(Civil Jurisdict io n) 2 4 FEB 2U25
REGISTR'r' 2
BETWEEN:
MANSFIELD SCOTT INVESTMENTS LIMITED
--
067,
APPLICANT
AND
BARCLAYS BANK ZAMBIA PLC RESPONDENT
Coram: Siavwapa JP, Chishimba and Patel, JJA
On 1gth & 24 th February 2025
Fo r the Ap plicant: Mr. L. M wam ba & M r. M. Chu ngu
Messrs. M wamba & M ilan Advocates
For the Respo nde nt: Mr. R. Mwa nza
Messrs. Ro bert & Partners
RULING
Patel, JA, delivered the Ruling of the Court
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Cases Referred to:
1. KV Wheels and Construction Limited and Others v Development Bank of
Zambia- SCZ Appeal No. 123 of 2016
2. Bidvest Food Zambia Limited, Chipkins Bakery Suppl ies (Pty) Limited , Crown
National (Pty) Limited, Bidfood Ingredients (Pty) Limited, Bidvest Group
Limited v. CAA Import and Export Limited- SCZ Appeal No. 56 of 2017.
3. Hermanus Philipus Steyn v Giovanni Ruscone Sup Ct Appl No. 4 of 2012
4. KV Wheels Constructio n Lim ited v Invest Trust Bank Pie - SCZ/8/29/2021
5. Kekelwa Samuel Kongwa vs Meamui Georgina Kongwa - SCZ/8/05/ 2019 .
6. Zlatan Zlatakkoauronotivic v Stanbic Bank Limited - SCZ/08/14/ 2020
7. John Kawadilu Kalenga v Mususu Mambo Kalenga -Caz Application No.35 of
2019
8. Philip v Barclays Bank Pie (2022) Q.B. 578
9. Barclays Bank Pie v Quincecare Limited & Another (1992) ALL ER 363
10 . Shreeji Investments Limited v ZANACO Pie -SCZ Appeal No. 143/20009
11. First National Bank v Libyan Investments Limited - CAZ Appeal No. 64 of
2020
12. Barclays Bank Pie vs Jeremiah Njovu & Others- SCZ/8/21, SCZ [2019]
Rules and Legislation Referred to:
1. The Court of Appeal Act No.7 of 2016
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1.0 INTRODUCTION
1.1 This is the Ruling in respect of a Notice of Motion for leave to appeal the
Judgment of this Court dated 13 th June 2024 to the Supreme Court of
Zambia pursuant to Section 13 (3) (a) and (c) of the Court of Appeal Act
2016 1 •
1.2 The Applicant commenced this matter in the High Court against the
Respondent by Writ of Summons and statement of claim seeking th e
following reliefs:
1) Special damages for economic loss due to the Respondent's negligent
misrepresentation and its failure to carry out its fiduciary duties owed
to the Appellant in its capacity as the Appellant's banker;
2} In the alternative, a declaration that the Respondent assumed the
role of an escrow agent to the Appellant and proceeded to act
outside its escrow mandate and in breach of its fiduciary duties as an
escrow agent, causing the Appellant financial loss, thereby making it
liable for special damages for economic loss;
3} General and exemplary damages for negligence;
4) And interest and costs.
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1.3 The lower Court considered the evidence on record and found that the new
signatories to its bank account, were nominated by th e Applicant itself. The
lower Court further concluded that the Applicant had not establish ed its
case on a balance of probabilities and dismissed all its cla ims with costs.
1.4 Dissatisfied, the Applicant subseque ntly appealed to this Court, and we
rendered our Judgment on 13 th June 2024, (now the subject of leave to
appeal) by which we dismissed the appeal with costs to the Respondent.
1.5 The Applicant has moved this Court seeking leave to appeal to the Supreme
Court of Zambia on four (4) grounds as stated in the intended
Memorandum of Appeal.
2.0 NOTICE OF MOTION
2.1 The Motion was filed on 26 th June 2024 with an affidavit in support sworn
by one Titus Nyirongo, in his capacity as Accountant in the Applicant
company.
2.2 The deponent has averred that following the Judgment of this Court, a copy
of which w as exhibited and marked 'TNl', the Applicant is desirous of
appealing to the Supreme Court and exhibited and marked 'TN2' and 'TN3'
are cop ies of the proposed Notice of Appeal and Memorandum of Appeal
respectively.
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2.3 The intended grounds of appea l are as follows :
Ground 1
The lower Court erred in law and fact by holding that the Respondent was
not negligent when it honoured the instructions issued by the authorized
signatories to the account to pay the various payees until it was put on
notice.
Ground 2
The lower Court erred in law and in fact when it held that where a Bank
receives instructions in accordance with the mandate, the duty of the bank
is to simply carry out, the instructions promptly and that the bank is not
concerned with the risks of the paying instructions.
Ground 3
The Court of Appeal erred in law and in fact by holding in paragraph 8.31 of
the Judgment that the Respondent had no reasonable grounds of believing
that the payments were being fraudulently made by the authorized
signatories.
Ground 4
The lower Court erred in law and in fact by holding that the Bank was on
firm ground when it declined to give viewing rights to the appellant or bank
statements which are only availed to authorized signatories.
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2. 4 The depon ent avers, that on the advice of Coun se l, the intended appeal
raises points of la w of public importance that transcen d the parties to t his
action.
2.5 It is further deposed that the ext en t of a Bank's duty in cases such as t he
o ne in casu, w here there is misappropriation of funds by an authorized
signatory of a customer, is o ne w hose determination wi ll inte rest every
Bank and all its cu stomers, particu larly those that appoint signatories to
oversee t heir accounts.
2.6 The deponent has furth er averred th at th e issue as to whether a customer
ca n have access to its bank statements and internet banking, even where it
has appointed signatories, also has a public signif ica nce as Banks and
Customers alike will benefit from the gu ida nce of the Supreme Court.
2.7 The Applicant also placed reliance on its ske leton arguments filed in
suppo rt of the Notice of Motion. We have fully interrogated these and wi ll
reference them where appropriate in th e analysis section of our Ruling.
2.8 The App licant also fil ed its skeleton argu ments in reply dated 11 th Feb ru ary
2025 whic h we have fully considered and w hich in fact reiterate or lend
force to its argu ments in support of t he Motion.
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3.0 THE RESPONDENT'S OPPOSITION
3.1 The Respondent opposed the Motion and pla ced reliance on its affidavit
and skeleton arguments filed on 2nd December 2025. In similar manner, w e
have interrogated these and will reference them where appropriate in t he
analysis section of our Ruling.
3.2 The main issues raised by the Respondent in opposing the Motion for leave
to appeal to the Supreme Court are that the proposed appeal does not
raise a point of la w of public importance, nor does it have prosp ects of
success.
4.0 THE HEARING OF THE NOTICE OF MOTION
4.1 At the hearing of the Motion, Counsel for th e Applicant placed reliance on
its heads of argument in support and those filed in reply. It was argued that
there had been negligence on th e part of the Respondent, more so that it
had been made aware of the business transaction entered into by the
Appellant. It was the combined submissio n that the proposed appeal had
raised important points of law of public importance which deserve to be
pronounced upon by the Supreme Court.
4.2 Counsel Mwanza placed entire reliance on its opposing process and
submitted that the applicant had not met the threshold as prescrib ed and
was not deserving of the grant of leave to appeal.
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5.0 CONSIDERATION OF THE NOTICE OF MOTION
5.1 We have careful ly considered the application together wit h the entire
record of motion and the intended grounds of appeal. We have also
considered the affidavits and skeleton arguments which have been referred
to in paragraphs 2 and 3 above .
5.2 The ma in issue for determ ination is, as we see it, straight forward. Has th e
Applicant demonstrated that leave to appeal to the Supreme Court ought
t o be gran t ed based on th e proposed grounds of appeal set o ut in
paragraph 2 above as read with section 13 {3) (a) (c) and (d) of th e Cou rt of
Appeal Act 1 . The Applicant contends t hat the int ended appea l has ra ised
points of law of public importance which transcend the interest of the
Parties to the actio n, that there are reasonable prospects of success and
that it is in the interest of justice, that th e leave sought is granted.
5.3 It is trite that leave to appeal to th e Supreme Cou rt may only be granted if
this Court is satisfied that at least one of the cond it ions in Section 13 of the
Act is satisfied . Section 13 (3) of the Court of Appea l Act No. 7 of 2016 1
provides as follows: -
"{3} The Court may grant leave to appeal where it considers that-
(a) the appeal raises a point of law of public importance;
(b) it is desirable and in the public interest that an appeal by th e
person convicted should be determined by the Supreme Court;
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(c) the appeal would have a reasonable prospect of success; or
(d} there is some other compelling reason fo r the appeal to be heard."
5.4 The cru cial question before us is w heth er th e Applicant s have met the
threshold in Section 13 (3) of the Court of Appeal Act 1 . We will now
exa min e t his M oti on to determ ine w hether it has met th e est ab lished
bench m ar ks.
Issue of Public Importance
5.5 We are alive to the threshold required to d ischarge th e argument that the
appeal has raise d an issue of pu bli c impo rtance. We place prem ium on the
decision of t he Supreme Cou rt in t he case of KV Wheels and Construction
Limited and Others v Development Bank of Zambia 1 in which the Apex
Court, cited w ith app roval, t he ca se of Bidvest and Four Others v CAA
Import and Export Limited 2 • Thi s decis ion has est abli shed th e m ini mum
t hreshold t o be met by a litiga nt, inte nding to seek leave t o appea l t o t he
Supreme Court of Zam bia, comm only referred to as t he Bidvest case.
5.6 In t he KV Wheels 1 case, th e Supre me Co urt stated as fo llows:
"In the Bidvest case, we explained quite clearly that for a point of
public im portance to provide a basis for granting leave to appeal, it
ought to be a point of law- an arguable point of law. We stated as
fo llows: Two fin al points on section 13 (3) (a). First, it is always critical
to bear in mind that under section 13 (3) (1), the three different facets
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of the qualifying criteria for leave to be granted must be satisfied.
These are: (i) a point of law; (ii) of public importance; and (iii) raised
in the appeal.
We went further to explain in that case that an appeal anchored on
findings of fact alone, even if it is demonstrated that those findings
were perverse or not borne out of evidence, does not qualify as
raising a 'point of law' in the first instance. An ordinary finding of fact
ipso facto fails the test on that account alone. "
5.7 In our Judgment, we addressed the same cardinal issues, which the
Appellant wants the Supreme Court to pronounce itself on. It is clear from
the perusal of the intended Memorandum of Appea l, that the intended
appeal is grounded on findings of fact which in terms of the KV Wheels 1
case does not qualify as raising a 'poin t of law.'
5 .8 It is notoriously obvious th at to cast the net on an issue of public
importance, it must affect a wider audience and not just the litigants. The
Sup reme Court of Kenya, in the case of Hermanus Philipus Steyn v
Giovanni Ruscone3, gave guidance on the meaning of a matter of general
public importance. It is noteworthy that the Kenyan Supreme Court clarified
that for a matter to be one of general public importance, the matter must
be of wider public significance, it should be based on uncertain points of
law which must transcend beyond the rights or interests of the parties to
the dispute. (emphasis ours.)
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5 .9 In our jurisdiction, the Apex Court has clarified the meaning of the phrase
"a matter of general public importance' in t he case of KV Wheels
Construction Limited v Invest Trust Bank Plc4 in the following terms :
"{1} The importance of the matter must be public in nature and must
transcend the circumstances of the particular case so as to have a
more general significance.
{2} Where the matter involves a point of law and that it is for the
common good that such law should be clarified so as to enable courts
to administer the law, not only the case at hand, but other cases in
future."
5.10 Similar sentiments we re expressed by a single Judge of the Supreme Court
in the case of Kekelwa Samuel Kongwa v Meamui Georgina Kangwa 5 when
the Judge stated :
11
.. .for a legal question to be treated as a point of law of public
importance, it must have a public or general character rather than
one that merely affects the private rights or interests of the parties to
a particular dispute. The legal point in issue should relate to a
widespread concern in the body politic the determination of which
should naturally have effect beyond the private interests of the
parties to the appeal. "
5.11 In a recent decision, in the case of Zlatan Zlatakkoauronotivic v Stanbic
Bank Limited 6 the Supreme Court st ated:
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"Therefore, for a legal question to be treated as a point of law of
public importance it must have a public or general character rather
than one that merely affects the private rights or interest of the
parties to a particular dispute; and it must be raised in the appeal."
5.12 In our decision rendered in the case of John Kawabilu Kalenga v Mususu
Mambo Kalenga 7, we rejected the argument that the issue raised grounds
of points of law of public importance. We stated in that case that the
argument did not meet the threshold stipulated in section 13 (3) (a), (c) or
(d}1.
5.13 In casu, we direct our mind to the intended grounds of appeal (cited at
paragraph 2 above). Firstly, it is common cause that reference should not
be made to 'the lower court" as it is the Judgment of this Court, that is
under reference in the Motion. The Applicant refers to the lower Court in
grounds 1, 2 and 4. It would therefore be correct for us to take the
intended grounds of appeal as only being ground 3 which is directed at our
finding in paragraph 8.31 of the Judgment of the Court.
5.14 We must stress and reiterate that mistakes of such a fundamental nature
must lie against the Party who makes them. It is not the place of the Court,
let alone at appellate level, to correct blatant errors.
5.15 Even overlooking the error noted above, the Applicant canvasses the
argument that leave to appeal, is critical so that the Apex Court may
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pronounce itself on novel areas of the Banker/Customer relationship and
the duty owed by a Bank to its customers, more so, on an account which is
opened for a specific purpose only. To th is extent, it has argued that the
Bank ought to make reasonable inquiries and as such, t he matter of a bank
mandate, is of public importance and transcends the interest of the Parties
to the action.
5.16 While the argument may, on the face of it, have an ingenuous ap peal and
public importance feature, we are of the considered opinion that there is
no point of law that has been raised which warrants the Supreme Court to
pronounce itself on. At best, the Applicant is attempting to challenge
findings of fact which were arrived at by the lower Court and upheld in our
Judgment. It is critical to note that the Bank was not found to have
abrogated or violated any normal banking duty that it was mandated to
perform . The Bank wa s also not found to be negl ige nt, an issue strongly
canvassed by the Applicant.
5.17 In th e cited Bidvest case, the Apex Court also revea led its mind on issues
wh ich could be viewed as raising a point of law of public importance. Th e
Supreme Court stated as follows:
"Second as regards the issue of whether every novel point should be
viewed as raising a point of law of public importance and thus
satisfying the threshold for the grant of leave to appeal, we must
state that novelty of a matter does not in itself and of itself turn a
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matter into one that raises a point of public importance within the
intendment of section 13 {3} (a) of the Act. " (emphasis added).
5.18 It is fundamental in banking pract ice t hat before a customer alleges breach
of duty or obligation on the part of the Bank, it must prove that th e Bank
owed it that duty in the first place. The Applicant has argued that on the
facts at hand, the Bank ought to have made reasonable inquiries, as it had
been put on notice as to the specific purpose of the money. In casu, it was
established by both the documentary evidence and of th e witnesses, that
the Appl icant by its letter of 8th February 2016, changed signatories to
operate its USD Account. The Bank, in compliance with the resolution
allowed the newly appointed signatories to transact the said account, until
the Applicant, by its lett er issued someti me in June 2016, instructed the
Bank to revert to the original signatories. We are at a loss now, as we were
when we delivered our Judgment, as to wh ich duty the Bank is supposed to
have breached . This is a finding of fact. It is not a point of law, novel or
otherwise that needs det erm in at ion by the Supreme Court.
5.19 We have also in our said Judgment ful ly considered the authorities referred
to by the App licant, and wh ich it has de ployed to fu rt her canvass the
argument that the Apex Court must pronounce it self on th e aspect of duty
of care owed by a Bank to its customer. We have considered the cases of
Philips v Barclays Bank 8 and Barclays Bank v Quincecare Limited 9 and in
our considered opin ion, we were able to dist inguish the facts in casu to the
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facts of the cases cited. On this point, we refer to paragraphs 8.18 to 8.22
of our Judgment.
5.20 We did equally pronounce on the duty of care, owed by a Bank t o its
Customer. We also referenced a decision of the Supreme Court rendered in
the case of Shreeji Investments Limited v Zambia National Commercial
Bank Plc 10, whic h confirmed banking practice which allows a duly
authorized signatory to operate th e account in question. Again, this
evidence was not challenged. The deponent at page 7, pa ragraph 6 of the
Affidavit in support has averred as follows:
" That the extent of a Bank's duty ;n cases such as this one where
there is misappropriation of funds by the authorized signatory of a
customer is one whose resoluUon will interest every Bank and in fact
every customer particularly companies/corporates that appoint
signatories to oversee their accounts."
5.21 We are of the cons id ered view th at this is a completely flawed argument. A
prudent customer does not appoint signatories to oversee their account,
signatories are mandated to manage and operate the account. Th is onus
cannot be placed on th e Bank in the face of no evidence to support it.
5.22 We also referred to our decision in th e case of First National Bank v Libyan
African Investments Company Limited 1 1, in wh ich the Bank was found
liable as it had been given actual notice, in writing of two fraudsters,
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presenting themselves as officia ls of the Respondent. In casu, the Appl icant
itself authored a change of banking mandate and appointed new
signatories to the Account.
5.23 The factual argument that the Bank, having been put on notice as to the
purpose of the account and the maize contract between the App licant and
its business associates, and that it ought to have managed the account as
per the business, is an argument that has already been dismissed and is not
a point of law. Paragraph 8.37 of our Judgment refers.
5.24 With regard to ground four of the intended grounds of appeal, that the
Court erred in law and in fact by holding that the Bank was on firm ground
when it declined to give viewing rights to the Applicant, the evidence
before the Court was clear. There was no request in writing by the
Applicant that it had asked for such viewing rights or access to the internet
banking platform. There being no evidence that it made the request, there
is no issue of the same having been denied by the Bank. We refer to
paragraph 8.40 of our Judgment. Again, th is is a classic attempt to create a
hypothetical issue to warrant a pronouncement by the Supreme Court
under the gu ise of public importance and prospect of success.
5.25 Th e Applicant has continued to assert that all the grounds of appea l are
points of law, without actually supporting that statement. As we have
noted, the findings challenged are findings of fact and grounded in the
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evidence placed before the trial court and which we saw no reason to
disturb.
Prospect of success
5.26 We must emphasize that all the intended grounds of appeal are findings of
fact, grounded on evidence before the court. There are no prospects of
success. We are also alive to the guidance of the Apex Court, in the case of
Barclays Bank Pie vs Jeremiah Njovu & Others 12, when dealing with the
1
principles of 'reasonable prospect of success on an application for leave to
appea l, and in rende rin g judgment Judge Mutuna emphasized as fol lows:
"Although section 13(3} (c) of the Court of Appeal, when dealing with
prospects of success, provides a stand-alone basis for granting leave
to appeal. It should, however, be resorted to very sparingly. It is not
every appeal that stands a nominal or notional chance of success that
qualifies to be heard by the Supreme Court. It must have real
prospects of success. My view is that the proposed appeal does not
present sufficient prospects of real, eventual success to justify the
intervention of the Supreme Court".
5.27 We are therefore of the settled view that the intended grounds of appeal
do not amount to a legal question or issue to be treated as points of law or
public importance. It is also trite that facts are foundational, and if those
facts have not been established before the lower Court, what magic wand
did the App licants expect this Court to waive, or indeed does it expect the
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Supreme Court to use, in arriving at conclusions any different to the one s
already established.
5.28 Having analyzed the motion, we are of the considered view that the issues
only affect the private interests of the Applicant herein and this is its
attempt at re-litigating the same issues. We find no merit in the application
for leave to appeal to the Supreme Court.
We dismiss it with costs to the Respondent to be taxed in default of
agreement.
JUDGE PRESIDENT
F.M. CHISHIMBA A.N. PATEL S.C.
COURT OF APPEAL JUDGE COURT OF APPEAL JUDGE
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