Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 987South Africa
Firstrand Bank Limited v Initiative for Specialized Resource Management (Pty) Ltd and Others (046733/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 987 (26 September 2024)
Headnotes
in Melville & Another that an initial does not constitute a signature and that the particular Will was invalid.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Firstrand Bank Limited v Initiative for Specialized Resource Management (Pty) Ltd and Others (046733/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 987 (26 September 2024)
Firstrand Bank Limited v Initiative for Specialized Resource Management (Pty) Ltd and Others (046733/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 987 (26 September 2024)
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sino date 26 September 2024
SAFLII
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Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
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Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
number: 046733/2023
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO.
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO.
(3)
REVISED: NO.
Date
26 September 2024
Signature
In
the matter between:
FIRSTRAND
BANK LIMITED
(Reg.
No.
1929/001225/06)
Applicant
and
INITIATIVE
FOR SPECIALIZED RESOURCE
MANAGEMENT
(PTY) LTD
(Reg. No.:
2017/444417/07)
First respondent
DANIEL FRANCOIS DU
TOIT
(ID
No 6[...])
Second respondent
RUDOLPH
JOHANNES VAN WYK RAUTENBACH
(ID
No 8[...])
Third respondent
JUDGMENT
WILLIAMS,
AJ
[1]
The applicant applied for judgment to be granted, jointly and
severally, against the three
respondents. On 27 October 2023
the Honourable Tshombe J granted judgment against the first
respondent, the principal debtor,
for payment of R2,855,712.17, plus
interest and attorney and client costs, as agreed.
[2]
The application against the second and third respondents was
postponed. After the
exchange of affidavits, it now served
before me.
[3]
The alleged liability of the second and third respondents is based on
alleged
Deeds of Suretyship. The second and third respondents
do not dispute signing the suretyship, however, the second respondent
says he only initialled the document throughout (i.e. on every
page). He never signed it in full on the page which called
for
a full signature.
[4]
Firstly, I deal with two ancillary points raised by the
respondents.
4.1.
Both the second and third respondents (I refer to defences raised in
their
respective answering affidavits) contend that the applications
against them is premature. They say that an unresolved (i.e.
pending) Rule 30 application precludes the main application from
being entertained. That application alleges that the main
application should fail because the founding affidavit was
“
commissioned”
by an attorney,
ex officio,
under circumstances where the attorney is “connected”
to the applicant’s attorney of record.
4.2.
It is, however, common cause that the founding affidavit was again
signed,
albeit after commencement of these proceedings, before
another (an independent) Commissioner of Oaths who duly commissioned
it.
The re-signed (and re-commissioned) founding affidavit was
served on 31 July 2023.
4.3.
The objection to the re-signed (and re-commissioned) founding
affidavit is
without substance.
4.4.
There is ample authority that I can condone any deficit in that
realm.
4.5.
There is no real prejudice here – it being trite that whether
you win
or lose the case is not the measure whether condonation
should be granted or not. I grant condonation insofar as is
necessary.
4.6.
I do however hold further that the applicant would only be entitled
to costs
from the date upon which it filed the correctly commissioned
founding affidavit.
[5]
5.1. The second respondent also contended
that the
documents were not properly uploaded to CaseLines.
5.2.
It is lamented that when preparing Heads of Argument it was not
possible to
refer to the specific pagination, as later uploaded to
CaseLines. This issue became resolved.
5.3.
It is not a basis upon which the matter should have become postponed,
nor a
basis upon which judgment should not be granted. All the
relevant issues were properly ventilated.
[6]
I now deal with the only two real issues:
6.1.
whether the second respondent can escape liability because he only
initialled
the page which called for his full signature. The
second respondent relies on
Melville & Another v The Master
and Others
1984 (3) SA 387
(C), which states that it is incumbent
upon the claimant (applicant in this instance) to prove compliance
with the formalities
of Act 50 of 1956, as confirmed most recently in
Jurgens v Volkskas Bank Ltd
[1993] 1 ALLSA 199
(A);
6.2.
whether the applicants’ failure to incorporate into the
original Notice
of Motion a date of hearing, rendered the application
a nullity. Second respondent says that on the basis of
Simross
Vinteners (Pty) Ltd v Vermeulen
;
VRG Africa (Pty) Ltd v
Walters t/a Tren Litho; Consolidated Credit Corporation (Pty)
Ltd v Van der Westhuizen
1978 (1) SA 779
(T) at 782B, and
Gallagher v Norman’s Transport Alliance (Pty) Ltd
1992
(3) SA 500
(W) at 502E to 503C), that the application was fatally
defective.
[7]
Ad the “signature” defence:
7.1.
Section 6 of the General Law Amendment Act, 50 of 1956 (“the
Act”)
demands that the Deed of Suretyship be “
signed”
by the surety. Signature is not defined in the Act.
LAWSA
Vol 26, paragraph 195 (First Re-Issue), postulates that a signature
may take the form of a written version of the signer’s
name or
his or her initials. The authors argue that whether only
initials are a signature for purposes of the Act, would
depend on the
intention with which the initials were made.
7.2.
Caney’s
The Law of Suretyship
(6
th
Edition),
argues that the word “sign” is derived from the Latin
“
signum”
which (only) means a mark. The
argument progresses that “signed” as demanded by the Act,
could mean merely the
placing of a mark on the document (which
identifies the person signing) and it is placed on the contract with
the intention of
identifying such person (page 69). Whether a
person writes his or her full name and surname, or merely deploys his
or her
initials, is irrelevant.
7.3.
Indeed, if regard be had to the dictum of Margo J N in
Standard
Bank of South Africa Ltd v Bhamjee & Another
1978 (4) SA 39
(W), the signature or initial must authenticate, in a manner intended
to cover the whole contract.
7.4.
Second respondent has however quoted, in this regard, the matter of
Melville & Another v The Master & Others
1984 (3) SA
387
(C). That matter dealt with the requirement in the Wills
Act, prior to it being amended by the Law of Succession Amendment
Act, 43 of 1992. That Act was needed to change the definition
of “sign” to include also the making of initials,
rather
than a full signature. Before the amendment it was held in
Melville & Another
that an initial does not constitute a
signature and that the particular Will was invalid.
7.5.
Also before the amendment,
Harpur NO v Govindamall & Another
[1993] ZASCA 110
;
1993 (4) SA 751
(A) confirmed that the word “signature”
must be interpreted against ordinary popular sense. The
Appellate Division
held that to “
sign”
does not
include the making of initials only. The Will in that matter
also was held to be invalid.
7.6.
The ratio in
Harpur NO-
case was that the requirement of
signatures (in that case that of the witnesses to the Will) was meant
to provide a safeguard against
fraud, uncertainty and speculation.
This ratio was also adopted and applied in
Webster v The Master &
Others
1996 (1) SA 34
(D).
7.7.
Two of the annotations to the decision in the
Harpur NO
-case
both dealt with electronic, but full signatures. They did not
turn on the issue that the signatory had merely placed
an initial.
However, in one of those matters,
Borcherds & Another v
Duxbury & Others
2021 (1) SA 410
(ECP), emphasized that
Courts lately follow a pragmatic approach to “signatures”.
The main function of a signature
being accepted, is to authenticate
the identity of the signatory and, more importantly, to evidence an
intention to be bound.
7.8.
I am tempted, in the absence of an amendment to this General Law’s
Amendment
Act, to hold that because the second respondent only
initialled the page of the Deed of Suretyship, that it does not
comply with
the Act. But based on the modern trend that
emphasizes the intention to be bound, I hold that the second
respondent initialling
the whole document, complies with section 6 of
the Act.
7.8.1.
In his answering affidavit the second respondent simply mentions that
his initials appear on each of the
individual pages of the Deed of
Suretyship but that the space provided for his signature is “empty”.
He does
not contend (and could presumably not as an experienced
businessman contend, credibly) that he did not intend to bind himself
as
surety for the debt.
7.8.2.
There is thus no issue as to the identity, nor as to his intention to
be bound.
7.8.3.
Also, on an objective basis (divorced from these facts), the
legislature in the case of Wills were justly
more inclined to
stipulate for a full signature, to prevent fraud, than it would have
been for suretyships.
[8]
Ad the “failure” to include a date of hearing in
the original Notice of Motion:
8.1.
The application was served on the second respondent on 24 May 2023.
His
attorneys filed the Notice to Oppose on 12 June 2023. This
was before the target date of 27 October 2023. The second
respondent initially opted not to file an answering affidavit.
Settlement negotiations ensued.
8.2.
On 23 October 2023 the second respondent realized that the applicant
wished
to pursue the application. The second respondent’s
attorney, Mr Verster, deposed to an affidavit seeking a
postponement.
The basis was that the second respondent (and
possibly other respondents) were only told on 23 October 2023 that
their settlement
proposals were not acceptable. The matter was
duly postponed.
8.3.
The second respondent’s counsel has attached to his Heads of
Argument,
a copy of the Notice of Motion, allegedly served on the
second respondent. It does not have the target date of 27
October
2024 typed or written in.
8.4.
It is argued, on the basis of an unreported judgment in
R H Plant
Hire CC v Kobus Vlok & 2 Others
(North Gauteng Case No
2023/018299) that the proceedings here are a nullity, because of
non-compliance with Uniform Rule 6(5)(b)(iii).
That sub-rule
contemplates that an applicant must state in the Notice of Motion
when the matter will be heard, if it is not opposed.
8.5.
The authorities relied on the
R H Plant Hire CC
-judgment that
are not applicable to the instant matter. The
R H Plant Hire
CC
-case relied essentially on
Simross Vintners (Pty) Ltd v
Vermeulen; VRH Africa (Pty) Ltd v Walter t/a Trend Litho;
Consolidated Credit Corporation
(Pty) Ltd v Van der Westhuizen
1978
(1) SA 779
(T). That case is authority for the proposition that
a Notice of Motion is a nullity if a target date is not stated.
The
Simross Vintners
-case dealt with cases where an applicant,
applying for sequestration of the respondent on a
nulla bona
(
and thus is exempted from having to serve on the respondent
)
addresses, i.e. seeks to give notice in terms of Rule 6(2) to the
respondent, but fails to state the date when the matter will
be
before Court.
8.6.
In the instant matter the application was served, opposition was
given and
ultimately an answering affidavit was filed. As
stated by the authors in
Erasmus
,
Superior Court Practice,
the reason for the sub-rule is that the respondent should be
afforded an opportunity to file an answer and/or to be heard.
Here the second respondent was served, unlike in the
Simross
Vintness
-case.
8.7.
After the
Simross Vintness
-judgment there have been several
judgments to the effect that procedural irregularity such as this,
are not nullities – and
can be condoned. See
Krugel v
Minister of Police
1981 (1) SA 765
(T).
8.8.
Mynhardt v Mynhardt
1986 (1) SA 456
(T) is authority for the
proposition that the fact that the second respondent answered,
constitutes a waiver of the right to rely
on the purported nullity of
the proceedings. This is in line with
Chasen v Ritter
1992 (4) SA 323
(SE), where the headnote states that “
distinction
between a proceeding which is irregular (and can be condoned) and
proceeding which is a nullity (and cannot be condoned)
is artificial
and serves no real purpose and of little practical value - ….”
.
Exactly the dictum also of the
Mynhardt
-case.
8.9.
I thus decline to hold that in the circumstances the applicants’
Notice
of Motion was a nullity. The alleged failure to include
a target date can, should and is hereby condoned.
8.10.
Significantly the Supreme Court of Appeal has latterly even condoned
the absence of the Registrar’s
signature on a Summons (which
was held in the circumstances to have interrupted prescription and
was not a nullity). This
overturned previous Appellate Division
authority on the point. See
Motloung & Another v
Sheriff, Pretoria East & Others
2020 (5) SA 123
(SCA) and
Minister of Prisons & Another v Jongilanga
1985 (3) SA 117
(A). The latter case held that whether or not procedural
irregularity results in a nullity, still has to be seen in the
context of the rules as a whole – also in the context of the
remedial provisions of Rules 27(3), which allows for condonation
being granted.
[9]
In the result I grant judgment against the first and
second
respondents, jointly and severally (also being joint and several with
the judgment granted against the first respondent)
for:
1.
Payment of R2,855,712.17 (Two Million Eight
Hundred and Fifty Five
Thousand Seven Hundred and Twelve Rand and Seventeen Cents), in
respect of account number 6[...];
2.
Payment of interest on the said amount of
R2,855,712.17 (Two Million
Eight Hundred and Fifty Five Thousand Seven Hundred and Twelve Rand
and Seventeen Cents) at the applicant’s
prime lending rate
(currently 11,25% (eleven comma twenty five per centum) per annum),
plus 2% (two per centum), thus 13,25% (thirteen
comma twenty five per
centum) per annum, compounded monthly, from 30 April 2023, until date
of payment, both days inclusive;
3.
The costs of this application subsequent to
31 July 2022 on the scale
as between attorney and client.
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 W Steyn
Instructed
by Thethe Swart Inc.
Representation
for the second respondent:
Adv
Gert Jacobs
Instructed
by Verster Attorneys
Representative
for third respondent:
Adv
P Marx
Instructed
by Gerhard Botha Attorneys
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