Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 666South Africa
Prioste v Edelstein Faber Grobler Inc and Another (2022 / 031631) [2023] ZAGPJHC 666 (8 June 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
8 June 2023
Headnotes
Summary
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Prioste v Edelstein Faber Grobler Inc and Another (2022 / 031631) [2023] ZAGPJHC 666 (8 June 2023)
Prioste v Edelstein Faber Grobler Inc and Another (2022 / 031631) [2023] ZAGPJHC 666 (8 June 2023)
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sino date 8 June 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO: 2022 / 031631
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
08.06.23
In the application by
PRIOSTE, MARIA DA
CONCEICAO FREITAS
Applicant
and
EDELSTEIN FABER
GROBLER INC
First
Respondent
GROBLER, RONEL
Second
Respondent
Neutral Citation
:
Prioste
v Edelstein Faber Grobler Inc and Another
(Case
No. 2022 / 031631) [2023] ZAGPJHC 666 (8 June 2023)
JUDGMENT
MOORCROFT AJ:
Summary
Mandate –
Instruction by two joint owners to register transfer of immovable
property and to then pay the balance of the purchase
price after
deductions into bank account of one owner
Both owners owned an
indivisible 50% share in property
Owners as mandators
are individually entitled to vary instruction to conveyancer in
respect of bank account into which the owner’s
share must be
paid
Order
[1] In this matter I make
the following order:
1.
The
application is dismissed.
2.
The
applicant is ordered to pay the respondents’ costs.
[2] The reasons for the
order follow below.
Introduction
[3] The applicant seeks
an order that either of the respondents, alternatively the
respondents jointly and severally, pay an amount
of R833 865.48
to her, with interest and costs. The claim arises out of what is
described as a “
mandate”
given to the first
respondent as a firm of conveyancers by the applicant and Mr Prioste,
her former husband to whom she was married
in community of property
until 2015, to transfer the immovable property owned by them jointly
to a third party purchaser and to
pay the balance of the proceeds
into the applicant’s bank account.
Money paid into trust
[4]
Money
paid into trust must be used only as instructed and may not be used
for any other purpose. In
Frikkie Pretorius Inc and Another v GG
[1]
the proceeds of the sale
of a jointly owned property was paid into trust with the wife’s
attorney. The attorney held the funds
for the benefit of both parties
irrespective of who the attorney’s client was, and it was not
permissible for the attorney
to deduct arrear maintenance owed by the
husband to his client from the amount payable to the husband and held
in trust.
[5]
In
Aeroquip SA v Gross and others
[2]
Southwood J, dealing with
money in an attorney’s trust account, said:
[13] The applicant has
not referred to any authority that an attorney becomes personally
liable for payment of a debt where he fails
to pay over to a client’s
creditor an amount held by him on behalf of his client in his trust
account. The contrary appears
to be true.
An attorney who
holds an amount of money in his trust account on behalf of a client
is obliged to use it for no other purpose than
he is instructed by
the client.
It is trite that it must always be available
to the client.
[emphasis added]
[6] The questions that
must then be answered are –
6.1 What was the
instruction given to the first respondent?
6.2 Who gave the
instruction?
6.3 Was it varied?
6.4 Could it be varied by
one of the two parties who gave the instruction without the knowledge
or co-operation of the other?
The instruction
[7]
The
mandate, or instruction relied upon consists of two documents, namely
a questionnaire
[3]
and an
“
instruction
to register transfer.
”
[4]
Both documents were completed and signed by the applicant and Mr
Prioste in 2022.
[8]
The
second respondent states in the answering affidavit that the transfer
documents were sent to the applicant and Mr Prioste as
the sellers
and were thereafter signed by both sellers and returned to the first
respondent. In the email
[5]
requesting the applicant and Mr Prioste to sign the instruction
document they were requested specifically to “
complete
banking details for the payment and sign in full.”
[9] The pre-typed
questionnaire requires clients of the first respondent to “
supply
proof of the banking account into which you require payment in order
to prove that it is your account”
and the banking account
then given is the Capitec bank account of the applicant. Next to the
words “
please confirm the banking account into which payment
of your proceeds is to be made”
the applicant’s bank
account details appear. It would seem that the purpose of the
questionnaire was to place the conveyancer
in possession of the
personal details of the sellers of the property.
[10] In the second
document headed “
Instruction to register transfer”
,
the first respondent was given an instruction to transfer ownership
of the property to the purchasers. The firm was instructed
to “
attend
to the registration of transfer of the above-mentioned property on
our behalf and
[we]
authorise you to receive the purchase
price on our behalf in cash or by way of guarantees from a bank,
building society or other
institution”
.
[11] The document then
states that “
we further authorise you out of the proceeds of
the sale and upon receipt of such proceeds, to pay, or when so
requested, to undertake
to pay the costs to cancel existing bonds and
the legal costs, agents commission, rates and taxes or levies”
,
and to pay the balance into the applicant’s bank account. This
was a clear and unequivocal instruction by both owners to
pay the
balance of the proceeds of the sale into the applicant’s bank
account.
[12] The instruction
document reflects the names and signatures of the applicant and Mr
Prioste and the date of 17 March 2022
appears above their
signatures. The instructions were given by both the applicant and Mr
Prioste - It was a joint instruction.
[13]
The
application turns not on the facts surrounding the divorce or any
other agreements or arrangements, but exclusively on the
interpretation of the two documents (being the questionnaire and the
instruction) relied on. Both parties refer to the authority
given to
the first respondent as a mandate. It is not necessary for the
purpose of this judgment to analyse the distinction between
a mandate
and an instruction, but it seems to me that the document is more
accurately described as an instruction to perform a
juristic act.
[6]
The variation of the
instruction
[14] It is common cause
that the first respondent did not carry out the original instruction
in respect of the payment of the balance
into the bank account of the
applicant. It made payment in two equal amounts of R833 865.48
to the applicant and to Mr Prioste.
[15] In the respondents’
answering affidavit the second respondent avers that the instruction
was contrary to the provisions
of the Court order in terms of which
the applicant and her husband were divorced in 2015. The Court order
provided for the equal
division of the joint estate whereas the
applicant now claimed all of the net proceeds of the sale of the
property and not only
50%. The reliance on the Court order is
misplaced as the applicant and her husband were at liberty to agree
to pay all the funds
into her account or indeed to any third party,
and to give such an instruction to the first respondent as
conveyancer. The first
respondent was not called upon to interpret
and implement the Court order but was called upon to carry out the
instruction as contained
in the instruction.
[16]
I
note in passing that the evidence by Mr Prioste in his affidavit was
that there was never any agreement in place to vary the terms
of the
court order. Such a variation might conceivably have been an
explanation for an instruction to pay the proceeds of the sale
to the
applicant but there is nothing in the instruction documents that
points to such an underlying agreement.
[7]
[17]
The
second respondent refers to an affidavit
[8]
deposed to by Mr Prioste attached to her answering affidavit. He
confirms that on 17 March 2022 he went to the offices of
the
applicant’s attorneys to sign transfer documents. He
specifically noticed the applicant’s banking details contained
in the documentation and when he queried the details he was told by
the applicant’s attorney that he should send his banking
details by email directly to the first respondent. Some six weeks
later he again attended at the offices of the applicant’s
attorneys and was advised that the first respondent and not the
applicant’s attorneys were dealing with the transfer.
Thereafter
Mr Prioste liaised with the staff of the first respondent.
[18]
On
5 May 2022, Mr Prioste’s brother on his behalf emailed
[9]
his banking details as well as a copy of the decree of divorce
incorporating a settlement agreement to the first respondent.
[19] The email reads
under the heading: “
Mr ATV Prioste banking details”:
“
Good day
Matilda
Please find herewith
banking details for Mr ATV Prioste.
Kind regards
Paul Prioste
Operations Director”
[20] The email does not
constitute an express variation of the instruction given to the first
respondent, but was interpreted as
such by the first respondent and
as a result 50% of the balance after deductions was subsequently paid
into Mr Prioste’s
account. This interpretation by the first
respondent no doubt arose out of the liaison between Mr Prioste and
the first respondent’s
staff. There is a paucity of evidence by
the first respondent in this regard but it must be accepted that it
is common cause on
the papers between the first respondent and Mr
Prioste that this was indeed the instruction.
Was it permissible for
Mr Prioste to change the instruction to pay his share of the proceeds
into the applicant’s bank account,
and to do so unilaterally?
[21]
Absent
a cession,
[10]
the terms of
the instruction as accepted by all parties, or an underlying
agreement binding also on the mandatary or agent, an
authority given
to another is not irrevocable.
[22] There is nothing in
the instruction document to justify the inference that was
irrevocable in respect of the instruction to
pay the proceeds into
the applicant’s bank account, or that either the applicant or
Mr Prioste could not unilaterally amend
the instruction and provide
the first respondent with a contrary instruction namely to pay his or
her 50% share into some other
account. The applicant and Mr Prioste
were both free to deal with their own 50% share as they pleased.
Conclusion
[23] I therefore find
that
23.1 Mr Prioste was
free to vary the instruction to pay into the application bank account
insofar as the instruction pertained
to his 50% share;
23.2 He did so;
23.3 The
respondents undertook no obligation to the applicant that was
independent of the instruction document to ensure that
Mr Prioste’s
share was paid into her bank account, and once Mr Prioste had given
alternate instructions in respect of his
share, the first respondent
was not obliged to pay his share into her bank account and was not
permitted to deal with his share
otherwise than in accordance with Mr
Prioste’s instruction.
[24] For the reasons set
out above I make the order in paragraph 1.
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
8 JUNE 2023
.
COUNSEL
FOR THE APPLICANT:
H P WEST
INSTRUCTED
BY:
ST ATTORNEYS
COUNSEL
FOR RESPONDENTS:
R SHEPSTONE
INSTRUCTED
BY:
FAIRBRIDGES WERTHEIM
BECKER ATTORNEYS
DATE
OF ARGUMENT:
25 MAY 2023
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
8
JUNE 2023
[1]
Frikkie Pretorius Inc and Another v GG
2011 (2) SA 407 (KZP).
[2]
Aeroquip SA v Gross and
others
[ 2009 ]
3 All SA 264 (GNP).
[3]
CaseLines 01-108.
[4]
CaseLines 01-112.
[5]
CaseLines 01-49.
[6]
Joubert and Van Zyl, ‘
Mandate
and Negotiorum Gestio,’ The Law of South Africa
,
2
nd
ed 2009, Vol 17, Part 1,
para 2.
[7]
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.
[8]
CaseLines 01-57.
[9]
CaseLines 01-67.
[10]
Wanda, ‘
Agency
and Representation,’ The Law of South Africa
,
2
nd
ed 2003, Vol 1 para 199.
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