Case Law[2023] ZASCA 38South Africa
Krugel Heinsen Incorporated v Thompson and Another (41/2022) [2023] ZASCA 38 (31 March 2023)
Headnotes
Summary: Appeal – reception of further evidence on appeal – evidence of events post-dating judgment of court of first instance – may be received in special and exceptional circumstances – new evidence demonstrates that no damages suffered for alleged breach of mandate – evidence allowed and appeal upheld.
Judgment
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## Krugel Heinsen Incorporated v Thompson and Another (41/2022) [2023] ZASCA 38 (31 March 2023)
Krugel Heinsen Incorporated v Thompson and Another (41/2022) [2023] ZASCA 38 (31 March 2023)
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sino date 31 March 2023
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Not Reportable
Case no: 41/2022
In the matter between:
KRÜGEL
HEINSEN INCORPORATED APPELLANT
and
CATHERINE
HELEN THOMPSON FIRST
RESPONDENT
COUPLES INVESTMENT
CC SECOND
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Krügel Heinsen
Incorporated v Thompson and Another
(Case
no 41/2022)
[2023] ZASCA 38
(31 March 2023)
Coram:
SALDULKER, VAN DER MERWE and
MABINDLA-BOQWANA
JJA and NHLANGULELA and OLSEN AJJA
Heard
:
27 February 2023
Delivered
:
31 March 2023
Summary:
Appeal – reception of further
evidence on appeal – evidence of events post-dating judgment of
court of first instance
– may be received in special and
exceptional circumstances – new evidence demonstrates that no
damages suffered for
alleged breach of mandate – evidence
allowed and appeal upheld.
### ORDER
ORDER
On
appeal from:
The Gauteng Division of
the High Court, Pretoria (Mabuse J, Khumalo J and Ceylon AJ
concurring), sitting as court of appeal.
1.
The application to adduce further evidence on appeal is granted.
2.
The appeal is upheld with costs, including the costs of the
application to adduce further
evidence on appeal.
3.
The order of the full court is set aside and replaced with the
following order.
‘
The
appeal is dismissed with costs.’
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Olsen AJA (Saldulker,
Van der Merwe and Mabindla-Boqwana JJA, and Nhlangulela AJA
concurring)
[1]
This appeal has its origin in an agreement
of compromise which went wrong in its implementation. The parties to
the compromise were:
(a)
Couples Investment CC (Couples), the second respondent, which was
cited together with Catherine Thompson,
its sole member and the first
respondent; and
(b)
FirstRand Bank Limited (FirstRand), which, for reasons which will
become apparent, is not a party to
the present appeal, despite the
fact that it was the second respondent in the court of first
instance.
The proceedings commenced
with an application launched by Ms Thompson and Couples in the
Gauteng Division of the High Court, Pretoria
(the high court). The
refusal of the application by the court of first instance was
followed by a successful appeal to the full
court. Special leave to
appeal having been granted by this Court, Krügel Heinsen
Incorporated (Krügel Heinsen), the first
respondent in the
original application, appeals against the order of the full court.
[2]
A summary of the circumstances which gave
rise to the compromise, its content, and an account of how it went
awry, is a necessary
precursor to an understanding of the issues
which must be decided in this appeal. I am unable to discern from the
papers why it
is that Ms Thompson is a party in this litigation. She
chose to be an applicant, and no objection to that was raised by the
respondents.
She is obviously the directing mind of Couples, but the
rights in issue in the case are those of Couples.
[3]
Ms Thompson was a director of Industrial
Lifting Instrumentation and Pump Supplies (Pty) Ltd (ILIPS), a
company which owed money
to FirstRand, as did Couples, which was also
a customer of FirstRand. Couples had bound itself as surety for
ILIPS’s debt
in favour of FirstRand, and had registered a
mortgage bond in favour of FirstRand over immovable property it
owned, to secure its
obligations as surety.
[4]
ILIPS could not pay its debts and was wound
up finally by an order granted in 2013. FirstRand then launched
proceedings for the
winding up of Couples, asserting claims against
Couples which included its obligations as surety for ILIPS. These
proceedings were
opposed.
[5]
In the meantime Couples found a buyer for
its property. That is when Krügel Heinsen, a firm of attorneys,
entered the picture.
It was appointed as conveyancer for the transfer
of the mortgaged property to the buyer.
[6]
An agreement had to be struck between
Couples and FirstRand as to the terms upon which FirstRand would
agree to the cancellation
of its mortgage bond over the property, so
that it could be transferred to the buyer. FirstRand wanted to be
paid out the proceeds
of the sale of the property. The amount
FirstRand would recover from or contribute to the winding up of ILIPS
was a significant
factor in determining the extent of FirstRand’s
claim against Couples in the latter’s role as surety for ILIPS.
[7]
Against that background FirstRand and
Couples concluded the agreement of compromise, the express terms of
which were recorded in
a letter dated 5 December 2014 written by the
attorneys acting for FirstRand. They amounted to this.
(a)
Against the registration of transfer of the mortgaged property
FirstRand would be paid R2 350 000.
(b)
A further amount of R500 000 would be retained out of the
proceeds of the sale, and invested in
an interest-bearing trust
account by Krügel Heinsen.
(c)
Once the liquidation and distribution account in the winding up of
ILIPS was confirmed, FirstRand’s
attorneys would provide Krügel
Heinsen with a copy of the confirmed account and instruct it to pay
over the amount of R500 000,
or any lesser amount found payable
by FirstRand to the liquidators in terms of the confirmed account.
(As FirstRand could not
make any claim in excess of R500 000, it was implied that the
interest earned on the trust investment
would be for the benefit of
Couples. It was equally clear that if less than R500 000 was
required by FirstRand, the balance
left would be payable to Couples.)
[8]
A little over two years later FirstRand’s attorneys sent a
letter to Krügel Heinsen, the
material portion of which read as
follows.
‘
We
enclose herewith a copy of the letter as received from our client
enclosing the first and final liquidation distribution and
contribution account.
Our client must refund
the estate with the amount of R518 624.29.
You are under these
circumstances requested to call up the investment and pay over to our
trust account, the amount of R500 000.00.’
[9]
This instruction given by FirstRand’s attorneys followed a
letter sent by FirstRand to its attorneys,
which was in turn copied
to Krügel Heinsen when the instruction was given. However the
letter from FirstRand made it clear
enough that the account in
question had not been confirmed. FirstRand’s attorneys and
Krügel Heinsen overlooked the
fact that it was a necessary
condition for the making of the demand that the account should have
been confirmed. Acting in error,
in February 2017 Krügel Heinsen
then paid R500 000 to FirstRand’s attorneys, and the
interest accrued on the investment
to Couples.
[10]
FirstRand’s attorneys disbursed the R500 000 in accordance
with FirstRand’s instructions. In a
letter sent to FirstRand’s
attorneys about six months later, the attorneys acting for Couples
asserted that FirstRand had
appropriated the money paid in error, and
had thereby repudiated the agreement of compromise recorded in the
letter of 5 December
2014. The letter recorded that the alleged
repudiation was accepted, and the agreement of compromise cancelled.
[11]
Ms Thompson and Couples then launched their application against
Krügel Heinsen and FirstRand. The first prayer
in the amended
notice of motion was for orders declaring that both respondents had
repudiated the agreement of 5 December 2014,
that the applicants
had lawfully
cancelled that
agreement, and that they were entitled to payment of the amount of
R500 000 in issue. They also sought an order
that Krügel
Heinsen pay the amount in question ‘plus interest thereon at
the prescribed rate of interest from 11 January
2017 to date of
payment
’
.
[12]
There followed a number of alternative orders largely arising from
related disputes between Couples and FirstRand.
However the second
alternative claim was for an order that the amount of R500 000
be reinstated into trust ‘by [Krügel
Heinsen]
alternatively [Krügel Heinsen and FirstRand] together with
interest at the prescribed rate from 11 January 2017 to
date of
payment
’
.
[13]
The case Couples sought to make in its founding affidavit went along
the following lines.
(a)
It had given Krügel Heinsen a mandate to take R500 000 of
the proceeds of the sale of the
property of Couples into trust, and
to disburse the money in the manner laid down by the terms of the
agreement of compromise Couples
had reached with FirstRand.
(b)
Krügel Heinsen released the money on an instruction from
FirstRand’s attorneys, acceded to
by Krügel Heinsen
despite the fact that the liquidation and distribution account of
ILIPS had not been confirmed.
(c)
Whilst Couples could concede that the conduct of Krügel Heinsen,
and that of FirstRand, up
to this point was a product of error, the
subsequent conduct of FirstRand in appropriating the money
constituted a repudiation
of the agreement of compromise which
Couples had accepted.
(d)
Given that the agreement of compromise was cancelled, Couples was
entitled unconditionally to repayment
of the sum of R500 000.
[14] The
claim to an order declaring that Krügel Heinsen had repudiated
the agreement of compromise was doomed
to fail from the outset.
Krügel Heinsen was not party to the agreement of compromise. In
the circumstances, according to the
judgment of the full court, what
was argued before it was that Krügel Heinsen had breached a duty
owed to Couples as its client,
and was obliged to compensate Couples
for the loss consequently suffered. This argument depended for
success, inter alia on a finding
that FirstRand had repudiated the
agreement of compromise; because if it had not, the agreement would
not have been lawfully cancelled,
and all Couples could ask for was
that the money be restored to its trust status and continue to stand
as security, as contemplated
by the agreement of compromise. It is
clear from the papers that Couples did not want that; it wanted
unfettered access to the
money. On its papers in the matter,
Couples could only succeed against Krügel Heinsen on the basis
that it had suffered
damages as a result of breach by the latter of
its mandate.
[15] In its
answering papers Krügel Heinsen, besides making the not
unnatural protest that it no longer held the
R500 000 in trust,
and was therefore in no position to disburse that sum again, advanced
the case that it had been obliged
in terms of the conditions upon
which it received the money into trust to obey the instructions of
FirstRand’s attorneys
as to the disposal the money. Counsel for
Krügel Heinsen did not persist in that contention before us, and
accepted that an
error had been made.
[16] In their
answer FirstRand and its attorneys accepted that the instructions to
call for payment of the R500 000,
as well as to the disposal
thereof, had been given in error. It had therefore arranged for the
money to be paid to its attorneys
and lodged in an interest-bearing
trust account for the benefit of Couples on the same terms as the
money had earlier been lodged
in an interest-bearing trust account by
Krügel Heinsen. FirstRand thus denied that it had
repudiated the agreement.
[17] In the
high court the application was dismissed with costs. There is no need
to comment on the reasons for that
decision beyond observing that the
court found that there was a dispute of fact concerning the question
as to whether FirstRand
had repudiated the agreement.
[18]
Couples obtained leave to appeal to the full court. Before the appeal
was argued Couples delivered a notice withdrawing
the appeal against
the judgment in favour of FirstRand, recording that this had been
done ‘as the matter has become settled,
each party to pay its
own costs’.
I will revert shortly
to how the withdrawal of the appeal against FirstRand was
dealt with before the full court, and
how matters with regard to that
issue unfolded in this Court.
[19] The full
court granted judgment against Krügel Heinsen for payment of the
sum R500 000 to Couples, together
with interest thereon at the
prescribed rate from 11 January 2017. Other issues aside, that order
could not be made without first
concluding that had it been
established that FirstRand had repudiated the agreement of
compromise.
[20] The
legal principles applicable to an enquiry into whether a contract has
been repudiated were set out by this
Court in
Datacolor
International (Pty) Ltd v Intamarket (Pty) Ltd
[2000] ZASCA 82
;
2001 (2) SA 284
(SCA);
[2001] 1 All SA 581
paras 16 to 20. The prominent elements of
the principles set out in
Datacolor
were confirmed in
University of Johannesburg v Auckland Park Theological Seminary
and Another
[2021] ZACC 13
;
2021 (6) SA 1
(CC);2021(8) BCLR 807
(CC) paras 104 and 105. The test is an objective one: would a
reasonable person in the position of the innocent
party conclude from
the conduct of the other party that the latter’s performance
would not be rendered? It must be assumed
that a reasonable person
would give the matter careful consideration, taking into account
background material and circumstances.
Conduct from which repudiation
may be inferred must be ‘clearcut and unequivocal, ie not
equally consistent with any other
feasible hypothesis’
(
Datacolor,
para 18, where the court observed further that
repudiation is a serious matter requiring anxious consideration, and
not lightly
to be presumed).
[21] In this
case the full court made no attempt at assessing FirstRand’s
conduct against the principles set out
in
Datacolor
. The
entire enquiry was dealt with in single a paragraph of the judgment.
Having recorded, correctly, that the release of the money
had been
erroneously requested and erroneously granted, the judgment proceeded
as follows:
‘
The
bank then clearly decided to snatch at the bargain and unlawfully
appropriate the amount contrary to the agreement by effecting
payment
into that account. This constitutes a repudiation or at least a
breach of the agreement of 5 December 2014.
The
appellants accepted the repudiation and therefore the agreement was
lawfully cancelled on 1 September 2017. In the result,
Couples is not
liable for the bank’s possible contribution obligation to the
liquidators of ILIPS and the bank is not entitled
to any form of
substituted security. Despite the recent correspondence the bank and
[Krügel Heinsen] have failed to rectify
the breach of agreement
and to do justice.’
[22] Of
course the position remained that when it realised its error, and the
reaction of Couples to it, FirstRand had
paid the money into trust to
be held on the same terms as contemplated by the original agreement
of compromise. Indeed, before
FirstRand’s answering papers were
delivered, the attorney who personally handled the matter for
FirstRand addressed a letter
to the attorney representing Couples,
explaining that he was personally responsible for the bona fide
mistake in instructing Krügel
Heinsen to release the sum of
R500 000, and that his firm would tender the costs of the
application on an unopposed basis
if the application were withdrawn.
The offer was not accepted.
[23] In my
view there was no easy answer to the question as to whether Couples
had been entitled to regard the conduct
of FirstRand as repudiatory,
and accordingly to cancel the agreement of compromise. What is more,
the transition from a finding
that FirstRand repudiated the agreement
to a judgement against Krügel Heinsen was not as obvious as
seems to have been assumed
by the full court. The language of ‘duty
of care’ was not apposite. And there was no basis for the
finding that the
cancellation of the compromise freed Couples from
liability for any contribution that FirstRand had to make to the
liquidators
of ILIPS. The suretyship remained extant. However, there
is no need to examine these matters any further. This appeal turns on
issues which post-dated the judgment of the court of first instance.
[24] Before
the appeal was argued in the full court it came to the attention of
those representing Krügel Heinsen
that the settlement between
FirstRand and Couples involved the latter agreeing to release the
R500 000 being held in trust
for Couples by FirstRand’s
attorneys, to the liquidators of ILIPS. Quite what further detail
concerning the settlement was
known to Krügel Heinsen at the
time is not clear on the papers before us. Be that as it may, when
counsel for Couples and
Ms Thompson (as appellants) argued the matter
in the full court the provisions of that settlement were not
disclosed. When counsel
for Krügel Heinsen addressed the full
court he attempted to make what appears to have been an application
from the bar for
the admission of further evidence in the way of a
disclosure of the terms of the settlement to the court, to be taken
in to account
by it in determining the appeal. (It must be remembered
that at that time Couples had no judgment in its favour for payment
of
R500 000. It was seeking it on appeal.) Counsel for Couples
objected, contending that the appeal had to be decided on the record
as it stood. It is common cause that the full court refused to
receive evidence of the settlement. However, the subject was not
dealt with in its judgment.
[25] Given
these circumstances Krügel Heinsen has made a formal application
to this Court asking it to receive
further evidence in terms of
s
19
(b)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
. The founding
affidavit in that application, supported by a confirmatory affidavit
from the attorney dealing with the matter for
FirstRand, describes
how the settlement came about and what its essential terms were.
Simply put, the agreement reached was to
the effect that, in exchange
for:
(a)
Wesbank (a division or trade name of FirstRand) having no further
claims against Couples and Ms Thompson;
(b)
Couples (and Ms Thompson as well) being released from all suretyship
obligations in favour of Wesbank;
(c)
Couples being released from its suretyship liability in favour of
FirstRand (for the loan) that
formed the basis of the initial
compromise
Couples and Ms Thompson
would withdraw their appeal against FirstRand in the present case and
Couples would permit FirstRand’s
attorneys to pay the R500 000
in trust to the liquidators of ILIPS.
[26] Couples
delivered an affidavit in opposition to the application for the
receipt of further evidence which in my
view can only be described as
an exercise in obfuscation. There is no doubt at all that Couples in
effect utilised the R500 000
held in the interest-bearing trust
account in its name, inter alia, to buy its release from its
obligations to FirstRand and Wesbank.
The cynical attempt by Couples
and Ms Thompson to exclude the evidence of the settlement, and to
extract the benefit of another
R500 000 out of this litigation
by pursuing the appeal in the full court against Krügel Heinsen,
and persisting with
those pursuits in this Court until their counsel
rose to address us, is to be deprecated.
[27] In its
affidavit opposing the reception of further evidence in this Court
Couples raised the argument that a formal
application ought to have
been made to and therefore considered by the full court. In principle
that is correct. Replying to that,
the attorney for Krügel
Heinsen said that on his side it was assumed that the provisions of
the settlement agreement would
be disclosed to the full court by
Couples. It suffices to say that that this appears to have been a
quite reasonable stance.
[28]
Receiving further evidence on appeal is not lightly done. An appeal
court’s function is to decide whether
the judgment of the court
a quo was correct on the material placed before it. However in
Rail
Commuters Action Group v Transnet Ltd t/a Metrorail
[2004] ZACC 20
;
2005
(2) SA 359
(CC)
;
2005
(4) BCLR 301
(CC) paras 42 & 43 the principles were stated thus.
‘
[42]
In
Van
Eeden v Van Eeden
[
1999
(2) SA 448
(C) at 454],
the
Cape High Court held that it was well established that the Court's
powers as derived from
s 22
(a)
of
the Supreme Court Act should be exercised sparingly. The Court held,
further, that in that case the additional evidence
related to facts
and circumstances which had arisen after the judgment of the Court
a
quo
. This
raised the question whether it was competent for the court, in the
exercise of its power under s 22
(a)
,
to receive such evidence or to authorise its reception. Comrie J held
that the section did not include any express limitation
which would
exclude the reception of the evidence then sought to be tendered and
that the court exercising appellate jurisdiction
had a discretion
whether or not to allow the evidence to be admitted, which discretion
should be exercised sparingly and only
in special circumstances. From
time to time, he held, cases did arise which cried out for the
reception of post-judgment facts.
[43]
In my view, this approach is correct. The Court should exercise the
powers conferred by s 22 'sparingly' and further evidence
on appeal
(which does not fall within the terms of Rule 31) should only be
admitted in exceptional circumstances. Such evidence
must be weighty,
material and to be believed. In addition, whether there is a
reasonable explanation for its late filing is
an important factor.
The existence of a substantial dispute of fact in relation to it will
militate against its being admitted.’
[29]
Here the evidence is to the crucial effect that Couples suffered no
damages as a result of the alleged breach of
mandate by Krügel
Heinsen. The factual evidence is common cause. These are
special and exceptional circumstances. The
interests of justice
demand that the evidence be received.
[30] The
approach of Couples recorded above to the application for the receipt
of further evidence, and to the appeal
generally, was not addressed
or defended in argument before us. Counsel for Couples confined his
submissions to the subject of
the interest on the sum of R500 000
which Couples had lost as a result of the premature release of the
money from the trust account
of Krügel Heinsen. His argument was
that this Court should adjust the judgment of the court a quo to
allow such a claim.
[31] The
issue was touched on in the affidavit in support of the opposition of
Couples to the admission of further evidence,
where Ms Thompson
stated that that the ‘mora interest’ (by which she
clearly meant interest at the prescribed rate)
on R500 000 from 2
February 2017 to the date of the settlement with FirstRand is R104
585.17. (The loss of interest on the money
which ought to have been
held in trust was also mentioned in passing in the founding
affidavit.)
[32] There
are a number of difficulties with this argument. The first is that
there was no prayer for interest as damages
for breach of contract by
Krügel Heinsen beyond the normal prayer for interest on the
capital sum for which judgment was sought.
The second difficulty is
that any loss would not be in respect of interest at the prescribed
rate, but the net interest which would
have been earned if the money
had remained in the interest-bearing trust account. There is no
evidence of that rate, which may
very well have fluctuated from time
to time; nor any account of the agency and administration fees which
would have been debited
to the account. (That there were such fees,
to which Couples made no objection, is apparent from a statement of
the account annexed
to the founding affidavit.) Nothing is said in
the papers about the fate of the interest on the sum of R500 000
whilst it was lodged
in the trust account of FirstRand’s
attorneys. A case for a claim for lost interest has not been made
out.
[33] The
following order is made:
1.
The application to adduce further evidence on appeal is granted.
2.
The appeal is upheld with costs, including the costs of the
application to adduce further
evidence on appeal.
3.
The order of the full court is set aside and replaced with the
following order.
‘
The
appeal is dismissed with costs.’
________________________
P J OLSEN
ACTING
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances:
For
appellant:
Mr
J S Griesel
Instructed
by:
Savage
Jooste & Adams Inc, Pretoria
Symington
& De Kok, Bloemfontein
For
respondents:
Mr
T P Kruger SC
Instructed
by:
Jaco
Roos Attorneys Inc, Pretoria
Noordmans
Inc, Bloemfontein
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