Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 65South Africa
Sithole v Benay Sager NCRDC2484 and Others (A369/2023) [2025] ZAGPPHC 65 (21 January 2025)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Sithole v Benay Sager NCRDC2484 and Others (A369/2023) [2025] ZAGPPHC 65 (21 January 2025)
Sithole v Benay Sager NCRDC2484 and Others (A369/2023) [2025] ZAGPPHC 65 (21 January 2025)
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sino date 21 January 2025
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Case
No.
A369 / 2023
(1)
REPORTABLE:
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
(3)
REVISED:
YES
DATE
:
21/1/2025
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
MTHOKOZISI
BLESSING SITHOLE
APPELLANT
and
BENAY
SAGER NCRDC2484
FIRST
RESPONDENT
BMW
FINANCIAL SERVICES (SOUTH AFRICA) (PTY) LTD
SECOND
RESPONDENT
DIRECT
AXIS (SA) (PTY) LTD ON BEHALF OF FIRSTRAND BANK LIMITED
THIRD
RESPONDENT
RCS
(PTY) LTD
FOURTH
RESPONDENT
FIRST
NATIONAL BANK (FNB), A DIVISION OF FIRSTRAND BANK LIMITED
FIFTH
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
NEUKIRCHER,
J
[1]
On 14 November 2023 the full panel of the
National Consumer Tribunal (NCT) handed down judgment in an
application brought by the
appellant in terms of s165 of the National
Credit Act 34 of 2005 (the Act), in which the appellant sought the
rescission of a consent
order granted on 26 August 2021. The NCT
dismissed the application for rescission.
[2]
Aggrieved by this decision, the appellant
now approaches this court in terms of section 148(2)(b) of the Act
which provides:
“
Subject
to the rules of the High Court, a participant in a hearing before a
full panel of the tribunal may:
(a)
…
(b)
appeal to the High Court against the
decision of the tribunal in that matter, other than a decision in
terms of section 138.”
[3]
The
facts of the application are not in dispute: on 4 February 2021 the
appellants applied for debt review with the first respondent
[1]
.
As part of that application the appellant completed and signed
certain documents, including:
a)
an application form (NCR Form 16);
b)
an
agreement (the agreement) with first respondent as well as a
company known as Debtfree Management Services
[2]
(DMS),
and powers of attorney in respect of each of them
[3]
;
c)
a debit order form;
d)
an application checklist.
[4]
The appellant duly completed and signed the
documents, including the terms and conditions, on 4 February 2021.
Paragraph 4 of the
agreement contains the power of attorney
provisions in respect of the first respondent which, inter alia,
states:
“
I
hereby give Benay Sager … Debt Counsellor for Debt Busters
permission to do the following:
a.
…
b.
To negotiate a debt restructuring plan with my credit providers.
…
f.
To sign the application for a Consent Order,
funding affidavit,
or other legal documents as necessary on my behalf
should debt Busters opt to bring my debt counselling application
before the
National Consumer Tribunal (NCT) or a Magistrates Court.
g.
To appoint DMS to manage the legal services and legal application as
it deems necessary to
improve my ability to meet my monthly
commitments to my creditors.”
[5]
The DMS agreement makes provision for a
power of attorney, and these inter alia state:
“
2.
I hereby give debt free management services (DMS) permission to do
the following:
a.
…
b.
to apply to the Magistrates Court for a
court order or the other National Consumer Tribunal [for] a consent
order, according to
the debt restructuring plan.”
[6]
According to the Debt Counseling
Application (the application) completed by the appellant, he had
eight creditors to whom he was
paying a total of R42 704 monthly. As
will be seen from the figures below, at the time the appellant
approached the first respondent,
he was over-indebted:
Nett monthly
income
R71 000.00
Less monthly
expenses
R34 820.00
Less Total Monthly Debt
Obligations
R42 704.00
Deficit:
R -6 524.00
[7]
However, through first respondent’s
negotiations with his creditors the appellant’s total
obligations were substantially
reduced by more than half monthly.
Most of the re-structured debts were repayable over a 60 month
period.
[8]
Armed with this, the first respondent (on
behalf of and instructed by the appellant) applied to the National
Credit Tribunal (the
Tribunal) for a consent order.
[9]
On 26 August 2021 the Tribunal made the
following order (the order):
“
The
Tribunal, having considered the papers filed of record, is satisfied
that the Applicant(s) and the Credit Provider(s) are parties
to a
debt re-arrangement facilitated by a Debt Counsellor:
1.
In terms of section 86(7)(b) read with
section 138(1)
of the
National Credit Act, Act
34 of 2005 (“the
Act”), the following order is made:
1.1
the 8 repayment agreements between the
consumer(s) and credit provider(s) are attached to this order and
1.2
the repayment agreements are confirmed as
an order of the Tribunal in terms of section 150 of the Act …”
[10]
For two years the appellant did nothing to
re-visit this order. This court was also not told whether or not the
appellant had complied
with its terms in the years since its grant.
What we are told is that, for some unknown reason, the appellant
consulted with his
present attorney on 31 August 2023 at which time
he was advised that the Tribunal had no jurisdiction to grant the
order it did.
The reason for this is that, because he was
overindebted at the time the application was made, only the
Magistrate’s Court
had jurisdiction to grant the consent order
and the consent application should have been referred to the
Magistrate’s Court
for a confirmation hearing.
[11]
It was as a result of this advice that, on
19 September 2023, the appellant brought an application in terms of
s165(1) of the Act
to rescind the order granted two years prior.
[12]
The grounds upon which the recission was
sought are the following:
a)
that the appellant was over-indebted when
he applied for debt review;
b)
that, as a result, the first respondent did
not have
locus standi
to apply for debt review given the provisions of s86(7)(b) of the
Act, as read with s138(1);
c)
that, given this, the Tribunal has no
jurisdiction to grant the consent order and it could only have been
considered, and granted,
by a Magistrates Court;
d)
that the consent order was granted in
appellant’s absence; and
e)
that, given the facts set out supra, the
consent order was erroneously sought and erroneously granted.
[13]
Although
the appellant sought to argue – in his reply – in this
appeal, that the s165(1) application could also resort
under
s165(1)(c)
[4]
,
this is not the case brought by the appellant either
a
quo
or in this appeal. The case that the appellant called the first
respondent to meet was that the order was erroneously sought or
granted in his absence. That is the case set out in the application
and that is the case that was argued
a
quo
and
initially before us. It ill behooves the appellant to change his case
in replying argument.
[14]
This appeal was opposed by the first
respondent. The first respondent raised three issues, which were also
argued before us:
a)
that
the appellant to failed to comply with Rule 24A(1)
[5]
and only launched the application two years after he became aware of
the consent order;
b)
the provisions of s165(1)(a) have not been
complied with in that:
(i)
the order was neither erroneously sought
nor erroneously granted; and
(ii)
the order was not granted in appellant’s
absence;
c)
the appellant seeks to impermissibly
prematurely exit from the debt review process without following the
correct procedure which,
in this case, would be to pay any
outstanding debt in full.
Rule 24(A)(1) and
Section 165(1)
[15]
The purpose of Act and its Rules becomes
apparent when reading these provisions together. Whilst the Act
provides for the causa
of the application, the Rules set out the
procedure.
[16]
Section 165(1) provides:
“
The
Tribunal, acting of its own accord or on application by a person
affected by a decision or order, may vary or rescind its decision
or
order-
(a)
erroneously sought or granted in the absence of a party affected by
it;
(b) in which
there is ambiguity, or an obvious error or omission, but only to the
extent of correcting that ambiguity,
error or omission; or
(c) made or
granted as a result of a mistake common to all the parties to the
proceedings.”
[17]
Rule 24A states:
“
24A
Variation or recission of Tribunal orders
(1)
An application for the variation of
recission of a Tribunal order must be made within 20 days of the date
on which the applicant
became aware of –
(a)
the Tribunal order which was granted in the
absence of the applicant;
(b)
the ambiguity, error or omission; or
(c)
a mistake common to the parties to the
proceedings; or
(d)
within such longer period as permitted by
the Tribunal.
(2)
An application for rescission or variation
in terms of section 165 must be made by way of Form TI.165.”
Re: Within 20 days
[18]
Whilst it is unquestionably so that
appellant “became aware of” the order on 6 October 2021
when first respondent notified
him of its grant, it is not in dispute
that he was only informed of the alleged possible irregularity in its
grant when he consulted
his attorney on 31 August 2023 – the
rescission application was brought 19 days later.
[19]
The NCT found that the appellant would only
have become aware of the alleged error committed by the tribunal,
when it was explained
to him by his attorney. He then launched the
recission within the prescribed period of 20 days. In my view this
approach is acceptable
given the particular circumstances of the
matter - it cannot be expected of a layperson to know the intricate
technicalities of
whether or not the Tribunal had jurisdiction to
grant the order it did.
Re: erroneously sought
or granted in the absence of
[20]
In essence, the approach to a rescission on
this ground is two pronged: the first question is whether the order
was granted in the
absence of the party affected by it; the second
question is whether the order was erroneously sought or erroneously
granted.
[21]
The NCT found that s165(a) bears a
“striking resemblance” to rule 42(1)(a) of the Uniform
Rules of Court which states:
“
(1)
The court may, in addition to any other powers it may have, mero motu
or upon the application of any party affected,
rescind or vary -
(a)
an order or judgment erroneously sought or
erroneously granted in the absence of any party affected thereby…”.
[22]
The NCT concluded that, bearing in mind
this “striking resemblance” “(i)t is, therefore,
reasonable to conclude
that the legislators of the NCA must have
intended for section 165(a) to have the same application in the law
as that of Rule 42(1)(a)”.
I agree with this conclusion.
[23]
In
Zuma
v Secretary of the Judicial Commission of Inquiry into Allegations of
State Capture, Corruption and Fraud in the Public Sector
including
Organs of State and Others
(Zuma)
[6]
,
the court stated
[7]
:
“…
the
words “granted in the absence of any party affected thereby, as
they exist in Rule 42(1)(a), exist to protect litigants
whose
presence was precluded, not those whose presence was elected”.
[24]
The court also stated that it is not open
to a litigant who seeks a recission to obtain a re-hearing on the
merits as the general
principle is that once a court has pronounced a
final order, it becomes
functus officio
and has no power to alter the order save under very narrow prescribed
circumstances. In
Zuma,
the court then stated:
“
[82] It
is trite that orders of this Court are final and immune from appeal.
They are, however, rescindable, and the
Legislature has carefully
augmented the common-law grounds of relief by expressly providing for
narrow grounds of rescission by
crafting rule 42. Narrow those
grounds are, for good reason, for the very notion of rescission of a
court order constitutes
the exception to the ordinary rule that court
orders, especially those of this Court, are final. By its nature the
law of rescission
invites a degree of legal uncertainty. So, to avoid
chaos, the grounds upon which rescission can be sought have been
deliberately
carved out by the Legislature. It is true that:
". . .
whatever the position may have been . . . there can no
longer be any equitable need to interfere
with the principle of
finality of judgments . . .:
'It should therefore no
longer be necessary to seek adaptations to the common-law, arguably
by uncomfortable and artificial contrivance,
to address the sort of
unhappy predicament that the applicants in this case find themselves
in . . .'
[W]hatever equitable need
may in the past have been felt to exist for departing from the
long-established principles of law to which
I have referred, has now
been more or less effectively dealt with by the legislature".
[25]
And so the question is: was appellant
“absent” as he contends? His argument is that as he was
not present when the order
was granted, it was granted in his
absence. Whilst this is technically true, what it ignores is that he
provided a written mandate
to the first respondent and its attorneys
to:
a)
sign
the application “or other legal documents necessary" to
bring his application for the consent order before the NCT
[8]
;
and
b)
to
apply on his behalf for the consent order in terms of the debt
restructuring plan
[9]
.
[26]
Thus, in my view, the appellant is in
precisely the same position as every litigant who is represented by
an attorney or advocate
in an application in which he or she is cited
as a party and who is not physically present in court when an order
is granted against
him – he is present in court by virtue of
the fact that he is represented. The fact that these were proceedings
before the
Tribunal does not derogate from that principle.
[27]
My view on the appellant’s “absence”
is re-enforced, once again, in
Zuma
:
“
[60] Accordingly,
this Court found that the irregularity committed by the High Court,
in so far as it prevented
the parties' participation in the
proceedings, satisfied the requirement of an error in rule 42(1)(a),
rendering the order rescindable.
Whilst that matter correctly
emphasises the importance of a party's presence, the extent to which
it emphasises actual presence
must not be mischaracterised. As I see
it, the issue of presence or absence has little to do with actual, or
physical, presence
and everything to do with ensuring that proper
procedure is followed so that a party can be present, and so that a
party, in the
event that they are precluded from participating,
physically or otherwise, may be entitled to rescission in the event
that an error
is committed. I accept this. I do not, however, accept
that litigants can be allowed to butcher, of their own
will, judicial process
which in all other respects has been
carried out with the utmost degree of regularity, only to then,
ipso
facto
(by that same act), plead
the "absent victim". If everything turned on actual
presence, it would be entirely too easy
for litigants to render void
every judgment and order ever to be granted, by merely
electing
absentia
(absence).”
[28]
This being so, in my view, the order was
not granted in the absence of the appellant. This ground must
therefore fail.
Was
the order erroneously sought or granted
?
[29]
The following are the relevant provisions of s86 of the Act which
determine whether a debt counsellor
may/should refer a debt
re-arrangement agreement to the Tribunal or the Magistrate’s
Court for confirmation:
“
(6)
A debt counsellor who has accepted an application in terms of this
section must determine, in the prescribed manner and within
the
prescribed time –
(a)
whether the consumer appears to be over-indebted; and
(b) if the consumer seeks
a declaration of reckless credit, whether any of the consumer’s
credit agreements appear to be reckless.
(7) If, as a result of an
assessment conducted in terms of subsection (6), a debt counsellor
reasonably concludes that –
(a) the consumer is not
over-indebted, the debt counsellor must reject the application, even
if the debt counsellor has concluded
that a particular credit
agreement was reckless at the time it was entered into;
(b) the consumer is not
over-indebted, but is nevertheless experiencing, or likely to
experience, difficulty satisfying all the
consumer’s
obligations under credit agreements in a timely manner, the debt
counsellor may recommend that the consumer and
the respective credit
providers voluntarily consider and agree on a plan of debt
re-arrangement; or
(c) the consumer is
over-indebted, the debt counsellor may issue a proposal recommending
that the Magistrate’s Court make
either or both of the
following orders-
(i) that one or more of
the consumer’s credit agreements be declared to be
reckless credit, if the debt counsellor has
concluded that those
agreements appear to be reckless; and
(ii) that one or
more of the consumer’s obligations be re-arranged by
(aa) extending the period
of the agreement and reducing the amount of each payment due
accordingly;
(bb) postponing during a
specified period the dates on which payments are due under the
agreement;
(cc) extending the period
of the agreement and postponing during a specified period the dates
on which payments are due under the
agreement; or
(dd) recalculating the
consumer’s obligations because of contraventions of Part A or B
of Chapter 5, or Part A of Chapter
6.
(8)
If a debt counsellor makes a recommendation in terms of subsection
(7)(b) and –
(a) the consumer and each
credit provider concerned accept that proposal, the debt counsellor
must record the proposal in the form
of an order, and if it is
consented to by the consumer and each credit provider concerned, file
it as a consent order in terms
of section 138; or
(b) if paragraph (a) does
not apply, the debt counsellor must refer the matter to the
Magistrate’s Court with the recommendation.”
Erroneously sought or
erroneously granted
[30]
In
Naidoo
and Another v Matlala NO and Others
[10]
it was stated:
“…
In
general terms, a judgment is erroneously granted if there existed at
the time of its issue a fact of which the judge was unaware,
which
would have precluded the granting of the judgment and which would
have induced the judge, if aware of it not to grant the
judgment.”
[31]
And in
Daniel
v President of the Republic of South Africa
[11]
the Constitutional Court stated that:
“
The
applicant is required to show that, but for the error he relies on,
this Court could not have granted the impugned order. In
other words,
the error must be something this court was not aware of at the time
the order was made and which would have precluded
the granting of the
order in question, had the Court been aware of it.”
[32]
The NCT found
“
32.
The applicant, further, has not shown that a fact existed at the time
that would have induced the tribunal member to refuse
the granting of
the order had been aware of it. The majority of judgments granted by
the Tribunal in similar applications, consistently
indicate that the
Tribunal is of the view that a determination of an applicant’s
over-indebtedness when applying for debt
review, is not a bar to
applying for a consent order, albeit that consent orders are often
rescinded for various other reasons.
On these grounds alone, the
consent order cannot be rescinded. It is worth noting that the two
judgments the applicant referred
to in his submission each contain a
dissenting judgment which held that a determination of a consumer’s
over-indebtedness
is not a bar to applying to the Tribunal for a
consent order where all concerned parties have agreed to such an
application.”
[33]
I
n
More v
Eugene Cilliers and Others
[12]
the majority finding of the NCT was that a Tribunal does not have
jurisdiction to consider applications for consent orders
where
the debtor is over-indebted. This determination is made by the
debt counsellor at the time of the application, but
before the
letters to the creditors are sent to propose the debt re-arrangement,
and certainly before the actual consent of the
creditor to the
proposal is obtained. Accordingly the majority of the NCT granted the
recission.
[34]
The minority judgment in
More
however disagreed with the narrow view and literal interpretation of
s86(7) of the Act. It argued that it is the outcome of the
debt
counsellor’s determination of the consumer’s
over-indebtedness when the consumer applies for debt review
[13]
that informs whether or not the debt counsellor may then refer the
matter to the Tribunal or must refer the matter to the Magistrate’s
Court. However, the view was that:
“
4.
One has to consider the practical application of this and wonder why
the legislature would compel
an already overindebted consumer to
participate in what could be a costly legal proceeding in the
Magistrate’s Court but
allow the “not over-indebted”
consumer to enjoy a more cost-effective, voluntary administrative
process where creditors
are all in agreement.”
[35]
The minority then stated that the only explanation for the omission
of the over-indebted consumer in the
wording of s86(7)(b) and s86(8)
of the Act is that it was an oversight on the part of the
legislature. It stated that although
the Tribunal is a creature of
statute, in terms of s2(1) of the Act, the Tribunal must still
interpret the Act in line with the
purpose set out in s3
[14]
.
As s3(i) provides for a consistent and harmonised debt restricting
system that prioritizes the eventual satisfaction of all the
consumer’s debt obligations, s86(8) should be interpreted in
line with this purpose which is to find a cost-effective way
to
alleviate the over-indebtedness of a consumer in a way that his/her
creditors consent to. Given this, there is no justification
for
preventing an over-indebted debtor from entering into a voluntary
debt re-arrangement plan with his/her creditors.
[36]
Thus, the minority found in light of this that “a direct and
literal interpretation of the Act in this regard
would result in
absurdity and that a purposive interpretation should be applied”.
He found that s86(8) should have read as
follows:
“
(8) If a debt
counsellor makes a determination in terms of section 86(7)(b)
or
(7)(c)
and
(a) The consumer
and each credit provider each enter into a voluntary debt
re-arrangement plan, the debt counsellor must record
the plan in the
form of an order and if it is consented to by the consumer and each
credit provider concerned, file it as a consent
order in terms of
section 138.”
[37]
Given this interpretation, he found that the order was not
erroneously sought or erroneously granted and
would have dismissed
the recission application.
[38] In
Khoza v
Benay Sager t/a Debt Busters and Others
[15]
,
and again in a majority judgment, the NCT granted the recission
application. It found that the Tribunal has no authority to grant
consent order in circumstances where the debt counsellor has made a
determination that the debtor is over-indebted. The dissenting
minority judgment was penned by the same member as in the
More
judgment, and on the same grounds.
[39]
In the appeal before us, the same member who wrote the minority
judgments in
More
and
Khoza
this time was the presider.
It is therefore unsurprising that the present recission application
was refused.
[40]
Here, the NCT stated that the majority of judgments have found that a
finding by a debt counsellor that a
debtor is over-indebted is not a
bar to the grant of a consent order by the Tribunal, especially where
all the parties have agreed
to the grant of the order.
[41]
The NCT likened the consent order to a compromise and stated that, in
line with
Slabbert
v MEC for Health and Social Development of Gauteng Provincial
Government
[16]
,
that where there are no grounds
[17]
to set aside a compromise agreement, a court has no discretion to do
so.
[42] It
also stated that s165 does not state that the NCT “must”
vary or set aside an order –
the section specifically uses the
word “may” which vests it with a discretion. It states,
along the lines of the
More
and Khoza minority judgments, that the NCT is bound by the provisions
of s 2(1) of the Act which provides that the Act must be
interpreted
in a manner which gives effect to the provisions of s3 of the Act. It
then finds that there is “no justification
to rescind an order
based on consent by all parties to assist the applicant in
alleviating his indebtedness. In this instance,
rescinding such an
order would be contrary to the purpose of the NCA and would likely
result in undesirable consequences for the
parties.”
[18]
[43] Mr
Bowles has argued that it is not necessary for this court to decide
on the interpretation of s86(7)(a)
as the NCT’s primary finding
is contained in paragraph 39 of its judgment. In my view, the
relevant conclusions of the NCT
are the following:
“
39.
The applicant failed to prove that the consent order was granted in
his absence and further that there was
a fact, which had the Tribunal
member been aware of, would have induced him to refuse the granting
or the order. Furthermore, the
applicant has not alleged or proven
that there exists any fraud, error or mistake in the underlying
compromise agreement which
he entered into with his creditors. The
first respondent acted accordingly o instruction from the applicant
to create a voluntary
debt re-arrangement plan to which all parties
consented to and approached the tribunal to have it made a consent
order. In doing
so, the first respondent did not seek this order
erroneously.
40.
The Tribunal acted in line with section 138(1) by making the debt
re-arrangement plan a consent order
u[on request to do so and,
therefore, did not grant the order erroneously or in the applicant’s
absence since all the parties
were aware of the application.
Rescinding the consent order would be contrary to the purpose of the
NCA and would likely result
in undesirable consequences for the
parties.”
[44] I
agree with the views expressed by the NCT set out supra. I also agree
that the appellant has not alleged
that the compromise agreement was
tainted by an error: he takes sole issue with the grant of the order
from which he greatly benefited
when his repayments were reduced by
more than fifty per cent.
[45]
But even were I wrong on this, s165 provides that the NCT “may”
vary or rescind its order. Thus,
the NCT, and this court, has a wide
discretion to grant or refuse a rescission application even were the
requirements met. This
discretion must be exercised judicially and in
accordance with the purpose of the NCA which is, inter alia, to
promote and advance
the social and economic welfare of South
Africans, promote a fair, transparent, competitive, sustainable,
responsible, efficient,
effective and accessible credit market and
industry, and to protect consumers, by inter alia providing for a
consistent and harmonised
system of debt restructuring, enforcement
and judgment, which places priority on the eventual satisfaction of
all responsible consumer
obligations under credit agreements.
[19]
[46] In
my view, the restructuring of appellant’s debts is in line with
the purpose of s3(i) of the Act
and also alleviates his financial
burden whilst ensuring that his debt obligations towards his
creditors is fulfilled, albeit over
a longer period.
[47]
This being so, there are a number of factors which militate
against the grant of this application:
a)
an order, especially one granted by
consent, must evince a measure of finality. Even where it is
susceptible to a rescission application
it cannot be ignored that
Rule 24A(i) envisages that the application be brought within 20 days
of the date on which appellant became
aware of it. This is in order
to achieve the measure of certainty and finality for the parties that
court orders provide;
b)
a
court will also not exercise its discretion in favor of a rescission
application if undesirable consequences would follow
[20]
.
In
casu
there are several consequences which militate against the grant of
the relief sought by the appellant, the most important of which
are:
(i)
the application itself is devoid of any
proper detail regarding the applicant’s financial status at
time of the initial application
or now. He fails to set out how much
of the debts he has repaid and the amounts still to be paid. He also
fails to set out the
reason that the approached his attorneys on 31
August 2023. All of this is relevant to the discretion that the NCT
or the court
exercises under s165;
(ii)
there is no indication on these papers
that, in fact, the Tribunal was not aware of the provisions of s86 of
the Act and, therefore,
no indication that the order was in fact
erroneously sought or erroneously granted;
(iii)
the
parties would be restored to the
status
quo ante
.
Yet, had the appellant in fact been making the payments as he was
obliged to do
[21]
,
there is no indication whether those payments would have to be
reversed and paid back to appellant, or whether they would be
retained to reduce his indebtedness;
(iv)
the floodgates would open to disgruntled
debtors who are tired of the long debt review process, to resile from
it without paying
off their debts in full.
[48] It
is common cause that the NCA provides for only two methods for a
debtor to end the debt review process
him or herself ie by paying off
the debt in full or via s165(1).
[49] In
my view, given the above, the consequences of granting this appeal
are indeed undesirable. Thus, on both
legs of s165(1), this appeal
must fail .
[50]
There is no reason that the cost should not follow the result.
Order
Thus the order is:
The appeal is
dismissed with costs.
B NEUKIRCHER
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
I agree and it is so
ordered.
JJ STRIJDOM
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION
PRETORIA
This judgment was
prepared and authored by the judges whose names are 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 January 2025.
Parties’
representatives
For
the appellant
:
Adv J
Marais
Instructed
by
:
Campbell
Attorneys
For
the first respondent :
Adv
RG Bowles
Instructed
by
:
VHT
Attorneys
Matter
heard on
:
26
November 2024
Judgment
date
:
21
January 2025
[1]
Who is the Debt Counsellor
[2]
Which
is a “legal processing company”
[3]
The
respective powers of attorney are part of the terms and conditions
of each agreement
[4]
I
e
that a court may vary or rescind its decision or order made or
granted as a result of a mistake common to all the parties to
the
proceedings
[5]
Rules of the Tribunal
[6]
(CCT 52/21)
[2021] ZACC 28
;
2021 (11) BCLR 1263(CC)
(17 September
2021)
[7]
At
par 56
[8]
Paragraph
4 supra
[9]
Paragraph
5 supra
[10]
2012 (1) SA 143
(GNP) at par 6
[11]
[2013] ZACC 24
at paragraph 6
[12]
NCT/252500/2022/165(10
March 2023)
[13]
Either
in respect of s86(6)(a) or s86(8)(b) of the Act
[14]
“The purposes of this Act are to promote and advance the
social and economic welfare of South Africans, promote a
fair,
transparent, competitive, sustainable, responsible, efficient,
effective and accessible credit market and industry, and
to protect
consumers, by-
(a)
promoting
the development of a credit market that is accessible to all South
Africans, and in particular to
those who have historically been
unable to access credit under sustainable market conditions;
(b)
ensuring
consistent treatment of different credit products and different
credit providers;
(c)
promoting
responsibility in the credit market by-
(i) encouraging
responsible borrowing, avoidance of over-indebtedness and fulfilment
of financial obligations
by consumers; and
(ii) discouraging
reckless credit granting by credit providers and contractual default
by consumers;
(d)
promoting
equity in the credit market by balancing the respective rights and
responsibilities of credit providers
and consumers;
(e)
addressing
and correcting imbalances in negotiating power between consumers and
credit providers by-
(i) providing
consumers with education about credit and consumer rights;
(ii) providing
consumers with adequate disclosure of standardised information in
order to make informed choices;
and
(iii) providing
consumers with protection from deception, and from unfair or
fraudulent conduct by credit providers
and credit bureaux;
(f)
improving
consumer credit information and reporting and regulation of credit
bureaux;
(g)
addressing
and preventing over-indebtedness of consumers, and providing
mechanisms for resolving over-indebtedness
based on the principle of
satisfaction by the consumer of all responsible financial
obligations;
(h)
providing
for a consistent and accessible system of consensual resolution of
disputes arising from credit agreements;
and
(i)
providing
for a consistent and harmonised system of debt restructuring,
enforcement and judgment, which places
priority on the eventual
satisfaction of all responsible consumer obligations under credit
agreements.”
[15]
NCT/253293/2022/165
(11 March 2023)
[16]
(432/2016)
[2016] ZASCA 157
(3 October 2016) para 7, 8 and 20
[17]
Such
a iustus error or fraud
[18]
Naidoo and Another v
Matlala NO and Others
2012 (1) SA 143
(GNP) para 4
[19]
Section
3(i) of the Act
[20]
Naidoo v Matlala at paragraph 4
[21]
There
is no indication either way in the section 165(1) application
sino noindex
make_database footer start
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