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[2001] ZASCA 118
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South African Eagle Insurance Company Ltd v NBS Bank Ltd (294/99) [2001] ZASCA 118; [2002] 2 All SA 220 (A) (28 September 2001)
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REPORTABLE
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL
OF SOUTH
AFRICA
Case No: 294/99
In the matter between:
SOUTH AFRICAN EAGLE INSURANCE COMPANY
LIMITED Appellant
and
NBS BANK LIMITED
Respondent
CORAM: NIENABER, MARAIS, SCHUTZ, NAVSA JJA et FRONEMAN AJA
HEARD: 21 AUGUST
2001
DELIVERED: 28 SEPTEMBER 2001
___________________________________________________________________________
JUDGMENT
________________________________________________________________
MARAIS JA
MARAIS JA:
[1] The background to the claims which were
dismissed in the Court a quo and are the subject of this appeal appears
in broad from the judgment of this Court in NBS Bank Limited v Cape Produce
Company (Pty)
Ltd and Others (Case No 281/99) and I shall not repeat it. I
shall refer to the case as the Cape Produce case. The appeal in that
case was
argued the day before the appeal in this case was argued. It goes without
saying that the evidence adduced in either of
the cases cannot be taken into
account in deciding the other but the broad background described in the
judgment in the Cape Produce
case is common to both cases and is also
established by the evidence led in the present case.
[2] Appellant is a short
term insurer which invests large sums of money for which it has no immediate
need. It frequently invests
by depositing money with banking institutions at
agreed interest rates. Sometimes the sums deposited are repayable on call;
sometimes
they are deposited for fixed periods. Respondent is a banking
institution.
[3] On 19 April 1996 appellant drew a cheque for R5 million in
favour of respondent. It was crossed and marked “not transferable”
and “not negotiable” and deposited to the credit of
respondent’s account at First National Bank. It was alleged
by appellant
that it was intended to be a fixed deposit with respondent for a period of six
months at an interest rate of 15%, the
interest payable upon maturity. On the
face of the cheque appeared the words “being Fixed Dep 6 Mnths
@15%”. On the
same day Mr Assante, in his capacity as branch manager of
respondent’s Kempton Park branch, wrote to appellant on an NBS Bank
letterhead in these terms:
“Dear Sir,
FINANCE – R5000 000,00
We hereby confirm that NBS Bank Ltd guarantees to repay the sum of R5000 000,00 (Five Million Rand) on 23 October, 1996 to SA Eagle Insurance Co Ltd upon presentation of this letter.”
The letter was handed to
Ms Pollock, an employee of appellant’s, when she handed over
appellant’s cheque to an intermediary
for delivery to respondent. A
further letter bearing the same date and signed by Assante in his capacity as
branch manager was also
delivered to appellant. The details are unimportant.
What is of importance is that it related to the interest component of the
deposit and is headed “confirmation of your investment” and the
opening sentence is “Thank you for investing with
us.” On 23
October 1996 respondent repaid the capital sum of R5 million to appellant by
drawing two cheques for R3,5 million
and R1,5 million respectively and paying
them into appellant’s bank account. On the same date respondent drew a
further cheque
for R376 090,34 for the interest owing to appellant and paid it
into appellant’s bank account. A deposit slip reflecting that
these
cheques had been paid into that account was sent to appellant. I shall call
this the first transaction.
[4] On 8 May 1996 appellant drew a cheque for R5
million in favour of respondent. It was crossed in the same manner and was
credited
to respondent’s account. It was intended by appellant to be a
fixed deposit with respondent for 12 months at an interest rate
of 15.10% p a.
On the face of the cheque appeared the words “being Investment @
15.10%.” In exchange a letter dated
7 May 1996 in identical terms to the
first of the two letters mentioned in para [3] (save that the date of repayment
was to be 7
May 1997) was given to appellant. A document broadly similar to the
second of the letters referred to in that paragraph and headed
“confirmation of your investment” was also delivered to appellant.
It was unsigned but was on NBS Bank stationery.
This was the second
transaction.
[5] Three more transactions took place in substantially the same
manner. The third was on 10 June 1996 and involved a deposit of
R10 million.
The fourth was on 21 November 1996 and involved a deposit of R5 million. The
fifth was on 5 December 1996 and also
involved a deposit of R5 million. The
relevant documentation was fundamentally the same as in the first two
transactions. I shall
return later to such variations as there were.
[6] As
happened in the Cape Produce case, the sums invested by appellant and deposited
in respondent’s bank account found their
way into the corporate saver
account of Nel, Oosthuizen & Kruger (“NOK”) and thence to third
parties. Appellant
has been paid the interest due in respect of the second,
third, fourth and fifth deposits but has not been repaid the invested capital.
It was that, and mora interest thereon, for which it sued in the
Witwatersrand Local Division of the High Court. It failed in its claim. Hence
this appeal
with leave granted by the learned trial judge, Van Oosten
J.
[7] A number of alternative causes of action were pleaded by appellant in
respect of each of the four transactions. In the view I
take of the matter it
is necessary to consider only two of them. The main claim in each case was
based upon the alleged existence
of an oral agreement between appellant and
respondent in terms of which appellant agreed to deposit the relevant sum of
money with
respondent’s Kempton Park branch for a specified period at an
agreed interest rate and respondent undertook to repay the capital
together with
the interest thereon on the date of maturity of the investment. Respondent was
alleged to have been represented by
one Jones and/or by one Bradley and/or by
Assante. The alternative claim in each instance was based upon the letters of
“guarantee”
signed by Assante, a prototype of which I have quoted in
paragraph [3]. They were said to constitute acknowledgments of debt upon
which
appellant was entitled to sue.
[8] The trial judge found that neither of
those causes of action had been established. As to the oral contracts pleaded,
he assumed
in appellant’s favour that those who purported to act on its
behalf had its authority to do so, but held that none of the persons
alleged by
appellant to have had authority to represent respondent, and to have done so by
concluding such contracts, did in fact
have such authority or did in fact enter
into such contracts. While accepting that appellant’s representatives
intended to
so contract, he concluded that no one purporting to represent
respondent “subjectively intended to conclude an agreement of
investment
by which the [respondent] would be bound”. That, so he continued,
precluded a finding that there had been a “direct
meeting of minds
(‘wilsooreenstemming’)”. An alternative contention advanced
by appellant, namely, that there
was at least an objective appearance of
consensus for the existence of which respondent was responsible, was rejected
both because
the pleadings were thought not to provide an adequate foundation
for the contention and because those responsible for creating the
appearance of
consensus were not actors whose conduct could be laid at respondent’s
door.
[9] An additional reason given by the trial judge for the dismissal of
the contractual claim was appellant’s failure to plead
or prove that NOK
had respondent’s authority to accept deposits on its behalf from investors
intending to invest with it (as
opposed to NOK) and that in as much as the
cheques were delivered by persons acting as appellant’s agents, not to
respondent,
but to NOK by whom “they were deposited directly into
[respondent’s] bank account as an investment by NOK for the credit
of
their Corporate Savers’ account with [respondent],” the consequence
was that “consensus ad idem was never reached.”
[10] In
dealing with the claims based on the alleged acknowledgments of debt signed by
Assante, the trial judge assumed in appellant’s
favour, but without
deciding, that the terms of the letters were sufficiently clear to constitute
acknowledgments of debt. However,
he dismissed the claims on four grounds. The
first was that appellant had neither pleaded nor proved “an acceptance of
the
acknowledgments of debt” animo contrahendi. The second was
that it had been formally admitted by appellant that Assante had neither express
nor implied authority to sign an
acknowledgment of debt on behalf of respondent.
The third was that a resort by appellant to estoppel in its replication could
not
succeed because there was no evidence of any representation made by
respondent to appellant that Assante was authorised to sign an
acknowledgment of
debt. The fact that Assante was respondent’s branch manager was
considered, in itself, to be of no consequence.
The fourth ground was that the
defence of non causa debiti was available to respondent as there was no
agreement of investment with it and therefore no indebtedness to which the
acknowledgment
of debt could have applied. In this Court counsel for respondent
supported these findings and sought to provide yet further fortification
for
them.
[11] The alleged contracts.
The first contention here was
that the evidence did not establish that the persons named by appellant in its
particulars of claim
as having represented appellant and respondent respectively
did in fact have any dealings with one another which could be said to
have
culminated in the coming into existence of the oral contracts pleaded.
Alternatively, so it was argued, they had no authority
to enter into the
contracts.
[12] The next contention was that in so far as appellant sought to
rely upon agreements constituted by conduct or “a doctrine
of quasi-mutual
assent”, it was not open to it to do so, first, because no such case had
been made in the pleadings and secondly,
because there was no evidence to
support it. It was submitted that there was no evidence that appellant placed
any reliance upon
any conduct of Assante (still less of respondent) in issuing
the written guarantees because those who were alleged by appellant to
have
contracted with respondent on its behalf (Mr Lober, appellant’s investment
manager, and Ms Pollock, appellant’s
investment administration clerk) did
not do so. Lober was unaware of the existence of the guarantees until December
1996. Ms Pollock
had simply received the guarantees and filed them away.
Alternatively, it was argued that even if there had been reliance upon the
guarantees issued by Assante, that would not have availed appellant because it
was admitted that he had no authority, express or
implied, to issue them and the
doctrine of quasi-mutual assent cannot be invoked by reason of the conduct of an
admittedly unauthorised
representative of one of the parties to the putative
transaction. Reliance upon conduct by the principal (respondent) is essential
and no such conduct had been pleaded or proved.
[13] Next it was contended
that even if the existence of the contracts had been established, appellant had
not performed its obligation
under the contracts and could therefore have no
claim against respondent. Appellant’s obligation was to deposit the
relevant
sum with respondent at its Kempton Park branch. It was submitted that
it had failed to do so in that the cheques intended for the
purpose were not
delivered to respondent at its Kempton Park branch but diverted by persons for
whose conduct respondent was not
responsible to NOK and deposited in
respondent’s bank account not by appellant but by NOK. It was argued that
there was no
evidence that Assante knew of those deposits, or gave any
instructions as to how they were to be dealt with, or that, if he did,
he had
any authority from respondent to do so.
[14] The alleged acknowledgments
of debt.
The first contention raised by respondent relates to the true
interpretation of the relevant documents. It was submitted that there
is no
express acknowledgment of an existing indebtedness by respondent and that, at
best, the document adverts to the indebtedness
of some undisclosed third party.
The use of the word “guarantees” is the foundation for the
submission.
[15] The second contention echoed the finding of the Court a
quo that, if they were acknowledgments of debt, they were not accepted by
appellant animo contrahendi prior to respondent’s repudiation of
Assante’s authority. The factual basis for the submission was that
appellant’s
board of directors were unaware of the letters. So was its
managing director, Mr Martin. Lober made the four investment decisions
which
give rise to these claims on the strength of what he had been told by Jones, an
intermediary, and not on the strength of any
of Assante’s letters of which
he too was unaware. Neither he nor Martin expected to receive any such letter.
Ms Pollock received
the letters only after each of the investment decisions had
been made and simply filed them away without any intention of
“accepting”
the acknowledgements of debt which, in any event, she
had no authority to do.
[16] The third submission was that, as the Court a
quo found, there was no causa debiti for the acknowledgements of
debt, appellant having failed to prove the existence of the underlying contracts
of investment.
[17] Before dealing with the issues raised I must sketch the
specific circumstances in which the payment into respondent’s bank
account
of the cheques drawn by appellant came about. Mr Jones was an accountant in
private practice. He was the brother-in-law
of Martin (appellant’s
managing director). While Lober was away on leave Jones telephoned Martin
during April 1996 and told
him “that NBS was looking for some
money”. He was asked to fax to Ms Pollock details of the investment
opportunity
and he did so. His letter dated 18 April 1996
reads:
“Dear Miss Pollock
Re: NBS Bank
We confirm that client required R2 mil – R5 mil tomorrow and is offering the following:
(Details were set out of the
interest rates offered for deposits for 6 months and 12 months
respectively.)
Kindly contact Tiny Jones ---------- or Steve Swanepoel
---------- in this regard. ----------“
[18] Martin was shown
the letter by Ms Pollock. He authorised Ms Pollock to deposit R5 million with
respondent for six months at
an interest rate of 15% per annum and he endorsed
the letter to that effect. She requisitioned an appropriate cheque drawn in the
manner described earlier. Mr Bradley, a broker, arrived to collect the cheque
bearing the letter of guarantee described in para
[3]. She read the letter and
was satisfied that it was “a confirmation, a guarantee that NBS would
repay a capital amount
of R5 million on 23 October at maturity”. She knew
Assante who had telephoned her on a previous occasion to obtain
appellant’s
banking details so that respondent could repay appellant a
previous deposit which had matured. She handed Bradley the cheque. It
was
deposited, as it had to be because of the manner in which it had been drawn and
crossed, in respondent’s bank account but
it was then credited in
respondent’s books of account to NOK’s corporate saver account. Ms
Pollock subsequently received
the further letter referred to in para [3]. In
due course both the capital and the interest were paid to appellant by cheques
drawn
on respondent’s bank account.
[19] On his return from leave Lober
was told of that transaction. Prior to receipt by appellant of the
payments of capital
and interest referred to in para [18] appellant
purported to make two more investments with respondent. Two more were made
thereafter. On each of these four occasions Jones approached Lober to enquire
whether appellant had any money which it wished to
invest. He told Lober that
the money could be placed with either the NBS or Syfrets (another well-known
financial institution) and
gave details of the rates on offer. The modus
operandi followed thereafter remained essentially the same. However, in all
four instances a further document was sent to appellant. It
was also a document
headed “confirmation of your investment” but it was not signed by
Assante. Nor did it relate to
the capital sum deposited by appellant. It
related to the interest component of the deposit. I should explain here that
the nominal
rate of interest payable upon the deposit was credited to appellant
in advance so that appellant would enjoy the benefit of interest
upon interest
for the period of the deposit. This particular document was the confirmation of
the investment of that nominal interest.
In each instance it ended with the
statement:
“This confirmation is null and void unless validated below by an NBS terminal.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------”
In
each instance there appeared below the broken line in an obviously computer
terminal-generated format details of the investment
of the interest component of
the deposit. In two of the four instances there were additional letters of
“confirmation of your
investment” signed by Assante which were in
similar terms to those referred to in para [3].
[21] Some attempt was made by
respondent to rebut appellant’s assertion that it believed itself to be
contracting with respondent.
The argument rested upon the same kind of
considerations as were relied upon for the same proposition advanced in the Cape
Produce
case. In addition, there was reference to a previous transaction
between the parties involving a third party (referred to as the
Federal Credit
transaction). That transaction, so it was argued, amounted to appellant
investing its money with a third party via
respondent and it was suggested that
appellant had done essentially the same here. Notwithstanding these
considerations and for
substantially similar reasons to those given in the Cape
Produce judgment I consider it to be in the highest degree unlikely that
appellant would have been content to lend millions of rands to a third party
whose identity was entirely unknown to it. The evidence
given by those who
testified on appellant’s behalf was inherently probable and it is
abundantly clear that they genuinely thought
that the investments were being
made with respondent and that, objectively regarded, they had good reason to
believe that those purporting
to represent respondent saw the matter in the same
light.
[22] However, it is equally clear that the high command of
respondent was unaware of what was being done in its name. Respondent’s
stance is that it did not in fact or in law contract with appellant; that any
contrary belief which appellant may have had was not
brought about by the doing
of anybody for whose actions it (respondent) can be held accountable; that the
sums of money deposited
in its bank account were not deposited by appellant in
performance of the contracts of deposit but by third parties for the credit
of
NOK; that it (respondent) did not accept the deposits as having emanated from
appellant but from NOK; that it was contractually
obliged in terms of the
corporate saver scheme to pay out the funds standing to the credit of
NOK’s account when requested
to do so by NOK; and that it had paid out
those funds in good faith and could not be required to, in effect, pay them out
again
to appellant. That respondent finds itself faced with these claims
entitles it to considerable sympathy but that is of course not
conclusive of the
issues raised.
[23] The contracts of deposit.
Some preliminary
observations need to be made. Assante was joined in the litigation as a third
party by respondent. So too were
Bradley and Stephenson. They were brokers to
whom Ms Pollock had handed the cheques and from whom she received the written
“guarantee”
signed by Assante. By consent, the actions against them
were separated and postponed sine die. None of them testified in this
action.
[24] The probabilities are overwhelming that Assante was the
instigator of the overtures made by Jones to appellant and that he intended
to
create the impression that appellant would be investing with respondent. His
contemporaneously given letters of “guarantee”
were obviously
designed to foster that impression. He plainly purported to speak for
respondent and it is neither here nor there
which particular representative or
representatives of appellant’s it was who may be said to have concluded
the contracts.
It is as plain as a pikestaff that, objectively regarded, they
were concluded.
[25] Respondent’s attempt to confine appellant
strictly to its characterisation in its pleadings of the contracts as oral and
as having been concluded by the persons named in the particulars of claim is
not, in my opinion, justified in the circumstances of
this case. The requests
for trial particulars filed by both parties were extensive and the replies given
fleshed out the respective
stances of the parties in considerable detail. It
became quite apparent during the trial that appellant’s case upon the
contracts
rested upon a mosaic of letters, telephone calls, conversations, and
conduct. Some of the actors named in the particulars of claim
such as Jones,
Lober and Ms Pollock were involved throughout all four transactions. Some
played an overt role in some of the transactions
but not in others. Thus,
Bradley delivered Assante’s letter of “guarantee” and
collected appellant’s cheque
in two of the transactions. Stephenson did
so on the other two occasions. Assante was the eminence gris throughout.
Whether the objectively plainly discernible resultant contractual consensus is
rightly described as constituting an oral
contract (in contradistinction to one
in writing) or, more accurately, as being partly oral, partly in writing, and
partly tacit
in so far as elements of the apparent consensus rested on conduct,
is of little moment. Respondent was not prejudiced by such broadening
of the
issues as occurred. They were fully canvassed at the trial. The entire premise
upon which the trial was conducted by respondent
was not that there were no
contracts of deposit at all, but that they were not with respondent, and if they
purported to be, they
were not binding upon respondent because of an absence of
authority on the part of those who purported to represent respondent.
[26] I
have borne in mine that respondent was armed with a formal admission by
appellant that Assante had no actual authority (express
or implied) to issue the
“guarantees” which he did and that he knew it. It is also true that
the evidence established
that he had no authority to contract in the terms
alleged by appellant. However, it does not follow from either that he did not
purport to do so on respondent’s behalf. A distinction must be drawn
between a case in which an unauthorised person does not
even purport to contract
on behalf of a principal with a third party, and a case where he or she does so
purport. In the first class
of case the absence of authorisation is irrelevant;
there is simply no contract either seemingly or in truth. In the latter class
of case, there is seemingly a contract but in truth none because of the lack of
authority. Where, as here, the initial question
being addressed is whether the
contracts of deposit were seemingly concluded, the fact that Assante had no
authority to conclude
such contracts is only relevant to the enquiry to the
extent that it might throw some light on whether it is probable that he would
have purported to contract. But the lack of authority is in itself inconclusive
as to whether he purported to contract. Nor, as
I see it, does it avail
respondent to say that even if there was seeming contractual consensus, it was
not its conduct which gave
rise to the appearance of contractual consensus but
Assante’s. When the question of Assante’s ostensible authority to
contract is considered respondent will of course be entitled to raise that
contention.
[27] The reason for the distinction is this. Where two parties
negotiate with one another directly and not through representatives
they will be
bound if, objectively regarded, they appear to have reached contractual
consensus. That one or other of the parties
did not subjectively intend to do
so will not matter. The objective theory of our law of contract dictates that
result. Each party
is entitled to rely upon the objective manifestations of
consensus which emanate from the other. And where each party is responsible
for
those which emanate from him or her it seems right that such should be the
result. However, where one of them purports to be
acting in a representative
capacity but has in fact no authority to do so, the person whom he or she
purports to represent can obviously
not be held bound to the contract simply
because the unauthorised party claimed to be authorised. That person will only
be held
bound if his or her own conduct justified the other party’s belief
that authority existed.
[28] Did respondent hold Assante out as having
authority to accept deposits of the magnitudes here involved on the terms on
which
they were accepted? That is of course a question of fact to be decided on
a balance of probability. It is not reducible to the
question, posed in
vacuo, of whether a branch manager of a business has apparent authority to
bind the business nor is it a question which lends itself to
a generalised
answer. The branch manager of a fast food outlet cannot be regarded, simply
because of his appointment as such, as
having been held out by the proprietor of
the chain of outlets as having authority to open a new branch, to buy or hire
premises
for it, or to engage staff for it. That is because these activities
are so patently not within the ordinary purview of such a manager.
On the other
hand, the manager of a business the sole activity of which is the buying and
selling of used motor vehicles may well
be justifiably thought to have been
empowered by the proprietor to negotiate purchases and sales for that is the
manager’s
publicly proclaimed raison d’etre. (Reed N.O.
v Sager’s Motors (Pvt) Ltd 1970 (1) SA 521 (R., A.D.)) In each case,
it is the particular facts which will provide the answer.
[29] Here we have
this situation. Respondent is a well-known financial institution which conducts
business countrywide through a
network of branches in South Africa’s
cities. It became known to the public at large as a building society which had
existed
for many years before its reincarnation as a bank. Its activities
remained fundamentally the same thereafter. It solicited funds
from the public
on which it paid interest. It lent money to the public in return for the
payment of interest. Much of that lending
was on the security of mortgage bonds
registered over property which had been acquired by the borrower and paid for
with the money
borrowed. It advertised extensively. The very essence of its
business was borrowing (for that is what the provision of savings
accounts, the
acceptance of deposits of money on call or for fixed periods, and the like
amount to in law) and lending money. The
establishment of branches was plainly
to facilitate convenient access by the public to it as an institution and to
encourage the
public living in the area concerned to make use of conveniently
situated branches. These branches were the public face of the institution
and
they were intended by respondent to be so regarded. There was no suggestion by
respondent that its branches were not intended
to be available to the public for
certain classes of lending and borrowing and that it made that generally known.
There was no publicly
proclaimed or advertised policy of dealing with
transactions of a particular magnitude only at its head office. The branches
were
held out by respondent as the places to which anyone wishing to deposit
money with it could and should repair. The branch manager
was held out to be
the person clothed with the most authority at a branch by his very designation
as branch manager. Inherent in
all that is that branch managers were being held
out as authorised to accept deposits whatever their magnitude.
[30] Indeed,
particulars for trial furnished by respondent make it clear that Assante, as
branch manager, did in fact have authority
to accept deposits of more than R1
million. It is true that his authority to do so was qualified in that he could
do so “only
on [respondent’s] quoted terms for deposits of R1
million or less” and that he “was obliged to report any deposits
of
more than R1 million to [respondent’s] treasury department at its head
office in Durban”. But these were limitations
and obligations of which
prospective depositors would be unaware and the central fact remains that he was
in fact permitted and authorised
to deal with the public in accepting deposits
of the magnitude here in question and to communicate to them the terms upon
which such
deposits would be and were accepted. Having actually clothed him
with general authority to represent to the public that he spoke
for it in
accepting deposits, respondent cannot shelter behind the fact that he exceeded
limitations placed upon the precise extent
of his authority in doing so, or the
fact that he failed to report the deposits to the treasury department, or that
he failed to
follow internally prescribed standard procedures, or to use its
standard documentation. (Cf National and Overseas Distributors Corporation v
Potato Board 1958 (2) SA 473 (A) at 479C-480E.)
[31] In the nature of
things it will seldom, if ever, be the case that, where no actual authority
exists, but the principal is held
to be liable on the basis of ostensible
authority, the principal’s holding out of the agent’s authority will
have extended
to each and every term of the contract which the agent has
purported to conclude. It is sufficient for successful invocation of
the
doctrine that the conduct of the principal was such as to entitle the party
concerned to believe that the person purporting to
act on the principal’s
behalf was authorised to transact a contract of the kind in
question.
[32] Appellant, through its functionaries, accepted that Assante
was authorised to accept these deposits by virtue of the circumstances
sketched
above and respondent created those circumstances. Its belief was reasonable.
It was reasonably foreseeable that, on the
strength of those circumstances,
members of the public would assume that Assante had authority to accept deposits
of this kind.
Assante must therefore be held to have had respondent’s
ostensible authority to conclude the contracts of deposit.
[33] The argument
that those who purported to make these deposits on appellant’s behalf have
not been shown to have had authority
to do so must be rejected. The evidence of
Martin and Lober was that appellant’s board of directors had approved
recommendations
by the investment committee of appellant regarding the limits to
be set upon how much money could be placed with particular banks
and that,
provided the investment manager operated within the parameters set by the board,
he could use his discretion. That evidence
could not be seriously challenged
and it is clear that the deposits made with respondent did not exceed those
parameters.
[34] The contention that respondent did not receive the deposits
from appellant because they were diverted and credited to NOK’s
account
requires consideration. It seems to me to be unsound. There can be no talk of
appellant’s cheques having been stolen
before respondent, through its
bank, could collect the proceeds of them, or of the proceeds being stolen before
respondent had received
them. The cheques had been drawn in such a way that no
one other than respondent could present them for and obtain payment. They
were
crossed, marked “not negotiable” and “not transferable”,
and made payable to respondent. They were
deposited in respondent’s bank
account; the proceeds were collected by respondent’s bank and credited to
respondent’s
account. As a fact, therefore, respondent received the
deposits from appellant and from no one else. Respondent proceeded to credit
NOK’s Corporate Saver account with an equivalent sum of money because NOK
claimed (falsely) that the proceeds of the cheque
were intended to be invested
with it. That is respondent’s misfortune, not appellant’s. Neither
appellant’s cheque
nor appellant’s money was stolen. If anything,
it was respondent’s money (or, more accurately, respondent’s
bank’s money) that was stolen from it by false pretences. (Cf
R v Stanbridge 1959 (3) SA 274 (C) at 277F-279E.)
[35] In my view
appellant’s claims based upon the oral contracts of deposit should have
been upheld
[36] The alleged acknowledgments of debt.
Are the
letters indeed acknowledgments of debt which can ground an additional
independent cause of action? On the face of them
they are just that.
(Adams v SA Motor Industry Employers Association 1981 (3) SA 1189 (A)
at 1198A-1199C.) They use the words “confirm” and
“repay” which connote both an existing indebtedness
and that
respondent is the debtor. The document is invested with more significance than
a merely confirmatory letter or a receipt
for its presentation is required when
repayment is made. These factors outweigh the use of the potentially ambiguous
word “guarantees”.
It is a word which, while often used in the
context of guaranteeing the performance of a contractual obligation by a third
party,
is also frequently used as a synonym for “warrants” or
“undertakes”. In the entire context of these letters
in which no
reference at all is made to any third party, the latter meaning is clearly the
meaning intended to be conveyed. That
being so, the documents are
acknowledgments of debt which can independently ground a cause of action.
(The Law of Negotiable Instruments in South Africa, 5 ed, Cowen and
Gering, p 28 n 97.)
[37] The submission that the acknowledgments of debt had
not been accepted animo contrahendi by appellant cannot be upheld. They
were delivered to appellant against delivery by appellant of its cheques. Ms
Pollock had been
instructed to attend to the implementation of the agreements of
deposit on appellant’s behalf. Her evidence was that she read
the
letters, found them to be in accordance with what had been agreed, and filed
them. The clear implication is that, if they had
not been, she would have
queried them. They were obviously filed for future use when the deposits fell
due for repayment. The cheques
were thereafter permitted to be paid (in the
sense that payment of them was not stopped by appellant) and, in so far as
acceptance
may have been necessary (as to which see Volkskas Spaarbank Bpk v
Van Aswegen [1990] ZASCA 57; 1990 (3) SA 978 (A) at 985F-986D), it is idle to suggest that
there was no acceptance by respondent of them as acknowledgments of
debt.
[38] It is so that Assante had no actual authority (express or implied)
to issue the letters and that he knew that, but the question
whether he had
ostensible authority to do so remains. For the reasons given earlier in this
judgment when the contracts pleaded
were considered, I conclude that he did have
ostensible authority to issue and sign the letters. That seems to me to be a
necessary
and inescapable consequence of the finding that he had ostensible
authority to accept the deposits. To conclude that he had ostensible
authority
to bind respondent by contracting to accept a deposit but none to undertake to
repay it in writing amounts to unjustifiable
hairsplitting.
[39] The final
contention, namely, that no underlying causa debiti existed for the
acknowledgments of debt, must, in my view, also fail. The onus of establishing
that no antecedent causa debiti existed was upon respondent. To hold
otherwise would render appellant’s right to rely upon the written
acknowledgments of
debt as an independent cause of action nugatory. Not only
has it failed to discharge that onus, but, as I have found earlier in
this
judgment, appellant has proved the contrary. Appellant was therefore also
entitled to succeed in its claims on the strength
of the acknowledgments of
debt.
[40] The appeal is upheld with costs, including the costs of two
counsel. The orders of the Court a quo are set aside and the following
orders are substituted for them:
1. Defendant is ordered
to pay to plaintiff:
1.1 R5 million and mora interest thereon at the rate of 15,5% per annum from 9 May 1997 to date of payment;
1.2 R10 million and
mora interest thereon at the rate of 15,5% per annum from 11 June 1997 to
date of payment;
1.3 R5 million and mora interest thereon at the rate
of 15,5% per annum from 22 November 1997 to date of payment;
1.4 R5 million
and mora interest thereon at the rate of 15,5% per annum from 6 December
1997 to date of payment.
2. Defendant is ordered to pay the costs of the action, including the costs of two counsel.
_______________________
R M MARAIS
JUDGE OF APPEAL
NIENABER JA )
SCHUTZ
JA )
NAVSA JA )
FRONEMAN AJA ) CONCUR