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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Saunderson v Land and Agricultural Development Bank of South Africa and Others (2024/090625)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 1100 (18 October 2024)
Saunderson v Land and Agricultural Development Bank of South Africa and Others (2024/090625)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 1100 (18 October 2024)
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sino date 18 October 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
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 2024-090625
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE: 18/10/24
SIGNATURE:
In the matter between:
JAN
HENDRIK GERHARDUS SAUNDERSON
Applicant
and
THE LAND AND
AGRICULTURAL
DEVELOPMENT
BANK OF SOUTH AFRICA
First
Respondent
ABSA
BANK
LIMITED
Second
Respondent
THE MINISTER OF THE
DEPARTMENT
OF
WATER AND SANITATION
Third
Respondent
BOEGOEBERG
WATER USER ASSOCIATION
Fourth
Respondent
JUDGMENT
The judgment and order
are accordingly published and distributed electronically. The date
for hand-down is deemed to be
18 October 2024
TEFFO,
J
:
Introduction
[1]
This is an urgent
application to compel the first respondent to issue settlement
figures to cancel the covering mortgage bond held
by the first
respondent over the immovable properties of the applicant and that
such settlement figures should exclude any and
all reference(s) to
legal costs.
[2]
The application is opposed
by the first respondent.
[3]
Condonation was granted
for the late filing of the answering and the replying affidavits.
The
parties
[4]
The applicant is Mr Jan
Hendrik Gerhardus Saunderson (“
Mr
Saunderson
”).
The first respondent is the Land and Agricultural Development Bank of
South Africa (“
Land
Bank
”).
The second respondent is Absa Bank Limited (“
Absa
Bank
”).
The third respondent is the Minister of the Department of Water and
Sanitation (“
the
Minister
”) and
the fourth respondent is Boegoeberg Water User Association
(“
Boegoeberg
”).
[5]
No relief is sought
against the second to the fourth respondents. These respondents were
only cited for any possible interest they
may have in the
application. The application was served on all these respondents and
none of them has filed a notice of intention
to oppose the
application.
Background
[6]
The applicant is the
registered owner of various properties namely, erven 1[…],
1[…], 1[…], 4[…], 4[…]
and 1[…],
all situated at the Karos Settlement, in David Kruiper Municipality,
Division Kenhardt, Northern Cape Province
(“
the
properties
”).
He concluded a revolving credit agreement with Unigro Financial
Services (Pty) Ltd (“
Unigro
”)
on 12 March 2019 and a term loan agreement on 15 May 2017. As
security for both agreements, the first respondent registered
bond(s)
over the immovable properties of the applicant. The second
respondent also holds bond(s) over erf 1[…].
[7]
On 29 October 2023, the
applicant sold the properties to YUD Agri (Pty) Ltd (“
YUD
”)
for a purchase consideration of R7 350 000,00 (seven
million three hundred and fifty thousand rand) (“
transaction
1
”). This
purchase consideration was to be utilised to settle the indebtedness
of the applicant to the second, third
and fourth respondents.
[8]
The applicant alleges that
he has made arrangements with the second to the fourth respondents
and undertaken by means of acknowledgement
of debts to pay their
debts as soon as the YUD transaction goes through.
[9]
He contends that the YUD
transaction (transaction 1) is ready for lodgement. He requested
settlement figures from the first respondent
in order for the
guarantees to be issued. The first respondent provided his attorneys
with settlement figures which include legal
fees. The legal fees
included in the settlement figures relate to proceedings between the
first respondent and an entity called
JHG Boerdery (Pty) Ltd (“
JHG
Boerdery
”), a
company of which he was a director.
[10]
The applicant claims that
there is no legal basis upon which the first respondent is entitled
to insist on adding legal fees against
the settlement figures on
accounts held in his personal name. He asserts that the conduct of
the first respondent has resulted
in a situation where the YUD
transaction (transaction 1) is now at risk which, in turn, could
cause all the payment plans he has
made to the second, third and
fourth respondents being put in danger.
[11]
He requests the court’s
urgent intervention to compel the first respondent to provide him and
his attorneys with the correct
settlement figures.
Urgency
[12]
The issue of whether a
matter should be enrolled and heard as an urgent application is
governed by the provisions of Uniform Rule
6(12). The Rule
provides as follows:
“
Rule 6(12) (a)
In urgent applications the Court or judge may dispense with forms and
service provided for in these rules and may
dispose of such matter at
such time and place and in such manner and in accordance with such
procedure (which shall as far as practicable
be in terms of these
rules) as it seems meet.
(b) In every
affidavit or petition filed in support of any application under
paragraph (a) of this subrule, the applicant
shall set forth
explicitly the circumstances which he avers render the matter urgent
and the reasons why he claims that he could
not be afforded
substantial redress at a hearing in due course.
(c)
…
”
[13]
The applicant who
approaches the court on urgency basis must apply for an order
condoning the non-compliance with the rules. He
or she must set forth
explicitly the circumstances which render the matter urgent. First
and where necessary, require that the
matter be heard outside of the
court’s usual urgent procedures. The applicant must show
an absence of substantial redress
if not heard as a matter of
urgency.
[14]
Whether
an applicant will not be able to obtain substantial redress in an
application in due course will be determined by the facts
of each
case. An applicant must make out his or her case in that
regard. The fact that the applicant wants the matter
to be
resolved urgently, does not render the matter urgent. The correct and
crucial test is whether, if the matter was to follow
its normal
course as laid down by the rules, an applicant will be afforded
substantial redress. If he cannot be afforded substantial
redress at
a hearing in due course, then the matter qualifies to be enrolled and
heard as an urgent application. If, however,
despite the
anxiety of an applicant, he can be afforded substantial redress in an
application in due course, the application does
not qualify to be
enrolled and heard as an urgent application
[1]
.
[15]
The
absence of substantial redress that is required by the rules is not
equivalent to the irreparable harm that is required before
the
granting of an interim relief. It is something less. The
applicant may still obtain redress in an application in due
course
but it may not be substantial
[2]
.
[16]
The applicant contends
that on 26 January 2024, the first respondent required guarantees to
be issued in the amount of R2 479 302,31
(“
settlement
1 amount
”).
This amount included legal fees under contract number 6006315 in the
amount of R96 579,57 (“
legal
fees 1
”) and in
the amount of R137 752,00 under contract number 6006339 (“
legal
fees 2
”) which
the first respondent unilaterally added to the account.
[17]
He avers that on 30
January 2024 his attorneys wrote to the first respondent and advised
it that JHG Boerdery settled all outstanding
amounts towards it under
the business rescue proceedings. His attorneys also pointed out that
no cost order was granted by any
court against him or JHG Boerdery
(by virtue of him signing as surety for JHG Boerdery).
[18]
In a letter dated 19 March
2024 the first respondent advised his attorneys that its attorneys
were requested to provide any outstanding
legal costs incurred so
that the legal costs can be paid in full as part of the guarantee
requirements. The applicant claims that
as per the new statement that
was attached to the letter (H6), the legal fees 2 amount of
(R137 752,00) were written off by
the first respondent and as at
19 March 2024, JHG Boerdery owed the first respondent R0,00.
[19]
In response to annexure
H6, the applicant’s attorneys addressed a letter to the first
respondent dated 20 March 2024 in which
they reiterated his request
to the first respondent to provide an explanation for legal fees 1 in
the amount of R96 579,57
charged by the first respondent on the
revolving credit account and a court order or taxed bill of costs
granted against him in
his personal capacity which entitled the first
respondent to claim legal fees from him. His attorneys also
required the first
respondent to urgently provide them with the
amended settlement figures to enable them to process the guarantees
in favour of the
first respondent.
[20]
On 26 March 2024 the first
respondent responded and advised that paragraph 23 of the loan
agreement which the applicant signed and
accepted, provides that
Unigro can at any time cede and transfer its rights and obligations
pertaining to the term loan and/or
the revolving credit agreements to
it. The letter further stated that the amount of R1 126 826,00
is the (
in duplum
)
amount on the revolving credit account and that the legal fees (legal
fees 1) are additional to the
in
duplum
amount.
[21]
There was further
correspondence between the parties and on 4 April 2024 the
applicant’s attorneys received correspondence
from the first
respondent’s attorney, Mr Strydom. In the email, Mr
Strydom referred to the liquidation and business
rescue applications
of JHG Boerdery and his engagement with Mr Fischer (“
the
Business Rescue Practitioner
”).
The letter stated that JHG Boerdery made an offer for payment of the
capital, interest and costs of the first respondent.
However, the
offer was subsequently withdrawn. Mr Strydom further indicated that
he had instructed his cost consultants to prepare
detailed accounts
and that the accounts will be presented to the first respondent and
the applicant’s attorneys. Mr
Strydom advised the first
respondent that as the previous undertakings were withdrawn and the
business rescue plan was not being
honoured, the first respondent
must include the legal costs in the settlement amount (cancellation
figures).
[22]
The applicant alleges that
since 4 April 2024 to the date of filing the application, his
attorneys have not received any accounts
for legal costs from the
first respondent’s attorneys.
[23]
In a letter from the
applicant’s attorneys dated 17 May 2024 to the first
respondent’s attorneys, the applicant’s
attorneys
recorded their disagreement and the incorrect interpretation
regarding the first respondent’s right to claim legal
costs
from him in his personal capacity. They also requested the
first respondent to urgently provide them with the latest
revised
settlement figures calculated up and until 31 July 2024.
[24]
From 28 May to 10 June
2024 the applicant’s attorneys repeatedly requested revised
clearance figures from the first respondent
and on 10 June 2024, the
first respondent provided the revised settlement figures in the
amount of R2 404 794,54.
There were no statements
attached to these figures and/or any calculation as to how the
settlement amount 2 was made up or calculated.
[25]
The applicant claims that
although he did not agree with the figures (in particular settlement
amount 2), in order not to further
delay the YUD transaction, he
instructed his attorneys to proceed to issue the guarantee in favour
of the first respondent.
[26]
He alleges that on 21 July
2024 his attorneys forwarded a draft guarantee for approval and issue
to the first respondent’s
attorneys in settlement amount 2. His
attorneys also informed all the affected parties in the YUD
transaction by email on 22 July
2024 that they had received all the
guarantees in respect of the YUD transaction. Furthermore, that all
the required documents
will be forwarded to the correspondent
attorneys in Kimberley for simultaneous lodgement in the Deeds Office
by all the affected
parties, once they were in a position to do so.
[27]
On 22 July 2024 the
attorneys of the second respondent were provided with a guarantee. On
the same day and 24 July 2024 the applicant’s
attorneys
requested the first respondent to provide them with the contact
details of their correspondent attorneys in Kimberley.
However, they
did not receive any response. On 25 July 2024 the applicant’s
attorneys issued the guarantee for the payment
of settlement amount 2
in accordance with the guarantee requirements issued by the first
respondent on 10 June 2024.
[28]
On 26 July 2024 the second
respondent’s attorneys confirmed receipt of the guarantee and
also advised that they would attend
to transactions 1 and 2
simultaneously as the properties are held under the same title deed
and bond. The applicant asserts that
on 26 and 29 July 2024 his
attorneys requested the first respondent to urgently provide them
with the contact details of their
correspondent attorneys in
Kimberley who would attend to the cancellation of their existing
bonds. They still did not receive any
response and on 29 July 2024,
his attorneys received an email from the first respondent stating
that the guarantee requirements
issued on 10 June 2024 were not
correct as there are legal fees outstanding and that as soon as the
first respondent received the
legal fees from its attorney, it will
provide the new guarantee requirements.
[29]
The applicant further
alleges that on 31 July 2024 his attorneys wrote to the first
respondent explaining that he was not indebted
to it in respect of
the legal costs claimed from him and further requesting it to provide
his attorneys with the guarantee requirements
for the revised
settlement amount 3 which amount should exclude all legal fees,
together with the contact details of their corresponding
attorneys in
Kimberley to attend to the bond cancellation on or before close of
business on Friday, 2 August 2024, failing which
he will approach
this court on an urgent basis to seek a declaratory order against the
first respondent.
[30]
He did not receive any
response from the first respondent and on 5 August 2024, his
attorneys wrote to the first respondent again
and attempted to find a
solution to the dispute relating to the legal costs to allow the
transactions to proceed to registration.
His attorneys requested the
first respondent to provide them with the revised settlement amount 3
which should provide for legal
fees separately before the close of
business on Monday, 5 August 2024. The proposal requested that the
amount for settlement should
be accompanied by a document indicating
how the amounts were calculated and that he will pay the amount for
legal fees into the
trust account of his attorney until such time
that the dispute was resolved.
[31]
Later in the day on 5
August 2024 his attorneys received correspondence from the first
respondent in which the first respondent
reiterated its stance
regarding the legal costs incurred in the liquidation application
against JHG Boerdery and the summonses
that were issued against the
sureties. The first respondent also indicated that it was still
awaiting information and outstanding
invoices from its attorneys
which will be presented to a committee for their consideration.
[32]
The applicant contends
that the first respondent has not provided him with any court order
that entitles it to claim legal costs
against him.
[33]
It was submitted that the
applicant stands to lose his entire livelihood as there are other
affected parties (the second to the
fourth respondents) who, in the
absence of finalising the transaction by obtaining final cancellation
figures, will enforce their
respective claims against him and this
will result in catastrophic losses for the applicant.
[34]
He claims that he has
explored every possible avenue before approaching the court and that
he has no other satisfactory alternative
remedy in law but to
approach the court on an urgent basis.
[35]
Relying
on the decision in
Luna
Meubel Vervaardigers
[3]
,
Mr
J G Cillliers for the first respondent argued that it is trite that
in urgent applications the degree of relaxation of the Rules
and of
ordinary practice should not be greater than the degree of urgency
that the circumstances of the case demand. Further submissions
made
were that the applicant fails to make out a proper case in its
founding affidavit for the extremely urgent basis on which
he elected
to bring the application; the alleged grounds for urgency relied upon
by the applicant and the nature of the relief
sought do not justify
the degree of relaxation of the Rules of Court sought by the
applicant; there is no reason why the first
respondent could and
should not have been afforded a reasonable period for the filing of
its answering affidavit; the first respondent
is severely prejudiced
by the degree of relaxation of the Rules sought by the applicant.
[36]
In the heads of argument
filed on behalf of the first respondent, it was submitted that the
applicant’s failure to afford
the first respondent a reasonable
period for filing its answering affidavit infringes on the first
respondent’s right to
be heard, and should not be allowed.
Furthermore, that the applicant has been aware of the dispute since
January 2024. If any urgency
exists (which is denied), it was
self-created by the applicant’s failure to bring the
application earlier. He delayed
in bringing the application
from January 2024 until 13 August 2024.
[37]
The
Court in
Luna
Meubel Vervaardigers
[4]
had this to say:
“
Practitioners
should carefully analyse the facts of each case to determine, for the
purpose of setting the case down for hearing,
whether a greater or
lesser degree of relaxation of the Rules and of ordinary practice of
the Court is required. The degree of
relaxation should not be greater
than the exigency of the case demands. It must commensurate
therewith. Mere lip service
to the requirements of Rule 6(12)
(b) will not do and an applicant must make out a case in the founding
affidavit to justify the
particular extent of the departure from the
norm …
”
[38]
The essence of the first
respondent’s contentions is that the period afforded to it for
filing its papers is not reasonable.
It is contended that the first
respondent was served with an application that comprises 160 pages by
email on 13 August 2024 and
only afforded less than 2 (two) court
days to consider it, consult with its legal representatives and then
file its notice of intention
to oppose. The first respondent
further complains that the applicant’s founding affidavit
contains detailed allegations
referring to a number of annexures
which it needed to deal with comprehensively in an answering
affidavit. It was only afforded
3 (three) court days from the date of
service of the application to file its answering affidavit. It is
alleged that the first
respondent was unable to prepare an answering
affidavit dealing fully and comprehensively with the averments in the
founding affidavit
in the time afforded.
[39]
It is correct that the
application was served on the first respondent on 13 August 2024 by
email and that the first respondent was
only afforded until 15 August
2024 to file a notice of intention to oppose the application. The
founding affidavit consists of
38 pages and numerous documents have
been annexed to the founding affidavit. Without condoning and
encouraging what most practitioners
do in not affording their
opponents reasonable time frames to file their opposing papers, I do
not agree that in the matter
in
casu
this was the
case. It is apparent from the papers that the parties in this matter
have been in constant communication shortly after
the applicant sold
the properties. Most of the documents attached to the application
relate to the communication between the parties
regarding the issue
at hand. There is nothing new in the documents and they relate to the
allegations made in the founding affidavit.
From 13 August 2024 the
first respondent was aware of the application. It was able to consult
its attorneys who are not new to
the matter and then filed its notice
of intention to oppose the application before the close of business
of 15 August 2024.
[40]
The first respondent had
from 13 August 2024 to start preparing its answering affidavit.
It was expected to file its answering
affidavit on or before 19
August 2024. It did not comply with the time frames given by the
applicant. Although the answering affidavit
was signed on 23 August
2024, it was only filed on 26 August 2024. The first respondent
sought condonation for the late filing
of its answering affidavit.
The application was not opposed and I condoned the late filing of the
answering affidavit as well as
the replying affidavit.
[41]
The first respondent
requested the court to postpone the application if it was willing to
entertain it to afford it a reasonable
opportunity to file a more
comprehensive answering affidavit. I did not deem it necessary to
postpone the application as I found
the information in the answering
affidavit more than sufficient to enable me to deal with the
application.
[42]
Mr Celliers on behalf of
the first respondent submitted that the dispute regarding the legal
costs already existed shortly after
October 2023 and finally
resurfaced in June 2024 when the first respondent clearly indicated
that it would not provide the applicant
with the settlement figures
without the legal costs. Mr Jacobs for the applicant conceded
that the applicant was aware of
the dispute from January 2024.
However, on 10 June 2024 the situation changed when the first
respondent provided the applicant
with settlement figures which did
not include legal costs. It was only on 29 July 2024 that the
applicant received the news
from the first respondent that the
figures provided on 10 June 2024 were not correct and that they
needed to add legal costs.
The applicant’s attorneys
requested an undertaking from the first respondent before 5 August
2024, the undertaking was not
provided and on 13 August 2024 the
application was launched.
[43]
Mr Celliers further
submitted that the applicant has an alternative remedy in that the
parties discussed how the matter can be resolved.
He referred me to
paragraphs 11.26 of the founding affidavit and 36 of the answering
affidavit to support his argument.
[44]
At paragraph 11.26 of the
founding affidavit the applicant alleges that his attorneys made a
proposal to the first respondent to
provide them with the revised
settlement figures which should include legal costs separately to
enable him to pay the amount for
legal costs into the trust account
of his attorney, so that the amount can be kept in his attorney’s
trust account until
such time that the dispute is resolved. More or
less the same tender was made by the first respondent’s
attorney, Mr Strydom
save to say that the difference between the two
proposals was that the proposal on behalf of the first respondent
requires the
applicant to pay the amount for legal costs into the
trust account of an independent attorney.
[45]
Mr Celliers submitted that
all the applicant can do is to pay the amount for the legal costs as
proposed by the first respondent
and/or provide for a guarantee
including costs which costs he can later claim from the first
respondent. Mr Jacobs disagreed that
the applicant has an alternative
remedy. He submitted that the applicant would not settle on the first
respondent’s terms.
As I understood Mr Jacobs’ argument,
the applicant did not agree to pay the amount for legal costs into
the trust account
of an independent attorney as per the first
respondent’s tender because his stance has always been that he
was not liable
to pay any of the first respondent’s legal
costs.
[46]
In
East
Rock Trading 7 (Pty) Ltd and Another v Eagle Valley Granite (Pty) Ltd
and Others
[5]
,
the Court held that the delay in instituting proceedings is not on
its own, a ground for refusing to regard the matter as urgent.
A
court is obliged to consider the circumstances of the case and the
explanation given. The important issue is whether, despite
the
delay, the applicant can or cannot be afforded substantial redress at
a hearing in due course. A delay might be an indication
that the
matter is not as urgent as the applicant would want the court to
believe. On the other hand, a delay may have been
caused by the
fact that the applicant was attempting to settle the matter or
collect more facts with regard thereto.
[47]
It is clear from the
papers that from January 2024 since this dispute about legal costs
started, there were ongoing discussions
between the parties until on
10 June 2024 when the first respondent issued settlement figures
without the legal costs and the applicant
continued with the process
of ensuring that bond cancellations are done and the registration of
the transfer of the properties
continue. This process was
halted after the applicant’s attorneys received correspondence
from the first respondent
that the figures were not correct and that
the amount for legal costs should be added. Immediately
thereafter, the applicant
further attempted to resolve the matter
with the first respondent. This did not work and the application was
launched.
[48]
In my view there was no
delay in bringing the application. The delay that could have been
there have been caused by the fact that
the applicant was attempting
to settle the matter. I am persuaded from the facts of this matter
that the applicant cannot be afforded
substantial redress at a
hearing in due course. I conclude that the application qualifies to
be enrolled and heard on an urgent
basis.
The
interdict and applicable legal principles
[49]
The relief sought by the
applicant is in the form of a final interdict.
[50]
The
requirements for the granting of a final interdict are trite. The
applicant is required to establish: a clear right; injury
actually
committed or reasonably apprehended, and the absence of any other
satisfactory remedy
[6]
.
[51]
A
clear right is established when an applicant on a balance of
probabilities, proves facts which in terms of substantive law,
establish
the right relied on.
[7]
It is incumbent upon the applicant to prove a clear right in order to
obtain a final interdict against the respondent. In
order to obtain a
final interdict, the applicant must prove all the requisites of a
final interdict. If one of the requisites
is not established,
then an interdict cannot be granted.
[52]
In
his book Willes’
Mortgage
and Pledge in South Africa
[8]
,
the
learned author, Scott says the following:
“
The right of
the mortgagee or pledgee is to retain his hold over the secured
property until his debt is paid and, if the mortgagor
or pledgor is
in default, to have his property sold and obtain payment of his debt
out of the proceeds of the sale.
”
[53]
In
Absa
Bank Ltd v Lombard Insurance Company Ltd, Firstrand Bank Ltd v
Lombard Insurance Company Ltd
[9]
,
the Court had this to say:
“…
Generally
the discharge of a debt requires an agreement between the parties to
that effect … It requires the parties to be
in agreement as to
the debt, whether that of the payer or that of a third party, to be
paid.
”
[54]
In
Nulliah
v Harper
[10]
,
the Court held that where immovable property is mortgaged, payment of
the mortgaged debt obliges the mortgagee
pari
passu
to cancel the bond or cause it to be cancelled in the Deeds Registry.
[55]
In
Tskanae
and Another v Firstrand Bank Ltd and Others
[11]
it was held that the mortgage bond restricts the borrower’s
ownership rights until the debt is repaid. Therefore, it
is
evident that the mortgage bond is crucial to secure the loan
advanced.
[56]
In
Panamo
Properties v Land and Agricultural Development Bank
[12]
(Panamo)
,
the Court had this to say:
“
It is clear
that the bond was initially passed to secure the performance of
Panamo under the loan. Its terms make it accessory to
the loan. Once
the loan is set aside as invalid, unless the bond is accessory to a
different obligation than the loan, it must
suffer the same fate as
does the loan and be subject to cancellation. However, even though
the loan is void, this does not in itself
mean that there is no
obligation secured by the bond …
In
the first place, the bond is a covering bond. A covering bond may
provide security for more than one specific debt. The
bond may
therefore afford security for more than obligations arising under the
loan. It is not necessarily extinguished merely
because the
loan is void. It complies with the formalities required by
section 51 of the Deeds Registries Act for those covering
future
indebtedness. The nature of the bond thus does not exclude the
possibility that an enrichment claim may be recovered.
”
Discussion
Have
the requirements of a final interdict been met
?
[57]
The applicant alleges that
he has a clear right to the fulfilment by the first respondent of its
obligation to provide him with
the requisite settlement figures at
his election to sell the properties. Upon request the first
respondent was obliged to, within
a reasonable time, provide the
correct settlement figures. He also has the right not to be held
liable for the costs that the first
respondent is not entitled to and
which he is not liable for.
[58]
The applicant referred me
to a statement issued by the first respondent’s attorneys,
annexure R2, which he submitted it indicates
that the purported legal
fees relate to other legal entities and not to him personally. He
disagrees with the contention by the
first respondent that it is
entitled to levy the purported legal fees against his properties when
issuing the cancellation figures.
He further disputes that by virtue
of the fact that he had signed surety for the other separate legal
entities, he is liable for
the legal costs of the first respondent
against the other entities.
[59]
It was argued on behalf of
the applicant that the first respondent is not in possession of any
court order directing any of the
entities, or the applicant to pay
its legal costs. Further, that the legal costs associated with the
various legal matters are
still to be argued and no costs order has
been granted in favour of the first respondent.
[60]
It was submitted that no
bill of costs has been drafted nor presented to the taxing master for
taxation. Furthermore, the applicant
contends that should such cost
order(s) be granted in the future, they will first be required to be
taxed whereafter it will be
the responsibility of the legal entities
against whom the order was granted and taxed, to pay such costs
order(s).
[61]
A concern was raised
regarding the discrepancies in the initial cancellation figures of
the first respondent that included amounts
of R96 579,57 and
R137 752,00 with a total of R234 331,57 in legal fees and
the amount of the security of R521 913,43
that the first
respondent demands.
[62]
On the other hand, the
first respondent claims that the applicant has failed to demonstrate
a clear right for the relief sought.
It asserts that it has a right
to refuse to consent to cancellation of the covering bond at this
stage in terms of the terms and
conditions of the covering bond
registered against the properties relating to this application, in
favour of Unigro. All the right,
title and interest in the said
covering bond were subsequently ceded to the first respondent on 22
November 2017.
[63]
The first respondent
referred me to the covering bond, annexure “
R1
”
attached to the answering affidavit which copy of the bond (number
B1290/2017) it is alleged has been registered over one
of the bonded
properties in favour of Unigro. The first respondent contends
that under the bond, the applicant provided the
bonded properties to
Unigro as security for all his current and future liabilities under
the revolving credit agreement and the
term loan agreement referred
to in the founding affidavit. I was also referred to clause 27 of
both the revolving credit agreement
and term loan agreement, in terms
of which the applicant is liable for any legal costs incurred by
Unigro to recover any amount
due or to enforce any of Unigro’s
rights under the revolving credit agreement and/or the term loan
agreement on a scale as
between attorney and own client.
[64]
Moreover, it was submitted
that apart from the indebtedness of the applicant towards the first
respondent in terms of the above
two agreements, the applicant is
also indebted to the first respondent in terms of a suretyship
agreement that he signed in favour
of Unigro. The applicant
accepted liability for the indebtedness of JHG Boerdery. In addition,
the applicant further agreed
to the registration of a covering bond
over the properties relevant to this application and the covering
bond was subsequently
registered over the said properties of the
applicant. The first respondent contends that the cancellation
of this covering
bond forms the subject matter of the application
in
casu
.
[65]
It is averred that all
these rights were subsequently ceded to the first respondent by
Unigro in terms of the agreements with the
applicant as well as the
covering bond.
[66]
It was submitted on behalf
of the first respondent that it is a specific term of the covering
bond that the bond also covers and
provides security to the first
respondent relating to any indebtedness that the applicant has or may
have with regard to the first
respondent in terms of his suretyship.
The relevant portion of the covering bond reads as follows:
“
EN
TEN OPSIGTE VAN die bedrae verskuldig ten opsigte van die oorsake
hierin genome aangegaan deur die ander persone, firmas, regspersone
of enigiemand anders
ten opsigte waarvan die
verbandgewer homself as borg, medehoofskuldenaar of andersins ten
opsigte van sodanige skuld, teenoor die
verbandgewer verbind het of
hierna mag verbind
.
”
[67]
The first respondent
further contends that in terms of the covering bond it is
entitled in its sole discretion to collect
and/or recover any amount
due and/or covered by the bond which include the recovering of costs.
On this basis it was submitted
that the legal costs relating to JHG
Boerdery (the principal debtor) are covered by the security provided
by the covering bond
that forms the subject matter of this
application.
[68]
In
an application for a final interdict, the grant or refusal of an
interdict is a matter within the discretion of the court hearing
the
application and depends on the facts peculiar to each individual case
and the right the applicant is seeking to enforce or
protect.
[13]
[69]
When
the proceedings are on affidavits the applicant must satisfy the
court on the admitted or undisputed facts by the same balance
of
probabilities required in every civil suit, of the facts necessary
for his success in the application
[14]
.
[70]
In
motion proceedings final relief may be granted where the disputes of
fact have arisen on affidavits if those facts averred in
the
applicant’s affidavit which have been admitted by the
respondent together with the facts averred by the respondent, justify
such a final order provided that the denial by the respondent of a
fact alleged by the applicant does not raise a real, genuine
or
bona
fide
dispute of fact. In such a case final relief may be granted if the
court is satisfied as to the inherent credibility of the applicant’s
factual averment
[15]
.
[71]
It is common cause between
the parties that JHG Boerdery obtained a term loan from Unigro in
2017 as well as a revolving credit
facility. Unigro as security
for the term loan and the revolving credit facility provided to JHG
Boerdery, registered bond(s)
over JHG Boerdery’s properties.
[72]
At some stage JHG Boerdery
was unable to meet its obligations towards Unigro. Consequently, the
first respondent who took cession
of the book debts of Unigro,
instituted legal proceedings against JHG Boerdery and the sureties of
JHG Boerdery who included the
applicant. An application for the
liquidation of JHG Boerdery was also launched.
[73]
The applicant contends
that these proceedings including the liquidation application against
JHG Boerdery were defended and after
all the papers were filed in the
liquidation application and before the application could be heard,
business rescue proceedings
were instituted and the application for
business rescue was granted. The liquidation application and the
actions instituted against
the sureties never proceeded. He claims
that in terms of the business rescue plan that was accepted, the
properties of JHG Boerdery
were sold and from the proceeds of the
sale the full amount that JHG Boerdery owed to the first respondent
was settled.
[74]
He further alleges that
JHG Boerdery does not owe the first respondent’s attorneys any
amount of money in respect of legal
costs as the attorneys could not
tax their legal account (Strydom) nor claim legal costs. The
liquidation application never proceeded
and no cost order was awarded
in favour of the first respondent against JHG Boerdery.
[75]
Mr
Jacobs for the applicant placed reliance on the decision of
Constitutional Court in
Nkata
v Firstrand Bank Ltd
[16]
and argued that the first respondent cannot just unilaterally add
costs on the settlement figures and force the applicant to pay
them
on attorney and client scale. The costs must be sanctioned by a costs
order. They must also be taxed. He further submitted
that if there is
a suretyship agreement, it must make provision for attorney and
client costs. Furthermore, that before a party
can be entitled to
costs, there must be a finding in that party’s favour followed
by an order for costs which must be taxed.
[76]
The
Court in the
Nkata
matter
[17]
held that legal
costs would become due and payable only when they are reasonable,
agreed or taxed and on due notice to the consumer.
While I concur
with the decision in the Nkata matter, I do not agree with the
argument by Mr Jacobs. It does not follow that if
costs are not
taxed, it means they were not incurred. He is correct to say until an
account has been drawn and agreed between the
parties or taxed in
case of a dispute, they are due and payable.
[77]
The terms of the covering
bond registered over the properties of the applicant have been
referred to at paragraphs 66 and 67 of
the judgment. I fully agree
with Mr Celliers that in order to establish whether the applicant is
entitled to cancel the covering
bond, one will have to look at the
agreements which include the covering bond. In terms of the
covering bond that the first
respondent registered over the
properties of the applicant, by virtue of him being a surety of JHG
Boerdery in respect of its indebtedness
to the first respondent,
which form the subject matter of the application in casu, the first
respondent is entitled in its sole
discretion to collect and recover
any amount due and/or covered by the bond which include the
recovering of costs.
[78]
At paragraph 3.7 of his
replying affidavit the applicant states the following:
“
The first
respondent remains fully entitled to obtain a cost order against JHG
Boerdery and, then, in terms of the costs order and
subsequent Taxing
Master’s allocator claim costs against JHG Boerdery or against
myself in my capacity as surety.
”
[79]
While the applicant denies liability for the legal costs of the first
respondent relating to
the litigation against JHG Broedery, he
concedes that the first respondent can claim such costs against him
once it has obtained
a costs order against him and a bill has been
drawn and then taxed. There can be no doubt that costs were incurred
by the first
respondent when it instituted litigation against JHG
Boerdery and its sureties. Now the question that becomes pertinent in
this
application, is what happens pending the finalisation of that
process of obtaining a costs order, drawing a bill and ensuring that
it is agreed or taxed? The first respondent contends that
it is entitled to hold on its security until its debt is
paid. The
applicant wants the court to compel the first respondent to abandon
its security when its debt is not paid. I agree that
the first
respondent has to retain its hold over secured property until its
debt has been paid.
[80]
As things stand the parties cannot agree on the issue of the
liability for costs. This dispute
is a real, genuine and a
bona
fide
dispute which cannot be resolved on the papers. Relying on the
decision in
Plascon-Evans
Paints
[18]
,
a final relief can therefore not be granted under the circumstances.
[81]
Put differently, I am not persuaded that the applicant has
established facts on a balance of
probabilities which in terms of
substantive law establishes the right that he relies on
[19]
.
He has therefore failed to establish a clear right. In order to
obtain a final interdict, the applicant must prove all the
requisites
of a final interdict. If one of them is not established, then the
final interdict cannot be granted. As a result, I
do not find it
necessary to deal with the other requisites of a final interdict.
[82]
Under the circumstances, I cannot order cancellation of the covering
bond where there is a dispute
between the parties relating to
liability for costs.
[83]
Consequently, the application is bound to fail.
Costs
[84]
Mr Celliers submitted that the application justifies a cost order on
scale C which costs should
include costs for the employment of two
counsel. The decision with regard to costs lies in the
discretion of the Court.
Having considered the matter, I am not
persuaded that it justifies a costs order on scale C and the
employment of two counsel.
I conclude that the appropriate
costs order should be on scale B.
[85]
In the result the following order is made:
85.1
The application is dismissed.
85.2
The applicant is to pay costs on scale B.
M J TEFFO
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Appearances
For the
applicant
M Jacobs
Instructed
by
C J Willemse & Babinsky Attorneys
For the first
respondent
J G Celliers & J S Griesel
Instructed
by
Strydom & Bredenkamp Inc
Date of
hearing
27 August 2024
Date of
judgment
18 October 2024
[1]
East
Rock Trading 7 (Pty) Ltd and Another v Eagle Valley Granite (Pty)
Ltd and Others
[2012]
JOL 28244
(GSJ) at [7] and [9]
[2]
East
Rock Trading 7 (Pty) Ltd and Another v Eagle Valley Granite (Pty)
Ltd and Others
at [7]
[3]
Luna
Meubel Vervaardigers (Edms) Bpk v Makin and Another
1977 (4) SA 135
(WLD) at 136D
[4]
At
137E-F
[5]
Supra
[8]
[6]
Dyalo
v Mnquma Local Municipality and Another
(8490/2016)
[2016] ZAECMHC 36 (9 September 2016)
[7]
LAWSA
Vol.II, 2
nd
Ed.397
[8]
Scott
and Scott:
Willes’
Mortgage and Pledge in South Africa 3ed
1987
p 5
[9]
[2012]
ZASCA 139
;
2012 (6) SA 569
(SCA) (
Lombard
)
at para 18
[10]
1930
AD 141
at 151-2 and 155
[11]
(A250/2021)
[2023] ZAGPPHC 596 (18 July 2023) at para 25
[12]
(20051/2014)
[2015] ZASCA 70
(22 May 2015) at para 29 and 31
[13]
Candid
Electronics (Pty)Ltd v Merchandise Buying Syndicate(Pty)Ltd
1992(2)
SA 459 (C) at 326
[14]
Mbangi
v Dobsonville City Council
1991 (2) SA 330
(W) at 335; See also
Mankowitz
v Koewenthal
1982 (3) SA 758
(A) at 787F-H
[15]
Plascon-Evans
Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
1984 (3) SA 623 (A)
[16]
Nkata
v Firstrand Bank Ltd
2016 (4) SA 257 (CC)
[17]
Supra
[18]
Plascon-Evans
Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
supra
[19]
LAWSA
Vol 11, 2
nd
Ed 397
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