Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 259South Africa
Safi v Gascoigne Randon and Associates (23052/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 259 (6 March 2023)
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Safi v Gascoigne Randon and Associates (23052/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 259 (6 March 2023)
Safi v Gascoigne Randon and Associates (23052/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 259 (6 March 2023)
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sino date 6 March 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG LOCAL DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO: 23052/2022
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES
06.03.2023
In the matter between:
JEROME
REUBEN SAFI
Plaintiff
and
GASCOIGNE RANDON AND ASSOCIATE
Defendant
(This judgment is handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties’ legal
representatives by email and uploading to
the electronic file of this
matter on CaseLines. The date for hand-down is deemed to be 06 March
2023.)
JUDGMENT
MIA J:
[1]
The
defendant excepts to the plaintiff’s particulars of claim
alleging that it lacks the averments necessary to find a cause
of
action.
The plaintiff was the purchaser of
immovable property and claimed the amount of R889 308.50 from
the defendant, the conveyancing
attorney responsible for the transfer
of the property, in respect of the sale of a property.
[2]
The
claim arises from an incident of cybercrime. The plaintiff received
email correspondence from an employee of the defendant requesting
that the plaintiff deposit and the transfer fees be paid into a bank
account. Unbeknown to the plaintiff the email was intercepted
by a
hacker who inserted their own banking details in an email and the
monies were transferred into the hacker’s bank account
resulting in a loss to the plaintiff. The plaintiff believed he was
effecting a transfer into the defendant’s bank account.
He
states he was defrauded by a third party in the particulars of claim.
The plaintiff suffered a loss of
R889 308.50, being the
deposit and transfer fees for the transaction, that was paid into the
incorrect bank account which he believed
to be the defendant ’s
trust account. He is unable to recover the amount from the incorrect
bank account.
[3]
The
defendant excepts to the particulars of claim, contending that
the
particulars of claim are clearly excipiable. This is so it says
because the plaintiff fails to disclose a cause of action,
alternatively, the particulars of claim are vague and embarrassing in
a number of respects. The defendant raised five grounds of
exception
and contended further that the plaintiff failed to plead the material
facts that would permit this Court to draw conclusions
of liability
in the law of delict. In highlighting this, the defendant states that
the particulars of claim do not plead the facts
which identify any
conduct on the part of the defendant which, if proved, would amount
to conduct in breach of the alleged legal
duty in that the plaintiff
failed to plead facts which demonstrate what steps the defendant did
or did not take which falls short
of the standard of the reasonable
person and which, if proved, would amount to negligent conduct. Thus
to the extent that the plaintiff
failed to plead the material facts
to satisfy either of these two elements of a delict, there is no
factual basis or legal basis
to determine the manner in which the
defendant allegedly caused the plaintiff to suffer a loss.
[4]
The
defendant contended, additionally, that
the plaintiff ’s
particulars of claim are vague and embarrassing in that the plaintiff
pleads generally that the defendant
has a “professional and
legal duty” in terms of the Companies Act and Protection of
Personal Information Act 4 of 2013(POPIA)
but does not plead the
sections in either of these statutes upon which he relies. The
defendant is unable to identify which section
of the legislation the
plaintiff relies on to hold the defendant accountable.
[5]
The
plaintiff does not state the defendant sent the email but that it
appears to have come from an email “ostensibly from
the
defendant’s office. On the basis of this email he paid the
amount
of R889 308.50 into the bank
account specified in the email. The plaintiff avers he lost the money
because he was a victim of a
“phishing” email scam due to
the defendant ’s “business email being fraudulently
compromised” (BEC).
He states generally that the defendant had
a legal duty and obligation in terms of the Companies Act and POPIA
‘to take appropriate
and reasonable technical and
organisational measures to securely maintain the integrity and
confidentiality of any personal information
it holds.’ This is
without any specificity.
[6]
The
plaintiff asserts that the defendant ’s duty to the plaintiff
as a client in terms of the Companies Act and POPIA would
have been
discharged had it taken the out steps below. They include:
6.1 establishing and
maintaining a proper information security management system to
protect their own information and that
of their clients;
6.2 putting in place documented
policies or processes governing the use of the technology or that
define information management
and security;
6.3 educating and making its staff
using the technology aware of their information security
responsibilities.
[7] The issue
for determination is whether the plaintiff’s particulars of
claim are vague and embarrassing.
[8]
Rule
18(4) which provides that: ‘every pleading shall contain a
clear and concise statement of the material facts upon which
the
pleader relied for his claim.
Exceptions
go to the root of the defence of the claim.
[1]
In
Telematrix (Pty) Ltd
t/a Matrix Vehicle Tracking v Advertising Standards Authority SA
[2]
,
t
he
Court indicated that
courts
should adopt a common sense approach and consider the pleadings as
well as the documents attached thereto, which tell a story.
[9]
The
Court has held previously
[3]
that:
“
Particulars of claim should be
so phrased that an
defendant may reasonably
and fairly be required to plead thereto. This must be seen against
the background of the further requirement
that the object of
pleadings is to enable each side to come to trial prepared to meet
the case of the other and not be taken by
surprise. Pleadings must
therefore be lucid and logical and in an intelligible form; the cause
of action or defence must appear
clearly from the factual allegations
made.”
FIRST GROUND
[10]
The
defendant complains that the plaintiff’s pleading does not
enable it
to identify what conduct by it is alleged to have
been wrongful or negligent. The allegations in paragraphs 16 to 19 of
the particulars
of claim are general statements describing broad
duties and the plaintiff does not identify elements of the
defendant’s system
or practice it alleges to be defective. The
subsequent paragraphs 20 and 21 are equally broad allegations that
the ‘defendant
failed to discharge its legal duty when it
reasonably could have done so’ and was negligent. The
plaintiff’s particulars
of claim do not aver any facts which
identify the specific conduct on the part of the defendant which, if
proved, would amount
to conduct of breach of the alleged duty pleaded
in paragraphs 16 to 19. The defendant is thus unable to ascertain
whether the
plaintiff relies on a positive act or an omission by the
defendant. The defendant maintains that the plaintiff’s
particulars
of claim lack the averments necessary to sustain a cause
of action against the defendant.
[11] In response, Counsel for
the plaintiff submitted on the first ground relating to the alleged
lack of averments, that
pleadings must be read as a whole and not in
isolation. It was excipiable only if evidence led would not disclose
a cause of action.
He argued that the pleadings were not vague such
that no cause of action was discernible. Additionally, he continued
that a distinction
had to be made between
facta
probanda
and
facta
probantia
. Counsel relied
on the
Trope
[4]
decision to submit that the
plaintiff’s particulars of claim would only be vague and
embarrassing if the pleadings were contradictory
and not pleaded in
the alternative. He continued moreover that the defendant’s
attack on the particulars of claim being
void of specificity and
particularity was ill-founded.
[5]
SECOND GROUND
[12]
In
further submissions to dismiss the exception, counsel for the
defendant argued that the plaintiff’s bold claim that the
‘defendant negligently caused the incident’ was not
sufficient in that negligence is a legal conclusion. The
plaintiff failed to plead all material facts which supported the
conclusion it sought the court to reach. Counsel relied on the
decision of
VM and Another v
Member of the Executive Council for Education, Eastern Cape
Provincial Government and Others
[6]
where the plaintiff failed to
aver necessary facts to establish negligence and the court upheld the
exception.
[13]
In
response, Counsel for the plaintiff submitted that the allegations
specifically made carried with them implied allegations and
were to
be read as such. This included the reference to the defendant
experiencing a similar breach previously. This was indicative
of the
defendant’s failure to implement and maintain a proper
information management security system of their own and clients’
information.
THIRD AND
FOURTH GROUND
[14]
The
defendant avers that the plaintiff’s particulars of claim
contain the same defect in that it makes reference to the defendant’s
duty in terms of the Companies Act and POPIA and does not specify the
act or omission with specificity but references sections
of the
legislation instead. The plaintiff then simply attributes conclusions
such as “that the defendant failed to discharge
its legal duty
when it reasonably could have done so” and “negligently
caused the incident”. The conclusions
are not obvious or
tenable argued counsel without the plaintiff attaching facts to
support the conclusions. Counsel continued that
the particulars
suggest a person other than the defendant caused the loss and the
plaintiff’s particulars of claim do not
establish factual or
legal causation against the defendant. Counsel for the
plaintiff submitted that the defendant was required
to comply with
POPIA in its entirety and if was not applicable it could deny the
allegation. The phishing scam that the plaintiff
was subject to was
an indication of the compromise of the defendant’s information
system.
[15]
Counsel for the plaintiff noted that the reference to the
Companies Act and the defendant being a partnership and acknowledged
that
the Particulars of Claim required an amendment to remove the
reference to the Companies Act. It was in any event an allegation
that the defendant could deny and did not require an over technical
approach counsel submitted.
FIFTH GROUND
[16] Additionally, counsel submitted
where the plaintiff relied on a professional duty owed by the
defendant to the plaintiff specifically,
the plaintiff failed to
establish a relationship of an attorney-client relationship between
it and the defendant. The only “client
relationship” that
is evident is the relationship between the defendant and the seller.
The seller nominated and appointed
the defendant as the conveyancing
attorney in respect of the sale of the property. Thus the defendant
contends it is not clear
from the plaintiff ’s particulars of
claim what professional legal duty the plaintiff relies upon. Counsel
submitted that
it was not clear whether such professional duty was a
duty that the defendant owed specifically to the plaintiff. Counsel
referred
to the case of
Fourie
v Van der Spuy and De Jongh Inc. and Others
[7]
where the court dealt with
an instance of cybercrime. She submitted that the facts differed from
the present matter as the
plaintiff was a client of the law firm in
that matter. The client claimed damages against the firm where one of
the attorneys erroneously
transferred the client’s funds held
in the firm’s trust account into several bank accounts held by
one or more unknown
hackers. In that matter, the attorney was
negligent as it failed to exercise the requisite skill, knowledge and
diligence that
was accepted in the practice of an attorney and the
associated standard of care, skill and diligence in the performance
of their
professional duty. The matter gave rise to a contractual
mandate of an attorney/client relationship encompassing fiduciary
obligations
and a duty of care towards the client; and the common law
duty which required sufficient care and attention. In the present
matter,
the plaintiff did not plead a contractual relationship
between it and the defendant or explain how one arose or the extent
thereof
thus counsel requested that the plaintiff ’s claim be
dismissed with costs.
[17] Counsel for the plaintiff argued
that the fact that the defendant as nominated attorneys would
transfer the property and be
paid for the transfer implied a
relationship from the expressed facts and that established a client
relationship. If the defendant
disputed that a relationship existed,
it could deny same. For this reason, the plaintiff requested that the
exception be dismissed.
[18] In considering the various
grounds raised and counter submission made, it is instructive that a
common sense approach inform
the view adopted as indicated in
Telematrix
[8]
.
The defendant failure to implement and maintain a proper information
management security system of their own and clients’
information if proven may well assist the plaintiff’s case even
if the reference to the Companies Act is conceded to be incorrect.
The plaintiff indicated this requires an amendment which will occur.
There is an issue relating to the incident of BEC and the
defendant
’s duty to its client which it says it does not owe to the
plaintiff. This approach is conservative. The
defendant
received money from the plaintiff to hold into their Trust account.
It would be taking a short sighted view to suggest
that such party
could never expect any courtesy and protection of their money, and
information whilst engaging with an attorney.
It is also contrary to
the purposes of POPIA that the plaintiff’s information and
privacy were breached through the defendant
s IT portal.
[19] As far as cost are concerned the
usual order should follow.
[20] For the reasons above I make the
following order:
1. The application for exception is
dismissed with costs.
S C MIA
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH
AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Appearances:
On
behalf of the plaintiff:
Adv. Awie du Plooy
Instructed
by:
Kyprianou Attorneys
On
behalf of the defendant:
Adv. Ammara Cachalia
Instructed
by:
Webber Wentzel
Date
of hearing:
20 February 2023
Date
of judgment:
06
March 2023
[1]
Dharumpal
Transport Pty Ltd v Dharumpal
1956
(1) 700 (A) at 706;
Vermeulen
v Goose Valley Investments Pty Ltd
2001
(3) SA 986
(SCA) at 997;
Koth
Property consultants CC v Lepelle-Nkumpi Local Municipality Ltd
2006
(2) 25 (T) at 31
[2]
Telematrix
(Pty) Ltd t/a Matrix Vehicle Tracking v Advertising Standards
Authority SA
2006
(1) SA 461
(SCA) para 2 & 465H
[3]
Trope
v South African Reserve Bank and Another and Two Other Cases
1992
(3) SA 208
(T) at 269
[4]
Trope
above
at para 221 A-E
[5]
Jowell
v Bramwell-Jones & Others
1998
(1) SA 836
(W);
Nel
and Other NNO v McArthur and Others
2003(4)
SA 142 (T)
[6]
1
[2020] ZAECBHC 32
[7]
Fourie
v Van der Spuy and De Jongh Inc. and Others
[2019]
ZAGPPHC 449; 2020 (1) SA 560 (GP)
[8]
See
fn2 above
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