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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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[2024] ZAGPPHC 127
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## Hlatshwayo N.O and Another v Nedbank Limited and Another (48595/2007)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 127 (12 February 2024)
Hlatshwayo N.O and Another v Nedbank Limited and Another (48595/2007)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 127 (12 February 2024)
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sino date 12 February 2024
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 48595/2007
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
DATE:
12 FERBUARY 2024
SIGNATURE:
SM MARITZ AJ
In
the matter between:
RAMASELA
LUCY HLATSHWAYO N.O.
FIRST APPLICANT
(In
her capacity as the representative of Deceased Estate
Enock
Mazibiya Hlatswayo)
RAMASELA
LUCY HLATSHWAYO
(In
her capacity as a surviving spouse of the deceased
SECOND APPLICANT
Enock
Mazibiya Hlatshwayo)
and
NEDBANK
LIMITED
FIRST RESPONDENT
(Previously
known as NEDCOR BANK LTD)
THE
MASTER OF THE HIGH COURT, PRETORIA
SECOND RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
MARITZ
AJ
[1]
The Applicants seek the rescission of an order granted by default on
4 December 2007
against them as well as condonation for the late
filing of their rescission application. Pursuant to the default
judgment granted
their immovable property situated at ERF 9[...]
S[...] A[...], TOWNSHIP, REGISTRATION DIVISION J.R., THE PROVINCE OF
GAUTENG, IN
EXTENT: 450 (FOUR HUNDERED AND FIFTY) SQUARE METERS, HELD
BY CERTIFICATE OF RIGHT OF LEASEHOLD NO. T 2[...] (hereinafter
referred
to as “the immovable property”) was attached and
sold in execution.
[2]
The Applicants’ rescission application is premised on Rule
42(1)(a) of the Uniform
Rules of Court namely that a court may
rescind or vary “
An order or judgment erroneously sought or
erroneously granted in the absence of any party affected thereby”,
alternatively on Rule 31(2)(b) of the Uniform Rules of Court which
states that “
A defendant may within 20 days after he or she
has knowledge of such judgement apply to court...and the court may,
upon good cause
shown, set aside the default judgement”
,
further alternatively in terms of the common law. See in this regard
paragraph 5.1 of the Applicants’ founding affidavit.
The First
Respondent opposes this application. No relief was sought against the
Second Respondent.
[3]
The legal nexus between the parties arises from loan agreements
concluded between
Nedcor Bank being the predecessor in title of the
First Respondent, and Enock Mazibiya Hlatshwayo (hereinafter referred
to as “the
deceased”) and the Second Applicant. As
security for the indebtedness arising from the said loan agreements,
the deceased
and Second Applicant (these parties being married in
community of property to each other) caused a first, second, third,
fourth
and fifth mortgage bond to be registered in favour of the
First Respondent over the immovable property. The deceased passed
away
on 29 June 2004 and the First Applicant, being the surviving
spouse of the deceased and cited in her personal capacity as the
Second
Applicant, was appointed as the representative of the deceased
estate as contemplated in terms of
section 18(3)
of the
Administration of Estates Act, 66 of 1965
.
[4]
Subsequent to the passing of the deceased, payments were made in
respect of the outstanding
debt due to the First Respondent, as
follows:
4.1
Two instalment in the amount of R 953.00 and
4.2
A life insurance policy of the deceased paid an amount of R 9 159.42.
[5]
Subsequent to receipt of the policy payment, a balance remained of
the account of
R 48 121.98. No further payments were made towards the
remaining outstanding balance.
[6]
Due to no payments having been made towards the outstanding
indebtedness or any further
steps taken by the Second Applicant, the
First Respondent, during October 2007, issued a summons against the
Applicants. At the
time of the institution of the action, the balance
on the account in terms of which the loan agreements were concluded
was R 58
717.08. The Second Applicant does not dispute that an
indebtedness amount remained on the account at the time of the
passing of
the deceased as is evident from paragraph 6.2 of the
Applicants’ founding affidavit where it is stated: “
The
deceased at the time of demise, the mortgage bond was in arrears in
the amount of R 58 717.08”
.
[7]
I pause to mention that prior to the service of the summons a notice
in terms of
section 129
and
section 130
of the
National Credit Act,
34 of 2005
, was sent to the Second Applicant on 3 August 2007 and
subsequent thereto the summons was duly served on the chosen
domicilium citandi et executandi
, being 9[...] B[...] A[...],
Soshanguve, of the Second Applicant/Second Defendant (in the action)
on 30 October 2007 by leaving
copies thereof at the said premises.
Service was effected in terms of Rule 4(1)(a)(iv) of the Uniform
Rules of Court. The dies
expired on 14 November 2007 and the
Applicants/Defendants did not enter an Appearance to Defend.
[8]
Pursuant thereto the First Respondent issued a request for judgment
in terms of Rule
31(5), which judgment was granted on 4 December 2007
in favour of the First Respondent/Plaintiff against the
Applicants/Defendants
for payment in the sum of R 58 717.08, as well
as interest on the said amount at the rate of 10.50% per annum from
12 April 2006
to date of final payment and for an order declaring the
immovable property executable. The Applicants seek to rescind this
judgment.
[9]
Subsequent to the default judgment been granted the immovable
property of the Applicants/Defendants
was attached and sold at a sale
in execution on 31 July 2008. Pursuant to the sale the First
Respondent received the total amount
of R 168 160.85. The amount
received in pursuance of the sale in execution of the immovable
property was in excess of the indebtedness
amount due by the
Applicants/Defendants. The outstanding amount at that stage was R 88
367.60. The excess amount, of R 79
793.27 (i.e. R 168 160.85
minus R 88 367.60) was subsequently paid to the account of the
deceased estate. The Applicants are not
disputing receipt of this
payment.
[10]
I will briefly deal with the legal framework as applicable to the
facts.
[11]
As previously stated, the rescission application is primarily
premised on Rule 42(1)(a) of the
Uniform Rules of Court. The purpose
of Rule 42 is “
to correct expeditiously an obviously wrong
judgment or order"
. An Applicant must prove that there is a
procedural issue present which causes the judgment to have been
erroneously sought or
granted. In order words Rule 42(1)(a) caters
for a mistake in the proceedings. A judgment cannot be said to have
been granted erroneously
in the light of a subsequent disclosed
defence which was not known or raised at the time of the default
judgment (See:
Kgomo v Standard Bank
2016 (2) SA 184].
Furthermore, the Supreme Court of Appeal in Lodhi 2 Properties v
Bondev
[2007] SCA 85 (RSA)
held that default judgment to
which the Plaintiff is procedurally entitled cannot be said to have
been granted erroneously in the
light of a subsequent disclosed
defence.
[12]
Even in the instance where a matter may have been erroneously sought
or granted, the judgment
or order will not be rescinded in the
instance where the party against whom it was granted has acquiesced
to the judgment. (See:
Schmidlin v Multisound (Pty) Ltd
1991 (2) SA
151
(C) at 156A-D).
[13]
As the Applicants are requesting condonation for the late filing of
their rescission application
it is necessary to briefly state the
time periods applicable within which the recission application should
be brought. Rule 31(2)(b)
requires the Applicant to bring the
application within 20 days after the he/she became aware of the
judgment. In terms of the common
law as well as Rule 42 the
application must be brought expeditiously and within a reasonable
time. An unreasonable long delay may
indicate acquiescence to the
court order.
[14]
I will briefly deal with the requirements to be met by an Applicant
before a court may rescind
a judgement in terms of Rule 31 as well as
in terms of the common law. These requirements are practically the
same for both Rule
31(2)(b) and the common law namely that the
Applicant must show "good cause" (Rule 31) or “sufficient
cause"
(common law), which entails that the Applicant must (a)
give a reasonable and acceptable explanation for his/her default for
the
entire period of default; (b) by showing that his/her application
is made bona fide; (c) by showing that he/she had a bona fide
defence
to the Plaintiff’s claim which carries some prospects of
success.
[15]
Before dealing with the merits of this application, I will briefly
deal with the Applicants’
grounds for condonation as set out in
their Founding Affidavit.
CONDONATION
[16]
It is important to note that the present application was instituted
during 2022 pertaining to
a judgment granted in 2007, therefore a 15
years period lapsed since judgment was granted.
[17]
The Applicants’ grounds for condonation are set out in
paragraph 11 of their Founding Affidavit
where the Second Applicant
states in paragraph 11.1 thereof as follows: “
I only knew
about the error in the judgment, recently when my Attorneys requested
me to obtain copy (sic) of the judgement at court,
at all material
time (sic), I knew that my house was sold, and thought everything was
above board.”
In paragraph 11.2 it is stated: “It was
when on the 09 December 2022, when the order was scrutinized and the
error was identified.”
Based on this the Applicants submitted
that they only became aware of the judgment on 9 December 2022.
[18]
Counsel for the First Respondent submitted in his heads of argument
that from the above remark,
it seems as if the Applicants were aware
of the sale of the immovable property, and therefore by implication
the judgment, since
2008. A submission that I agree with.
[19]
Moreover, paragraph 9.1 of the Applicants’ founding affidavit
states: “
I and my child were rendered homeless because of
this judgment, the house was sold, we were chased out, and we have
been without
shelter, of our own for the part 14 (fourteen) years.”
This statement suggests that the Second Applicant was aware,
based on her own account, of the sale of the property and the
subsequent
eviction of herself and her child for a period spanning 14
years prior to filing the current application. Consequently, it is
reasonable
to infer that she should have been aware of the judgment
rendering the property executable at the time of the sale in
execution,
dating back to 2008.
[20]
I conclude that the Applicants have not provided a reasonable and
satisfactory explanation for
the significate delay in filing of their
application for rescission considering the substantial period of
almost 15 years since
judgment was granted. No justifiable reason has
been offered for the prolonged delay. Based on this primary reason
alone, the condonation
application and the application in its
entirety should be dismissed. Nonetheless, I will briefly address the
grounds for rescission
below.
APPLICATION
FOR RESCISSION
[21]
The crux of Applicants’ grounds for instituting the rescission
application can be summarised
as follows:
21.1
Firstly, that the First Defendant/Applicant being cited as
an
Executor
in the summons, instead of a
section 18(3)
representative of the deceased estate
. See paragraphs 6.7 to 6.10
of the Applicants’ founding affidavit. As a result thereof the
Second Applicant/Defendant did
not defend the summons, because
according to the Second Applicant the summons referred to a totally
different person, namely the
Executor, and at that time she knew that
she was not the Executor, but a representative duly appointed by the
Master in terms of
section 18(3) of the Administration of Estate Act,
66 of 1965.
21.2
Secondly, the heading of the Request for Default Judgment references
that the First Applicant/Defendant was
the representative of the
estate of “
the Late SB Murray”
instead of the
deceased. See in this regard paragraphs 6.12 to 6.16 of the founding
affidavit.
21.3
In light of the above it is submitted by the Applicants that the
judgment was erroneously granted.
[22]
The First Respondent opposes the application on the following basis:
22.1
That the above grounds raised by the Applicants amount to
typographical issues.
22.2
That the Applicants do not disclose a
bona fide
defence to the
relief contained in the judgment and more specifically-
22.3
That the Applicants do not deny the conclusion of the underlying loan
agreements nor the registration of
the relevant mortgage bonds;
22.4
That the Applicants do not deny that the account of which the
relevant loan agreements were concluded was
in fact in arrears or
that all obligations in terms of the relevant loan agreements were
being honoured by the First Respondent;
22.5
The Second Applicant did not provide any information on which steps
she, as the representative of the deceased
estate has taken to ensure
that the obligations of the deceased estate (and she in her personal
capacity) towards the First Respondent
were honoured subsequent to
the passing of the deceased. No steps were taken in transferring or
repaying the indebtedness amount
which remained due to the First
Respondent;
22.6
That there is no issue that can or should be ventilated in the event
that the rescission application is granted
as no
bona fide
defence exists;
22.7
That the present application has been instituted during December 2022
i.e. subsequent to receipt of the excess
amount recovered pursuant to
the sale of the immovable property; and
22.8
That the acceptance of the payment of the excess amount, amounts to
an acquiescence of the execution steps
taken pursuant to the order
and therefore the Applicants are barred from applying for a
rescission of the underlying error.
[23]
After hearing Counsel on behalf of both parties and reading the
documents filed, I find nothing
to deviate from the submissions made
by the First Respondent and therefore I agree therewith. In addition
thereto I find that the
application is instituted with an
ulterior
motive, without merit and ill-founded for the following reasons:
23.1
Even if I condone the late filing of the Applicants’ rescission
application (which is not condoned)
I find no submission made by the
Applicants in which procedural irregularities pertaining the record
of the proceedings are addressed
which occurred during the granting
of the default judgment as is required in terms of Rule 42
(erroneously granted) in order to
succeed with the rescission
application. I find that the First Respondent duly complies with all
statutory requirements and court
rules. The Applicants have further
failed to show “
good cause”
or “
sufficient
cause”
to rescind the judgment granted against them in
terms of Rule 31 or the common law.
23.2
The First Respondent was entitled to the default judgment as is
evident from the fact that the Applicants
do not dispute the loan
agreements and the registration of the subsequent bonds as well as
their indebtedness to the First Respondent.
Apart from the payments
made by the Applicant, as referred to previously, the Second
Applicant, as the administrator/representative
of the deceased
estate, took no steps to repay the outstanding amount, which remained
due. No
bona fide
defence is raised, which carries any
prospect of success and which can be ventilate in the event that the
judgment is rescinded.
23.3
The summons was served on the chosen
domicilium
address of the
Applicants in terms of the relevant court rule. I find that the
summons was duly served. The fact that the First
Defendant/Applicant
was cited as
an Executor
in the summons, instead of a
section
18(3) representative of the deceased estate
is purely a bona fide
mistake alternatively a typographical error and it does not rendered
the summons and the subsequent service
thereof defective. At all
relevant times the Second Applicant should have been aware that the
summons pertained to the said immovable
property and that it was
directed at her and the estate of the deceased. Her full names and
surname appeared on the summons as
well as her identity number.
Furthermore, the Second Respondent was cited correctly on the summons
in her personal capacity, which
is not denied. I find that the Second
Respondent was in wilful default as she was aware of the process, but
opted not to oppose
it. Even if she was uncertain whether the summons
was directed at her and the deceased estate, she could have and
should have contacted
the First Respondent’s Attorneys, whose
contact details appeared on the summons, to enquiry what the position
was. She wilfully
ignored the summons.
23.4 In
addition, the Applicants do not dispute service and/or receipt of the
notice in terms of
section 129
and
130
of the
National Credit Act.
These
notices set out a specific time period within which payment
should be made as well as alternative remedies in the event that a
party is unable to effect payment. It also clearly states that
summons will be issued in the absence of payment or alternative
arrangements being made. No notice to defend was served and no
payment was made. Thus, the First Respondent was entitled to apply
for default judgment. The existence or non-existence of a defence on
the merits is an irrelevant consideration when granting a
default
judgment. If a defence is subsequently disclosed it cannot transform
a validly obtained judgment into an erroneous judgment
(See:
Lodhi
2 Properties investments CC & Another vs Bondev Developments
(Pty) Ltd (2007) SCA 85 (RSA)
). Thus, the default judgment
obtained against the Applicants is valid.
23.5
Secondly, the submissions of the Applicants that the judgment is
null
and void
as it was erroneously granted due to the fact that the
heading of the Request for Default Judgment references that the First
Applicant/Defendant
was the representative of the estate of “
the
Late SB Murray”
instead of the estate of the deceased, is
without merit. The incorrect reference to the deceased estate is in
all probabilities
a
bona fide "copy and paste” error
,
alternatively, a typographical error. The aforementioned "mistakes"
are not material. There is no evidence that any
subsequent execution
steps were taken against the estate of the “the Late SB
Murray”. Instead it was correctly taken
against the estate of
the deceased. On the Second Applicant’s own version the said
immovable property was sold in execution.
Despite any amendments made
by the First Respondent to its summons and request for default
judgment, it remains indisputable that
the Applicants were in arrears
at the time the judgment was granted. Consequently, the First
Respondent rightfully obtained the
judgment granted.
23.6 I
find that the present application was instituted with an ulterior
motive being the ill- founded attempt
to extract payment of “
the
amount equivalent to the current market value”
of the
encumbered property (See: prayer 4 of the Notice of Motion), as
initially claimed in the Notice of Motion. Prayer 4 of the
Notice of
Motion was during the hearing of the application abandoned by Counsel
for the Applicants and therefore I will not deal
with it further.
23.7
Lastly, the Applicants acquiesced to the judgment once payment of the
excess amount was accepted. In
Schmidlin v Multisound (Pty) Ltd
1991 (2) SA 151
(C) at 156A-D it was held that: Acquiescence in the
execution of judgment must surely in logic normally bar success in an
application
to rescind...”.
The delayed payment of the
excess amount suggests that the Second Applicant, in her capacity as
the administrator/representative
of the deceased estate, neglected
her fiduciaries duties to the deceased estate.
24.
For reasons stated above, I find that the Applicants’
application for rescission of
the default judgment is without merit
and thus dismissed.
COSTS
[25]
Costs should follow the successful party. There is no reason why the
successful party should
be” out of pocket.” At all
material times the Applicants were aware of the defences raised by
the First Respondent
in opposing their rescission application, but
irrespective thereof they persisted with their application for
rescission.
[26]
The First Respondent requested in its Answering affidavit that the
application should be dismissed
with costs on a scale as between
attorney and client, which scale of costs is in line with the
provisions of the mortgage bond.
At the hearing of the current
application Counsel for the First Respondent submitted that the First
Respondent will only move for
costs on a scale as between party and
party.
THEREFORE
the following order is made:
1.
The recission application is dismissed with costs on a scale as
between party
and party.
SIGNED
ON THIS 12TH DAY OF FEBRUARY 2024.
BY
ORDER
SM
MARITZ AJ
APPEARANCE
ON BEHALF OF THE PARTIES:
Counsel for
Applicants:
Adv V Mukwevho
Applicants’
Instructing Attorneys:
Shapiro Ledwaba Inc
Tel: 012 328
5848/071 209 3448
Email:
ali@shapiroledwaba.co.za
Counsel for First
Respondent:
Adv CGVO Sevenster
First Respondent’s
Instructing Attorneys:
Vezi & De Beer
Attorneys
Tel: 012 361 5640
Email:
mustafa@vezideheer.co.za
Date of Hearing:
7 February 2024
Date of Judgment:
12 February 2024
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