Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 569South Africa
Standard Bank of South Africa Limited v Khoza (2023/100165) [2025] ZAGPPHC 569 (23 May 2025)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Standard Bank of South Africa Limited v Khoza (2023/100165) [2025] ZAGPPHC 569 (23 May 2025)
Standard Bank of South Africa Limited v Khoza (2023/100165) [2025] ZAGPPHC 569 (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:
2023/100165
(1) REPORTABLE: YES
/
NO
(2) OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: YES /
NO
(3) REVISED. YES
DATE
23 May 2025
SIGNATURE
In the application
between:
THE STANDARD BANK
OF SOUTH AFRICA LIMITED
(Registration
number: 1962/000738/06)
APPLICANT
and
REYENCK
BUTHANI MAGUDU KHOZA
RESPONDENT
(Identity
number: 6[...])
JUDGMENT
Introduction
:
1.
The applicant has instituted an application in which it seeks
the
following relief against the respondent:
1.1.
Confirmation of cancellation of the agreement entered into between
the applicant and respondent;
1.2.
Payment in the amount of
R341,333.02
[1]
together with
interest at the rate of 12.75% per annum, calculated daily and
compounded monthly in arrears from 16 May 2025, to
date of payment,
both days inclusive;
1.3.
Cost of suit on an attorney and client scale.
2.
The applicant is Standard Bank of South Africa Limited, a public
company registered and incorporated in accordance with the laws of
the Republic of South Africa that trades as a registered
deposit-taking
institution in terms of the Banks Act, 94 of 1990 and
a credit provider duly registered as such in terms of the National
Credit
Act, 34 of 2005 (“the
National Credit Act&rdquo
;).
The Credit Agreement
and its terms:
3.
The applicant alleges that during or about 21 August 2018, and
in
Rosebank, the applicant and the respondent entered into a written
agreement in respect of a World Elite Credit Card and other
banking
facilities (“the Credit Agreement”), in terms of which
the applicant would from time to time provide the respondent
with
credit. The applicant alleges that it is not in possession of a
signed copy of the Credit Agreement, but it has annexed
as annexure
“FA3” a true copy of the terms and conditions which apply
to the Credit Agreement.
4.
The relevant terms of the Credit Agreement pleaded by the applicant
are the following:
4.1.
The applicant granted the respondent a credit card facility of
R1,000,000.00.
4.2.
Interest would be charged at the rate equal to the applicant’s
prime interest rate.
4.3.
The applicant may charge the respondent a separate transaction fee
for certain transactions. The transaction fees are not part of
the principal debt.
4.4.
The account has a credit limit, and the respondent may not exceed
it.
Any transactions honoured by the applicant, or any interest, costs,
fees, and charges that are due and payable by the respondent
and that
caused the credit limit to be exceeded, will be treated as a
temporary increase in the credit limit.
4.5.
The applicant will provide the respondent with monthly statements
on
the account.
4.6.
The respondent may dispute all or part of the statement by sending
the applicant written notice of the dispute within 30 days of the
statement date.
4.7.
The respondent must contact any of the applicant’s branches
or
contact centres if the respondent did not receive a statement.
If the respondent fails to receive a statement, this will
not entitle
the respondent to refuse or fail to pay any amount due to the
applicant.
4.8.
The respondent must pay all repayments on or before the repayment
due
date, without deduction or demand, for the duration of the agreement
and while any amounts are owed to the applicant.
4.9.
Each repayment will be credited to the account on the date of
receipt,
firstly to satisfy any due or unpaid interest, secondly to
satisfy any due or unpaid costs, fees and charges, and thirdly to
reduce
the principal debt amount.
4.10.
The respondent must pay the applicant at least a minimum repayment
amount as indicated
on the statement.
4.11.
The interest rate applicable to the agreement may change if the prime
interest rate
fluctuates.
4.12.
Interest will be payable:
4.12.1.
If, with reference to the minimum repayments, the
respondent does not
pay the full amount due on or before the repayment due dates.
4.12.2.
On the amount of each cash advance, if the cash advance
results in a
debit balance on the account.
4.13.
If the respondent is in default under the agreement, the applicant
may draw such
default to the respondent’s attention in writing
and suggest that the respondent refer the agreement to a debt
counsellor
or a dispute resolution agent or the Consumer Court, or
the Ombud with jurisdiction.
4.14.
The applicant will charge collection costs that the applicant
incurred in collecting
any amount due and/or payable in terms of the
agreement.
4.15.
A default in terms of the agreement will occur:
4.15.1.
If the respondent fails to pay any amount payable
to the applicant
under the agreement on a due date;
4.15.2.
If the respondent breaches any of the terms and conditions
of the
agreement or any agreement in terms of which the respondent provided
collateral, and the respondent fails to remedy the
breach within the
timeframe provided for in the written notice to do so; or
4.15.3.
The respondent defaults in the due and punctual performance
under any
other agreement, including but not limited to any other agreement
concluded between the respondent and a third party
or any loan/credit
facility between the respondent and the applicant and same is not
remedied to the satisfaction of the applicant
within 14 days from the
date of any written notice given by the applicant to the respondent
to remedy the default.
4.16.
The applicant may commence legal proceedings if the applicant has
given the respondent
notice and the respondent has been in default
under the agreement for at least 20 business days and at least 10
business days have
elapsed after delivery of the notice.
4.17.
A certificate signed by any of the applicant’s managers, whose
appointment
need not be proved, specifying the amount which the
respondent owes and stating that such amount is due, owing and
payable by the
respondent will, on its mere production, be sufficient
proof of any amount due and/or owing by the respondent to the
applicant,
unless the contrary is proved.
The respondent’s
failure to settle his arrears:
5.
The applicant alleges that the respondent breached the terms
of the
Credit Agreement by failing to make timely payment of the amounts due
in terms thereof.
6.
The applicant alleges that as of 10 August 2023, the account
was in
arrears for R50,771.89. In compliance with its
obligations in terms of the
National Credit Act, the
applicant
alleges that it dispatched the necessary
section 129
notices to the
respondent by registered mail and email on 10 August 2023.
7.
The respondent does not deny that the physical address and the
e-mail
address used by the applicant when sending the
section 129
notices
are the respondent's addresses.
8.
The respondent failed to remedy his breach within 10 (ten) business
days after the delivery of the
section 129
notice, with the result
that the applicant dispatched a written notice of cancellation to the
respondent via email and registered
post on 14 September 2023.
9.
Again, the respondent does not deny that the Credit Agreement
was
cancelled on 14 September 2023.
10.
As at 14 September 2023, the total amount outstanding to the
applicant was an
amount of R780,157.28, together with interest at the
rate of 12.75% per annum, which interest is calculated daily and
compounded
monthly in arrears from 4 September 2023 to date of
payment, both days inclusive.
11.
Copies of the applicant’s certificate of balance and statement
of account
are annexed to the founding affidavit.
The issues:
12.
The respondent raises the following disputes in opposition to the
present application:
12.1.
Firstly, as a point
in
limine
,
the applicant failed to annexe a true copy of the Credit Agreement as
required by Uniform
Rule 18(6).
In this regard, the
respondent admits that a Credit Agreement was concluded in terms of
which the respondent would have a
credit limit of R1,000,000.00 (one
million rand).
[2]
12.2.
Secondly, the respondent
denies that the applicant was entitled to cancel the agreement as the
respondent had settled the arrears
by the 16
th
of September 2023.
[3]
12.3.
Thirdly, the respondent contends that there are foreseeable factual
disputes.
Brief analysis of the
affidavits:
13.
In paragraph 13 of the founding affidavit, the applicant
comprehensively sets
out what the terms are of the Credit Agreement
relied on by it. The majority of these terms have been set out
supra
.
14.
In response, the
respondent indicated the following:
[4]
“
The terms are
admitted insofar as they are consistent with the annexure attached to
the founding affidavit.”
15.
Significantly, the respondent does not deny that these were the terms
of the
agreement. Moreover, the respondent does not put up his own
version of the agreement and its terms.
16.
It is trite that
if
a respondent’s affidavit in answer to the applicant’s
founding affidavit fails to admit or deny, or confess and avoid,
allegations in the applicant’s affidavit, the court will, for
the purposes of the application, accept the applicant’s
allegations as correct.
[5]
17.
Accordingly, the terms of the Credit Agreement
between the applicant and the respondent are not disputed and as
such, are common
cause.
18.
Even
if the Credit Agreement terms were not common cause, the respondent
has not introduced a
bona
fide
dispute
of fact. As set out by the Supreme Court of Appeal in
Wightman
[6]
:
“
[13]
A real, genuine and bona fide dispute of fact can exist only where
the court is satisfied that the party who purports to raise
the
dispute has in his affidavit seriously and unambiguously
addressed the fact said to be disputed. There will of course
be
instances where a bare denial meets the requirement because there is
no other way open to the disputing party and nothing more
can
therefore be expected of him. But even that may not be sufficient if
the fact averred lies purely within the knowledge of the
averring
party and no basis is laid for disputing the veracity or accuracy of
the averment. When the facts averred are such that
the disputing
party must necessarily possess knowledge of them and be able to
provide an answer (or countervailing evidence) if
they be not true or
accurate but, instead of doing so, rests his case on a bare or
ambiguous denial the court will generally have
difficulty in finding
that the test is satisfied…”
19.
The respondent
furthermore does not deny that the applicant complied with all of its
obligations in terms of the agreement and that
the facility was made
available for the respondent’s use.
[7]
20.
The respondent does not
deny that his account fell into arrears. The respondent alleges that
he made several payments towards the
arrears pursuant to the delivery
of the
section 129
notice and after discussions with the
applicant.
[8]
21.
The proof of payment relied on by the respondent does not show that
any payments
were made before the 16
th
of September 2023.
22.
This is significant as the applicant elected to cancel the Credit
Agreement
several days earlier on 14 September 2023, i.e.,
before the respondent made any payment towards the arrears.
23.
The cancellation of the
credit agreement necessarily meant that the full outstanding amount
became due and payable, and not just
the arrears.
Significantly, the respondent does not deny receiving the notice of
cancellation that was sent on the 14
th
of September 2023.
[9]
24.
Accordingly, based on the allegations in the founding and the
answering affidavit,
the Credit Agreement was validly cancelled.
The failure to annexe
a true copy of the Credit Agreement to the founding affidavit:
25.
The respondent contends that the applicant has failed to:
25.1.
Annexe a true copy of the Credit Agreement and as such has
failed to comply
with Uniform
Rule 18(6)
;
1.25cm; margin-bottom: 0cm; line-height: 150%">
25.2.
Provide an adequate explanation for its failure to do so.
26.
Uniform
Rule 18(6)
provides as follows:
(6) A party who in his
or her pleading relies upon a contract shall state whether the
contract is written or oral and when, where
and by whom it was
concluded, and if the contract is written a true copy thereof or of
the part relied on in the pleading shall
be annexed to the pleading.
27.
In
Moosa
and Others NNO v Hassam
[10]
the
court indicated
inter
alia
the
following in the context of which factors the court would consider in
overlooking and/or condoning non-compliance with Uniform
Rule 18(6):
However, this is not
to say that a failure to annex a written agreement relied upon may
never be condoned in terms of
rule 27(3).
Good cause would have
to be shown why the party concerned is unable, at that stage, to
annex a copy of the written agreement relied
upon. Relevant
considerations would be the steps taken to obtain a copy of the
written agreement and the prospects of the written
agreement being
obtained in the future. That a true copy will be available before the
issues arising therefrom have to be determined
will be of particular
importance in this regard. In addition any prejudice to the opposing
party caused by the failure to annex
the agreement to the pleading
would have to be considered. Of significance in this regard would be
whether the pleading concisely and clearly sets out the terms
relied upon in the written agreement upon which the cause of action
is based
, and is not excipiable. The above factors are not
exhaustive and each case will have to be decided upon its individual
merits.’
28.
Aside from the fact that the applicant has pleaded the terms of the
Credit Agreement
quite extensively, none of these terms have been
disputed. In the absence of the terms being disputed, there can be no
prejudice
for the respondent under the circumstances.
29.
Significantly, the respondent does not allege that he also does not
have a copy
of the Credit Agreement.
30.
In
Dass
and Others NNO v Lowewest Trading (Pty) Ltd
,
[11]
Tshabalala
JP held that non-compliance with
rule 18(6)
can be condoned in the
absence of prejudice to the other party.
31.
As the
applicant pleaded a complete cause of action, and there is very
little, if any, prejudice that the respondent can rely on,
the
applicant cannot be deprived of a cause of action simply because it
failed to annexe a true copy of the Credit Agreement.
[12]
32.
I agree with the respondent that the applicant
should have provided a better explanation of what happened to the
signed Credit Agreement
and why it was not attached to the founding
affidavit.
33.
But, given the fact that:
33.1.
The applicant has comprehensively pleaded the
terms of the Credit Agreement;
33.2.
the respondent has not disputed the terms pleaded
by the applicant;
33.3.
the respondent suffers very little (if any)
prejudice as a result; and
33.4.
the respondents failure to provide any explanation
as to what he did with his copy of the Credit Agreement,
the applicant’s
failure to annexe a signed copy of the Credit Agreement is not fatal
to its case and will be condoned.
The letters of demand
and the subsequent cancellation of the Credit Agreement:
34.
The respondent further contends he did not receive the
section 129
notices.
35.
The respondent does not deny that the
section 129
notice was sent to
the correct physical and e-mail address.
36.
The applicant has provided the necessary track and trace reports to
demonstrate
that the
section 129
notice was delivered to the relevant
Post Office. In addition, the applicant also sent the
section 129
notice to the respondent by way of e-mail.
37.
In terms of
section 129(7)
of the
National Credit Act:
(7
)
Proof
of delivery contemplated in subsection (5) is satisfied by-
(a)
written confirmation by the postal service or its authorised
agent, of delivery to the relevant post office or postal agency…”
38.
There is accordingly sufficient evidence that the
section 129
notices
were properly delivered.
The attempted
reinstatement of the Credit Agreement:
39.
The respondent seeks an order for the reinstatement of the credit
agreement
because he brought his arrears up to date.
40.
In terms of
section 129(4)(c)
of the
National Credit Act:
“
A
credit
provider may not reinstate or revive a credit agreement after
(c)
the termination thereof in accordance with
section 123.
”
41.
In terms of
section 123:
“
(2)
If a consumer is in default under a credit agreement, the credit
provider may take the steps set
out in
Part C
of Chapter 6 to enforce
and terminate that agreement.”
42.
Given the fact that the credit agreement was lawfully cancelled, the
respondent
cannot insist on reinstating the credit agreement because
he brought his arrears up to date after the Credit Agreement had
already
been validly cancelled.
43.
In the premises, a proper case has been made for the relief sought by
the applicant.
44.
I accordingly grant an order in the following terms:
44.1.
An order confirming the cancellation of the agreement entered into
between the applicant
and the respondent.
44.2.
The respondent is ordered to pay the applicant an amount of
R341,333,02 together
with interest at the rate of 12.75% per annum,
calculated daily and compounded monthly in arrears from 16 May 2025,
to date of
payment, both days inclusive.
44.3.
Costs on a party and party High Court Scale, which costs include the
costs of the
applicant’s counsel on scale “C”.
SG MARITZ AJ
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
On behalf of the
applicant:
Adv JC Viljoen
Attorneys for the
applicant:
Stupel & Berman Inc
On behalf of the
respondent:
Mr Pather
Attorneys for
Respondent:
Tyron I Pather Inc
Date of Hearing:
20 May 2025
Date of Judgment:
23 May 2025
[1]
This
is in terms of an updated Certificate of Balance dated 16 May 2025.
[2]
The
respondent contends that the Credit Agreement had a different name.
[3]
Page
0008 – 7, para 4.2.4.
[4]
Page
008 – 9.
[5]
Moosa
v Knox
1949
(3) SA 327
(N) at 331. See, for example,
United
Methodist Church of South Africa v Sokufundumala
1989
(4) SA 1055 (O)
at 1059A;
Ebrahim
v Georgoulas
1992
(2) SA 151
(B) at 153D.
[6]
Wightman
t/a JW Construction v Headfour (Pty) Ltd and Another
E
2008
(3) SA 371 (SCA)
[7]
Page
002 – 15, para 15 read with page 008 – 9, para 8.1.
[8]
Page
008 – 9, para 9.2.
[9]
Pages
002 – 17 to 002 – 18, para 24, read with page 008 –
10, para 12.1.
[10]
2010
(2) SA 410 (KZP)
at 413B–414B
[11]
2011
(1) SA 48 (KZD)
at 53B–H.
[12]
Nedbank
Ltd v Yacoob
2022
(2) SA 230 (GJ)
.
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