Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 978South Africa
Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd v Vally and Another (2023-077576) [2024] ZAGPPHC 978 (26 September 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 Ltd v Vally and Another (2023-077576) [2024] ZAGPPHC 978 (26 September 2024)
Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd v Vally and Another (2023-077576) [2024] ZAGPPHC 978 (26 September 2024)
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sino date 26 September 2024
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
number: 2023-077576
(1)
REPORTABLE:
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
(3)
REVISED.
Date
26 September 2024
Signature
In
the matter between:
THE
STANDARD BANK OF SOUTH AFRICA LTD
Applicant
and
SHAHEEN
ISMAIL VALLY
(ID
NO 6[...])
First Respondent
MOHAMMED
ISMAIL VALLY
(ID
NO
9[...])
Second Respondent
JUDGMENT
WILLIAMS,
AJ
[1]
On 13 May 2019 the first and second respondents, jointly and
severally, in writing, guaranteed
as a principal and independent
obligation, to guarantee and pay in full the debts of O’Cornish
& Associates (Pty) Ltd
to the applicant. (The Guarantee was
for a limited amount of some R11 million.) The respondents
renounced the legal
benefits (set out in paragraph 6 of their
Guarantee). They also agreed that a certificate under the hand
of any manager or
authorised signatory of the applicant, shall be
sufficient proof of the contents and correctness thereof (and shall
be valid as
a liquid document for those purposes). The Manager,
Business Solutions and Recoveries, of the applicant on 22 May 2023
certified
the indebtedness of the first and second respondents in
respect of :
1.1.
Claim 1 – in the amount of R5,067,694.56, plus interest
calculated thereon
at 13,75%, compounded monthly in arrears, from 25
April 2023 to date of payment;
1.2.
Claim 2 – in the amount of R1,431,989.76, plus interest
calculated thereon
at 13,75%, compounded monthly in arrears, from 25
April 2023 to date of payment.
Such Certificates of
Balance was issued in respect of each of the respondents.
[2]
The first and second respondents opposed the application for payment,
brought by the
applicant.
[3]
They deny that their address was correctly recorded in the agreement
(i.e. the
domicilium citandi et exedutandi)
. Nothing
turns on this since they have been able to file answering affidavits
and are aware of the proceedings.
[4]
There is also no merit in the argument that the applicant did not
provide the company
with a written opportunity to remedy its failure
to pay, nor is there any merit in the alternative defence that a
written demand
was to be made also on the respondents, before the
amount can be regarded as due and payable. It is trite that a
demand may
be made
interpellatio extrajudicialis
, for example
by way of a letter of demand or it may be by way of, for example, the
instituting of action or application process
(
interpellation
judicialis).
The allied contention that the application against
the respondents was premature on these bases, is to be rejected.
[5]
The only real defence raised by the respondents is that under section
133 of
the Companies Act there is a general moratorium placed on
legal proceedings against the company which is in business rescue.
The respondents are seemingly unaware that, unlike a suretyship, a
Contract of Guarantee entails that the guarantor/s undertakes
the
principal obligation to indemnify the promise.
[6]
Section 133
of the
Companies Act, 71 of 2008
, does preclude legal
proceedings against a company under business rescue (without the
consent of the business rescue practitioner)
– but that does
not mean (as argued by the respondents) that because of that fact no
amount is due by the company.
The moratorium prevents
proceedings being commenced against the company whilst it is under
business rescue, not that the company
does not owe.
[7]
The respondents’ indebtedness is an independent indebtedness,
not dependent
on the principal obligation by the company being due
and payable when the creditor comes knocking on their door.
[8]
The fact that the company was placed under business rescue on 9 June
2022, is thus neither
here nor there. The fact that there is a
moratorium on “legal proceedings” against a company in
business rescue,
does not absolve the respondents from having to
pay. It is trite that a Contract of Guarantee is not akin to
that of suretyship.
It is not an accessory debt – but an
indemnification promise which remains in force (even the obligation
may fall away in
the case of a suretyship). Unlike suretyship,
a guarantor undertakes to pay regardless. The fact that the
company,
in the parlance of suretyship, is an accessory debt, does
not apply in the case of a guaranteed debt.
[9]
The estate of the first respondent was sequestrated in the Gauteng
Local Division,
Johannesburg, on 6 February 2024 (under Case No
2023-113396). I thus order, insofar as the application
pertains to the
first respondent, that the application is postponed
sine die
. That would allow joinder of the trustee of the
first respondent, if needed.
[10]
Accordingly, I grant judgment against the second respondent for
payment of
:
10.1.
R5,067,694.56, plus interest thereon calculated at the rate of 13,75%
per annum, from 25 April 2023
until date of final payment (both days
inclusive);
10.2.
R1,431,989.76, plus interest thereon calculated at the rate of 13,75%
per annum, from 25 April 2023
until date of final payment (both days
inclusive);
10.3.
Costs on the scale as between attorney and client, as agreed in the
Guarantee given by the respondents,
respectively;
10.4.
The judgment is joint and several with any judgment granted or that
may be granted against O’Cornish
and Associates (Pty) Ltd or
against the first defendant;
10.5.
The claim against the first defendant is postponed
sine die
,
should his trustee have to be joined.
WILLIAMS AJ
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA
Date
heard :
15 April 2024
Date
of judgment :
26 September 2024
Representation
for the applicant :
Adv
D van den Bogert
Instructed by Vezi
de Beer Incorporated
Representation for
the respondents :
Shaheen Ismail
Vally - First respondent in person
Mohammed Ismail
Vally – Second respondent in person
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