Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 7South Africa
Rockland Group Holdings (Pty) Limited v Commissioner of the Financial Sector Conduct Authority and Another (A133/2021; 22504/2019) [2022] ZAWCHC 7 (11 February 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
11 February 2022
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
>>
2022
>>
[2022] ZAWCHC 7
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Rockland Group Holdings (Pty) Limited v Commissioner of the Financial Sector Conduct Authority and Another (A133/2021; 22504/2019) [2022] ZAWCHC 7 (11 February 2022)
Rockland Group Holdings (Pty) Limited v Commissioner of the Financial Sector Conduct Authority and Another (A133/2021; 22504/2019) [2022] ZAWCHC 7 (11 February 2022)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAWCHC/Data/2022_7.html
sino date 11 February 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(
WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case Number: A133/2021
Case Number: 22504/2019
In the matter between:
ROCKLAND GROUP
HOLDINGS (PTY)
LIMITED
Appellant
(Applicant
a
quo
)
and
THE COMMISSIONER FOR
THE FINANCIAL
First Respondent
SECTOR CONDUCT
AUTHORITY
(First Respondent
a quo
)
PIERRE DU PLESSIS
KRIEL
N.O.
Second Respondent
(Second
Respondent
a quo
)
Coram:
Fortuin, Wille et Sher, JJ
Heard:
19
th
of January 2022
Delivered:
11
th
February 2022
JUDGMENT
WILLE, J
:
(unanimous,
Fortuin et Sher JJ
, concurring)
INTRODUCTION
[1] This is an appeal about an
application that was chartered in the court of first instance
essentially for the removal of the second respondent as the curator
of the ‘business’ of Rockland Asset Management and Consulting
(Proprietary) Limited (‘RAM’). The appeal is before us with
leave from the Supreme Court of Appeal. The appellant
in the
initial application sought this urgent final relief in terms of the
Financial Institutions (Protection of Funds) Act.
[1]
In addition, the appellant sought the removal of the second
respondent from his duties, obligations and ultimate control of
two
trusts which were founded and managed by RAM. These two trusts
are ‘
bewind’
beneficiary trusts that trade as the Rockland
Targeted Development Investment Fund (‘TDI’) and the Rockland
Property Investment
Fund (‘RIF’).
[2] In the court a
quo
, it
was alleged that the sole director and controlling mind of RAM was
involved in the misappropriation of significant amounts of
money
entrusted to his businesses by various employee and trade union
pension and provident funds. It was further contended
that RAM was but one of these vehicles utilized in the alleged
misappropriation of these investor funds.
[3] In summary, the appellant’s
case on appeal before us is that the curator owes certain fiduciary
duties to RAM and accordingly has a conflict of interest in acting
both as the curator of the business of RAM and at the same time,
to
the beneficiary trusts. In addition, the appellant advances
that RAM has no further business that falls to be controlled
by the
second respondent.
[4] The respondents’ case is
that the curator owes no fiduciary duties to RAM and those who
benefit or benefited from its activities. Besides, it is
advanced that the curator was appointed to take over the ‘business’
of the beneficiary trusts and RAM and, he is accordingly obliged to
act in the interests of the investors whose monies were allegedly
misappropriated through the activities of RAM. This, the
respondents say is why,
inter alia
, the curator was
appointed. By way of elaboration, it is argued that the curator
was appointed to look after the interests
of the investors who put
money into the business of RAM, TDI and PIF and was appointed as the
curator to this collective investment
scheme ‘business’.
[5] Finally, the appellant
contends for the position that the curatorship should come to an end,
as RAM has since become insolvent under the curatorship. To
counter this, the respondents aver that RAM already faced severe
solvency problems prior to the curatorship application in 2012.
Besides, RAM has a pending claim against the appellant in the
sum of approximately R32 million, which claim needs to be pursued to
finality.
THE FACTUAL MATRIX
THE ‘CONTROLLING MIND’ AND STRUCTURE OF THE
‘INVESTMENT’ SCHEME
[6] In my view, central to the
determination of some of the core issues in this appeal is the
concern about the seemingly unbridled power which was vested in Mr
Wentzel Lindsay Oaker (‘WLO’). Undoubtedly, WLO was
the
‘controlling mind’ behind this collective investment scheme.
WLO is the sole director of RAM. WLO is the sole
director of
the appellant ‘RGH’. In turn, the sole shareholder of RAM
is RGH. The sole shareholder of RGH is the
Johnny Bravo Trust
(‘JBT’). WLO is a trustee of the JBT with his wife as the
other trustee. In summary, the allegation
is that WLO was
involved in the commingling and the misappropriation of investor
funds.
[7] RAM is the founder of the
bewind
beneficiary trusts trading as TDI and PIF. Global
Pact Trading 151 (Proprietary) Limited (‘GPT’) is the corporate
trustee
of TDI and PIF. WLO is the nominee trustee of GPT.
This means that WLO is effectively in control of the two
bewind
beneficiary trusts. TDI and PIF concluded management
agreements with RAM in terms of which very lucrative fees were
charged
by RAM to these beneficiary trusts. The sole
investments made by PIF consisted of shareholdings into two private
‘shelf’
companies. WLO and his brother became the directors
of these two ‘shelf’ companies. These two companies own a
vast
tract of, as yet, undeveloped land.
[2]
[8] To complete the picture, the
sole beneficiary of PIF is TDI. TDI’s most substantial
investment is in PIF. The beneficiaries of TDI are the pension
funds. This because TDI and PIF are beneficiary trusts
so the
assets must of necessity vest in the pension funds. All of the
corporate entities are subject to the overall control
of WLO. This
is and was a factual finding and is not the subject of any serious
dispute or engagement by the appellant.
[9]
It is so that RAM, TDI and PIF are discrete entities. Their
‘business’ however was
operated together as one. This, so
as to permit investor funds to be diverted for the benefit of WLO and
JBT. This single
business investment scheme was ultimately
controlled by WLO. It was precisely this single business that
was placed under curatorship
THE ‘CURATORSHIP’
[10] The collective investment scheme
‘business’ of RAM and the trusts was placed into curatorship by
the first respondent during 2012 and 2013. The second
respondent was appointed as the curator of the collective investment
scheme ‘business’ of RAM and of the two
bewind
beneficiary
trusts. One of the investors
[3]
,
lodged a complaint against RAM with the first respondent. A
subsequent investigation exhibited a significant misappropriation
of
investor funds. These misappropriations were connected with the
pension benefits of relatively low-paid working-class people.
[11] At the heart of the ‘round-robin’
money trail was the following stratagem, namely; that two
shelf
companies were utilized to purchase the immovable properties;
that these immovable properties were purchased for approximately
R36
million during early 2007; that the purchase price was paid for
by utilizing certain of the investor funds; that
thereafter the
JBT received approximately R105 million for the latter’s one-third
shareholding in and to these two shelf companies;
that a
further sum of R159 million was paid for the remaining shares and
finally the sum of approximately R264 million was paid to
acquire all
the shares housed in these two shelf companies. These two shelf
companies had initially acquired these assets for
the sum of R36
million.
[12] Furthermore, an option agreement was
thereafter concluded so that JBT was permitted to again re-acquire
these shares at certain stipulated prices and times suitable under
this extremely ‘friendly’ trust structure. Most
significantly,
no consideration was ever payable for this option.
Thereafter, an option cancellation agreement was concluded under and
in
terms of which PIF agreed to pay the JBT the sum of R150 million
for the said cancellation of the option.
[13] Put in another way, this meant that the
JBT effectively received R150 million to cancel an option for
which
it had paid nothing. In order to finance this simulated
transaction, this now ‘new debt’ was financed by a ‘sale
share
swop’ effectively permitting the JBT to receive a further increased
aliquot
shareholding in the two shelf companies that owned the
immovable properties. In order to increase the value of the JBT
a further
scheme was orchestrated in terms of which TDI paid
exorbitant management fees to RAM. The profit on these fees
filtered up
through RGH to the JBT.
[14] As a direct result, the assets of JBT
increased from approximately R2,5 million to R250 million. This,
because of the unlawful conduct and the resultant abuse of the funds
which had been invested in TDI by the pension funds. The
investigation at the instance of the first respondent exhibited,
inter alia
, that the entire structure and methodology that was
put into place, was orchestrated at benefitting RAM, RGH and the JBT
and, not
the investors.
[15] It was precisely this peculiarly
orchestrated ‘single business’ which was subsequently placed
under
curatorship. The second respondent successfully pursued a
number of claims against these various entities and other related
parties for substantial amounts of money and,
inter alia
, for
the return of the ‘share-swop’ shareholding. The
total capital that was held to be payable to the curator in
an action
in this court before Ndita J was the sum of R107 906 037.42. This,
excludes the value of the ‘sale-swop’ shareholding
in the two
shelf companies which the second respondent also seeks to have
returned.
THE ‘ISSUES’ ON APPEAL
[16] The core issue on appeal is whether the
court of first instance was correct to dismiss the appellant’s
application for final relief to remove the second respondent as the
curator of the ‘business’ of RAM and the two
bewind
beneficiary trusts which were founded and managed by RAM.
Further, an attack is piloted against the punitive costs order which
was granted against the appellant in the court
a quo
.
[17] The second respondent argues; that
the court of first instance correctly decided that in these
peculiar
circumstances, the curator does not owe any fiduciary duties to RAM
or its owner; that the curator was not and is
not conflicted;
that the appellant did not show good cause, or indeed, any cause for
the removal of the curator. Likewise,
the insolvency of RAM is
not sufficient or good cause to remove the second respondent as the
curator.
THE ‘LOCUS STANDI’ CHALLENGE
[18] The second respondent contends that he
is entitled to persist in advancing the submission that the appellant
has no standing to bring a case to remove him in respect of TDI and
PIF.
[4]
It is undoubtedly so that the appellant has less to do with any of
these latter
bewind
beneficiary trusts as it is the sole
shareholder in RAM, which in turn entered into management agreements
with TDI and PIF, which
agreements are now at an end. The
appellant’s counsel conceded that there was no direct nexus between
the appellant and the
two trusts.
[19] I remain unpersuaded that the appellant
is possessed of the necessary
locus standi
to pursue this
application in the style that it was formulated. I say this
because the initial core relief contended for was
for the removal of
the second respondent as the curator of TDI and PIF. The
appellant only has a financial interest in RAM
as its shareholder,
nothing more and nothing less.
[5]
[20] Fortunately, this appeal does not fall
to be decided on this discrete issue. In my view, because
these
various entities have been treated as having a ‘single business’
this may give some standing, or at the very least an interest
to the
appellant, to claim the relief it seeks in respect of these entities
in which it has no direct interest. Thus, for the
purposes of
this appeal, I accept that the appellant indeed demonstrated a
sufficiently discernible interest that it could have had
in obtaining
the relief it contended for in this connection, and that it
accordingly has the necessary
locus standi
.
CONSIDERATION
THE UNLAWFUL ‘COLLECTIVE INVESTMENT’ SCHEME
[21] The first respondent concluded
that the business operated by RAM and TDI was a collective investment
scheme and that it was being conducted unlawfully in that,
inter
alia,
RAM was not licenced to operate such a scheme in terms of
the Collective Investment Schemes Control Act.
[6]
In terms of the final curatorship order which was granted the
‘collective investment business’ of the appellant was placed
under curatorship. Curiously, the appellant now for the first
time, seeks to confront the averment, which was undisputed at
the
time when the curatorship order was obtained, that the ‘business’
of the appellant was indeed part of a collective investment
scheme.
[22] Absent the papers is any material
advanced in support of this issue and it was not meaningfully engaged
with by the appellant during argument. Moreover, in the event
that the relief sought by the appellant on this score, was to
be
granted, then in that event, the business of these various entities
would in all probability once again be subject to the control
of its
former controlling mind and they could conceivably resume conducting
an unlawful collective investment scheme. Henceforth,
the
object sought to be achieved by the initial curatorship orders could
be rendered nugatory.
[23] Put in another way, RAM managed an
unlawful collective investment scheme which it was not licenced
to
do. Therefore, it could not legally have earned fees from these
unlawful activities. For this reason alone, it must
be so that
the second respondent cannot be subject to a fiduciary duty to have
preserved this unlawful income stream for the benefit
of its
shareholder and director.
THE ALLEGED ‘CONFLICT OF INTEREST’ AND BREACH OF
A FIDUCIARY DUTY
[24] The argument by the appellant on this
score is that the alleged conflict between the second respondent’s
duty to the investors in TDI and his duty to RAM, is such that RAM
should be released from curatorship, or that a different curator
should be appointed. This argument is predicated on the
contention that the curator owes a fiduciary duty to the company
(RAM)
and, does not take into account that it is the interests of the
investors that is paramount.
[25] In
Volvo (SA
)
[7]
Nugent JA pointed out that whilst certain relationships have come to
be accepted in our law as encompassing fiduciary duties
[8]
,
there is no closed list thereof, and whether a particular
relationship should be characterized as one which involves such a
duty
will depend on the facts of a particular case. In this
regard
[9]
,
Courts have commonly sought to identify certain features or
characteristics which are considered to impart a fiduciary quality to
a relationship, such as the discretion or power that one party may
have in relation to the affairs of another, the influence that
he/she
is able to bring to bear on the relationship or the affairs of the
other, and the vulnerability of one party or person to
another, and
the trust and reliance that is placed by them in the other.
[10]
[26] But in each instance the court is
required to carefully weigh these aspects, in the light of the
relevant
facts, and the context in terms of which the relationship
came about. In addition, the court must surely take into
consideration
the legislative context in terms of which the
appointment of a curator is made to a business,
[27] The appellant’s counsel emphasised
that in terms of the provisional order of court by means of which
the
curator was appointed (which was later confirmed), he was afforded
vast discretionary powers of control over the affairs of RAM.
Thus,
he was vested with ‘all the executive powers’ that would
ordinarily be vested in, and exercised by, the board of
directors and
the directors were simultaneously divested of all such powers in
relation to the business. In addition, he alone was
authorised to
institute or prosecute any legal proceedings on behalf of RAM.
[28] Consequently, the appellant’s counsel
contended that the curator has not only stepped into the shoes,
but
functions as, the one-man board of RAM and its current sole director
is powerless and RGH is entirely reliant on the curator
to manage the
company. In the circumstances the curator stands in a
relationship of trust,
vis a vis
,
the company and has a fiduciary duty to act in its interests,
which the second respondent has failed to do.
[29] In my view, as superficially attractive
as the appellant’s thesis might, at first blush, appear to
be, it
loses sight of the legislative context in terms of which the
appointment was made, and has no regard for the statutory purposes
which are sought to be achieved by it. The second respondent
was appointed as curator to the collective investment scheme and
financial service
business,
which was being rendered by RAM
and the two trusts (and not as the curator of the
company and the
trusts)
, in terms of section 5 of Act 28 of 2001, the so-called
Financial Institutions (Protection of Funds Act). As is evident
from
its title, as expanded upon in its preamble, the purpose of the
Act is to provide for the legislative regulation of the investment,
‘safe custody’ and administration of funds and property held in
trust by entities that function as financial institutions.
[30] In considering the provisions of section
5, Wallis JA held for the full court in the decision of the
SCA in
Dynamic Wealth
[11]
that in determining whether a curator should be appointed to a
business run by such an institution the court must assess whether,
in
the light of the interests of actual or potential investors in the
business, or investors who have entrusted or may entrust the
management of their investments to it, it is desirable to appoint a
curator. The court is required to determine whether appointing
a curator will address problems in the business that have been
identified, and whether such an appointment will have ‘beneficial
consequences’ for investors.
[31] Thus, if there is any duty that is owed
by a curator that is appointed to the business of a company
that
functions as a financial institution in terms of the Act, it is one
which is owed to investors in the company, and not to the
company
per
se
, or its shareholders. To impose or construe a fiduciary
duty on a curator,
vis a vis,
the company would in many instances be inimical to the
curator’s duty to act in the interests of investors, and would in
many instances
conflict with it.
[32] Thus, as is the case in this matter,
where it is alleged that the company has served as a vehicle which
has been operated by its directors to run a collective investment
scheme business, albeit an unlawful one, for the benefit of its
shareholders, the interests of the company would require the business
to continue in order to generate profits for the shareholders,
whereas the interests of hapless investors who had unwittingly
invested in it would be to put an end or at least a halt to the
business,
so that any funds which had not yet been spent or
lost could be protected, and any funds which had previously been
expended
should be recovered. Clearly, to expect a curator to
act in the interests of the investors as well as the company in such
circumstances
would be to postulate the impossible.
[33] The appellant’s suggestions to
the contrary would mean that the court would be directing the
curator
to conserve and preserve the unlawful operation of the collective
investment scheme to enable those who set up the unlawful
scheme in
the first place to continue benefitting from this operation at the
expense of the investors.
[34] The second respondent was precisely
appointed to take control of, and manage, the ‘business’
of
RAM and the two trusts, which it was alleged were run as a single,
unlicensed and thus unlawful, collective investment scheme.
[12]
The curator’s allegiance can only be to the interests of the
investors in such a scheme. A curator is appointed particularly
where problems are identified in the ‘business’ of a financial
institution. A curator’s purpose is to address those
problems,
for the benefit of investors in the business.
[13]
[35] As a matter of logic, a curator cannot
acquire any obligations towards any of the entities that are
controlled by parties who took investor funds in the first place,
particularly where those parties are the cause of the institution’s
problems. The second respondent is not obliged to look after
the interests of persons who allegedly misappropriated money as
this
would of necessity thwart his ability to attend to the interests of
the investors and the business under curatorship.
The placing
under curatorship of a business is totally different from the placing
under curatorship of a specific entity.
[14]
[36] The second respondent was appointed to
take control of, and to manage, the ‘business of an institution’
and, in so doing, he is required to look after the best interests of
the investors in that ‘business’.
[15]
In my view, on the facts of this case, the second respondent
does not owe any fiduciary duty towards RAM as a corporate entity
or
the trusts, who were entrusted with the ‘investors’ money in this
collective investment scheme.
THERE IS ‘NO LONGER’ A BUSINESS
[37] The appellant takes the position that
there is no longer a business in existence in RAM that should
be the
subject of a curatorship order and that, in consequence, the order
should be discharged. The reasoning advanced by the
appellant
on this score is hard to discern. As a general proposition it
must be so that if an institution no longer has a business,
there is
nothing to be
placed
under curatorship. It is common
cause that at the time when the businesses of RAM and the trusts were
placed under curatorship,
they were functioning.
[38] If an institution’s business that was
placed under curatorship merely changes during the course of
the
curatorship, this in itself, clearly does not support any ‘hard-rule’
that the curatorship should be discharged. The
issue of whether
there is still a business to be administered by a duly appointed
curator, at all times remains and is a factual
issue.
[39] On the facts of the current case, it
cannot be contended that there is good cause to remove the curator
from the ‘single business’ merely because he took steps to
regularise RAM’s position and ultimately cancelled the flow of
exorbitant
management fees which were earned by it and, which were
somewhat central to the misappropriation.
[40] Most importantly, RAM still has
‘unfinished’ business. In this regard RAM has a claim
against
the appellant in the sum of about R32 million, based on an
alleged loan which was made by RAM to RGH. This very claim
formed
the subject of some close scrutiny in a recent judgment by
Binns-Ward J in this very division.
[16]
In this matter the following was indicated in connection with
this loan claim, namely:
‘…
In
his capacity as curator of RAM, the curator is the plaintiff in
pending litigation against Rockland Group Holdings (Pty) Ltd (‘RGH’)
in case no. 5417/2014, in which he is claiming the capital sum of R31
282 386,46 in repayment of a loan made by RAM to RGH
.
I
shall refer to the action between RAM and RGH as ‘the loan claim
action’.
RGH’s
defence in that action is that the loan is not repayable on demand,
but only out of dividends declared by RAM which RGH would
become
entitled to receive…’
[41] This is precisely the species of
‘business’ in the collective investment scheme which falls to be
finalized by the second respondent. Furthermore, there is a
significant judgment from this court in favour of the investors
(which is on appeal), that also forms part of the ‘business’ of
the collective investment scheme that was placed under curatorship.
[42] In this regard, the second respondent
pursued claims against WLO, JBT and a number of additional parties
for substantial sums of money and for a return of 20% of the
‘share-swop’ transaction. After a lengthy trial in this
division
the following findings were, inter alia, made against
WLO, namely; that WLO attempted to mislead the pension funds;
that WLO gave false information to the first respondent’s
inspectors; that WLO placed himself in a conflicted position
with
that of PIF and the JBT
[17]
;
that WLO breached his fiduciary duties towards RAM and/or PIF and TDI
and that his evidence was not credible and was unreliable
in a number
of respects.
[43] The total amount declared to be payable
to the curator, after a lengthy trial (before interest), amounts
to
some R 107 906 037,42. In addition, the value of the
aliquot
shareholding that falls to be returned amounts to the sum of
about R20 million. These claims as a matter of logic and
necessity
form part of the business of the curatorship that fall to
be recovered by the second respondent as part of the business of the
collective
investment scheme, for the benefit of the investors, with
a view to recouping some of the losses which they suffered .
[44] The appellant contends that the
‘
investors committee
’ can deal with these ‘remaining’
aspects of the business under curatorship. I disagree.
Without the curator and
the curatorship, this committee will have no
legal authority. The prospect of a substantial recovery in the
continuing litigation
against RAM alone, is in my view a valid and
very sound legal reason to continue with the curatorship over
RAM.
[18]
[45]
In addition
,
a very real possibility exists that should RAM, TDI or PIF be
discharged from the curatorship order, this will allow WLO to
significantly
derail or undo the recoveries made by the curator on
behalf of the investors. This would be contrary to the very
rationale
why the curatorship order was granted in the first place.
Moreover, when the FSCA described RAM and TDI as ‘
one , unified,
collective investment scheme’
this was not the subject of
any challenge. This brings me to the single business argument.
THE ‘SINGLE BUSINESS’ ARGUMENT
[46] The appellant’s complaint now is
that RAM was placed under curatorship together with the two
bewind
beneficiary trusts. This, notwithstanding that the curatorship
application was not challenged on this or any other ground.
Factually, these three entities were carrying on one, unified,
collective investment scheme without being so registered. Moreover,
RAM was carrying on this ‘business’ unlawfully and unregulated.
[47] Significantly, it was the
management of the assets acquired by the collective investment scheme
that enabled this misappropriation and enrichment at the expense of
the investors to take place. The shield raised by the appellant
that RAM no longer has any business cannot now be raised. This,
particularly in the peculiar circumstances, when on the facts,
RAM
has unfinished ‘business’ in the form,
inter alia
, of
pending litigation in that an asset is sought to be recovered.
[48]
Besides, WLO remains the central figure in the misappropriation of
significant amounts of money
entrusted to this ‘business’ by the
investors and the pension funds. RAM was a crucial cogwheel in
this collective investment
scheme,
inter alia,
because it
levied excessive fees for the managing of the TDI and PIF investments
and diverted a corporate opportunity which should
have been made
available to the pension funds for the ultimate benefit of the
investors.
[49] Because of the corporate structure
put into place by WLO, the funds misappropriated through and
by RAM
accrued to WLO and to the benefit of his family at the expense of the
investors. The argument that this was not a single
business is
simply untenable on the facts taking into account also the peculiar
investment structure engineered and orchestrated
by WLO.
THE ALLEGATIONS REGARDING THE ‘CONDUCT’ OF THE
CURATOR
[50]
The second respondent’s primary duty is to report to the court. He
has done so on an annual basis
since his appointment. His
reports have since been accepted by the court and the regulatory
authority. In the discharge
of his duties, the curator acted in
consultation with an ‘investors committee’ which was
representative of the investor classes
and groups and indeed, it is
the interests of the investors, that the curatorship order seeks to
protect and preserve.
[51] It is accordingly not understood on what
basis any highly speculative averments and complaints regarding
the
extent of the supervision of the conduct of the curator, could or
would assist the appellant in any material manner, when same
relates
to the relevant core issues in this appeal. There are other
options open to the appellant under the provisions of the
Protection
Act.
THE ‘INSOLVENCY’ OF RAM
[52] The appellant contends that the
curator was the cause of RAM’s insolvency. There is not
an
iota of evidence to support this assertion. This, because the
total value of assets attributed to RAM at the time of the
curatorship amounted only to R33 466 879,00.
[53] Further, RAM has been held liable for
the amounts unlawfully taken from the investors in the sum of
R61
million and R22 million respectively. This, with the strong
possibility of further amounts in due course. Of significance
is that these claims arose prior to the date of the curatorship
order.
THE AVERMENT THAT THE CURATORSHIP HAS ‘RUN IT’S
COURSE’
[54] The curator has realised certain of the
assets that were held in the collective investment scheme, and
has
returned a large percentage of the investments made by the pension
funds to them. What remains under the control of the
curator
are the investments in the immovable properties registered in the
names of the two shelf companies whose shares are in turn
held by the
JBT. Some of these immovable properties are yet to be developed
and realized. In addition, these immovable
properties are the
subject of ongoing litigation regarding certain ‘developmental
rights’, which could materially affect the
value of these assets.
[55] The second respondent’s argument is
that until all these assets have all been realised and the pension
funds receive their
aliquot
shares, the ‘business’
continues. Besides, all the current and ongoing litigation
needs to be finalized by the curator
and in the interim the
administration of these properties should not be returned to those
who have caused the losses to the investors.
Needless to say, I
am in agreement with this argument advanced by the second respondent.
THE ‘LITIGATION’ CONDUCTED BY THE CURATOR
[56] It was precisely the ‘controlling-mind’
structure that enabled the funds invested to be misappropriated
and
unlawfully diverted from the various pension funds. In
addition, this structure allowed for exorbitant management fees
to be
levied and for certain ‘share-swop’ transactions to be
manipulated to the prejudice of the pension funds. Again,
these
issues are not engaged with, save by way of a general denial.
[57] It is against this factual canvass
that the appellant’s contention that the investors’ committee
established in terms of the curatorship order is able to continue
with the litigation and other proceedings, must be measured.
The life of the investors’ committee will expire upon the discharge
of the curatorship. The committee is there to consult
with a
curator, not to conduct litigation or institute execution proceedings
in his stead.
[58] Neither by force of law, nor in terms of
the order of court by means of which the committee was established,
does the committee have the authority or power to assume and
discharge the powers and duties which were conferred upon the curator
in terms of his appointment. In the circumstances, as a matter
of logic and law, it would be premature and contrary to the
interests
of the investors for the curatorship to be discharged at this stage
with all the current pending litigation.
THE ‘PLASCON-EVANS’ RULE
[59] It is trite that in motion proceedings
for final relief, an applicant can only obtain an order where
the
facts averred in the applicant’s affidavits, which have been
admitted by the respondent, together with the facts alleged by
the
respondent, justify such order, unless the respondent’s version
consists of uncreditworthy denials or are
implausible,
far-fetched or clearly untenable.
[19]
[60] It is submitted that the appellant’s
arguments ignore the crucial facts contained in the affidavits
of the
curator and of the first respondent, which indicate why there is no
good cause for removing the curator or otherwise ending
the
curatorship over the business of the entities. These relevant
facts were meticulously substantiated by the respondents
and it
cannot seriously be contended that this version by the respondents,
is implausible or untenable. Accordingly, I hold
the view that
the respondents’ version must be preferred as a matter of
procedural law.
[61] I say this also because (7) years have
passed since the curatorship order was granted before the subject
application was launched in the court
a quo
. No
answering affidavits were filed in opposition to the first
respondent’s application which led to the curator’s appointment.
This despite the grant of an interim order in this connection.
[62] The validity of the curatorship order
cannot now form the subject of any legitimate belated attack as
it
regrettably did in the court
a quo.
A number of other
remedies were open to the appellant which were not explored at all.
These remedies appear from various
provisions in the Protection
Act.
[20]
This also weighs heavily with me in deciding whether the facts put up
by the respondents may be legitimately characterized
as being
implausible or untenable.
THE
‘SUBSTITUTE’ CURATOR ARGUMENT
[63] The curator’s primary motivation for
continuing with the curatorship over the business is to ensure
that
the misappropriated monies of the investors are recovered. By
contrast, the appellant advances a variety of reasons for
why it
seeks to have the curator’s appointment cancelled. The
stratagem of the appellant on this score becomes more apparent
when
analysing and interrogating the effect of the relief sought in the
initial application and in this appeal.
[64] If the curator was to be removed from
the business of the collective investment scheme, then in that
event,
the controlling mind of the business would simply again control the
‘business’ and the various entities which conducted
it, to the
prejudice and ultimate detriment of the investors. In my view,
the appellant has also failed to show any cause,
let alone good
cause, for the curator’s removal and for the substitution of the
curator with another person.
[65] This, precisely also because the curator
has diligently complied with all his obligations in terms of
the
curatorship order. The litigation he has undertaken has been
successful and appointing an alternative curator would be
detrimental
to the investors and would be at their expense. In addition, it
would make no commercial sense to retain the current
curator to TDI
and PIF and appoint an entirely different curator to RAM in these
peculiar circumstances. All these entities
formed part of the
‘business’ of the collective investment scheme that was initially
placed under the curatorship order.
COSTS
[66] The court of first instance ordered that
the appellant be liable for the respondents’ costs on the
scale as
between attorney and client. In the exercise of its discretion
in this connection it found,
inter alia
, that the investors
should not be saddled with the costs of the application
a quo
in circumstances where the curator has not been found wanting and the
allegations made by the appellant were found to be lacking
in
substance. This ruling in my view, cannot be faulted and
accordingly there is no room to interfere with this order on appeal
and to interfere with the discretion so judicially exercised in this
connection.
[67] Costs on the attorney and client scale
are awarded when a court decides to mark its disapproval of the
conduct of a litigant.
[21]
The respondents’ take the position that the appeal is misconceived
and is a desperate stratagem designed by the appellant
and its
connected role players in an attempt to re-acquire control over the
scheme so as to avoid the consequences of the serious
financial
misconduct and misappropriation within the scheme. I do not
agree that the facts of this case, as a racing certainty,
demonstrate
that any inference of bad faith may justifiably be drawn
against the appellant. I say this because the appeal
process
was largely connected with the respective parties’ differences in
the interpretations of the numerous court orders and
their
understanding of their respective divergent legal positions.
CONCLUSION
AND ORDER
[68] The judgment by the court
a quo
was largely based on facts. Most of the arguments advanced by
the appellant were so underwhelming to the point of vanishing.
The grounds of appeal contended for were also mostly defined by
numerous logical fallacies. In my view, this appeal has no
basis in law or in fact and falls to be dismissed with costs,
including the costs of two counsel. In the circumstances, I
propose
the following order, namely:
1.
That the appeal is dismissed.
2.
That the appellant shall be liable for the costs
of and incidental to
the appeal, including the costs of two counsel (where so employed),
on the scale as between party and party,
as taxed or agreed.
SIGNED
WILLE, J
I agree and,
it is so
ordered.
SIGNED
FORTUIN, J
I agree.
SIGNED
SHER, J
[1]
In terms of section 5(9)
of the Financial Institutions (Protection of Funds) Act 28 of 2001
(
the
‘Protection Act’).
[2]
The
‘immovable’ properties.
[3]
The PPWAWU National Provident
Fund.
[4]
SA Reserve Bank v Khumalo
2010 (5) SA 449
(SCA) para 4.
[5]
Hlumisa
Investment Shareholdings (RF) and another v Kirkinis and others
2020 (5) SA
419 (SCA).
[6]
Act 45 of 2002.
[7]
Volvo (SA) (Pty) Ltd v
Yssel
2009 (6) SA 531
(SCA), para 16
[8]
Including for example
those between a director and the company he is employed by, and
trustees and the trust they are to administer.
[9]
Id
,
para 16, citing the decision of the Supreme Court of Canada in
Hodgkinson v Simms
[1994] 3 SCR 377 (SCC).
[10]
Id, Phillips v
Fieldstone Africa (Pty) Ltd
2004
(3) SA 465
(SCA) at 482C-D
[11]
Executive Officer of
the Financial Services Board v Dynamic Wealth Ltd & Ors
2012 (1) SA 453
(SCA), para 4.
[12]
Section
5 (1) of the Protection Act.
[13]
Executive Officer:
Financial Services Board v Dynamic Wealth Ltd and others
2012 (1) SA 453
(SCA) para 4.
[14]
Commissioner
for Inland Revenue v Van der Merwe NO and others
2001(3) SA 1
(SCA).
[15]
Dynamic
Wealth
n
11.
[16]
Kriel N O v Rocklands
Group Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Another; Born Free Investments 247
(Pty) Ltd v Kriel N O
(5417/2014;
96109 /2014; 12862/2019)
[2021] ZAWCHC 243
( 24 November 2021) para
2.
[17]
Curiously,
a conflict of interest is the very complaint raised by the appellant
against the second respondent.
[18]
Registrar
of Pension Funds v SACCAWU National Provident Fund and Another
[19]
Plascon-Evans Paints
Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
1984
(3) SA 623 (A)
[20]
Act 28 of 2001.
[21]
Public Protector v
South African Reserve Bank
2019
(6) SA 253
(CC) para 223.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Rockwood Electrical Motors CC v Autocon Systems CC (39343/2015) [2023] ZAGPJHC 414 (26 April 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 414High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)97% similar
Rock Foundation Properties CC and Another v Dosvelt Properties (PTY) Ltd and Another (20/28515) [2022] ZAGPJHC 1018 (21 December 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 1018High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)97% similar
Spar Group Ltd v Hard As Nails (Pty) Ltd and Others - Rule 30(1) Application (3274/2022; 3752/2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 199 (10 August 2023)
[2023] ZAWCHC 199High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)96% similar
Rock Foundation Properties CC and Another v Dosvelt Properties (Pty) Limited and Another (20/28515) [2023] ZAGPJHC 408 (2 May 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 408High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)96% similar
Spar Group Limited v Old Mutual Superfund Provident Fund and Others (2025/180517) [2025] ZAWCHC 564 (3 December 2025)
[2025] ZAWCHC 564High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)96% similar