Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 76South Africa
Bester N.O. and Another v Pieters (13994/2021) [2022] ZAWCHC 76; 2023 (1) SA 466 (WCC) (11 May 2022)
Headnotes
on trust pending the finalization of the dispute between Absa and the Trust, Haycock caused the funds in the amount of R 1 667 824.90 to be retained and invested that amount in the name of the Trust with the Standard Bank (“the invested funds”).
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Bester N.O. and Another v Pieters (13994/2021) [2022] ZAWCHC 76; 2023 (1) SA 466 (WCC) (11 May 2022)
Bester N.O. and Another v Pieters (13994/2021) [2022] ZAWCHC 76; 2023 (1) SA 466 (WCC) (11 May 2022)
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sino date 11 May 2022
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
WESTERN CAPE DIVISION,
CAPE TOWN
CASE NO: 13994/2021
In the matter between:
CHRISTIAN FINDLAY
BESTER N.O.
First Applicant
CHRISTINA MAUREEN
PENDERIS N.O.
Second Applicant
and
EDITH DEANNA
PIETERS
Respondent
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ representatives via email. The date
of hand-down is
deemed to be 11 May 2022.
JUDGMENT
Kusevitsky J:
Introduction
[1]
This is an application by the insolvent trustees for repayment of
monies which they
contend are assets of the insolvent estate of the
Pieters Family Trust (“the Trust”). The Applicants also
seek relief
on a number of alternative bases for the repayment of R
409 814.30 from the Respondent (“Mrs Pieters”).
The background
[2]
The Trust was the registered owner of the farm property known as the
remainder of
portion 3 (Molenstroom) of the Farm Diepekloof No. 226,
George, Western Cape (“the farm”). The Trust caused
various
mortgage bonds to be registered over the farm in favour of
Absa Bank as security for any debt that may be owed by
inter alia
the Trust to Absa. Mrs Pieters was at all relevant times a trustee of
the Trust.
[3]
On 2 October 2015, the Trust concluded a written agreement for the
sale of the farm
to Van Greunen Boerdery CC for the purchase price of
R 13 250 000.00. Haycock Attorneys (“Haycock”) was
mandated as
the conveyancer to attend to the registration of the
transfer of the property on the instruction of the Trust. In terms of
this
mandate, Haycock attended to the cancellation of the mortgage
bond registered over the Farm in favour of Absa as security for any
debt that may be owed by
inter
alia
the Trust to Absa.
[4]
At the time that the transfer was to be effected, certain disputes
arose between the
Trust and Absa regarding the cancellation of the
bonds registered against the farm, and more specifically whether
certain monies
were due and payable by the Trust to Absa in terms of
such cancellation.
[5]
These disputes were resolved in terms of a settlement agreement (“the
settlement
agreement”) concluded between the Trust and Absa on
the basis that the transfer of the farm could be effected and the
bonds
simultaneously cancelled, subject to the following conditions:
5.1
That Haycock as the conveyancer furnish an unconditional and
irrevocable guarantee in favour of Absa for the
payment of the amount
of R 2 832 175.10 plus interest at 9.75% per annum from 22 January
2016 to date of cancellation or payment
(“the guarantee”);
5.2
That Hancock furnish an undertaking to Absa and the Trust to retain
from the proceeds of the sale of the farm
the amount of R 1 667
824.90 in his trust account in a separate interest-bearing savings
account in the name of the Trust pending
the resolution of the money
disputes between the Trust and Absa (“the undertaking’).
[6]
On 18 March 2016, the farm was transferred in terms of the deed of
sale and Haycock’s
final account to the Trust reflected
inter
alia
the following: the amount of R 13 250 000.00 was received by
Haycock on behalf of the Trust as the primary proceeds of the sale
of
the farm; the amount of R 2 876 637.83 was paid by Haycock on behalf
of the Trust to Absa in cancellation of the bonds; and
the amount of
R 7 431 552.21 which was the balance of the proceeds owing to the
Trust, was paid into the bank account of the Trust.
Furthermore, in
accordance with the settlement agreement of 12 February 2016 wherein
Haycock provided Absa with an irrevocable
undertaking that the amount
would be held on trust pending the finalization of the dispute
between Absa and the Trust, Haycock
caused the funds in the amount of
R 1 667 824.90 to be retained and invested that amount in the name of
the Trust with the Standard
Bank (“the invested funds”).
[7]
Subsequent to the transfer of the farm, the following transpired in
relation to the
invested funds: On 29 March 2017 and on the
instruction of the trustees of the Trust, Haycock called up the
invested funds and
reinvested it in the name of Mrs Pieters
personally with Absa Bank. According to the founding affidavit, the
reason for this transfer
was purportedly that the trustees were in
the process of dissolving the Trust and the interest on such
investment “
would cause problems to the Trust
”.
Based on this instruction and without the consent or authorisation of
Absa, Haycock closed the investment in the name of
the Trust held
with Standard Bank and re-invested the amount of R 1 764 178.31 in
the name of Mrs Pieters with Absa.
[8]
On 21 January 2019, Haycock again called up the invested funds and
reinvested same
in the name of Mrs Pieters personally, again with the
Standard Bank. During the period of March 2018 to May 2020 and
purportedly
on the instruction of Mrs Pieters or the previous
trustees of the Trust, Haycock paid the interest accrued on the
invested funds
and withdrawn from the investment, to Mrs Pieters
personally, the combined sum of which amounted to R 409 814.30. It is
common
cause that during the period 13 March 2019 to 6 May 2020, the
sum of R 129 273.61 was paid to and received by Mrs Pieters
after
the date of sequestration of the Trust and after the date on which
the
concursus creditorum
was instituted, being 4 March 2019.
It is on this basis that the Applicants claim the amount of R 129
273.61 in the alternative.
[9]
It is common cause on 3 June 2017, the trustees of the Trust resolved
to cede the
invested funds and more specifically the claim thereto,
to Mrs Pieters personally as repayment towards her purported loan
account
in the Trust (“the cession”). The relevant
provisions are as follows:
“
b.
Die R 1 667 824.90 wat bele is by die prokureursfirma Haycock
Prokureurs tot voordeel van die Pieters Familie Trust die eindom
van
mev ED Pieters is en alle reg om dit terug te eis aan ED Pieters
sedeer en verleen word.
…
f. Die geld het deur
die Pieters Familie Trust aan mev ED pieters verskuldig is vir die
betaling van haar leningsrekening aan die
Pieters Familie Trust asook
ander gelde aan die trust geleen.”
On the same date, the
trustees of the Trust also resolved to dissolve the Trust. The Trust
was dissolved on or about 11 August 2018.
[10]
According to the founding affidavit, this resolution occurred against
the following factual backdrop
and knowledge of the trustees: that
the trustees received the remaining proceeds from the sale of the
farm, its only asset; that
they confirmed to the Master that the
remaining proceeds of the sale received by the Trust was used to
repay and discharge the
loan accounts
[1]
.
In fact, according to the Trust’s financial statements, Mrs
Pieters loan account showed that she owed the Trust money and
not
vica
verca
[2]
.
[11]
It was also averred that the trustees failed to effect payment of a
judgment obtained against
it by one of its creditors, Tuinroete Agri
(Pty) Ltd (“Tuinroete Agri”) on 23 November 2016 in the
Magistrates Court,
George for payment in the amount of R 593 373.93
and also failed to inform Absa of their intention to dissolve the
Trust notwithstanding
the pending disputes, undertakings furnished
and other claims raised by Absa against the Trust.
[12]
On 23 May 2019 and on application of Tuinroete Agri, an order was
granted in terms whereof the
decision and resolution of the trustees
of the Trust dated 3 June 2017 to dissolve the Trust was rescinded
and set aside and the
Trust was re-instated. Simultaneously,
Tuinroete Agri also applied for the sequestration of the Trust, which
order was granted
and finally obtained on 26 August 2019. On 29 July
2020, the Applicants were appointed as the insolvent trustees of the
Trust.
The previous
litigation
[13]
Subsequent to the sequestration of the Trust, the Applicants were
appointed as the provisional
insolvency trustees of the Trust and on
20 August 2020, they issued an application for an order
inter alia
extending their powers and directing that Haycock pay the invested
funds together with all interest accrued thereon to them in
their
capacities as the insolvency trustees. According to the Applicants,
the basis for that application was that the invested
funds
constituted the property of the Trust as envisaged in and by section
2 of the Insolvency Act, 24 of 1936 (‘the
Insolvency Act&rdquo
;).
[14]
Prior to the hearing of the matter, Mrs Pieters and her husband (“the
Pieters’) sought
to intervene and oppose that application. On
31 August 2020, Gamble J extended the powers and postponed the
balance of the relief
sought in order to afford the Pieters’
the opportunity to deliver their application for leave to intervene
together with
their answering affidavit to the main application by 18
September 2020 and the Pieters’ as intervening parties were
ordered
to file their reply, if any, in the application for leave to
intervene by 6 October 2020. In the meantime, Haycock was interdicted
from transferring or disposing of or in any way dealing with the
amount of R 1 647 824.90 which was the subject of the main
application
and all interest accruing thereon, in any way. The
Pieters’, as the recorded intervening parties, failed to file
their application
for leave to intervene and on 26 October 2020,
Dolamo J ordered (‘the Dolamo Order”) that the invested
funds and all
accrued interest thereon constituted the property of
the Trust and directed that Haycock pay the invested funds together
with the
interest accrued, to the insolvency trustees. In compliance
with the Dolamo Order, Haycock transferred the invested funds and the
remaining accrued interest into the trust account of the Applicants
attorneys
The Applicants case
[15]
The Applicants argue that:
15.1 The invested
funds originated from the proceeds of the sale and transfer of the
Trust’s immovable and movable property
and accordingly
constituted the property of the Trust as contemplated in
section 2
of
the
Insolvency Act. The
invested funds were specifically invested for
and on behalf of the Trust in terms of a specific settlement
agreement concluded
between the Trust and Absa;
15.2 A court has
already pronounced on the aforesaid facts in that the invested funds
constituted the property of the Trust
and accordingly it follows that
the interest accrued thereon also constituted the property of the
Trust and now the insolvent estate
and falls to be repaid;
15.3 The subsequent
payments of the accrued interest on the invested funds to Mrs Pieters
constituted dispositions of the
Trust’s property in that the
payment of the accrued interest during the period 13 March 2019 to 6
May 2020 occurred and was
effected after the sequestration of the
Trust and was unlawful.
They submit that the
Pieters’ were afforded an opportunity to intervene in the
proceedings and lay claim to the invested funds,
however they elected
to abide by the order of the court. Absa similarly did not lay claim
to the invested funds and also abided
by the decision of the court.
[16]
The Applicants also claim that the Trust was insolvent at the time
that the disposition of the
accrued interest was made to Mrs Pieters
in that the Trust owned no assets other than the prospective right of
action
[3]
;
it owed Tuinroete Agri the amount of R 593 373.93 together with
interest and costs, and Absa in the amount of approximately R
10
million
[4]
.
[17]
The Applicants finally argue that the purported cession between the
Trust and Mrs Pieters on
3 June 2017, which purported to constitute
repayment or security for such repayment of Mrs Pieters’ loan
account in the Trust,
is a nullity. This is because the financial
statements of the Trust for the relevant period reflected that the
Respondent’s
loan account was in fact in debit at the time of
the purported cession, simply put, she owed the Trust money at the
relevant time.
They argue there is accordingly no
causa
, for
value, for the purported cession and that the inference is that the
intention was to divest the Trust of the invested funds,
or the claim
thereto, prior to its dissolution and shift the prospective claim
against Absa to the hands of the trustees in their
personal
capacities.
The relief sought
[18]
The interest withdrawn during the period 26 March 2018 to 6 May 2020
in the sum of R 409 814.30
and paid by Hancock to Mrs Pieters was not
due, owing or payable to her. The interest withdrawn was paid to her
without any legal
or natural obligation to do so and was accordingly
sine causa
; Mrs Pieters was unjustly enriched in the amount of
R 409 814.30 at the expense of the insolvent estate and the interest
paid to
her during the period 13 March 2019 to 6 May 2020 in the sum
of R 129 273.61 was paid and received by her after the date of
sequestration
of the Trust and thus after the date on which the
concursus creditorum
was instituted, i.e. 4 March 2019.
The Respondent’s
defences
[19]
Mrs Pieters denies that the investment funds held in trust by Haycock
Attorneys or any interest
paid thereon were assets of either the
Trust or the Trust’s insolvent estate. She admits receiving the
claimed amount but
avers that she was entitled thereto by virtue of
the fact that she became the owner of the funds in the amount of R 1
667 824.90
invested in the name of the Trust and was accordingly
entitled to the interest on the invested funds.
[20]
This is because firstly, ownership vested in her in terms of the
decision by the trustees to
allocate the funds to her, which decision
was taken when the farm was sold, but prior to the receipt of the
proceeds of the sale
by Haycock on or about March 2016. She says that
there was a clear understanding that the Trust would be dissolved
when the farm
was sold and that all the loan accounts and debts owing
to the beneficiaries, which she was one of, would then become
payable.
[21]
The Respondent also averred that the resolution, and more
specifically paragraphs (b) and (f)
were clear proof that the
invested funds were already her property.
[22]
The Respondent also claim that there are factual disputes in this
matter which militate the decision
by the Applicants to proceed
via
motion proceedings. This is so ostensibly because of the disputes
between the Trust and Absa. She claims that the disputes with
Absa,
for example the claim by the Trust that the bonds registered with
Absa did not have valid and binding resolutions from the
Trust,
strike at the root of the investment funds being the source of the
interest claimed.
[23]
The Respondent furthermore points out that ‘
no
other decision made or resolution adopted by the trustees than the
resolution to dissolve the trust, had been set aside by the
court
order of 23 May 2019
[5]
.”
She therefore submits that on this basis, the allocation of trust
moneys to beneficiaries, the payment of loans and loan
accounts and
any disbursement of trust assets as was done in the discretion of the
trustees following the terms of the trust deed,
and not contrary
thereto, were all valid. This includes the money the Respondent was
allocated out of the sale of the farm and
what she received in her
name when Haycock Attorneys re-invested the invested funds in her
name.
[24]
The Respondent denied that the Trust was commercially insolvent. This
is because, according to
the Pieters’, the Trust did not owe
Absa any money and the alleged claims by Absa were covered by the
securities covered
by the settlement agreement and the undertaking
supplied by Haycock Attorneys. They also stated that the Trust did
not owe Tuinroete
Agri any money. They say that they ‘
did
not forsee that the trust could have lost that case’
and in
any event, the correctness of the amount was disputed.
[25]
With regard to the decision not to intervene in the proceedings, the
Respondent was ostensibly
advised by her husband that she would not
lose the sum of money invested by Hancock Attorneys in her name
because it was part of
her loan account as reimbursed to her by the
Trust out of the proceeds of the sale of the farm. This was the
reason for the decision
not to proceed with the intervention
application. They were also of the view that the court order of 23
May 2019
[6]
did not set aside
any earlier decision made by the trustees regarding the repayment of
loan accounts and money owed to any beneficiary.
[26]
With regard to the purported cession, the Respondent denies that a
court has already pronounced
that the invested funds together with
all interest accrued thereon should be paid to the insolvency
trustees, contending that the
Respondent had not been a party to the
proceedings giving rise to the court order of Dolamo J.
[27]
In sum, the Respondent avers that the money has been paid to her in
terms of a valid decision
taken by the trustees and in accordance
with the agreement entered into between her and the Trust. It is also
contended that on
a proper interpretation of the court order, that
the decision by the trustees to instruct Haycock Attorneys to
transfer the investment
onto the name of the Respondent has not been
set aside and therefore has no binding effect on the Respondent. They
contend that
the Dolamo Order should be seen as returning the
investment to the Trust on that day and that the operative date is
not the date
of the sequestration order, but the date of the court
order which is 26 October 2020. The invested funds became the
Respondent’s
property the latest on 30 March 2017 which
according to the investment schedule
[7]
,
was when the investment was made in the name of the Respondent and
when she became entitled to the interest thereon.
Evaluation
[28]
In order for the Applicants to succeed with the main claim, this
court must be satisfied that
the Respondent received the money to
which the Insolvent estate of the Trust is entitled to; the absence
of a valid cause justifying
the receipt of the funds and that the
Respondent was enriched at the expense of the Trust and that the
Trust was simultaneously
impoverished by the payments.
[29]
It is common cause that the payments claimed from the Respondent,
which payments are admitted,
comprised the interest that accrued on
the investment funds belonging to the Trust. It is also common cause
that on 26 October
2020, Dolamo J ordered that i) Haycock Attorneys
pay to the insolvent trustees the sum of R 1 667 824.90
together
with interest accrued thereon
and which it held on behalf of the
Pieters Family Trust and ii) that the cost of the postponement of the
application with regard
to the intervention application of Mr Casper
Pieters and Ms Edith Pieters would be paid jointly and severally by
them. That court
therefore pronounced that the capital and the
interest thereon vests in the Insolvent estate. It would be an
absurdity for the
Respondent to suggest that she is entitled to the
interest of capital which belongs to another. Furthermore, her claim
that the
matter is not
res iudicata
and in any event, that the
order does not bind her, because she was not a party thereto, is
similarly misguided.
[30]
A plea of
res
iudicata
takes the attenuated form commonly referred to as issue estoppel.
Res
iudicata
deals with the situation where the same parties are in dispute over
the same cause of action and the same relief and in the form,
issue
estoppel arises
“
[w]here
the decision set up as a
res
judicata
necessarily
involves a judicial determination of some question of law or issue of
fact, in the sense that the decision could
not have been legitimately
or rationally pronounced by the tribunal without at the same time,
and in the same breath, so to speak,
determining that question or
issue in a particular way, such determination, though not declared on
the face of the recorded decision,
is deemed to constitute an
integral part of it as effectively as if it had been made so in
express terms …”.
[8]
According
to the Applicants, on 26 October 2020, this court,
via
the Dolamo Order pronounced in a final order that the investment
funds together with all the accrued interest thereon must be paid
to
the Applicants. The order was made on the basis that the invested
funds and all interest accrued thereon comprised an asset
of the
Trust to be dealt with in terms of the applicable provisions of the
Insolvency Act in
the normal course of its winding up. Thus the issue
of the status of the funds and the Trust’s entitlement thereto
was finally
decided – on the merits – on 26 October 2020
and became issue estopped and therefore
res
iudicata
.
The Applicants argue that Mrs Pieters accepted the correctness of the
court order because she did not oppose the relief sought
in the
application despite her initial threats to intervene. The Respondent
on the other hand contend that the Dolamo Order is
not a final order
and that the order does not have a retrospective effect in that it is
not a pronouncement by the court on any
interest paid out to the
Respondent by Haycock and that such an inference cannot be made. The
basis for this, so the argument goes,
is that they have not become
parties to the proceedings and that the defence of issue estoppel is
not applicable to them. In any
event, she says that she will
experience great hardship and injustice, relying on
Smith
v Porrit & Others
2008
(6) SA 303
(SCA)
if issue estoppel is applied.
[31]
In the
Aon
matter
supra
,
the Appeal court had cause to deal with the requirements of issue
estoppel. In that matter, the court
a
quo
had initially found that the parties were different because the
plaintiffs were the liquidators of Financial Services whereas in
the
previous litigation, the plaintiffs were the liquidators of
Protector. The appeal court held that whilst there was a technical
distinction between the plaintiffs in that action to the previous
action, that that was a matter of form and not substance –
their sole purpose of the litigation was to recover the amount of R
50 million in order that it could be distributed to Protector
on the
winding up of Financial Services. In the Dolamo Order, there was a
complete identity of interests, i.e. the claim to the
invested funds
and ownership thereof, and a similar identity of interests between
the parties
[9]
, i.e. the
Insolvent trustees of the Trust and Haycock in whose capacity he
received the invested funds as stakeholder
[10]
(between the Trust and Absa) and the Respondent, as intervening
party. In my view, a party who intervenes as an ‘intervening
party’ to existing proceedings and cause those proceedings to
be postponed or stymied in order for them to participate, cannot
at a
later stage claim to have not been a party to the proceedings merely
because they chose not to file any papers. They cannot
approbate and
reprobate. It is common cause that the Respondent applied to
intervene in those proceedings, she and her husband
were the
intervening parties therein, they chose not to file their papers and
they were accordingly penalised with a cost order
[11]
against them in that regard. That should be the end of the enquiry.
In any event, one can hardly claim prejudice or hardship in
those
circumstances as claimed.
[32]
Furthermore, the Respondent’s claim that she became the owner
of the invested funds because
of a clear and express intention of the
trustees that she would be entitled to it as the owner, is clearly
untenable. The Respondent
also sought to bolster their evidence in
reliance of their claim that ownership vested in the Respondent and
the
bona
fides
of the cession, in a supplementary answering affidavit belatedly
filed. In my view, the content of the supplementary affidavit
and the
annexures thereto are completely irrelevant to any of the real issues
raised in this matter. As contended by the Applicants,
in our law,
ownership does not pass merely because the parties agree to transfer
ownership, but pursuant to an act of publicity
of the change in legal
relationships to third parties. This publicity function is fulfilled
by either delivery of the thing (in
a case of corporeal movables) or
registration of the transfer (in the case of immovable). Accordingly,
transfer of movable property
such as money requires delivery coupled
with a real agreement between the parties.
[12]
The constituent elements of a real agreement are the intention of the
owner to transfer ownership and the intention of the transferee
to
acquire ownership.
[13]
In
casu
,
I am in agreement with the Applicants that the transfer of the
invested funds could never have lawfully passed from the Trust
to the
Respondent because of the existence of the settlement agreement
concluded between the Trust and Absa. Neither the Trust,
nor Haycock
could lawfully have had the intention to transfer ownership of the
interest to the Respondent in contravention of a
settlement
agreement. Moreover, Haycock could never have lawfully ‘delivered’
the invested funds to the Respondent
in contravention of his
undertaking furnished to Absa Bank and without their consent. The
trustees’ resolution on 3 June
2017 in terms of which the money
was to be paid to Mrs Pieters, rather than retained in Haycock’s
trust account was set aside
by the court on 23 May 2019. It therefore
follows that any decision by the Trust to pay the money to the
Respondent for whatever
reason was
pro
non scripto
.
[33]
However, to reinforce my decision, the Respondent fails on the
alternative claims as well. It
is common cause that part of the
payments were made after the date of sequestration of the Trust. It
is also common cause that
the judgment debt of Tuinroete Agri, a
creditor of the Trust, remained unsatisfied and that the dispute with
Absa was still ongoing.
The Respondent claimed that she was entitled
to the money by virtue of a settlement agreement and resolutions
adopted by the Trust.
In terms of normal insolvency practice, that
would have entitled her to prove a claim in the usual course against
the Insolvent
estate of the Trust as a creditor. In terms of
section
29
of the
Insolvency Act, a
disposition may be set aside as being a
voidable preference if an applicant can prove i) a disposition of the
property of the Trust
ii)within six months before the sequestration
of its estate to the person, the Respondent, in whose favour the
disposition was
made, iii) which disposition had the effect of
preferring one of the creditors above another and iv) that
immediately after the
making of such disposition, the Trust’s
liability exceeded the value of its assets.
[34]
The payment made to the Respondent constituted a disposition of the
Trust’s property as
envisaged by
section 2
of the
Insolvency
Act. The
property was also confirmed as belonging to the Trust in
accordance with the order of Dolamo J. The disposition was made
within
six months of the sequestration of the Trust and in fact, the
interest withdrawn and paid to the Respondent during the period 13
March 2019 to 6 May 2020 in the sum of R 129 273.61 was paid to and
received by the Respondent after the date of sequestration
of the
Trust. As an aside, the contention that the operative date is the
date of the Dolamo Order and not the sequestration date,
is also
misguided as this would be contrary to the prescripts of the
Insolvency Act. The
Trust’s liabilities also exceeded its
assets in that the Trust was dormant and its bank account closed; the
Trust owned no
other asset other than the potential right of action
against Absa; and the debt to Tuinroete Agri remained unsatisfied.
The Respondent
on the other hand gave no evidence to prove that the
disposition was made in the ordinary course of business and that it
was not
intended thereby to prefer one creditor above another.
[35]
Whilst, in my view, there were some elements of collusion – the
decision by the trustees
to dissolve the Trust after judgment had
been taken against it, so called understandings that the Respondent
would be reimbursed
for loans and services rendered - I do not find
it necessary to make any pronouncements in this regard. Suffice to
say that in
motion proceedings, a court is constrained by the
principles of the Plascon-Evans
[14]
rule unless the allegations as stated by the Respondent are so
far-fetched or clearly untenable that a court can safely reject
it as
false. I am in agreement with the Applicants reliance on
Ripoll-Dausa
v Middleton NO
[2005] ZAWCHC 6
;
2005 (3) SA 141
(C)
which holds that denials by a respondent which are not
bona
fide
or which do not raise real or genuine disputes of facts should not be
accepted by a court. It is also trite that a court should
adopt a
common sense approach and reject a version which, although presented
in some detail, is wholly fanciful and untenable
[15]
and if on the papers, the probabilities overwhelmingly favour a
specific factual finding, the court should take a robust approach
and
make that finding.
[16]
In
casu
,
the reliance placed by the Respondent on the disputes that the Trust
has with Absa are irrelevant and misplaced. The invested
funds were
held by Haycock on behalf of the Trust in terms of an agreement
between the Trust and Absa. Any subsequent agreement
to divert the
funds directly to the Respondent would have been unlawful. Second, as
I have already stated, the convenient dismissal
of the existence of
the Dolamo Order or its effect on the Respondent is to be rejected.
In fact, this is the cornerstone of the
Respondent’s defence,
that the ownership of the invested funds was transferred to her at
the latest when Haycock re-invested
the funds and put it onto the
Respondent’s name on 30 March 2017. The Dolamo Order has made
this argument moot. Third, the
financial statements of the Trust do
not support the Respondent’s version that it had loan accounts
which entitled her to
any payments.
[36]
For all the reasons stated, the Respondent’s defences must be
rejected and the application
granted as prayed.
In the circumstances, the
following order is made:
1.
The Respondent is directed to pay to the
Applicants the amount of R409 814.30.
2.
Interest on the aforesaid amount a
tempora
morae
.
3.
The Respondent is ordered to pay the costs
of this application.
DS
KUSEVITSKY
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
C
OUNSEL
FOR APPLICANTS:
ADV.
JANNIE VAN DER MERWE
COUNSEL
FOR RESPONDENTS:
ADV. LOURENS JOUBERT
[1]
As
reflected in a subsequent Trust resolution dated 3 June 2017
[2]
The
balance sheet and financial statements for the years 28 February
2015 to 2018 and signed off by Ed Pieters and C Pieters as
trustees
reflect a debit for ED Pieters in the amount of R 21 717.00
[3]
The possible claims against Absa
[4]
This is in accordance with a subsequent claim submitted and proved
by Absa against the Insolvent Estate of the Trust
[5]
para 37.3 of the Answering Affidavit by Casper Hendrik Pieters,
husband of the Respondent and confirmed by her
[6]
When
the decision of the trustees to dissolve the Trust was set aside
[7]
Annexure CB7
[8]
AON
South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Van den Heever
NO
(615/2016)
2017 ZASCA 66
(30 May 2017) at para 22
[9]
See
generally
AON
South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Van den Heever
NO (615/2016)
2017 ZASCA 66
(30 May 2017) para 27
[10]
In
Bakers
v Probert
1985 (3) 429 (AD) at 441B-E Botha JA held as follows: “
The
concept of a stakeholder is best known in our law in the context of
a person who holds a res litigiosa pending the outcome
of litigation
between two rival claimants …In both instances it is of the
essence of the stakeholding that at its inception
it is uncertain
which of the two parties involved will ultimately become entitled to
receive what the stakeholder is holding.
The identity of the
creditor will only be established on the happening of an uncertain
future event – the outcome of litigation…That
being so,
it can be said in these instances, that the stakeholder holds the
money or the thing on behalf of that one of the two
parties involved
who will eventually become entitled to it, but it cannot be said
that the stakeholder, when he received the
money or the thing, or
while he is holding it pending the happening of the future event, is
acting as the agent of specifically
one or the other of the two
parties
.”
[11]
Paragraph
2 of the Dolamo Order
[12]
Air-Kel
h/a Morkel Motors v Bodenstein
1980
(3) SA 917 (A)
[13]
Legator
McKenna Inc. v Shea 2020
(1)
SA 35 (SCA)
[14]
Plascon
Evans Paints v Van Riebeeck Paints
[1984]
ZASCA 51
;
1984 (3) SA 623
(A) at 634H-635C
[15]
Truth
Verification Centre CC v PSE Truth Detection
CC
1998 (2) SA 689
(W) at 689 I-J
[16]
South
Peninsula v Evans and Others
2001 (1) SA 271
(CPD) at 283F-I
sino noindex
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