Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 204South Africa
HW and Another v RP (18246/2019) [2024] ZAGPJHC 204 (7 March 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
7 March 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## HW and Another v RP (18246/2019) [2024] ZAGPJHC 204 (7 March 2024)
HW and Another v RP (18246/2019) [2024] ZAGPJHC 204 (7 March 2024)
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sino date 7 March 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
1.REPORTABLE:
No
2.OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: No
3.REVISED.
Case
No.
18246/2019
In
the matter between:
HW
First Plaintiff
SJW
Second Plaintiff
and
RS
Defendant
#####
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J
:
1
The plaintiffs seek leave
to appeal against my judgment of 24 November 2023. In that judgment,
I absolved RS from the instance,
at the end of the whole case, on the
basis that neither party had, on a conspectus of all the facts,
proved their version.
2
The plaintiffs’ case
was that R610 000 that the first plaintiff, HW, had advanced to RS in
cash was a loan for her personal
expenses. The amount was advanced as
part of what HW freely admitted was a ruse to deprive his wife, the
second plaintiff, of that
money in a forthcoming divorce. He also
freely admitted that he made no record of the transaction at the
time, and could point
to no objective evidence that recorded the
transaction as a loan. He also accepted that, although he never
intended the money to
go anywhere near RS’ business, that was
in fact where it ended up.
3
RS’ case was that
the amount advanced to her was a gift, not a loan. Its purpose was to
help her pay her business debts, and
to free her of her business
obligations, enabling her to close her business down.
4
I recorded in my trial
judgment that HW was not an impressive witness, and that his evidence
ought to be treated with circumspection,
particularly as his entire
case was based on a plan to deceive his wife.
5
Mr. West, who advanced the
application for leave to appeal before me, did not challenge any of
these findings. He instead laid great
emphasis on a series of
WhatsApp exchanges in which RS consistently failed to deny that the
R610 000 was a loan and not a gift.
He also relied on an entry in
RS’s company’s books of account that record the
transaction as a loan. This documentary
evidence was enough, Mr. West
argued, to create the reasonable prospect that an appeal court will
conclude that I should have given
judgment for the plaintiff.
6
Mr. West pressed his
submissions home with the assertion that RS never advanced an
explanation for her failure to deny that HW had
loaned her the money
in the WhatsApp exchange, or for recording the money as a loan in her
business account. In this Mr. West was
mistaken. In evidence that was
clear, consistent and otherwise reliable, RS did in fact explain why
she failed to deny HW’s
assertions that he loaned her the
money. She said that the assertions were made at a time when her
relationship with HW was collapsing,
and that she saw those
assertions as acts of spite with which she did not engage in order to
avoid conflict. She explained her
later half-hearted assurance that
she would repay HW when she was back “on her feet” as
another attempt to mollify
him. She also explained that her decision
to record the money as a loan to her business was taken on the advice
of her bookkeeper
for tax purposes.
7
I found neither of these
explanations particularly convincing, but I could not entirely reject
them. In particular, they were not
so poor as to raise my level of
confidence in the evidence of RW, whose self-serving and deceitful
conduct hangs over every aspect
of this case, to the point that I
could give judgment for him.
8
Still, Mr. West contended
that the WhatsApp exchanges and the bank records were enough in
themselves to provide the corroboration
a court would need to give
judgment for RW, notwithstanding the very poor quality of his
evidence.
9
I do not think that is
correct, but I am driven to accept that an appellate court might
reasonably disagree. I wonder to what extent
an appellate court will
really be in a position to gainsay the credibility findings that I
have made, but I am content to leave
that decision to the court of
appeal itself.
10
Mr. West quite properly
accepted, at the close of his argument, that there was no basis on
which to refer this matter to the Supreme
Court of Appeal, and I
agree. Raising as it does only factual issues, the appeal lies to a
Full Court of this Division.
11
For all these reasons –
11.1 The
plaintiffs are granted leave to appeal to a Full Court of this
Division against the whole of my judgment and order
dated 24 November
2023.
11.2 The costs in
the application for leave to appeal will be costs in the appeal.
S
D J WILSON
Judge
of the High Court
This
judgment is handed down electronically by circulation to the parties
or their legal representatives by email, by uploading
to Caselines,
and by publication of the judgment to the South African Legal
Information Institute. The date for hand-down is deemed
to be 7 March
2024.
HEARD
ON:
7 March 2024
DECIDED
ON:
7 March 2024
For
the Plaintiffs:
HP West
Instructed by Lindeque
Van Heerden Attorneys
For
the Defendant:
B
van der Merwe
Instructed by GJ Brits
Attorneys
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