Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 600South Africa
Whyte v WK Insurance Associates (PTY) Ltd and Others (2021/6801) [2022] ZAGPJHC 600 (25 August 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
25 August 2022
Judgment
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## Whyte v WK Insurance Associates (PTY) Ltd and Others (2021/6801) [2022] ZAGPJHC 600 (25 August 2022)
Whyte v WK Insurance Associates (PTY) Ltd and Others (2021/6801) [2022] ZAGPJHC 600 (25 August 2022)
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sino date 25 August 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
number: 2021/6801
Date
of hearing: 10 August 2022
Date
delivered: 25 August 2022
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHERS JUDGES: NO
REVISED
In
the application between:
WHYTE,
GEOFFREY DAVID
Applicant
And
WK
INSURANCE
ASSOCIATES
(PTY) LTD
First Respondent
KRUGER,
WESLEY
Second Respondent
GUTHRIE,
BRADBURN
Third Respondent
PRETORIUS,
RICHARD
Fourth Respondent
JUDGMENT
SWANEPOEL
AJ•.
# INTRODUCTION
INTRODUCTION
[1]
Applicant seeks that respondents be ordered to pay, jointly and
severally, the sum of £ 149 451.24 into the bank account
of
Overseas Trust and Pension Ltd ("OTAP"), alternatively that
respondents be ordered to pay the aforesaid amount or
its equivalent
in South African Rand to applicant. Applicant also seeks interest on
the amount at 5.5% per annum, from 1 September
2018 to date of
payment, and costs.
# THE FACTS
THE FACTS
[2]
Applicant has made use of fourth respondent's ("Pretorius")
services as a financial advisor for a number of years.
When Pretorius
left the employ of his previous employer, and set up his own business
in consultation with first respondent ("WK"),
applicant
followed him. At that stage applicant believed that Pretorius was
employed by WK. Second and third respondents are directors
of WK.
First to third respondents deny that Pretorius was ever an employee
of WK, and say that they entered into a consultancy
agreement with
him, on a fee-sharing basis. I accept their version.
[3]
Towards the beginning of 2018 applicant decided to invest
approximately £ 1.9 million in OTAP, and he sought Pretorius'
assistance in doing so. Pretorius provided the necessary forms for
completion by applicant, whereafter the deal was concluded with
OTAP,
and the funds were paid over. OTAP was, at all material times,
administered by Friends Provident International (FPI).
[4]
Unbeknown to second and third respondents Pretorius had agreed with
applicant that applicant would pay Pretorius a personal
once-off
commission of R 75 000.00. It was further agreed between them that,
save for a 1% once-off charge, no further fees would
be levied by
FPI.
[5]
Applicant alleges that either Pretorius or WK, or both, failed to
convey the terms of the agreement to FPI, which resulted in
FPI
setting up a fees structure in terms of which 1.111% of the invested
funds would be levied annually. First to third respondents
deny that
they knew anything about the fee arrangement between applicant and
Pretorius. Pretorius is adamant that he advised FPI
of its terms, and
he cannot say why FPI did not abide by the agreement.
[6]
Ultimately applicant transferred a total of £2 135 017.75 to
OTAP.FPI raised fees of £ 149 451.24 on the investment,
which
it paid over to WK. First to third respondents allege that Pretorius
had previously advised them that a large payment would
be made to WK
as fees on the applicant's investment, and therefore, they were not
surprised on 7 September 2018 when WK received
the sum of R 2 937
660.90 from OTAP. In accordance with the fee-sharing agreement
between them, WK paid 70% of that amount, being
R 2 056 362.63, to
Pretorius on 10 September 2018. Also on 10 September 2018, WK
disbursed a further R 734 415.23 to a third party
as payment for its
assistance in sourcing advisors. WK retained the sum of R 146 883.05
of the monies received from OTAP.
[7]
Some months later Pretorius approached second and third respondents.
He advised them that the fee payment had been made in error,
and that
the money had to be repaid to applicant. Second and third respondents
asked Pretorius how the error had come about, and
he told them that
FPI had miscalculated the fees. They say that they were surprised
that there had been an error, because Pretorius
had warned them in
advance that approximately R 3 million would be paid to WK as fees on
this investment. When applicant demanded
repayment of the money on
the basis that it had been paid in error, Pretorius paid the sum of R
1 540 000.00 to WK on 28 February
2019. He did so on the
understanding that WK would repay the money to OTAP, who would then
hold it to applicant's credit.
[8]
Second respondent initially admitted to applicant and to applicant's
attorneys that WK was liable to repay the money to OTAP.
Second and
third respondents agreed to sign an acknowledgement of debt on behalf
of WK, and they invited applicant to prepare such
a document.
Ultimately, having taken legal advice, they refused to sign the
document. WK never repaid the money that it had received,
using the
money for its own purposes instead, including the amount of R 1.54
million that Pretorius had repaid to it.
## PRETORIUS' VERSION
PRETORIUS' VERSION
[9]
Pretorius says that when he received the money from WK, he did not
know that it was for payment of fees in respect of applicant's
investment. Second and third respondents say that Pretorius
specifically warned them in advance that the fees were due to be paid
to WK. I find Pretorius' version very hard to believe. Pretorius says
that it took him some time to determine that the money was
paid to WK
as fees on applicant's investment. Even if I reject second and third
respondents' version, that Pretorius had warned
them in advance that
these monies would be paid to WK (which I do not), I believe that
Pretorius could easily have ascertained
where the money had come
from, by simply asking second or third respondents to trace its
origin. I find Pretorius' version so unlikely
that, even considering
the test in Plascon-Evans which enjoins me to accept the respondent's
version where there is a dispute of
fact, I can reject his version on
the papers.
[1]
It is
far-fetched and extremely unlikely.
[10]
In my view, Pretorius knew from the outset that the money had been
paid in error and that it was paid as fees on applicant's
investment.
He accepted a substantial portion thereof, only returning R 1.54
million to WK when applicant demanded repayment.
[11]
I accept that second and third respondents did not know, when the
monies were first received in their account, that the payment
had
been made in error. However, Pretorius later told them about the
error, repaid R 1 540 000.00 to them, and he also forfeited
certain
commissions in order to repay the full amount that he had received.
At that point, second and third respondents knew that
the money was
not theirs to keep, and that they were obliged to pay the monies to
OTAP, to the credit of the applicant. Despite
being possessed of that
knowledge, second and third respondents still used the money to pay
WK's debts
[2]
.
### THE CAUSE OF ACTION
THE CAUSE OF ACTION
[12]
There was
some debate as to applicant's cause of action. Applicant says that it
bases its claim on the conditio furtiva, which is
a delictual
claim
[3]
,
and in the alternative, on either the conditio 0b turpem vel iniustam
causa or the conditio sine causa, the latter being claims
based on
unjustified enrichment The contention that the conditio 0b turpem vel
injustam causa may be applicable to this case can
be disposed of
simply on the basis that it is an action is aimed at transactions
where the transfer was made for an unlawful purpose.
That is not the
case in this matter. The transfer was made in pursuance of a legal
purpose, albeit mistakenly. The transferor may
have been under the
misapprehension that the payment was due to WK, but the underlying
causa of the payment, the payment of fees,
was not unlawful.
CONDITIO
SINE CAUSA
[13]
Applicant says that it relies on the conditio sine causa This is an
action aimed at the recovery of a transfer made without
just cause,
which results in one party being enriched at the expense of another.
[14]
In order to prove unjust enrichment, applicant would have to prove
that the general requirements for an enrichment claim have
been met.
They
are the following:
[14.1] That respondents
were enriched by the transfer of money to them;
[14.2] The respondents'
enrichment must be at applicant's expense, and applicant must have
been impoverished;
[14.3] The enrichment
must have been unjustified.
[15]
The first question to be determined is whether respondents were
enriched by having received the funds. Respondents' enrichment
must
be patrimonial in nature.
[4]
Enrichment
can occur in a number of ways. A party may, for instance, acquire
corporeal property, its own property may be improved,
or its debts
may be reduced. In this case WK received funds with which it was able
to settle creditors. WK did not have to use
its own funds to pay
creditors. In my view WK was enriched to the extent of the funds
which it received from OTAP.
[16]
The second question is whether applicant was impoverished. As with
the enrichment enquiry, the plaintiff is only impoverished
if his
loss is patrimonial in nature. In Nortjé and another v Pool
N.O.
[5]
5
Rumpff
Ja explained as follows:
"Die doel van die
verrykingsaksie is dus die beskerming van die waarde van die vermoë.
Wat die verryking betref,
konstateer Bregstein dat
'n materiële identifikasie van die waarde, wat die een vermoë
verlaat om in die ander te vestig,
nie nodig is nie; nodig is alleen
dat 'n waardeelement aan die vermoë onttrek is, terwyl die ander
vermoë 'n waardeelement
bevat, wat daar nie aanwesig sou wees
nie, indien die vermoënsverlies nie sou plaasgevind het nie. Die
vermoë bestaan
uit 'n aktiefen 'n passief. 'n Vermoënsoorgang
kan bestaan uit die toevoeging van 'n nuwe aktiewe element, maar ook
uit 'n
vermindering van die passief.
Wat die
verarmingsvereiste betref, wys Bregstein daarop dat die verarming nie
alleen bestaan uit effektiewe vermoënsvermindering
nie maar OOR
uit aje feit dat die vermoë die Dates derf wat volgens heersende
maatskaplike opvattinge aan daardie vermoë
behoort ten goede te
kom Daartoe behoort in die eerste plek die bates wat die vermoë
sou gehad het, indien die verarmende
gebeurtenis nie sou ingetree het
nie. In die reël sal verarming bestaan uit 'n vermindering van
die aktief (bv. gedane uitgaaf);
dit kan 00k bestaan uit 'n aangegane
skuld, dus uit vermeerdering van die passief, of uit 'n
nie-vermeerder van die aktief. "
[17]
Mr. Bishop, acting for first to third respondents argued that
applicant had not shown that he was the sole owner of the money,
as
the money had been paid to OTAP and had become comingled with OTAP's
funds. Applicant only had a personal right to claim against
OTAP for
payment in terms of the investment agreement, he argued, but he was
not the owner of the money. Applicant had therefore
not demonstrated
that he had locus standito institute the claim. It follows further,
Mr Bishop argues, that if applicant were not
the owner of the money,
the loss thereof could not have impoverished him.
[18]
In my view, once OTAP had paid the money to WK, the money was no
longer comingled with OTAP's funds, and OTAP no longer had
any claim
thereto. Applicant, however, had a direct interest in the monies,
once payment had been effected to WK in error, and
he therefore he
has locus standi in the matter.
[19]
When OTAP paid the monies to WK, the applicant's pension interest was
reduced by the amount paid out. Instead of those monies
accruing to
applicant's benefit, they were dissipated by the respondents. In my
view applicant was clearly impoverished by the
transfer. WK and
Pretorius' enrichment was, in my view, directly at applicant's
expense.
[20]
The final question is whether there was any legal ground for the
enrichment. In more recent writings, the test whether there
was a
legal ground for enrichment is defined narrowly, and means simply
whether there is an absence of a normal ground for retaining
the
enrichment, such as a contractual or statutory obligation. For
instance, in Mc Carthy Retail Ltd v Shortdistance Carriers CC
[6]
the
Court held that the absence of a valid contract rendered the
enrichment sine causa The test is an objective one, and does not
depend on the parties' state of mind.
[7]
In
Willis Faber (supra) it was held that in the absence of a specific
obligation underlying the transfer, the enrichment was sine
causa
[21]
In this matter the parties are in agreement that there was no legal
basis for the payment of fees to WK. The agreement between
applicant
and Pretorius did not provide for payment of these fees, and WK had
no legal ground upon which to receive the monies.
The payment was
clearly sine causa
[22]
I therefore find that, even though first, second and third
respondents did not know, at the time when the transfer was received
in WK's account, that it was not due to WK, WK was nevertheless
enriched at applicant's expense, sine causa. WK must therefore
repay
what it has received, which is £149 451.24.
[23]
The fact that WK made payment to Pretorius in the sum of R 2 056
362.63 approximately a month after receiving the payment from
OTAP,
in the mistaken belief that the money was due to him, is of no
moment. In my view, the enrichment claim was established the
moment
the transfer to WK was completed, and it appropriated the money for
its own purposes.
### THE CONDITIO FURTIVA
(ACQUILIAN LIABILITY)
THE CONDITIO FURTIVA
(ACQUILIAN LIABILITY)
[24]
Mr Stockwell, acting for the applicant, argued that respondents were
also liable in delict, under the conditio furtiva, because
they stole
applicant's money. I have already found that WK is liable to
applicant for repayment of the full amount on the basis
of
unjustified enrichment. However, respondents are also liable for
damages suffered by applicant based on the conditio furtiva.
[25]
In Chetty v Italtile Ceramics
[8]
the
Court explained the conditio furtiva as follows:
"The conditio
furtiva is a remedy the owner of, or someone with an interest in, a
thing has against a thief and his heirs for
damages. It is generally
characterized as a delictual action. It is, of course,required that
the object involved be stolen before
the condition can find
application. The law requires for the crime of theft-
'not only that the thing
should have been taken without belief that the owner.... Had
consented or would have consented to the taking,
but also that the
taker should have intended to terminate the owner's enjoyment of his
rights or, in other words, to deprive him
of the whole benefit of his
ownership.
[9]
"
[26]
In order for applicant to succeed with a delictual action applicant
would have to prove:
[26.1] A wrongful action;
[26.2] Fault on the part
of the perpetrator,
[26.3] Patrimonial loss;
[26.4] That the action
was causally linked to the patrimonial loss.
[27]
As far as Pretorius is concerned, he was clearly aware of the fact
that no fees were due to either WK, or to himself. Nonetheless,
he
accepted payment of a substantial portion of the fees, which he
retained for himself until applicant demanded repayment. I have
no
doubt that Pretorius knew that the money was due to be paid to WK and
in respect of which investment it was paid. He knew that
the money
was not due to WK or to himself, but he allowed the transfer to
continue. He received payment of 70% of the money. Receiving
monies
not due to you, and then using the money for your own purposes, is
theft.
[28]
The loss to applicant occurred in two stages. The first was when OTAP
paid the fees to WK, and WK used the funds, distributing
some of it,
and appropriating the rest for itself. At that point WK was
unjustifiably enriched. The second stage occurred when
Pretorius
advised first to third respondents that the fee payment had been made
incorrectly, and he repaid R 1 540 000.00 to WK
with the request that
it be paid to OTAP. Pretorius also forfeited commissions due to him
in order to make up the balance of what
he had received. At that
point first to third respondents misappropriated the money.
[29]
I accept that when first to third respondents first became aware of
the transfer they were under the misapprehension that the
money was
due to WK. However, Pretorius advised them some months later that the
transfer had been made in error. Respondents then
reached agreement
that Pretorius would repay R 1 540 000.00 to WK, and that WK would
repay the money to OTAP. They also agreed
that Pretorius would
forfeit certain commissions, in order to make up the balance of the
funds that he had received. At that stage
respondents were all aware
of the fact that the money was the applicant's.
[30]
Despite knowing that the money was not due to them, first to third
respondents used the money to settle WK's debts. That is
theft, and
applicant is entitled to repayment of what was stolen.
[31]
In view of the fact that I have found that Pretorius was aware from
the outset that the payment was not due to respondents,
but that he
nevertheless allowed the monies to be divided between WK and himself,
Pretorius is liable for repayment of all the
money to applicant.
[32]
When first to third respondents became aware of the fact that the
money was not due to them, and Pretorius made repayment to
them,
first to third respondents had already spent R 881 298.28 of the
money under the erroneous belief that they were entitled
to do so.
They did not have any fault in the disbursement of those monies.
However, when they became aware of the fact that the
money was not
due to WK, they nevertheless spent the rest, totalling R 2 056
362.62. First to third respondents are thus liable
to applicant, on
the basis of the conditio furtiva for payment of the sum of R 2 056
362.62.
[33]
It is necessary to deal with the remaining contention raised by first
to third respondents. They say that the law of Guernsey
applies to
this case, as the lex loci contractus (the place where the contract
was concluded), applies. Mr Bishop argued that in
terms of the laws
of Guernsey the Life Assurance (Compensation of Policyholders)
Regulation, 1991 finds application, which precludes
applicant from
claiming against respondents.
[34]
This is not a claim in terms of the investment contract between the
parties. OTAP paid out fees in the normal course of business,
albeit
contrary to the agreement between Pretorius and the applicant. If,
for instance, it had been the case that the pension fund
had
misappropriated the money, then the claim would have been brought
against the pension fund in terms of the Guernsey law. In
this case
the monies were paid out by the pension fund and were received by WK
in South Africa. It is in South Africa where the
enrichment occurred
and where the monies were stolen. In my view this argument is without
merit.
## COSTS
COSTS
[35]
Applicant has sought costs on the attorney/client scale. Such costs
are generally only awarded where there has been improper
conduct, and
the Court wishes to express its disapproval of such conduct.
[36]
It is trite that attorney/client cost orders are not lightly granted.
Parties have the right to have their disputes resolved
by litigation,
and they should not be put off by unnecessary punitive cost orders.
However, when there are special circumstances
present, such as when
there has been dishonesty
[10]
or
fraud, or a party has been malicious, frivolous, reckless or
vexatious, a Court will not hesitate to grant a punitive costs order.
[37]
Pretorius' conduct merits, in my view, a punitive costs order. I have
found that he knew from the outset that the money was
not due to
either himself, or to WK. First to third respondents knew, a few
months after WK had received the money, that the transfer
had been
made in error. Nonetheless, they did not make good on their
undertaking to Pretorius to repay to OTAP the money that Pretorius
had repaid to WK. They decided to keep the money for their own
purposes.
[38]
First to third respondents have known, since they were advised by
Pretorius that the transfer had been made in error, and that
they
were liable to repay the money to applicant. They made numerous
promises of repayment, even going as far as to undertake to
sign an
acknowledgement of debt. Unfortunately, due to the advice given to
them, they reneged on the undertaking to sign an acknowledgement
of
debt. Once they were faced with this application, they raised a
number of spurious defences to try and evade liability. In their
answering affidavit they disclose that they tendered repayment of £
130 000.00. They would only have made that offer if they
knew that
the money was due to applicant. This knowledge did not deter them
from litigating the matter to the end. In my view their
approach to
the matter is vexatious.
[39]
First to third respondents have therefore not only been dishonest in
taking applicant's money when they knew that it was due
to him, they
have also been disingenuous and vexatious in their defence. I believe
that an order for punitive costs against first
to third respondents
is also appropriate.
[40]
Consequently I make the following order:
[40.1] First and
Fourth respondents are ordered to pay applicant the sum of £
149 451.24, or the equivalent in South African
Rand, to be calculated
at the prevailing exchange rate on the date of payment, jointly and
severally, the one paying the other
to be absolved.
[40.2] First and
fourth respondents shall pay interest on the aforesaid sum at the
rate of 5.5% per annum, calculated from 1 September
2018 to date of
payment.
[40.3] Second and
third respondents are ordered to pay applicant R 2 056 362.63, which
liability shall be joint and several with
one another, and with the
liability of first and fourth respondents in terms of paragraph 40.1
above, the one respondent paying,
the others to be absolved.
[40.4] Second and
Third respondents shall pay interest on the aforesaid sum at the rate
of 5.5% per annum, calculated from 1 September
2018 to date of
payment.
[40.5] Respondents
shall pay the costs of the application jointly and severally, the one
paying the other to be absolved on the
attorney/client scale.
SWANEPOEL
AJ
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
COUNSEL
FOR APPLICANT:
Mr R. Stockwell SC
ATTORNEY
FOR APPLICANT:
Rudolph Buys & Associates
COUNSEL
FOR FIRST TO
THIRD
RESPONDENTS:
Mr. A Bishop
ATTORNEYS
FOR FIRST TO
THIRD
RESPONDENTS:
Gittins Attorneys
FOR
FOURTH RESPONDENT:
In Person
DATE
HEARD:
10 August 2022
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
25 August 2022
[1]
Plascon-Evans Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984 (3) SA
623
(AD) at 634 (H)
[2]
First to Third respondents' heads of argument par. 20
[3]
Minister van Verdediging v Van Wyk
1976 (1) SA 397
(t) at 400
[4]
The South African Law of Unjustiified Enrichment, Du Plessis, J,
page 27
[5]
1966 (3) 96 115
[6]
2001 (3) SA 482
(SCA)
[7]
See: Willis Faber Enthoven (Pty) Ltd v Receiver of Revenue 1992 (4)
202 220 J
[8]
2013 (3) SA 374 (SCA)
[9]
R v Sibiya 1955 (4) 247 257 B-D
[10]
Nel v Waterberg Landbouers Ko-Operatiewe Vereeniging
1946 AD 597
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