Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 648South Africa
Saint Gobain Construction Products South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Mathula Investment and Construction CC and Others (2023/112275) [2024] ZAGPJHC 648 (5 July 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
5 July 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Saint Gobain Construction Products South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Mathula Investment and Construction CC and Others (2023/112275) [2024] ZAGPJHC 648 (5 July 2024)
Saint Gobain Construction Products South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Mathula Investment and Construction CC and Others (2023/112275) [2024] ZAGPJHC 648 (5 July 2024)
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sino date 5 July 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 2023-112275
1.
REPORTABLE: Yes☐/ No ☒
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: Yes☐ / No ☒
3.
REVISED: Yes ☐ / No ☒
5
July 2024
In
the matter between:
SAINT
GOBAIN CONSTRUCTION PRODUCTS SOUTH AFRICA (PTY) LTD
PLAINTIFF
and
MATHULA
INVESTMENT AND CONSTRUCTION CC
FIRST
DEFENDANT
PHILANI
ASCENIUS SIKHAKHANE
SECOND
DEFENDANT
DAPHNEY
SPHUMLILE SIKHAKHANE
THIRD
DEFENDANT
INNOCENTIA
MKHWANAZI
FOURTH
DEFENDANT
JUDGMENT
DU
PLESSIS AJ
[1]
This is an interlocutory application where the first to third
Defendants (the “Excipients”) excepted to the
Plaintiff’s
particulars of claim on the basis that they do not contain averments
to sustain the cause of action as prayed
for in the particulars of
claim.
[2]
On 27 October 2023, the Plaintiff instituted action against the First
to Fourth Defendants, claiming that it paid the
First Defendant an
amount of R12 808 736 between 4 December 2017 and 31 August 2022 in
respect of bogus invoices issued by it.
The Plaintiff alleges that it
paid the amount in
bona fide
and reasonable belief that the
amount was owing to the First Defendant.
[3]
The Second and Third Defendants are alleged to be members of the
First Defendant. The Fourth Defendant is alleged to be
a former
employee of the Plaintiff. The claim is based on fraud in that the
payments were made through the Plaintiff’s SAP
system when it
indicated that this amount was owed to the First Defendant. This
system is operated by the Plaintiff’s employees
or agents.
There are alternative claims in enrichment (against the First
Defendant), breach of contract (against the Fourth Defendant)
and
statute (against the Second and Third Defendants).
[4]
The Plaintiff alleges it paid the First Defendant for transport
services it did not render. The problem, says the Defendants,
is that
the Plaintiff fails to allege the basis upon which such services were
procured or rendered. Instead, in paragraph 9 of
the particulars of
claim, the Plaintiff alleges that the Plaintiff paid the First
Defendant in the mistaken and
bona fide
belief that the amount
was due to the First Defendant.
[5]
The Excipients state that the Plaintiff seeks to disown its employee,
the Fourth Defendant, and other agents who made
payments to the First
Defendant. The basis for this is unclear and not pleaded in the
particulars of claim. The Plaintiff does,
however, confirm that the
Fourth Defendant was employed by it. What the Plaintiff essentially
alleges, they say, is that the Defendants
acted in a common design to
defraud it. In other words, the Excipients acted in concert with the
Fourth Defendant to defraud it.
[6]
Alternatively,
the Plaintiff claims, based on alleged unjustified enrichment,
against the First Defendant. In relation to the Second
and Third
Defendants (as an alternative claim to A), the Plaintiff alleges the
Second and Third Defendants carried on the business
of the First
Defendant recklessly as contemplated in s 64 of the Close Corporation
Act.
[1]
Based on that, the
Plaintiff seeks a declarator that the Second and Third Defendants are
personally liable to pay R12 808 736.
[7]
The problem, the Excipients state, is that the particulars of the
claim disclose no cause of action against Excipients
collectively.
This is why they delivered a notice of exception.
[8]
The particulars of claim, they point out, in paragraph 7, state that
“at all material times, the Fourth Defendant
was an employee of
the Plaintiff”. This means that at all material times, the
Fourth Defendant was acting as an employee
and agent of the
Plaintiff. Based on this, they raise the following grounds of
exception:
i. The allegation
that the Plaintiff paid the First Defendant from its SAP system means
that it presumes that the Plaintiff
would have been a creditor, and
no such allegation is made. It alleges no relationship or agreement
between itself and the Excipients.
It can, therefore, not be a
creditor. It ignores that the Fourth Defendant was employed by the
Plaintiff and was in control of
loading and releasing payment on
demand of the First Defendant. The problem is that the Plaintiff did
not allege that the false
representation was made by the First
Defendant, or specific fraudulent acts by the Excipients.
ii. The second
ground relates to paragraph 14 of the particulars of claim, where the
Plaintiff alleges that one or more of
the Defendants acted in concert
and/or furtherance of the design to defraud the Plaintiff. However,
the Plaintiff fails to identify
which of the Defendants, particularly
which Excipient, acted in that manner. This is too general. The
Excipients could not all
have issued the requisitions or the
invoices. Thus, the particulars of claim do not disclose a cause of
action of fraud against
each of the Excipients individually.
iii. Paragraph 8
of the particulars of claim alleges that the “fraudulent”
payment was made into the account of
the First Defendant. The
Plaintiff also alleges that the Second and Third Defendants were
knowingly party to the fraud and, as
such, must be declared
personally liable. Thus, the Plaintiff seeks to pierce the corporate
veil. The Plaintiff does this without
alleging that any money or
funds were paid or transferred to the Second or Third Defendants'
bank accounts or that they benefitted
personally. There is thus no
basis to claim this. There is no allegation on how the Second and
Third Defendants participated in
the design. There is no allegation
that the Second and/or Third Defendants issued invoices or received
payment from it or the First
Defendant.
The fourth ground of
exception pertains to s 64 of the Close Corporations Act, which
refers to any creditor making an application.
If the Plaintiff wishes
to invoke this section, it must allege that it was or is a creditor,
and no such allegation is made. If
the Plaintiff wishes to allege
that it was a creditor, then it ought to have alleged an agreement
between the two, and no such
agreement is alleged. Without this, s 64
cannot be invoked because the Plaintiff is not a creditor. What is
more – the declaration
sought must be applied for. This
anticipates a separate application for declaratory relief, and no
such application was made. S
64 further provides that any creditor
may, on application, declare that any person who was knowingly a
party to the carrying on
of the business [recklessly, with gross
negligence or with the intent to defraud any person] personally
liable for the debts. The
Plaintiff alleged that the Second and Third
Defendant were knowingly party to the alleged fraud, and, as such,
must be personally
liable. The Plaintiff further alleges that the
Second and Third Defendants, as members of the First Defendant, were
knowingly party
to the business of the First Defendant carried out
recklessly or fraudulently as alleged. There is no allegation made
that the
Second and Third Defendants issued invoices or compiled the
invoices for the First Defendant or were involved in the day-to-day
management of the First Defendant – in other words, there is no
allegation to impute knowledge of the Second and Third Defendants,
or
that they did so intentionally to defraud the Plaintiff, or in
general participated in the reckless or fraudulent conduct of
the
business. The Plaintiff also does not allege that the Second and
Third Defendants received payment from the Plaintiff. They
need to
have actual knowledge to be knowingly part of it. There is also no
causal link between the alleged “carrying on”
of the
First Defendant’s business and the “participation”
of the Second and Third Defendants. Simply put, no
role of the Second
and Third Defendants is mentioned in the particulars of claim.
Failure to do so is fatal for a claim under s
64. This is more so
since the Plaintiff fails to allege that the First Defendant was
solely incorporated by the Second and Third
Defendant for improper
purposes. The plaintiff must also allege intention. Intention is an
important allegation of the cause of
action of fraud. The intention
to defraud also relates to a creditor, which the Plaintiff was not.
iv. The Plaintiff
acted through a natural person and did so at all material times –
including through the Fourth Defendant.
In paragraph 7 of the
particulars of claim the Plaintiff alleges that the Fourth Defendant
was employed by it. It thus acted in
the manner alleged during her
employment and within the course and scope of her employment,
representing the Plaintiff. The Fourth
Defendant raised purchase
requisitions and caused the Plaintiff's employees to act in a
particular manner. All these persons, including
the Fourth Defendant,
were acting on behalf of the Plaintiff. The Plaintiff cannot
extricate itself from this conduct, and the
Plaintiff does not make
the allegation that the Fourth Defendant was not acting within the
course and scope of her duties. There
is also no allegation that the
Fourth Defendant was engaged with the First or other Defendants in
any other capacity – namely,
the furtherance of her private
business. Thus, the fraud was committed by the Fourth Defendant
within the course and scope of her
employment while representing the
Plaintiff. The Plaintiff cannot rely on its conduct or that of its
employees to allege fraud
on the part of the Excipients; thus, there
is no cause of action against them.
[9]
The Plaintiff disagrees. They state that the test is not whether the
Plaintiff has proved its case. The test is whether
it will be
entitled to the relief it seeks if the allegations it makes are
established at a trial. The exceptions must, therefore,
be dismissed.
They answer to the exceptions as follows:
i. If the nub of
the first ground is that the Plaintiff has not alleged that any of
the Defendants acted to defraud the Plaintiff,
there is no merit in
the complaints. This is because the particulars of claim make it
clear that the Plaintiff’s case is
that the Defendants worked
together in a common design to defraud the plaintiff into paying
bogus invoices. Whether they can prove
it with evidence at trial is
not the test for pleadings – the question is whether they will
be entitled to judgment if they
can prove it. They also do not have
to particularise the specific acts – they state how the fraud
was conducted and allege
the defendants participated in that fraud as
part of a common design. The details will be
facta probantia
,
part of the evidence at trial.
ii. The second
exception is similar to the first. There is no need to state which of
the Defendants acted in furtherance of
a common design, as it is
alleged that they all participated in the fraud, coupled with an
alternative that one or more of them
did so.
iii. The third
ground is misplaced, as Plaintiff alleges that they used the money
paid to the First Defendant for their benefit,
knowing they had no
entitlement to it. The Plaintiff states that alleging or proving this
is also unnecessary. It is simply not
necessary to show that the
stolen funds were enjoyed by those who were knowingly party to the
carrying on of the corporation’s
business in terms of s 64.
iv. This complaint
relates to
locus standi
because the Plaintiff did not prove it
is a creditor. This is simply not true based on a holistic reading.
For instance, in paragraph
26.1 of the particulars of claim, it is
alleged that Plaintiff is a creditor of First Defendant. The
creditor/debtor relationship
is not dependent on a written agreement.
Relief under s 64 is typically sought by way of action, not
application, so that argument
is also unfounded. The argument
regarding “knowingly a party to” can also not be
sustained, as it has been alleged
how they improperly carried on the
corporation's business. The lack of stating
how
it was done is
also a misreading of s 64, as a failure to perform a fiduciary duty,
even if you are aware of fraud, can also be
considered in terms of s
64.
v. The suggestion
seems to be that since the Fourth Defendant was an employee of the
Plaintiff it defrauded itself. The doctrine
of vicarious liability
is, however, only available for delicts committed by an employee
against third parties. It also does not
absolve an employee-wrongdoer
from liability. Should the vicarious liability work that way, it
would be an issue for the Fourth
Defendant to raise; she is not one
of the Excipients.
# Discussion
Discussion
[10]
South
African Police Service v Solidarity obo Barnard
[2]
explained the link between the purpose of pleadings and the right to
a fair hearing as guaranteed in s 34 of the Constitution.
It stated
It
is a principle of our law that a party must plead its cause of action
in the court of first instance so as to warn other parties
of the
case they have to meet and the relief sought against them. This is a
fundamental principle of fairness in the conduct of
litigation. It
promotes the parties' rights to a fair hearing which is guaranteed by
section 34 of the Constitution.
[11]
How
do pleadings comply with these requirements? By defining the issues
for the other party, the trial court, and any court of appeal.
The
courts adjudicate only those disputes contained in the pleadings.
[3]
For this reason, pleadings must contain clear and concise statements
of the material facts upon which the pleader relies. It must
be
particular enough to enable the opposite party to reply to that.
[4]
The facts (
facta
probanda
)
are pleaded, not the evidence (
facta
probantia
).
[5]
[12]
It
is possible to except to certain averments in pleadings. The purpose
of raising an exception to the pleading is to dispose of
the leading
of evidence on that point in the trial. There are two grounds for
exceptions in terms of Rule 23. One is that the pleading
is vague and
embarrassing,
[6]
the other that
the pleading lacks the averments necessary to sustain a cause of
action (thus bad in law).
[7]
In
this case, the Excipients rely on the second ground.
[13]
The
pleadings must be benevolently interpreted when considering whether a
cause of action has been established. They must be considered
holistically, with no one paragraph read in isolation. The excipient
must show that the pleading is excipiable on every interpretation
of
the pleadings,
[8]
assuming that
the allegations in them are true. A pleading will then be excipiable
if it is impossible to lead any evidence to
prove or disprove the
claim or defence.
[9]
[14]
An
exception is raised to obtain a speedy and economical resolution of a
dispute. If there is no cause of action on the face of
the pleading,
then the exception will aid in avoiding leading unnecessary evidence
as it weeds out the claims or defences that
do not have legal
merit.
[10]
[15]
The
court stated that the test for an exception is whether, on all
possible readings of the facts, no cause of action is made out.
[11]
The onus is on the defendant to show that the legal conclusion the
Plaintiff seeks, cannot be supported by any interpretation of
the
facts.
[16]
The
substantive law will determine the
facta
probanda
in a particular case. It does not require that the evidence to prove
each fact be pleaded, but rather, the facts that need to be
proven.
[12]
Herbstein &
Van Winsen
[13]
concludes that
if evidence can be led to disclose a cause of action alleged in the
pleadings, the pleading is not excipiable. It
is only excipiable if
no evidence led on the pleading can disclose a cause of action.
[17]
Ultimately,
the test for whether the exception should be held is whether the
excipient will be prejudiced.
[14]
This is to prevent parties from taking technical objections without
real substance.
[18]
The essential allegations for a claim or defence based on fraud are
the following:
(a) A representation by
the representor to the representee. The representation usually
concerns a fact but may relate to the expression
of an opinion said
to be held but which is not held.
(b) Fraud (i.e. that the
representor knew the representation to be false).
It
is not sufficient to allege that the representation was ‘false’,
because this word implies no more than that the
representation was
untrue. The mental element must be alleged.
The representor must
intend that the representee will act on the representation.
(c) Causation (i.e. the
representation must have induced the representee to act in response
to it).
(d) If damages are
claimed, it must be alleged that the representee suffered damages
because of the fraud.
(e) If reliance is placed
on fraudulent non-disclosure, facts giving rise to the duty to
disclose must be set out. It is also necessary
to show that the
breach of the duty to disclose was deliberate and intended to
deceive.
[19]
These allegations are set out in the particulars of claim, as argued
by the Plaintiff.
[20]
As
for the argument regarding s 64 of the Close Corporations Act,
Ebrahim
and Another v Airport Cold Storage (Pty) Ltd
[15]
clarified that the test for recklessness lies in the scope of
operations and the members’ roles, functions and powers.
That
is true, but it does not help the Excipients. This is because
Cooper
NO v Myburgh
[16]
stated
that failure to perform fiduciary duties can establish liability. It
is an objective test. The necessary allegations
are made in the
particulars of claim to disclose a cause of action. It is for the
Plaintiff to lead evidence on it, or for the
Defendants to ask for
more information through particulars of claim.
[21]
Lastly, the issue of vicarious liability in the context of an
employment relationship assigns liability to an employer
if his
employee’s acts were performed in the course of employment or
other duty, causing harm to a third party. It deals
with third-party
claims. The submission by the Excipients is thus flawed.
[22]
From the abovementioned, it is thus clear that the exception must
fail.
# Order
Order
[23]
I, therefore, make the following order:
1. The exception is
dismissed, with costs.
WJ
DU PLESSIS
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Delivered:
This judgement is handed down electronically by uploading it to the
electronic file of this matter on CaseLines and sending
it to the
parties/their legal representatives by email.
Counsel
for the Excipients:
Mr F Nalane SC
Mr M Sikhakhane
Instructed
by:
Mabuza Attorneys
Counsel
for the Plaintiff:
Mr A Morrissey
Instructed
by:
Werksmans attorneys
Date
of the hearing:
22 May 2024
Date
of judgment:
05 July 2024
[1]
69 of 1984.
[2]
(CCT 01/14) [2014] ZACC 23; 2014 (6) SA 123 (CC); [2014] 11 BLLR
1025 (CC); 2014 (10) BCLR 1195 (CC)
[3]
Barkhuizen
v Napier
[2007] ZACC 5
;
2007 (7) BCLR 691
(CC),
2007 (5) SA 323
(CC) para. 39
[4]
Rule 18. See also
Everfresh
Market Virginia (Pty) Ltd v Shoprite Checkers (Pty) Ltd
2012 (3) BCLR 219
(CC),
2012 (1) SA 256
(CC) para. 52
[5]
Nasionale
Aartappel Koöperasie Bpk v Price Waterhouse Coopers Ing
[2001] 2 All SA 319 (T), 2001 (2) SA 790 (T).
[6]
Nasionale
Aartappel Koöperasie Bpk v Price Waterhouse Coopers Ing
[2001] 2 All SA 319
(T),
2001 (2) SA 790
(T).
[7]
Trope
v SA Reserve Bank
[1993] 2 All SA 278 (A), 1993 (3) SA 264 (A).
[8]
See also
Pets-Warehousing
and Sales CC v Dowsink Investment CC
2000 (3) 833 (E) at 839G-H.
[9]
Imprefed
(Pty) Ltd v National Transport Commission
1993 (3) SA 94
(A) at 107C-H.
[10]
Gillyfrost
54 (
Pty
)
Ltd v Nelson Mandela Bay Metropolitan Municipality
[2015] 4 All SA 58
(ECP) para 9.
[11]
Trustees
for the time being of Children's Resource Centre Trust v Pioneer
Food (Pty) Ltd
[2012] ZASCA 182.
[12]
McKenzie
v Farmer’s Co-operative Meat Industries Ltd
1922 AD 16
at 23.
[13]
Herbstein & Van Winsen,
The
Civil Practice of the Superior Courts of South Africa
,
2022, p 23.
[14]
Trope
v South African Reserve Bank
[1993] ZASCA 54
at 211B.
[15]
2008 (6) SA 585 (SCA).
[16]
[2020] ZAWCHC 174.
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