Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 204South Africa
Dale v Riaan Du Plessis Attorneys and Conveyancers and Others (798/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 204 (30 March 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
30 March 2022
Judgment
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## Dale v Riaan Du Plessis Attorneys and Conveyancers and Others (798/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 204 (30 March 2022)
Dale v Riaan Du Plessis Attorneys and Conveyancers and Others (798/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 204 (30 March 2022)
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sino date 30 March 2022
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
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SAFLII
Policy
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 798/2020
DOH:
22 February 2022
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
DATE:
2022/03/30
In
the matter of:
IRENE
DALE
APPLICANT
And
RIAN
DU
PLESSIS
ATTORNEY
& CONVEYANCER
FIRST RESPONDENT
JOHANNES
CHRISTIAN DU PLESSIS
SECOND RESPONENT
P
J KLEYHANS INCORPORATED ATTORNEYS
THIRD RESPONDENT
LEGAL
PRACTICE COUNCIL
FOURTH RESPONDENT
JUDGEMENT
# THIS JUDGEMENT HAS BEEN
HANDED DOWN REMOTELY AND SHALL BE CIRCULATED TO THE PARTIES BY WAY OF
EMAIL/ UPLOADING ON CASELINES. THE
DATE OF HAND DOWN SHALL BE DEEMED
TO BE 30 MARCH 2022
THIS JUDGEMENT HAS BEEN
HANDED DOWN REMOTELY AND SHALL BE CIRCULATED TO THE PARTIES BY WAY OF
EMAIL/ UPLOADING ON CASELINES. THE
DATE OF HAND DOWN SHALL BE DEEMED
TO BE 30 MARCH 2022
BamJ
# A.
INTRODUCTION
A.
INTRODUCTION
1.
This case is concerned with a claim for the recovery of money,
an
amount of R843 945, that was retained in the respondents' trust
account for the benefit of the applicant. The money was paid
out to
two recipients both of whom the applicant claims not to know, without
her authorisation. She blames the respondent for making
the payments
and she states that it is unlikely that anyone else would have known
that there were funds in the respondent's trust
account and much less
that anyone else would have intercepted and redirected emails, all of
which led to the payment of the alleged
unknown third parties. She
seeks an order from this court for the payment of the full amount
with interests and costs on a punitive
scale. On 28 February,
following argument on 22 February 2022, I issued an order dismissing
the application based on the applicant's
failure to comply with Rule
63 of the Uniform Rules. Based on the state of the applicant's
papers, I concluded that it cannot be
said that there is an
application before this court. The applicant has since requested
reasons for this decision. Since the merits
of the case were fully
argued, in addition to the reasons, I include my findings on the
merits of the case.
# B.
THE PARTIES
B.
THE PARTIES
2.
The applicant identifies herself as a housewife and holder of
a
British passport, number [....]. She states in her papers that she
resides at Mentzhauser Strasze, Ovelgoenne, in the Republic
of
Germany. The second respondent practices for his own account under
the name and style of the first respondent. As such, the
first and
second respondents are one person; hence, I refer to them
collectively as the respondent. The third and fourth respondents
are
not participants in this litigation. Thus, nothing further need be
said about them.
C.BACKGROUND
3.
The common
cause facts are: On 4 July 2018, whilst resident in Norfolk in the
State of Virginia, USA, the applicant accepted an
offer to purchase
her home situated in Pretoria North, Gauteng, from one Ms Fourie, in
the amount of R 900 000. The property was
transferred on 3 September
2018. A little over two months after accepting the offer, on 6
September 2018 to be precise, the applicant
announced to the
respondent that she had moved to Germany to the address already
mentioned
[1]
.
4.
The applicant and respondent have never met in person and never
spoken to each other over the telephone. They became connected to one
another through an introduction by the estate agents, KW
Edge
Infinity Reality, Pretoria North, mandated to market the applicant's
property. As a result of the recommendation of the estate
agents, the
respondent was appointed to attend to the registration of transfer of
the property. The applicant, according to the
respondent, chose
e-mail as her preferred mode of communication. Thus, all
communication, both before and after the transfer was
only by means
of e-mail. There came a time when the parties began communicating via
WhatsApp. Niether the WhatsApp communication,
the nor the reasons for
switching from e-mail to WhatsApp are covered anywhere in the
applicant's affidavit. Nonetheless, it appears
that through a third
party, apparently from the estate agents, information was relayed by
the applicant that the respondent contact
her via WhatsApp. I
elaborate on the circumstances and the reasons proffered by the
applicant for the change.
5.
Just over two weeks since registration of transfer, money was
paid
out of the respondent's trust account, via his correspondent, on the
strength of what the respondent says were e-mail instructions
from
the applicant. The first payment in the amount of R 450 000 was made
to a Siphiwe Qhama on 13 September 2018. The second and
last payment
of R 393 940 was to Enkanyezi Funerals, on 21 September. The
respondent stands by a series of e-mails which bear the
email address
of the applicant, through which he says his instructions were
communicated. The respondent denies being negligent
or that he
committed theft or fraud. He asserts that there are too many material
disputes of fact in the matter and that this court
cannot overcome
those by a mere reading of the affidavits before court. On that
basis, the applicant ought to have sued out a summons,
which would
have seen the testimony of each witness being tested under cross
examination to get to the bottom of the truth, says
the respondent.
He asked that the court dismiss the applicant's case with costs.
D.
MERITS
6.
In making her case for the liability of the respondent, and
after
canvassing the background detail, the applicant sets out what was due
to her, with reference to Annexure A, a Statement of
Account issued
by the respondent on 3 September 2018. She then states:
'Following the last
authorised payment on 19 September 2018, the second [respondent]
indicated that he would open a bank account
on his name for me
because opening a bank account in my name would be a long process. I
attach hereto as Annexure C an extract
of communication
I received
from the second respondent to that effect.'
[2]
'To my utter surprise I
then received an sms/email from the Second Respondent on 28th of
September 2018, wherein he told me that
he was concerned that there
was still a problem with payments of my money. '
[3]
7.
The applicant further adds that on 29 September, for the first
time,
the respondent revealed that he had made payments to Simphiwe Qhama
in the amount of R 450 000 on 13 September and the remainder
of R 393
940.65 to Enkanyezini Funerals on 20 September. She says she told the
respondent that she had never made the instruction
to pay and had no
idea who the two recipients were to whom the respondent had allegedly
paid her money. In his reply, the respondent
stated, 'we have a huge
problem.' He further went on to say that he had been hacked by
criminals and that he would report the incident
to the police. These
exchanges, took place via WhatsApp. I shall return to the WhatsApp
exchanges.
8.
The applicant says she believes the respondent has not been
candid
with the court about what he did with her funds. She lists the
reasons for her belief as: (i) The delay on the part of the
respondent in reporting to her the two payments made on 13 and
21September and his failure to confirm with the applicant whether
she
had received the funds. (ii) The respondent's failure to provide her
with progress reports on the police investigation into
the alleged
criminal hacking. (iii) The unlikelihood that, firstly, anyone other
than the respondent would have known of the funds
in the respondent's
trust account, and that anyone else would have intercepted e-mails
and redirected them, resulting in the payments
as alleged by the
respondent.
9.
The respondent denies committing fraud or theft. He further
denies
the he had been negligent and specifically points out that the
applicant has failed to present any factual basis on which
this court
can conclude that he had been negligent. He adds that the applicant
has failed to present expert evidence to this court
to establish the
authenticity of the emails she relies on as evidenced in Annexure C.
He denies authoring the e mail in Annexure
C. He states that all
the emails conveying the instructions to pay to the two recipients
came from the very same email address
that the applicant supplied
him. That e-mail address was confirmed by the applicant when
completing the mandatory Financial Intelligence
Centre Act (FICA)
form. He stands by the e-mail instructions he received to pay out to
the two recipients and states that without
expert evidence, there is
no proof that the applicant had not sent the emails. He refers this
court to the letter issued by his
attorneys on 1 November 2018,
wherein the applicant was informed in no uncertain terms that the
funds held in trust on her behalf
were paid out on the basis of the
applicant's instructions.
E.
ANALYSIS
10.
Building on
the foundation laid out in the applicant's affidavit, and with
reference to the
Plascon
Evans
rule
[4]
,
counsel for
the applicant urged this court to find in favour of the applicant.
The reasoning as stated by counsel went along these
lines: There were
funds in the respondent's trust account. Upon receipt of an e-mail
instruction and without verifying, the respondent
paid the wrong
parties. Counsel placed reliance on the reasoning of this court in
Fourie
v
Van der
Spuy and De Jongh Inc. and Others
[5]
,
pointing
that the law on the duties of an attorney when dealing with trust
money and whether or not the applicant, as a trust creditor,
has any
control over the respondent's trust
account
have long
been
established.
In
this
case, so
the
argument
ran, money
was paid into the respondent's trust account, and upon receipt of
instructions, without verification, the respondent
paid the wrong
party. The respondent must, according to the reasoning of the court
in
Fourie,
take
the knock. Indeed, this was the conclusion of the court in
Fourie
and the
facts justified it.
The facts
in Fourie briefly were as follows: the applicant, a long standing
client of the respondents and to whom the respondents
had rendered
professional services, had money standing to his credit in their
trust account. This is what the court found of the
respondents'
conduct:
'The Respondents say that
the dispute between the parties lies therein that "a dispute
exists regarding payment instructions
(real or perceived)'. Yet, the
payment instructions are clear: those
that
were
legally
done
and
those
that
were
done
due
to
hacking,
are
clearly
distinguishable.'
[6]
'It
cannot
be
disputed
by
the
Respondents that had
the 2nd
Respondent
confirmed
or verified
the
new
bank details
with the
Applicant
the fraud
simply would not have occurred. It is abundantly clear from the facts
that no
verification
process was followed and that the firm would have to carry the loss,
not the Applicant.'
[7]
11.
Similar
sentiments were expressed by the court in
Jurgens
and Another
v
Volschenk
[8]
.
The
court in
Fourie
made
reference to
Jurgens.
In
Jurgens,
the
facts briefly, point to the applicants and the respondent having had
prior dealings in that the respondent firm of attorneys
had sometime
in 2017 transferred a property belonging to the applicant to a third
party. That transfer was concluded without problems.
For the second
transfer, the applicants provided the mandate and thereafter
emigrated to the USA. On 13 December 2017, the applicants
received an
email from the respondent's secretary, Natasha, advising that the
transfer had been lodged. On the same day, the applicants
responded
that the proceeds are to be paid into the first applicant's Standard
Bank account, which the respondents had all along
had. The following
day,
the
first applicant received an email purporting to be from Natasha and
asking for proof of bank details. Since the email address
was
different from that often used by Natasha, the respondent copied the
old Natasha address in his reply. He also copied the conveyancer.
This is what the court said of the facts in reaching its conclusions
on negligence:
'The furnishing of
different banking institution within such short space of time should
have raised eyebrows to the respondent.
First, the statement which
purported to be from Absa Bank did not have names and addresses of
the account holder. Second, most
of the transactions in the statement
were made in Gauteng in places such as Cresta, Centurion, Randburg
and Fourways and cash deposits
made in respect of Sotho speaking
people. Third, the sudden change of banking institution was made a
day after the Standard Bank
account
was
given.
A
diligent,
reasonable
attorney
would
have
taken
steps
to
verify
the
information from Jurgens. The respondent failed to do so.'
[9]
12.
In
Flionis
v
Bartlett
and Another
[10]
,
an out
and out fraud had been perpetrated on the appellant, an attorney. In
short, in pursuance of what was initially described
as a Gold Bullion
scheme that made little or no sense to the court when carefully
analysed, the respondent, also an attorney, had
caused money to be
transferred into the appellant's trust account, without informing the
appellant that he had done so. The respondent
had been introduced
into the scheme by a woman named Hardarker, who apparently knew some
people overseas who were said to be instrumental
and experienced in
brokering the deal. To cut the long and complex story, the respondent
was specifically told by Hardarker not
to communicate with the
appellant. Shortly after the respondent had confirmed to Hardarker
that the funds had been paid into the
appellant's bank account, they
were distributed, based on two successive letters sent by email to
the appellant by a certain Gambino,
without any proof or explanation
of who he was, how he was connected to the funds, and what authority
he had to issue instructions
as he did. The letters conveying
the
instructions
were
handwritten, in
broken
English with numerous grammatical
errors.
Gambino
included
his
contact
numbers.
Those
numbers
in
the court's
view would in all probability have led anyone astray. After hearing
expert evidence from a person who had years of experience
in dealing
with attorneys' trust accounts, the court of appeal had the following
to say:
'Faris testified that, in
the present instance, the clearance voucher and the deposit slip
would not have revealed the identity
of the depositor, but the
learned Judge found on the evidence that reasonably
directed
enquiry by Flionis would have established that the money came from
the trust account of Bartlett's [the respondent's] company.
In turn,
any ensuing enquiry made of Bartlett would have elicited the latter's
instructions to retain the money in the trust account.
Appellant's
counsel submitted that Bartlett, faced with such enquiry, would have
adhered to his alleged undertaking not to communicate
with Flionis.
However, in all likelihood, in my view, Flionis would have had to say
that he had instructions
from
Gambino. It
is
most
unlikely
that
Bartlett
would
then
have
kept
silent.
He
would
have
realised
Hardaker's duplicity and spoken out.
[11]
13.
Each of the cases referred to in the previous paragraphs turned on
its own facts.
Certainly, there does not appear to have been an
instance, in any of the cases discussed, where the courts registered
a concern
about whether or not the victims of the fraud had placed
either half a story before the court or a carefully directed
narrative
to achieve a particular purpose. This, regrettably is what
is at play in the present case. As enticing as counsel's argument was
on the law, the reasoning of the courts in the cases referred to
cannot and does not apply in the circumstances of this case. I
now
turn to the reasons for this statement.
## (i)Internal contradictions in the applicant's version
(i)
Internal contradictions in the applicant's version
14.
I start
with the applicant's claim concerning the last authorised payment on
19 September
2018
[12]
,
for
which she
provides no
proof,
and the
alleged undertaking
from the
respondent
to open a
bank account on her behalf. This latter point alone, must the raise
some questions. The first is, on what basis does a
seller of
property, in the ordinary course of events, expect a conveyancer to
open a bank account for the seller in the conveyancer's
name? The
next question is: what became of the seller's own bank account? I
demonstrate shortly that the applicant's avowals, that
she was
waiting to hear from the respondent about a bank account he had
agreed to open
for her, in
his name, cannot be true, and this is based on the applicant's own
version. Thereafter, I deal with the alleged 'utter
surprise' in the
applicant's statement where she says, 'to
my
utter surprise, the respondent sent me an smslemaif
and
informed her that he was concerned about the problem with her
payments. The applicant herself had engineered the change to move
away from e-mail communication to WhatsApp, under the excuse of
having no email connection in her home; this, notwithstanding the
numerous emails she had sent to the respondent whilst awaiting
internet connection to her home. Simply, the applicant's story does
not add up.
15.
Annexure C contains two e-mail exchanges, one owned by the applicant
with the
date of 14 September 2018 at 4h36 pm and a second email
dated 19 September 2018 at 09h51 am, which she says emanated from the
respondent.
There is a further extract in Annexure C with no clear
reference as to its origins, with the time of 07h26. The extract has
no
date or email address. It is not possible to work out whether this
is an extract from an email or from a short message system (sms).
The
applicant owns this extract as her own communication to the
respondent. The respondent denies receiving both the email and
the
extract. He further denies sending the email of 19 September.
16.
The e-mail allegedly from the respondent on 19 September reads:
'I have (sic) rectify
the banking details you requested me to pay R5,000 into and they will
get it on their
side
tomorrow.
Also
I
have asked if I
would
be able to open an account
and
the requirement. I can be able to open an account (sic) on my
name for you otherwise It will have to be
a
very long process
opening an account on your name. Kindly let me know if I should open
on my name or following the procedure opening
of your name. Looking
forward to your response. Regards'.
17.
On 29 September 2018 at 09h25 pm, the respondent sent a WhatsApp to
the applicant.
The events as to how the applicant and respondent came
to communicate via WhatsApp are fully canvassed in the respondent's
affidavit.
They are not mentioned at all in the applicant's
affidavit. I deal with them in the next heading. In the course of
their communication
the applicant wrote:
'... Stephanie and G..
said you are good at your job. So how can you transfer money into
people while my last email to you I was
asking you (sic) wether to
(sic) ipen an account for me
and you told me it was not easy to do
that
. The other option would have been you depositing the money
into your own account. ..'
The applicant continues,
at 09h29 pm:
' ..but I told you that I would like to know what has
to be done to open a bank account.'
The respondent responds:
'The last email I received from you were the ones dated 21
September when you confirmed that you had seen the last payment to
Enkanyezini
Funerals. I did not communicate to you regarding possible
opening of bank accounts. We were hacked by criminals.'
18.
In all the papers provided by the applicant to this court, her bank
account,
into which the proceeds of the sale were to be paid, is not
recorded anywhere. Now, if the applicant had indeed received the
e-mail,
set out in Annexure C of 19 September, from the respondent,
and placed reliance on it, as she claims in her affidavit, there
would
have been no basis whatsoever for the persistent enquiries
about the opening of a bank account for her, in the name of the
respondent,
as revealed in her WhatsApp exchanges of 29 September.
These exchanges on WhatsApp, demonstrate that:
(i)
The applicant, at the time of deposing to the affidavit in 2020, well
knew that the
respondent had not agreed to open a bank account for
her, in his name. Thus, the statement she makes in her affidavit must
be taken
as a false.
(ii)
Her careful avoidance of referencing her WhatsApp exchanges in her
affidavit, and her choice
of referring to those exchanges as
sms/email, is telling. The WhatsApp exchanges are not even labelled
as an Annexure to her affidavit.
They are merely dumped as part of
her papers placed before this court.
(iii)
The demand as can be seen in this statement during the WhatsApp
exchanges,
'but I told you that I would like to know what has to
be done to open a bank account'
reveals that the applicant had no
intention of having the funds deposited into her own bank account at
all, whatever the explanation
was for such a stance.
(iv)
The applicant's statement that: 'The other option would have been you
depositing the money into your
own account...' exposes the true
nature of her game. First, it must be understood that the funds were
always in the respondent's
trust account. The reference therefore to,
'your own account', is a reference to the respondent's personal
funds.
20.
These facts reveal that the respondent, whether knowingly or
unknowingly, was caught
in a dangerous web of lies and deciet. Why
the applicant was so desperate to have the funds paid from the
respondent's trust account
into other people's accounts and not her
own accont, is a mystery. It is doubtful whether litigation would
have ensued had the
respondent relented to the applicant's demands,
much earlier in the transaction, either by opening the bank account
for the applicant,
in his name, or depositing the funds into his
personal account, both of which, would be unlawful. In addition to
all that has been
said, after a lengthy period of communicating with
the respondent by e-mail only, the grammatical and language mistakes
exhibited
in the e-mail in Annexure C, make it plain that the
respondent did not author the e-mail. Where the e-mail came from, and
why the
applicant has not seen it fit to attach her e-mail of 19
September, in which the applicant claims to have authorised the last
payment,
simply echo the respondent's assertions in questioning the
authenticity of the e-mails in Annexure C and his claim that there is
a genuine dispute of fact in the matter. The deliberate avoidance of
making any reference to the WhatsApp exchanges in the applicant's
affidavit make it plain that the applicant knew that the whole story
would be exposed and would upset the carefully directed narrative
she
has provided of an innocent victim who was awaiting an attorney to
transfer funds into her bank account. These facts cannot
be
overlooked in favour of the carefully carved out narrative to suit
the
Fourie
and
Jurgens
cases.
## (ii)
Glaring omission in the applicant's narrative
(ii)
Glaring omission in the applicant's narrative
21.
The applicant engineered the move away from e-mail to WhatsApp. The
respondent says,
on 25 September 2018, about twelve days after the
first payment to Qhama, and four days after the payment to the
Funeral home,
he received a call from a lady by the name of Rose,
enquiring about payment of R 5000 the respondent was supposed to make
to her.
He informed the lady that he had no such instruction. He
further informed the lady that the applicant had been paid already.
On
28 September, the respondent received a follow up call from the
estate agent, Stefanie, conveying a complaint from the applicant
about an unpaid amount of R 5000 to a Rose. Stefanie further informed
the respondent that the applicant had been struggling to
get hold of
the respondent. Stefanie advised the respondent to rather contact the
applicant via WhatsApp, as the applicant was
having trouble with her
emails. Indeed, on 28 September 2018, at 8h19, the respondent wrote
to the applicant via WhatsApp:
'Hi Irene,
I understand that you
are experiencing problems with your emails, since when is this the
case since we have been in email-touch
since last Friday, if I am not
mistaken? I'm concerned that there is still problems with the
payments of your money! Can you please
confirm the successful
payments to your nominees and the amounts received? Regards Riaan
On 29 September 2018 at
06h13 pm, the applicant responds: Notably, with no immediate reaction
to the payments made to her nominees
referred to by respondent. Nor
does she react to the respondent's reference to 'e-mail-touch since
last Friday':
'I
am
not able
to access my email right now because I am still waiting for internet
to be connected at my house. The Five Thousand Rands
has not been
deposited yet?
So
what is the problem? When did you do the
transaction?'
At 6h59 the respondent
writes:
'When and how did you ask me to pay R 5000?'
22.
Why the applicant preferred to furnish the respondent's number to
Rose and register
her dissatisfaction and struggles in getting hold
of the respondent to Stefanie, instead of calling the respondent
directly via
his landline or on his mobile phone, is a mystery. Why
she chose to direct that the respondent pay third parties, such as
Rose,
who have no connection in any way to the conveyancing
transaction, is not explained.
23.
The applicant's explanation of why she was not able to access emails
makes no sense
at all. She had been communicating by e-mail with the
respondent since the day she announced her arrival at her address in
Germany,
with or without house connection. For example, on 6
September 2018 at 10h31, the applicant wrote to the respondent:
'Hi Riaan
'I/We have moved to
Germany
….
Looking at the exchange rate for the
ZAR I wonder whether it makes more sense to leave the money in South
Africa and invest it through
a
bank. What are your thoughts on
that? Could you arrange it?' The attachment only shows council fees,
is this (sic) sell tax free.
Thanks again
Kind
regards
Irene Dale'
24.
What is important to stress for now is that it could not have come as
a surprise that
the respondent sent an sms or WhatsApp to the
applicant. The applicant engineered the entire shift from e-mail as a
mode of communication
to the WhatsApp platform. She has no
explanation for it.
25.
During argument, counsel for the applicant emphasised that the
respondent was negligent
in failing to verify the e-mail instructions
that saw him pay the two recipients, stating that the respondent had
flouted a basic
rule of risk management. I do not accept that the
respondent's failure to call the applicant in the circumstances of
this case
points to negligence. For one, there is nothing
distinguishing the e-mails with instructions to pay from any of the
applicant's
e-mails. There is no way of telling that the e-mails were
not from the applicant. It is only the applicant's say so. Any
reasonable
attorney in the position of the respondent would have
acted on those e mail instructions without any hesitation and
made the
payments.
26.
In any
event, I need not state that the applicant in her affidavit makes no
case for the respondent's negligence. She has not placed
any
information before this court to demonstrate just how the
respondent's conduct, in the circumstances of this case, deviated
from that of a reasonable conveyancer. Other than making
unsubstantiated statements suggesting the unlikelihood that anyone,
other
than the respondent, would have known of the funds standing to
her credit in the respondent's trust account, and the unlikelihood
that anyone other than the respondent, could have redirecting emails,
leading to the payments, the applicant makes no case for
the
respondent's negligence. None
at
all.
If
anything,
the
applicant
in
her
affidavit
blames
the
respondent
of
not being
candid and adumbrates theft and fraud, neither of which are properly
established as a foundation for the respondent's
liability. In any
event, motion proceedings can hardly be an appropriate means to
pursue a claim based on fraud. In
Steyn
v
Ronald
Bobroff
&
Partners
[13]
,
the
court remarked:
'To encapsulate: (a) The
appellant set out to prove that the respondent had failed to execute
its mandate with the skill, diligence
and care required from a
reasonable attorney.
(b)
The only evidence proffered was, however, that of the appellant
herself who did not practice nor
was she qualified as an attorney.
(c)
Shorn of unnecessary detail, her evidence established two things.
First, that her claim
against the Road Accident Fund could notionally
have been brought before the court much earlier and, secondly, she
wanted her claim
to be finalized as a matter of urgency.
(d)
In argument, counsel for the appellant contended that in the
circumstances the delays were so
unreasonable that it justified the
inference of negligence on the part of the respondent. Or, in legal
parlance,
[res ipsa loquitur,]
which literally means that the
facts spoke for themselves....As I see it, the mere fact that the
respondent did not bring the matter
before court in the shortest
possible time-frame does not necessarily justify the inference of
negligence. Even on the assumption
that the appellant took a long
time which could, on the face of it, conceivably be described as
unreasonable, the enquiry whether
this constituted lack of skill,
diligence and care on the part of the respondent would, in my view,
still raise the question: what
were the circumstances?'
## (iii)
Revealing information in the applicant's replying affidavit
(iii)
Revealing information in the applicant's replying affidavit
27.
In her 22
pages' of replying affidavit, the applicant shifts gears, makes
direct accusations that the respondent has been complicit
in fraud
and has lied to this court. She further indirectly accuses the
respondent of making a false report to the police. She
also reveals
details that can only be interpreted to mean that the applicant knows
a little more than she has revealed about the
payment to at least one
of the individuals. In this regard, the applicant deals with the
payment to Simphiwe Qhama of 13 September
2018 in minute detail
[14]
.
She makes
the startling statement that the reason the second payment of 17
September, which the respondent had attempted to make,
failed (based
on the follow-on instruction to pay the balance to Qhama), was
because the account 'was no longer active / no longer
able to receive
payment'. She then remembers that the reason the payment was rejected
was noted as unknown. As to the provenance
of the statement made by
the applicant that the account was no longer active/ no longer able
to receive payment, the applicant
provides no explanation. One thing
is clear, the respondent, the person who was asked to make payment,
never made mention of the
account's inactivity as the reason the
payment was unsuccessful. He simply recorded in his answering
affidavit that he was informed
by his correspondent firm that the
payment did not go through, for unknown reasons.
The
applicant's replying affidavit is replete with statements as to why
the respondent was easily hacked, without providing any
expert
evidence.
28.
As to the applicant's direct accusations that the respondent was
complicit in fraud
and the statements implying that the respondent
had made false reports to the police, a litigant is not entitled to
make a new
case in a reply in motion proceedings. In
Global
Environmental Trust and Others
v
Tendele Coal Mining (Pty) Ltd
and Others,
it was said:
'It is impermissible for
an applicant in motion proceedings
to make out
a new case in reply. As Cloete JA pointed out in
Minister
of
Land
Affairs and Agriculture
v D
&
F
Wevell Trust,
'[t]he
reason
is
manifest -
the
other party
may
well
be
prejudiced
because
evidence
may have
been available to it to refute the new case on the facts. The
position is worse where the arguments are advanced for the
first time
on appeal'
[15]
.
29.
It is time
to address one more contention made by the applicant's counsel during
argument in his comparison of this case with the
facts in
Fourie
[16]
and in
Jurgens
[17]
.
Counsel,
ignoring the circumstances of this case, including the disputes of
fact, made reference to a comment made by the court
in
Fourie.
This
was in response to an averment made by the respondent that there was
a dispute as to whether the applicant was not involved
in the alleged
cybercrime. The court, rejecting the alleged dispute, noted that the
respondent
had deposed
to an affidavit to the police, alleging that fraud had been
committed, as a result of which money belonging to the applicant
was
paid out to incorrect parties. Bringing the same reasoning to the
present case, counsel raised the fact that the respondent
too had
reported the matter to the police, alleging criminal hacking. He
further referred to an instance where the respondent exclaimed
that
he had been hacked by criminals. This was, of course, during the
exchanges on WhatsApp. The respondent has explained his reaction
at
the time. He says that at the time, he was made to believe that he
had sent e-mails he does not know to the applicant, and that
the
applicant had sent e-mails to him,
as set out
in Annexure C, demonstrating the alleged hacking,. However, says the
respondent, after having threaded his way carefully
over his e-mail
communications with the applicant, and made contact with his service
provider, he is satisfied that there is no
evidence that he was
hacked. He concludes by stating that the emails carrying the
applicant's instructions to pay are from her
and, without expert
evidence, that dispute cannot be overcome. Looking at the
circumstances of this case, I must agree with the
respondent's
assertions that there simply is no way of telling that the emails did
not come from the applicant.
F.
CONCLUSION
30.
For all the
reasons set out in this judgement, I am satisifed that the applicant
has failed to prove her case against the respondent.
Her reliance on
the decided cases discussed in this judgment was misplaced, given the
unique facts of her case. Motion proceedings
are about resolving
legal issues on common cause facts. See in this regard the comments
of the court in
National
Director of Public Prosecutions
v
Zuma
that
[18]
.
The
principle was repeated in
Fakie
NO v CCII
Systems
(Pty)
Ltd
in the
passage below:
That conflicting
affidavits are not a suitable means for determining disputes of fact
has been doctrine in this court for more than
80 years. Yet motion
proceedings are quicker and cheaper than trial proceedings,
and in the
interests
of justice,
courts have been at pains not to permit unvirtuous respondents to
shelter behind patently implausible affidavit versions
or bald
denials. More than sixty years ago, this court determined that a
judge should not allow a respondent
to raise
'fictitious' disputes
of
fact to
delay the
hearing of the matter or to deny the applicant its order.
There had
to be 'a bona fide dispute of fact on a material matter'. This means
that an uncreditworthy denial, or a palpably implausible
version,
can be rejected out of hand, without
recourse to
oral
evidence.
In
Plascon-Evans
Paints
Ltd
v
Van
Riebeeck
Paints (Pty) Ltd,
this
court extended the ambit of uncreditworthy denials. They now
encompassed not merely those that fail to raise a real, genuine
or
bona fide dispute of fact, but also allegations or denials that are
so far-fetched or clearly untenable that the Court is justified
in
rejecting them merely on the papers.'
[19]
31.
The question that must now be answered is, is the respondent's
citation of material
disputes of fact in this case so far-fetched,
untenable and palpably impossible such that the court would be
justified in rejecting
his version on paper? The answer most
definitely must be a no. On the circumstances of this case, the
applicant has not proved
any negligence against the respondent. That
means, the applicant's application fails. As to the costs, the
applicant was informed
in the respondent's letter of 1 November 2018
that her version was disputed by the respondent. The half version
produced by the
applicant of the parties' extensive e-mail
communication, coupled with the WhatsApp trail, ought to have been
sufficient basis
to conclude that there were bound to be material
disputes of fact. These were sufficient reasons to dissuade the
applicant from
proceeding by way of motion proceedings to pursue
relief. Yet the applicant proceeded. The applicant must pay the
respondent's
costs.
G.
Rule 63
32.
It is time to refer to the state of the applicant's papers. Rule 63
deals with authentication
of documents outside the Republic for use
within the Republic. Authentication in the context of the Rule means
the verification
of any signature thereon when applied to a document.
A document includes any deed contract or affidavit or other writing.
The relevant
part is found in subsection 2 and it states:
'(2) Any document
executed in any place outside the Republic shall be deemed to be
sufficiently authenticated for the purpose of
use in the Republic if
it be duly authenticated at such foreign place by the signature and
seal of office-
(a)
of the head of a South African diplomatic or consular mission or a
person in the administrative
or professional division of the public
service serving at a South African diplomatic, consular or trade
office abroad; or
(b)
of a consul-general, consul, vice-consul or consular agent of the
United Kingdom or any other
person acting in any of the
aforementioned capacities or a pro-consul of the United Kingdom;
(c)
of any Government authority of such foreign place charged with the
authentication of documents
under the law of that foreign country; or
(d)
of any person in such foreign place who shall be shown by a
certificate of any person referred
to in paragraph
(a), (b)
or
(c)
or of any diplomatic or consular officer of such foreign
country in the Republic to be duly authorised to authenticate such
document
under the law of that foreign country; or (e)... (f)...
(3)
If any person authenticating a document in terms of subrule (2) has
no seal of office, ...'
(4)
Notwithstanding anything in this rule contained, any court of law or
public office may accept
as sufficiently authenticated any document
which is shown to the satisfaction of such court or the officer in
charge of such public
office, to have been actually signed by the
person purporting to have signed such document. '
32.
I start with the document serving as applicant's founding affidavit
and note the following:
(i) Neither the applicant's initials nor that
of the person authenticating appear on the pages of the affidavit.
The last two pages
carry the seal of a person who identifies himself
as a notary public, by the name of Christian Freericks. Below the
first seal
on the penultimate page, the words, 'Seal of a Notary
Public' are underlined and above the seal the following appears:
Address
of Notary Public: Hindernburgstrasse 29, 26122, Oldenburg,
Germany. The last page carries what appears to be a certificate in
the
German language, the seal, the place Oldenburg, the word notary,
a signature, file number 798/2020 and a brief translation into
English. Below the file number is the following:
'I hereby certify that
this document was signed in my presence by Mrs Irene Dale, born
Rusape, on 04 October 1960, of Mentzhauser
Strasse 26939, Ovelgonne,
identified by her official passport of the United Kingdom. Oldenburg
and date 19.08.2020. '
33.
Save for the applicant's initials that appear on every page, without
those of the
person authenticating, the applicant's replying
affidavit appears to have been authenticated by the same Freericks on
19 October
2020. Both the founding and the replying affidavits appear
to have been authenticated by a person who falls outside the
categories
set out in sub rule 63 (2) (a), (b), and (c). In the
event, as sub rule (2) (d) provides, that such person,
'shall be
shown by
a
certificate of any person referred to in paragraph
(a), (b) or (c) or of any diplomatic or consular officer of such
foreign country
in the Republic to be duly authorised to authenticate
such document under the law of that foreign country'.
Ex facie
the applicant's papers, Rule 63 (2) (d), couched in peremptory terms,
was not complied with. I shall return to this aspect.
I now turn to
the Annexure:
33.1 Annexure A is
a statement of account bearing the respondent's letterhead, his
address and telephone numbers. This document
appears to have been
authenticated in Bremerhaven on 17 August 2020, two days before the
applicant's signature in the founding
affidavit was authenticated.
There is a seal, which is clearly different from that placed by the
person who identified himself
as the notary with the name Freericks.
Before I deal with all the Annexures, those that were 'authenticated'
carry reference to
the same person, by way of seal and office
address. The person is not Freericks. Whether the annexures were at
all placed before
Freericks, and what he made of them, is not clear.
33.2 Annexure B,
the Offer to Purchase that was prepared by the estate agents, appears
not to have received the attention
of the person who signed the
affidavit as notary at all.
33.3 There are two
copies of the applicant's British passport, issued on 13 January
2018, a mere six months before the sale
took place. These copies,
like the WhatsApp trail, which carry neither the initials of the
person who authenticated the affidavit
nor that of the applicant, are
simply placed on Caselines with no clear indication of what they
represent. They further carry no
label.
33.4.
Annexure C is a record with two pages carrying two emails that
appear
to have been exchanged during the month of September 2018. The two
pages carry neither the applicant's initials nor that
of the person
authenticating. A third page with no writing at all carries the seal
and stamp.
33.5 A further document,
not identified as an annexure, carrying WhatsApp exchanges between
the applicant and the respondent, shows
neither the initials of the
applicant nor that of the person authenticating. The last page, a
blank, carries a seal.
30.6 Annexure D: A single
page letter dated 1 November 2018, on the letterhead of the third
respondent, carries what appears to
be a stamp. Neither the
applicant's initials nor that of the person authenticating appear in
the document.
33.7 Annexure E is a
letter of demand on the letterhead of the applicant's attorneys dated
25 June 2020. Neither the applicant's
initials nor that of the person
authenticating appear on the document. The last page, a blank,
carries a seal.
34.
I now
return to Rule 63 (2) and the apparent purpose and context in which
the meaning is to be understood
[20]
.
The wording
of the sub rule is plain. It requires, in the event the person
authenticating, does not fall within the category of
persons set out
in subrule (2) (a) (b) or (c ) a certificate to confirm that such
person has been duly authorised, under the laws
of that particular
country. That would be confirmation that the alleged notary, and the
second person whose seal and stamp appears
in the Annexures, are both
duly authorised to authenticate documents in the Republic of Gemany.
Clearly,
the object of the provision must be,
inter
alia,
to
minimise instances of unauthorised individuals pretending to be so
authorised, authenticating documents to the prejudice or disadvantage
of lay
persons who may be none the wiser.
35.
This brings me to the more compelling point in this case. It is one
thing that the
applicant may be oblivious of the demands of Rule 63,
but the same cannot be said of her legal team. The duty to place
properly
authenticated papers rests with the applicant, the party
that is
dominus litis.
To sum up, based on the applicant's
founding papers, the annexures and the replying affidavit, and for
the reasons aforementioned,
there is, in fact, no application before
the court to accept the applicant's papers as they are, simply
because no objection was
raised by the respondents, would undermine
the orderly functioning and effectiveness of the justice system. Rule
63 (2) was not
complied with, which is fatal to the applicant's case.
It was for the applicant, assisted by her legal team, to ensure that
the
papers presenting her case are properly before court It Is on
this basis that I issued the order dismissing the applicant's case.
F.
Order
36.
The applicant is dismissed. The applicant is ordered to pay the costs
of the respondent.
NN
BAM
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT, PRETORIA
DATE
OF HEARING
21 February 2022
APPEARANCES
APPLICANT'S
COUNSEL:
Adv Mureriwa
Instructed
by·
Makota Attorneys
Pretoria
FIRST
AND
SECOND
RESPONDENTS'
COUNSEL:
Adv Grobler SC
Instructed
by:
Rian du Plessis Attorneys
Pretoria
[1]
see paragraph 2
[2]
paragraph 4.11 FA
[3]
paragraph 4.12 FA
[4]
The Plascon Evans rule from
Plascon-Evans
Paints (TVL) Ltd.
v
Van
Riebeck Paints (Pty) Ltd.
(53
of
1984) (1984) ZASCA 51
(21 May 1984) informs that"…..where
there is a dispute as to the facts a final interdict should only be
granted in
notice of motion proceedings if the facts as stated by
the respondents together with the admitted facts in the applicant's
affidavits
justify such an order…..Where it is clear that
facts, though not formally admitted, cannot be denied, they must be
regarded
as admitted".
[5]
(65609/2019) (2019] ZAGPPHC
449;
2020
(1) SA 560
(GP) (30 August 2019)
[6]
paragraph 10
[7]
note 4 supra, paragraph 24
[8]
(4067/18) [2019) ZAECPEHC 41 (27 June 2019)
[9]
note 7 supra, paragraph 36
[10]
[2006] SCA 24 (RSA)
[11]
paragraph 22
[12]
Refer to paragraph 6 of this judgement
[13]
025/12)
[2012] ZASCA 184
(29 November 2012) at paragraph 29
[14]
paragraph 6.4.11 RA : Caselines 006-20
[15]
(1105/2019)
[2021] ZASCA 13
(09 February 2021)
[16]
note 4
[17]
note 7 supra
[18]
(573/08) (2009] ZASCA 1 (12 Jan 2009) at paragraph 26
[19]
(653/04) [2006) ZASCA 52
[2006] ZASCA 52
; ;
2006 (4) SA 326
(SCA) (31 March 2006) at
paragraph 56
[20]
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
(920/2010)
[2012] ZAS A 13 (15 March 2012) at paragraph 18: '... Interpretation
is the process of attributing meaning to the words
used in a
document, be it legislation, some other statutory instrument, or
contract, having regard to the context provided by
reading the
particular provision or provisions in the light of the document as a
whole and the circumstances attendant upon its
coming into
existence. Whatever the nature of the document, consideration must
be given to the language used in the light of
the ordinary rules of
grammar and syntax: the context in which the provision appears; the
apparent purpose to which it is directed
and the material known to
those responsible for its production.'
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