Moyo case: High Court rules in favour of Old Mutual boar

19 May, 2022 - 00:05 0 Views
Moyo case: High Court rules in favour of Old Mutual boar Former Old Mutual CEO, Peter Moyo

eBusiness Weekly

Bloomberg

The Gauteng Local Division of the High Court on Monday dismissed, with costs, former Old Mutual CEO Peter Moyo’s application to have Old Mutual non-executive directors declared delinquent and in contempt of court.

The decision, made by Justices Raulinga, Twala and Opperman, is based on hearings that took place in November 2021.

According to a statement issued by the insurer, the court concluded that the directors did not breach their duties to the company.

“On the contrary, once the relationship between the board and Moyo had broken down, the board was not only entitled but obliged to terminate his appointment,” it says.

Mean­while, the court found Moyo guilty of breaching his fiduciary duties to the insurance company. Moyo was suspended with immediate effect in May 2019.

Conflicting interests

According to the insurance com­pany, Moyo was given a notice of termination on June 17, 2019, following a report on Moyo’s relat­ed-party transactions, after vari­ous concerns emerged regarding his conduct relating to conflicting interests.

This includes two decla­rations of ordinary dividends by investment company NMT Capital totalling R115 million in 2018.

Moyo, who is founder and former CEO of NMT, was found to have benefitted to the tune of R30.6 million.

According to Old Mutual, Moyo and his partners shared R84 million, while omitting to pay pref­erence share dividends – valued at R65.4 million at the time – that were due to the insurance com­pany.

“The board terminated Moyo’s contract only after it had concluded, in good faith and on reasonable grounds, that he had been guilty of egregious mis­conduct and could no longer be trusted to serve the best interests of Old Mutual,” says the insurer.

The judgment follows a deci­sion on January 31 dismissing a damages case brought against Old Mutual by Moyo.

The company says the application was made by Moyo following Old Mutual declining his services after an initial court order reinstated him on an interim basis pend­ing the conclusion of his legal proceedings against the company on July 30 2019.

The court found that Old Mutual did not defy the initial court order by preventing Moyo from resuming his position as CEO.

The court also found that Moyo’s employment was lawfully terminated the second time. According to the company, the court found that Moyo failed to produce evidence showing Old Mutual’s wrongful connec­tion to the termination of his employment.

Old Mutual says it is “pleased to put this matter behind [it] after three years of conten­tious litigation and will be focusing on growing the business well into the future, with good governance at all times”.— Bloomberg

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