Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 26South Africa
Van Baalen and Another v ABSA Bank (22652/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 26 (3 January 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
3 January 2024
Judgment
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
>>
2024
>>
[2024] ZAGPPHC 26
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Van Baalen and Another v ABSA Bank (22652/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 26 (3 January 2024)
Van Baalen and Another v ABSA Bank (22652/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 26 (3 January 2024)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPPHC/Data/2024_26.html
sino date 3 January 2024
FLYNOTES:
CIVIL PROCEDURE – Pleadings –
Copy
of contract
–
Bank
relying on credit agreements for its cause of action –
Exception – Whether particulars of claim are excipiable
because Absa failed to annex true copies of written agreements –
Bank arguing that it pleads the best evidence available
to it in
its particulars – Terms of agreement as alleged in
particulars of claim are sufficient to enable defendants
to plead
thereto – Party to written agreement not precluded from
enforcing it merely because the agreement has been
destroyed or
lost – Exception dismissed – Uniform Rule 18(6).
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case Number: 22652/2022
(1) REPORTABLE: NO
(2) OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO
(3) REVISED: NO
DATE: 03/01/2024
SIGNATURE:
In
the matter between:
PIETER
WILLEM ADRIAAN VAN
BAALEN
First Excipient
JUANETTE
VAN
BAALEN
Second Excipient
and
ABSA
BANK
Respondent
In
re:
ABSA
BANK
Plaintiff
and
PIETER
WILLEM ADRIAAN VAN
BAALEN
First Defendant
JUANETTE
VAN
BAALEN
Second Defendant
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and
authored by the Judge whose name is reflected and is handed down
electronically by circulation to
the parties/their legal
representatives by e- mail and by uploading it to the electronic file
of this matter on Caselines The date
and for hand- down is deemed to
be 03 January 2024
JUDGMENT
KUBUSHI, J
INTRODUCTION
[1]
The
exception, which is opposed, turns on the issue of whether the
Particulars of Claim are excepiable based on the failure by the
Respondent to annex true copies of the written agreements upon which
it (the Respondent) relies for its cause of action, as required
in
terms of Rule 18(6) of the Uniform Rules of Court.
[1]
[2]
Rule
18(6) requires, amongst others, that a party who relies upon a
written agreement in her/his pleading, annex a true copy thereof
or
of the part relied on in the pleading to that pleading. The written
agreement serves as a vital link in the chain of a party’s
cause of action,
[2]
and
failure to attach it may result in the pleading being excepted to on
the ground that the pleading does not sustain a cause of
action or
does not disclose a cause of action.
[3]
The First and Second Excipients (“the
Excipients”) who are the Defendants in the main action, relying
on Rule 18(6),
have taken an exception to the Particulars of Claim of
the Respondent, who is the Plaintiff in the main action, on the
ground that
the Particulars of Claim do not disclose a cause of
action in that the Respondent did not attach the written agreements
which it
rely upon for its claim.
BACKGROUND
[4]
The exception is premised on a Summons issued by
the Respondent against the Excipients, in which the Respondent claims
payment of
monies lent and advanced to the Excipients in the amount
of R1 077 867. 07, plus interest thereon. In addition, the Respondent
claims an order declaring the immovable property of the Excipients
hypothecating the said loan, specially, executable together with
costs on an attorney and client scale.
In
its claim, the Respondent is relying on three separate Credit
Agreements allegedly entered into with the Excipients, for its
cause
of action.
[5]
The Respondent is unable to attach true copies of
the three Credit Agreements to its Particulars of Claim, as required
in terms
of Rule 18(6), but instead, has attached copies of the
Standard Terms and Conditions applicable to Credit Agreements the
Respondent
enters into with all its debtors, alleging that the
original Credit Agreements were misplaced and, after diligent search,
could
not, as at the time of issuing of the Summons, be procured.
Together with the Standard Terms and Conditions, the Respondent has
attached copies of the Mortgage Bonds registered in its favour as
security for the monies it lent and advanced to the Excipients
in
respect of the three Credit Agreements. The contention being that the
respective Mortgage Bonds confirm both the conclusion
of the
respective Credit Agreements between the parties and the Excipients’
indebtedness to the Respondent. It is due to
the Respondent’s
failure to attach the said Credit Agreements that the Excipients have
excepted to the Respondent’s
Particulars of Claim.
[6]
The Respondent has in its Particulars of Claim
alleged some of the material and tacit provisions of the respective
Credit Agreements
which, amongst others, are that the loan amount
would be paid in monthly instalments on or before the 1st day of each
month until
all the amounts owing or claimable have been paid in
full; that the Excipients agreed to pay interest to the Respondent at
a rate
of 5.5%; the agreement constituted the whole agreement between
the parties and no amendment, alteration, addition, variation or
cancelation would have any effect unless reduced to writing and
signed by the parties.
GROUNDS OF EXCEPTION
[7]
The Excipients’ grounds of exception are
that –
“
1.
The
Respondent (Plaintiff in the main action) is relying on three written
loan [credit] agreements for its claim for payment of
the outstanding
part(s) thereof plus interest;
2.
The actual written loan [credit] agreements form
an integral part of the Respondent's claim and should in law have
been attached
to the particulars of claim;
3.
The Respondent failed to attach true copies of the
written agreements as required in law and prescribed in Uniform Rule
18(6) of
the Uniform Rules of Court;
4.
Instead, the Respondent attached copies of the
standard terms and conditions for loan agreements and of the bond
agreements upon
which it relies for its claim against the
Defendants.”
[8]
The angle the Excipients take to attack the
Particulars of Claim is that a true copy of each Credit Agreement is
not attached as
required by Rule 18(6) and assert on that basis that
the respective claims, automatically, do not sustain a cause of
action.
EXCIPIENTS’
ARGUMENT
[9]
It is submitted on behalf of the Excipients that
the Respondent's claim against the Excipients should, on the grounds
raised, be
dismissed with cost.
[10]
The argument is that in terms of the copies of the
Standard Terms and Conditions applicable to Credit Agreements
attached to the
Summons, the principal debt, which is ostensibly the
loan amount, together with interest thereon calculated in terms of
the Mortgage
Loan Agreement, shall be repaid in instalments, the
amount and number of which and the dates on which they are to be paid
is specified
in the Mortgage Loan Agreement or, in respect of the
third Loan Agreement, a pre- agreement statement/quotation.
[11]
Additionally, it is argued that in terms of the
Mortgage Bonds, which are in favour of the Respondent, and which
confirms the conclusion
of the first and second Loan Agreements and
the Excipients' indebtedness to the Respondent, and in respect of the
third Loan Agreement,
that the repayment of all amounts owed to the
Respondent must be paid in accordance with the written agreement(s)
as may be entered
into between the Respondent and the Excipients.
According to the Excipients, the Mortgage Bonds
are the only documents which the Respondent, was able to attach
copies thereof to
its Particulars of Claim. No other agreements
and/or quotations between the parties, as referred to in the Mortgage
Bonds, is alleged
nor attached to the Particulars of Claim.
All the documents on which the Respondent relies
for its cause of action, therefore, refer back to an agreement or
agreements which
the Respondent failed to attach to the Particulars
of Claim, and the Respondent expects the Excipients to be in a
position to plead
to its claim, so it is argued.
[12]
The contention being that if the allegations in
the Respondent's Particulars of Claim are taken to be true, one has
to accept that
the actual terms on which the Respondent relies for
its cause of action is to be found in agreements and quotations which
should
have been entered into with the Excipients but which the
Respondent did
not
attach
to
its
Particulars
of
Claim.
The
copies
of
the
documents
which
are attached only
refer to these agreements and/or quotations which should have been
entered into.
The very document which is
alleged to be a copy of the Loan Agreement and which the Respondent
relies upon for its cause of action,
refers back to the document
which the Respondent alleges the first document to be.
[13]
In as
far as the Respondents rely on the Mortgage Bond for its cause of
action, the Excipients refers to the decision of the Court
in
Mnguni
,
[3]
where
it was said that a Mortgage Bond can stand on its own only if it
contains all the
essentialia
of
the underlying agreement. The Excipients’ suggestion is that
the terms of the Mortgage Bond regarding repayment in
Mnguni,
refers
to agreement(s) that has been or is to be concluded between the
parties which was not attached to the Summons.
The
Court in that judgment, as a result, found that non-compliance with
Rule 18(6), that is failure to attach the underlying agreement,
renders the Respondent's cause of action not to have been properly
pleaded and therefore incomplete.
[4]
The
Excipients’ view is that even in this matter, where the Credit
Agreements (the underlying agreements to the Mortgage Bonds)
are not
annexed to the Particulars of Claim, there is non-compliance with the
provisions of Rule 18(6).
RESPONDENT’S
ARGUMENT
[14]
The
Respondent’s argument is that the point in this matter is that
it (the Respondent) pleads the best evidence available
to it in its
Particulars of Claim. The issue in regard to the Credit Agreements
and the terms thereof is, according to the Respondent,
a matter of
evidence which should be dealt with by a Trial Court, particularly as
the Excipients do not positively assert any contradictory
terms as
that which has been pleaded by the Respondent. The ultimate question
of whether the best evidence in this regard should
be allowed and
whether a Court may reasonably find that the three Credit Agreements
were concluded, the money advanced to the Excipients,
as confirmed
prima
facie
by
the respective Mortgage Bonds, is a question of evidence for a Trial
Court to decide, so the argument goes. In support of this
argument,
the Respondent refers to the judgment in
Zalvest
Twenty
,
[5]
a case
wherein an exception was raised to the particulars of claim on the
basis that Rule 18(6) has not been complied with in that
the written
agreement relied on was not attached to the particulars of claim.
The
exception, in that judgment, was dismissed on the ground that there
is no rule of substantive law to the effect that the party
to a
written contract is precluded from enforcing it merely because the
contract has been destroyed or lost.
DISCUSSION
[15]
It is
trite that in order to succeed an Excipient should persuade the Court
that upon every interpretation which the pleading in
question may
have, and in particular the document upon which it is based, no cause
of action is disclosed. Failing this, the exception
ought not to be
upheld.
[6]
[16]
As argued, correctly so by the Respondent, the
issue in regard to a plaintiff not being in possession of the
original credit agreement
has been conclusively, so, decided in the
judgment in
Zalvest Twenty
.
The Court in dismissing the exception stated the
following:
“
The
rules of court exist in order to ensure fair play and good order in
the conduct of litigation.
The rules do not lay down
the substantive legal requirements for a cause of action, nor in
general are they concerned with the substantive
law of evidence. The
substantive law is to be found elsewhere, mainly in litigation and
the common law. There is no rule of substantive
law to the effect
that the party to a written contract is precluded from enforcing it
merely because the contract has been destroyed
or lost. Even where a
contract is required by law to be in writing (e.g. a contract for the
sale of land or a suretyship), what
the substantive law requires is
that the written contract in accordance with the prescribed
formalities should have been executed;
the law does not say that the
contract ceases to be of effect if it is destroyed or lost.
In regard to the
substantive law of evidence, the original signed contract is the best
evidence that a valid contract was concluded,
and the general rule is
thus that the original must be adduced. But there are exceptions to
this rule, one of which is where the
original has been destroyed or
cannot be found despite diligent search. In such a case, the litigant
who relies on the contract
can adduce secondary evidence of its
conclusion and terms (see
Singh v Govender Brothers Construction
1986 (3) SA 613
(N) at 616J – 617I). There are in modern
law no degrees of secondary evidence (i.e. one does not have to
adduce the “best”
secondary evidence). While a copy of
the lost original might be better evidence than oral evidence
regarding the conclusion and
terms of the contract, both forms of
evidence are admissible once the litigant is excused from producing
the original. . .
That then is the
substantive law. The rules of court exist to facilitate the
ventilation of disputes arising from substantive law.
The rules of
court may only regulate matters of procedure; they cannot make or
alter substantive law (
United Reflective Converters (Pty) Ltd v
Levine
1988 (4) SA 460
(W) at 436B – E and authority there
cited). The court is, moreover, not a slave to the rules of court. As
has often been
said, the rules exist for the courts, not the courts
for the rules.
. .
A rule which purported to
say that a party to a written contract was deprived of a cause of
action if the written document was destroyed
or lost would be ultra
vires. But the rules say no such thing. Rule 18(6) is formulated on
the assumption that the pleader is able
to attach a copy of the
written contract. In those circumstances the copy (or relevant part
thereof) must be annexed. Rule 18(6)
is not intended to compel
compliance with the impossible. . .
. . . On a proper
interpretation of Rule 18(6) itself, there is arguably a necessary
implication that a copy need not be attached
if it is impossible for
the pleader to do so, though to avoid an objection to the particulars
of claim the pleader must explain
the inability. . .
I
also, with respect, disagree with the learned Judge’s
proposition that “(i)n the absence of the written agreement
the
basis of the [plaintiff’s] cause of action does not appear
ex
facie
the
pleading”. (para 18). If a plaintiff pleads the conclusion of a
written contract and the terms relevant to his cause of
action, the
cause of action will appear
ex
facie
the
particulars of claim. That, after all, is how causes of action based
on written contracts were legitimately pleaded prior to
the amendment
of rule 18(6) in 1987, at a time when there was no procedural
requirement to annex the written contract. . .”
[7]
[17]
Zalvest Twenty
is
distinguishable from the present matter in that in
Zalvest
Twenty
, the Credit Agreement had been
destroyed by fire whereas in the present matter, the Credit
Agreements at issue, have simply been
misplaced and despite diligent
search, as at the time the Summons was issued, they could not be
procured. Nevertheless, the substantive
law cited in
Zalvest
Twenty,
finds application in the
circumstances of the present matter.
[18]
In amplifying the substantive law as it applies
regarding written agreements, the Court in
Zalvest
Twenty
held that there is no rule of
substantive law to the effect that the party to a written agreement
is precluded from enforcing it
merely because the agreement has been
destroyed or lost. Even where an agreement is required by law to be
in writing (e.g. an agreement
for the sale of land or a suretyship),
what the substantive law requires is that the written agreement, in
accordance with the
prescribed formalities, should have been
executed; the law does not say that the agreement ceases to be of
effect if it is destroyed
or lost. The law, therefore, is that if the
original agreement or true copy thereof, cannot be produced and
attached to the Summons,
then the terms of the said agreement, as
alleged in the Particulars of Claim, becomes a matter of evidence. It
becomes a question
of proving same before the Trial Court. Similarly,
in the present matter, the fact that the written agreement or a true
copy thereof,
cannot be produced and/or attached to the Particulars
of Claim, at this point of the proceedings, does not mean that there
is no
cause of action and that the claim must just be summarily
dismissed.
[19]
In
Zalvest Twenty
,
the Court dismissed the exception even when the agreement had been
destroyed by fire and would never have been made available.
In the
present matter, the allegation is that the Credit Agreements have
been misplaced, and as at the time of the issue of Summons,
they had
not been procured. The documents are not lost or destroyed, they have
simply been misplaced and they may be found. At
this juncture, it is
not known whether by the time the matter gets to trial the agreements
would have been procured and made available
to the Court.
The
Respondent has, furthermore, set out the alleged terms of the Credit
Agreements in the Particulars of Claim. It has, also, proffered
an
explanation why the Credit Agreements have not been attached to the
Particulars of Claim.
Thus, on any
construction of the pleading excepted to, the exception cannot be
upheld.
[20]
The reliance by the Excipients on the judgment in
Mnguni
, is
misguided. On a proper reading of the Particulars of Claim, it is
patently clear that the Respondent relies for its claim,
on the
misplaced Credit Agreements and not the Standard Terms and Conditions
and/or the Mortgage Bonds that are attached to the
Particulars of
Claim. The Respondent alleges in the Particulars of Claim that the
Standard Terms and Conditions it attached to
the Summons applies to
loan agreements entered into between it and all its debtors. It,
also, alleges that the Mortgage Bonds confirms
both the conclusion of
the respective Credit Agreements between the parties as well as the
indebtedness of the Excipients to it.
There
is nowhere in the Particulars of Claim where it is stated that the
Respondent relies on the Standard Terms and Conditions
and/or the
Mortgage Bonds for its claim, nor was it ever so suggested by the
Respondent in argument.
[21]
The Excipients’ other submission, which is
also based in
Mnguni
,
that in the absence of the written Loan Agreements the basis of the
Respondent’s cause of action does not appear
ex
facie
the pleadings and is, therefore,
excipiable, is not sustainable. This issue was, correctly so,
conclusively dealt with in
Zelvra
Twenty
, as follows:
“
I
also, with respect, disagree with the learned Judge’s
proposition that “(i)n the absence of the written agreement
the
basis of the [plaintiff’s] cause of action does not appear
ex
facie
the
pleading”. (para 18). If a plaintiff pleads the conclusion of a
written contract and the terms relevant to his cause of
action, the
cause of action will appear
ex
facie
the
particulars of claim. That, after all, is how causes of action based
on written contracts were legitimately pleaded prior to
the amendment
of rule 18(6) in 1987, at a time when there was no procedural
requirement to annex the written contract. . .”
[22]
As it
has been said, pleadings are the written statements of the parties,
served by each party in turn upon the other, which must
set out in
summary form the material facts on which each party relies in support
of her/his claim or defence, as the case may be.
The object of
pleading is to define the issues so as to enable the other party (and
the Court) to know what case has to be met.
It is indeed a basic
principle that a pleading should be so phrased that the other party
may reasonably and fairly be required
to plead thereto.
[8]
Equally
so, the terms of the agreement as alleged in the Particulars of Claim
are sufficient to enable the Excipients to plead thereto.
[23]
It is worthy to note that the cases upon which the
Excipients rely, were decided before 2014, they have, as a result,
all been overruled
by
Zalvest Twenty
which was decided in 2014.
As
was decided in
Zalvest Twenty
,
wherein the exception taken is in this exact type of scenario, the
exception, in the present matter, is not well taken, it is
not good
law and cannot be sustained.
COSTS
[24]
The Respondent, as the successful party, argues
for the exception to be dismissed with costs on an attorney and
client scale as
provided for in the underlying agreements. The
underlying agreements are not available at this point in time, and
the terms thereof
having not been proved at this stage of the
proceedings, costs ought to be reserved for determination at the
hearing of the main
action.
ORDER
[25]
In the premises, the application is dismissed and
costs are reserved.
E M KUBUSHI JUDGE OF
THE HIGH COURT
PRETORIA
APPEARANCES:
For
the Excipients:
Adv T
L Jacobs
Instructed
by Legal Aid South Africa
For
the Respondent:
Adv W
J Roos
Instructed
by Velile Tinto & Associates
[1]
Rule
18(6), a party who in his 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.
[2]
South
African Railways and Harbours v Deal Enterprises (Pty) Ltd
1975 (3)
SA 944
(W) at 953A.
[3]
Mnguni
& Another v ABSA (8294/2012)[2013] ZAGPPHC 81 (14 March 2013)
para 36.
[4]
Para
37.
[5]
Absa
Bank Ltd v Zalvest Twenty (Pty) Ltd 2014 (2) SA 119 (WCC).
[6]
See
Sanan v ESKOM Holdings Ltd
2010 (6) SA 638
(GSJ) at 645D.
[7]
See,
also, Erasmus: Superior Court Practice Volume 2 at pD1-236 –
D1-239.
[8]
See
Erasmus: Superior Court Practice Volume 2 at pD1-228 and the cases
quoted therein.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Van Reenen and Another v Heidi Homes (Pty) Ltd (A80/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 408 (23 April 2024)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 408High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar
Van As N.O. and Others v Jacobs N.O. and Others (54121/2019) [2024] ZAGPPHC 292 (27 March 2024)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 292High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar
Van Der Walt and Another v Justsolve (Pty) Ltd and Others (020842/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1208 (18 November 2024)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 1208High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar
Van Den Heever N.O v Mashaba and Others (124034/2024) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1210 (13 November 2024)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 1210High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar
Van Der Spuy and Another v Maritz N.O and Others (2023-081159) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1174 (7 September 2023)
[2023] ZAGPPHC 1174High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar