Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 314South Africa
ABSA Bank Limited v Monalebo Holdings (Pty) Limited and Another (001873/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 314 (5 April 2024)
Headnotes
Summary: Summary judgment application-Rule 32. Credit sale agreement-cancellation. Surety obligations and credit guarantor obligations. First Defendant liquidated and Second Defendant to satisfy the debt due not premised on the principal obligation but based on the surety agreement. Summary judgment granted in favour of the applicant and Second Defendant also ordered to pay the costs on an attorney and client scale.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## ABSA Bank Limited v Monalebo Holdings (Pty) Limited and Another (001873/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 314 (5 April 2024)
ABSA Bank Limited v Monalebo Holdings (Pty) Limited and Another (001873/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 314 (5 April 2024)
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sino date 5 April 2024
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE
NUMBER: 001873/2023
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
DATE:
05 April 2024
SIGNATURE:
In
the matter between:
ABSA BANK
LIMITED
APPLICANT
And
MONALEBO HOLDINGS
(PTY) LIMITED
FIRST DEFENDANT
MONABUDI GABRIEL
SEBOTHOMA
SECOND DEFENDANT
Delivery:
This judgment is
issued by the Judge whose name appears herein and is submitted
electronically to the parties /legal representatives
by email. It is
also uploaded on CaseLines and its date of delivery is deemed 05
April 2024
.
Summary
:
Summary judgment
application-Rule 32. Credit sale agreement-cancellation. Surety
obligations and credit guarantor obligations. First
Defendant
liquidated and Second Defendant to satisfy the debt due not premised
on the principal obligation but based on the surety
agreement.
Summary judgment granted in favour of the applicant and Second
Defendant also ordered to pay the costs on an attorney
and client
scale.
JUDGMENT
NTLAMA-MAKHANYA AJ
[1]
This is an application for a summary judgment against the Second
Defendant in terms
of Rule 32 of the Uniform Rules of the Court for
the payment of R658 000.59 plus 12% interest linked per annum,
capitalized from
05 April 2023 to date of payment, both days
included. The First Defendant was placed under provisional
liquidation on 23 February
2023 subsequent to the institution of this
action and the applicant sought relief against the Second Defendant
based on the surety
agreement signed on 21 May 2021.
[2]
The application was opposed by the Second Defendant for the reasons
to be highlighted
hereunder.
[3]
The applicant prayed for an order:
[3.1]
Confirming the cancellation of the agreement;
[3.2]
Payment of the sum of R658 000.59;
[3.3]
Costs of suit and
[3.4]
Further and or alternative relief.
[4]
This brings us to the content of the facts from where and how the
dispute emanated.
Background
[5]
The parties entered into an instalment sale agreement (credit
agreement) for the purchase
of a 2016 Mercedes-Benz motor-vehicle on
28 May 2021 which was preceded by the signage of the suretyship
agreement on 21 May 2021.
The Second Defendant bound himself as a
co-principal debtor for the obligations of the First Defendant
regarding the said credit
agreement. The First Defendant defaulted in
honouring the credit agreement payments with an outstanding balance
of R658 000. 59
and arrear amount of R186 931.92 as of 24 April 2023.
The applicant issued summons on 16 January 2023 for the recovery of
the outstanding
amount with interest as indicated herein and
appearing in the particulars of claim.
[6]
The Second Defendant opposed the application arguing that the
applicant sought relief
for the return of the vehicle in the summons
against both defendants, thus, claiming monetary relief against the
Second Defendant
only in the application for the summary judgment.
Further, the Second Defendant submitted that Ms Pearl Matshaya, was
not authorised
to sign the affidavit on behalf of the applicant to
the extent of not having personal knowledge of the facts in dispute.
Also,
the applicant was precluded by Rule 32(2)&(4) to disprove
the facts raised by the Second Defendant. In addition, the credit
agreement was signed as a ‘credit guarantor’ because
‘suretyship is not just the vehicle for a surety to be jointly
liable with the principal but also functions as a credit guarantee’.
The applicant, having registered as a credit provider
in terms of
section 40 of the National Credit Act 34 of 2005 (NCA), the Second
Defendant is entitled to protection afforded by
various provisions as
envisaged in the NCA which the applicant has failed to comply with.
In this regard, a credit agreement, unlike
surety, is not subject to
the threshold limitation of the NCA. The Second Defendant raised a
plethora of defenses in that the applicant
was not entitled to cancel
the credit agreement, the latter was not signed, certificate of
balance by a manager cannot be a
prima facie
proof of the
amount owing due to the uncertainty of the proceeds of the sale and
liquidation. The Second Defendant prayed for the
dismissal of the
applicant’s claim in that the latter’s plea amounts to
collusion or unfair practices as envisaged
in section 40 of the CPA.
Also, for the agreement to be declared void or set aside as per
sections 52(3)(b)(iii) and 52(4)(a)(i)(bb)
and or 52(4)(bb) of the
CPA. In essence, the Second Defendant boldly denied that the
applicant is entitled to be granted the relief
sought.
Analysis of
evidence
[7]
It is common cause between the parties that a credit agreement was
entered into, and
after the institution of this action, the First
Defendant was placed on liquidation. The primary issue which was
misdirected by
the Second Defendant was the status of a ‘surety’
and ‘credit guarantee’ in ‘credit agreements’.
The Second Defendant boldly stated that he signed the agreement as a
‘credit guarantor’ and not as a ‘surety’.
[8]
I do not intend to make superfluous analysis and distinction between
these concepts,
thus, for purposes of clarity on the substance of
this case, it is imperative that I provide a brief overview of the
interrelationship
between them. For the argument in the present
matter, a ‘surety agreement’ is an accessory obligation
after the principal
debtor defaulted in paying the primary
obligation, (Molahlehi J in
PG
Group (Pty) Ltd v Amoretti
(7151/2021 [2023] ZAGPHJHC 6,
para
19
)
.
This means that the surety obligation is dependent on the failure of
the principal debtor to undertake the envisaged principal
responsibilities. It is the
failure
itself
to satisfy
the debt due that the principal creditor may have the right of
recourse to claim the outstanding amount from the ‘surety’.
Makgoka JA in
Liberty
Group Limited v Illman
(1334/2018)
[2020] ZASCA 38
endorsed
the legal status of surety and held ‘
the
surety’s obligation is merely to guarantee performance by the
principal debtor. Given a suretyship’s accessorial
nature, the
liability of a surety is tied to that of the principal debtor. If the
claim against the principal debtor became prescribed
or ceased to
exist, the claim against the surety likewise became prescribed or
otherwise ceased to exist
’,
para 10
.
Of further importance is the voluntary nature of the obligation
regarding the signage of the suretyship agreement wherein the
surety
consents to be bound by the obligations as envisaged in the principal
debt should the principal debtor fail to honour the
said obligations.
This is the framework for credit agreements in that parties must
voluntarily enter legal and binding obligations
without a shadow of
doubt regarding the nature of their responsibilities. I need not go
any further about the suretyship status
as the Supreme Court of
Appeal (SCA) in
Van
Zyl v Auto Commodities (Pty) Ltd
(279/2020)
[2021] ZASCA 67
put a final ‘
nail
in the coffin
’
on the definition of what constitutes a ‘surety agreement’
and held:
a contract of
suretyship is distinct from the contract or contracts between the
principal debtor and the creditor that give rise
to the principal
indebtedness, but it is accessory to that contractual relationship
and the principal debtor's obligations under
it. Subject to any
specific limitation, such as a suretyship in a limited amount, the
surety’s obligations are coterminous
with those of the
principal debtor. Where the surety signs as co-principal debtor, as
Mr van Zyl did, the addition of those words
shows that the surety is
assuming the same obligations as the principal debtor. In other
words, the obligation of the surety is
the same as that of the
principal debtor. It follows from the accessory nature of the
surety’s undertaking that the liability
of the surety is
dependent on the obligations of the principal debtor’, (para
11, all footnotes omitted).
[9]
On the other hand, a credit guarantor or guarantee is foundational to
a credit agreement
as envisaged in section 8(5) of the NCA which
reads as follows:
an agreement,
irrespective of its forms but not including an agreement contemplated
in subsection 2, constitutes a credit if, in
terms of that agreement,
a person undertakes or promises to satisfy upon demand any obligation
in terms of a credit facility or
a credit transaction to which this
Act applies.
[10]
It is in line with this definition that I do not intend to qualify
the Second Defendant’s
argument about the applicant’s
non-compliance with the various provisions of the NCA to an extent of
alleging that he did
not waive the rights as provided in the said
provisions. The Second Defendant sought to distract this court from
the interpretation
and meaning of a creditor guarantee which he
viewed it exclusively of the primary responsibility of satisfying a
‘debt due’.
These concepts, through the lens of a
purposive approach on their interpretation are interrelated and not
distinct from each other
as they are foundational to the satisfaction
of the debt due. The slight distinction is that on a suretyship
agreement, the surety
is a co-principal debtor which would be
enforceable as soon as the principal debtor fail to honour the debt
due. On the other hand,
a credit guarantor is not a primary party to
the agreement but serves as what I would refer to as a ‘
safety
valve
’ for the principal creditor wherein the latter may
institute a claim for the amount due. In essence, they capture the
same
principle of the existing need to pay the debt due on demand
which entails an underlying interrelationship that exists between the
surety and the guarantor in a credit agreement.
[11]
Binns-Ward J in
Standard Bank of SA Ltd v Adam Essa
(18994/2009)
[2012] ZAWCHC 265
similarly expressed that the
‘
definition of ‘credit
guarantee’ in s 8(5) of the Act may be wide enough to encompass
a contract of guarantee related
to the performance by another of
person of his or her obligations under a contract qualifying as a
credit facility or a credit
transaction, as well a contract of
suretyship intended to provide a form of the performance of its
obligations by a principal debtor
under a credit agreement in terms
of section 8(3) or 4 of the NCA
,
(
para 14, all footnotes omitted
).
In giving substance to Binns-Ward J extension of the definition of a
credit guarantee, I am persuaded by Mshila J in
Home
Afrika Limited v Ecobank Kenya Limited
[2023] KEHC 1802
(KLR)
citing with
approval
Peter Munga v African
Seed Investment Fund LLC
[2017] eKLR
that
‘
a
creditor has a free hand, when to act and on which security, without
any direction by the debtor, sureties or the court, unless
parties
have expressly agreed to the contrary and the security documents
themselves stipulate the agreement’, (
para
18
).
It
is my considered view, in the context of the present matter, the
Second Defendant, whether he is surety or credit guarantor,
the
foundational principle is to pay the amount due and not for him to
dictate to the applicant how to identify the person whom
he sought to
recover the amount due. Particularly, there is no disagreement
regarding the common cause of the dispute, the existence
of a credit
agreement, wherein the First Defendant defaulted from fulfilling the
terms as agreed. The undisputed subject matter
of the original credit
agreement which was based on the Second Defendant’s liability
regarding the original principal debt
was owed at the time of
instituting this action,
(
Shabangu v Land and
Agricultural Development Bank of South Africa
2020 (1)
BCLR 110
(CC)
paras 23-25
).
[12)
The Second Defendant also took aim at what he alleged as the
misapplication of Rule 32 of the Uniform
Rules of the Court in this
matter regarding the liquidated amount in summary judgments. This
Rule, with effect from 01 July 2019,
was amended to read as follows:
(1)
The plaintiff
may, after the defendant has delivered a plea, apply to court for
summary judgment on each of such claims in the summons
as is only:
(a)
on a liquid
document.
(b)
for a liquidated
amount in money.
(c)
for delivery of
specified movable property; or
(d)
for ejectment,
together with any claim for interest and costs.
[13]
The import of Rule 32 was contextualised by Navsa JA in
J
oob
Joob Investments (Pty) Ltd v Stocks Mavundla Zek Joint Venture
(161/08)
[2009] ZASCA 23
and held:
the rationale for
summary judgment proceedings is impeccable. The procedure is not
intended to deprive a defendant with a triable
issue or a sustainable
defence of her/his day in court. After almost a century of successful
application in our courts, summary
judgment proceedings can hardly
continue to be described as extraordinary. Our courts, both of first
instance and at appellate
level, have during that time rightly been
trusted to ensure that a defendant with a triable issue is not shut
out. […] first,
there has been sufficient disclosure by a
defendant of the nature and grounds of his defence and the facts upon
which it is founded.
The second consideration is that the defence so
disclosed must be both bona fide and good in law. A court which is
satisfied that
this threshold has been crossed is then bound to
refuse summary judgment. […] …[and] that recalcitrant
debtors pay
what is due to a creditor. Having regard to its purpose
and its proper application, summary judgment proceedings only hold
terrors
and are ‘drastic’ for a defendant who has no
defence. Perhaps the time has come to discard these labels and to
concentrate
rather on the proper application of the rule, …
[…], (paras 32-33, all footnotes omitted).
[14]
The essence of a summary judgment, particularly with the exercise of
the judicial discretion
on its enforcement, Binns-Ward J in
Tumileng
Trading CC v National Security and Fire (Pty) Ltd and Others
(3670/2019) [2020] ZAWHC 28
held that ‘[the] amendment [of
Rule 32] has not changed the test that is prescribed in [its]
subsection 3 for a
bona fide
defence which serves as a
catalyst for the validity of the defence against the application’,
(
para 13
). In turn, the applicant must show that the
defendant is
mala fide
as pleaded [as is the case] in this
case, (
para 22
). In the present matter, having read
Rule 32 ‘holistically’ and not the subsections
independently of each other, it
is my express opinion that the Second
Defendant’s defence that the claim is not in a liquidated
amount is without substance.
The rule entails the link and
interdependence of a claim for a movable property and liquidated
amount. The movable property claimed
(2016 Mercedes Benz) is
foundational to the liquidated amount which is correctly reflected in
the particulars of claim and certified
in the Certificate of Balance.
The Second Defendant misplaced the
goal post
regarding the
centrality of Rule 32 on the enforcement of summary judgment
applications.
[15]
The Second Defendant is hypocritical in taking responsibility towards
fulfilling the original
debt by refuting that he is ‘surety’
instead as ‘credit guarantor’ which also means that on
its broader
interpretation, he is still the carrier of the duty to
satisfy the outstanding amount. The Second Defendant did not dispute
the
signage of the suretyship agreement and argued ‘uncertainty
regarding the nature of the principal debt not capable of being
determined by reference to the said agreement and is subject to the
proceeds of sale and liquidation’. I find it discomforting
that
the Second Defendant without evidence of duress in the signage of the
surety agreement as correctly captured in the Surety
greement
(paragraph 2 of the SJ4 document) bound himself for the debts and
future liabilities including any associated interest
and costs
against the First Defendant. The defenses lack merit in that the
underlying obligation which is not disputed is the agreements
(credit
and surety) that serve as a framework towards his duty to satisfy the
debt due. This court is not to rely on technical
concerns about the
identity of the debtors at the expense of the broader view regarding
the fulfilment of the secondary obligations
towards the satisfaction
of the debt due.
[16]
That brings me to the Second Defendant’s dismissal of the
legitimacy of the affidavit signed
by Ms Matshaya which is also
disingenuous by unfairly, through the ‘
tom’s peeping
eye
’ sought to discredit the quality and qualification of
the applicant’s employees in executing their duties. Ms
Matshaya
is the
Legal Recoveries Manager of Business Banking and
Wealth Recoveries Department
of the applicant, as reflected in
the affidavit, (
para 1
). The Second Defendant gave the
impression that the applicant’s legal archives are dependent on
a particular individual at
the time the case is made. I need not
legitimise the Second Defendant’s argument regarding this
aspect because the applicant,
as a juristic person its record-keeping
is not attached to an individual and or anyone within the portfolio.
I am persuaded by
the applicants Counsel with the reference to
Shackleton Credit Management v Microzone Trading
(2010) 5 SA 112
(KZP)
judgment wherein the court held ‘
first
hand knowledge which goes to make up the applicant’s cause of
action is not required and where the applicant is a corporate
entity
the deponent may well legitimately rely on records on company’s
possession for personal knowledge of at least certain
of the relevant
facts and the ability to answer positively to the facts’
,
(
para 13
). The Second Defendant is ‘
clutching a dry
bone
by the straws
’ to evade the satisfaction of the
debt because, as read from the affidavit, it is evident that Ms
Matshaya understands the
substance of the facts and case presented
before this court. A wild allegation about Ms Matshaya not having
personal knowledge
of the dispute, I repeat, is the ‘
chase
of a wild goose
’ with no substance. This is also an attack
on the intellectual integrity of the applicant in the determination
of the ripeness
of the matters that need to be lodged before this
court.
[17]
It is my considered view that the defenses raised by the Second
Defendant against the application
for a summary judgment are bad in
law and without merit and the application must succeed as envisaged
in the particulars of claim.
Of further consideration, the legitimacy
and or validity of the credit agreement was not in dispute as
attached in the particulars
of claim and the Second Defendant having
engaged in a frivolous litigation should bear the costs of this
application.
[18]
Accordingly, it is ordered as follows:
[18.1]
a summary judgment is granted in favour of the applicant for the
payment of the sum of R658 000.59; together with interest
of 12% per
annum from the date upon which amount became due (05 April 2023)
until final payment.
[18.2]
Cancellation of the agreement.
[18.3]
The costs are granted against the Second Defendant to pay the
applicant on an attorney and client scale.
NTLAMA-MAKHANYA
ACTING JUDGE, THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Date
Heard:
02 November
2023
Date
Delivered:
05 April
2024
Appearances
:
Plaintiff:
Advocate
Jacklin Kiarie
Cnr
Dely and Pinaster Avenue
Pretoria
Respondents
:
Advocate
CW Havemann
307
West Street
Pretoria
North
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