Case Law[2024] ZAKZDHC 64South Africa
Unlimited Group (Pty) Ltd v Mamogale (D13829/2023) [2024] ZAKZDHC 64 (16 September 2024)
Headnotes
a BSc degree in financial modelling, conferred upon him by the University of South Africa in 2006, was part way through studying towards a BSc degree in computer engineering at the same university, and was also part way through studying towards a BSc degree in mathematics statistics at the University of Pretoria. In addition, he also allegedly represented to the applicant that he was a qualified actuary.
Judgment
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# South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
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## Unlimited Group (Pty) Ltd v Mamogale (D13829/2023) [2024] ZAKZDHC 64 (16 September 2024)
Unlimited Group (Pty) Ltd v Mamogale (D13829/2023) [2024] ZAKZDHC 64 (16 September 2024)
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sino date 16 September 2024
SAFLII
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Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
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SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
KWAZULU-NATAL
LOCAL DIVISION, DURBAN
Case
no:
D13829/2023
In
the matter between:
THE
UNLIMITED GROUP (PTY) LTD
APPLICANT
and
KGOTHATSO
BARREL MAMOGALE
RESPONDENT
IDENTITY
NUMBER: 8[...]
UNMARRIED
Coram
:
Mossop J
Heard
:
9 September 2024
Delivered
:
16 September 2024
ORDER
The
following order is granted:
The
application is dismissed with costs, such to be taxed on scale B.
JUDGMENT
MOSSOP
J
:
[1]
This is an opposed application in which the
applicant seeks to sequestrate the estate of the respondent, who was
previously employed
by it as a senior business solutions analyst. The
applicant alleges that the respondent has committed an act of
insolvency as contemplated
in s 8
(b)
of
the Insolvency Act 24 of 1936 (the Act).
[2]
The circumstances under which the
respondent was employed by the applicant is the source of the obvious
simmering discontent between
the parties. The applicant apparently
employed the respondent on the strength of his curriculum vitae and
his performance at an
interview. In that curriculum vitae, the
respondent stated that he held a BSc degree in financial modelling,
conferred upon him
by the University of South Africa in 2006, was
part way through studying towards a BSc degree in computer
engineering at the same
university, and was also part way through
studying towards a BSc degree in mathematics statistics at the
University of Pretoria.
In addition, he also allegedly represented to
the applicant that he was a qualified actuary.
[3]
The applicant now holds the view that all
these academic achievements are false. The respondent does not hold a
BSc degree in financial
modelling, and he is not a qualified actuary.
In short, it is alleged by the applicant that the respondent is a
fraud.
[4]
Having been employed by the applicant for
two and a half years, the respondent was dismissed by it for
misconduct in March 2021.
It appears that the misconduct relied upon
by the applicant was the respondent’s alleged misrepresentation
of his academic
achievements.
[5]
Because of this alleged fraudulent conduct,
the applicant in August 2021 brought an action against the
respondent, seeking to recover
damages from him arising out of his
alleged misrepresentations. It appears that it seeks to recover the
salary that it had paid
him over the period of his employment. The
respondent defended the action and in due course delivered an
exception to the applicant’s
particulars of claim.
[6]
The exception was argued before Radebe J
and was dismissed by her in a judgment delivered on 2 November 2023,
and costs were awarded
against the respondent (the first costs
order).
[7]
The applicant caused a bill of costs to be
prepared consequent upon the first costs order and then had it taxed
by the taxing master.
An amount of R46 802.45 was allowed by the
taxing master. This costs order is central to the applicant’s
attempt to sequestrate
the respondent’s estate.
[8]
When the taxed costs were not settled by
the respondent, the applicant caused a warrant of execution to be
served upon him by the
sheriff of this court. Service of the writ was
effected by the sheriff on the respondent personally on 1 September
2023. Curiously,
this was not done at the respondent’s place of
residence, of which the applicant had direct knowledge, having cited
it in
its founding affidavit in this application, but was effected at
the offices of the Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and
Arbitration
(CCMA), where the respondent was on that day litigating
against the applicant, challenging the termination of his employment.
[9]
The sheriff’s return of service
reads, in part, as follows:
‘
PROCEEDED
TO THE ADDRESS AND MET WITH MR J SCHABORT THE ATTORNEY. HE POINTED
OUT THE DEBTOR. DEBTOR INFORMED ME THAT HE OWNS NO
MOVABLE ASSETS,
NOR VEHICLES TO SATISFY THE WARRANT. HE ALSO REFUSED TO PROVIDE HIS
RESIDENTIAL ADDRESS. A RETURN OF NULLA NOBA
(sic) RENDERED. NOTE:
DEBTOR SERVED AT CCMA AS HE WAS APPEARING. Further, it is here by
(sic) certified that at the above address,
the amount of had been
demanded from. (sic)
, however, informed me
that had no money or attachable assets to satisfy the said warrant or
a portion thereof. No movable goods/disposable
assets were pointed
out either, or could be found by me after a diligent search and
enquiry at the given address. Therefore my
return is one of NULLA
BONA, in respect of the given address, it is not known whether
Defendant has any assets at any other address.
It is hereby further
certified that has been requested in terms of section 66(8) to
declare whether has any immovable property which
is executable on
which the following answer has been furnished:
(sic)’
[10]
The return appears to be incomplete, with
gaps existing where information presumably was to be inserted by the
sheriff but was not.
The applicant views this return as constituting
evidence of an act of insolvency in terms of s 8
(b)
of the Act.
[11]
Section 8
(b)
of the Act reads as follows:
‘
A
debtor commits an act of insolvency-
. . .
(b)
if a court has given judgment against him and he
fails, upon the demand of the officer whose duty it is to execute
that judgment,
to satisfy it or to indicate to that officer
disposable property sufficient to satisfy it, or if it appears from
the return made
by that officer that he has not found sufficient
disposable property to satisfy the judgment.’
[12]
It
is settled law that there are two different and distinct acts of
insolvency contemplated in
s 8
(b)
:
‘
The
first is committed when the debtor fails to satisfy the judgment or
to indicate sufficient disposable property to satisfy it;
and the
second when the sheriff fails to find sufficient property to satisfy
the judgment.’
[1]
Given
the peculiar circumstances of this matter, and service of the writ of
execution on the respondent at the CCMA, it is apparent
that the
second act must fall away and the applicant can only rely on the
first act of insolvency.
[13]
I
shall assume, without deciding, that the sheriff’s return
constitutes an act of insolvency contemplated by s 8
(b)
,
notwithstanding the blank spaces in the return.
[14]
However, the applicant alleges that the
respondent does own immovable property and owes money to a financial
institution in respect
of a mortgage bond registered over that
immovable property, which is situated in Centurion, Gauteng. It is
that immovable property
that the applicant submits will form the core
of the benefit to creditors that it is required to establish if the
respondent’s
estate is to be sequestrated. The extent of the
equity in the immovable property is not, however, mentioned by the
applicant. No
other assets of any significant financial value owned
by the respondent are mentioned by the applicant.
[15]
The applicant’s case in its founding
affidavit is succinctly stated and is shorn of any excess verbiage.
It appears, however,
that it is also shorn of certain essential facts
that ought, in my view, to have been disclosed by it. Those facts
have, however,
been revealed by the respondent in opposition to the
applicant’s application. What the respondent states in that
regard has
not been seriously challenged by the applicant and has
largely, if not totally, been admitted in reply.
[16]
The respondent alleges that there is other
litigation between the parties besides the litigation in this court.
The applicant obliquely
acknowledged this to be the case in its
founding affidavit when it stated that the sheriff had served its
warrant of execution
on the respondent at the offices of the CCMA.
There are, in fact, two matters between the parties before that body:
one relating
to an unfair labour practice and the other to the
termination of the respondent’s employment with the applicant.
[17]
A
significant omission from the applicant’s founding affidavit,
however, is the fact that before instituting its action in
this court
against the respondent, the applicant had sought relief against him
in the labour court. That litigation appears to
have been an
application relating to the validity of the respondent’s
contract of employment with the applicant. It was initially
brought
by the applicant on an urgent basis and was dismissed by
Tlhotlhalemaje J on 10 October 2021.
[2]
A copy of the judgment in the labour court has been put up by the
respondent. The order that was granted in that matter reads as
follows:
‘
The
applicant’s application for interim relief as sought under
paragraph 2.1 of its Notice of Motion is dismissed with costs,
payable on the attorney and client scale, inclusive of wasted costs
occasioned by the postponement on 1 October 2021.’
[18]
In
coming to that conclusion, Tlhotlhalemaje J made the following
observation:
[3]
‘
In
every respects (sic), and given the manner with which the applicant
has conducted itself in pursuing this matter, and further
also taking
into account its approach at the CCMA, there is clearly merit in
Mamogale’s contentions that the applicant was,
and is intent on
avoiding the arbitration proceedings, delaying the resolution of his
dispute, and attempting to “litigate”
him financially.
Through its conduct under the circumstances, the applicant has taken
the abuse of this Court to a different higher
level, which clearly
deserves censure on a punitive scale.’
The judgment was not
appealed, and the costs order is accordingly extant.
[19]
Thus, in asserting that the respondent was
indebted to it in respect of the first costs order, the applicant
failed to mention in
its founding affidavit that it was liable to the
respondent in respect of the costs ordered against it in the labour
court on the
attorney and client scale.
[20]
On the strength of that order of the labour
court, the respondent caused a bill of costs to be drawn up. It came
to the amount of
R72 144.40, which exceeds the first costs order in
favour of the applicant. To be fair to the applicant, at the time
when the respondent
delivered his answering affidavit in this
application, that bill of costs had not been taxed by the taxing
master of the labour
court. Despite this not having occurred, in my
view, the applicant ought to have disclosed in its founding affidavit
that it, too,
was indebted to the respondent in an as yet
undetermined amount. But it did not do so. The respondent boldly
claimed in his answering
affidavit that the prospect of any
significant amount being taxed off his bill of costs when it was
finally taxed was remote, given
that he was awarded costs on the
attorney and client scale.
[21]
In reply, the applicant admitted the fact
of the costs order granted by the labour court in the respondent’s
favour and simply
noted that the respondent’s bill of costs had
not, as yet, been taxed. It then went on to mention another costs
order that
had been granted in its favour, apparently in this court,
and in respect of which a further bill of costs in the amount of
R95 000
had been drawn up (the second costs order). Those costs
relate to proceedings in this court but the basis for the order has
not
been disclosed. This bill of costs, like the respondent’s
bill of costs in the labour court, had, however, not been taxed
by
the time the applicant prepared its replying affidavit. The second
costs order was not mentioned in the founding affidavit and
thus
comprised a new matter raised by the applicant in reply.
[22]
To
deal with this new disclosure, the respondent elected to deliver a
supplementary affidavit (the supplementary affidavit).
[4]
In the supplementary affidavit, he indicated that, in the interim,
the applicant’s second costs order had been considered
by the
taxing master and an amount of R74 312.65 had been allowed on
taxation. The respondent accepted that this amount was due
to the
applicant and revealed that he had already paid R50 000 of that
amount to the applicant and that it had been agreed
between himself
and the applicant’s attorneys that he would pay the balance by
the end of August 2024. Before me, Ms Russo,
who appears for the
respondent, stated that the balance due to the applicant had, indeed,
been fully paid at the end of August
2024, a fact confirmed by Mr
Veerasamy, who appears for the applicant.
[23]
The respondent introduced new facts of his
own in the supplementary affidavit and went on to state that his bill
of costs had also
now been taxed in the labour court and that an
amount of R61 411.65 had been allowed by the taxing master. His
earlier assertion
that no significant amounts would be taxed off his
bill of costs was thereby vindicated.
[24]
The respondent accordingly submitted that
the costs order granted in his favour in the labour court exceeded
the first costs order
granted in favour of the applicant by
approximately R14 000. Through the operation of set-off, he was,
thus, no longer indebted
to the applicant and had informed the
applicant of this fact. According to the respondent, the applicant
had responded to this
by stating that it:
‘…
does
not consent to set-off’.
[25]
A
party does not have to consent to set-off for it to operate.
Compensatio,
or set-off, merely requires that there must be two liquidated debts,
due and payable and mutually
owed
by the same pair of persons for it to operate.
[5]
The party claiming set-off bears the onus of proving it. As to how
set-off operates, there
are two competing theories.
[6]
The first theory holds that set-off operates automatically and
ipso
iure
.
The second theory holds that it does not occur automatically, but
must first be invoked by one party but that, once invoked, it
has
retrospective effect. The weight of authority seems to favour the
first theory. Indeed, in
Herrigel
NO v Bon Roads Construction Co (Pty) Ltd
,
[7]
the court stated that ‘it is trite law that set-off operates
automatically’.
[26]
Parties
may, however, contractually agree that set-off will not apply to
their relationship.
[8]
There is,
however, no suggestion that this has been agreed upon in this matter
and accordingly whether the applicant consented
to set-off operating
is of no importance.
[27]
To counter the point of set-off, the applicant sought leave
to, and did deliver, a further affidavit. In it, the applicant
referenced
a disclosure that the respondent had made in his answering
affidavit. At paragraph 22 of the answering affidavit, deposed to on
27 February 2024, the respondent said the following:
‘
In
an effort to be transparent with the Honourable Court, and in the
hopes that it may assuage the applicant in its current approach
of
trying to litigate me into submission, I advise that I hold a legal
insurance policy with First National Bank Limited (“FNB”),
in terms of which I am entitled to provision of legal assistance
(“the FNB Policy”). I am up to date with all payments
in
terms of my FNB Policy and have been appointed legal practitioners to
assist me by virtue of my ability to maintenance (sic)
regular
payments of premiums in terms of that policy as and when they become
due.’
[28]
The applicant latched onto this disclosure and submitted
that the respondent had therefore not incurred any legal costs in
the
labour court. FNB did. Thus, so it was argued, the applicant is not
indebted to the respondent arising out of the labour court
order, but
to FNB. There is accordingly no mutual indebtedness and set-off
consequently does not arise.
[29]
This is an argument of such brittle
fragility that it does not withstand even the slightest scrutiny:
(a)
As Ms Russo adroitly pointed out in
argument, there is no suggestion whatsoever that the respondent had
such a policy in place in
2021 when the proceedings were first
commenced by the applicant against the respondent in the labour
court. In the extract from
the respondent’s answering affidavit
already referred to, the respondent did not say that his insurance
policy was in place
in 2021: he said that it was in place in 2024. It
is not possible therefrom to conclude that he had the policy in 2021;
(b)
Who paid the respondent’s costs of
litigation in the labour court is of no concern to the applicant. The
applicant forgets
that it was the applicant in the labour court, and
it chose who the respondent was. It chose the respondent and not his
insurers.
Had it succeeded against the respondent, it would not have
looked to FNB for its costs: it would have sought them from the
respondent
for there was simply no lis with FNB, only with the
respondent;
(c)
Whether
the respondent had an insurance policy in place is of no concern to
the applicant for the relationship between the respondent
and FNB is
a classic example of a
res
inter alios acta
.
[9]
In
Zysset
and others v Santam Limited
,
[10]
the
court observed that the
two classic examples of this, are:
‘
(a)
benefits
received by the plaintiff under ordinary contracts of insurance for
which he has paid the premiums and
(b)
moneys
and other benefits received by a plaintiff from the benevolence of
third parties motivated by sympathy.’
[11]
Scott
J went on to state that:
‘…
the law baulks at
allowing the wrongdoer to benefit from the plaintiff’s own
prudence in insuring himself or from a third
party’s
benevolence or compassion in coming to the assistance of the
plaintiff.’
[12]
[30]
The second example mentioned above, namely
the benevolence of a third party, obviously does not arise in this
matter.
In casu
,
the respondent incurred the expense of the premiums in respect of his
policy of insurance. That cannot be of benefit to the applicant
nor
can the existence of the insurance policy. The labour court ordered
the respondent’s costs to be paid and the respondent
is thus
entitled to enforce that order.
[31]
It was argued by Mr Veerasamy that the
respondent must have entered into an agreement of cession with FNB.
There is no evidence
of this being the case. There is, as already
pointed out, no evidence that the policy even existed at the time
that the applicant
commenced litigation against the respondent in the
labour court. Mr Veerasamy submitted that the applicant had requested
a copy
of the insurance policy from the respondent’s attorneys
but was advised that the respondent declined to make it available.
He
had every right to refuse, for there is no obligation to discover in
insolvency proceedings. I was asked by Mr Veerasamy to
draw a
negative inference from such refusal. I am not prepared to do so in
the face of the facts of this application.
[32]
There
is accordingly no doubt that the two parties who have engaged in
litigation in a variety of legal fora are the applicant and
the
respondent, as cited in this application. The amounts that have been
awarded to each of them by way of costs orders have been
taxed and
are thus liquidated amounts,
[13]
which are now due. All the requirements for the operation of set-off
are consequently present and I find that it has operated by
operation
of law. Consequently, the applicant is no longer a creditor of the
respondent.
[33]
As
the applicant is not a creditor of the respondent, it has no basis to
insist on the sequestration of his estate.
[14]
The
respondent is therefore not presently indebted to the applicant and
t
he
application cannot be granted.
[34]
Even
if I should be incorrect in this conclusion, it is so that a court
hearing a sequestration application has a discretion as
to whether to
grant such an application.
[15]
This is irrespective of the ground relied upon for the sequestration
of the insolvent party.
[16]
As
was said in
Kent
v Transvaalsche Bank
:
[17]
‘
And
in determining how that discretion should be exercised it seems to me
that the Court has a right to look at all the facts and
circumstances
bearing upon the case which it deems necessary to enable it to arrive
at a right decision.’
[35]
A conspectus of all the facts in this
matter makes it plain that there is ongoing litigation between the
parties - even as this
application is brought. The situation is a
fluid one, with each of the parties having secured some success
against the other in
the form of costs orders. At present, it appears
to me that the applicant is indebted to the respondent. That may
change as the
litigation progresses and further interlocutory
applications, if any, are considered and are either granted or
dismissed. It seems
to me to be inappropriate at this stage to
sequestrate the respondent’s estate and that I should exercise
my discretion against
such a course of action. In the exercise of my
discretion, I would therefore decline to grant the relief sought.
[36]
As the facts have
been revealed over the spread of the several affidavits delivered by
the parties, there is, in any event, considerable
doubt as to whether
the applicant has established that the respondent is unable to pay
his debts. He has, for example, paid the
second costs order, a
considerable sum, in full. He has provided his reasons for not paying
the first costs order and, in my opinion,
those reasons are
sustainable in law and are bona fide and reasonable.
[37]
Finally,
it seems to me that the facts of this matter align with what was
contemplated in
Badenhorst
v Northern Construction Enterprises (Pty) Ltd
.
[18]
In
Exploitatie-
en Beleggingsmaatschappij Argonauten 11 BV and another v Honig
,
the Supreme Court of Appeal
confirmed
that what was held in
Badenhorst
‘
applies
equally in both winding-up and sequestration proceedings’.
[19]
[38]
In
my view, the
respondent
has opposed his sequestration on bona fide and reasonable grounds.
In
Imobrite
(Pty) Ltd v DTL Boerdery CC
,
[20]
the
Supreme Court of Appeal observed that:
‘
A
winding-up order will not be granted where the sole or predominant
motive or purpose of seeking the winding-up order is something
other
than the bona fide bringing about of the company’s liquidation.
It would also constitute an abuse of process if there
is an attempt
to enforce payment of a debt which is bona fide disputed, or where
the motive is to oppress or defraud the company
or frustrate its
rights.’ (Footnotes omitted.)
The
reference to a company in this extract may comfortably be
interchanged with a reference to a natural person. I agree with these
observations and consider that they apply with equal effect to the
facts of this matter.
[39]
The application consequently must fail.
Again, a costs order will issue in the ongoing insidious dispute
between the parties, this
time in favour of the respondent. It is
trite that costs are awarded in the discretion of the court. The
matter was of considerable
importance to the respondent who faced a
potential loss of status if the application succeeded. The issues,
however, were not particularly
simple nor unbearably complex. In my
view, it would accordingly be just to order costs against the
applicant on scale B.
[40]
In the result, I
grant the following order:
The
application is dismissed with costs, such to be taxed on scale B.
MOSSOP J
APPEARANCES
Counsel
for the applicant:
Mr I
Veerasamy
Instructed
by:
MacGregor
Erasmus Attorneys Incorporated
First
Floor, Bond Square
12
Browns Road
The
Point
Durban
Counsel
for the respondent:
Ms S
Russo
Instructed
by:
H L
Legal Incorporated
Unit
4, The Zenith
20
Solstice Road
Umhlanga
Ridge
[1]
Absa
Bank Ltd v Collier
2015
(4) SA 364
(WCC) para 9.
[2]
The
Unlimited Group (Pty) Ltd v Mamogale and others
[2021] ZALCJHB 354.
[3]
Ibid
para 27.
[4]
To the extent necessary, I grant leave for the filing of the
respondent’s supplementary affidavit and the applicant’s
supplementary affidavit delivered in reply to that affidavit.
[5]
Ackermans
Ltd v Commissioner, South African Revenue Service; Pep Stores (SA)
Ltd v Commissioner, South African Revenue Service
[2010]
ZASCA 131
;
2011 (1) SA 1
(SCA) para 8.
[6]
See generally 31
Lawsa
3 ed
at 244.
[7]
Herrigel
NO v Bon Roads Construction Co (Pty) Ltd and another
1980
(4) SA 669
(SWA);
[1980] 4 All SA 704
(SWA) at 676F-G.
[8]
Blakes
Maphanga Inc v Outsurance Insurance Co Ltd
[2010]
ZASCA 19
;
2010 (4) SA 232
(SCA) para 15 (
Blakes
Maphanga Inc
).
## [9]The
full maxim is ‘res
inter alios acta, aliis neque nocet, neque prodest’,
meaning ‘a thing done, or a transaction entered
into, between
certain parties cannot advantage or injure those who are not parties
to the act or transaction’: seeErasmus
Ferreira & Ackermann and others v Francis[2009] ZASCA 54; 2010 (2) SA 228 (SCA); [2009] 3 All SA 500 (SCA)
para 15.
[9]
The
full maxim is ‘
res
inter alios acta, aliis neque nocet, neque prodest’,
meaning ‘a thing done, or a transaction entered
into, between
certain parties cannot advantage or injure those who are not parties
to the act or transaction’: see
Erasmus
Ferreira & Ackermann and others v Francis
[2009] ZASCA 54; 2010 (2) SA 228 (SCA); [2009] 3 All SA 500 (SCA)
para 15.
[10]
Zysset
and others v Santam Ltd
1996
(1) SA 273 (C).
[11]
Ibid
at
278B-C.
[12]
Ibid at 278C-D.
[13]
It meets the requirement for being liquid as set out in
Lester
Investments (Pty) Ltd v Narshi
1951 (2) SA 464
(C) at 469F-G. See also
Blakes
Maphanga Inc
paras 17-18.
[14]
Section
9(1) of Act reads as follows: ‘
A
creditor (or his agent) who has a liquidated claim for not less than
fifty pounds, or two or more creditors (or their agent)
who in the
aggregate have liquidated claims for not less than one hundred
pounds against a debtor who has committed an act of
insolvency, or
is insolvent, may petition the court for the sequestration of the
estate of the debtor.’
[15]
Section 10 of
the
Act;
Epstein
v Epstein
1987 (4) SA 606
(C) at 612G.
[16]
F
& C Building Construction Co (Pty) Ltd v Macsheil Investments
(Pty) Ltd
1959
(3) SA 841
(N) at 844.
[17]
Kent
v Transvaalsche Bank
1907
TS 765
at 783, per Bristowe J.
[18]
Badenhorst v Northern Construction Enterprises (Pt
y
)
Ltd
1956 (2) SA 346
(T) at 374
-
348
(
Badenhorst
)
.
[19]
Exploitatie-
en Beleggingsmaatschappij Argonauten 11 BV and another v Honig
[2011]
ZASCA 182
;
2012 (1) SA 247
(SCA) para 11.
[20]
Imobrite
(Pty) Ltd v DTL Boerdery CC
[2022]
ZASCA 67
para 40.
sino noindex
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