Case Law[2025] ZAWCHC 93South Africa
Itanex CC v Legal Practitioners' Fidelity Fund (15043/2020) [2025] ZAWCHC 93 (13 January 2025)
Headnotes
by Gattoo Inc to be held in trust pending the plaintiff’s instructions as to the disbursement thereof.
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Itanex CC v Legal Practitioners' Fidelity Fund (15043/2020) [2025] ZAWCHC 93 (13 January 2025)
Itanex CC v Legal Practitioners' Fidelity Fund (15043/2020) [2025] ZAWCHC 93 (13 January 2025)
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sino date 13 January 2025
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personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case
No.15043/2020
In
the matter between:
ITANEX
CC
Plaintiff
and
LEGAL PRACTITIONERS’
FIDELITY FUND
Defendant
Coram:
NUKU J
Heard
on:
25-6 November 2024
Delivered
on:
13 January 2025
JUDGMENT
NUKU,
J
[1]
The plaintiff instituted this action against the defendant
claiming payment of the sum of R8 170 305,10 alleged to have been
misappropriated
by Mr Naushad Gattoo (
Mr Gattoo
) who was an
admitted attorney enrolled as such in term of the Attorneys Act 53 of
1979 (
Attorneys Act
) prior to 1 November 2018 and from which
date he was enrolled in terms of the Legal Practice Act 28 of 2014
(
Legal Practice Act
>).
[2]
The plaintiff alleges that during December 2015, Mr Gattoo, who
was a managing member of the firm Naushad Gattoo Incorporated (
Gattoo
Inc
) and who conducted a trust account practice concluded a
verbal agreement the plaintiff which was represented by Mr Fayyaz
Moosa
(
Mr Moosa
), the plaintiff’s sole member and
directing mind, in terms of which the funds that were anticipated to
be received by the
plaintiff from the sale of a business and an
immovable property would be deposited into the trust account held by
Gattoo Inc to
be held in trust pending the plaintiff’s
instructions as to the disbursement thereof.
[3]
The plaintiff alleges further that following the agreement referred
to above a total amount
of R15 000 000,00 was paid into the trust
account held by Gattoo Inc, which amount was made up as follows:
3.1
R500 000,00 paid on 1 April 2016;
3.2
R2 000 000,00 paid on 1 April 2016;
3.3
R2 500 000,00 paid on 3 April 2016;
3.4
R8 000 000,00 paid on 17 November 2016; and
3.5
R2 000 000,00 paid on 17 November 2016;
[4]
Of the sum of R15 000 000,00 received
into the trust account of Gattoo Inc, the plaintiff alleges that
Gattoo was authorised to
disburse a sum of R10 209 694,90 in the
period between 26 April 2016 and 20 March 2018 leaving the balance of
R4 790 305,10 standing
to the credit of the plaintiff. To this amount
the plaintiff alleges that further deposits were made into the trust
account held
by Gattoo Inc which brought the amount standing to the
credit of the plaintiff to R8 170 305,10, this being amount that is
alleged
to have been malapportioned by Gattoo.
[5]
The defendant denies that it is liable
to reimburse the plaintiff the sum of R8 170 305,10
claiming that the monies were
not placed by plaintiff with Gattoo Inc
subject to trust, as contemplated in
section 55
of the
Legal Practice
Act. This
, according to the defendant is because:
5.1
Mr Moosa, in an affidavit that had been filed on behalf of the
plaintiff when the plaintiff’s
claim was submitted to the
defendant, had stated that the sum of R15 000 000,00 was paid into
the trust account of Gattoo Inc for
purposes of holding “t
hese
funds in trust in respect of a transaction I was still negotiating
”
and in respect of a “t
ransaction which I was still in the
process of concluding
” on behalf of plaintiff;
5.2
The R15 000 000,00 paid into the trust account of Gattoo Inc
comprised of R5 000 000,00
in respect of the sale of an immovable
property paid on 1 April 2016 (in two payments of R500 000,00 and R2
500 000,00) and 3 April
2016 (R2 500 000,00); and R10 000 000,00 in
respect of the sale of a business paid on 17 November 2016 (in two
payments of R8 000
000,00 and R2 000 000,00);
5.3
From the date that the amount of R15 000 000,00 was transferred to
the trust account of
Gattoo Inc, various amounts totalling R10 209
694,90 were disbursed, on plaintiff’s instructions and on
plaintiff’s
behalf, by Gattoo Inc to various parties.
5.4
Plaintiff also deposited further funds into the trust account of
Gattoo Inc in the total
sum of R3 380 000,00 to “
ensure that
there were sufficient funds available which would be required for the
transaction which I was still in the process of
concluding
”;
5.5
During 2018, approximately two years after the first funds were paid
into the trust account
of Gattoo Inc, plaintiff requested the funds
remaining in the trust account be paid over to it, in the amount of
R8 170 305,10.
[6]
The plaintiff has since abandoned part
of its claim in the sum of R3 380 000,00 leaving only the balance of
R4 756 105.10.
[7]
Only Mr Moosa gave evidence during the trial as
the defendant closed its case without leading any evidence. Mr
Moosa’s evidence
was relatively straight forward and can be
summarised as follows. He is a businessman with interests in various
businesses. He
is the sole member of the plaintiff as well as Le Mini
Project Management and Consulting CC (
Le
Mini
). The plaintiff was the registered
owner of erf 4[…] Reservoir Hills, Durban (
the
property
) at which Le Mini conducted a
petrol service station and a convenience store (
the
business
). In what he understood to be
a composite transaction, the plaintiff sold the property to Green
Spice Investments (Pty) Ltd for
the sum of R5 000 000,00 and Le Mini
sold the business to Rebel Star Trading (Pty) Ltd for the sum of R10
000 000,00 all of which
was to be paid into the trust account of
Gattoo Inc, being the firm of attorneys that was advising both the
plaintiff and Le Mini
with the process of concluding the transaction
for the sale of the property and the business. He instructed Mr
Gattoo that the
R15 000 000,00 should be held in the name of the
plaintiff.
[8]
Mr Moosa’s business interests included
shares in ESwift Investments (RF) (Pty) Ltd, a company that had a
preference share
subscription agreement with RMB in terms of which it
was required, from time to time, to make some substantial payments to
RMB.
For this reason, he thought that he should keep some of the
proceeds from the sale of the property and the business so that he
could use same to make the aforementioned payment when it became due.
[9]
Mr Moosa confirmed having authorised Mr Gattoo to
disburse the sum of R10 209 694,90 from the proceeds of the sale
of the property
and the business. Mr Gattoo, however, never paid the
balance as he started making excuses whenever he requested the money
to be
paid to the plaintiff. At some point in time Mr Gattoo even
provided him with a fraudulent bank statement in an attempt to
convince
him that the money was still being held in trust. At some
point he heard that Mr Gattoo had been struck off as an attorney.
Thereafter
he decided to approach attorneys who had been representing
some of the claimants against Mr Gattoo and/ Gattoo Inc. Attempts to
trace Mr Gattoo did not yield any positive results and he even
reported the matter to the police.
[10]
Mr Moosa, during cross-examination, was
asked about his appreciation of the fact that some of the money
belonged to Le Mini in that
these were proceeds from the sale of the
business and not monies belonging to the plaintiff. His response was
that he regarded
the transaction as an indivisible transaction and
that he, in any event, had instructed Mr Gattoo that the entire sum
of R15 000
000,00 should be kept under the plaintiff’s file.
When referred to paragraph 9 of an affidavit he had signed in support
of
the plaintiff claim, he readily conceded that its contents are not
factually correct. This is the paragraph in which he had stated
that
‘
The Claimant concluded an
agreement of sale of business and immovable property with a company
known as Green Spice Investments (Pty)
Ltd for the sum of R15 000
000,00 (Fifteen Million Rand) which was to be paid as follows:…’
He further confirmed that paragraph 13
of the same affidavit wherein he stated ‘
Gattoo
therefore held R15 000 000,00 in trust on behalf of the claimant’
was a correct reflection of the instructions he had given to Gattoo
regarding the proceeds from the sale of the property and the
business.
[11]
The evidence having established that
the misappropriation of the funds occurred prior to the coming into
effect of the
Legal Practice Act counsel
for both parties were in
agreement that the matter should be determined in terms of the
provisions of the Attorneys Act, and in
particular section 26 which
reads:
‘
Subject
to the provisions of this Act, the fund shall be applied for the
purpose of reimbursing persons who may suffer pecuniary
loss as a
result of – (a) theft committed by a practising practitioner,
his or her candidate attorney or his or her employee,
of any money or
other property entrusted by or on behalf of such persons to him or
her or his or her candidate attorney or employee
in the course of his
or her practice or while acting as an executor or administrator in
the estate of a deceased person or as a
trustee in an insolvent
estate or in any other similar capacity.’
[12]
Regarding
the interpretation of section 26 of the Attorneys Act, plaintiff’s
counsel referred this court to the judgment of
the then Witwatersrand
Local Division in
BIC
Southern Africa (Pty) Ltd v Attorneys Fidelity Fund Board of
Control
[1]
where the requirements to establish liability of the defendant were
stated in the following terms:
‘…
the
essential elements of the action brought in terms of the section are:
1.
There must have been a pecuniary loss.
2.
The loss must stem from theft.
3.
The theft must occur by a practising
attorney.
4.
It must be in a sum of money.
5.
The money must have been entrusted to the
attorney.
6.
It must have been in the course of his
practice.’
[13]
Plaintiff’s
counsel further referred this court to the decision of the Supreme
Court of Appeal (
SCA
)
in
Legal
Practice Fidelity Fund v Marshall (
Marshall
)
[2]
in support of his argument that (a) the concept of “deposit”
and “entrustment” were not necessarily
distinct and
separate, (b) entrustment is a broader concept than “
impressing
with a trust in the legal technical sense
”
and (c) the plaintiff is entitled to be the sole beneficiary.
[14]
It was submitted on behalf of the plaintiff that
all the requirements for liability of the part of the defendant had
been established
in that:
14.1 It
is not disputed that there has been a pecuniary loss of R4 756
105.10, and the only issue is whether it
is the plaintiff which
suffered loss or some other third party.
14.2 It
was admitted that the loss stemmed from theft.
14.3
the theft was committed by Mr Gattoo who was a practising attorney at
the time when the theft was committed.
14.4
what was stolen is the sum of R4 756 105.10.
14.5
the money was entrusted to Mr Gattoo, a practising attorney, and
14.6 Mr
Gattoo had been advising the plaintiff and Le Mini regarding the
transaction for the sale of the property
and the business.
[15]
It was submitted on behalf of the
defendant that the plaintiff is not entitled to include the sum of
R10 000 000 in the computation
of its claim as this amount belonged
to Le Mini as the proceeds from the sale of business. The argument
went further that the plaintiff
could not have suffered any pecuniary
loss because Mr Gattoo had disbursed more than the R5 000 000 that he
had received in respect
of the sale of the property.
[16]
It
was further submitted on behalf of the defendant that the funds
stolen by Mr Gattoo were not placed by the plaintiff with Gattoo
Inc,
subject to trust as contemplated in section 26 of the Attorneys Act
because the elements of entrustment had not been established.
In this
regard, counsel for the defendant placed great reliance on the
decision of the SCA in
International
& Commercial Factors v Attorneys Fidelity Fund (
ICF
)
[3]
for the proposition that the test to prove entrustment
comprises two elements, namely (a) to place in the possession of
something, (b) subject to trust, and that the latter connotes that
the person entrusted is bound to deal with the property or money
concerned for the benefit of others. In short, the argument was that
the import of the ICF judgment is that section 26 of the Attorneys
Act makes provision for reimbursement to either (1) the person by
whom the has been entrusted or (ii) the person on whose behalf
the
money has been entrusted, provided that such a person has suffered
pecuniary loss.
[17]
In dealing with the facts of this
matter, it was submitted that the first element of entrustment had
been proved only in relation
to the R5 000 000 which was in respect
of the proceeds of the property by the plaintiff. Regarding the
second element of entrustment,
it was submitted that the plaintiff
had failed to prove this because there was no obligation on the part
of Gattoo Inc to hold
and apply the money for the benefit of some
person or persons or for the benefit of accomplishment of some
special purpose because
the money was kept in the trust account of
Gattoo Inc because Mr Moosa ‘
required
attorneys Gattoo to hold these funds in trust in respect of a
transaction I was still negotiating on behalf of the claimant
’.
Thus, so goes the argument, the plaintiff used the trust
account of Gattoo Inc as a general transactional account
and not for
the purposes contemplated in the Attorneys Act, that is to hold
monies on behalf of clients for specific legal purposes
such as
property transfers, the settlement of legal claims or the
safeguarding of funds during disputes.
[18]
The defendant’s argument that the
plaintiff is not entitled to claim any monies beyond the R5 000 000
which was paid as the
proceeds from the sale of the property ignores
the undisputed evidence of Mr Moosa that he had given instructions to
Mr Gattoo
that the entire amount of R15 000 000 must be held in trust
in the name of the plaintiff. Consistent with this instruction, Mr
Moosa, acting on behalf of the plaintiff, instructed Mr Gattoo to
disburse the sum of R10 209 694,90.
[19]
It is also significant that Mr Moosa is the sole
member of both the plaintiff as well as Le Mini and as the directing
mind of both
entities, the defendant had not suggested that there was
any prohibition that would have prevented him from directing the
funds
paid in respect of the sale of the business to be held in trust
on behalf of the plaintiff. After Mr Moosa gave the instruction
that
the money be held in trust on behalf of the plaintiff, which
instruction appears to have been actioned by Mr Gattoo in light
of
the fact that he disbursed more than R5 000 000 which was the
proceeds from the sale of the property, Le Mini could no longer
lay
any claim to any of the proceeds of sale. In a much as Le Mini is a
separate corporate entity from the plaintiff, it is the
instruction
that was given by Mr Moosa, as the sole member of Le Mini that is
determinative. The defendant’s argument that
that the
plaintiff’s claim has been extinguished has no merit. That
leaves the argument relating to the requirements of entrustment
to
which I turn next.
[20]
The gist of the defendant’s
argument revolves around what Mr Moosa stated in his affidavit in
support of the plaintiff’s
claim that he intended the moneys to
be held in trust in respect of a transaction that he was still
negotiating on behalf of the
plaintiff. Reference was also made to
the fact that Mr Moosa had instructed Gattoo Inc to pay various
disbursements which had nothing
to do with the plaintiff and that
this is indicative of the fact that Mr Moosa or the plaintiff
intended to use the trust account
of Gattoo Inc as a general
transactional account.
[21]
My reading of the SCA judgment in
Marshall is that it is no longer a requirement of section 26 (a) of
the Attorneys Act that the
person entrusted with the property or
money is bound to deal with such property or money for the benefit of
others, a point which
the defendant seems to rely heavily on. As
pointed out on behalf of the plaintiff, the SCA in Marshall endorsed
the majority decision
of the full court when it stated ‘
In
light of the decision in ICF it must follow that the concept of
entrustment for the purposes of section 26 (a) does not connote
that
the person entrusted is bound to deal with the property or money
concerned for the benefit of others, in the sense that it
does not
include moneys deposited by a depositor such as the respondent who
will provide instructions as to the application of
such funds in
trust in due course
.’
[22]
Thus, it was open to the plaintiff or Mr Moosa to
give instructions as to the application of the funds that had been
paid into Gattoo
Inc’s trust account from time to time and that
would not take such funds outside of the ambit of the protection of
section
26 (a) of the Attorneys Act. In my view, the plaintiff has
satisfied the requirements of section 26 (a) of the Attorneys Act and
as such is entitled to be reimbursed the sum of R4 756 105.10 that
was stolen by Mr Gattoo.
[23]
The plaintiff has been successful, and, in my
view, costs should follow the result.
ORDER
[24]
In
the result I make the
following order:
24.1
Defendant is liable to pay plaintiff the sum of
R4
756 105.10 with interest at the prescribed rate from the date of
judgment to date of payment;
24.2
Defendant shall pay the costs of suit on scale B and such costs shall
include the costs of one counsel.
L.G. Nuku
Judge of the
High Court
APPEARANCES
For
plaintiff:
N Cassim
SC and M Karolia
Instructed
by
:
Shaheed
Dollie Inc, Johannesburg
For
defendant:
H Cassim
Instructed
by
:
Abrahams
Kiewitz Inc, Cape Town
[1]
2003
(6) SA 757
(W) at para [2]
[2]
2023
(5) SA 409 (SCA)
[3]
[1996] ZASCA 84
;
1997
(1) SA 136
(SCA) at 150B-C
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