Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 179South Africa
Firstrand Bank Ltd ta FNB Homeloans v Molefe (2022-060705) [2024] ZAGPPHC 179 (21 February 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
21 February 2024
Headnotes
judgment in which the plaintiff claims payment of R 305 380.08, interest on the aforesaid amount, and an
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Firstrand Bank Ltd ta FNB Homeloans v Molefe (2022-060705) [2024] ZAGPPHC 179 (21 February 2024)
Firstrand Bank Ltd ta FNB Homeloans v Molefe (2022-060705) [2024] ZAGPPHC 179 (21 February 2024)
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sino date 21 February 2024
SAFLII
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Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
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IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Case number:
2022-060705
Date of hearing: 12
February 2024
Date delivered: 21
February 2024
REPORTABLE: NO
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO
REVISED
In the application
between:
FIRSTRAND BANK LTD
Plaintiff
t/a FNB HOMELOANS
and
DINA-BLESSING MMAGAUTA
Defendant
MOLEFE
JUDGMENT
SWANEPOEL J:
[1] This is an
application for summary judgment in which the plaintiff claims
payment of R 305 380.08, interest on the
aforesaid amount, and an
order declaring the immovable property situated at Section 16 in the
Scheme known as C[…] P[…],
situate at Erf […]
A[…] Township, City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality […]
("the property")
specially executable. The plaintiff also
seeks an order setting a reserve price, and costs on the
attorney/client scale.
[2] The
plaintiff's case is based on a loan agreement between the parties
dated 28 July 2015, and a mortgage bond which
was registered over the
property as security in favour of the plaintiff.
[3] Defendant,
who appeared in person, raised the following defences in her plea:
[3.1] That
this Court does not have jurisdiction to hear the matter,
as the amount claimed
falls within the jurisdiction of the Regional Court;
[3.2] The
defendant admits entering into a loan agreement with the plaintiff,
but denies having signed the written agreement
on which the plaintiff
relies, and furthermore, that the loan amounted to R 320 000.00;
[3.3] The
defendant denies that the summons was served at the correct domicile
address;
[3.4] The
defendant says that an order declaring the property specially
executable would infringe on her Constitutional
right to housing
under section 26 of the Constitution.
[3.5] The
defendant denies that the notices in terms of section 129 of the Act
were sent to the correct domicile address.
[4] The
defendant made much of the fact that the annexures to the summons
were not served on her, and that the plaintiff
had failed to comply
with rule 18 (6) of the Uniform Rules. However, the defendant has not
taken the point that this constituted
an irregular step, and
delivered a plea nonetheless. Conspicuously absent from the plea is
any reliance on reckless lending as
defined in section 80 of the Act.
In a claim in reconvention the defendant pleads that the plaintiff
never conducted a credit assessment
and that the loan constitutes
reckless lending within the meaning of section 80. The defendant says
that her net salary amounted
to R 8 232.12, and that she was never
able to afford the mortgage bond repayments. Consequently, the
defendant says that her property
should be declared to be
"in-executable", that all amounts paid by her be repaid by
the plaintiff, and for all loan agreements
between the plaintiff and
the defendant by declared to be null and void, even those entered
into after the home loan was entered
into.
[5] The
counter-claim is not before me. I have to adjudicate the matter on
the plea as it stands, together with the affidavit
opposing summary
judgment. However, as defendant is acting in person, I shall touch on
the reckless lending defence which only
emerges from the
counter-claim.
[6] It is also
perhaps·appropriate to deal, at this stage, with an
application brought by the plaintiff to condone
the late filing of
the application for summary judgment. The defendant delivered her
plea and counter-claim on 6 March 2023 by
email, despite the parties
not having agreed to electronic service. The application for summary
judgment was due on 27 March 2023,
but was only served on 20 April
2022, 16 court days late. The plea and counter-claim, and the
annexures thereto, amount to 94 pages,
some of which were allegedly
difficult to decipher. The plaintiff alleges that the defendant made
a vast number of allegations,
which took some time to investigate.
Having read the plea and counter claim myself, I agree that the
defendant has raised
numerous defences which would have taken a
substantial time to investigate, and due to her being a lay person,
she not always plead
in a clear and concise manner. The deponent to
the affidavit in support of summary judgment also suffered a family
crisis in that
time, to which he had to attend.
[7] The
plaintiff is seeking an indulgence, and must explain the delay fully.
In my view the plaintiff has done so, and
I believe that condonation
should be granted for the late filing.
[8] The
defendant says that she obtained the home loan with the assistance of
a bond originator. The bond was originally
granted for R 300 000.00,
the exact amount of the purchase price. At some stage the defendant
was told that the transfer costs
amounted to R 20 600.00, and that
she would have to pay this amount before transfer could be effected.
The defendant again approached
the plaintiff who granted her a
further loan of R 15 000.00. The defendant paid in the balance of the
transfer fees.
[9] The
defendant denies signing any agreement or quotation. She says that
the signature on the agreement upon which
the plaintiff relies was
forged by someone else. Nonetheless, the defendant does not deny
entering into a home loan agreement,
she does not deny the terms of
the agreement, nor does she deny receiving the monies (albeit that
the money was paid to the conveyancers
on her behalf). I must say
that I find it difficult to believe that the plaintiff would advance
a home loan without a signed agreement
being in place. The defendant
admits that she visited the bond originator's offices, but, she says,
she never signed this agreement.
Nonetheless, although the defendant
denies that she signed the agreement, it is not in dispute that the
loan agreement was entered
into upon the terms contained in the
written document. This defence is consequently a mere red herring.
[10] The
defendant also has a problem with the fact that the home loan was for
R 315 000.00, and she says that the additional
R 15 000.00 should
have been given to her as a personal loan. I see no difference
whether the loan was termed a personal loan or
a home loan. This is
also no defence to the claim.
[11] As
far as the jurisdiction defence is concerned, the Constitutional
Court has disposed of this issue.
[1]
A
High Court may not refuse to exercise its jurisdiction in a matter in
which a Magistrates Court has concurrent jurisdiction. It
may,
however, be appropriate only to award costs on the Magistrates Court
tariff.
[12] The
defendant's allegation that both the summons and the section 129
notices were sent to the incorrect address,
and that she never
received the section 129 notices can be disposed of simultaneously.
The defendant's chosen domicile address
according to the agreement is
S[…] B[…] Street, A[…].
[13] It
is now trite that if a section 129 notice is delivered to the
domicile address by registered mail, and the delivery
is proven by
proof of posting by registered mail, and a track and trace report
evidencing delivery to the nearest post office,
that is sufficient to
prove delivery for purposes of section 129.
[2]
The
plaintiff has delivered the section 129 notice in accordance with the
Sebo/a
judgment.
The plaintiff has also shown that the summons was served by the
Sheriff of Court at the domicile address on 19 January
2023. Once
again, this point does not raise a triable issue.
[14] The
further point to consider is the defendant's allegation that her
Constitutional right to housing would be infringed
should the order
be granted declaring the property specially executable. The
Constitutional Court has held on a number of occasions
that it is not
unconstitutional to declare a property specially executable, but
that, where it is a person's primary residence,
as in this case, a
Court must determine whether it is justifiable to make such an order,
given the individual facts of each case.
[3]
In
Jaftha
v Schoman
and
Others; Van Rooyen v Stoltz and Others
[4]
the
Court said:
"Another factor
of great importance will be the circumstances in which the debt
arose. If the judgment debtor willingly put
his or her house up in
some manner as security for the debt, a sale in execution should
ordinarily be permitted where there has
not been an abuse of court
procedure."
[15] The
property is the primary residence of the defendant and her husband
and children. In this case the defendant
willingly put up the
property as security for the loan. As at 13 April 2023, shortly
before the application for summary judgment
was launched, the
defendant owed R 313 945.70 on the property, and she was in arrears
with approximately ten instalments totaling
R 37 753.33. By June 2023
the arrears had escalated to R 45 941.02. the last payment on the
bond was made on 3 February 2023 in
the sum of R 2000.00. In
addition, the defendant was indebted to the body corporate of the
Sectional Title Scheme in the sum of
R 167 861.58 in respect of
arrear levies.
[16] Even if I
were to exercise my discretion against granting an order declaring
the property specially executable,
it is likely that the body
corporate will at some stage foreclose on the property. On the
defendant's own version, she is unemployed
and unable to afford the
bond payments. As much as I sympathize with the defendant's position,
I cannot find any basis not to grant
the order sought.
[17] Finally,
although reckless lending was not pleaded, it was touched on in the
counter-claim, and in argument, and
I will deal with the issue in
this judgment. Effectively the defendant says that it was crystal
clear to all concerned, that when
the loan was granted, the defendant
could not afford to service the bond. In her heads of argument, the
defendant says that she
became unemployed
in 2019. Until then, she says, she paid the
bond "without fail". Her salary was paid into her account
monthly, and the
debit orders were invariably paid. That fact, in my
view, puts paid to the defendant's assertion that she was always
unable to
afford the loan. She in fact paid the loan for some four
years without defaulting.
[18] In my view the
defendant has not demonstrated any triable issue. I am satisfied that
summary judgment should be granted.
However, to allow the defendant
the opportunity to locate alternative accommodation, or to resolve
the arrears (if possible), I
intend to suspend the order for three
months.
[19]
Consequently,
I
make
the following order:
[19.1] The late filing
of the application for summary judgment is condoned;
[19.2] Judgment is
granted for payment of the amount of R 305 380.08;
[19.3] Defendant shall
pay interest on the aforesaid amount at a variable rate of 12.76%
nominal per annum calculated daily and
compounded monthly in arrears
from 30 November 2022 to date of payment;
[19.4] The
immovable property described as:
a.)
Unit consisting of Section No. 16 as
shown and more fully describe on sectional Plan No. […], in
the scheme known as C[…]
P[…] in respect of the land
and building
or
buildings
situate
at
ERF
[…]
A[…] TOWNSHIP,
LOCAL
AUTHORITY:
CITY
OF
TSHWANE
METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY, of which the floor area, according to the said
sectional is 39 (THIRTY NINE) square metres extent; and
b.)
An
undivided
share
in
the
common
property
in
the scheme apportion to the said section in
accordance with the participation quota as endorsed on the
said
sectional plan.
Held
by Deed of
Transfer
no […]
is
declared
to
be
specially
executable
for
the
aforesaid
amounts.
[19.5] The Registrar
is authorised to issue a Writ of Execution in terms of Rule 46 as
read with Rule 46A for the attachment of
the Property;
[19.6] The reserve
price is set at R 100 000.00;
[19.7] Costs of suit
on the attorney and client scale, to be taxed.
[19.8] This order is
suspended for three months from date of judgment.
SWANEPOEL J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION
PRETORIA
COUNSEL FOR
PLAINTIFF:
Adv. A Ellis
ATTORNEY FOR
PLAINTIFF:
Friedland Hart
Solomon Nicolson
Attorneys
COUNSEL FOR
DEFENDANT:
In person
ATTORNEY FOR
DEFENDANT:
In person
DATE
HEARD:
12 February 2024
DATE OF
JUDGMENT:
21 February 2024
[1]
South
African Human Rights Commission v Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd
2023(3)
SA 36 (CC)
[2]
Sebo/a
and Another v Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd
2012
(5) SA 142 (CC)
[3]
Gundwana
v Steko Developments
and
Others
2011
(3) SA 608
(CC) at para58
[4]
[2004] ZACC 25
;
2005
(2) SA 140
(CC)
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