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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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[2022] ZAGPJHC 719
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## Nedbank Limited v Mhlari N O and Others (37766/2018)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 719;
2022 (6) SA 438 (GJ) (22 September 2022)
Nedbank Limited v Mhlari N O and Others (37766/2018)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 719;
2022 (6) SA 438 (GJ) (22 September 2022)
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sino date 22 September 2022
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 37766/2018
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
NO
22
September 2022
In
the matter between:
NEDBANK
LIMITED
Plaintiff
and
PORTIA
KHENSANI MHLARI N.O.
1
st
Defendant
PATRICK
JEALOUSY MALABELA N.O.
2
nd
Defendant
PORTIA
KHENSANI MHLARI
3
rd
Defendant
PATRICK
JEALOUSY MALABELA
4
th
Defendant
LULAMA
BUSINESS ENTERPRISES CC
5
th
Defendant
(REG
NR: 2011/106203/23)
MAMPEPU
PROJECTS CC
6
th
Defendant
(REG
NR: 2002/080738/23))
MASORINI
VULSTASIE (PTY) LTD
7
th
Defendant
(REG
NR: 2003/006349/07)
PATIENCE
LETHABO MLENGANA N.O.
8
th
Defendant
Judgment
Mdalana-Mayisela
J
1.
The Plaintiff is a commercial bank registered and
incorporated in South Africa in terms of the company laws of the
Republic. It
has instituted an action against the Defendants arising
from the written loan agreement that was concluded between the
Plaintiff
and Patrick Malabela Family Trust (IT752/01) (“Trust”)
on 7 May 2013 at Boksburg. In concluding this loan agreement,
the
Trust was represented by its trustees, who are cited as the First
Defendant and the Second Defendant respectively.
2.
On or about 23 April 2013 and 21 June 2014 and at
Hyde Park and Edenvale respectively the Third, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth
and Seventh
Defendants each signed a separate Deed of Suretyship
(“Suretyships”) binding themselves jointly and severally
in s
olidum
with the
trust unto and in favour of the Plaintiff as surety and co-principal
debtors for the due performance of the Trust in terms
of the loan
agreement unto the Plaintiff.
3.
Pursuant to the conclusion of the loan agreement,
a covering bond was registered in the Deeds Office over immovable
property described
as PORTION [....] OF ERF [....] HYDE PARK
EXTENSION [....] TOWNSHIP, REGISTRATION DIVISION I.R, PROVINCE OF
GAUTENG, held by deed
of transfer [....]situated at [....]
T [....] ROAD, HYDE PARK, EXTENSION [....], SANDTON,
JOHANNESBURG (“the
property”) in favour of the plaintiff
as a continuing covering security for all and any amounts advanced,
or to be advanced
by the Plaintiff from time to time for whatsoever
cause arising to or on behalf of the Trust or otherwise owing by the
Trust to
the Plaintiff in terms of the loan agreement and the bond.
4.
The loan amount was the sum of R14,005,700,00
(Fourteen million five thousand and seven hundred rand), and the bond
was registered
for the sum of R16,005.700.00 (Sixteen million five
thousand and seven hundred rand).
5.
The Trust acknowledged itself to be truly and
lawfully indebted to the Plaintiff in the sum of R16,005,700.00
together with interest,
and a further sum of R4,002,000,00 (Four
million and two thousand rand), which was described as the additional
amount. The loan
amount was to be repaid in monthly instalment of
R146,444,39 (One hundred and forty six thousand four hundred and
forty four rand
and thirty nine cents) over a period of 180 months,
subject to alteration as set out in the loan agreement.
6.
The Third, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth and Seventh
Defendants each bound themselves with the Trust in favour of the
plaintiff for repayment
on demand of all amounts which the Trust may
now or at any time owe the Plaintiff, its successors in title or
assigns. There were
no conditions suspending the operation of the
suretyships or obligations arising from the loan agreement.
7.
The Third to Seventh Defendants renounced the
benefit of excussion which means that these Defendants are no longer
entitled to claim
that the Plaintiff first exhaust its remedies
against the Trust before proceeding against them. These Defendants
also renounced
the benefit of division which means that these
Defendants are no longer entitled to claim that their obligations be
divided proportionately
between them, any co-sureties or the Trust.
They also renounced the legal exception of non numeratae pecuniae,
which means that
these Defendants are no longer entitled to claim
that no moneys were in fact paid over to the Trust, the legal
exception of non
causa debiti, which means that these Defendants are
no longer entitled to claim that the principal debtor for which they
undertook
liability does not exist, the legal exception of errore
calculi which means that these Defendants are no longer entitled to
claim
that the amount which is claimed has been incorrectly
calculated and the legal exception of revision of accounts which
means that
these Defendants are no longer entitled to claim that the
Plaintiff revises its accounts in respect of their or the Trust’s
indebtedness. These Defendants have renounced all other exceptions
which might or could be pleaded in defence to the payment of
their
obligations or any part thereof, with the full force and effect of
the exceptions, these Defendants declare themselves to
be fully
acquainted.
8.
The Plaintiff has pleaded in the particulars of
claim both in their original form and amended form that the Trust
breached the loan
agreement by being in arrears by five months
totalling the sum of R827 667,21. As at 1 May 2018, the Trust was
indebted to the
Plaintiff in the sum of R12,316,632,37 with interest
accumulating. In terms of the suretyship agreement, the indebtedness
of the
Trust is axiomatically the debt of these Defendants.
9.
In claiming judgment for the principal sum
outstanding from the loan account in the sum of R12,316,632,37, the
Plaintiff also wants
an order that the immovable property be declared
executable, and a writ of execution be authorised for the immovable
property,
be attached and sold in execution.
10.
The First to Sixth Defendants have defended the
action and filed a special plea and a plea. The special plea was
concerned with
the non-joinder of a third Trustee, by the name of
Patience Mlengana. This Trustee was subsequently joined by the
Plaintiff as
the eighth Defendant and this special plea fell by the
wayside. On the merits, the Defendants did not dispute the material
averments
of the Plaintiff’s claim as pleaded in the
particulars of claim and the amended particulars of claim. The
Defendants raised
legal objections pertaining to breach of the
provisions of the Trust Deed. The thrust of the defence is that the
loan agreement
is invalid because it was concluded in circumstances
where the Trust Deed was breached. According to clause 4.4 of the
Trust Deed,
at all relevant times, no less than 3 and no more than 5
persons may be appointed as Trustees to the Trust.
11.
The Defendants have pleaded that during the
period 2 March 2010 to 4 October 2018, an insufficient number of
Trustees as contemplated
by clause 4.4 of the Deed of Trust were
appointed and the remaining Trustees, Malabela and Mhlari were not
able, as a matter of
law, to bind the Trust to any agreement. As a
result of the alleged invalidity, any suretyship concluded pursuant
to an invalid
loan agreement is invalid.
12.
The plaintiff replicated to this defence and
pleaded that the conduct of the First and Second Defendants is such
that the Trust
is estopped from raising lack of authority of the two
Trustees and the absence of the required number of Trustees in terms
of clause
4.4 of the Deed of Trust as a defence. For instance, they
inter alia provided the Plaintiff with a resolution purporting to
have
been adopted in the meeting of Trustees held on 19 March 2013 to
the effect that the First and Second Defendants are authorised
to
complete and sign all documents incidental to the conclusion of the
loan agreement on behalf of the Trust.
13.
In countering the Defendants’ defence of
lack of authority, the Plaintiff has pleaded ostensible authority to
bind the Trust
by the First and Second Defendants, and that the Trust
as principal debtor must be held liable. The Plaintiff has pleaded
that
the Trust is estopped from denying the authority of the First
and/or Second Defendant to have concluded the loan agreement.
14.
As a cautionary measure, the Plaintiff amended
its particulars of claim and pleaded in the alternative an enrichment
claim. The
Defendants are defending that claim as well and filed a
plea to it and a counter claim. The Defendants’ counter claim
is
brought by the First, Second and Eighth Defendants as Trustees.
The counter claim is centred around an allegation that the First
and
Second Defendant were not authorised to conclude the loan agreement
and register a covering bond on behalf of the Trust. The
order sought
by these Defendants in the counter claim is that the Plaintiff be
ordered to cancel the covering bond. A legal defence
of prescription
of Claim B, the enrichment claim has been raised by the Defendants.
However, they did not lead evidence to discharge
their evidentiary
burden on this point, that the claim has prescribed. The defence of
prescription to Claim B is dismissed. This
is however of no moment,
because if I find for the plaintiff in the main action based on the
loan agreement and the suretyship
agreements concluded, it is
unnecessary for me to consider the alternative claim of undue
enrichment.
15.
What is astonishing about the Defendants’
counter claim is that it is brought by the same Trustees who
represented to the
Plaintiff that they were authorised to act for and
on behalf of the Trust, and now make an about turn and allege that
they were
not authorised. What is further astonishing about this
counter claim is that despite making these averments in the counter
claim,
these Defendants elected not to testify or call any witness at
the trial. They closed their case without calling any witness, whilst
the Plaintiff called Mr Perie Kemp (“Kemp”), an employee
of the plaintiff in its recoveries division, stationed in
Paarl,
Western Cape Province as a witness. His evidence was by and large
unchallenged. I find that the Defendants’ counter
claim is a
nonstarter, and I find that the Defendants have failed to discharge
the onus of proof resting upon them in so far as
the counter claim is
concerned. The counter claim is accordingly dismissed.
16.
This leaves me only with the main action by the
Plaintiff. It is common cause from the pleadings that the merits of
the Plaintiff’s
claim are uncontested. What is in dispute is
whether the First and Second Defendants had the necessary authority
to bind the Trust,
and if they did not, whether the doctrine of
ostensible authority binds them. Central to this question is whether
the Trust could
be legally bound to the loan agreement and
obligations arising from the loan agreement despite that when the
loan agreement was
concluded, only two Trustees were appointed
instead of three.
17.
In
Land and Agricultural
Bank of South Africa v Parker & Others
(2005) 2 SA 77
(SCA),
the Court had the occasion of examining the circumstances where the
Trust has acted or purported to act on behalf of the Trust
when the
required number of Trustees in terms of the Trust Deed has not been
achieved. In
Parker
supra, the Court held that the Trust suffers from an incapacity which
precludes it from acting on its behalf when the required
number of
Trustees is not achieved. In such circumstances, the Trust estate was
not capable of being bound.
18.
It is common cause in this matter that only two
Trustees instead of three were in office when the loan agreement was
concluded.
In such circumstances the question that remains is whether
this defect rendered the loan agreement concluded on its behalf
invalid,
thus excusing the Trust from liability from the Plaintiff.
The Plaintiff has pleaded that the Trust should be estopped from
relying
on invalidity by virtue of the fact that only two and not
three Trustees were in office at the time, by virtue of the doctrine
of ostensible authority. The Plaintiff has submitted that the
following facts should be taken into account. First, that this Trust
was established by the Second Defendant, who was also a Trustee and
beneficiary of the Trust together with children born from the
marriage with the Third Defendant. The Second Defendant appointed the
Third Defendant as the Trustee, who was also entitled to
enjoyment of
all benefits of the Trust’s assets. Thus, this Trust was a
typical family Trust. The duty to appoint a third
Trustee rested with
the Second Defendant who failed to do so. The third Trustee was
appointed at a later stage after the loan agreement
had been
concluded.
19.
The First and Second Defendants had represented
by the resolution submitted to the Plaintiff that they were the
representatives
of the Trust authorised to act and bind the Trust.
The plaintiff submits that it could not have been expected of the
Plaintiff
to have known that the Trust Deed was not complied with. It
was within the First and Second Defendants’ knowledge that only
two and not three Trustees were in office at the time of the
conclusion of the agreement.
20.
In
Parker
the
Court found that it is the responsibility of the Trustees to ensure
that the formalities provided in the Trust Deed are complied
with.
Outsiders are in no position to know that internal formalities have
been complied with. Where it is evident that the Trust
form has been
abused, the Courts should intervene to avoid injustice. In this case,
not only did the Trust receive the loan amount
from the Plaintiff,
but for several years repaid in terms of the loan agreement an amount
in excess of R8 million in monthly instalments.
The Trust continued
to pay and subsequently debit orders were return, which rendered the
loan account to be in arrears. According
to the evidence of Mr Kemp,
which was unchallenged, as from June 2018 no further payments were
received after the debit orders
were returned.
21.
In
Investec Bank Limited v
Adriaanse and Another NNO
(2014) 1 SA 84
(GNP),
the court found that outsiders dealing with Trusts are obliged to
observe provisions of the Trust Deed, but the primary responsibility
for compliance with the Trust Deed rests with the Trustees. In this
matter the Second Defendant failed to ensure that he appoints
the
third Trustee at the relevant time. In my view the failure by the
Defendants to lead evidence at the trial was fatal in that
they lost
the opportunity to explaining why the resolution was submitted to the
Plaintiff to the effect that the First and Second
Defendants were the
authorised representatives of the Trust, and that they were
authorised to act on behalf of the Trust, contrary
to the Deed of
Trust.
22.
The Defendants have relied on the
Parker
judgment supra in their heads of argument as authority for the
proposition that the Trust is not bound by the terms of the loan
agreement due to its invalidity
. Parker
supra is authority for the proposition that the Trust could not be
bound where there were fewer than the required number of Trustees
in
terms of the Deed of Trust, except where the statute provides
otherwise. The Defendants have however stressed in their heads
of
argument, and correctly so that the
Parker
decision left open the question of ostensible authority and estoppel.
It is not clear whether these defences are legally available
to the
party such as the Plaintiff in the circumstances of this case. In my
view, I see no legitimate basis upon which it can be
asserted that
these defences cannot be invoked in the case of the action of the
Trust, where the other party was lured to believe
that internal
formalities were complied with when in fact that was not so. I am
satisfied that on the undisputed facts, the Trust
should be estopped
from relying on lack of authority to contract. The loan agreement is
binding on the Trust, and the Third, Fourth,
Fifth, Sixth and Seventh
Defendants are equally bound as sureties to the debts owed by the
Trust to the plaintiff. I am also satisfied
that the Trust breached
the loan agreement by failing to honour its obligation to pay monthly
instalments as they became due. The
Defendants have also not provided
evidence to the contrary as to why the property should not be
declared executable.
23.
Judgment is accordingly granted in favour of the
Plaintiff against the First, Second, Third, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth and
Seventh Defendants
as follows:
1.
Payment of the amount of R12,316,632,37;
2.
Interest at prime lending rate applicable from
time to time from 2 May 2018 to date of final payment, both days
inclusive.
3.
That the immovable property described as PORTION
[....] OF ERF [....] HYDE PARK EXTENSION [....] TOWNSHIP,
REGISTRATION DIVISION
I.R, PROVINCE OF GAUTENG, held under deed of
transfer [....] situated at [....] T [....] ROAD, HYDE PARK,
EXTENSION [....], SANDTON,
JOHANNESBURG, be declared specially
executable.
4.
That a writ of execution is authorised in terms
whereof the aforesaid immovable property may be attached and sold in
execution.
5.
The First, Second, Third, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth
and Seventh Defendants are ordered to pay the costs of suit on the
scale as between
attorney and client.
6.
In respect of the Defendants’ counter
claim, the counter claim is dismissed with costs.
MMP
Mdalana-Mayisela J
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng
Division
(
Digitally
submitted by uploading on Caselines and emailing to the parties)
Date
of
delivery:
22 September 2022
Appearances:
On
behalf of the Plaintiff:
Adv JM Killian
Instructed
by:
O’ Connel Attorneys
On
behalf of the Defendants:
Adv L Hollander
Instructed
by:
Faber Goertz Ellis Austen Inc
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