Case Law[2024] ZASCA 39South Africa
Mhlari NO and Others v Nedbank Limited (251/2023) [2024] ZASCA 39 (4 April 2024)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
4 April 2024
Headnotes
Summary: Unjust enrichment ─ conditio indebiti and conditio sine causa specialis ─ when available ─ not required to plead reliance on one to the exclusion of the other ─ where the pleading puts the claim in the ambit of the condictio indebiti to the exclusion of the condictio sine causa, not entitled to an election ─ the requirements of the pleaded condictio must be proved to succeed.
Judgment
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## Mhlari NO and Others v Nedbank Limited (251/2023) [2024] ZASCA 39 (4 April 2024)
Mhlari NO and Others v Nedbank Limited (251/2023) [2024] ZASCA 39 (4 April 2024)
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sino date 4 April 2024
FLYNOTES:
CIVIL LAW – Unjust enrichment –
Purported
loan agreement – Bank loaning money to trust which defaulted
on payments – Trustees disputing that trust
had capacity to
conclude the agreement – Conditio indebiti and conditio sine
causa specialis – Facts pleaded
bring enrichment claim
within ambit of condictio indebiti – Reasonableness of
bank’s mistake depends on facts
– Bank’s
reliance on representations regarding capacity of the trust was
reasonable in circumstances
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Not Reportable
Case
no: 251/2023
In the matter between:
PORTIA KHENSANI MHLARI
NO
FIRST APPELLANT/
FIRST
RESPONDENT IN CROSS-APPEAL
PATRICK JEALOUSY
MALABELA NO
SECOND APPELLANT/
SECOND
RESPONDENT IN CROSS-APPEAL
PORTIA KHENSANI
MHLARI
THIRD APPELLANT/
THIRD
RESPONDENT IN CROSS-APPEAL
PATRICK JEALOUSY
MALABELA
FOURTH APPELLANT/
FOURTH
RESPONDENT IN CROSS-APPEAL
LULAMA BUSINESS
ENTERPRISES CC
FIFTH APPELLANT/
FIFTH
RESPONDENT IN CROSS-APPEAL
MAMPEPU PROJECTS
CC
SIXTH APPELLANT/
SIXTH
RESPONDENT IN CROSS-APPEAL
PATIENCE LETHABO
MLENGANA NO
SEVENTH APPELLANT/
SEVENTH
RESPONDENT IN CROSS-APPEAL
and
NEDBANK
LIMITED
RESPONDENT/APPELLANT IN CROSS-APPEAL
Neutral
citation:
Mhlari
NO and Others v Nedbank Limited
(251/2023)
[2024] ZASCA 39
(4 April 2024)
Coram:
GORVEN and MATOJANE JJA, COPPIN, SMITH and
KEIGHTLEY AJJA
Heard:
27 February 2024
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down electronically by
circulation to the parties’ representatives via email,
publication on the
Supreme Court of Appeal website and released to
SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 11h00 on 4
April 2024.
Summary:
Unjust enrichment ─
conditio
indebiti
and
conditio
sine causa specialis
─
when
available ─ not required to plead reliance on one to the
exclusion of the other ─ where the pleading puts the claim
in
the ambit of the
condictio indebiti
to
the exclusion of the
condictio sine
causa,
not entitled to an election ─
the requirements of the pleaded
condictio
must be proved to succeed.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng Division of the
High Court, Johannesburg (Mdalana-Mayisela J sitting as court of
first instance):
1.
The appeal is upheld.
2.
The cross-appeal is upheld with costs, including
the costs of two counsel where so employed.
3.
The order of the High Court is set aside and is
substituted by the following order:
‘
(1)
The trustees of the PATRICK MALABELA FAMILY TRUST are ordered to pay
the amount of R5 436 347.57
to the plaintiff, together with
mora interest thereon, calculated from 12 September 2019 to date of
final payment, both days inclusive.
(2)
The plaintiff is directed to take such steps as
may be necessary for the cancellation of the covering mortgage bond
executed in
its favour and registered with the Registrar of Deeds,
Pretoria, with registration number B2260/2023.
(3)
In the event of the plaintiff failing to comply
with paragraph (2) within 30 days from the date of this order, the
sheriff is hereby
authorized to sign and execute all such documents,
and do all such things as may be necessary, for the implementation of
paragraph
(2).
(4)
The trustees of the PATRICK MALABELA FAMILY TRUST
are ordered to pay the plaintiff’s costs of suit.’
JUDGMENT
Smith AJA (Gorven and
Matojane JJA, Coppin and Keightley AJJA concurring):
Introduction
[1]
The appellants appeal against the judgment of the
Gauteng Division of the High Court in terms of which they were,
inter
alia
, ordered to pay the respondent,
Nedbank Limited (Nedbank) the sum of R12 316 632,37. The
order also declared specially
executable an immovable property owned
by the trustees of the Patrick Malabela Family Trust (the Trust),
situated in Sandton, Johannesburg.
The respondent has filed a
conditional cross-appeal against the dismissal of its alternative
claim based on unjust enrichment.
Both appeals are with the leave of
the High Court. The appellants will be referred to as in the main
appeal.
[2]
The first, second and seventh appellants are
trustees of the Trust, and the third to sixth appellants were cited
as sureties for
and co-principal debtors with the Trust for the due
performance of its contractual obligations
vis-a-vis
Nedbank.
[3]
Nedbank is a duly registered and incorporated
public company with limited liability. It trades as a deposit-taking
institution in
terms of the Banks Act 94 of 1990, and is a credit
provider duly registered in terms of the
National Credit Act 34 of
2005
.
The common cause facts
[4]
The following material facts are common cause. On
7 May 2013, Nedbank and the Trust, represented by the second
appellant, purportedly
concluded a loan agreement in terms of which
the former lent R14 million to the Trust. As security for the loan, a
covering mortgage
bond was registered over the Trust’s
immovable property and the third to sixth appellants bound themselves
as sureties for,
and co-principal debtors with, the Trust.
[5]
After the registration of the bond, Nedbank duly
paid the sum of R14 million to the Trust in accordance with the terms
of the loan
agreement. The Trust initially made regular payments by
way of debit order but subsequently defaulted, with the last payment
having
been made on 23 June 2018. Nedbank consequently instituted
civil action against the Trust and the appellants on 12 October 2018,
claiming the sum of R12 316 632,37, an order declaring the
mortgaged immovable property specially executable, and other
ancillary relief (the contractual claim).
[6]
In their plea, the appellants disputed that the
Trust had the requisite capacity to conclude the agreement. They
averred that the
trust deed required that there should be no fewer
than three and no more than five trustees in office at any time. One
of the trustees
had resigned in October 2010, leaving only the first
and second appellants as trustees. However, it was only on 4 October
2018
that the Master issued the certificate appointing a third
trustee, namely the seventh appellant. Thus, when the loan agreement
was concluded on 7 May 2013, there were an insufficient number of
trustees in office to bind the Trust legally. The appellants asserted
that the loan agreement and the mortgage bond registered in pursuance
of the invalid loan agreement were consequently also null
and void.
[7]
Nedbank thereafter successfully applied to join
the seventh appellant in her capacity as the third trustee. It also
amended its
particulars of claim to introduce an alternative claim
based on unjust enrichment (the unjust enrichment claim).
[8]
In response, the appellants filed a counter-claim
for the cancellation of the mortgage bond and amended their plea,
averring that
Nedbank’s alternative claim had become
prescribed. They asserted furthermore that by the exercise of
reasonable care, Nedbank
could have ascertained more than three years
prior to 12 September 2019 (when it filed its unjust enrichment
claim) that the Trust
did not have the requisite number of trustees
at the time of contracting. In terms of s 12
(b)
of the Prescription Act 68 of 1969 (the
Prescription Act), it
is consequently deemed to have had knowledge of
that fact when the loan agreement was concluded. The appellants
contended for this
reason that Nedbank’s alternative claim had
prescribed.
Proceedings in the
High Court
[9]
At the trial, Nedbank called only one witness,
namely Mr Perie Kemp, who was employed in its Paarl recoveries
division. Mr Kemp
confirmed that: (a) the capital sum was duly
advanced to the Trust in terms of the loan agreement: (b) the Trust
had made various
payments by way of debit order; and (c) the Trust
had defaulted on its contractual obligations and no further payments
were made
after 23 June 2023.
[10]
Certificates of Indebtedness, issued in terms of
the loan agreement and reflecting an outstanding amount of
R5 436 347.57,
were also admitted into evidence. The
appellants did not dispute any aspect of Mr Kemp’s testimony
and closed their case
without calling any witnesses.
[11]
In respect of the contractual claim, Nedbank
relied on ostensible authority and estoppel as defences to the
appellants' contention
that the loan agreement was null and void. The
High Court upheld Nedbank’s argument that the Trust should be
estopped from
relying on the invalidity of the loan agreement. The
Court found that there was no ‘legitimate basis upon which it
can be
asserted that these defences [ostensible authority and
estoppel] cannot be invoked in the case of the action of the Trust,
where
the other party was lured to believe that informal (sic)
formalities were complied with when in fact it was not so.’ The
Court therefore concluded that the agreement was enforceable against
the Trust and the sureties. In the light of that finding, the
Court
declined to pronounce on Nedbank’s unjust enrichment claim or
the first, second and seventh appellants’ counter-claim.
And,
having found that the appellants were in material breach of their
contractual obligations, the Court granted the order prayed
for by
Nedbank.
[12]
Nedbank
has conceded in its written argument that the loan agreement is null
and void because at the material time there were an
insufficient
number of trustees in office to legally bind the Trust.
[1]
This
concession was correctly made and nothing further needs to be said
about that issue. Nedbank has consequently also conceded
that the
main appeal should succeed, the agreement must be set aside, and the
mortgage bond cancelled. It follows that Nedbank’s
claim
against the third and fourth appellants, as sureties, shares the same
fate.
[13]
Thus, only the appellants’ special plea
regarding prescription and Nedbank’s alternative claim based on
enrichment remain
for consideration.
Did Nedbank’s
unjust enrichment claim become prescribed?
[14]
Because the High Court found for Nedbank on the
issue of the Trust’s capacity, it declined to decide the
prescription issue.
Nonetheless, that defence can be dismissed out of
hand.
Section 12(3)
of the
Prescription Act provides
that ‘[a]
debt shall not be deemed to be due until the creditor has knowledge
of the identity of the debtor and the facts
from which the debt
arises: Provided that a creditor shall be deemed to have such
knowledge if he could have acquired it by exercising
reasonable
care.’ The first and second appellants represented to Nedbank
that they were duly authorised to bind the Trust
and that the latter
had the requisite capacity to conclude the loan agreement. They also
provided Nedbank with the necessary resolutions
and other relevant
written instruments in support of those representations.
[15]
Furthermore, it is common cause that the
appellants had, at least until June 2018, acquiesced in the
implementation of the loan
agreement. The Trust made regular payments
in terms thereof and had by that date repaid more than half of the
capital amount.
[16]
There
was, in my view, therefore nothing that could have alerted Nedbank to
the fact that the loan agreement was invalid, until
the appellants
raised the point in their plea. The onus was on the appellants to
adduce evidence in support of their contention
that Nedbank could
have become aware of that fact ‘by exercising reasonable
care.’
[2]
They
have failed to do so, and the prescription defence must accordingly
fail.
The unjust enrichment
claim
[17]
The
requirements for a claim based on unjust enrichment are that the
defendant must be enriched, the plaintiff must be impoverished,
the
enrichment must be at the expense of the plaintiff, and the
enrichment must have been unjustified (
sine
causa
).
Although
there
is no unified general enrichment action, these are requirements
common to all enrichment actions.
[3]
[18]
A
person who pays money (or delivers a thing) to another because of a
reasonable error of fact or law in the belief that the money
is
owing, whereas it is not, has a claim for repayment in terms of the
condictio
indebiti
,
to the extent that the person who received the payment has been
enriched at his or her expense.
[4]
The
condictio
sine causa specialis
lies
where the money is in the hands of the defendant without cause,
whether due to the plaintiff’s mistake or not. Therefore,
a
defendant may raise as a defence to the
condictio
indebiti
that
the mistake was unreasonable and negligent, but in a claim based on
the
condictio
sine causa specialis
that
consideration is irrelevant.
[19]
In
Willis
Faber Enthoven (Pty) Ltd v Receiver of Revenue,
[5]
this
court held that the
condictio
indebiti
is
an equitable remedy and its object is to prevent one person being
unjustifiably enriched at the expense of another. The principles
underlying the c
ondictiones
are
not immutable but are constantly evolving to accommodate new
circumstances.
[6]
[20]
In its written argument,
Nedbank
relied on the
condictio
sine causa specialis
and
in the alternative, on the
condictio
indebiti.
Nedbank’s
purported reliance on the
condictio
sine causa specialis
is
understandable. As mentioned,
if the
unjust enrichment claim were to be decided based on the
conditio
sine causa specialis
, any negligence on
Nedbank’s part is irrelevant. If, however, it were to be
determined according to the principles applicable
to the
condictio
indebiti
, Nedbank’s negligence,
if proved, may preclude reliance on that
condictio
.
[21]
Before us, counsel for Nedbank argued that
notwithstanding the factual matrix pleaded in its counterclaim, which
brings its enrichment
claim within the ambit of the
condictio
indebiti,
Nedbank is not precluded from
relying on the
condictio sine causa
specialis
. He submitted that in
circumstances where the underlying
causa
for the payment was an invalid contract, the
latter
condictio
is
the correct remedy. In such a case the payment was not made
indebiti
because Nedbank was not settling a debt
when making the payment to the Trust but was purportedly performing
in terms of a void contract.
There was consequently no
causa
for the payment, and Nedbank’s counterclaim
must accordingly be decided in terms of the legal principles
applicable to the
condictio sine causa
specialis
. The issue regarding the
reasonableness of its mistake therefore does not arise, or so he
argued.
[22]
In
my view, even though that submission is legally sound as a general
proposition, the facts pleaded in this matter bring the enrichment
claim squarely within the ambit of the
condictio
indebiti
.
Although it is not necessary for a claimant to commit in its
pleadings to either
condictiones
to
the exclusion of the other,
[7]
Nedbank
has firmly nailed its colours to the mast of the
condictio
indebiti
.
It has pleaded,
inter
alia
,
that the payment was made ‘in the reasonable, but mistaken,
belief that it was owing in terms of the loan agreement.’
And
furthermore, that the payment was made ‘
indebiti
,’
in that there was no legal obligation to make it.
It
is furthermore common cause that Nedbank made the payment to the
Trust in the mistaken belief that the underlying agreement was
valid
and enforceable. Nedbank’s counterclaim must accordingly be
decided based on the legal principles applicable to the
condictio
indebiti
.
[8]
In any
event, for reasons that follow below, holding Nedbank to its pleaded
cause of action makes no difference to the outcome of
the case.
[23]
That the trust has been enriched at Nedbank’s
expense is manifest and incontrovertible.
On
the common cause facts, the Trust has been enriched in the sum of
R5 436 347,57, being the original loan amount advanced
to
it in terms of the invalid agreement, less the payments it made from
time to time.
It is also not disputed that,
apart from the issue whether Nedbank’s mistake was reasonable
and thus excusable, all the other
requisites for a claim based on
enrichment have been established. The only issue that thus remains
for determination is whether
Nedbank’s mistake was reasonable
and excusable.
Was Nedbank’s
mistake reasonable?
[24]
The
reasonableness of Nedbank’s mistake depends on the facts, on
which the Court must exercise a value judgment. In this regard
the
Court must consider the relationship between the parties, the conduct
of the Trust, whether the trustees were aware of the
mistake, whether
their conduct contributed to the mistake, Nedbank’s state of
mind, and the culpability of its ignorance
in making the payment.
[9]
It is
trite that Nedbank bears the onus of proving that its conduct was not
so slack that it is undeserving of the Court’s
protection.
[25]
In my view, it would be unreasonable to ascribe
negligence to Nedbank’s failure to perform a due diligence
exercise to verify
the Trust’s capacity beyond its reliance on
the documents provided by the trustees. Before the conclusion of the
loan agreement,
Nedbank was provided with a Trust resolution
indicating that the first and second appellants had been duly
authorized to conclude
the agreement on its behalf. In addition, in
terms of the loan agreement the first and second appellants warranted
the correctness
of the information provided to Nedbank and declared
that ‘no information that may affect Nedbank’s decision
to approve
the loan has been withheld.’ The first and second
appellants also provided Nedbank with a certificate confirming that
the
loan agreement was for the benefit of the Trust beneficiaries and
proof that the agreement has been duly authorized in terms of
a
resolution adopted by the Trust. In addition, the loan was secured by
a covering mortgage bond, as well as by suretyships.
[26]
While
it is possible that the first and second appellants initially acted
in the bona fide but mistaken belief that their actions
conformed to
the trust deed, as trustees they nevertheless bore the primary
responsibility of ensuring that the Trust complied
with all its
internal formalities before concluding the contact.
[10]
The
Trust acquiesced in the implementation of the loan agreement for some
five years and purported to perform its contractual obligations
in
terms thereof. It is common cause that it continued to pay the
monthly instalments and had in fact paid about 60 instalments,
amounting to more than R11 million. It also went so far as to
mortgage its immovable property as security. Thus, the undisputed
evidence regarding the appellants’ conduct, both before and
after the conclusion of the loan agreement, significantly attenuates
Nedbank’s culpability and renders its mistake excusable.
[27]
In conclusion then, I find that Nedbank’s
reliance on the first and second appellants’ representations
regarding the
capacity of the Trust was reasonable in the
circumstances. Nedbank’s failure to undertake a due diligence
exercise in respect
of the trust deed under these circumstances was
therefore understandable and, in my view, did not constitute
inexcusable slackness.
Its mistake was therefore reasonable and
excusable, and the counterclaim must consequently succeed.
Costs
[28]
There can be little doubt that Nedbank was substantially successful
and is therefore entitled
to its costs, including the costs of two
counsel. There are, however, different considerations in respect of
the main appeal. In
concluding the loan, the first and second
appellants purported to act on behalf of the Trust and in the process
made extensive
representations to Nedbank regarding the Trust’s
capacity. They did so in circumstances where they ought to have been
aware
of the trust deed terms and should have known that the Trust
had been incapacitated because there were an insufficient number of
trustees in office at the material time. It is therefore only fair
that they should bear their own costs in respect of the main
appeal.
Order
[29]
In the result the following order issues:
1.
The appeal is upheld.
2.
The cross-appeal is upheld with costs, including the costs of two
counsel where
so employed.
3.
The order of the High Court is set aside and is substituted by the
following
order:
‘
(1)
The trustees of the PATRICK MALABELA FAMILY TRUST are ordered to pay
the amount of R5 436 347.57
to the plaintiff, together with
mora interest thereon, calculated from 12 September 2019 to date of
final payment, both days inclusive.
(2)
The plaintiff is directed to take such steps as may be necessary for
the cancellation of
the covering mortgage bond executed in its favour
and registered with the Registrar of Deeds, Pretoria, with
registration number
B2260/2023.
(3)
In the event of the plaintiff failing to comply with paragraph (2)
within 30 days from the
date of this order, the sheriff is hereby
authorized to sign and execute all such documents, and do all such
things as may be necessary,
for the implementation of paragraph (2).
(4)
The trustees of the PATRICK MALABELA FAMILY TRUST are ordered to pay
the plaintiff’s
costs of suit.’
________________________
J E
SMITH
ACTING
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
For the appellants:
L Hollander
Instructed by:
Faber Goërtz Ellis Austen Inc, Bryanston
Lovius Block Inc,
Bloemfontein
For the respondent:
JG Wasserman SC and JM Kilian
Instructed by: O’Connell
Attorneys, Bryanston
Honey & Partners Inc,
Bloemfontein
[1]
Land
and Agricultural Development Bank of SA v Parker and Others
[2004]
ZASCA 56
;
2005 (2) SA 77
(SCA);
[2004] 4 All SA 261
(SCA) para 11,
where Cameron JA said that: ‘It follows that a provision
requiring that a specified minimum number of trustees
must hold
office is a capacity-defining condition. It lays down a prerequisite
that must be fulfilled before the trust estate
can be bound. When
fewer trustees than the number specified are in office, the trust
suffers from an incapacity that precludes
action on its behalf.’
[2]
McLeod
v Kweyiya
[2013]
ZASCA 28; 2013 (6) SA 1 (SCA).
[3]
McCarthy
Retail Ltd v Short-distance Carriers CC
[2001]
ZASCA 14
;
[2001] 3 All SA 236
(A)
paras
8-10;
Kudu
Granite Operations (Pty) Ltd v Caterna Ltd
[2003]
ZASCA 64
;
2003 (5) SA 193
(SCA).
[4]
Govender v Standard
Bank of South Africa Limited
1984
(4) SA 392
(C) at 400 (
Govender
).
[5]
Willis Faber Enthoven
(Edms) Bpk v Receiver of Revenue and Another
[1991] ZASCA 163
;
1992
(4) SA 202
(A) (
Willis
Faber
).
[6]
Bowman, De Wet and Du
Plessis NNO and Others v Fidelity Bank Ltd
1997
(2) SA 35
(AD), at page 40A-C, where Harmse JA said that the
principles underlying the
condictio
are not immutable and
that, in principle, a party is entitled to rely “op die
analogiese aanwending van die
condictio
indebiti
…”’
[7]
Govender
at
396C-D, cited with approval in
B
& H Engineering v First National Bank of SA Ltd
1995
(2) 279 (A). See also:
First
National Bank of Southern Africa Ltd v Perry NO and Others
2001
(3) SA 60
(SCA) at para [23].
[8]
In
Kudu
(supra),
at 201G-H, this court dealt with a void contract, albeit when void
due to statutory prohibition. The court held that
the
condictio
applies
if the contract which gave rise to the transfer of property was
ab
initio
unenforceable
or has subsequently become unenforceable. And that ‘[t]he same
principle applies if the contract is void due
to a statutory
prohibition (
Wilken
v Kohler
1913
AD 135
at 149-50), in which case the
condictio
indebiti
applies.’
[9]
Willis
Faber
at
224G-226A.
[10]
Land
and Agricultural Bank of South Africa v Parker & Others
2005
(2) SA 77
(SCA).
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