Case Law[2023] ZAKZDHC 24South Africa
Sydwell Trading CC and Others v Sean Pillay and Company (Pty) Ltd (4581/2021) [2023] ZAKZDHC 24 (16 May 2023)
Headnotes
of the amounts due to each plaintiff, with the pages in the bundle cross-referenced. This enabled a ready and easy comparison of the relevant documents.
Judgment
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# South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
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## Sydwell Trading CC and Others v Sean Pillay and Company (Pty) Ltd (4581/2021) [2023] ZAKZDHC 24 (16 May 2023)
Sydwell Trading CC and Others v Sean Pillay and Company (Pty) Ltd (4581/2021) [2023] ZAKZDHC 24 (16 May 2023)
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sino date 16 May 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
KWAZULU-NATAL LOCAL
DIVISION, DURBAN.
Case No: 4581/2021
In
the matter between:
Sydwell
Trading
CC
First Plaintiff
Coalition
Trading 1341
CC
Second Plaintiff
Mafika
and Sons Trading (Pty)
Ltd
Third Plaintiff
Khovish
De Brand
Marketing
Fourth Plaintiff
ELD
Promotions (Pty)
Ltd
Fifth Plaintiff
Makhosi
Marketing (Pty)
Ltd
Sixth Plaintiff
Platform
Com (Pty)
Ltd
Seventh Plaintiff
Wiseman
Marketing (Pty)
Ltd
Eighth Plaintiff
Blue
Skull Promotions (Pty) Ltd
Ninth Plaintiff
and
Sean
Pillay and Company (Pty) Ltd
First Defendant
Pravashnie
Pillay
NO
Second Defendant
Judgment
Lopes
J
[1]
The plaintiffs in this action are all franchisees of The Unlimited
Group (Pty) Ltd
(‘TUG’). The first defendant is a company
providing financial and taxation services and advice (‘the
company’).
At all material times, the sole shareholder and
director of the company was the late Sean Pillay (‘the
deceased’).
I shall refer to the company and the deceased as
‘the company’ unless the context requires clarification.
The second
defendant is the deceased’s widow, who is cited in
her capacity as the executrix of the estate of the deceased.
[2]
TUG concluded franchise agreements with the plaintiffs, who sold the
short-term insurance
products of TUG, including funeral, ‘scratch
and dent’ and ‘accident cash’ policies. The
plaintiffs invoiced
TUG on a monthly basis, for the products sold,
including value added tax (‘VAT’). TUG would then pay
over to the plaintiffs
the commission due to them, and the VAT
portion was to have been sent to the Receiver of Revenue (‘SARS’).
[3]
In order to assist the plaintiffs, and ensure that their tax
liabilities were always
complied with, TUG hired the services of the
company, who was supposed to provide financial and taxation services
to the plaintiffs.
These functions included the calculation of VAT
payable by each plaintiff on their due date, and to pay over the VAT
payable to
SARS, which the company would receive directly from TUG.
[4]
That is the background to this action. The plaintiffs allege in their
pleadings that
VAT amounts were paid over to the company and/or the
deceased, which were not, in turn, paid over to SARS. In addition,
the company
failed to render the VAT returns, properly, or at all.
Those returns which were rendered by the company/the deceased were
nil returns,
in circumstances where the plaintiffs were actively
trading, and owed VAT to SARS.
[5]
The evidence of Mrs Louise Tracy McTavish, for the plaintiffs, may be
summarised as
follows:
(a)
she is a Financial Business Partner at TUG;
(b)
she holds an Honours Degree in Accounting, and is a qualified Cost
and Management Accountant;
(c)
prior to January 2019, and acting on behalf of TUG, she had been
negotiating with
the deceased to conclude a service contract.
Initially TUG wished to have the plaintiffs pay their VAT directly
over to the company,
but by the 31
st
January 2019, TUG and
the company agreed that TUG would withhold the VAT due to SARS by the
plaintiffs, and pay it over to the
company, who, acting for each
plaintiff as its registered tax practitioner, would in turn pay it to
SARS. This amendment to the
system was because TUG feared that
franchisees who came under financial pressure may be tempted to use
their VAT collections as
bridging finance, and not pay it over to the
company;
(d)
TUG viewed its responsibility to its franchisees to ensure that they
were up-to-date with
their taxes, in all respects. To this end, and
as admitted in the defendants’ plea, the company undertook for
each plaintiff
to draft annual financial statements, IRP5
reconciliations, PAYE returns and payments, VAT and the calculation
of provisional taxes
as required, including the submission of tax and
VAT returns to SARS;
(e)
the court bundles (A to E) as referred to in her evidence contained,
for each plaintiff:
(i)
the invoices rendered by them to TUG;
(ii)
the internal electronic funds transfer documents (‘EFT’)
compiled by
her, showing the VAT payable by each plaintiff;
(iii)
the EFT document would, in each case, trigger the payment to the
account of the company,
or the deceased. Two bank accounts were used
– the deceased’s private bank account (as per his initial
written instruction
to TUG), and the company’s bank account, as
reflected on invoices sent to TUG; and
(f)
the company would instruct TUG every two months (or whatever VAT
period was
applicable) of the amounts to be paid by the plaintiffs to
SARS.
[6]
The contents of the bundles meticulously laid-out the path of the
monies paid over
to the company, and Mrs McTavish was taken through
the documents for the first two plaintiffs. She confirmed that the
same process
was followed for all the plaintiffs, and that the
bundles confirmed the processes and payments for the plaintiffs. In
addition,
Exhibit ‘A’ was adduced in her evidence,
containing a summary of the amounts due to each plaintiff, with the
pages
in the bundle cross-referenced. This enabled a ready and easy
comparison of the relevant documents.
[7]
Mrs McTavish also testified to the fact that the company charged each
plaintiff R1
000 per month for the services which it rendered. Those
amounts were claimed back by each of the plaintiffs on the basis that
the
company had not performed its obligations in terms of the
agreement, because it and/or the deceased had not rendered VAT
returns
timeously, or at all, had rendered inappropriate nil returns,
and had not paid over the VAT amounts to SARS. Instead, the monies
had been stolen/appropriated by the company and/or the deceased.
[8]
In cross-examination, Mr
Naidu
, for the defendants, went
through numerous of the documents, pointing out that many of the
invoices, bank statements, and some
of the EFT requisitions did not
reflect that the payments made were for VAT. Most of these references
were to bank statements of
one kind or another, and the references,
in the main, were that payments were made by TUG. Ten EFT documents
were criticised by
Mr
Naidu
as not reflecting that they were
for VAT. Mrs McTavish pointed out that in those cases (as in some of
the bank references), the
invoice numbers of the plaintiffs were
reflected, and the paper-trail in the bundles showed how those
payments were arrived at,
and were, indeed, VAT obligations of the
plaintiffs, which the company was bound to pay over to SARS.
[9]
The second witness for the plaintiffs was Mervyn Gregory Gavin, a
financial manager
at Burns Acutt, specialists in finance, taxation,
and accounting. He holds a B Comm degree (UNISA), completed his
auditing articles,
and has been employed in financial services for 21
years. He manages 150-170 accounts monthly, dealing with clients’
payrolls,
VAT calculations, and financial statements.
[10]
Mr Gavin testified that he had been requested by Mrs McTavish to
quote on the functions previously
performed by the company. This was
after the deceased had died. He stated that:
(a)
he examined the tax profiles of all the plaintiffs, and discovered
that, for the most part,
no tax returns had been made by the company
for the periods during 2018-2019, and nil returns had in a few cases
been submitted
by the company, in circumstances where it was clearly
inappropriate for it to have done so;
(b)
as part of his take-over, he went to the offices of the company.
There he met the new owners,
who gave him a flash-disc with very
little useful information on it to assist him. He was then obliged to
obtain the necessary
information for him to be able to service the
plaintiffs, from TUG or the plaintiffs. Each of the plaintiffs had
incurred penalties
and interest charges from SARS because no returns
had been filed and no VAT payments had been made – this
stretched back
from August 2018 until his take-over in November 2020;
and
(c)
Mr Gavin went through the bundles, identifying the documents he had
prepared to demonstrate
the position of each of the plaintiffs. As
the eighth plaintiff was no longer a franchisee of TUG, he did not
take-over that company
as a client.
[11]
That was the case for the plaintiffs, and the defendants closed their
case without calling any
witnesses, or adducing any documentation.
[12]
Ms
Hennessy
, for the plaintiffs, submitted that the emails
between the parties, the invoices, bank statements, internal EFT
documents and summaries
adduced in evidence by the plaintiffs amply
proved the causes of action in the pleadings.
Inter alia
, the
company and/or the deceased had admitted in correspondence that they
received the funds sent to them for VAT, and failed to
pay those
monies over to SARS. In addition, the plaintiffs had established a
complete and utter failure on the part of the company
in fulfilling
its contractual obligations. None of this was, in any effectual
manner, rebutted by the defendants.
[13]
With regard to costs, Ms
Hennessy
submitted that I should
order that the defendants are liable for costs on a punitive scale.
She conceded, correctly in my view,
that it would have been difficult
for the defendants’ legal representatives fully to appreciate
the facts until discovery
was made, and documents were delivered to
them on the 24
th
February 2023. She submitted that
thereafter, they should have attempted to settle the action to avoid
the parties incurring the
costs of trial. Ms
Hennessy
also
conceded an error in the particulars of claim, in that the claim in
favour of the fourth plaintiff in respect of fees, should
only be in
the sum of R17 000.
[14]
Mr
Naidu
, submitted that where a court had to rely on the
evidence of one party only, the evidence should be closely
scrutinized. He referred
to
Borcherds v Estate Naidoo
1955 (3)
SA 78
(A) at 79A, where Fagan JA stated:
‘
Here
the one party to the alleged transaction of repayment is dead. The
Court must therefore scrutinise with caution the evidence
given by,
and led on behalf of, the surviving party. This attitude had been
adopted by the Courts in a number of cases in which
a claim was
preferred against a deceased estate, or a defence was set up to a
claim by the estate.’
The learned judge of
appeal then referred to various cases, in particular
Wood v Estate
Thompson and Another
1949 (1) SA 607
(D) at 614, where Selke J
stated:
‘
I
am not aware of any rule of our law or of any practice of our Courts
which requires that, merely because a claim is one made against
a
deceased’s estate, it must on that account be proved with a
special degree of cogency, and I do not believe that any such
rule
exists. If it did, it would no doubt work for the protection of the
estates of deceased persons against fraudulent claims,
but, on the
other hand, it might work considerable injustice on honest claimants
against such estates. It seems to me that such
a principle, if it
existed, would obviously cut both ways, and, on the whole, I do not
think the cases are really authority for
more than the principle that
the Court must examine with a very cautious eye uncorroborated
evidence given in such cases, but I
do not appreciate that the Court
should do more in that respect than it is wont to do in all cases
where interested evidence is
given
ex
parte
against
someone who is not in a position to answer it.’
Fagan JA further recorded
that he found no fault with the above statement except that he would
prefer to omit the word ‘uncorroborated’,
unless it meant
‘uncorroborated by evidence which is itself cogent enough to
overcome the caution’.
[15]
Mr
Naidu
also referred to
Cassel and Benedick NNO and
Another v Rheeder and Cohen NNO and Another
[1991] ZASCA 25
;
1991 (2) SA 846
(A),
where the court approved of the statements in
Borcherds
, and
recorded at page 851H that although ‘there is no rule requiring
evidence against a deceased estate to be corroborated,
corroboration
may assist in satisfying the cautionary rule’.
[16]
I have carefully considered the evidence of the plaintiffs’
witnesses. No suggestion was
made that they were attempting to convey
anything but the truth, and such vague criticisms of their evidence
as were made, were
unjustified. They both testified as
representatives of the companies employing them, and they had no
personal grudge against the
company and/or the deceased, and no
benefit to them was ever suggested. In this sense, this action is
somewhat distinguishable
from
Borcherds
. Nevertheless, I
have no hesitation in accepting their evidence, corroborated as it
was by the documentary evidence in both
instances.
[17]
In the plaintiffs’ particulars of claim, the allegation is made
that the deceased (and,
consequently, the company) traded recklessly
in contravention of the provisions of s 218(2), read with s 77(3)
(b)
and
s 22(1)
of the
Companies Act, 2008
.
Section 22(1)
thereof
provides:
‘
22.
Reckless trading prohibited. –
(1)
A company must not carry on its business recklessly, with gross
negligence, with intent to defraud any person or for any fraudulent
purpose.’
[18]
There is no doubt whatsoever that, based upon the evidence of the
plaintiff’s witnesses
and the documents adduced in evidence,
that the company and the deceased did exactly what is prohibited in
s
22(1).
[19]
Mr
Naidu
referred to
Philotex (Pty) Ltd and others v Snyman
and Others; Braitex (Pty) Ltd and Others v Snyman and Others
[1997] ZASCA 92
;
1998
(2) SA 138
(SCA) and
Heneways Freight Services (Pty) Ltd v Grogor
2007 (2) SA 561
(SCA), as ‘pertinent and applicable judgments’
demonstrating that there had been no evidence of reckless trading in
this action. Those cases do not assist the defences of the company or
the deceased in this action. The plaintiffs have clearly
objectively
demonstrated on a balance of probabilities that the deceased stole
monies which he was obliged to pay over to SARS.
His actions go
beyond recklessness. This was not a case where the supine attitude of
a director is to be analysed in order to determine
recklessness. It
relates to deliberate acts of theft and fraud.
[20]
There was no dispute that the service fees charged by the company and
paid to it, were R1 000
per month, for 17 months. There was also no
suggestion that, if the evidence of the plaintiffs was accepted, that
the plaintiffs
were entitled to be reimbursed those monies, either on
the basis that the work which the defendants were contractually
obliged
to render had not been performed, or as damages. Regarding
costs, Mr
Naidu
submitted that the defendants’ legal
representative had to plead without full knowledge of the facts.
These had only become
apparent after discovery, and the exchange of
documents on the 24
th
February 2023. Thereafter, it took
time for the documents (in excess of 450 pages) to be scrutinised and
whatever checks could
be made to be investigated and carried out.
[21] I understand, and
accept the difficulties facing the defendants’ legal
representatives. The defendants’ interests
may, however, have
been better served had the matter been settled before trial, as the
result seemed inevitable. However, as Mr
Naidu
submitted, the
impact of any decision would have consequences for the interests of
the estate of the deceased, and the legal representatives
had to
ensure that any liabilities were properly established.
[22] In the circumstances
I make the following order:
The defendants are
liable, jointly, and severally, the one paying, the other to be
absolved to pay to the plaintiffs the following
amounts:
A:
(a)
the first plaintiff,
the sum of R544 673.14;
(b)
the second plaintiff,
the sum of R167 928.18;
(c)
the third plaintiff,
the sum of R36 773.37;
(d)
the fourth plaintiff,
the sum of R75 416.78;
(e)
the fifth plaintiff,
the sum of R81 251.30;
(f)
the sixth plaintiff,
the sum of R57 071.37;
(g)
the seventh plaintiff,
the sun of R43 428.31;
(h)
the eighth plaintiff,
the sum of R29 679.74;
(i)
the ninth plaintiff,
the sum of R108 483.39.
B:
To each plaintiff,
interest on the sum awarded at the rate of 7.0 per cent per annum,
calculated from the 28
th
May 2021 to date of payment.
C:
Each plaintiffs’
costs of suit.
Lopes J
Dates
of hearing:
8
th
and 9
th
May 2023.
Date
of judgment:
16
th
May 2023.
For the plaintiffs:
Ms
K Hennessy (instructed by Kenneth Watt Attorneys).
For the defendants:
Mr
K Naidu (instructed by Kumaran Pillay Attorneys).
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