Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 837South Africa
Doola v Firtsrand Bank Ltd trading inter alia as RNB Private Bank and as FNB (2020/13723) [2022] ZAGPJHC 837 (27 October 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
27 October 2022
Headnotes
Summary
Judgment
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## Doola v Firtsrand Bank Ltd trading inter alia as RNB Private Bank and as FNB (2020/13723) [2022] ZAGPJHC 837 (27 October 2022)
Doola v Firtsrand Bank Ltd trading inter alia as RNB Private Bank and as FNB (2020/13723) [2022] ZAGPJHC 837 (27 October 2022)
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sino date 27 October 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 2020/13723
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
27/10/2022
In
the matter between:
DOOLA,
RIYADH
Applicant
And
FIRST
RAND BANK LTD trading inter alia as RMB PRIVATE
BANK
and as FNB
(Registration
Number: 2011/009111/07)
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MOORCROFT
AJ:
Summary
Documents and
recordings that are referred to in pleadings or affidavits must be
discovered when they are relevant to the dispute,
unless they are
privileged.
Order
[1]
In this matter I make the following order:
1.
The
applicant’s application to strike out paragraphs of the
respondent’s answering affidavit in this application is
dismissed;
2.
The
applicant is ordered to pay the costs of the striking out application
on the scale as between attorney and client;
3.
The
application in terms of Rule 35(12) is dismissed;
4.
The
applicant is ordered to pay the costs of the application on the scale
as between attorney and client, such costs to include
the reserved
costs of 25 April 2022;
[2]
The reasons for the order follow below.
Introduction
[3]
This is an application for discovery in terms of Rule 35(12) of
documents
referred to in the founding affidavit and replying
affidavit in the main application between the parties. The applicant
(“the
surety”) in this interlocutory application is the
respondent in the main application and the respondent (“the
bank”)
in this application is the applicant in the main
application .
Pending
applications
[4]
The litigation is acrimonious. In the main application launched in
June
2020 the bank seeks payment of an amount of R6 514 057.13
with interest and costs arising out of a loan in the form of
a credit
facility granted to Northend Showroom CC, the principal debtor, and a
deed of suretyship signed by the surety in favour
of the bank for the
debts of Northend. The debt was secured by the registration of
mortgage bonds over the surety’s immovable
property. The surety
was the only member of Northend.
[5]
In August 2020 the surety brought a counter - application for the
joinder
of various parties, a declaratory order that Northend is not
indebted to the bank, that the credit facility and the suretyship
constitute unlawful and reckless credit agreements and are void
ab
initio
, that his obligations arising out of the credit facility
and the suretyship be set aside, and that leave be granted to him to
apply
for the cancellation of the mortgage bond. In the alternative
the surety seeks an order for rectification of the loan agreement
to
reflect the applicant as the principal debtor, or that the bank’s
application be dismissed, or that the dispute be referred
to trial.
In addition he seeks a money judgment and order for the debatement of
the account.
[6]
The credit
facility granted in 2017 was for an amount of R6 000 000
repayable over 240 months. Northend was a juristic
person with a
turnover in excess of R1 000 000 and the credit facility
was a large agreement as defined in the National
Credit Act. For
these reasons the Act did not apply to the transaction. The Act
therefore also did not apply to the suretyship.
[1]
This is common cause on the papers but the case for the surety is
that had he entered into the agreement as principal debtor, then
the
Act would have been applicable. He states that when signing the
documents that “
I
did notice that the loan agreement was in the name of Northend and
that I was signing as surety.”
[7]
This need not to be decided in this application but if the agreement
were
to be rectified to reflect the surety as principal debtor, then
documents pertaining to the credit application by Northend would
be
irrelevant to the application.
[8]
The parties
submitted to mediation that did not result in an amicable resolution
of the dispute. When the bank filed an ‘answering/replying
affidavit’ together with an application for condonation of late
filing of the affidavit in June 2021, the surety gave notice
in terms
of Rule 30 on 26 July 2021 and followed two days later with an
application to set aside the replying affidavit as an irregular
step.
The notice was out of time.
[2]
[9]
In the affidavit in support of the application to set aside the
bank’s
answering / replying affidavit, the surety states that
the replying affidavit was filed ‘
without any notice of
request for condonation or indulgence for the late filing.’
This statement made under oath is palpably false.
[10]
The next day, 29 July 2021, the surety gave notice in terms of Rule
35(12) for the discovery
of documents referred to in the bank’s
affidavits.
[11]
On 6 August 2021 the bank gave notice in terms of Rule 30(2)(b),
stating that although
a Rule 30 application is interlocutory, the
surety’s application had been brought by way of the long form.
Furthermore, the
bank was of the view the surety had taken a further
step with the knowledge of the alleged irregularity by delivering his
notice
in terms of Rule 35(12) and was now in any event precluded
from continuing with the Rule 30 application.
[12]
The surety neglected to deliver heads of argument, a practice note,
and a chronology in
the bank’s Rule 30(2) application. The bank
applied for an order to compel the surety to deliver same and the
application
became opposed. On 11 April 2022 Adams J granted an order
compelling the surety to deliver heads of argument, practice note and
chronology.
[13]
On 14 April
2022
[3]
the surety launched the
present application to compel discovery of the documents sought in
the Rule 35(12) notice.
[14]
In this judgment I am called upon to deal only with the Rule 35(12)
application for discovery.
Nothing in this judgment impacts on the
other pending applications in terms of Rule 30 and I do not have to
decide whether the
surety’s Rule 35(12) application is a
further step as described in Rule 30(2)(a). I also do not find it
necessary to determine
whether the bank would be taking a further
step in the proceedings, thus thwarting its own application in terms
of Rule 30, by
complying with a request for documents made to it in
terms of Rule 35(12).
In
limine
: The authority of the bank’s deponent
[15]
A deponent
to an affidavit is a witness and need not be authorised to give
evidence. The more fundamental question is that the institution
and
prosecution of the proceedings must be authorised
[4]
and this appears from the founding affidavit in the main application.
[16]
The
deponent is a Recoveries Manager of the bank and relies in paragraph
1 of the founding affidavit in the main application for
his authority
on a Delegation of Authority annexed to the founding affidavit. The
written delegation reflects a delegation by the
bank that includes
the power to sue for the recovery of moneys due. None of these
averments are disputed in the answering affidavit
save for a bald and
generic denial in paragraph 87 of the answering affidavit. These
facts have therefore been established by the
time when the founding
and answering affidavit in the main application were delivered. The
surety did not invoke the provisions
of Rule 7.
[5]
[17]
Having failed to deal with the authority or the personal knowledge of
the deponent in the
main application, the surety now wishes to
dispute the authority of the deponent in the replying affidavit in
the application to
compel. There is no basis for such an about-turn.
[18]
The point
in limine
is dismissed.
Striking
out application
[19]
The court
has a discretion to strike irrelevant matter.
[6]
Rule 6(15) provides that:
“
The court may
on application order to be struck out from any affidavit any matter
which is scandalous, vexatious or irrelevant,
with an appropriate
order as to costs, including costs as between attorney and client.
The court may not grant the application
unless it is satisfied that
the applicant will be prejudiced if the application is not granted.”
[20]
The
application must be heard with the application to which it relates,
in this case the Rule 35(12) application. An applicant in
a striking
out application is required to deal with the averments sought to be
struck.
[7]
A failure to deal
with the allegations means that if the application to strike the
objectionable matter does not succeed, the allegations
made by the
other party are the only evidence before Court.
[21]
The surety gave notice of an application to strike paragraphs 5 to
12, 16.1, 16.2 and 17.2
of the bank’s answering affidavit in
the Rule 35(12) application. The application is brought on the basis
that the allegations
in those paragraphs are irrelevant.
[22]
The surety
does not allege that he would be prejudiced
[8]
if the application to strike were not granted.
[23]
The bank’s evidence set out in the paragraphs sought to be
struck are relevant to
the merits of the Rule 35(12) application and
to the cost order sought, and also in the context of the surety’s
argument
that the bank is a large corporate entity with unlimited
resources, and that he is therefore at a disadvantage. To the extent
that
the evidence is irrelevant, it will be merely ignored if it did
not contribute to the judgment but it needed not to be struck -
there
is no prejudice to the opponent.
[24]
The application to strike out is dismissed. The paragraphs sought to
be struck are relevant
and no prejudice has been alleged or shown.
Rule
35(12) of the Uniform Rules
[25]
Rule 35(12) provides for the discovery of documents or recordings
referred to in the opponent’s
pleadings or affidavits. The
opponent may produce the document, object to its production on the
basis that it is privileged or
irrelevant, or state under oath that
the document is not in its possession.
[26]
In
Democratic
Alliance v Mkhwebane
[9]
Navsa JA said:
“
It
appears to me to be clear that documents in respect of which there is
a direct or indirect reference in an affidavit or its annexures,
that
are relevant, and which are not privileged, and are in the possession
of that party, must be produced. Relevance is assessed
in relation to
rule 35(12), not on the basis of issues that have crystallised, as
they would have had pleadings closed or all the
affidavits been
filed, but rather on the basis of aspects or issues that might arise
in relation to what has thus far been stated
in the pleadings or
affidavits and possible grounds of opposition or defences that might
be raised and, on the basis that they
will better enable the party
seeking production to assess his or her position and that they might
assist in asserting such a defence
or defences.”
[27]
Three questions therefore arise in the context of Rule 35(12):
27.1 Are the
documents referred to in an affidavit or pleading, either in the body
of the document or in an annexure,
27.2 are the
documents relevant, and
27.3 are the
documents privileged?
[28]
Documents referred to in affidavits and pleadings would often be
relevant. A party is required
in litigation to rely on relevant
evidence and irrelevant evidence is inadmissible.
[29]
Relevance
is a matter of common sense.
[10]
The
substance of the application
[30]
I now deal with the substance of the application, namely the
discovery of the documents
sought by the surety.
[31]
It is so that the surety stated in an affidavit that his purpose is
to inspect the required
documents for the purpose of pursuing fraud,
perjury and other criminal charges. The statement is not framed with
great accuracy
and it is not apparent that criminal charges were his
only objective.
[32]
Discovery
of relevant documents that are not privileged can in my view not be
denied merely because a litigant may pursue other
legal avenues, and
once again the test is that of relevance and of privilege.
[11]
[33]
The affidavit in support of the application to compel discovery in
terms of Rule 35(12)
was signed by the surety. He is of the view that
the fact that a document is referred to in a pleading or affidavit,
without more
entitles him to discovery. This is not so – as
shown above the document has to be relevant to the dispute between
the parties.
[34]
The surety as the sole member of Northend negotiated with the bank
when the facility was
extended to Northend. There were negotiations
and eventually an agreement was entered into. The document became the
record of the
transaction and the liability of Northend, and by
extension of the surety, arose out of the agreement.
[35]
It is common cause that the National Credit Act is not applicable and
the bank did not
need to apply the reckless credit provisions of the
Act at the time when the agreement was entered into. As it is, no
relevance
is shown or even alleged and the documents listed below
have no relevance to the application. These documents are:
35.1 The
certificate from Northend’s auditors referred to in clause 5.7
of annexure “DF2” to the founding
affidavit referred to
in paragraph 11;
35.2 Signed
and audited financial statements referred to in clause 18.1 and
19.2.3.1 of annexure “DF3” to
the founding affidavit
referred to in paragraph 13;
35.3 Copies
of Northend’s CK1 and CK2 documents referred to in clause
19.3..2.1 of annexure “DF3”
to the founding affidavit
referred to in paragraph 13;
35.4 The
written confirmation from Northend’s auditors referred to in
clause 19.3.2.1 of annexure “DF3”
to the founding
affidavit referred to in paragraph 13;
35.5 The
audited financial statements for the year ending February 2017
referred to in paragraph 14 of the replying
affidavit and annexure
“DFR5”;
35.6 The
motivation to the bank’s credit department referred to in
paragraph 18 of the replying affidavit;
35.7 The
lever arch file referred to in paragraph 13 of the replying
affidavit;
35.8 The
surety’s personal balance sheet referred to in paragraph 18.11
of the replying affidavit.
[36]
The surety also requires discovery of certain documents that are, in
fact, not referred
to in the bank’s founding affidavit or
replying affidavit as alleged:
36.1 There is
no loan application form referred to in paragraph 3 of the founding
affidavit. (There is a facility agreement
that is referred to in
paragraph 11 and that is attached to the founding affidavit.)
36.2
Commission documents and payments from the bank to Reinecke referred
to in paragraph 7.6 of the replying affidavit;
36.3 The
decision to grant a credit facility on the terms set out in annexure
“DF2” to the founding affidavit
as referred to in
paragraph 20 of the replying affidavit;
36.4 There is
no document entitled ‘Structured loan application’
referred to in paragraph 21.1 and the relevant
letter is annexure
“DFR7” of the replying affidavit;
36.5 There
are no documents confirming the purchase of trading stock referred to
in paragraph 31 of the replying affidavit;
36.6 There
are no documentation for consignment stock referred to in paragraph
36.3 of the replying affidavit;
36.7 There is
no written request referred to in paragraph 36.5 of the replying
affidavit;
36.8 There is
no resignation document referred to in paragraph 44.7 of the replying
affidavit (if the paragraph did
indeed refer to a letter of
resignation, it is impossible to see how it could be relevant and no
averments were made by the surety
in this regard).
36.9 There
are breach documents referred to in paragraph 66.1 of the replying
affidavit.
[37]
If there were indeed such documents, it is not alleged or shown that
any of them are relevant.
[38]
The following documents are also clearly not relevant and the surety
did not present any
evidence or argument to the effect that these are
relevant:
38.1 The
power of attorney authorising a conveyancer to appear before the
Registrar of Deeds for the purposes of the
mortgage bond referred to
in paragraph 24 of the founding affidavit;
38.2 A copy
of the tracer’s report referred to in paragraph 28 of the
founding affidavit;
38.3 The
correspondence referred to in paragraph 15 of the replying affidavit;
38.4 The
decision to grant a credit facility on the terms set out in annexure
“DF2” to the founding affidavit.
[39]
The surety seeks discovery of Rule 46A. This is one of the Uniform
Rules of Court and is
not subject to discovery. Rules are published
and are in the public domain. The fact that the surety approaches a
court for an
order that a rule of court be furnished to him under the
machinery of Rule 35(12) was not explained in argument.
[40]
The surety seeks discovery of ‘misplaced documents’
referred to in paragraph
7.5 and 7.6 of the bank’s replying
affidavit. These documents are not described or defined in any
detail, and an order for
discovery is not possible. The request has
the appearance of a fishing expedition and no relevance is shown.
[41]
In conclusion, no case is made out for the relief sought.
The
wasted costs of the enrolment in April 2022
[42]
The application to compel was sent to the bank’s attorneys on
18 April 2022 and on
the 19
th
a notice of set down for 25
April 2022. The bank’s attorneys alerted the surety’s
attorneys that a date of 4 May 2022
had been allocated on Caselines.
The surety’s attorneys then removed the matter on the roll of 4
May 2022.
[43]
The bank’s attorneys then proposed to the surety’s
attorney that the matter
be removed from the roll by agreement,
failing which an application to strike it would be brought on the
ground of short service.
No response was received and on the day of
the hearing the presiding Judge postponed the matter
sine die
,
set dates for exchange of affidavits by agreement, and reserved the
question of costs.
[44]
In terms of the Judge President’s Directive 1 of 11 June 2021,
matters shall be set
down on seven clear court days’ notice and
the surety’s attorneys persisted with a three-day notice period
even when
the Directive was pointed out to them. The costs could have
been avoided by dealing with the matter in accordance with the
Practice
Directive and the practice of the High Court in
Johannesburg. It follows in my view that the costs should be borne by
the surety.
The
costs of this application
[45]
Both parties sought an attorney and client cost order against the
other party.
[46]
In
Public
Protector v South African Reserve Bank
[12]
Khampepe
J and Theron J said:
[223]
More than 100 years ago, Innes CJ stated the principle that costs on
an attorney and client scale are awarded when a court
wishes to mark
its disapproval of the conduct of a litigant.
[13]
Since
then this principle has been endorsed and applied in a long line of
cases and remains applicable. Over the years, courts
have awarded
costs on an attorney and client scale to mark their disapproval of
fraudulent, dishonest or mala fides (bad faith)
conduct;
vexatious
conduct; and conduct that amounts to an abuse of the process of
court
.”
[footnotes
omitted]
[47]
The one aspect that militates against such an order is the fact that
some of the allegations
that may,
prima facie
at least, merit
a punitive cost order relate not to this Rule 35(12) application but
to the application to strike out the bank’s
answering /
replying affidavit that was brought out of time, his failure to file
heads of argument in the Rule 30 application that
led to an opposed
application as well as a second counter-application, and his notice
that the set down of the application to file
heads constituted an
irregular step. He also served a notice in terms of Rule 30 out of
time, complaining about the replying affidavit
in the main
application being out of time. He alleged that the replying affidavit
was filed late without any application for condonation,
when a proper
condonation application had indeed been made.
[48]
Seen in isolation however, the surety’s conduct in the main
application and the Rule
30 applications does not justify a punitive
cost order in this Rule 35(12) application.
[49]
In this application the surety disputed the authority of the bank’s
deponent when
his authority had already been dealt with in the
founding and answering affidavit in the main application, and he
persisted with
an inappropriate application for discovery of a
Uniform Rule of Court which is inappropriate as it is available to
his attorneys
from various sources. This conduct is vexatious,
frivolous, and in bad faith.
[50]
Some of the documents sought in the R35(12) notice and then persisted
with in this application
merit the inference that the application is
vexatious and frivolous and in bad faith.
[51]
In this regard the demand for the power of attorney authorising a
conveyancer to appear
before the Registrar of Deeds on behalf of the
surety, the tracer’s report, payments made to the bank official
Reinecke,
documentation confirming the purchase of trading stock and
consignment stock, the request for financial statements of Northend,
and the surety’s resignation from the time he was employed by
the bank all come to mind.
Conclusion
[52]
I therefore come to the conclusion that an attorney and client cost
order is justified.
[53]
For all these reasons I made the order in paragraph 1 above.
J
MOORCROFT
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION
JOHANNESBURG
Electronically
submitted
Delivered:
This judgement was prepared and authored by the Acting Judge whose
name is reflected and is handed down electronically
by circulation to
the Parties / their legal representatives by email and by uploading
it to the electronic file of this matter
on Caselines. The date of
the judgment is deemed to be
27 October 2022
COUNSEL
FOR THE APPLICANT: G NEL SC
INSTRUCTED
BY:
VALLY CHAGAN & ASSOCIATES
ATTORNEYS
COUNSEL
FOR RESPONDENT:
R SHEPSTONE
INSTRUCTED
BY:
A D HERTZBERG ATTORNEYS
DATE
OF THE HEARING:
12 October 2022
DATE
OF ORDER:
27 October 2022
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
27 October 2022
[1]
Northend is a juristic person with an asset value or turnover of
more than R1 000 000 and the agreement is a large
agreement of more than R250 000. See
s 4(1)(a)(i)
and
8
(5) of
the
National Credit Act, 34 of 2005
, and GN 713 in GG 28893 of
1 June 2006.
[2]
In terms of
Rule 30(2)
notice must be given within ten days and the
application to court must be brought not more than 15 days
thereafter.
[3]
Not 2021 as per the notice of motion.
[4]
Ganes
and Another v Telecom Namibia Ltd
2004 (3) SA 615 (SCA) para [18] & [19];
Eskom
v Soweto City Council
1992
(2) SA 703 (W)
705C – J.
[5]
The authority of anyone acting on behalf of a party may be disputed
in terms of Rule 7 of the Uninform Rules.
[6]
Titty’s
Bar and Bottle Store (Pty) Ltd v ABC Garage (Pty) Ltd
1974
(4) SA 362
(T) 368G.
[7]
Compare
Shephard
v Tuckers Land and Development Corporation (Pty) Ltd (1)
1978
(1) SA 173 (W)
177D–E and
Gore
v Amalgamated Mining Holdings
1985
(1) SA 294
(C) 295H–296B.
[8]
Beinash
v Wixley
[1997] ZASCA 32
;
1997
(3) SA 721
(SCA)
733B.
[9]
Democratic
Alliance v Mkhwebane
2021
(3) SA 403
(SCA) par [41]. See also
Caxton
and CTP Publishers and Printers Ltd v Novus Holdings Ltd
[2022] 2 All SA 299 (SCA).
[10]
R v
Matthews
1960 (1) SA 752 (A) 758.
[11]
The question of privilege does not arise in this application - the
bank does not claim that any of the documents are privileged.
[12]
Public
Protector v South African Reserve Bank
2019 (6) SA 253
(CC) para. 223.
[13]
The footnote refers to
Orr
v Solomon
1907
TS 281.
sino noindex
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