Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 364South Africa
Nedbank Ltd v Forbes (2020/41706) [2022] ZAGPJHC 364 (30 May 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
30 May 2022
Headnotes
judgment against the defendant, a former employee, in the amount of R1 030 037.52 (the “principal sum”). The amount claimed was paid to the defendant whilst he was an employee of the plaintiff and that it was paid in the period 20 February 2017 until 20 March 2019 as follows (the “indebiti payments”) -
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Nedbank Ltd v Forbes (2020/41706) [2022] ZAGPJHC 364 (30 May 2022)
Nedbank Ltd v Forbes (2020/41706) [2022] ZAGPJHC 364 (30 May 2022)
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sino date 30 May 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 2020/41706
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:NO
REVISED:
NO
30
May 2022
In
the matter between:
NEDBANK
LIMITED
Plaintiff
and
GERALD
HENRY FORBES
Defendant
JUDGMENT
This
Judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ and or parties representatives by email and by
being
uploaded to CaseLines. The date and time for the hand down is deemed
on 30 May 2022.
BALOYI
AJ:
Introduction
[1]
This is an application in which
the plaintiff seeks summary judgment against the defendant,
a former
employee, in the amount of R1 030 037.52 (the “
principal
sum
”
). The amount claimed was
paid to the defendant whilst he was an employee of the plaintiff and
that it was paid in the period 20
February 2017 until 20 March 2019
as follows (the “
indebiti
payments
”
) -
1.1 R30 005.25 - 20
February 2017;
1.2 R41 582.84 - 20
March 2017;
1.3 R36 132. 57 - 20
April 2017;
1.4 R41 569.11 - 20
May 2017;
1.5 R39 724.95 - 20
June 2017;
1.6 R37 958.35 - 20
July 2017;
1.7 R41 569.08 - 20
August 2017;
1.8 R37 919.59 - 20
September 2017;
1.9 R39 763.71 - 20
October 2017;
1.10 R39 724.95 - 20
November 2017;
1.11 R37 958.40 - 20
December 2017;
1.12 R41 569.11 - 20
January 2018;
1.13 R36 090.71 - 20
February 2018;
1.14 R38 442.02 - 20
March 2018;
1.15 R38 334.66 - 20
April 2018;
1.16 R43 331.12 - 20
May 2018;
1.17 R39 609.41 - 20
June 2018;
1.18 R41 540.88 - 20
July 2018;
1.19 R43 307.95 - 20
August 2018;
1.20 R37 842.33 - 20
September 2018;
1.21 R46 308.86 - 20
October 2018;
1.22 R41 377.40 - 20
November 2018;
1.23 R39 774.68 - 20
December 2018;
1.24 R43 308.86 - 20
January 2019;
1.25 R37 514.46 - 20
February 2019; and
1.26
R37 776.27 - 20 March 2019.
[1]
[2]
The plaintiff claims interest on each individual amount from the date
when the amount was paid to the defendant to date of repayment
as
follows – (i) interest at the rate of 10.50% per annum on the
amounts in paragraphs 1.1 to 1.7; (ii) interest at the rate
of 10.25%
per annum on the amounts in paragraphs 1.8 to 1.15; (iii) interest at
the rate of 10% per annum on the amounts in paragraphs
1.16 to 1.23;
and (iv) interest at the rate of 10.25% on the amounts in paragraphs
1.24 to 1.26, these being the rates of interest
applicable at the
date of each payment respectively.
[3]
It is common cause that the
indebiti
payments
to the defendant were without
a valid
causa
and
in error. Whilst the defendant opposes the application (and the
action), he does not deny receipt of the
indebiti
payments
and that the payments were
over and above the salary agreed by the parties and that there was no
valid cause for the payments. Neither
does he deny that he has not
repaid to the plaintiff any part of the principal sum. It is fair to
say that the defendant’s
contestation of the
quantum
claimed from him is that he does not know how the
plaintiff determined the deductions made on the gross amounts to
arrive at each
nett amount paid to him.
[4]
In its particulars of claim, the plaintiff provides the following
explanation about the payments to the defendant. The defendant
was
first employed by the plaintiff on a temporary basis from 8 November
2010 to 31 May 2016. He was subsequently employed on a
fixed-term
contract from 1 June 2016 until 31 August 2016, which was renewed
from 1 September 2016 to 31 December 2016, in which
period he was
remunerated at five hundred rand (R500.00) per hour. With effect from
1 February 2017, the defendant became employed
for an “indefinite
period” with an agreed annual salary of R785,644.44, with the
employment contract terminable as
provided in the contract (a copy of
the contract of employment is attached to the particulars of claim).
Notwithstanding the defendant’s
changed employment status to
indefinite employment and payment of the agreed annual salary in
terms thereof, he continued to receive
payment in terms of the
expired fixed-term contract at the hourly rate applicable to that
contract for the same work. It is common
cause that the defendant did
not alert the plaintiff to the fact of double payment for the same
work. In March 2019, conducted
an investigation into expenditure in
the department where the defendant was employed and discovered that
the defendant continued
to be paid an hourly rate as a fixed-term
employee in addition to his annual salary. When questioned about the
double payments,
the defendant admitted receipt of the double
payments and offered an explanation that he had assumed that the
plaintiff had decided
to increase his agreed salary. The defendant
admitted that he was not entitled to the payments and offered to
repay the amounts
to which he was not entitled, an admission and
offer which the plaintiff considers as an acknowledgement of debt.
The defendant
was subjected to a disciplinary hearing which
culminated in his summary dismissal from employment on 13 September
2019 on charges
of gross misconduct of dishonesty for not disclosing
to the plaintiff that he was being doubly remunerated for doing the
same work
(I paraphrase the charges for convenience).
[5]
The plaintiff relies on three causes of action, in the alternative –
5.1 firstly, a claim
based on contract, namely, the defendant’s contractual
obligation to repay all over-payments made to
him; breach of a
fiduciary duty and duty to act honestly and in the best interest of
the plaintiff;
5.2
secondly, a claim based in delict, in that the defendant wrongfully,
intentionally and without cause appropriated the
indebiti
payments and caused pecuniary damage to the
plaintiff in the amount of the principal sum; and
5.3 lastly, undue
enrichment to the extent of the
indebiti
payments.
[6]
The plaintiff pleads that the
indebiti
payments to the
defendant were made as a result of a
bona fide
error.
[7]
The defendant does not dispute the absence of a valid
causa
for the payments but pleads that the payments were caused by the
reckless, negligent and unreasonable conduct of the plaintiff.
In the
plea and in the affidavit opposing summary judgment, he has raised a
number of defences to each alternative cause of action,
including 2
special pleas, namely, prescription of at least part of the claim,
and lack of cause of action for the claim of interest.
I deal with
the defences raised by the defendant as necessary later in the
judgment.
The
case for summary judgment
[8]
Uniform Rule 32(1)(b) permits a plaintiff claiming a liquidated
amount, after delivery of a plea, to apply for summary judgment
on
the liquidated amount, together with a claim for interest and costs.
The application for summary judgment must be accompanied
by an
affidavit by a person who, (i) can swear positively to the facts,
(ii) verifies the cause of action and the amount, if any,
claimed,
(iii) identify any point of law relied upon and the facts upon which
the plaintiff’s claim is based, and (iv) explain
briefly why
the defence pleaded by the defendant does not raise any issue for
trial. A defendant who wishes to oppose the claim
for summary
judgment may elect to provide security to the satisfaction of the
court for any judgment, including costs (rule 32(3)(a));
or “
satisfy
the court by affidavit (which shall be delivered five days before the
day on which the application is to be heard), or with
the leave of
the court by oral evidence of such defendant or of any other person
who can swear positively to the fact that the
defendant has a bona
fide defence to the action;
such
affidavit or evidence shall disclose fully the nature and grounds of
the defence and the material facts relied upon therefor
”
(rule 32(3)(b)). (my underlining)
[9]
The plaintiff’s affidavit in support of summary judgment is
deposed by Ms Lindi Botha who describes herself as Senior
Legal
Advisor employed at the plaintiff, who swears positively to the
facts, verifies the causes of action and the amounts claimed.
Ms
Botha has attached to her affidavit “schedule(s) of
remuneration” which record the amount of each
indebiti
payment to the defendant. By reference to the relevant paragraphs in
the plaintiff’s particulars of claim, the affidavit
incorporates the factual allegations in the particulars of claim and
the legal grounds relied upon by the plaintiff. I am satisfied
that
the supporting affidavit contains the necessary allegations as
required by rule 32(1)(b) and that the amount claimed is a
liquidated
amount as contemplated therein – see
Colrod Motors (Pty) Ltd
v Bhula
1973 (3) SA 836
(W)
. Ms Botha disputes that the
defendant has a
bona fide
defence to the claim and sets out
the reasons.
[10]
In his plea, the defendant has raised 2 special pleas in addition to
pleading to the merits. The first special is a plea of
prescription
of at least part of the claim. With the second special plea, the
defendant pleads that the particulars of claim do
not disclose a
cause of action for the claim for interest. In the plea over, the
defendant admits - (i) that he “was not
only paid his agreed
remuneration in terms of his new employment contract”; (ii) the
gross over-payment amounts but states
that he has no knowledge how
the nett amounts were computed; (iii) that the
indebiti
payments were without causa. He denies that - (i) he had knowledge
that he was not entitled to
the indebiti
payments; (ii) he
wrongfully and intentionally appropriated the
indebiti
payments; (iii) that the over-payments were made in error because the
plaintiff was aware of the expiry of the fixed-term contract
and any
error was inexcusable, grossly negligent, reckless and unreasonable
by failing to take certain specified steps to prevent
the payments to
the defendant; (iv) he was unduly enriched. Finally, the defendant
seeks apportionment in the event I find that
he is liable for the
amount claimed by the plaintiff. These defences are repeated and
expanded upon in the affidavit opposing summary
judgment.
[11]
Summary judgment has often been described as an extraordinary and
drastic remedy in that, if granted, “it closes the
door to a
defendant and permits a judgment without a trial”. And yet in
reality, as the Supreme Court of Appeal pointed out
in Joob Joob
Investments (Pty) Ltd v Stocks Mavundla Zek Joint Venture
2009 (5) SA
1
(SCA), “(h)aving regard to its purpose and its proper
application, summary judgment proceedings only hold terrors and are
“drastic” for a defendant who has no defence.”
(para [33]), a view I respectfully agree with. The court went
on to
say that “The rationale for summary judgment proceedings is
impeccable. The procedure is not intended to deprive a
defendant with
a triable issue or a sustainable defence of her/his day in court. …”
(para [32]). The remedy is in
my respectful view correctly explained
as one which “seeks to protect a plaintiff from the delay and
costs of a full-blown
trial where there is no answer to its claim.”
[12]
A defendant opposing summary judgment and who does not offer security
in terms of rule 32(3)(b), must satisfy the Court by
affidavit that
he has
bona fide
defence
to the claim. The Appellate Division (as it then was) explained the
threshold for a successful opposition to summary judgment
in
Maharaj
v Barclays
National
Bank Ltd
1976 (1) SA 418
(A)
as follows:
“…
Accordingly,
one of the ways in which a defendant may successfully oppose a claim
for summary judgment is by satisfying the Court
by affidavit that he
has a
bona
fide
defence
to the claim. Where the defence is based upon facts, in the sense
that material facts alleged by the plaintiff in
his summons, or
combined summons, are disputed or new facts are alleged constituting
a defence, the Court does not attempt to decide
these issues or to
determine whether or not there is a balance of probabilities in
favour of the one party or the other. All that
the Court enquires
into is:
(a)
whether
the defendant has “fully” disclosed the nature and
grounds of his defence and the material facts upon
which it is
founded, and
(b)
whether
on the facts so disclosed the defendant appears to have, as to either
the whole or part of the claim, a defence which
is both
bona
fide
and
good in law. If satisfied on these matters the Court must refuse
summary judgment, either wholly or in part, as the case
may be. The
word “fully”, as used in the context of the Rule (and its
predecessors), has been the cause of some judicial
controversy in the
past. It connotes, in my view, that, while the defendant need not
deal exhaustively with the facts and the evidence
relied upon to
substantiate them, he must at least disclose his defence and the
material facts upon which it is based with sufficient
particularity
and completeness to enable the Court to decide whether the affidavit
discloses a
bona
fide
defence.
… At the same time the defendant is not expected to formulate
his opposition to the claim with the precision
that would be required
of a plea; nor does the Court examine it by the standards of
pleading. …”
(at
425G–426E)
[13]I
have already determined that the affidavit deposed to by the
plaintiff’s Ms Botha meets the requirements of rule 32(1)(b).
It now falls to consider whether the defendant meets the threshold
eloquently explained in Maharaj,
viz.
whether he
has
““
fully”
disclosed the nature and grounds of his defence and the material
facts upon which it is founded, and
(b)
whether
on the facts so disclosed the defendant appears to have, as to either
the whole or part of the claim, a defence which
is both
bona
fide
and
good in law.”
If
I find that the defendant has failed to meet the threshold in respect
of anyone of the alternative claims, that should be dispositive
of
the matter and I must grant summary judgment
.
The
claim based on the employment contract
[14]
The plaintiff firstly relies on the employment contract to assert its
claim. In particular, it contends that the defendant
had a
contractual obligation to act in the best interest of the plaintiff,
in good faith and with honesty (the so-called fiduciary
duty), to
report the irregularity of the payment of the over-payments and to
repay to the plaintiff any over-payments to him. The
relevant clauses
of the employment contract relied upon include,
“
5.1.2
use your best endeavours to protect and promote the interests of the
Bank and not do anything harmful to those interests.
”
“
13.1
You acknowledge that your employment with the Bank requires trust and
honesty” …
”.
“
17
you must at all times look after the best interests of the Bank.
”
“
21
When you become aware of any irregularity perpetrated against the
Bank, you must immediately … report this to your manager,
or
…
”.
“
30.5
By signing this Agreement, you consent to the Bank deducting any sums
owed by you to any member of the group at any time from
your
remuneration or other payment due to you … in respect of any
overpayment of any kind made to you … . You also
agree, on
demand, to pay any sums owed by you to the bank at any time
”.
[15]
The defendant’s indefinite period contract of employment
provided that he will repay to the plaintiff any over-payments
made
to him by the plaintiff (clause 30.5). This is what the defendant
agreed in his contract. The defendant’s contractual
obligation
to repay over-payments is not qualified in any way, in particular,
that he is excused from repayment obligations where
the over-payments
is the result of the plaintiff’s own gross negligence,
recklessness or unreasonable conduct. The defendant
does not assert
any such contractual right or other legal basis that excuses him from
the contractual obligation to repay the principal
sum or why he
should not be held to the contract. It follows that his answer that
plaintiff’s error was inexcusable, grossly
negligent, reckless
and unreasonable for failing to take steps to prevent the payments to
the defendant does not, in my view, make
a
bona
fide
defence to the claim.
[16]
The defendant accepts that the
indebiti
payments were made without valid cause. The
payments are over-payments as contemplated in clause 30.5 of the
employment contract
and the plaintiff is entitled in terms thereof to
demand repayment. In terms of clause 30.5 of his contract of
employment, the
defendant is therefore liable to repay these amounts
on demand. None of the defences that the defendant has raised are
good in
law to answer the plaintiff’s contractual claim. The
defendant’s plea and answer to the claim for summary judgment
that he has no knowledge of computation of amounts claimed by the
plaintiff does not raise a defence, let alone a
bona
fide
defence, to the claim for the
indebiti
payments,
these being the amounts claimed from him. The defendant does not deny
that he received the
indebiti
payments as appear in the “schedules of
remuneration” attached to the plaintiff’s affidavit. Only
that he does
not know how the nett amounts (after deductions) paid to
him were computed. Suffice to say that the defendant is called upon
to
repay what was in fact paid to him and no more. It is therefore
irrelevant what deductions were made by the plaintiff to arrive
at
the nett amounts paid to him and this does not raise a sustainable
defence against the claim.
[17]
Thus, the defendant has not pleaded facts or points of law which
raise triable issues on the contractual claim. I accordingly
find
that his answer to the application for summary judgment does not
disclose a
bona fide
defence
or a defence which is good in law. This in my view is the end of the
enquiry about the defendant’s contractual obligation
and
liability to repay the
indebiti
payments.
Special
plea of prescription
[18]
The plaintiff instituted the action on 3 December 2020. The defendant
pleads that the debt in respect of all payments made
before 3
December 2020 has become prescribed in accordance with section 11(d)
of the Prescription Act (Act 68 of 1969) after the
expiry of 3 years
from date of payment. The defence of prescription, if successful,
will therefore see the plaintiff unable to
recover in the action, and
therefore in this application, the amount of three hundred
eighty-five nine hundred and fifty rand forty
cents (R385 950.40)
(amounts in paragraphs 1.1 to 1.10 above) and the plaintiff would
accordingly be entitled to recover only
the amounts in paragraphs
1.11 to 1.26 above.
[19]
Section 11(d) prescribes that a debt shall prescribe after the expiry
of 3 years from the date when the debt became due. Section
12(2)
prescribes that
“
If the debtor
wilfully prevents the creditor from coming to know of the existence
of the debt, prescription shall not
commence to run until
the creditor becomes aware of the existence of the debt.”
It is not contended that section 12(3) is
applicable.
[20]
The plaintiff states that it became aware of the over-payments to the
defendant during March 2019, an allegation denied by
the defendant
only with a bare denial, and that the defendant concealed from it the
fact of the payments when he had the contractual
obligation to
disclose the payments. Thus, it is alleged, the defendant prevented
the plaintiff from finding out about the debt.
If I find this to be
the case, it follows that prescription did not begin to run until
March 2019 when the plaintiff first became
aware of the
over-payments.
[21]
In his affidavit, the defendant states that until he was questioned
about the over- payments, he was not aware that he was
paid over and
above the agreed annual salary and that he assumed that the
additional amounts were a result of a salary increase
decided by the
plaintiff. This explanation of the defendant is not supported by the
“schedule(s) of remuneration” attached
to the plaintiff’s
affidavit which clearly show that he continued to be paid an amount
identified as “temp staff pay”.
From
this, the defendant would have become aware that the payments
additional to the agreed annual salary were not paid as a salary
increase as he now alleges. The reason he offers for not bringing his
unexplained windfall to the attention of the plaintiff is
so
far-fetched that it can be fairly and must rightly be rejected out of
hand. That the defendant did not enquire about his unexpected
and
unexplained largesse ineluctably must lead to the conclusion that he
knew that he was receiving more than was contracted and
opportunistically elected to keep his peace with the hope never to be
found out. Any other suggestion would defy common sense.
I am
satisfied that the defendant wilfully elected to conceal from the
plaintiff the facts of the over-payments commencing when
the first
payment was made to him. It follows that prescription did not
commence to run until March 2019 and I find that no part
of the debt
has become prescribed.
[22]
In the light of my conclusion that prescription did not commence to
run until March 2019, I do not consider it necessary to
decide the
question whether the running of prescription was interrupted by what
the plaintiff contends was the defendant’s
an acknowledgement
of debt of 25 April 2019 and undertaking to pay of 7 May 2019.
[23]
I accordingly find that the plaintiff has made out a case for summary
judgment based on the contract of employment to the extent
of the
amount in paragraphs 1.11 to 1.26 above.
Special
plea of failure to disclose a cause of action
[24]
The special plea relates to the plaintiff’s claim for interest
on each
indebiti
amount
from date of payment to the defendant. Rule 32(1)(b) entitles an
applicant for summary judgment to claim interest on the
amount
claimed. The plaintiff has done so and seeks interest from the date
of payment to the defendant of each
indebiti
payment. The plaintiff claims interest from date
when the individual sums were paid on the basis that the amounts are
liquidated
and that as a matter of law, interest began to run from
the date at the applicable prescribed rate of interest from the date
of
each payment, this being the date when the cause of action arose
in respect of each payment. The date of each payment has been pleaded
and there is no dispute that the amounts claimed are liquidated
amounts – they have been ascertained, alternatively are easily
ascertainable and importantly, are not disputed by the defendant.
[25]
The claim for interest is not a separate cause of action apart from
the claim for each
indebiti
amount. It is consequent upon the payments to the defendant which
were without cause at the time they were made. I agree with the
plaintiff that there is no requirement in law that the plaintiff
should have made a demand for payment of interest before it would
be
entitled to claim interest on each individual liquidated amount. The
defendant became liable to repay the plaintiff as soon
as he received
payment and became aware of the payments as is apparent from the
salary payment schedules attached to the plaintiff’s
affidavit
and interest became due from the date of payment. There is no reason
that the plaintiff should not be compensated for
the interest that it
would have earned on the amounts. The defence, such as it is, has no
merit. It follows that it is not a
bona
fide
defence to the claim for interest
and does not raise a triable issue for determination by a trial
court.
[26]
If ever there was a case of a plaintiff who has established his claim
in the clearest terms, this is the case. Equally, if
ever there was a
case of a defendant who has raised “sham defences” to
delay relief to the plaintiff through a trial
and the unavoidable
delays that comes with it, the defendant in this matter is such a
defendant.
[27]
For all the above reasons, I find that the plaintiff has made out a
case for summary judgment based on contract. In the light
of my
conclusion, it is not necessary that I deal with the plaintiff’s
remaining alternative claims and the defendant’s
answers
thereto.
[28]
With respect to the defendant’s claim or plea for
apportionment, suffice to say that this does not arise in the claim
based on contract, the Apportionment of Damages Act (Act 34 of 1956)
being inapplicable to claims based on contract. The plaintiff
does
not claim damages – it seeks to enforce the contract between
the parties.
Costs
[29]
The plaintiff seeks that the defendant pays costs on the attorney and
client scale.
[30]
Whilst a successful party is ordinarily entitled to costs in the
normal cause, and there is no reason in the present matter
to
deviate, a party who seeks costs on the punitive scale of attorney
and client, such as the plaintiff seeks, must make out a
case for
such a cost order. The plaintiff has not pleaded any facts why such
an order is appropriate. Neither has it, in its written
submissions,
made submissions in support of the punitive costs order.
[31]
The fact that the defendant fails in his opposition of summary
judgment does not of itself and without more warrant a punitive
cost
order such as is sought by the plaintiff. I am not satisfied that a
cost order such as sought by the plaintiff is appropriate
in the
circumstances and propose to grant an order on the ordinary scale.
Order
[32] In the result, I
make the following order
1. The defendant is to
pay to the plaintiff the amount of R1 030 037.52.
2. The defendant is to
pay interest on the amount R1 030 037.52 as follows:
2.1 on the amount
R30 005.25 - interest at the rate of 10.50% from 20 February
2017 to date of payment’
2.2 on the amount
R41 582.84 - interest at the rate of 10.50% from 20 March 2017
to date of payment.
2.3 on the amount
R36 132. 57 - interest at the rate of 10.50% from 20 April 2017
to date of payment.
2.4 on the amount
R41 569.11 - interest at the rate of 10.50% from 20 May 2017 to
date of payment.
2.5 on the amount
R39 724.95 - interest at the rate of 10.50% from 20 June 2017 to
date of payment.
2.6 on the amount
R37 958.35 - interest at the rate of 10.50% from 20 July 2017 to
date of payment.
2.7 on the amount
R41 569.08 - interest at the rate of 10.50% from 20 August 2017
to date of payment.
2.8 on the amount
R37 919.59 - interest at the rate of 10.50% from 20 September
2017 to date of payment.
2.9 on the amount
R39 763.71 - interest at the rate of 10.50% from 20 October 2017
to date of payment.
2.10 on the amount
R39 724.95 - interest at the rate of 10.50% from 20 November
2017 to date of payment.
2.11 on the amount
R37 958.40 – interest at the rate of 10.25% from 20
December 2017 to date of payment.
2.12 on the amount
R41 569.11 – interest at the rate of 10.25% from 20
January 2018 to date of payment.
2.13 on the amount
R36 090.71 – interest at the rate of 10.25% from 20
February 2018 to date of payment.
2.14 on the amount
R38 442.02 – interest at the rate of 10.25% from 20 March
2018 to date of payment.
2.15 on the amount
R38 334.66 – interest at the rate of 10.25% from 20 April
2018 to date of payment.
2.16 on the amount
R43 331.12 – interest at the rate of 10% from 20 May 2018
to date of payment.
2.17 on the amount
R39 609.41 – interest at the rate of 10% from 20 June 2018
to date of payment.
2.18 on the amount
R41 540.88 – interest at the rate of 10% from 20 July 2018
to date of payment.
2.19 on the amount
R43 307.95 – interest at the rate of 10% from 20 August
2018 to date of payment.
2.20 on the amount
R37 842.33 – interest at the rate of 10% from 20 September
2018 to date of payment.
2.21 on the amount R46
308.86 – interest at the rate of 10% from 20 October 2018 to
date of payment.
2.22 on the amount
R41 377.40 – interest at the rate of 10% from 20 November
2018 to date of payment.
2.23 on the amount
R39 774.68 – interest at the rate of 10% from 20 December
2018 to date of payment.
2.24 on the amount
R43 308.86 – interest at the rate of 10.25% from 20
January 2019 to date of payment.
2.25 on the amount
R37 514.46 – interest at the rate of 10.25% from 20
February 2019 to date of payment.
2.26 on the amount
R37 776.27 – interest at the rate of 10.25% from 20 March
2019 to date of payment.
3. The defendant is to
pay costs as between party and party.
MS
BALOYI
ACTING
JUDGE
Date
of Hearing: 11 November 2021
Judgment
Delivered: 30 May 2022
APPEARANCES:
For
the Plaintiff:
Adv E Kromhout
Instructed
by:
Lowndes Dlamini Inc Attorneys
For
the Defendant:
Adv MS Patel
Instructed
by:
Ameen Attorneys
[1]
The
indebiti
amounts are set out in an annexure to the plaintiff’s
particulars of claim which also reflects the gross amounts and
deductions resulting in the nett amounts paid and which make up the
indebiti
payments.
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