Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 949South Africa
Roopal N.O. v Tony (56527/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 949 (29 November 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
29 November 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Roopal N.O. v Tony (56527/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 949 (29 November 2022)
Roopal N.O. v Tony (56527/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 949 (29 November 2022)
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sino date 29 November 2022
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 56527/2021
REPORTABLE:
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
REVISED.
29/11/2022
In the matter between:
ANOOSHKUMAR
ROOPAL N.O.
Applicant
and
MPHEPHU
PETER
TONY
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MAKUME
J
:
[1] The
Applicant is the duly appointed Liquidator of VBS Mutual Bank (in
Liquidation) VBS was placed
in liquidation by order of the High Court
sitting in Pretoria on the 13
th
November 2018.
[2] The
Applicant seeks an order that the Respondent be directed to make
payment to it of certain
sums of money due to it arising from certain
finances agreements concluded by the Respondent with VBS during the
years 2015 and
2018.
[3] The
Finance agreements are in respect of 3 motor vehicles namely;
3.1 A Range Rover
5.0 V8 for which the Respondent owes the amount of R1 466 654.08,
3.2 A BMW 760i Sedan
for which the Respondent owes the sum of R2 106 720.08
3.3 A Mercedes-Benze
V250d for which the Respondent owes the amount R2 013 180.41
[4] The
total amount due and payable to VBS under the 3 agreements the is sum
of R4 119 901.00. The
Applicant also seeks an order cancelling the
agreements and that it be placed in possession of the 3 motor vehicle
in accordance
with the terms of agreements.
[5] The
Respondent is a member of the Venda Royalty and was recognised as a
Chief of the Venda Tribe
in accordance with the laws of the Republic
of South Africa. He in that capacity received not only royalties but
a stipend or salary
from the Government of South Africa.
[6] He
has two addresses one at the upmarket Golf and Security Estate known
as Dainfern the second
address is in Louis Trichardt Makhado.
[7] The
Respondent defaulted with payments in contravention of the agreements
as a result letters
of demand were addressed to him in terms of
Section 129 (1) of the National Credit Act (the Act) which letters
were received by
the Respondent. He acknowledged receipt thereof
though his attorneys
[8] In a
letter addressed to VBS attorneys by the Respondent’s Attorneys
dated the 8
th
July 2021 he said the following:
“
Our client is fully committed
to make the necessary payments of the instalments of all the vehicles
alternatively to make payment
arrangements, alternatively to
surrender all or some of the vehicles depending on your settlement
proposal.”
[9] In
response to the proposal the Applicant’s Attorneys Messrs
Werksmans wrote to the Respondent
on the 13
th
July 2021
informing them that Applicant is prepared to accept voluntary
surrender of all the 3 vehicles. The Respondent failed
to return the
motor vehicles and failed to make any payment of the outstanding
amount.
[10] On
receipt of this application the Respondent filed his Answering
Affidavit and confirmed conclusion
of the 3 agreements also that he
is indebted to the Applicant. He however raises the following
defences.
10.1 That at the time of the
conclusion of the agreements VBS was not a registered credit
provider.
10.2 That in view of what is
stated in 10.1 above that renders the 3 agreements unlawful.
10.3 That VBS contravened
Section 80 read with Section 81(2) of the Act in that VBS failed to
properly assess the Respondent’s
ability to afford repayments
and thus made themselves guilty of reckless credit granting and that
a proper assessment would have
demonstrated that the Respondent was
over indebted.
[11] In
paragraphs 25 and 26 of his Answering Affidavit the Respondent says
he is financially distressed
and cannot afford to make payments under
the 3 agreements and requests the Court to discharge all his
obligations arising from
the agreements alternatively that his
obligations under the agreements be suspended until his financial
positon improves.
[12] In
the further alternative he pleads that this Court allows him in terms
of Section 85 of the
Act to be declared over indebted and that he be
referred to a debt counsellor to evaluate his circumstances and then
make recommendations
in terms of Section 86(7) or 85(b) of the Act.
[13]
Strange enough at paragraph 33.1 of his Answering Affidavit he now
denies being indebted to VBS
in any amount whatsoever and denies the
existence of any valid agreement. He also raises prescription as a
defence.
[14] In
the Replying Affidavit the Liquidator dealt extensively in responding
to the Answering Affidavit
and in my view exposed the Respondent’s
dishonesty at various levels. The Respondent’s evidence and
version crawls
with contradictions and inconsistence and has
completely distorted the reality.
REGISTRATION
NATIONAL CREDIT ACT
[15] VBS
has been a registered credit provider since the year 2007 it is still
so registered whilst
undergoing a process of winding up its affairs.
RECKLESSNESS
[16] The
second defence is one of a dilatory plea that VBS failed to assess
him and thus granted him
finance in a reckless manner calling upon an
order to declare the agreement unlawful and unenforceable. This has
also been proved
to be not the truth. The Applicant has in reply
attached documents showing that the Respondent in his capacity as a
regent of the
VhaVenda people has at all times been receiving
remuneration from the Central Government in terms of
Section 5(1)
of
the
Remuneration of Public Office Bearers Act 20 of 1998
.
[17]
There is also proof that his personal bank account with VBS evidences
various sources from which
the Respondent received income. He also
operated an account with Standard Bank of South Africa and received
various large amounts
into that account between the year 2015 to
2017.
[18] The
Respondent also has interests in various companies like Mmapilo
Petroleum (Pty) Ltd; Vele
Investments and Venmont Holdings which
companies at various times serviced his indebtedness to VBS. The
Applicant has also demonstrated
that Mmapilo Petroleum paid
R341776.11 to the Respondent; Vele Investments paid him R4 38929.24
and Venmont Holdings paid him R145 370.56.
[19] In
his application for finance which he submitted to VBS he indicated to
VBS that his monthly
income was R150 000.00 and that his net
income after all deductions in respect of other vehicle finance,
clothing accounts,
groceries and transportation costs amounted to
R62971.00. Later in January 2018 the Respondent declared to VBS that
his monthly
income was R300 000.00. This was at a stage when his
bank records indicated that he was receiving R310 000.00 from
Vele
Investments on a monthly basis.
[20] I
am persuaded that the argument advanced by the Applicant proves that
there was proper assessment
done by VBS based on information
furnished by the Respondent. In the result the defence of reckless
credit granting must fail.
The Respondent’s version is so
far-fetched and legally untenable and requires no further
consideration.
PRESCRIPTION
[21] The
Respondent then proceeded to plead prescription on flimsy grounds
even though he through
his attorneys had as late as 2021 admitted
liability and even proposed to voluntarily surrender the three motor
vehicles. This
defence must also fail. It was an afterthought judging
by the various correspondence of admission of indebtedness by the
Respondent.
DEBT
REVIEW
[22] The
Respondent should have raised this issue as early as 2017 when he
fell into arrears he did
not do so and that avenue is no longer
available to him in terms of Section 86(2) of the National Credit
Act.
[23]
During the hearing of this matter the Respondent raised issues in
respect of the contents of
the Section 129(1) statutory letter sent
to him. As a result, the matter was stood down and the Applicant was
directed to re-send
fresh Section 129(1) statutory letters in terms
of the Act.
[24] On
the 15
th
September 2022 the Applicant filed a Compliance
Affidavit setting out that fresh Section 129(1) letters were
dispatched and had
been received by the Respondent’s Attorneys
in accordance with paragraph 3 of the order dated the 24
th
August 2022.
[25] The
Respondent filed his own Affidavit in response to the Compliance
Affidavit filed by the Applicant.
In his Affidavit through the mouth
of his Attorneys Mr Danie Barnard the Respondent says that on receipt
of the fresh Section 129
letter he decided to lodge a complaint with
the National Credit Regulator with a request that the complaint be
referred to the
National Consume Tribunal established in terms of
Section 129 of the National Credit Act.
[26] In
paragraph 7 of his Affidavit the Respondent says the following:
“
The matter has therefore been
referred to the Credit Regulator and the Tribunal for adjudication.”
[27] The
central issue in the Complaint is that VBS in granting the Respondent
credit failed to take
reasonable steps to assess the Respondent’s
general understanding and appreciation of the risks and costs of the
proposed
credit as a result the three credit agreements were
concluded recklessly and in contravention of Section 80 read with
Section 81
(2) of the National Credit Act.
[28]
Section 81(2) (a)(i) of the National Credit Act reads as follows:
“
A credit provider must not
enter into a credit agreement without first taking reasonable steps
to assess:
a)
The proposed consumer
b)
General understanding and
appreciation of the risks and costs of the proposed credit and of the
rights and obligations of a consumer
under a Credit Agreement.
[29] I
have already made a finding in this judgment that the Respondent in
making application for
credit had furnished VBS with documents
indicating that he as a member of the Royal Family in the VhaVenda
Community was receiving
remuneration from the Government of the
Republic of South Africa in terms of
Section 5
(1) of the
Remuneration of Public Office Bearers Act 20 of 1998
.
[30] The
Respondent also received income from various sources as indicated in
my judgement above.
He never disputed the information. The Applicant
based on the information properly assessed the Respondent. In fact,
as early as
when the Respondent received the first
Section 129
letter
he through his attorneys made proposal to settle the debt and never
raised the issue of reckless credit granting.
[31] It
is trite law that the effect of a
Section 129(1)
letter read together
with the provisions of
Section 130
of the NCA prevents a credit
provider from commencing any legal proceedings before meeting certain
requirements. When a
Section 129(1)
letter is received it is very
instructive and precisely tells the debtor what his or her options
are in view of the default. Such
a debtor may choose any of the
following:
a)
He or she may refer the
credit agreement to a debt counsellor;
b)
A dispute resolution
agent;
c)
The Consumer Court; or
d)
Ombuds with jurisdiction.
[32]
When the Respondent’s previous attorneys and the present
attorneys received the
Section 129(1)
letter they did not advise
their client to take advantage of what is offered by the provisions
of
Section 129(1).
The definition of “Ombud with jurisdiction”
does not refer to the Tribunal nor the Credit Regulator it refers to
a
financial institution as defined in the Financial Sector
Regulations Act of 2017.
[33] The
referral of a complaint in terms of Section 136 read with Section 141
of the NCA is a new
tactic by the Respondent to avoid the inevitable.
This referral is flawed and is a delaying tactic.
[34] At
the commencement of the further hearing of this matter the Applicant
indicated that it is
no longer praying for return of the three motor
vehicles. The revised draft order only prays that the sale on
suspensive condition
agreements concluded by VBS and the Respondent
in respect of the three motor vehicles be cancelled and that the
Respondent pays
to the Applicant the amounts due in respect of the
three agreements plus interest and costs on the scale as between
attorney and
client which costs shall include the costs of two
Counsel.
[35] On
the other hand Counsel for the Respondent conceded that the second
batch of the Section 129(1)
demand letter had been properly served in
accordance with the Court order dated the 24
th
August
2022. Secondly the Respondent also abandoned the defence of
non-registration as a credit provider by VBS. This the Respondent
did
after receiving confirmation of registration from the National Credit
Regulator.
[36] The
Respondent argues that in view of the complaint he has referred to
the NCR this Court’s
jurisdiction is ousted and that the
application be postponed
sine die
pending the outcome of the
finding of the Tribunal. As I have indicated the referral to a
tribunal is a new version it is not canvassed
in the original
Answering Affidavit nor has the Respondent filed any heads in that
regard. The only thing that the Respondent says
in his affidavit at
case lines 016-5 paragraph 7 is the following:
“
The matter has therefore been
referred to the Credit Regulator and the Tribunal for adjudication.
Proper legal argument will be
presented on behalf of my client on the
legal consequences of the referral of the matter to the Credit
Regulator and the Tribunal.”
[37]
Counsel for the Respondent placed reliance on the provisions of
Section 130(3) (b) and 130(4)
of the Act which reads as follows:
“
[130(3) (b)] Despite any
provisions of law or contract to the contrary in any proceedings
commenced in a Court in respect of a credit
agreement to which this
Act applies, the Court may determine the matter only if the Court is
satisfied that there is no matter
arising under credit agreement and
pending before the Tribunal that could result in an order affecting
the issues to be determined
by the Court.”
[38]
There is no complaint at this stage pending before the Tribunal what
is before this Court is
a letter of complaint addressed to the
National Credit Regulator… Willis J in the matter of
FirstRand
Bank t/a FNB v Seyffert
2010 (6) SA 429
alluded to this notion of
“pending” and at paragraph 5 page 432 he says the
following:
“
Section 130 (3) of the Act
prevents a Court from determining a matter in respect of a Credit
Agreement to which the NCA applies
if it is “pending before”
the National Consumer Tribunal or during the time that the matter was
before a Debt Counsellor,
alternatively Dispute Resolution Agent,
Consumer Court or the Ombud with jurisdiction. The most common
defence in otherwise hopeless
cases for Respondents attempting to
resist Summary Judgment in this division is that the matter is before
a debt counsellor awaiting
debt review in terms of the provisions of
the NCA.”
[39]
Willis J in the same matter at paragraph 15 thereof makes reference
to a number of decisions
and finally referring to a judgment by Eloff
J in the matter of
Noah vs Union National South Africa Insurance
Co. Ltd
1979 (1) SA 330
(T) at 332
in which the following was
said:
“
Indeed Eloff J as he then was
said of the very word “pending” that its meaning depends
much upon its context. It seems
to me that in context the words
“pending” in Section 130(3) (b) and also in Section
130(4) (c) and “before”
in Section 130(3) (c) denote a
certain immediacy to the event rather than merely a formal referral
having been made.”
[40]
This is precisely the situation in this matter all that the
Respondent relies on is the letter
to the Regulator there is nothing
pending immediately before the Tribunal or before a Debt Review
Counsellor.
[41] The
Applicant has in my view correctly referred this Court to the
provisions of Section 166(1)
of the Act which reads as follows:
“
(166)
Limitation of Bringing Action
166(1) A complaint in terms of this
Act may not be referred or made to the Tribunal or to a Consumer
Court more than three years’
after
(a)the
act or omission that is the cause of the complaint.”
[42] The
last of the three Credit agreements was concluded in January 2018 it
is more than three and
half years ago. The Respondent is accordingly
barred specifically to raise this complaint. I see no reason why when
this matter
eventually comes before the Tribunal this lateness issues
will not be successfully raised. Willis J as he then was in the mater
of FirstRand Bank vs Seyffert (supra) correctly described persons of
the calibre of the Respondent in the following words “the
debt-review mechanism of the NCA do not provide a safe haven for
pirates and dilatory sunbathers”
[43] The
Respondent has failed to provide this Court with valid and credible
reason why this application
should be postponed sine die pending the
outcome of a complaint still on its way to the Tribunal. In the
result I make the following
order:
ORDER
1.
The sale on Suspensive
conditions of the Range Rover Finance Agreement concluded between the
parties in respect of the vehicle fully
described as Land Rover Range
Rover 5.0 V8 2015 Vin number [....] is hereby cancelled.
2.
The sale on Suspensive
conditions of BMW Finance Agreement concluded between the parties in
respect of the vehicle fully described
as BMW 760i Sedan 2016 Vin
number [....] is cancelled.
3.
The sale on Suspensive
conditions of the Mercedes-Benz Finance Agreement concluded between
the parties in respect of the vehicle
fully described as
Mercedes-Benz V250d 2018 Vin number [....] is hereby cancelled.
4.
The Respondent is directed
to pay the Applicant the following sum;
4.1
The sum of R1466654.08
plus interest at the agreed rate of 10.25% calculated daily and
compounded monthly in arrears from 1
st
April 2022 until date of full payment.
4.2
The sum of R2106720.67
plus interest at the agreed rate of 11.59% calculated daily and
compounded monthly in arrears from 1
st
August 2022 until date of full payment.
4.3
The sum of R2013180.41
plus interest at the agreed rate of 12.50% calculated daily and
compounded monthly in arrears from 1
st
August 2022 until date of full payment.
5.
The Respondent is ordered to pay the costs of this application on the
scale as between attorney
and client.
DATED at JOHANNESBURG this the 29
th
day of NOVEMBER 2022.
M
A MAKUME
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
DATE
OF HEARING
: 11 NOVEMBER 2022
DATE
OF JUDGMENT
: 29 NOVEMBER 2022
FOR
APPLICANT
: ADV VAN VUUREN
WITH
ADV ISLES
INSTRUCTED
BY
:
FOR
INTERVENING PARTY
: ADV VAN DER MERWE
INSTRUCTED
BY
:
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