Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 586South Africa
Flexi Fuel Logistics (Pty) Ltd v Nedbank Ltd and Others (2022/23189) [2023] ZAGPJHC 586 (29 May 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
29 May 2023
Headnotes
Summary
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Flexi Fuel Logistics (Pty) Ltd v Nedbank Ltd and Others (2022/23189) [2023] ZAGPJHC 586 (29 May 2023)
Flexi Fuel Logistics (Pty) Ltd v Nedbank Ltd and Others (2022/23189) [2023] ZAGPJHC 586 (29 May 2023)
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sino date 29 May 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO: 2022/23189
NOT REPORTABLE
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES
In
the matter between –
FLEXI
FUEL LOGISTICS (PTY) LTD
APPLICANT
and
NEDBANK LTD
FIRST
RESPONDENT
FIRSTRAND BANK LTD
SECOND
RESPONDENT
Y&N HOLDINGS (PTY) LTD
THIRD
RESPONDENT
Neutral Citation
:
Flexi Fuel
Logistics (Pty) Ltd v Nedbank Ltd and Others
(Case No.
2022/23189) [2023] ZAGPJHC 586 (29 May 2023)
JUDGMENT
MOORCROFT AJ:
Summary
Unjustified enrichment – bank
not enriched when customer’s debtor pays a debt due to bank’s
customer into bank
customer’s account and customer is credited
with the payment. When the money received is set off against the
bank’s
claim against its customer, bank is similarly not
enriched as its claim against its customer is reduced by the amount
of the payment
Order
[1] I make the following order:
1.
The
application is dismissed;
2.
The
applicant is ordered to pay the costs.
[2] The reasons for the order
follow below.
Introduction
[3] The applicant purchased fuel
and related products from the third respondent, Y&N, over a
number of years. Until about
2019 when Y&N furnished the
applicant with new bank account details of a bank account at FNB the
applicant settled Y&N’s
invoices by transferring funds from
its own bank account into Y&N’s Nedbank account.. Both
these bank accounts used by
Y&N were loaded onto the FNB banking
portals used by the applicant.
[4] On occasion Y&N would
request the applicant to effect payment into its Nedbank account but
in the recent past most
payments were made into the FNB account.
The relevant payment
[5] During March 2022 Y&N
sold fuel to the applicant and issued two invoices reflecting the FNB
bank account as the account
for payment. When the deponent to the
founding affidavit paid these invoices using the FNB banking portal,
an amount was paid into
the FNB account but the applicant had reached
its daily limit for payments on this portal. She then logged onto
the FNB’s
Enterprise banking portal that had no maximum limit
in order to pay the balance due to Y&N. She selected Y&N
from
the list of preloaded beneficiaries and paid over the amount of
R1 117 649.60 to Y&N. Without giving it any thought
she
selected the Y&N preloaded beneficiary with the Nedbank banking
details as opposed to the one preloaded with the FNB banking
details.
[6] When the deponent gave the
requisite instruction on the banking portal and made the payment to
the preselected beneficiary,
a number of things happened:
6.1 The applicant’s bank (which
also happened to be FNB) accepted the instruction and paid the funds
into the Y&N Nedbank
account. The applicant’s FNB account
was debited with the equivalent amount.
6.2 Money is
res
fungibiles
and ownership of
the money passed to Nedbank by
commixtio
.
In
Trustees, Estate
Whitehead v Dumas and Another
[1]
Cachalia JA put it thus:
“
[13] Generally, where money
is deposited into a bank account of an account-holder it mixes with
other money and, by virtue of commixtio,
becomes the property of
the bank regardless of the circumstances in which the deposit was
made or by whom it was made. The account-holder has
no real
right of ownership of the money standing to his credit but
acquires a personal right to payment of that amount from
the bank,
arising from their bank-customer relationship. This is also so where,
as in this case, no money in its physical form
is in issue, and the
payment by one bank to another, on a client's instruction, is no more
than an entry in the receiving bank's
account. The bank's
obligation, as owner of the funds credited to the customer's
account, is to honour the customer's
payment instructions. Where the
depositor is not the account-holder he relinquishes any right to the
money and cannot reverse the
transfer without the account-holder's
concurrence.”
[footnotes omitted]
6.3 The money paid into the account
could therefore not be claimed with the
rei
vindicatio
.
[2]
6.4 Y&N’s account with
Nedbank was credited with the amount and therefore the payment
benefitted Y&N.
6.5 However, the account was overdrawn
and set off was applied.
6.6 Nedbank became entitled to the
amount and simultaneously its claim against Y&N was diminished in
the exact same amount.
[7] Had the account been in
credit Y&N would have been able to exercise its personal right
against Nedbank and could have
instructed Nedbank to repay the same
amount to the applicant, but because the account was overdrawn Y&N
could not do so. A
comparable situation arises when a thief (not a
debtor as in the current situation) pays his own or someone else’s
debt with
stolen money. The debt is extinguished provided the
creditor is innocent. Any amount that remains in credit can be
claimed by the
victim of the theft, and the victim has a claim
against the thief.
[3]
[8] The most basic relationship
between bank and customer is a debtor – creditor
relationship.
[4]
When the account is in credit the customer is the creditor and the
bank is the debtor; when the account is overdrawn the bank is
the
creditor and the customer is the debtor. Because it was the debtor in
the relationship Y&N could not repay the money to
the applicant.
[9] The payment was not made
indebite
, nor was it made
sine causa,
nor was Nedbank
enriched. The money was due to the recipient, Y&N, and the
causa
for the payment was the undisputed debt owed by the applicant to Y&N.
None of the
condictiones
are applicable and the question of
which
condictio
applies, does not arise for decision in this
case.
Events subsequent to the payment
[10] After making the payment
the deponent received a telephone call from a Director of Y&N who
informed her that the
money had been paid into the Y&N Nedbank
account which was no longer in use. He said it had lain dormant since
about 2019.
[11] She then immediately logged
back onto the FNB Enterprise Banking portal and effected a further
payment of R1 117 649.60
from the applicant’s FNB
account into Y&N’s FNB account. The debt was therefore paid
for a second time.
[12] It is alleged in the
founding affidavit that Y&N’s account at Nedbank, the first
respondent, had been closed
and that the funds had thus not been
credited to Y&N. The source of this information seems to be Y&N.
It is alleged that
Nedbank had neither paid over these funds to Y&N
nor has it returned same to either FNB or the applicant. It has
simply retained
the funds – ostensibly for itself. It is then
alleged that Nedbank has no lawful basis to retain the funds and that
Nedbank
has been unjustly enriched in the amount of R1 117 649.60.
[13] The applicant seeks relief
only against Nedbank for repayment of the funds transferred. No
relief is sought against the
second respondent, FirstRand Bank
Limited, referred to as “FNB” or against Y&N.
Nedbank’s response
[14] Nedbank states that the
factual basis for the application is incorrect.
[5]
The Nedbank account was never closed and was not dormant at the time
that the applicant paid money into it. When the applicant
refers to the account being dormant, it is probably referring to an
account that is open but not used. Nedbank denies that it merely
appropriated the applicant’s money and states that the amount
received into the Y&N bank account was indeed credited
to Y&N,
thus diminishing the amount that the account was in overdraft. It is
also noteworthy that Y&N’s director
knew that the funds had
been paid into the Y&N Nedbank account, a statement impossible to
reconcile with the averment that
the account was closed and that
Nedbank had merely appropriated the money.
[15] The fact that the account
is open and not closed is also borne out by the fact that the
applicant was able to make a
payment into the account on the banking
portal. If there was no account or the account had indeed been
closed, funds received by
Nedbank would have been placed in a
suspense account and ultimately returned to FNB.
[16] The account is the subject
of a dispute between Nedbank and Y&N presently before the High
Court in Durban. Nedbank
alleges that the account is substantially
overdrawn in excess of the amount paid by the applicant. Y&N had
an overdraft facility
with Nedbank and the standard conditions
provided that in the event of default (including the account being
overdrawn), Nedbank
was contractually entitled to set off the
indebtedness of Y&N to Nedbank. This is what Nedbank did.
[17] Y&N and Nedbank also
entered into a “Deed of Pledge and Cession.”
[18] The applicant approach the
two banks and because of the query raised by the applicant, Nedbank
flagged the incident as
a possible fraud and the money was held in a
suspense account for a period.
[19] The argument that set off
could not take place because the money was placed in a suspense
account is incorrect. Set off
takes place automatically and the set
off between the money received on behalf of Y&N and the debt owed
by Y&N to Nedbank
took place immediately when the funds were
deposited. A bank’s right to apply set off is well
established.
[6]
[20] Placing the funds in a
suspense account later is immaterial to the question of set off but
rather a banking or an accounting
practice to hold funds in a
suspense account when allegations of fraud were made.
[21] The payment of the funds
into Y&N’s Nedbank account reduced the indebtedness of Y&N
to Nedbank, did not
enrich Nedbank, and benefited Y&N. If any
party were enriched, it would appear that Y&N was enriched and
the applicant
impoverished. Reading the correspondence between the
applicant and Y&N attached to the founding affidavit, it is
apparent that
Y&N did not make a full disclosure of the
relationship between itself and Nedbank to the applicant. Had a full
disclosure been
made before the applicant made the second payment
into Y&N’s FNB account, the applicant might have taken a
different
decision about the second payment. Y&N would have known
about the overdraft, the fact that the facility had been revoked, the
pending litigation and that the account was not closed.
[22] The averment by the
applicant that the funds were “
simply lying in Nedbank’s
own account”
is therefore wrong. It is also incorrect to
say as the applicant does that Y&N’s Nedbank account was
“
no longer accessible.”
The account was clearly
accessible and the money was paid into it by the applicant.
[23] It is therefore not clear
on what basis Y&N purported to instruct that the funds be
returned to the applicant under
circumstances where the money had
been received by it in its own bank account, stood to its benefit as
a credit on its account,
and had been set off against the debt Y&N
owed to Nedbank. Y&N was not in a position to issue instructions
to Nedbank.
It was the debtor, not the creditor in the relationship.
[24] The applicant confuses the
cancellation of the overdraft facility by Nedbank with the
termination of the debtor-creditor
relationship. All that the
cancellation of the facility means is that the credit thereby
extended was now revoked. It did not terminate
the debtor-creditor
relationship and the debt still existed, and the termination of the
facility did not mean that Nedbank could
no longer rely on set off.
[25] If it eventually turned out
that Y&N is not indebted to Nedbank on overdraft, the money paid
into the account will
still stand to the credit of Y&N on
Nedbank’s books. This dispute between Nedbank and Y&N has
nothing to do with
the present dispute between Nedbank and the
applicant.
[26] The applicant relied in
argument on the decision by the Supreme Court of Appeal in
FirstRand
Bank Ltd v Spar Group Ltd
[7]
for two conclusions, namely that there is no inflexible rule that
only an account holder may assert a claim to money held in the
account holder’s account with the bank,
[8]
and the fact that the proposition that money deposited in bank
account becomes the property of the bank does not necessarily
militate
against a legitimate claim by another party. These two
conclusions are correct and this is borne out by the SCA judgment,
but there
are of no application in this matter.
[27] In the
Spar
matter a
franchisee defaulted on terms of a franchise agreement and the
parties came to an arrangement whereby the franchise business
would
be run by the franchisor at its own cost and for its own benefit.
Credit card payments continued to be made into the franchisee’s
bank accounts and the franchisor’s attempts to have the matter
rectified with the franchisee and the bank were unsuccessful.
The
bank thereupon used the funds so deposited from the business operated
by the franchisor to set off amounts owed to it by the
franchisee and
also permitted the controlling mind behind the franchisee to withdraw
funds from the accounts. They did this despite
the fact that both the
bank and the franchisee were at all times aware of the franchisor’s
claim to the funds.
[28] Sutherland AJA and
Unterhalter AJA
[9]
held that it was possible that the personal right to the credit
arising from the deposits may form the subject of an agreement
between the bank, the customer (the franchisee) and the third party
depositor (the franchisor) in terms of which there is an obligation
on the bank to pay the credit accruing in the account to the
franchisor. In such circumstances set off would not operate.
[10]
[29] In the absence of an
agreement between the three parties, the knowledge of the bank that
the franchisor has deposited
money into their client’s account
to which their client has no claim may also give a right to the
franchisor to payment of
the money.
[11]
It is incorrect to interpret
Joint
Stock Co Varvarinskoye v Absa Bank Ltd and Others
[12]
to mean that “
agreement”
and “
knowledge”
were used interchangeably. Even in the absence of agreement,
knowledge may have the effect that the third party depositor becomes
entitled to the funds. Where a bank owes a personal obligation to the
third party to pay the credit balance accruing from the third
party’s
deposits, the bank cannot set off its own customer’s
indebtedness to the bank against the bank’s debt
that is due to
the third party. The Court therefore interpreted the
Joint
Stock
case to mean that the
bank’s knowledge of the entitlement of the third party to the
funds may give rise to a right enjoyed
by the third party to payment
from the bank.
[30] The franchisee had no right
to claim the amounts deposited by the franchisor and set off could
not operate between the
bank and the franchisee. The same would
happen if a payment is made in error: If party A wishing to pay party
B paid the money
into party C’s account, party C has no
entitlement to the funds credited to his account and any
appropriation of the funds
by party B with knowledge that they were
not entitled to deal with the funds, would amount to theft.
[13]
[31] It was argued on behalf of
the applicant that Nedbank explicitly renounced any entitlement to
the money and therefore
has no liability to its customer. There is no
factual basis to find that Nedbank explicitly renounced any
entitlement to the money.
The money came into Y&N’s account
and was dealt with as such.
[32] In
Nissan
South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Marnitz NO & Others
,
[14]
the appellant paid an amount of money into the account of a third
party and the account was duly credited. The third party was
not
entitled to the funds and the third party had no claim against the
bank in respect of the funds. It was accepted that if the
account
holder had no claim, then the appellant who had made the error was
entitled to payment.
[33] Reference was also made to
the decision in
First
National Bank of Southern Africa Ltd v Perry NO and Others
[15]
were a bank was not entitled to make payment to its own client
because the deposited funds were stolen funds. The bank was therefore
enriched and an enrichment action lay against it.
[16]
Thus whether the funds deposited were stolen or deposited in error,
the account holder who was credited has no claim against the
bank for
the reasons set out. In the
Spar
case and the
Joint
Stock
case the funds
deposited were neither stolen nor deposited in error but were
deposited pursuant to an arrangement between the bank’s
customer (the franchisee) and the third party (the franchisor) with
the knowledge of the bank. Under any of these sets of circumstances
the account holder had no claim to the money.
[17]
[34] In the present case the
funds meant for Y&N were deposited into Y&N’s account
and the bank did have a duty
or a liability to its customer, and in
fulfilment of that duty, it credited its customer’s account.
Had the credit meant
that the account itself was now in credit, Y&N
would have been able to deal with the money as it pleased and could
have repaid
the amount in credit to the applicant. Y&N did, after
all, receive payment for the same debt from the applicant twice.
[35] I therefore make the order
in paragraph 1 above.
J MOORCROFT
ACTING JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION
JOHANNESBURG
Electronically submitted
Delivered: This judgement was prepared
and authored by the Acting Judge whose name is reflected and is
handed down electronically
by circulation to the Parties / their
legal representatives by email and by uploading it to the electronic
file of this matter
on CaseLines. The date of the judgment is deemed
to be
29 MAY 2023
.
COUNSEL
FOR THE APPLICANT:
A
L Williamson
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Nadeem
Mahomed Inc
COUNSEL
FOR THE RESPONDENT:
J
Kilian
(Heads
of argument by P J Wallis SC)
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Larson
Falconer Hassan Parsee Inc (Durban)
Martini
– Patlansky Attorneys
(Johannesburg)
DATE
OF THE HEARING:
22
MAY 2023
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
29
MAY 2023
[1]
Trustees,
Estate Whitehead v Dumas and Another
2013 (3) SA 331 (SCA).
[2]
First
National Bank of Southern Africa v Perry NO and Others
2001
(3) SA 960 (SCA).
[3]
Absa
Bank Ltd v Moore and Another
2017 (1) SA 255
(CC) para 35.
[4]
The authorities are summarised in Moorcroft and Vessio
Banking
Law and Practice
para 15.4.
[5]
The application must be approached on the basis set out in
Plascon-Evans Paints
Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984 (3) SA 623
(A) 634 and
Stellenbosch
Farmers' Winery Ltd v Stellenvale Winery (Pty) Ltd
1957
(4) SA 234 (C)
235E – G,
Burnkloof
Caterers (Pty) Ltd v Horseshoe Caterers (Green Point) (Pty)
Ltd
1976
(2) SA 930
(A) 938A – B, and various other
authorities.
[6]
Fourie
The
Banker and the Law
101;
Duba
and Others v Ketsikili and Others
1924 EDL 332
341;
ABSA
Bank Ltd v Intensive Air (Pty) Ltd
[2011] 3 All SA 2
(SCA);
2011 (2) SA 275
(SCA) para 20.
[7]
FirstRand
Bank Ltd v Spar Group Ltd
[2021] All SA 680 (SCA); 2021 (5) SA 511 (SCA).
[8]
See also
Symon
v Brecker
1904 TS 745
and
ABSA
Bank Ltd v Intensive Air (Pty) Ltd
[2011] 3 All SA 2
(SCA);
2011 (2) SA 275
(SCA) para 24.
[9]
Cachalia JA, Dambuza JA and Makgoka JA concurring.
[10]
Para 43 of
Spar
.
[11]
Para 45 of
Spar
.
[12]
Joint
Stock Co Varvarinskoye v Absa Bank Ltd and Others
2008 (4) SA 287 (SCA)
[13]
Para 48 of
Spar
.
[14]
Nissan
South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Marnitz NO & Others
2005 (1) SA 441 (SCA).
[15]
First
National Bank of Southern Africa Ltd v Perry NO and Others
2001 (3) SA 960
(SCA)
[16]
Para 61 of
Spar
.
[17]
Set off means after all that a debt owed by party A to party
B is set off against a debt owed by party B to party A.
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