REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL
OF SOUTH AFRICA
REPORTABLE
Case number: 73/03
In the matter between:
THE STANDARD BANK
OF SOUTH AFRICA LTD Appellant
and
SUZETTE KOEKEMOER 1st Respondent
PETRUS JACOBUS KOEKEMOER 2nd
Respondent
HENDRIK JACOBUS KOEKEMOER 3rd
Respondent
SUZETTE KOEKEMOER 4th
Respondent
PETRUS JACOBUS KOEKEMOER 5th
Respondent
DEIRDRé KOEKEMOER 6th
Respondent
CORAM: MPATI DP, MARAIS, MTHIYANE,
CLOETE JJA and JONES AJA
HEARD: 14 MAY 2004
DELIVERED: 27 MAY 2004
Summary: Trusts – Trust Deed empowering trustees to enter into loan agreements and to
encumber trust property in the process – lending bank under no obligation to
protect beneficiaries in circumstances of case
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JUDGMENT
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MPATI DP:
[1] The first, second and third respondents are the trustees of the Supedre
Trust (the Trust), which was set up by the second respondent. The third
respondent is the son of the second respondent and husband of the first
respondent. During September 1992 the appellant bank (the bank) advanced
a home loan of R600 000 to the Trust. This loan was secured by a first
mortgage bond over the Trust’s fixed property, described as Portion 5 of the
farm Northdene 589, Registration Divi sion I.Q., Transvaal (the property). In
August 1996 the bank advanced a second home loan of R700 000 to the
Trust. As security for the loan a continuing covering bond was registered over
the property. It is common cause that the money in each case was on-lent by
the Trust to the third respondent, who applied most of it in his own business
ventures.
[2] In July 1997 the bank instituted action against the first, second and third
respondents in their capacity as trustees of the Trust, for repayment of the
loans together with interest. An order declaring the property executable was
also sought. The first and second respondents in this appeal were added, at
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their request, as fourth and fifth respondents respectively, together with the
sixth respondent, in their capacity as beneficiaries of the Trust.
[3] The respondents denied liability and pleaded that the trustees had
entered into the loan agreements and bonded the property in the bona fide,
but mistaken, belief that they could on-lend the money advanced to the Trust
to the third respondent (who was not a beneficiary of the Trust), an act
prohibited by the Trust Deed. It was accordingly pleaded that the loan
agreements were ultra vires the Trust Deed and therefore unenforceable.
[4] The court a quo (Du Toit AJ) upheld the respondents’ defence and
dismissed the bank’s claim with costs. Leave to appeal was subsequently
refused. This appeal is with leave of this court.
[5] In terms of the Trust Deed t he trustees are empowered, in the
performance of their obligations qua trustees, to conserve or increase the
value of the Trust, to borrow m oney under any conditions and against any
security and, in doing so, to encumber any assets of the Trust. However, the
trustees are not entitled to use or dispose of (‘beskik oor’) any capital or
income of the Trust to their own advantage or for the benefit of their estates
(‘vir hulle eie voordeel of vir die voordeel van hulle boedels’) unless they are
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also beneficiaries of the Trust, in which event the consent of all the other
trustees must be obtained.
[6] The only witness to testify before the court a quo was Johan van
Rooyen Botha, a registered chartered accountant. His testimony related to the
question whether the moneys derived from the loans and passed on to the
third respondent by the Trust constituted capital or income. As will emerge
below, the characterization of the money as either capital or income or indeed
as falling within any other category is irrelevant in this case.
[7] The court a quo was asked to decide the matter on a statement of
agreed facts, which read:
‘1 . . .
2 . . .
3 . . .
4 The proceeds of the first bond were disbursed by plaintiff as follows:
4.1 On 11 September 1992 plaintiff cred ited the home loan account of Supedre
(account number 212317326) with the amount of R500 000,00.
4.2 On the same date and on the instruct ions of the third defendant, who was
representing Supedre, plaintiff transferred the said amount from the home
loan account of Supedre to the curr ent account of the third defendant
(account number 021767971).
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4.3 On 25 September 1992 plaintiff credit ed the home loan account of Supedre
(account number 212317326) with the amount of R100 000,00.
4.4 On the same date and on the instruct ions of the third defendant, who was
representing Supedre, plaintiff transferred the said amount from the home
loan account of Supedre to the curr ent account of the third defendant
(account number 021767971).
4.5 The said payments extinguished the third defendant’s overdraft of
R321 745,07 with plaintiff.
4.6 The third defendant dealt with the bal ance of those funds as follows:
4.6.1 On 11 September 1992, the third defendant transferred R185 000,00
to the current banking acc ount of Supedre (account number
021811539).
4.6.2 On 25 September 1992, the third defendant paid R100 000,00 to
Roodhuis (Pty) Ltd, a company in which the third defendant had a
50% interest, by way of cheque number 33 drawn on his current
account.
5. The proceeds of the second bond were disbursed by plaintiff as follows:
5.1 On 13 August 1996, plaintiff appropriated an amount of R6 516,70 towards
the payment of bond costs;
5.2 On the same date:
5.2.1 plaintiff credited the home loan account of Supedre (account number
212317326) with the amount of R693 483,30;
5.2.2 on the instructions of the third defendant, who was representing
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Supedre, plaintiff transferred the said amount to the current account
of Supedre (account number 021811539);
5.2.3 the third defendant drew a cheque on that account for the said amount
in favour of Modderfontein St eenmakery CC (“Modderfontein”), a
close corporation of which the third defendant was the sole member
and which required the said amount to enable it to conduct its
business operations. The cheque was deposited into the banking
account of Modderfontein, which received the proceeds thereof.
6 The plaintiff disbursed the said sums kn owing that the disbursements would be used
for the purposes for which they were in fact used.
7 At all times during which the aforegoing trans actions were effected, the plaintiff was
in possession of the Trust Deed of Supedre. . . .
8 All repayments in terms of the two bonds were made to plaintiff by Modderfontein.
9 When Modderfontein was plac ed under a winding-up order, repayments under the
bonds ceased.
10 Supedre proved a claim in the winding up of Modderfontein . . . . Pursuant to that
claim, Supedre received a dividend of approximately R87 000,00.
11 . . . ‘
[8] It was argued on behalf of the respondents that on these facts it is clear
that the actual intention of the parties was to advance the money to the third
respondent. If by this argument counsel meant that the bank intended to
advance the loans to the third respondent then I disagree. The argument
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loses sight of the fact, as is clear from the agreed facts, that the third
respondent had an existing overdraft facility with the bank and that it would
thus have been the easiest thing for the bank simply to increase such facility,
albeit that security would probably have been required. It seems clear that the
bank had no intention whatsoever to advance money to the third respondent.
It may well be that by granting the loans to the Trust the bank facilitated a loan
by the Trust to the third respondent, a matter that I shall come to presently.
Clearly the party with which the bank concluded the loan agreements was the
Trust and the Trust alone, as represented by the trustees. The fact that the
repayments were made by Modderfontein Steenmakery CC does not change
the position. That was merely an arrangement between the Trust and the third
respondent outside of the loan agreements. The covering bonds reflect the
Trust as the mortgagor who ‘shall pay all amounts owing to the bank . . . in
consecutive monthly instalments . . .’.
[9] What I have just said also uncovers the flaw in the reasoning of the trial
court in dismissing the bank’s action. Du Toit AJ found that the third
respondent, not being a beneficiary of the Trust, ‘to the advantage and
prejudice of the Trust, encumbered trust property and used the proceeds
thereof to his own advantage and the advantage of Roodhuis (Pty) Ltd and
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Modderfontein’. As I have shown above, the parties to the loan agreements
are the bank and the Trust. Plainly the third respondent would not have been
able to bind the Trust without the consent of the other two trustees and there
is indeed nothing in the agreed facts to i ndicate that he did not have their
consent. On the contrary, and as has been mentioned in para 3 above,
respondents pleaded that the trustees had entered into the loan agreements
with the bank. The third respondent’s instructions to the bank to transfer funds
from the Trust’s home loan account to his current account and to the Trust’s
current account were given by him in his capacity as a duly authorised trustee
representing the Trust and could not be resisted by the bank. Once the bank
had granted the loans and credited the Trust’s home loan account, it was not
entitled to control the application of the funds by the Trust.
[10] But counsel for the respondents subm itted that the transactions, ie the
home loan agreements, between the bank and the trustees were not
concluded at arm’s length, and that because not only the trustees but also the
beneficiaries were affected (trust property was to be encumbered) the bank,
with the knowledge it had of the purpose for which the loans were intended,
should have been more circumspect. Although no general duty rested on it to
do so, the bank, in the circumstances of this case, should have enquired as
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to whether the trustees were empowered to on-lend the money to the third
respondent, so counsel argued. The bank was in a position to do so, said
counsel, because it had the Trust Deed in its possession. Its failure to do so,
the submission concluded, rendered the agreements unenforceable.
[11] I shall assume, without deciding, in favour of the respondents that if the
bank knew that the trustees were specifically prohibited from on-lending the
money to the third respondent and that such on-lending was a benefit or
advantage to a non-beneficiary, the home loan agreements would have been
unenforceable. It is true that the bank was in possession of the Trust Deed of
the Trust ‘at all times during which t he . . . transactions were effected’, but
nowhere is it stated in the agreed facts that the bank’s attention was drawn to
the prohibition clause or that any responsible official of the bank was aware
of it. When asked whether knowledge of the contents of the prohibition clause
should be imputed to the bank counsel disavowed reliance upon constructive
knowledge.
[12] Part of the bank’s business is to lend money to clients and what would
have been of interest to it is whether the trustees had the authority to borrow
money and to encumber trust property in the process. If satisfied on that
score, the bank was under no obligation to protect the beneficiaries. There
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was accordingly no obligation on it to study the Trust Deed any further to
ascertain whether the trustees did or did not have the power to on-lend the
money to the third respondent. The fact that the Trust Deed was in its
possession indeed provided the bank with the means to acquire the
knowledge, or, if that was not apparent ex facie the Trust Deed alone, to
appreciate what questions should be asked to acquire the knowledge, but that
in itself does not justify a finding that it had actual or constructive knowledge
of the prohibition. In my view, to render the agreements unenforceable at least
actual knowledge by the bank of the prohibition would have to be established.
A court is not normally concerned with the respective motives which actuate
parties in entering into a contract, except in so far as they were made part and
parcel of the contract either expressly or by clear implication. African Realty
Trust Limited v Holmes 1922 AD 389 at 403. The question whether, if actual
knowledge was established, the respondents, in their quest to have the loan
agreements declared unenforceable, would have to go further and show that
the bank also appreciated the implications upon the validity or enforceability
of the on-lending, does not arise for consideration here.
[13] It may be mentio ned, in conclusion, that in the absence of proof at least
of actual knowledge on the part of t he bank of the prohibition clause in the
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Trust Deed, or the existence of a positive duty in law to investigate whether
the on-lending would be ultra vires the Trust Deed or constitute a breach of
trust prejudicial to the beneficiaries, considerations of public policy do not
arise. The appeal should accordingly succeed.
[14] Although the total amount claimed in the particulars of claim is
R1 321 431.16 with interest thereon at the agreed rate of 18% per annum
from 1 November 1996 to date of payment, counsel for the bank submitted in
their heads of argument that the amount payable by the Trust is R2 414
479.22, together with interest at the rate of 13.5% per annum from 1 May
2001 to date of payment. Counsel for the respondents had no objection to the
order sought in this court and I can see no reason why it should not be
granted. Counsel for the respondents also conceded that in the event of the
appeal succeeding, a costs order should be made in terms of the contract,
which provides for costs on the scale as between attorney and client.
[15] In the result I make the following order:
(1) The appeal succeeds with costs, such costs to be taxed on the scale as
between attorney and client.
(2) The order of the court a quo is set aside and for it is substituted the
following:
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(a) ‘The first, second and third respondents, in their capacity as trustees
of the Supedre Trust, are ordered to pay to the plaintiff the sum of R2
414 479.22, together with interest thereon at the rate of 13.5% per
annum from 1 May 1996 to date of payment;
(b) The immovable property being Port ion 5 of the farm Northdene 589,
Registration Division I.Q., Transvaal is declared executable;
(c) The first, second and third respondents in their aforesaid capacities are
ordered to pay the plaintiff’s costs of suit on the scale as between
attorney and client.’
L MPATI DP
CONCUR:
MARAIS JA
MTHIYANE JA
CLOETE JA
JONES AJA