Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 619South Africa
BMW Financial Services South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Liebenberg (46375/2020) [2025] ZAGPPHC 619 (9 June 2025)
Headnotes
AT PRETORIA
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## BMW Financial Services South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Liebenberg (46375/2020) [2025] ZAGPPHC 619 (9 June 2025)
BMW Financial Services South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Liebenberg (46375/2020) [2025] ZAGPPHC 619 (9 June 2025)
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sino date 9 June 2025
SAFLII
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Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
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REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
HELD AT PRETORIA
CASE NO: 46375/2020
DOH: 27 January 2025
DECIDED: 09 June 2025
1)
REPORTABLE: NO
2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
3)
REVISED.
DATE
09 JUNE 2025
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
BMW
FINANCIAL SERVICES SOUTH AFRICA (Pty) Ltd (Registration Number:
1990/004670/07)
Applicant
And
BEULAH
LIEBENBERG
Respondent
(I.D
NUMBER: 7[...])
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 09 June 2025.
ORDER
1.
Condonation is granted for the late filing
of the respondent’s answering affidavit.
2.
The application is upheld.
3.
The respondent is ordered to pay the
applicant the amount of R 170 181. 00 plus interest on the said
amount at the rate of 0.75%
above the prime overdraft rate per annum
from date of summons to date of final payment.
4.
Costs on the scale as between attorney and
client at the Magistrates court scale.
JUDGMENT
Bam
J
Introduction
1.
This
is an application for the recovery of damages against the respondent.
The origin of the applicant’s claim may be traced
back to the
installment sale agreement (agreement) concluded by the parties
sometime in 2017. The respondent opposes the relief
based on several
points in
limine
which include, amongst others, lack of
locus
standi
and reckless lending, the latter, as contemplated in Sections 81(1)
and 81(3) of the National Credit Act
[1]
(the Act). The respondent further seeks condonation for the late
filing of her answering affidavit.
Background
2.
The common cause facts suggest that during
November 2020, following the respondent’s breach of the
agreement, the applicant
obtained an order by default authorizing,
inter alia
,
the return of the vehicle. As the applicant’s damages had
neither been established nor quantified at that stage, the issue
was
postponed. The vehicle was sold and the proceeds allocated to the
respondent’s account in terms of the agreement. Following
the
sale, the applicant caused a letter in terms of Section 127 of the
National Credit Act, Act 34 of 2005 to be served upon the
respondent
calling upon the respondent to effect payment of the remaining
amount, which the respondent failed to do leading to
the present
application.
Whether condonation
should be granted to the respondent
3.
The test whether condonation should be
granted in any given case is the interests of justice. In this
regard, the Constitutional
Court has admonished that even though
prospects of success should be considered, they are not decisive as
demonstrated in
Turnbull-Jackson
v
Hibiscus Coast Municipality and
Others
:
‘
In
this Court the test for determining whether condonation should be
granted or refused is the interests of justice. Factors that
the
Court weighs in that enquiry include: the length of the delay; the
explanation for, or cause of, the delay; the prospects of
success for
the party seeking condonation; the importance of the issues that the
matter raises; the prejudice to the other party
or parties; and the
effect of the delay on the administration of justice. It should be
noted that although the existence of prospects
of success in favour
of the party seeking condonation is not decisive, it is a weighty
factor in favour of granting condonation.’
[2]
4.
The applicant does not oppose the
application. Given the importance of the issues involved and the
negligible delay, it is in the
interests of justice that condonation
be granted.
Respondent’s
points in limine
5.
The respondent raises the following points
in
limine
:
(i)
Lack of locus standi
(ii)
The alleged failure to comply with Rule
41A(2) (a)
(iii)
Reckless lending and simulated transaction
6.
The respondent recorded in her Heads of
Argument that she is no longer persisting with the locus
standi
and the allegation dealing with failure to comply with Rule
41A(2)(a). In the circumstances, nothing further need be said about
the two points. That leaves the points dealing with reckless
lending and simulated transaction.
The alleged reckless
lending and simulated transaction
7.
I consider it convenient to deal with these
two points simultaneously as they rely on the same facts. In brief,
the respondent alleges
that pursuant to the affordability analysis
conducted by the applicant, it was found that she could not afford
the vehicle. To
bring the transaction within her affordability, the
agent, acting on behalf of the applicant, reduced the monthly
installments
and added a residual payment, (the so called balloon
payment) of R 58 047.00 without establishing whether she could afford
the
residual payment. She submits that the agreement was concluded
recklessly. Thus, this court must declare it unlawful and set aside
her rights and obligations as provided for in Sections 83(1) and (2)
of the Act.
8.
Briefly, a balloon payment refers to a
portion of a loan that is deferred until the end of the loan term.
The consumer typically
does not make payments towards this portion.
However, they will be required to make one final payment which is
usually significantly
larger than the installments paid during the
term of the loan.
9.
In advancement of the claim that the
transaction was simulated, the respondent suggests that concluding a
credit agreement for a
vehicle she could not afford, had the effect
thereof of undermining the purpose and policies of the Act. For these
reasons, she
argues that the agreement is unlawful and must be
pronounced as such by this court as provided for in Section 90(2) (a)
of the
Act.
10.
I cannot agree with these contentions. The
provisions of the Act in so far as reckless lending is concerned
read:
‘
80.
(1) A credit agreement is reckless if, at the time that the agreement
was made, or at the time when the amount approved in terms
of the
agreement is increased, other than an increase in terms of section
119(4)-
(a) the credit provider
failed to conduct an assessment as required by section
81(2), irrespective of
what the outcome of such an assessment might have
concluded at the time; or
(b) the credit provider,
having conducted an assessment as required by section 81(2), entered
into the credit agreement with the
consumer despite the fact that the
preponderance of information available to the credit provider
indicated
that-
(i) the consumer did not
generally understand or appreciate the consumer’s risks, costs
or obligations under the proposed
credit agreement;
(ii) entering into that
credit agreement would make the consumer overindebted.
(2) When a determination
is to be made whether a credit agreement is reckless or not, the
person making that determination must
apply the criteria set out in
subsection (1) as they existed at the time the agreement was made,
and without regard for the ability
of the consumer to
(a) meet the obligations
under that credit agreement; or
(b) understand or
appreciate the risks, costs and obligations under the proposed credit
agreement, at the time the determination
is being made.
11.
If
one pauses for a moment, Section 80, subsections (1) and (2) are fact
driven. What was required of the respondent was to substantiate
her
allegations with facts as they were at the time the credit
transaction was entered into. It can be accepted that the respondent
has not provided any such information. Both allegations must fail as
they are premised on the same bald claim. With regard
to the
claim that the agent informed the respondent that the inclusion of
the balloon payment was to make cars affordable to consumers,
this is
hearsay evidence which, in terms of Section 3 of the Law of
Evidence Amendment Act
[3]
is not admissible, unless the court concludes otherwise, based on the
criteria set out in the section, that it is in the interests
of
justice to admit it. In the circumstances of this case, there is
nothing before the court from which it may draw the conclusion
that
it is in the interests of justice to admit the hearsay evidence.
12.
I may add that on her own version, the
applicant was able to sustain the monthly installments from about
March 2017 up to August
2020. This to me does not suggest reckless
lending or anything about simulation but a change in the respondent’s
circumstances.
The defences of reckless lending and simulated
agreement then must fail.
Costs
13.
The applicant sought the costs on the scale
as between attorney and client. I grant the costs but on the
Magistrates court scale.
Order
1.
Condonation is granted for the late filing
of the respondent’s answering affidavit.
2.
The application is upheld.
3.
The respondent is ordered to pay the
applicant the amount of R 170 181. 00 plus interest on the said
amount at the rate of 0.75%
above the prime overdraft rate per annum
from date of summons to date of final payment.
4.
Costs on the scale as between attorney and
client at the Magistrates court scale.
N.N BAM J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Date of
Hearing:
27 January 2025
Date of
Judgment:
09 June 2025
Appearances
:
Counsel
for the Applicant:
Adv
S Webster
Instructed
by:
MacRobert
Inc
Brooklyn,
Pretoria
Counsel
for the Respondent:
Mr
W.R Ewart
(Attorney
with right of appearance in the High Court)
Ewart
Attorneys
c/o
Herman Vorster Inc, Garsfontein, Pretoria
[1]
Act
34 of 2005.
[2]
[2014]
ZACC 24
, paragraph 23;
Brummer
v Gorfil Brothers Investments (Pty) Ltd and Others
(CCT45/99)
[2000] ZACC 3
;
2000 (5) BCLR 465
;
2000 (2) SA 837
(CC)
(30 March 2000), paragraph 3.
[3]
Act
45 of 1988.
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