Case Law[2022] ZASCA 128South Africa
Van Wyk Van Heerden Attorneys v Gore N.O and Another (828/2021) [2022] ZASCA 128; [2022] 4 All SA 649 (SCA); 2023 (1) SA 80 (SCA) (30 September 2022)
Headnotes
Summary: Insolvency – deposit into attorney’s account – application to set aside
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: Supreme Court of Appeal
South Africa: Supreme Court of Appeal
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: Supreme Court of Appeal
>>
2022
>>
[2022] ZASCA 128
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Van Wyk Van Heerden Attorneys v Gore N.O and Another (828/2021) [2022] ZASCA 128; [2022] 4 All SA 649 (SCA); 2023 (1) SA 80 (SCA) (30 September 2022)
Van Wyk Van Heerden Attorneys v Gore N.O and Another (828/2021) [2022] ZASCA 128; [2022] 4 All SA 649 (SCA); 2023 (1) SA 80 (SCA) (30 September 2022)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZASCA/Data/2022_128.html
sino date 30 September 2022
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case
no: 828/2021
In
the matter between:
VAN
WYK VAN HEERDEN ATTORNEYS
APPELLANT
and
STEPHEN
MALCOLM GORE NO
FIRST
RESPONDENT
SELBY
MUSAWENKOSI NTSIBANDE NO
SECOND
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Van
Wyk Van Heerden Attorneys
v
Gore NO and Another
(828/2021)
[2022] ZASCA 128
(30 September 2022)
Coram:
VAN DER
MERWE,
MAKGOKA and GORVEN JJA and GOOSEN
and
MASIPA AJJA
Heard
:
13 September
2022
Delivered
:
30
September 2022
Summary:
Insolvency
– deposit into attorney’s
account – application to
set aside
under
s 26(1)
(b)
of Insolvency Act 34 of 1926 – test
whether
attorney
benefits or not – if so, onus to show solvency on attorney.
###
### ORDER
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Western
Cape Division of the High Court, Cape Town (Magona AJ, sitting
as court of first instance):
1
To the extent set out in paragraph 2 hereof, the appeal is upheld
with costs,
including costs of two counsel.
2
Paragraphs 2 and 3 of the order of the high court are set aside and
substituted
with the following:
‘
2
It is declared that the following payments made by Brandstock
Exchange (Pty) Ltd to the respondent:
2.1
On 23 February 2018 in the sum of R75 000;
2.2
On 30 April 2018 in the sum of R200 000;
are
dispositions without value as contemplated by
s 26(1)
(b)
of the
Insolvency Act 24 of 1936
read with s 340 of the
Companies Act 61 of 1973 and they are set aside.
3
The respondent is ordered to pay to the applicants the sum of
R275 000.’
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Gorven
JA (Van der Merwe and Makgoka JJA and Goosen and Masipa AJJA
concurring)
[1]
This appeal concerns the application of the provisions of s 26(1)
(b)
of the Insolvency Act 24 of 1936 (the Act) to trust accounts of
attorneys.
[1]
Three deposits
were made into the trust account of the appellant, a firm of
attorneys (the attorneys). Two were made on 23 February 2018
and one on 30 April 2018. The first two were of R1 250 000
and R75 000 respectively and the third of R200 000.
All
three were made from the account of Brandstock Exchange (Pty) Ltd
(Brandstock). The sole director of Brandstock was one Bruce
Robert
Philp (Philp). Brandstock was provisionally wound up on 3 July 2018
and finally wound up on 20 August 2018.
The deposits
excited the attention of the respondents who are the liquidators of
Brandstock (the liquidators). They applied to
have them set aside
under s 26(1)
(b)
of the Act. Their contention was that the deposits into the trust
account amounted to dispositions to the attorneys.
[2]
The application was brought in the Western Cape Division of the High
Court,
Cape Town (the high court). It found favour with Magona AJ,
who declared the deposits to have been dispositions to the attorneys
and set them aside. Pursuant to that declaration, the attorneys were
ordered to pay R1 525 000 to the liquidators, along
with
interest and costs. The high court dismissed an application by the
attorneys for leave to appeal. The appeal is before us
with the leave
of this Court.
[3]
The relevant parts of s 26(1)
(b)
of the Act read:
‘
Every
disposition of property not made for value may be set aside by the
court if such disposition was made by an insolvent –
. .
.
(b)
within two years of the sequestration of
his estate, and the person claiming under or benefited by the
disposition is unable to
prove that, immediately after the
disposition was made, the assets of the insolvent exceeded his
liabilities’.
It
is clear that the deposits took place less than two years prior to
the winding up of Brandstock. This would bring them within
the ambit
of s 26(1)
(b)
.
[4]
The elements required to set aside a
disposition under s 26(1)
(b)
are therefore:
a)
A disposition;
b)
by an insolvent;
c)
not made for value;
d)
within two years of liquidation; and
e)
the person claiming under or benefited by the disposition is
unable
to prove that, immediately after the disposition was made, the assets
of the insolvent exceeded his liabilities.
[5]
It is necessary to sketch the plain, unvarnished,
[2]
material facts of the application. At the time of the deposits, the
attorneys acted for Philp and another entity controlled by
him, BRP
Livestock CC (BRP). The attorneys neither represented, nor even knew
of the existence of, Brandstock. BRP was provisionally
liquidated on
3 November 2017 and finally wound up on 8 March 2018
by an order of court. At the time the three
deposits were made, Philp
was confronting a sequestration application.
[6]
The insolvency proceedings against Philp and BRP were pursued by an
acknowledged
creditor, the Utexx Trust (Utexx). The attorneys were
involved in negotiations for a person well-disposed to Philp to
purchase
its claims against BRP and Philp. Philp indicated to the
attorneys that a certain Muir would be the purchaser. The attorneys
were
requested to draft a cession and sale agreement to that effect.
[7]
On 13 February 2018, the attorneys transmitted the first
draft
to attorneys representing Utexx. They had been informed that
Muir had not decided which of his corporate entities would purchase
the claims and were to leave the identity of the purchaser blank. The
purchase price was R1.25 million. Utexx’s attorneys
sent
back an amended draft. This reflected (incorrectly, but the attorneys
did not notice it) that the attorneys represented the
purchaser.
Utexx also required payment to be made from the trust account of the
attorneys.
[8]
On 23 February, the attorneys
informed Utexx that the purchase price of R1.25 million had been
deposited into their trust account.
The agreement was signed by both
parties on 26 February. It is unclear from the affidavit of the
attorneys at what point they
realised that the purchaser was one
Sandra Pratt (Pratt) rather than Muir. They explained:
‘
On
23 February 2018, I advised [Utexx’s attorney] that
the purchaser was in Johannesburg and would only be able
to sign the
Agreement on 24 February 2018 and provide me with a copy of
it by 26 February 2018. I pause to
mention that, at this
point in time, I was still under the impression that Muir would be
purchasing the claim of [Utexx]. On 21 February 2018,
I
transmitted an e-mail to Philp again requesting him to complete the
details of the purchaser. On 23 February 2018,
I addressed
a letter to Philp requesting the aforesaid payment upon which Philp
responded by confirming in writing that the purchaser
disclosed in
the Agreement had made payment of the purchase consideration and
attached the proof of payment to his aforesaid letter.
It was only
upon receipt of the signed Agreement from Philp that I noticed that
Muir was not the purchaser but instead Sandra Pratt’s
details
were included as the purchaser.’
[9]
After seeing the signed agreement, the attorneys sought clarification
from Philp. According to them, ‘he indicated that Pratt was his
aunt and that she had offered to purchase the claim from [Utexx]
and
to then allow him some additional time to repay the indebtedness of
BRP to her.’ What is clear is that Philp misled,
or at best for
him failed to tell, the attorneys that the funds deposited into their
trust account came from Brandstock. On the
contrary, he informed them
that the funds were those of the purchaser. The attorneys transferred
the R1.25 million purchase price
to Utexx on 27 February. It is
accepted by the liquidators that the attorneys were entirely unaware
of the existence or involvement
of Brandstock at this time.
[10]
The other two amounts of R75 000, deposited on 23 February,
and of R200 000,
deposited on 30 April, were used by the
attorneys to settle their fees, counsel’s fees and further
disbursements. These
all related to the attorneys’
representation of Philp and BRP.
[11]
It is against this factual backdrop that the claims by the
liquidators against the attorneys
under s 26(1)
(b)
fall to be considered.
[12]
In support of their contention that the deposits amounted to
impeachable dispositions to
the attorneys, the liquidators relied on
a line of cases. These cases have held that, when attorneys operate
on their trust accounts,
they do so as principals and not as
agents.
[3]
They submitted that
this demonstrated that the dispositions were made to the attorneys as
envisaged under s 26(1)
(b)
.
[13]
On the other hand, the attorneys called in aid a dictum of this
Court concerning
a deposit into the trust account of an attorney who
acted for the nominated payee.
[4]
In that matter, this Court held that ‘the disposition was to
Iprolog [the payee on whose behalf it was received] and occurred
. .
. when the money was paid into the attorney’s trust
account’.
[5]
They further
relied on a series of cases where trustees or liquidators of
insolvent estates sought unsuccessfully to contend that
amounts
deposited in bank accounts were dispositions to the banks.
[6]
[14]
I shall deal more fully with both sets of contentions with reference
to the cases relied
on. Before doing so, however, it is worth
rehearsing some of the legal principles concerning the position of
bank accounts in general
and trust bank accounts of attorneys in
particular. General banking principles are clear that the bank owns
the money deposited
into accounts held with it. A debtor-creditor
relationship is established as was explained by Holmes JA in
S
v Kearney
:
[7]
‘
[I]t
has long been judicially recognised in this country that the
relationship between bank and customer is one of debtor and creditor.
When a customer deposits money it becomes that of the bank, subject
to the bank's obligation to honour cheques validly drawn
by the
customer . . .’.
Under
the banker-customer relationship, the bank is indebted to the
customer. The bank owns the money but is obliged to comply with
instructions of the account holder concerning a positive balance in
the account. Account holders thus have the power of disposal
over the
credit balance of funds held by the bank on their behalf.
[15]
This holds no less true of trust bank accounts held by attorneys.
Money deposited into
attorneys’ trust accounts gives rise to
the same relationship with the bank as with any account holder. The
bank owns the
money, but becomes obliged to give effect to
instructions by the attorney holding the account. It is indebted to
the attorney and
to no other party. No one else is entitled to
instruct the bank on how to deal with it.
[16]
At the same time, the credit balance in trust accounts is held by the
attorney on behalf
of particular clients. A similar debtor-creditor
relationship obtains between the attorney and the client. The
attorney is obliged
to give effect to instructions of clients
concerning the credit balance held for them. But vis-a-vis the bank,
the attorney has
the power of disposal over credit balances in the
trust account. This is at least partly why our courts have held that,
when attorneys
deal with funds in a trust account, they generally do
so as principals and not as agents.
[17]
Section 86(2) of the Legal Practice Act
28 of 2014 (the LPA) applies to attorneys:
‘
Every
trust account practice must keep a trust account at a bank with which
the Fund has made an arrangement as provided for in
section
63(1)
(g)
and must deposit therein, as soon as possible
after receipt thereof, money held by such practice on behalf of any
person.’
Trust
accounts of attorneys held with banks have, for a considerable time,
enjoyed special characteristics. Chief among these is
that reflected
in s 88(1) of the LPA, which provides:
‘
(a)
Subject to paragraph
(b)
, an amount standing to the
credit of any trust account of any trust account practice-
(i) does
not form part of the assets of the trust account practice or of any
attorney, partner or member thereof
or of any advocate referred to in
section 34(2)
(b)
; and
(ii) may
not be attached by the creditor of any such trust account practice,
attorney, partner or member or advocate.
(b)
Any
excess remaining after all claims of persons whose money has, or
should have been deposited or invested in a trust account referred
to
in paragraph
(a)
,
and all claims in respect of interest on money so invested, are
deemed to form part of the assets of the trust account practice
concerned.’
This
echoes similar provisions in prior legislation governing attorneys’
trust accounts.
[8]
It can be
seen that these provisions circumscribe the rights of attorneys and
their creditors in relation to trust accounts.
[18]
The rights of banks are similarly
curtailed by s 91 of the LPA, the relevant part of which reads:
‘
.
. . a bank at which a trust account practice keeps its trust account,
or any separate account forming part of a trust account,
does not, in
respect of any liability of the trust account practice to that bank
not being a liability arising out of, or in connection
with, any such
account, have or obtain any recourse or right, whether by way of
set-off, counter-claim, charge or otherwise, against
money standing
to the credit of that account.’
[19]
With that in mind, I turn to the cases called in aid by the parties.
The first, relied
on by the liquidators was
Kaplan
,
[9]
where it was held:
‘
Sec.
33(3) of Act 23 of 1934, as amended, while providing that an amount
standing to the credit of an attorney's trust account shall
not form
part of the assets of such attorney, left unimpaired the right of the
attorney to direct the bank at which the trust account
is kept to
dispose of the amount standing to the credit of that trust account in
a manner as directed by him . . . Indeed as between
himself and the
bank, unaware of the fact that he was acting in conflict with
his trust obligations, he could direct the bank
to pay the amount
standing to the credit of his trust account to his personal creditors
or to himself.’
[10]
This
is a straightforward application of banking principles as applied to
trust accounts. It simply explains that banks must give
effect to
instructions of an account holder.
[20]
In
Kaplan
,
an attorney, Katz, had made payments of his personal gambling debts
from his trust account. His trustees sued his gambling creditor,
the
respondent. The latter excepted to the particulars of claim on the
basis that, because the credit balance in the trust account
was not
an asset belonging to Katz, the payments were not dispositions of
Katz’s property. The exception was upheld by the
court of first
instance. Reversing this finding on appeal, Van Winsen J held:
‘
In
effect, therefore, even although the amount in the trust account was
not, while it was still in such account, an asset belonging
to Katz,
he had a right of disposal over such amount which right empowered him
to deal with it in such a way as to make it, or
an amount equivalent
thereto, part of his assets . . . In the case where he directed the
money to be paid to his trust creditors
he would be released from his
obligations to them. Where he directed the payment of the excess in
the account to his personal creditors
or to himself his estate would
thereby be benefited.’
[11]
Here
one sees operating the two sets of relationships governing a trust
account: that of the attorney with the bank and that of
the attorney
with the client. Katz had a right of disposal with the bank. But he
also had an obligation to the clients on whose
behalf he held the
moneys in the trust account. He breached the latter obligation by
abusing his right of disposal of the funds
held for them for his own
benefit. The element of benefit is central to the reasoning in the
judgment that these were dispositions
by Katz.
[21]
That approach has been endorsed by this Court on more than one
occasion and can be considered
settled law. In
Wypkema
,
[12]
a summons for provisional sentence had been sued out against an
attorney on the basis of a dishonoured cheque drawn on his trust
account. A bank had undertaken to grant a loan to the attorney’s
client on registration of a mortgage bond over an immovable
property
he was purchasing. The appellant agreed to advance a loan to the
client as bridging finance. Before the loan money was
advanced, the
attorney furnished the appellant with a cheque in the amount of the
loan plus its fee. The cheque, drawn on the attorney’s
trust
account, was dishonoured by non-payment when presented, and returned
marked ‘effects not cleared’. The court
a
quo
refused provisional sentence against the attorney, holding that the
cheque had been furnished by the attorney as agent for the
client
rather than as principal. This Court disagreed and granted
provisional sentence against the attorney. After referring to
Kaplan
,
it held:
‘
The
Court
a
quo
failed
to have regard to these basic principles and consequently erred in
its conclusion. When an attorney draws a cheque
on his trust account,
he exercises his right to dispose of the amount standing to the
credit of that account and does so as principal
and not in a
representative capacity.’
[13]
[22]
The principle was further illustrated in
Capricorn
.
[14]
An attorney had transferred funds from his trust account to the
Capricorn Beach Home Owners Association (the HOA) in error. He
had
intended to transfer them to his client, the Capricorn Beach Joint
Venture (the JV). The JV owed the HOA money. Instead of
repaying the
attorney, the HOA claimed to have set off the money received by it
against the debt of the JV on the basis that the
attorney had acted
as the agent of the JV in making the transfer. This Court upheld the
attorney’s claim against the HOA
under the
condictio
indebiti
with reference to the above principles:
‘
First,
it is at odds with the judgment of this court in
Wypkema
v Lubbe
2007
(5) SA 138
(SCA) para 7. That case held that, when an attorney
draws a cheque on his trust account, he exercises his right to
dispose
of the amounts standing to the credit of that account and
does so as principal and not in a representative capacity. In my
view that puts paid to the submission that the first respondent, a
duly admitted attorney, notary and conveyancer, was acting as
an
agent when, through his bookkeeper, he made the erroneous transfer of
money to the appellant. It is true that in this case we
are not
concerned with the drawing of a trust cheque but in principle it
makes no difference that the payment was made in the modern
way by
electronic transfer. The account from which the erroneous
payment was drawn was a trust account controlled by the first
respondent. Therefore the principle laid down
in
Wypkema
applies.’
[15]
[23]
From the above examples, it is clear that attorneys operate on their
trust accounts as
principals and not as agents. This is because they,
and only they, can instruct a bank to dispose of amounts to the
credit in that
bank account since clients have no legal relationship
with the bank concerning that account. When attorneys operate on a
trust
bank account in accordance with their instructions, however,
they may function at two levels. In the first place, because only
they have the right to dispose of funds to the credit in that account
pursuant to the banker-customer relationship, they do so as
principal. In the second place, however, if they give effect to a
mandate from the client in whose name the moneys are held in
trust,
they do so as agent. What is relevant for present purposes, however,
is that the power to operate a trust account does not
determine
whether a deposit into that account amounts to a disposition to the
attorney. The contention of the liquidators to this
effect must
therefore be rejected.
[24]
The matter of
Iprolog
[16]
was invoked by the attorneys as authority for the contention that a
deposit into an attorney’s trust account amounted to
a
disposition to the payee to whom the attorney was instructed to make
payment of those funds. It involved a claim by trustees
of the
insolvent estate of a husband who had obtained a divorce order
shortly before being sequestrated. The trustees alleged collusive
dealings between the husband and wife.
[17]
The funds were used to enable an entity called Iprolog to purchase an
immovable property. On 23 June 2009, the husband transferred
R3 500
000 of that amount into an attorney's trust account for the credit of
Iprolog. The issue was framed by this Court as follows:
‘
It
brooks no debate that the payments made by Mr M[…] to Mrs M[…]
constitute “dispositions” within the
meaning of
the
Insolvency
Act. As
I
have already stated, there were two of those. The first was for
R3 500 000 into an attorney’s trust account
for the
credit of Iprolog on 23 June 2009 and used towards the purchase of
property in Iprolog’s name. The second payment
was made shortly
after the divorce decree was finalised. It was submitted that despite
the payment date for the R3 500 000
being June 2009, the money
only accrued to Mrs M[…] on 26 August 2009, after the decree
of divorce was granted and the property
had been transferred into
Iprolog’s name. Thus, it was said that Mrs M[…] was
only “paid” after
the divorce order was granted, and “in
terms” thereof.
This
submission has merely to be stated, to be rejected. It was contrived
to bring the disposition within the ambit of the exclusionary
provisions of the definition of “disposition” in
s 2
of
the
Insolvency
Act referred
to above. As I have said, the disposition was
to Iprolog and occurred on 23 June 2009 when the money was paid into
the attorney’s
trust account. That Iprolog was only free to use
it later is irrelevant. The exclusionary provisions of
s
2
did not apply to this payment, and it was accordingly
susceptible to being set aside in terms of one or other of the three
sections of the
Insolvency
Act referred
to above.’
[18]
As
was made plain, the deposit was to a trust account for the credit of
Iprolog. Thus, the attorney was mandated by Iprolog to receive
the
payment as its agent. That distinguishes the present deposit which
was to the trust account of the attorneys who did not receive
them on
behalf of Utexx but were instructed to pay them on. A different
enquiry must determine to whom an impeachable disposition
under
s 26(1)
(b)
has been made in this matter.
[25]
Matters concerning banks may shed some light on the essential enquiry
to be made. In
Zamzar
,
[19]
Goldblatt J was confronted with an exception to particulars of claim
brought by liquidators of Zamzar Trading (Pty) Ltd (Zamzar)
against
the respondent bank (the bank). The claim was that Zamzar and one
Sferopoulos conspired in a fraudulent scheme. Pursuant
to that
scheme, Zamzar opened a current account with the bank. VAT repayments
were made into the account and, on instruction from
Zamzar that it
had an obligation to Sferopoulos, the bank debited the account in
favour of Sferopoulos. The liquidation of Zamzar
ensued and the
liquidators sought to recover these amounts from the bank. There was
no suggestion that the bank was in any way
aware of the fraudulent
dealings. In upholding the exception, the court said:
‘
Should
plaintiff's cause of action be valid it would mean a commercial bank
would in respect of each customer and each transaction have
to
ascertain where the customer's funds came from and the reason
therefore and why such funds were being paid to a named payee.
Thus
the bank would only be permitted to safely execute its client's
mandate if it could be satisfied it was not tainted in any
way.
The
whole scenario envisaged by the plaintiff is, in my view, repugnant
to logic and law as it would create a situation where a principal
could visit liability on his agent for performing precisely the
mandate which it had given to its agent.’
[20]
This
reasoning strikes me as unassailable and equally applicable to an
attorney who is merely instructed to make a payment.
[26]
In
Reynolds
,
[21]
Mercantile Bank (Mercantile) did not have outlets in certain areas
and, for the convenience of its clients, opened bank accounts
in
those areas with Standard Bank (Standard). As such, it became a
client of Standard. Clients of Mercantile in those areas could
deposit cheques into accounts of Mercantile with Standard without
having to go to a branch of Mercantile. Within two years of being
liquidated, Duchini (Pty) Ltd deposited two cheques made out to
Mercantile into one of its accounts with Standard. That account
with
Standard was credited accordingly. On the instructions of one of the
directors of Duchini, the amounts of the deposits were
credited by
Mercantile to accounts held by that director with Mercantile. This
reduced the indebtedness of that director to Mercantile.
Duchini was
not indebted to Mercantile at the time. The liquidators of Duchini
sued Mercantile, seeking to set the payments aside
under s 26(1)
of the Act. This Court held:
‘
Indeed
a disposition without value which is liable to be set aside is one in
which the person who benefited by the disposition runs
the risk of
having such disposition being set aside in certain specified
situations. It is manifest that [Mercantile] benefited
from the
dispositions. First, as previously stated, it obtained the
benefit of a credit to its account with the Standard Bank
which it
could immediately use. Secondly, it was thereafter able to reduce the
debt which was owed to it by [the director in question]
Makrides by
the amounts of the two deposits making use of the transfer of the
credit to its account at the Standard Bank.’
[22]
Standard
was not held to have benefited despite having become the owner of the
moneys collected from Duchini’s bank. This
accords with the
position of the bank in
Zamzar
.
Not so in the case of Mercantile. This Court held that the effect was
that ‘Duchini paid Makrides’ debt to the defendant.’
[23]
In arriving at that conclusion, this Court highlighted the need for
the recipient to benefit from the disposition.
[27]
This approach finds echo in English and Australian law. In the
English case of
Hollicourt
,
[24]
the liquidators of Hollicourt (Contracts) Ltd (Hollicourt) sought to
recover payments by the Bank of Ireland (the bank) to third
parties
from the account of Hollicourt. The claim of the liquidators was
based on s 127 of the Insolvency Act, 1986 which
provided:
‘
In
a winding up by the court, any disposition of the company’s
property, and any transfer of shares, or alteration in the
status of
the company’s members, made after the commencement of the
winding up is, unless the court otherwise orders, void.’
[25]
The
court of first instance had accepted the contention of the
liquidators that the bank was obliged to effectively repay the total
amount of the payments in question. On appeal, the bank made
submissions on what was termed the ‘double disposition point’:
‘
This
point turns on the identity of the relevant dispositions at which
s 127 is aimed. The section refers to “
any
”
disposition of the company’s property. It is common ground
that, where a company pays a creditor by cheque drawn on
an account
in credit between the date of a petition and the winding-up order,
there is a disposition of the company’s property
in
favour of the creditor
falling within s 127. But it is contended that the judge was not
required by principle nor by authority to hold (and he was
wrong in
holding) that there was another relevant disposition of the company’s
property
in
favour of the bank
when the Bank debited the Company’s account with the sum paid
to the creditor and that that disposition was avoided by s 127,
so as to render the Bank liable to restore the Company’s
account to its pre-disposition condition.’
[26]
This
submission went home, causing Mummery LJ to hold:
‘
In
our judgment the policy promoted by s 127 is not aimed at
imposing on a bank restitutionary liability to a company in respect
of the payments made by cheques in favour of the creditors, in
addition to the unquestioned liability of the payees of the
cheques.’
[27]
[28]
In this, he found support in other English law matters as well as in
Australian law. He
referred with approval to the Australian matter of
Re
Mel Bower’s Macquarie Electrical Centre Pty Ltd (in liq)
,
[28]
where Street CJ said:
‘
[The]
paying by a bank of the company’s cheque, presented by a
stranger, does not involve the bank in a disposition of the
property
of the company so as to disentitle the bank to debit the amount of
the cheque to the company’s account. The word
“disposition”
connotes in my view both a disponor and a disponee. The section
operates to render the disposition void
so far as concerns the
disponee. It does not operate to affect the agencies interposing
between the company, as disponor, and the
recipient of the property,
as disponee . . . The intermediary functions fulfilled by the bank in
respect of paying cheques drawn
by a company in favour of and
presented on behalf of a third party do not implicate the bank in the
consequences of the statutory
avoidance prescribed by s. 227. .
. . I consider that the legislative intention . . . is such as to
require an investigation
of what happened to the property, that is to
say, what was the disposition, and then to enable the liquidator to
recover it upon
the basis that the disposition was void. It is
recovery from the disponee that forms the basic legislative purpose
of s. 227.’
[29]
Mummery
LJ also approved a dictum of McPherson J in the matter of
Re
Loteka Pty Ltd (in liq)
:
[30]
‘
The
amount standing to the credit of the customer’s account is
simply diminished thus reducing
pro
tanto
the indebtedness of the bank to the customer. It is the payee of the
cheque that receives the benefit of the proceeds of the cheque.
All
that happens between customer and banker is an adjustment of entries
in the statement recording the accounts between them .
. . ’
[31]
[29]
After having dealt with two further
English law matters, Mummery LJ concluded:
‘
In
summary, our conclusion, in the light of these authorities, is that
section 127 only invalidates the dispositions by the
Company of
its property to the payees of the cheques. It enables the Company to
recover the amounts disposed of, but only from
the payees. It does
not enable the Company to recover the amounts from the Bank, which
has only acted in accordance with its instructions
as the Company’s
agent to make payments to the payees out of the Company’s bank
account. As to the intermediate steps
in the process of payment
through the Bank, there is no relevant disposition of the Company’s
property to which the section
applies.’
[32]
It
will be seen that Mummery LJ and the Australian courts invoked the
purposive approach to legislative interpretation in ascribing
meaning
to the word ‘disposition’. As has been seen, their
findings largely accord with those set out above in the
Kaplan
,
Reynolds
and
Zamzar
matters.
[30]
The approach in our law to what
constitutes an impeachable disposition is a matter of interpretation.
It is now trite that, when
it comes to interpretation:
‘
A
sensible meaning is to be preferred to one that leads to
insensible or unbusinesslike results or undermines the apparent
purpose of the document . . . The “inevitable point of
departure is the language of the provision itself”, read in
context and having regard to the purpose of the provision and the
background to the preparation and production of the
document.’
[33]
[31]
As to language, it will be recalled
s 26(1)
(b)
provides in its relevant parts:
‘
Every
disposition of property not made for value may be set aside by the
court if such disposition was made by an insolvent –
. .
.
(b)
within two years of the sequestration of
his estate, and the person claiming under or benefited by the
disposition is unable to
prove that, immediately after the
disposition was made, the assets of the insolvent exceeded his
liabilities’.
On
a grammatical level, the position is clearer than that of s 127
of the English Insolvency Act. The phrase ‘benefited
by the
disposition’ is absent from s 127 of that Act. In arriving
at the conclusion that impeachable dispositions were
not made to
those bankers because they were not benefited by them, the English
and Australian courts were obliged to resort to
a purposive
interpretation of the section. In contrast, in our law the clear
language of the provision includes a pertinent reference
to benefit.
[32]
At the heart of s 26(1)
(b)
is the requirement that the party to whom the disposition was made is
put to the proof that ‘immediately after the disposition
was
made, the assets of the insolvent exceeded his liabilities’.
The person on whom that obligation rests is only one who
‘benefited
by the disposition’. The construction of the section does not
allow for liability to attach to one who did
not benefit by it. The
plain language requires the disponee to have benefited.
[33]
This is buttressed by a sensible and businesslike approach. As
Goldblatt J held in
Zamzar
,
to hold a party liable who simply acted as an intermediary and gave
effect to instructions by the client but did not benefit from
the
disposition gives rise to an absurd and unbusinesslike outcome. In
that regard, an attorney would generally have the same lack
of
knowledge of the source of the funds deposited as would a bank. Where
they on-pay those funds to a third party as instructed
by their
client, they also function purely as intermediaries.
[34]
And the purposive approach articulated so clearly in
Hollicourt
lends further strength to this interpretation. This applies no less
in our law since s 26(1)
(b)
is clearly aimed at only the person who benefits from (or claims
under) the disposition. It is also not envisaged that there is
a
‘double disposition’ where successive persons both become
subject to the section. Where attorneys give effect to
pay the third
party nominated by their clients without themselves benefiting, it
can be said that they simply function as conduits.
This situation
must be distinguished from that in
Kaplan
.
There Katz did not give effect to instructions from clients when he
appropriated moneys held on their behalf to pay his gambling
debts.
As a result of his having utilised those funds for his personal
purposes, his estate was thereby benefited.
[34]
[35]
Finally and decisively, this Court held in
Reynolds
that, ‘a disposition without value which is liable to be set
aside is one in which the person who
benefited
by the disposition
runs the risk of having such disposition being set aside in certain
specified situations’.
[35]
This forms part of the
ratio
of that judgment and, unless we are convinced that it is clearly
wrong, binds us in this matter. On the contrary, that position
accords with the above reasoning and interpretation.
[36]
This then is the relevant touchstone for liability under s 26(1)
(b)
.
In our law, the clear language of the provision requiring benefit
fortifies the purposive approach to interpretation in the unitary
interpretative exercise. This is consistent with the context of
banking law and that relating to the operation of trust accounts
of
attorneys. It all points to the need for the person to whom the
disposition is made for the purpose of s 26(1)
(b)
to have benefited from it.
[37]
This brings into sharp focus the essential enquiry in the present
matter. The attorneys
were unaware of the source of the deposits into
their account. A client had instructed them to pay the R1.25 million
to Utexx as
the purchase price under the agreement. They complied
with that mandate. Moneys of whose origin they were unaware were
deposited
into their trust account as was the case with the bank in
Zamzar
.
They paid them to Utexx as instructed by their client, Philp. They
testified without challenge that it was ‘common cause
that [the
attorneys] did not receive any benefit or retain any portion of the
purchase consideration.’
[38]
Who then benefited from the disposition? During argument, the parties
were
ad idem
that Utexx benefited by the deposit of R1.25 million which was thus
hit by the provisions of s 26(1)
(b)
.
This must be correct. Utexx received moneys of Brandstock without
Brandstock receiving value since it was not party to the transaction.
In turn, Utexx benefited by that amount since its claim for the
purchase price under the agreement was satisfied.
[39]
As regards the deposit of R1.25 million,
the attorneys acted in accordance with the instruction of their
client. As was said of
the bank in
Zamzar
:
‘
If
the defendant was authorised to make the payments, then it
was authorised and entitled to debit plaintiff's account with
the moneys paid and was merely a conduit or 'neutral payment
functionary' through which a disposition was made to Sferopoulos by
the plaintiff itself.’
[36]
In
giving effect to their mandate, therefore, the attorneys acted as a
conduit in the onward transmission to Utexx and for its benefit.
The
disposition of Brandstock was one to Utexx. Since the attorneys did
not benefit, they did not attract the onus to show the
solvency of
Brandstock immediately after the deposit was made. The deposit into
their account was not a disposition to the attorneys
and was thus not
impeachable under s 26(1)
(b)
.
[40]
What, then, of the deposits of R75 000 and R200 000? They
were not paid on to
a third party. On the other hand, they were dealt
with in accordance with the principles governing trust accounts.
Unlike in
Kaplan
,
there was no breach of mandate by the attorneys. Attorneys are
entitled to account to their clients for fees and disbursements
and
to then appropriate moneys held in trust for that purpose. This is
what was done by the attorneys. This does not, however,
necessarily
render them immune to the machinery of s26(1)
(b)
.
The same enquiry governs the outcome of these two deposits. Who
benefited from those deposits?
[41]
The attorneys made them part of their assets when they appropriated
them to settle their
fees and pay disbursements incurred on behalf of
their clients. As such, they clearly benefited from the deposit of
those two amounts.
This despite their not having breached the
principles governing the operation of the trust account. As between
the attorneys, BRP
and Philp, the application of these funds to
settle fees and disbursements was lawful and appropriate. If BRP or
Philp had deposited
these amounts, they would have received value for
them. But the deposit was made by Brandstock, which did not receive
value. When
applied to amounts due by BRP and Philp, these two
deposits became dispositions which fall within the provisions of
s 26(1)
(b)
.
Before us the attorneys only argued faintly to the contrary.
[42]
As regards those two dispositions, then, the onus rested on the
attorneys to prove that,
at the relevant times, the assets of
Brandstock exceeded its liabilities. This is clearly a full onus and
not a mere duty to adduce
evidence. If unable to discharge the onus,
the section provides that the disposition is void and must be set
aside.
[43]
Because the deposits were made on different dates, the onus operates
for each such date.
It was candidly conceded in argument that, as
regards the R200 000 deposited on 30 April 2018, the attorneys
could not discharge
the onus. This concession was well made. At that
time, the liabilities of Brandstock clearly exceeded its assets. This
was clear
from the claim of one Louw, the creditor at whose instance
Brandstock was liquidated. That claim arose during April 2018.
[44]
The attorneys submitted, however, that
the position on 23 February 2018 was different. Both
parties accepted that Brandstock
had cash of R102 308 in its
account after 23 February 2018. The liquidators testified
as follows concerning that
date in the founding papers:
‘
Brandstock
had no assets. . . Brandstock was indebted to Brodie Farming (Pty)
Ltd at the date of the disposition, in the amount
of R1 052 055.84
which indebtedness arose on 19 February 2018.
This
was responded to by the attorneys as follows:
‘
I
deny that Brandstock was factually insolvent on 23 February 2018 . .
. Brandstock had livestock in its possession and had enough
assets
including its claims against BRP, Philp and Pratt and cash reserves
which exceeded its liabilities which according to the
Applicants were
in any event only 1 (one) creditor being Brodie Farming (Pty) Ltd.
This Honourable Court is reminded of the fact
that Brodie Farming
(Pty) Ltd is not an approved creditor of Brandstock and full legal
arguments will be presented at the hearing
of this application in
this regard.’
None
of these averments carries much evidential weight. Possession of
cattle does not equate to ownership. One does not know what
the
financial relationships between Brandstock, BRP, Philp and Pratt were
at the time. The fact that Brodie Farming had not proved
a claim in
the estate of Brandstock does not negate the existence of the claim
testified to by the liquidators. There are any number
of reasons why
creditors refrain from proving claims in an insolvent estate. At
least one is that the creditor might be required
to contribute to the
costs of the administration of the insolvent company instead of
receiving payment of the whole or a portion
of their claim.
[45]
Before us the attorneys conceded that these averments did not amount
to positive evidence
that, on 23 February 2018, the assets of
Brandstock exceeded its liabilities. They amounted to little more
than surmise. They agreed
that the best evidence of the state of
affairs of a company is to produce and prove books of account showing
the assets and liabilities
of a company. Although they were not in
possession of such books, the machinery of the Uniform Rules of Court
was available to
the attorneys to require discovery of any such books
by the liquidators. I do not believe that what was asserted by the
attorneys
gave rise to a factual dispute. But, if it did so, since
the attorneys bore the onus and did not request that any such dispute
be resolved by way of oral evidence or trial, it must be resolved in
favour of the liquidators. This all means that the attorneys
failed
to discharge the requisite onus under s 26(1)
(b)
.
It follows that these two dispositions, totalling R275 000, were
correctly set aside by the high court, albeit for different
reasons.
[46]
Since the attorneys have succeeded before us in setting aside the
order for repayment of
R1.25 million, they are entitled to the costs
of the appeal. The liquidators conceded that, in view of the
complexity of the matter
and the importance of the issues, the costs
of two counsel would be warranted. I view that as a correct
concession. As to costs
in the high court, the liquidators were
obliged to go to court to obtain payment of the R275 000 and
were thus entitled to
costs of the application. The costs order in
the high court must therefore stand.
[47]
It remains to mention a matter of grave concern which, if not
corrected, could have serious
adverse ramifications for the
attorneys. In the judgment on both the application and the
application for leave to appeal, the learned
acting judge made
strongly deprecatory comments and drew adverse inferences concerning
the conduct of the attorneys. Counsel representing
the liquidators
made it plain before us that the papers did not support any such
adverse remarks or inferences. I agree. There
is nothing in the
record which in any way warrants an adverse comment or inference of
improper conduct on the part of the attorneys.
It is important that
this Court makes it clear that it dissociates itself from those
undeserved criticisms.
[48]
In the result:
1
To the extent set out in paragraph 2 hereof, the appeal is upheld
with costs, including
costs of two counsel.
2
Paragraphs 2 and 3 of the order of the high court are set aside and
substituted with
the following:
‘
2
It is declared that the following payments made by Brandstock
Exchange (Pty) Ltd to the respondent:
2.1
On 23 February 2018 in the sum of R75 000;
2.2
On 30 April 2018 in the sum of R200 000;
are
dispositions without value as contemplated by
s 26(1)
of the
Insolvency Act 24 of 1936
read with s 340 of the Companies Act
71 of 1973 and they are set aside.
3
The respondent is ordered to pay to the applicants the sum of
R275 000.’
T
R GORVEN
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
appellant:
R G Goodman SC
(with A Brink)
Instructed
by:
Van
Wyk Van Heerden Attorneys, Paarl
Lovius
Block, Bloemfontein
For
respondent:
G
W Woodland SC
Instructed
by:
Oosthuizen
& Company, Cape Town
Claude
Reid Attorneys, Bloemfontein
[1]
I
shall refer to ‘attorney’ or ‘attorneys’ as
a matter of convenience and consistency. As regards the
trust
accounts of attorneys, as will be seen, the Legal Practice Act
28
of 2014 (the LPA)
refers
mostly to the general term ‘trust account practices’.
These used to be the sole domain of attorneys but the
LPA now allows
certain legal practitioners functioning as advocates to operate
trust accounts.
[2]
In
the papers and heads of argument, the liquidators sought to make out
a case that the transaction described below was a sham
one. Certain
inferences were drawn and remarks made by the high court concerning
the conduct of the attorneys. I mention these
later. These were
expressly disavowed in argument before us, correctly in my view.
[3]
See eg
De
Villiers NO v Kaplan
1960
(4) SA 476
(C) (
Kaplan
);
Wypkema
v Lubbe
[2007]
ZASCA 36
;
2007 (5) SA 138
(SCA);
[2007] 4 All SA 1224
(SCA)
(
Wypkema
);
and
Capricorn
Beach Home Owners Association v H. E. S. Potgieter t/a Nilands and
Another
[2013] ZASCA 116
;
2014 (1) SA 46
(SCA) (
Capricorn
).
[4]
M and
Another v Murray and Others
[2020]
ZASCA 86
;
2020 (6) SA 55
(SCA) (
Iprolog
).
[5]
Ibid
para 31.
[6]
See
eg
Zamzar
Trading (Pty) Ltd (in Liquidation) v Standard Bank of SA Ltd
2001 (2) SA 508
(W) (
Zamzar
);
Reynolds
and Others NNO v Mercantile Bank Ltd
[2004] ZASCA 137
;
2004 (5) SA 220
(SCA) (
Reynolds
);
and the English law case of
Bank
of Ireland v Hollicourt (Contracts) Ltd
[2001] All ER 289
(CA) (
Hollicourt
).
[7]
S v
Kearney
1964
(2) SA 495
(A) at 502H–503A.
[8]
Section 33(3) of Act 23 of 1934, as substituted by sec. 17 of Act 18
of 1956, provides:
‘
No
amount standing to the credit of such trust account in the
bank shall form part of the assets of the attorney, notary
or
conveyancer concerned and no such amount shall be liable to
attachment at the instance of any creditor of such attorney, notary
or conveyancer: Provided that any excess remaining after payment of
the claims of all persons whose moneys have, or should have,
been
deposited in such trust account, shall be deemed to form part of the
assets of such attorney, notary or conveyancer.’
And
s 78(7) of the Attorneys Act 53 of 1979, the immediate predecessor
to the LPA, reads:
‘
No
amount standing to the credit of any practitioner's trust account
shall be regarded as forming part of the assets of the practitioner,
or may be attached on behalf of any creditor of such practitioner:
Provided that any excess remaining after payment of all
claims
of persons whose money has, or should have, been deposited or
invested in such trust account, and all claims in respect
of
interest on money so invested, shall be deemed to form part of the
assets of such practitioner.’
[9]
Kaplan
fn
3.
[10]
Ibid
at 478H-479B.
[11]
Ibid at 479B-E.
[12]
Wykema
fn 3.
[13]
Ibid para 7.
[14]
Capricorn
fn 3.
[15]
Ibid
para 16.
[16]
Footnote 4.
[17]
The
cause of action implicated
s 31
of the
Insolvency Act as
well
as
ss 29
and
26
(1)
(b)
.
[18]
Footnote 15 paras 30-31.
[19]
Zamzar
fn 6.
[20]
Ibid
at 515B-C.
[21]
Reynolds
fn 6.
[22]
Ibid
para 8.
[23]
Ibid
para 11.
[24]
Hollicourt
fn 6.
[25]
Ibid
para 3.
[26]
Ibid para 19(1) at 293
h-j
.
Emphases in the original.
[27]
Ibid para 23 at 294
j
.
[28]
Re Mel
Bower’s Macquarie Electrical Centre Pty Ltd (in liq)
[1974] 1 NSWLR 245.
[29]
Ibid
at 258.
[30]
Re
Loteka Pty Ltd (in liq)
(1989) 7 ACLC 998.
[31]
Ibid
at 1004.
[32]
Hollicourt
para 31 at 297.
[33]
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
[2012] ZASCA 13
;
2012 (4) SA 593
(SCA) para 18.
[34]
See
Kaplan
at 497E.
[35]
Reynolds
para
8. My emphasis.
[36]
Zamzar
at 515I.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Van Rooyen N.O and Another v Mokwena N.O and Another (63/2023) [2025] ZASCA 130 (12 September 2025)
[2025] ZASCA 130Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa98% similar
68 Wolmarans Street Johannesburg (Pty) Ltd and Others v Tufh Limited (1263/2022) [2024] ZASCA 48 (15 April 2024)
[2024] ZASCA 48Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa97% similar
Adendorff N O and Another v Kubheka and Another (463/2020) [2022] ZASCA 29 (24 March 2022)
[2022] ZASCA 29Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa97% similar
Van Veen v Director of Public Prosecutions and Others (104/2024) [2025] ZASCA 46; [2025] 3 All SA 85 (SCA); 2025 (2) SACR 115 (SCA) (17 April 2025)
[2025] ZASCA 46Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa97% similar
Steenhuisen and Another v Van Rooyen and Others (611/2021) [2023] ZASCA 78 (29 May 2023)
[2023] ZASCA 78Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa97% similar