Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 1033South Africa
Sasfin Bank Limited and Another v Fitness Holdings Ltd (16634/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 1033 (28 December 2022)
Headnotes
Summary: Exception- the defendant contending that the particulars of claim lacks particulars to sustain the cause of action based on the allegation that the plaintiff has failed to plead locu standi adequately in the averment relating to cession. The principles governing exception and cession restated. The confusion between an undertaking to cede rights and the cession itself explained. The distinction between the undertaking to cede rights and the cession itself explained. The undertaking to cede rights and the underlying cessionary agreement are two distinct enforceable juristic acts.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Sasfin Bank Limited and Another v Fitness Holdings Ltd (16634/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 1033 (28 December 2022)
Sasfin Bank Limited and Another v Fitness Holdings Ltd (16634/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 1033 (28 December 2022)
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sino date 28 December 2022
# IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
# (GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
CASE
NO: 16634/2021
REPORTABLE:
No
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: No
REVISED:
NO
28
December 2022
In
the matter between:
SASFIN
BANK LIMITED
First
Plaintiff
SUNLYN
(PTY) LTD
Second
Plaintiff
and
FITNESS
HOLDINGS LTD
Defendant
Delivered:
This judgment was
handed down electronically by circulation to the parties' legal
representatives by email, and uploaded on caselines
electronic
platform. The date for hand-down is deemed to be 28 December 2022.
Summary:
Exception- the defendant
contending that the particulars of claim lacks particulars to sustain
the cause of action based on the
allegation that the plaintiff has
failed to plead
locu standi
adequately in the averment relating to cession. The principles
governing exception and cession restated. The confusion between
an
undertaking to cede rights and the cession itself explained. The
distinction between the undertaking to cede rights and the
cession
itself explained. The undertaking to cede rights and the underlying
cessionary agreement are two distinct enforceable juristic
acts.
JUDGMENT
Molahlehi
J
Introduction
[1]
This is an exception brought by the
defendant, against the plaintiffs' particulars of the claim, based on
the contention that the
particulars of claim lack averments necessary
to sustain a cause of action.
[2]
The essential aspect of the defendant's
complain is that the plaintiffs have failed to adequately plead
their
locus standi
to
sue the defendant.
The
background facts
[3]
The
background facts relating to the dispute between the parties are set
out in the plaintiff's particulars of claim, which for
this judgment,
is accepted as being correct.
[1]
The dispute arose from a complex contractual relationship between
various parties.
[4]
The plaintiff's claim is for payment of
monies owing in terms of three separate master rental agreements
concluded between Astfin
and the defendant, Planet Fitness Holding
(Pty) Ltd.
[5]
The amount to be paid for the rental by
the defendant is set out in each agreement with the specified date
for the commencement
of the payment.
[6]
The plaintiffs aver in the particulars
of claim that the equipment, which is the subject of the lease
agreement, was delivered and
installed to the satisfaction of the
defendant.
[7]
The three rental agreements contain the
same terms and conditions. The terms and conditions of the
agreements, are as summarised
in the plaintiff's heads of argument as
follows:
“
9.1
Asfin would rent to the defendant and the defendant would hire, the
goods as described in the addendum's to each of the rental
agreement
( “
the equipment”)
in respect of the first
rental agreement, for a minimum period of 60 months and 48 months in
respect of the second and third
rental agreement.
9.2
the rental payable would not escalate.
9.3.
In the event of the defendant failing to make payment to in terms of
any of the rental agreement on the due date thereof, it
would be
deemed that the defendant would be in breach in respect of any or all
of the rental agreements, whereupon Astfin would
be entitled,
inter
alia
, to forthwith claim immediate payment of all amounts which
would have been payable in terms of any of the of the rental
agreements
until the expiry of the Arctic rental agreement (s).”
9.4.
Austin will be entitled, without notice to the defendant, receipt,
transfer and make over, any and all rights in and to any
of all of
the rental agreements, to any person whatsoever.
9.5.
A certificate signed by any manager of Austin, certifying the amount
due by the defendant would on the face of it, the proof
of the amount
of the defendant's indebtedness.
9.6.
The defendant will pay Astfin, interest at the prime rate plus 6% on
all amounts overdue in terms of any or all of the rental
agreements.
9.7
The defendant will bear Astfin’s legal expenses, including
attorney and own client cost incurred in recovering any amounts
in
terms of any or all of the rental agreements."
[8]
The agreement that the plaintiffs rely
on in claim A, which is between Astfin and ABSA Technologies Finance
Solutions (Pty) Ltd
(ABSA Finance) makes provision for a mechanism in
clause 3.1 whereby the contracts can be ceded.
[9]
Similarly, the agreements relied upon in
claims B and C, between Asfin and Sunlyn provide for a mechanism
whereby the contract can
be ceded.
[10]
The plaintiffs contend that in terms of
the underlying contract, claims were ceded to ABSA Finance on 20
November 2015.
[11]
About claims B and C, the plaintiffs
contend that Astfin ceded the contracts on 31 October 2017 and 9
December 2019, respectively.
In this respect, the rental agreements
were offered for cession by Astfin and accepted by Sunlyn on 31
December 2017. The offer
was accepted by way of Sunlyn making payment
of the purchase price.
The
grounds of exception
[12]
The first ground of exception of the
defendant is formulated as follows:
“
[8]
the particulars of claim do not plead out that the Claim A Agreement
was offered by Astfin and accepted
by Absa Finance, in writing,
and accordingly not set out the averments necessary to prove: –
8.1.
The initial cession to Absa Finance:
8.2
The cessions thereafter to Sunlyn and /or Sasfin; and
9.
Further, in pursuant to the principle
nemo
dat quod non habet
, even if Austin had ceded its rights in Claim
A agreement to Absa Finance, and subsequently the cession by Absa
Finance to Sunlyn
and/or Sasfin, it would still be subject to the
provisions of the "the first main cession agreement.
10
Accordingly, and on 22, November 2020 when the
Initial period of Claim A Agreement expired, the rights in
and to
Claim Agreement would have automatically been ceded back to Astfin.”
The
principles governing exception
[13]
The
approach to adopt in determining whether the pleading is excepiable
is set out in Barnard v Barnard,
[2]
as follows:
“
[10]
In considering the question whether the plaintiff's proposed
amendment (or any part of it) is excipiable, the Court must accept
the truth of the allegations contained therein and determine whether
those allegations are capable of supporting a cause of action. In
considering this question the Court is ordinarily not entitled to
consider any facts outside those stated in the particulars and
the
proposed amendment. It is for the excipient (defendant in this case)
to satisfy the Court that in all its possible meanings
no cause of
action is disclosed.”
[14]
It
is also a well-established principle of our law that an exception has
to be confined to the four corners of pleadings. In other
words, the
excipient must confine his or her complaint to what is pleaded in by
the other party.
[3]
[15]
In the present matter, the defendant
complains that although the plaintiff contends in Claim A that the
contract was ceded over
to ABSA Finance on 20 November 2015, the
essentials of the cession as provided for in the contract has not
been complied with.
It further contends that in the absence of
establishing the underlying cession between Sasfin and ABSA Finance,
cession cannot
be said to have taken place.
[16]
The other challenge faced by the
plaintiffs, according to the defendant, is that when the contract in
Claim A expired in September
2020, the agreement between Asfin and
ABSA Finance automatically receded to Asfin and not any of the
plaintiffs. The defendant
contends, based on the above, that the
plaintiff lacks
locus standi
to
sue under that agreement.
Evaluation
[17]
As the above shows, the exception is
based on the contention that the particulars of claim are excepiable
because of the failure
to plead the essentials of the cession. It is
particularly alleged that the cause of failure to establish the
cession between Asfin
and ABSA Finance, any subsequent cession
between the plaintiffs and Sunlyn, cannot be said to have taken
place.
[18]
The
complexity of this matter arises from the conceptual confusion that
often arises between the undertaking to cede and the cession
itself.
The undertaking is abstract in its nature and distinct from the
underlying agreement. It should, however, be pointed out
that the two
juristic acts constitute two types of binding agreements, as
explained in Brayton Chartswald and Another v Brews,
[4]
In further explaining the distinction between the two types of
agreements the SCA quoted with approval what was said in Law of
South
Africa:
"The
undertaking to cede and actually cession will often coincide and be
consolidated in a single document, yet remain discreetly
juristic
acts. However, because they are frequently merged into one
transaction between the obligatory agreement to cede, and the
actual
cession sometimes tends to be smudged. They are nevertheless distinct
in function and can be so in time: By the former,
a duty to cede is
created, the latter is discharged."
[19]
It is trite that a debtor has no role to
play in the cessionary process between cedent and cessionary. This
means that the debtor
need not know about the cessionary process.
Neither is his or her consent required. Furthermore, the debtor has
no right to veto
the agreement between the cessionary and the cadent.
This also means that the cedent need not notify the debtor in
concluding a
cession with the cessionary.
[20]
Simply
put, a cession is an agreement to transfer rights from the cedent
(the creditor) to cessionary (the new creditor).
[5]
And thus as a matter of law, contractual obligations arising
from such an agreement would exist between the cedent and the
cessionary. It follows, therefore, that it is only any one of the
parties to such a contract that would have the right to challenge
the
validity or enforcement of the terms of the cession. This rule was
stated in Letseng Diamonds Ltd v JCI Ltd and Others,
[6]
as follows:
“
The
general rule is that if two parties enter into an agreement and there
has been non-compliance with its terms, it is only the
contracting
parties who can challenge the validity of the agreement.”
[21]
In my view, both exceptions raised by
the defendant are bad in law. The defendant was not a party to the
agreement between Astfin
and ABSA Finance. As the matter stands, it
appears from the papers that Astfin and ABSA Finance, being the only
parties to the
main cession, were no longer parties at the expiry of
the first rental agreement. The rights to the first rental agreement
were
at that stage ceded to Sunlyn and thereafter to Sasfin.
[22]
As I understood the submission made
during the hearing, the defendant did not persist with the second
ground of exception. Even
if it did it would, for the same reasons as
those stated in the first exception, not be sustainable.
[23]
For the above reasons, I find that the
defendant has failed to demonstrate that the plaintiffs' particulars
of claim do not disclose
a cause of action. In other words, the
defendant has failed to show that the plaintiffs do not have
locus
standi
to institute action
proceedings against it.
Order
[24]
In the premises, the defendant's
exception is dismissed with costs on the attorney and client scale.
E
Molahlehi
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNNESBURG.
Representation:
For
the applicant :
Adv
J M Hoffman
Instructed
by:
Smit
Jones and Pratt Inc.
For
the respondents: Adv
S Aucamp
Instructed
by: Swartz
Weil Van Der Merwe Greenberg Inc.
Heard
on: 29
August 2022
Delivered: 28
December 2022
[1]
See
Makgae v Sentramboer (Kopertatief) Bpk
1981 (4) SA 239
(T) at 244H –
245A and Stalls v Garlicke 2012 (4) SCA 415. 421 H.
[2]
2000
[3] SA 741 [C] in paragraphs 9 and 10.
[3]
See
Sanan v ESKOM Holdings, Ltd 2010 [6] SA 638 [GSJ] paragraph 20 and
21.
[4]
2017
(5) SA 498
(SCA) paragraph (15).
[5]
See Damsam (Pty) Ltd v Cywilnut (Pty) Ltd 1991 (1) SA 100 (A).
[6]
2009.
[4] SA58 [SCA] in paragraph [23].
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