Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 521South Africa
Standard Bank of South Africa Limited v Van Rensburg (61392/2020) [2024] ZAGPPHC 521 (5 June 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
5 June 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Standard Bank of South Africa Limited v Van Rensburg (61392/2020) [2024] ZAGPPHC 521 (5 June 2024)
Standard Bank of South Africa Limited v Van Rensburg (61392/2020) [2024] ZAGPPHC 521 (5 June 2024)
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sino date 5 June 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
IN THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA)
CASE NUMBER:
61392/2020
(1)
Reportable: No
(2)
Of interest to other judges: No
(3)
Revised: Yes
SIGNATURE:
In
the matter between:
THE
STANDARD BANK OF SOUTH AFRICA LIMITED
APPLICANT
and
DANIËL
THEODORUS JANSE VAN RENSBURG
RESPONDENT
Coram
:
A Vorster AJ
Heard
:
20 April 2023
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties’ legal
representatives by email,
by uploading the judgment onto
https://sajustice.caselines.com,
and release to
SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 10:00 on 5
June 2024.
ORDER
The
application is dismissed with costs.
JUDGMENT
A
Vorster AJ
Introduction
1.
The relationship
between the applicant and the respondent came into
existence when the applicant agreed to open bank accounts in the name
of the
respondent. The relationship between the parties are
defined by the types of activities, products, or services provided by
the applicant to the respondent or availed by the respondent.
The
applicant and the respondent concluded
3 separate
agreements, an overdraft agreement, a credit agreement, and a home
loan agreement. The nature of these relationships
are
contractual where the applicant is the creditor and the respondent is
the debtor. See:
Di Giulio v First National Bank of South Africa
Ltd
2002 (6) SA 281
(C) &
Standard Bank of SA Ltd v
Oneanate Investments (Pty) Ltd
1995 (4) SA 510
(C) &
London
Joint Stock Bank Ltd v MacMillan and Arthur
[1918] AC 777
(HL).
2.
Given
the different legal aspects of the agreements between the
applicant and the respondent, the agreements simultaneously embodies
the characteristics of different categories of contract, namely,
mandatum, mutuum and depositum. See:
Standard Bank of SA Ltd v
ABSA Bank Ltd and Another
[1995] 1 All SA 535
(T).
3.
As security for the respondent’s
obligations in terms of the home loan agreement the respondent
registered a mortgage bond
in favour of the applicant over his
immovable property situated at and known as [...] J[...] M[...] Road,
Mooikloof Equestrian
Estate, Mooikloof, Pretoria (‘the
property’).
Case information
4.
On 10 November 2020 the applicant issued
out an application against the respondent in which it claimed
performance of the respondent’s
obligations under the overdraft
agreement, the credit agreement, and the home loan agreement.
Properly construed these claims are
liquidated claims ad pecuniam
solvendam, based on specific performance, alternatively breach of the
agreements by the respondent.
The applicant also claimed foreclosure
and execution against the respondent’s immovable property,
based on security provided
through a mortgage bond for the due
fulfilment by the respondent of his obligations under the home loan
agreement.
5.
The founding affidavit was deposed to by
a Manager: Business Support, Rescue and Recoveries, a division of the
applicant. The deponent
claims personal knowledge of the facts
deposed to in the founding affidavit on the basis that all files,
documents and records,
both electronic and physical, relating to the
matter and the indebtedness of the respondent, resort under her
direct control by
virtue of the position she holds with the
applicant. I will briefly deal with the substantive content of
the founding affidavit.
6.
According to the deponent:
6.1.
The respondent breached the overdraft
agreement by exceeding the credit limit and by failing to repay the
credit drawn on the account
as and when it became due. It is alleged
that on 26 March 2020 the respondent owed an amount of R538’231.95
which was due
and payable. On 18 May 2020 the applicant’s
attorney delivered a notice in terms of section 129 of the NCA to the
respondent
personally. Thereafter, during July 2020, the respondent
made two payments to the applicant, totalling an amount of
R300’000.00.
On 8 September 2020 the amount still due and
payable was R253’302.45.
6.2.
The respondent breached the credit
agreement by exceeding the credit limit and by failing to repay
credit drawn on the account in
the sum of R68’775.58, which
became due and payable on 3 April 2020. The applicant claims
payment of R260’947.18
which is the total amount of credit
drawn on the account which, according to the agreement, the applicant
may claim at its election.
On 18 May 2020 the applicant’s
attorney delivered a notice in terms of section 129 of the
National
Credit Act
to the respondent
personally. The respondent failed to make any payments.
6.3.
The applicant claims payment of
R10’428’976.70 which amount has become due and owing in
terms of the respondent’s
home loan account. The respondent
defaulted on his obligations under the agreement by failing to pay
all monthly instalments in
full on due date. As a consequence the
full outstanding balance became due and payable. On 19 February 2020
the respondent last
made a payment on the account in the sum of
R50’000.00. On 18 May 2020 the applicant’s attorney
delivered a section
129 notice to the respondent personally. On 14
October 2020 an amount of R1’232’408.46 was due and
payable by the respondent.
7.
On 1 February 2021 the respondent gave
notice of his intention to oppose the application. On 9 February 2021
the respondent delivered
a notice in terms of rules 35(1) and 35(13),
calling upon the applicant ‘to make discovery of documents and
tape recordings
relating to any matter in question in this
application’ and a notice in terms of rule 7, challenging the
authority of the
deponent to the founding affidavit.
8.
On
15 February 2021 the applicant delivered a reply to the notice in
terms of rule 7 in which it correctly contended that rule 7
does not
provide for a deponent’s authority to be challenged, but rather
the authority of an attorney
[1]
.
9.
On the same day the applicant delivered
an affidavit in response to the notice in terms of rules 35(1) and
35(13). The affidavit
was deposed to by a Manager: Business Support,
Rescue and Recoveries, a division of the applicant. This manager was
not the same
as the one who deposed to the founding affidavit. The
deponent took over from that manager after the latter emigrated to
Canada.
The deponent stated under oath that:
9.1.
she perused all the applicant’s
records relevant to the respondent’s accounts;
9.2.
all books and documents which the
applicant has, or had, in its possession, or under its control,
which relate to the application, and which the applicant intends to
use in the application, or which tend to prove or disprove
either
party’s case, are attached to the founding affidavit;
9.3.
the applicant does not have, nor had, tape recordings in its
possession.
The
applicant delivered the affidavit notwithstanding the fact that at
the time the respondent had not approached the court
by
way of an application on notice to order discovery and declare
sub-rule 35(1) applicable to the proceedings.
10.
The respondent failed to deliver an
answering affidavit within the period prescribed by the rules.
This prompted the applicant
to enrol the matter for hearing on the
unopposed motion court roll of 22 July 2021.
11.
On the day of the hearing the respondent
delivered what he styled a ‘provisional answering affidavit’.
The matter was
postponed sine die at the behest of the respondent and
he was ordered to pay the wasted costs occasioned by the
postponement. The
applicant did not object to the late delivery of
the answering affidavit.
12.
In his answering affidavit the
respondent did not dispute that the applicant advanced credit to
him. It is clear from the
bank statements attached to the
applicant’s founding affidavit that the respondent transacted
on all three accounts for many
years and utilised the credit advanced
to him by overdrawing on his current account, utilising the credit
facility on his credit
account, and acquiring an immovable property
with the proceeds of the home loan. The registration of a mortgage
bond over his immovable
property in 2008 is immutable proof that the
applicant extended credit to the respondent.
13.
The respondent’s answering
affidavit is replete with irrelevant matter and it is difficult to
discern what the bases of his
opposition to the applicant’s
claims are. The respondent devoted a considerable part of the
answering affidavit to blaming
the applicant for his financial
distress. A defence in respect of all three claims seems to be that
the applicant is part of a
scheme orchestrated by the respondent’s
former business partners to ‘decimate and destroy’ him,
and that the
proceedings were instituted with an ulterior motive.
Attached to the answering affidavit are combined summonses in actions
instituted
by the respondent and third parties against various
entities. One of these summonses, issued out four months after
the application
was served, evidences damages claims by the
respondent and two close corporations against the applicant.
14.
Properly construed, the respondent’s
defences may be summarised as follows:
14.1.
The applicant approached the court with
unclean hands and as a result should not be allowed to enforce the
credit agreements.
14.2.
Certain provisions in the agreements,
such as acceleration clauses, are against public policy and
unenforceable.
14.3.
Certain suspensive conditions in the
agreements were not met.
14.4.
The certificates of balance attached to
the founding affidavit are void and invalid and there is accordingly
insufficient proof
of the respondent’s indebtedness.
14.5.
The respondent has an unliquidated
damages claim against the applicant.
14.6.
The respondent relies on the protections
afforded by the
National Credit Act
.
14.7.
The respondent relies on the protections
afforded by the
Prevention of Illegal
Eviction from and Unlawful Occupation of Land Act
.
14.8.
The Magistrate’s Court has
concurrent jurisdiction, and the claims should accordingly be
prosecuted in that court.
15.
The applicant delivered a replying
affidavit on 13 September 2021. In the replying affidavit the
deponent to the affidavit restated
what was contained in the
applicant’s reply to the respondent’s notice in terms of
rule 7, and the affidavit delivered
in response to the notice in
terms of rules 35(1) & (13), and the applicant’s response
thereto.
16.
On 25 October 2021 the applicant delivered a notice of set
down enrolling the main application for hearing on the opposed motion
court roll of 31 January 2022.
17.
On 1 December 2021 the respondent
delivered an interlocutory application, dated 22 November 2021, in
which he seeks the following
relief:
17.1.
an order that the main application be
postponed until finalisation of the interlocutory application;
17.2.
an order that the applicant ‘make
full and proper discovery in terms of rule 35(1) read with rule
35(13)’;
17.3.
an order that the respondent ‘shall
be entitled to seek further and better discovery in terms of rule
35(3).
17.4.
an order that the respondent “shall
be entitled to file a final (sic) answering affidavit in the main
application…”;
17.5.
an order compelling the applicant to
provide the respondent with documents evidencing the authority of the
deponent to the founding
affidavit
.
18.
Although not required by rule 6(11), on
30 November 2021 the applicant gave notice of its intention to oppose
the interlocutory
application and on the same day delivered its
answering affidavit.
19.
On 21 January 2022, ten days before the
hearing of the matter on the opposed motion court roll, the
respondent delivered his replying
affidavit and a notice in terms of
rule 35(12). He also delivered a notice in terms of rule 7(1) in
which he challenged the authority
of the deponent to the opposing
affidavit in the interlocutory application.
20.
On 3 February 2022 Basson J referred
both the main and interlocutory applications, as well as a further
anticipated interlocutory
application by the respondent, to the third
motion court. In respect of the further anticipated interlocutory
application Basson
J issued directives for the exchange of papers.
21.
Basson J directed that the respondent
should deliver the further anticipated interlocutory application by
15 February 2022, which
he failed to do. On 22 April 2022 the
applicant delivered a supplementary affidavit in which it dealt with
the notices in terms
of rules 35(12) and 7(1), delivered on 21
January 2022.
22.
On 28 April 2022 the respondent ‘s
attorney wrote a letter to the applicant’s attorney in which
the latter was informed
that the respondent will no longer persist
with the relief sought in terms of rule 7(1). On 13 June 2022 the
respondent delivered
an affidavit in response to the applicant’s
supplementary affidavit and confirmed that he will not be persisting
with the
relief sought in respect of rule 7(1) and abandoned that
which he sought in the notice in terms of rule 35(12).
23.
The Deputy Judge President directed that
the matters should proceed on the ordinary opposed motion court roll
and that the interlocutory
application should be disposed of before
the main application is adjudicated.
24.
What is now before me is an application
by the respondent to make the rules relating to discovery applicable
to the main application,
and leave to deliver a final answering
affidavit in the main application, once discovery is made.
Discussion
25.
At the outset it is necessary to deal
with the status of the respondent’s so-called
‘
provisional
answering affidavit’.
There are normally three
sets of affidavits in motion proceedings, namely a founding
affidavit, an answering affidavit, and a replying
affidavit. A party
who wishes to file any other affidavit may only do so with leave of
the court. See:
Standard Bank of SA Ltd v Sewpersadh
2005
(4) SA 148
(C) at 153G–H. The rules do not make provision
for a respondent to deliver a ‘provisional answering affidavit’
and thereafter a ‘final answering affidavit’. The rules
only contemplate an answering affidavit. Prior to delivery
of
the ‘provisional answering affidavit’ the respondent did
not apply for leave to file anything other than an answering
affidavit, and I must accordingly accept that the ‘provisional
answering affidavit’ is the respondent’s answering
affidavit as contemplated in rule 6(5)(d)(2) of the Uniform Rules of
Court. Having delivered an answering affidavit, it is not
open to the
respondent to file a further answering affidavit.
26.
To
determine whether the rules relating to discovery should be made
applicable to the application the court needs to establish whether
there are exceptional circumstances which
justify
a departure from the usual procedure for the launching, hearing and
completion of motion proceedings
[2]
.
In
Premier Freight
(Pty) Ltd v Breathetex Corp (Pty) Ltd
[2003]
JOL 10797
(SE) at par 12 Plasket AJ, as he then was, held that the
notion of exceptional circumstances appears to encompass two aspects:
“…
the first is that, by
the very nature of applications and the discovery procedures, as a
matter of practice, it is only rarely that
a party seeks an order
directing the rules of discovery to apply; secondly, even then, a
case in which a party seeks an order to
make the rules of discovery
applicable must have special features that render the making of such
a direction necessary.”
27.
It is only necessary to detain myself
with the second aspect, namely whether the application has special
features that render the
making of a direction that discovery should
apply to the proceedings necessary. The enquiry is not an
abstract enquiry but
should be decided with reference to the facts
put forward by the party seeking such a direction. Differently
put, it is incumbent
on the respondent to make out a case for the
direction to be exercised in his favour.
28.
The respondent’s main contention
is that claims such as the ones preferred by the applicant in the
main application are normally
brought by way of action proceedings,
and not by way of motion proceedings, because it should be foreseen
that disputes of fact
will arise. The respondent argues that
the decision by the applicant to approach the court by way of motion
proceedings was
deliberate and calculated to avoid having to make
discovery, as it would have been compelled to do if it had instituted
action.
The respondent further believes that through discovery he
would be able to obtain documents which will either prove his defence
or disprove the applicant’s claim. The respondent states that
he will apply at the hearing of the main application for the
matter
to be referred to oral evidence and that the application be
consolidated with his unliquidated damages claim against the
applicant.
29.
The
respondent’s contention that the applicant should have
approached the court by way of action proceedings is completely
without merit. A litigant is at liberty to approach the court by way
of motion proceedings, unless motion proceedings aren’t
permissible at all, such as matrimonial causes and unliquidated
claims for damages
[3]
. Nothing
in the rules prevents an applicant with a liquidated claim for
payment, and a claim for foreclosure and execution
against immovable
property, to approach the court by way of motion proceedings.
30.
If
a litigant approaches the court on motion proceedings, where such
proceedings are permissible, and the application cannot properly
be
decided on affidavit for whatever reason, a respondent’s remedy
does not lie in the provisions of rule 35 but in the provisions
of
rule 6(5)(g). The rule allows the court to dismiss the application or
make such order as it deems fit with a view of ensuring
a just and
expeditious decision
[4]
.
31.
Sub-rule 6(5)(g) envisages a specific
instance where an application cannot properly be decided on
affidavit, namely where it can
be shown that a dispute of fact arose
in the application. The sub-rule prescribes a remedy in such an
instance, namely for
oral evidence to be heard on specified issues
with a view to resolving the dispute of fact and to end the court may
(i) order any
deponent to appear personally or grant leave for such a
deponent or any other person to be subpoenaed to appear and be
examined
and cross-examined as a witness; or (ii) refer the matter to
trial with appropriate directions as to pleadings or definition of
issues, or otherwise.
32.
The respondent’s belief that documents (evidence), which
might tend to prove his defense, or disprove the applicant’s
claims, can be adequately dealt with if the matter is referred to
oral evidence in terms of rule 6(5)(g). I must make it clear
that I
am not expressing myself on whether such an application should be
successful if or when it is made.
33.
It
is of course so that in instances where there are foreseeable
disputes of fact motion proceedings should not be used because
such
proceedings are not geared to deal with factual disputes but
principally for the resolution of legal issues
[5]
.
If a dispute of fact was foreseeable, and motion proceedings are not
prescribed for the type of claim, and an applicant nonetheless
persisted to approach the court on application, the respondent’s
remedy does not lie in the provisions of rule 35. If the
respondent
is correct in his assertion that real, genuine, and bona fide
disputes of fact have arisen on the affidavits, and that
these
disputes were foreseeable, he has an appropriate remedy through the
application of the now trite
Plascon
Evans
principle
which in essence provides for the application to be decided on his
version.
34.
The respondent’s intention to
apply for a consolidation of the application with his unliquidated
damages claim is not relevant
because such an application had not
been made. I am not in a position to consider whether the
consolidation of the proceedings
will constitute exceptional
circumstances because I do not know if such an application will even
be successful if and when it is
made.
35.
Therefore in summary, the proposed
consolidation of the proceedings is irrelevant and the facts that (i)
the applicant decided to
approach the court by way of motion
proceedings, and (ii) the possibility that the applicant might be in
possession of documents
(evidence)
which might tend to prove
the respondent’s defense or disprove the applicant’s
claims, and (iii) the respondent’s
contention that foreseeable
disputes of fact have arisen on the affidavits, are not exceptional
circumstances that
that render the making of a
direction that discovery should apply to the proceedings necessary.
36.
I
accordingly propose to dismiss the application with costs.
A. VORSTER AJ
Acting Judge of the
High Court
Date
of hearing:
20
April 2023
Date
of judgment:
5
June 2024
Counsel
for the applicant:
Y
Coertzen
Instructed
by:
Newtons
Incorporated
Counsel
for the respondent:
R
du Plessis SC
M
Boonzaaier
Instructed
by:
J.J.
Jacobs Incorporated
[1]
Ganes
and Another v Telecom Namibia Ltd
2004 (3) SA 615
(SCA) at para 19.
[2]
MV
Urgup: Owners of the MV Urgup v Western Bank Carriers (Australia)
(Pty) Ltd
1999 (3) SA 500
(C)
507 513;
MV
Rizcun Trader
(2)
1999 (3) SA 956
(C).
[3]
Room
Hire Co (Pty) Ltd v Jeppe Street Mansions (Pty) Ltd
1949 (3) SA 1155
(T) at 1161.
[4]
Cresto
Machines (Edms) Bpk v Die Afdeling Speuroffisier, SA Polisie,
Noord-Tvl
1970 4 SA 350 (T) at 365.
[5]
Cadac
(Pty) Ltd v Weber-Stephen Products Company and Others
[2010] ZASCA 105
;
2011 (3) SA 570
(SCA).
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