Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1335South Africa
Crowd Tech Limited v Prokas and Others (2019/24387) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1335 (15 November 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
15 November 2023
Headnotes
the clients funds.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Crowd Tech Limited v Prokas and Others (2019/24387) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1335 (15 November 2023)
Crowd Tech Limited v Prokas and Others (2019/24387) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1335 (15 November 2023)
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sino date 15 November 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO:
2019/24387
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES
NOT REVISED
15/11/23
In
the matter between:
CROWD
TECH LIMI
T
ED
Applicant
And
GEORGE
PROKAS
First
Respondent
CYBER-FX
(PTY) LIMITED
Second
Respondent
ABSA
BANK LIMITED
Third
Respondent
JUDGMENT
Manoim J
Introduction
[1] The sole issue
in this case is whether the applicant, which had abandoned an interim
order obtained
ex parte
against the first respondent, should
pay the latter’s costs on an attorney client scale. The
applicant has already tendered
party and party costs, but this has
not satisfied the first respondent against whom the original interim
order was awarded. The
second and third respondents are not involved
in the present litigation.
[2] The matter has
been brought to the court by the first respondent in terms of Rule
41(1)(c) of the Uniform Rules of court.
This rule states that if a
party withdraws a matter without tendering costs the other party can
apply to court on notice for an
order of costs. This rule also
applies when the party in whose favour a judgment has been granted
abandons the judgment. This is
in terms of Rule 41(2) which deals
with the consequences of abandonment.
Background
[3]
In one week of urgent court hearings in July 2019, three of the
dramatis
personae
in the present matter were involved in three separate applications,
albeit in different guises.
[1]
The issue in this case relates to one of those applications; an
ex
parte
application in which the applicant, Crowd Tech Limited (“Crowd
Tech”) sought to partially freeze a bank account belonging
to
the first respondent, George Prokas (“Prokas”) which he
holds with ABSA Bank Limited, (“ABSA”) the third
respondent.
[2]
I will refer to
this as the freezing application.
[4] Crowd Tech
succeeded in getting an interim order to partially freeze the Absa
account but has, in subsequent litigation,
abandoned that relief.
Although it eventually tendered costs on a party and party scale,
Prokas is not satisfied and believes he
is entitled to attorney
client cost hence the present application. I turn first to the
background that led to the freezing application.
[5] The second
respondent in this case is Cyber FX (Pty) Ltd (“Cyber”).
Cyber has two shareholders, Prokas and
Kevin Reinstein. Prokas
was also a director but resigned on 6 June 2019.
[6]
Crowd Tech is an investment firm based in Cyprus. It has clients who
seek opportunities internationally to trade in derivatives.
In 2018
it took a decision to invest in South Africa and was referred to
Cyber. The attraction of Cyber was that it had a licence
to trade
derivatives on an online platform in what is known as the over the
counter derivative market. In November 2018 the two
companies entered
into an agreement known as a White Label agreement.
[3]
In terms of the agreement Crowd Tech deposited funds from its clients
into an account controlled by Cyber which was necessary for
the
clients to enable them to trade. These accounts are known as margin
accounts. The significance of these accounts is that they
held the
clients funds.
[7] On 7 May 2019
Crowd Tech transferred € 271 985.36 to Cyber’s account.
This amount represented money from its
clients for the purpose of
Cyber using it to conduct trades on its platform on behalf of these
clients. But, Crowd Tech claimed,
it later learnt that Cyber did not
transfer these funds into end users margin accounts as it was
required to in terms of the White
Label agreement. It got to find
this out because in June, one of Crowd Tech clients complained to it
that its funds had not been
transferred to its margin account. Then
On 3 July 2019, Crowd Tech says it got information that Prokas had
transferred € 69
837 from Cyber’s account with a
Portuguese bank to his personal account in South Africa, held with
ABSA. This transfer was
alleged to have taken place on 17 May
2019.i.e., ten days after the date that Crowd Tech had transferred
the € 271 985.36,
to the Cyber account. As proof of this
transfer, Crowd Tech attached a document from a foreign exchange
agent called Fidelis. The
document is headed “Trade
Confirmation” and evidences an instruction from Prokas to pay
the amount to an ABSA account.
The reference is for: “
consulting
fees and disbursements”.
[8] Crowd Tech
claims that after it learnt of this transfer on 3 July, it attempted
to contact Prokas but was unable to get
hold of him. On 18 June it
got its attorneys to send a letter of demand to Prokas calling upon
him to remedy what it considered
was a breach of the White Label
agreement. It set a deadline for this to be done by 2 July 2019.
Prokas never responded by the
deadline given to him.
[9]
Based on these facts Crowd Tech sought an interim interdict to
prohibit Prokas from withdrawing or transferring an amount
of €
271 985.36 from his Absa bank account, pending an action to be
instituted against him to recover this amount from him.
[4]
The justification for doing so is set out in the following paragraph
of the founding affidavit:
“
A
letter of demand was sent to Prokas on 18 June 2019 setting out the
breach and requesting a remedy of the breach. There has been
no
response. The silence of Prokas is in itself telling and reasonably
gives rise to the inference that Prokas has misappropriated
the
funds.”
[10] On 12 July
Matojane J, who was in the urgent court that week, granted the
interim order
ex parte
. This was on a Friday. But in that same
week Crowd Tech, on the Tuesday, had applied for an
ex parte
order to freeze the Cyber account, which was granted unopposed. This
account was also with ABSA and the freeze was limited to €
271
985.36; the same amount in the freeze sought later that week to be
imposed on Prokas. On the Tuesday as well, Prokas brought
an
application to place Cyber in provisional liquidation. In the
application Prokas alleged that his co-shareholder, Reinstein,
had
misappropriated money from the company. The application was
unsuccessful. It is not clear why. According to Prokas it was
dismissed on the grounds of urgency. But as Ms Cooke for Crowd Tech
points out, the order does not state this – it says the
application was dismissed, but not in the customary terms that this
was because of lack of urgency. What is common cause is that
Matojane
J who had heard the liquidation application on the Tuesday also heard
the present
ex parte
application on the Friday of that same
week.
[11] Once the order
was granted it was not served on Prokas until five days later. He
then proceeded to anticipate the order.
Crowd Tech then abandoned the
order on 20 November 2019. It did not however tender costs at the
time it served its notice of abandonment.
Hence Prokas brought the
present application in terms of Rule 41(1)(c) but only in January
2022. It was only after Prokas brought
the present Rule 41(1)(c)
application that Crowd Tech tendered costs, but then only on a party
and party scale.
[12] Prokas
contends that he is entitled to attorney client costs because Crowd
Tech had brought the
ex parte
application in bad faith. Three
reasons were advanced for this contention. First, that Crowd Tech had
failed to disclose material
facts. Second, that the application
relied on hearsay evidence and third, on illegally obtained evidence.
[13] However, the
three points are interrelated. The first relates to the Trade
Confirmation. Recall that this was attached
to the founding affidavit
in the
ex parte
application. Crowd Tech never disclosed to the
court how it had obtained the document or verified it. According to
Prokas the document
was password protected and only he knew the
password. Therefore, he assumes it must have been obtained illegally.
Crowd Tech has
despite filing further affidavits remained silent on
this point. I can assume it is reluctant to disclose these facts.
However,
there is no dispute about its authenticity. Crowd Tech
argues even it was illegally obtained, something it does not concede,
there
are circumstances where courts can still rely on this evidence.
[14] Moreover, it
argues even if the document is considered hearsay, a court can still
accept it as evidence. I do not need
to go into this. This is because
it is common cause the document was historical. Prokas had on 20 May
2019 (i.e., three days later)
cancelled the instruction, and so he
never withdrew the money from the Fidelis account to his ABSA
account. He says he did so because
Cyber was then in “
parlous
financial circumstances”
and his action was taken to ensure
it had the funds to meet some of its immediate debts.
[15] The
cancellation instruction had been issued prior to the date that the
ex parte
application had been sought. To put it plainly had
the application not been brought
ex parte
this fact would have
been revealed to the court and an important factual plank
underpinning the
ex parte
application would have been
dismantled. This is the real objection to Crowd Tech’s
reliance on the Trade Confirmation.
Less because it was illegally
obtained or constituted hearsay, but because it was unreliable and
hence tempting as it was for an
applicant in a freezing application
to rely on it – it was reckless to do so, when either it did
not have the full context,
or if it did not, by denying Prokas an
opportunity to offer an explanation. If he had been able to file an
answer undoubtedly this
fact would have been brought to the court’s
attention and so the most important piece of evidence suggesting
Prokas was guilty
of misappropriation, would have been negated, and
hence it is unlikely that the freezing order would have been granted.
[16] But this was
not the only problem with the application. The most egregious
non-disclosure concerned the allegation that
Prokas had not paid the
moneys over to the investors and when called upon to explain why he
had not done so; he had remained silent.
But Prokas had not been
silent. In fact, he had been in contact with an internal auditor for
Crowd Tech and had explained to him
that he needed to know who the
owners of the funds were in order to pay the moneys out as part of
compliance with FICA regulations.
He had made it clear that because
of regulatory requirements he could not pay out the monies until he
had this information. Prokas
had corresponded with the internal
auditor using another email, not his Cyber email address, which is
the one Crowd Tech’s
attorneys had used to send their letter of
demand.
[17] Crowd Tech
says it was entitled to use his Cyber email because this was the
email given by Prokas for all communications
with the company in
terms of the White Label agreement. This is correct, but if a
representative of Crowd Tech was in active communication
with Prokas
on his personal email why did they not make use of that as well.
[18] The only
possible explanation for these failures is that Mr. Agathocleous,
Crowd Tech’s deponent to the founding
affidavit, was not aware
of the communications with the internal auditor and has only found
out that now in the present application.
But Crowd Tech does not say
so. I thus cannot rely on speculation when the opportunity to explain
has been given and not taken.
Thus if the full facts had been made
known, negative inferences which might otherwise have been drawn by
the urgent court about
Prokas’ apparent unexplained failure to
pay monies out to the client’s margin account, or by his
alleged failure to
respond to Crowd Tech’s attorneys letter of
demand, would have been seen in a different light.
[19] Much was made
by counsel for Prokas of Crowd Tech’s failure to disclose in
the
ex parte
application that Prokas had brought an
application for the liquidation of Cyber on the Tuesday of the same
week. Unlike with the
other points of complaint raised, I do not
consider this criticism has substance. The allegation was that when
the liquidation
application was heard during the course of that week,
Crowd Tech had an attorney on a watching brief during the hearing.
However,
it is not clear that Agathocleous was aware of the
liquidation application. His affidavit was deposed to in Cyprus on 9
July, presumably
prior to the liquidation hearing. Whilst no mention
was made of the liquidation application in his affidavit it does not
follow
that this may not have been mentioned by counsel during the
ex
parte
application on the Friday. There is no record of this
proceeding. But it is common cause that Matojane J who heard the
ex
parte
application had also heard the liquidation application so
he may well have been aware of it. Matojane J had also granted the
freezing
order in respect of the Cyber FX account.
[20] Moreover, even
if it had been mentioned, it is not clear that this disclosure would
have led to the court to come to
a different conclusion. Counsel for
Prokas suggests that it was a material fact in the liquidation
application that Prokas had
accused his erstwhile partner in the
business of misappropriation, but the partner had despite opposing
the application not made
similar accusations against Prokas. This
would suggest that Prokas was attempting to preserve the company’s
assets not dissipate
them by lining his own pocket, as the
ex
parte
application implied. Whilst this is one reading of the
implications of the liquidation application it is not the only one.
The
court might well have considered that conflict between the two
joint shareholders was a sufficiently alarming development that might
lead credence to a third party’s concerns about its money being
dissipated.
Scale of costs
[21] I now consider
what the implications of these background facts should be for the
scale of costs. The question is whether
Crowd Tech’s conduct in
the ex parte litigation merits the sanction of
[22]
It is as well to commence by considering what is not objectionable.
The general caution about courts granting orders
pursuant to an
ex
parte
application is that the respondent is denied its fundamental right to
be heard. Nevertheless, our courts have recognised, based
on
pragmatism, that sometimes orders obtained pursuant to
ex
parte
applications are necessary, to avoid negating the relief being
sought. Over time a number of instances where courts will do so
has
emerged. One of those instances, as recently recognised in this
division in the
Mazetti
case was that of: “…
a
creditor who seeks to freeze the bank account of a debtor when
grounds exist to fear illegitimate dissipation especially in
insolvency
proceedings.”
[5]
[23] Crowd Tech’s
choice to institute proceedings
ex parte,
was not on its own,
objectionable, as if the facts before the court were correct, it fell
into one of the classic cases justifying
its use.
[24]
The next question is whether Crowd Tech’s use of the withdrawal
instruction was use of illegally obtained evidence
which should not
have been placed before the court. Prokas alleges that the document
could only have been accessed using a code
known to him. Crowd Tech
denies it was illegally obtained but offers no explanation of how it
obtained the document. I will assume
for the present purposes that it
was illegally obtained. Whilst our law on the use of illegally
obtained evidence in civil proceedings
is evolving, since the
adoption of our Constitution, from a common law rule to always admit
this evidence, to now a more nuanced
approach to give courts a
discretion, I do not consider this a case where the point has to be
decided more definitively
[6]
. I
will accept for present purposes that where an illegally obtained
document in a freezing application serves as evidence of an
act of
alleged dissipation, based on an authentic instruction to a bank,
such evidence could be accepted in the interests of justice.
[25] I now turn to
the question of whether Crowd Tech acted in good faith given this was
an
ex parte
application.
[26]
It is a trite principle of law that good faith is a “
sine
qua non in an ex parte
application
.”
[7]
But the duty to disclose goes further than merely acting in good
faith. Even where it is not shown that a party has acted
mala
fide
the court can take into account whether the applicant acted
recklessly in the sense that it failed to disclose facts. In
Schlesinger
v Schlesinger
the court acknowledged the distinction but nevertheless granted an
award of attorney client costs against the party who had brought
the
ex parte application holding that:
“
The
respondent and her legal advisers, in my opinion, brought the
original application with a reckless disregard for the full and
true
facts in an effort to obtain some tactical advantage over the
applicant or to use the pending action in South Africa against
him in
the matrimonial proceedings in Switzerland. I am not, however,
imputing fraudulent conduct to either the respondent or her
attorney,
but a reckless disregard of a litigant's duty to a Court in making a
full and frank disclosure of all known facts which
might influence
the Court in reaching a just conclusion.
[8]
[27] In this case I
do not consider there is sufficient evidence to suggest that Crowd
Tech and its attorneys acted in bad
faith. Rather the question in
this case is whether there was a reckless disregard of their duty to
the court in disclosing certain
facts given that this was an
ex
parte
application.
[28] I consider
that there was. The failure to disclose the discussions between the
internal auditor and Prokas regarding
the reasons he was not making
the payments to the clients was material. It may well be that
Agathocleous was unaware of this interaction.
But he has had an
opportunity to explain this and has failed to do so. The
failure to get all the necessary facts from his
subordinates or
agents before taking these drastic steps was reckless. One would have
expected him to consult with these people
before taking action.
Secondly, whilst he could bring the court’s attention to the
Trade Confirmation instruction, doing
so without context as to how
and when it had been obtained was reckless, because it risked
reliance on an incomplete picture, as
has become now evident in this
case. Unknown to the court was that at time of the hearing, this very
document on which presumably
much reliance was placed had been
countermanded and there had been no withdrawal of funds.
[29]
This is not the end of the saga. Several further affidavits were
filed including two by Crowd Tech. In the first, Crowd
Tech whilst
accepting that Prokas had not withdrawn monies pursuant to the
withdrawal letter, maintained adamantly that having
scrutinised the
accounts of Crowd Tech its suspicions were justified. But a litigant
who has brought an ex parte application on
incomplete and erroneous
allegations cannot look to subsequent facts to justify why it took
the action it did.
[9]
Nor in any
event is the post hoc reconstruction dispositive of the need to have
frozen the account. The disputes of facts on the
papers are
inconclusive and will only be clarified during the subsequent action
proceedings.
[10]
[30] Crowd Tech has
never acknowledged that it was incorrect to have attempted to have
applied to freeze Prokas’ ABSA
account. It did however abandon
the order once it was opposed. Crowd Tech contends that this was done
because it had now become
evident that there was a negligible amount
left in Prokas’ ABSA account, and hence pursuing the
application was pointless.
But Crowd Tech has also elected not to
leave the costs decision to the trial court as suggested initially by
its counsel in the
written heads of argument. This means I must
decide the case on what facts I have before me now that are
uncontested.
[31]
A proper case has been made that the
ex
parte
application was made without disclosing all the information to the
court and this omission was reckless. I am satisfied that an
attorney
client costs award is justified. Although Crowd Tech complains that
the present application was brought months after the
abandonment of
the
ex
parte
application, I do not consider this a relevant consideration. Proper
compliance with the duty to disclose in an
ex
parte
application is a concern to the courts generally.
[11]
Imposing a punitive costs order for non-compliance is appropriate not
only as a solatium to the disaffected party but also as an
independent consideration as a corrective discipline on litigants.
ORDER:-
[32] In the result
the following order is made:
1.
The applicant (“Crowd Tech”) is
ordered to pay the first respondent the costs of this application
including the application
in terms of Rule 41(1)(c) on the scale as
between attorney and client.
N. MANOIM
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION
JOHNANNESBURG
Date of hearing: 31
October 2023
Date of judgment: 15
November 2023
Appearances:
First
Respondent’s Counsel:
JM Heher
Instructed by: Raymond
Druker Attorneys/ Raymond Druker
Applicant’s
Counsel: A Cooke
(Heads
of Arguments drafted by C. Van der Linde)
Instructed by: Norton
Rose Fulbright South Africa Inc/G.
Bouwer
[1]
The
dramatis personae are the applicant and the first and second
respondent. The third respondent, ABSA has not involved itself
in
this litigation.
[2]
I
will refer to the parties by name and not their designations.
Although they have reversed their respective designations
in the
present costs application, they have continued to use their
designations as they were in the main mater. These designations
are
reflected in the heading of this judgment.
[3]
A
white label agreement is a contract that allows a party to rebrand
and sell a product or service developed by another as their
own. See
https://www.contractscounsel.com.
[4]
This
action is still pending at the time of this decision I was informed
by counsel.
[5]
Mazzetti
Management Services (Pty) Ltd and another v Amabhungane Centre for
Journalism NPC and others
Case
number 050131- 2023.
[6]
See
for instance the useful discussion in
Protea
Technology and Another v Wainer and Others
1997
(3) All SA 594 (W)
[7]
See
Erasmus
Superior Court Practice volume 2, D1-61
[8]
Schlesinger
v Schlesinger
1979 (4) SA 342
(W) at 354.
[9]
See
Mazetti
supra.
[10]
By
way of example, the disputes of facts concerning what Reinstein is
alleged to have stated in the opposed liquidation application
about
Prokas.
[11]
See
more recently,
Public
Protector v South African Reserve Bank
2019
(6)
SA 253 (CC) where the court refers to abuse of process as one of the
grounds where an attorney client costs award may be appropriate.
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