Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 62South Africa
SB Guarantee Company (RF) Proprietary Limited v Double Delight Investments 1 CC and Another (2022/053688) [2024] ZAGPPHC 62 (1 February 2024)
Headnotes
judgment based on the failure of the respondents to perform in terms of a home loan agreement and surety thereto.
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 62
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## SB Guarantee Company (RF) Proprietary Limited v Double Delight Investments 1 CC and Another (2022/053688) [2024] ZAGPPHC 62 (1 February 2024)
SB Guarantee Company (RF) Proprietary Limited v Double Delight Investments 1 CC and Another (2022/053688) [2024] ZAGPPHC 62 (1 February 2024)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPPHC/Data/2024_62.html
sino date 1 February 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 2022/053688
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
Date:
01/02/24
Signature
In
the matter between:
SB GUARANTEE COMPANY
(RF) PROPRIETARY LIMITED
(Registration Number:
2006/021576/07)
Applicant
and
DOUBLE
DELIGHT INVESTMENTS 1 CC
First Respondent
NAZER
CASSIM
Second Respondent
JUDGMENT
STRYDOM,
AJ
INTRODUCTION:
1.
This is an application for summary judgment based on the failure
of
the respondents to perform in terms of a home loan agreement and
surety thereto.
2.
The second Respondent describes the contractual matrix involved
as
follows: On or about 7 October 2019, the First Respondent and the
Standard Bank of South Africa Limited ("SBSA") entered
into
a home loan agreement (" loan agreement"). The Applicant
concluded a written guarantee (the Common Terms Agreement)
in favour
of SBSA, in terms of which, inter alia, the Applicant guaranteed the
due and punctual payment of all sums now and subsequently
due by a
debtor (who has borrowed money from SBSA pursuant to a home loan
agreement) to SBSA ("Guarantee" ). The First
Respondent was
required by the Applicant, in turn (of the Guarantee) to conclude a
written indemnity agreement in terms of which,
inter alia, the First
Respondent (as borrower) indemnified and held the Applicant harmless
from and against all loss, costs, expenses
and liabilities which the
Applicant may suffer in connection with SBSA and the Guarantee ("
Indemnity Agreement" ). In
the event that the loan agreement
became effective and was breached, SBSA would have had the option to
claim from both the First
Respondent and the Applicant (as guarantor)
jointly and severally. The Second Respondent concluded an agreement
of surety in favour
of the Applicant concerning the obligations of
the First Respondent in terms of the Indemnity Agreement ("
Surety Agreement"
).
3.
It is common cause that the first respondent is in default of
the
repayments of the home loan. The applicant seeks judgment in the
amount of R1 246 102.05 against the first Respondent (being
the whole
outstanding amount per the homeloan agreement), alternatively
R1 170 000-00 against the second Respondent (being
the
maximum to be granted pursuant to the suretyship agreement) as well
as an order declaring the property executable.
4.
Consequent to the default of the first respondent, the Applicant
served summons on the 12
th
of January 2023. Following the
service of a notice of bar, the Respondents delivered their plea on
the 29
th
of March 2023.
5.
Pursuant to the plea, the applicant filed an application for
summary
judgment which was set down on the unopposed roll of the 8
th
of June 2023. On that day, however, the Respondents served a notice
of intention to amend its plea. The matter was accordingly
removed
from the roll.
6.
The Applicant served a notice of objection to the amendment
in terms
of Rule 28 (3) on 23 June 2023. The amendment was never affected and
on the 28
th
of September 2023 the Applicant served
the Respondents with a notice of set down for the summary judgment
application on
the unopposed motion roll for the 27
th
of
October 2023.
7.
The Respondent’s filed their affidavit resisting summary
judgment on the morning of the 27
th
of October 2023 and
sought condonation for the late filing.
8.
As the
consideration of the strength of the defence raised would, in any
event, be a factor in considering whether the late
filing
should be condoned
[1]
and even
if not condoned, necessary to determine whether the plea discloses a
prima
facie
defence, I requested counsel for both parties to prepare short
written heads of argument to address the validity of the defence
raised.
Condonation
9.
The second respondent explains the reason for the delay in filing
the
affidavit resisting summary as follows:
“
The
reason that I have filed late is that I instructed my attorneys of
record to amend the First and Second Defendants plea to clarify
my
defence. It was my opinion that by amending the plea, we would be
able to make our defence clearer…. Unfortunately, after
my
attorneys of record filed the notice of intention to amend, the
Plaintiff objected to the amendment. I was of the opinion
that
the summary judgment application would not proceed until such time as
there was certainty about the Defendants truly pleaded
case and after
the amendment had been dealt with. I have now deposed to this
affidavit because the Plaintiff has indicated that
they do not have
the same view and intend on advancing the summary judgment despite
there being a pending amendment to clarify
my defence.”
10.
This affidavit was deposed to on the 27
th
of October 2023
(being the same day as the hearing of the summary judgment
application.
It is wholly insufficient in that it
fails to explain what steps have been taken to effect the amendment
after the objection in
June 2023. Furthermore despite having been
served with the set down for the present application in September,
the deponent fails
to address why it took him a whole month to depose
to the affidavit. Save for his own subjective views, there is in fact
no explanation
specifically related to the question of delay.
11.
Rule 27(3) of the Uniform rules provides that a ‘court may, on
good cause
shown, condone any non-compliance with these rules’.
In
United Plant Hire (Pty) Ltd v Hills
& others Holmes JA
stated:
‘
It is well
settled that, in considering applications for condonation, the Court
has a discretion, to be exercised judicially upon
a consideration of
all of the facts; and that in essence it is a question of fairness to
both sides
.’
The various factors that are to be
considered ‘are not individually decisive but are interrelated
and must be weighed one
against the other’ with the effect, for
instance, that ‘a slight delay and a good explanation may help
to compensate
for prospects of success which are not strong’
12.
In
Darries v Sheriff, Magistrate’s Court, Wynberg &
another
the Court held that:
‘
I
will content myself with referring, for present purposes, only to
factors which the circumstances of this case suggest should
be
repeated. Condonation of the non-observance of the Rules of this
Court is not a mere formality. In all cases some acceptable
explanation, not only of, for example, the delay in noting an appeal,
but also, where this is the case, any delay in seeking condonation,
must be given
. An appellant should whenever he realises
that he has not complied with a Rule of Court apply for condonation
as soon as possible.
Nor should it simply be assumed that, where
non-compliance was due entirely to the neglect of the appellant's
attorney, condonation
will be granted
……………….
And
further on:
“
But appellant's
prospect of success is but one of the factors relevant to the
exercise of the Court's discretion, unless the cumulative
effect of
the other relevant factors in the case is such as to render the
application for condonation obviously unworthy of consideration.
Where
non-observance of the Rules has been flagrant and gross an
application for condonation should not be granted, whatever the
prospects of success might be
.’
[2]
[Underlining
my own]
13.
I have also
noted that, as per
Smith
NO v Brummer NO
[3]
,
where there has been a reckless or intentional disregard of the rules
of court, or the Court is convinced that the applicant does
not
seriously intend to proceed, the Court will refuse to grant the
application.
14.
In
casu,
the non-observance has been flagrant and the reason
for the delay in compliance wholly insufficient enough to render a
reference
to possibility of success irrelevant. However, by virtue of
the fact that I have to, even on an unopposed basis, have regard to
the prospects of success of the defence raised in the pleadings for
purposes of summary judgment, I note that for purposes of condonation
the pleaded defence has no merit (as set out below.) In the affidavit
resisting summary judgment, the Respondent raises issue with
the
amount due being proven on the strength of a certificate of balance,
when the indemnity agreement does not provide for such
a certificate
being proof. I note that this is not pleaded, even in the
intended amended pleadings. Apart from being a technical
point that
does not disclose a defence to the fact that the Respondent is
indebted to the Applicant, it therefore also does not
convince this
Court that the Respondent seriously intends to proceed with this
argument.
15.
The argument that the Applicant failed to attach the liquid
document upon
which it relies to the summary judgment application
(the certificate of balance), similarly is a technical objection –
especially
in circumstances where there is no dispute that the
document exists and that the Respondents are aware of it (attached to
the particulars
of claim) and the Respondents in fact refer to it is
their defence as part of the affidavit resisting judgment.
16.
As a result, the application for condonation is refused. I pause to
note that,
even if condonation had not been refused, the outcome of
this judgment would have remained unchanged.
The
prima facie defence raised
17.
In the written submissions on behalf of the Respondents, it is
contended that:
“…
one of the loan agreement's
suspensive conditions was not met and that the loan agreement (and
all the agreements concluded based
on the presupposed existence of
the loan agreement) is consequently void
.”
18.
The argument advanced is as follows:
“
The
Applicant has no claim against the Respondents as the Guarantee only
obliges it to pay SBSA in relation to home loan agreements.
In the
matter at hand, the Applicant is not obliged to pay SBSA as there is
no home loan agreement considering that:
15.1.the
suspensive condition in clause 9.7.2 of the loan agreement that a
resolution be passed and provided by the First Respondent
was not
met; and
15.2.the
special condition that a certified copy of the resolution of the
authorising the acquisition of ownership of the immoveable
property
and the registration of a bond over it be provided to SBSA was not
met.”
19.
Both clauses form part of the home loan agreement entered into
between SBSA
and the first Respondent. Clause 9.7.2 operates as a
suspensive condition in favour of SBSA, as is evident from the
wording of
clause 10, which indicates that in the event the
resolution is not provided within 6 months, SBSA reserves their
rights to withdraw
from or/or terminate the home loan agreement, on
written notice to the first Respondent. The provision of the
certified copy of
the resolution follows from the resolution to be
taken in terms of clause 9.7.2 and therefor similarly operates within
the discretion
and in favour of SBSA.
20.
Absent an allegation that such a written notice has been received by
the first
Respondent in terms of which the agreement is withdrawn
from or terminated, the “suspensive conditions” referred
to
by the Respondents is of no assistance to them.
21.
To hold otherwise would on a practical level, in the words of the
applicant,
be “farcical” when one considers that the
second respondent is the sole member of the first respondent. He does
not
deny receiving the loan amount, using it to acquire the property
or that the first respondent is in default. Instead his defence
is
based on the technicality that he failed to authorise himself in
writing to conclude the loan agreement.
22.
The applicant correctly refers to the following explanation of the
concept of
‘alter ego’ as per
Die Dros (Pty) Ltd and
Another v Telefon Beverages CC and Others
[2003] 1 All SA 164
(C):
"A
company is said to have been the 'alter ego if its controlling
shareholders where it does not, in truth, carry on its own
business
or affairs but acts merely in the furtherance of the business or
affairs of its shareholders, in other words, its controllers
do not
treat it as a separate entity, at least not in the full sense.
Although the form is that of a separate entity carrying on
business
to promote its stated objects, in truth the company is a mere
instrumentality or business conduit for promoting, not its
own
business or affairs, but those of its controlling shareholders. For
all practical purposes the two concerns are in truth one.
In these
cases there is usually no intention to defraud although there is
always abuse of the company's separate existence (an
attempt to
obtain the advantages of the separate personality of the company
without in fact treating it as a separate entity".
23.
The defence raised is therefore not one that prima facie would be
successful
if proven at trial. As such summary judgment is also
granted in favour of the Applicant.
24.
I note
that, despite the property being owned by the first respondent (a
juristic person) the Applicant has indicated that this
Court should
set a reserve price. I have had regard to the submissions made by the
applicant in it’s “affidavit in
support to declare
property specially executable”
[4]
and will set a reserve price of R850 657-87
ORDER
25.
In the result, the following order is made:
1.
The application for condonation for late delivery of the affidavit
resisting summary judgment is dismissed.
2.
The Court grants summary judgment in favour of the Applicant against
the First Respondent, jointly and severally with the Second
Defendant, the one paying the other to be absolved, for:
2.1. Payment of the sum
of R1 246 102.05, of which the maximum amount that may be recovered
from the second Respondent shall be
R1 170 000.00;
2.2 Interest on the
abovementioned amount at the rate of 10,240% per annum from 7
November 2022 to date of payment, both dates inclusive;
3.
That the immovable property described as:
A unit consisting of-
(a) Section No. 48 as
shown and more fully described on Sectional Plan No. SS416/2001, in
the scheme known as TURTLE CREEK in respect
of the land and building
or buildings situated at KOSMOS EXTENSION 5 TOWNSHIP, LOCAL
AUTHORITY: MADIBENG LOCAL MUNICIPALITY of
which section the floor
area, according to the said sectional plan, is 142 (ONE HUNDRED AND
FORTY TWO) square meters in extent;
and
(b) An undivided share
in the common property in the scheme apportioned to the said section
in accordance with the participation
quota as endorsed on the said
sectional plan HELD BY DEED OF TRANSFER NUMBER ST75242/2019 ("the
Property" )
be declared executable
for the aforesaid amounts.
4.
The issuing of a writ of execution in terms of Rule 46 as read with
46A for the attachment of the property is hereby authorised;
5.
The reserve price for the property as described at a sale in auction
shall be R850 657-87
6.
The first and second Respondents are ordered to pay the applicant’s
costs of suit on attorney and client-scale
K STRYDOM
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Applicant's
written submissions receive: 31 October 2023
Respondent's
written submissions received: 1 November 2023
Judgement
delivered: 01 February 2024
Appearances:
For
the Plaintiff:
Adv
Xolisa Hilita
For
the Defendant:
Adv
Butler J
[1]
See for instance
Darries
v Sheriff, Magistrate’s Court, Wynberg & another
1998 (3) SA 34
(SCA) at 40H-41E.
[2]
Darries
v Sheriff, Magistrate’s Court, Wynberg & another
1998 (3) SA 34
(SCA) at 40H-41E.
[3]
Smith
NO v Brummer NO
1954 (3) SA 352
(0) at 358A
[4]
Case Lines 003-27
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
SB Guarantee Company (RF) Proprietary Limited v Vestgro Capital (Pty) Ltd and Another (45317/2021) [2024] ZAGPPHC 605 (25 June 2024)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 605High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)100% similar
SB Guarantee Company (RF) Proprietary Limited v Edwoud Frederick Botes (87458/2019) [2024] ZAGPPHC 161; [2024] 2 All SA 529 (GP) (15 February 2024)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 161High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)100% similar
SB Guarantee Company (RF) Proprietary Limited v Mohamed (11029/2020) [2024] ZAGPPHC 933 (19 September 2024)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 933High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)100% similar
SB Guarantee Company (RF) Pty Limited v Hadien (10141/2020) [2024] ZAGPPHC 360 (9 April 2024)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 360High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)100% similar
SB Guarantee Company (RF) (Pty) Ltd v Zondo and Another (37766/2020) [2025] ZAGPPHC 814 (30 July 2025)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 814High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)100% similar