Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 105South Africa
Investec Markets (Pty) Ltd v Joosub N.O. (2020/12981) [2022] ZAGPJHC 105 (1 March 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
1 March 2022
Headnotes
judgment application in terms of which the plaintiff claims against the defendant for payment of the sum of R1,241,129.67 plus interests and costs.
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
>>
2022
>>
[2022] ZAGPJHC 105
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Investec Markets (Pty) Ltd v Joosub N.O. (2020/12981) [2022] ZAGPJHC 105 (1 March 2022)
Investec Markets (Pty) Ltd v Joosub N.O. (2020/12981) [2022] ZAGPJHC 105 (1 March 2022)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2022_105.html
sino date 1 March 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 2020/12981
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
YES
1/03/2022
In
the matter between :
INVESTEC
MARKETS (PTY) LTD
Plaintiff
and
ASHRAF
JOOSUB N.O.
Defendant
JUDGMENT
STRYDOM
J :
[1]
This is a summary judgment application in terms of which the
plaintiff
claims against the defendant for payment of the sum of
R1,241,129.67 plus interests and costs.
# The particulars of claim
The particulars of claim
[2]
The plaintiff sued the defendant in his official capacity as the
trustee
of the Halima Tayob Testamentary Trust (“the Trust”).
[3]
The relationship between the various role players in this action has
been
set out in the particulars of claim as follows:
3.1
The plaintiff sued the defendant as cessionary to all the rights,
duties and obligations of Investec
Securities (Pty) Ltd (“Investec
Securities”) which cession took place from 17 February 2020.
3.2
On or about 6 February 2015, Investec Securities concluded a written
Prime Service Mandate Agreement
(“the Service Agreement”)
with Vunani Private Clients (Pty) Ltd.
3.3
Vunani Private Clients (Pty) Ltd changed its company name to Unum
Capital (Pty) Ltd (“Unum”)
on 14 July 2016.
3.4
On or about 11 March 2016, Unum concluded a written Mandate Agreement
with the defendant (“the
Mandate Agreement”).
[4]
Pursuant to the Mandate Agreement, the defendant authorised Unum to
open
an equity market trading account on its behalf with Investec
Securities.
[5]
It is alleged that during the period March 2016 to date, Unum, acting
as agent to the defendant, rendered the financial services that it
was mandated to render to the defendant under the Mandate Agreement
and it did so by utilising Investec Securities and thereafter the
plaintiff’s prime broking services in accordance with the
terms
of the Service Agreement. This entailed that the defendant was the
“
underlying client
” referred to and contemplated
in clause 3.4 of the Service Agreement.
[6]
It is then alleged that from about 4 August 2015, Unum instructed
Investec
Securities and thereafter the plaintiff to render prime
broking services for and on behalf of the defendant, and in
particular,
to trade in Derivative CFDs.
[7]
As at 10 March 2020, the margin callout on the defendant’s
account
was in a debit balance of R1,478,027.43 which amount became
due, owing and payable to Unum on 10 March 2020. Part payment was
made
by the defendant leaving the balance of R 1 241 129.
67 claimed in this summary judgment application.
[8]
This amount was demanded and the defendant has failed and/or
neglected
to pay the debit balance of R1,241,129.67.
[9]
In terms of the provisions of clause 3.4 of the Service Agreement,
the
right, title and interest in the claim that Unum had against the
defendant, upon default, was automatically and immediately ceded
to
the plaintiff. This formed the basis for the claim against the
defendant.
# Defendant’s plea
Defendant’s plea
[10]
In the defendant’s plea, the name change of Vunani Private
Clients (Pty) Ltd (“Vuvani”)
to Unum was not admitted.
This became a moot issue as the defendant in its answering affidavit
resisting summary judgment admitted
the name change. Thus, reference
in this judgment would be made to Unum as this is the same entity as
Vuvani .
[11]
As far as the cession between Unum and Investec Securities was
concerned, the defendant
pleaded that it has no knowledge of these
allegations and consequently denied them. The same applied to the
cession between Investec
Securities and the plaintiff.
[12]
Clause 25.3 of the Mandate Agreement was pleaded to the effect that
Unum may at any time
give the defendant notice in writing that if its
accrued debt is not paid within a period of not less than seven days
of the date
of the notice, Unum may without further notice realise
sufficient enough of the defendant’s Financial Products to
discharge
the debt. It was then pleaded that Unum failed to provide
to the defendant with the seven days’ notice but closed out
defendant’s
Financial Products on the same day the demand was
made for payment of the outstanding margin.
[13]
It is pleaded that had Unum provided the defendant with seven days
notice to settle the
accrued debt, the defendant would have done so
and that there was no need to realise the defendant’s Financial
Products.
[14]
Accordingly it was alleged that Unum did not have a claim against the
defendant and was
not in a position to cede such claim to Investec
Securities. This claim could also not be ceded to the plaintiff.
[15]
The defendant admitted in its plea an allegation contained in
paragraph 21 of the plaintiff’s
particulars of claim stating
that from 4 August 2016 Unum instructed Investec Securities and
thereafter the plaintiff to render
prime brokerage services for and
on behalf of the defendant, in particular to trade in derivative
Contracts for Difference transactions.
[16]
These allegations pertaining to the lack of the 7 days’ notice
then also formed the
basis of a counterclaim which the defendant
pleaded should be set off against the claim of the plaintiff.
Insofar as this
issue is concerned the defendant, in its answering
affidavit, conceded that such set off cannot take place, unless the
obligations
of Investec Securities were also ceded to plaintiff, and
for that reason defendant issued a third party notice to which Unum
has
pleaded.
# The affidavit filed on
behalf of the plaintiff
The affidavit filed on
behalf of the plaintiff
[17]
The plaintiff filed an affidavit in support of its summary judgment
application as required
by rule 32(2)(b). In this affidavit the
deponent swore positively to the facts contained therein and to the
facts as set out in
the particulars of claim.
[18]
In the affidavit, it is stated that the defences as pleaded by the
defendant do not raise
any issue for trial. It is pointed out that
the denials by the defendant of the cession agreements which were
referred to in the
particulars of claim were nothing more than bald
denials.
[19]
Furthermore, it was alleged that clause 3.4 of the Service Agreement
is clear and unambiguous.
It provides that upon default by the
defendant, all the rights, title and interest of Unum in the claim
against the defendant is
automatically and immediately ceded to the
plaintiff. The defendant did not specifically challenge the
conclusion of the Service
Agreement save to plea that it had no
knowledge of the allegations the plaintiff made in this regard and in
consequence denied
them.
[20]
The plaintiff also referred to the issue raised by the defendant that
in terms of clause
25.3 of the Mandate Agreement, Unum was required
to give the defendant seven days notice before selling the
defendant’s Financial
Products.
[21]
Before this court this was the main defence raised by the defendant
and will be discussed
hereinafter.
[22]
It was stated that the defendant’s counterclaim is contrived
and was advanced solely
in an attempt to defeat the plaintiff’s
claim for summary judgment; that all the defences raised by the
defendant in its
plea and counterclaim can on no interpretation
constitute a
bona fide
defence to the plaintiff’s claim
and that a court should order summary judgment.
The
affidavit filed by the defendant resisting summary judgment
[23]
The affidavit filed by the defendant restated the defences raised in
the plea. It further
denied that Mr James the deponent to the
affidavit on behalf of the plaintiff has personal knowledge of the
facts of the indebtedness
of the defendant; denied that the defendant
do not have a
bona fide
defence; and that the defendant seeks
leave to defend the action merely to delay the legal process.
[24]
Central to the defence is whether there was an obligation to give the
defendant a seven
day notice of its intention to sell the defendant’s
Financial Products. This required interpretation of clause 25.3 of
the
Mandate Agreement. It was then stated that when it comes to
interpretation it “
is now an exercise which requires the
leading of extrinsic evidence.”
A trial court will be
better placed to decide on the interpretative issue. The defendant
then submitted that the interpretation
advanced by the plaintiff is
neither in text, context or purpose faithful and that it plainly does
not make commercial sense. Lastly,
on the issue whether the
counterclaim disclosed a valid cause of action it becomes important
to interpret the Service Agreement
and that again will required the
leading of extrinsic evidence.
# The legal position
The legal position
[25]
The
defendant had to set out a
bona
fide
defence.
The nature and grounds of the defence must be stated as well as the
facts enabling the court to consider the existence
of a
bona
fide
defence.
In Breytenbach v Fait SA (Edms) Bpk
[1]
with reference to Shepstone v Shepstone
1974 (2) SA 462
(N) it
was held that “…
that
no more is called for than this: that the statement on material facts
be sufficiently full to persuade the court that what
the defendant
has alleged, if it is proved at the trial, will constitute a defence
to the plaintiff’s claim. What I would
add, however, is that
the defence is averred in a manner which appears in all the
circumstances to be needlessly bald, vague, or
sketchy, that will
constitute material for the court to consider in relation to the
requirement of bona fides.”
[26]
Accordingly, this court will consider the answering affidavit to
decide whether a
bona fide
defence was shown which, at the
trial, may constitute an arguable defence. If any one of the defences
raised points to a triable
issue summary judgment should be refused.
If no
bona fide
defence is raised then summary judgment should
be granted provided that a court has a discretion to refuse summary
judgment even
if a defence was not properly raised.
[27]
The Mandate Agreement was admitted but not the conclusion of the
Service Agreement.
The
disputed cessions
[28]
The defendant disputes the cession agreement which goes to the
locus
standi
of the plaintiff. The plaintiff averred in its
particulars of claim that the plaintiff sued herein as cessionary to
all rights,
duties and obligations of Investec Securities. The
written cession document and acceptance was attached to the
particulars of claim.
The defendant, as he was entitled to do, denied
the cession stating that he has no knowledge of the cession. Not only
was the cession
disputed but the subject matter of the cession being
due and payable. Defendant stated that Unum first had to give him
seven days’
notice before it could sell defendant’s
Financial Products. This did not happen and the debt did not become
due. Does this,
however, constitute a
bona fide
defence? It
will depend on the veracity of this defence.
[29]
The defendant denied that Unum and Investec Securities entered into a
service provider
agreement. Also was denied the subsequent cession.
Although defendant was not a party to this cession it, through Unum
as intermediary,
conducted business with Investec Securities. The
Mandate Agreement between Unum and defendant, which was admitted,
provided for
the appointment of a Financial Service Provider (“SFP”).
By denying the existence of this agreement, which was
attached
to the particulars of claim, in my mind does not constitute a
bona
fide
defence.
[30]
To prove the cession from Unum to Investec Securities plaintiff
relied on the terms of
clause 3.4 of the Service Agreement which
provides that upon default by the defendant, all the rights, title
and interest of Unum
in the claim against the defendant is
automatically and immediately ceded to the Investec Securities. The
defendant placed the
underlying debt, the subject matter of the
cession in dispute. Therefore the plaintiff had to establish the
existence of the debt
which became due and payable to Unum. I will
deal with this debt later in this judgment.
[31]
The court is satisfied that Mr Hamish Edward James had sufficient
personal knowledge to
depose to the affidavit for purposes of
obtaining summary judgment. He stated under oath that he was the head
of the business unit
of Investec Prima Services. He stated that he is
the person responsible for managing the business relationship between
the plaintiff,
Unum and the defendant. He was responsible for
managing this business relationship on behalf of Investec Securities
prior to 17
February 2020 when plaintiff took cession of the rights
and obligations of Investec Securities. He stated that he had
personal
knowledge of the Service Agreement and its addendum.
[32]
The lawfulness of a claim which was capable of being ceded will be
dealt with herein below.
The
“no notice” defence.
[33]
This
defence is premised on an interpretation of clause 25.3
[2]
of the Mandate Agreement. It was submitted that the “
may”
contained
in this clause must be read as a “
must”
and
that Unum was required to give 7 days’ notice before it could
realize the defendant’s Financial Products.
[34]
Considering
the text and the ordinary grammatical meaning of clause 25.3 then it
cannot be found that clause 25.3 is either unclear
or ambiguous.
Despite this it was argued on behalf of defendant that when it
becomes a matter for interpretation of a contract
this should not be
done at the summary judgment stage. It was argued that the leading of
extrinsic evidence was permissible even
in a case where a contractual
clause was unambiguous. For this proposition defendant relied on the
cases of
Natal
Joint Pension Fund v Endumeni
[3]
,
University
of
Johannesburg v Auckland Park Theological Seminary and Another
[4]
and
Capitec
Bank Holdings Ltd & Others v Coral Lagoon Investments 194 (Pty)
Ltd & Others
[5]
. These cases made it clear that in certain circumstances a court can
admit extrinsic evidence to assist a court to interpret a
contract.
For purposes of this judgment in this summary judgment application
there is in my view no need to determine whether this
is a case where
extrinsic evidence should be resorted to to interpret the Mandate
Agreement. The reason for this being that in
summary judgment
proceedings it was expected of a defendant to “
disclose
fully the nature and grounds of the defence and all material facts
relied upon therefor.”
What
the defendant did was to set out the legal position in great detail
but failed to provide facts or refer to any extrinsic evidence
which
may provide an indication to court that if that evidence is admitted
this evidence may move a court to find that clause 25.3
should be
interpreted contrary to its ordinary grammatical meaning. What the
defendant did was to make reference to an available
interpretation
aid, the leading of extrinsic evidence, when it comes to contractual
interpretation but failed to provide any facts
to show that this aid
should be resorted to in this particular matter. Consequently,
the defendant failed to disclose fully
the nature and grounds of its
defence and all material facts relied upon therefor.
[35]
The
defendant then referred to clause 13, and more particularly to clause
13.5
[6]
of the Mandate Agreement, and argued that on Unum’s
interpretation clause 25.3 is rendered useless as it is in conflict
with clause 13.5. Clause 25.3 has been quoted hereinbefore and
provides that Unum may at any time give the defendant notice
in
writing that if accrued debt is not paid within a period of not less
than 7 calendar days of the date of the notice Unum may
without
further notice realize sufficient of the Client’s Financial
Products to discharge the debt.
[36]
In my view these two clauses are not in conflict. Clause 13 relates
to “
Deposits/withdrawals form Client’s Account”
which Unum would be authorized to do and clause 13.5 deals with a
failure to pay
margin
. If this happens then Unum would
immediately be entitled to close any position, trade and/or contracts
of the defendant. Clause
25.3 deals with default to pay
accrued
debt.
[37]
In my view 7 (seven) day notice was not required to be given upon
failure to pay
margin
on call and the defence raised by
defendant it this regard will not establish an arguable defence at
trial. A
bona fide
defence was, pertaining to this issue, not
raised by the defendant. This finding will also render the
counterclaim unenforceable
and nothing further needs to be stated in
that regard.
Should
the court nevertheless exercise it discretion not to order summary
judgment?
[38]
The court has one concern and that relates to an issue which came to
the fore after the
defendant filed its affidavit opposing the summary
judgment application. This pertains to the denial of Unum, in its
plea to the
third party notice filed by defendant, that defendant was
indebted to it. Unum sets out the terms of the Mandate Agreement and
pleads that it only acted as an intermediary and agent for and on
behalf of the defendant to open a trading account with Investec
Securities and later with the plaintiff. If margin was not paid then
Investec Securities could claim against the defendant as principal
and not as cessionary. Add to this the undefined term “
vested
interest”
used in clause 3.4 of the Service agreement
describing the interest of Investec Securities in the performance of
the “
underlying client”
( the defendant). The
nature of this interest is unclear.
[39]
This defence was argued before court but was not confirmed under
oath. The court is not
going to deal with the merits of this defence
suffice to point out that the Mandate Agreement appears to provide a
mandate to Unum
to act as an
intermediary
and not as
principal
. If that is a correct interpretation then in becomes
unclear whether Unum had a claim against defendant capable of being
ceded.
The plaintiff’s claim is founded on this claim,
originally that of Unum, which was ceded to Investec Securities and
ultimately
to plaintiff. The court cannot turn a blind eye to this
issue as the possibility exist that the claim against defendant
vested
with Investec Securities and not in Unum. The party which
dealt directly with defendant is stating this. This affects the
validity of the cessions and the need for plaintiff to have placed
reliance on the cession between Unum and Investec Securities.
[40]
A reasonable possibility exists that the there is a defect in the
plaintiff’s claim
with reference to which party margin should
have been paid. There is no allegation in the particulars of claim or
in the plaintiff’s
affidavit that Unum paid this margin for and
on behalf of defendant. Why did it become payable to Unum and not to
Investec Securities
where Unum conducted defendant’s account as
intermediary? These questions remain unanswered. This possible defect
may have
a straightforward answer but at this stage the court is
uncertain about it.
[41]
In my view the court should under such circumstances not shut the
door on the defendant
by ordering the drastic remedy of summary
judgment.
[42]
The following order is made:
42.1 Summary
judgment is refused;
42.2 Leave to
further defend this matter is granted to the defendant;
42.3 Cost to
be cost in the cause.
RÉAN
STRYDOM
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION OF THE HIGH COURT
JOHANNESBURG
APPEARANCES
For
the Plaintiff:
Adv. P. Chirone
Instructed
by:
Werkmans Attorneys
For
the Defendant:
Adv. L. Choate
Instructed
by:
Mortimer Govender Attorneys
Date
of Hearing:
17 February 2022
Date
of Judgment:
01 March 2022
[1]
1976
(2) SA 226
(TPD) at 228 C-F
[2]
Clause
25.3 reads; “
Vunani
Private Clients may at any time give the Client notice in writing
that if a accrued debt is not paid within a period of
not less than
7 (seven) calendar days of the date of the notice the Vunani
Private Clients may without further notice realize
sufficient of the
Client’s Financial Products to discharge the debt. Any sum
remaining after such a transaction will be
held for the Client’s
account subject to the aforesaid terms and conditions.”
[3]
2012
(4) SA 593 (SCA)
[4]
2021
[ZACC] 13
[5]
ZASCA
99 [9 July 2021]
[6]
13.5
“Notwithstanding the provisions of clauses 13.3 and 13.4
above, should the Client fail to pay any margin when payment
is due
as required by Unum, the Financial Product Provider and/or this
Mandate, Unum is entitled to immediately close out one,
or more or
all of the positions, trades and /or contracts of the Clients.”
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Investec Securities (PTY) Ltd v Corwil Investments Holdings (PTY) Ltd and Others (2021/11126) [2022] ZAGPJHC 475 (20 July 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 475High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
Investec Bank Limited v Zouzoua (21/44429) [2023] ZAGPJHC 131 (10 February 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 131High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
Investec Bank Limited v Litha (2021/11116) [2023] ZAGPJHC 487 (16 May 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 487High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
Investec Bank Ltd v Knoop and Others (2011/11563) [2023] ZAGPJHC 244 (20 March 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 244High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
Investec Bank Limited v Culverwell Cattle Company (Pty) Ltd (048263/2022) [2025] ZAGPJHC 291 (17 March 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 291High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar