Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 32South Africa
ABSA Bank Limited v Objective Photo (Pty) Ltd and Another (035251/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 32 (24 January 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
24 January 2024
Headnotes
by Jacobs AJ[1] that pleadings in civil litigation do not only serve to inform an adversary of the case he or she has to meet. He referred to the
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## ABSA Bank Limited v Objective Photo (Pty) Ltd and Another (035251/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 32 (24 January 2024)
ABSA Bank Limited v Objective Photo (Pty) Ltd and Another (035251/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 32 (24 January 2024)
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sino date 24 January 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
Number: 035251/2022
(1)
REPORTABLE:
YES
/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES
YES
/NO
(3)
REVISED:
YES/NO
DATE:24
January 2024
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
ABSA
BANK
LIMITED
Plaintiff
and
OBJECTIVE
PHOTO (PTY)
LTD
First Defendant
JACOBUS
DANIEL
WIEDEMEN
Second Defendant
JUDGMENT
MALATSI-TEFFO AJ
INTRODUCTION
This is an application
for default judgment against the first and second respondents for the
payment of R391 539.55. The plaintiff
further seeks an order for
costs.
BACKGROUND
[1]
The issued summons which was served by the
Sheriff of the High Court on the first and second defendants,
indicated on the return
of service that the Sheriff served the
summons in terms of Rule "41A", "
by
affixing at the chosen domicilium citandi et executandi by affixing
on the principal door at the registered addresses.
”
The
dies induciae
had expired and the first and second defendants failed to enter an
appearance to defend.
[2]
In the main application and application for
default judgment, the plaintiff/applicant sought an order against the
first respondent/defendant
and second respondent/defendant for the
payment of R391,539.55, the parties being jointly and severally
liable, the one to pay
the other to be absolved. However, during
court proceedings, counsel submitted that judgment should be granted
against the first
defendant and should exclude the second defendant.
THE FACTS
[3]
On 21 August 2020, the plaintiff and the
defendants entered into a loan agreement subject to the COVID-19
term. The conditions of
the loan agreement provided that the
plaintiff would lend and advance to the first defendant, a bridge
loan in the amount of R338,144.00.
The capital loan amount was to be
repaid by way of 60(sixty) monthly installments, each for R7 975.52
per month commencing
1
st
March 2021.
[4]
These were the amounts pleaded in the
particulars of the claim. During the proceedings before the
Court, I raised an issue
concerning the completeness of the contract
which I shall address in detail later. It suffices for the
present purposes to
say that the agreement upon which the plaintiff
relies in this suit is not the correct version and/or is an
incomplete agreement
concluded between the parties.
[5]
In terms of the loan agreement, all the outstanding amounts
that were due and payable by the defendants to the plaintiff had to
be paid by no later than the relevant due dates provided for. Should
the first defendant fail to make payment of any such amounts
to the
plaintiff, the plaintiff would be entitled to recover all the amounts
owing under the agreement.
[6]
A certificate signed by any manager whose authority need not
be proved, as to the indebtedness by the plaintiff to the defendants
would be the
prima facie
proof of the correctness thereof.
[7]
The loan facility was granted for financing working capital.
[8]
The defendants breached the terms of the
loan agreement, in that it failed to make payment of the monthly
interest due and the necessary
capital repayments in terms of the
agreement.
[9]
T
he
plaintiff accordingly sent out a notice and terminated the COVID-19
term loan agreement as it was entitled to do so. As a result
of the
termination, the full balance became due and payable. The plaintiff
issued summons, which was followed by a default judgment
application,
as the defendants failed to file a notice of intention to defend.
The cause of action
[10]
The cause of action is based on two
documents that were annexed to the particulars of claim namely, the
COVID-19 term loan agreement
concluded in terms of the
National
Credit Act 34 of 2005
marked as annexure “A” (’the
loan agreement”), and the Suretyship agreement marked as
annexure ”D”.
[11]
The loan agreement was signed in 2020 by
the second defendant on behalf of the first defendant as the
borrower, however, the signature
of the lender does not appear on the
agreement; the plaintiff in this case.
[12]
The
suretyship agreement referred to was signed in 2013 by the second
defendant and it has not been shown how it was connected to
the loan
agreement. I raised these issues with Counsel, and I afforded her the
customary opportunity to remedy them. Counsel requested
the matter be
stood down to afford her the opportunity to look at the papers. Upon
resumption of the proceedings, she insistently
submitted that the
loan agreement was signed and that a proper case against the first
defendant had been made, therefore an order
should be granted against
the first defendant only. She then handed in the amended draft order
wherein the words, “
second
defendant, jointly and severally liable the one paying the other to
be absolved”
were deleted. Upon scrutinization of the documents, it came out that
there is no signed agreement; thus it seems to me that Counsel
has
forgotten that as an officer of the court, she has the duty to assist
the court with the correct information to avoid creating
mishaps and
for the court to make proper and informed decisions. The prudent
thing would have been for the counsel to remove the
matter from the
roll to sort out their papers.
ISSUES TO BE
DETERMINED
[13]
The issues before the Court are the
following:
a.
whether a proper case has been made by the
plaintiff; and if so,
b.
should an order for default judgment be
granted, are the parties jointly and severally liable, with the one
to pay the other to
be absolved? Alternatively, can an order only be
granted against the first defendant despite relief being initially
sought against
both parties?
LEGAL PRINCIPLES AND
REASONS
[14]
Rule 18(6) of the Uniform Rules of Court provides as follows:
"A party who in his
pleadings 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”.
[15.2]
It was held by Jacobs AJ
[1]
that
pleadings in civil litigation do not only serve to inform an
adversary of the case he or she has to meet. He referred to the
importance of pleadings as
shown by W.J. Odgers many
years ago as "
The system of pleading introduced by the
Judicator Acts in theory the best and wisest, and indeed the only
sensible system of pleading
in civil actions.” Each party in
turn is required to state the facts on which he relies; ……….
[15.3] Jacobs AJ further
indicated that, If pleadings are not formulated in conformity with
the well-established practice the trial
will be conducted by counsel
at cross purposes before a mystified judge, and when the fog is
lifted by a court of appeal the defendants
would find themselves
landed with the costs of an appeal and the plaintiff with the costs
of the trial and both parties would go
away feeling that litigation
is an expensive and unsatisfactory business. All this can be avoided
if the plaintiff’s particulars
of claim is formulated with the
required measure of particularity.
[15]
An
agreement does not constitute an enforceable contract until signed by
both parties
[2]
. Once the
parties decide that they will reduce their contract to writing and
that they will be bound by their written contract
then the contract
comes into existence only when it has been signed by both parties.
[3]
[16]
The plaintiff, in the current case, has failed to
sustain a valid cause of action on the basis that an unsigned version
of
the loan agreement was attached to the particulars of claim.
[17]
It
is my
view that the loan agreement annexed to the particulars
of claim does not support the averments therein, as it is incomplete.
Particular
attention must be paid to the clause after the
amortization profile clause which reads as follows:
"By signing this
agreement each party acknowledges that it has read and understood its
terms and accepts and agrees to those
terms and confirm the
correctness thereof…”
[18]
The loan agreement attached to the particulars of claim does not bear
the signatures of both parties and
contains only one signature, being
that of the second defendant on the signature page.
[19]
The plaintiff's particulars of claim do not comply with the
Rules of Court and are therefore vague and embarrassing. Accordingly,
the attachments to the particulars of claim do not support the
averments.
CONCLUSION
[21] In my view the claim
by the plaintiff/applicant against the first and the second
defendants is baseless, as a result, no proper
case has been made by
the plaintiff/applicant.
[22] In light of
the above findings, I find there are insufficient reasons for me to
deal with the second issue.
ORDER
Having
regard to the above, the following order is made:
1.
The application is struck off.
2.
No order as to costs.
MALATSI-TEFFO AJ
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Counsel
for the Applicant:
Adv
JDB Themane
Instructed
by:
VZLR
INC
tshepo@vzlr.co.za
Date
of Hearing:
20
December 2023
Date
of Judgment:
24
January 2024
[1]
VAN
ZYL'S INCORPORA TED v ANDRE DANIEL BRAND N.O. and others 11460/22
par 5/6 GD PTA
[2]
Minister
of Justice and Constitutional Development v C J C Myburgh and Others
JA46/15 LAC
[3]
Richmond
v Crofton
(1898) 15 SC 183
189; Hadingham v Carruthers 1911 SR 33
38; Goldblatt v Fremantle
1920 AD 123
129; Patrikios v The African
Commercial Co Ltd 1940 SR 45 56–7
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