Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 536South Africa
Botes v SB Guarnatee Company (RF) Proprietary Limited and Others (87458/2019) [2025] ZAGPPHC 536 (23 May 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
23 May 2025
Headnotes
judgment against the applicant in favour of the first respondent in the following terms:
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Botes v SB Guarnatee Company (RF) Proprietary Limited and Others (87458/2019) [2025] ZAGPPHC 536 (23 May 2025)
Botes v SB Guarnatee Company (RF) Proprietary Limited and Others (87458/2019) [2025] ZAGPPHC 536 (23 May 2025)
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sino date 23 May 2025
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA)
CASE
NO: 87458/2019
(1) REPORTABLE:
YES /
NO
(2) OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES: YES /
NO
(3) REVISED. YES
DATE
23 MAY 2025
SIGNATURE
In
the application between:
EWOUD
FREDERICK BOTES
APPLICANT
and
S
B GUARNATEE COMPANY (RF) PROPRIETARY LIMITED
(Registration
number: 2006/021576/07)
FIRST
RESPONDENT
STANDARD
BANK OF SOUTH AFRICA LIMITED
(Registration
number: 1962/000738/06)
SECOND
RESPONDENT
CHANTELLE
SCOTT
(Registration
number: NCRBC 3858)
THIRD
RESPONDENT
THE
SHERIFF OF THE HIGH COURT, GEORGE
FOURTH
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
Introduction:
1.
On 15 February 2024, this court (
per
the honourable Van Wyk
AJ) granted summary judgment against the applicant in favour of the
first respondent in the following terms:
1.1.
Payment in the amount of R1,606,163.34 (One million six hundred
and sixth thousand one hundred and sixty-three rand and thirty-four
cents);
1.2.
Interest on the aforementioned amount calculated at the rate of
10.45% per annum from 8 November 2019 to date of payment, both dates
inclusive;
1.3.
An order declaring the immovable property, known as Erf 1[...]
H[...], in the municipality and district of George, Province of
Western
Cape, (“
the immovable property
”)
measuring 4.2686 (Four comma two six eight) hectares, held by Deed of
Transfer number T72727/2016 – subject to the
conditions
contained therein, specially executable in terms of Uniform Rule
46A(a)(d), which immovable property is to be sold in
execution by the
sheriff with the reserve price;
1.4.
A reserve price was set in the amount of R1,498,200.00;
1.5.
The registrar is authorised to issue of writ of execution against
the immovable property in terms of Uniform Rule 46A(1)(a)(ii) read
with Uniform Rule 46A(2)(c);
1.6.
Costs on an attorney and client scale.
2.
The first respondent had a securitized claim
against the applicant, based on a written indemnity agreement (read
with the relevant
provisions of the mortgage bond agreement), which
agreement formed part of a suite of agreements between the applicant,
the first
respondent and the second respondent.
3.
The main underlying agreement is a written home
loan agreement (“the loan agreement”) concluded on 17
October 2016 between
the applicant and the second respondent.
4.
Pursuant to the conclusion of the loan agreement,
a first covering continuing mortgage bond was registered over the
immovable property
in favour of the first respondent.
5.
The applicant did not appeal against the summary
judgment granted on
15 February 2024.
6.
During November 2024, some 9 months after
the summary judgment was
granted, the applicant consulted with the third respondent to apply
for a debt rearrangement order per
the provisions of the National
Credit Act, 34 of 2005 (“the NCA”).
7.
Why the applicant waited approximately 9 months
before he approached
a debt counsellor is not explained.
8.
Significantly, as long ago as 31 October 2019,
the second
respondent caused a section 129 notice in terms of the NCA to be
personally served on the applicant. In terms
of this notice,
the applicant was advised of his rights regarding the NCA.
9.
Pursuant to the receipt of the section 129
notice, the applicant
(until the summary judgment was granted on the 15th of February 2024)
failed to approach a debt counsellor
and failed to exercise any of
the remedies that he may have had in terms of the NCA.
10.
In the interim, the first respondent proceeded with execution steps
against the applicant.
11.
On 30 January 2025, the sheriff (fourth respondent) delivered a
notice of sale in execution pertaining to the immovable property.
12.
This jolted the applicant into action, and on the 19
th
of
February 2025, the applicant instituted an urgent application, set
down to be adjudicated on 25 February 2025.
13.
In Part A
of the urgent application, the applicant sought an order,
inter
alia
,
for the stay of the execution of the judgment granted against the
applicant on 4 October 2023,
[1]
pending the outcome of Part B of the urgent application.
14.
In Part B, the applicant seeks various declaratory orders to the
effect that the applicant was not precluded from applying for debt
review pursuant to the summary judgment being granted.
Effectively, the applicant sought to obtain a declaratory order with
the effect that the applicant would be permitted to rearrange
his
judgment debt and that the further execution steps pertaining to the
immovable property, be stayed permanently.
15.
Even though the applicant seeks an order in terms of Part A, pending
the final determination of Part B of his notice of motion, the
applicant's notice of motion makes it clear that both Part A and
Part
B are inexplicably set down on the same day.
16.
On 25 February 2025, the urgent court, (per the honourable Yende
AJ),
granted an order in terms of which the application was removed from
the roll and the applicant was ordered to pay the first
and second
respondent’s wasted costs.
17.
It is this application that currently serves before me.
The
issue(s)
:
18.
The crisp issue in this matter is whether a judgment debtor is
entitled
to apply for debt review, pursuant to a judgment being
granted against such judgment debtor.
19.
If not, the applicant is not entitled to the declaratory relief set
out in Part B and self-evidently also not entitled to a stay of
execution in terms of Part A to his notice of motion.
20.
Section 86 of the NCA provides as follows:
“
Application
for debt review:
86. (1)
A consumer may apply to a debt counsellor in the prescribed manner
and form to have the consumer declared
over-indebted.
(2)
An application in terms of this section
may
not be made in respect of, and does not apply to, a particular credit
agreement if, at the time of that application, the credit
provider
under that credit agreement has proceeded to take the steps
contemplated in section 130 to enforce that agreement.
”
(my
emphasis)
21.
Section 130 of the NCA provides as follows:
“
Debt
procedures in a Court
(1)
Subject to subsection (2), a credit provider may approach the court
for
an order to enforce a credit agreement only if, at that time, the
consumer is in default and has been in default under that credit
agreement for at least 20 business days and –
(a)
at least 10 business days have elapsed since the credit provider
delivered a notice to the consumer
as contemplated in section 86(10),
or section 129(1), as the case may be;
(b)
in the case of a notice contemplated in section 129(1), the consumer
has –
(i)
not responded to that notice; or
(ii)
responded to the notice by rejecting the credit provider’s
proposals…”
22.
The delivery of a section 129 notice is an obligatory step a credit
provider must take when enforcing that agreement.
23.
It is common cause that the second respondent delivered a section
129
notice to the applicant and that the applicant failed to respond
thereto. As such, and in accordance with section 86(2),
the
applicant may not apply to a debt counsellor in respect of a credit
agreement if, at the time of that application, the credit
provider
under that agreement has proceeded to take the steps contemplated in
section 130 to enforce that agreement.
24.
Accordingly, the second respondent is excluded from any subsequent
debt review application.
25.
In
Nedbank
Limited v The National Credit Regulator
,
[2]
the Supreme Court of Appeal held that consumers can only approach a
debt counsellor after they have received a section 129(1)(a)
notice
for the purposes as set out in section 129(1)(a) and not for the
general debt review as contemplated by section 86(1).
The bar
against debt review in terms of section 86(2) of the Act was
accordingly interpreted to commence once a section 129(1)(a)
notice
was delivered to a consumer in respect of a specific credit
agreement.
26.
In
FirstRand
Bank Limited v Barnard
,
[3]
the court indicated that the object of debt review and restructuring
is not to enable a consumer to continue in possession
and use of the
relevant property after the instalment sale agreement under which
that property is held is cancelled. The
court remarked that the
same can be said in regard to a claim on a home loan.
27.
This is fatal to the relief sought by the applicant for a stay of
the
execution proceedings.
28.
In
Nedbank
Limited and Others v National Credit Regulator and another
,
[4]
the Supreme Court of Appeal indicated the following in this
regard:
[5]
“
[14]
…The purpose of a s 129(1)(a) notice is the resolution of a
dispute and the bringing up to date of payments
under a specific
credit agreement. While it is a ‘step’ prior to the
commencement of legal proceedings it is also the
first ‘step’
the credit provider ‘has proceeded to take … to enforce
that agreement’ (s 86(2)).
It does not exclude a debt review
save in so far as it relates to the particular credit agreement under
consideration. Nor
does it exclude a general debt review
pursuant to ss 83 and 85. Key to the construction of s 86(2) are the
words ‘has proceeded
to take the steps’ used in s 86(2).
A ‘step’, amongst its meanings, includes ‘an action
or movement which
leads to a result; one of a series of proceedings
or measures’. To ‘proceed’ means ‘to go
on with
an action’ and also ‘with stress on the progress
or continuance of the action’ to ‘go on or continue what
one has begun; to advance from the point already reached’.
By the use of the words ‘has proceeded’ and
‘steps’
an ongoing process is indicated of which the s 129(1)(a) notice is
the first ‘step’. It is
the only step expressly
mentioned in s 129 although the other ‘steps’ or
requirements referred to in s 130 are incorporated
by
reference. Section 129(1)(b)(i) makes it clear that the notice
in terms of s 129(1)(a) is a necessary ‘step’
before
legal proceedings may be commenced. It follows that by giving the
notice envisaged by s 129(1)(a) the credit provider ‘has
proceeded to take the steps contemplated in section 129 to enforce
that agreement’:
a debt
review relating to that specific agreement is thereafter excluded
.”
29.
From the aforementioned, it is clear that a debt review relating
to
this specific loan agreement is excluded.
30.
Herein lies the difficulty for the applicant. The second respondent
delivered a 129 notice to the applicant during 2019, and as such took
steps to enforce the debt. As such the loan agreement cannot
form
part of any debt review process. As such, there is simply no merit in
any of the declaratory orders sought by the applicant.
31.
As the declaratory relief is plainly without merit, the applicant
would not be entitled to an order for the stay of the execution
proceedings.
The intervention
application:
32.
Prior to the hearing of the application, Mr Barend Haasbroek filed
an
application in which he seeks leave to be admitted as an intervening
party “
in all proceedings under case number 87458/2019, in
terms of Rule 12 of the Uniform Rules of Court
”.
33.
Mr Haasbroek also seeks the following relief:
33.1.
An order that the further execution of the judgment be suspended in
accordance with Uniform Rule 45A;
33.2.
An order that the judgment granted in favour of the first respondent
be set aside in accordance with
Uniform Rule 42(1)(a);
33.3.
That the sale in execution of 21 February 2025 be cancelled and that
the fourth respondent releases
the immovable property from
attachment;
33.4.
That the first, second and/or fourth respondents be interdicted and
prohibited from continuing with
the transfer of the property pursuant
to the sale in execution of 21 February 2025 and that they be
prohibited from transferring
the property to the execution purchaser,
or any other party.
34.
Mr Haasbroek appeared during the hearing of the matter but indicated
that he was not persisting with his intervention application,
at
this stage
. Even if he did, in my view Mr Haasbroek does not have
a direct and substantial interest in the subject matter of the
action. I
need not decide this issue as he did not persist with his
intervention application before me.
35.
In the premises, the following order is made:
35.1.
The application (both Part A and Part B) is dismissed with costs,
such costs to include the cost of
the first respondent’s
counsel on Scale B.
SG MARITZ AJ
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Counsel
for Applicant:
Adv
H Marais
Attorneys for the
applicant:
Vezi & De Beer
Incorporated Attorneys
On behalf of First
Respondent:
In person
Date
of Hearing:
19
May 2025
Date
of Judgment :
23
May 2025
[1]
This
date is erroneous as the judgment was granted on 15 February 2024.
[2]
2011
(3) SA 581 (SCA).
[3]
2015
JDR 1614 (GP) at para 26.
[4]
2011
(2) SA 581 (SCA).
[5]
At
para 14
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