Case Law[2025] ZAWCHC 109South Africa
Itanex CC v Legal Practitioners' Fidelity Fund (Leave to Appeal) (15043/2020) [2025] ZAWCHC 109 (17 March 2025)
Headnotes
in the trust account of Gatoo Inc. In fact, prior to the discovery of Mr Gattoo’s misappropriation, Mr Gattoo had paid a sum of R10 243 894.90 on Mr Moosa’s instructions.
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Itanex CC v Legal Practitioners' Fidelity Fund (Leave to Appeal) (15043/2020) [2025] ZAWCHC 109 (17 March 2025)
Itanex CC v Legal Practitioners' Fidelity Fund (Leave to Appeal) (15043/2020) [2025] ZAWCHC 109 (17 March 2025)
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sino date 17 March 2025
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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:
12 March 2025
Delivered
on:
17 March 2025
JUDGMENT
ON THE APPLICATION FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL
NUKU,
J
[1]
The judgment that is the subject of this application for leave to
appeal was handed
down just over a month after the Supreme Court of
Appeal (
SCA
)
delivered its judgment in
Smith
[1]
,
where in giving what it considered an uncontroversial example of
entrustment within the meaning of section 26 (a) of the now repealed
Attorneys Act 53 of 1979 (
the
Attorneys Act
)
said “
If
for example, a person is in the process of purchasing an immovable
property and paid, in terms of the deed of sale, the purchase
price
into the trust account of a seller’s attorney, there can be no
doubt that the purchaser entrusted the money to
the seller’s
attorney
.”
[2]
[2]
In the judgment that is the subject of this application this Court
found that monies
that were paid by Green Spice Investments (Pty) Ltd
(
Green Spice
), who were in the process of purchasing a petrol
service station and a convenience store (the business) and Rebel Star
Trading
(Pty) Ltd (
Rebel Star
) who were in the process of
purchasing an immovable property known as erf 4[...] Reservoir Hills,
Durban (
the property
) both of whom paid, in terms of the
respective deeds of sale, the purchase prices into the trust account
of a seller’s attorney,
Naushad Gattoo Incorporated (
Gattoo
Inc
) were not entrusted within the meaning of section 26 (a) of
the Attorneys Act.
[3]
The defendant, who takes no issue with the above example used by the
SCA suggests
that there are reasonable prospects of another court
coming to a different conclusion that the monies that were paid by
Green Spice
and Rebel Star into the trust account of Gattoo Inc,
which were misappropriated by Mr Naushad Gattoo (Mr Gattoo) were not
entrusted
within the meaning of section 26 (a) of the Attorneys Act.
[4]
In respect of the monies paid by Green Spice, the defendant suggests
that the first
requirement of entrustment has not been met because
“
the funds were not paid into the trust on behalf of and for
the benefit of the plaintiff
” but were paid for the benefit
of Le Mini Project Management and Consulting CC (
Le Mini
)
which had sold the business to Green Spice. The plaintiff having
failed to establish the first requirement of entrustment, the
argument goes, that dispenses with the need to consider the second
requirement of entrustment in respect of monies paid towards
the
purchase price of the business.
[5]
In respect of the monies paid by Rebel Star, the defendant suggests
that it is the
second requirement of entrustment that has not been
met because the monies “were paid into the trust account of
Gattoo Inc
in circumstances where Mr Moosa, the plaintiff’s
sole member, was still negotiating a transaction on behalf of the
plaintiff.
As no transaction had materialised, so the argument goes,
there was accordingly no obligation where the firm was bound to hold
and apply the monies for and on behalf of some other person or
persons or for the accomplishment of some special purpose.
[6]
The defendant prefaced its argument in relation to the second
requirement of entrustment
by stating that “
the issue of
entrustment must be judged in light of the intention of the person
who placed the money or property in the possession
of the receiver
.”
[7]
On the facts of this matter the receiver of the money is Gattoo Inc
and the persons
who placed the money in the possession of the
receiver, that is Gattoo Inc, are Green Spice and Rebel Star. The
purpose for which
the monies were placed in the possession of Gattoo
Inc was to pay for the purchase price of both the business and the
property
for the benefit of the plaintiff as the seller of the
property and Le Mini, as the seller of the business. That in my view,
establishes
the second requirement of entrustment and this should be
the end of the matter in so far as concerns the monies paid in
respect
of the sale of the property where there is no dispute as to
the first requirement of entrustment.
[8]
The mistake that the defendant makes, is to regard the monies paid in
respect of the
purchase price of the property as having been paid by
the plaintiff. That is factually incorrect because the monies in
respect
of the sale of the property were deposited into the trust
account of Gattoo Inc by or on behalf of the purchaser, Rebel Star.
[9]
The defendant, proceeding from that incorrect premise, then looks to
the plaintiff
to establish the purpose for which the monies were
placed in the possession of Gattoo Inc and finds the plaintiff
wanting in that
regard. Had the defendant heeded its own statement
that “
the issue of entrustment must be judged in light of
the intention of the person who placed the money or property in the
possession
of the receiver
” and correctly located the
identity of the person who placed the monies in the possession of the
receiver (Gattoo Inc), it
would have realised that the argument that
the second requirement of entrustment has been dispensed with
is a non-starter.
[10]
Turning to the argument that the first requirement of entrustment has
not been met in respect
of monies paid by Green Spice, the argument
that this requirement has not been met, conflates the issues and
seems to address a
different issue, namely the identity of the person
for whose benefit Gattoo Inc was required to deal with the money.
Incidentally,
this is the issue raised as a second ground of appeal,
namely that the plaintiff does not have the legal standing to claim
in respect
of the loss arising from the misappropriation of the
proceeds of the sale of business because those monies belong to a
separate
entity, Le Mini. I turn to that issue after dispelling any
notion that Gattoo Inc was not placed in possession of the proceeds
of the sale business.
[11]
Green Spice, as the purchaser of the business, paid the sum of R10
000 000.00 into the trust
account of Gattoo Inc in terms of a deed of
sale for the sale of the business. It is therefore self-evident that
Green Spice placed
the money in the possession of Gattoo Inc and no
evidence has been led to contradict that. That puts paid to any
notion that the
first requirement has not been established. Any issue
regarding the claim by the plaintiff and not Le Mini, is the issue I
turn
to next.
[12]
As is apparent from above, there were two transactions that were
concluded simultaneously for
the sale of the business and the sale of
the property. The purchase price for both these transactions were
paid into the trust
account of Gattoo Inc, the attorneys acting for
the sellers in both transactions. This was R5 000 000 in respect of
the sale of
the property and R10 000 000 in respect of the sale of
business.
[13]
The evidence of Mr Moosa, the sole director of both the plaintiff and
Le Mini was that he instructed
Mr Gattoo to allocate everything into
the plaintiff’s file. Having so instructed Mr Gattoo, Mr Moosa
would from time to time
instruct Mr Gattoo to pay certain
disbursements from the funds that were held in the trust account of
Gatoo Inc. In fact, prior
to the discovery of Mr Gattoo’s
misappropriation, Mr Gattoo had paid a sum of R10 243 894.90 on Mr
Moosa’s instructions.
[14]
In submitting the claim to the fund, Mr Moosa, on behalf of the
plaintiff regarded the monies
in the trust account as belonging to
the plaintiff hence only the plaintiff submitted the claim and not
both plaintiff and Le Mini.
[15]
The defendant advanced a defence that the plaintiff has no locus
standi to claim the loss relating
to the R10 000 000.00 paid in
respect of the business. This, however, cannot assist the plaintiff
because there is no separate
claim for R10 000 000 but one claim by
the plaintiff for the sum of R4 756 105.10 which is well within the
amount that was paid
in respect of the sale of the property. But that
was not the plaintiff’s case, because Mr Moosa regarded the
entire R15 000
000 which he had instructed Mr Gattoo to allocate into
the plaintiff’s file, as plaintiff’s property. And of
that R15 000 000.00,
R4 756 105.10 was misappropriated by
Mr Gattoo. In my view, the defendant’s ground of appeal based
on the lack of
locus standi
is bad in law and enjoys no
reasonable prospects of success.
[16]
The third and final ground of appeal relied upon by the defendant, is
that there is a compelling
reason why leave to appeal should be
granted as the order’s practical implications for the public
arises from its potential
abuse of attorneys’ trust accounts
being used as transactional accounts to settle clients’
liabilities and expenses.
[17]
This ground of appeal, in my view, proceeds from the same erroneous
factual basis of regarding
the monies that were paid into the trust
account of Gattoo Inc, as having been paid by either the plaintiff or
Le Mini for no purpose
other than to enable Mr Moosa to pay
liabilities unrelated to the transactions on which Mr Gattoo had been
advising. As already
stated above, that is factually incorrect as the
monies were paid by the two purchasers who were in the process of
purchasing the
business and the property.
[18]
For all the above reasons, I am not satisfied that the appeal would
have a reasonable prospect
of success, or that there is some other
compelling reason why the appeal should be heard. The application for
leave to appeal must,
therefore fail.
Order
[19]
In the result I make the following order:
The application for leave
to appeal is refused and 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]
Smith
v Legal Practitioners’ Fidelity Fund Board (541/2023)
[2024]
ZASCA 170
(11 December 2024)
[2]
Smith
v Legal Practitioners’ Fidelity Fund Board (541/2023)
[2024]
ZASCA 170
(11 December 2024)
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