Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 737South Africa
Flexicor Cables (Py) (Ltd) v Howard Woolf (2023/113646) [2025] ZAGPJHC 737 (28 July 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
28 July 2025
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Flexicor Cables (Py) (Ltd) v Howard Woolf (2023/113646) [2025] ZAGPJHC 737 (28 July 2025)
Flexicor Cables (Py) (Ltd) v Howard Woolf (2023/113646) [2025] ZAGPJHC 737 (28 July 2025)
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sino date 28 July 2025
FLYNOTES:
CIVIL
LAW – Delict –
Trust
account funds –
Allegedly
disbursing funds without proper authorization – Failure to
plead negligence or wrongfulness – Fatal
to claim –
Deprived respondent of opportunity to raise defences such as
contributory negligence – Respondent
knew depositor’s
identity and acted on client’s instructions – Not
patently suspicious – Failed to
establish a valid delictual
claim – Facts and circumstances did not unequivocally
demonstrate or support an inference
of negligence –
Application dismissed.
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case No: 2023-113646
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
28 July 2025
In the matter between:
FLEXICOR
CABLES (PT) LTD
Applicant
and
HOWARD
SHANE WOOLF
Respondent
JUDGMENT
BARNES AJ
Introduction
[1]
The Applicant, Flexicor Cables (Pty) Ltd, is a
company in the business of manufacturing cables, connectors and
related accessories
(“Flexicor”).
The Respondent is an attorney based in
Johannesburg practicing under the name and style of Howard S Woolf
(“Woolf”).
[2]
In this application, Flexicor seeks re-payment of
the amount of R591 110.89 from Woolf.
[3]
It is
not in dispute that Flexicor deposited the aforesaid amount
(“the
funds”)
into
Woolf’s trust account on 25 May 2023. Nor is it in dispute that
Woolf transferred the funds to a third party, one Alberto
Lorenzo
Pavoncelli
(“Pavoncelli”)
the
following day, that is, 26 May 2023.
[1]
[4]
Flexicor claims re-payment of the funds on the
basis that Woolf was not entitled to dispose of them without
Flexicor’s instructions
or consent. Woolf, for his part,
contends that Flexicor has failed to make our case for the re-payment
of the funds, whether in
terms of contract, delict or on any other
basis.
[5]
In what follows below, I will set out the
circumstances in which the funds were deposited into Woolf’s
trust account and thereafter
transferred to Pavoncelli. The facts in
this regard are largely common cause between the parties. Thereafter,
I will consider whether
Flexicor has made out a case for the
re-payment of the funds.
The Material Facts
[6]
The story begins in May 2023. Flexicor’s
director, Eugenia Gualdi
(“Gualdi”)
was approached by Pavoncelli, who proposed that he
partner with Flexicor, through his company, Swiss Integr-8-Group, to
establish
a cable manufacturing company in Italy. Gualdi has
explained that, following negotiations, Flexicor and Pavoncelli
reached an agreement
along the following lines:
6.1
A cable manufacturing entity would be established
in Italy.
6.2
Financing for the project would be sourced through
a subsidy from the Italian Government.
6.3
Pavoncelli would register a company in Italy, with
the name ItalCor, through which the entity would operate.
6.4
Flexicor would hold an 85% shareholding in the
entity while Pavoncelli, through his company, would hold a 15%
shareholding.
6.5
The cost of setting up the entity, “the
project cost”, would be R700 000.00.
6.6
Flexicor would deposit R591 110.89 into
Woolf’s trust account, this being its 85% contribution to the
project cost (“the
funds”).
6.7
The funds would be placed in an interest bearing
account.
6.8
In the event that the project deliverables were
met, notably the securing of the subsidy from the Italian government
and the establishment
of ItalCor, the funds would be transferred to
Swiss Integr-8-Group, Pavoncelli’s company.
6.9
In the event that the project deliverables were
not met, the funds would be returned to Flexicor, with interest.
[7]
On 25 May 2023, and in accordance with the above,
Flexicor deposited the funds into Woolf’s trust account, the
details of
which were provided to Gauldi by Pavoncelli. Flexicor had
had no prior dealings with Woolf and did not communicate with Woolf
with
regards to the deposit.
[8]
Months passed and Pavoncelli was not keeping his
end of the bargain. Gauldi became increasingly concerned and started
making enquiries.
Gualdi then discovered, through her attorney, that
Pavoncelli had previously swindled a South African businessman out of
millions
of rands through abuse of an attorney’s trust account.
This was confirmed in a Supreme Court of Appeal
(“SCA”)
judgment. This discovery must have brought with it
a sense of fearful apprehension and alas, shortly thereafter, Gauldi
confirmed
that Pavoncelli had taken no steps to apply for an Italian
Government subsidy. Nor he had he taken any steps to register a
company
in Italy. In short, the entire deal had been a scam.
[9]
Gauldi took legal advice and, on 13 September
2023, her attorney wrote to Woolf, setting out the details of
Flexicor’s “agreement”
with Pavoncelli and asking
Woolf to confirm:
9.1
that he represented Pavoncelli;
9.2
that the funds had been deposited into his
trust account on 25 May 2023;
9.3
that the funds had been placed in an interest
bearing account; and
9.4
that, since the project objectives agreed between
Flexicor and Pavoncelli had not been achieved, the funds would be
returned to
Flexicor, with interest.
[10]
Woolf responded to Flexicor in a letter dated 15
September 2023. He stated that “
I
was aware that the funds deposited into my trust account were paid
and deposited by your client for the benefit of my client,
and in
regard to the then prospective business relationship between our
respective clients”.
Save as
above Woolf stated that had no knowledge of the arrangements between
Flexicor and Pavoncelli.
[11]
Further correspondence ensued between the parties
which failed to produce a resolution of the matter and on 1 November
2023 Flexicor
launched the present application against Woolf for the
repayment of the funds.
Flexicor’s
Claim
[12]
Flexicor’s claim against Woolf is pleaded in
its founding affidavit
solely
in the following terms:
“
Apart
from paying the money into the respondent’s trust account,
there was never any communication between the applicant and
the
respondent. Under those circumstances the respondent received the
money on behalf of the applicant. As such he had to obtain
the
Applicant’s mandate and could not make payment without the
applicant’s instructions or consent.”
“
It
is submitted (and will be argued at the hearing) that the money in
the trust account at all times remained the applicant’s
funds
and the respondent could not lawfully dispose of it without the
applicant’s consent.”
[13]
In his answering affidavit, Woolf pleaded that
Pavoncelli (who was his client) informed him that Flexicor was to
deposit funds into
Woolf’s trust account in relation to a
prospective business arrangement between the two. Pavoncelli advised
Woolf that the
funds were immediately required for the new business
venture and instructed that they be transferred into his account in
Italy
forthwith. Acting in accordance with these instructions, Woolf
transferred the funds to Pavoncelli on 26 May 2023. Woolf pleaded
that he had no idea what the prospective business arrangement between
Flexicor and Pavoncelli was.
[14]
Insofar as Flexicor’s claim for the
re-payment of the funds was concerned, Woolf pleaded that Flexicor
had failed to make
out a case for the relief sought. In particular,
Woolf contended that Flexicor would have had to establish either a
contractual
or delictual right to the relief sought but had failed to
plead either cause of action in its founding papers.
The Parties’
Submissions
[15]
At the hearing of the application, Adv Theron SC,
who appeared on behalf of Flexicor, confirmed that its claim was
founded in delict.
He submitted that the doctrine of
res
ipsa loquitur
applied, that Woolf had
put up no defence to Flexicor’s claim and that the relief
sought ought accordingly to be granted.
[16]
Adv Pincus SC, who appeared on behalf of Woolf,
submitted that Flexicor had failed to make out a case in delict for
the relief sought.
In particular, he submitted that Flexicor had
failed to plead facts to establish the delictual elements of either
wrongfulness
or fault.
[17]
Somewhat unusually, at the hearing of the matter,
counsel on both sides sought to rely on the same two judgments in
support of their
arguments. These were
Hirschowitz
Flionis v Bartlett and Another
[2006] ZASCA 23
;
2006 (3)
SA 575
(SCA) and
Du Preez and Others v
Zwiegers
[2008] ZASCA 42
;
2008 (4) SA 627
(SCA).
[18]
In order to properly assess the parties’
respective submissions, it is necessary to consider these judgments
in some detail.
I do so below.
The Case Law
The Hirschowitz
Judgment
[19]
In this case, the appellant firm of attorneys,
Hirschowitz Flionis, received a deposit of R3.1 million into its
trust account without
information as to the identity of the depositor
or the purpose for which the deposit was intended. (It should
be noted that
only one of the partners of the appellant firm,
Flionis, was involved in the events relating to the case.)
[20]
The deposit had been made by the first respondent,
Bartlett, who was also an attorney. Bartlett had borrowed the money,
with the
intention that it be held in trust until he gave
instructions to Flionis as to how it should be disbursed.
[21]
It transpired that an elaborate fraud was being
perpetrated against Bartlett. In execution of this fraud, one Ms
Karen Hardaker
told Bartlett that Flionis had been informed of the
purpose of the deposit and instructed Bartlett not to communicate
with Flionis.
Bartlett obliged and made no contact with Flionis.
[22]
Thereafter, Flionis received instructions from one
Mr Charlie Gambino (which were patently suspicious) to make certain
payments
from the money that had been deposited by Bartlett. Flionis
did so.
[23]
When Bartlett eventually discovered the fraud and
demanded repayment of the deposit, he was informed that it had been
paid out.
[24]
Bartlett instituted a delictual action against
Flionis in the High Court for damages for pure economic loss.
[25]
The High Court found that Flionis had owed
Bartlett a legal duty of care. It found further that Flionis had been
negligent by omission
in disbursing the money without querying
Gambino’s (patently suspicious) instructions or tracing the
true depositor. Notably,
both the legal duty of care resting on
Flionis in the circumstances and the grounds on which it was alleged
that Flionis had acted
negligently were pleaded by Bartlett. The High
Court awarded Bartlett damages in the amount of R3.1 million.
[26]
On appeal to the SCA, it was common cause that
Flionis had been negligent by omission in the respects found by the
High Court.
[27]
The issues on appeal were:
27.1
whether there had been a legal duty of care on
Flionis; and
27.2
whether Bartlett had been contributorily negligent
in not informing Flionis of the deposit or its purpose.
[28]
On the first issue, the SCA held that there were a
number of considerations which, as a matter of legal policy,
compelled the conclusion
that Flionis had been under a duty of care
in relation to Bartlett. These were the following:
“
(i)
the appellant was a firm of practising attorneys and as such
proclaimed to the public that it possessed the expertise and
trustworthiness
to deal with trust money reasonably and responsibly;
(ii) Bartlett had reasonably relied on that and particularly on the
fact that
the money would be in the appellant’s trust account
until he instructed otherwise; (iii) even when an attorney discovered
an anonymous and unexplained deposit in his trust account, it
required minimal management to transfer the money to a suspense
account and to trace the depositor; and (iv) unreasonable conduct
that might put the money at risk would, as a reasonable
foreseeability, cause loss to the depositor or beneficiary. The legal
convictions of the community would undoubtedly clamour for
there to
be liability in the circumstances.”
[2]
[29]
On the second issue, the SCA found that the
appellant had established contributory negligence on the part of
Bartlett. This was
so because a reasonable person in Bartlett’s
position would not have accepted Hardarker’s assurances that he
need not
contact Flionis (particularly on such an important matter
and given that he only knew Hardarker over the telephone). A
reasonable
person in Bartlett’s position would have put Flionis
in the picture so as to avoid any risk.
[30]
Quantifying the parties’ respective degrees
of fault, the SCA assessed that Flionis was 60% at fault and Bartlet
40% at fault
in respect of the loss sustained by Bartlett. The award
of damages by the High Court therefore fell to be reduced from R3.1
million
to R1.86 million.
The Du Preez Judgment
[31]
In this case, the appellant, Versatile
Construction CC
(“the
corporation”)
deposited the sum
of R385 000.00 into the trust account of the respondent
attorney, Zwiegers.
[32]
The corporation’s sole member, Mr Du Preez,
in partnership with one Mr Johst, had sought to obtain a foreign loan
for a project
which the corporation would undertake. The loan was to
be procured through an entity called DLA International Financial
Services.
Under the loan agreement with DLA the borrowers (Du Preez
and Johst) were required to pay the sum in question as a refundable
deposit.
The deposit was to be paid into Zwiegers’ trust
account where it would be held pending onward payment to DLA on
implementation
of the loan.
[33]
However pursuant to instructions from a client, Mr
Michael Louw, who himself claimed to be entitled to the deposit,
Zweigers paid
the money to a company designated by Louw.
Zwiegers did so with without contacting the corporation or anyone
representing
it, and despite correspondence from both the corporation
and DLA pertaining to what ought to be done with the deposit, which
conflicted
with Louw’s instructions.
[34]
When DLA subsequently failed to pay out the loan
moneys, Du Preez tried to recover the deposit from Zwiegers to no
avail.
[35]
Du Preez, Johst and the corporation, as
co-plaintiffs, then sued Zwiegers for damages in the sum of
R385 000.00. The claim
was based in contract, alternatively
delict. The High Court dismissed the action but granted leave to
appeal on the delictual claim.
[36]
On appeal, the SCA held, following
Hirschowitz,
that Zwiegers had owed the appellants a legal duty
of care.
[37]
The SCA held further that Zwiegers had been
negligent in failing to make contact with the depositor (the identity
of which was known
to him) in the face of the conflicting
instructions he had received pertaining to what was to be done with
the deposit.
[38]
The SCA accordingly upheld the appeal and granted
damages against Zwiegers in the amount of R385 000.00.
[39]
In the hearing before me, Mr Theron argued that it
was clear from these judgments that Woolf owed a legal duty of care
to Flexicor.
He argued further that Woolf had obviously been
negligent and that this was a case of
res
ipsa loquitur
.
[40]
Mr Pincus, on the other hand, argued that the
judgments underscored the need to plead wrongfulness and fault in a
delictual claim
for pure economic loss. Not only had Flexicor failed
to plead negligence but its failure to so had the consequence that
Woolf was
precluded from pleading contributory negligence. Mr Pincus
submitted further that the facts in
Hirschowitz
and
Du Preez
were in any event distinguishable from the present
case, in that Woolf had not received conflicting instructions with
regards to
the funds, nor were the instructions he had received
pertaining to the funds “patently suspicious”.
Analysis
[41]
It is
trite law that a litigant must plead every element of a delict in
order to disclose a valid cause of action. This applies
equally in
motion proceedings where an applicant must stand or fall by its
founding affidavit. The founding papers must set out
a complete cause
of action on their face. The SCA has defined “
cause
of action”
as
“
every
fact which it would be necessary for the plaintiff to prove in order
to support his right to judgment.”
[3]
It is not enough to simply recite a legal conclusion, for example by
stating that the defendant or respondent acted “wrongfully”
or “negligently” without pleading the material facts that
underpin each delictual element.
[4]
Thus a claimant must allege facts to establish every element of the
delict, namely: conduct, wrongfulness, fault (intention or
negligence, unless it is a strict liability delict), causation and
harm (damages).
[5]
[42]
As is evident from the portions of Flexicor’s
founding affidavit quoted above, it failed to plead either
wrongfulness or fault.
We are not dealing here with a strict
liability delict. Flexicor’s failure to plead fault is
therefore, on its own (and without
regard to whether or not the other
elements of delict may have been sufficiently pleaded) fatal to its
claim.
[43]
It is important to emphasise that this is not
simply a matter of form, but fundamentally one of substance.
Flexicor’s failure
to plead fault means that it has failed to
articulate any basis for its contention (made only in argument) that
Woolf acted negligently
in transferring the funds to Pavoncelli.
[44]
Mr Pincus is correct that the
Hirschowitz
and
Du Preez
judgments are distinguishable on the facts.
Central to the finding of negligence in
Hirschowitz
were the twin facts that the identity
of the depositor was unknown to Flionis and the instructions given to
him by Charlie Gambini
were patently suspicious. In
Du
Preez,
it was the fact that the
attorney in question, Zwiegers, had been given conflicting
instructions pertaining to the deposit and failed
to take steps to
clarify them.
[45]
In this case, where Woolf knew the identity of the
depositor and was informed by his client of the purpose of the funds,
it is by
no means clear that he acted negligently in transferring
them to Pavoncelli. Certainly, this is not a case of
res
ipsa loquitur
, where the only
reasonable inference from the proven facts is one of negligence, as
suggested by Mr Theron.
[46]
Like
Hirschowitz
,
this is case in which, had negligence been pleaded, Woolf may well
have countered with a defence of contributory negligence, in
that,
like Bartlett, it may well be that Flexicor ought to have
communicated with Woolf regarding the deposit so as to avoid any
risk. As Mr Pincus correctly submitted, Flexicor’s failure to
plead negligence, meant that Woolf was precluded from pleading
contributory negligence.
[47]
In short, Flexicor’s failure to properly
plead its delictual claim has the consequence that it failed to aver
and therefore
establish fault on the part of Woolf. The application
must therefore be dismissed.
[48]
Both parties were in agreement that costs ought to
follow the result and be awarded on Scale C.
[49]
For all of the above reasons, I make the following
order:
Order
1.
The application is dismissed with costs on Scale C.
H BARNES
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
JOHANNESBURG
Heard:
10 February 2025
Reasons/Judgment: 28
July 2025
Appearances:
Applicant:
Adv E Theron SC (heads of
argument drawn by Adv P Van den Berg SC) instructed by Van Veijeren
Attorneys
Respondent:
Adv Pincus SC instructed
by Harold S Woolf Attorneys
[1]
The date of the transfer
of the funds by Woolf to Pavoncelli was initially in dispute between
the parties. However, at the hearing
of the application Woolf sought
leave to file a supplementary affidavit. There was no objection to
this by Flexicor and leave
was accordingly granted. Woolf attached
to his supplementary affidavit a redacted copy of his trust banking
account for the month
of May 2023 which confirmed that the funds had
been transferred out of his trust account on 26 May 2025. This was
accepted by
counsel for Flexicor and the hearing accordingly
proceeded on the basis that there was no longer a dispute between
the parties
as to the date on which Woolf transferred the funds out
of his trust account.
[2]
Paragraph [30] at
589C-F.
[3]
Mckenzie
v Farmers Co-operative Meat Industries Ltd
1922
AD 16 (A).
[4]
Radebe
and Others v Eastern Transvaal Development Board
1988
(2) SA 785 (A).
[5]
See
for example
Evrigard
(Pty) Ltd and Another v Select PPE (Pty) Ltd and Others
[2024]
ZAGPJHC 183.
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