Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 665South Africa
Muchenje and Another v Investec Bank Ltd (17072/22) [2023] ZAGPPHC 665 (4 August 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
4 August 2023
Headnotes
under Deed of Transfer T[...](“the property”) with a loan from the respondent (Investec). For this purpose, a written home loan agreement was concluded and a mortgage bond registered over the property in favour of Investec. The initial capital amount lent to the applicant was R3 205 000-00 with the agreed monthly repayments being R29 115 -40 over 20 years.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Muchenje and Another v Investec Bank Ltd (17072/22) [2023] ZAGPPHC 665 (4 August 2023)
Muchenje and Another v Investec Bank Ltd (17072/22) [2023] ZAGPPHC 665 (4 August 2023)
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sino date 4 August 2023
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IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
[GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA]
CASE NO: 17072/22
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHERS JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED
DATE: 04/08/2023
SIGNATURE
In the matter between:-
MUCHENJE,
LAZARUS
First Applicant
MUCHENJE,
JANET
Second Applicant
and
INVESTEC
BANK
LTD
Respondent
(Registration no.
169/004763/06)
JUDGMENT
SKOSANA AJ
[1]
The present application seeks a declaratory order that a supposed
cancellation by
the respondent of a written home loan agreement is
invalid and in the same breath that such agreement be reinstated in
terms of
section 129(3) of the National Credit act 34 of 2005
(“NCA”).
[2]
The relevant facts are briefly that the applicants purchased
immovable property described
as Portion 4 (a portion of portion 1) of
Erf 9[...] of W[...] R[...] Township, Registration Division JR,
Province of Gauteng, held
under Deed of Transfer T[...](“the
property”) with a loan from the respondent (Investec). For this
purpose, a written
home loan agreement was concluded and a mortgage
bond registered over the property in favour of Investec. The initial
capital amount
lent to the applicant was R3 205 000-00 with
the agreed monthly repayments being R29 115 -40 over 20 years.
[3]
During 2020, the applicants fell into arrears and on July 2020
Investec issued a notice
in terms of section 129 of the NCA (“
the
s 129 notice
”)
by which it notified the applicants, among others, that they had
defaulted in payment and had remained so for more than
20 days. They
then demanded the full outstanding amount in terms of the agreement
which amounted to R3 152 615-13 with
interest effective
from 19 June 2020. The applicants had purchased another property at
Morningside with Investec’s financial
assistance
[1]
.
[4]
The notice further stated that Investec will, subject to the
provisions of the NCA,
approach a court for an order to enforce the
credit agreement. It concluded by saying that, should judgment be
obtained against
the applicants, execution against their properties
will follow.
[5]
Investec subsequently sought such judgment and on 14 May 2021, Davis
J delivered a
judgment order for payment of an amount of
R3 152 615-13 plus interest and declared the property
specially executable.
He also authorized the issuance of a warrant of
execution against the property and ordered that the property be sold
at a sale
in execution with a reviewable reserved price of
R1 736 000-00.
[6]
On 01 October 2021, Investec, through its attorneys, addressed what
it termed a “
cancellation notice
” to the
applicants in which it intimated that the total outstanding amount
owed to them by the applicants was R3 334 177-05
plus
interest. In this letter, Investec directed that the agreements are
forthwith cancelled as a consequence of the applicants’
default
and failure to pay as per the judgment order. However, the
cancellation was not confirmed by a court.
[7]
An interposing urgent application was instituted by the applicants
against the sale
in execution of the property which resulted in a
settlement agreement which was made an order of court. Essentially,
the settlement
agreement provided for the acknowledgement of debt by
the applicants as well as an undertaking to pay 4 instalments amounts
in
rectification of the applicants’ default. The undertaken
payments were the following:
[7.1]
R300 000-00 on or before 11 November 2021;
[7.2]
R90 000-00 on or before 30 November 2021;
[7.3]
R200 000-00 on or before 15 December 2021 as well as settlement
of the total outstanding amount
on or before 15 February 2022;
[8]
Such agreement also made provision for the continuation of payment of
the monthly
instalments in terms of the loan agreement in the amount
of R25 380-83 as well as payment of all outstanding legal fees
on
or before 15 February 2022. My attention was also drawn to
paragraph 6.1 of the settlement agreement to the effect that such
settlement
agreement did not constitute a novation or amendment of
the written loan agreement. I am mindful though that the same clause
also
states that the settlement agreement does not amount to waiver
or amendment of the “
judgments already obtained
”.
[9]
The above mentioned three payments were deposited into the Investec
account in respect
of the loan agreement, namely R300 000-00 on
17 November 2021, R90 000-00 on 18 December 2021 and R200 000-00
on
19 January 2022. Further, on 02 February 2022, a letter on behalf
of the applicants was addressed to Investec’s attorneys
stating
that all the required amounts had been paid as agreed including
monthly instalments on the bond account. It also requested
a bill of
costs for any remaining legal fees for the applicants to decide
whether they require the taxation thereof as well as
any further
arrears or costs. Finally, it also indicated that the applicants wish
to reinstate the loan agreement.
[10]
On 28 February 2022, Investec responded that the amount due and
payable as on 15 February 2022
was R1 298 460-27 plus legal
fees of 222 960-00. I am informed by the counsel for the
applicants, Mr Felgate that
the legal fees referred to in that
correspondence related to the bill of costs of any other legal fees
as the legal fees agreed
upon in terms of the settlement agreement
had already been fully paid. Further, such legal fees had not been
taxed.
[11]
The issues are somewhat crisp in this matter. First, I am to
determine whether or not there was
a legally valid cancellation of
the loan agreement in the light of the sequence of events and the
applicable principles of the
law of contract. Both counsel agreed in
principle that this aspect is dispositive of the matter. The second
issue is whether or
not the applicants are entitled to reinstatement
of the loan agreement in terms section 129(3) of the NCA.
CANCELLATION
[12]
The cancellation relied upon by Investec is allegedly encompassed in
the letter of 01 October
2021. The letter came after the judgment
order of Davis J but before the settlement agreement. The judgment
order which was preceded
by a section 129(3) notice ordered payment
of the outstanding amount with interest, the declaration of the
property as specially
executable and authorized its sale.
[13]
After the cancellation notice of 01 October 2021, the application to
stay execution of the judgment
was settled in terms of the settlement
agreement. The settlement agreement was made an order of court which
places it on par with
the judgment order.
[14]
The settlement agreement, after referring to the judgment order,
proceeds to state that the parties
have now agreed to settle the
matter and that such settlement follows upon the urgent application
instituted by the applicants.
As stated earlier, the settlement
agreement made provision for payment by the applicants of three
amounts as well as to settle
the total outstanding amount including
outstanding legal fees.
[15]
What complicates the matter to some extent is that the settlement
agreement makes provision for
the continuance of payment of monthly
instalments. It is hard to regard such provision as anything else but
the reinstatement of
the agreement. Actually, it is not possible to
continue with such instalments unless the loan agreement is
reinstated or re-arranged.
The applicants, as I understand, not only
paid the three amounts referred to above but also proceeded
thereafter to pay the monthly
instalments as stated in paragraph
4.2.2 of the settlement agreement
[2]
.
[16]
Clause 4.2.1.4 of the settlement agreement, which seem to call in
addition for the payment of
the total outstanding amount by 15
February 2022, makes no business sense. The applicants could not have
been required to pay the
three mammoth lumpsums in a period of about
a month and thereafter be required to pay the full outstanding amount
a month and a
half later. Then on top of that, be required to resume
and continue with monthly instalments. The only logical conclusion or
reasonable
inference that can be drawn is that the purpose of the
first 3 sums was to remedy the default in payment and was to be
followed
by normal monthly instalments, all of which point to a
reinstatement of the agreement. This also constitutes a businesslike
construction
of the settlement agreement
[3]
.
[17]
This brings me to clause 6.1 of the settlement agreement which
postulates that the settlement
agreement does not constitute
novation, waiver or amendment. The novation, waiver or amendment in
question relates to, among others,
judgments already obtained, the
provisions of the written agreement, the written loan agreement and
instalment sale agreement.
This conglomeration of legal transactions
spells out another complication to the matter in that:
[17.1] First, there
are two judgments, being the judgment order of Davis J and the
settlement agreement, which was made an
order of court. The only
logical and legally sound conclusion that one may come to is that the
latest judgment must be honoured
over the earlier one. As a matter of
fact, the latest judgment (settlement agreement) refers to the
earlier judgment and adopts
the terms of the settlement agreement
over it. The two court judgments/orders cannot co-exist in their
entirety.
[17.2] Second, the
reference to a written agreement or the written loan agreement in
that clause can only be a reference to
the original loan agreement.
It therefore is an indication that such a loan agreement was still in
existence and was being preserved
by this clause. Similarly, the
instalments sale agreement can only be a reference to the loan
agreement. The cancellation notice
of 01 October 2021 was therefore
superseded by this settlement court order.
[18]
Further, there is also merit in the contention by the applicants that
Investec had sent a section
129 notice claiming specific performance,
which resulted in the judgment order and they thereafter attended to
execute on it. However,
in between, Investec sent a cancellation
notice. That amounts to approbation and reprobation contrary to the
contractual principle
of election. A party must make a clear election
whether they want to enforce the agreement (specific performance) or
to cancel
it and claim damages
[4]
.
In any event, the ‘cancellation’ was not sanctioned by
the court while specific performance was.
[19]
Moreover, Investec was enjoined not only by section 129(3) but also
paragraph 18.1.17 of the
loan agreement to follow certain steps
before cancelling the agreement. As seen from clause 18.1.17 and
18.1.18 of the loan agreement,
such steps include referral to a debt
counsellor and other relevant notices. None of these steps were taken
in relation to cancellation.
[20]
Section 123(2) requires that, in the event of the consumer’s
default, the credit provider
take the steps set out in Part C of
Chapter 6
[5]
to
enforce
and terminate
that agreement
[6]
. The right to
cancel is based on contract law and section 129 merely provides a
procedure for exercising the right
[7]
.
Section 129(1)(b) prohibits enforcement of an agreement in legal
proceedings before compliance with sub-section (1)(a) thereof
and
section 130. Section 129(2) provides that sub-section (1) thereof
does not apply to credit agreements that are
subject
to legal proceedings
.
[21]
Section 129(3) provides :
“
(3) Subject
to
subsection
(4)
,
a consumer may at any time
before
the credit provider has cancelled the agreement
,
remedy a default in such credit agreement by paying to the credit
provider all amounts that are overdue, together with the credit
provider’s prescribed default administration charges and
reasonable costs of enforcing the agreement up to the time the
default was remedied.”
[My
emphasis]
[22]
Investec does not, as I understand, seriously or at all dispute that
the three lumpsum payments
made by the applicants were intended to
remedy the default but contends that there was cancellation before
such payment and therefore
such payments could not remedy the
default. Hence it became pivotal to determine the legal validity of
such cancellation. If the
cancellation is invalid, then there is
hardly a need for reinstatement.
[23]
In addition, section 129(4) stipulates that a credit agreement may
not be reinstated after the
termination thereof in terms of
sub-paragraph (c) thereof. Complementarily, section 130(3) provides
as follows:
“
(3) Despite
any provision of law or contract to the contrary, in any proceedings
commenced in a court in respect of a
credit agreement to which this
Act applies, the court may determine the matter only if the court is
satisfied that—
(a)in
the case of proceedings to which sections 127, 129 or 131 apply,
the procedures required by those
sections have been complied with;
(b)
…
(c)
that the credit provider has not approached the court—
(i)during
the time that the matter was before a debt counsellor, alternative
dispute resolution agent, consumer court or the ombud
with
jurisdiction; or
(ii)
despite
the consumer having
—
(aa)…;
(bb)agreed
to a proposal made in terms of section 129 (1) (a) and
acted in good faith in fulfilment of that
agreement;
(cc)complied
with an agreed plan as contemplated in section 129 (1) (a);
or
(dd)brought
the payments under the credit agreement up to date, as contemplated
in section 129 (1) (a).
”
[24]
Distinctly, section 130(3) requires the court, before determining a
matter such as the present
case, to satisfy itself of the factors
outlined in paragraphs (a) to (c) thereof. Of relevance is paragraphs
(a) and (c)(ii)(bb),(cc)
and (dd), in that:
[24.1]
In the present case, the judgment order of Davis J was preceded by a
section 129 notice. There is no gainsaying that
the process
culminating in such judgment was for the enforcement of the loan
agreement rather than the cancellation thereof. Otherwise,
there
would be no need for Investec to endeavor to cancel it later.
[24.2]
The purported cancellation on the other hand was not preceded by the
prerequisite notice.
I
am in agreement with Mr Felgate for the applicants that the word
“
enforce
”
in section 129(1)(b) denotes both claiming specific performance and
cancellation
[8]
.
Section
123(2) confirms this by reference to “enforce and terminate”
in the same vein.
[24.3] The section
129(3) notice is a precursor not only to claiming specific
performance but also to cancellation with a
view to claim damages. As
a matter of contractual law, cancellation ought to be followed by a
claim for damages. None of that was
done or overtly contemplated by
Investec in its cancellation notice. Naturally, the terms of the
settlement agreement are in stark
contrast to such course.
[24.4] Section
130(3)(a) makes compliance with the prerequisite notice a compulsory
condition for entertaining the present
application. As indicated
above, This fortifies the view that a new section 129 notice was
required for the purposes of cancellation.
Although premised on the
same credit agreement, cancellation constitutes a new cause of action
with different remedies or consequences.
[24.5] As far as
section 130(3)(c)(ii) is concerned, the settlement agreement
constituted and was a result of either an agreed
proposal in terms of
section 129(1)(a) (paragraph (ii)(bb)) or the applicants complied
with an agreed plan by paying in accordance
with that plan(ii)(cc) or
the payments under the credit agreement were brought up to date (para
(ii)(dd).
[24.6] In other
words, this court is not satisfied that Investec has not breached the
conditions under para (c)(ii) of the
NCA. Although, paragraph (c) of
sub-section (3) refers to a credit provider approaching the court, I
am of the view that those
circumstances are relevant in the present
case where a purported cancellation is challenged on the basis of
non-compliance with
the requirements of section 129(1). Moreover, in
effect, the present proceedings amount to an anticipatory defence to
a claim based
on cancellation of the loan agreement.
[25]
Section 130(4)(e) also enjoins this court to dismiss a matter where
among others, the credit
agreement is subject to an agreement and the
consumer has complied with that agreement. This, in my view also
supports the granting
of the relief sought in that the credit
agreement has not only been kept alive by the settlement agreement
and/or subjected to
it but also the settlement agreement has been
substantially complied with by the applicants.
[26]
In the light of the above, it is my view that the applicants have
made out a case for a declaratory
order that the ‘cancellation’
of the loan agreement is legally invalid. As stated earlier, the
invalidity of the cancellation
presupposes the continued existence of
the loan agreement which makes reinstatement thereof unnecessary.
[27]
It has been satisfactorily shown that payment in compliance with the
settlement agreement was
made by, on behalf of and to the credit of
the applicants. The respondents’ contention that the payments
were not made by
the applicants as contemplated in section 129(3) is
logically and legally unsound especially where it is shown not only
that Investec
credited such amounts to the applicants’ account
but also that the authorized representative of the payer confirms it.
[28]
The above is also confirmed by
Mostert
decision,
[9]
where it was held that payment may be made by a third party on behalf
of the consumer, as long as it is clear that the third party
makes
the payment for the benefit of the debtor.
[29]
On this score as well, and having found the purported cancellation to
be invalid, it is my view
that the default was remedied and the
credit agreement was accordingly reinstated. The principle relating
to reinstatement is plainly
laid down in
Nkata
decision
[10]
where the
Constitutional Court held that reinstatement occurs by operation of
law and the consumer’s payment in the prescribed
manner is
sufficient to trigger reinstatement. It also found that reinstatement
occurs upon payment of all arrears that are due
as well as
permissible default charges and legal costs. It also confirmed that
the right to reinstatement is predicated on the
payment of the arrear
instalments and not the full accelerated debt
[11]
.
[30]
I therefore find, for the sake of completeness, that the loan
agreement was reinstated.
[31]
I find no reason why costs should not follow the results nor was such
argument presented to me.
[32]
In the result, I make the following order:
[32.1] The
purported cancellation by the respondent, dated 01 October 2021 of
the written home loan agreement entered into
by the parties on 14
April 2016 and bearing account number 2[...] (“the home loan
agreement”) is declared invalid and
of no force.
[32.2] The home
loan agreement is reinstated by virtue of section 129(3)of the
National Credit Act 34 of 2005
.
[32.3] The
respondent is ordered to pay the costs of this application.
DT SKOSANA
Acting Judge of the
High Court
Pretoria
Date of hearing: 24 July
2023
Date of Judgment: 04
August 2023
APPEARANCES:
Counsel
for the Applicant:
Advocate
N Felgate
Instructing
Attorneys:
Amina
Rahman Attorneys
Counsel
for the Respondent:
Advocate
JE Smit
Instructing
Attorneys:
Delberg
Attorneys
[1]
The
only relevance of the transaction relating to the Morningside
property seems to be to clarify the transaction for the Waterkloof
property and totality of figures referred in the loan agreement and
other related documents
[2]
Albeit
such payments were not strictly in accordance with time frame set
out in the settlement agreement
[3]
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality 2012 (4) SA 593
(SCA)
[4]
De
Villiers case (infra) footnote 7
[5]
This
covers sections129 to 133
[6]
ABSA
Bank Ltd v Havenga
2010 (5) SA 533
(GP) para 537C-D
[7]
Havenga
(supra)
[8]
ABSA
Bank Ltd v De Villiers
2009 (5) SA 40
(C) paras 12-14
[9]
Mostert
& Others v Firstrand Bank t/a RMB Private Bank
2018 (4) SA 443
(SCA) paras 26-27
[10]
N
kata
v Firstrand Bank Ltd & Others
2016 (4) SA 257
(CC) para 105
[11]
Nkata
paras 108 & 109
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