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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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[2024] ZAGPPHC 147
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## Mahlaba N.O v People's Bank Limited (20119/2019)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 147 (23 February 2024)
Mahlaba N.O v People's Bank Limited (20119/2019)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 147 (23 February 2024)
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sino date 23 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
HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA)
CASE NO: 20119/2019
(1)
REPORTABLE:� NO.
(2) OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:� NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
23 FEBRUARY 2024
SIGNATURE�
In the matter between:
KGABO MARIA MAHLABA N.O
���������� ����������������������������������� ����������Applicant
and
PEOPLE�S BANK LIMITED��������� �����������������������������������������������������������
�����
Respondent
JUDGMENT
This matter has been heard in
open court and is otherwise disposed of in terms of the Directives of the Judge
President of this
Division. �The judgment and order are accordingly published
and distributed electronically.
DAVIS, J
Introduction
[1]
An application for rescission of a default judgment granted on 28
May 2009 came before this court yesterday.� The application has
been launched
on 12 March 2019, that is almost five years ago and almost 10 years after the
default judgment had been granted.�
I shall deal with the aspect of delay
hereunder while referring to the parties as in the main action.� Their
identities and that
of other role-players will appear from the chronology of
the matter.
Chronology
[2]
In 1999 the late Marakiwa Cedrick Mashabela bought a property
situated at Erf 1[�], P[�] C[�], Soweto (the property).� The purchase
price was
funded by a loan from (then) FBC Fidelity Bank Ltd and secured by a bond over
the property on 15 October 1999.
[3]
FBC fidelity Bank Ltd with registration number 94/000929/06 later
became known as People�s Bank Ltd and later as the People�s Mortgage
Ltd (with
the same registration number) and is administered by Nedbank Ltd (Nedbank).� It
was at all relevant times a registered
bank and credit provider in terms of the
applicable legislation.� It later became the plaintiff in this matter.
[4]
On 11 December 2004 the late Mr Mashabela passed away and on 22
July 2005 Ms Kgabo Maria Mahlaba was appointed as the executrix in
the deceased
estate.� She, in that capacity, eventually became the defendant in this matter.
[5]
At the time of the passing of Mr Mashabela, the defendant believed
that the outstanding amount due on the bond would be covered by
the proceeds of
a life policy held by BOE Life Insurance.� For this purpose she had reported
the passing to Nedbank and had completed
the necessary claim documentation.
[6]
On 2 November 2005 however, BOE Life Insurance advised the
defendant as follows: �
We refer to your submission of a death claim that was
received by this office on 4 September 2005 � we have repudiated the claim
on
the above policy as the event that caused the late MC Mashabela�s death is
excluded in terms of the policy.� Should you require
further medical
information in this regard, please request that the late MC Mashabela�s medical
practitioner write to our company
medical officer at the address below, who
will supply the deceased�s medical practitioner with full reasons for the
repudiation
�
�.� The claim and its repudiation were not further pursued.
[7]
On 15 November 2005 the defendant received a letter from Nedbank
reflecting the outstanding amount on the bond to be R93 804,
22 with an arrears
amount of R19 895.84.� The defendant�s affidavit deposed to in support of
the rescission application is
silent as to what her reaction was to this letter
save to indicate that she had not received correspondence from the plaintiff
directly, but always via Nedbank.
[8]
It appears however that the bond payments remained unpaid and in
arrears and some three years later on 13 October 2008 Nedbank�s
attorneys sent
the defendant a letter of demand which she concedes having received.� The
relevant portions of the letter read as
follows: �
We act on behalf of
Nedbank Ltd.� Please convey our condolences to the family of the deceased.� The
balance outstanding on the abovementioned
bond account is in the sum of
R103 894, 76 at the rate of 16.25% per annum calculated from 20 March
2008.� Please note that
the following guidelines can be followed to finalise
the estate: (a) enter into a six months payment plan to settle the outstanding
balance, (b) apply for a section 45 or section 57 endorsement, (c) settle the
outstanding balance in full or (d) proof must be
submitted, should the
beneficiaries be pensioners, minor children or medically boarded or disabled
�.
[9]
None of the above options were exercised by the defendant.�
Instead, she approached Nedbank on 4 November 2008, after having been
advised
to do so by the attorneys who had sent the letter of demand.� The defendant
states that she had agreed with Nedbank that
she would pay R2000,00 per month
into the attorneys� account.� She furnished no particulars of the remainder of
the terms or conditions
of this agreement.
[10]
The defendant
furnished proof of four such payments and a fifth one, after allegedly having
been telephoned by the attorneys, on
30 April 2009.� She alleges that she had
paid R23 000,00 in total.
[11]
In the meantime
summons had been issued on 12 April 2009. �Pursuant to a failure to deliver a notice
of intention to defend, default
judgment had been granted against the defendant
in her capacity as the executrix of the deceased estate on 28 May 2009.
[12]
There is no
further proof of payment but the defendant alleges that about the time that
default judgment had been granted, the attorneys
had sent a valuator to value
the property.
[13]
After a writ of
attachment had been issued (the papers are silent as to when it was executed) a
sale in execution took place on
22 October 2009.� The defendant alleged that
she only received the notice of that sale on 30 October 2009.� She further alleged
that �
this was for the first time to know there was a case against me � I
then stopped paying the agreed amount because I was confused
about the sale of
the house while I was busy making payments as per our agreement
�.
[14]
It appears that
Udumo Trading 77 (Pty) Ltd had purchased the property at the sale in
execution.� It had on-sold the property on
31 March 2010 to a Mr and Mrs Nkgaba
who initiated eviction proceedings in the Johannesburg Division of this court under
case no
31385/2010.� The notice of motion was served on the defendant on 20
August 2010.� Pursuant thereto and apparent appearance by or
on behalf of the
defendant, the eviction matter was postponed on 6 October 2011 and the
defendant was ordered, both in her personal
and representative capacity, to
institute an application for rescission within 30 days.
[15]
Four days after
the postponement, the defendant went to the registrar of this court, searching
for the court file.� She was assisted
by three named officials who could not
locate the court file.� She had also resorted to Nedbank�s attorneys who had by
then returned
their file to Nedbank but who made enquiries at the bank on her
behalf, also to no avail.� The attorneys later obtained returns
of service from
the sheriff and confirmed that the default judgment had properly been obtained.
[16]
On 11 November
2011 the defendant instructed Kabu Phetedi Attorneys who also made enquiries at
Nedbank�s attorneys who on 21 February
2012 advised them of the return of the
file.
[17]
The details of
further searches and/or legal steps taken by the defendant remain unclear.� In
the portion of her affidavit dealing
with condonation, she says the following
on this aspect: �
[I] stopped searching for the file after being advised by
advocate Kabu Phetedi that they will take care of the matter � the applicant
[the defendant] had not approached one attorney for advice on this matter, but
four (4) attorneys who failed her.� The first one
was Attorney Mophosho, the
second one was Advocate Ngwangele; Advocate Steven Khoza who was immediately
arrested for not being
a qualified advocate; Thomas Benjamin Percy Parker, from
unnamed attorneys, who briefed Advocate Kabu
�.� I interject the chronology
to point out that the defendant was during the present matter represented by
Baloyi Ntsako Attorneys
who had briefed Adv Ntsimane to argue the matter.
[18]
The papers are
silent as to when and from where the annexures that featured in the present
application had been obtained.� There
are also no particulars furnished in
respect of a court order granted on 15 August 2012 in Case No 31385/2010 in the
Johannesburg
Division whereby that application was postponed
sine die
.�
Without explanation, the heading of that order indicated the defendant (and no
longer Mr and Mrs Nkgaba) as the applicant and
Nedbank, the Sheriff, the
Registrar of Deeds and Mr and Mrs Ngaba as the respondents.� This might or
might not have been the rescission
application contemplated in the order of
that Division granted on 6 October 2011.
[19]
A next
inexplicable item in the chronological train which I have pieced together from
the parties� various statements, is the following
statement made by the defendant
in her founding affidavit: �
On the 19
th
of September 2018 a
notice of motion was filed which combined Part A and Part B (rescission of
judgment and lack of jurisdiction
of the respondent), but none of the
respondents filed intention to defend hence this application only respondent.�
Therefore, this
matter is only part A of that application
�.�
[20]
Whatever �that
application� may have been a reference to, the current application was launched
on 23 March 2019 and the only relief
claimed apart from punitive costs was: �
That
the default judgment of the 28
th
day of May 2009 ordering payment of
R103 894,00 and declaring property known as Erf 1[...] P[...] C[...], held
under deed
of Transfer T[...] specially executable, be rescinded
�.
Evaluation
[21]
The defendant
principally relied on the provisions of Rule 31 for purposes of her application
(references were made in heads of
argument filed on her behalf to Rule 42 and
the common law but reliance thereon was not pursued, in my view correctly so as
no
case in that regard had been made out in the papers).� Counsel for the
defendant had, in my view again correctly so, summarized
in her heads of
argument the questions to be answered as follows: �
7.1 whether the applicant
[the defendant] has shown good cause for non-compliance with the rules on late
filing of her application
for rescission; 7.2 whether the applicant was in
willful default and 7.3 whether she has a bona fide defence
�.
[22]
On the most
beneficial version of events, the defendant knew on date of the sale in
execution (or at the latest on 30 October 2009)
that judgment had been granted
and that executability had been ordered.� Had she at that time taken the steps
required by a defendant
seeking to rescind a judgment, the problems which later
manifested regarding loss of files or documents would have been prevented.
[23]
Even though the
defendant stated that she had taken the notice of the sale in execution to her
erstwhile attorneys, her affidavit
is silent as to what steps she took to
ensure that her attorneys were executing their mandate.� She made no enquiries,
telephone
calls or any attempt at ascertaining the position for almost a year
until she was served with eviction papers
[1]
.
[24]
Upon being served
with the eviction papers, she did nothing until she obtained a postponement
thereof on 6 October 2011.
[25]
Despite the obstacles
in thereafter obtaining copies of documents up to February 2012, her silence
and inactivity for a further
6 years until either 2018 (having regard to the
possibility of an application in the Johannesburg Division) or for a further
year
until the launch of the present application, is grossly unreasonable and
constitute an inexcusable delay without any cogent explanation.�
For purposes
of obtaining condonation under Rule 27(3), which is the Rule upon which the
defendant relied, a full and reasonable
explanation, covering the whole period
of delay should have been furnished
[2]
. This was not done.
[26]
The first of the questions
posed in paragraph [21] above should then be answered in the negative and the
defendant should not be
entitled to condonation.� This I find, would be the
position irrespective of whether the application had been brought under Rule
31(5), 31(2)(b) or in terms of the common law, which also requires a full
explanation for a delay of this nature to have been furnished.
[27]
A further
consequence of the long delay is that other innocent third parties have been
drawn into the chain of events, namely subsequent
purchasers of the property.�
Although counsel for the defendant had from the bar tendered the evidence that
the defendant has since,
in response to the eviction application/s, vacated the
property (which removed some of the prejudice of the third parties) the same
counsel conceded readily that those parties had a direct and substantial
interest in the matter as it may affect their title to
the property.� The fact
that these parties have not been cited and given notice of these proceedings
amount to a fatal non-joinder.
[28]
As to the issue
of willful default in failing to initially defend the action, but for a denial,
the defendant offered no evidence
in this regard.� Even if the totality of her
evidence of the
pactum de non petendo
by way of monthly payments of
R2000,00 per month is accepted and if all the vagueness surrounding that
agreement is ignored, there
is no evidence as to why the action was not
defended and why this point had not been raised then (or even pursued after the
sale
of the property).
[29]
As to the merits,
the position is simply this: the defendant had hoped or believed that the life
cover of the late Mr Mashabela
would extinguish the bond debt but once this had
not taken place, no other defence to the plaintiff�s claim remained.
[30]
There were two
further peripheral issues raised.� The first related to the plaintiff�s
locus
standi
and much was made of the defendant�s interaction with Nedbank (only)
and the different names of the plaintiff.� Having regard to
the evidence
tendered by the plaintiff and as referred to in paragraph [3] above, nothing
turns on this.� The plaintiff had clearly
all along been the same juristic
entity, despite name changes from time to time.� The second point related to
judicial oversight
over executability of primary residences.� The order was
granted before the promulgation of Rule 46A in 2017 and even before the
proviso
to Rule 31(5)(b) with effect from 16 August 2013 having been introduced,
requiring such oversight.� This court has found,
however that these previsions
do no operate retrospectively
[3]
.� Additionally �no facts have been
asserted which could notionally even have invoked the exercise of a court�s
discretion in favour
of the defendant
[4]
.
[31]
Despite valiant
efforts having been expended by counsel on her behalf, particularly in written
heads of argument, the defendant
has failed to present sufficient evidence to
this court to satisfy the requirements for a rescission of judgment.
Costs
[32]
Ordinarily costs
should follow the event.� In this case however, somewhat of the delay which
ultimately initiated the defendant�s
difficulties once she embarked upon a
course of action to have the judgment rescinded, was caused by the plaintiff
itself.� How
can it be that a bank cannot produce copies of the documents on
which it had obtained judgment? The fact that these documents eventually
became
annexures in this matter is proof that the documents had not been destroyed but
was merely imprecisely stored.� Having regard
to this fact and the respective
positions of the parties and the deceased estate and in the exercise of the
court�s decision, I
propose to make no order as to costs, resulting therein
that each party would pay its own costs.
Order
[33]
The following
order is made:
The application
is dismissed without an order for costs.
N DAVIS
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng Division, Pretoria
Date of Hearing: 22 February 2024
Judgment delivered: 23 February 2024�
APPEARANCES:
For the Applicant:��������������������������������������� Adv
B B Ntsimane
Attorney for the Applicant:� ����������� ����������� Baloyi
Ntsako Attorneys, Pretoria
For the Respondent:���������������������������������� Adv
C. G. V. O Stevenster
Attorney for the Respondent:������� ����������� Vezi
& De Beer Inc, Pretoria
[1]
See also the duties of such a litigant
as referred to in
Saloojee & Another NNO v Minister of Community
Development
1965 (2) SA 135
(A) at 141.
[2]
Erasmus �
Superior Court Practice
,
2
nd
Edition, volume 2 at D1-323
[3]
Williams v Standard Bank of SA Ltd
[2019] ZAGPPHC 364 (3 May 2019) and
Classic Crown Property v Standard Bank
of SA Ltd
[2023] ZAGPPHC 1137 (5 October 2023) (a full Court Decision).
[4]
See:
NGPS Protection & Security
Services CC v FirstRand Bank Ltd
2020 (1) SA 494
(SCA).
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