Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 104South Africa
Firstrand Bank Limited v Mokone (24509/2022) [2025] ZAGPPHC 104 (31 January 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
31 January 2025
Headnotes
judgment application and Rule 46A application, I made the following
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Firstrand Bank Limited v Mokone (24509/2022) [2025] ZAGPPHC 104 (31 January 2025)
Firstrand Bank Limited v Mokone (24509/2022) [2025] ZAGPPHC 104 (31 January 2025)
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sino date 31 January 2025
SAFLII
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Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION PRETORIA
Case
Number: 24509/2022
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED
DATE:
31/01/2025
SIGNATURE
FIRSTRAND
BANK LIMITED
Plaintiff
and
TEBOGO
BATISTA GEORGE MOKONE
Defendant
This
judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected herein 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.
JUDGMENT
ELLIS
AJ
1.
On 11 March 2024, having heard argument in an opposed summary
judgment application and Rule
46A application, I made the following
order:
1.
Payment of the sum of
R2 161 872.42 (TWO MILLION ONE
HUNDRED AND SIXTY-ONE THOUSAND EIGHT HUNDRED AND SEVENTY-TWO RANDS
AND FORTY-TWO CENTS)
;
2.
Payment of interest on the above amount at the rate of
8.75%
(EIGHT POINT SEVEN FIVE)
percent per annum calculated and
capitalised monthly in advance in terms of the mortgage bond, from
the 20/02/2022 until date of
payment.
3.
An order declaring the Defendant’s Immovable property;
ERF 1[...] B[...]
EXTENSION 113 TOWNSHIP
Registration Division I.R
Province of GAUTENG
Measuring 357 (THREE
HUNDRED AND FIFTY-SEVEN) Square Meters
Held by Deed of Transfer
No. T32696/2014
(Situated at UNIT 1[...]
V[...] C[...], 1[...] E[...] ROAD, BARTLETT EXTENSION 113) mortgaged
under Mortgage Bond No. B[...] to
be specially executable for the
said sum plus costs.
4.
The Registrar is authorised to issue a Warrant of Execution for the
attachment of the Defendant’s
Immovable property.
5.
The Sheriff of the above Honourable Court is authorised to execute
the Warrant of Attachment.
6.
The immovable property to be sold at auction at a set reserved price
of R1 725 578.10.
7.
Costs on the scale as between party and party.
8.
The execution of this order is suspended for a period of 3 (three)
months from the date of this order.
9.
The Defendant’s attention is drawn to the provisions of
section
129(3)
and (4) of the
National Credit Act, 34 of 2005
: In terms of
this section, Defendant is entitled to reinstate the agreement by
paying to the credit provider all overdue amounts
(this is the rear
amount on the instalments and not the full balance outstanding),
together with the credit provider’s prescribed
default
administration charges and reasonable costs of enforcing the
agreement up to the time the default was remedied. Such payment
is to
be made before any sale in execution of the subject property to
revive the credit agreement.
2.
The reasons for my aforesaid order follow hereinbelow.
REASONS:
3.
Plaintiff’s cause of action is premised on a loan agreement and
mortgage bond concluded
between the parties in 2014. As at date of
summons, the arrears on the bond account were an amount of
R154 057.86 representing
6.75 months.
4.
Defendant does not dispute the conclusion of the loan agreement,
registration of the mortgage
bond, the terms of both the agreement
and the mortgage bond as well as the arrears on the bond account.
5.
It is trite that a defendant in a summary judgment application should
advance his or her
defence with sufficient degree of clarity in order
to enable the court to ascertain whether he or she has deposed to a
defence
which, if proved at trial, would constitute a good defence to
the action
[1]
and with reference
to the plea that was delivered.
[2]
6.
In
Joob
Joob Investments (Pty) Ltd v Stocks Mavundla Zek Joint Venture
,
[3]
the Supreme Court of Appeal discussed summary judgment proceedings
and held as follows:
“
[31] … the
summary judgment procedure was not intended to ‘shut (a
defendant) out from defending’, unless it
was very clear indeed
that he had no case in the action. It was intended to prevent sham
defences from defeating the rights of
parties by delay, and at the
same time causing great loss to plaintiffs who were endeavouring to
enforce their rights.
[32] The rationale for
summary judgment proceedings is impeccable. The procedure is not
intended to deprive a defendant with a triable
issue or a sustainable
defence of her/his day in court. After almost a century of successful
application in our courts, summary
judgment proceedings can hardly
continue to be described as extraordinary. Our courts, both of first
instance and at appellate
level, have during that time rightly been
trusted to ensure that a defendant with a triable issue is not shut
out. In the
Maharaj
case at 425G-426E, Corbett JA, was keen to
ensure that first, an examination of whether there has been
sufficient disclosure by
a defendant of the nature and grounds of his
defence and the facts upon which it is founded. The second
consideration is that the
defence so disclosed must be both bona fide
and good in law. A court which is satisfied that this threshold has
been crossed is
then bound to refuse summary judgment. Corbett JA
also warned against requiring of a defendant the precision apposite
to pleadings.
However, the learner judge was equally astute to ensure
that recalcitrant debtors pay what is due to a creditor.
[33] Having regard to its
purpose and its proper application, summary judgment proceedings only
hold terrors and/or ‘drastic’
for a defendant who has no
defence. Perhaps the time has come to discord these labels and to
concentrate rather on the proper application
of the rule, as set out
with customary clarity and elegance by Corbett JA in the
Maharaj
case at
425G-426E.”
[4]
6.
Defendant in his plea and affidavits filed in opposition to the
summary judgment application
and
Rule 46A
application, essentially
raised the following defences, namely:
6.1
that Defendant and his dependants’ right to housing in terms of
section 26 of the Constitution
will be infringed, as the mortgage
property is their primary residence;
6.2
that Plaintiff failed to comply with the provisions of section 129 of
the National Credit Act 34 of
2005 (“
NCA
”) as
Defendant never received the section 129 notice and as such Defendant
was unable to respond to or act in terms of such
notice;
6.3
that there are alternative and satisfactory remedies available, other
than execution and/or declaring
the property specially executive, to
recover the monies owing.
7.
The defences raised by Defendant must therefore be analysed in order
to determine whether
they are
bona fide
and good in law.
First
Defence: Section 26 of the Constitution
8.
It is trite that the Constitution of South Africa provides for
justifiable socio-economic
rights and this includes the right to have
access to adequate housing which is enshrined in section 26 of the
Contribution.
9.
In
Jaftha
v Schoeman and Others, Van Rooyen v Stoltz and Others
,
[5]
the Constitutional Court stated that section 26 of the Constitution
must be seen as making a decisive break from the past. It emphasises
the importance of adequate housing and in particular the security of
tenure in our new constitutional democracy. The indignity
suffered as
a result of evictions from homes, forced removals and relocation to
land often wholly inadequate for housing needs
has to be replaced
with a system in which the state must strive to provide access to
adequate housing for all and, where that exists,
refrain from
permitting people to be removed unless it can be justified.
[6]
10.
The construction and the order in
Jaftha
recognised that the
sale in execution of a person’s home limit the right to
housing, and such limitation must be justifiable
in terms of section
36 of the Constitution. Thus, judicial oversight was an essential
element of the application for the sale of
execution of a residential
home.
11.
However, the Constitutional Court in
Gundwana
v Steko Development CC and Others
,
[7]
clarified that the
Jaftha
decision applies not only in exceptional cases but also in typical
mortgage foreclosure cases, i.e. the matter at hand.
12.
Rule 46A of the Uniform Rules of Court was introduced to impose
procedural rules to give effect to the
right enshrined in section 26
of the Constitution and must be interpreted purposively against that
backdrop.
13.
The aim of Rule 46A is to assist the court in considering whether the
section 26 rights of a judgment
debtor would be violated if his/her
house is sold in execution and therefore requires judicial oversight
and consideration by a
court of various factors to determine whether
there is good cause to order execution against the immovable property
concerned.
The factors include whether the immovable property which
the execution creditor intends to execute against is the primary
residence
of the judgment debtor and whether there are alternative
means by which the judgment can satisfy the debt other than execution
against the judgment debtor’s primary residence.
14.
In casu
, Defendant merely raised his section 26 rights without
indicating how his constitutional right to adequate housing might be
impacted.
At no stage during the hearing of the matter did
Defendant, who appeared in person, suggested that he and his family
will
as result of indigence be left vulnerable to homelessness if the
property in question be sold in execution. On the contrary, Defendant
himself valued the property in the amount of R2 300 000.00
and submitted during the hearing hereof that the full outstanding
amount should be set as the reserved price at the sale of execution,
without proffering any other means by which Defendant’s
indebtedness could be satisfied. Defendant suggested, as set out in
his papers, that he be allowed to continue to pay a monthly
amount of
R2 000.00 (which was increased to R4 000.00), towards his
instalment of nearly R30 000.00 a month, until
such time that he
gets a job or recovers financially, losing count of the fact that his
indebtedness towards Plaintiff continues
to escalate.
15.
In my view, there is no substance in Defendant’s reliance on
section 26 of the Constitution in
opposing the summary judgment
application or the Rule 46A application. It appears from the facts
and the submissions made that
it was raised purely as a dilatory
defence, which is not good in law.
Second
Defence: Defendant did not receive the section 129 notice:
16.
In
Sebola
and Another v Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd and Another
,
[8]
Cameron J, writing for the majority, held the following in respect of
the proper meaning of section 129 of the NCA, namely:
‘
[86]…I
conclude that the obligation section 130(1)(a) imposes on a credit
provider to “deliver” a notice to the
consumer is
ordinarily satisfied by proof that the credit provider sent the
notice by registered mail to the address stipulated
by the consumer
in the credit agreement, and that the notice was delivered to the
post office of the intended recipient for collection
there.
[87] To sum up. The
requirement that a credit provider provide notice in terms of section
129(1)(a) to the consumer must be understood
in conjunction with
section 130, which requires delivery of the notice. The statute,
though giving no clear meaning to “deliver”,
requires
that the credit provider seeking to enforce a credit agreement aver
and prove that the notice was delivered to the consumer.
Where the
credit provider posts the notice, proof of registered despatch to the
address of the consumer, together with proof that
the notice reached
the appropriate post office for delivery to the consumer, will in the
absence of contrary indication constitute
sufficient proof of
delivery.
If
in contested proceedings the consumer avers that the notice did not
reach her, the court must establish the truth of the claim.
If it
found that the credit provider has not complied with section 129(1),
it must in terms of section 130(4)(b) adjourn the matter
and set out
the steps the credit provider must take before the matter may be
resumed
.’
[9]
17.
Although the aforesaid conclusions reached in the
Sebola
-matter,
quite clearly describe the interplay between the provisions of
sections 129 and 130 of the NCA, culminating in the finding
that
section 129(1)(a) must be interpreted as requiring the credit
provider to prove that the notice was indeed provided to the
consumer, and if posted, proof of registered despatch to the address
of the consumer, together with proof that the notice reached
the
appropriate post office for delivery to the consumer, the broad
statement made by Cameron J following the findings (the underlined
portion in the quotation above), required clarification.
18.
In
Kabyana
v Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd,
[10]
the Constitutional Court clarified the broad statement in the
Sebola
-matter,
more particularly in relation to the misinterpretation of “contrary
indication”, which was understood to mean
that a consumer may
simply aver that he or she did not receive the notice, in order to
invoke the provisions of section 130(4)(b).
To this end, Mhlantla AJ,
referred to the statement made in
Sebola
,
namely that “
[T]he
statute does not demand that the credit provider prove that the
notice has actually come to the attention of the consumer,
since that
would ordinarily be impossible
”
[11]
,
before clarifying the misreading of “contrary indication”
in the following terms:
‘
[52]…The
“contrary indication” requirement applies to two
inferences that a court may make: the inference that
the notification
from the Post Office (indicating that a registered item is available
for collection) reached the consumer and
the inference that a
reasonable consumer would have responded to that notification and
retrieved the notice. The first inference
is based on the reasonable
assumption that when a credit provider has dispatched a notice by
means of registered post, has specified
the correct address for the
consumer and has insured that the notice is delivered to the correct
branch of the Post Office, the
notification calling on the consumer
to collect a registered item will be delivered to her address. A
contrary indication would
be a factor showing that, in the
circumstances and despite the credit provider’s efforts, the
notification did not reach
the consumer’s designated address.
The second inference is based on the assumption that a consumer
acting reasonably would,
having received the notification from the
Post Office to retrieve a registered item, proceed to collect the
notice. In these circumstances
a contrary indication would be a
factor showing that the consumer acted reasonably in failing to
collect or attend to the notice,
despite the delivery of the
notification to her address.
[53] Once a credit
provider has produced the track and trace report indicating that the
section 129 notice was sent to the correct
branch of the Post Office
and has shown that a notification was sent to the consumer by the
Post Office, that credit provider will
generally have shown that it
has discharged its obligations under the Act to effect delivery. The
credit provider is at that stage
entitled to aver that it has done
what is necessary to ensure that the notice reached the consumer. It
then falls to the consumer
to explain why it is not reasonable to
expect the notice to have reached her attention if she wishes to
escape the consequences
of that notice. And it makes sense for the
consumer to bear this burden of rebutting the inference of delivery,
for the information
regarding the reasonableness of her conduct
generally lies solely within her knowledge. In the absence of such an
explanation the
credit provider’s averment will stand. Put
differently, even if there is evidence indicating that the section
129 notice
did not reach the consumer’s attention, that will
not amount to an indication disproving delivery if the reason for
non-receipt
is the consumer’s unreasonable behaviour.’
[12]
19.
Mhlantla AJ concluded that proof of delivery of a section 129 notice
(when delivery occurs through the
postal service), entails proof
that:
(a) the section 129
notice was sent via registered mail and was sent to the correct
branch of the Post Office, in accordance
with the postal address
nominated by the consumer. This may be deduced from a track and trace
report and the terms of the relevant
credit agreement;
(b) the Post Office
issued a notification to the consumer that a registered item was
available for collection;
(c) the Post
Office’s notification reached the consumer. This may be
inferred from the fact that the Post Office
sent the notification to
the consumer’s correct postal address, which inference may be
rebutted by an indication to the contrary;
and
(d)
a
reasonable consumer would have collected the section 129 notice and
engaged with its contents. This may be inferred if the credit
provider has proven (a)-(c), which inference may, again, be rebutted
by a contrary indication: an example of why, in the circumstances,
the notice would not have come to the attention of a reasonable
consumer.
[13]
20.
In casu
, Plaintiff indeed sent the section 129 notice per
registered post to Defendant’s nominated postal address as
depicted on
the credit agreement. The nominated postal address is
situated in Boksburg, and the track and trace report confirmed that
it was
duly dispatched and received at the correct Post Office.
Moreover, the track and trace report confirm that a first and second
notification
were sent to Defendant, without any collection. In this
regard, Plaintiff in my view satisfied the requirements of
subparagraphs
(a)-(c) referred to in the immediately preceding
paragraph. Defendant did not dispute the aforesaid, but instead
argued that Plaintiff
failed to prove that Defendant collected the
notice, which is not a rebuttal to the requirements set out above.
Notably, Defendant’s
submission in this regard is premised on
the exact misreading of “contrary indication” in the
Kubyana
-matter, which the Constitutional Court rejected out of
hand. There is therefore no merit in Defendant’s second
defence.
Third
defence: alternative and satisfactory remedies available, other than
execution
21.
The facts adduced by Defendant indicate that Plaintiff has since 2021
actively assisted Defendant through
means of financial relief
assistance, offering a holiday period on his loan account and the
Quick Sell option, and even pended
legal action in August 2022 upon
receipt of a distressed application from Defendant. None of these
measure managed to ensure that
the arrears are settled and the
account reinstated.
22.
The summary judgment and Rule 46A applications were therefore brought
after numerous attempts by Plaintiff
to obtain payment from Defendant
has failed, whilst Defendant did not dispute the debt. I therefore
conclude that execution is
the only remedy available in the
circumstances of this matter, in view of the fact that all other
remedies yielded no satisfactory
outcome.
23.
Notwithstanding the fact that I could not uphold any of the defences
raised by Defendant, I deemed it
appropriate to set a reserve price
in this matter. To this end I allowed an updated valuation report of
the property in terms of
Rule 46A(8), which was submitted by
Plaintiff in a supplementary affidavit. The updated valuation report
indicated that the market
value of the property is R2 250 000.00
and that a forced sale of the property will yield an amount of
R1 800 000.00.
24.
During the hearing of this matter counsel for Plaintiff graciously
suggested that the valuation of the
property put forward by
Defendant, namely R2 300 000.00 should be considered in
determining a reserve price, taking into
account that Defendant has
continued to pay amounts into his account, albeit insubstantial to
eradicate the arrears to the account.
I have already referred to this
issue upfront and confirm that the reserve price was determined in
accordance with the amounts
proffered by Defendant.
25.
In order to further afford Defendant every opportunity to remedy the
situation, I suspended execution
of the order for three (3) months
and directed Defendant’s attention to the provisions of section
129(3) and (4) of the NCA,
wherefore I issued the order in paragraph
1 above.
ELLIS AJ
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
GAUTENG DIVISION OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
APPEARANCES:
For Plaintiff:
Adv J Minnaar
Instructed by:
Hammond Pole Attorneys
For Defendant:
In person
Date of hearing:
11 March 2024
Date Delivered:
31 January 2025
[1]
Breitenbach
v Fiat SA (Edms) Bpk
1972
(2) SA 226
(T) at 228.
[2]
Tumileng
Trading CC v National Security and Fire (Pty) Ltd
2020 (6) SA 624
(WCC) at [22], [24] and [26]-[27].
[3]
2009 (5) SA 1 (SCA).
[4]
Joob
Joob Investments (Pty) Ltd v Stocks Mavundla Zek Joint Venture
2009 (5) SA 1
(SCA) at [31]-[33].
[5]
2005 (2) SA 140 (CC).
[6]
Jaftha
v Schoeman and Others, Van Rooyen v Stoltz and Others
[2004] ZACC 25
;
2005 (2) SA 140
(CC) at
[29]
.
[7]
2011 (3) SA 608 (CC).
[8]
2012 (5) SA 142 (CC).
[9]
Sebola
and Another v Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd and Another
2012 (5) SA 142
(CC) at [86]-[87]. My own emphasis added.
[10]
2014 (3) SA 56
(CC).
[11]
Sebola
and Another v Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd and Another
supra at [61].
[12]
Kubyana
v Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd
2014
(3) SA 56
(CC) at [52]-[53].
[13]
Kubyana
v Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd
supra at [54].
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