Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 1347South Africa
Standard Bank of South Africa Limited v TNBH (Proprietary) Ltd and Another (2021-28819) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1347 (19 December 2024)
Headnotes
judgment based on an installment sale agreement entered into by the applicant and the first respondent duly represented by the second respondent on the 11th February 2020.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Standard Bank of South Africa Limited v TNBH (Proprietary) Ltd and Another (2021-28819) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1347 (19 December 2024)
Standard Bank of South Africa Limited v TNBH (Proprietary) Ltd and Another (2021-28819) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1347 (19 December 2024)
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sino date 19 December 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
NO:
2021-28819
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE
19/12/2024
LENYAI
J
In
the matter of:
THE
STANDARD BANK OF SOUT AFRICA LIMITED
Applicant
And
TNBH (PROPRIETARY) LTD
First
Respondent
MARIUS
STRYDOM
Second Respondent
Delivered:
This judgment is handed down electronically by circulation to the
Parties/their legal representatives by email and by
uploading to
Caselines. The date and time of hand-down
is
deemed to be 14:00 on 19 December 2024
JUDGMENT
LENYAI
J
[1]
This is an application for summary judgment based on an installment
sale agreement entered into
by the applicant and the first respondent
duly represented by the second respondent on the 11
th
February 2020.
[2]
In terms of the agreement the applicant sold a 2018 Mercedes-Benz
Vito 116 2.2CDi to the first
respondent, with engine number 6[...]
and chassis number W[...] (the goods). The principal debt advanced to
the first respondent
under the agreement was an amount of R593
685.60.
[3]
The claim against the second respondent is based on a suretyship
agreement which was executed
on the 11
th
February 2020,
wherein the second respondent bound himself as Co-Principal Debtor in
solidum unto and in favour of the applicant
in respect of any amounts
then or thereafter due and payable by the first respondent to the
applicant. The second respondent expressly
renounced the benefits
available in relation to sureties, including, inter alia of
excussion, division of cession of action, as
well as all other legal
exceptions which may be raised or pleaded by a surety. The second
respondent also agreed to be liable for
all costs incurred by the
applicant in the institution of legal action pursuant to the
suretyship agreement and such costs to be
calculated on the scale as
between attorney and client.
[4]
The applicant avers that in describing the first respondent the word
“Natural” was
typed instead of “juristic” in
the particulars of claim. The attached instalment sale agreement
clearly states juristic.
The applicant avers that this was a clear
clerical mistake which does not invalidate the agreement.
[5]
The applicant further avers that a guarantee which is a direct link
to the instalment sale agreement
clearly indicated that the debtor’s
full name is TNBH (PTY) LTD with registration number 2017/287206/07.
[6]
The applicant contends that the deponent to the respondent’s
answering affidavit was not
a party to the instalment sale agreement
and there is no resolution authorizing the deponent to sign documents
on behalf of the
first respondent. The applicant avers that the
Company search it conducted, revealed that the second respondent is
the sole director
of the first respondent.
[7]
The applicant avers that the second respondent further signed a
declaration form on behalf of
the first respondent which provides as
follows:
7.1
“
1.
Declarations made by the Customer
We
confirm that:
…
1.4
We accept the offer of the agreement contained in Part A and the
related terms and conditions in Part
B and further confirm that the
Bank has giving us copies of these documents;”
[8]
The applicant further avers that Part B of the agreement provides as
follows:
8.1
“
Part B – Terms and
conditions granted to a juristic person,
…
1.3
Agreement means the cost of credit section (
Part A) of this agreement, attached to and read together with these
terms and conditions
(Part B) and all letters and notices relating to
same.”
[9]
The applicant submits that the respondents took possession of the
goods and started making payments
as per the instalment sale
agreement. The applicant further avers that in due course the
respondents failed to make regular payments
in terms of the
agreement. On the 6
th
May 2021 the applicants submits that
it sent a letter of demand to the respondents, at their chosen
addresses, by way of registered
post, informing them of the default
and requesting the first respondent to remedy its breach of the
agreement. The applicant further
attached the proofs of postage and
track and trace reports of the postages to the founding affidavit.
[10]
The applicant avers that the respondents were indebted to it as at
the 8
th
February 2023 in the amount of R620 636.78
together with interest thereon at the rate of 12.32% from 08 February
2023 to date of
payment. The applicant submits that a cancellation
letter dated the 27
th
May 2021 was sent to the
respondents, confirming the applicant’s election to cancel the
instalment sale agreement and claim
repossession of the goods,
arrears, interest, costs and damages as it is entitled to in terms of
the instalment agreement.
[11]
The applicant avers that the instalment sale agreement is
exempt from the National Credit Act 34 of 2005 (NCA)
by virtue of the
fact that the first respondent is a juristic person with an annual
turnover of asset value exceeding R1 000 000.00
as provided for in
Section 4(1)(a)(i) of the NCA, alternatively exempt by virtue of
Section 4(1)(b) of the NCA in that the agreement
is a large agreement
as defined in Section 7(1) of the NCA, despite the first respondent
‘s turnover or asset value being
less than R 1 000 000.00. The
applicant further avers that the NCA is also not applicable to the
suretyship agreement in terms
of section 4(2)(c) and section 8(5) of
the NCA.
[12]
The applicant contends that the respondents did
not raise the issue of the liquid document in their pleadings
and
should not be allowed to do so in argument. The applicant further
contends that the respondents’ plea does not raise
any triable
issues let alone a bona fide defense and the summary judgement
application should be granted.
[13]
The respondents oppose the application for summary judgement as they
are of the view that they have a defense
to the applicant’s
claim. The respondents deny that they entered into an instalment sale
agreement with the applicant. They
submit that what the applicant
attached to its particulars of claim as “Annexure A” is a
pre-agreement quotation and
not an instalment agreement as alleged by
the applicant.
[14]
The respondents contend that in the absence of the instalment sale
agreement, the court cannot grant summary
judgement as the claim is
not based on a liquid document.
[15]
The respondents aver that the applicant admits that it made a
mistake in its particulars of claim as
the word natural instead of a
juristic was typed when the description of the agreement was
typed.
[16]
The respondents in their opposing affidavit admitted that the second
respondent signed Part A and B of the
agreement as well as the
suretyship agreement.
They
however deny that there are any obligations in respect of which the
first respondent can be in default of or in breach of as
there is no
agreement that can be cancelled.
[17]
The respondents submit that they are not disputing that the second
respondent signed the quotation, they
are simply not accepting that
the quotation is an instalment sale agreement as alleged by the
applicant.
[18]
The respondents argued in court as well as in their heads of argument
that there is no liquid document that
was attached to the pleadings
by the applicant and as a result, the applicant has not satisfied the
requirements for the granting
of a summary judgement.
[19]
The respondents contend that the applicant should have brought a Rule
7 application if they have a challenge
to Mr Slabbert’s claims
that he is authorised to depose to an affidavit on behalf of the
first respondent.
[20]
The respondents insist that the NCA is applicable to the agreement.
[21]
The principles governing summary judgement are provided for in Rule
32 of the Uniform Rules of Court and
have become trite.
21.1
Rule 32(1) enables a plaintiff to apply to court for summary
judgement in respect of four categories of claims
namely:
(a)
on a liquid document;
(b)
for a liquidated amount in money;
(c)
for delivery of specified movable property; or
(d)
for ejectment,
together with any claim
for interest for interest and costs.
21.2 In
terms of Rule 32(2)(b), the plaintiff (applicant) is required to:
(a)
verify the cause of action and the amount claimed;
(b)
identify any point of law relied upon;
(c)
identify the facts upon which the plaintiff’s claim is based
and
(d)
explain briefly why the defence as pleaded does not raise any triable
issue for trial.
[22]
For a respondent to succeed in resisting an application for summary
judgment, it must be shown that there
is a
bona
fide
defence to the applicant’s
claim which raises a triable issue. The respondent must fully
disclose the nature and grounds
of the defence, and the material
facts relied upon therefor. In the matter of
Breitenbach
v Fiat SA (Edms) Bpk
1976 (2) SA 226
(T) at 229F-H
,
the court held that bald, vague and sketchy defences should not be
tolerated.
[23]
In the matter of
Joob Joob
Investments
(Pty) Ltd v
Stocks Mavundla Zek Joints Venture (161/08)
[2009] ZASCA 23
;
2009 (5)
SA 1
(SCA);
[2009] All SA 407
(SCA) (27 March 2009),
the
court held that:
“
[31]
So too in South Africa, the summary judgement procedure was not
intended to ‘shut (a defendant) out from
defending’,
unless it was very clear indeed that he had no case in the action. It
was intended to prevent sham defences from
defeating the rights of
parties by delay, and at the same time causing great loss to
plaintiffs who were endeavoring to enforce
their rights.
[32]
The rationale for summary judgement proceedings is impeccable. The
procedure is not intended to deprive a
defendant with a triable
issue or a sustainable defence of her/his day in court. After almost
a century of successful application
in our courts, summary judgment
applications can hardly continue to be described as extraordinary.
Our Courts, both of first instance
and at appellate level, have
during that time rightly been trusted to ensure that a defendant with
a triable issue is not shut
out. In the
Maharaj
v Barclays National Bank Ltd
1976 (1) SA 418
(A)
case at 425G –
426E, Corbett JA, was keen to ensure first, an examination of whether
there has been sufficient disclosures
by a defendant of the nature
and grounds of his defence and the facts upon which it is founded.
The second consideration is that
the defence so disclosed must be
both bona fide and good in law. A court which is satisfied that this
threshold has been crossed
is then bound to refuse summary judgment.
Corbett JA also warned against requiring of a defendant the precision
apposite to pleadings.
However, the learned judge was equally astute
to ensure that recalcitrant debtors pay what is due to a creditor.
[33]
Having regard to its purpose and its proper application, summary
judgment proceedings only hold terrors and
are ‘drastic’
for a defendant who has no defence. Perhaps the time has come to
discard these labels and to concentrate
rather on the proper
application of the rule, as set out with customary clarity and
elegance by Corbett JA in the
Maharaj
case
at 425G – 426E,”
[24]
In the matter of
NPGS
Protection and Security Services CC and Another v FirstRand Bank Ltd
(314/2018)
[2019] ZASCA 94
;
[2019] 3 All SA 391
(SCA);
2020 (1) SA
494
(SCA) (6 June 2019) at paragraph 11,
the
court held as follows in relation to denials in pleadings:
“
Rule
32(3) of the Uniform Rules requires an opposing affidavit to disclose
fully the nature and grounds of the defense, and the
material facts
relied upon therefor. To stave off summary judgment, a defendant
cannot content him or herself with bald denials,
for example, that it
is not clear how the amount claimed was made up. Something more is
required. If a defendant disputes the amount
claimed, he or she
should say so and set out a factual basis for such denial. This could
be done by giving examples of payments
made by them which have not
been credited to their account”
[25]
It is trite that a suretyship is, by its nature, an accessory to a
contract. See the matter of
Kloe-Daley v
Barclays National Bank Limited
[1984] ZASCA 90
;
1984 (4) SA 609
(A) at 623I-624G
.
For there to be a valid suretyship there must be a valid principal
agreement or contract.
[26]
It is also trite that the exercise of interpreting a deed of
suretyship invokes the application of the same
principles relating to
the interpretation of contracts. These principles were well
established in the matter of
Bekker NO v
Total South Africa (Pty) Ltd
1990 (3) SA 159
(T) at 170G-H
by
Kriegler J, which was quoted by the Supreme Court of Appeals in the
matter of
Moss & Another v KMSA
Distributions (673/2018)
[2019] ZASCA 81
(31 May 2019)
at
paragraph 8 where Kriegler J stated as follows:
“
The
interpretation of a written document is not an exercise in the
arcane. It is a logical process in which the interpreter seeks
the
intention of the draftsman as embodied in the instrument. The mutual
intention of the parties to a bilateral contract is, of
course, an
abstraction. The primary method to find out what the abstract was is
to ask: What did the parties say ? That does not
mean picking away at
words like a guineafowl down a row of maize seeds. One looks at the
language used with both sense and perceptive.”
[27]
In the same matter of
Moss & Another
v KMSA Distributions
at paragraph 10,
the court stated as follows:
“
In
Privest Employees Solutions (Pty)
Ltd v Vital Distribution Solutions (Pty) Ltd
2005
(5) SA 276
(SCA) paras 22 and 23
,
this court held that when construing an agreement comprising more
than one document, one must consider all the terms used by the
parties in all the documents to determine the meaning thereof. Terms
in a subsidiary document can prescribe how the terms in the
main
document are to be construed. In this case, that principle was
embodied in the dealer agreement under clause 2.1.7 in the
following
terms :
‘
Annexures
to this agreement [form] part of the agreement and will not be
interpreted in a separate manner or be separated from this
agreement
for construction of a different meaning.’
[28]
Turning to the matter before me, the hurdle that the applicant must
jump is whether it has complied with
the requirements of Rule 32(2)
of the Uniform Rules of Court. The respondents contends that they
have not complied as there is
no instalment sale agreement to speak
of as the document that was signed is a quotation and therefore the
applicant has not made
out a cause of action.
[29]
As the court has stated in the matter of
Moss
& Another v KMSA Distributions,
wherein
the court referred to the matter of
Privest
Employees Solutions (Pty) Ltd v Vital Distribution Solutions (Pty)
Ltd,
the SCA held that when
construing an agreement comprising of more than one document, one
must consider all the terms used in all
the documents to determine
the meaning thereof. I would go as far as to say, by scrutinizing all
the documents carefully, the true
intention of the parties will
become clear. A party cannot simply rely on technicalities to escape
liability based on an agreement.
[30] On
careful consideration of the documents signed by the parties, Part A
of the document bears the following
descriptions:
(a)
On the top left hand side of the document
the following words appear:
Part
A, Pre-Agreement Quotation/Cost of Credit.
(b)
On the top right hand side of the same document the following words
appear:
Type
of Agreement – Credit Transaction, Instalment Sale
Agreement (Juristic).
[31] In
this case there are several documents that are linked Part A that
have been signed by the second respondent:
on behalf of the first
respondent
(a)
Authority for mandate and payment instruction;
(b)
Declaration made by customer, where under clause 1.4 it is stated
that: “
we accept the offer of the agreement contained in
Part A and the related Part B and further confirm that the Bank
has given
us copies of these document;”
(c)
Part B – Terms and Conditions granted to a Juristic person. I
have observed that the heading
of this document is “Type of
Agreement – Credit Transaction Instalment Sale Agreement
(Juristic Person).
Clause 1.3 clearly
prescribes as follows:
(1)
“Agreement means the cost of credit section (Part A) of this
agreement, attached to and read together with these terms
and
conditions (Part B) and all letters and notices relating to same”
(2)
Furthermore Clause 1.23
of
Part B provides as follows:
“
Guarantor(s)
means a person(s) who undertake(s) to pay, in full or in part, the
amount owing in terms of this agreement in the event
of a default by
you under this agreement”
(3)
Clause 1.45 of Part B provides as
follows:
“
Surety(ies)
means a person(s) who undertake(s) to pay in full or in part, the
amount owing in terms of this agreement in the event
of a default by
you under this agreement”
(d)
Acknowledgement of freedom of choice
(e)
Insurance Details and Proposals
(f)
Statutory disclosures in terms of the Financial Advisory and
Intermediary Services Act,
2002 (FAIS Act) and Data Privacy
(g)
Standard Insurance Limited, Commercial Asset Shortfall, Top-Up Policy
Summary of Material Terms
(h)
Insurance Discussion Form
[32]
The respondents at paragraph 5 of its amended plea admitted that the
second respondent signed the suretyship
marked “B”.
The second respondent has bound himself to paying the outstanding
amount due to the applicant.
[33] I
am satisfied that there is a valid instalment agreement and a valid
suretyship in place. The applicants
are also claiming for the return
and delivery of the goods which have been in the possession of the
first respondent since the
12
th
February 2020.
[34]
The applicant has explained the clerical mistake of typing the word
natural instead of juristic in its particulars
of claim. I have
scrutinized the documents, and the mistake is not material,
and, in my view, it is a minor error which does
not detract from the
intent of the parties to the contract.
[35]
The respondents on the other hand have made bald and sketchy denials
in their plea without substantiating
with clear reasons. The
respondents’ main defence was that there is no instalment sale
agreement as they only singed a quotation.
I have already ruled that
there is a valid instalment sale agreement together with a
suretyship.
[36]
The respondents further made arguments in their heads of argument as
well as in court, which are not in their
pleadings. This kind of
conduct is not acceptable as it is trite that a litigant must set out
its case in its pleadings and not
in argument.
[37]
I am of the view that the applicant has satisfied the
requirements for summary judgment and
the respondents have not
convinced the court that they have a
bona fide
defence which
raises a triable issue.
[38]
Under the circumstances I make the following order:
1.
The cancellation of the instalment sale agreement is confirmed;
2.
The first respondent is directed to restore to the applicant
possession of the Goods, being
a
2018
MERCEDES BENZ VITO 116 2.2CDi
with
Chassis Number:
W[...]
and
Engine Number:
6[...]
;
3.
The applicant is entitled to retain all monies paid to it by the
first respondent pursuant
to the instalment sale agreement;
4.
Leave is granted to the applicant to apply on the same papers, duly
supplemented where necessary
for;
4.1
damages, if any, in an amount to be calculated by subtracting the
current market value of the Goods
(as well as a rebate on unearned
finance charges from the balance outstanding, if applicable);
4.2
interest on the said damages at the rate of 08.385% per annum from 24
July 2020 to date of payment;
and
5.
Costs of suit on an attorney and client scale.
LENYAI J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Appearances
Counsel
for Applicant:
Adv
C Nkosi
Instructed
by:
Findlay
& Niemeyer Attorneys
Counsel for the
Respondents:
Adv E Coleman
Instructed by:
McCarthy Cruywagen
Date
of hearing:
07
August 2024
Date
of Judgement:
19
December 2024
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