Case Law[2025] ZASCA 93South Africa
Intengo Imoto (Pty) Ltd t/a Northcliff Nissan v Zoutpansberg Motor Wholesalers CC t/a Hyundai Louis Trichardt (474/2024) [2025] ZASCA 93; [2025] 4 All SA 39 (SCA); 2025 (6) SA 143 (SCA) (20 June 2025)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
20 June 2025
Headnotes
Summary: Contract—purchase and sale—claim for payment of price of vehicles purchased—payment by way of electronic funds transfer (EFT)—details of seller’s bank account provided in invoice sent by email—plea of payment into bank account—payment not received by seller in its bank account—whether the onus of proving payment discharged.
Judgment
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# South Africa: Supreme Court of Appeal
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## Intengo Imoto (Pty) Ltd t/a Northcliff Nissan v Zoutpansberg Motor Wholesalers CC t/a Hyundai Louis Trichardt (474/2024) [2025] ZASCA 93; [2025] 4 All SA 39 (SCA); 2025 (6) SA 143 (SCA) (20 June 2025)
Intengo Imoto (Pty) Ltd t/a Northcliff Nissan v Zoutpansberg Motor Wholesalers CC t/a Hyundai Louis Trichardt (474/2024) [2025] ZASCA 93; [2025] 4 All SA 39 (SCA); 2025 (6) SA 143 (SCA) (20 June 2025)
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sino date 20 June 2025
FLYNOTES:
CONTRACT – Payment –
EFT
fraud
–
Payments
diverted through Business Email Compromise (BEC) –
Cyber-crime – Failed to prove fulfilment of payment
obligation – Funds diverted to a fraudulent account without
authorisation – Risk of incorrect payment rested
with
purchaser – Neglected basic verification steps –
Failed to verify banking details before transfer –
Failed to
call key witnesses to explain erroneous payment – No legal
basis to shift risk of fraud to seller –
High Court erred –
Appeal upheld.
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case
no: 474/2024
In
the matter between:
INTENGO
IMOTO (PTY) LTD t/a NORTHCLIFF
NISSAN
APPELLANT
And
ZOUTPANSBERG
MOTOR WHOLESALERS CC t/a
HYUNDAI
LOUIS TRICHARDT
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Intengo
Imoto (Pty) Ltd t/a Northcliff Nissan v Zoutpansberg Motor
Wholesalers CC t/a Hyundai Louis Trichardt
(474/2024)
[2025] ZASCA 93
(20 June 2025)
Coram:
ZONDI DP and MOTHLE, WEINER, KATHREE-SETILOANE and
COPPIN JJA
Heard
:
20 May 2025
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down electronically by
circulation to the parties’ representatives by email,
publication on the Supreme
Court of Appeal website and released to
SAFLII. The time and date for hand-down is deemed to be 11h00 on 20
June 2025.
Summary:
Contract—purchase and sale—claim
for payment of price of vehicles purchased—payment by way of
electronic funds
transfer (EFT)—details of seller’s bank
account provided in invoice sent by email—plea of payment into
bank account—payment
not received by seller in its bank
account—whether the onus of proving payment discharged.
ORDER
On
appeal from
:
Limpopo Division of the High Court, Thohoyandou (Tshidada J and Khosa
AJ, sitting as a court of appeal):
1
The appeal is upheld with costs.
2
The order of the high court is set aside and replaced with the
following order: ‘The
appeal is dismissed with costs.’
JUDGMENT
Coppin JA (Zondi DP
and Mothle, Weiner and Kathree-Setiloane JJA concurring):
[1]
This appeal concerns the question whether a purchaser who pays the
price of the thing purchased
into a bank account, other than the
account of the seller, without the authority of the seller, but due
to a fraudulent substitution
of account details, has discharged the
onus of proving payment.
[2]
This is an appeal against the order of the Limpopo Division of the
High Court, Thohoyandou (Tshidada
J and Khosa AJ) (the high court)
which upheld with costs, an appeal by the respondent against an order
of the Regional Court for
the Regional Division of Limpopo, held at
Louis Trichardt (the regional court). The regional court ordered the
respondent, Zoutpansberg
Motor Wholesalers CC t/a Hyundai Louis
Trichardt (Hyundai), to pay the appellant, Intengo Imoto (Pty) Ltd
t/a Northcliff Nissan
(Intengo): (a) the purchase price (R290 000)
for two motor vehicles; (b) mora interest; and (c) party and party
costs. The
high court substituted the regional court’s order
with an order that Intengo’s claim for payment against Hyundai
is
dismissed with costs. Leave to appeal against the high court’s
order was granted to Intengo on petition to this Court.
Background facts
[3]
On 30 October 2018 and in Northcliff, Johannesburg the parties
concluded a partly written, partly
oral agreement in terms of which
Intengo sold to Hyundai two Nissan NP200 vehicles for the price of
R145 000 each. The written
part of their contract consisted,
essentially of two invoices generated in respect of each of the
vehicles, which reflected the
particulars of the vehicles, the price,
the delivery address, and of significance for this appeal, the
banking details of Intengo.
[4]
It is common cause that it was agreed between them that: (a) upon
receipt of the invoices that
were to be sent by email, Hyundai would
effect payment of the purchase price of the vehicles by way of an
electronic funds transfer
(EFT) into the banking account of Intengo,
the details of which were provided on the invoices; and (b) upon
receipt of payment,
Hyundai could take delivery of the vehicles.
[5]
The following is also common cause. In entering into the agreement,
Intengo was represented by
Mr Marco Sutherland (Mr Sutherland), who
at the time was the new vehicle sales team leader. Hyundai was
represented, initially,
by Mr Dawie Schlebush (Mr Schlebush) and
subsequently by Mr Brian Lucien Meth (Mr Meth), a senior sales
executive. Mr Sutherland
sent an email to Mr Meth on Tuesday, 30
October 2018, in which he requested the invoicing details of Hyundai.
On the same day Mr
Meth emailed those details to Mr Sutherland.
[6]
According to Mr Sutherland, he emailed the invoices pertaining to the
sale of the two vehicles
to Mr Meth on the same day, ie 30 October
2018 at 13h12. The invoices were attached to an email addressed by Mr
Sutherland to Mr
Meth and copied to Mr Schlebush. The subject of the
email was ‘invoices’. The attached invoices also
contained Intengo’s
banking details, which included the name of
the banking institution, First National Bank (FNB), the account
number and branch number,
which for security purposes is only
described here with reference to the last three digits, namely 7[...]
and 3[...] respectively.
Payment of the purchase price of the two
vehicles was to be made by means of an EFT into Intengo’s
banking account, as described
on those invoices.
[7]
On 31 October 2018 at about 15h56, Mr Meth emailed proof of payment
in respect of the first vehicle
to Mr Sutherland. It is accepted that
the proof of payment reflected that the amount owing in respect of
that vehicle had been
paid into a FNB account number ending with the
digits 9[...]. On the same day, and without establishing whether the
payment was
reflected in Intengo’s bank account, Mr Sutherland
released the first vehicle for delivery, and it was delivered to
Hyundai.
[8]
On 1 November 2018, Mr Meth, by WhatsApp, furnished Mr Sutherland
with a proof of payment in respect
of the second vehicle. The proof
of payment document showed that an amount of R145 000 had been
paid into an FNB account ending
with the digits 9[...]. On that same
day Mr Sutherland, again, without establishing whether any of the
amounts were reflected in
Intengo’s bank account, released the
second vehicle for delivery and it was delivered to Hyundai.
[9]
It is also not disputed that on 7 November 2018 Intengo became aware
that the payments for the
vehicles had not been made into its FNB
bank account number (ie ending with 7[...]) as reflected in the
invoices that Mr Sutherland
had sent to Mr Meth and Mr Schlebush on
30 October 2018.
[10] It
was discovered that instead of having paid the purchase price for the
two vehicles into Intengo’s
bank account ending with 7[...] and
held at branch 3[...], the amounts had been paid into a different
(fraudulent) account ending
with 9[...], purportedly held at FNB
branch number ending with 6[...]. Intengo demanded payment. Hyundai,
on the other hand, insisted
that it had paid. In doing so, it relied
on the proofs of payment into, what turned out to be fraudulent
account(s), and that Mr
Sutherland had released the vehicles upon
receipt of those proofs of payment.
[11] On
9 March 2020, Intengo instituted an action in the regional court in
which it claimed the payment of the
total purchase price for the two
vehicles (R290 000), plus mora interest and costs from Hyundai.
The action was defended by
Hyundai. The matter eventually proceeded
to trial. Intengo called as witnesses, Mr Sutherland and Mr Adrian
Petrus Roux (Mr Roux).
Mr Roux gave evidence on the information
technology (IT) aspects, including the fraudulent electronic
interception of the emails
and computers. Hyundai only called Mr Meth
as a witness.
[12]
The regional court found that the matter involved “cybercrime”;
that the payments had been made
erroneously into the wrong account;
and that it was indisputable that Intengo never received payment.
Relying on the decision of
Potgieter
v Capricorn Beach Homeowners Association and Another
,
[1]
it held that Hyundai was obliged to pay Intengo. Ultimately, the
regional court found that Hyundai ought to have verified the banking
account details with Intengo before making the payments; and that if
Hyundai ‘did this the risk would have been mitigated’;
and that [t]he money was spirited away but [Hyundai] still owes
[Intengo]’. On that basis the regional court granted Intengo
the relief as prayed and ordered Hyundai to pay the principal sum,
mora interest and costs.
[13]
Hyundai appealed to the high court. The high court found in its
favour and substituted the regional court’s
order with an order
dismissing the appellant’s claim with costs. The high court
found as follows:
‘
[23]
[Intengo’s] claim was founded in contract, not in delict. As
the
dominus litis
,
[Intengo] bore the onus to prove the terms of the contract, that it
complied with the terms and that [Hyundai] breached those
terms.
[24]
The appellant pleaded additional terms of the contract. By doing so,
it placed the onus on [Intengo]
to prove that those additional terms
are not terms of the contract. In my view, The Regional Court erred
in finding that the onus
shifted to [Hyundai] to prove that it paid
into the correct bank account. There is no basis in law for that
shift of onus to [Hyundai].
[25]
[Intengo] failed to prove the terms of the contract and to disprove
the additional terms of the
contract pleaded by [Hyundai]. Without a
clear identification of the terms of the contract, it would naturally
be difficult to
make a determination whether there is a breach.
[26]
In order to succeed, [Intengo] had to prove a breach of the terms of
the contract relating to
payment of the purchase price. Instead,
[Intengo] adduced evidence of negligent failure to verify bank
account details. Effectively,
[Intengo] failed to prove the breach of
a term of the contract claim it pleaded. On this basis alone,
[Intengo] claim ought to
have failed.
[27]
In determining the liability of [Hyundai] to pay [Intengo] the sum of
R290 000.00 based
on negligence, the court a quo erred in that
it lost sight of the pleaded case. Therefore, the judgment of the
Regional Court falls
to be set aside.’
The pleadings
[14] In
the particulars of claim to its summons Intengo, inter alia, alleged
that ‘in breach of its obligations
according to the agreement,
[Hyundai] has failed to make payment to [Intengo] of any of the
amounts owed to [Intengo] in respect
of the vehicles’.
[15]
Hyundai defended the action and, in its plea, inter alia, denied that
it was indebted to Intengo, and pleaded,
effectively, that it had
paid all amounts due in respect of the purchase of the vehicles in
full to Intengo. In particular, Hyundai
alleged that:
‘
9
[Intengo] alleges that
the payment effected by [Hyundai] was paid into an unknown bank
account. [Hyundai] pleads that at all material
times it effected
payment into the bank account described on the invoices.
10
At
all material times, [Intengo] stipulated the mode of payment by
[Hyundai] and elected electronic funds transfer (EFT) as its
chosen
mode of payment. [Intengo] elected email as its chosen mode of
communication. [Hyundai] acceded the request of [Intengo]
in respect
of [Intengo’s] stipulated mode of payment and communication,
any risk inherent in the stipulated methods were
for [Intengo’s]
account.
11
[Hyundai] reacted to the
invoice received and effected payment of the purchase price of the
vehicles into the bank account stipulated
on the invoices received.
12
At all material times,
the risk of loss in utilizing the EFT system and email lay with
[Intengo]. [Hyundai’s] obligation to
pay, must be deemed to be
fulfilled. Any risk associated [with] and inadequacies of the EFT
payments system and the email communication
system must be assumed by
[Intengo].
13
[Hyundai] denies being
indebted to [Intengo] for the sums claimed in [Intengo’s]
summons or any sum at all.
14
Wherefore
[Hyundai] prays that [Intengo’s] action be dismissed with
costs.’
[16]
Since Intengo did not replicate to the plea, Hyundai’s
allegations were to be taken as denied. In an
affidavit in support of
an application for summary judgment Intengo, inter alia, averred that
payment had not been made into the
account specified in the invoices
that were sent to Mr Meth and Mr Schlebush of Hyundai on 30 October
2018 and that the proofs
of payment relied upon by Hyundai show
payment into another account not linked to Intengo.
The
issues arising from the pleadings and the onus
[17]
The high court erred in its characterisation of the issues arising
from the pleadings and the nature of the
onus. Essentially, Intengo
claimed payment of the purchase price and Hyundai alleged that it had
paid the purchase price. Hyundai
bore the onus to prove, inter alia,
payment (and any additional terms it alleged) on a balance of
probabilities.
[2]
If it failed
to discharge that onus, judgment had to be given in favour of
Intengo. It is another trite principle of law that the
onus of proof
does not shift, and that only an evidentiary burden shifts, depending
on the evidence presented in respect of the
issues and in respect of
which the onus is to be discharged.
[3]
[18]
As part of its onus, Hyundai had to prove that the payment was made
into the bank account of Intengo as per
Intengo’s request,
which Hyundai agreed to. This Court has accepted, that as a matter of
common sense, for effective payment
to occur the payee must, in the
absence of a contrary agreement, acquire ‘the unfettered or
unrestricted right to the immediate
use of the funds in question
otherwise the payment is inchoate’.
[4]
It has also been held that the place of payment in the case of an EFT
is when the funds (meant for payment) are actually received
by the
payee in its bank account.
[5]
[19]
The essential facts in this case are not unique. This kind of
incident seems to occur often. In
Mosselbaai
Boere Dienste (Pty) Ltd t/a Mosselbaai Toyota v OKB Motors CC t/a
Bultfontein Toyota
[6]
the full court of the Free State High Court dealt with a similar
situation. Having reviewed a few judgments
[7]
where a similar issue was dealt with, that court correctly concluded:
‘The golden thread in the judgments referred to
supra
places
an obligation on the purchaser to ensure that the bank account
details contained in the invoice is in fact correct/verified
and that
payment is made to the seller and not to an unknown third party.
Failure to do so, and where payment is made into an incorrect
bank
account, such incorrect payment does not extinguish the purchaser’s
obligation and liability to pay the debt.’
[8]
[20]
Regarding the risk - our courts
[9]
have effectively held that the same general principle that applies
where payment was made by means of a cheque also applied in
these
instances, namely, that the ‘risk is the debtor’s since
it is the debtor’s duty to seek out his creditor’.
[10]
Recently, in a matter where a debtor who made a payment into a false
account sued attorneys for pure economic loss, this Court
reversed
the decision of a court which effectively found that all creditors
owe a legal duty to protect debtors from the possibility
of their
accounts being hacked. This Court found that imposing such a duty was
untenable in circumstances where the debtor could
have taken steps to
protect itself but failed to do so. It held: ‘The ratio of the
high court’s judgment that all creditors
in the position of ENS
[Edward Nathan Sonnenberg] owe a legal duty to debtors to protect
them from the possibility of their accounts
being hacked is
untenable. The effect of the judgment of the high court is to require
creditors to protect their debtors against
the risk of interception
of their payments. The high court should have declined to extend
liability in this case because of the
real danger of indeterminate
liability.
’
[11]
[21]
Intengo, through the evidence of Mr Sutherland and Mr Roux
established a prima facie case that Mr Sutherland
sent the invoices
to Mr Meth and Mr Schlebush by email; these invoices bore the correct
banking details of Intengo; and there was
no interception of the
email until it left the server of Intengo. Implicit in their evidence
is that there must have been an interception
of the email on the side
of Hyundai.
[22]
Although Mr Roux conceded that he could not verify whether it had
been intercepted on the side of Hyundai
because he had no access to
its server or computer, he was adamant that the interception and
infiltration of Intengo’s banking
details could not have been
from Intengo’s side. According to Mr Roux: ‘. . .
definitely [the] [e]mail was intercepted,
and an attachment was
changed on the email’. Mr Roux pointed out, that if he had
access to Hyundai’s mail server and
computer he would have been
able to determine more accurately when the interception occurred and
when the changes were affected.
[23]
Hyundai did not produce any evidence at all that would address that
issue. Instead, it only led the evidence
of Mr Meth, who testified to
the following effect: he passed on the invoices, that he received in
the email from Mr Sutherland
to Hyundai’s accounts department
‘to load it for payment’. Once he had concluded the deal
in respect of the vehicles
with Hyundai’s customer, he sent his
driver on the morning of 31 October 2018 to Intengo, and instructed
Hyundai’s
accounts department ‘to release payment and
forward proof of payment’.
[24]
Hyundai did not call anyone from its accounts department to testify
how payment was made. Mr Meth, on his
own version, did not have
personal knowledge of that fact. Hyundai appears to have relied a
great deal on the fact that Mr Sutherland
released the vehicles after
the proofs of payment had been sent to him. But that was clearly not
enough to prove payment.
[25]
Mr Meth conceded that Intengo ‘did not receive the money which
had been paid into the account’
ie the account number ending
with the digits 9[...]. When asked whether the respondent had
received the appellant’s correct
banking details as alleged by
the appellant, Mr Meth answered as follows: ‘I received the
correct banking details which was
on the invoice’. And he
further testified: ‘[s]o, according to us we have paid the
correct account number, the funds
into the correct account’. He
further testified that he did not call Mr Sutherland after receiving
the invoices in order
to confirm that the banking details were
correct, because he did not have a ‘reason to suspect that the
banking details would
be different.’ He was asked whether there
was a duty on him to check whether payment was made into the correct
account. His
answer was:
‘
[m]y duty
was to make sure the payment is made on the proof of payment. My
accounts must release funds and then I sent the proof
of payments.
Once Mr Sutherland releases the bakkies, that confirms with me that
he has received the funds.’
Mr Meth further testified
that the incorrect payment was Mr Sutherland’s fault ‘because
he did not check his accounts
before releasing the bakkies’.
[26] Mr
Meth conceded that it was normal business practice in car dealerships
to request payment by way of an
EFT. He testified to the effect that
he was not aware of cybercrime and the fact that emails could have
been intercepted as occurred
in this instance. This intensified the
need on the respondent’s side to produce the necessary evidence
to call someone from
the accounts department of Hyundai who was
responsible for the payments. But none of that was done. Mr Meth
could not speak for
and on behalf of the accounts department of
Hyundai.
[27]
The most concerning aspect of Mr Meth’s evidence was that he
could not explain a third notification
of payment that he emailed to
Mr Sutherland on 1 November 2018. The notice shows that an amount of
R145 000 had been transferred
by the respondent into the correct
account of the appellant (ie the FNB banking account number ending
with the digits 7[...]).
That notification, however, bears the
incorrect branch code. The fact that this notification emanated from
the respondent shows
that the respondent was aware of Intengo’s
correct banking account details. The anomaly created by that
notification called
for an answer from Hyundai, but it remained
unexplained. Ms Tahera Karim, who handled the finances and accounts
of Hyundai, and
who furnished Mr Meth with the proofs of payment, was
not called as a witness, and Hyundai made no effort to deal with the
anomaly
presented by this third notification. It is also common cause
that Hyundai never verified Intengo’s banking details before
making the payments into the false account(s).
[28] On
a conspectus of all the facts, Hyundai failed to discharge its onus
of proving that it had paid Intengo
the purchase price for the two
vehicles. A payment into a different account, not authorised by
Intengo, and without verifying Intengo’s
banking details, did
not release Hyundai of its payment obligation to Intengo. Hyundai’s
contention that Intengo bore the
risk in those circumstances is
untenable. The regional court correctly ordered Hyundai to pay those
amounts, plus mora interest
and costs. Insofar as the high court held
otherwise, it erred.
[29]
In the result:
1
The appeal is upheld with costs.
2
The order of the high
court is set aside and replaced with the following order: ‘The
appeal is dismissed with costs.’
P COPPIN
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
the appellant:
D
B du Preez SC with J C Carstens
Instructed by:
GD Ficq Attorneys,
Johannesburg
Honey
Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For the respondent:
J H Groenewald
Instructed by:
Van Heerden &
Rudolph Inc., Louis Trichardt
JL Jordaan
Attorneys, Bloemfontein.
[1]
Potgieter
v Capricorn Beach Homeowners Association and Another
[2012]
ZAWCHC 66
(20 March 2012).
[2]
See
inter alia,
Pillay
v Krishna
1946
AD 946
at 952 and 958;
Standard
Bank of South Africa Ltd v Oneanate Investments (Pty)Ltd (In
Liquidation)
[1997]
ZASCA 94
;
1998 (1) SA 811
(SCA);
[1998] 1 All SA 413
(A)
at
823.
[3]
South
Cape Corporation (Pty) Ltd v Engineering Management Services (Pty)
Ltd
1977
(3) SA 534 (A).
[4]
Vereins
– Und Wesbank AG v Veren Investments and Others
2002
(4) SA 421 (SCA).
[5]
Bush
and Others v B J Kruger Inc. and Another
[2013]
ZAGPJHC 4;
[2013] 2 All SA 148
(GSJ) para 67.
[6]
Mosselbaai
Boere Dienste (Pty) Ltd t/a Mosselbaai Toyota v OKB Motors CC t/a
Bultfontein Toyota
[2024]
ZAFSHC 95
;
2024 (6) SA 564
(FB) (
Mosselbaai
Boere Dienste)
.
[7]
Galactic
Auto (Pty) Ltd v Andrè Venter
[2019]
ZALMPPHC 27 paras 49-51;
Fourie
v Van der Spuy & De Jongh Inc.
[2019]
ZAGPPHC 449;
2020 (1) SA 560
(GP) paras 23-24;
Andrè
Kock en Seun Vrystaat (Pty) Ltd v Snyman NO
[2022]
ZAFSHC 161
; 2022 JDR 1792 (FB) paras 8-9;
Gerber
v PSG Wealth Planning (Pty) Ltd
[2023]
ZAGPJHC 270; 2023 JDR 0899 (GJ) paras 89-90;
Hartog
v Daly and Others
[2023]
ZAGPJHC 40;
[2023] 2 All SA 156
; 2023 JDR 0189 (GJ) paras 41-73 and
80-81. See also
Gripper
& Company (Pty) Ltd v Ganedhi Trading Enterprises CC
[2024] ZAWCHC 352
;
2025 (3) SA 279
(WCC); Njabulo Kubheka ‘Email
fraud and payment verification: How have the courts adapted to the
challenges posed by cybercrime?’
(2025)
De
Rebus.
[8]
Mosselbaai
Boere Dienste
para 58.
[9]
See
the cases referred to in footnote 6 and 7.
[10]
Mannesman
Demag (Pty) Limited v Romatex
1988
(4) SA 383
(D) at 389 F – 390 D.
[11]
Edward
Nathan Sonnenberg Inc. v Judith Mary Hawarden
[2024] ZASCA 90
;
2024 (5) SA 9
(SCA) para 21.
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