Close This website uses modern features that are not supported by your browser. Click here for more information.
Please upgrade to a modern browser to view this website properly. Google Chrome Mozilla Firefox Opera Safari
your legal news hub
Sub Menu
Search

Search

Filter
Filter
Filter
A A A

Counting the cost of bad financial advice

Publish date: 16 October 2017
Issue Number: 747
Diary: IBA Legalbrief Africa
Category: Consumer

Financial advisers have to take out indemnity insurance before they may give advice to potential investors. But what happens when the insurance company has an exclusion clause in place that automatically rejects crucial claims – claims brought by clients against brokers who advise them to invest in Ponzi schemes, for example? Marisa Oosthuizen, who recently won a case against her financial adviser via a crucial decision in the Free State High Court, was in exactly this position after her broker said she should put her money in a scheme that collapsed, just days after she did so. He advised her to put her funds in the scheme even though she had made it clear to him that she wanted a safe investment because she could not afford to lose ‘even two cents’ of the funds earmarked for her son’s upbringing. The judgment, interpreting the insurance company’s exclusion clause, ruled that the company had to pay. But as legal writer Carmel Rickard explains in her A Matter of Justice column on the Legalbrief site, the insurers have since filed notice that they want to appeal, saying one compelling reasons to do so is that this is the first time the South African courts have adjudicated on the issue.

A Matter of Justice

Judgment

Notice of application for leave to appeal

We use cookies to give you a personalised experience that suits your online behaviour on our websites. Otherwise, you may click here to learn more, or learn how to block or disable cookies. Disabling cookies might cause you to experience difficulties on our website as some functionality relies on cookie information. You can change your mind at any time by visiting “Cookie Preferences”. Any personal data about you will be used as described in our Privacy Policy.