Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 390South Africa
Skycastle Securities (PTY) Ltd and Others v TMM Holdings (PTY) Ltd and Another : In re: TMM Holdings (PTY) Ltd and Another v Skycastle Securities (PTY) Ltd and Others (30494/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 390 (8 June 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
8 June 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Exceptions- alleged not to disclosing cause of action. The test for determining exception restated. The first exception based on the indemnity clause of the contract between the parties. Second exception based on lack of causal connection between the alleged negligent conduct of the and the consequent damages.
Judgment
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## Skycastle Securities (PTY) Ltd and Others v TMM Holdings (PTY) Ltd and Another : In re: TMM Holdings (PTY) Ltd and Another v Skycastle Securities (PTY) Ltd and Others (30494/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 390 (8 June 2022)
Skycastle Securities (PTY) Ltd and Others v TMM Holdings (PTY) Ltd and Another : In re: TMM Holdings (PTY) Ltd and Another v Skycastle Securities (PTY) Ltd and Others (30494/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 390 (8 June 2022)
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# 5e93fffe133a4da1b9574f99cb2b6e955e93fffe133a4da1b9574f99cb2b6e95-1
5e93fffe133a4da1b9574f99cb2b6e955e93fffe133a4da1b9574f99cb2b6e95-1
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
CASE
NO.:
30494/2021
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
NO
08
June 2022
In
the matter between:
SKYCASTLE
SECURITIES (PTY)
LTD
First Excipient
JOHNSON,
PAUL SIMON
Second Excipient
TERBLANCHÉ,
STEFAN
Third Excipient
GIRAUD,
ALAIN MICHEL
Fourth Excipient
and
TMM
HOLDINGS (PTY)
LTD
First Respondent
GOLDSOL
II (PTY) LTD
Second Respondent
IN
RE
:
CASE
NO.: 30494/2021
TMM
HOLDINGS (PTY) LTD
First Plaintiff
GOLDSOL
II (PTY) LTD
Second Plaintiff
and
SKYCASTLE
SECURITIES (PTY) LTD
First Defendant
RUSSELL,
OLIVIER LESLIE HUGH
Second Defendant
JOHNSON,
PAUL SIMON
Third Defendant
TERBLANCHÉ,
STEFAN
Fourth Defendant
GIRAUD,
ALAIN MICHEL
Fifth Defendant
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to
the parties' legal representatives by email, and uploaded on
caselines
electronic platform. The date for hand-down is deemed to be
08 June 2022.
Summary:
Exceptions- alleged not to disclosing cause of action. The test
for determining exception restated. The first exception based on
the
indemnity clause of the contract between the parties. Second
exception based on lack of causal connection between the alleged
negligent conduct of the and the consequent damages.
JUDGMENT
MOLAHLEHI
J
Introduction
[1]
This judgment concerns the consideration of two exceptions raised by
the
excipients who I shall refer to in this judgment as cited in the
action proceedings. The first excipient shall be referred to as
the
"first defendant," and the second to the fifth excipient
are referred to as the "remaining defendants."
The first
and second plaintiffs shall be referred to as the "plaintiffs."
[2]
The action proceedings in this matter
arose from the written non-discretionary FSP mandate agreements
concluded between the parties
on 26 February 2019.
[3]
In terms of the mandate agreements
attached to the amended particulars of claim as annexures "POC1"
and "POC2,"
the plaintiffs authorised the first defendant
to manage their investments as provided for in clause 2.1 of the
schedule attached
to the agreements.
[4]
The first defendant was required to
transact on behalf of the plaintiffs in the following investments:
SAFEX financial, Equities,
and CFDIS. The plaintiffs further
authorised the first defendant to purchase, sell and enter into
transactions on behalf of the
plaintiffs. Attached to the mandate
agreements were schedules which specified the objectives which the
plaintiffs sought to achieve
in concluding the mandate agreements.
[5]
Upon receipt of the funds from the
plaintiffs, the first defendant was required to deposit the same as
part of management thereof
into the bank account of the investment
companies or their nominee companies or banks. The first defendant
would further, upon
receipt of cash monies, dividends, including
interest, and proceeds of disposals from the investment, deposit the
same into the
plaintiffs' nominated bank account.
[6]
In their particulars of claim, the
plaintiffs aver that the first defendant's discretion in managing the
investments on their behalf
was expressly restricted. The first
defendant's right to sell and purchase shares on behalf of the
plaintiffs was restricted to
performing such function upon receipt of
instructions and with the prior consent of the plaintiffs.
[7]
The mandate agreements were supplemented
on 26 January 2019 by an addendum, which amended the mandate
agreements in instances where
Standard Bank Online Share Trading, the
division of SBG Securities (Pty) Ltd. (SBG Security), had been
appointed as the preferred
brokers.
The
claim against the first defendant.
[8]
The plaintiff avers that from 2019 to
2020, the first defendant, without their instructions or consent and
in breach of the amended
agreements, sold shares belonging to the
first plaintiff to MC Mining and Jasco, respectively, at the price of
R1,495,000, and
R11 548 368. In the case of the second plaintiff, the
first defendant is alleged to have sold shares for R551.78 to Jasco.
[9]
The plaintiffs have consequent the
above-claimed damages against the first defendant. The plaintiffs
contend that the claim for
damages flows naturally from the breach of
the amended agreements by the first defendant.
Claim
against the remaining defendants
[10]
The claim against the remaining
defendants is both a statutory and delictual claim based on the
complaint that the defendants failed
to oversee the implementation of
the amended agreements by the first defendant.
[11]
The plaintiffs aver that the remaining
defendants, who were directors and members of the board, owed a duty
of care to ensure that
the first defendant complied with its
obligations in the amended agreements. They were responsible for
ensuring that the shares
were protected from being unlawfully
alienated or misappropriated by the first defendant. Their duty in
this respect was to ensure
that the first respondent complied with
its obligation as provided for in the mandate agreement.
[12]
The
statutory duties of the remaining defendants are those imposed by
section 76 (3) of the Companies Act.
[1]
The consequences of their failure to comply with their duty of care
have, according to the plaintiffs, cost them loss or damages
as
envisaged in section 218 (2) of the Companies Act.
[13]
The plaintiffs claim the following
amounts against the first defendant:
15.1
the first plaintiff: R 41 61048 368.00.
15.2
the second plaintiff: R4 25 717.56
[14]
Furthermore, the plaintiffs claim the
identical amounts, as above, concerning the remaining defendants and
payment to be made jointly
and severally.
The
exceptions.
[15]
The defendants have raised two
exceptions which are the same, except that the first is raised by the
first defendant and the second
by the remaining defendants.
[16]
The first defendants in the first
exception contend that the plaintiffs' claim does not disclose a
cause of action. The nature of
the claim in this respect is a breach
of contract.
[17]
The first defendant contends that the
claim based on breach of contract is unsustainable because of the
indemnity clause in the
contract.
[18]
The remaining defendants' complaint
consists of two parts. The first part of the complaint concerns the
contractual "loss or
damages" pleaded in the claim against
the first defendant and its relation to the loss or damages allegedly
occasioned by
the breach of duty of care on the part of the remaining
defendant.
[19]
The second part of the complaint is
similar to the first, except that the claim is based on the provision
of section 218 (2) of
the Companies Act. The complaint in this
instance is that there are insufficient facts alleged in the
particulars of claim to create
a connection between the breach of the
Companies Act and the contractual loss suffered by the plaintiffs.
Legal
principles and analysis
[20]
The
correct approach to deciding an exception was restated in the recent
judgment of the Supreme Court of Appeal in
Luke
M
Tembani and
Others
v President of the Republic of South Africa
and
Another,
[2]
on
20 May 2022. In that judgment per Ponnan JA, the court held that:
"[14]
Whilst exceptions provide a useful mechanism 'to weed out cases
without legal merit', it is nonetheless necessary that
they be dealt
with sensibly. It is where pleadings are so vague that it is
impossible to determine the nature of the claim or where
pleadings
are bad in law in that their contents do not support a discernible
and legally recognised cause of action, that an exception
is
competent. The burden rests on an excipient, who must establish that
on every interpretation that can reasonably be attached
to it, the
pleading is excipiable.
The
test is whether on all possible readings of the facts no cause of
action may be made out; it being for the excipient to satisfy
the
court that the conclusion of law for which the plaintiff contends
cannot be supported on every interpretation that can be put
upon the
facts."
(footnotes
omitted).
[21]
In
PicbeI Group Voorsong Fonds (In Liquidation) v Somerville and Related
Matters,
[3]
the court held that:
"As
a rule, courts are reluctant to decide upon exception questions
concerning the interpretation of contract."
[22]
The case of the first respondent, as I
understand it, is that the plaintiffs' claims are based on the
provisions of clause 4.3 of
the amended agreements, which provides
for indemnity on the part of the first defendant. In determining
whether the particulars
of claim in this matter is excepiable this
clause has to be read with the whole of clause 4 in POC1 and POC2,
which appears under
the heading, 'RISK DISCLOSURE.'
[23]
Clause 4.1 reads as follows:
"Skycastle
Securities uses its discretion to invest on the client's behalf with
great care and diligence. However, the client
acknowledges that there
is a risk associated with investing in the financial products
involved. The value of the investments and
income may rise as well as
fall, and there is a risk that the client may suffer financial
losses."
[24]
The risks identified above in clause 4.1
are acknowledged and accepted in 4.2 wherein the plaintiffs’
records that the first
defendant ". . . will not be liable or
responsible for any financial losses," arising from the
identified risks.
[25]
The indemnity relied upon by the first
defendant is stated in the following terms in clause 4.3
:
"The
client hereby irrevocably indemnifies Skycastle Securities and holds
it harmless against all and any claims of whatsoever
nature that
might be made against it howsoever arising from its management of the
investments, including but not limited to any
loss or damage that may
be suffered by the client in consequence of any depreciation in the
value of the investments from whatsoever
cause arising."
[26]
A proper reading of the particulars of
the claim reveals a clear distinction between the breach of the
contracts and the management
of the investments on behalf of the
plaintiffs by the first respondent. In other words, in the context of
this matter, the concept
of "mismanagement of investment"
cannot be attributed to a breach of the contracts between the
parties.
[27]
Thus, the first defendant's
interpretation of clause 4.3 of the mandate agreements is
unsustainable when regard is had to the distinction
between the
concepts of mismanagement of the investment and breach of contract.
[28]
The reliance on the indemnity in clause
4.3 is further unsustainable when regard is had to the regulatory
provisions made in the
statutory framework. In this respect the
essence of the first defendant's interpretation, would mean that the
plaintiff waived
their rights provided for under the statutory
framework. Part 13 of the Code of Conduct entitled "Waiver of
Rights,"
provides as follows:
"No
provider may request or induce in any manner a client to waive any
rights or benefit conferred on the client by or in terms
of any
provision of this code, or recognised, accepted or act on such waiver
by the client, and any such waiver is null and void."
[29]
In
the second exception, the remaining defendants contend that the claim
against them is for loss or damages consequent to the first
defendant's alleged breach of the mandate agreements. The complaint
is that it is not clear from the particulars of claim how the
breach
by the first defendant caused the plaintiffs' contractual damages.
[30]
The
complaint is further that it is not clear how the alleged
contravention of section 76(3),
[4]
of the Companies Act caused contractual loss or damages to the
plaintiffs. It is apparent that this complaint arises from the
reading of paragraph 16 of the plaintiff's particulars of claim,
which reads as follows:
"The
negligent breach of the duty of care on the part of the second to the
fifth defendants caused the plaintiffs to suffer
the damages as
pleaded in paragraph 16 above",
[31]
The complaint further arises from the
reading of paragraph 25 of the particulars of claim, which read as
follows:
"By
virtue of the Third to Fifth Defendants breach of the duty of care .
. . the Third to the Fifth Defendants are liable for
the loss or
damages suffered by the Plaintiffs as pleaded above."
[32]
The
remaining defendants interpret the plaintiffs' plea to be saying that
they suffered loss or damages consequent to the alleged
breach of the
amended agreement by the first defendant. In this regard, they
contended that the plaintiffs have failed to allege
and prove the
causal connection between the negligent act and the damages suffered.
In support of this contention, the remaining
defendants referred to
several authorities dealing with the principle that a plaintiff
relying on a delictual claim must allege
and prove a causal
connection between the negligent act and the damages
suffered.
[5]
[33]
In my view, reading the plaintiffs'
particulars of claim in their context, it is clear that the loss or
damages claimed were allegedly
caused by the conduct of the remaining
defendants, allegedly in breach of their duty of care. The
particulars of claim do not,
as the remaining defendants seek to
suggest, rely on a contractual breach by the first defendant. The
causality between the alleged
negligent conduct of the remaining
defendants and damages allegedly suffered by the plaintiffs is
pleaded quite clearly in paragraph
16 of the particulars of claim
also quoted above. This is made even more evident from what is
pleaded in paragraph 25 of the particulars
of claim, also quoted
above.
[34]
In brief, the alleged loss or damages
suffered by the plaintiff consequent to the conduct of the remaining
defendants resulted in
the quantum of damages as pleaded in the
particulars of claim. In the circumstances, the remaining defendants
should have no difficulty
in pleading with the averments made by the
plaintiffs in their particulars of claim.
[35]
In the circumstances, I find that the
two exceptions raised by both the first defendant and the remaining
defendants stand to fail.
Order
[36]
In the circumstances, the exceptions
filed by the first defendant and the second to the fifth defendant
are dismissed with costs.
E
MOLAHLEHI J
Judge
of the High Court of South Africa,
Gauteng
Local Division, Johannesburg
Representations
For
the First, Third and Fifth Defendants (excipients): Adv L Hollander
Instructed
by: EFG Incorporated
For
the Plaintiffs: Adv A G Sawma SC
And
Adv H P van Nieuwenhuizen
Instructed
by: Allan Allschwang & Associates
Hearing
date: 02 March 2022
Delivery
date: 8 June 2022.
[1]
Act
number
71
of 2008.
[2]
(
167/2021)
[2022] ZASCA 70.
[3]
2013
(5) SA 496
(SCA),
[4]
Section
73(3) of the Companies Act provides as follows: "(3) Subject to
subsections (4) and (5), a director of a company,
when acting in
that capacity, must exercise the powers and perform the functions of
director—
(a)
in good faith and for a proper purpose;
(b) in the best
interests of the company; and
(c)
with the degree of care, skill and diligence that may reasonably be
expected of a person—
(i)
carrying out the same functions in relation to the company as those
carried out by that director; and
(ii) having the general
knowledge, skill and experience of that director
See
Oppelt v Department of Health, WC
2016 (1) SA 325
(CC), Nxumalo v
First Link Insurance Brokers Ltd
2003 SA 620
(T), and Du Plesssis
N.O v Phelps 1995 (4) SA1 65 [C].
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