Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 38South Africa
Prudential Authority v Mayongo and Another (21547/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 38 (26 January 2022)
Headnotes
at (26)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Prudential Authority v Mayongo and Another (21547/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 38 (26 January 2022)
Prudential Authority v Mayongo and Another (21547/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 38 (26 January 2022)
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sino date 26 January 2022
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
No. 21547/2020
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
REVISED:
Date:
26/01/2022
In
the matter between
THE
PRUDENTIAL
AUTHORITY
Applicant
and
E
S MAYONGO
First Respondent
(Identity
Number [....])
V
N
MAYONGO
Second Respondent
(Identity
Number [....])
JUDGMENT
MAHOMED,
AJ
# INTRODUCTION
INTRODUCTION
1.
This is an application for the
sequestration of the joint estate of the respondents. The respondents
participated in a deposit taking
business, without the necessary
authorisation, which falls within the definition of “the
business of a bank,” and as
part of a pyramid scheme.
2.
The applicant, “the Prudential
Authority,” established in terms of s32 of the Financial Sector
Regulation Act 9 of 2017
has assumed the roles and responsibilities
which were previously assigned to the Registrar of Banks and has
powers and obligations
to act in terms of the provision of the Banks
Act 94 of 1990 (“the Banks Act”). It brings this
application in terms
of s83(1) read with s 84 of the Banks Act. The
respondents failed to repay the monies they received and are
therefore deemed to
be unable to pay their debts. In terms of the
provisions of the Act the applicant is then entitled to apply for the
sequestration
of their estate.
3.
On 21 August 2020, Pillay AJ, granted a
provisional order in this matter. The applicant applies for the final
order for sequestration.
# THE FACTS
THE FACTS
4.
The first respondent represented himself
and applied for a postponement. He advised the court that he will
require the services
of a legal representative but is unable to
afford one currently. He alleged that he is a pensioner and that he
needs about three
to four months to save enough from his pension
monies to pay for those services. He applied for a postponement for
three to four
months.
5.
He submitted that “
a
lot is wrong in this matter and that he wanted to further argue this
matter
.” The main thrust of his
argument was that although, he accepted payments from various
persons, who of their own free will
wanted to purchase certain
“vouchers” which would entitle the holder of a voucher
discounted rates on travel and hotel
bookings anywhere in the world,
he transferred them over to a third party.
6.
He proffered that when he received payments
he handed them over to an international company based in London,
which issued the vouchers.
He alleged there is no proof that he kept
any of the monies he received.
7.
In his view, the Registrar of Banks is
incorrect in looking to him for the monies and that it should look to
the company who accepted
the monies from him and issued the vouchers.
His dealings with that company were exclusively online and that he
only received discounts
on hotel and travel rates for his work.
8.
This court attempted to explain to the
first respondent that it is his act of accepting the deposits from
the public, holding same
in his bank account and thereafter handing
over to a third party, which was “the offending act.”
9.
Counsel for the applicant, Ms Mokale,
reminded the court that the first respondent in his answering papers,
admitted to accepting
monies from the public and that he had actively
marketed the business of this scheme. She submitted that the
postponement for legal
representation would be futile. He admitted to
accepting the monies from the public, he has not paid back the monies
and in that
instance, the Act permits the applicant to apply for the
sequestration of his estate.
10.
She further submitted that no further legal
representation could “bolster” the first respondent’s
case.
11.
Counsel submitted that the respondents
accepted monies from the public over a period of three years.
12.
She further submitted that the first
respondent furthermore, has failed to use the remedies that he is
afforded in the Act, to take
the Registrar’s decision on
review. She submitted that he was informed in the statutory notice in
terms of s83 of the Banks
Act, of his right to review the decision of
the Registrar of Banks, if he disagreed with that decision.
13.
He signed and acknowledged receipt of this
notice.
14.
Counsel argued that he failed to comply
with the notice to repay the monies, and that in terms of section
83(3)(b) of the Act this
failure, constitutes “an act of
insolvency, in that the respondents are “deemed to be unable to
pay their debts.”
15.
It was submitted further that the first
respondent is factually insolvent when upon investigation by the
applicant, it found that
their liabilities exceeded their assets.
Counsel informed this Court that there is still likely to be an
advantage to creditors,
at this stage, if the estate is sequestrated.
# THE LAW
THE LAW
16.
Section 83 (1) provides:
“
if
as a result of an inspection conducted ….the Registrar is
satisfied that a person has obtained money by carrying on the
business of a bank without being registered as a bank or without
being authorised, in terms of the provisions of section 18A(1)
to
carry on the business of a bank, the Registrar may in writing direct
that person to repay, … all money so obtained by
that person
in so far as such money has not yet been repaid, including interest
or any other amounts owing by that person in respect
of such money.
(2) ….
(3) Any person who
refuses or fails to comply with a direction under subsection (1) –
(a)
shall be guilty of an offence, and
(b)
shall for the purposes of any law relating to the winding up of
juristic persons of the sequestration of
insolvent estates, be deemed
not to be able to pay the debts owed by such person or to have
committed an act of insolvency, as
the case may be, and the Registrar
shall , notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained in any
law, be competent to apply
for the winding-up of such juristic person
or for the sequestration of the estate of such a person, as the case
may be, to any
court having jurisdiction.”
17.
The respondent has not paid over the monies
nor taken any steps to review the decision by the Registrar.
18.
The respondent has not been able to pay
over the monies. He informed the court that he relied on his pension
only to sustain himself.
He did not have the money to repay the
“investors.”
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
19.
I agree with Ms Mokale and am of the view
that in the light of the admissions the first respondent has no
prospects of success at
a hearing in the future and a postponement
will simply delay the inevitable. If investors still have an
opportunity to recover
some monies, they must be protected.
20.
The first respondent has been aware of the
notice issued for over 5 years now and has done nothing in that time
to challenge the
Registrar’s decision.
21.
The decision of the Registrar and issue of
the notice is a public administrative decision.
22.
In
OUDEKRAAL
ESTATES (PTY) LTD v CITY OF CAPE TOWN AND OTHERS
2004 (6) SA 222
(SCA),
the court was to determine
whether the respondent was entitled to disregard an administrative
decision merely because it believed
the decision was invalid. The
court held at (26)
“
until
the administrative approval (and thus also the
consequences of approval) is set aside by a
court,
in proceedings for judicial review it exists in fact, and it has
legal consequences that cannot simply be overlooked.
The proper functioning of a modern state would be compromised if all
administrative acts could be given effect to or ignored depending
on
the view the subject takes of the validity of the act in question. No
doubt it is for this reason that
our law
has always recognised that even an unlawful administrative act is
capable of producing legally valid consequences for as
long as the
unlawful act is not set aside.”
Emphasis added.
23.
The first respondent has done nothing to
challenge this decision. He has been complacent for five years since
the notice was issued
and has only reacted when the application for
sequestration was launched.
24.
The first respondent has not paid over the
monies. The applicant’s investigations have revealed that his
liabilities exceed
his assets and that there is a possibility that
there could be an advantage to creditors if the order for
sequestration is granted.
25.
In
REGISTRAR
OF BANKS v KHAMBULE
, unreported
16/04/2016 Windell J stated that
“
there
are two main advantages that the sequestration of the respondents
will bring. It will enable investigations to be conducted
to
determine what has been done by the respondents with the funds
appropriated by them and it will enable unidentified investors
to
come forward and stake a claim for repayment.”
26.
This court was advised that the investors
are not all identified and that the amounts claimed are estimates.
The respondents’
estate after liabilities will likely be able
to realise some monies to repay creditors, many of whom were from
rural areas without
access to computers and internet facilities, to
even enquire about their investments.
27.
At the date of this hearing the first
respondent informed the court that his financial circumstances were
dire and that even if
this matter is postponed for three months, he
did not think that he would have saved enough to pay for his legal
services. The
respondent is unable to pay the debts, he may not even
secure legal services in three or four months’ time.
28.
I am of the view that the postponement will
serve no purpose and simply delay the inevitable. Accordingly, the
application for postponement
must fail.
29.
The applicant has met the procedural
requirements for the granting of the final order and accordingly the
final order for sequestration
must succeed.
I
make the following Order:
1.
The application for postponement is
refused.
2.
The joint estate of the Eric Sonwabo
Mayongo (identity number: [....]) and Victoria Nomvuyo Mayongo
(identity number: [....]) is
hereby placed under final sequestration.
3.
Costs to be in the administration of the
respondents' joint insolvent estate.
_______________________
S
MAHOMED
Acting
Judge of the High Court
This
judgment was prepared and authored by Acting Judge Mahomed. It is
handed down electronically by circulation to the parties
or their
legal representatives by email and by uploading it to the electronic
file of this matter on Caselines. The date for hand-down
is deemed to
be 26 January 2022.
Date
of hearing: 19 January 2022
Date
of Judgment: 26 January 2022
Appearances:
For
Applicant: Adv Mokale
Instructed
by: ENS Africa Inc
Tel:
011 269 7600
For
Respondents. Mr Mayongo
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