Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 369South Africa
Firstrand Bank Limited v Seema (78547/2018) [2024] ZAGPPHC 369 (23 April 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
23 April 2024
Headnotes
BY DEED OF TRANSFER NUMBER T[...], SUBJECT TO THE CONDITIONS THEREIN CONTAINED,
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 Limited v Seema (78547/2018) [2024] ZAGPPHC 369 (23 April 2024)
Firstrand Bank Limited v Seema (78547/2018) [2024] ZAGPPHC 369 (23 April 2024)
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sino date 23 April 2024
SAFLII
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Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
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Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NUMBER:
78547/2018
1.
REPORTABLE:
YES
/NO
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
YES
/NO
3.
REVISED
DATE:
23 April 2024
SIGNATURE:
In
the matter between:
FIRSTRAND
BANK LIMITED
PLAINTIFF/APPLICANT
and
MERLE
DIPUO SEEMA
DEFENDANT/RESPONDENT
REASONS
FOR JUDGMENT
COERTZEN
AJ:
[1]
On 25 March 2024 I granted the following order:
“
THAT
judgment is hereby granted in favour of the plaintiff/applicant
against the defendant/respondent for:
1.
Payment of the amount of R518,328.28 (FIVE HUNDRED EIGHTEEN THOUSAND,
THREE HUNDRED TWENTY EIGHT RAND AND TWENTY EIGHT CENTS);
2.
It is recorded that interest is currently accrued at a variable rate
of 0.00% nominal per annum, calculated daily and compounded monthly
from 30 June 2023, as per the plaintiff’s/applicant’s
certificate of balance dated 29 February 2024;
3.
The immovable property of the defendant/respondent, described as:
ERF
2030 LETHLABILE-A TOWNSHIP, REGISTRATION DIVISION J.Q., NORTH WEST
PROVINCE, MEASURING 506 (FIVE HUNDRED AND SIX) SQUARE METRES,
HELD BY
DEED OF TRANSFER NUMBER T[...], SUBJECT TO THE CONDITIONS THEREIN
CONTAINED
,
-
(‘the immovable property’),
is hereby declared executable;
4.
The Registrar is authorised to issue a writ of
execution against the immovable property, which writ of execution
shall be suspended
for period of 4 (four) months from date of this
order;
5.
A reserve price of R550,000.00 (FIVE HUNDRED AND FIFTY THOUSAND RAND)
is hereby set in terms of Rule 46(9)(a);
6.
Should the reserve price set in terms hereof not be achieved at a
sale in execution,
the provisions of Rule 46A(9)(c), (d) & (e)
will apply;
7.
The defendant/respondent is ordered to pay the
plaintiff’s/applicant’s
costs on a scale as between
attorney and client.
8.
Should any of the parties require reasons for this order, a written
request must
be made to the Registrar within 10 (ten) days of this
order.”
[2]
The defendant requested reasons for the order. These are the reasons.
[3]
On 11 September 2012 the parties concluded a mortgage loan agreement
– (‘the agreement’).
In terms of the agreement the
plaintiff lent and advanced an amount of R394,500.00 to the
defendant. The home loan under
the agreement is secured by a
mortgage bond, registered in favour of the plaintiff over the
defendant’s aforementioned immovable
property for a maximum
amount of R468,000.00. The loan amount and interest at a variable
interest rate, were repayable to the plaintiff
in 240 monthly
instalments, which monthly instalments, on date of the agreement,
amounted to R5,180.16. It was agreed that in the
event of the
defendant’s failure to pay any amount payable in terms of the
agreement, the plaintiff would be entitled to
claim immediate
repayment of the full outstanding balance of the loan. The plaintiff
would further be entitled to foreclose on
the mortgage bond. The
plaintiff would also be entitled to legal costs on a scale as between
attorney and client. In terms
of the agreement a certificate of
balance signed by a manager of the plaintiff shall constitute
prima
facie
proof of the outstanding balance due to the plaintiff in
terms of the defendant’s home loan account under the agreement.
[4]
Pursuant to the defendant’s default in terms of her monthly
repayment obligations, the plaintiff
instituted action against the
defendant during 2018. The defendant did not enter an appearance to
defend. The defendant opposed
the plaintiff’s application for
default judgment and the relief sought for an order to declare the
defendant’s bonded
immovable property executable.
[1]
[5]
The application was served on the defendant personally on 17 February
2020. The defendant filed opposing
papers on 26 February 2020. When
the application came before the court on 2 February 2021 the
defendant appeared in person. The
court postponed the application
sine
die
,
and granted the plaintiff leave to resend a notice to the defendant
in terms of section 129(1) of the National Credit Act, 34
of 2005
(‘NCA’).
[2]
The
plaintiff was also granted leave to send the notice by email to the
defendant. It is not in dispute that the defendant actually
received
the plaintiff’s subsequent notice on 15 February 2021. In
accordance with the order, the plaintiff notified the
defendant that
action has been instituted against the defendant; that an application
in terms of r 31(2)(a), r 46(1) and r 46A(8)
has been launched; that
the application has been postponed
sine
die
;
and that as on the 24 of January 2022, the amount in arrears was
R128,139.62.
[6]
The application was re-enrolled for hearing on 18 March 2024. The
defendant has been unrepresented since
the institution of the action.
When this matter came before me on 22 March 2024, there was a brief
appearance on behalf of the
defendant by one advocate Senne. Counsel
indicated that he was requested by Senne Attorneys to assist.
According to counsel, Senne
Attorneys have their offices in the
Pretoria CBD. I indicated to counsel that there was no notice of
appointment of attorneys of
record on behalf of the defendant on the
electronic case file. I point out that there was also no
representative from an attorney’s
office present in court.
Counsel who appeared also did not file heads of argument. I requested
counsel to inform his instructing
attorney to attend court. The
matter stood down. During the adjournment, an unsigned notice of
appointment of Senne Attorneys,
together with what purported to be a
supplementary answering affidavit, were uploaded to the electronic
case file. These documents
were uploaded to the electronic case file
from the personal profile of the defendant. When the court resumed
counsel indicated
that the attorney was not present. Counsel then
informed the court that he did not believe that he was properly
briefed, and that
he wished to withdraw and to be excused. Counsel
then promptly left the court. The defendant then proceeded to
address the
court once again in person.
[7]
It was not in dispute at the hearing that the defendant was in
arrears with her repayment obligations
in terms of the agreement,
although the defendant disputed the balance owing. In her address to
the court the defendant submitted
that she was under the impression
that she was “under debt review”.
[8]
It was common cause at the hearing that the defendant had made
certain payments to the plaintiff since
the institution of the
action. According to the defendant the last payment made to the
plaintiff was on 29 February 2024 in an
amount of R7000.00. A bank
statement placed before the court shows that as on 17 August 2020 the
amount in arrears was R81,490.03.
An updated certificate of balance
dated 29 February 2024 shows that the arrears have increased to
R156,422.97, and that the monthly
instalment amounted to R3,381.15.
The balance due and owing to the plaintiff by the defendant was
certified in terms of the certificate
to be an amount of
R518,328.28.
[3]
In my view the plaintiff has
prima
facie
shown that it has accounted for payments made prior to the date of
hearing. There is no need for the court to perform a calculation
itself.
In
Rossouw
and another v First Rand Bank Ltd t/a FNB Home Loans (formerly First
Rand Bank of SA Ltd)
[2011] 2 All SA 56
(SCA) it was held:
[4]
“…
To the
extent that the certificate reflects the balance due as at the date
of hearing, it is merely an arithmetical calculation
based on the
facts already before the court which the court would otherwise have
to perform itself.
Such calculations are better performed by a
qualified person in the employ of a financial institution. And to the
extent that such
a certificate may reflect additional payments by the
defendant after the issue of summons, or payments not taken into
account when
summons was issued, this constitutes an admission
against interest by the Bank and the Bank is entitled to abandon part
of the
relief it seeks. Certificates of balance handed in at the
hearing (whether a quo or on appeal) perform a useful function…”
.
[9]
The
defendant alleges her supplementary affidavit that the plaintiff
overcharged interest on the defendant’s account over
a sample
period of three years. According to the defendant the plaintiff was
requested to recalculate the interest from date
of inception of
the bond. The plaintiff allegedly failed to do so. In the absence of
actual facts placed before the court to rebut
the
prima
facie
proof presented by the plaintiff in terms of the certificate of
balance, I was prepared to accept the correctness of the plaintiff’s
certificate of balance as proof of the balance due.
A certificate of balance is an evidentiary tool provided for in an
agreement to facilitate proof of the amount of the indebtedness
–
Thrupp
Investment Holdings (Pty) Ltd v Goldrick
2008 (2) SA 253 (W).
[5]
As
was pointed out in
Senekal
v Trust Bank of Africa Ltd
[1978]
4 All SA 43 (A):
[6]
“…
.There
might be several items to which such a certificate relates, some of
which may appear to be unassailable while others may
either be shown
to be inaccurate or appear to be of dubious reliability, or might
require some modification or adjustment. I can
find no reason why in
such circumstances the certificate is to be entirely disregarded
merely because it is found or thought to
be inaccurate or unreliable
in certain respects. At the end of the case, when all the evidence
(which includes the certificate)
is in, the Court must decide whether
the party upon whom the onus rests has discharged it on a proper
balance of probabilities…”
[10] As for
debt review, the plaintiff points out that the defendant failed to
exercise her rights within 10 days of
receipt of the plaintiff’s
notice. It appears from a string of emails exchanged between the
plaintiff’s debt review
department and
Zero Debt
, on 11
March 2021 and 6 April 2021, as attached to the defendant’s
supplementary affidavit, that a provisional proposal was
forwarded to
the plaintiff, but that the account in question was excluded from
debt review. According to a notice placed before
the court by the
plaintiff, the relevant debt counsellor, filed a notice of withdrawal
of the application under case number 2005/2021
in the Magistrate’s
Court, Brits. I was satisfied that there were no debt review in
place.
[11] It
follows that in my view the plaintiff was entitled to a money
judgment.
[12] I
proceeded to consider whether the execution against the immovable
property of the defendant was warranted.
[13] It was
common cause at the hearing that the property is the primary
residence of the defendant. It was common cause
that the
defendant
did not acquire the property by means of a state subsidy.
[14]
In terms of r 46A(5) I had to consider, amongst other factors
which may be necessary to give effect to subrule 8, the market value
of the property, the local authority valuation, the amount owing on
the mortgage bond, the amount owing to the local authority
as rates
and other dues and the amounts owing to a body corporate as levies.
It was common cause that there is no amount
owing to a body corporate
as levies.
[15]
The municipal valuation of the property as on 24 April 2019
was R122,000.00. An updated municipal statement reflects the
municipal
valuation during December 2023 as R553 000.00. The market
value of the property as on 27 August 2018 was R530,000.00. As on 22
January 2024 the market value of the property was R780,000.00 and the
forced sale value was R624,000.00. The arrear rates and taxes
owing
to the local municipality as on 24 April 2019 amounted to R16,069.25.
As on 19 December 2023 the arrear rates and taxes have
increased to
R80,678.56. The plaintiff pointed out that the arrear amount owing to
the plaintiff equates to more than 46 months
of default.
When the application was previously enrolled, the arrears
represented an amount of R81,490.03. The arrear amount owing to the
plaintiff
has therefore almost doubled. The plaintiff submits that
the defendant cannot afford to live in the property.
[16] The
defendant submitted that her circumstances have improved. She runs a
software company. She is also a traditional
healer. The defendant
submitted that she has alternative means to make payment to the
plaintiff and that she required an opportunity
to until the end of
this year. I pause to point out that it is for this reason that I
deemed it appropriate to order that the writ
of execution shall be
suspended for period of four months, which was in my view a more
reasonable period. The defendant submitted
that she is currently
unable to make payment of the arrears to the plaintiff. She is also
currently unable to make a lump sum payment
to the plaintiff.
According to the defendant’s supplementary answering affidavit
she earns in the region of approximately
R16000 per month. She also
receives an amount of R8000 – R9000 per month from her sister
in the United States of America.
The defendant submitted that the
arrear amounts owed to the local municipality should not be a
concern, as the local municipality
writes off half of the debt owed
by the local community in respect of their properties, every four
years, closer to the elections.
No evidence to support this
submission was however placed before the court.
[17] In terms
of r 8(d) a court considering an application under r 46A, may order
execution against the primary residence
of a judgment debtor if there
is no other satisfactory means of satisfying the judgment debt. Even
accepting that the defendant’s
circumstances have improved, the
defendant has not in my view shown that she will be able to
meaningfully address the substantial
arrear amount which has accrued
on her home loan account.
[18] Having
considered all relevant circumstances and factors, I was persuaded
that no other reasonable alternative
exists for the plaintiff to
exact payment of the debt by the defendant. In my view the order to
declare the defendant’s immovable
property as executable, would
not constitute an abuse of process, and would not infringe the
defendant’s right to access
to adequate housing in terms of s
26 of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996.
Considering the present income
of the defendant I am of the view that
she will be able to obtain adequate alternative housing for herself
and her family.
[19] There
appears to be no disproportionality between execution against the
property and other possible means to exact
payment of the judgment
debt -
NPGS
Protection and Security Services CC and another v Firstrand Bank
Limited
[2019] 3 All SA 391 (SCA).
[7]
No
other possible means, other than a statement that by the defendant
that she will be able to make payment to the plaintiff if
given an
opportunity until the end of the year, has been proffered by the
defendant. In the circumstances I was inclined to exercise
my
discretion in favour of the plaintiff. In my view execution
against the immovable property was warranted.
[20] I proceeded to
consider whether a reserve price should be set.
[21] It is
evident from the order that I set a reserve price. In the plaintiff’s
papers the plaintiff submitted
that a reasonable reserve price would
be an amount of R385 871.44. However, counsel for the plaintiff
conceded in argument that
this amount was in the circumstances, too
low. Counsel submitted that a revised reserve price of
R550,000.00
would be more appropriate. It is evident from the order that I agreed
with this submission.
[22]
In arriving at the order, I also considered that it remains open to
the defendant to remedy her default in terms
of the home loan
agreement, by paying the arrear, overdue amounts, together with the
costs and charges as contemplated in terms
of s 129(4) of the
NCA
[8]
.
Even after a judgment is granted, the defendant will have the right
to remedy her default, until the proceeds from a sale
in execution
have been realised. In this sense the defendant is given
greater leeway in relation to the maintenance of the
home loan
account.
[9]
Counsel for the plaintiff indicated that the plaintiff remains open
to the possibility of a payment arrangement.
[23] For
these reasons I granted the order in this matter on 25 March 2024.
YVAN COERTZEN
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Date
of hearing:
22 March 2024
Date of
order:
25 March 2024
Date of
reasons:
23
April 2024
The
reasons for the order were provided electronically by circulation to
the parties’ legal representatives by email and by
uploading
same to the electronic case file on Caselines. The date and
time for delivery of the reasons are deemed to be at
10h00 on 23
April 2024.
Appearances:
Counsel for the
plaintiff/applicant:
Adv L Badenhorst
Instructed by:
Coetzer and
Partners, Pretoria
MD
Seema - d
efendant/respondent:
In person
[1]
An
application
in
terms of r 31(2) & r 46(1) & r 46A(8) of the Uniform Rules
of Court.
[2]
In terms of s 130(4)(b).
[3]
It
is recorded that in the certificate that interest is currently
accrued at a variable rate of 0.00%.
[4]
At
para
47.
[5]
At
para
6.
[6]
On
p
47.
[7]
At
paras 55 & 62.
[8]
Nkata
v Firstrand Bank Limited and Others
2016 (4) SA 257
(CC) at para 131;
Duma
v Absa Bank Limited
2018 (4) SA 463
(GP) at para 17.
[9]
Erasmus,
Superior Court Practice, D1-632S.
sino noindex
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