Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 596South Africa
SB Guarantee Company (RF) Proprietary Limited v Tayob (2023-114200) [2025] ZAGPPHC 596 (5 June 2025)
Headnotes
AT PRETORIA CASE NO: 2023-114200
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## SB Guarantee Company (RF) Proprietary Limited v Tayob (2023-114200) [2025] ZAGPPHC 596 (5 June 2025)
SB Guarantee Company (RF) Proprietary Limited v Tayob (2023-114200) [2025] ZAGPPHC 596 (5 June 2025)
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sino date 5 June 2025
SAFLII
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Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
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SAFLII
Policy
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
HELD AT PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 2023-114200
DOH: 28 JANUARY 2025
DECIDED: 05 JUNE 2025
1)
REPORTABLE: NO
2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
3)
REVISED.
SIGNATURE
DATE: 05 June 2025
In
the matter between:
SB
GUARANTEE COMPANY (RF)
Respondent/Plaintiff
PROPRIETARY LIMITED
(REGISTRATION
NO. 2006/021576/07)
And
HAVA
TAYOB (ID: 7[...]
Excipient/ Defendant
This judgment has been
handed down remotely and shall be circulated to the parties by way of
email / uploading on Caselines. The
date of hand down shall be deemed
to be 05 June 2025.
ORDER
1.
The exception is dismissed with costs on
the scale as between attorney and client.
JUDGMENT
Bam J
Introduction
1.
The Plaintiff, SB Guarantee Co (RF)
(Proprietary) Limited, (SB) instituted action proceedings against the
defendant, arising from
breach of her home loan agreement with
Standard Bank of South Africa Limited, (the bank). The plaintiff
alleges in its Particulars
of Claim, PoC, that the home loan
agreement was subject to certain terms. They include,
inter
alia
, the conclusion of two further
agreements, namely, the guarantee issued by the plaintiff to the
bank, guaranteeing the defendant’s
performance in respect of
the home loan agreement, and the Indemnity signed by the defendant,
undertaking to hold the plaintiff
harmless against any claim made by
the bank on the basis of the guarantee. The same terms required that
the defendant register
a mortgage bond over the property purchased in
favour of the plaintiff in the amount of R 4 500 000,00 plus an
additional amount
of R 1 150 000.00.
2.
The PoC allege that during or about May
2022, the defendant fell into arrears with her monthly installments
and further failed to
regularize such payments after receiving a
notice directing her to do so. Acting on indemnity, the plaintiff
instituted the action.
The summons initiating the plaintiff’s
claim was issued and served on 2 and 7 November 2023, respectively.
The defendant
took an exception to the particulars of claim,
suggesting that the plaintiff had failed to allege facts to sustain a
cause of action.
3.
In
summary, it was submitted on behalf of the defendant that since the
plaintiff has made no allegation that the plaintiff and the
bank are
registered credit providers, both the indemnity signed by the
defendant and the guarantee provided by the plaintiff to
the bank
will be rendered void in terms of the National Credit Act
[1]
.
It was further submitted on behalf of the defendant that if the main
loan is void, there is no obligation that could trigger the
guarantee
and, if the guarantee itself is void, the causa for the mortgage bond
falls away, entitling the plaintiff to claim only
on enrichment or
some other causa.
4.
Premised on the alleged failure to allege
registration as credit providers, the defendant submitted that
failure to register as
a credit provider, where the lender was
required to register, renders the credit agreement unlawful and void
ab initio
,
in terms of Section 89(2) (b) of the Act, and, in terms of Section 89
(5) this court is enjoined to pronounce them void and further
make
any order that is just and equitable.
Parties
5.
SB, is a ring fenced privately incorporated
company with limited liability, with its principal place of business
at 9
th
Floor, Standard Bank Centre, [...] S[...] Street, Johannesburg. The
defendant is Ms Hava Tayob, an adult female whose
domicilium
citandi et executandi
is 3[...] B[...]
Street, Laudium, 0037.
Background
6.
As to the background, the particulars of
claim allege the following: On 14 March 2017, the bank and the
defendant entered into a
written Home Loan Agreement for the purchase
of an immovable property. In terms of the home loan agreement, the
defendant was obliged
to make monthly payments to the bank to
discharge the home loan. The Home Loan agreement attached to the PoC
further evinces that
the bank is a registered credit provider with
registration number N[...].
7.
It is alleged in the PoC that on the same
day, 14 March, the plaintiff furnished the bank with a written
Guarantee in terms of which
it,
inter
alia
, guaranteed the punctual payment
of all sums payable or which may become due by the defendant to
the bank, pursuant to the
loan.
8.
The defendant, on 14 March 2017, executed a
written Indemnity Agreement (Indemnity) in favour of the plaintiff
and its successors
in title or assigns. In terms thereof, the
defendant,
inter alia
,
indemnified and held the plaintiff harmless from any loss or damage
the plaintiff may suffer as a result of any claims which may
be made
against it by the bank or the transferee arising out of the
guarantee. If the defendant did not pay any amount due and
payable to
the bank, immediately following a notice of demand, the plaintiff
upon being notified by the bank would have the right
to and be
obliged to take all steps as may be reasonably necessary to realise
the mortgage bond and, out of the proceeds, pay the
bank’s or
transferee’s claims in accordance with the provisions of the
guarantee and the costs provided for in the
Indemnity.
9.
Pursuant to the conclusion of the loan
agreement, the defendant caused a mortgage bond to be registered over
the immovable property,
in favour of the plaintiff, as security for
the defendant’s indebtedness to the bank under the loan
agreement for the amount
of R 4 500 000.00, with the additional sum
of R 1 125 000.00. It is, according to the particulars of
claim, a material
term of the mortgage bond that in the event
the defendant (i) fails to observe or perform any of the provisions
of the mortgage
with bond; or (ii) fails to pay any sum which may be
legally claimable by the plaintiff, or (iii) fails to perform any
other obligation
on the due date thereafter or at all; then all
amounts secured by the mortgage bond would become immediately due and
payable in
full, at the plaintiff’s option, even if the
plaintiff made use of any other right it may have, and the plaintiff
may institute
proceedings for the recovery thereof and for an order
declaring the immovable property specially executable.
Defendant’s
breach
10.
The particulars of claim allege that the
defendant fell into arrears on or about May 2022. Attempts by the
bank to have her pay
the arrears proved unsuccessful. Thus, on 14
August 2023, the bank notified the plaintiff of the defendant’s
breach. The
plaintiff was thus required forthwith to discharge of its
obligations to the bank in terms of the guarantee, by promptly
proceeding
against the defendant in a competent court on the strength
of the indemnity, by calling up and foreclosing on the mortgage bond
and enforcing any other remedy it may have in law. To this end, the
plaintiff sent a demand to the defendant on 16 August 2023
for
payment of the full amount due in terms of the Indemnity.
The law on exception
11.
It
is trite that ‘exceptions should be dealt with sensibly. They
provide a useful mechanism to weed out cases without legal
merit. An
over-technical approach destroys their utility.’
[2]
The ‘burden rests on an excipient, who must establish that on
every interpretation that can reasonably be attached to it,
the
pleading is excipiable. The test is whether on all possible readings
of the facts no cause of action may be made out; it being
for the
excipient to satisfy the court that the conclusion of law for which
the plaintiff contends cannot be supported on every
interpretation
that can be put upon the facts.’
[3]
It is further trite that ‘an exception taken against a pleading
is not directed at a particular paragraph or paragraphs within
the
pleading. An exception is directed at the formulation of the claim as
a whole. No paragraphs can be read in isolation.’
[4]
Discussion
12.
The single ground of attack is that the
particulars of claim do not allege that the plaintiff and the bank
are registered providers
in terms of the NCA. That failure, claims
the defendant, renders the particulars excipiable on the basis that
they do not allege
facts as to sustain a cause of action.
13.
The defendant relies for her exception on
several authorities emanating from this court. These include,
inter
alia
,
Van
Heerden
v
Nolte
,
where the court upheld the defendant’s exception. It is
important to set out the court’s reasoning in that case:
‘
[16]
It follows that when an unregistered credit provider who is required
to be registered lends money to a consumer[,] he or she
will have no
contractual cause of action..’
[17] …The failure
to plead such facts renders the summons excipiable for want of
necessary averments on which to found a
contractual cause of action.
This is not a matter that should be left for evidence at trial.
Registration as a credit provider
is an essential allegation in an
action on a credit agreement … in the absence of which the
particulars fail to disclose
a cause of action.
[19]
The particulars of claim are also excipiable on the grounds that they
do not allege compliance with section 129 of the NCA
... If the
agreements are credit agreements, then the averments in the
particulars of claim must include allegations that the plaintiff
has
complied with the provisions of section 129 and 130 of the NCA, which
permit a credit provider to enforce an agreement only
once
alternative procedures have been pursued.’
[5]
14.
The
court in
Van
Heerden
relied on the
ratio
in the cases of
IS
and GM Construction CC
v
Tunmer
2003 (5) SA 218
(W),
Tyrone
Seimon Properties (Pty) Ltd
v
Phindana
Properties 112 (Pty) Ltd
,
[2006] 1 All SA 545
(C). More recently, in the case of
AD
All CC t/a Millenium Bodyguards
v
Joinbach
(Pty)
,
it was said that the plaintiff had to plead that it was a registered
security service provider, in terms Private Security Industry
Regulation Act, 56 of 2001. As the plaintiff had not done so,
it had failed to establish its legal entitlement to payment
and its
particulars of claim thus failed to disclose a cause of action.
[6]
15.
The court in
Millenium
Bodyguards
cited, amongst others,
Taljaard
v
TL Botha Properties
,
where the Supreme Court of Appeal confirmed that an estate agent who
claims remuneration in conflict with s 34A, that is without
being in
possession of a valid fidelity fund certificate when she performed
the relevant act, she will be prevented from enforcing
her/his claim.
However, the court in
Taljaard
was concerned not with an estate agent enforcing their claim to
remuneration but a recovery of the commission paid in circumstances
where no fidelity fund certificate had been issued to the agent
concerned.
16.
Are
the cases mentioned in paragraphs 12-14 in this judgment of any
assistance to the defendant in the present case? I think not.
As I
demonstrate, it seems to me that the defendant’s exception is
not well founded and appears to be built on stilts. The
test on
exception is ‘whether on all possible readings of the facts no
cause of action is made out. It is for the defendant
to satisfy the
Court that the conclusion of law for which the plaintiff contends
cannot be supported upon every interpretation
that can be put upon
the facts.’
[7]
The alleged failure to
allege that the bank is a registered credit provider
17.
I first dispose of the attack against the
home loan concluded with the bank, and the alleged failure to allege
that the bank is
a registered credit provider. It is a fact that the
bank is a registered credit provider with registration number 15.
This is evident
from, amongst others, the home loan agreement annexed
to the PoC. Pleadings, according to the Supreme Court of Appeal in
Telematrix
,
must be read as a whole. In deciding the exception in
Telematrix
,
the court did not confine itself to the allegations in the PoC but on
allegations fleshed out by means of annexures, including
documents
that were handed in which did not form part of the pleadings. The
reasoning of the court was that pleadings must be read
as a whole;
and in deciding an exception a court is not playing games,
blindfolding itself. I am bound by the ratio of the court
in
Telematrix
.
18.
Thus, regard must be had to the loan
agreement, one of the annexures to the PoC, which makes plain that
the bank is a registered
provider as is required in Section 40 of the
Act. The PoC further set out in detail the bank’s allegation on
compliance with
the relevant protective legislation, namely, the Act.
These include the notice in terms of Section 129 of the Act,
dispatched on
29 September 2023 via registered mail. The fact that
the matter of breach of the home loan is not before an ombudsman, and
further
that the bank had complied with Section 130 of the Act.
Van
Heerden
espouses, amongst others, that
alleging compliance with the protective legislation is essential.
19.
In all the cases set out in paragraphs
13-15 of this judgment, the facts established that the plaintiffs,
who were required to be
registered with the relevant regulators, in
line with the protective legislation quoted in those judgments, were
not registered.
There is no such question in this case, as the PoC
attach a home loan agreement evincing that at the time of the
agreement, the
bank was a registered credit provider. I may further
add in conclusion that the plaintiff’s claim is based on the
Indemnity
signed by the defendant and not on the home loan.
The absence of an
allegation that the plaintiff is a registered credit provider
20.
On
the issue of registration of the plaintiff as a credit provider, this
court has in several of its judgments held that the Indemnity
relied
on by the plaintiff is not a credit agreement. In
SB
Guarantee Company (RF) Proprietary Limited
v
Edwoud
Frederick Botes
[8]
,
this court dismissed the idea that the Indemnity is a credit
agreement stating that: (i) the Defendant entered into a Loan
Agreement
with Standard Bank (the Credit Provider) subsequent to
which funds were advanced to the Defendant by Standard Bank with
which he
purchased the immovable property; and that the
vinculum
juris
between the plaintiff and defendant flows from the Indemnity
agreement.
21.
The
court further distinguished the Indemnity in question from
transactions such as those in
Shaw
& Another
v
Mackintosh
& another
(267/17)
[2018] ZASCA 53
(29 March 2018).
Mackintosh
was concerned with a guarantee to an agreement that was itself not
subject to the Act, and
Firstrand
Bank Ltd
v
Carl
Beck Estates (Pty) Ltd and Another
(56174/2007)
[2008] ZAGPHC 423
(25 September 2008).
Carl
Beck
has no relevance to the issues in
the present case.
22.
In
Leshika
v
SB Guarantee Company (RF) Proprietary
Limited
(2023-037065) [2024] ZAGPJHC
1030 (10 October 2024), this court dismissed the idea that the
Indemnity is a credit agreement. In
that case, it was argued,
inter
alia
, that the Indemnity agreement did
not exist independently of the mortgage agreement; that it did not
create any special and/or
separate and independent claim or cause of
action; and that it did not create special immunity from the NCA. In
rejecting the arguments,
the court held that the Respondent,
(plaintiff in the present case) had neither advanced any credit
and/or funds to the Applicant
(defendant in our case) in terms of
which payment of an amount owed by one person to another is deferred.
I conclude that the Indemnity
is not a credit agreement, nor is the
guarantee in question a credit transaction.
23.
Section 8 (5) describes an agreement as a
credit agreement if:
‘
in
terms of that agreement, a person undertakes or promises to satisfy
upon demand any obligation of another consumer in terms of
a credit
facility or a credit transaction to which this Act applies.’
The guarantee between the bank and the plaintiff is
simply not a
credit agreement. In any event, it is repeated that the basis of the
plaintiff’s claim against the defendant
is the Indemnity. It
follows that the exception is not well founded and cannot be upheld.
Concluding remarks
24.
Finally,
I note from the defendant’s Heads of Argument that she neither
denies the home loan between herself and the bank.
Nor does she deny
being party to the Indemnity signed in favour of the plaintiff.
Similarly, the registration of the mortgage over
her property and the
material terms thereof have not been placed in dispute in her heads.
Her default and failure to regularize
the home even after being
issued with a notice in terms of Section 129 was not placed in
dispute. In
Luke
M Tembani and Others
v
President
[9]
,
the SCA observed:
‘
…
In
Maize Board v Tiger Oats Ltd this Court held: ‘ . . . it now
has to be accepted that a dismissal of an exception (save
an
exception to the jurisdiction of the court), presented and argued as
nothing other than an exception, does not finally dispose
of the
issue raised by the exception and is not appealable. Such acceptance
would on the present state of the law and the jurisprudence
of this
court create certainty and accordingly be in the best interests of
litigating parties. If litigating parties wish to obtain
a final
decision, whichever way the decision of the court goes on an issue
raised by an exception, they should make use of the
procedure
designed for that purpose namely the procedure provided for in Rule
33 and either agree on a special case in terms of
that rule or
request the court to direct that the issue be finally disposed of in
an appropriate manner. If that is done any misunderstanding
on the
part of any of the parties and any resulting prejudice should be
avoided.’
Maize Board has been
consistently followed by this Court and it is well established that
this Court will not readily depart from
its previous decisions. It
follows that the dismissal by the high court of the legal duty
exception is not appealable.’
Order
In the result, the
following order is granted:
1.
The exception is dismissed with costs on
the scale as between attorney and client.
N.N BAM J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Date of Hearing:
28 January
2025
Date of
Judgment:
05 June 2025
Appearances
:
Counsel
for the Excipient / Defendant:
Adv
A.C Diamond
Instructed
by:
Mahdiyyah
Patel Attorneys Valhalla, Pretoria
Counsel
for the Respondent / Plaintiff:
Adv
S Webster
Instructed
by:
Vezi
& De Beer Inc
Lynnwood,
Pretoria
[1]
Act
34 of 2005.
[2]
Telematrix
(Pty) Ltd v Advertising Standards Authority SA
(459/2004)
[2005] ZASCA 73
;
[2006] 1 All SA 6
(SCA);
2006 (1) SA 461
(SCA) (9 September 2005), paragraph 3
;
Luke M Tembani and Others v President of the Republic of South
Africa and Another
(Case no 167/2021)
[2022] ZASCA 70
(20 May 2022, paragraph 14.
[3]
Luke
M Tembani
,
supra.
[4]
Adise
v Minister of Defence and Military Veterans (32474/2022) [2023]
ZAGPPHC 732 (21 August 2023)
[5]
(19428/11)
[2014] ZAGPPHC 12;
2014 (4) SA 584
(GP) (28 January 2014),
paragraphs 16.17 and 19.
[6]
Ltd
(22464/2022) [2025] ZAGPPHC 143 (14 February 2025).
[7]
Trustees
for the time being of Children's Resource Centre Trust and Others v
Pioneer Food (Pty) Ltd and Others
(050/2012)
[2012] ZASCA 182
;
2013 (2) SA 213
(SCA);
2013 (3) BCLR
279
(SCA);
[2013] 1 All SA 648
(SCA) (29 November 2012), paragraph
36.
[8]
(87458/2019)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 161;
[2024] 2 All SA 529
(GP) (15 February 2024),
paragraphs 16.
[9]
Id,
paragraph 27.
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