Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 570South Africa
Uys N.O and Others v National Credit Regulator and Another (A58/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 570 (4 August 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
4 August 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Uys N.O and Others v National Credit Regulator and Another (A58/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 570 (4 August 2022)
Uys N.O and Others v National Credit Regulator and Another (A58/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 570 (4 August 2022)
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sino date 4 August 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
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
Case
Number: A58/2021
REPORTABLE:
YES
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
REVISED
4
August 2022
In
the matter between:
DIRK
CORNELIS UYS
N.O.
First
Appellant
CARL
ALEXANDER GREATOREX
N.O.
Second
Appellant
HESTER
SOPHIA UYS
N.O.
Third
Appellant
(Cited
in their capacities as trustees for the time being
Of
the Cornelis Family Trust, IT number: 1524/2004)
And
THE
NATIONAL CREDIT
REGULATOR
First
Respondent
THE
NATIONAL CONSUMER
TRIBUNAL
Second
Respondent
JUDGMENT
POTTERILL
J
[1]
The first appellant, Dirk Cornelis Uys N.O., the second appellant
Carl Alexander Greatorex
N.O., and Hester Sophia Uys N.O., the third
appellant, are trustees of the Cornelis Family Trust IT 1524/2004 and
are for ease
of reference referred to collectively as “
the
trust”
and for purposes of the appeal as “
the
appellants”
. The appellants are seeking the review and
setting aside of the findings and sanctions imposed by the second
respondent, the National
Consumer Tribunal [the Tribunal] established
in terms of
s26
of the
National Credit Act, 34 of 2005
[the Act]. The
first respondent, the National Credit Regulator [the Regulator] is a
juristic person established in terms of
s12
of the Act. Its function
is
inter alia
to monitor the consumer market ensuring that
prohibited conduct is detected, or prevented, and where necessary
prosecuted. The
Regulator in essence must ensure that the main
objective of the Act, to protect consumers, is fulfilled.
The
complaints
[2]
On 21 May 2018 the Regulator received a complaint from Mr Seabi
against a company,
Loans Acceptable Funding. This complaint
referenced the Appellants and the Regulator in terms of
s1
39 of the
Act then initiated an investigation into the affairs of the
Appellants. The Regulator before commencing with its investigation
received a further complaint against the Appellants from Ms Slabbert.
[3]
It is common cause that the Appellants bought these two complainants’
respective
properties under market value and the properties were
registered in the name of the Appellants. Simultaneously with the
sale agreements
the complainants signed lease agreements with the
Appellants to lease the same sold properties. In the lease agreements
an option
clause was inserted affording the complainants the right to
repurchase the property with specified purchase prices from the
appellants
during the term of lease, on condition that the monthly
rental was not in arrears.
Findings
of the Tribunal
[4]
The Tribunal found that when stripping the titles of the sale and
lease agreements
and upon a reading of the contracts together the
substance and form of the agreements constituted credit transactions
in terms
of
s8(1)(b)
read with
s8(4)(f)
of the Act. It was conceded
by the Appellants that the complainants were seeking “
finance”
and in reality the complainants were seeking loans with their
properties serving as security.
[5]
The Tribunal found that the Appellants contravened the following
sections of the Act:
-
sections 40(1)
,
40
(3)
and
89
(2)(d) of the NCA; the Appellants failed to register as credit
provider;
-
section 81(2)
read with
Regulation 23A
; the Appellants failed to conduct an affordability
assessment;
-
section 81(3)
read with
section 80(1)(a)
the Appellants entered into reckless credit
agreements;
-
section 90(1)
read with
section 90(2)(a)(i)
; the Appellants contravened the sections in that
their agreements contained unlawful provisions in a credit agreement.
Must
the findings of the Tribunal be reviewed and set aside?
[
6]
I do not find it necessary to expand on the reasoning of the Tribunal
in finding that
the contracts of sale and lease together constituted
impermissible credit agreements. The reason for this is, although
counsel
for the Appellants did not abandon his argument that the
agreements were not simulated transactions due to the facts not
bearing
out the simulation test, he did not argue this point, but
rather persisted with the appeal against the sanctions. It is fair to
accept that the Tribunal was correct that the contracts concluded
with the complainants were simulated loan agreements disguised
to
appear as agreements of sale and rental and that the complained off
relevant provisions of the Act were contravened. The real
substance
and commercial sense of the transactions were the two complainants’
financial distress and the sale and rental
agreements were in fact
simulated in providing the complainants finance. If the
transaction was simulated, it is dishonest,
no matter the intention
or motives of those who concluded the transaction.
[1]
[7]
Counsel for the Appellants relied on
Sasol Oil Proprietary Limited
v Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service
(923/2017)
[2018] ZASCA 153
;
[2019] 1 All SA 106
(SCA) as support for his
submission that there had to be a common intention to simulate and at
best the complainants were misled.
Reliance on this matter is
misplaced because the majority decision found that on the facts
before that court a quo, the court a
quo had rejected the evidence
led without any basis to do so, especially where there was no
evidence led by the Commissioner to
gainsay the evidence that was
led. The Court however, also took into account the written agreements
and found on the probabilities
for the agreements to have been a sham
it would have required the most extensive and elaborate fraud
stretching over many years.
The Court referred to the
NWR- and
Bosch
-matters cited above and reiterated the principles set out
there in that if the transaction was simulated it is dishonest, no
matter
the intentions or motives of the parties.
Could
the findings be made on affidavit?
[8]
In the matter before us no evidence was led before the Tribunal and
the argument was
that there were
bona
fide
factual
disputes on the papers requiring the application of the
Plascon-Evans
[2]
principle. The denials in
the answering affidavit did not raise
bona
fide
factual
disputes affecting the real substance and the commercial sense of the
transactions. The complaints of the two complainants,
the founding
affidavit of the Acting manageress: Investigations and Enforcement:
National Credit Regulator, the answering affidavit
of the Appellants,
the contracts and the unusual features of the contracts, as well as
the surrounding circumstances were sufficient
for the Tribunal to
come to the conclusion it did without resort to oral evidence.
The
sanctions
[9]
I find it necessary to quote the sanctions imposed:
“
55.1.
The Trust is interdicted from entering into any further credit
transactions with consumers or operating as a credit provider while
it is not registered as a credit provider;
55.2 All the
credit transactions entered into between consumers and the Trust are
declared reckless All the consumer’s
obligations in terms of
these agreements are set aside. All the consumers are to be
reimbursed with all payments made to
the Trust in terms of those
transactions;
55.3
The Trust is interdicted from proceeding with
any current civil proceedings against consumers under the credit
agreements.
The Trust must rescind any judgments obtained
against any consumers under those agreements.
55.4 The
Tribunal further orders that the Respondents appoint an independent
auditor at its own cost within 30 days of the
issuing of this
judgment. The auditor must be registered as a Chartered
Accountant. The auditor must determine whether
any further
credit transactions (besides the six transactions identified) were
concluded within the last five years. All
the amounts paid by
any consumers under those credit agreements must be reimbursed.
If the Trust sold any property (which
was the subject of a credit
agreement), the sale value must be reimbursed to the relevant
consumer (this includes the amount paid
by Mr Seabi to buy-back his
property). The auditor must provide a comprehensive report,
regarding the consumers identified
and the refunded amounts, to the
NCR within 120 days of this judgment being issued;
55.5 The
Respondent is to pay an administrative fine of R200 000.000 into
the National Revenue fund within 30 days of
this judgment being
issued. The National Revenue fund account details are as
follows;
Bank
- Standard Bank of South Africa
Account
name
- Department of Trade and Industry
Account
number
- [….]
Account
type
- Business current account
Branch
code
- 010645 (Sunnyside)
Branch
code for electronic
payments
- 051001
Reference
- NCT/142671/2019 (Name of depositor); and
55.6 There is no
order as to costs.”
[10]
The appeal of the sanctions is in the main against the sanctions
imposed in paragraphs 55.2 and
55.4 and this court must decide
whether these sanctions were lawful and appropriate.
The
auditor sanction
[11]
The Tribunal regularly includes a sanction that the offending party
must appoint an independent
auditor at its own cost. Often such audit
sanction is couched in similar vein to the audit sanction herein, but
not with the vagueness
and ambiguity of the formulation of this
sanction.
[12]
The sanction herein can be interpreted in no other way as that the
Tribunal is deferring the
Regulator’s duty to an auditor. It is
akin to a Court instructing an accused to appoint a registered
private investigator
to investigate if the accused had committed
other offences; deferring the police’s duty. The question is
whether this is
permissible in the context of the Act and
regulations.
[13]
In terms of
s15(j)
the Tribunal can order the Regulator to deal with
any matter referred to it by the Tribunal. The Tribunal can
accordingly order
the Regulator to appoint an auditor, if in its
discretion it found it just and equitable to do so. In the founding
affidavit on
behalf of the Regulator the audit sanction is proposed,
but no reasons are forwarded as to the basis for this. Nowhere is it
set
out that the Regulator had a reasonable apprehension that the
Appellants had not disclosed all the transactions it concluded in
a
similar vein. The only averment is that the “
nature and
duration of the contraventions dictate that the conduct of the Trust
has been ongoing prior to the investigation.”
The Regulator
did not set out why, despite this suspicion, they did not investigate
any further. It is not set out that the Regulator
did not have the
capacity or the means to do such an investigation. The question is
whether without any such motivations by the
Regulator there is a
ratio for granting a sanction delegating the powers of the Regulator
to an auditor.
[14]
But, not only does this sanction cater that the auditor fulfils the
Regulator’s duty, the
auditor must also function as a Court or
Tribunal effectively deciding and finding whether further agreements
in fact constituted
credit agreements. When the auditor had made this
decision he or she must then report on the amounts that were repaid.
[15]
In par 11.9.3 of the founding affidavit it was placed on record that
the Tribunal would be requested
to order the Appellants to provide
their management and audited financial statements to determine a
fine. This was not done. A
similar order for audited statements for a
5-year period could have been requested. The Regulator could have
investigated these
statements and could have obtained an auditor’s
input to analyse same, if they did not have the capacity. Or, as
often ordered
by the Tribunal, an auditor can be appointed to
investigate further transactions and file a report. The transactions
identified
therein by the auditor to be submitted to the Regulator
for assessment and referral to the Tribunal for declaration as
reckless
credit, if it did constitute reckless credit. The auditor
cannot declare a transaction void and determine the amounts to be
repaid
and inform “
the NCA”
thereof by means of a
report. This sanction provides exactly that; the auditor must decide
and report on the “
refunded amounts”
. Only the
Tribunal can decide on the report of the auditor whether reckless
credit was granted. If the intention of the sanction
was that
the auditor must just file a report for the Regulator to consider and
present to the Tribunal with the Tribunal to make
a declaration it
most definitely does not convey it.
[16]
Sanctions must be formulated in unambiguous language. The five-year
period is uncertain; is it
prior to the investigations of the
Regulator, or does it include the period investigated by the
Regulator, or does the five years
start to run from the date of the
findings of the Tribunal backdated five years, or is it financial
year ends and from when? The
fact that the sanction included that the
amount of the sale value paid by Mr Seabi to repurchase his home has
to be calculated
would indicate that the five-year period included
the period investigated by the Regulator.
[17]
The audit sanction in paragraph 55.4 is too wide and delegated the
powers of the Regulator and
Tribunal to an auditor. Nothing in the
Act prevents an auditor from being appointed. The auditor can
investigate transactions and
report thereon opining as to the nature
of the transactions, but the Regulator must apply its mind and submit
its conclusions to
the Tribunal and only the Tribunal can make a
finding as to whether there was non-compliance with the Act. This
sanction must be
set aside and replaced.
The
setting aside sanction
[18]
The Appellants submitted that the setting aside sanction made
applicable to
all
the transactions was done without resort to
any evidence of the transactions placed before the Tribunal. This in
turn led to a
disguised class action on behalf of consumers who did
not complain, were not notified or were even aware of these
proceedings.
Consumers had no option to opt in or opt out.
[19]
Two complaints were received and investigated by two inspectors. The
Regulator put evidence to
the Tribunal under oath pertaining to the
findings of the investigation pertaining to these two transactions,
and the Tribunal
found the agreements to be simulated with the
Appellants accordingly contravening various sections of the Act. The
Regulator also
instituted its own investigation against the
Appellants, i.e. not based on complaints, as it is entitled to do.
The question is
what evidence was put before the Tribunal pertaining
to the Regulator’s own investigation?
[20]
The inspectors did not do any independent investigations pertaining
to the other transactions
or “
all”
transactions.
They had an interview with the Appellants and the Appellants provided
them with information of 7 transactions of
which 1 transaction was
indeed a sale agreement [not simulated] and the other two related to
the complaints of Seabi and Slabbert.
Pertaining to the other 4
transactions only the following is noted on the NCR investigation
memorandum [Annexure 5]:
“
7.2
AMURTHAM
THYAGAVATHI GOVENDER – Annexure “C2”
Documents
contained in consumer file:
·
Deed of sale – 10 March 2017
Erf 1727 Lenasia South
8 Hawk Crescent
Johannesburg
Ø
Purchaser: The Cornelis Family Trust
Ø
Seller: AT Govender
·
Lease Agreement – 10 March 2017
Erf 1727 Lenasia South
8
Hawk Crescent
Johannesburg
Ø
Lessor: Cornelis Family Trust
Ø
Lessee: AT Govender
·
Lease Agreement – 01 August 2018
Erf 1727 Lenasia South
8
Hawk Crescent
Johannesburg
Ø
Lessor: Cornelis Family Trust
Ø
Lessee: AT Govender
Affordability
Assessment Mechanisms:
None
Cost of credit
None
Purchase Price:
R425 000.00
Rental fee
(Lease
Agreement 1): R7 000.00
Rental fee
(Lease
Agreement 2): R8 000.00
Assessment by the
Inspector:
In this instance, the Trust is the
purchaser of the property. No supporting documentation is
attached to the agreement.
No reasons are
contained in the documentation for the reasons behind the sale and
subsequent lease by the consumer.”
[21]
Paragraph 7.3 related to a Fatima Fredricks and reads exactly as
paragraph 7.2. does. Paragraph
7.4 relates to a Henrick Mashoa Matome
and it reads exactly as paragraph 7.2. As do paragraphs 7.5 relating
to Mr and Mrs Roos
and paragraph 7.6 relating to a Mr van den Berg.
[22]
In the report of the inspectors no mention at all is made of these
consumers. In the findings
the only reference is to C7 and C8, Mr
Seabi and Ms Slabbert.
[23]
In the founding affidavit there is no specific reference made to any
of the transactions of the
other consumers with the only evidence
pertaining to other consumers being “
sample”
contracts. In application proceedings the affidavits constitute the
pleadings and the evidence. The only evidence before the Tribunal
was
the contracts of sale and lease. There was no evidence from
complaints, no findings by the inspectors made pertaining to these
consumers, no surrounding circumstances or any other evidence. On
that evidence alone the Tribunal could never make a finding on
the
other 4 transactions.
[24]
The question is whether the answering affidavit of the Appellants
setting out the detail of the
sale and rental agreements, thus on the
totality of the evidence, rendered the Tribunal’s decision
pertaining to these decisions
non reviewable. These 4
transactions seemingly followed the exact same pattern as the
transactions complained off by Mr Seabi
and Ms Slabbert. I am thus
satisfied that despite the paucity of the investigations and the lack
of specific evidence in the founding
affidavit pertaining to these 4
transactions the Tribunal’s finding that these transactions
also constituted unlawful credit
transactions is correct and are not
to be set aside. I am accepting that an auditor can also prepare a
report on these 4 transactions
as to what amounts must be reimbursed
to the consumers.
[25]
If the sanction in paragraph 55.2 with the word “
all”
refers to the two complaints of Mr Seabi and Ms
Slabbert including the other 4 transactions set out above, then that
sanction should
stand. If, however the word “
all”
relates to transactions that the auditor has to
uncover then once again the sanction is too wide. The Regulator would
have to put
the evidence before the Tribunal and the Tribunal will
have to declare such transactions reckless before the obligations of
those
consumers can be set aside.
Once again an example that
Tribunal’s must carefully word sanctions as not to have it set
aside due to vagueness.
[26]
I accordingly propose the following order:
26.1
The findings of the Tribunal are confirmed.
26.2
The sanctions in paragraphs 55.1, 55.3, 55.5 and 55.6 are confirmed.
26.3
The sanction in paragraph 55.2 is set aside and replaced with the
following:
“
The six
credit
transactions referred to in the papers entered into between consumers
and the Trust are declared reckless. All the
consumer’s
obligations in terms of these agreements are set aside. All the
consumers are to be reimbursed with all
payments made to the Trust in
terms of those transactions. The auditor is to in his/her
report set out comprehensively what
amounts are to be repaid to the
consumers.”
26.4
The sanction in paragraph 55.4 is set aside and replaced with the
following:
“
The
Tribunal further orders that the Respondents appoint an independent
auditor at its own cost within 30 days of the issuing of
this
judgment. The auditor must be registered as a Chartered
Accountant. The auditor must investigate whether any further
similar transactions (besides the six transactions identified) were
concluded within the last five years from the date of the Tribunal’s
finding. The auditor must within 120 days submit a comprehensive
report regarding such transactions and the amounts that could
be
reimbursed to the Regulator for assessment and referral to the
Tribunal for a decision as to whether such transactions constituted
reckless credit and whether reimbursement would be just and
equitable.
S.
POTTERILL
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
I
agree
M.P.N.
MBONGWE
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
I
agree
M.P.
KUMALO
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
CASE
NO: A58/2021
HEARD
ON: 11 May 2022
FOR
THE APPELLANTS:
ADV. S. BUDLENDER SC
ADV. P. BOTHMA
ADV. Y. PEER
INSTRUCTED
BY:
B Karolia Inc.
FOR
THE RESPONDENTS:
ADV. M.C. MAKGATO
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Lebethe Attorneys & Associates Inc.
DATE
OF JUDGMENT: 4 August 2022
[1]
Commissioner
for South African Revenue Service v NWR Ltd
2011
(2) SA 67
(SCA) par [55] and
Commissioner
for South African Revenue Service v Bosch and another
2015
(2) SA 174
(SCA) par [40]
[2]
Plascon-Evans
Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984
(3) SA 623
(A)
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