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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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[2022] ZAGPJHC 945
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## ABSA Bank Ltd v Tebeila N.O. and Others (2019/14019)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 945 (29 November 2022)
ABSA Bank Ltd v Tebeila N.O. and Others (2019/14019)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 945 (29 November 2022)
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sino date 29 November 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: 2019/14019
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST OF OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED
2022/11/29
In
the matter between:
ABSA
BANK
LTD
Applicant
and
TEBEILA
N.O., TIMOTHY
First Respondent
NTWAMPIE
N.O., MORWAMOCHE ANDREW
Second Respondent
MOKOU
N.O., IMOGEN-FAITH MALIN
Third Respondent
[in
their capacities as trustees for the time being of
The
MOLANGWANE TRUST (IT no 3775/2000]
TEBEILA,
TIMOTHY
Fourth Respondent
JUDGMENT
# Friedman AJ:
Friedman AJ:
#
1
On 8 December 2010, the Molangwane Trust (“
the Trust
”)
concluded an agreement with the applicant, Absa Bank Ltd (“
Absa
”),
in terms of which Absa approved a facility of R28 million to enable
the Trust to purchase residential property in Hurlingham,
Johannesburg (“
the Hurlingham property
”). The
relevant aspects of the agreement, for our purposes, are the
following:
1.1
The agreement was essentially a mortgage agreement in respect of the
Hurlingham property.
1.2
The debt in respect of the property was secured not only be the
mortgage but by several suretyships,
including one given by the
fourth respondent (who was also one of the trustees of the Trust). In
acting as a surety in terms of
the agreement, the fourth respondent
bound himself as surety and co-principal debtor jointly and severally
together with the Trust
in favour of Absa, for the repayment on
demand of any sums which the Trust owed to Absa in terms of the
agreement.
1.3
The agreement contained various general terms and conditions, which
begin at page 002-61 of Caselines.
These terms included the
following:
1.3.1
An “event of default” was defined to include the failure
of the borrower to make any payment
to Absa on the due date.
1.3.2
The agreement provided that, if the borrower failed to rectify an
event of default within 2 business
days of having been given notice,
then all of the borrower’s indebtedness became due and payable
“forthwith”
and Absa was entitled to demand and claim
payment of all of the sums due or deemed to be due and to exercise
its rights under any
securities.
2
Absa says that the Trust breached the agreement by failing to keep
up
with its monthly payments. On 27 September 2018, Absa’s
attorneys wrote to the first respondent and recorded that the
home
loan account was in arrears in the amount of R1 222 260.35.
In an email dated 2 October 2018, the fourth respondent
acknowledged
that the account was in arrears and said that he was awaiting a large
payment – thus implying that the arrears
would be settled once
the payment came in.
3
In terms of the relevant clauses of the agreement which I have
discussed
above, as soon as the trust defaulted on its payments and
did not rectify the default in two business days, the entire balance
of the sum owed in terms of the facility became due and payable and
the bank was entitled to claim it.
4
Absa attached a certificate of balance to its founding affidavit,
which demonstrates that, as of 19 March 2019, the full outstanding
balance on the facility (which, as a result of the Trust’s
default, is due and payable) is R24 115 129.62. The primary
relief initially sought by Absa was an order that the three
Trustees
of the Trust (ie, the first to third respondents), and the fourth
respondent as one of the sureties in respect of the
agreement, are
liable to pay Absa that sum plus interest as calculated in terms of
the agreement. As I explain below, that relief
has now been modified
slightly.
5
The respondents have filed an answering affidavit and have raised
various defences, which may properly be described as technical. They
have not, however, meaningfully disputed the core contentions
of Absa
– ie, that the full amount of the loan became payable as soon
as default was not cured within two business days.
6
On the morning of the hearing, the respondents unilaterally uploaded
a practice note and short heads of argument onto Caselines. This is,
of course, impermissible in terms of the rules set out in
the
Practice Manual of this division. I take the view, however, that
documents of that nature are primarily there to assist the
Court, and
so I see no purpose in adopting an unduly technical approach to the
matter, especially because Absa’s counsel
did not object. In
the exercise of my discretion on procedure, I allow the filing of
those documents.
7
In the heads of argument, counsel for the respondents focused
exclusively
on the right to housing (ie under section 26 of the
Constitution) and rule 46A of the Uniform Rules. I return to discuss
those
matters below. The respondents’ heads of argument do not
address the merits, other than to record that the respondents do
not
deny being indebted to Absa. It is noted in the heads of argument
that the respondents have tendered to pay a lower monthly
instalment
to discharge their debt. In the light of the provisions of the
agreement which I described above, Absa is not obliged
to accept that
tender.
8
There is, accordingly, no basis to refuse the primary relief sought.
In
Rossouw v Firstrand Bank Ltd
2010 (6) SA 439
(SCA) at para
48, in the context of a summary judgment application, the SCA held
that it was useful for the certificate of balance
to be handed up at
the hearing of the matter. This is now reflected in paragraph
10.17(4) of the Practice Manual of this Court.
Absa has attached a
current certificate of balance to its affidavit demonstrating
compliance with the Practice Manual (which appears
at folder 041 of
Caselines). On taking an instruction, Ms Acker for Absa confirmed
that Absa seeks an order to reflect the updated
certificate of
balance. That is an appropriate order to make in the circumstances.
9
Absa also seeks an order declaring the Hurlingham property to be
executable.
Although the principal debtor is the Trust, the fourth
respondent, in binding himself as a surety, also rendered himself the
co-principal
debtor. He lives in the Hurlingham property with his
family. In my view, that renders rule 46A applicable. As I have said,
the
respondents have filed an answering affidavit in this matter.
They declined to place any facts before the Court in that affidavit
to assist the Court in the exercise of its discretion under rule 46A,
saying simply that they would seek leave to file a supplementary
affidavit in due course to deal with the matter. This was not done.
10
In my view, courts, when exercising a discretion in terms of rule
46A, should be robust and apply common sense (within reason, of
course). If the principal debt and value of the property is
relatively
small, courts should be astute to ensure that the
interests of the debtor in his or her residential property are
properly taken
into account and that all avenues to avoid execution
have been explored. They should do this, even if the matter is not
opposed
(even, if necessary, by asking that the debtor be present in
court to address the court orally) and even if the matter is opposed
but the answering affidavit is not a model of clarity. Judgment
debtors, having fallen on difficult times, often do not have the
wherewithal to brief competent attorneys and so courts might often
have to step into the breech and ensure that justice is done.
11
In a case such as the present, the considerations are different. The
judgment
debt sat at roughly R24 million in 2019 and now sits at more
than R32 million. Absa, in its founding affidavit, values the
property
at anywhere between R10 million and R43 million. The
respondents deny this valuation, but notably they say that it is
higher
, not lower than this. And, in the answering affidavit,
the fourth respondent referred to various major pending business
deals which
he said would enable him to settle the claim in due
course. In the practice note filed by his counsel, presumably on his
instruction,
reference is made to an offer by the fourth respondent
to pay R300 000 per month to settle the respondents’
indebtedness.
In making this offer, the fourth respondent makes clear
that he is a businessman with substantial means.
Ms Acker
submitted on behalf of Absa that there was no prospect that the
fourth respondent and his family would be rendered homeless if
the
Hurlingham property is declared executable. I agree. In the absence
of compelling information to the contrary (which, for instance,
could
have been presented in the supplementary affidavit which the
respondents promised, but failed, to file), it has to be assumed
that
a person with the fourth respondent’s means would be able to
find alternative accommodation.
12
This is not the only consideration in rule 46A. The court must also
consider
alternative ways in which the debtor might be able to
discharge the debt. In the answering affidavit, which was filed in
2019,
reference was made to the prospect of the fourth respondent
being able to settle the respondents’ indebtedness from funds
received from a mining agreement on behalf of Sekeko Resources (a
company of which he is a director and another one of the sureties)
which he was, at that time, apparently in the process of concluding.
He also referred to payment expected from a company of which
his wife
is the sole director, which he said would assist the Trust in
settling the claim. The difficulty is that here we are,
three years
later, and the outstanding amount of Absa’s claim now sits at
around R32 million. This implies that these deals
fell through or
failed to generate sufficient funds. It is not for me to speculate
about that. The respondents undertook to file
a supplementary
affidavit to update the Court on matters relevant to rule 46A. Their
failure to do so leaves me in a position where
I have to assume that
there are no alternative mechanisms available to the respondents to
settle their indebtedness.
13
The same applies to the question of execution against movables.
Mr
Modisenyane
, who appeared for the respondents (and put up a
valiant effort in the circumstances; and particularly taking into
account that
he was briefed two days before the hearing) submitted
that there is no evidence on the papers that Absa sought to execute
first
against the respondents’ movable property before seeking
the order which it now seeks in respect of the Hurlingham property.
The starting position which any reasonable observer would take in
this matter is that execution against movable property would
be an
inadequate mechanism to discharge an indebtedness of roughly R32
million. But, of course, this may not always be so –
one can
imagine very valuable movable property that might be available in
some circumstances. But, again, it was not in my view
Absa’s
responsibility to waste time going down that road. If there was a
genuine prospect of the debt being discharged in
this way, the
respondents ought to have presented facts to substantiate that
assertion.
14
To be clear: it is not my finding that rule 46A does not apply to
this
matter because the value of the residential property is high. It
applies in all cases where the property is the home of the judgment
debtor. But, in a case such as this, where the value of the debt is
very high, the value of the property is very high and the prima
facie
indications are that the debtor would be able to afford to rent
alternative accommodation, there is an obligation on the
debtor to
put up facts to aid the court in the exercise of its discretion. The
respondents’ failure to do so means that I
have to assume that
there are no reasons, relevant to the enquiry under rule 46A, for me
not to grant the orders which Absa seeks.
15
Mr Modisenyane
quite reasonably accepted that there was
insufficient information on the papers to enable me to conclude that
there were meaningful
alternatives to execution against the
Hurlingham property to settle the respondents’ indebtedness.
While acknowledging that
there was no formal postponement application
before me, he asked me to exercise my discretion under rule 46A(8) to
postpone the
matter and call for more evidence. Part of his basis for
making this request was his submission that there is a risk of
homelessness
and that it would be appropriate to call for more
information to address this issue. As I have already explained, there
is simply
no basis to be concerned that there is a risk of
homelessness given the means of the fourth respondent. The
respondents have, in
my view, had long enough to place information
before this Court and it would not be in the interests of justice to
delay this matter
any further. Not only am I satisfied that there is
no risk of homelessness, but I have no reason to believe that there
is any meaningful
alternative to the order sought by Absa to enable
the respondents to discharge their obligations to it.
16
The agreement provides that, if Absa is required to incur legal costs
in
order to preserve its rights under the agreement, it is entitled
to costs on the attorney-client scale. It must therefore be awarded
costs on that scale in these proceedings.
ORDER
17
I accordingly make the following order:
1.
The respondents are obliged to pay to the applicant, jointly
and severally, the one paying the others to be absolved, the sum of
R32 483 269.97 together with interest thereon calculated at
the rate of prime less 0.5% per annum calculated daily and
compounded
monthly in arrears from 6 October 2022 to date of payment.
2.
The following property is declared specially executable for
the amounts to which reference is made in paragraph 1 above: ERF
[....]
Hurlingham Township, registration I.R, the Province of Gauteng
Measuring 2483 square meters Held by Deed of Transfer no. T [....]
subject to the conditions therein-contained.
3.
The Registrar of this Court is authorised to issue a writ of
execution against the immovable property referred to in paragraph 2
above and as envisaged in Rule 46(1)(a).
4.
The respondents are to pay the costs of this application on
the attorney and client scale.
ADRIAN
FRIEDMAN
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected above 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 29 November 2022.
APPEARANCES:
Attorney
for the applicant:
Cliffe Dekker Hofmeyr
Counsel
for the applicant:
L Acker
Attorney
for the respondents:
Musekwa HT Incorporated
Counsel
for the respondents:
T Modisenyane
Date
of hearing:
23 November 2022
Date
of judgment:
29 November 2022
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