Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 652South Africa
Ndou and Another v Ayob and Another (2024/062334) [2024] ZAGPJHC 652 (12 July 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Ndou and Another v Ayob and Another (2024/062334) [2024] ZAGPJHC 652 (12 July 2024)
Ndou and Another v Ayob and Another (2024/062334) [2024] ZAGPJHC 652 (12 July 2024)
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sino date 12 July 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 2024/062334
1.
REPORTABLE:
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
3.
REVISED:
In
the matter between:
WITNESS
NDOU
MAROTHI
MASHASHANE
First
Applicant
Second
Applicant
and
ACQILAH
AYOB
HELLO
PAISA
First
Respondent
Second
Respondent
This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties’ representatives
via e-mail, by being uploaded
to CaseLines/Court online and by
release to SAFLII. The date and time for hand- down is deemed to be
10h00 on 12 July 2024.
Order: Para [24] of this judgment.
JUDGMENT
TODD, AJ:
[1]
This matter came before me on the urgent
roll on 12 June 2024.
[2]
The First Applicant opened a bank account
with the Second Respondent. At least that is what he understood that
he was doing.
[3]
During April 2024 he provided his bank
account details to a friend who, on 6 April 2024, transferred an
amount of R9,000 into his
account. For reasons that are not clear on
the papers, but which appear to concern the fact that the transfer
into his account
was regarded as improper or a suspicious transaction
of some kind, the First Applicant’s bank account was “frozen”
and the First Applicant currently does not have access to transact on
it.
[4]
The First Applicant raised this with the
Second Respondent and was requested to complete certain
documentation, which he says he
duly completed. His account remains
suspended. After he visited the Second Respondent’s premises
seeking an explanation,
he was “warned not to come to the
offices any more”. As a result, he has been advised to approach
this Court “as
a last resort”.
[5]
The First Applicant seeks an order
declaring the conduct of the Second Respondent in suspending his bank
account without reasonable
cause to be unlawful, and directing the
Second Respondent to uplift the suspension and allow him full access
to transact on the
account forthwith.
[6]
As indicated, the First Applicant was
unrepresented and is a lay person, although he was assisted by the
Second Applicant, who he
identified as a church leader.
[7]
There are significant formal deficiencies
in the founding papers. I do not point all of these out, but they
provide, by themselves,
sufficient grounds to dismiss the matter.
Since, however, the First Applicant is unrepresented and a lay
person, I considered it
appropriate to place substance over form, and
to see what can be understood from the papers such as they stand
regarding what caused
him to approach this court.
[8]
The Second Respondent delivered an
answering affidavit, and Mr Kok appeared on its behalf. In its
answering papers the Second Respondent
points out the various formal
deficiencies in the application, including the misjoinder of the
Second Applicant (who is described
as an “
amicus
curiae
” but in fact has no
standing in the matter of any kind) and the First Respondent (who is
an employee of the Second Respondent
and has no contractual or other
relationship with or responsibility towards the First Applicant).
[9]
On the substance of the issue that has
arisen, the Second Respondent is a money transfer service or, as it
describes the position,
is in business “to assist customers
with money related solutions”. Together with Sasfin Bank, the
Second Respondent
provides what it refers to as a “co-branded
banking solution”. Under this arrangement Sasfin provides the
banking infrastructure
and licensing, and physically creates and
holds a bank account and issues a bank card. The Second Respondent
then distributes the
bank card, branded with its Hello Paisa
insignia, and the card also displays the words “issued by
Sasfin”.
[10]
According to the Second Respondent the
First Applicant’s account has indeed been suspended in
consequence of a suspicious
transaction. But this is not at the
instance of the Second Respondent, which has no power either to
suspend an account or to uplift
that suspension. The Second
Respondent, unlike Sasfin, is not a registered banking institution.
Instead, Sasfin is the only entity
that has the authority to effect
suspension of accounts, and to deal with accounts as the law may
require.
[11]
Apart from raising a point about the
non-joinder of Sasfin, the Second Respondent points out that Sasfin
has obligations under its
banking licence to take relevant actions in
circumstances where there is suspicious activity on an account. It
states that the
First Applicant has provided contradictory statements
about the matters apparently under investigation.
[12]
This leaves the First Applicant in
something of a stalemate. He does not appear to have access to a
customer services function within
the First Respondent that can
assist him to regain access to what are not disputed to be his own
funds.
[13]
It is no doubt frustrating for the holder
of a bank account to learn that he has no access to his own funds for
reasons that have
not been fully explained to him or, if they have,
that he does not fully understand. The First Applicant described
various ways
in which he had attempted to resolve the situation
through interacting with the Second Respondent. These efforts came to
naught.
[14]
That being said, there are numerous
problems with the manner and form in which the First Applicant has
approached this court, including
that no proper grounds are made out
in the papers for enrolling the matter on this court’s urgent
roll, and there is a clear
alternative remedy available. This is
explained in a section of the terms and conditions applicable to the
relevant account dealing
with customer complaints, which in addition
to providing access to a call centre number (which it seems the First
Applicant has
tried unsuccessfully to use) gives contact details for
the independent ombudsman for banking services. The First Applicant
has
not tried that avenue.
[15]
Nor is it clear in any event that the First
Applicant has an immediate or ongoing right of access to his funds in
the particular
circumstances that have arisen, and pending the
conclusion of whatever further regulatory investigation may be taking
place regarding
the transaction or transactions which appear to have
been flagged as suspicious and which caused the temporary suspension
of the
account.
[16]
Finally, the amount of money in the account
at issue is less than R10,000. Although this might be important to
the First Applicant
and represent a substantial sum for him, the fact
of the matter is that if he is unable to secure redress through any
alternative
means and persists in believing that he should seek the
intervention of a court, this is a matter that plainly falls within
the
jurisdiction of the Small Claims Court, which is more readily
accessible to unrepresented applicants than this court.
[17]
For all of these reasons this is an
application which, it seems to me, should be dismissed rather than
simply being struck from
roll.
[18]
I have carefully considered whether or not
the First Applicant should be ordered to pay the Second Respondent’s
costs incurred
in opposing this application. The First Applicant has
been unsuccessful. He has chosen the wrong route in his quest for
redress.
There are, however, clear indications of various efforts
that he made first in an attempt to resolve the matter before
approaching
this court.
[19]
Although he has not yet approached the
banking services ombudsman (a course of action that is still
available to him) he submitted
that he did not have access to the
detailed conditions of the contract including its provisions which
provide details of that office.
The conditions, he states, were
simply accepted by him electronically when he opened the account, and
no written copy was provided.
[20]
Of course the First Applicant may be
expected to have sought out those conditions before bringing
proceedings such as the present,
and also to have considered less
expensive means of attempting to assert his rights than approaching
the High Court, which inevitably
places him at risk of a substantial
costs burden if he is unsuccessful.
[21]
Nevertheless, I accept that the First
Applicant approached this Court as a frustrated citizen without the
means to secure legal
representation, and that he made a
bona
fide
attempt to assert his rights.
[22]
On an overall conspectus of the matter it
seems to me to be in the interests of justice that I should not grant
an order for costs
in the matter.
[23]
The First Applicant should, however,
realise that if he were to approach this Court again on similarly
flimsy legal grounds, he
will risk having an order for costs made
against him that might far exceed the amount that is in issue when he
approached the Court
in the first place.
[24]
In the circumstances I make the following
order: the application is dismissed.
C TODD
ACTING JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
JOHANNESBURG
Date of Hearing:
12 June 2024
Date of Judgment:
12 July 2024
APPEARANCES
for the
Applicants:
in person
for the First Respondent:
Rudie Kok Attorney
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