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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 Limited v Brilliant Car Sales CC and Others (17496/2017)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 1193 (20 November 2024)
Standard Bank of South Africa Limited v Brilliant Car Sales CC and Others (17496/2017)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 1193 (20 November 2024)
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sino date 20 November 2024
SAFLII
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Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
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Policy
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
number: 17496/2017
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHERS JUDGES: YES/NO
(3)
REVISED
DATE
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
THE STANDARD BANK OF
PLAINTIFF
SOUTH
AFRICA LIMITED
Registration
number 1962/000738/06
and
BRILLIANT CAR SALES
CC
FIRST DEFENDANT
Registration
number 1996/006921/23
ADAM
ABOO OSMAN
SECOND DEFENDANT
FEROZA
ABOO OSMAN
THIRD DEFENDANT
JUDGMENT
MOTHA,
J
:
Introduction
1)
On 16 October 2006, the plaintiff and the first defendant entered
into a written loan agreement in terms whereof
the plaintiff lent and
advanced the sum of R631 900.00 to the first defendant. As
security for the repayment of the loan,
a sectional continuing
covering mortgage bond SB209593/2006 was registered in favour of the
plaintiff. The question that is front
and centre in this case is
whether the second defendant’s business friend paid the sum of
R650 000.00 in full and final
settlement of the loan, on 17
September 2014. The plaintiff disputes ever receiving a dime from the
defendants after 15 July 2008.
The
parties
2)
The plaintiff is the Standard Bank of South Africa
Limited, a company with limited liability, incorporated in accordance
with the
Company Laws of the Republic of South Africa and registered
as a Bank in terms of Banks Act No.94 of 1990; and Credit Provider as
envisaged under
section 40
of the
National Credit Act No 34 of 2005
.
3)
The first defendant is Brilliant Car Sales CC, a
Close Corporation registered and incorporated in accordance with the
Close Corporation
Act of the Republic of South Africa.
4)
The Second and Third defendants are Adam Aboo
Osman and Feroza Aboo Osman, the adult male and female, respectively,
who are married
to each other in Community of Property.
The
pleaded facts in brief
Plaintiff
5)
The plaintiff’s pleaded case is that the first defendant
entered into a written loan agreement with it,
under Account number
3[…]. On 9 October 2006, the second and third respondents
bound themselves as sureties for the repayment
of the loan, when due.
It is common cause that in terms of the agreement the plaintiff lent
and advanced to the first Defendant
the sum of R631 900.00. As
security for the repayment of the loan, as already stated, a
Sectional Continuing Covering Mortgage
Bond was registered in favour
of the plaintiff, for the sum of R624 0720.00 together with an
additional amount of R156 018.00.
6)
Furthermore, in terms of the agreement, the first defendant
hypothecated to the plaintiff the immovable
property described as:
(a)
Section No. 22 as shown and more fully
described
on the Sectional Plan No.
SS1205/2006 in the scheme known as Hill Top in respect of the land
and building or buildings situated
at Celtisdal Extension 20
Township, Local Authority: City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality,
of which the floor area, according
to the said Sectional Plan is 93
square meters in extent; and
(b)
An undivided share in the common property
in the scheme apportioned to the said section in accordance with the
participation quota
as endorsed on said Sectional Plan.
Held by Deed of Transfer
No ST 168497/2006
7)
The nub of the plaintiff’s case is that the
first respondent breached the loan agreement by not adhering to the
repayments.
In consequence, the defendants owed the sum of R1 240
515.39 together with interest at a rate of 8.60% per annum.
It
is common cause that the requirements of the
National Credit Act,
such
as complying with
section 129
letter, have been met.
Defendants
8)
The
substratum of the defendants’
plea is that due to health reasons, the second defendant’s last
payment was on 15 July
2008. Nevertheless, Mr Ebrahim Goolam Mahomed
Amod (Mr. Amod) paid the full outstanding amount in cash, on 17
September 2014. The
amount paid in full and final settlement of the
loan was the sum R650 000.00. Therefore, the defendants are no
longer indebted
to the plaintiff. Subsequently to this payment, the
defendants’ pleaded that the plaintiff, by post, dispatched a
letter
to them acknowledging payment.
The
evidence
Evidence
for the plaintiff
9)
The plaintiff called two witnesses to the stand. First to testify was
Ms. Wall, a Legal Manager employed by
the plaintiff for the last five
years. Then it was Ms. Davids, a subpoenaed witness who used to work
for the plaintiff. Referring
to a fake liquidation court order -
which is most worrying as it reflected that the order was granted by
Madam Justice Jansen Van
Niewenhuizen AJ, on 9 September 2014 –
which the defendant confirmed was fake, Wall testified that the first
defendant was
not liquidated and still owed the plaintiff.
10)
Having confirmed that the parties entered into a loan agreement, and
the first defendant breached the agreement, Wall testified
that the
defendant’s last payment towards the loan, in the sum of R
7768.40, was on 15 July 2008 as reflected in the statements
annexed
to the particulars of claim. Therefore, she testified, the plaintiff
issued summons seeking an order declaring specially
executable
Section No 22 on Sectional Plan
SS1205/2006
in the scheme called Hill
Top; in respect of the land and buildings situated at Celtisdal
Extension 20 Township, Local Authority:
City Of Tshwane Metropolitan
Municipality with 93 square metre per Sectional Plan, held by Deed of
Tranfer No ST168497/2006.
11)
She testified that at the time when the summons was issued the
amount outstanding was R1240 515.39, as per the certificate
of
balance. From 15 July 2008 there were several payments which were
reversed until 15 July 2011, when activities on the account
ceased.
As at 2024 April 23, the account was in arrears in the sum of R2131
925.77.
12)
Under cross-examination, she conceded that she did not know
much about the matter because she had not yet joined the plaintiff
when the litigation started. She was just familiar with the process.
Asked about her assertion that the defendants do not reside
in the
property, she stated that she obtained that information from the
legal representatives. She said the bank uses the information
from
evaluators to determine if people reside in their houses. She
conceded that on the available evaluation it was possible that
the
defendants stayed there.
13)
When dealing with the letter which was alleged to have been
authored by the plaintiff, she disputed that the letter was
sent by
Standard bank, not least the amount owing was far higher at that time
was R1 029 104. 26, and not the R650 000.00.
She insisted that
R650 000.00 would never have been given as a full and final
settlement amount. Moreover, she testified that
it was not common
practice for the Bank correspondence to “pp” letters, as
was done in this letter.
14)
Responding to the questions from the court, she pointed out
that in the affidavit Ebrahim Goolan Mahomed Amod said he
“went
to the bank and spoke to David Harber and requested a settlement
amount.” He wrote “I thereafter made a
cash payment of
R650 000.00 in full on 17 September 2014.” This, she
testified, was not possible for Mr Amod to be provided
with a
settlement amount because the bank would not give out customers’
information to third parties. That person, she continued,
would have
to be in possession of a Power of Attorney. She testified that after
conducting a global search on her computer, Standard
Bank did not
have an employee called Mr David Harber. I found her to be an honest
and a credible witness who conceded whenever
the moment called for
it.
15)
The second witness for the plaintiff was Ms Bridget Davids who
left the Bank in 2016. She testified that she worked at
Credit and
Recovery Department for over 10 years. She was confronted with a
letter, allegedly signed by her. Firstly, she testified
that she was
in the administration space and not authorised to sign off home loan
letters about payment in full. Secondly, she
questioned the
authenticity of the letter by pointing out that Standard bank letter
did not write in caps in the middle of a sentence,
nor would it have
been written in the language and tone such as: “We confirm THAT
THE Amount owing in THE Above account has
been paid in full on 17
September 2014”. Thirdly, she denied knowledge of the signature
on the document, however, confirmed
that typed on the document were
her name, telephone, fax numbers and URL she used when she was still
employed by the plaintiff.
16)
Finally,
she stated that the “pp” would not have been in front but
behind the signature. Corroborating the evidence
of Ms. Wall, she
testified that due to the requirements of FICA
[1]
,
she would not have given information of a customer to another person
without a Power of Attorney. Additionally, she testified
that she
would never have written the letter until the account was, to quote
her, “Zerorised,” because in administration,
they could
not write off any amounts. Since the matter was already in the
recovery department, she mentioned that the attorneys
would have been
the ones communicating with the customer or his attorneys.
17)
Under cross-examination, she maintained that the Bank would not
give out a settlement figure on the spot. The payment
of
R650 000.00 in cash would have been flagged due to FICA
requirements, she insisted. She conceded that the letter might
have
been sent without her knowing. When asked by the court about “pp”
letters, she contradicted Ms. Wall and testified
that her department
allowed “pp” letters. However, as already stated, she
pointed out that the “pp” would
be in front and not at
the back of the signature, unlike in the letter presented in the
proceedings. I found her to be a self-assured
witness, who had no axe
to grind. She was forthright and willing to explain her answers. Her
testimony, in my view, was credible
and plausible. Even when there
were contradictions, they were not material or numerous. Overall, her
testimony had a ring of truth
and reliability.
Evidence
for the defendants
18)
The defendants did not call any witness in pursuit of its
counterclaim. Eventually, counsel for the defendants conceded
that
there was no evidence before this court in support of the
counterclaim. Accordingly, the counterclaim stood to be dismissed.
Mr
Amod was the only witness who testified for the defendants. It is
noteworthy that he was first called by the plaintiff who made
him
available to the defendants. From the word go, he informed the court
that he had gone into a diabetic coma, and following his
admission
into hospital for four weeks with kidneys and heart problems, his
memory was not the best. Having mentioned that he and
the second
defendant moved in the same social and religious circles,
he
testified that he had business transactions involving sale of motor
vehicles with the second defendant.
19)
In August 2014, he owed the second defendant
an amount of approximately R800,000.00. He approached the second
defendant with a view
to paying him his money. Since the second
defendant was not well, he testified, the second defendant asked him
to deposit the money
into a Standard Bank account on his behalf. On
17 September 2014, having been provided with the home loan account
number, he went
into Standard Bank in Centurion to make the payment.
20)
At the branch, he met a bank employee called
David Harber and asked him to ascertain the amount owing on the
account. After half
an hour, David Harber came back and told him to
pay R650 000.00. He then completed a deposit slip and deposited the
sum of R650,000.00
in cash. He was not requested to produce any Power
of Attorney. He testified that he did not know what he was paying.
All he did
was to pay into the account provided to him by the second
defendant. The balance of the money he delivered to the defendant at
his home. He also mentioned that he once worked for Standard Bank in
the 80s, from 1985 to 1987.
21)
Under cross-examination, when he was
confronted with the fact that the bank would not give the settlement
amount on the same day,
he answered that he did not ask for a
settlement amount. He testified that as businesspeople from time to
time they run overdrafts.
He said he could have been paying off the
balance of the overdraft. He was not aware of what he was paying off
or what the account
was for. In answer to the question of whether he
could dispute that the defendants owed more than one million rands at
that time,
he answered that he was not qualified to answer that.
22)
When confronted with the bank statement
which did not reflect the alleged deposit of R650 000.00, he
testified that he was
not qualified to answer that. Asked if he could
dispute that the amount never reflected in the bank statement, he
said that he
was not qualified to dispute that. Unexpectedly and
rather startlingly, he testified that it was very easy to type up a
bank statement
(create a fake one), people have done it. It has been
done if one gets a bank letterhead one can type it, he continued. At
this
stage counsel for the plaintiff asked him if it was not easy to
type up a deposit slip or a letter confirming that an account has
been closed or a liquidation order. He answered that there was no
bank stamp on the statements.
23)
The court asked him to clear the obvious
contradiction in his affidavit wherein he wrote that he had requested
a settlement amount,
and his testimony in court to the effect that he
never requested a settlement amount. He ascribed the contradictions
to the health
problems of being forgetful. In the affidavit he was
clear that he was making a bond payment, yet in court he was
uncertain whether
he was paying an overdraft or a car installment. To
this question, he, again, referred to his health and memory
challenges. Confronted
with the letter, allegedly authored by Ms
Davids, which did not have a court stamp, he testified that as a lay
person that would
have been acceptable.
Findings
24)
I found his testimony full of contradictions
and at times tangential. He could not explain the serious
discrepancies between his
affidavit, which is the backbone of the
defendants’ plea, and his testimony in court. The crux of the
defendants’ defense
is that the account was paid in full. Now
if the account was not paid in full the entire edifice of the
defendants’ case
crumbles.
25)
At the end of the day the defendants failed
to challenge the testimony of Wall and Davids. Wall’s testimony
that the defendants
owed the plaintiff above a million remained
unchallenged. As already stated, Davids’ testimony was sound
and beyond reproach.
Her testimony, which was well-motivated, that
the letter from the bank would not have the discrepancies she pointed
out, remains
uncontested. Contrasting all that with the concerning
testimony of the defendants’ only witness, especially in the
light
of a fake court order, I am persuaded that, on a balance of
probabilities, the plaintiff has succeeded in proving its case.
26)
There
just is no evidence before this court rebutting the evidence of the
plaintiff, nor supporting the defendant’s plea and
counterclaim, which came a cropper. In
Galante
v Dickson
[2]
the court held:
“
In
the case of the party himself who is available, as was the defendant
here, it seems to me that the inference is, at least, obvious
and
strong that the party and his legal advisers are satisfied that,
although he was obviously able to give very material evidence
as to
the cause of the accident, he could not benefit and might well,
because of the facts known to himself, damage his case by
giving
evidence and subjecting himself to cross examination.”
27)
Following the testimony of the version of
events from the plaintiff’s witnesses, especially Davids, I
expected the second
defendant, who was present in court, to take the
stand and adduce evidence in rebuttal. The only plausible version
before this
court is that the defendants failed to settle the
account. On a balance of probabilities, and in the light of the
uncontroverted
evidence of Davids, this court accepts that no payment
was made into account no 3[...]. What I find to be most concerning in
this
matter is the ease with which forgery seems to be perpetrated.
First, it was the forged court order. Second, it is the forged
deposit
slip. Third, it is the forged letter from the bank. Finally,
it is the forged payments which had to be reversed several times.
Undoubtably, this matter leaves a sour taste in one’s mouth. If
this rampant forgery is not nipped in the bud, we are on a
slippery
slope that will not only endanger the financial stability of Banks in
SA but also will lead to the loss of livelihoods
and eventually our
lives, as witnessed in Spaza shops in Soweto.
28)
At
this stage it is apt to mention that
Rule 46A
does not apply
retrospectively, as confirmed in the matters
of
Williams and Another v Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd and Another.
[3]
Accordingly, there is no need
to set a reserved price for the property.
Costs
29)
It is trite that costs follow the results. I
do not see a reason to depart from that well-trodden path.
In
terms of clause 22.2.8, the parties agreed that costs are to be on
the attorney and client scale.
Order
1.
The defendant is ordered to pay the sum of
R1 240 515.39 and interest at the rate of 8.6% with effect
from 09 February
2017 to date of payment, both days inclusive.
2.
That the immovable property described as:
Section No 22
Sectional plan No
SS1205/2006
CELTISDAL Extension 20
Township
City Of Tshwane
Metropolitan Municipality
Sectional Plan 93 Square
Meters
Deed of Transfer No ST
168497/2006 (“the immovable property”) is declared
specially executable for the aforesaid amounts.
3.
It is ordered that a writ of execution be
issued in terms of
Rule 46
as read with
Rule 46(A)
for the attachment
of the immovable property.
4.
The Defendants’ counterclaim is
dismissed.
5.
The Defendants are jointly and severally
liable for the costs of suit on the attorney and client scale,
including the costs of counsel
on scale B.
M. P. MOTHA
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT, PRETORIA
Date
of hearing: 6 and 7 June 2024 & 18 September 2024
Date
of judgement: 20 November 2024
APPEARANCES:
For
the Plaintiff Adv A
Saldulker instructed by Van Hulsteyns Attorneys
For
the Defendants
Adv M Ayob Instructed by Aboo Attorneys
[1]
The
Financial
Intelligence Centre Act 38 of 2001
(“FICA”),
came into operation on 1 February 2002. In terms of section 28 of
FICA:
“
28
Cash transactions above prescribed limit
An
accountable institution and a reporting institution must, within the
prescribed period, report to the Centre the prescribed
particulars
concerning a transaction concluded with a client if in terms of the
transaction an amount of cash in excess of the
prescribed amount-(a)
is paid by the accountable institution or reporting institution to
the client, or to a person acting on
behalf of the client, or to a
person on whose behalf the client is acting; or
(b)
is received by the accountable institution or reporting institution
from the client, or from a person acting on behalf of
the client, or
from a person on whose behalf the client is acting.
[Date
of commencement of s. 28: 4 October 2010.]”
[2]
1950(2) SA 460 (A)
[3]
2019 ZAGPPHC 363(3 May 2019)
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