in which it was held in a defamation case that,
although the Court
record
was conclusive evidence that the person in
question was convicted of being a thief,
nevertheless by itself it did not prove that he stole anything.
Hollington's
case,
supra
, is
binding on this
Court
and accordingly I rule that the conviction of the plaintiff
in
question
is
not
admissible
in
the
present
proceedings to establish that in fact he is guilty of the fraud
alleged so as to support the plea of justification.’
iv.
In
Society
of
Advocates
of
South
Africa
(Witwatersrand
Division)
v
Rottanburg
[4]
the
court explained:
‘
None
the less, save for certain well-known exceptions
when it has evidential or testimonial value
which are not
now
relevant, a conviction or judgment is inadmissible evidence of the
facts upon which it was founded when those facts are directly
in
issue in subsequent civil proceedings. Its exclusion springs from a
combination of the hearsay rule with the rule rejecting
certain types
of opinion evidence. The conviction or
judgment in effect expresses the opinion at which the court arrived
on the judicial evidence
placed before it which invariably does not
include facts perceived by itself. Where a party to the litigation
therefore challenges
the
propriety
of the conviction or judgment, the Court in the
subsequent trial would have to retry the
criminal case to find out what weight ought to be attached to the
result. The conviction
or judgment is then irrelevant because it
expresses an opinion on a matter which the
Court in the subsequent trial
itself
has
to
decide.
See
Hollington v F Hewthorn & Co Ltd
[
1943] 2 All ER
35 at 40.’
[24]
In
the present matter the reliance placed on the factual findings made
in the sequestration proceedings is not for the purpose of
res
judicata,
but
as evidence and
conclusive
adjudication of issues that are material to this litigation. I am of
the view that that the cases referred to above substantiate
a view
that an existing judgment cannot be conclusive evidence of the facts
or issues common to both matters, even more where the
former was on
application while
viva
voce
evidence
was led in the latter.
[5]
Although the judgment handed down by Tsoka J and the findings
recorded therein, contains the court’s expressed view and
finding that Mr. Gungudoo, through
Shaneil,
at some time conducted unauthorised transactions and that shares were
misappropriated, the judgments do not prove on a
balance of
probabilities that the funds in the Shaneil account at the time that
SPW reversed same, were the proceeds
of
illegal transactions.
[25]
However,
even if it is accepted for the moment that this court can find solely
based on Tsoka J’s judgment that the funds
in the Shaneil
account were the proceeds of illegal and unauthorised transactions,
SPW’s counsel did not refer me to any
authority on which he
based the submission that SPW was entitled not only to freeze
or
suspend Shaneil’s account but to reverse Shaneil’s
account and to credit the Goodall account. Mothle J held in
Houtbosplaas
(Pty) Ltd v Nedbank Ltd
,
[6]
albeit in relation to the
Financial Intelligence Centre Act 38 of
2001
, that:
‘
A
business relationship between a financial institution and a
customer does not entitle the former to
restrict or freeze access to
the
account of the latter, even in instances where there is a suspicion
the transaction involves unlawful activity.
Section 29
of FICA
provides for suspicious and unusual transactions. … The courts
have frowned upon the freezing of accounts even in
more serious cases
where unlawful activities or a suspicion thereof was
conducted in those accounts.’
[26]
When
one considers the question as to a financial institution’s
responsibility towards
third
parties in circumstances where e.g., stolen money is deposited into
an account, the recent Supreme Court of Appeal decision
in
FirstRand
Bank Limited v The Spar
Group
[7]
is
insightful. In
FirstRand
Bank Ltd
the
court had to answer two questions:
‘
First,
can a bank set off the customer’s debts to the bank against
amounts standing to the credit of a
customer, if the bank knows that a third party has a claim to these
funds? If not, what claim
does the third party have against the bank?
Second, does the bank
owe
a legal duty to the third party if the bank allows the customer
to utilise the money deposited by the third
party into the customer’s
account,
if the bank knows the customer has no valid claim to those funds?’
The second question is
relevant for the present proceedings.
[27]
The
SCA referred to
First
National Bank of Southern Africa v Perry NO and Others
[8]
where
stolen money was deposited into a Nedbank account:
‘
Schutz
JA explained that, by operation of law, ownership of this money
passed to Nedbank and could not be claimed by way of the
rei
vindicatio.
However, the mere fact that
the customer’s
account
had been credited with the stolen money did not mean that the
customer (and thief) had a claim against Nedbank for payment
of the
amount standing to his, ostensible, credit.’
Sutherland
and Unterhalter AJJA
[9]
explained with reference to
Nissan
South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Marnitz NO and Others
[10]
that
the same position arises when funds are paid into a bank account in
error:
‘
The
customer into whose account an amount is paid in error has no
entitlement to the funds credited to that account. And an
appropriation
of the funds by such a customer, with knowledge that
they were not
entitled to deal with the funds, would amount to theft.’
[28]
The
principle confirmed in
FirstRand
Bank Ltd
is
that money deposited with a bank becomes the property of the bank and
persons enjoy personal rights against the bank to the credit
balance
on account derived from the deposit made. The bank is the owner of
the money deposited, and the deposit gives rise to a
personal right
in respect of the credit that is thereby created in the books of the
bank.
[11]
The learned judges
continued:
‘
[56]
Once this distinction
is recognised, two questions arise. What is the nature of the
personal right against the bank, and enjoyed
by whom? In the standard
case, the customer deposits money into their account and has a
personal right against the bank
to be paid the
credit reflected on the account (with interest, if agreed) or
otherwise to direct the bank as to who should be paid.
The personal
right is an incident of the contract that subsists between the
customer and the bank.
[57]
However, as may be observed from the cases to which we have referred,
the personal right to claim against the bank may not
be enjoyed by
the customer. The customer may be the agent of a principal in respect
of the account, and the principal will then
have the claim. Or the
bank, the customer and a third party may have an agreement as to the
rights of the third party to the use
of the account and the credit
balance on account.’
[29]
The SCA in
FirstRand
Bank Ltd
in addition held that a bank
which is aware that a third party has deposited funds into its
client’s bank account and is aware
that the client has no
legitimate claim to the funds is under a duty to take steps to
prevent harm by way of misappropriation of
those funds by its client-
the bank’s failure to prevent harm to the third party renders
it a co-wrongdoer with the client
for theft.
[30]
In the present matter, even if it is
accepted that the funds were reversed because it
was the proceeds of illegal transactions,
SPW, went further than to take steps to prevent harm coming to a
third party. It did not
merely place a hold on the funds and
allowed the law to take its course, but
decided unilaterally to allocate the funds to the Goodall account.
This action was taken
4 months after Mr. Gungudoo’s joint
estate was finally sequestrated. When SPW unilaterally reversed the
entry and removed
the funds from the Shaneil account, it conducted an
act contra its contractual agreement with Shaneil. The difference
between freezing
or suspending
an
account and reversing a transaction, is that while the former
preserves the status
quo,
the latter is an action in relation to investment transactions. In
terms of the non-
discretionary
mandate transactions could only be conducted on Shaneil’s
instructions. In the absence of an instruction, an
agreement, or a
court order authorising the transfer, SPW took matters into its own
hands and seemingly regarded itself as adjudicator
in the dispute
that arose between Mr. Gungudoo and Hannover and Goodall. The
reversal also coincides with the settlement reached
between the
second defendant, SPW and Hannover in litigation instigated by the
second defendant against the latter parties wherein
SPW and Hannover
each accepted liability for losses suffered in the Goodall account.
Neither Mr. Gungudoo nor Shaneil were parties
to the litigation. In
the present matter the plaintiff claimed in its particulars of claim
that SPW transferred the sum of R2 043
865.19 from the Shaneil
account to the Goodall account in order to reduce its liability in
terms of the
settlement
agreement reached in the litigation between the second defendant,
Hannover and itself. SPW did not deny this claim but
pleaded: ‘The
Plaintiff’s main claim as set out in paragraph 4 and further in
the particulars of claim, is not stated
to be based on the First
Defendant’s alleged allegations as contained in the
paragraphs under reply. The relevance of
these allegations for purposes of pleadings are accordingly denied.’,
and: ‘To
the extent that the allegations contained
in the aforesaid paragraphs of the
particulars of claim are quoted from pleadings or
documents filed by the First Defendant in
other cases, the First Defendant admits the allegations only to the
extent that the allegations
are a true and correct reflection
of such pleadings or documents. Save as set
out above, the remainder of these allegations are denied.’
[31]
In the premise the transfer of R2 043
865.19 by SPW from the investment account
held by Shaneil to an investment account
held by Goodall was unauthorised. This is, however, not the end of
the matter.
# Has the plaintiff’s
claim prescribed?
Has the plaintiff’s
claim prescribed?
[32]
Section 12
of the
Prescription Act 68 of
1969
provides as follows:
‘
(1)
Subject to the provisions of subsections (2) and (3), prescription
shall commence to run as soon as a debt is due.
(2)
If the debtor wilfully prevents the
creditor from coming to know of the
existence of the debt, prescription shall
not commence to run until the creditor
becomes aware of the existence of the debt;
(3)
A debt shall not be deemed to be due until
the creditor has knowledge of the
identity
of the debtor and of the facts from which the debt arises: Provided
that a creditor shall be deemed to have such knowledge
if he could
have acquired it by exercising reasonable care.’
[33]
SPW pleaded that the reversal of the
unauthorised transactions from the Shaneil account occurred on or
about 30 September 2011.
It claims that Shaneil had knowledge of the
facts from which the debt in question is alleged to arise and the
identity of the debtor
involved on or about 31 October 2011,
alternatively 1 December 2011 alternatively 3 July 2015. In the
alternative SPW pleaded that
Shaneil could have acquired the
knowledge on 31 October 2011, alternatively 1 December 2011,
alternatively 3 July 2015 by exercising
reasonable care. Summons
was served on 4 July 2018, more than three
years after the date upon which the alleged claim became due.
[34]
SPW’s counsel submitted that Mr.
Gungudoo’s evidence established the special plea of
prescription. As indicated above,
Mr. Gungudoo testified that he
received an investment report from SPW dated 30 September 2011,
during October 2011. This
report
reflected the reversal of unauthorised funds, leaving a nil balance
to the account. After phoning SPW and speaking to Ms.
Sally Jeeva he
was advised that the funds had been transferred into a suspense
account. This evidence accords with
what
was pleaded by the plaintiff in replication. SPW’s counsel
submitted that Shaneil and Mr. Gungudoo knew in October 2011
that
there had been an unauthorised transfer of funds from the Shaneil
account. The present action was, however, instituted in
June 2018,
almost seven years later. Counsel submitted that
the only basis on which the plaintiff
sought to avoid prescription was by replicating that SPW wilfully
prevented Shaneil from coming
to know of the existence of the debt.
Counsel submitted that SPW did not wilfully seek to prevent Shaneil
from coming to know of
the existence of the debt – it sent the
investment report dated 30
September
2011 to Shaneil. This report reflects the nil balance and contains
the reason for the nil balance.
[35]
Counsel
lastly
submitted that SPW advised the trustees of Mr. Gungudoo’s
insolvent
estate
on 1 December 2011 that the Shaneil account had a nil balance.
Plaintiff’s counsel during closing argument likewise
referred
to the email of 1 December 2011
wherein
the trustees of Mr. Gungudoo’s were informed of the fact that
the Shaneil account reflected a nil balance. Plaintiff’s
counsel submitted that SPW cannot rely on this correspondence to
satisfy the onus as to when Shaneil became aware or should have
become aware of its claim against SPW. The submission is that:
‘
There
was no demand made by Gungudoo in October 2011. On the contrary, the
terms of the mandate had by operation of law changed
as the only
authorised person who could make demand would have been his duly
appointed trustees. No demand was made by the trustees
on 28 November
2011, as the letter was merely an enquiry as to whether an account
was held by Shaneil with a credit balance which
had been frozen upon
his sequestration. The response was unequivocal that there was a nil
balance.
There
was
no
cause
for
a
demand
as
the
enquiry
had
been comprehensively answered. The trustee was informed that
there was no claim.’
[36]
Mr.
Mohamed
commenced communication with SPW on behalf of the trustees of Mr.
Gungudoo’s insolvent estate,
enquiring about the Shaneil account, during June 2014. During August
2014, SPW provided Mr. Mohamed
with statements of the Shaneil
account, the latest statement provided was dated 24 June 2011. On
these statements a credit balance
was reflected because these
statements preceded the reversal of the alleged unauthorised
transaction. The trustees of the Gungudoo’s
estate resolved to
wind-up Shaneil, and Shaneil was wound-up by way of special
resolution on 2 March 2015.
[37]
Mr. Mohammed, this time representing
Shaneil (In Liquidation) again wrote to SPW
in August 2015 enquiring about the account.
SPW informed that the Shaneil account
had
a nil balance on 2 September 2015.
[38]
The
plaintiff’s counsel submitted with reliance placed on
Minister
of Finance v Gore
N.O
[12]
that
Shaneil did not possess the necessary knowledge of the facts from
which
the
debt arose by 1 December 2011. In considering this submission,
cognisance must be taken that it is the plaintiff’s case
that
SPW breached the contract concluded
with
Shaneil, by reversing alleged unauthorised transactions. This
contract contained a non-discretionary mandate in terms whereof
no
transactions could be concluded without Mr. Gungudoo’s
instructions. Mr. Gungudoo, as Shaneil’s sole shareholder
and
representative was informed that Shaneil’s account was
suspended
subsequent
to the provisional sequestration of his joint estate. Thereafter he
received an investment report, reflecting that a
journal entry was
made, which entry
reversed
unauthorised funds on the Shaneil account. By 1 December 2011 the
trustees of Mr. Gungudoo’s insolvent estate was
informed that
the Shaneil account reflected a nil balance.
[39]
It is undisputed that Mr. Gungudoo received
the investment report whereon the reversal of the funds and the
reason for the reversal
was reflected. I am of the view that it is
irrelevant whether Mr. Gungudoo was informed that the money was
transferred to a suspense
account, or to the Goodall account. The
fact of the matter
is
that SPW acted in breach of the contract concluded with Shaneil when
the funds were so transferred.
[40]
In
Van
Staden v Fourie
[13]
the
court explained:
‘
Artikel
12(3) van die Verjaringswet stel egter nie aanvang van die verjaring
uit totdat die skuldeiser die volle omvang van sy regte
uitgevind het
nie. Die toegewing wat die Verjaringswet in hierdie verband maak, is
beperk tot kennis van ‘die feite waaruit
die skuld ontstaan’.
Similarly, in
Minister
of Finance v Gore, supra,
the court held:
‘
the
Court has, in a series of decisions, emphasised that time begins to
run against a creditor when it has the minimum facts that
are necessary to institute action.’
Mr. Gungudoo had
knowledge of the minimum facts that were necessary to institute
action, namely that SPW transferred funds from
the Shaneil account
without any instructions from Shaneil, during October 2011. Mr.
Gungudoo’s joint estate was however sequestrated
by that time.
If Mr. Gungudoo’s knowledge cannot be ascribed to the trustees
of his insolvent estate, the trustees’
position needs to be
considered.
[41]
As far as the trustees of his insolvent
estate are concerned, the evidence placed before the court by
reference to the email correspondence
between the trustees and
SPW, reflects that the trustees were
informed that the Shaneil account reflected a nil balance by 1
December 2011. SPW’s response
followed on a query received from
Barnard, who wrote in her capacity as trustee of the insolvent
estate. Barnard wrote:
‘
According
to our information the insolvent traded under the name
of Shaneil Financial Investments. The
insolvent advised us that the account had a credit balance and has
been frozen upon his sequestration.’
[42]
SPW claims that Shaneil could have acquired
the knowledge of the facts from which
the
debt in question is alleged to arise by exercising reasonable care.
The plaintiff did not lead any evidence explaining why the
trustees
did not timeously follow up after being informed on 1 December 2011
that the Shaneil account reflected a nil balance despite
being
informed by Mr. Gungudoo that the account had a credit balance. They
waited until June 2014 before exploring the matter further.
I have to
agree with SPW’s counsel that Shaneil could have acquired the
requisite knowledge
soon
after 1 December 2011 if reasonable care was exercised. In the result
Shaneil
is deemed
to have had the requisite knowledge that SPW transferred funds from
the
Shaneil
account without being authorised by Shaneil by December 2011.
[43]
The evidence does not support a finding
that SPW wilfully prevented Mr. Gungudoo,
or the trustees of Mr. Gungudoo’s
insolvent estate, and thus Shaneil, from coming to know of the
existence of the debt. The
monthly investment reports were sent to
Mr. Gungudoo, and his trustees were informed by SPW that the Shaneil
account reflected
a nil balance as early as December 2011. SPW cannot
be blamed for the trustees’ inaction to make further enquiries
between
December 2011 and June 2014,
or
the apparent lack of information-flow between the trustees of Mr.
Gungudoo’s insolvent estate and their legal representative.
[44]
I am of the view that Shaneil’s claim
against SPW became prescribed. There is no reason for costs not to
follow success.
# ORDER
ORDER
In the result, the
following order is made:
1. The plaintiff’s
claim has prescribed and is dismissed with costs.
E van der Schyff
Judge
of the High Court
Delivered: This judgement
is handed down electronically by uploading it to the electronic file
of this matter on CaseLines. As a
courtesy gesture, it will be sent
to the parties/their legal representatives by email. The date for
hand-down is deemed to be 3
January 2022.
Counsel
for the plaintiff:
Adv.
A.G. South SC
Instructed
by:
Vezi
and De Beer
For
the first respondent:
Adv.
E. Fagan SC
Instructed
by:
Werkmans
Date
of the hearing:
18,
19, 20, 22 October 2021
Date
of judgment:
3
January 2022
[1]
290
III. 594,
125 N.E. 252
as reference in 1 Austin Abbott & Allan
J. Carter, A brief on the Modes of Proving Facts: Most Frequently in
Issue or Collaterally
in Question on the Trial of Civil or Criminal
Cases (4th ed) (1922) 717.
[2]
[1943]
2 All ER 35.
[3]
1964
(4) SA 117
(W) 126F – 127A.
[4]
1984
(4) SA 35
(T) 38A.
[5]
See
also G O W Mueller and L H Whinery. Second-Hand Judgments:
Reciprocal Use of Judgments in Civil and Criminal Matrimonial Cases
(1958) Washington and Lee Law Review 15:1, 44-75.
[6]
(68087/2017)
[2019] ZAGPPHC (12 December 2019) para [21].
[7]
(1334/2019)
[2021] ZASCA 20
(18 March 2021).
[8]
2001
(3) SA 960 (SCA).
[9]
FirstRand
Bank Ltd par 48.
[10]
2005
(1) SA 441
(SCA) para 25 and 26.
[11]
FirstRand
Bank Ltd paras 55 and 56.
[12]
2007
(1) SA 111 (SCA).
[13]
1989
(3) SA 200
(A) 216D-E.
sino noindex
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