Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 927South Africa
Zwane and Others v Firstrand Bank Limited (2019/42590) [2022] ZAGPJHC 927 (21 November 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
21 November 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Zwane and Others v Firstrand Bank Limited (2019/42590) [2022] ZAGPJHC 927 (21 November 2022)
Zwane and Others v Firstrand Bank Limited (2019/42590) [2022] ZAGPJHC 927 (21 November 2022)
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sino date 21 November 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 2019/42590
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
NO
21
NOVEMBER 2022
In
the matter between:
DOROTHY
ZWANE
First
Applicant
SANLAM
TRUST LIMITED
Second Applicant
MERISE
MONTEZ VAN WYK NO
Third Applicant
And
FIRSTRAND
BANK LIMITED
Respondent
JUDGMENT
VILJOEN
AJ
[1]
This is an application for the rescission
of a judgment granted by default against the first applicant on 7
September 2020.
The
default judgment in question confirmed the cancellation of an
instalment sale agreement concluded between Mzwandile Sydney Zwane,
the late husband of the first applicant, and the respondent.
The order directed the first applicant to
return the vehicle, the subject of the instalment sale agreement, to
the respondent.
[2]
The first defendant’s husband passed
away on 12 November 2018.
The
second applicant was appointed as the executor of the late Zwane’s
estate in terms of a joint will executed by the first
applicant and
Zwane.
The third
applicant was appointed executor as a nominee of the second
applicant.
By all
accounts, neither the second nor the third applicant took any
interest in these proceedings.
Their
joinder to the proceedings came about at the instance of the first
applicant by way of an application for their joinder launched
after
the default judgment sought to be rescinded had been granted.
[3]
The founding affidavit contains a prayer
for the condonation of the late filing of the application for
rescission.
The
notice of motion does not contain this prayer.
Nevertheless, since the delay was not
significant, and the respondent did not raise any prejudice there is
no reason for me not
to consider the merits of the application.
[4]
The first applicant seeks the rescission of
the default judgment relying on the provisions of Rule 31(2)(b).
That rule permits the rescission of a
judgment granted by default “
upon
good cause shown
”.
[5]
To show good cause, it is trite, an
applicant must:
5.1.
give a reasonable explanation of her
default;
5.2.
show that she has a
bona
fide
defence to the claim; and
5.3.
show
that the application is
bona
fide
and
not made merely to delay the claim.
[1]
[6]
It
is equally trite that an applicant’s explanation for her
default must be sufficiently full so that the Court is able to
understand how it came about and to assess the applicant’s
bona
fides
.
[2]
The explanation for
the default
[7]
The summons was served on the first
applicant on 12 December 2019.
She
does not dispute the service of the summons.
The first applicant did not give notice of
an intention to defend the action.
She
does not dispute her default.
[8]
The first applicant explains that
“
subsequent to receiving the
summons from the Plaintiff [sic], same was sent to the executor of
the estate
”.
The papers do not explain who sent the
summons to the executor nor when this was done.
[9]
It is apparent that the first applicant
understood the significance of the summons.
However, she professes a belief that the
matters raised in the summons fell within the scope of the duties of
the executor.
Claims
against her husband’s deceased estate, so the first applicant
states, had to be dealt with by the executor.
[10]
The first applicant states that she “
relied
solely on the executor to handle any and all legal process pertaining
to [her] husband’s deceased estate
”.
The summons, however, is clear that the
respondent’s claims are against the first applicant.
The founding affidavit indicates that she
appreciated this.
[11]
It is impossible to reconcile the first
applicant’s expressed belief that the summons had to be dealt
with by the executor
with her knowledge that the claims stated
therein were against her.
[12]
Be that as it may.
The court is not told how the executor
reacted to being sent the summons.
The
papers do not reveal any contact at all between the first applicant
and the executor to discuss the content of the summons or
the way
forward.
[13]
Thereafter, by her own account, the first
applicant washed her hands completely of the matter.
She took no further interest in the pending
litigation, not even making the most superficial of enquiries from
the executor on the
status of the matter.
[14]
In the heads of argument filed on behalf of
the first applicant the following submission is made:
“
6.3
The Executors [sic] of the estate
wilfully, alternatively negligently failed to inform the [first
applicant] of the progress of
the matter, and furthermore failed to
file opposing papers, or even inform the [first applicant] that their
office would not be
dealing with the matter.”
[15]
This submission is founded on an
unsubstantiated premise.
The
papers establish no grounds for any obligation on the executor to
defend the matter on the first applicant’s behalf or
to make
reports to her.
Moreover,
to the first applicant’s knowledge, by March 2020, the third
applicant had indicated her intention to resign as
executor.
[16]
The
founding papers underplay the significance of the executor’s
resignation. The first applicant dismisses the telephonic
notification of the executor’s resignation as “
incorrect
and fraudulent
”.
This
comment is unhelpful to the first applicant’s cause.
It
is also entirely gratuitous, devoid of substance and quite frankly
inappropriate.
Fraud
is a serious allegation and is, it must be remembered, not lightly
inferred.
[3]
[17]
In the event, the respondent would not
apply for default judgment until August 2020, some 6 months after the
first applicant learnt
of the executor’s resignation.
The first applicant did not avail herself
of the reprieve the delayed application for default judgment afforded
her, not to the
extent of making the most basic of enquiries about
the status of the matter.
She
does not explain her inaction.
[18]
The first applicant instead chose to keep
possession and use of the vehicle ignoring the fact that the vehicle
was the subject of
an instalment sale agreement, that the account was
in arrears, that the respondent retained ownership of the vehicle,
and that
it demanded the return thereof.
She was spurred into action only upon the
sheriff taking possession of the vehicle on 20 October 2020.
[19]
The nearest the applicant’s papers
come to a justification for her continued default and her continued
use of the vehicle
is her stated expectation that the proceeds of a
policy on the life of her late husband would cover all the debts of
his estate.
The
papers do not advance this explanation beyond stating that the policy
was never paid out and that the matter is pending before
“the
Ombudsman”.
[20]
I am unable to conclude from the aforesaid
that the first applicant succeeded in providing a comprehensive and
reasonable explanation
for her default indicative of
bona
fides
.
[21]
I should mention that the first applicant
introduced the content of the estate file kept by the Master of the
High Court by way
of an affidavit deposed to by her attorney and
uploaded to CaseLines on 27 September 2022.
There was an objection by the respondent to
the admission of this affidavit, it having been filed out of time.
[22]
Despite the respondent’s objection, I
considered the content of the affidavit file to determine whether any
portion thereof
could be of assistance to the first applicant’s
cause.
I found
most of it to be irrelevant to the matter before me.
[23]
The affidavit, however, contains the letter
of resignation from the second and third applicants dated 19 June
2020.
The
resignation letter describes the first applicant as uncooperative and
disinterested in threatened legal action by creditors
of the estate.
In the concluding paragraphs, the writer
states: “
She has advised that she
wants nothing to do with us and that we should not ever contact her
again otherwise she will open a case
of harassment against us.
”
[24]
These comments, if accepted as evidence of
the truth thereof, are potentially further destructive of the first
applicant’s
explanation for her default.
They called for an explanation from the
first applicant.
Considering
my findings about the cogency and acceptability of the first
applicant’s explanation for her default, the executor’s
comments about the first applicant’s attitude and conduct may
be disregarded without affecting the outcome.
Rule 31(2)(b) or
Rule 42(1)(a)
[25]
I
indicated
above
that
the
first
applicant
based
her
application
on
the
provisions of Rule
31(2)(b).
In the
argument before me, it was contended that the first applicant’s
bona fide
defence
lies in the fact that the judgment was erroneously sought or
erroneously granted.
The
bona fide
defence
element of “
good cause
”,
so the argument went, is wide enough that an error in the granting or
seeking of a default judgment is encompassed in the
scope thereof.
[26]
This
seems to me to be an unnecessary conflation of two independent bases
upon which a Court that would otherwise be
functus
officio
can
revisit a judgment.
[4]
Rule
31(2)(b) permits a Court to come to the aid of a judgment debtor who
has a defence to the claim upon which judgment was granted
but failed
to avail herself timeously of the opportunity to defend such claim.
Rule
42(1)(a) is an aid to a judgment debtor to rescind a judgment granted
in her absence to which the judgment creditor was procedurally
not
entitled.
[5]
[27]
The
subsequent disclosure of a defence does not transform a judgment,
which had been validly obtained, into an erroneous order.
[6]
Similarly,
in my view, the fact that a default judgment was granted in error
does not become a defence to the underlying claim.
[28]
For purposes of this judgment, however, it
is unnecessary to consider the notional existence and extent of
overlap between Rules
31(2)(b) and 42(1)(a). As I shall point out, it
is my assessment that the first applicant has shown neither a
bona
fide
defence to the claim nor that the
default judgment was granted in error.
No
bona fide
defence
[29]
As
the owner of the vehicle in question, the respondent is entitled to
claim possession thereof.
The
first applicant may not withhold possession from the respondent
unless she is vested with some right enforceable against the
respondent.
[7]
Once
the respondent establishes ownership and the first applicant’s
possession of its property, the onus rests on the first
applicant to
establish a right to continue to hold the property.
[8]
Neither
the respondent’s ownership nor the first applicant’s
possession of the vehicle is in dispute.
[30]
The content of the founding affidavit
dangles the first applicant between two conflicting propositions.
She contends that she was not a party to
the instalment sale agreement and ought thus never to have been
joined to the proceedings.
She,
however, also appears to contend that she stepped into the shoes of
the Late Zwane and continued up to the repossession of
the vehicle to
make payment of the instalments, thus acquiring a right to possess
and use the vehicle.
[31]
Neither of these opposing propositions
comes to the first applicant’s aid.
If she is not bound by the instalment sale
agreement, she has no right to possession of the vehicle.
If she is bound by the instalment sale
agreement, the terms thereof must be applied to her.
[32]
In terms of the agreement, the respondent
is entitled in the event of a breach by the consumer either to claim
immediate repayment
of the outstanding balance or to take
repossession of the vehicle.
The
failure to pay amounts due in terms of the agreement constitutes a
breach.
[33]
There is no dispute that the instalment
sale account was in arrears at the date of judgment. The respondent
did not claim damages
against the first applicant. Therefore, the
precise quantum of the arrears is immaterial to the default judgment
that was granted.
Once
it is accepted that the account was in arrears, it must be accepted
that the respondent acted within its rights to claim repossession
of
the vehicle.
That
the vehicle was “
close to being
paid off
” establishes no right to
retain possession.
These
are not proceedings for the execution of a judgment against a primary
residence.
[34]
I conclude therefore that the first
applicant has shown no
prima facie
right
to retain possession of the vehicle and, consequently, no
bona
fide
defence.
Judgment
not granted in error
[35]
Turning then to the argument that judgment
had been granted in error.
This
argument is premised on the misjoinder of the first applicant.
[36]
In her heads of argument, the first
applicant argues:
“
6.5
The [first applicant] should not
have been cited personally and or alternatively dealt with directly
subsequent to the [respondent]
being made aware that the deceased’s
estate is under administration.
“
6.6
The matter should accordingly be
finalised between the Plaintiff and the executors of the estate.”
[37]
These submissions might notionally assist
the first applicant had the default judgment concerned contractual
damages.
It
concerns, however, possession of the vehicle.
Since the first applicant was in possession
of the vehicle, she was the correct party from whom the respondent
had to vindicate
its property.
[38]
There is no contention that the judgment
was in some other respect irregular.
[39]
In consequence, I find that the default
judgment was not erroneously sought or granted.
Conclusion
[40]
The application must therefore be
dismissed.
[41]
In the premises, I make the following
order:
1.
The applicant is dismissed.
2.
The first applicant is ordered to pay the
costs thereof.
H
M VILJOEN
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION OF THE HIGH COURT, JOHANNESBURG
Delivered:
This judgement was prepared and authored by the 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 for
hand-down is deemed to be 21 November 2022.
Date
of hearing: 11 October 2022
Date
of judgment: 21 November 2022
Appearances:
Attorneys
for the first applicant:
THABANG
MASHIGO ATTORNEYS
Counsel
for the first applicant:
MS J D B THEMANE
Attorneys
for the respondent:
SMIT JONES & PRATT
Counsel
for the respondent:
MS K MEYER
[1]
Grant
v Plumbers
1949
(2) SA 470
(O) at 476
[2]
Silber
v Ozen Wholesalers (Pty) Ltd
1954
(2) SA 345
(A) at 353A
[3]
Gilbey
Distillers & Vintners (Pty) Ltd v Morris NO
1990
(2) SA 217
(SECLD) at 226A
[4]
See
also
Colyn
v Tiger Food Industries Ltd t/a Meadow Geed Mills (Cape)
2003
(6) SA 1
(SCA) at [8]: “
The
trend of the Courts over the years is not to give a more extended
application to the Rule to include all kinds of mistakes
or
irregularities.”
[5]
Freedom
Stationery (Pty) Ltd and others v Hassam and others
2019
(4) SA 459
(SCA) at [18]
[6]
Lodhi
2 Properties Investments CC and another v Bondev Developments
2007
(6) SA 87
(SCA) at [27]
[7]
Chetty
v Naidoo
1974
(3) SA 13
(A) at 20B-C
[8]
Chetty
v Naidoo
at
20C
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