Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 958South Africa
Mahomed-Padayachee v Mohamed and Another (2021/40442) [2022] ZAGPJHC 958 (1 December 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
1 December 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Mahomed-Padayachee v Mohamed and Another (2021/40442) [2022] ZAGPJHC 958 (1 December 2022)
Mahomed-Padayachee v Mohamed and Another (2021/40442) [2022] ZAGPJHC 958 (1 December 2022)
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sino date 1 December 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NUMBER:
2021/40442
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
01
DECEMBER 2022
In
the matter between:
KESHIA
MOHAMED-PADAYACHEE
Applicant
and
RAEES
LEROTHOLI MOHAMED
First Respondent
ANGELIQUE
JUSTINE MOHAMED
Second Respondent
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties' and/or the parties' representatives by email and by
being
uploaded onto CaseLines. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to
be 10h00 on 01 December 2022.
JUDGMENT
REDMAN
AJ
:
[1]
The applicant's claim is based on two
Acknowledgements of Debt namely -
(1)
an Acknowledgement of Debt signed by both
the first and second respondents in terms of which they acknowledged
that they were jointly
and severally liable to the applicant in the
sum of R400 000,00 and undertook to pay this amount to the
applicant on 31 May
2020.
(2)
An Acknowledgement of Debt signed by the
first respondent in terms of which he acknowledged being liable to
the applicant in the
amount of R133 000,00 and undertook to repay
this amount by 21 May 2020.
[2]
Both Acknowledgements of Debt were signed
on 18 March 2020 and provided that in the event of default the
signatories would be liable
for legal costs incurred on the scale as
between attorney and client. The Acknowledgements of Debt also made
provision for payment
of default interest at the prime rate per annum
calculated and capitalised on the same day of each month in arrears
on the outstanding
balance.
[3]
The applicant and the first respondent are
brother and sister. The second respondent is the first respondent's
wife. It is common
cause that the Acknowledgements of Debt do not
constitute arms-length transactions and the provisions of the
National Credit Act, 34 of 2005
are not applicable.
[4]
The applicant seeks condonation for the
late delivery of her replying affidavit. I am satisfied that the
applicant has provided
a reasonable explanation for her delay and I
do not believe that the respondents have suffered any prejudice as a
result thereof.
The respondents did not oppose the application for
condonation. In the circumstances condonation for the delivery of the
replying
affidavit outside the time periods prescribed by the Rules
of Court is granted.
[5]
In their answering affidavits the
respondents admit having signed the Acknowledgements of Debt but
contend that this was done under
duress. They further allege that
certain payments had been made by them which have not been taken into
account by the applicant.
[6]
The respondents aver that on the day when
the Acknowledgements of Debt were signed, sister (the applicant and
her husband arrived
at the respondents' house and demanded that he
sign the Acknowledgements of Debt. This demand was purportedly made
in the presence
of the respondents' daughter and the second
respondent's grandmother. The highwater mark of the respondents'
defence is their suggestion
that the first respondent recalled that
the applicant's husband carried a firearm which "
he
could have been carrying with him
".
The respondent avers that he signed the document out of fear for his
daughter and his wife's life and solely on the promise
that the
applicant and her husband would leave the house.
[7]
The elements of a defence of duress
entitling a party to set aside an agreement are well settled and were
described by Wessels:
Law of Contract in South Africa Vol 1, 2
nd
ed., at paragraph 1167, to be the following:
(1)
actual violence or reasonable fear;
(2)
the fear must be caused by the threat of
some considerable evil to the party or his family;
(3)
it must be a threat of imminent or
inevitable evil;
(4)
the threat or intimidation must be
contra
bonos mores
;
(5)
the moral pressure that was used must have
caused damage. (See
BOE Bank Bpk v Van
Zyl
2002 (5) SA 165
(C) at para 36).
[8]
In their answering affidavits the
respondents do not allege that any threat was made by the applicant
or her husband The first respondent's
alleged fear for the lives of
his wife and child was not induced by any threat of imminent or
inevitable danger. According to the
respondent, the applicant merely
demanded that the respondents sign the Acknowledgements of Debt. The
first respondent's alleged
fear for his daughter and his wife's lives
was not induced by anything the applicant or her husband did or said.
The first respondent's
alleged fear purportedly arose because he
remembered that the applicant's husband owned a firearm. Any fear
which the first respondent
may have experienced could not be
considered reasonable in the circumstances described in the answering
affidavits.
[9]
In his answering affidavit, the first
respondent omits to disclose the e-mails and WhatsApp messages which
had been exchanged between
himself and his sister prior to conclusion
of the Acknowledgements of Debt. An initial Acknowledgement of Debt
incorporating the
full indebtedness of R533 000,00 had been sent to
the first respondent. The second respondent refused to sign the
Acknowledgement
of Debt incorporating the full indebtedness and
accordingly at the request of the first respondent, the
Acknowledgement of Debt
was split into two documents. On 17 March
2020 in a WhatsApp message the respondent recorded his receipt of the
two Acknowledgements
of Debts mail and undertook to print and sign
them.
[10]
Subsequent to the signing of the
Acknowledgements of Debts, there were further communications between
the parties relating to payment.
The alleged duress was raised for
the first time in these proceedings.
[11]
Although the respondents in their answering
affidavits allege that they had made certain payments towards their
indebtedness, they
failed to provide any details of such payments.
From the answering affidavits it is impossible to determine what
amounts the respondents
allege they had paid and no information or
documentation is provided in support of these allegations.
[12]
Subsequent to the delivery of the answering
affidavits, the respondents uploaded onto Caselines a number of
payment notifications
purportedly confirming payments of R1 000,00
per month for the period November 2021 to May 2022. The payment
notifications were
not supported by an affidavit and were not
referred to in any of the papers. The applicant accepted that the
respondents had made
payment of an amount of R11 000,00 and that this
should be deducted from the amount claimed under the first
Acknowledgement of
Debt.
[13]
The first and second respondents appeared
in person at the hearing of the application. During the course of
argument, they contended
that certain payments made to the applicant
had not been taken into account in the calculation of the amounts
claimed by the applicant.
Other than the payment of R11 000,00
conceded by the applicant, however, it appears that the amounts were
all paid prior to the
signing of the Acknowledgement of Debts and
accordingly did not constitute payments made pursuant thereto.
[14]
The respondents implored that I should take
into account the amount by which the respondents' water account was
credited by Johannesburg
Water pursuant to the intervention by the
Ombudsman during September 2021. In this regard the respondents
relied on e-mail correspondence
received from the Office of the
Ombudsman recording that a credit of R130 826,37 would be issued on
the first respondent's water
account and a debit of R62 217,96 would
be raised for the period 11 January 2016 to 22 November 2019 by
Johannesburg Water.
[15]
There is, however, no evidence that the
Johannesburg Water account was rectified in the manner suggested.
From the documents relied
on by the respondents it appears that the
relevant water account was registered in the first respondent's name
and there is no
evidence that any amounts were paid over to the
applicant following upon the alleged crediting of the account.
Indeed, this is
not even suggested to be the case relied upon by the
respondents. The respondents have thus not proved any entitlement to
credits
over and above the R11 000,00 conceded by the respondent.
[16]
The respondents' version of the events of
18 March 2020 fly in the face of the correspondence and WhatsApp
messages exchanged between
the parties during the relevant period. In
the absence of any threat having been made by the applicant or her
husband, the contention
that the respondents signed the
Acknowledgements of Debt under duress is far-fetched, misconceived
and can be rejected out of hand.
I am accordingly satisfied that the
applicant is entitled to the order set out below.
[17]
The applicant has not proved by means of
evidence what the prime rate of interest was at the date of default.
The applicant has
thus not established a basis for such interest. See
Midrand/Rabie Ridge/Ivory park
Metropolitan Substructure v Lanmer (Pty) Limited
2001 (2) SA 516
(T) paras [13] to [19].
[18]
I accordingly make an order in the
following terms:
1.
That the respondents jointly and severally,
the one paying the other to be absolved, make payment to the
applicant –
1.1.
of the amount of R389 000,00;
1.2.
interest thereon at the rate of 7% per
annum from 24 June 2020 to date of payment.
2.
The first respondent is to make payment to
the applicant
2.1
of the amount of R133 000,00;
2.2
interest thereon at a rate of 7% per annum
from 24 June 2020 to date of payment.
3.
The respondents pay the costs of the
application on the scale as between attorney and client.
N
REDMAN
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Johannesburg
Heard
:
21 November 2022
Judgment
:
01 December 2022
Appearances
:
For
Applicant
:
F Darby
Instructed
by
:
Schultz Demarthe Inc.
For
Respondents
:
[In Person]
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