Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1463South Africa
Transnet Second Defined Benefit Fund v Wood (21/21875) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1463 (19 December 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
19 December 2023
Headnotes
of expert evidence that is to be adduced at the trial in the action between the parties, in response to the expert evidence of the Fund. The expert witness is Mr Wood himself. In the affidavit Mr Wood holds this up as evidence of a dispute of fact. Again, however, it is nothing new. The summary’s contents are in great part verbatim a repetition of the relevant parts of Mr Wood’s answering affidavit. The fact that it is now cast as an opposing expert report
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Transnet Second Defined Benefit Fund v Wood (21/21875) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1463 (19 December 2023)
Transnet Second Defined Benefit Fund v Wood (21/21875) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1463 (19 December 2023)
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 21/21875
In
the matter between:
TRANSNET
SECOND DEFINED BENEFIT FUND
Applicant
and
ERIC
ANTHONY
WOOD
Respondent
JUDGMENT
YACOOB
J
:
INTRODUCTION
1.
The applicant (“the Fund”)
seeks the final sequestration of the respondent (“Mr Wood”),
in terms of section
12 of the Insolvency Act, 24 of 1936 (“the
Act”).
2.
Mr Wood’s estate was placed under
provisional sequestration in terms of section 10 of the Act in an
order granted on 10 November
2022, handed down together with a
written judgment by my brother Manoim J (“the first judgment”).
3.
The application to sequestrate is based on
claims against Mr Wood for over R110 million, emanating from Mr
Wood’s alleged
control of certain entities which had a
fiduciary relationship with the Fund, the actions of which caused
loss to the Fund and
gain, ultimately, to Mr Wood. The Fund has
other claims against Mr Wood, related to the same set of facts, which
are the
subject of action proceedings.
4.
It was submitted for Mr Wood that the Fund
makes use of smoke and mirrors and emotive language to obscure the
fact that it does
not have a case against him. It must be noted that
both sides in these proceedings have used their fair share of emotive
language.
The accusation of smoke and mirrors could equally be
levelled at Mr Wood for much of his defence.
5.
To the extent that the Fund seeks to rely
on allegations of conspiracies, state capture and use of
misappropriated funds for allegedly
nefarious purposes, Mr Wood is
right that none of that is relevant to whether the Fund has
established its case in terms of section
12 of the Act. I do not take
that into account. Nor did Manoim J take those allegations into
account in the section 10 determination.
6.
The history of the relationship between Mr
Wood’s entities and the Fund is set out in detail in the first
judgment I do not
propose to repeat it here. Much of it is common
cause. I will deal with the facts only to the extent it is
necessary to deal
with what is before me. That is, whether the Fund
has made out a case for a final sequestration order in terms of
section 12 of
the Act, or whether the matter should be referred to
oral evidence, as submitted on Mr Wood’s behalf.
THE APPLICABLE TEST
7.
The Fund argues that, Manoim J having found
that there was a
prima facie
case,
Mr Wood now has the obligation to dislodge the
prima
facie
case, which he does not do, and
therefore it is entitled to a final order.
8.
Mr Wood submits that the Fund must do more
than simply establish a
prima facie case
in order to be entitled to a final order. He submits that even if the
balance of probabilities favours the Fund, the application
should be
referred to oral evidence, to be determined together with the action
he is defending, so that the factual disputes he
raises can be dealt
with. He also relies on the death of the deponent to the Fund’s
founding affidavit to raise the spectre
of hearsay.
9.
In addition Mr Wood relies on many of the
same arguments considered and rejected in the first judgment.
Although it is for this
court to consider those arguments as they are
relevant to the matter as a whole, it seems to me that there is
nothing substantively
different which has been put before this court
which would move me to deal with those arguments differently than
they have already
been dealt with. The only difference is the
difference between what is required for an order in terms of
section
10
of the
Insolvency Act, and
the requirements for an order in terms
of
section 12
thereof.
10.
In March 2023, Mr Wood filed a so-called
“Opposing Affidavit”. This was in addition to the
Answering Affidavit and Supplementary
Affidavit already filed before
the hearing which preceded the first judgment. The stated purpose of
the Opposing Affidavit was,
firstly, to inform the court that the
deponent to the Fund’s affidavit had died and that this meant,
for some reason, that
the Fund could no longer rely on his
affidavits; and secondly to demonstrate to the court that there are
irreconcilable material
disputes of fact that needed to be resolved
by referring the matter to oral evidence before the court could make
a decision.
11.
The Opposing Affidavit does not contain any
relevant new factual material. Apart from the death of Mr Maritz, the
Fund’s deponent,
the affidavit consists of submissions that are
argumentative in nature, contending that there are four fundamental
disputes of
fact which require referral to oral evidence. Mr Wood has
always relied on an irreconcilable dispute of fact in opposing the
application,
so this was nothing new.
12.
The
affidavit also has annexed to it a summary of expert evidence that is
to be adduced at the trial in the action between the parties,
in
response to the expert evidence of the Fund. The expert witness is Mr
Wood himself. In the affidavit Mr Wood holds this up as
evidence of a
dispute of fact. Again, however, it is nothing new. The summary’s
contents are in great part
verbatim
a repetition of the relevant parts of Mr Wood’s answering
affidavit. The fact that it is now cast as an opposing expert report
does not give it any greater probity. There being nothing really new
before me, I am in the position of determining whether the
applicant
has made out a case for relief in terms of
section 12
of the
Insolvency Act, on
essentially the same evidence on which the first
judgment found that a case for relief in terms of
section 10
of the
Insolvency Act was
made out.
[1]
13.
At the hearing before me, the consistent
reliance on a dispute of fact notwithstanding, it was submitted for
Mr Wood that no demonstration
of disputes of fact was necessary for a
referral to oral evidence. All that was required was that it be
demonstrated that the forensic
tool of cross-examination would show
the deficiencies in the applicant’s case. This lower threshold,
it was submitted, was
because the sequestration involved a matter of
status.
14.
In
the first judgment, Manoim J accepted that there were disputes of
fact on certain issues, but found that since a
prima
facie
case
was made out, a provisional order should be granted. The test relied
on was that set out by Corbett JA in
Kalil
v Decotex (Pty) Ltd and Another
,
[2]
in which it is clarified that for purposes of a provisional order of
sequestration (or liquidation), the finding of a
prima
facie
case
when the application is opposed and there is a full set of
affidavits, meant that the case was made out on a balance of
probabilities
in favour of the applicant, even though it there was a
possibility that it may be dislodged by a referral to oral evidence.
15.
Corbett
JA also held that no lasting injustice results if an order is granted
despite there being disputed issues, for two reasons.
The first is
that the respondent has the opportunity to ask for a referral to oral
evidence on the return date, and the second,
that the purpose of the
provisional order is to preserve the
status
quo
while issues that arise are dealt with. It was also pointed out that
a referral to oral evidence without granting a provisional
order is
not usually appropriate, if a
prima
facie
case
in the sense set out above has been established, because that would
defeat the purpose of preserving the respondent’s
affairs. The
appropriate time for a referral to oral evidence is on the return
date.
[3]
16.
Mr Wood now asks for the opportunity
to dislodge the Fund’s case by means of oral evidence, and
submits that it would be appropriate
that this be dealt with as part
of action proceedings already pending between the parties, where
there is an overlap in the evidence
relied on, even if the cause of
action is distinct. He does not ask for the discharge of the
provisional order.
17.
The
test at this stage of the proceedings is different that it was at the
first, or provisional stage. The court dealing with a
provisional
sequestration must be of the opinion that
prima
facie
[4]
the applicant has established a liquidated claim against the
respondent for not less than R100; that the debtor has committed an
act of insolvency or is insolvent, and that there is reason to
believe that the sequestration will be to the advantage of creditors.
The court then has a discretion to order provisional sequestration.
If it does so, it must also issue a
rule
nisi
,
calling on the debtor to show on the return date why the estate
should not be finally sequestrated.
18.
On the return day,
section 12
of the
Insolvency Act applies
. At this stage, the same three elements must
be determined, save that the court must be satisfied, on a balance of
probabilities,
of the existence of those elements. It then has a
discretion to sequestrate the estate. If the court is not satisfied,
it either
dismisses the application for sequestration, or orders that
further proof be adduced, and may then postpone the hearing for a
reasonable
period to permit this.
19.
It
was submitted for Mr Wood that an order can only be made if the court
is satisfied that “oral evidence can make no difference
to the
impression given by the affidavits”, relying on a judgment of
the Full Court of the Cape Provincial Division,
Priest
v Collett
.
[5]
However, in that judgment, the court was dealing with a situation in
which a respondent in sequestration proceedings raises a dispute
of
fact, pointing out that bringing sequestration proceedings where
there is no preceding judgment in the creditor’s favour
is
risky. It is not a question of oral evidence for the sake of it.
20.
It is clear that Corbett JA holding in
Kalil v Decotex
that the appropriate time for a referral to oral evidence is on the
return date does not mean that a respondent is entitled to
a referral
just because he is would like to cross-examine the applicant’s
witnesses. Nor would he be entitled to a referral
so that he may take
advantage of the death of one of the witnesses. It must be evident on
the papers that there is an issue which
would be determined or
resolved by the referral. This would logically include the
determination of any irresoluble dispute of fact.
For that to happen,
the court must be satisfied that there is in fact a real, or
bona
fide
dispute of fact, relevant to the
requirements that must be established in terms of section 12 of the
Act, that demands referral.
HAVE THE REQUIREMENTS
OF SECTION 12 BEEN MET?
A liquidated claim
21.
The Fund’s claim against Mr Wood in
these proceedings is founded in his having effective control of and
having received benefits
from his control Regiments Capital (Pty) Ltd
and its wholly owned subsidiaries, Regiments Fund Managers (Pty) Ltd
and Regiments
Securities Limited.
22.
The Fund relies on various sets of
transactions which caused benefits to Mr Wood and those entities to
found its liquidated claims
against Mr Wood. The first are what the
Fund refers to as “bond churning transactions”, in which
large numbers of bonds
were traded on the same days. The second are
interest rate swap transactions in which the Fund and Transnet each
assumed the interest
rate exposure of Nedbank to the other, each
advised by Mr Wood wearing the hat of a different entity, and which
resulted in the
misappropriation of funds to pay transaction fees for
services allegedly provided to Transnet (not the Fund) by Regiments
Capital.
The Fund claims the disgorgement of an amount that can be
traced to Mr Wood, as a part of the amount that has not yet been
recovered.
23.
Regiments Fund Managers was the Fund’s
fund manager and had a fiduciary duty to the Fund. The allegation is
that that, amongst
other things, the Fund entered into a number of
unnecessary transactions, called “bond churning transactions”,
which
resulted in fees being generated for Regiments Fund Managers
and loss to the Fund. The allegation is that the only purpose of
those
transactions was in order to generate fees for Regiments Fund
Managers. The fees generated by these transactions amounted to R348
million, of which R90-odd million was paid to companies nominated by
Mr Wood, which paid on over R46 million to Mr Wood.
24.
The transactions entailed the sale and
purchase on the same day of billions of R186 bonds to Regiments
Securities, resulting also
in profits being gained by Regiments
Securities. Although the numbers sold and purchased in each set of
transactions was not identical,
purchase from Regiments Securities
was consistently at a higher price than sale to Regiments Securities.
Mr Wood’s nominee
companies received a share of the profits
resulting from these transactions.
25.
Mr Wood does not deny the transactions, nor
their outcomes. He alleges however that the transactions were
justified, and that the
Regiments entities were entitled to act as
they did. He submits on this basis that his nominee companies were
entitled to the payments
that they received, and that, ultimately, he
was too.
26.
In his justification of the transactions,
Mr Wood relies on general principles related to fund management,
specifically, the need
to manage delta risk in a defined benefit
fund. It is common cause that buying or selling R186 bonds to manage
delta risk is an
appropriate strategy. However, there is absolutely
nothing in Mr Wood’s version which explains the positive effect
on delta
risk management of the trade of billions more bonds than was
necessary to result in a net difference of numbers of bonds held by
the Fund, in sets of simultaneous transactions, at prices always to
the disadvantage to the Fund, in multiple trades on a scale
at which
the only perceptible benefit was to the Fund’s fund managers,
where the trades took place only with a related entity
of the fund
managers, resulting in a profit to that entity. The only possible
conclusion is that this was done contrary to Mr Wood’s
fiduciary duty to the Fund, as a director of Regiments Fund Managers
and an advisor of the Fund in his own person, albeit through
Regiments Fund Managers, in order to generate transaction fees for
Regiments Fund Managers and consequent fees for himself.
27.
Mr Wood also claims in his justification of
the bond churning transactions that Regiments Fund Managers was
entitled to act as it
did because its agreement with the Fund gave it
a broad mandate in terms of which it always acted. It is true that
the mandate
was broad. However the mandate did not, nor could it by
law, agree to a blanket exclusion, without full disclosure, of the
fiduciary
duties of Regiments Fund Managers and the natural persons
through which it acted (including Mr Wood).
28.
Mr Wood attempts to rely on the proposition
that it was Regiments Fund Managers which owed the fiduciary duty to
the Fund, and not
he himself, since it was Regiments Fund Managers
which had the contract with the Fund, and therefore that a claim lies
only to
Regiments Fund Managers. This argument was properly dealt
with in the first judgment and I take the same view. The same applies
to Mr Wood’s reliance on his having left Regiments by the time
payments were made, and before some of the bond churning transactions
took place. He still benefitted from his actions while he was still
with Regiments, and transactions took place on his advice.
Having
left by the time he benefitted does not free him from liability.
29.
I am satisfied that the Fund has
established that the bond churning transactions were not justified,
and in fact resulted in fixed
and determined loss to the Fund and
gain to Mr Wood’s entities and Mr Wood himself, and that Mr
Wood is liable to the Fund
for the amount that it has shown was paid
to his nominated entities. There is nothing that Mr Wood has put
before the court that
raises a dispute of fact on this score, and
which leads to a finding that oral evidence and cross-examination may
dislodge what
the Fund has established. A liquidated claim therefore
has been established.
30.
That being the case, there is no need to
consider the liability of Wood emerging from the interest rate swaps
and the use of the
Fund’s cash to pay Regiments Capital for an
alleged debt of Transnet. However, to the extent necessary, I agree
with and
adopt Manoim J’s analysis and conclusion regarding the
use of the Fund’s cash to pay Regiments on Transnet’s
behalf.
Insolvency
31.
The debtor must either have committed an
act of insolvency or be insolvent. The Fund submits that Mr Wood is
insolvent, because
his debts outvalue his assets.
32.
On Mr Wood’s own version, his assets
are worth R1 455 000. The Fund has established a claim of at least
R90 million against
him. On what is before this court, therefore, Mr
Wood is insolvent.
Advantage to creditors
33.
The
applicable test is that set out in
CSARS
v Hawker
:
[6]
“
a
court need not be satisfied that there will be advantage to creditors
in the sense of immediate financial benefit. The Court needs
to be
satisfied only that there is reason to believe … that as a
result of investigation and enquiry assets may be unearthed
that will
benefit creditors”.
34.
Taking into account that Mr Wood has
received, through his entities which received payment on his behalf
as well as directly, many
millions of rands more than he claims his
estate is worth, I am satisfied that there is reason to believe that
investigation and
enquiry may unearth assets that will benefit
creditors.
CONCLUSION
35.
For these reasons I am satisfied that the
Fund has established that it has a liquidated claim against Mr Wood
of more than R100,
that he is insolvent, and that it is to the
benefit of creditors to liquidate him. I do not see any reason to
refer the matter
to oral evidence. Nor has Mr Wood raised any reason
which would support an exercise of my discretion in his favour.
36.
To the extent that I have not dealt with
any of Mr Wood’s arguments in the papers, which were set out in
detail and argued
in detail in the written and oral argument before
Manoim J, I have considered them and there is nothing that Mr Wood
has submitted
which moves me to find differently on them. They were
not argued before me in the hearing, and there is nothing that I can
find
on the papers that moves me to deal separately with them.
37.
For these reasons I make the following
order:
1.
The estate of the respondent, ERIC ANTHONY
WOOD (Identity Number 630[…]) is sequestrated.
2.
Costs, including costs of two counsel, are
costs in the sequestration of the respondent’s estate.
____________________________
S.
YACOOB
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Appearances
Counsel
for the applicant:
A E Bham SC, M Chaskalson SC, N Luthuli
Instructed
by:
ENS Africa
Counsel
for the respondent: E
L Theron SC
Instructed
by:
Fairbridges Wertheim Becker
Date
of hearing:
24 July 2023
Date
of judgment:
19 December 2023
[1]
That
is, for the provisional order.
[2]
1988
(1) SA 943 (A)
[3]
Kalil
v Decotex
pages
976-979
[4]
In
the sense set out in
Kalil
v Decotex
[5]
1930
372 CPD at 375
[6]
[2006] ZASCA 51
;
2006
(4) SA 292
(SCA) at
[29]
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