Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 1363South Africa
Somlal v Nedbank Limited and Others (57426/2018) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1363 (31 December 2024)
Headnotes
Summary: Recission of default judgment - The impact of the incorrect amount of municipal account in setting the reserve price- recission granted.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Somlal v Nedbank Limited and Others (57426/2018) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1363 (31 December 2024)
Somlal v Nedbank Limited and Others (57426/2018) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1363 (31 December 2024)
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sino date 31 December 2024
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 57426/2018
DOH:
04 September 2024
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES /
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/
NO
(3)
REVISED.
SIGNATURE
DATE:
31/12/2024
In
the matter between:
PRENASH
SOMLAL
APPLICANT
and
NEDBANK
LIMITED
FIRST
RESPONDENT
CITY
OF TSHWANE MUNICIPALITY
SECOND RESPONDENT
REGISTRAR
OF DEEDS, PRETORIA
THIRD RESPONDENT
SHERRIF
OF NORTH WEST, PRETORIA
FOURTH RESPONDENT
HAWA
BIBI OSMAN
FIFTH RESPONDENT
This
Judgment was handed down electronically and by circulation to the
parties’ legal representatives by way of email and
shall be
uploaded on caselines. The date for hand down is deemed to be on 31
December 2024.
JUDGMENT
Summary:
Recission of default judgment - The impact of the incorrect amount of
municipal account in setting the
reserve price- recission granted.
Mali J
[1]
This application pertains to the
application for the rescission of default judgment granted by this
honourable court on 23 January
2020, for the amount of R124 323.80,
as well as warrant of execution against immovable property. The value
of the immovable
property was R1 400 000.00, and the court
set a reserve price of R700 000.00. The applicant is Mr Somlal a
self-employed
accountant. The first respondent Nedbank Limited is a
banking institution and a financial service provider which had
financed the
applicant to buy immovable property (the property). A
mortgage bond over the property was registered in favour of the first
respondent.
[2]
The second respondent is the City of
Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality, a local municipality duly
established in terms of the law
of the Republic of South Africa. The
third respondent is the Registrar of Deeds, which deals with the
registration of all properties.
The fourth respondent is the Sheriff
of the Court, North-West Pretoria.
[3]
The immovable property was later sold in
auction for the amount of R700 000.00 through the fourth
respondent and is currently
registered in the name of the fifth
respondent, Mr Hawai Bibi Osman (Mr Osman). The applicant and his
elderly parents were still
residing in the immovable property at the
time of the hearing of this application. The applicant appeared in
person. Only the first
respondent opposed the application. The order
sought by the applicant in the notice of motion is couched in the
following terms:
“
1)
That the condonation be granted for the late filing of this
application for recission of the default Judgement granted on 23
January 2020 against the applicant in favour of the first respondent
2) That the default
judgement granted in favour of the First Respondent on 23 January
2020 be rescinded and set aside in respect
of the Applicant.
3) Anyone opposing
this application -----
4)……
”
[4]
The applicant asserts in paragraph 4 of the
founding affidavit that the purpose of the application is also to
“
set aside the warrant of
execution issued on 1 July 2020 and also to set aside the deed of
transfer regarding the transfer of Erf
9[...], Laudium Township,
Registration Division IT, Province of Gauteng in favour of the first
respondent.
[5]
There
is no averment as to the rule employed by the applicant for the
recission application however the application was argued under
both
under Rule 42 (1) of the and Rule 31 (2) (b) of the Uniform Rules of
the Court. Judgment obtained by default under common
law can be
rescinded by court if the applicant has shown, sufficient cause for
rescission. Where a judgment is to be set aside
on the basis of
Justus error under common law in
De
Wet
v
Western
Bank Ltd
[1]
it was held that the discretion of the courts in setting aside a
default judgment under common law extends beyond, and is not limited
to, the grounds provided for in rules 31 and 42(1) of the Rules.
[6]
Rule 31 2(b) provides;
"a
defendant may within twenty days after he/she has knowledge of such
judgment apply to court upon notice to the plaintiff
to set aside
such judgment and the court may, upon good cause shown, set aside the
default judgment on such terms as to it deems
fit."
Rule
42 (1) (a) provides;
“
the
court may, in addition to any other powers it may have, mero motu or
upon the application of any party affected, rescind or
vary”
(a)
An order or judgment erroneously
sought or erroneously granted in the absence of any party affected
thereby.
[7]
It is common cause that the applicant filed
the recission application out of time. In the notice of motion, the
applicant referred
to condonation for the late filing of the
rescission application, however not much was ventilated in the
founding affidavit. The
first respondent did not
seriously take up the issue of the late filing of the application.
Taking into account that the applicant
is a lay person and that there
is no prejudice visited upon the first respondent the condonation is
granted as prayed for in the
notice of motion.
[8]
It is not in dispute that the
applicant obtained a loan from the first respondent (Nedbank) and
during 2003 a bond in the sum of
R220 000.00 was registered over the
immovable property (the property). It is common cause that the
applicant was not in court on
23 January 2020 although he knew about
the application.
Absence or
otherwise of the applicant
[9]
In
the case of
Zuma
v
Secretary
of Judicial Commission of Injury into Allegations of State Capture,
Corruption and Fraud in the Public Sector Including
Organs of State
and Others
[2]
,
the
Constitutional Court had to decide and determine whether or not Mr.
Zuma the applicant had met and satisfied the requirements
for
rescission of judgment either in terms of rule 42 (1) (a) or the
common law. The court summarized the legal position and correct
approach as follows:
“
It
should be pointed out that once an applicant has met the requirements
for rescission,
a
court is merely endowed with a discretion to rescind its order
.
The precise wording of rule 42, after all, postulates that the court
“
may
”,
not
“must
”,
rescind or vary its order – the rule is merely an “empowering
section and does not compel the court”
to set aside or rescind
anything. This discretion must be exercised judicially.
[10]
In
Zuma
(supra)
the court drew a distinction between two litigants: In the first
place, there is a litigant who was
physically
absent
because
he or she was not present in court on the day the judgment was
granted. In the second place there is
a
litigant whose absence she or he chose or elected.
Accepting
this approach, the court held that on the facts, Mr. Zuma was given
notice of the case against him and also, sufficient
opportunity to
participate in the matter by opposing same if he wanted to. He
deliberately chose not to participate. The court
therefore found that
a litigant who elects not to participate in despite knowledge of
legal proceedings against him or her is not
absent within the meaning
of Rule 42 (1)(a). In other words, the court emphasized that the word
“absence” in the rule,
“…
exists
to protect litigants whose presence was precluded, not those whose
absence was elected.”
[11]
In summarising this requirement, the
constitutional court put the position as follows:
“
Our
jurisprudence is clear: where a litigant, given sufficient
opportunities to participate, elects to be absent, this absence does
not fall within the scope of the requirement of rule 42 (1)(a). And
it certainly
cannot
have the effect of having an order granted in absentia, into one
erroneously granted.”
[12]
There
is a protracted history of litigation between the applicant and the
first respondent. In particular 2011 was the beginning
of various
applications for default judgments against the applicant. Since 2018
the applicant has raised the defence of
in
duplum
rule
[3]
with the first
respondent.
[13]
Sometime in 2018 the applicant learnt
through email correspondence from the first respondent’s
officials that the application
for default judgment would be heard on
2 May 2019. On that day, the matter was stood down for the applicant
and the first respondent’s
counsel to have a discussion.
Subsequent to the discussions the matter was postponed sine die. It
is common cause that
the applicant kept on contacting the first
respondent’s officials as he was trying to reason with them
that he had paid the
debt in full. Also, the applicant was
approaching other regulatory bodies including the National Credit
Regulator Authority for
assistance in establishing his case on the
basis of in duplum rule.
[14]
In explaining his absence, the applicant
submitted that on 14 January 2020 he sent an email to the Chief
Executive Officer of the
first respondent informing him of his
intentions to refer the matter to the Banking Ombudsman. On the
same day he received
email correspondence from the first respondent’s
attorneys informing him about the date of the hearing of the
application
for default judgment, which is 23 January 2020. He later
had was telephonic engagement Ms Robin Van Niekerk, the employee of
the
first respondent. She informed him that the first respondent was
not going to proceed with the application for default judgment.
She
was going to investigate the matter and revert.
[15]
As a result of the above engagement, he did
not attend the court proceedings as he was made to believe there were
none. He further
submitted that he was in the vicinity of the court
as he attended to the Legal Practice Council (formerly Law Society)
to obtain
advice about the same matter.
[16]
The first respondent denied that the
applicant was advised by its official that it would not proceed with
the application for default
judgment. The first respondent’s
version is unsubstantiated. There is no rebuttal of the version
about Ms Robin
Van Niekerk. The first respondent would have
been in a better position to obtain the affidavit from its employee.
The first respondent’s
version is a bare denial and cannot be
accepted. The presence of the applicant was precluded, his absence
was not elected.
Erroneously
sought or granted orders.
[17]
In order to
satisfy this requirement an applicant has to show on a balance of
probabilities that at the time the orders were granted,
there were
material facts that the court was unaware of, and that had these
facts been known to the court, the court would not
have granted the
order. In other words, the applicant has to show and demonstrate that
there was a deliberate and intentional non-disclosure
and or
withholding of crucial and material facts and information to the
court, which induced the court to grant the order. This
simply means
that the court must have been misled, into granting the order.
[18]
In
Bakoven
Ltd
v
GJ
Howes (Pty) Ltd
[4]
the
court explained the position as follows:
“
An
order or judgment is ‘erroneously granted’ when the court
commits an ‘error’ in the sense of ‘a
mistake in a
matter of law appearing on the proceedings of a Court of record’.
It follows that in deciding whether a judgment
was ‘erroneously
granted’ is, like a Court of Appeal, confined to the record of
proceedings.”
In
Naidoo
v
Matlala
No
[5]
Southwood J said the following:
“
In
general terms a judgment is erroneously granted if there existed at
the time of its issue a fact of which the judge was unaware,
which
would have precluded the granting of the judgment and which would
have induced the judge, if aware of it, not to grant the
judgment.”
[19]
The issue in this application is whether
the court would have decided differently, had all relevant facts been
placed before it.
According to the applicant the reserve price
was set on an incorrect figure taking into consideration the amount
of the municipality
account disclosed to the court.
[20]
The first respondent’s averment in
the application for default judgment is “
the
amount owed by the Respondent/Defendant regarding levies is R61 076.
083 a copy of the Municipal Statement
is attached hereto
as Annexure NED 6”.
It is
common cause that the NED 6 Annexure is a certificate of balance and
Annexure NED 5 attached in the application is the municipal
account
reflecting the amount owed to the municipality as being R1276. 63.
The explanation proffered on behalf of the of the first
respondent is
that the above is all an unfortunate oversight and typing error.
[21]
Indeed, it is unfortunate and above all so
material in all respects. In
FirstRand
Bank Limited
v
Folscher
and Another and similar matters
2011
(4) SA 314
GNP, the full court had an occasion to list factors to be
considered when the court is called upon to exercise judicial
oversight
in matters dealing with sale of residential property for
recovery of outstanding bond repayments. In paragraph 19 the court
held
that a creditor, applying for default judgment in those
circumstances must simultaneously with the application file an
affidavit
setting out:
(i)
The amount of the arrears outstanding on
the date of application for default judgment;
(ii)
whether the hypothecated property was
acquired with a state subsidy or not;
(iii)
whether, as far as the debtor is aware, the
property is occupied or not;
(iv)
whether the property is utilised for
commercial or for residential purposes;
(v)
whether the debt sought to be enforced was
incurred to acquire the property or not;
(vi)
in addition, any matter in which the amount
claimed falls within the jurisdiction of the magistrate’s court
must be referred
to the court if the hypothecated property is to be
declared especially executable;
(vii)
the debtor’s attention must be
specifically draw, in the warrant issued for the purposes of
execution of the registrar’s
order, to the fact that he may
apply for rescission of the judgment enforced against the
hypothecated immovable property.
[22]
Furthermore, the Courts in the exercise
judicial oversight over the sale of residential properties have a
discretion to set the
reserve price. In this division it is well
accepted practice, that the amount owed to the municipality as well
as the market values
of the immovable property and other variants,
are taken into account in order to arrive at a reserve price. The
applicant’s
submission is that the reserve price would have
been set at a different amount had the correct figures been disclosed
to the court.
He is therefore prejudiced because he had suffered
loss.
[23]
Subsequent to the first respondent
obtaining the default judgment of the amount of R124 333.80, the
first respondent issued
the applicant with a statement of account in
the sum of R94 488.17. This happened without the applicant
making payment towards
reducing the sum of R124 333.80. This
glaring contradiction can be nothing more than miscarriage of
justice. One is left non-
the wiser as to the amount of debt owed by
the applicant to the first respondent when the judgment was granted.
These issues should
be ventilated in the appropriate forum.
[24]
Having regard to the above the
judgment was granted erroneously. With regards to the warrant of
execution, it follows that it ought
to be set aside. There is
also another issue pertaining to the registration of the immovable
property in the name of the
fifth respondent, the purchaser. He
did not oppose the application. Regardless of whatever
consideration this court
would have given to his circumstances, the
sale would not be able to stand when the judgment and the warrant of
execution have
been set aside. The sale is accordingly set aside. In
the result I grant the following order:
ORDER
1.
It is hereby ordered that the judgment
granted by this court on 23 January 2020 be and is hereby rescinded
and set aside.
2.
The warrant of execution issued on 1 July
2020 and the sale in execution held on 12 November 2020 of erf 9[...]
Laudium Township,
Registration Division J.R.; Province of Gauteng,
Local Authority: City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality; Measuring
441 (Four
Hundred and Forty-One) Square Meters is hereby set aside.
3.
The costs are hereby reserved for the main
action.
N P MALI
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
Appearances
For
the applicant:
Applicant
acts in person
Prenash
Solmal
prenash@sugarrealty.co.za
For
the first respondent:
Adv.
WJ Roos
Email:
wroos@rsabar.com
Instructed
by:
VHI
Attorneys
Ms.
Yolande Steyn/Mr. H Buitendag
Email:
law2@vhilaw.co.za
law3@vhilaw.co.za
For
further respondents:
No
representation
[1]
1979 (2) SA 1031(A)
[2]
2021 (11) BCLR 1263 (CC)
[3]
Interest
stops running when the unpaid interest equals the amount of the
outstanding capital claim. This principle is referred
to as
the in duplum rule, arises from English Law.
[4]
1992 (2) SA 446 (ECD)
[5]
2012
(1) SA 143
(GNP)
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