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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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[2024] ZAGPPHC 422
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## Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd v D G Tyres (Pty) Ltd (In Liquidation) and Another (18696/2022)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 422 (9 May 2024)
Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd v D G Tyres (Pty) Ltd (In Liquidation) and Another (18696/2022)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 422 (9 May 2024)
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sino date 9 May 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
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
Number:
18696/2022
(1)
REPORTABLE:
YES
/ NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
YES
/ NO
(3)
REVISED:
DATE:
09 May 2024
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
THE
STANDARD BANK OF SOUTH AFRICA LTD
Plaintiff
(Registration
No:
1962/000738/06)
and
D
G TYRES (PTY) LTD (In
liquidation)
First
Defendant
(Registration
No:
2015/246494/07)
ALETA
CATHARINA
Second
Defendant
(ID
No: 5[...])
JUDGMENT
MKHABELA
AJ:
Introduction
[1]
This is an application for summary judgment against the second
defendant for
debts incurred by the first defendant under two
instalment sale agreements which were concluded in respect of two
motor vehicles.
[2]
It is not in dispute that the first defendant has been liquidated and
that the
liability of the second defendant is pursuant to two surety
agreements that the second defendant concluded for the punctual
payment
of the debts of the first defendant.
[3]
The application is opposed by the second defendant on various
grounds,
inter alia
, that the certificates of balance which
specify the quantum have not been attached to the founding affidavit
in support of the
application for summary judgment.
[4]
It follows therefore that since the application for summary judgment
is
opposed, the question that falls crisply for determination is
whether the second defendant has raised a
bona fide
defence
and concomitantly whether the affidavit in support of the application
for summary judgment together with the particulars
of claim contain
sufficient averments which are necessary to sustain an application
for summary judgment.
Background Facts
[5]
The plaintiff and the first defendant concluded two written
instalment sale
agreements in respect of two motor vehicles. In turn,
the second defendant and the plaintiff concluded two corresponding
surety
agreements for the debts of the first defendant pertaining to
the purchase of the two motor vehicles.
The
first instalment agreement
[6]
The first instalment agreement between the plaintiff and the first
defendant
was concluded on 15 June 2017 in terms of which the
plaintiff sold to the first defendant a 2017 Toyota Hilux 2.8 GD –
6 Raider 4x4 (“the first motor vehicle”).
[7]
The total cost arising from the first instalment agreement was in the
sum of
R950 428,80 which would be repaid by the first defendant
by way of 71 (seventy-one) payments of R13 200,00 per month.
The
first payment was due on 1 August 2017 and the final instalment
was expected to be on 1 July 2023.
[8]
Ownership of the first motor vehicle would be vested with the
plaintiff until
the first defendant had paid all outstanding amounts.
The
first suretyship agreement
[9]
Consequent upon the conclusion of the first instalment agreement
pertaining
to the first motor vehicle, the second defendant bound
herself as surety and co-principal debtor for the financial
obligations
of the first defendant.
The
second instalment agreement
[10]
On 20 July 2017, the plaintiff and the first defendant concluded
the second instalment agreement
in terms of which the plaintiff
financed the purchase of a motor vehicle, a 2017 Toyota Hilux 2.4 GD
– 6 RB SRXP/U with engine
number 2[...] (“the second
motor vehicle”).
[11]
The total cost of the second instalment agreement was in the sum of
R641 452.40 which was
payable by way of 71 (seventy-one) monthly
instalments of R8 909.20. The first instalment was due on
1 September 2017
and the final instalment was expected to be on
1 August 2023.
The
second suretyship agreement
[12]
On 20 July 2017, the second defendant bound herself jointly and
severally as surety and
co-principal debtor for all the financial
obligations of the first defendant arising from the second instalment
agreement.
[13]
Both the suretyship agreements for the first and second instalment
agreements have been attached
to the particulars of claim as
annexures G and I respectively.
Breach
of both the first and second instalment agreements
[14]
It is common cause between the parties that the first defendant was
liquidated and was therefore
in default of its obligations in terms
of the two instalment agreements. As a consequence of the first
defendant’s default,
both agreements were subsequently
cancelled.
[15]
The amount owing to the plaintiff by the second defendant as surety
in respect of the first instalment
agreement is R406 120,56 and
the amount owing in respect of the second instalment agreement is
R311 467,93. These amounts
arose because of the shortfall to
extinguish the debt owed by the first defendant after the sale of the
two motor vehicles.
[16]
Default notices have been sent to the second defendant and
notwithstanding such notices, the
second defendant had failed or
neglected to make the required payment arising from her obligation as
surety and co-principal debtor
for the first defendant’s
financial obligations.
[17]
I pause to note that the plaintiff attached certificates of balance
which confirm the amounts
owing in respect of both suretyship
agreements. Furthermore, the second defendant has renounced the
benefits of excursion and division.
Moreover, she is a co-principal
debtor for all financial obligations of the first defendant owed to
the plaintiff.
The
Plea
[18]
As I have already stated, the second defendant raised various
defences, inter alia, the following
which pertain to the first
instalment agreement and the first suretyship agreement:
a.
She denied that the first defendant and the plaintiff concluded
an
instalment sale agreement on 15 June 2017 between the first defendant
and the plaintiff.
b.
She alleged
further that the plaintiff has failed to provide any proof of
registration as a credit provider in terms of Section
40 of the
National
Credit Act
[1]
and accordingly, the instalment sale agreements and deed of
suretyship are not valid.
c.
She alleged that the amount the plaintiff could recover from
her as
the second defendant and surety was not unlimited.
d.
She alleged that the goods or motor vehicles were sold at an
amount
less than the market related value and also less than the forced sale
value.
e.
She denied that the first defendant or the second defendant
is liable
to the plaintiff, for the amounts claimed or any other amount at all.
[19]
The second defendant’s defences pertaining to the second
instalment sale and the second
suretyship agreements are similar to
the ones advanced in respect of the first instalment and suretyship
agreements.
a.
The second
defendant repeats her assertion that the agreements are not valid or
enforceable and that they are not legal agreements
owing to the
allegation that the plaintiff is not a registered as a credit service
provider as required by Section 40 of the
National
Credit Act
.
[2]
b.
In addition, the second defendant admits signing
the suretyship
agreement pertaining to the first defendant’s punctual
performance in respect of the second instalment agreement
but avers
that when the parties signed the vehicle and asset finance agreement
a novation occurred which replaced the two suretyship
agreements for
both the first and second instalment sale agreements.
The
affidavit in support of the application for summary judgment
[20]
The affidavit in support of the application for summary judgment was
deposed to by one Mubeen
Rahimtoola who verifies the plaintiff’s
cause of action and swears positively to the facts contained in the
founding affidavit.
a.
As far as the facts are concerned, Rahimtoola
reiterates that the
second defendant is indebted to the plaintiff by virtue of the
corresponding suretyship agreements arising
from the two instalment
sale agreements.
b.
Moreover, the affidavit asserts that the first
defendant was wound up
on 11 December 2019 by an order of this very Court and that the
plaintiff had repossessed the two motor
vehicles in question and sold
them at an auction on 28 August 2016.
c.
Unfortunately, for the second defendant, the
proceeds from the sale
of the two motor vehicles did not expunge the liability of the first
defendant to the plaintiff. Consequently,
the full outstanding
balance in terms of the suretyship agreements are recoverable from
the second defendant.
d.
As a result, the plaintiff is claiming R406 120,56
in respect of
the first suretyship agreement and R311 467,93 in respect of the
second suretyship agreement together with interest
at the rate of
13.55% for the amount of R406 120,56 and at the rate of 14.28%
in respect of the amount of R311 467,93
from the date of summons
to the date of payment.
The
second defendant’s affidavit resisting summary Judgment
[21]
The second defendant denied that it does not have a
bona fide
defence.
a.
The second defendant asserted that the plaintiff’s
claim is
essentially the
actio ad exhibendum
in respect of the value of
the vehicles. Since the
actio ad exhibendum
is a claim for
damages, it is not allowed under Rule 32.
[22]
In view of the approach that I adopt and coupled with the fact that
the second defendant abandoned
most of her pleaded defences during
oral argument, it is not necessary to deal exhaustively with the rest
of the other grounds
upon which the second defendant relies on in her
attempt to resist summary judgment.
Oral
Submission
[23]
As I have already stated that during oral submission, the second
defendant did not persist with
the other grounds of defence on which
she was resisting summary judgment. The only defence that was
actively advanced was that
the plaintiff’s claim is essentially
based on the
actio ad exhibendum
which the second defendant
contended was not allowed under Rule 32.
The
Applicable Law
[24]
The law
applicable to applications for summary judgment is clear. The
plaintiff can now apply for summary judgment only after the
delivery
of the plea.
[3]
[25]
Prior to the amendment of the Rule 32, summary judgment proceedings
could be instituted upon
the notice of intention to defend being
filed.
[26]
The case of
Bragan
Chemicals (Pty) Ltd v Devland Cash and Carry (Pty) Ltd and
Another,
[4]
explains the rationale behind the amendment to Rule 32 as follows:
“
This
judgement is instructive. It sets out the intention of the
legislature to address the shortcomings of the position under the
old
rule bearing in mind that a plaintiff was required to bring a summary
judgment application at a time when a possible defence
to the claim
has not yet been disclosed in a plea. The amended rule now requires
an affidavit in support of summary judgment to
be filed only once the
defendant's defence to the action is apparent, by virtue of having
been set out in a plea.”
[27]
I align
myself with the enunciations in the case of
South
African Securitisation Programme (RF) Ltd & Others v Cellsure
Monitoring and Response (Pty) Ltd & Others,
[5]
where it is stated as follows:
“
[33]
I am mindful that a bona fide defence is assessed upon a
consideration of the extent to which the nature and grounds
of the
defence and the material facts relied upon have been canvassed. Bona
fides does not mean that the defendant has to satisfy
the court that
his version is believed to be true. All the defendant is required to
do is to swear to a defence valid in law, in
a manner which is not
seriously unconvincing. Put differently, he should show that there is
a reasonable possibility that the defence
he advances may succeed on
trial.
[34]
I am further mindful that at this stage of the proceedings, the court
is not required to decide
the disputed issues or determine whether or
not there is a balance of probabilities in favour of another. The
court merely considers
whether the facts alleged by the defendant
constitute a good defence in law and whether that defence appears to
be bona fide.”
[28]
In so far as the plaintiff is concerned, the authorities are also
quite clear about what is required
of a plaintiff to succeed in
obtaining summary judgment.
[29]
Rule 32(2)(b) requires that a plaintiff should verify the cause of
action and identify the facts
upon which the plaintiff’s claim
is based and explain why the defence as pleaded does not raise any
issue for trial.
[30]
In respect
of what the defendant is required to do to defeat an application for
summary judgment, Rule 32(3)(b) provides that a
defendant must
satisfy the Court by affidavit or with the leave of the Court by oral
evidence, that the defendant has a
bona
fide
defence
to the action. The subrule also states that such affidavit or
evidence shall disclose fully the nature and grounds of the
defence
and the material facts relied upon.
[6]
Evaluation
[31]
It must be emphasised that the plaintiff’s cause of action
against the second defendant
arises from the two suretyship
agreements which the second defendant does not dispute but avers that
the agreements are not enforceable
by virtue of the contention that
the plaintiff is not a registered financial service provider.
[32]
As I have already stated that contention was abandoned by the second
defendant in her oral submissions.
This defence was in any event
untenable. Similarly untenable was the defence to the effect that
summary judgment should not be
granted because the plaintiff did not
attach the certificates of balance which specify the amount that the
plaintiff is claiming
from the second defendant.
[33]
In my view since summary judgment can now only be sought after a
defendant has filed its plea,
the court is enjoined to adjudicate the
application by considering all the pleadings before it cumulatively.
This means that the
allegations in the particulars of claim and the
defendant ‘s defence as raised in the plea are taken into
account.
[34]
The fact that the certificates of balance are not attached to the
founding affidavit supporting
summary judgment is not fatal to the
plaintiff ‘s claim since there is no prejudice to the second
defendant. Attaching the
very same certificates that are already
annexed to the particulars of claim would have unnecessarily burdened
the record.
[35]
It is worth emphasising that the defence and in fact the only one
that the second defendant vigorously
pursued in oral submissions was
that the plaintiff’s claim for the amounts owing both in
respect of the first and second
instalment agreements are claims for
damages which are not allowed in terms of Rule 32. The other one that
was also pursued (albeit
not so much with vigour) is that the amount
that the plaintiff is entitled to recover in terms of the suretyship
agreements was
not unlimited.
[36]
These contentions lose sight of the fact that the amounts in question
arose out of the first
defendant’s default in making payment of
the monthly instalments until the motor vehicles were paid off and
also that these
amounts are as a result of the fact that the proceeds
arising from the sale of the two motor vehicles were not sufficient
to extinguish
the debt that the first defendant is owing to the
plaintiff.
[37]
Since it is not in dispute that the first defendant had defaulted and
has not made payment of
the amounts owing, the plaintiff is entitled
to invoke its suretyship agreements with the second defendant.
There is no restriction
in both suretyship agreements about the
nature of the debt that the first defendant should owe in order to
trigger the second defendant’s
liability as surety.
[38]
In the circumstances, the second defendant’s attempt to avoid
her liability to the plaintiff
by alleging that the plaintiff’s
claim amounts to a claim of damages does not constitute a
bona
fide
defence in law against the plaintiff’s claim. Nor is
the purported defence that the amount that the plaintiff is entitled
to recover under the suretyship agreement is not unlimited.
[39]
There is no limit in the suretyship agreements about the amount that
the plaintiff is entitled
to recover from the second defendant as
surety. On the contrary, the suretyship is unambiguous that the
second defendant is liable
for all debts owed by the first defendant
to the plaintiff.
[40]
This conclusion is fortified by the fact that the amounts in question
could not have been limited
since the actual amount that would be
owed by the first defendant could not have been known at the time
when the suretyship agreements
were concluded.
[41]
The situation is different from standing as surety for a fixed amount
in the form of a loan advanced
to the principal debtor. In such
a scenario the amount that could be owed by a surety could be limited
to the loan.
[42]
In the circumstances, the second defendant’ contention that the
amount that the plaintiff
is entitled to recover in terms of the
suretyship agreements was not unlimited has no merit and is
susceptible to be rejected.
[43]
In view of the fact that the second defendant has renounced the
benefits of excussion and division,
the plaintiff is entitled for
payment of the amount owing and the second defendant cannot escape
such contractual liability arising
from the two suretyship
agreements.
[44]
It is trite
that a suretyship is a contract in terms of which one person (the
surety) bounds herself/himself as debtor to the creditor
of another
person (the principal debtor) to render the whole or part of the
performance due to the creditor by the principal debtor
if and to the
extent that the principal debtor fails, without lawful excuse to
render the performance herself/himself.
[7]
[45]
The only conceivable defence that the second defendant could have
been able to advance albeit
as a point
in limine
, is the
excussion of the first defendant. This is not possible since the
first defendant has been liquidated but more importantly
and
decisively, the second defendant had renounced the benefit of
excursion and division.
[46]
There is no
valid and arguable defence for the second defendant to avoid her
liability arising from the conclusion of the suretyship
agreements.
No authority is required for the trite proposition that a surety ‘s
debt normally
[8]
becomes
enforceable as soon as the principal debtor is in default. This is
because of the nature of the suretyship agreement being
an accessory
in nature.
[47]
The
viability of commerce requires that Courts should continue to uphold
the doctrine of
pacta
sunt servanda
in
our law of contract
[9]
in the
absence of any conflict between the contractual terms embodied in the
suretyship agreement and the constitutional values
enshrined in our
Constitution.
[48]
There is no contention or evidence that the second defendant was
induced in concluding the suretyship
agreements. On the contrary, the
undisputed evidence is that the second defendant concluded the two
instalment sale agreements
on behalf of the first defendant with the
plaintiff as the sole director of the first defendant and then
concluded the two corresponding
suretyship agreements to secure the
first defendant ‘s debts to the plaintiff. She did so freely
and voluntarily.
[49]
It is common cause that the first defendant was liquidated under the
second defendant’s
watch, its debts that are due to the
plaintiff remain owing and the second defendant ‘s liability as
surety is indisputable.
Consequently, the second defendant, as surety
for the first defendant ‘s debts, has no valid defence in law
to resist the
plaintiff’s claim for summary judgment.
[50]
In the light of my conclusion that the second defendant had not
disclosed a
bona fide
defence to foil the plaintiff’s
application for summary judgment, I reiterate that, it is not
necessary to deal exhaustively
with all the other defences which are
largely peripheral in nature and trumped-up to delay the plaintiff ‘s
uncontested claim
arising from the two suretyship agreements.
[51]
For all these reasons, I am inclined to exercise my discretion in
granting summary judgment given
my conclusion that the second
defendant has not managed to satisfy the Court by affidavit that she
has a
bona fide
defence to the plaintiff’s action as
required by Rule 32(3)(b) of the Uniform Rules of Court.
[52]
On the totality of the purported defences that the second defendant
has raised, it is logically
impossible to arrive at a conclusion that
there is
bona fide
defence to the plaintiff ‘action let
alone whether there are grounds of the purported defences and
material facts relied
upon. There is absolutely nothing that could be
regarded as a
bona fide
defence which is valid in law.
Costs
[53]
I now turn to the issue of costs. As I have already alluded, the
second defendant had advanced
spurious defences in her affidavit
opposing summary judgment. These include the defence that the
plaintiff being a recognised bank
which advanced the finance to
purchase the two motor vehicles was not a registered financial
service provider.
[54]
It is of no surprise that this absurd argument was abandoned in oral
submission and rightly so
in my view. These ill-conceived arguments
in resisting summary judgment application resulted in the unduly
burdening of the papers.
In my view the Court should indicate its ire
for such conduct and censor such irresponsible manner of litigating.
[55]
I am alive to the trite principle that the granting of costs falls
within the Court’s discretion
which must be exercised
judicially.
[56]
I therefore make the following order which in my view is warranted
given the criticism of the
manner in which the second defendant
conducted herself in concocting defences which were abandoned in her
oral submission.
Order
[57]
In the circumstances, I make the following order:
a.
The application for summary judgment is granted.
b.
The second defendant is ordered to make the following payment within
5 (five) calendar
days from the date of the order.
(i)
Payment of the amount of R406 170,56 at the rate of 15.5% from
date of summons to date of payment.
(ii)
Payment of the amount of R311 467,93 at the rate of 14.28% from
the date of summons to the date of payment.
(iii)
The second defendant is further ordered to pay the cost of the
application
on attorney and client scale including the costs incurred
in drafting the particulars of claim and considering the plea.
R
B MKHABELA
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION
PRETORIA
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by the Acting Judge whose
name is reflected and is handed down electronically
by circulation to
the Parties / their legal representatives by email and by uploading
it to the electronic file of this matter
on CaseLines. The date of
the judgment is deemed to be
9 May 2024
.
COUNSEL FOR THE
PLAINTIFF:
C Nkosi
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Findlay
& Niemeyer attorneys
COUNSEL
FOR SECOND DEFENDANT:
JHF Re Roux
INSTRUCTED BY:
DBM attorneys
DATE OF THE
HEARING:
23 August 2023
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
9 May 2024
[1]
34 of 2005.
[2]
34 of 2005.
[3]
Rule
32(1) of the Uniform Rules of Court.
[4]
[2020]
ZAGPPHC 397 para 14, referencing
First
Rand Bank Ltd v Shabangu and Others
2020 (1) SA 155
(GJ) paras 16- 19.
[5]
[2022]
ZAGPPHC 925 paras 33 to 34, a Decision of Kooverjie J in the Gauteng
Division, Pretoria.
[6]
Visser
v Kotze
[2012]
ZASCA 73
(25 May 2012) at para 11.
[7]
LAWSA
para 281 read with the definition of Coney,
The
Law of Suretyship
,
4
th
Edition at 26.
[8]
The surety can of course demand that the principal debtor first be
excused which defence is not available to the second
defendant as I
have alluded.
[9]
Barkhuizen
v Napier
2017 (5) SA 323
(CC) at para 70.
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