Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 517South Africa
BMW Financial Services SA (Pty) Ltd v Mofomme (4855/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 517 (6 June 2024)
Headnotes
Judgment against the Respondent for the return of a luxury vehicle. The Applicant alleges that the instalment sale agreements was cancelled due to the breach of the agreement by the Respondent. The Applicant further alleges that he complied with the provisions of section 129 of the National Credit Act 34 of 2005 (herein after referred to as “NCA”).
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## BMW Financial Services SA (Pty) Ltd v Mofomme (4855/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 517 (6 June 2024)
BMW Financial Services SA (Pty) Ltd v Mofomme (4855/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 517 (6 June 2024)
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sino date 6 June 2024
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
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SAFLII
Policy
IN THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA)
Case No: 4855/2022
(1) REPORTABLE: NO
(2) OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3) REVISED
DATE:
06 JUNE 2024
SIGNATURE:
In the matter
between:
BMW FINANCIAL SERVICES
SA (PTY) LTD
APPLICANT
And
TSHEPO SIMON MOFOMME
RESPONDENT
Coram:
ACTING
JUDGE KEKANA
Heard
on:
29 APRIL 2024
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down electronically
by circulation to the parties' representatives by email, by being
uploaded to the
CaseLines
system.
JUDGMENT
[1] In this matter the
Applicant is applying for an order for a Summary Judgment against the
Respondent for the return of a luxury
vehicle. The Applicant alleges
that the instalment sale agreements was cancelled due to the breach
of the agreement by the Respondent.
The Applicant further alleges
that he complied with the provisions of section 129 of the National
Credit Act 34 of 2005 (herein
after referred to as “NCA”).
BACKGROUND
[2]
On 10 March 2021 Applicant (duly represented) and Respondent entered
into a written lnstallment Sale Agreement. ln terms of
the agreement
the Applicant sold a BMW M5 M DCT (F90) to the Respondent, which
vehicle was delivered to the Respondent on date
of concluding the
agreement. Despite delivery of the vehicle to the Respondent,
ownership of the vehicle remains vested within
the Applicant.
The Respondent breached the agreement in that the
Respondent failed to pay the payments in terms of the agreement
and on 7
January 2022 the Respondent was in arears with payments in
the sum of R 24 807.08
[3]
On 3 November 2021, the Applicant delivered to the Respondent a
notice complying with
Section 129
of the
National Credit Act 34 of
2005
, advising the Respondent of the extent of its arrears and
demanding payment of the outstanding balance. The Respondent chose
this manner of service in terms of the agreement.
[4]
The applicant alleges the that the R
espondent
failed to respond to the notice in that:
i)
He has failed to pay the arrears within 20 (Twenty) business days
from
date of default.
ii)
He has failed to refer the agreement to either a debt counsellor,
alternative
dispute resolution agent, consumer court or ombud with
jurisdiction to resolve any dispute under the agreement or
develop
and agree on a plan to bring the payments under the agreement
up to date
iii)
He has not surrendered the vehicle to the Plaintiff as contemplated
in
Section 127
of the
National Credit Act.
Due
to the Respondent's
breach of the agreement the Applicant terminated the agreement,
[5] The Respondent argue
that there was no compliance with
section 129
of the
National Credit
Act in
that, mere dispatch of notice is not enough as the track and
trace only show that the documents are at the post office, it does
not show if the documents were delivered to him or not. Therefore,
the Applicant has not complied with
section 129
of the NCA. There
were payments that were later made by the Respondents, those payments
consequently revived the agreement and
as such the agreement is not
terminated.
[6] In arriving at the
correct answer to the issues raised and contended, this Court will
have to consider and pronounce on the
following issues:
(i)
the Applicant’s compliance with the
provisions of
section 129
of the
National Credit Act;
(ii
)
the existence of the credit
agreement/contract, do the payments made by the Respondent later,
revive the agreement?; and
(iii)
the character of payments made by the
Respondent on the dates of between June and August 2022.
[7]
I will now deal with what is required from the service provider to
ensure compliance with
section 129
of the
National Credit Act. In
the
Constitutional Court case of
Sebola
v Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd
[1]
Cameron J, who delivering the majority judgment, held that:
the
NCA did not require the credit provider to prove that the default
notice had actually come to the attention of the consumer
or that it
had been delivered to a specific address, as this would ordinarily be
impossible to do. He added, that although it might
be difficult for
the credit provider to show that the notice came to the attention of
the consumer, the credit provider had to
make allegations that would
satisfy the court from which enforcement was sought that the notice,
on a balance of probabilities,
had reached the consumer.
Therefore,
where the notice was posted, mere dispatch of it was not sufficient.
Due to the risk of non-delivery by ordinary mail.
He added that even
when a registered letter was sent there was a possibility that proof
of registered dispatch by itself was not
enough. Thus, it was not
sufficient for the credit provider to simply allege and provide proof
that the notice had been sent by
registered mail to the address
chosen by the defaulting consumer. A credit provider also had to
prove that the notice was received
by the correct post office. Thus,
the mere dispatch of a notice was not enough and at the very least,
the credit provider "must
obtain a post-dispatch 'track and
trace' print-out from the website of the South African Post Office"
to show that the notice
had been delivered to the relevant post
office
[2]
. If the notice reached
the correct post office, in the absence of an indication to the
contrary, a court could accept that there
was adequate proof of
delivery of the notice to the defaulting consumer.
[8] In the matter before
me there is evidence in the form of Annexures C2 (Postal Slip) and C3
(Parcel Tracking) – which also
show that the Respondent was
notified when the parcel arrived at Soshanguve Post Office.
[9]
In another Constitutional Court case of
Kubyana
v Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd
[3]
the majority judgment (per Mhlantla AJ) held that:
the
credit provider had shown that it had complied with the NCA by
proving that the notice had been sent via registered mail to
the
correct post office. By doing this, the credit provider might
credibly aver receipt of the notice by the consumer, and to require
anything further from the credit provider would be too onerous and
would allow consumers to ignore validly sent notices with impunity.
that there was no need for the credit provider to
prove that the notice had come to the subjective attention of the
consumer, nor
was it a requirement that the notice be served
personally on the consumer. (paras 31 and 39).
[10] The Constitutional
Court summarised the situation as follows: (para 53)
Once a credit provider
has produced the track and trace report indicating that the
section
129
notice was sent to the correct branch of the Post Office and has
shown that a notification was sent to the consumer by the Post
Office, that credit provider will generally have shown that it has
discharged its obligations under the Act to effect delivery.
The
credit provider is at that stage entitled to aver that it has done
what is necessary to ensure that the notice reached the
consumer. It
then falls to the consumer to explain why it is not reasonable to
expect the notice to have reached her attention
if she wishes to
escape the consequences of that notice. And it makes sense for the
consumer to bear this burden of rebutting the
inference of delivery,
for the information regarding the reasonableness of her conduct
generally lies solely within her knowledge.
In the absence of such an
explanation the credit provider's averment will stand. Put
differently, even if there is evidence indicating
that the section
129 notice did not reach the consumer's attention, that will not
amount to an indication disproving delivery if
the reason for
non-receipt is the consumer's unreasonable behavior.
[11] Relying on the above
referred Constitutional Court cases, I’m satisfied that the
existence of Postal Slip and Parcel
Tracking proves that the
Applicant has complied with section 129 of the NCA. There is no
defence in law to be raised by the Respondent
on the aspect of
whether the Applicant complied with section 129 of the NCA. The two
cases are clear on what is expected of the
Applicant, and I’m
satisfied that there has been compliance.
[12] I now turn to the
question of whether the sale agreement/contract is terminated or not
and do the payments made by the respondent
later, revive the
agreement. The decision taken by the Applicant to terminate the sale
agreement is challenged by the Respondent
on two grounds:
(a)
that there was no compliance with section 129 of the NCA, compliance
thereto would have enabled
the Respondent to explore the remedies
provided for in the agreement under clause 16.2.1 thereof; and
(b)
payments made by the Respondents in June
2022 and August 2022 revived the contract and as a result
the
contract is not terminated.
[13] The sale agreement
between the Applicant and the Respondent clearly defined fixed time
for performance and what would happen
in cases of a breach. The
evidence of the issuance of summons is enough to prove cancellation
of the agreement. The summons serves
the purpose of proving action
taken by the Applicant. No further letter of demand is required.
Having established that there was
compliance with section 129 of the
NCA, the Applicant was within his rights to cancel the sale
agreement. There is no evidence
presented before of any further
discussions between the Applicant and the Respondent after the
Applicant has taken the decision
to cancel the sale agreement. I
conclude that the agreement was terminated, this aspect is closely
connected with the issue about
the character of the payments made by
the Respondent between June 2022 and August 2022 which I will deal it
immediately hereafter.
[14] I now deal with the
issue about the character of payments by the Respondent on the dates
of between June and August 2022 is.
Clause 6.8
of the sale
agreement reads as follows:
if this agreement is
terminated by us and you dispute such termination whilst remaining in
possession of the Goods, you must continue
to pay all amounts due in
terms of the Agreement. Notwithstanding our acceptance of such
payments, we will not lose any of our
rights herein.”
[15] The Respondent had
an obligation in terms of the agreement itself even if the agreement
is terminated to continue to make payments
especially as he continued
to be in possession of the goods. The clause on the agreement is very
clear of what obligations it imposes
on the Respondent, payments per
se to ensure compliance with the obligation does not revive the
agreement in any way. The Respondent
always had and during the times
when the said payments were made being in the possession of the
goods. In the absence of evidence
demonstrating any revived
agreement, the contract remains terminated. It is my conclusion that
the contract between the Applicant
and the Respondent remains
terminated even as the Respondent continued making payments as this
was adherence with the obligation
in terms of clause 6.8 of the
agreement.
[16]
Since this is an application for summary Judgment one has to ask the
same question which was posed by Corbett J in the case
of
Maharaj
v Barclays National Bank Limited
,
whether the [Applicant’s] claim is unimpeachable and that the
[Respondents] defence is bogus and bad in law
[4]
.
[17]
Courts are extremely loath to grant summary judgment unless satisfied
that the plaintiff has an unanswerable case. This is
because summary
judgment is an extra ordinary and very stringent remedy in that it
permits a judgment to be given without trial.
It closes the court for
the defendant. It is only where there is no doubt that the plaintiff
has an unanswerable case that it should
be granted
[5]
.
[18] The provision of
section 130 (3) of the NCA states that:
Despite any provision of
law or contract to the contrary, in any proceedings commenced in a
court in respect of a credit agreement
to which this Act applies, the
court may determine the matter only if the court is satisfied that-
(a)
in the case of proceedings to which
sections 127, 129 or 131 apply, the procedures required by those
sections have been complied
with;
(b)
there is no matter arising under that
credit agreement, and pending before the Tribunal, that could result
in an order affecting
the issues to be determined by the court; and
(c)
that the credit provider has not approached the court-
(i) during the time that
the matter was before a debt counsellor, alternative dispute
resolution agent, consumer court or the ombud
with jurisdiction; or
(ii) despite the consumer
having-
(aa) surrendered property
to the credit provider, and before that property has been sold;
(bb) agreed to a proposal
made in terms of section 129(1)(u) and acted in good faith in
fulfilment of that agreement;
(cc) complied with an
agreed plan as contemplated in section 129(1)(a); or
(dd) brought the payments
under the credit agreement up to date, as contemplated in section
129(1)(a).
[19] In the circumstances
I’m satisfied that Applicant has proved an unimpeachable claim
against the Respondent and that the
Respondent has no defence in law.
I therefore grant
judgment in favour of the Applicant. I make the following order:
1.
The application for summary judgment is granted.
2.
The sale agreement between the Applicant and the Respondent is
terminated as of the date the Applicant
terminated the agreement.
3.
The Respondent to return to the Applicant a
BMW M5 M DCT (F90) with engine Number 2[...] and chassis Number
F[...] to the Applicant
forthwith.
4.
The Applicant is authorized to apply to the
Court on the same papers, supplemented insofar as may be necessary,
for judgment in
respect of any damages and further expenses incurred
by the Plaintiff in the repossession of the said vehicle, which
amount can
only be determined once the vehicle has been repossessed
by the Applicant and has been sold.
5.
The Applicant is awarded cost on a
Party-to-Party Scale - Scale B.
HEARD
ON:
29
APRIL 2024
JUDGMENT
DELIVERED ON:
06
JUNE 2024
COUNSEL
FOR THE APPELLANT:
ADV
CJ WELGEMOED
COUNSEL
FOR RESPODENT:
ADV
KP LETSWALO
[1]
2012 (5) SA 142
(CC) para 74.
[2]
Supra
Sebola
p
ara
76.
[3]
2014
(3) SA 56
(CC) para 12.
[4]
1976
(1)SA 418 A.
[5]
Supra Maharaj.
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