begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
>>
2025
>>
[2025] ZAGPPHC 460
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## ABSA Bank Limited v Modingwana (2023/126064)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 460 (9 May 2025)
ABSA Bank Limited v Modingwana (2023/126064)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 460 (9 May 2025)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPPHC/Data/2025_460.html
sino date 9 May 2025
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 2023-126064
(1) REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO THE JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
DATE:
9 May 2025
SIGNATURE:
In
the matter between:
ABSA
BANK LIMITED
PLAINTIFF
AND
SYDNEY
THIPE MODINGWANA
DEFENDANT
JUDGMENT
MYBURGH,
AJ
INTRODUCTION:
[1]
The Plaintiff in the summary judgment applicationt was ABSA Bank Ltd,
with its status
as a duly registered bank and its registration as an
authorized Financial Credit Provider in terms of Section 40 of the
National Credit Act
, Act 34 of 2005
(herein
after referred to as “NCA”), being common cause.
[2]
On 14 May 2019, at Centurion, the Plaintiff and the Defendant entered
into a written
Instalment Sale Agreement, in terms whereof the
Defendant purchased from the Plaintiff a 2013 Nissan Juke 1.6,
properly identified
in the agreement, for the purchase price of R85
652.17 (herein after referred to as “the Agreement”).
[3]
In terms of the Agreement, the Defendant was further liable to pay to
the Plaintiff
finance charges in the amount of R44 661.81 at a
variable rate of 12.57% per annum over a period of 72 months. The
agreement afforded
the Plaintiff the right, in the event of the
Defendant failing to make any payment in terms of the Agreement or
fail to comply
with any other provision of the Agreement or any legal
provision applicable in respect of the said Agreement, to terminate
the
Agreement in which event, the Plaintiff shall be entitled,
subject to the provisions of Section 127 and Section 129 read with
Section
130 of the NCA, to the return and possession of the motor
vehicle.
[4]
The Defendant failed to make the payments as required in terms of the
Agreement and
was in arrears with monthly instalments in the amount
of R 37 983.57.
[5]
The Plaintiff duly complied with the prescripts of the NCA,
specifically Section 129
read with Section 130, by dispatching a
letter of demand, informing the Defendant that he was in default
under the Agreement and
has remained in default for more than 20
business days and that the full outstanding amounts have become due,
owing and payable.
The Defendant was informed of his options in terms
of the NCA, and insofar as he fails to make payment of the arrear
amount outstanding
plus interest thereon at the default interest rate
within 10 days from the date of delivery of the notice, the Plaintiff
will approach
a Court.
[6]
The Defendant did not take any steps contemplated in Section 127 of
the NCA and as
such the Plaintiff elected to cancel the Agreement.
[7]
The Plaintiff thus claims, in this Summary Judgment, the return of
the motor vehicle,
with the claim for damages, if any, to be
postponed
sine die
.
[8]
Before this Court the Defendant represented himself.
[9]
On proper consideration of the Defendant’s affidavit resisting
summary judgment
and his argument, all of the aforementioned were
common cause, save that the Defendant argued that the Agreement was
“voided”
on 14 May 2019, being the date on which the
Agreement was, according to the Plaintiff, concluded. The Defendant
submitted that
“…
the Agreement voided when the
unregulated "Mechanical Breakdown Warranty" appeared on the
agreement under "Additional
fees"”.
[10]
In paragraphs 17 to 18 of the Defendant’s affidavit resisting
summary judgment, he states
the following:
"The Plaintiff
misrepresented the "Mechanical Breakdown Insurance" as what
the Defendant was buying, when in fact
it is immediately converted to
an unregulated loan, namely "Mechanical Breakdown Warranty".
The "Mechanical
Breakdown Warranty" was not misrepresented as an insurance
product, it is the actual unregulated lending
product that
masquerades as the "Mechanical Breakdown Insurance", the
insurance product, the Applicant's summary is ambiguous
and
misleading.”
[11]
The Defendant argued that the Mechanical Breakdown Warranty
contravened Section 8(2) of the NCA
and therefore, per paragraph 27
of his affidavit, “…
voids the credit agreement as it
is based on an unlawful provision as per the NCA”.
[12]
The Defendant, in argument, submitted that he is prepared to return
the motor vehicle to the
Plaintiff once he has received repayment of
all monies paid by him to the Plaintiff, plus interest.
THE
NATIONAL CREDIT ACT 34 OF 2005
:
[13]
The argument advanced by the Defendant should be considered against
the express provisions and
dictates of the NCA, and as a point of
departure,
Section 8(2)
thereof, being the only express contravention
submitted by the Defendant.
[14]
Section 8(2)
reads as follows:
(2)
An agreement, irrespective of its form, is not a credit agreement if
it is—
(a)
a policy of insurance or credit extended by an insurer solely to
maintain the payment of
premiums on a policy of insurance;
(b)
a lease of immovable property; or
(c)
a transaction between a stokvel and a member of that stokvel in
accordance with the
rules of that stokvel.
[15]
Sections 8(2)(b)
and
8
(2)(c) find no possible application in the
present matter.
Section 8(2)(a)
is applicable to policies of
insurance and credit provided to the insured by an insurer. In any
event,
Section 8(2)
merely regulates the status of certain agreements
as not being credit agreements and does not impose any penalty of
voidness. I
thus find the Defendant’s reliance on
Section 8(2)
as misplaced.
[16]
Albeit not specifically argued, I consider
Section 89(1)
to (2) of
the NCA, which reads as follows:
Unlawful credit
agreements
(1)
This Section does not apply to a pawn transaction.
(2)
Subject to subSections (3) and (4), a credit agreement is unlawful
if—
(a)
at the time the agreement was made the consumer was an unemancipated
minor unassisted by
a guardian, or was subject to—
(i)
an order of a competent court holding that person to be mentally
unfit; or
(ii)
an administration order referred to in Section 74(1) of the
Magistrates’ Courts
Act, and the administrator concerned did
not consent to the agreement, and the credit provider knew, or could
reasonably have determined,
that the consumer was the subject of such
an order;
(b)
the agreement results from an offer prohibited in terms of Section
74(1);
(c)
it is a supplementary agreement or document prohibited by Section
91(a);
(d)
at the time the agreement was made, the credit provider was
unregistered and this Act requires
that credit provider to be
registered; or
(e)
the credit provider was subject to a notice by the National Credit
Regulator or a provincial
credit regulator requiring the credit
provider—
(i)
to stop offering, making available or extending credit under any
credit agreement,
or agreeing to do any of those things; or
(i)
to stop offering, making available or extending credit under the
particular
form of credit agreement used by the credit provider,
whether or not this
Act requires that credit provider to be registered, and no further
appeal or review is available in respect
of that notice.
[17]
In terms of Section 89(5), and if a credit agreement is unlawful in
terms of this Section, despite
any other legislation or any provision
of an agreement to the contrary, a court must make a just and
equitable order including
but not limited to an order that the credit
agreement is void as from the date the agreement was entered into.
[18]
The Defendant was not a minor, and as such Section 89(2)(a) finds no
application in the present
matter. The agreement did not result from
an offer prohibited in terms of Section 74(1) not was it a
supplementary agreement or
document prohibited by Section 91(a). At
the time the Plaintiff was a registered credit provider and was not
subject to a notice
by the National Credit Regulator or a provincial
credit regulator.
[19]
The agreement that forms the subject of this summary judgment was
therefore not unlawful.
[20]
Again, and although not specifically argued, I now turn to consider
whether the specific provision,
being the “
mechanical
breakdown warranty
”, was unlawful.
[21]
Section 90 of the NCA deals with unlawful provisions of credit
agreements. The argument advanced
by the Defendant seems to suggest
that the “
mechanical breakdown warranty
” provision
was unlawful.
[22]
There is simply no factual or legal basis to find that, in terms of
Section 90(2)(a), its general
purpose or effect was to defeat the
purposes or policies of the Act, deceive the Defendant or subject the
Defendant to fraudulent
conduct.
[23]
There is simply no factual or legal basis to find that, in terms of
Section 90(2)(b), it directly
or indirectly purports to waive or
deprive the Defendant of a right set out in the Act, avoided the
Plaintiff’s obligation
or duty in terms of this Act, set aside
the effect of any provision of the Act or authorised the Plaintiff to
do anything that
is unlawful in terms of the Act or fail to do
anything that is required in terms of this Act.
[24]
There is no waiver of rights contemplated in Section 90(2)(c) and did
not the from an offer prohibited
in terms of Section 74(2) or (3), as
contemplated in Section 90(2)(d). It did not make the agreement
subject to a supplementary
agreement prohibited by Section 91(a),
contemplated in Section 90(2)(e). It did not require the Defendant to
enter into a supplementary
agreement, or sign a document, prohibited
by Section 91(a), contemplated in Section 90(2)(f). It further did
not purport to exempt
the Plaintiff from any liability contemplated
in Section 90(2)(g). It did not express any acknowledgement by the
Defendant contemplated
in Section 90(2)(h).
[25]
The provision did not express an agreement to forfeit any money
(Section 90(2)(i)), it did not
purport to appoint the Plaintiff, or
any employee or agent of the Plaintiff as an agent of the Defendant
for any purpose other
than those contemplated in Section 102 (Section
90(2)(j)). It did not contain an authorisation for any person acting
on behalf
of the Plaintiff to enter any premises for the purposes of
taking possession of goods to which the credit agreement relates, or
grant of a power of attorney in advance. It did not contain an
undertaking to sign in advance any documentation relating to
enforcement
of the agreement, a consent to a pre- determined value of
costs relating to enforcement of the agreement, a limitation of the
credit
provider’s liability for an action contemplated in
subparagraph (iv), or a consent to any jurisdiction (Section
90(2)(k)).
[26]
The “
mechanical breakdown warranty
” did not
expresses an agreement by the Defendant to deposit with the
Plaintiff, or with any other person at the direction
of the
Plaintiff, an identity document, credit or debit card, bank account
or automatic teller machine access card, or any similar
identifying
document or device or provide a personal identification code or
number to be used to access an account (Section 90(2)(l)).
[27]
The “
mechanical breakdown warranty
” did not
purport to direct or authorise any person engaged in processing
payments to give priority to payments for the Plaintiff
over any
other credit provider (Section 90(2)(m)). It did not purport to
authorise or permit the Plaintiff to satisfy an obligation
of the
Defendant by making a charge against an asset, account, or amount
deposited by or for the benefit of the Defendant, except
by way of a
standing debt arrangement, or to the extent permitted by Section 124
(Section 90(2)(n)).
[28]
The “
mechanical breakdown warranty
” did not state
or imply that the rate of interest is variable, except to the extent
permitted by Section 103(4) (Section
90(2)(o)).
[29]
Even on the broadest reading of the affidavit resisting summary
judgment and the heads of argument
filed by the Defendant, such
provision in the agreement does not fall fowl of Section 90. The
inclusion of an unlawful provision,
in any event, does not carry with
it the automatic result of voidness of the agreement
in toto
.
[30]
I therefore find that the “
mechanical breakdown warranty
”
was not an unlawful provision in terms of Section 90 and did not
result in the Agreement being void.
[31]
The Defendant did not allege an inability to pay or over-indebtedness
and as such it is accepted
that the Agreement complied with Sections
79, 80 and 81 of the NCA.
[32]
Lastly, the Defendant also argued that, due to the inclusion of the
provision in the Agreement,
the Plaintiff contravened the
Prevention
of Organized Crime Act
121 of 1998 Chapter 3 and was involved in
money laundering. These arguments are rejected as baseless.
THE
APPLICABLE TEST IN SUMMARY JUDGMENT PROCEEDINGS:
[33]
In
Maharaj v Barclays National Bank Ltd
,
1976 (1) SA
418
(A) at 4268-C Corbett JA outlined the principles and what is
required from a Defendant in order to successfully oppose a claim for
summary judgment as follows:
“
All that the
Court enquires into is: (a) whether the defendant had "fully"
disclosed the nature and grounds of his defence
and the material
facts upon which it is founded, and (b) whether on the facts so
disclosed the defendant appears to have, as to
either the whole or
part of the claim, a defence which is both bona fide and good in law.
If satisfied on these matters the Court
must refuse summary judgment
either wholly or in part, as the case may be. The word "fully",
as used in the context of
the Rule (and its predecessors), has been
the cause of some judicial controversy in the past. It connotes, in
my view, that, while
the defendant need not deal exhaustively with
the facts and the evidence relied upon to substantiate them, he must
at least disclose
his defence and the material facts upon which it is
based with sufficient particularity and completeness to enable the
court to
decide whether the affidavit discloses a bona fide defence.”
[34]
See also in this regard
Breitenbach vs Fiat SA (Edms) Bpk
1976 (2) (TPD) 226 at 229E-H and
South African Land
Arrangements CC v Nedbank Limited
2015 JDR 2364 (SCA) para
[13].
[35]
In
Joob Joob Investments (Pty) Ltd v Stocks Mavundla Zek Joint
Venture
2009 (5) SA 1
(SCA) Navsa JA said:
'[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 applications in our courts,
summary judgment
proceedings can hardly continue to be described as extraordinary.'
[36]
I find, having properly considered the affidavit resisting summary
judgment, the heads of argument
filed by the Defendant as well as the
argument presented in Court, that the Defendant had fully disclosed
the nature and grounds
of his defence and the material facts upon
which it is founded.
[37]
I interpose to state that, at the onset of the matter, I enquired
from the Defendant whether
he required legal assistance, which he
confirmed he did not. He came over eloquently and was more than
capable in expressing himself,
evidenced by the fact that he drafted
his own pleadings.
[38]
However, and having regard to the discussion above, the defence
raised by the Defendant is not
good in law. There is no triable issue
or sustainable defence insofar as it concerns the return of the motor
vehicle. On the Defendant’s
own version, he should not retain
the motor vehicle. Having made such finding it is unnecessary to make
any finding on
bona fideis
.
[39]
In the result I am satisfied that the Plaintiff is entitled to be
awarded summary judgment in
its favour insofar as the return of the
motor vehicle is sought.
ORDER
[40]
I therefore make the following order:
1.
Ex abudandi cautela
the cancellation of the Instalment Sale
Agreement is confirmed.
2.
Summary judgment is granted in favour of the Plaintiff against the
Defendant,
and the Defendant is directed to return the vehicle
identified as a
2013 NISSAN JUKE 1.6 ACENTA
motor vehicle with
engine number
H[...]
and chassis number
S[...]
to the
Plaintiff.
3.
The Defendant is ordered to pay the costs of this application, such
costs to
include the costs of counsel on Scale B.
4.
The remaining issues are postponed
sine die
.
SJ
MYBURGH
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT, PRETORIA
APPEARANCES:
FOR
PLAINTIFF:
Adv
J Eastes Room
Cell:
072 570 6297
Email:
eastes@lawcircle co za
Delberg
Attorneys
Tel:
(012) 361 5001
Ref:
L Kilian/ZT/AVAF-D0075
FOR
DEFENDANT:
In
person
Email:
sydneymodingwana@gmail.corn
Cell:
082 294 2854
sino noindex
make_database footer start