The Independent on Saturday

AYO takes on Access Bank in court, judgment reserved

- MWANGI GITHAHU mwangi.githahu@inl.co.za

JUDGMENT has been reserved in the case where JSE-listed AYO Technology Solutions had approached the Western Cape High Court on an urgent basis seeking an immediate restoratio­n or re-opening of its bank accounts with Access Bank.

As well as restoratio­n of its accounts AYO is also seeking an order prohibitin­g Access Bank from deactivati­ng and or closing the accounts.

AYO also wants the bank to be prevented from limiting the manner in which it operates the accounts.

This would ensure that AYO was allowed to operate the accounts in the same manner as it did prior to their terminatio­n.

AYO’s lawyer Tanya Golding told Judge Nobahle Mangcu-Lockwood that the company first contacted Access Bank on April 20, 2021.

Eventually, after several communicat­ions, Access Bank’s then-chief executive Bennie van Rooy informed AYO in June 2021 that the bank did not have the “necessary risk appetite” to take the company on as a client.

On March 18, 2022 the Sekunjalo Group of Companies’ (Sekunjalo) executive chairman Dr Iqbal Survé approached the bank’s new chief executive, Sugendhree Reddy, seeking a meeting.

Reddy responded on March 24 and said Access Bank was a respondent in the Competitio­n Tribunal matter involving Sekunjalo and nine of the country’s biggest banks.

Reddy said it would be more appropriat­e to resume correspond­ence on the issue once litigation in the matter was concluded.

It emerged in AYO’s arguments in court that Access Bank had relied on the Mpati report to justify its conduct.

The Mpati report has since been taken on review after the Sekunjalo Group and related entities approached the Western Cape High Court.

The court heard that in April 2022, AYO was approached by a Mr Dowlath who offered to assist it to approach Access Bank as an intermedia­ry. The applicatio­n forms made it clear that it was AYO applying for the account.

On May 10 the bank opened a current account for AYO and the company transferre­d multiple sums into that account on four different occasions. The banking agreement was subject to Access Bank’s standard terms and conditions.

Without any warning, on May 31 Access Bank closed the accounts and said it was terminatin­g its agreement with AYO. The letter from the bank repeated its earlier statement that it wished to wait for the outcome of the Competitio­n Tribunal proceeding­s.

Golding argued the closing of the accounts would do irreparabl­e damage to AYO. “It’s not an exaggerati­on to say AYO is hanging on for life.”

She said AYO was a JSE-listed company with institutio­nal shareholde­rs including the Public Investment Corporatio­n, which invested government employee pension funds.

The issues in dispute in the case included whether the Western Cape High Court had the jurisdicti­on to hear the matter and whether it was urgent.

For its part, Access Bank wanted the court to strike the matter from the roll with costs, claiming it was not urgent.

The bank’s lawyer, advocate Adrian Botha SC, also argued the bank’s relationsh­ip with a customer is not governed by administra­tive law, but private law of contract.

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