Case Law[2024] ZASCA 75South Africa
Old Mutual Unit Trust Managers Limited v Living Hands (Pty) Ltd and Others (18/2023) [2024] ZASCA 75; [2024] 3 All SA 407 (SCA); 2024 (6) SA 85 (SCA) (16 May 2024)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
16 May 2024
Headnotes
Summary: Delict – pure economic loss – financial institution – client calling up investment portfolio – funds paid out in terms of investment agreement – client’s directors misappropriating funds – wrongfulness not proved – no legal duty on institution to safeguard funds – institution not negligent – theft of funds not reasonably foreseeable – neither factual nor legal causation established – appeal upheld.
Judgment
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## Old Mutual Unit Trust Managers Limited v Living Hands (Pty) Ltd and Others (18/2023) [2024] ZASCA 75; [2024] 3 All SA 407 (SCA); 2024 (6) SA 85 (SCA) (16 May 2024)
Old Mutual Unit Trust Managers Limited v Living Hands (Pty) Ltd and Others (18/2023) [2024] ZASCA 75; [2024] 3 All SA 407 (SCA); 2024 (6) SA 85 (SCA) (16 May 2024)
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sino date 16 May 2024
FLYNOTES:
CIVIL LAW – Delict – Pure economic loss –
Financial
institution – Client calling up investment portfolio –
Funds paid out in terms of investment agreement
– Client’s
directors misappropriating funds – No indication that funds
would be misappropriated by the
wrongdoers – No possibility,
let alone reasonable possibility, that this could have been
foreseen – Wrongfulness
not proved – No legal duty on
institution to safeguard funds – Institution not negligent –
Neither factual
nor legal causation established – None of
statutory and constitutional provisions on which plaintiffs rely
grants them
a right of action – Appeal upheld.
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case No: 18/2023
In the matter between:
OLD
MUTUAL UNIT TRUST MANAGERS LIMITED
APPELLANT
and
LIVING
HANDS (PTY) LTD
FIRST
RESPONDENT
WILHELMINA
JACOBA LUBBE
SECOND RESPONDENT
PRELLER
NO
XOLA
COLUMBUS STEMELA NO
THIRD RESPONDENT
LIVING
HANDS (PROPRIETARY) LIMITED
FOURTH RESPONDENT
JOSEPH
ARTHUR WALTER BROWN
FIFTH
RESPONDENT
ANDREW
HERBERT TUCKER
SIXTH RESPONDENT
PHILIPPUS
JOHANNES MALAN
SEVENTH RESPONDENT
HJALMAR
MULDER
EIGHTH RESPONDENT
JOHANNES
DE JONGH
NINTH RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Old Mutual Unit Trust Managers Limited
v Living Hands (Pty) Ltd and Others
(Case no
18/2023)
[2024] ZASCA
75
(
16 May
2024
)
Coram:
SCHIPPERS, NICHOLLS and GOOSEN JJA
Heard:
14 March 2024
Delivered:
16 May 2024
Summary:
Delict – pure economic loss – financial institution –
client calling up investment portfolio – funds paid
out in
terms of investment agreement – client’s directors
misappropriating funds – wrongfulness not proved –
no
legal duty on institution to safeguard funds – institution not
negligent – theft of funds not reasonably foreseeable
–
neither factual nor legal causation established – appeal
upheld.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng
Division of the High Court, Johannesburg (Siwendu J, sitting as court
of first instance):
1
The appeal is upheld with
costs, including the costs of three counsel.
2
The order of the court below
is set aside and replaced with the following:
‘
The
plaintiffs’ claim is dismissed with costs, including the costs
of three counsel.’
JUDGMENT
Schippers
JA (Nicholls and Goosen JJA concurring)
Introduction
[1]
The appellant, Old Mutual Unit Trust Managers Limited
(OMUT), a
financial institution, was the defendant in an action instituted in
the Gauteng Division of the High Court of South Africa,
Johannesburg
(the high court), by the first, second and third respondents (the
plaintiffs) in their capacities as the trustees
of the Living Hands
Umbrella Trust (the Trust). The fourth to ninth respondents (the
third parties), former directors and employees
of the Fidentia Group
of Companies (the Fidentia Group), were joined in the action by OMUT.
[2]
In the action the plaintiffs claimed damages in delict,
based on a
negligent omission by OMUT which caused the Trust to suffer pure
economic loss. The extraordinary feature of the action
is that the
undisputed, primary cause of the loss was the criminal conduct of
individuals comprising the controlling mind of the
first plaintiff,
Living Hands (Pty) Ltd, a trust administration company. At the
relevant times it was the sole trustee of the Trust
and the sole
plaintiff when the action was instituted.
[3]
OMUT defended the action on the grounds that it did not
act
wrongfully or negligently and did not cause the plaintiffs to suffer
any loss. In the alternative and to the extent that its
primary
defences were rejected, OMUT claimed an apportionment of damages from
the first plaintiff and a contribution from the third
parties, on the
basis that the loss sustained by the Trust was caused by their
criminal conduct.
[4]
The high court upheld the plaintiffs’ claim and
ordered OMUT to
pay the Trust an amount of R854 654.00, together with
in
duplum
interest and costs. It granted OMUT leave to appeal
against that order. This Court granted OMUT leave to appeal the high
court’s
order dismissing its claim for apportionment against
the first plaintiff, and a contribution from the third parties.
The
plaintiffs’ case
[5]
In broad summary, the plaintiffs allege the following
in the
particulars of claim. On 5 September 2000 Mercantile Asset Trust
Company (Pty) Ltd (Mercantile) and the Mineworkers Provident
Fund
(the Provident Fund) entered into a service level agreement. In terms
of that agreement Mercantile agreed to establish and
administer
trusts into which the Provident Fund would, from time to time, pay
death benefits for dependants of deceased members
of the Provident
Fund.
[6]
The Trust was accordingly the recipient of funds from
sources such as
the Provident Fund. It was required to administer those funds for the
benefit of the Trust beneficiaries.
[7]
In early 2002 Mercantile sold its administration business
to the
first plaintiff. The latter assumed the rights under the service
level agreement with the Provident Fund and became the
sole trustee
of the Trust. The first plaintiff was thus obliged to perform the
administration function.
[8]
On 10 May 2002 the first
plaintiff, then known as Mantadia Asset Trust Company (Matco),
entered into an agreement with OMUT, which
was replaced by a new
agreement concluded on 15 September 2004 (the OMUT agreement). These
agreements regulated the relationship
between the first plaintiff and
OMUT pertaining to the buying, selling and switching of units in
portfolios administered by OMUT,
a manager as defined in the
Collective Investment Schemes Control Act 45 of 2002 (CISCA).
[1]
[9]
On 5 October 2004 Fidentia Holdings (Pty) Ltd (Fidentia
Holdings)
concluded a sale of shares agreement with the shareholders of the
first plaintiff (then Matco), in terms of which the
latter sold its
entire share capital to Fidentia Holdings for R93 million. The
directors of Fidentia Holdings were Mr Joseph Arthur
Walter Brown
(the fifth respondent), Mr Graham Alan Maddock, Mr Andrew
Herbert Tucker (the sixth respondent), Mr Hjalmar Mulder
(the eighth
respondent) and Mr Johannes Cornelis Linde.
[10]
Fidentia Asset Managers (Pty) Ltd (FAM), was a wholly-owned
subsidiary of Fidentia
Holdings. Messrs Brown, Maddock and De Jongh
were its directors. FAM was an approved portfolio manager in terms of
s 4 of the Stock
Exchange Control Act 1 of 1985 (Stock Exchange
Control Act) and s 5 of the Financial Markets Control Act 55 of 1989
(Financial
Markets Control Act). When these statutes were repealed,
FAM was registered as a financial services provider in terms of s 8
of
the Financial Advisory and Intermediary Services Act 37 of 2002
(FAIS Act).
[11]
On 15 October 2004, prior to the closing date of the sale of shares
agreement,
Mr Steven de Kock, Mr Johannes de Jongh (the ninth
respondent) and Mr Linde, acting on behalf of FAM, met with
representatives
of OMUT. At that meeting they handed two letters to
Mr Andries Cronje, a compliance officer employed by Old Mutual. The
first was
a letter by Matco to FAM confirming FAM’s appointment
as the ‘Portfolio Manager’ of the Trust; that FAM was
registered
with the Financial Services Board (FSB); and that Mr De
Jongh, also registered with the FSB, would manage the portfolio. The
second
letter was an instruction by FAM to OMUT to liquidate R150
million of the Trust’s assets with immediate effect, and to
transfer
the proceeds into FAM’s trust account.
[12]
As at 15 October 2004, OMUT had invested some R1.24 billion in
various portfolios
forming part of collective investment schemes as
defined in CISCA. These investments were made in accordance with its
agreements
with the first plaintiff.
[13]
OMUT did not act on FAM’s instruction to immediately liquidate
R150 million
of the Trust’s assets. Instead, by letter dated 15
October 2004, OMUT informed FAM that it would only act on a signed,
written
instruction from the first plaintiff confirming the proper
appointment of FAM. On the same day OMUT wrote to Mr Geoff Gover, the
first plaintiff’s Managing Director, advising him of the
meeting and what OMUT had communicated to FAM.
[14]
On 19 October 2004 Mr Gover authorised Symmetry Multi Manager
(Symmetry) to
provide information to FAM regarding the Trust’s
investment with OMUT. Symmetry is a division within Old Mutual which
gave
investment advice concerning the Trust’s portfolio with
OMUT.
[15]
On 19 October 2004 Fidentia Holdings became the first plaintiff’s
sole
shareholder, pursuant to the sale of shares agreement. The first
plaintiff thus became a wholly-owned subsidiary of Fidentia Holdings.
The existing directors of the first plaintiff resigned. Fidentia
Holdings appointed Mr Linde, Mr Tucker and Mr Philippus Johannes
Malan (the seventh respondent), as directors of the first plaintiff.
[16]
By letter dated 19 October 2004, the first plaintiff informed
Symmetry and
OMUT that its board had resolved to call up its entire
investment portfolio with OMUT with immediate effect, and requested
OMUT
to transfer the funds to the first plaintiff’s bank
account by no later than 17h00 that day. The letter was signed by the
first plaintiff’s Managing Director, Mr Malan, and its
director, Mr Tucker. It states that the first plaintiff was ‘legally
and morally unable to perpetuate the status quo’, for the
following reasons:
‘
1.
No legally binding written mandate is currently in existence;
2.
The provisions of the
Financial Advisory and Intermediary Services
Act do
not appear to have been fully complied with;
3.
There is no written appointment of an asset manager;
4.
Questions around fees, performance bonuses, and incentives derived
from the portfolio
have not been adequately answered;
5.
There appears to be a discrepancy between the portfolio balances as
calculated
by Old Mutual and Symmetry;
6.
Compliance documentation could not be produced and no plausible
explanation [was]
given therefor;
7.
Questions around the construction of the underlying portfolio have
not been adequately
answered – in this regard, you originally
undertook to revert with answers by 17:00 on 18 October 2004, which
time was later
extended to 18:00, where after you confirmed to us
that no mandate is currently in existence.’
[17]
On 20 October 2004 Mr Chris Potgieter, OMUT’s Finance, Risk and
Compliance
Manager, replied to the letter of 19 October 2004. He
stated that OMUT would accept the letter calling up the entire Matco
investment
trust portfolio ‘as soon as we receive confirmation
of authority from the beneficial owner’.
[18]
On the same day (20 October 2004) the first plaintiff faxed a letter,
signed
by its Managing Director, Mr Malan, to OMUT and Symmetry. In
the letter the first plaintiff confirmed that (i) Mr Malan was the
sole representative trustee of the Trust; (ii) FAM had been given a
full discretionary mandate on 14 October 2004 to act as the
investment manager of the Trust; and (iii) in terms of that mandate,
FAM was authorised to liquidate the entire investment portfolio
with
OMUT or portions thereof, as it deemed fit.
[19]
Between 22 October and 10 November 2004, OMUT paid all the funds
which the
first plaintiff had invested through OMUT in various
collective investment schemes, totalling R1 130 319 447.32
(the
Funds), into the first plaintiff’s designated bank
account. The plaintiffs alleged that OMUT did so without insisting on
the 90-day written notice of intention to terminate, specified in the
OMUT agreement.
[20]
Following the transfer of the Funds from OMUT to the first plaintiff,
the latter
paid them over to Fidentia Holdings and its wholly-owned
subsidiary, Fidentia Capitalwise (Pty) Ltd. The Funds were then under
the control of ‘the Fidentia wrongdoers’, as the
plaintiffs describe them in the particulars of claim. They did not
invest the Funds for the benefit of the Trust or its beneficiaries.
Instead, they misappropriated the Funds.
[21]
The plaintiffs alleged that by repaying the Funds to the first
plaintiff, OMUT
acted wrongfully. More specifically, it was alleged
that ‘OMUT owed the Trust and the Trust beneficiaries a legal
duty to
comply with the statutory duties’ set out in CISCA, the
Financial Institutions (Protection of Funds Act) 28 of 2001
(Protection
of Funds Act), the Trust Property Control Act 57 of 1988
(Trust Property Control Act), and ss 27 and 28 of the Constitution.
This
legal duty, so the plaintiffs alleged, arose by virtue of the
contractual relationship between OMUT and the first plaintiff, the
provisions of the trust deed pertaining to the Trust (the Trust
Deed), and the nature of the Funds.
[22]
The plaintiffs further alleged that OMUT was negligent in that it
failed to
ensure that its staff was properly supervised in the
exercise of their duties and it did not act with the necessary skill,
care
and diligence, and in the interests of the investor, as required
by CISCA. It was also alleged that OMUT contravened the provisions
of
the Trust Property Control Act and the Protection of Funds Act.
[23]
In February 2007 the Western Cape High Court placed the whole of the
financial
services business of FAM and Fidentia Holdings under
provisional curatorship. Curators were appointed and the provisional
order
was made final on 27 March 2007. When the curators took control
of the Fidentia Group, including the Trust and FAM, an amount of
R
1 133 911 822.12 was supposed to have been under the
control of FAM and the Trust for the benefit of Trust beneficiaries.
The curators recovered R403 806 196.00, incurred expenses of
R100 071 674.00 in doing so, and distributed the remaining
R272
689 727.00 to the plaintiffs. The plaintiffs claimed payment the
balance of R861 222 095.12 (amended during the trial to R854
654.00)
as damages from OMUT.
[24]
The plaintiffs alleged that OMUT caused this loss. They claimed that
the Fidentia
wrongdoers would not have been able to act as they did,
had OMUT complied with its alleged duties.
The
evidence
[25]
The claim was tried before Siwendu J in 2022. The main witnesses for
the plaintiffs
were Mr De Jongh, Mr Malan, Ms Invanka Atcheson (a
former trustee of Matco), Mr George Nicholas Papadakis, a chartered
accountant
and curator of the Fidentia Group, and Mr German Emmanuel
Anderson, a former employee of the FSB and its successor, the
Financial
Sector Conduct Authority (FSCA).
[26]
As appears more fully below, the evidence of these witnesses was
merely a narrative
of the events that led to the transfer of the
Funds from OMUT to the first plaintiff. Their evidence did not
establish the elements
of the plaintiff’s claim. OMUT did not
adduce any evidence and closed its case.
[27]
Mr De Jongh testified about the meeting on 15 October 2004 with Mr
Cronje at
OMUT. He confirmed that the Trust had appointed FAM as its
portfolio manager and that he had signed the letter instructing OMUT
to liquidate R150 million of the Trust’s assets. Mr De Jongh
said that he had no reason to doubt that those within the Fidentia
Group were persons of integrity. He stated that he had not seen any
wrongdoing such as theft or fraud and that had there been such
wrongdoing, he would have reported it to the authorities.
[28]
Mr Malan described the circumstances surrounding his appointment as a
trustee
of the first plaintiff (then Matco) and its appointment of
FAM as portfolio manager. He said that FAM’s appointment was
part
of the Fidentia Group’s business model. He explained how
it came about that he, together with Mr Gover and Mr Arthur
Brown, had signed the letter authorising FAM to verify the extent of
the investment portfolio with OMUT; to make and execute investment
decisions; and to instruct Symmetry to implement any decision taken
by FAM.
[29]
Mr Malan said that there was no harm or imprudence in appointing FAM
to manage
all the issues around the funds invested with OMUT, since
FAM was approved and registered with the FSB. He confirmed his
involvement
in drafting the letter of 20 October 2004, advising OMUT
of the mandate given to FAM to liquidate the investment portfolio
with
OMUT as FAM deemed fit.
[30]
Ms Atcheson was employed by the first plaintiff (then Matco) since
the early
1990s and subsequently became a shareholder. She described
the process in making payments to beneficiaries and guardians, and
how
Matco carried out its functions under the Trust Deed. She
testified that when the sale of shares agreement was concluded, there
was nothing to indicate that the persons involved in Fidentia
Holdings were dishonest. She and the other shareholders were guided
by Investec Bank Limited, which was aware of the Matco’s
functions and the type of beneficiaries it served. Ms Atcheson said
that she would have had major doubts about proceeding with the sale
of Matco’s shares to Fidentia Holdings if there was any
indication that Matco was dealing with dishonest people.
[31]
The testimony of Mr Papadakis concerned the circumstances in which
FAM’s
licence as an authorised financial services provider
(FSP) was withdrawn, and the Fidentia Group placed under curatorship
by the
Registrar of Financial Services Providers (the Registrar). Mr
Papadakis was one of the curators. An inspection report dated 16
January 2007 issued by the FSB, in sum, states that FAM and its key
individuals failed to comply with the requirements of honesty
and
integrity contained in the fit and proper requirements in the FAIS
Act, and that R685 million of client funds were unaccounted
for.
[32]
Mr Papadakis said that a whistle blower had alerted the FSB to the
improprieties
occurring within the Fidentia Group; that the curators
discovered that FAM was run as a Ponzi scheme; and that the amount of
funds
unaccounted for was even higher than R685 million. He gave
details of the amounts recovered and what was paid to the plaintiffs.
Mr Papadakis also said that the unlawful conduct of persons
within the Fidentia Group was not in the public domain when the
investment portfolio was transferred to FAM, which was an approved
FSP.
[33]
Mr Anderson’s witness statement was admitted into evidence. In
short,
the statement describes the procedure followed by the FSB when
it receives information indicating a failure to adhere to the
legislation
which it oversees. The FSB would usually request
information from the FSP relating to the allegations against it; the
type of licence
granted to it; the mandates given by its clients; and
details of the funds invested and the investment strategies adopted
by the
FSP.
The
high court’s judgment
[34]
The high court found that the first plaintiff, as a trustee, owed a
fiduciary
duty to the Trust and its beneficiaries; and that ‘Trust
assets in the form of the portfolio were liquidated from units to
cash on the instruction of the Trustee’. Despite this finding,
the court held that ‘the legislative reach goes beyond
the
narrow strictures of OMUT’s contractual relationship with the
Trust administration company and included the Trust as
a party to
whom a duty would be owed by a manager’, apparently in terms of
s 71 of CISCA. It then held that ‘OMUT owed
a direct duty of
care to the Trust on whose behalf the assets were held and managed’,
which ‘ranks higher than duties
arising from the contractual
obligations’ under the OMUT agreement.
[35]
The high court stated that the legislation on which the plaintiffs
relied to
establish wrongfulness ‘does not expressly create
liability for losses to individual investors or beneficiaries’,
but
granted them ‘indirect protection through the effective
regulation of the responsible financial institution’. The
ultimate
goal of regulation, the court said, is ‘the best
interests of . . . investors as a whole’; and the fact that the
FSB
may not have investigated particular conduct, ‘does not
exclude statutory liability or liability at common law if it is found
that the institution negligently breached its institutional
obligations’.
[36]
The high court held that public and legal policy considerations
dictated that
it would be reasonable to impose liability for pure
economic loss in this case, which it said, ‘would be wholly
consistent
with constitutional norms’. The court stated that
‘the nature of the harm and the manner in which it occurred is
what
is contemplated by the relevant statutes’, the provisions
of which are intended to protect the Funds and the end beneficiaries,
albeit indirectly.
[37]
OMUT, the high court found, failed to report the facts and events
leading to
the release of the Funds to the Master of the High Court,
and consequently contravened s 9(1) of the Trust Property Control
Act,
read with s 2(b) of the Protection of Funds Act. This, the court
said, rendered its conduct ‘wrongful and culpable in respect
of
the Trust and the Trust beneficiaries’.
[38]
As regards negligence, the high court held that in the absence of an
explanation
by OMUT, the inescapable inference was that it ‘quickly
yielded to the self-seeking posturing of the Fidentia wrongdoers’;
and that ‘despite demonstrating the level of prudence,
diligence and skill and care required’ (by insisting on a
signed,
written instruction from the first plaintiff confirming the
appointment of FAM, and confirmation of authority from the beneficial
owner before accepting the letter calling up the entire Matco
investment trust portfolio), OMUT ‘did not follow through’.
This conduct, the high court held, was ‘not reasonable and not
one expected of a prudent manager’.
[39]
The court went on to say that OMUT had 90 days to comply with the
first plaintiff’s
instruction, which was ‘sufficient time
to notify the regulatory bodies of the dis-investment, given the
scale and size of
the portfolio’. A ‘measure of due
diligence on Fidentia and FAM as well as notification to the
regulatory bodies’,
the court held, ‘is not an
unreasonable, burdensome or costly exercise or requirement for an
entity of OMUT’s calibre
and size’. Consequently, the
court found that the plaintiffs had proved negligence.
[40]
On the issue of
causation, the high court made the following findings. OMUT was
‘aware of its obligations to the Trust and
in turn, the end
beneficiaries’. It was alive to the material risks of
liquidating the portfolio and paying over the Funds.
There was ‘a
real probability that Fidentia’s conduct
would
have been detected early
but for OMUT’s failure to report it’ (to Standard Bank,
the Registrar and the Master).
[2]
This failure, the high court found, ‘enabled the acquisition
[of the Funds] and what followed thereafter’.
[41]
OMUT, the high court said, led no evidence to show that its failure
to report
the disinvestment would have made no difference to the
events that followed and the loss suffered. The court stated that on
the
facts and the sheer size of the portfolio, the material risks and
detrimental consequences would have been foreseen by a prudent
manager. The plaintiffs, the court concluded, had established factual
and legal causation.
The
issues
[42]
The central issue raised by this appeal is whether the plaintiffs
established
the elements of delictual liability. These are:
(a)
wrongfulness;
(b)
negligence; and
(c)
causation.
Wrongfulness
Pure
economic loss and omissions
[43]
The plaintiffs’ claim is for pure economic loss based on an
omission.
OMUT, they say, culpably failed to take steps to prevent
the loss caused to the Trust and the Trust beneficiaries by the
misappropriation
of the Funds by the Fidentia wrongdoers.
[44]
There is no general right
not to be caused pure economic loss.
[3]
Wrongfulness must be positively established.
[4]
Thus, the plaintiffs were required to show that an entity in the
position of OMUT, which carried out an instruction of its client
to
call up an investment, owed a legal duty not to cause harm to the
beneficiaries of one or more of the trusts administered by
that
client.
[45]
In
Loureiro
[5]
the Constitutional Court stated that the wrongfulness enquiry focuses
on
‘
the
[harm-causing] conduct and goes to whether the policy and legal
convictions of the community, constitutionally understood, regard
it
as acceptable. It is based on the duty not to cause harm –
indeed to respect rights – and questions the reasonableness
of
imposing liability.’
[46]
The Constitutional Court
in
Country
Cloud
[6]
described wrongfulness
thus:
‘
Wrongfulness
is an element of delictual liability. It functions to determine
whether the infliction of culpably caused harm demands
the imposition
of liability or, conversely, whether “the social, economic and
other costs are just too high to justify the
use of the law of delict
for the resolution of the particular issue”. Wrongfulness
typically acts as a brake on liability,
particularly in areas of the
law of delict where it is undesirable or overly burdensome to impose
liability.’
[47]
It is therefore not
surprising that the courts have been cautious in extending liability
to new situations involving pure financial
loss. This is because of
the spectre of exposing defendants ‘to a liability in an
indeterminate amount for an indeterminate
time to an indeterminate
class’.
[7]
The
plaintiffs’ allegations
[48]
The plaintiffs allege that OMUT’s conduct in paying out the
Funds was
wrongful for the following reasons. By 22 October 2004 OMUT
knew or should have known that Fidentia Holdings had taken control of
the first plaintiff, and that the latter would place the Funds under
the administration of FAM. There was a material risk that
the Trust
had come under the control of individuals who may not act in the best
interests of the Trust beneficiaries, and if the
Funds were repaid to
the first plaintiff, they would be depleted to the prejudice of the
Trust and the Trust beneficiaries.
[49]
The plaintiffs relied on various pieces of legislation as well as the
Constitution
for their allegation that OMUT owed a statutory duty –
not to its client, the first plaintiff – but to ‘the
Trust
and the Trust beneficiaries’, not to release the Funds to
the first plaintiff without having taken steps to safeguard the
Funds. These steps, so the plaintiffs alleged, included OMUT
satisfying itself that the first plaintiff and FAM would act
honestly,
prudently and in the interests of the trust beneficiaries.
[50]
The statutory provisions on which the plaintiffs relied were these:
(a)
Sections 2(1) and 4(4) of CISCA, which regulate
the functions of a
manager in administering collective investment schemes.
(b)
Section 2 of the Protection of Funds Act, which requires
financial
institutions inter alia to exercise utmost good faith and proper care
and diligence.
(c)
Section 9 of the Trust Property Control Act, which
enjoins trustees
to perform their duties and exercise their powers with care,
diligence and skill.
(d)
Sections 27 and 28 of the Constitution, which guarantee
the right to
social security and children’s rights, respectively.
[51]
The plaintiffs further alleged that OMUT owed the Trust and the Trust
beneficiaries
a legal duty to comply with the constitutional and
statutory duties described above, by virtue of ‘the contractual
relationship
arising from the first and subsequently the second OMUT
agreements’ as well as ‘the provisions of the Trust
Deed’.
No
legal duty established
[52]
As this court explained
in
Olitzki
,
[8]
whether the breach of a statutory duty is delictually wrongful is a
matter of statutory interpretation:
‘
Where
the legal duty the plaintiff invokes derives from breach of a
statutory provision, the jurisprudence of this Court has developed
a
supple test. The focal question remains one of statutory
interpretation, since the statute may on a proper construction by
implication
itself confer a right of action, or alternatively provide
the basis for inferring that a legal duty exists at common law. The
process
in either case requires a consideration of the statute as a
whole, its objects and provisions, the circumstances in which it was
enacted, and the kind of mischief it was designed to prevent. But
where a common-law duty is at issue, the answer now depends less
on
the application of formulaic approaches to statutory construction
than on a broad assessment by the court whether it is “just
and
reasonable” that a civil claim for damages should be accorded.
“The conduct is wrongful, not because of the breach
of the
statutory duty
per
se
,
but because it is reasonable in the circumstances to compensate the
plaintiff for the infringement of his legal right.”
The
determination of reasonableness here in turn depends on whether
affording the plaintiff a remedy is congruent with the court’s
appreciation of the sense of justice of the community. This
appreciation must unavoidably include the application of broad
considerations
of public policy determined also in the light of the
Constitution and the impact upon them that the grant or refusal of
the remedy
the plaintiff seeks will entail.
’
[53]
In
Steenkamp
[9]
the Constitutional Court held that factors pointing to wrongfulness
include the following: whether the object of the statutory
scheme is
mainly to protect individuals or advance the public good; whether the
relevant statute envisages, directly or by inference,
a claim for
damages by the aggrieved party; whether the imposition of liability
for damages will have a ‘chilling effect’
on the
performance of administrative or statutory functions; whether the
ensuing harm was foreseeable; and whether the party bearing
the loss
is the author of its own misfortune.
[54]
Applied to the present case, the first plaintiff – which
intentionally
misappropriated the Funds and consequently is the
author of its own misfortune – asks that liability for damages
be imposed
on OMUT on the basis that OMUT negligently enabled that
misappropriation by repaying the Funds to the first plaintiff. And
this,
when the Funds were repaid in accordance with the OMUT
agreement and the first plaintiff’s duly authorised
instruction. The
proposition needs merely to be stated to appreciate
its absurdity.
[55]
It goes without saying that such a claim is contrary to the legal
convictions
of the community, and the imposition of liability sought
by the plaintiffs is both unreasonable and inconsistent with public
policy.
OMUT acted as any reasonable investment manager would have
done. It ensured that the instruction from the first plaintiff was
properly
authorised, and then acted upon it as it was contractually
bound to do. OMUT had no duty to involve itself in the inner workings
of the Trust, and it was not permitted to refuse to comply with a
duly authorised instruction to call up the Funds. On this basis
alone, the plaintiffs failed to prove wrongfulness.
[56]
Aside from this, it is clear from the evidence that OMUT could not,
and did
not, foresee that if the Funds were repaid to the first
plaintiff, they would be dissipated to the prejudice of the Trust and
its
beneficiaries. Rather, the evidence points the other way.
[57]
Mr De Jongh stated that there was no reason to doubt that those
within the
Fidentia Group were persons of integrity. Mr Malan said
that FAM was appointed to manage the funds invested with OMUT,
because
FAM was approved by and registered with the FSB. Ms Atcheson
testified that she wanted to ensure that the interests of the trust
beneficiaries were protected; that there was no indication that the
persons involved in Fidentia Holdings were dishonest; and that
if
they were, it was doubtful that Matco would have proceeded with the
sale of its shares.
[58]
Mr Papadakis confirmed that FAM was properly licensed and there was
nothing
in the public domain at the time to cast any doubt on the
integrity of persons within the Fidentia Group. FAM was entitled to
manage
a portfolio of assets, since it was an approved portfolio
manager in terms of the Stock Exchange Control Act and the Financial
Markets Control Act. Mr Anderson stated that because FAM was an
approved portfolio manager under these statutes, it was entitled
to
follow a shortened application process for its licence under the FAIS
Act, since it fell into the category of entities ‘whose
details
were substantially known and credentials approved of by the FSB’.
[59]
Turning to OMUT’s
alleged breach of its statutory duties, a plaintiff who seeks to
establish a delictual duty based on the
breach of a statutory
provision is required to demonstrate that the provision has been
breached; that the plaintiff is a person
for whose benefit and
protection the statutory duty was imposed; that the nature of the
harm and the manner in which it occurred
are contemplated by the
enactment; and that the defendant acted negligently.
[10]
None of these requirements were met in this case.
[60]
Contrary to the high court’s conclusion, s 71 of CISCA does not
extend
beyond OMUT’s contractual relationship with the first
plaintiff. Neither does the provision ‘include the Trust as a
party to whom a duty would be owed by a manager’. Section 71
provides:
‘
Status
of assets
For
purposes of this Act any-
(a)
money or other assets received from an investor; and
(b)
an asset of a portfolio,
are
regarded as being trust property for the purposes of the Financial
Institutions (Protection of Funds) Act, 2001 (Act 28 of 2001),
and a
manager, its authorised agent, trustee or custodian must deal with
such money or other assets in terms of this Act and the
deed and in
the best interests of investors.’
[61]
The Protection of Funds Act defines ‘trust property’ as
meaning:
‘
[a]ny
corporeal or incorporeal, movable or immovable assets invested, held,
kept in safe custody, controlled, administered or alienated
by any
person, partnership, company or trust for, or on behalf of, another
person, partnership, company or trust, and such other
person,
partnership, company or trust is hereinafter referred to as the
principal.’
[62]
Thus, s 71 of CISCA does
nothing more than oblige OMUT to treat the assets invested with it as
property held in trust, and to deal
with those assets in accordance
with that Act, the deed in terms of which the collective investment
scheme is established and administered,
[11]
and the best interests of the investor (defined as ‘the holder
of a participating interest in a portfolio in the Republic’).
This is consistent with s 2(1) and s 4(4) of CISCA which enjoins a
manager to administer a collective investment scheme reasonably,
honestly, fairly, with skill, care and diligence ‘in the
interests of investors’.
[63]
These provisions reinforce the fact that OMUT’s obligations
under CISCA
are to the first plaintiff – not to the Trust and
its beneficiaries. Consequently, the high courts’
interpretation
that s 71 imposes on OMUT a legal duty to deal with
money or assets in the best interests of the Trust, which ‘ranks
higher’
than its contractual obligations to the first
plaintiff, is incorrect.
[64]
Similarly, there is nothing in the Protection of Funds Act or the
Trust Property
Control Act which suggests that OMUT owed a statutory
duty not to cause harm to the Trust and its beneficiaries. Rather,
the objects
of the Protection of Funds Act are to provide for and
consolidate the laws relating to the investment, safe custody and
administration
of funds and trust property by financial institutions,
so as to enable the Registrar to protect such funds and property.
[65]
Section 2 of the Protection of Funds Act states:
‘
Duties
of persons dealing with funds of, and with trust property controlled
by, financial institutions
A
financial institution or nominee company, or director, member,
partner, official, employee or agent of the financial institution
or
nominee company, who invests, holds, keeps in safe custody, controls,
administers or alienates any funds of the financial institution
or
any trust property-
(a)
must, with regard to such funds, observe the utmost good faith and
exercise proper care and diligence;
(b)
must, with regard to the trust property and the terms of the
instrument or agreement by which the trust
or agency in question has
been created, observe the utmost good faith and exercise the care and
diligence required of a trustee
in the exercise or discharge of his
or her powers and duties; and
(c)
may not alienate, invest, pledge, hypothecate or otherwise encumber
or make use of the funds or trust
property or furnish any guarantee
in a manner calculated to gain directly or indirectly any improper
advantage for any person to
the prejudice of the financial
institution or principal concerned.’
[66]
Section 2 of the Protection of Funds Act sets the standard of conduct
–
the utmost good faith and proper care and diligence –
for persons dealing with the funds of and trust property controlled
by financial institutions which hold, control, administer and
alienate funds or trust property. In similar vein, s 9(1) of the
Trust Property Control Act requires trustees to ‘act with care,
diligence and skill which can reasonably be expected of a
person who
manages the affairs of another’.
[67]
Both these provisions are focused on the duties that the institution
owes to
the entity on whose behalf it holds and administers the funds
– in this case the first plaintiff. They do not impose a duty
on the institution to second-guess a lawful instruction by a
principal to call up funds, nor to anticipate what the principal may
do with those funds in future.
[68]
Consequently, the high
court’s finding that OMUT had contravened s 9(1) of the Trust
Property Control Act read with s 2
(b)
of the Protection of
Funds Act, is erroneous. Further, there is no evidence to support
this finding. The court paid insufficient
attention to the fact that
at the relevant time, Mr Brown, Mr Malan and Mr Mulder were the first
plaintiff’s nominees in
terms of s 6 of the Trust Property
Control Act and as such, owed the s 9(1) duties to the Trust and its
beneficiaries.
[12]
[69]
More fundamentally, the
nature of the harm and the manner in which it occurred – the
loss of the Funds because of the first
plaintiff’s own theft
and fraud after it had issued a duly authorised instruction to OMUT
to release the Funds – are
simply not contemplated by the
constitutional and statutory provisions on which the plaintiffs rely.
They do not envisage that
a financial institution in the position of
OMUT, should be required to compensate beneficiaries whose interests
the
principal
failed to protect. A
contrary interpretation would not only produce manifestly absurd
results,
[13]
but also result
in the imposition of liability to an indeterminate class that cannot
be justified in principle.
[70]
Finally, the plaintiffs failed to prove that there was a legal duty
on OMUT
not to cause the financial loss, on account of the
contractual relationship arising from the OMUT agreement and the
provisions
of the Trust Deed. There was no contractual relationship
between OMUT and the Trust and its beneficiaries. That relationship
was
between the first plaintiff, a trust administration company, and
OMUT.
[71]
The relevant terms of the OMUT agreement, in sum, are these. The
stated purpose
of the agreement is to set out the terms and
conditions under which the first plaintiff would buy, sell and switch
units in the
portfolios administered by OMUT. All transactions
relating to unit trust funds would be carried out by OMUT on receipt
of instructions
from the client (the first plaintiff). Any payments
which OMUT was required to make in terms of the agreement would be
paid into
the first plaintiff’s account at Standard Bank,
within two days of OMUT’s receipt of the request for payment
(clause
9.1).
[72]
The high court mistakenly held that OMUT had 90 days to comply with
the first
plaintiff’s instruction (in terms of the OMUT
agreement). OMUT paid the Funds into the first plaintiff’s
Standard Bank
account in terms of clause 9.1, as it was contractually
obliged to do. And the plaintiffs’ allegation that OMUT should
have
insisted on the full 90-day written notice to terminate the OMUT
agreement, defies logic. The first plaintiff was entitled to call
up
the investment at any stage and exercised its right under clause 9.1.
It instructed OMUT to transfer the Funds into its bank
account by no
later than 17h00 on 20 October 2004.
[73]
In the circumstances, there was no duty on OMUT to notify the
regulatory bodies
of the disinvestment, nor to perform ‘due
diligence on Fidentia and FAM’. In any event, and as the
evidence shows,
there was nothing to indicate that the Fidentia
wrongdoers would misappropriate the Funds.
[74]
In addition, it is a
settled principle that in general, parties to a contract contemplate
that their contract should lay down the
ambit of their reciprocal
rights and obligations. A court should therefore be loath to extend
the law of delict into this area
and thereby eliminate provisions
which the parties considered necessary.
[14]
As Brand JA put it in
Two
Oceans Aquarium
:
[15]
There is ‘no policy
imperative for the law to superimpose a further remedy’.
[75]
The Constitutional Court
expanded on this point in
Country
Cloud
:
[16]
‘
Where
parties take care to delineate their relationship by contractual
boundaries, the law should hesitate before scrubbing out
the lines
they have laid down by superimposing delictual liability. That could
subvert their autonomous dealings. This underscores
the broader point
made by this court in
Barkhuizen
that, within bounds, contractual autonomy claims some measure of
respect.’
[76]
It also does not avail the plaintiffs to attempt to found a legal
duty on the
Trust Deed. OMUT is not a party to and has no obligations
under the Trust Deed, by virtue of its contractual relationship with
the first plaintiff. Ironically, the Trust Deed protects the trustees
– including the first plaintiff – against any
loss
occasioned by any cause, save for losses on account of personal
dishonesty or gross misconduct; yet the first plaintiff seeks
the
imposition of liability on OMUT, without there being any hint of
dishonesty or misconduct on the part of OMUT.
Conclusion
on wrongfulness
[77]
The plaintiffs’ loss occurred as a result of theft and fraud by
the first
plaintiff’s directors. None of the statutory and
constitutional provisions on which the plaintiffs rely grants them a
right
of action, neither do these provisions provide a basis for
inferring a claim for civil damages at common law. In any event, the
loss was not foreseeable. Public policy as informed by constitutional
norms, dictates that it is both unreasonable and overly burdensome
to
impose liability on OMUT.
Negligence
[78]
The authoritative test
for negligence is that of Holmes JA in
Kruger
v Coetzee
:
[17]
‘
For
the purposes of liability
culpa
arises if -
(a)
a
diligens paterfamilias
in the position of the defendant
-
(i)
would foresee the reasonable possibility of his conduct injuring
another in his person or property and
causing him patrimonial loss;
and
(ii) would
take reasonable steps to guard against such occurrence; and
(b)
the defendant failed to take such steps.’
[79]
The test was tersely
stated by Scott JA in
Sea
Harvest Corporation
:
[18]
‘
[T]he
true criterion for determining negligence is whether in the
particular circumstances the conduct complained of falls short
of the
standard of the reasonable person. Dividing the inquiry into various
stages, however useful, is no more than an aid or guideline
for
resolving this issue.’
[80]
The plaintiffs did not adduce any evidence in support of their
allegation that
OMUT was negligent, because it failed to ensure that
its staff was properly supervised in the exercise of their duties.
Neither
was there any evidence to show that OMUT failed to act with
the necessary skill, care and diligence, and in the interests of the
investor.
[81]
The high watermark of the plaintiffs’ case on negligence –
and
indeed, the high court’s finding that OMUT should have
taken steps to prevent the loss of the Funds – is the meeting
at the OMUT offices on 15 October 2004. It will be recalled that at
that meeting Messrs De Kock, De Jongh and Linde handed two
letters to
Mr Cronje of OMUT: (i) by Matco, confirming FAM’s
appointment as Portfolio Manager with immediate effect;
and (ii) by
FAM, instructing OMUT to forthwith liquidate R150 million and
transfer the money to FAM’s bank account.
[82]
As stated, OMUT did not act on the latter instruction. Indeed, this
is common
ground. On the same day ie 15 October 2004, Mr Cronje of
OMUT wrote to Mr Gover, the Managing Director of Matco informing
him of the meeting. Mr Cronje stated that OMUT required a valid
instruction from Matco to liquidate R150 million of the investments;
that OMUT would only act on a signed, written instruction based on
proper authority from Matco as its client; and that the proceeds
of
the repurchase would only be paid into the account stipulated in the
OMUT agreement, not to any third party. Mr Cronje also
confirmed that
Mr Gover was satisfied that OMUT was acting in Matco’s best
interests.
[83]
These steps taken by Mr Cronje, the high court found,
demonstrated ‘the
level of prudence, diligence and skill and
care required’ of a manager in his position. But then the court
stated that OMUT
‘did not follow through’, because it
failed to notify the regulatory bodies (not specified) of the
disinvestment, and
to conduct due diligence on Fidentia and FAM.
Consequently, OMUT was held to be negligent.
[84]
On the facts, however, there was nothing to report to any regulatory
body.
And there is no basis for the inference that OMUT ‘yielded
to the self-seeking posturing of the Fidentia wrongdoers’,
in
the absence of an explanation – the plaintiffs bore the onus of
proving negligence. The evidence shows that on 20 October
2004,
Mr Malan, both in his capacity as the Managing Director of the first
plaintiff and trustee of the Trust, confirmed the mandate
given to
and the appointment of FAM on 14 October 2004, and that FAM was
mandated to liquidate the entire investment portfolio.
[85]
Moreover, there was no indication that the Funds would be
misappropriated by
the Fidentia wrongdoers. There was no possibility,
let alone a reasonable possibility, that OMUT
could
have
foreseen this. OMUT was merely the management company required to
carry out the instruction of its client (the first plaintiff)
in
accordance with the OMUT agreement. It did so.
[86]
For the above reasons, the plaintiffs failed to prove negligence on
the part
of OMUT. On this basis also, their claim ought to have been
dismissed.
Causation
[87]
In
Minister
of Police v Skosana
[19]
Corbett JA said:
‘
Causation
in the law of delict gives rise to two rather distinct problems. The
first is a factual one and relates to the question
as to whether the
negligent act or omission in question caused or materially
contributed to . . . the harm giving rise to the claim.
If it did
not, then no legal liability can arise and
cadit
quaestio
.
If it did, then the second problem becomes relevant, viz. whether the
negligent act or omission is linked to the harm sufficiently
closely
or directly for legal liability to ensue or whether, as it is
said, the harm is too remote. This is basically a juridical
problem
in which considerations of legal policy may play a part.’
[88]
The plaintiffs’ case on causation is essentially this. Had OMUT
complied
with its statutory duties, Standard Bank and the Registrar
of Collective Investment Schemes would have been informed of the
facts
(the attempted withdrawal of the R150 million and the
instruction to call up the first plaintiff’s investment
portfolio),
which the Registrar of Collective Investment Schemes
would have regarded as an ‘irregularity’. Thereafter, a
convoluted
chain of events would have followed involving, amongst
others, Standard Bank, the Registrar of Collective Investment
Schemes, the
Registrar of Financial Services Providers and the Master
of the High Court, that would have prevented the Fidentia wrongdoers
from
dealing with the funds and avoided the resultant loss.
[89]
However, the plaintiffs presented no evidence in support of these
allegations.
Mr Anderson’s evidence, on which the plaintiffs’
relied, comprised general assertions and did not establish causation.
He stated:
‘
Where
information was received indicating possible failures to adhere to
the legislation overseen by the FSB, the usual procedure
was to make
enquiries with the relevant service provider. This would usually take
the form of a request for information. Questions
that would have been
asked, would be specifically about the allegations made against the
service provider, and for the type of
licence granted to FAM, also
include details about the mandates from clients held by the service
provider, details of the investment
strategy/ies employed by the
service provider, and details of where funds were invested.’
[90]
The high court was thus asked to speculate as to what Standard Bank,
the Registrar
of Collective Investment Schemes, the Registrar of
Financial Services Providers and the Master of the High Court would
have done,
had OMUT reported the innocuous fact that FAM had
attempted to liquidate R150 million of the first plaintiff’s
investment,
prematurely by two business days. There was nothing to
report to the bank or any regulatory authority concerning the
withdrawal
of the first plaintiff’s investment portfolio, which
was done in accordance with its instructions and the terms of the
OMUT
agreement.
[91]
The high court held that ‘OMUT cannot plausibly rely on
speculative
consequences of such reporting’ and that it ‘led
no evidence to show that it would have made no difference to the
chain
of events that ensued and the loss suffered’. But that
turns the inquiry on its head. OMUT did not adduce evidence because
the onus of proving causation rested on the plaintiffs. And the facts
show that on causation, there was no case to meet.
[92]
Apart from this, on a straightforward application of the test for
factual causation,
OMUT’s repayment of the Funds to the first
plaintiff in terms of the OMUT agreement, was not the factual cause
of the loss.
OMUT carried out the first plaintiff’s instruction
to call up its investment, convert the unit trusts into cash and pay
the
money into the first plaintiff’s account at Standard Bank.
In its capacity as a trustee of the Trust, the first plaintiff
continued to hold those assets. In liquidating the investment and
transferring the Funds to the first plaintiff, OMUT caused no
loss.
[93]
The factual cause of the loss, instead, was the misappropriation of
the Funds
by the Fidentia wrongdoers who acted fraudulently and
dishonestly. In fact, that was the evidence of the plaintiffs’
own
witness, Mr Papadakis. He said that FAM was run as a Ponzi scheme
(save that Mr Brown and his cohort targeted pooled investor funds
rather than individuals); that the huge drain from the proceeds of
the portfolio of the Trust ‘was as a result of fraudulent
conduct within the Fidentia group’; and that the directors and
officers of Fidentia Holdings were the ‘criminals who
perpetrated the crimes’ (both Mr Arthur Brown and Mr Graham
Maddock were convicted of fraud and sent to prison).
[94]
What is more, OMUT was
not the legal cause of the loss. The purpose of legal causation (or
the remoteness of damage rule) is to
‘curb liability’,
[20]
by determining whether a factual link between conduct and consequence
should be recognised in law.
[21]
It takes into account factors such as reasonable foreseeability,
directness, the presence or absence of a new intervening act (
novus
actus interveniens
),
legal policy, reasonableness, fairness and justice.
[22]
[95]
A consideration of these factors leads to the conclusion that the
loss is too
remote to be recoverable from OMUT as damages. When it
paid the Funds into the first plaintiff’s banking account,
nobody,
least of all OMUT, could have known that the Fidentia
wrongdoers were going to embark on a course of criminal conduct that
would
result in the depletion of the Funds. The loss suffered was not
of a kind that was reasonably foreseeable.
[96]
It follows that the high court’s conclusions on causation are
insupportable
as a matter of law, and on the evidence. The underlying
policy reason for the remoteness rule is that the defendant must not
be
held liable for all loss factually caused by the delict, however
far removed in time and space. There was no evidence of any ‘material
risk’ in liquidating the portfolio and paying over the Funds;
and no evidence that the conduct of the Fidentia wrongdoers
could
have been detected earlier. Causation, as in the case of the other
elements of delictual liability, was not proved.
Conclusion
[97]
The various reasons given for allowing the plaintiffs’ claim,
are in
principle not legally sound. The plaintiffs, on whom the
burden of proof lay, failed to establish wrongfulness, negligence and
causation. The appeal must therefore succeed.
[98]
The parties agreed that the costs of three counsel in the court below
and on
appeal, are justified. In the particular circumstances of this
case, this Court considers orders to that effect, appropriate.
[99]
The following order is made:
1
The
appeal is upheld with costs, including the costs of three counsel.
2
The
order of the court below is set aside and replaced with the
following:
‘
The
plaintiffs’ claim is dismissed with costs, including the costs
of three counsel.’
__________________
A SCHIPPERS
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances:
For
appellant:
A E Bham SC (with E W Fagan SC and M B E Mbikiwa)
Instructed
by:
Webber Wentzel, Johannesburg
Symington
& De Kok Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For
respondents:
H Epstein SC (with A Bester SC and A Ngioli)
Instructed
by:
Knowels Husain Lindsay Inc, Johannesburg
McIntyre
Van Der Post, Bloemfontein
[1]
The
Collective Investment Schemes Control Act 45 of 2002
defines a
‘manager’ as ‘a person who is authorised in terms
of this Act to administer a collective investment
scheme’.
[2]
Emphasis in the original.
[3]
Administrateur,
Natal v Trust Bank Van Afrika Bpk
1979
(3) SA 824
(A)
at
833A-B, affirmed in
Country
Cloud Trading CC v MEC, Department of Infrastructure Development,
Gauteng
[2014]
ZACC 28
;
2015 (1) SA 1
(CC);
2014 (12) BCLR 1397
(CC) para 22.
[4]
T
elematrix
(Pty) Ltd t/a Matrix Vehicle Tracking v Advertising Standards
Authority SA
2006
(1) SA 461
(SCA)
para
13;
Country
Cloud
fn
3 para 24.
[5]
Loureiro
and Others v Imvula Quality Protection (Pty) Ltd
[2014] ZACC 4
;
2014 (5)
BCLR 511
(CC);
2014 (3) SA 394
(CC) para 53.
[6]
Country
Cloud
fn
3
para
20.
[7]
Ultramares
Corp v Touche
(1931)
255 NY 170
(74 ALR 1139
;
174 NE 441)
, approved in
Country
Cloud
fn
3 para 24.
[8]
Olitzki
Property Holdings v State Tender Board and Another
2001
(3) SA 1247
(SCA)
para
12, affirmed in
Steenkamp
No v Provincial Tender Board, Eastern Cape
2007
(3) SA 121
(CC) footnotes omitted.
[9]
Steenkamp
NO v Provincial Tender Board of the Eastern Cape
[2006] ZACC 16
;
2007 (3)
SA 121
(CC);
2007 (3) BCLR 300
(CC)
para
42.
[10]
Da
Silva and Another v Coutinho
1971 (3) SA 123
(A) at 140; J Neethling and J M Potgieter
Law
of Delict
8
ed (2020) at 90-92; J C van der Walt and J R Midgley
Principles
of the Law of Delict
4
ed (2016) at 154-158 para 95.
[11]
The
Collective
Investment Schemes Control Act
defines
‘deed’ to mean
‘
the
agreement between a manager and a trustee or custodian, or the
document of incorporation whereby a collective investment scheme
is
established and in terms of which it is administered and includes-
(i)
the deed of a management company which immediately prior to the
commencement of this Act was
a management company in terms of any
law repealed by this Act; and
(ii)
a supplemental deed entered into in terms of a deed.’
[12]
See in this regard 43
Lawsa
3 ed paras 224-227.
[13]
Shenker
v The Master and Another
1936
AD 136
at 142
;
S v
Toms; S v Bruce
[1990] ZASCA 38
;
1990
(2) SA 802
(A) at 807H-I;
Independent
Institute of Education (Pty) Limited v Kwazulu-Natal Law Society and
Others
[2019]
ZACC 47
;
2020 (2) SA 325
(CC);
2020 (4) BCLR 495
(CC) para 18.
[14]
Lillicrap,
Wassenaar and Partners v Pilkington Brothers (SA) (Pty) Ltd
1985
(1) SA 475
(A)
at
501, affirmed in
Country
Cloud
.
[15]
Trustees,
Two Oceans Aquarium Trust v Kantey & Templer (Pty) Ltd
2006
(3) SA 138
(SCA)
para
18.
[16]
Country
Cloud
fn
3
para
65, footnotes omitted.
[17]
Kruger
v Coetzee
1966
(2) SA 428
(A) at 430, affirmed in
Oppelt
v Department of Health, Western Cape
2016
(1) SA 325
(CC) para 69.
[18]
Sea
Harvest Corporation (Pty) Ltd and Another v Duncan Dock Cold Storage
(Pty) Ltd and Another
2000
(1) SA 827
(SCA) at 839F-G;
Oppelt
v Department of Health, Western Cape
2016
(1) SA 325
(CC) para 70.
[19]
Minister
of Police v Skosana
1977
(1) SA 31
(A) at 34-35, affirmed in
Lee
v Minister of Correctional Services
[2012]
ZACC 30
;
2013 (2) BCLR 129
(CC);
2013 (2) SA 144
(CC);
2013 (1) SACR
213
(CC) para 38;
De
Klerk v Minister of Police
2021
(4) SA 585
(CC) para 77.
[20]
Country
Cloud
fn
3 para 25.
[21]
15
Lawsa
3 ed para 181.
[22]
International
Shipping Co (Pty) Ltd v Bentley
1990
(1) SA 680
(A);
[1990] 1 All SA 498
(A) at 701C-E;
Standard
Chartered Bank of Canada v Nedperm Bank Ltd
[1994] ZASCA 146
;
1994
(4) SA 747
(A) at 769I-771A;
Fourway
Haulage
SA
(Pty) Ltd v SA National Road Agency Ltd
[2008] ZASCA 134
;
2009
(2) SA 150
(SCA);
[2008] JOL 22803
(SCA) paras 30-35.
sino noindex
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