Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 596South Africa
Tskanae and Another v Firstrand Bank Ltd and Others (A250/2021) [2023] ZAGPPHC 596 (18 July 2023)
Headnotes
Summary: Reinstatement of mortgage bond which had been cancelled as a result of a sale in execution of immovable property – sale in execution eventually set aside -bond, as security of a debt, to be reinstated — cancellation of the bond had not extinguished the debt.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Tskanae and Another v Firstrand Bank Ltd and Others (A250/2021) [2023] ZAGPPHC 596 (18 July 2023)
Tskanae and Another v Firstrand Bank Ltd and Others (A250/2021) [2023] ZAGPPHC 596 (18 July 2023)
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sino date 18 July 2023
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
CASE NO: A250/2021
(1)
REPORTABLE:
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
(3)
REVISED
NO
DATE:
18 July 2023
SIGNATURE:
In
the matter between:
MAHORI
GLADWELL TSKANAE
First
Appellant
MULEA
CONSTANCE MASHUDU
Second
Appellant
and
FIRSTRAND
BANK LTD
First Respondent
THE
SHERIFF OF THE HIGH COURT, TEMBISA
Second
Respondent
MOKOSINYANE,
ALFRED
Third Respondent
NEW
AFRICA GATEWAY CHURCH
Fourth Respondent
THE
REGISTRAR OF DEEDS, PRETORIA
Fifth
Respondent
MOKOSINYANE
VIOLET
Sixth Respondent
Summary:
Reinstatement of mortgage bond which had been cancelled as a
result of a sale in execution of immovable property – sale in
execution eventually set aside -bond, as security of a debt, to be
reinstated — cancellation of the bond had not extinguished
the
debt.
ORDER
The
appeal is refused, with costs.
JUDGMENT
KHWINANA
AJ
Introduction
[1]
This is an appeal lodged against a judgment and order delivered by
the
court a quo on 3 May 2019 wherein the following order was made:
“
1.
Directing the Sixth Respondent (the fifth respondent herein) to
reinstate the mortgage
bond registered in favour of the Applicant
(the first respondent herein) on or about 25 April 2007 over the
First and Second Respondents’
(the appellants herein) immovable
property, being the Remaining Extent of Portion 51 of the Farm
Olifantsfontein 410, JR, Province
of Gauteng (“the property”)
a copy of which bond is attached to the Applicant’s (the first
respondent herein)
founding papers marked “FA2”2
(Mortgage Bond No. B[...] dated 25 April 2007);
2.
Directing the First and Second Respondents (the appellants herein) to
pay the
costs of this application jointly and severally, the one
paying the other to be absolved
”.
[2]
The central issue in this appeal is the correctness of the decision
to
reinstate the mortgage bond in favour of the first respondent.
Costs followed the event.
[3]
The appellants have failed to comply with a number of the rules
relating
to the prosecution of the appeal but the respondent, wishing
to have the appeal finalised has not raised any objections to this.
Consequently, we heard the appeal even despite the absence of a
formal application for condonation.
Background
[4]
On or about 29 March 2006 the first respondent (Firstrand Bank Ltd)
and
the appellants (Mr Mahori and Mrs Mulea) entered into a credit
agreement in which an amount of R1 200 000.00 was lent and
advanced to the appellants by the first respondent. A mortgage bond
was registered over the property to secure the loan. The appellants
breached the terms of the credit agreement, leading to enforcement
thereof by the first respondent.
[5]
On 11 November 2008, default judgment was granted in favour of the
first
respondent. Subsequently, a sale in execution was arranged for
11 August 2010, and the property was sold by the Sheriff of Tembisa,
who features in the appeal as the second respondent, to the third
respondent.
[6]
It later transpired that the appellants had settled the arrears on
the
credit agreement prior to the sale in execution. Accordingly the
first respondent (through the second respondent's offices) should
not
have sold the property in execution.
[7]
After the arrears had been settled, an attorney employed by the first
respondent had given an undertaking to the appellants, stating that
the sale in execution scheduled for 11 August 2010 would be
set
aside. However, that undertaking was not communicated to the
conveyancers, and the property was transferred to the third
respondent,
who subsequently on-sold it to the fourth respondent. The
consequence of registration of the transfer to the third respondent,
was also the cancellation of the bond registered in favour of the
first respondent.
[8]
On 24 May 2011, the appellants launched a second urgent application
(having
not pursued a prior first urgent application) seeking to set
aside the sale in execution of 11 August 2010, the transfer of the
property to the third respondent, and the subsequent sale to the
fourth respondent. The parties reached an agreement not to oppose
the
application but would pay the costs incurred by the appellants.
[9]
Consequently on 10 August 2011, Spilg J granted made the following
order:
1.
Setting aside the sale in execution held on 11 August 2010;
2.
Setting aside the transfer of the property to the third
respondent at the sale in execution on 11 August 2010;
3.
Setting aside the sale of the property to the fourth
respondent;
4.
Directing the fifth respondent to take necessary actions to
implement the order.
5.
Directing the first, third, and fourth respondents to take
necessary actions to implement the order.
6.
Ordering the first, third, and fourth respondents to pay the
costs of the second urgent application jointly and severally; and
7.
The appellants are to forward the papers in the application to
the National Prosecuting Authority for investigation.
[10]
Despite the order, the third respondent again sold the property to
the fourth respondent
and it was subsequently registered in the name
of the fourth respondent. The appellants then filed a third
application seeking
to set aside the registration of the property in
the fourth respondent's name and requesting that the property be
registered again
in their names. The fourth respondent opposed the
application, and on 2 April 2013, Kganyago J dismissed the
application.
[11]
The appellants sought leave to appeal, which was initially refused
but eventually granted
by the Supreme Court of Appeal. The appeal was
to a full court of the Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg. The full
court heard the
matter on 18 November 2015 and granted the following
order:
1.
Setting aside the registration of the property in the name of
the fourth respondent.
2.
Registering the property in the names of the appellants.
3.
Directing the second respondent to take necessary actions and
sign required documents to implement the order.
4.
………
..
5.
Ordering the first, third, and fourth respondents to pay the
costs of the application, including reserved costs from 30 January
2013.
[12]
The property was then registered back into the appellants' names.
This was done however,
without the mortgage bond securing their
indebtedness to the first respondent also being re-registered.
Consequently, the first
respondent launched an application in court a
quo and successfully obtained the order mentioned in paragraph 1
above. It is this
order for the reregistration of the mortgage bond
that is being appealed.
Grounds
of appeal
[13]
The appellant’s notice of appeal states the following as their
grounds of appeal:
1.
The court erred in directing the reinstatement of the mortgage
bond, as the first respondent had cancelled the bond and
reinstatement
is not allowed by law.
2.
The court correctly held that the mortgage bond over the property
was cancelled when the transfer of ownership from the appellants
to
the third respondent took place.
3.
The court failed to understand that the first respondent's consent
is required for the re-registration, and the first respondent
cannot
reverse this consent. Only the appellants, whose consent is not
needed, can reverse the situation. The appellant relies
on ABSA Bank
Ltd v Moore and Another, as stated in its judgment, which affirms
that the appellants had no involvement in the cancellation
of the
mortgage bond and therefore cannot refuse its reinstatement.
4.
The court a quo erred in agreeing to reinstate the bond, as the
consent of the creditor is required to cancel the bond, unlike the
debtor. Thus, a creditor is not allowed to reinstate a bond that they
consented to cancel. Reference is made to section 129(4)
of the
National Credit Act, 34 of 2005 ("the NCA") and ABSA v
Moore-supra.
5.
The court erred in not finding that reinstatement is prohibited.
6.
The court erred in not finding that reinstatement is prohibited
under section 129(4)(d) of the NCA when the sale in execution of
the
property and the realization of the proceeds occurred. The appellant
refers to ABSA Bank Limited v Malibongwe Noel Vokwani
case number
35579/2017.
7.
The court erred in failing to examine the contents of a letter
dated 3 March 2011, marked "MG2," written by the first
respondent to reinstate the property or bond to the appellants when
requested to do so. The application to the court a quo exhibits
elements of both approval and disapproval, whereas the law requires a
litigant to choose one of the two.
8.
The court failed to properly examine the reinstatement of the bond
on or about 25 April 2007, as the appellants received different
amounts communicated to them. Reference is again made to ABSA Bank
Limited v Malibongwe-supra, which deals with foreclosure and
monetary
judgment.
9.
Erred in not dismissing the application, as the first respondent
was the orchestrator of its own dilemma, in that:
9.1
The first respondent sold the property without a valid judgment and
compromised the judgment.
9.2
The first respondent agreed to cancel the sale but allowed it to
proceed without proper
explanation.
9.3
After the unlawful transfer of the property to the third respondent,
the first respondent
refused to reverse the transfer.
9.4
The first respondent refused to comply with the judgment of Judge
Spilg, which required certain actions
to be performed.
9.5
The first respondent wrote dubious letters with the intention of
depriving the appellants of their
property, incurring future legal
costs, and defying a court order. See paragraph 50 of the founding
affidavit. Additionally, after
the payment of R150 000.00, the loan
agreement and mortgage bond were reinstated between the parties, and
the first respondent's
judgment was compromised under section 129(3)
of the NCA. The appellants argue that the court below erred by not
distinguishing
between sections 129(3) and 129(4) of the NCA, which
deal with reinstatement and prevention of reinstatement after the
property
is sold, respectively.
9.6
The court failed to recognize that the application was tainted with
wrongdoing (turpitude), and relief
could not be claimed under such
circumstances. The court should have dismissed the application based
on the par delictum rule.
9.7
The emphasis placed on the principle that a mortgagee or pledgee has
the right to retain hold of the
secured property until the debt is
paid and, in case of default, to sell the property and obtain payment
from the proceeds. It
is the appellants' contention that the property
was sold in execution on 11 August 2010, and the process described
above took place.
9.7.1 The
sale in execution occurred, and the proceeds of the sale were
realized. Therefore, the matter is closed. Cadit
quaestio.
9.7.2 The
mortgage bonds are accessory to the main obligation, which is the
loan agreement. Once the main obligation
was validly cancelled, it
logically follows that the accessory obligation is also discharged.
The
law
[14]
The
National Credit Act (the
NCA) stipulates as follows:
“
(3) Subject to
subsection (4), a consumer may…
(a) at any time before
the credit provider has cancelled the agreement re-instate a credit
agreement that is in default by paying
to the credit provider all
amounts that are overdue, together with the credit provider’s
permitted default charges and reasonable
costs of enforcing the
agreement up to the time of re-instatement; and-
(b) after complying
with paragraph (a), may resume possession of any property that had
been repossessed by the credit provider pursuant
to an attachment
order.
(a) the sale of any
property pursuant to- (i) an attachment order; or
(b) the execution of
any other court order enforcing that agreement; or
(c) the termination
thereof in accordance with
section 123
”
.
[15]
It
does however not follow that payment of arrears results in the
discharge of the debt.
Absa
Bank Ltd v Lombard Insurance Company Ltd
,
Firstrand
Bank Ltd v Lombard Insurance Company Ltd
[1]
confirmed this in the following terms: “
To
discharge a debt it must be paid in the name of the true debtor.
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
.”
[16]
In
Volkskas
Bank Bpk v Bankorp Bpk (t/a Trust Bank)
[2]
the court also explicitly rejected the proposition that “payment
may be made without knowledge thereof by the creditor”.
It asserted instead that payment is a bilateral juristic act that,
unless agreed otherwise, requires the cooperation of debtor
(or
payer) and creditor.
[17]
In
Nulliah
v Harper
[3]
,
the Appellate Division (the predecessor of the SCA) 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.
[18]
The
purposes of the NCA are manifold
[4]
.
While it aims to correct imbalances by providing additional rights
and protections to the consumer, it also aims to ensure
that South
Africa’s credit market becomes and remains “competitive,
sustainable, responsible [and] efficient”
[5]
.
[19]
The
Constitutional Court has also emphasised that “…
the
purpose of the [NCA] is not only to protect consumers, but also to
create a ‘harmonised system of debt restructuring,
enforcement
and judgment, which places priority on the eventual satisfaction
of all responsible consumer obligations under
credit agreements’.”
[20]
In
addition, it has found that “
[o]ne
of the main aims of the [NCA] is to enable previously marginalised
people to enter the credit market and access much needed
credit.
Credit is an invaluable tool in our economy. It must,
however, be used wisely, ethically and responsibly. Just
as these
obligations of ethical and responsible behaviour apply to providers
of credit, so too to consumers … . The
notion of a
‘reasonable consumer’ implies obligations for both credit
providers and consumers.
”
[6]
Analysis
[21]
From a reading of the affidavits in the main application, it is
evident that the following
relevant facts are agreed common cause:
15.1
The appellants and the first respondent had entered into a credit
agreement in 2006, whereby the first respondent
lent them an amount
of R1 200 000.00 based on the terms of the credit agreement.
15.2 The
loan amount of R1 200 000.00, together with an additional amount
of R240 000.00, would be secured by
registering a bond for a maximum
amount of R1 440 000.00, subject to the terms of the first
respondent's standard terms.
15.3
The security was effected by the registration of the mortgage bond in
question over the property.
15.4
The appellants defaulted on their repayment terms and a judgment was
obtained against them. In satisfaction
of that judgment, execution
was levied against the property. The proceeds of the sale were
insufficient to satisfy the judgment
debt, bur resulted in the
cancellation of the bond.
15.4
Following the events described in paragraph 5 to 9, the appellants
successfully obtained the transfer of
the property back into their
names.
15.5
The appellants are the property owners, and the property is
unencumbered.
15.6
The appellants are still indebted to the first respondent, and they
have refused to consent to the reregistration
of the mortgage bond
over the property.
[22]
Based on the abovementioned facts, there is no defense to the relief
claimed by the first
respondent, and the court a quo correctly
granted the requested relief. None of the other grounds of appeal can
detract from this
fact. The case law recited in the notice of appeal
are all distinguishable on their own facts and all that the first
respondent
actually sought from the court was that both the lender
and the borrower be placed in as close as possible situation as they
were
prior to the erroneously pursued sale in execution and its
consequences. The appellants’ alleged consent requirement
herein,
is misplaced and has no legal basis.
[23]
The appellants' further argument that granting the relief requested
would force them to
enter into a new credit agreement with the first
respondent is also flawed, both in fact and in law. The appellants
and the first
respondent entered into a credit agreement in 2006, and
that debt was never extinguished. The reregistration of the mortgage
bond
is merely a measure to reinstate the security of the outstanding
debt to which the parties had agreed. No new credit agreement is
being imposed on the appellants by such reregistration.
[24]
With
reference to
ABSA
Bank Ltd v Mokebe
[7]
(Mokebe)
and related cases, the court aquo had correctly relied on what had
been stated by the learned author Scott in
Willes’
Mortgage and Pledge in South Africa
3ed
(1987) on p.5 as follows: “
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 the property sold and obtain payment
of his debt out of the proceeds of the sale
.”
[25]
The court a quo referenced
Mokebe
, citing
Standard Bank of
South Africa v Saunderson and Others
, which held that a mortgage
bond is an agreement between the borrower and the lender. Once
registered against the property's title,
it binds third parties and
entitles the lender, in the event of default, to have the property
sold to satisfy the outstanding debt.
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. The court a quo correctly concluded that the appellants'
claims of alternative means
of securing the indebtedness, such as
attachment or sequestration, lack merit.
[26]
Regarding the alleged compromise of the first respondent's claim when
the appellants paid
R150 000.00 in August 2010, it should be
emphasised that this payment was made to settle the arrears and not
the full balance of
the loan agreement. Consequently,
Section 129(3)
and the
Nkata
principle apply. This payment did not result in
whole of the debt secured by the mortgage bond having been discharged
and neither
did it entitle the appellants to having the mortgage bond
being cancelled.
[27]
The appellants complain that they have been disadvantaged by the
actions of the attorney
Ms Slabbert in failing to honour the
undertaking that she had made to them. This is a valid complaint and
it is lamentable that
this failure had persisted until the property
had been transferred to the third respondent and the sale to the
fourth respondent.
These failures have however been dealt with in the
judgments and orders by which the appellants had obtained
reregistration of
the property in their name and do not detract from
the fact that neither the original debt nor the judgment debt had
been extinguished
by payment by the appellants.
[28]
It is undisputed that, while ownership of the immovable property has
been reinstated to
the appellants, the mortgage bond had not formed
part of the reinstatement order. It is understandable why the bank
will require
security for their debt which has not been extinguished.
It is evident that the property was sold whilst there was still an
outstanding
amount from the appellants’ mortgage bond
repayments. The fact that the property was erroneously sold at an
auction which
had resulted in the bank consenting to cancellation of
the mortgage bond remains exactly that: an error. This error has only
partially
been rectified in that only the immovable property has been
reinstated to the appellants but the security for the mortgage bond
has not.
[29]
The appellants can therefore not want to have rights without
responsibilities. The mortgage
bond does not qualify as a debt that
ought to have been extinguished by virtue of a mistake and the
appellant can therefore not
rely on that alone. The appellants
themselves acknowledged that as at the time when the immovable
property was sold on auction,
they had only paid arrears and not the
full outstanding mortgage bond amount.
[30]
The appellants raised what they considered an important point, namely
the amount to be
considered as the mortgage bond amount. The
bond, when reinstated, even at its original amount, only constitutes
security.
The bond amount does not equate to the outstanding
amount. That is a matter that the appellants must sort out with
the first respondent. I agree with the previous Judge that
there remains a judgment for the outstanding loan amount, secured
by
the mortgage bond. That judgment has not been rescinded and interest
calculated will be in terms of the court order obtained
therein.
[31]
This court is however only required to determine whether
reinstatement of the security
for the original loan, which has later
been converted to a judgment debt, had been correctly ordered. As
pointed out above,
that has been done by the court a quo and the
appeal against that order must fail. As neither the rescission
nor the calculation
of the outstanding amount legally formed part of
the appeal, this court would be overstepping its boundaries if it
were to pronounce
on the correctness of the outstanding amount, be
that in respect of capital, interest or the application of the
proceeds of a cancelled
sale in execution.
Costs
[32]
The first respondent submitted that the appellant should pay the
costs of the appeal on
attorney and client scale. It is however
important to note that the first respondent through its attorney had
created or
even exacerbated the initial situation, leading to the
sale in execution.
[33]
Despite this, and although first respondent was author of its own
misfortune at the time
of the sale and the subsequent application for
reinstatement of the bond, once having obtained that order, there was
no merit in
the appellants’ attempts to stop what was in effect
restitution of the security to which they had initially agreed. Their
appeal amounts to an attempt at retaining an unencumbered property
whilst the debt which had initially been secured, had not been
satisfied. Costs should therefore follow the event but, in the
exercise of our discretion, on the customary party and party scale.
Order
[34]
The appeal is refused, with costs.
ENB KHWINANA
ACTING JUDGE OF
GAUTENG DIVISION
HIGH COURT, PRETORIA
N
DAVIS
JUDGE OF GAUTENG
DIVISION
HIGH COURT, PRETORIA
P
MANAMELA
ACTING
JUDGE OF GAUTENG DIVISION
HIGH
COURT, PRETORIA
Date
of hearing: 15 March 2023
Date
of judgment: 18 July 2023
For the Appellant:
In Person
For the Respondent:
Adv M Minnaar
Attorney for the
First Respondent:
Hammond Pole Majola
c/o NVA Attorneys,
Pretoria
[1]
[2012]
ZASCA 139
;
2012
(6) SA 569
(SCA)
(
Lombard
)
at para 18
[2]
[1991]
ZASCA 57
;
1991
(3) SA 605
(A)
at 612C-D
[3]
1930
AD 141
at
151-2 and 155
## [4]Nkata
v Firstrand Bank Limited and Others(CCT73/15) [2016] ZACC 12; 2016 (6) BCLR 794 (CC); 2016 (4) SA 257
(CC) (21 April 2016))Nkata).
[4]
Nkata
v Firstrand Bank Limited and Others
(CCT73/15) [2016] ZACC 12; 2016 (6) BCLR 794 (CC); 2016 (4) SA 257
(CC) (21 April 2016))
Nkata
).
[5]
The
preamble to the NCA
[6]
Nkata
supra
at para 38
[7]
2018 (6) SA 492
(GJ),
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