Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1458South Africa
Unified Patroll Limited v Mwakurudza (048817/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1458 (14 December 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
14 December 2023
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
>>
2023
>>
[2023] ZAGPJHC 1458
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Unified Patroll Limited v Mwakurudza (048817/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1458 (14 December 2023)
Unified Patroll Limited v Mwakurudza (048817/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1458 (14 December 2023)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2023_1458.html
sino date 14 December 2023
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been redacted
from this document in compliance with the law and
SAFLII
Policy
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO:
048817/2022
(1)
REPORTABLE:
YES
/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
YES
/NO
(3)
REVISED:
YES
/NO
DATE: 14/12/2023…
In the matter between:
UNIFIED
PATROLL LIMITED (IN LIQUIDATION)
Applicant
(A company incorporated
in the United Kingdom
With a company
registration number: [....])
and
PATIENCE
MWAKURUDZA Respondent
(Foreign passport number:
EN[....] and
FN[....])
JUDGMENT
MANOIM J:
[1] This is an
application for the provisional sequestration of the respondent. The
applicant Unified Payroll Limited is a
company based in the United
Kingdom (“UK”) but now in liquidation. The application is
brought on the authority of the
joint liquidators of the company.
Although they are based in the UK, they have authorised Mr Leonard
Katz, an attorney practising
with the firm ENSafrica, to bring this
application on their behalf.
[2] The respondent
is a Zimbabwean citizen, but she is resident in South Africa and has
assets here, hence the reason this
court has jurisdiction. She was
employed by a company registered in South Africa known as Applemed
SA, the latter being a company
related to the applicant.
[3] Central to this
case are the actions of a London based Zimbabwean businessman
Zwelithini Ncube. Ncube and the respondent
were in a romantic
relationship when the events relevant to this application occurred.
This personal information is relevant to
both the cases of the
applicant and the respondent. The applicant’s case in a
nutshell is that Ncube used the respondent
to conceal the flow of
monies he unlawfully misappropriated from UPL to evade creditors of
UPL. His relationship with the respondent
enabled him to do so
without the need for any paper trail beyond the payments and
withdrawals.
[4] The respondent
however claims she became the innocent scape goat of Ncube’s
fraudulent design and because of their
relationship she was taken
advantage of and asked no questions. The respondent does not contest
that Ncube misappropriated moneys
from UPL, but she does contest that
she was a partner in that fraudulent enterprise and hence the
application for sequestration
is unfounded.
The applicant’s
business in the United Kingdom
[5] UPL was
registered in the United Kingdom in 2015. Ncube was its founder, sole
director, and sole shareholder until its
liquidation. Its business
was that of an employment agency. It would employ people and in turn
supply them to employment agencies
who in turn would supply them to
employers. The primary employers were National Healthcare Service
Trusts (“NHS Trusts”),
and the employees were mostly
health care workers. This had implications for the flow of
money because the flow of money
was not a direct one between the de
facto employer and employee but instead was routed via intermediaries
and this is where Ncube
took advantage of the situation to line his
own pockets.
[6] Prior to 2017
there was a loophole in tax collection. If the employee elected to be
paid to a personal service company
(“PSC”) the umbrella
company in this case, UPL was not required to deduct PAYE and
insurance (“NICS”);
the exception to this being VAT,
which they to deduct. These payments were the responsibly of the PSC
to pay the UK tax authority,
Her (now His) Majesty’s Revenue
and Customs (“HMRC”).
[7] In 2017 the UK
tightened its tax laws to combat tax avoidance by employee making use
of PSC’s. This affected the
obligations of umbrella companies
such as UPL. UPL received the employee’s gross remuneration
from the employer, typically
an NHS Trust. UPL was obliged in terms
of the new tax legislation to deduct PAYE and NICS from an employee’s
remittance,
before paying the balance over to the employee. UPL was
then responsible for paying the deducted PAYE and NICS to the HMRC.
But
UPL did not always do so. It retained monies it received on
behalf of the employees, and which did not belong to it, but which
were owed to the HMRC.
[8] As part of the
new reforms the UK tax authority began to audit firms who served as
intermediaries like UPL. The applicant
explains that:
“
In
order to conceal that UPL had not made the tax deductions, Ncube and
the respondent manufactured false pay slips which reflected
that the
worker was on the PAYE scheme whereas in fact the worker had
contracted through a PSC and was on the Ltd Co. scheme. The
false pay
slips reflected that PAYE and NICs had been deducted which was a
misrepresentation of the true position
.”
[9]
But UPS’ fraud went further. As the applicant explains:
“
In
addition to the PAYE/NICs fraud, UPL also committed VAT fraud. As a
business making onward taxable supplies for the purposes
of VAT, UPL
charged VAT for the supplies of staff made to its customers. UPL
failed, however, to declare and properly account for
the VAT received
from its customers. UPL's records confirm that VAT was charged but
not accounted for to HMRC.”
[10]
In order to ensure compliance with the new tax regime the NHS
introduced audits of umbrella companies. The audits were carried
out
quarterly. The auditors would monitor a sample of pay slips to check
if the PAYE and NIC deductions had been made and paid
out in the
correct amounts to HMRC. I do not have the detail of how this was
discovered but eventually Ncube’s fraud was
uncovered. This is
not in dispute.
[11]
As part of the fraudulent scheme and the link with the respondent,
are two intermediary companies known as Applemed UK and
Applemed SA.
The payment trail of the funds flowed from UPL to Applemed UK then
Applemed SA, and then from the latter, into the
accounts of the
respondent, hence these proceedings.
[12]
According to the liquidators in their application to the UK courts
Ncube is liable for just over £40 million pounds in
respect of
NIC/PAYE and £17 million in respect of VAT and thus a total of
over £58 million pounds.
[13] What then followed
were a series of court orders against Ncube and his entities.
In
October 2021, HMRC obtained an order from a UK court to provisionally
liquidate UPL. In November 2021 UPL’s liquidators
obtained a
worldwide freezing order against Ncube. The liquidators also
instituted a personal claim against Ncube, and persons
related to
him. Then matters came closer to this jurisdiction. In December 2021
UPL’s liquidators obtained an order from
a Western Cape High
court recognising their appointment in South Africa and authorising a
section 417 enquiry into UPL’s
affairs.
[14] A year later in
October 2022, the liquidators of UPL concluded a settlement with
Ncube. Ncube agreed to provide the liquidators
with information as to
how they could realise his assets for the benefit of UPL’s
creditors. Part of his ‘coming clean’
involved explaining
how Applemed UK had been used by him to channel funds that were due
to UPL. The liquidators claim that most
of the monies emanating from
UPL that were paid to the respondent had been channelled via Applemed
UK.
[15] The respondent
testified during the section 417 enquiry. The applicant seeks to rely
on aspects of this testimony to support
the relief it seeks.
The respondent’s
link to the UPL funds
[16] It is common cause
that the liquidators cannot trace any payment made directly from UPL
to the respondent. However, the liquidators
rely on payments made by
Ncube and Applemed UK, which they submit must have emanated from the
funds misappropriated from UPL. The
respondent does not deny receipt
of these payments, but she places in issue that she was aware that
they emanated from the tainted
funds. The problem for her in this
matter is that Ncube in his own capacity and in that as the
controller of Applemed UK has admitted
that these funds were monies
which should have been paid to UP and to which UPL was entitled,
[17] The liquidators have
followed the trail from UPL via the intermediaries to the
respondent’s bank account with FNB. These
payments total an
amount of R34 705 935.40. The liquidators trace some of the
monies as follows:
a.
approximately
R20.7 million paid by Applemed UK;
b.
approximately
R10.3 million paid by Ncube;
c.
approximately
R1.7 million paid toy Applemed SA.
[18]
The respondent admits the receipt of these monies from the source.
However, her argument is that there is no nexus between
these
payments to her and the fraudulent scheme perpetuated by Ncube. The
applicant contends that whilst the respondent may not
have been
familiar with all the details of the scheme there is sufficient
evidence to suggest that she knew that UPL was the source
of this
money and secondly given the size of these amounts that she must have
known that the money was not from revenue generated
legitimately by
UPL. This is the essence of the present case. Was the respondent
simply an innocent payee caught up in Ncube’s
machinations or
was she a conscious, as the liquidators would have it, co-conspirator
with Ncube, who now that they have fallen
out personally and
professionally, attempts to extricate herself from culpability.
[19]
One of the issues in contention is the respondent’s level of
responsibility in Applemed SA. It is common cause that she
was
employed by it. The applicant alleges that the respondent was the
head of UPL’s compliance and customer service divisions
which
were run through Applemed SA. The respondent admits she was the
manager of compliance but says this function was a ‘back-office’
function limited to checking candidates ID documents and their right
to work in the UK. She distinguishes this function from
so-called ‘front-office’ functions which she says were
the sole responsibility of Ncube. One of the payments made to
the
respondent was amount of R 5million which she says was paid to her as
part of a settlement package.
[20]
When she was pressed during the section 417 enquiry as to how she had
achieved such a favourable package of R 5 million rand,
a package
that exceeded two years of turnover for Applemed SA (R 1,5 million in
2019 and 2,9 million in 2020 according to the financials)
she stated
that Applemed SA was just a shell company or a back office. Whatever
income was earned she said came from UPL and she
was contracted to
UPL. She conceded that Applemed SA on its own did not have money.
Approach
to the law
[21]
It is common cause that this is an application for provisional
sequestration and therefore the approach in
Kalil v Decotex
applies. This approach was succinctly summarised in
Payslip
Investment Holdings CC v Y2K Tec Ltd
2001 (4) SA 781
(C) by Brand
J.
“
Guidelines
as to how factual disputes should be approached in an application
such as the present were laid down by the Appellate
Division in Kalil
v Decotex (Pty) Ltd and Another
1988
(1) SA 943
(A)
.
According to these guidelines a distinction is to be drawn between
disputes regarding the respondent's liability to the applicant
and other disputes. Regarding the latter, the test is whether the
balance of probabilities favours the applicant's version on the
papers. If so, a provisional order will usually be granted. If not,
the application will either be refused or the dispute referred
for
the hearing of oral evidence, depending on, inter alia,
the strength of the respondent's case and the prospects of viva
voce evidence tipping the scales in favour of the applicant.
With reference to disputes regarding the respondent's indebtedness,
the test is whether it appeared on the papers that the applicant's
claim is disputed by respondent on reasonable and bona
fide grounds. In this event it is not sufficient that the
applicant has made out a case on the probabilities. The stated
exception regarding disputes about an applicant's claim thus cuts
across the approach to factual disputes in general”.
[22]
The first issue to consider is the legal basis for the applicant’s
claim. It is based on delictual, not contractual,
liability. This is
the essence of the answer to the respondent’s argument that
there needed to be a cession of action from
Applemed SA or Ncube to
the applicant for it to have locus standi. Once it has established
that its case is based on aquilian liability,
the applicant alleges
that the respondent is a joint wrongdoer along with Ncube. Hence
based on the
condictio furtiva
there does not need to be
contractual privity between the parties.
[23]
That being said, the next issue is whether the claim based on the
condictio
can be established – has the respondent
disputed this claim based on reasonable and bona fide grounds.
[24]
The applicant seeks to refute this. Here the applicant relies on two
sources. The respondent’s answers to certain questions
posed to
her during the 417 enquiry and an email she authored written to
colleagues at UPL. I consider these next.
[25]
The respondent has offered several explanations for why she was paid
the money. The first was that some of this money was part
of a
resignation package she received. But this money was paid to her by
Applemed SA not Applemed UK or UPL. Yet her testimony
in the section
417 hearing was that UPL was responsible for payment of Applemed SA’s
expenses.
“
[UPL]
was responsible for Applemed South Africa of
(sic)
taking care of any expenses or salaries
of Applemed South Africa. So, I think my package would be coming from
UPL where I was contracted
to.”
[26] Yet in her answering
affidavit the respondent contradicts herself on this point.
“
I
did not know that the primary source of the income was from the
Applicant as I never ran financial interest (sic) of Mr. Zweli
Ncube.
I did not play any pivotal role as I was never a director or
shareholder of the applicant.”
[27] And then later she
states:
“
I
did not know that the money originated from the Applicant, and Mr
Ncube never discussed with me how he made payments, I did not
know
that the funds were fraudulently obtained, and we were a legitimate
company working on behalf of the Applicant dealing with
candidate
compliance and customer service. There is a justifiable basis for the
receipt of the funds, the liquidators are desperately
looking for the
money and they have targeted me with no factual and legal basis to do
so. There is no shred of evidence that I
colluded with Mr. Ncube to
defraud anybody, I was never and I am not joint wrong- doer.”
[28] The respondent’s
difficulty is that she received payments which she was not adequately
able to explain. For instance,
she said a R 5 million payment
constituted a settlement package due to her from Applemed SA. But as
the applicant points out this
was an extraordinary package for
someone who earned a monthly salary of R60 000 per month at the
time. The so-called settlement
package would have represented a
package completely disproportional to this salary. This fact was put
to her in the section 417
enquiry but although given the opportunity
she was unable to do so.
[29] She also contended
that some of the remaining money represented loans made to her. But
as with the resignation package, she
has no documents to show that
this was the case. Nor, if some of these amounts constituted
loans, is there any evidence that
she repaid them in whole or in
part. Her explanation for this lacuna is that all agreements between
her and Ncube were oral agreements.
[30] But most damning for
the respondent is how she dealt with her knowledge of the fraudulent
payslips. In the record is an email
sent by the respondent to
recipients who include Ncube, and others, seemingly internal staff at
UPL. The email is dated 10 September
2018. On the face of it she is
apologising for a problem with the processing of payments. But what
is significant in the email
is the following comment:
“
Office
8 is a dummy office that Merit created for us to process mock
payslips for audit purposes for TFS and Redspot Care Limited
Company
Umbrella Scheme.”
[31] Office 8 is a
reference to an electronic accounting package. This extract shows
that the respondent knew that the payslips
were fraudulent and the
reason for this.
[32] The respondent does
not deny sending the email. Her explanation is that she was acting
under instructions. But if the respondent
was some junior player
acting under orders this is not supported by the text of the same
email, were she goes on to state:
“
We
are open to suggestions and any changes that can be made to improve
the service and avoid further confusions. We have taken this
as a
learning curve for the future. I would also suggest that Zwe should
explain this arrangement to everyone concerned and affected
by this
arrangement like Sandra Q.”
[33] The respondent has
not been able to demonstrate that its indebtedness is disputed on
bona fide and reasonable grounds. The
respondent’s difficulty
is that she had to reconcile two contradictory versions. In order to
minimise her involvement in
Ncube’s fraudulent design she had
to profess to a limited involvement in back-office operations. But
this is not borne out
by the text of the email I quoted earlier. But
the other difficulty was accounting for the R 5 million settlement
she received?
Why would she receive a payment of this size given her
limited involvement and level of salary as reflected in her payslips.
This
must mean she had a greater involvement in the business if this
was her entitlement. Then there is the absence of any documentation
to explain the payments. Here her relationship with Ncube is used as
the excuse. There was no need for any documentation given
the
personal relationship that then existed between them. But even if
there was no formal documentation one would have expected
at least a
message that might accompany payments of this size. But there are
none in the record. The relationship between them
has the more likely
explanation why Ncube could safely use her as a conduit for the funds
which both knew were illicit. Hence no
documentation and the arm’s
length payments.
[34] The other difficulty
for the respondent is that she had to go on record during the 417
enquiry and could be cross examined.
Her attempt to resurrect a
version in the answering affidavit has further undermined her
credibility. The version put up by the
respondent is not bona fide or
reasonable and stands to be rejected. The applicant has established a
liquidated claim.
Dispositions in terms
of section 8(c) of the Insolvency Act
[35] The applicant also
relies on section 8(c) of the Act which states:
8. A debtor commits an
act of insolvency-
(a) ….;
(b) ….;
(c) if he
makes or attempts to make any disposition of any of his property
which has or would have the effect of prejudicing
his creditors or of
preferring one creditor above another;
[36] The applicant
alleges that the respondent has committed several acts of insolvency.
The basis for this, is that during the
period December 2017 and
January 2022, the respondent made payments from her bank account that
exceeded R 43 million. This emerged
from an analysis the liquidators
performed of drawings from her bank accounts during that period. The
applicant alleges that these
payments were made when her liability to
UPL “
already existed and continued to increase
”.
In her answering affidavit the respondent does not dispute that the
payments were made, or paid in this amount, but instead
asserts that
they were made before UPL was liquidated and that no creditors have
laid a claim against her. But the respondent does
not deal with the
nub of the allegation made against her, nor does she dispute the
amounts.
[37] No explanation is
proffered to explain the movement of such large sums into and from
her account in this period. I conclude
that these must have been
dispositions made in contravention of 8(c) of the Insolvency Act.
Analysis of the legal
requirements
[38]
The applicant’s claim is based in delict specifically, the
condictio
furtiva
.
The remedy is available to an owner (in this case the applicant) to
recover money from the thief.
[1]
In this case the issue is what knowledge the respondent had of the
fraudulent design. Certainly, the email suggests that she had
knowledge that UPL was engaged in processing fraudulent payslips. In
Crots
v Pretorius
the court explained the liability in the following way:
“
The
respondent will be liable if, on a balance of probabilities, he
recognised the real possibility that Petrus did not have the
right to
deliver the cattle to him or that it was somebody else's cattle and
he deliberately shut his eyes and entered into the
transaction,
thereby taking the risk of the consequences if the cattle were being
stolen. Knowledge in the form of dolus eventualis
is present if all
the objective, factual circumstances justify the inference on a
balance of probabilities that the respondent
actually and
subjectively foresaw that someone else had title to the cattle.”
[2]
[39] In
Frankel Pollak
v Stanton
the court whilst acknowledging that actual knowledge
is required explained what suffices to constitute this:
“
In
all the examples I have given, where knowledge is essential, there is
a common thread. What is required is actual knowledge.
Where a person
has a real suspicion and deliberately refrains from making inquiries
to determine whether it is groundless, where
he or she sees red (or
perhaps amber) lights flashing but chooses to ignore them, it cannot
be said that there is an absence of
knowledge of what is suspected or
warned against. In the absence of direct evidence, a court has to
determine the existence of
knowledge as an inference from the
established facts and circumstances. If a person's professed
ignorance is so unreasonable that
it cannot be accepted that he or
she laboured under it, evidence of the ignorance will not be believed
in the absence of some acceptable
explanation. But this amounts to
a
finding of actual, subjective knowledge made when a person wilfully
precludes himself or herself from acquiring it.
[3]
[40] The email shows a
red light flashing for the respondent or at best for her an amber
one. This was not satisfactorily explained
at either the 417 enquiry
or with the further benefit of hindsight in the answering affidavit.
The reason is quite simple; the
respondent had full knowledge of what
was going on and later received large payments into her account
albeit via conduits. She
was aware both of the fraudulent
payslips and payments of large undocumented payments to her account.
The link must have been obvious
to a woman of business – the
red lights must have flashed.
[41] I turn next to the
question of whether the respondent’s liabilities exceeded her
assets. It is common cause that her
assets are valued at R25 million.
As noted earlier her liabilities exceed R 34, 7 million. In addition,
she has admitted to outstanding
debt in respect of a bond on her
property although the extent is not disclosed. The respondent has not
refuted these facts. There
is also the matter of R 43 million that
was disbursed over the period of time from her bank account which
would constitute a self-standing
ground of insolvency in terms of
sections 8(c) read with section 9(b) of the Insolvency Act.
[42] The sequestration,
the applicant argues, will be of advantage to creditors as she owns
unencumbered properties of R 19 million
whose proceeds could be
distributed to creditors. Moreover, it is argued that an orderly
disposition of these assets by a liquidator
is more favourable to
creditors than a series of auctions under the auspices of the
sheriff. The other factor favouring sequestration
and hence the
engagement of liquidators is the realisation of the many
transactions, which appear to be dispositions without value.
[43] Finally, the
respondent has not alleged any special circumstances for why an order
should not be granted.
Conclusion
[44] The applicant has
established that it has a liquidated claim in terms of section 10(a)
of the Act. For the purposes of
section 10(b), the applicant
has established both (i) that the respondent is insolvent and (ii)
has committed an act of insolvency
in terms of section 8(c). There is
reason to believe that the sequestration will be to the advantage of
the respondent’s
creditors in terms of section 10(c). Hence, a
case has been made out for the respondent to be provisionally
sequestrated.
ORDER:-
[45]
In the result the following order is made:
1.The estate of the
respondent is placed under provisional sequestration.
2. A rule nisi is issued
calling upon the respondent and any interested parties to show cause,
if any, to this Court on a date to
be advised by the Registrar, to
show cause why:
2.1. the respondent's
estate should not be placed under final sequestration; and
2.2. the costs of this
application should not be costs in the administration of the
respondent's insolvent estate.
3. Directing that the
order be served on:
3.1. The respondent at
1466 Eye of Africa Estate, Eikenhof, Johannesburg, Gauteng (“the
residential address”);
3.2. The South African
Revenue Service, Johannesburg;
3.3. The employees of the
respondent, if any, at the residential address; and
3.4. All registered trade
unions representing the employees of the respondent, if any.
N. MANOIM
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION
JOHNANNESBURG
Date of hearing: 16
October 2023
Date of Judgment: 14
December 2023
Appearances:
Counsel for the
Plaintiff: G
Woodlands
SC
K
Reynolds
Instructed
by. Edward
Nathan Sonnenbergs Inc
Counsel for the
Defendant: T
Mukwani
Instructed
by: T.
Mukwani Attorneys
[1]
First
National Bank of Southern Africa v East Coast Design CC
2000 (4) SA
137
(D&CLD) at 144E- I,
[2]
2010
(6) SA 512
(SCA)
at
515 D-F.
[3]
2000
(1) SA 425
(W) at 438.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
University of Mpumalanga v Magma Masemola Attorneys Incorporated and Another (008531/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 906 (14 August 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 906High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
University of Johannesburg and Another v Toto Tshabalala Construction and Projects CC (52165/2021) [2025] ZAGPJHC 1081 (23 October 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 1081High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
Various parties obo minors v Anglo-American South Africa Limited and Others (2020/32777) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1474 (14 December 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 1474High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
Communication Genetics (Pty) Ltd v Schonenberger and Another (025959/2025) [2025] ZAGPJHC 338 (2 April 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 338High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
South African Board of Sheriffs v Cibe (000219/2023) [2024] ZAGPJHC 583 (21 June 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 583High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar