The 80 year old Senator Aguy Clement Georgias (Georgias)
founded the plaintiff company in 1975. He is the majority shareholder and Board
Chairman and talks fondly of his “business empire” which unfortunately he said
is crumbling because of his involvement with the first defendant, Russell Karimazondo
(Karimazondo), his son born out of wedlock.
Of course ...
The 80 year old Senator Aguy Clement Georgias (Georgias)
founded the plaintiff company in 1975. He is the majority shareholder and Board
Chairman and talks fondly of his “business empire” which unfortunately he said
is crumbling because of his involvement with the first defendant, Russell Karimazondo
(Karimazondo), his son born out of wedlock.
Of course he has his wife, daughters, and other sons, but
it is Russell Karimazondo, whom he did not know of until a few years ago -“about
four, five or seven years ago.” Then, Russell Karimazondo had pulled up in a
flashy Mercedes Benz ML motor vehicle at his Trinity Engineering offices and
introduced himself as his son.
From the very beginning, Senator Aguy Clement Georgias'
evidence is at variance with that of Russell Karimazondo who said that he first
communicated on the telephone with his father in 1994 when he was doing the
first year of his Bachelor of Business Administration at Solusi University.
Thereafter, Senator Aguy Clement Georgias assisted in paying his University
fees but he engaged him physically for the first time in the year 2000 as his
father, although he had seen him before.
Senator Aguy Clement Georgias says he was quite happy to
meet his son, who made an immediate impact because he was friendly with his
daughters when his other boys from previous marriages did not relate well with
his daughters. He was quick to point out that when one has children out of
wedlock that is a problem presumably because they do not get along well with
the mainstream family. He trusted Russell Karimazondo as he was optimistic that
he would look after his other children well after his demise; he being a
brilliant young businessman. He was ready to make him an Executive in his
business empire.
Russell Karimazondo wanted assistance from him to secure
licences for his 20 recharge cards kiosks dotted around town which did not have
licences. Senator Aguy Clement Georgias quickly stepped in by approaching
Minister Chombo to expedite the licences - which were issued. His son returned
with a request for assistance to meet Minister Goche in an effort to get a
business deal from Reward Kangai, the head of Netone Cellular. Although he
assisted, nothing came out of that.
Karimazondo was not done yet.
He came back with a request to be assisted in meeting
Minister Mohadi who was thought to be in a position to persuade James Makamba
of Telecel to give the young businessman some money. Although he again took his
son to him, Minister Mohadi was not impressed by the story and again nothing
came out of that.
Subsequent to that, Russell Karimazondo then made a
proposal to him for the sale of airtime cards and vouchers which resulted in an
Agreement, exhibit 1, being signed between them on 6 February 2011. The witness confirmed that his signature is
appended on that Agreement he having signed on behalf of the plaintiff. Russell
Karimazondo signed on behalf of the second defendant.
The preamble to that Agreement recites that the second
defendant's core business is the wholesale and retail of cellular airtime
recharge cards/vouchers; that it had secured a roll-over facility with the
third defendant to access re-charge cards/vouchers against suitable collateral
of $1million; and that the plaintiff was “willing to permit a mortgage bond to
be registered” over its property in favour of the third defendant as security
for the roll-over facility. It further records that the bond would be a second
bond after that in favour of People's Own Savings Bank (POSB) and that in
return the parties would “profit share in the sale of the stock allotted by
Telecel to Maxifix.”
In terms of clause 2 of that Agreement:
“2. Bond Registration
Trinity shall do all such things and sign all such
documents as may be required to enable a second bond in the sum of US$1 million
to be registered over the property in favour of Telecel. The said bond shall
have a fixed term of 12 months (the Bond Tenure) commencing from the date of
registration. Maxifix shall bear all costs associated with the bond
registration.”
In terms of clause 4, in consideration for the collateral
security, the second defendant was, inter alia, to pay the plaintiff $50,000= within 15 working days from the
date of initial drawdown, $500,000= within 8 weeks after the initial drawdown
and service the first bond in favour of People's Own Savings Bank (POSB) by stop order.
Senator Aguy Clement Georgias denied ever signing the power
of attorney to pass a mortgage bond, either in favour of People's Own Savings
Bank (POSB) or the third defendant stating that the signature on the power of
attorney used by Wintertons to register the bond for the third defendant, while
it is strikingly similar to his, is not his but a forgery.
He did not attend at Wintertons to sign it although they
are his legal practitioners of longstanding…,.; They also did the conveyancing
for his house. When he got to know that they had registered the bond on his
property in favour of the third defendant he did not deem it necessary to take
any action against them. He did not find it necessary to report what was
clearly a criminal offence to the police as he was legally advised that it was
not for him to do so but for the third defendant which has been prejudiced.
The witness stated that the existence of a bond in favour
of the third defendant was not discovered by himself but his wife and daughter.
When the two made the discovery, they went about investigating the issue only
to discover that the first defendant already owed the third defendant money
which was now secured by the mortgage bond and not that he needed the bond to
secure future advances.
When the existence of the third defendant's bond was
brought to his attention, he says he confronted the first defendant demanding
to know why, as his son, he could do such a thing to him when he had not met
the conditions of their Agreement, namely, to pay him the sums set out in the
agreement and to allow access to the books of the second defendant among
others. He then pressured the first defendant to pay off the debt owed to the
third defendant in order to have his property released from encumberment.
It was at that point that the first defendant admitted
having forged the witness's signature which admission he demanded in writing.
The first defendant was taken to Harare Central Police Station to depose to an
affidavit, exhibit 2, making that confession. The affidavit, which was sworn to
on 22 January 2012, reads, in relevant part, thus:
“I, RUSSEL KARIMAZONDO, ID NO. 29-162678 M 47, of No. 163
Robert Mugabe Road, Harare, do hereby make oath and swear that:-
1. I am the Director of Maxifix (Private) Limited of 163
Robert Mugabe Road, Harare.
2. I confirm that I forged the signatures of Senator Aguy
Clement Goergias to pass two mortgage bonds in favour of Telecel Zimbabwe and
People's Own Saving Bank amounting to US$1,250,000=.
3. I also forged Senator Georgias's signatures on the
purported minutes of the Board of Directors of Trinity Engineering (Private)
Limited authorising the registration of the said bonds.
4. The mortgage bond numbers are 04504/2011and 01533/2011
respectively.
5. For all intents and purposes, it was my intention to pay
off the bonds but failed to do so because of Mr James Makamba of Telecel who
did not perform his side of the transaction as agreed.
6. I apologise to Senator Georgias for my misdemeanour.”
This is interesting indeed.
A person confessing to having committed a crime of forgery
was, even as he made the confession, still blaming someone else for his crime. I
shall return to deal with the credibility of the first defendant later.
But for now, let it suffice that Senator Aguy Clement
Georgias stated that when the first defendant intimated that he wanted to make
arrangements to pay, he advised him to go to his lawyers to do that. The
engagement with the first defendant ended, according to the father, with the
latter vowing that he never wanted to see his son again.
He has kept his word.
Senator Aguy Clement Georgias denied receiving any payment
from the first and second defendants whom he said failed to meet any of the
conditions in Exhibit 1. He denied ever attending at the offices of the third
defendant to inquire about the status of the account maintaining that it is his
wife and daughter who did that. He denied standing as surety and co-principal
debtor for the due performance of the second defendant's liability to the third
defendant.
Under cross-examination, Senator Aguy Clement Georgias made
quite surprising statements regarding the entire dispute. Although both his
summons and his exhibit 2 (Russell Karimazondo's affidavit) state categorically
that the power of attorney and resolution of the Board of Directors used to
register the People's Own Saving Bank (POSB) bond were forged, he was adamant
that the People's Own Saving Bank (POSB) bond registration was proper and there
was no forgery involved at all.
In fact, he said that the Bond has been paid off through an
arrangement he had with CBZ Bank. He literally disowned the contents of his
summons and declaration.
But then life can never be that easy.
A party to proceedings is bound by its pleadings. In
addition, it is trite that a litigant cannot be allowed to approbate and
reprobate a step taken in the proceedings. He cannot have it both ways: S v
Marutsi 199 (2) ZLR 370 (S).
The basis of the plaintiff's claim is that both bonds were
registered on the strength of forged documents and the pleadings were not
amended. It cannot turn around when it suits it, to accept one bond as having
been lawfully registered and persist on the other having been a fraud. It is
either both were unlawfully registered or not. It is not easy to accept the
testimony of a prevaricating witness, and, ordinarily, adverse inferences have
to be drawn against such a witness.
Counsel for the plaintiff, of course, tried to give that
evidence a new colour in his closing address stating that the plaintiff
abandoned the claim against People's Own Saving Bank (POSB) for other reasons
than what was stated by the witness.
Counsel cannot give evidence.
Although he claimed to have discovered a crime and to being
very angry with Russell Karimazondo, someone he never wanted to see again, he
did not find it necessary to report the crime. He left that to the third
defendant, a party which was enjoying the benefit of security which it is
seeking to enforce. While he accused Wintertons of fraudulently registering a Bond
on his property, he says he did not raise any complaint with them and did not
find it necessary to sue them because he never dealt with them in the first
place and saw no need to “bother them.”
In the end, what was left was his self-serving denial of
his signature and the confessions of his son who had made it a point to change
his story each time an opportunity presented itself.
On the signature itself, he was requested by counsel for
the third defendant to provide a specimen of the signature from the witness box
- which he did. He admitted that the signature on exhibit 1, the Agreement with
the second defendant, is his, so is the one on the discovery affidavit and the
two of them have a striking resemblance not only with the specimen produced in
court but also with the signature on the power of attorney used to register the
bond.
To my untrained eye, there is absolutely no difference
between the signature on the power of attorney and the other three signatures
attributed to Senator Aguy Clement Georgias - they are the same.
In that regard, I find it quite strange that Senator Aguy
Clement Georgias, whose entire case hinges on him successfully disowning the
signature on the power of attorney, with all his years as a businessman of
repute, and with the benefit of very competent legal representation, did not
bother to enlist the services of a handwriting expert to assist him in his
endeavours. Only an expert would have authoritatively dealt with the issues of
signatures and told us if his signature was forged, not the mere say so of an
extremely conflicted witness.
An adverse inference must be drawn against the plaintiff's
failure to adduce the evidence of an expert to resolve the disputed signature.
As I have said, to me, the questioned signature resembles
that of Senator Aguy Clement Georgias. His failure to bring an expert can only
mean that he was aware that the expert would confirm that he signed the power
of attorney - as I hereby find, as a fact, that he did.
I am fortified in my conclusion by the manner in which the
whole saga unfolded.
As I have said, it is not Senator Aguy Clement Georgias, of
his own volition, who stood up to challenge the Bond in favour of the third
defendant. In fact, as reference to the letters from his legal practitioners,
dated 1 and 5 August 2011, will show, long after the bond had been registered,
he was happy to seek to harvest from the effects of the registered Bond. It is
his wife and daughter who took the leading role in raising a red flag. Although
Senator Aguy Clement Georgias did not say so in his evidence, according to his
summary of evidence, his wife received a summons from People's Own Saving Bank (POSB).
When she went to investigate the issue, she discovered there was another bond
registered on the property in favour of the third defendant. Problems then
started for Senator Aguy Clement Georgias, who was quick to point out himself
at the commencement of his testimony that if one has children out of wedlock
that creates problems.
I would not want to speculate, but one cannot resist the
conclusion that when questioned about the Bond which was benefiting only his
newly found son, Senator Aguy Clement Georgias was forced to disown it. It is
for that reason that this matter has come up. How else can one explain his
insistence on enforcing an Agreement which could only bear fruits upon
registration of the bond, long after the Bond had been registered on 7 March
2011? I am here referring to the letters from Gollop and Bank in August 2011,
which incidentally did not complain about his signature in the power of
attorney?
On 1 August 2011, Gollop and Bank, then representing the
plaintiff, complained to Russell Karimazondo thus:
“Senator Goergias advises that he met with you on Thursday
28th July 2011 to discuss the outstanding issues mentioned in our
two previous letters….,. Our instructions are that you undertook to comply with
the payment of $500 000= mentioned under Clause 4(ii) of the principal
agreement by no later than Wednesday 3rd August 2011 and that you
would also ensure that all payments due by Trinity in favour of the POSB as
mention in Clause 4(iii) would be paid up to date. In addition to the above,
you gave an undertaking to afford Trinity's representative access to all your company
records concerning payments that had been received from Telecel as provided for
with reference to Clause 3 and the sub-clauses thereunder forthwith.
We are instructed to write to you to confirm these
arrangements which have been entered into and concluded with you by Trinity on
a purely 'without prejudice' basis, and, more particularly, in an attempt to
keep the agreement alive….,.
In the event that your promised payments are not effected
by the close of business on Wednesday 3rd August 2011our client
instructs us that it shall deem the Agreement violated and that cancellation
take place. Damages arising from the breach are reserved, and, in addition, our
client, in the event that funds do (sic) to it under the Agreement have been
diverted, will rise a complaint of fraud, alternatively, theft by conversation
with the Zimbabwe Republic Police as a criminal complaint. Hopefully this can
be avoided. The delays thus far are completely unacceptable and require
immediate rectification.”
In terms of exhibit 1, the third defendant was only going
to make advances against suitable collateral of US$1 million and the parties
would enjoy “profit share in the sales of the stock allotted by Telecel to
Maxifix” - after registration of the Bond. The plaintiff could thus only claim
as it did in the above letter after registration for the Bond.
On 5 August 2011, Gollop and Bank addressed another letter,
this time to the third defendant, which reads, in part:
“Maxifix approached Trinity with a proposal to share in the
profit of the sale of the recharge cards/vouchers which were to be administered
by Maxifix. The consideration to profit-sharing was dependant upon Trinity
giving authority that its immovable property, 70 Woolwich Road, Willowvale,
Harare be released to Maxifix so that it, in turn, could be handed over to
Telecel who would register a bond over the property equivalent to the amount of
the required security reflected in the principal agreement. Other undertakings
by Maxifix are set out in the agreement attached to this letter.
Trinity advise that Maxifix have breached various terms and
conditions of the agreement between them. In consequence, Maxifix has been put
on terms to remedy its default but thus far has neglected to do so. The Trinity
bond's tenure in terms of clause 2 was for a period of 12 months. It is not
known whether registration of the bond has taken place. Trinity have requested
that steps be taken to cancel the bond which they assert has been registered in
consequence of fraudulent representations, clearly evidenced by the default of
Maxifix coupled with the conduct of the Managing Director…,.
Are you in a position to confirm whether a bond has been
registered in Telecel's favour over Trinity's property? If so, would Telecel
agree (to) the cancellation of the bond and return of title to Trinity?”
Of course, the plaintiff may have been laying the groundwork
for litigation and experienced legal practitioners give away very little, but
rocket science is not required to decipher what was happening here because
there can only be one interpretation that can be assigned to this letter. It is
that the plaintiff was aware that the Bond was either in the process of being
registered or it had been registered hence the need to have it cancelled.
Significantly, there is no mention whatsoever of the signature having been
forged. In fact, the gist of the “fraudulent representations” was not forging
the signature but the default of the second defendant coupled with the conduct
of Russell Karimazondo which prompted the plaintiff to put the second defendant
'on terms to remedy its default.'
I therefore come to the inescapable conclusion that the
plaintiff agreed to the registration of the bond and that Senator Aguy Clement
Georgias signed the documentation to make this possible.
When the second defendant failed to honour its
side of the bargain, and realising what a bad business decision it had made,
the plaintiff resorted to disowning the Bond.