Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 604South Africa
Dumakude v Bidvest Bank Ltd and Another (054716/2025) [2025] ZAGPJHC 604 (21 May 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
21 May 2025
Headnotes
by the applicant with Bidvest Bank Limited (“the account”), and release the funds for the benefit of the applicant in the amount of R448,838.35, together with ancillary relief, including costs on an attorney and client scale. The first respondent, Bidvest Bank Limited (“Bidvest”) opposes the application. The applicant joined the second respondent, the Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service (“SARS”), to the proceedings after the institution thereof. SARS opposes the application.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Dumakude v Bidvest Bank Ltd and Another (054716/2025) [2025] ZAGPJHC 604 (21 May 2025)
Dumakude v Bidvest Bank Ltd and Another (054716/2025) [2025] ZAGPJHC 604 (21 May 2025)
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sino date 21 May 2025
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO
: 054716/2025
DATE
:
21-05-2025
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO.
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO.
(3)
REVISED.
In
the matter between
CUBA
DUMAKUDE
Applicant
and
BIDVEST BANK
LTD
First Respondent
CSARS
Second Respondent
JUDGMENT
CRUTCHFIELD,
J
: The applicant, Cuba Dumakude,
approaches this court urgently for an order that the first
respondent, Bidvest Bank Limited, immediately
unfreeze his bank
account number xxxxx held by the applicant with Bidvest Bank Limited
(“the account”), and release
the funds for the benefit of
the applicant in the amount of R448,838.35, together with ancillary
relief, including costs on an
attorney and client scale.
The first
respondent, Bidvest Bank Limited (“Bidvest”) opposes the
application. The applicant joined the second respondent,
the
Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service (“SARS”),
to the proceedings after the institution thereof.
SARS opposes the
application.
The applicant
alleges that Bidvest froze the account on 20 February 2025 or
thereabouts, and that it did so without prior notice
to him or valid
justification for the freeze.
The applicant has
not had access to the funds of R448 838.35 since 20 February 2025 or
thereabouts. On 24 March 2025, approximately
one month after becoming
aware of Bidvest freezing the account, the applicant contacted
Bidvest in respect of the alleged financial
and personal hardship
caused to him as a result of the ongoing freeze of the funds in the
account, and Bidvest’s failure
to finalise its investigation
into the funds and the source of those funds.
This being a matter
that comes before the court on an urgent basis, the applicant is
obliged to comply with rule 6(12) of the uniform
rules of court and
demonstrate compliance with the two requirements thereof.
Firstly, the
applicant must articulate the specific facts based upon which the
applicant alleges that the application is urgent
and furthermore,
demonstrate why the applicant will not receive substantial redress at
a hearing in due course.
The grounds of
urgency upon which the applicant places reliance include the
potential collapse of his business, personal hardship
and his
inability to secure legal advice in respect of the issues raised in
this application.
The applicant
alleges that the freezing of the account resulted in him being unable
to pay suppliers of his business, employees
of the business and
operational costs, resulting in reputational damage to him and the
business and loss of business contracts.
No detail is
finished in respect of such reputational damage or the loss of any
business contracts due to Bidvest freezing the account.
Furthermore,
no details are furnished in respect of the identities of suppliers
who the applicant allegedly was unable to pay,
consequences of that
alleged inability to pay suppliers, no details of the operational
costs that allegedly were unpaid and any
consequences pursuant
thereto.
In respect of the
applicant’s alleged personal hardship, the applicant alleges an
inability to meet basic living expenses
“due to restricted
access to (his) sole business account.” Accordingly, the
applicant categorises the account in terms
of the founding affidavit
as his “sole business account”.
Furthermore, the
applicant alleges that he could not secure legal assistance in order
to deal with Bidvest’s freeze of the
account.
Eventually on 31
March 2025, approximately six weeks after becoming aware of the
freeze of the account, the applicant contacted
attorneys who
eventually agreed to assist him and who were instrumental in bringing
this application.
Importantly, the
applicant contends that the account is his “primary source for
daily expenses, business operations and debt
obligations”. See
paragraph 3.32 at CaseLines page 001-9.
As a result, the
applicant alleges that he could not pay the rental and that his
landlord, who is unnamed, agreed to a grace period
for the month of
March 2025. Nor could the applicant allegedly meet his payroll
obligations in respect of four employees, each
allegedly receiving R6
500 per month, amounting to a total of R26 000.00 per month.
As a result, the
applicant contends that the business will collapse if the order
sought by him urgently in terms of the notice of
motion, is not
granted by this court.
Accordingly, the
urgency pursuant to which the applicant approaches this court is that
the account is his primary source of funds.
The first respondent,
however, demonstrated effectively that the account was dormant for
approximately one year prior to receipt
of the deposit of the funds
in question, being the balance of a deposit of R900 000.00 made
on 17 February 2025 into the account.
For the sake of
clarity, the funds of R448 838.35 are the balance of a deposit of
R900 000.00, and the remaining balance in
the account when
Bidvest froze the account on or about 20 February 2025.
The first
respondent demonstrated that the account was not used for the payment
of rent, salaries or supplies as alleged by the
applicant, from 1
April 2025 to 21 February 2025, contrary to the applicant’s
assertions in the founding affidavit.
The applicant in
reply, revealed that he does in fact have various other banking
accounts and that the account is not his sole account
or his sole
source of funds. This raises the question of why the deposit of R900
000 from Hill Side Trading And Projects (PTY)
Limited, allegedly a
payment resulting from a legitimate transaction, was paid into a
dormant account in circumstances where the
applicant has other
banking accounts, including a bank account held at Tyme Bank.
The applicant
relies for his urgency in the founding papers upon the account being
his primary business account. However, in reply,
the applicant denies
that the account is his sole or primary account and refers to other
banking accounts operated by him.
That contradiction
by the applicant is fatal to the alleged urgency upon which the
applicant places reliance, being the prejudice
that he is allegedly
suffering due to his primary business account being frozen and the
applicant not having access to the funds
therein.
The applicant’s
notice of motion is dated 15 April 2025, approximately six to seven
weeks subsequent to the applicant becoming
aware of Bidvest freezing
the account. The applicant knew from as early as 20 February 2025
that the account was frozen.
I take account of
the applicant’s alleged inability to obtain legal assistance to
deal with the freezing of the account. I
am sympathetic towards the
applicant in this regard.
The applicant,
however, served the application, together with a joinder application,
on the second respondent approximately three
weeks later, on 7 May
2025, after receipt of the first respondent’s answering
affidavit.
This is
notwithstanding that Bidvest delivered its answering papers on 24
April 2025, which included the third party appointment
of Bidvest by
SARS. Yet, the applicant waited until 7 May 2025, to deliver the
application and the joinder application to SARS.
The application was
set down for hearing on 29 April 2025 and again on 6 May 2025, both
instances in the urgent court. This is the
third occasion upon which
this application has been set down and taken up the time of a Judge
in an extremely busy urgent court.
It is now
approximately three weeks after the first hearing and three months
since Bidvest froze the account.
There is no proper
or cogent explanation from the applicant for the delays in this
matter, other than the initial inability to procure
legal
representation. That inability, however, came to an end when the
applicant was able to secure his attorneys and to issue
the
application.
Nor does the
applicant sustain the alleged prejudice and alleged hardship to him
as the account is not his sole or primary account
as alleged by him
in his founding papers.
In the
circumstances, this application does not qualify for enrolment on an
urgent basis in terms of rule 6(12) of the uniform rules
of court.
The applicant will receive substantial redress at a hearing in due
course and this application stands to be struck for
a lack of
urgency.
As to the costs, an
order for costs was granted previously by
Epstein
AJ
on 6 May 2025. The first respondent
argued that Bidvest is entitled to costs from the date of delivery of
the first respondent’s
answering affidavit. The second
respondent also sought an order for costs on the attorney and client
scale.
The respondents are
entitled certainly to their costs in the following terms: the first
respondent is entitled to its costs on a
party and party scale from
the date of the delivery of the first respondent’s answering
affidavit excluding the costs arising
from the order by
Epstein
AJ
.
The second
respondent is entitled to its costs on a party and party scale.
Accordingly, the
application is struck from the roll with costs as set out herein
above.
I hand down the judgment.
CRUTCHFIELD, J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
DATE
:
21 May 2025.
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