Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1354South Africa
H.W and Another v R.S (18246/2019) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1354 (24 November 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
24 November 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## H.W and Another v R.S (18246/2019) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1354 (24 November 2023)
H.W and Another v R.S (18246/2019) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1354 (24 November 2023)
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sino date 24 November 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG)
#### Case
No.18246/2019
Case
No.
18246/2019
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
REVISED
24/11/23
In the matter between:
HW
First
Plaintiff
SJW
Second
Plaintiff
And
RS
Defendant
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J
:
1
The first plaintiff, HW, is married in community of property
to the second plaintiff, SJW. In or around 2015, HW began an
extramarital
affair with the defendant, RS. During that affair, on 30
January, 1 February and 3 February 2017, HW made three withdrawals
from an investment account in his name
which
amounted together to just over R850 000 in cash. HW’s evidence
before me was that he did this to prevent SJW from obtaining
it in
the divorce proceedings he was at that time intending to pursue
against her. Some of the cash was stored in RS’s bedroom.
HW
took the rest of it away himself.
2
In the weeks following the cash withdrawals, HW gave R610 000
of the cash to RS. The question at the centre of this case is whether
that amount was advanced as a loan to help RS with her personal
expenses, or whether it was instead a gift to RS from a man who
was
intent on leaving his wife to join her.
3
HW says that it was a loan, advanced in two amounts –
one of R210 000 and another of R400 000 – which was repayable
on demand. RS says that it was a donation to help her wind up her
close corporation, which was at the time struggling to pay its
debts.
RS wanted to close the business and return to work as a salaried
employee. She found running a business stressful, and wanted
to be
free of the myriad concerns that tend to occupy the thoughts of a
small business owner.
4
It is clear from RS’s evidence that she also expected HW
to follow through on his promise to divorce SJW, and that RS
considered
that the money had been given to her in the expectation
that HW would leave his wife and devote himself exclusively to RS.
HW’s
evidence was decidedly cooler on that score. He said that
he did intend to leave his wife, but he had not finally decided
whether
to enter a permanent and exclusive relationship with RS. In
his own words he wanted to “wait and see” what happened
with the divorce.
5
As time went on, RS began to doubt whether HW really intended
to divorce SJW. The evidence suggests that towards the end of 2017
and at the beginning of 2018, HW’s and RS’s relationship
became turbulent, and in December 2017, HW first demanded
repayment
of what he said was the loan. Ultimately HW decided not to go through
with the divorce. On 3 June 2018 he made clear
to RS that he intended
to remain married to SJW, and the affair ended.
6
HW now sues for repayment of the money he gave RS. RS resists
the claim on the basis that the money was not a loan to her, but a
donation to her close corporation. Before evaluating those
contentions, it is first necessary to address a special plea of
prescription
raised on RS’s behalf.
Prescription
7
An ordinary debt prescribes three years after the plaintiff
acquires knowledge of the facts on which it can be claimed. In their
original form, HW’s particulars of claim call for the repayment
of a R710 000 debt, which was said to have been advanced
to RS
in one go, during February 2017. HW began to demand repayment of that
amount in December 2017, which is when prescription
started running.
The summons and the particulars of claim in their original form were
served on 4 June 2019 – well in time
to interrupt prescription.
However, on 10 February 2022, HW amended his particulars to allege
that two amounts – one of R210 000
and one of R400 000
– were in fact advanced to RS in February and March 2017
respectively.
8
Mr. van der Merwe, who appeared for RS before me, argued that
the amendment fundamentally altered HW’s cause of action, such
that a completely new claim had been introduced by way of the
February 2022 amendment, at a time when that claim had plainly
prescribed.
9
Section 15
(1) of the
Prescription Act 68 of 1969
provides
that prescription is “interrupted by the service on the debtor
of any process whereby the creditor claims payment
of the debt”.
The word “debt” in
section 15
bears “a ‘wide
and general meaning’. It does not have the technical meaning
given to the phrase ‘cause
of action’ when used in the
context of pleadings” (see
CGU Insurance Ltd v Rumdel
Construction (Pty) Ltd
2004 (2) SA 622
(SCA) at 628A and the
cases cited there). It follows that HW’s amended claim had
prescribed if, and only if, the “debt”
adverted to in the
amended particulars was not the “debt” referred to in the
particulars in their original form.
10
On the facts, I fail to see how there is any real difference
between the debts claimed in the two sets of particulars. It is true
that the amounts are different and the times at which those amounts
were alleged to have been advanced are also different, but
they are
not so different as to support the conclusion that the second set of
particulars actually refers to a completely different
transaction,
wholly unrelated to the transaction set out in the first set of
particulars. HW was plainly referring to the same
debt in both the
original and amended particulars. The mere fact that he amended his
version about the time, amount and manner
of payment does not, in my
view, transform the nature of the debt he claims.
11
The special plea of prescription must accordingly be
dismissed.
Did HW loan or donate
his money to RS?
12
HW and RS were each the only witnesses to testify in support
of their cases. Their evidence, a record of the WhatsApps exchanged
between them from January 2018 to January 2019, and a small quantity
of documentation connected with HW’s investment account
and
RS’s close corporation was the only material placed before me
on which I must decide whether the money that passed between
them was
a loan or a donation.
13
That material is sparse indeed, and it is HW who bears the
risk of failing to persuade me that the more probable inference from
that material is that the amounts he advanced to RS constituted a
loan. If I am persuaded that there was a loan, then I must give
judgment for HW. If I am persuaded that there was a donation, then I
must dismiss HW’s claim. However, if I am persuaded
that
neither party has demonstrated, on a balance of probabilities, that
the transaction had the character they ascribed to it
in their
pleadings and evidence, then I must absolve RS from the instance.
14
On a conspectus of all the evidence, I am not persuaded of
either party’s case. I say so for the following reasons.
15
HW’s evidence was very poor. But, despite what Mr. van
der Merwe rightly said was an inconsistent and somewhat shaky quality
to his evidence, HW just about managed to put up a
prima
facie
case. He said that the two amounts of R210 000 and
R400 000 were advanced as a loan to RS. He took me through the
cash
withdrawals he made from his account. He set out how these
amounts were dealt with, including the extent to which they were
handed
over to RS. He established the version that he considered them
a loan. He took me through a WhatsApp exchange between him and RS
which spanned many months, in which he demanded repayment of the
money, and RS consistently failed to deny that the amount advanced
was in fact a loan. He denied RS’s version that his intent was
to donate the money to her close corporation rather than to
loan the
money to her. Given these essential features of his evidence, and the
extent to which they found support in contemporaneous
documents, I
was bound to refuse RS’s application absolve her from the
instance at the end of HW’s case.
16
However, while HW got out the bare bones of his case, he did
so in a way that left me with serious doubts about his credibility
and reliability. Underpinning his entire case was an act of
dishonesty: a scheme to spirit money away from his wife. I was not
convinced that this was all there was to it. All he needed to do to
achieve that result was move the money to a secret account,
or into
an undisclosed investment. That would have been no less dishonest
than what he actually did. What he actually did, though,
implied a
motive beyond merely depriving his wife of the money. He gave it to
RS, who, if nothing had been said, would plainly
have formed the
reasonable impression that it was meant to free her from her business
so that they could start a new life together
after HW’s
divorce.
17
In the absence of the documentary evidence to which I shall
shortly turn, it would have been impossible to credit HW’s
claims
that his intent, at the time he advanced the money to RS, was
merely to lend it to her, and that he would have demanded repayment
whether or not he ultimately decided to continue his relationship
with her after his divorce from SJW. It beggars belief that HW
would
place so much money in RS’s hands if, at the time, his intent
was not to share it with her.
18
The idea that he could seriously have meant the amounts he
gave her out of the cash he left in her bedroom to be a loan
repayable
on demand seems risible. HW could not say what the loan was
for – beyond RS’s “personal expenses”. He
made
no contemporaneous notes to record the fact of the loan. He told
no-one about it. There are no contemporaneous letters or emails
that
refer to the existence of a loan. There were no witnesses to the
transaction.
19
HW insisted that he knew nothing about RS’s business,
but, given the nature of their relationship, I find that impossible
to credit. RS must have talked to him about her business. And, if
RS’s clear, consistent and credible evidence on this point
is
accepted, she was very unhappy as a businesswoman. Her close
corporation was failing, and she wanted a way out. I fail to see
how
any reasonable person would lend money to someone in these
circumstances, and expect them to repay the loan on demand. HW’s
evidence was at its poorest when he was trying to explain that
contradiction.
20
RS, on the other hand, was an impressive witness. She said
that HW donated the money to her business. The intent was to help her
wind it up. She clearly understood the winding-up of her business as
a prelude to a life together with HW. Whether or not HW described
it
as a loan, and whether or not she outwardly agreed that it was, she
plainly did not see the transaction as having any commercial
quality.
She perceived it as a downpayment on her future with HW.
21
Had my task been limited to choosing who to believe, in the
absence of any documentary evidence, I would have had little
hesitation
in giving judgment for RS. However, her version is
undercut by two critical pieces of evidence, on which Mr. West, who
appeared
for HW, placed a great deal of emphasis. The first was a
transcript of a WhatsApp conversation between HW and RS that spanned
from
January 2018 to January 2019. For the whole of that year, HW
persistently asked RS when she would give him his money back (for
example: at 17h31 on 12 Jun 2018: “
wanner kan jy die geld
betaal asb
[?]”). RS’s response was either to say
nothing at all, or to make vague promises to pay. At one point, at
10am on 13
January 2019, RS seems to raise the issue herself, and
promises to pay when she is back “on her feet” (“
op
my voete
”).
22
RS’s consistent failure to deny that the money HW gave
her was a loan counts against her version. In her evidence, she
explained
this failure as an attempt to avoid conflict. The WhatsApp
conversation spans the period during which, and immediately after,
RS’s
relationship with HW broke down. In that context, RS said
that she understood HW’s sudden assertion of the existence of a
loan as an act of spite with which she was not prepared to engage. It
is also possible that, whether or not there was a loan, HW’s
entreaties for repayment were all that remained of a relationship of
which RS clearly had some difficulty letting go. I cannot
form a firm
view either way.
23
Mr. West relied upon the decision of
McWilliams v First
Consolidated Holdings
1982 (2) SA 1
(A) to press the inference
that RS’s silence ought to be taken as an admission that she
and HW had in fact made a loan agreement.
In that decision, relying
on a long line of cases concerning when silence constitutes an
admission, Miller JA held that, although
“a party's failure to
reply to a letter asserting the existence of an obligation owed by
such party to the writer does not
always justify an inference that
the assertion was accepted as the truth . . . in general, when
according to ordinary commercial
practice and human expectation firm
repudiation of such an assertion would be the norm if it was not
accepted as correct, such
party's silence and inaction, unless
satisfactorily explained, may be taken to constitute an admission by
him of the truth of the
assertion, or at least will be an important
factor telling against him in the assessment of the probabilities and
in the final
determination of the dispute” (see p10E-G).
24
While I accept that general principle, I do not think that it
applies to this case. HW and RS were plainly not engaged in “ordinary
commercial practice”. They were engaged in a romantic
relationship. I cannot say what constitutes a reasonable “human
expectation” in that context, but it seems plain to me that the
promises made between romantic partners cannot fairly be
assessed by
reference to the rules of lawyerly engagement. In any event, while I
am not entirely convinced by the reasons RS gives
for not denying
HW’s assertions that she owed him a debt, I can find no basis,
in the context of this litigation, to discount
them either.
25
A further piece of documentary evidence that counts against RS
is the entry in her close corporation’s books against the
deposit
of HW’s money into the business’s account. There
were two deposits: one of R210 000 on 2 March 2017, the other
of
R400 000 on 27 March 2017. Against each entry appear the words
“Loan H [W]”. RS explains that the use of the
word “loan”
was a ruse to avoid paying tax on the income. She denied Mr. West’s
suggestion that this was either
an act of intentional dishonesty
aimed at defrauding the Receiver of Revenue, or a frank admission of
the truth of HW’s claim.
RS said that she merely acted on her
bookkeeper’s advice to describe the income as a loan in order
to avoid tax, without
thinking too much about whether or not that
might constitute fraud.
26
Whether or not RS’s version can be relied upon, the
entries on the close corporation’s account are no smoking gun.
The
very fact that the amounts were deposited into RS’s
business account rather than into her personal account sits
uncomfortably
with HW’s version that he did not intend the
money to go anywhere near the close corporation, and that the amounts
were purely
for RS’s personal expenses. That the money ended up
in the close corporation’s account tends to corroborate RS’s
version that the amounts were really donations to the close
corporation, meant to pay its debts, and to free RS of the burden the
business placed on her.
27
In the end, I am left with the mutually destructive versions
of two witnesses. One of the witnesses gave substantially
uncreditworthy
evidence that was bolstered in some respects by
contemporaneous documents. The other gave clear and consistent
evidence that
was reliable on its face, but which required
reconciliation with contemporaneous documents which ultimately
neither supported it
nor reliably disproved it.
Order
28
The only conclusion available on these facts is that neither
party has proved their case. The onus being on HW, an order of
absolution
from the instance is the only proper outcome.
29
For all these reasons –
29.1 the special plea is
dismissed; and
29.2 the defendant is
absolved from the instance with costs.
S D J WILSON
Judge of the High Court
This judgment is handed
down electronically by circulation to the parties or their legal
representatives by email, by uploading
to Caselines, and by
publication of the judgment to the South African Legal Information
Institute. The date for hand-down is deemed
to be 24 November 2023.
HEARD ON: 14 and 15
November 2023
DECIDED ON: 24
November 2023
For the Plaintiffs: HP
West
Instructed by Lindeque
Van Heerden Attorneys
For the Defendant:
B van der Merwe
Instructed by GJ Brits
Attorneys
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