Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 1202South Africa
Standard Bank of South Africa v Infogold Investments CC and Others (25921/2017) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1202 (20 September 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
20 September 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Standard Bank of South Africa v Infogold Investments CC and Others (25921/2017) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1202 (20 September 2023)
Standard Bank of South Africa v Infogold Investments CC and Others (25921/2017) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1202 (20 September 2023)
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
No: 25921/2017
REPORTABLE: NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:NO
REVISED:
NO
Date:
20 September 2023
In
the matter between:
THE
STANDARD BANK OF SOUTH AFRICA LIMITED
Plaintiff
(Registration
No:1962[…])
And
INFOGOLD
INVESTMENTS CC
1st
Defendant
(Registration
No: 2002[…])
TOVA
SHAHAR
2nd
Defendant
(ID.
45[…])
ISAC
SHAHAR
3rd
Defendant
(ID.
41[…])
COLIN
WAINE SILVERSTONE
4th
Defendant
(ID.
6[…])
NURIT
SILVERSTONE
5th
Defendant
(ID.
7[…])
JUDGEMENT
MOOKI AJ
1
The matter is before court as a stated
case. The plaintiff (“the bank”) instituted action
against the first defendant
(“close corporation” or “the
company”) seeking payment in the sum of R3,189,326.54. The bank
also sought
an order declaring immovable property executable. The
property is described.
2
The bank claims an amount of R1,355,000.00
against the second to fifth defendants, jointly and severally, the
one paying the other
to be absolved. The second to fifth defendants
bound themselves as sureties in favour of
the bank against debts of the close
corporation. The second defendant has died. The bank seeks relief
against the third to fifth
defendants.
3
The discovered documents constitute the
evidence bundle. The documents are what they purport to be, without
the need to adduce further
evidence.
4
The following facts are common cause:
4.1
The plaintiff and defendant concluded a
home loan agreement on 19 August 2002 under account number 2[…]
in terms of which
the plaintiff lent and advanced the sum of
R670,000.00 to the first defendant.
4.2
The loans were secured by a mortgage bond
and two continuing covering mortgage bonds registered in favour of
the plaintiff over
the immovable property.
4.3
The plaintiff advanced monies as reflected
in the loan agreements.
4.4
The second, third, fourth and fifth
defendants bound themselves as sureties for payment when due of all
the present and future debts
of any kind of the first defendant.
4.5
The first defendant defaulted on its
payment in respect of the loan agreements.
4.6
The total amount of the debts which the
plaintiff may recover from
the
defendants under the suretyships is limited to R1,355,000.00
5
The following facts are in dispute:
5.1
The plaintiff and defendant entered into a
home loan agreement on
19
August 2002 and account number 2[…] in terms of which the
plaintiff lent and advanced the sum of R1,355,000 to the first
defendant.
5.2
The certificate of balance as well as
statement of account reflected the amount due and payable by the
first, third, fourth and
fifth defendant.
5.3
The
section
129
notices
were
despatched
to
the
chosen
domicilium
citandi et executandi
.
5.4
The
registered
slips
and
track
and
trace
reports
of
the
section
129
notices.
6
The court is to determine the following
issues:
6.1
What is the effect of the absence of the
fourth defendant’s signature
on
the loan agreement for the sum of R1,355,000?
6.2
What
is
the
proven
quantum
of
the
plaintiff's
claim
against
the defendants?
6.3
The
plaintiff's
compliance
with
the
provisions
of
Section
129
of
the
National Credit Act 34 of 2005
.
7
Contentions by the plaintiff:
7.1
The absence of a signature by the fourth
defendant in the loan agreement advancing the sum of R1,355,000.00 to
the first defendant
does not invalidate the agreement.
7.2
Three of the four members of the first
defendant signed the agreement, each holding a 25% members interest
in the first defendant.
7.3
The representation made by signatories
holding a 75% interest is that the first defendant applied for the
loan.
7.4
The Turquant rule applies.
7.5
The certificate of balance is
prima
facie
proof of indebtedness with
respect to the outstanding balance and the establishment of the
claim.
7.6
The statement archive is reflective of all
amounts of monies advanced, paid by the defendants, the resultant
default as well as
the balance outstanding as at the date of the
issuing of the certificate of balance.
7.7
The plaintiff complied with
section 129
of
the
National Credit Act.
>
7.8
The chosen postal and physical addresses
were used for the purposes of sending the
section 129
notices in
terms of the mortgage bond.
7.9
The
suretyship
agreements
reflect
the
addresses
for
service
of
the third, fourth and fifth defendant.
7.10
The
section 129
notice was sent to the
first defendant via registered post to its chosen address.
7.11
The
track
and
trace
for
the
section
129
notice
sent
to
the
first defendant reflect first notification
to recipient.
7.12
The
section 129
notice was sent to the
third defendant via registered post to the chosen address.
7.13
The
track
and
trace
for
the
section
129
notice
sent
to
the
third defendant reflect first notification
to recipient.
7.14
The
section
129
notice
was
sent
to
the
fourth
defendant
by
race
opposed to its chosen address.
7.15
The
track
and
trace
for
the
section
129
notice
sent
to
the
fourth defendant reflect first notification
to recipient.
7.16
The
section 129
notice was sent to the
fifth defendant via registered post to its chosen address.
7.17
The
track
and
trace
for
the
section
129
notice
sent
to
the
fifth defendant reflect first notification
to recipient.
8
Contentions by the defendants:
8.1
The loan agreement advancing the sum of
R1,355,000.00 to the first defendant does not contain the signature
of the fourth defendant.
The absence of that signature invalidates
the agreement.
8.2
Three of the four members of the first
defendant signed the
agreement
without the requisite authority. The three members signed in their
capacity as sureties. The three did not sign on behalf
of the first
defendant, or sign with the intention to bind the first defendant.
8.3
The plaintiff, as the author of the
documents, had a duty to ensure
that
the loan agreement was valid and signed by the party authorised to
represent the first defendant.
8.4
The Turquand Rule does not apply.
8.5
Admits that there is authority to the
effect that the certificate of balance is prima facie proof of
indebtedness with respect to
the outstanding balance and the
establishment of the claim.
8.6
The statement archive is reflective of all
amounts of monies advanced and amounts paid by the first defendant,
the resultant default
as well as the balance outstanding as at the
date of the issuing of the certificate of balance.
8.7
The certificate of balance does not reflect
proof of the quantum as against the second to fifth defendants.
8.8
The plaintiff did not comply with
section
129
of the
National Credit Act.
8.9
The
following is admitted:
8.9.1
The chosen postal and physical addresses
were used for the purposes of sending the
section 129
notices in
terms of the mortgage bond.
8.9.2
The suretyship agreements reflect addresses
for service of
the
third, fourth and fifth defendants.
8.9.3
The track and trace reflects first
notification to recipient.
8.10
The
section 129
notice was not sent to the
third defendant by registered post to the chosen address. It is
admitted that the track and trace reflects
first notification to
recipient.
8.11
The
section 129
notice was not sent to the
fourth defendant by registered post to the chosen address. It is
admitted that the track and trace reflects
first notification to
recipient.
8.12
The
section 129
notice was not sent to the
fifth defendant by registered post to the chosen address. It is
admitted that the track and trace reflects
first notification to
recipient.
9
The
section 129
notice was not sent to the
third, fourth, and fifth defendant as stated above for the following
reasons:
9.1
The postal slips regarding the letters in
respect of the first to fifth defendants do not contain the initial
of the post office
official (the accepting officer) and thus there
has not been compliance with the requirements of evidence
substantiating that the
letters were in fact despatched in compliance
with the
National Credit Act.
9.2
All
that
prima
facie
has been submitted is that there
exists a
section 129
letter, a postal slip and a track and trace
report. There is no evidence reflecting that such letters to each
recipient absent
the
initial
of the post office official on the post office slips. The slips
require that the post office official affix his or her initial
to the
document as evidence of receipt and despatch of the document.
Analysis
10
There are three loan agreements that are
relevant to the dispute among the parties. There is one account for
all three agreements.
Only
the validity of one agreement is in dispute. Validity is disputed in
part because not all four members of the close corporation
signed the
agreement. The fourth defendant did not sign.
Validity is also disputed because the
section in the agreement for a signatory in the name of the close
corporation was left blank.
11
I find that the loan agreement binds the
close corporation.
12
The
disputed home loan agreement was secured by the registration of a
mortgage bond over immovable property. Second, third and fifth
defendants signed the agreement.
The
three signatories constitute 75% of the membership of the close
corporation. Their conduct made the close corporation a party
to the
loan agreement, as contemplated in section 46(b)(iv) of the Close
Corporation Act.
[1]
13
The contentions by the defendants that the
close corporation was not a party to the loan agreement is, in any
event, inconsistent
with the conduct of the parties following the
conclusion of the agreement. The inconsistency is demonstrated by the
fact that the
close corporation made withdrawals from the home loan
account within three weeks of the signing of the agreement.
14
The defendants cited Venter v Kruger
1971
(3) SA 848
(N) as support that the close corporation was not bound to
the loan agreement because the fourth
defendant
did
not
sign
the
document.
Venter
did
not
deal
with
whether all members of a close corporation must sign an agreement for
such agreement to bind a close corporation.
15
The contention that the close corporation
is not bound by the home loan agreement because the second, third,
and fifth defendants
signed only as “sureties” is
unsound. That is because these defendants cannot be sureties absent a
principal debtor.
The close corporation, in this instance, is the
principal debtor.
16
The
defendants referred to
Merifon
(Pty) Limited v Greater Letaba Municipality and Another
[2]
as
further support that the agreement did not bind the close
corporation.
17
The dispute between the parties does not
concern a public body as was the case in
Merifon
.
Merifon
concerned
performance by a public body of an act or exercise of public power
without compliance with applicable prescripts. The
court found the
conduct void.
18
The defendants accepted during argument
that members of a close corporation, if authorised, can bind a close
corporation. Defendants
did not make submissions why the three
members of the first defendant who signed the home loan agreement
lacked authority to bind
the first defendant. The defendants did not
seek to persuade the court that section 46(b)(iv) of the Close
Corporations Act did
not support the case made for the plaintiff.
19
It is unnecessary to consider the Tarquand
rule given the findings as stated above.
20
The signatories to the home loan agreement
were competent to conclude that agreement, rendering the close
corporation a party to
the agreement.
Section 129 Notices
21
Section
129(1)
of the
National Credit Act
[3
]
requires that a debtor be notified before a creditor could enforce a
debt. The Act prescribes how such a notice must be delivered.
The Act
does not define “delivery” in relation to the sending of
a notice.
The
Regulation
[4]
contains
the following definition:
’
delivered’
unless otherwise provided for, means sending a document by hand, by
fax, by email, or registered mail to an address
chosen in the
agreement by the proposed recipient, if no such address is available,
the recipient’s registered address.
22
Section
129(7)
details
that
the
following
constitutes
satisfactory
proof
of
delivery:
(a)
Confirmation
by
the
Postal
Service
or
its
authorised
agent,
of
delivery to the relevant post office or postal agency; or
(b)
the signature or identifying mark of the
recipient contemplated in subsection (5)(b)
23
The defendants accepted, during argument,
that the plaintiff used the close corporation’s postal and
business addresses for
the section 129 notice. It was submitted;
however, that the plaintiff did not send section 129 notices to the
chosen addresses
of the third to fifth defendants.
24
I do not accept that the plaintiff did not
send section 129 notices to the chosen addresses of the third to
fifth defendants. These
defendants specified their chosen addresses
in the suretyship agreement. The plaintiff used those addresses for
sending the section
129 notices.
25
The defendants deny that the section 129
documents were despatched
from
the post office.
That
is because, according to the defendants, the
postal slips associated with the documents
are not signed or initialled by an official from the post office as
evidence of receipt
and despatch of the documents by the post office.
26
The plaintiff maintains that there is no
requirement for an official at a post office to initial or sign a
postal slip as proof
of delivery by a post office. It was submitted
on behalf of the plaintiff that the track and trace reports
constitute satisfactory
proof of delivery of the section 129 letters.
The defendants accept that the track and trace reports constitute
first notification
to a recipient.
27
The defendants did not substantiate their
contention that a signed or initialed postal slip is evidence of
receipt and despatch
of a document from a post office. They did not
cite any law or a practice accepted by the courts in that regard.
28
The
Constitutional Court has said the following regarding the subject:
[5]
[75]
Hence, where
the notice is posted, mere despatch is not enough.
This is
because the risk of non-delivery by ordinary mail is too great.
Registered
mail is in my view essential.
Even though
registered letters may go astray, at least there is a “high
degree of probability that most of them are delivered.”
But the
mishap that afflicted the Sebolas’ notice shows that proof of
registered despatch by itself is not enough.
The statute
requires the credit provider to take reasonable measures to bring the
notice to the attention of the consumer, and make
averments that will
satisfy a court that the notice probably reached the consumer, as
required by section 129(1).
This will
ordinarily mean that the credit provider must provide proof that the
notice was delivered to the correct post office.
[76]
In practical
terms, this means the credit provider must obtain a post-despatch
“track and trace” print-out from the
website of the South
African Post Office.
As BASA’s
submission explained, the “track and trace” service
enables a despatcher who has sent a notice by registered
mail to
identify the post office at which it arrives from the Post Office
website.
This
can be done quickly and easily. The registered item’s number is
entered, the location of the item appears, and it can
be printed.
29
The defendants cannot, on the one hand,
accept that a track and trace
report
constitute a first notification to a recipient while, on the other
hand, disputing that the post office despatched a document.
A track
and trace report logically pertains to the fate of a document
despatched from a post office.
30
The track and trace reports could not have
been issued without the prior despatch of documents associated with
the notifications.
I find that the plaintiff did deliver the section
129 notices to the defendants, as required by the Act.
Quantum
31
The plaintiff maintains that the
certificate of balance and the statement of account reflect the
amount due and payable by the defendants.
The defendants say that the
certificate of balance is not proof of the quantum against the second
to fifth defendant.
32
The defendants do not state the basis for
saying the amounts are neither due nor payable. It was submitted that
the third to fifth
defendants are not liable to the plaintiff if the
suretyship agreement were invalid.
This
submission does not address the quantum.
33
It was further submitted for the defendants
that not all parties signed the suretyship agreement, rendering that
agreement invalid.
Counsel
for the defendants was invited to refer the court to authority
supporting the submission. No authority could be cited to
the court.
34
The defendants accept that the certificate
of balance is
prima facie
proof
of indebtedness and that the statement archive reflects all amounts
advanced and repaid by the close corporation. The defendants
also
accept the outstanding balance as at the date of issuing of the
certificate of balance.
35
The suretyship agreement is ancillary to
the home loan agreement between the bank and the close corporation.
The second to fifth
defendants concluded the suretyship agreement as
co-principal debtors with the close corporation. They are jointly and
severally
liable for the obligations of the close corporation.
36
The certificate of balance reflects the
indebtedness of the second to fifth defendants in their capacity as
co-principal debtors.
The second to fifth defendants remain liable in
their capacity as sureties. Their liability as sureties is as set out
in the suretyship
agreement.
37
Clause 3.1 of the suretyship agreement
provides that “If there are more
than
one of us, this suretyship applies to us individually and to any
combination of us together (joint and several liability).
38
Clause 6 of the suretyship agreement deals
with recoverability of capital, interest and costs. Clause 6.1
stipulates that:
The total amount of the
Debts which the Bank may recover from us under this suretyship is
limited to R1355000,00 (ONE MILLION THREE
HUNDRED AND FlFTY FIVE
THOUSAND RAND) …”
39
Proof of the first defendant’s
indebtedness is stipulated as follows:
The amount of the
indebtedness of the Mortgagor to the Bank at any time which is
secured by this bond (including any interest and
the rate at which
and the period for which interest is calculable) and the fact that
such indebtedness is due and payable may be
determined and proved by
a certificate stating the same signed by any manager or administrator
of the Bank, whose appointment and
authority to sign need not be
proved. Such certificate shall be accepted as proof of the facts
therein stated, unless the Mortgagor
is able to prove the facts
incorrect, and shall be sufficient for purposes of obtaining
provisional sentence or summary judgement
against the Mortgagor.
40
The first defendant has produced a
certificate of balance detailing an indebtedness by the close
corporation in the amount of R3
189 326.54.
41
The defendants accept that the statement
archive is reflective of all
amounts
of monies advanced and amounts paid by the close corporation, the
resultant default and the balance outstanding as at the
date of the
issuing of the certificate of balance.
42
The certificate of balance is based on the
statement archive, which the defendants accept as correct. The close
corporation does
not contend that the facts recorded in the
certificate of balance are wrong. I find that the certificate of
balance reflects the
indebtedness of the defendants to the plaintiff.
43
I make the following order:
(1)
The
first
defendant
is
ordered
to
pay
to
the
plaintiff
the
sum
of
R
3
189
326.54;
(2)
The
first
defendant
is
ordered
to
pay
interest
on
the
amount
of
R
3
189 326.54 at the rate of 10.50% per annum
with effect from 16 MARCH 2017 to date of payment, both days
inclusive;
(3)
The first defendant is ordered to pay the
plaintiff the sum of R 1 212.67 per month with effect from 16 MARCH
2017 to date of payment;
(4)
The first defendant is ordered to pay costs
as between attorney and own client.
(5)
It is declared that PORTION 1 OF ERF 2[…]
WOODMEAD EXTENSION 1 TOWNSHIP REGISTRATION DIVISION l.R, THE PROVINCE
OF GAUTENG
MEASURING
1,122
HECTARES
HELD
BY
CERTIFICATE
OF
REGISTERED
TITLE T33[…] be specially executable.
(6)
The Registrar is directed to issue a
Warrant of Execution against immovable property mentioned in
paragraph 5, in terms of Rule
46(1) of the Uniform Rules of Court.
(7)
It is ordered, as against the third,
fourth, and fifth defendants, jointly and severally with the First
Defendant, the one paying
the other to be absolved, for:
a.
Payment to the First Defendant of the sum
of R1 355 000.00;
b.
Interest on the amount of R1 355 000.00 at
the rate of 10.50% per annum with effect from 16 March 2017 to date
of payment, both
days inclusive.
(8)
The third, fourth and fifth defendants are
ordered to pay costs as between attorney and client.
Omphemetse
Mooki
Judge of the High
Court (Acting)
Heard
on:
8
August 2023
Delivered
on:
20
September 2023
For
the Plaintiff:
K
Kollapen
Instructed by:
Haasbroek
& Boezaart Inc.
For the first to fifth
defendants:
Instructed
by:
Larry
Marks Attorneys
[1]
Act
No 69 of 1984
[2]
2022
(9) BCLR 1090
(CC) (4 July 2022)
[3]
Act
No 34 of 2005
[4]
Regulation
1, Definitions
[5]
Sebola
and Another v Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd and Another 2012 (8)
BCLR
785
(CC) (7 June 2012) (internal footnotes omitted)
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