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2023
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[2023] ZAECQBHC 4
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Prudential Authority v Jafta (1219/2018) [2023] ZAECQBHC 4 (31 January 2023)
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(EASTERN
CAPE DIVISION, GQEBERHA)
CASE
NO: 1219/2018
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES/ NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/ NO
(3)
REVISED
DATE:
SIGNATURE:
In
the matter between:
THE
PRUDENTIAL AUTHORITY
Applicant
And
VUYOKAZI
CONFIDENCE JAFTA
Respondent
JUDGMENT
NONCEMBU
J:
[1]
This is an application for the final sequestration of the respondent
brought in terms
of section 83(3)(b) of the Banks Act.
[1]
The order for provisional sequestration was granted by Revelas J of
this division on 24 March 2022. The applicant is now seeking
the
final sequestration of the respondent.
[2]
Following upon a suspicion that the respondent was involved in a
Pyramid Scheme known
as Travel Venture Institution (TVI), which had
been the subject of various previous litigation, Mr Johannes George
Kruger was appointed
to conduct an inspection into the business
practices of TVI in order to establish whether TVI and its associates
were conducting
the business of a bank without being registered as a
bank. During the inspection it was established that the respondent
was an
advanced member and a distributor at TVI.
[3]
As a result of the above inspection, the Registrar of Banks (now
replaced by the Prudential
Authority), was satisfied that the
respondent had obtained money by conducting the business of a bank
without being registered
as a bank in terms of section 17 of the
Banks Act, or without being authorised in terms of the provisions of
section 18A (1) of
the said Act to conduct a bank.
[4]
Consequent upon this, a repayment directive was issued against the
respondent in terms
of section 83(1) of the Banks Act, and was served
on her on 5 May 2014. The respondent failed to repay the amount she
was directed
to pay in terms of the directive, or to respond to the
directive. As a result thereof, after a successful application for
the attachment
of the respondent’s immovable assets was moved
by Mr Kruger, the applicant lodged an application for her to be
provisionally
sequestrated in terms of section 83(3) (b) of the Banks
Act. The application was granted on 24 March 2022.
[5]
In terms of section 83(3)(b) of the Act, failure to comply with the
aforementioned
directive is deemed to be an act of insolvency. This
provision serves as the basis for the current application. It
provides as
follows:
‘
Any
person who refuses or fails to comply with a direction under
subsection (1) -
Shall
for the purposes of any law relating to the winding-up of juristic
persons or to the sequestration of insolvent estates, be
deemed not
to be able to pay his debts
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 a juristic person or for the sequestration of the
estate of such a person, as the case may be, to any
court having
jurisdiction.’
[6]
In resisting the application, the respondent mounted a series of
points
in limine,
which
were initially raised in the provisional sequestration application
and apparently dismissed therein. Citing the reason that
no reasons
were furnished for their dismissal in the provisional sequestration
application, the respondent sought to raise these
again in the
current proceedings.
[7]
No reasons were advanced before me as to why the reasons for the
provisional sequestration
order were never pursued with the court
that granted same. I however deal with these as they have been raised
in the answering
affidavit. At the onset I must state that I agree
with the finding of the court in the provisional sequestration in
this regard
for the reasons that follow.
Prescription
[8]
The respondent contends that the payments which the Registrar of
Banks sought to secure
on behalf of creditors prescribed on 18 March
2017 in terms of section 11(d) of the Prescription Act
[2]
and therefore unenforceable as the application was only instituted on
4 April 2018. This contention is misplaced. Firstly, the
application
in
casu
is not brought on behalf of the investors or creditors of the TVI
scheme, but by the applicant in exercising its statutory powers
in
terms of the Banks Act.
[3]
The
directive to repay does not give rise to a debt as understood in the
Prescription Act, and therefore prescription does not
apply in the
matter.
[9]
Secondly, sequestration proceedings are not civil proceedings for the
enforcement
of a debt. Authority for this view is found in
Collet
v Priest
[4]
where De Villiers CJ stated the following:
‘
The
order placing a person’s estate under sequestration cannot
fittingly be described as an order for a debt due by the debtor
to
the creditor. Sequestration proceedings are instituted by a creditor
against a debtor not for the purpose of claiming something
from the
latter but for the purpose of setting the machinery of the law in
motion to have the debtor declared insolvent. No order
in the nature
of a declaration of rights of giving or of doing something is given
against the debtor. The order sequestrating his
estate affects the
civil status of the debtor and results in vesting his estate in the
Master. No doubt before an order so serious
in its consequences to
the debtor is given the court satisfies itself as to the correctness
of the allegations in the petition.
It may for example have to
determine whether the debtor owes the money as alleged in the
petition. But while the court has to determine
whether the
allegations are correct, there is no claim by the creditor against
the debtor to pay him what is due nor is the court
asked to give any
judgment decree or order upon any such claim.’
[10]
In
Prudential
Shippers SA Limited v Tempest Clothing Co. (PTY) Limited
Mc
Ewan J
[5]
held that an
application for the winding up of a debtor’s estate did not
constitute proceedings ‘for the recovery of
a debt’.
[11]
Section 9(2) of the Insolvency Act also lends support to the above
position in that according to this
section, the sequestrating
creditor’s claim need not even be due, that is, it need not yet
be enforceable. The requirement
for a liquidated claim is not because
the claim is for the enforcement of the claim, but merely to ensure
that applications are
brought by creditors with a sufficient interest
in the sequestration.
[12]
From the above it is clear that sequestration proceedings are not
civil proceedings for the enforcement
of a debt and therefore not
subject to prescription.
[6]
This
point therefore cannot be sustained and is accordingly dismissed.
Locus Standi
[13]
The grounds raised as a basis for this point are two-fold. The
respondent alleges, in the first
instance, that the applicant is not
a creditor with a liquidated claim as contemplated in section 9 (1)
of the Insolvency Act,
and therefore cannot bring this application.
In the second instance it is contended that the applicant deposed to
the founding
affidavit in his capacity as the Deputy Registrar of
Banks, and therefore does not have equal powers with the Registrar of
Banks
(section 4(2) of the Banks Act, and thus in the absence of a
directive from the Registrar, he has no authority or competence to
initiate these proceedings.
[14]
A further aspect raised by the respondent in this regard was that the
later substitution of the
Registrar of Banks by the Prudential
Authority as the applicant in the matter, which allegedly was
intended to circumvent the lack
of authority by the Deputy Registrar,
could not avail the applicant as it was only raised in the replying
affidavit which was not
properly placed before the court.
[15]
I can find no merit to this point. The Deputy Registrar is empowered
by section 4(2) of the Banks
Act which gives him powers to perform
the functions of the Registrar. I am of the view that the averments
made in the founding
affidavit by the Deputy Registrar in this regard
are sufficient for the purpose of establishing his competency to
bring this application.
[16]
The substitution of the Registrar by the Prudential Authority is
provided for by section 300
(2) of the Financial Sector Regulation
Act
[7]
(FSR Act) which
provides:
‘
The
Prudential Authority must be substituted as a party in any
proceedings, whether in a court, tribunal or before an arbitrator
or
any other person or body, that have been commenced but not finally
determined immediately before the date on which this section
comes
into effect, for the Reserve Bank or a Registrar in terms of the
Banks Act, the Mutual Banks Act, 1993 (Act No.124 of 1993),
the
Co-operative Banks Act (Act No. 40 of 2007), the Short Term Insurance
Act or the Long Term Insurance Act.’
[17]
This section is instructive; I can therefore find nothing untoward in
the conduct of the applicant
in following the letter of the law. This
point therefore cannot be upheld.
Failure
to disclose a cause of action
[18]
The respondent does not dispute that she was served with the
directive and that she failed to
comply with it. She contends,
however, that she was entitled to ignore the directive as it did not
meet the prescripts of the law,
and was thus rendered a nullity. In
amplification of this she contends that the directive was not
authorised by the Registrar of
Banks as required by section 83(1) of
the Banks Act and did not comply with section 84(4) (a) as the true
amount of money unlawfully
obtained was not stipulated.
[19]
This point cannot be sustained. Annexure ‘FA4’ to the
founding affidavit clearly
shows that the directive served on the
respondent was issued from the office of the Registrar of Banks. I
have already dealt with
the competency of the Deputy Registrar in
paragraph 15 above.
[20]
Section 84(4) (a) explicitly states that simultaneously or soon after
the issuing of the directive
in terms of section 83(1), a repayment
administrator (manager) shall be appointed whose functions shall
include conducting further
investigations in order to establish,
inter alia,
the true amount of the money unlawfully obtained.
It is therefore not a requirement in terms of section 83(1) that the
true amount
be reflected in the directive because it is one of the
aspects to be investigated by the repayment administrator. There is
therefore
no substance to this point.
[21]
Having been established that the respondent was served with a payment
directive, which she failed/refused
to comply with, nothing more
needs to be proved to establish a cause a cause of action. The Act
makes it clear that failure to
comply with a payment directive is
deemed to be an act of insolvency. For purposes of these proceedings
therefore, a cause of action
has been established.
[22]
Whilst the solvency report indicates that the respondent is factually
solvent, it states that
she is legally insolvent as she is deemed to
have committed an act of insolvency by failing/refusing to comply
with the payment
directive. The act is instructive in this regard.
[23]
The report further indicates that sequestration of the estate of the
respondent will be to the
benefit of the victims of the TVI scheme as
there are sufficient assets to cover the total amount of the deposits
which is stated
to be R1 405 519.17.
[24]
The applicant has met all the requirements for final sequestration.
The order for provisional
sequestration was properly served in terms
of the court order. None of the defences raised by the respondent are
valid in law.
There is therefore no reason why the order for final
sequestration should not be granted.
ORDER
[25]
In the premises, the following order is made:
24.1
THE ORDER OF PROVISIONAL SEQUESTRATION GRANTED BY REVELAS J ON 24
MARCH 2022 IS HEREBY MADE FINAL.
24.2
COSTS OF THE APPLICATION SHALL BE COSTS IN THE INSOLVENT ESTATE.
V P NONCEMBU
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
APPEARANCES
Counsel
for the Applicant
:
E Theron
Instructed
by
: Gildenhuys Malatji Inc
C/OStrauss Daly
Attorneys,
Port Elizabeth
Counsel
for the 2
nd
Respondent
:
M P G Notyawa
Instructed
by
: Simphiwe Jacobs &
Associates
Port Elizabeth
Date
of hearing
: 08 September 2022
Date
judgment delivered
:
31 January 2023
[1]
Act
94 of 1990.
[2]
Act
68 of 1968.
[3]
See
Kruger
v Mothapo and Another
(82907/2014) [2015] ZAGPPHC 984 (11 December 2015).
[4]
1931
AD 290
at 299.
[5]
1976 (2) SA 856
(W) at 863D- 865A.
[6]
Collet
v Priest supra.
[7]
Act
9 of 2017.