Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 425South Africa
Auto and Truck Tyres (Pty) Ltd v Symes and Others (2019/34782) [2024] ZAGPJHC 425 (2 May 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
7 February 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Auto and Truck Tyres (Pty) Ltd v Symes and Others (2019/34782) [2024] ZAGPJHC 425 (2 May 2024)
Auto and Truck Tyres (Pty) Ltd v Symes and Others (2019/34782) [2024] ZAGPJHC 425 (2 May 2024)
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sino date 2 May 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
Case no: 2019/34782
1. REPORTABLE: NO
2. OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO
3. REVISED: NO
2 May 2024
In the matter between:
AUTO
AND TRUCK TYRES (PTY) LTD
Applicant
/ Defendant
and
SYMES,
MARYNA ESTELLE
N.O.
First
Respondent / Plaintiff
MEDUPE,
TSHEPO
N.O.
Second Respondent / Plaintiff
MOOLLAJIE,
ABDURUMAN
N.O.
Third Respondent / Plaintiff
JUDGMENT
This
judgment is handed down electronically by circulation to the parties’
legal representatives by e-mail and publication
on CaseLines.
MOULTRIE
AJ
[1]
The
applicant in this matter seeks leave to amend its plea in an action
instituted against it by the joint liquidators of a company
that is
being compulsorily wound up under the Companies Act, 61 of 1973. It
is convenient to refer to these parties as “the
defendant”,
“the plaintiffs” and “the company”
respectively.
[1]
[2]
In the action, the plaintiffs allege that the company made certain
payments to the defendant that constituted dispositions without
value
as contemplated in
section 26(1)(b)
of the
Insolvency Act, 24 of
1936
. Orders are sought setting aside the alleged dispositions and
holding the defendant liable for the full amount of each of the
pleaded
payments.
[3]
The plaintiffs’ particulars of claim in the action do not
expressly allege either the means by which the pleaded payments
were
made to the defendant or that the defendant actually received them or
that it received any benefit thereby. Despite this,
the plaintiffs
have indicated in the course of pre-trial exchanges in the action
(and it is apparent from the argument advanced
on their behalf before
me) that they intend at the trial to contend that it has become
common cause between the parties as a result
of certain “positive
averments” made by the defendant in its plea and other
documents not only that the pleaded payments
were made to the
defendant, and it alone; but also that the defendant, and it alone,
received them – even if this is objectively
“inaccurate
or untrue”.
[4]
On the other hand, the defendant contends that the plaintiffs’
interpretation of its plea and the averments made on its behalf
in
the other documents is opportunistic and incorrect, and seeks to
amend its plea so as to “clarify” its position,
which is
(i) that the pleaded payments were made by way of deposits into the
trust banking account of attorneys who were not representing
it
alone, but were also representing two other parties; and (ii) that it
did not receive the pleaded payments or any benefit therefrom.
It
also seeks to introduce what it characterises as a special plea of
“mis-joinder / non-joinder” in which it identifies
the
parties to whom it contends the proceeds of the pleaded payments were
“distributed” as being Messrs John Beaumont
and Deon
Auby.
[5]
The defendant’s notice of intention to amend was delivered on 7
February 2023, some two weeks before the trial of the action
was due
to commence on 21 February 2023. On 13 February 2023, the parties
filed a joint trial practice note indicating that the
trial was not
ready to proceed, and an order was then granted by agreement
postponing the trial
sine die
and reserving the wasted costs
occasioned by the postponement for later determination.
[6]
The plaintiffs delivered their
Rule 28(3)
notice of objection on 20
February 2023. The defendant then launched this application on 7
March 2023. Since that was one day after
the expiry of the 10-day
period stipulated in
Rule 28(4)
, the defendant seeks condonation. The
explanation given for the slight delay is adequate and the plaintiffs
do not oppose the request
for condonation. Condonation will therefore
be granted.
[7]
The plaintiffs’
Rule 28(3)
notice of objection contends that
the intended amendments are “
mala fide
and prejudicial
to the rights of the plaintiffs”. Although the notice is not a
model of drafting clarity, it appears to me
that the objections fall
into two broad categories. The first of these raises the issue for
whether the facts about the pleaded
payments that the plaintiff
contends have become common cause have indeed become so. The second
category relates to the defendant’s
intention to withdraw an
admission that it previously made that the plaintiffs are the joint
liquidators of the company, and that
the order of compulsory winding
up was preceded by a voluntary winding up.
IS
IT COMMON CAUSE THAT THE PLEADED PAYMENTS WERE MADE TO THE DEFENDANT
AND THAT IT RECEIVED THEM?
[8]
The proposed amendments relevant to the first category of the
plaintiffs’ objections are the intended introduction of the
special plea and the proposed amendment of paragraph 8.3 of its plea
(part of the defendant’s response to paragraph 8 of
the
plaintiffs’ particulars of claim) and paragraph 11 thereof (in
response to paragraph 11 of the particulars of claim).
[9]
According to the plaintiffs, the result of granting the defendant
leave to effect these amendments would be to allow it to “withdraw”
or to introduce “a denial (or placing in dispute)” of two
“positive averments” that the defendant has allegedly
previously advanced:
(a)
that the payments pleaded by the plaintiff as constituting the
alleged dispositions “were made to the defendant”; and
(b)
that “the defendant received” those payments.
[10]
It is contended that these alleged averments constituted binding
“statements of facts that are common cause”, which
consequently “became unnecessary for the plaintiffs to prove”.
The notice goes on to contend that “the defendant
grossly
misled the plaintiffs and the court by making the positive averments
… and “induced the plaintiffs to believe
that the
defendant received the payments” and “thereby lead [sic]
the plaintiffs astray for three years to prejudice
of the
plaintiffs”. Although the only prejudice expressly mentioned in
the notice and the answering affidavit is the postponement
referred
to above and that the amendment will result in the plaintiffs not
knowing what case and defence the defendant is attempting
to advance,
their counsel also argued that the averments resulted in the
plaintiffs not initially pursuing the parties that the
defendant
contends received the benefit of the pleaded payments, and that when
they did so, those parties raised a special plea
of prescription. In
the circumstances, says the plaintiff, “the defendant attempts”
by means of the proposed amendments
“to obtain an unfair
advantage over the plaintiffs in the current and/or probable future
litigation” which “is
not
bona fide
”.
[11]
Furthermore, the plaintiffs contend that these proposed amendments
(in particular the defendant’s application for leave to
insert
paragraphs 2, 3 and 7 of the special plea), would introduce
“contradictory factual versions” on the defendant’s
pleadings as to whether or not it accepts that it received the
pleaded payments. It is also alleged that “further ambiguity
and confusion” would arise from the intended amendments because
they would allegedly result in the defendant’s pleaded
case
contradicting the content of certain documents in its supplementary
discovery as to the identities of the parties who did
receive the
payments.
[12]
The defendant’s proposed special plea reads as follows:
MIS-JOINDER /
NON-JOINDER
1.
The Plaintiffs instituted action against the Defendant alleging that
payments made to the Defendant constitute dispositions of
[the
company’s] property (the “dispositions”) within the
meaning of section 2 of the Insolvency Act 24 of 1936
(the "Act").
2.
The Defendant has no knowledge regarding the allegations of the
payments allegedly received by the Defendant.
3.
All payments allegedly made to the Defendant were made in terms of
the settlement agreement (Annexure “X”) and were
made by
alternatively, at the instance and for and on behalf of Hylton
Odendaal (“Hylton”), in discharge of all his
obligations
arising from and pursuant to the settlement agreement.
4.
In terms of the settlement agreement “Creditors” are
defined as collectively Auto and Truck [the Defendant], Rob Beaumont
and John Deon
Auby.
5.
Payments made, were made into the trust account of DMO Attorneys, for
and on behalf of the “creditors”, whereafter
the amounts
were, in accordance with the instructions issued to DMO Attorneys,
distributed to Rob Beaumont and John Deon Auby.
6.
As such, there is a mis-joinder of the Defendant who at no stage
received any payment and/or benefit as alleged by the Plaintiffs.
7.
The Defendant has no knowledge of these payments as same was neither
made to the Defendant nor received by the Defendant.
[13]
Paragraph 8 of the plaintiffs’ particulars of claim alleges
that “During the period 3 April 2017 to 2 November 2018
[the
company] made nineteen payments to the defendant in the aggregate
amount of R1,330,000.00 …” and proceeds to
specify 19
payments of R70,000 on specified dates during the pleaded period.
Paragraph 9 of the particulars of claim goes on to
allege that “the
payments constitute dispositions of [the company’s] property
(“the dispositions”) within
the meaning of
section 2
of
the
Insolvency Act.”
[14
]
The defendant’s response to paragraph 8 of the particulars of
claim is contained in paragraphs 7 and 8 of its plea which,
together
with the proposed amendments to paragraph 8 thereof, read as follows
[proposed additions to the plea are recorded in curly
brackets in
bold and proposed excisions therefrom are “struck through”
in bold, while the name of the company is replaced
in square
brackets]:
7.
Each of the allegations as contained in this paragraph are denied as
if specifically traversed and the Plaintiffs' are put to the
proof
thereof.
8.
In amplification of the said denial, the Defendant pleads as follows:
8.1
On or about 20 March 2017, the Defendant, Rob Beaumont and John Deon
Auby, on the one hand and Hylton Bernard Odendaal ("Hylton")
and Nicola Jane Odendaal, on the other hand, entered into a
settlement agreement ("the Settlement Agreement"), a copy
of which is annexed hereto marked annexure "X", the content
of which the Defendant prays be read as if specifically incorporated
herein.
8.2
Hylton was at all times the only director and shareholder of [the
company] (in liquidation) (“[the company]”). {
Hylton
held a director’s and/or shareholder’s loan within [the
company].
}
8.3
All payments {
made
} to the Defendant {
and/or Rob Beaumont
and/or John Deon Auby
} were made {
into the trust account of
DMO Attorneys
} pursuant to {
and in terms of
} the
{
S
}
s
ettlement {
A
}
a
greement
and were made by, alternatively at the instance and for and on behalf
of{
,
} Hylton, in discharge of all his obligations arising from
and pursuant to the settlement agreement.
[15]
Paragraph 11 of the plaintiffs’ particulars of claim states
that “The dispositions fall to be set aside in terms of
the
provisions of
Section 26(1
)(b) of the Act.”
[16]
The defendant’s response to this allegation is contained in
paragraph 11 of its plea which, together with the proposed amendments
thereto, reads as follows [again, proposed additions to the plea are
recorded in curly brackets in bold and proposed excisions
therefrom
are “struck through” in bold, while the name of the
company is replaced in square brackets]:
11.{
1.
} The
Defendant denies the content of this paragraph as if specifically
traversed and puts the Plaintiffs' to the proof thereof.
{
11.2. There exists no
evidence of any disposition of any assets but only payments to a
creditor (Hylton), which constitutes a reduction
of an obligation
which lies in the hands of [the company], such that it receives a
benefit.
11.3.
These payments were a repayment of a shareholder's loan and not a
disposition for no value. [The company] received
a direct benefit, in
terms of which its obligations to Hylton were reduced.
}
The
necessity of a benefit having been received for liability under
section 26(1)(b)
[17]
It is convenient at this juncture to reiterate that the plaintiffs’
objection to the proposed special plea and amendment
of paragraphs
8.3 and 11 of the plea is based on the contention that the defendant
has made two separate and distinct averments
from which it may not
now retreat by means of the proposed amendments. This is of central
importance to my determination of this
matter.
[18]
There is some superficial attraction in the plaintiffs’
argument that a party’s positive statement or admission that
payments were in fact “made to” it also contains the
implicit statement or admission that it “received”
those
payments. However, while that may indeed be the case in many
instances, such an implication does not axiomatically follow
in this
particular application given the very distinctive features of the
factual matrix that applies to its determination (in
particular the
defendant’s contention that the payments were made into the
trust banking account of attorneys representing
not only the
defendant but also Beaumont and Auby), as well as the legal context
in which the plaintiffs’ claim is advanced.
[19]
A clear
distinction of principle is drawn in the context of claims under
section 26(1)(b)
of the
Insolvency Act between
the making of a
payment constituting a disposition to the defendant and the receipt
thereof by the defendant in the legally relevant
sense. In
Van
Wyk Van Heerden Attorneys v Gore
,
a matter that bears striking factual similarities to the current one,
the Supreme Court of Appeal held that the clear language
of
section
26(1)(b)
“includes a pertinent reference to a benefit”
and that, in order to apply to a “party to whom a disposition
was
made”, that party must be “one who ‘benefited
by the disposition’.” The Court also held that “the
construction of the section does not allow for liability to attach to
one who did not benefit by it … [t]he plain language
requires
the disponee to have benefited”.
[2]
The court’s use of the phrase “to whom a disposition was
made” (as well as the word “disponee”) indicates
that even if it were to be established that the defendant is a person
“to whom the alleged disposition was made”, that
does not
necessarily mean that it is also a person who has “benefited
by” it.
[20]
In reaching
these conclusions, the SCA carefully excavated previous authoritative
statements of South African law to the same effect,
[3]
and explored the underlying rationale for the section with reference
to the approaches adopted in both English
[4]
and Australian law
[5]
(where the
language of the relevant statutory provisions are not as explicit)
and held that “
section 26(1)(b)
is clearly aimed at only the
person who benefits from (or claims under) the disposition”.
[6]
In the process, the SCA approved of “the purposive approach
articulated so clearly” by the English Court of Appeal
in
Hollicourt
to the effect that the reason why a bank (for example) would not be
liable in respect of payments made by means of cheques drawn
by a
subsequently liquidated insolvent company in insolvent circumstances
in favour of the bank’s customers is that “the
policy
promoted by” a provision such as
section 26(1)(b)
is one of
“restitutionary liability”, as opposed to the imposition
of liability solely because the disposition had
been made to it in
the applicable circumstances.
[7]
[21]
The SCA
consequently held that “the relevant touchstone for liability”
under
section 26(1)(b)
, including in the context of payments made
into the trust banking accounts of attorneys, is “the need for
the person to whom
the disposition is made for the purpose of
s
26(1)(b)
to have benefited from it”.
[8]
[22]
I would add that the SCA’s conclusions would seem to be
bolstered by the language employed in section 33(1) of the Act, which
provides that if a person “in return for [a] disposition …
liable to be set aside under section 26 …
has lost any right
against another person, shall if he acted in good faith, not be
obliged to
restore any … benefit received
under such
disposition, unless the [liquidator] has indemnified him … for
losing such right”.
[23]
While the differences between the factual matrices arising in the
current matter and in
Van Wyk Van Heerden
are discussed
further below, it suffices for current purposes to observe that the
distinction sought to be drawn by the plaintiffs
themselves between
averments allegedly made by the defendant that the pleaded payments
were “made to” it, on the one
hand, and averments as to
its receipt thereof, on the other hand, is not a distinction without
a difference. For this reason, I
proceed to consider the two alleged
averments separately.
The
defendant’s alleged averments that the pleaded payments were
made to it
[24]
In the first two sentences of paragraph 64 of the founding affidavit
in the application for leave to amend, the defendant’s
deponent
(one of its directors, Beaumont) denies that the pleaded payments
were “made to the defendant”. According
to Beaumont, the
defendant’s position has always been that:
(a)
the defendant, together with Beaumont and Auby entered into a
settlement agreement with Hylton Odendaal (a director of the company)
and Nicola Odendaal in 2017, which recorded an indebtedness and
created an obligation for payment by the latter parties in favour
of
the former; and
(b)
Odendaal effected payment, or caused payment to be effected in
accordance with that obligation, and in discharge of that
indebtedness.
[25]
Beaumont states that these payments “were made to DMO Attorneys
and not to the defendant”, emphasising that the alleged
settlement agreement stipulates that Odendaal’s indebtedness to
the defendant, Beaumont and Auby (who were defined as “the
creditors”) was to be discharged by way of one lump sum payment
and subsequent monthly payments into the “designated
account”,
which was in turn defined as “the Trust Account of DMO
Attorneys”. I note that the alleged settlement
agreement (which
is attached to Beaumont’s affidavit and which the defendant
specifically prays in paragraph 8.1 of its plea
should “be read
as if specifically incorporated herein”) stipulates that the
“settlement amount” was the
sum of R3 million, that the
lump sum payment was R1 million, and that the subsequent monthly
payments were to be in amounts of
R70,000 each, commencing from 3
April 2017.
[26]
In substantiation of this allegation, Beaumont attaches a document
bearing the heading:
Transaction History
for Daly Maqubela
Oliphant Incorporated
for HYLTON ODENDAAL
(AT 4246) / AUTO AND TRUCK TYRES (PTY) LTD (CNT1815)
for 03 Apr 2017 –
01 Dec 2018
and
purporting to record 20 separate “received direct deposits”,
each in the amount of R70,000.
[27]
Notably,
the document records 19 of these deposits as having been received by
DMO Attorneys on the same dates as the pleaded payments.
For the
purposes of the determination of this application, I am bound to
accept that it is common cause that these 19 deposits
(to which I
shall refer to where necessary as “the alleged settlement
payments”)
[9]
are the very
same “payments” as the pleaded payments that the
plaintiffs allege constituted dispositions to the defendant
without
value. While the defendant assiduously avoided saying so in its
founding affidavit, this is the effect of paragraphs 33,
34, 38, 54
and 57 of the plaintiffs’ answering affidavit and the defendant
ultimately accepted this, as is apparent from
paragraphs 8, 10, 20,
21, 24 and especially paragraph 37.2 of the replying affidavit, in
which Beaumont plainly states the following:
I cannot state it any
more clearly, Auby and I were recipients of payments,
payments
made pursuant to the settlement agreement
entered into. Despite
these payments
having been made by [the company] (
as
contended by the respondents
), [the company] benefitted from
these payments, [the company] having been indebted to Hylton
Odendaal.
[28]
Beaumont’s
contends that, if indeed the alleged settlement payments were paid
into the trust banking account of DMO Attorneys
as he alleges, that
would mean that they were not (even partly) “made to” the
defendant. I am not prepared to make
that finding for the purposes of
the current application. On Beaumont’s own version, the
defendant was one of the creditors
under the alleged settlement
agreement, and the whole tenor of his affidavit makes it clear that
the defendant, together with Beaumont
and Auby, was one of DMO
Attorneys’ clients at the time that the settlement agreement
was allegedly concluded and the alleged
settlement payments were
made. The heading of the transaction history document also expressly
refers to the defendant as being
a client of DMO Attorneys.
[10]
What is more, the alleged settlement agreement expressly states
Odendaal’s indebtedness to the creditors (i.e. jointly,
including the defendant) thereunder would be “discharged by way
of payment into” DMO Attorneys’ trust banking
account. In
other words, on the defendant’s version, DMO Attorneys was the
payment agent for all of the creditors. I thus
proceed on the basis
that the alleged settlement payments (which must be accepted for
current purposes as being the same as the
pleaded payments) were at
least partly “made … to the defendant”.
[29]
In the circumstances, I conclude that the defendant should not be
granted leave to amend its pleadings in a manner that seeks to
contend that the pleaded payments were not at least partly “made
to” it. To do so would contradict the factual averments
that
the defendant makes in its own papers.
[30]
In the circumstances, leave to introduce paragraph 7 of the proposed
special plea, which not only seeks to allege that the defendant
has
no knowledge of the pleaded payments at all, but also that they were
not made (even partly) to the defendant, must be refused.
[31]
I am,
however, unable to agree with the plaintiffs’ argument that the
references in paragraph 8.3 of the defendant’s
plea to “all
payments to the defendant” and the references in paragraph 10
thereof to “the payments” and
“each payment”
constitute either unequivocal averments or admissions made by
necessary implication,
[11]
that any portion of the pleaded payments were made to the defendant.
Apart from the fact that paragraph 7 of the plea contains
an express
general denial of paragraph 8 of the particulars of claim (as was the
case in
Biddulph
),
the use of the indefinite article “all” in the phrase
“all payments to the defendant” in paragraph 8.3
of the
plea
[12]
indicates that this
is not inevitably or necessarily a reference to the pleaded payments
(or even to any portion thereof), but
that it might refer to other
payments (or some portion thereof) made to the defendant pursuant to
the alleged settlement agreement.
[13]
And while the “payments” referred to in paragraph 10 of
the defendant’s plea do indeed appear to refer to the
pleaded
payments, none of them is alleged in paragraph 10 to have been made
“to the defendant”. In the circumstances,
no
contradiction arises between the proposed amendments and the
defendant’s existing pleadings.
The
defendant’s alleged averments that it received the pleaded
payments
[32]
The
plaintiffs next objection is to the defendant’s proposed
introduction of a special plea disputing that it has any “knowledge
regarding the [plaintiffs’] allegations” that it received
the pleaded payments;
[14]
that
“it at no stage received” the pleaded payments “and/or
benefit” therefrom “as alleged by the
plaintiffs”;
[15]
and alleging that “payments were made into the trust account of
DMO Attorneys … whereafter the amounts were in accordance
with
the instructions issued to DMO Attorneys, distributed to …
Beamont and … Auby”.
[16]
[33]
The plaintiffs’ notice of objection refers to two occasions
prior to the delivery of the notice of intention to amend upon
which
the defendant allegedly made positive averments that it received the
pleaded payments. These are allegedly contained in (i)
paragraph 8.3
of the plea; and (ii) paragraphs 7.3, 8 and 9.2 of the annexure to a
third-party notice that the defendant served
on the plaintiffs after
the close of pleadings in October 2020.
[34]
This contention is hotly disputed in the defendant’s founding
affidavit in this application. Beaumont states that “from
the
outset, the defendant has denied receiving the payments as claimed by
the plaintiffs”.
[35]
Importantly, the plaintiffs only allege in the notice of objection
that the defendant made “positive averments” that
it
received the pleaded payments. They do not go so far as to contend
that it pleaded any formal admission that his was the case,
or that
the defendant “benefited by” them, which the courts in
both
Reynolds
and
Van Wyk Van Heerden
recognised to be
a requirement for liability under section 26(1)(b). This is of course
unsurprising given the absence of any express
allegation in the
particulars of claim that the defendant received the pleaded payments
or benefited by them.
[36]
I have already concluded above that neither paragraph 8.3 of the plea
nor its proposed amendment contains or would contain an implied
averment that the pleaded payments were (even partly) made to the
defendant, as opposed to an averment that other payments made
under
the alleged settlement agreement were (at least partly) made to it. I
have also found that neither paragraph 10 of the plea
nor paragraph 3
of the proposed special plea give rise to the necessary implication
that the pleaded payments were made to the
defendant. But even if
these paragraphs of the plea and proposed special plea could be
interpreted in that manner, both
Reynolds
and
Van Wyk Van
Heerden
are authority for the proposition that the mere fact that
a payment constituting a disposition was made to a “disponee”
does not necessarily mean that it was received by that disponee –
especially in the relevant sense of a benefit actually
received. As
such the plaintiffs’ contention that the proposed special plea
and amendment of paragraph 8.3 would introduce
“contradictory
factual versions” on the defendant’s pleadings as to
whether or not it received the pleaded payments
(or indeed any
portion thereof) is misplaced.
[37]
As to the
third-party notice and annexure, while I accept that paragraph 9.2 of
the annexure included a positive averment that the
defendant received
the pleaded payments,
[17]
it
cannot be regarded as ever having been formally advanced in view of
the defendant’s admission that it did not obtain the
leave of
the court to serve the notice after the close of pleadings, as
required by Rule 13(3)(b). In the absence of such leave,
it is
“basically in draft form,”
[18]
and is not a pleading. In the circumstances, the document is “
dehors
the pleadings”, does not constitute a formal statement in the
course of litigation, and does not pose any obstacle to the
amendment
sought.
[19]
Even if it had
been indeed formally advanced in a pleading, the amendment or removal
of this averment would not have been subject
to the same limitations
that apply in relation to the withdrawal of an admission: a positive
averment in a pleading may be readily
withdrawn,
[20]
especially where it has not been admitted by the other party.
[21]
At best for the plaintiffs, the averment in question could
potentially form the evidential basis of a replication.
[22]
[38]
Furthermore, any “ambiguity and confusion” that may arise
as a result of the content of documents in the defendant’s
supplementary discovery as to the identities of the parties who did
in fact receive the pleaded payments contradicting the defendant’s
amended pleaded case is simply a matter for evidence, and is not a
basis upon which to refuse the amendment.
[39]
In their answering affidavit, the plaintiffs seek to rely on three
further documents in which the defendant allegedly averred that
it
received the pleaded payments, namely:
(a)
paragraphs 16 and 25 of the founding affidavit deposed to by the
defendant’s attorney in an application for security for
costs
launched in November 2019, as well as two annexures thereto (i.e. the
transaction history document referred to above and
a letter
despatched by DMO Attorneys to the plaintiffs’ attorneys on 26
September 2019);
(b)
a response delivered by the defendant on 28 August 2020 to a rule
35(3) and (6) notice served by the plaintiffs; and
(c)
paragraph 7 of a response furnished by the defendant on 2 August 2021
to an enquiry made by the plaintiffs in the course of pre-trial
procedures.
[40]
None of
these documents was referred to in the notice of objection itself and
for that reason alone, not objection based on them
cannot be
entertained.
[23]
In any event,
the paragraphs of the founding affidavit in the security for costs
application sought to be relied upon did not contain
any averment of
receipt by the defendant – only an allegation that the alleged
settlement payments were “effected …
to” the
defendant and Auby by means of the transfers into DMO Attorneys’
trust banking account identified in
the transaction history document
referred to above. The statement by DMO Attorneys in the letter of 26
September 2019 to the effect
that the payments under the alleged
settlement agreement were “paid to our clients” was made
“
dehors
the pleadings” (indeed, even before the action was instituted),
and may thus readily be “withdrawn” – though
it
might of course form the evidential basis of a replication).
[24]
In any event, this statement does not necessarily imply that any
payment was made to (let alone received by) the defendant, given
that
it appears from paragraph 2 of the letter that the “clients”
in question might have been Beaumont and/or Auby.
The defendant’s
response to the plaintiffs’ Rule 35(3) and (6) request (to the
effect that the defendant’s bank
statements were not relevant
to the action at the time, and that the defendant admits the dates
and amounts of the pleaded payments)
contains no implied averment or
admission of receipt of those payments. As for paragraph 7 of the
written response of 2 August
2021, all that the defendant admitted to
was “the benefit in the form of contractual rights reflected in
the Settlement Agreement”,
which does not necessarily
constitute an admission that it received any part of the pleaded
payments or that it actually “benefited
by” them.
[41]
The only remaining issue to determine in this regard is whether the
defendant’s contention in this application that the pleaded
payments were deposited into the trust banking account of DMO
Attorneys could itself give rise to the necessary implication that
the pleaded payments were received by the defendant, or that it
benefited therefrom.
[42]
In my view, such a conclusion is not sustainable when the relevant
legal principles are applied to the factual matrix before me.
[43]
In
Van
Wyk Van Heerden
,
the SCA held that when attorneys operate on their trust banking
accounts they do so as principals and not in a representative
capacity as they alone (and “no other party”) are
entitled to instruct the bank on how to deal with the credit balances
in such accounts. This is the case notwithstanding that such balances
may be “held on behalf of particular clients”
and “the
attorney is obliged to give effect to instructions of clients
concerning the credit balance held for them”,
and even though
the rights of attorneys, their creditors and the banks themselves are
circumscribed and curtailed by specific legislation.
[25]
[44]
But the mere fact that the attorneys in
Van Wyk Van Heerden
had received payments into their trust banking account that
constituted dispositions liable to be set aside under section
26(1)(b)
could not, without more, provide an answer to the question
of whether they were liable for those dispositions. Although the
Court
was only concerned with the question whether the attorneys
could be held liable for a disposition paid into their trust bank
account,
and not whether the client could be held liable (as in the
current matter), the approach adopted by the SCA to determine whether
the attorneys could indeed be liable was to enquire whether they had
“benefited by” the payment, failing they would
not be
liable.
[45]
Furthermore,
while it is possible that an attorney’s trust banking account
could be found in appropriate circumstances to
have operated as a
“mere conduit” for receipt of a disposition made to the
client, the answer as to whether that is
indeed true in a given case
will depend on precisely how the attorney deals with the receipt.
While attorneys will be regarded
as mere conduits for a particular
client if they in fact pay the proceeds thereof out to that
client,
[26]
or if they pay the
proceeds thereof to third parties on the instructions of that
client,
[27]
the client is only
liable because such conduct has the result of benefiting that
particular client, and not merely because the
attorney received
payment on the client’s behalf into its trust banking account.
In the words of the SCA, “the same
enquiry governs” the
issue, namely “who benefited” from the receipts into the
attorney’s trust banking
account?
[28]
[46]
This is
illustrated by cases dealing with situations where attorneys dealt
with receipts in a manner that benefited them, for example,
by
wrongly misappropriating the proceeds of the payment to themselves in
breach of their instructions, or using such proceeds to
pay their own
personal creditors,
[29]
or by
appropriating the proceeds to their own fees and disbursements (even
when this is in accordance with the client’s instructions).
[30]
In those cases, the attorneys themselves may be found to be liable.
[47]
In other words, the mere fact that a payment constituting a
disposition is made into an attorney’s trust banking account
on
behalf of a client does not necessarily mean that the attorney is
merely a conduit for that client, or that the client has received
the
disposition, or any benefit thereby. Something more would be required
before that conclusion may be drawn. Although this would
not
necessarily have to be payment by the attorney of money, either to
the client or to some third party in a manner that benefited
the
client, the client must actually have received the benefit of the
payment received into the attorney’s trust banking
account.
[48]
In the current matter, while it is of course possible that it may be
established at the trial that the defendant did indeed benefit
to
some extent from the making of the pleaded payments to DMO Attorneys
or that DMO was acting as a mere conduit for the defendant,
the facts
that I have accepted to be established on the basis of the evidence
before me are not a sufficient basis upon which to
reach that
conclusion in this application. And this is especially not the case
in respect of the entire amount of every pleaded
payment, given that
I cannot go so far in this application as to find that the payments
were “made to” DMO Attorneys
on behalf of the defendant
alone.
[49]
While I accept for current purposes that DMO Attorneys were acting on
behalf of all three of the “creditors” under
the alleged
settlement agreement when the pleaded payments were received into
their trust banking account, the only evidence before
me as to how
they dealt with those receipts is Beaumont’s statement that
they “were distributed to Auby and me”,
and not to the
defendant. In substantiation of this, Beaumont emphasises that the
defendant was only one amongst the three creditors,
and attaches
various documents that he describes as “proof of payments”.
While many of these documents are illegible
to me on CaseLines, I
note that some them do clearly purport to reflect payments made by
DMO Attorneys to Beaumont and an entity
identified as “Premier
Logistics” during the period May 2017 to November 2018 in sums
of either R70,000 or R35,000.
None of the legible documents indicate
any payment to Auby or the defendant.
[50]
Critically, there is no evidence before me as to:
(a)
whether there was any agreement or arrangement between the creditors
under the alleged settlement agreement (and DMO attorneys)
inter
se
governing their respective rights and obligations in relation
to payments received by DMO Attorneys pursuant to the agreement;
(b)
who issued “the instructions to DMO Attorneys” alleged in
paragraph 5 of the proposed special plea that “the
amounts”
should be “distributed to … Beaumont and … Auby”;
(c)
whether the defendant issued those alleged instructions, or was party
to issuing them; or
(d)
what
instructions, if any, the defendant itself gave to DMO Attorneys, and
whether they acted in accordance with those instructions.
[31]
[51]
In other words, in the specific and somewhat extraordinary
circumstances of the current application and the evidence before me,
I am unable to conclude that it is axiomatically the case that the
pleaded payments made into DMO Attorneys’ trust banking
account
resulted in the defendant receiving those payments or actually
“benefiting by” them.
[52]
I conclude that no portion of the proposed special plea or amendments
should be refused on the grounds that the defendant is improperly
seeking to introduce an allegation that it did not receive the
pleaded payments, or that it did not receive any benefit thereby,
as
I find that it has not made any binding positive or implied averment
to the contrary. In the circumstances, the plaintiffs’
allegations that they relied to their prejudice on the documents
referred are irrelevant to the current application.
Conclusion
on this category of objections
[53]
In view of the findings I have made in paragraphs [29], [31] and [52]
above, there is no basis why the remaining amendments sought
in
paragraphs 1, 5 and 6 of the defendant’s notice of intention to
amend should be refused, save in respect of paragraph
7 of the
proposed special plea, in view of the conclusion reached in paragraph
[30] above.
[54]
Lest this judgment be misunderstood, I should emphasise that no
finally determinative finding of fact is made here for the purposes
of the action (i) that the pleaded payments (or any part thereof)
were in fact made to the defendant; (ii) that the defendant in
fact
did not receive the pleaded payments (or any part thereof); or (iii)
that the defendant did not in fact benefit thereby. Final
determination of those issues, should they arise, is the province of
the trial court.
WITHDRAWAL
OF PRE-TRIAL ADMISSION OF PARAGRAPH 4 OF THE PARTICULARS OF CLAIM
[55]
The second category of objections raised in the plaintiffs’
notice of objection relates to the intended amendment (by means
of
paragraph 2 of the notice of amendment) of paragraph 3 of the
defendant’s plea. This in turn addresses paragraph 4 of
the
particulars of claim, in which the plaintiffs allege that they are
the joint liquidators of the company, which was voluntarily
wound up
pursuant to a special resolution registered by the Companies and
Intellectual Property Commissioner and attaches a letter
confirming
the registration of the special resolution.
[56]
The plaintiffs object to this amendment on the basis that it
“withdraws facts that were admitted and made common cause”
in the course of pre-trial procedures during June 2021.
[57]
In my view, this objection is well-founded. In response to the
plaintiffs’ enquiry whether the defendant persisted with its
denial of the content of paragraph 4 of the particulars of claim, the
defendant stated that “[t]he allegations in paragraph
…
4 of the particulars of claim are no longer disputed, the Defendant
having been informed by the Plaintiff's attorneys
that the
allegations are accurate”.
[58]
Admissions
of fact made at a pre-trial conference constitute sufficient proof of
those facts, and if a party elects to limit the
ambit of his case in
this way, that election is binding unless special circumstances exist
why this should not be the case.
[32]
Such an admission has the same effect as an amendment of the
pleading itself
[33]
and as
such it seems to me that the ordinary rules relating to the
withdrawal of admissions apply: an amendment cannot be had merely
for
the asking, and in such cases the Court will generally require to
have before it a satisfactory explanation of the circumstances
in
which the admission was made as well as the reasons why the party now
seeks to withdraw it.
[34]
[59]
The
defendants have made no attempt whatsoever to furnish any information
at all as to the circumstances in which the admission
was made or of
the reason why it seeks to withdraw it by means of the proposed
amendment.
[35]
There is no
suggestion that it was erroneously made as a result of some mistake
of fact or law,
[36]
or that
while it was deliberately made, new facts have come to the
defendant’s attention.
[37]
[60]
There is thus no basis for me to consider that this proposed
amendment is
bona fide
, and the application for leave to
effect it falls to be dismissed.
THE
REMAINING PROPOSED AMENDMENTS
[61]
The
plaintiffs’ Rule 28(3) notice identified no basis for any
objection to the amendments sought in paragraphs 3 and 4 of
the
notice of intention to amend (i.e. the proposed amendment of
paragraphs 4 and 8.2 of the defendant’s plea). As such,
no
objection to these amendments can be entertained,
[38]
and leave to effect them will be allowed.
CONCLUSION,
COSTS AND ORDER
[62]
Although the defendant has been successful, it seeks an indulgence
and it appears that the delivery of its notice of amendment
resulted
in significant disruption in the conduct of the action. I am of thus
of the view that neither party should be awarded
its costs. No costs
order will be made.
[63]
The following order is granted:
1.
The late delivery of the application for leave to amend is condoned.
2.
The defendant’s application for leave to insert paragraph 7 of
the special plea and to amend paragraph 3 of its plea in accordance
with paragraph 1 and 2 of its notice of intention to amend dated 7
February 2023 is refused.
3.
The defendant is granted leave to amend its plea in accordance with
the remainder of its notice of intention to amend dated 7 February
2023.
RJ MOULTRIE AJ
Acting Judge of the High
Court
Gauteng
Local Division, Johannesburg
FINAL
SUBMISSIONS:
24 November 2023
JUDGMENT:
2 May 2024
APPEARANCES
For the applicants:
KA Slabbert instructed by DMO Attorneys
For
the respondent: WG Pretorius instructed by Brooks & Braatvedt
Inc.
[1]
The plaintiffs allege that the court order pursuant to which the
company is being wound up required that it is to be kept
confidential
and private and is not to be disclosed without the
prior leave of the Master and/or the Commissioner of CIPC and/or
this Court.
[2]
Van Wyk
Van Heerden Attorneys v Gore and Another NNO
2023 (1) SA 80
(SCA) para 32; Sharrock ‘
Insolvency
’
in
The
Law of South Africa.
2 ed. Vol. 11 Annual Cumulative Supplement 2023 (LexisNexis, 2023)
para 270.
[3]
In particular,
Reynolds
and Others NNO v Mercantile Bank Ltd
2004 (5) SA 220 (SCA).
[4]
Bank of
Ireland v Hollicourt (Contracts) Ltd
[2001] 1 All ER 289 (CA).
[5]
Re Mel
Bower's Macquarie Electrical Centre Pty Ltd (in liq)
[1974] 1 NSWLR 245.
[6]
Van Wyk
Van Heerden
(above) para 34.
[7]
Hollicourt
(above) para 23. While the SCA’s approval of the concept of
“restitutionary liability” potentially suggests
to me
that that liability under section 26(1)(b) only arises in respect
the
extent
of a benefit actually received by the defendant as a result of the
disposition made to it, and not necessarily in respect of
the amount
of the payment constituting the disposition, it is not strictly
necessary for me to decide that issue in this application.
[8]
Van Wyk
Van Heerden
(above) para 36.
[9]
It must be emphasised that this terminology is employed purely for
convenience, and should not be understood to indicate any
factual
finding on my part there were two separate and distinct “sets”
of payments.
[10]
I do not go so far as to accept, simply on the basis of the heading
of the transaction document and the subject line of the letter
of 26
September 2019 (referred to below) that either Beaumont or Auby was
not a client of DMO Attorneys or that they “were
acting
exclusively on the instruction of the defendant”, as the
plaintiffs allege in paragraph 38 of the answering affidavit.
Indeed, in paragraph 54 they only contend that the letter gave the
impression that the defendant was DMO Attorneys’ “principal”
client.
[11]
AA
Mutual Insurance Association Ltd v Biddulph
1976 1 SA 725
(A) at 735: where the court approved the statement
that “an admission does not entail the admission of anything
which cannot
fairly be regarded as an
inevitable
consequence or a
necessary
implication.”
[12]
The proposed amendment seeks to add the word “made”
between the words “payments” and “to”,
but I
cannot see that this results in any substantive change to the
meaning of the pleading.
[13]
For example (i) the twentieth payment to DMO Attorneys identified in
the document; (ii) the amount of R600,000 in respect of
which the
defendant, Beaumont and Auby jointly obtained an order for payment
against Hylton and Nicola Odendaal on 29 October
2019; or (ii) the
lump sum payment of R1 million which may be deduced as having been
paid (by whom and to whom is not known)
in terms of the alleged
settlement agreement, given that this is the remaining portion of
the “settlement amount”
of R3 million.
[14]
Paragraph 2 of the proposed special plea. As noted above, no express
allegation is made to this effect in the particulars of
claim.
[15]
Paragraph 6 of the proposed special plea. Again, the particulars of
claim do not contain any express allegation of either receipt
or
benefit.
[16]
Paragraph 5 of the proposed special plea.
[17]
Paragraph 7.3 of the annexure, on the other hand, was simply a
recitation of paragraph 8.3 of the plea in its original form prior
to its previous amendment and (since that amendment resulted in no
change that is materially relevant to my determination of
this
issue), the plaintiffs’ reliance thereon is misplaced.
Paragraph 8 of the annexure is also unavailing. This paragraph
not
only refers merely to unidentified payments as having been made by
or for Odendaal to an unidentified person (i.e. not necessarily
the
defendant), this “allegation” was expressly stated to be
advanced on the basis of a “representation”
made by the
putative third parties. It is stretching credulity to contend that
this could ever constitute a “positive averment”
by the
defendant that the pleaded payments were received, and I do not
accept that it does.
[18]
Pitsiladi
v Absa Bank
2007
(4) SA 478
(SE) para 12.
[19]
Wild
Sea Construction (Pty) Ltd v Van Vuuren
1983 (2) SA 450
(C) at 452F;
Black
Mountain Mining (Pty) Ltd v Commissioner for the South African
Revenue Service
2021 JDR 3319 (GJ) para 59.
[20]
Wild
Sea Construction
(above)
at 452G–H.
[21]
Absa
Bank Ltd v Ms T van Rie t/a Amazing and Others
[2010] ZAGPJHC 185 para 15;
X
v Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service
[2019] ZATC 12
para 48.
[22]
Black
Mountain Mining
(above) para 66.
[23]
Squid
Packers (Pty) Ltd v Robberg Trawlers (Pty) Ltd
1999 (1) SA 1153
(SE) at 1157E – 1158C;
Botha
and Others v Premier For Eastern Cape Province and Others
2003 JDR 0207 (TkH) p 10;
Potters
Mill Inv 14 (Pty) Ltd v Abe Swersky & Assoc
2016 (5) SA 202
(WCC) para 29;
Tricks
Wrought Iron Services (Pty) Ltd v Vhembe District Municipality
2020 JDR 2877 (GP) para 9;
Kidrogen
RF (Pty) Ltd v Nordien and others
2023 JDR 0260 (WCC) para 20.
[24]
See paragraph [37] above, and the authorities cited there.
[25]
Van Wyk
Van Heerden
(above) paras 12 to 23.
[26]
Ibid.
paras
24 and 25, referring to and
M
v Murray NO
2020 (6) SA 55
(SCA) paras 30 – 31.
[27]
Ibid.
paras
37 – 39.
[28]
Ibid.
para
40.
[29]
See, for example,
De
Villiers NO v Kaplan
1960 (4) SA 476 (C).
[30]
Van Wyk
Van Heerden
(above) paras 40 and 41.
[31]
Since the plaintiffs did not plead receipt of the payments by the
defendant or that it received any benefit thereby, and since
there
was thus no question of a withdrawal of a pleaded admission to this
effect in the notice of objection, the defendant was
under no
obligation in this application to furnish these details, or any
details of payments or benefits that it might in fact
have received.
[32]
Filta-Matix
(Pty) Ltd v Freudenberg
[1997] ZASCA 110
;
1998 (1) SA 606
(SCA) at 614A-D.
[33]
Price
NO v Allied-JBS Building Society
1980 (3) SA 874
(A) at 881H-882A.
[34]
Bellairs
v Hodnett & another
1978
(1) SA 1109
(A) at 1150G-H.
[35]
In any event, even assuming that the defendants had not made the
pre-trial admission or that it did not have the effect of an
amendment, an amendment is not to be had merely for the asking, and
I am at a loss to understand why it is sought, as it seems
to me
that the only substantive change that it would make to the
defendant’s plea would be to make a partial admission.
[36]
cf.
Northern
Mounted Rifles v O’Callahan
1909 TS 174
at 178;
Morant
v Roos & another
1911 TPD 1092
; and
Rishton
v Rishton
1912 TPD 718
at 720.
[37]
cf.
Young
v Land Values Ltd
1924 WLD 216
at 218.
[38]
See footnote 23 (above).
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