Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 1South Africa
Rooplal N.O. v Pelesa (22424/2019) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1 (10 January 2023)
Headnotes
HEADNOTE: CREDIT AND CONSENT OF SPOUSE
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
>>
2023
>>
[2023] ZAGPPHC 1
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Rooplal N.O. v Pelesa (22424/2019) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1 (10 January 2023)
Rooplal N.O. v Pelesa (22424/2019) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1 (10 January 2023)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPPHC/Data/2023_1.html
sino date 10 January 2023
HEADNOTE:
CREDIT
AND CONSENT OF SPOUSE
Credit
agreement – Consent of spouse – Consumer ticking box
for “single” in application –
Details in
personal affidavit that marital status unmarried – Bank
could not reasonably have known about consumer’s
marriage –
Consumer’s defence of lack of spousal consent failing
–
National
Credit Act 34 of 2005
–
Matrimonial
Property Act
88
of 1984
,
s
15(9)(a).
HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
CASE
NO: 22424/2019
REPORTABLE:
NO.
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVlSED
10
January 2023
In
the matter between:
ANOOSHKUMAR
ROOPLAL
N.O
Applicant
and
MMUSO
SOLOMON
PELESA
Respondent
Summary
:
credit
-
liquidator of VBS
Bank
seeking
to recover loans made
to
an
individual
-
no real or bona
fide disputes of fact
-
defence of having
obtained credit without spousal consent rejected.
ORDER
Judgment
is granted against the respondent for the following:
1.
Payment of an amount
of R200 722.61 plus interest at the agreed rate of 11.5%
calculated daily and
compounded monthly in arears from 29 February 2020 until date of full
payment.
2.
Payment
of
the
amount
of R6
247 582
.
31,
plus
agreed
interest
at
the
rate of 10
.
50%,
calculated daily and compounded monthly in arrears from 29 February
2020
until date of full
payment
(b
o
th
dates inclusive).
3.
Payment of the costs
of this application, on the scale as between attorney and client.
JUDGMENT
This
matter
has
been
heard
in open
court
and
is
otherwise
disposed
of
in terms of the
Directives of the Judge President of this Division.
The judgment and
order are accordingly
published
and
distributed
electronically
.
DAVIS,J
Introduction
[1]
Around 2017 VBS
Mutual Bank (VBS)
''fell
prey to an elaborate
,
yet
unsophisticated fraudulent scheme perpetrated on it by some members
of its management
and
their related
entities".
These are the words
of the applicant, who is the liquidator of VBS, appointed pursuant to
a winding
-
up
order of VBS, granted
by
this court on 13 November
2018.
[2]
The
present
application
is
one
whereby
the
liquidator
seeks
to
recover
monies
lent and advanced by VBS to
the
respondent in
his personal
capacity.
The monies were
used
to
buy
an
upmarket
residential
property and a
Porche
Cayenne. For
purposes
of
recovery,
the liquidator did
not
rely
on
any
allegation
of
fraud
and
the respondent
similarly sought
to
distance
himself from
the
fraudulent scheme,
yet
he suggested that the scheme and subsequent
recoveries
of funds created factual
disputes
.
The respondent
also
claimed
that
the loan
agreements
were
invalid
as
he
had obtained credit
without
spousal consent as required
by
the
Matrimonial
Property
Act 88 of 1984 (the
MPA).
The
credit
agreements
[3]
The first credit
agreement
in
question,
is
one
for the
purchase
of
a
luxury
vehic
l
e
,
a Porch
Cayenne
GTS.
The agreement
was
entered
into
on
6
April 2017
.
The
purchase
price
of
the
vehicle was
R1
550 760.00.
After
some initial
instalments
had been paid by the respondent, the
vehicle
was "written off
'
in
an
accident
,
causing
the
insurance company to make payment of R1
319 000
.
00
to VBS
on
4
October
2014.
After
this,
the
respondent
paid
only one
further partial instalment.
The
liquidator
is
now
claiming
the
balance
outstanding
o
f
R200 722.61
(plus
interest).
[4]
The second
credit
agreement
is
a Mortgage
Credit
Agreement dated
18
April 2017.
In
terms hereof, the
respondent borrowed R5 055 240.00
for
the purpose
of
purchasing an
immovable
property in
Midstream
Estate
,
Ekurhuleni and
constructing
a
luxury
dwelling thereon.
Initially
the amounts
would
ha
v
e
been
paid
to
Buildesigns
(Pty)
Ltd
and
to
an
attorneys
firm,
but
in
the
end
,
the
amount
s
were
paid
out
a
s
follows:
R5
million
to
Wiku
s
Strydom
Att
o
rne
ys,
R49 540
to
Munonde
Attorneys
and R5 700.00 as
an
"
initiation
fee
"
.
The
respondent
called this agreement
"
his"
home loan and his
(now
estranged
)
wife
lives
in the property.
[5]
There can
be
no
doubt
that the
agreements
had
been
entered
into and
that
the amounts
mentioned therein had been advanced.
This is not denied
and
in
fact
forms
the
basis
of
the respondent's counter-application
based
on alleged
reckless
credit and his
resultant alleged over-indebtedness (with which I shall deal later).
[6]
The liquidator only
relied on the terms of the agreements themselves,
while
the respondent, on
the other hand, made extensive reference to the fraudulent
schemes
perpetrated on
VBS bank by its directors and managers
,
public
disclosures of these schemes in the media and a resultant
report
compiled by
Adv
Terry
Motau SC
regarding these wrongdoings and the beneficiaries thereof
,
e
ntitled
"The
Great Bank Heist".
After
raising these issues himself
,
the respondent
referred to his co-operation with criminal investigations conducted
by the Hawks and concluded thereafter that
he
was
blameless
of any
wrong-doing and that these were arm's
length
transactions.
This was also
the
basis on
which
the
liquidator
framed his
causes of action and that will then be the basis on which this court
will approach the matter.
Defences
[7]
Having established that neither the agreements nor the amounts in
question are in
dispute, what are the
defences
raised
by
the
respondent?
In
his answering affidavit, he listed five.
These are 1) a
dispute
of
fact, 2) reckless lending
,
3)
contravention
of section 80 of the National Credit Act 34 of 2005
(the
NCA) resulting
in the respondent
becoming
over-indebted,
4) the
fact
that
the
agreements
were entered
into
in
contravention of section 15 (2) of the MP
A
and 5) a
failure to make out a case
.
Dispute
of fact
[8]
In respect of the alleged dispute of fact, the respondent
referenced
a City
Press
Article of one Dewald van Rensburg dated 29 April 2018 claiming
that
the
liquidator
withdrew
or
withheld
VBS'
financial
statements
for
2017 "because
they
could
not
be
trusted".
He
also
referenced
the report
by
Adv
Motau
SC and a
book
by
Van Rensburg titled
"VBS-a
dream
deferred'
.
[9]
Based
on
this,
the
respondent
attacked
the
application
lodged
for
the vehicle finance
,
alleging that
some parts of it had not been completed
by him, but by some
other bank official.
Significantly
however, the respondent did not deny his signature on the application
nor deny the subsequent agreement, in respect
of which
the patties had
perfo1med
as
already
mentioned
in
paragraph
3 above.
[10]
The fact that VBS'
financial
statements
may have been manipulated
does
not mean all individual agreements are automatically implicated.
Insofar
as the respondent
claims
that
there
is
a
factual
dispute
regarding
"the
authenticity
"
(as
he calls it) of the agreements, I find that no real or bona fide
dispute of fact
has
been established
which
cannot
be
resolved
on
the papers
[1]
.
Reckless
lending
[11]
In respect
of
the issue
of
reckless
lending,
the
NCA
provides
that
a court may set aside a credit agreement
in
circumstances
where
the credit provider
has
not conducted a proper assessment of the lender's ability to meet his
prospective obligations under the proposed agreement
[2]
.
Although
the respondent has made submissions in this regard in his answering
affidavit, his counsel
,
in
my view correctly so, did not proceed with this point in argument.
There
is no merit in it
,
particularly
when
viewed
against
the
respondent's
contention
that
the
credits
were
not
extended
to
him
in
the
same
fashion
as
to other "related
parties"
to
the
VBS :fraudsters
but
on proper arm's length considerations.
This
was also confirmed
by
way
of
reference
in
the
replying
affidavit
to
the
payslips
the
respondent
had
produced
at
the
time
as
well
as
the
credit
assessments
done
by
VBS.
Over-indebtedness
[12]
Regarding
the issue of over
-
indebtedness,
the respondent claims to have fallen on hard times now that the
income stream on which he had relied from a company
called Gorogo
Projects (Pty) Ltd, which had done "good work
"
for
the Venda King and VBS bank, had dried up.
Based
on this, he claimed in his counter-application, that his debt under
these agreements should be restructured and payments postponed
for
three years
.
He
also claims that a referral to a debt counsellor would be of no
assistance.
The
respondent has however
,
prior
to his counter-application, failed to react to the notices sent to
him in terms o
f
section
129 of the NCA which, inter alia provides for referral to a debt
counsellor in order that an arrangement could be made to
bring
payments up to date.
The
respondent has also not made any
proposals
regarding
the basis upon which his debt should be postponed and how repayments
should be restructured.
He
had been reminded in prior correspondence that courts have found that
a defaulting debtor, seeking relief by way of restructuring,
should
not seek to retain the purchased property while failing to make
payment, but should consider avenues by which their debt
could be
liquidated.
This
would include the sale of the immovable property
[3]
.
The
respondent refused to even consider this option.
[13]
The respondent appears to simply throw himself at the mercy of the
court claiming over
-
indebtedness
and a postponement of his liability
.
This
he does by relying on section 85(6) of the NCA.
This
section provides the court with a discretion
to
be
judicially
exercised,
to
declare
a
consumer
over
-
indebted
and
to
make an order 'to relieve the consumer's over-indebtedness
"
.
Where
the consumer,
the
respondent
in
this
case
,
has
elected
not
to
avail
himself
of
the
services
of
a debt counsellor to report to and assist
the
court,
as
provided for
in
sections
85(a)
or 86 and has not utilized the procedure
provided
for in section
87,
dealing
with
restructuring
of
his obligations by a Magistrates Court,
the
exercise
of
the
discretion
becomes more strained
[4]
.
In
Standard
Bank
(above
at footnote 3
,
at
par 81) the following finding
has
been
made which is also
apposite
to this case:
"The
Purpose
of
the
NCA is
,
inter
alia, to provide for the debt re organisation
of
a
consumer who is
over-indebted,
thereby
affording
such consumer the
opportunity
to
survive the immediate
consequences
of
his financial distress and to
achieve
a
manageable financial position".
No
evidence has been placed
before
the court indicating
that
the respondent's "financial position" would
be
"manageable"
at
any
time
in
the
future
[5]
. The
respondent
vaguely claims that
this
court should assist him by
"
...
reducing
the
amounts payable under the agreement
payable
after
three
(3)
years from the
date
of
the
Court
'
s
order"
[6]
.
This
generalized
approach
is simply not good enough and understandably
this
part
of
the
counter-application
was
not
pursued with
much
vigour
during
argument.
The
conclusion
is that respondent has
failed
to
provide sufficient detail
and
particularity
to enable this court
to
exercise
its discretion
to
come to his assistance.
The
MPA defence
[14]
By far the strongest point advanced on behalf of the respondent, was
the issue of contravention
of Section 15(2)(t) of the MPA. This
section provides that a spouse
"
... shall not, without the written consent of the other spouse, ...
enter as a consumer, into a credit agreement ..."
to
which the NCA applies. An agreement entered into in contravention of
this statutory prohibition is unlawful, void and unenforceable
[7]
.
[15]
The
required
consent
by
the
non-contracting spouse
is
deemed
to
have taken place when the other contracting party "...
does
not know
and
cannot
reasonably
know that the contract is being entered into contrary
to
these
provisions
...
"
[8]
.
In
such an event, the contract
would
be valid
and
enforceable. The onus is on such other contracting party to show that
it has satisfied the duty placed on it by the MPA
"
..
.
to
make the enquiries that a reasonable person would make in the
circumstances as to whether the other contracting party is married
and, if so, in terms of which marriage regime"
[9]
.
[16]
In
his
applications
for
credit,
the
respondent
ticked
the
boxes
'single"
in respect of his
marital status
.
Apart from the
respondent's say-so, VBS bank relied on a "Personal Affidavit"
by the respondent wherein he confirmed,
on oath, a nmnber of facts.
These related to his
full names and identity number,
that he was in
possession of an identity document contemplated in Regulation
18(1)
of the
Deeds
Registries Act 47 of 1937
, that he is not insolvent and that his
estate has never been sequestrated and that his marital status is
unmarried.
The
extensive
credit check done by VBS indicated
some risk due to
previous
judgments
or unpaid accounts
(which had been old and which risk had been assessed and resolved)
but did not indicate
any "joint loan participants"
in respect of any of
the accounts or loans, including a previous vehicle finance
agreement.
The
offer to purchase the immovable property in question, made to
Buildesigns (Pty) Ltd (referred to in paragraph 4 above), was
also
only made by the respondent
,
again
indicating himself to be single
.
The only indication
of a marriage
is
the handwritten certificate produced by the respondent in his
answering affidavit
,
issued
by
a
marriage
officer,
indicating
a
fairly
recent
marriage
on
30
January 2017 (Some 10
days before the offer to purchase and some three months prior to the
agreements).
No
indication is given in the certificate as to the marital property
regime applicable.
The
extracts from the marriage register produced by the respondent are
also incomplete, both in this regard and in regard to supporting
documents.
No
indication has been given whether this marriage has been registered
at the Department of Home Affairs at the time of the agreements
(or
at all).
[17]
Accepting that a credit provider is "put on enquiry" by
section 15(9)(a)
and cannot rely on the "bold assurance" of
a consumer
[10]
,
no
allegation has been made as to what exactly VBS should have done in
this particular case.
Apart
from general submissions, no particularity has been furnished.
To
all intents and purposes all that has happened in this case, was that
the respondent
and
his wife had gone and married at the offices of the Department of
Home Affairs and only the respondent, his wife, the marriage
officer
and the two unidentified
witnesses
knew about this
.
It
is difficult
to
fathom what enquiries
made
by
VBS
would
have unearthed
this
fact in view of all the other contrary
indicia
available
,
listed
in paragraph 16 above.
[18]
In these premises, I find that VBS could not reasonable have known
about the respondent's marriage
and that it should be deemed that the
agreements had been entered into with consent as contemplated in
section 15(9)(a)
of the MPA.
[19]
It follows further that the contention that the liquidator had not
made out a case, should fail.
Costs
[20]
I
find
no
reason
why
costs
should
not
follow
the
event,
on
the
scale
as provided for in
the agreements.
Order
[21]
In the premises the following order is granted against the
respondent:
1.
Payment
of
an amount
of R200
722.61
plus interest
at
the
agreed
rate
of 11.5%, calculated daily and compounded monthly in
arears
from
29
February
2020 until
date of full payment.
2.
Payment of the amount
of R6 247 582.31, plus agreed interest at the rate of 10.50%,
calculated daily and compounded monthly in arrears
from
29
February
2020
until
date of full payment
(both
dates
inclusive).
3.
Payment of the costs
of this application, on
the
scale
as
between
attorney and client.
N
DAVIS
Judge
of
the High
Court
Gauteng
Di
vision,
Pretoria
Date
of Hearing: 8 November 2022
Judgment
delivered: 10 January 2023
APPEARANCES:
For
the Applicants:
Adv S
Mohapi
Attorney
for the Applicants:
Werksmans Attorneys, Johannesburg
c/o
Cassim Inc Attorney, Pretoria
For
the
Respondent:
Adv E De Bruin
Attorney
for
the
Respondent:
Modise Matlou Thipe Inc,
Johannesburg
c/o
NP Mukwevho Attorneys, Pretoria
[1]
Trust
Bank of Africa v Western Bank ltd
1978
(4) SA 281
(A) at 293H - 294E and
Ripoll-Dausa
v Middleton NO and Others
[2005] ZAWCHC 6
;
2005
(3) SA 141
(C) at 151A -153C.
[2]
Section
80
of the NCA.
[3]
Standard
Bank of SA Ltd v Panayottis
2009
(3) SA 363
(W) at para 77.
(Standard
Bank)
[4]
Section
87
of the NCA provides as follow:
87
Magistrates' Court may re-arrange consumer's obligations.
(1)
If a debt counsellor makes a proposal to
the magistrates' court in terms of
section 86(8)(b)
, or a consumer
applies to the magistrates' court in terms of
section 86(9)
, the
magistrates' court must conduct a hearing and, having regard to the
proposal and information before it and the consumer's
financial
means, prospect and obligations, may –
(a)
Reject the recommendation or application as the
case may be or;
(b)
Make-
(i)
An order declaring any credit agreement to be
reckless, and an order contemplated in
section 83(2)
Or 3, if the
magistrates' court concludes that the agreement is reckless;
(ii)
An order re-arranging the consumer's obligations
in any manner contemplated in
section 86(7)(c)(ii)
; or
(iii)
Both orders contemplated In subparagraph (i) and
(ii).
[5]
See
also
FirstRand
Bank Ltd v Olivier
2009
(3) SA 353
(SE) in this regard.
[6]
Para
1.79 of the affidavit in support of the counter-application.
[7]
Schierhout
v Minister of Justice
1926 AD 99
at 109, Bopape v Moloto
2000 (1) SA
383
(T) at 386J - 387A and Marais v Maposa
2020 (5) SA 111
(SCA)-at
para 26. (Marais)
[8]
Section
15(9)(a)
of the MPA.
[9]
Marais
at
para 32.
[10]
Visser
v Hull
2010
(1) SA 521
(WCC) at para 8 and
Sishaba
v Skweyiya
[2008]
ZAECHC 25
, referred to in
Marais
at
para 31.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
P.S.N obo N.L.N v Road Accident Fund [2023] ZAGPPHC 309; 16867/2019 (10 May 2023)
[2023] ZAGPPHC 309High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar
S.N.M obo A.S.M v Road Accident Fund [2023] ZAGPPHC 448; 21179/2018 (31 May 2023)
[2023] ZAGPPHC 448High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar
Ndlangamandla v Road Accident Fund (54826/21 ;12935/21; 28763/22) [2025] ZAGPPHC 1020 (25 September 2025)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 1020High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar
Rooyen N.O and Another v Nkwinika and Another [2023] ZAGPPHC 217; 18665/2021 (20 March 2023)
[2023] ZAGPPHC 217High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar
L.N and Another v Road Accident Fund [2023] ZAGPPHC 274; 43687/2020 (20 April 2023)
[2023] ZAGPPHC 274High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar