Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 605South Africa
SB Guarantee Company (RF) Proprietary Limited v Vestgro Capital (Pty) Ltd and Another (45317/2021) [2024] ZAGPPHC 605 (25 June 2024)
Headnotes
JUDGMENT AND
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## SB Guarantee Company (RF) Proprietary Limited v Vestgro Capital (Pty) Ltd and Another (45317/2021) [2024] ZAGPPHC 605 (25 June 2024)
SB Guarantee Company (RF) Proprietary Limited v Vestgro Capital (Pty) Ltd and Another (45317/2021) [2024] ZAGPPHC 605 (25 June 2024)
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sino date 25 June 2024
SAFLII
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Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
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SAFLII
Policy
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 45317/2021
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
DATE
25 June 2024
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
SB
GUARANTEE COMPANY (RF)
PROPRIETY
LIMITED
Plaintiff/Applicant
(Registration
number: 2006/021576/07)
And
VESTGRO
CAPITAL (PTY) LTD
1
st
Defendant/1
st
Respondent
(Registration number:
2016/333899/07)
MARIUS
STRYDOM
2
nd
Defendant/2
nd
Respondent
(Identity number: 8[...])
IN HIS CAPACITY AS
SURETY
JUDGMENT: APPLICATION
FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT AND
RULE 46(1)(A)
APPLICATION
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected on 25 June 2024 and is handed down electronically
by
circulation to the parties/their legal representatives by e-mail and
by uploading it to the electronic file of this matter on
CaseLines.
The date for hand-down is deemed to be10h00 on 25 June 2024.
MNISI
AJ
Introduction
[1]
This is an application for summary judgment in which
the plaintiff seeks judgment against the first and second defendants,
in the
sum of R3,406,161.69 plus interests at the rate of 5.850% per
annum, jointly and severally with costs as between attorney and
client
scale. The debt allegedly arises from the defendants’
breach of a home loan agreement (“loan agreement”)
concluded
between the parties on 27 August 2020. For the sake of
convenience, I will refer to the ‘parties’ as they
appeared
in the main action.
[2]
The plaintiff also seeks an order in terms of Rule 46(1)(a)(ii) of
the Uniform Rules
of Court, declaring the property of the first
defendant to be executable for the amounts and interest set out above
and directing
the Registrar of this Court to issue a Warrant of
Execution against the property. It further prays for an order in
terms of Rule
46A determining whether or not the property of the
first defendant should be sold in execution with a reserve price.
[3]
At the commencement of the
proceedings, Counsel for the defendants brought
an application for
postponement of the summary judgment application. Upon hearing the
arguments from both sides, I issued an
ex
temporae
ruling dismissing the application.
I
informed the parties that reasons for my ruling would be in my
judgment for summary judgment application.
I
immediately informed the parties to make submissions in respect of
the summary judgment. I now proceed to deal with the reasons
preceding the application for postponement.
Reasons
on the refusal for postponement
[4]
It is common cause that an application for postponement was served
and filed
on 4 March 2024, three days’ shy of the summary
judgment application. The reason for the postponement application by
the
defendants was that they filed a Rule 34(14) and requested
certain documents to be furnished to them by the plaintiff. The
documents
include:
1.
The
resolution by the Bank to enter into the loan agreement.
2.
The
resolution by the Bank to authorise the person who signed the loan
agreement on behalf of the bank to do so.
3.
The
authority given to the person who signed the loan agreement on behalf
of the bank to do so.
4.
The
resolutions made by the Plaintiff and the bank to enter into the
Common Terms Agreement.
5.
The
resolution made by the bank and the Plaintiff to authorise the
persons who signed the agreement on their behalf.
6.
The
authorities given to the persons who signed the agreement on behalf
of the bank and the Plaintiff to do so.
[5]
It was argued on behalf of the defendants that the documents
requested are important
to them because if they did not exist, then
this would bolster their defence as set out in their plea and that it
may very well
be fatal for the plaintiff’s claim as the
defendants will then amend their plea to plead the non-existence of
the documents
in more detail than what is currently pleaded.
[6]
It
is a well-established legal principle that the party seeking
postponement must proffer good and strong reasons thereof, and that
the applicant must give a full and satisfactory explanation of the
circumstances that give rise to the application.
[1]
The application itself must be
bona
fide
and
must not be used as a tactical endeavour to obtain an advantage to
which the applicant is not entitled.
[7]
In
Psychological
Society of South Africa v Qwelane and Others
[2]
(Psychological Society)
the
Constitutional Court held:
‘
In
exercising its discretion, a court will consider whether the
application has been timeously made, whether the explanation for
the
postponement is full and satisfactory, whether there is prejudice to
any of the parties and whether the application is opposed.
All these
factors will be weighed to determine whether it is in the
interests of justice to grant the postponement. And, importantly,
this Court has added to the mix. It has said that what is in the
interests of justice is determined not only by what is in the
interests of the immediate parties, but also by what is in the
broader public interest.’
[8]
In my view, the defendants did not only fail to make the application
timeously,
they also failed to proffer
good
and strong reasons
for
the postponement application. It was also my considered view that
granting such an application would prejudice the plaintiff
in the
summary judgment application, and therefore it would not be in the
interests of justice to grant it.
[9]
I now turn to deal with the application for summary judgment.
Merits
of The Summary Judgment Application
It
appears from the joint practice note and the papers filed of record
by the parties that the following are either common cause
facts or
they are not in dispute:
[10]
The debt which forms the subject matter of the claim arises out
of a written Home Loan agreement,
a written Indemnity Agreement, a
Guarantee Agreement, a Common Terms Guarantee Agreement and a Deed of
Suretyship. The said loan
agreement was concluded between Standard
Bank and the first defendant for an amount of R2,963,013.16.
[11]
All the amounts owing to Standard
Bank in terms of the loan agreement would bear interest
at variable
interest rates and the Principal Debt would be repaid by the first
defendant to the Bank in instalments of R25,787.80
per month.
[12]
The relationship between the plaintiff and the Bank is governed
by the Common Terms Guarantee
Agreement, concluded between the
parties on 1 March 2015, in terms of which the plaintiff undertook as
the needs arose, to guarantee
the obligations of the Bank’s
debtors under individual Home Loan Agreements.
[13]
The parties further agreed that the Certificate signed by the
Bank Manager, specifying the amount owed
by the first defendant
shall, on its mere production constitute sufficient proof of any
amount due or owing by the first defendant
in terms of the loan
agreement, unless the contrary is proved.
[14]
On 27 August 2020, the first defendant signed and executed the
required Indemnity Agreement in favour of
the plaintiff. In terms of
the Indemnity Agreement, the first defendant acknowledged and agreed
that if the first defendant became
liable to pay any amount owed to
the Bank in terms of the Guarantee provided to the Bank, the first
defendant would immediately
be liable to the plaintiff in terms of
the said Indemnity Agreement in the amount for which the first
defendant was liable under
the Guarantee provided to the Bank.
[15]
Pursuant to the conclusion of the loan agreement and the
Indemnity Agreement, the first defendant caused
a continuing covering
Mortgage Bond to be registered over the immovable property in favour
of the plaintiff. In terms of the Mortgage
Bond, the first defendant
acknowledged and declared itself to be lawfully indebted and bound to
the plaintiff in the sum of R2,950,000.00,
together with an
additional sum of R737,500.00 as a continuing covering security for
and in respect of every indebtedness or obligation
of whatsoever
cause and nature.
[16]
Moreover, on 27 August 2020, the second defendant signed a Deed of
Suretyship in terms of which he bound himself
as Surety and
Co-Principal Debtor for the payment when due of all present and
future indebtedness of the first defendant to the
plaintiff, limited
to a maximum aggregate amount of R2,950,000.00, inclusive of
interest, costs, fees and charges that may be levied
for which the
first defendant may become liable to the plaintiff.
[17]
The first defendannt failed to pay the monthly instalments,
which resulted in the Bank notifying
it on 6 March 2021, in writing
that the failure to pay constituted a breach of the Loan Agreement.
The plaintiff alleges in its particulars of claim that the
defendants have breached the terms of the agreement in that they
failed
to pay instalments as reflected in the certificate of balance
and statement of account.
[18]
The application for summary judgment is opposed
by the defendants. The latter have filed an opposing
affidavit in which
they raised few grounds as the basis of opposition
to the summary judgment application. They contend that
the person who
purported to sign the Loan Agreement, Mortgage Bond, Common Terms
Agreement, Indemnity and the Deed of Surety
(“the
agreements”)
on behalf of the Bank did not have the authority to do so.
[19]
They also contended that the denials do not constitute bare denials
since they are made up of
specified and individual denials and that
the plaintiff must prove the denied allegations in order to succeed
with the claim. The
defendants also argued that they are not at this
stage required to persuade the court that in view of the disputed
facts, the probabilities
are in their favour.
Applicable
legal principles
[20]
It
is trite that summary judgements enable a plaintiff to obtain
judgment against a defendant without the necessity of going to
trial
when a defendant has no defence to a claim based on a liquid
document, for a liquidated amount of money, for delivery of
movable
property, and for ejectment. The instant application for summary
judgment is for breach of a loan agreement. In
Rich
& Others v Lagerwey
[3]
the
court concluded as follows:
“…
if
on a proper construction the document evidences by itself that the
claim is one sounding in money, without extrinsic evidence
required,
such document would meet the test for summary judgment.”
[21]
With effect from the 01
st
of
July 2019
an
application for summary judgment can only be brought after a
defendant has filed its plea, and in doing so the plaintiff must
not
only verify the cause of action and the amount claimed but must, in
addition, also identify any point of law which it relies
upon and the
facts upon which its claim is based, and must also briefly explain
why the defence which has been pleaded by the defendant
does not
‘raise any issue’ for trial.
[22]
The defendant opposing summary judgment is required
to set out a
bona
fide
defence
by affidavit disclosing fully the nature and grounds of the defence
and the material facts relied upon. The defendant need
not deal
exhaustively with all the facts and evidence relied on to
substantiate a defence, but the essential material facts on
which the
defence is based must be disclosed with sufficient completeness,
particularly to enable the court to decide whether or
not the
affidavit discloses a
bona
fide
defence.
[4]
However
a
bona
fide
defence,
is not scrutinised according to the strict standards of pleadings. In
summary judgments, it is the material and factual
defence and not the
defendant which must be
bona
fide.
[23]
In
Maharaj
v Barclays National Bank Ltd
[5]
the court held that in determining whether the defendant has
established a
bona
fide
defence
the court has to enquire whether the defendant has with sufficient
particularity disclosed the nature and grounds of his
defence and the
material facts upon which his defence is based. It is expected of the
applicant on the other hand to convince the
court that he has made
out a case for summary judgment.
[24]
The
court has an overriding discretion whether on the facts averred by
the plaintiff, it should grant summary judgment or on the
basis of
the defence raised by the defendants, it should refuse it. Such
discretion is unfettered. If the court has a doubt as
to whether the
plaintiff’s case is unanswerable at trial such doubt should be
exercised in favour of the defendant and summary
judgment should be
refused. The court can exercise its discretion and refuse summary
judgment even if the requirements resisting
summary judgment have not
been met.
[6]
[25]
The test for the granting of a summary judgment is whether the
defendant has satisfied the Court that he
has a
bona
fide
defence
to the action in terms of Rule 32(3) of the Uniform Rules of Court.
What this entails is whether the facts put up by the
defendant raised
a triable issue and a sustainable defence in law deserving of their
day in court.
[26]
While it is not incumbent upon the defendant to formulate his or her
opposition to summary
judgment application with precision that would
be required in a plea, nonetheless when he or she advances his
defence or her contentions
in resistance to the plaintiff’s
claim, he or she must do so with sufficient degree of clarity to
enable the court to ascertain
whether he or she has deposed to a
defence which, if proved at the trial, would constitute a good
defence to the action.
See: Bretenbach v Fiat SA (Pty) Ltd
1976
(2) SA 226(T)
; Gilinsky v Superb Launderers and Dry
Cleaners
1978 (3) SA 807
(C );
Marsh v Standard
Bank of South Africa Ltd
2000 (4) SA 947
(W)
.
[27]
It is also trite that pure technical defences are not permitted. See
Liberty Life Group Limited v Sigh 2012(5) 526 at 537G-538G
.
Application of
the legal principles to the facts
[28]
In the present case, the defendants contend that the person who
purported to sign the agreements
on behalf of the plaintiff, did not
have the authority to do so. In addition, they contend that as a
consequence the signed agreements
are void and unenforceable.
[29]
If the defences raised by the defendants in this respect were
bona
fide
I would have expected them to set out the material facts
upon which they rely. The defendants should be able to demonstrate
with
a degree of exactitude what they are alleging to be defences in
opposition of this application. The absence of such material facts
leads one to conclude that the defence raised in this regard is
bald. The lack of particularity fortifies the plaintiff’s
argument that the purported defences are bare denials which are
premised entirely on pure speculation.
[30]
There is no dispute regarding the allegation that the
defendants are indebted to the plaintiff
for the amount as specified
in the particulars of claim, and the fact that the dispute regarding
the authority of the person who
signed on behalf of the bank was not
raised by the defendants prior to this litigation.
[31]
The issue of
bona
fide
defences has occupied the attention of our courts on numerous
occasions, and the authorities are quite clear as to the nature
of a defence which the defendant has to adduce in its resisting
affidavit to escape the consequences of a summary judgment.
The
defence so raised should be inherently convincing and valid in law,
and must be raised in such a manner that there is a reasonable
possibility that the defence he or she advances may succeed at the
trial
[7]
. The defendants in the
present case have had ample time to raise a dispute concerning the
lack of authority on the person who represented
the bank when the
aforementioned agreements were signed. No reasonable explanation has
been proffered why such a simple exercise
was not done.
[32]
The ‘grounds’ as envisaged in sub Rule (3)(b), relates to
the facts upon which the
defence is based. There are no material
facts alleged in the defendants’ papers upon which this court
can deduce the
bona
fide
defence.
In this regard I find support in
Lurlev
(Pty) v Unifreight General Services
1978 (1) SA 74(D)
at 77. There, the court held that bare denial of
correctness of amounts claimed does not constitute a defence
[8]
.
Similarly, in this case, I hold the view that bare denials of the
authority of the person who represented the bank does not constitute
a defence. After looking at the matter at the end of the day and
based on the documents properly before me, I therefore conclude
that
the defendants’ defence falls short of the requirements of rule
32(3)(b).
Application in
Terms of Rule 46(1)(a)(ii)
[33]
Simultaneously with the application for summary judgment, the
plaintiff also brings an application
for an order declaring the
property of the first defendant specially executable for the amounts
and interest in terms of the summary
judgment application. It prays
that if the court orders the executability of the property then it
must set a reserve price in the
amount of R2,469,811.71.
[34]
Rule 46(1)(a)(i)(ii) provides that:
“
Subject to the
provisions of Rule 46A, no writ of execution against the immovable
property of any judgment debtor shall be issued
unless –
(i)
A return has been made of any process issued against the movable
property
of the judgment debtor from which it appears that the said
person has insufficient movable property to satisfy the writ; or (ii)
such immovable property has been declared to be specially executable
by the court or where judgment is granted by the registrar
under rule
31(5)”.
[35]
It is clear from the above, more particularly Rule 46(1)(a)(ii)
that the requirement is that
the property must be declared to be
specially executable by the court before any writ of execution
against the property can be
issued and this is subject to the
provisions of Rule 46A. Rule 46A provides that:
“
(1) This
rule whenever an execution creditor seeks to execute against the
residential immovable property
of a judgment debtor.
(2)
(a) A court considering an application under
this ule must
–
(i)
Establish whether the immovable property which
the execution creditor
intends to execute against is the primary residence of the judgment
debtor; and
(ii)
Consider alternative means by the judgment debtor of
satisfying the
judgment debt, other than execution against the judgment debtor’s
primary residence.
(b) A
court shall not authorise execution against immovable property which
is the primary residence of a judgment
debtor unless the court,
having considered all relevant factors, considers that the execution
against such property is warranted.”
[36]
It is clear that according to Rule 46A, whenever an execution
creditor seeks to execute against
the residential immovable property
of a judgment debtor this rule must be applied. Both Rule46(1)(a)(ii)
and Rule 46A refer to
a “judgment debtor”.
[37]
Prior to 22 December 2017, the position was that there was no
procedural protection afforded under
Rule 46A. Property owned by a
company, close corporation, trust, even if such property was occupied
for residential purposes by
a natural person who happened to be a
shareholder, member of beneficiary of the respective company, close
corporation or trust,
was not protected under Rule 46 until the
inclusion of Rule 46A. A sale in execution of a residential immovable
property is subject
to the judgment debtor’s Constitutional
right to have adequate housing in terms of section 26 of our
Constitution.
[38]
In
Petrus
Johannes Bestbier and Others v Nedbank Ltd,
[9]
the
Constitutional Court held that:
“
It
must be borne in mind that rule 46A applies not only to executions
against “primary residential immovable property”
but to
residential immovable property of a judgment debtor. The factor
pertaining to primary residence is just one of the
factors a court
must consider. The text is clear that the rule applies whenever
an execution creditor seeks to execute against
the residential
immovable property of a judgment debtor. When applying rule
46A(2)(a)(i), one of the factors that the court
must consider is
whether the residential immovable property is used as the primary
residence of the judgment debtor.”
[39]
In the recent judgment of
Bestbier and Others v Nedbank Limited
2023 (4) SA 25
(SCA) (13 June (2022)
the SCA held that:
“
[25]
The text of rule 46A(1) reveals that the rule applies whenever an
execution creditor seeks to
execute against residential immovable
property of a judgment debtor. Notably, rule 46A(2) provides that a
court considering an
application in which a creditor seeks to execute
against the judgment debtor’s immovable property must consider
various matters.
Given that rule 46A(2) provides that a court ‘shall
not’ authorise execution unless ‘all relevant factors’
have been considered, I can see no reason why the fact that the
relevant immovable property is owned by a trust and occupied as
a
place of residence by the beneficiaries of that Trust should not be
one of the factors to be taken into account. It is also noteworthy
that rule 46A(3) requires that ‘every notice of application to
declare residential immovable property executable shall be
. . . on
notice to the judgment debtor
and
to any other party who may be affected by the sale in execution
.
. .’. (Own emphasis).
[26]
It is clear from a plain reading of the entire text of rule 46A that
it is important to have
a preceding enquiry in all cases where the
immovable property of the judgment debtor is used as residential
immovable property.
This preceding enquiry should be directed at
establishing whether the persons occupying the immovable property in
question are
of the
Jaftha
kind.
As I see it, a creditor seeking to execute against immovable property
owned by a trust would have to establish whether beneficiaries
of
that trust occupy the immovable property in question. Where that has
been established, rule 46A would have to be followed and,
consequently, rule 33 of the Practice Directive would have to be
complied with. I therefore disagree with the submission made by
the
respondent’s counsel that the person to be protected by rule
46A is, in the tradition of
Jaftha
and
Gundwana,
a natural person and not a legal persona such as a company or a close
corporation, nor an institution such as a trust,
‘. . .even if
the immovable property is the shareholder’s, member’s or
beneficiary’s only residence’.
Clearly, a blanket
approach that considers all immovable property held in the name of a
juristic person to fall outside the protection
of rule 46A is too
narrow.”
[40]
In this case, the plaintiff included in its particulars of claim,
averments regarding the
applicability of Rule 46A(1). It further
averred as follows:
“
Based
on the contentions made by the second defendant, it is the
plaintiff’s belief that the property sought to be
executed
is not the primary residence
of the second defendant”.
[10]
(emphasis added).
[41]
This averment was not denied by the defendants. The plaintiff went on
to explain the provisions of
section 26(1) of the Constitution to the
effect that it accords everyone the right of access to adequate
housing and that should
the defendants claim that the order for
eviction will infringe upon that right, it is incumbent upon them to
place information
supporting that claim before Court.
Instead of grabbing this opportunity to address the Court regarding
the above, the defendants responded by simply stating that
“
this
is noted”
in their plea. Counsel for the defendants did not
even attempt to persuade this Court not to grant this order in favour
of the plaintiff.
[42]
I have no doubt in my mind that
the
circumstances which the defendants could have placed on record
include inter alia: the circumstances about how the debt was
incurred; any attempts made by the debtor to pay off the debt; the
financial situation of the parties; the amount of the debt;
whether
the debtor is employed or has a source of income to pay off the debt
and any other factor relevant to the particular facts
of the case
before the court.
[43]
In light of the above, there was nothing placed on record by the
defendants which prevents this
Court to grand an order in favour of
the plaintiff. The plaintiff’s Counsel submitted that given the
amount due to the plaintiff
by the defendants, it is unlikely that
the defendants would be in a position to satisfy any judgment
granted, either by way of
payment or by way of attachment of movable
property as envisaged by Rule 46(1)(a)(i) of the Rules of this Court,
and I agree.
[44] Having
heard Counsels and having considered all the documents placed before
me, I am inclined
to agree with plaintiff’s Counsel that an
amount of no less than R2,469,811.71 is a fair amount for the
determination of
a reserve price.
[4]
Accordingly, the following order is made:
1.
The first and second defendants are directed to pay the plaintiff the
sum
of R3,100,161.69, jointly and severally,
the
one paying the other to be absolved.
2.
Interest on the aforesaid sum at a rate of 5.850% per annum from 29
August
2021 to date of payment inclusive of both dates.
3.
The immovable property described as:
PORTION 13 OF ERF. 3406
NORTHCLIFF EXTENSION, MEASURING 317 (THREE HUNDRED AND SEVENTEEN)
SQUARE METRES; HELD BY DEED OF TRANSFER
NUMBER” T[...] (“the
property”); AND SUBJECT TO THE CONITIONS AS IMPOSED BY THE
NORTHCLIFF RIDGE HOME OWNER’S
ASSOCIATION NPC
be declared
specially executable
4.
That the
property be sold in execution at a reserve price not less than
R2,469,811.71.
5.
The defendants shall pay the plaintiff costs of action on attorney
and
client’s scale jointly and severally, the one paying the
other to be absolved.
6.
The defendants are also liable for the costs of the postponement
application.
J
Mnisi
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Date
of hearing:
7
March 2024
Date
of Judgment:
25
June 2024
For
the Applicant/Plaintiff:
Adv
JA du Plessis
Instructed
by:
Vezi
& de Beer Incorporated
For
the Respondents/Defendants:
Adv
E Coleman
Instructed
by:
McCarthy,
Cruywagen Attorneys
[1]
See National
Police Service Union fn 2 at 1112C-F; Shilubana and Others
v Nwamitwa (National Movement of
Rural Women and Commission
for Gender Equality as Amicus Curiae)
[2007]
ZACC 14
;
2007
(5) SA 620
(CC)
at 624B-C;
[2]
Psychological
Society of South Africa v Qwelane and Others (CCT226/16)
[2016]
ZACC 48
;
2017
(8) BCLR 1039
(CC)
para 31.
[3]
1974
(4) SA 748
(AD) at 754.
[4]
Maharaj
v Barclays National Bank Ltd
1976 (1) SA 418
(A) at 426C-E.
[5]
Supra.
[6]
Mahomed
Essop (Pty) Ltd v Sekhukhulu and sons
1967 (3) SA 728
D
[7]
Citibank NA, South Africa Branch v Paul NO
2003
(4) SA 180
(T) at 200J -201A.
[8]
Nichas
and Son (Pty) Ltd Papenfus
1969 (2) SA 494
(O); Petlen Properties
(Pty) Ltd v Boland Construction Co (Pty) Ltd
1973 (4) SA 557
(C).
[9]
[2024] ZACC 2
at para 81.
[10]
Particulars of Claim, para 55.
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