Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 23South Africa
Absa Bank Limited v Mosomane and Others (37737/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 23 (18 January 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
18 January 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Absa Bank Limited v Mosomane and Others (37737/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 23 (18 January 2022)
Absa Bank Limited v Mosomane and Others (37737/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 23 (18 January 2022)
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sino date 18 January 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
(1)
Reportable: No.
(2)
Of interest to other Judges: No
(3)
Revised.
18
January 2022
Case No:
37737/2020
In
the matter between:
ABSA
BANK
LIMITED
Applicant
AND
MOSEDI JAFTALINA
MOSOMANE
First Respondent
STANLEY KGAAPU
MPHAHLELE
Second
Respondent
THE PRUDENTIAL
AUTHORITY OF THE
SOUTH AFRICAN
RESERVE BANK
Third Respondent
JOHANNES KRUGER
N. O
Fourth Respondent
REGISTRAR OF
DEEDS, PRETORIA
Fifth Respondent
The judgment is
uploaded on case lines by the Judge's secretary. It has also been
submitted electronically to the parties’ legal
representatives by
email. The date of this judgment is deemed to be 18 January 2022.
JUDGMENT
M.Munzhelele J
Introduction
[1]
The applicant launched an application in terms of section 84 (1A) (b)
(ii) of the Banks
Act 94 of 1990 seeking leave from the Court to
institute proceedings against the first and second respondents. The
first respondent
opposed the application and raised the prescription
defence. However, the respondents filed their answering affidavit out
of time
which also led to the applicant filling its replying
affidavit out of time. However, all the parties agreed to the filling
of such
affidavits, which were out of time.
Facts
of the case
[2]
The case's background is extracted from the heads of argument by the
applicant. The
facts are thus; an amount of R1, 6 million was
advanced as a loan to the second respondent. The second respondent
secured the debt
by a registered mortgage bond. At the time of the
loan, the second respondent was still married to the first
respondent. However,
in 2013 the said marriage was dissolved. A
decree of divorce was granted with the settlement agreement
stipulating that
the
transfer of the
immovable property Erf 1027 Kosmosdal Gauteng will be on the names of
the first respondent. In March 2014, the first
respondent was
required to repay all the monies she illicitly obtained while
conducting an unlawful bank.
[3]
On 18 March 2014, a repayment administrator was appointed to launch
an application in
order to obtain interim order for ABSA to recover
and to take possession of all assets belonging to the first
respondent, including
the immovable property described as Erf 1027
Kosmosdal, which is in the province of Gauteng. The final order was
granted on 8 October
2019 by Justice Tuchten. The first and second
respondents were indebted to ABSA in the amount of two million one
hundred and ninety-eight
thousand four hundred and forty-eight rand
and forty-one cents (R 2 198 448, 41). It was then agreed
by the administrator
at the request of the applicant that they may
sell the property at a reasonable market value. The applicant then
launched this application
to seek leave from the Court to institute
proceedings against the first and second respondents.
The legal
issue to be decided
[4]
The only issue in dispute between the parties is regarding the
prescription of the debt.
Submissions by
the parties
[5]
The applicant submits that in order to consider whether a debt has
prescribed, it is
necessary to consider the genesis of such debt in
terms of the Prescription Act. They rely on
section 11
of the
Prescription Act 68 of 1969
, which provides that the prescription
period of any debt secured by a mortgage bond is 30 years. The
applicant contends that the
debt has not prescribed as yet. They
argued that the respondents did not dispute that the applicant
approved the loan during 2005,
and a mortgage bond secured the debt.
Further that, the applicant approved a loan to the second respondent,
who was married to the
first respondent, in the sum of R1, 6 million.
Accordingly, the
parties are
ad idem
as to the identity of the debt. The
applicant submits that the debt fits neatly into
section 11
(a) (i)
of the
Prescription Act. Accordingly
, and on this basis alone, the
applicant submits that the first and second respondents’ point
in
limine
regarding prescription must fail because the debt owed
only prescribes after 30 years, which has not lapsed. Further, they
argued
that the debt has not prescribed because
section 14
of the
Prescription Act prescribes
that prescription shall be interrupted by
the debtor's express or tacit acknowledgement of liability.
[6]
On the other hand, the respondents submit that the debt has become
prescribed, and as
such, the applicant should not be permitted to
launch an action based on a prescribed claim. They further submit
that this claim
was due in 2005 or 2012, or 2016 and three years on,
all those years had already expired. The respondents denied that the
prescription
of this claim or debt is thirty (30) years, as provided
in
section 11
of the
Prescription Act 68 of 1969
. The respondents
submit that this was a loan debt, and as such, the form of the debt
does not change because of the mortgage bond
registered as security
for the debt; as a result, the debt prescribed within three years. I
find this argument flawed in law because
section 11
of the
Prescription Act 68 of 1969
provides that a claim secured through a
registered bond prescribes after 30 years.
[7]
The respondents further submitted that the Court should deal with
when the debt became
due to find the date when this debt became
prescribed. The respondent maintained that this debt was due in 2005;
as such, the debt
has prescribed. Alternatively, the respondents
argue that the dueness was triggered by ABSA in 2012 when a letter of
demand was served
to the respondent, and as such, the debt has
already prescribed. The respondents again argued that the dueness
could also have been
triggered in 2016 when
section 129
of the
National Credit Act 34 of 2005
was issued by the applicant together
with a demand for the money, and again on that basis, the debt has
already prescribed.
[8]
It is convenient to set out at this stage particular relevant
statutory provision. The
relevant provision of the
Prescription Act
68 of 1969
is
section 11
, which reads thus:
“
Section 11.
Periods of
prescription of debts.
11. The periods of
prescription of debts shall be the following:
(a) thirty years in
respect of
(i) any debt secured by
mortgage bond;.
”
The
respondent was correct in this argument that the prescription date
depends on when the debt became due. In this case, the prescription
in respect of the ABSA's right of action to claim the entire
outstanding amount of the debt began to run immediately upon the
debtor's
default; that’s when the creditor’s right of action had
accrued. However, in this ABSA case, the type of debt described by
the
Prescription Act determines
the period the prescription will run.
Now, as above stated, while quoting
section 11
of the
Prescription
Act, it
provides that the debt secured by mortgage bond prescribes in
thirty years. Therefore, the ABSA's claim will prescribe in 30 years.
Whether the claim was due in 2005, or 2012 or 2016, this will not
have an effect because either way, the claim has not as yet
prescribed.
[9]
On the respondent's heads of argument, it was argued that the
Kilroe-Daley v Burclays National Bank Ltd
[1984] ZASCA 90
;
1984 (4) SA 609
(A)
page 617H, dismissed Burclay's claim because of prescription.
Similarly, this Court should dismiss the applicant’s application.
I
find the respondents reasoning flawed in that they misinterpreted the
case of Kilroe-Daley regarding this issue of prescription.
I find
that the submission by the respondents’ counsel cannot be sustained
because the issue in Kilroe-Daley was regarding the
appellant, who
was a surety and co-principal debtor who had secured his surety
liability by registering the mortgage bond. The Appellate
Court in
Kilroe-Daley found that a contract of suretyship is a separate
contract from that of the principal debtor and his creditor.
The
surety’s indebtedness was found to be accessory to that of the
principal debtor. Surety had secured her debt with a mortgage
bond
security. That accessory and dependent debt was secured by the bond,
not the principal debt. If the principal debt became prescribed,
even
the surety's debt became prescribed. Hence, the Appeal Court found
that it was wrong for the bank to invoke
section 11
in order to find
the surety liable to pay the debt which the principal debtor has
found prescribed within a year and said that because
the surety has
secured the debt with a bond, then the prescription will be within 30
years.
[10]
This was never the issue in the ABSA’s case. The respondents were
never declared insolvent, and there
were not sureties to the
respondents for their debt. The respondents in ABSA’s case secured
their debt by the mortgage bond. The
second respondent is the one who
registered a mortgage bond to secure his debt, and this secured
mortgage bond falls under
section 11
of the
Prescription Act. The
judgment in Kilroe-Daley cannot assist in deciding prescription in
this present case and does not take the respondent's case any
further.
[11]
The respondents further relied on
Trinity Asset Management (Pty)
Ltd v Grindstone Investments
[2017] ZACC 32
at para. 40. They
contend that where a loan has been advanced, it cannot later change
to be a mortgage bond. On that basis, their
focal point on their
arguments was on the debt and not on debt secured by a mortgage bond
which I find to be wrong because ABSA is
basing its claim on a debt
secured by a mortgage bond because the second respondent secured the
debt with a mortgage bond. The
Prescription Act binds
the respondents
if they raise the defence of prescription. The
Prescription Act
should
guide them. The Act provides that any debt secured by a
mortgage bond its period of prescription is thirty years. This
includes the
loan agreement if a mortgage bond secures it. Secondly,
Trinity's case is distinguishable from the case at hand because, in
Trinity,
the debt was not secured by a mortgage bond.
[12]
In the Trinity case, it was just a loan that prescribed within three
(3) years. Secondly the contract
between Trinity and Grindstone
investments stipulate
s
that the
creditors should issue a demand first so that the debt can become
due, however, the majority decision found that the claim
has
prescribed even if there was no demand issued yet by the creditors.
So, it was of importance for the court in Trinity’s case
to first
determine when the debt became due. Unlike the loan agreement which
ABSA and the second respondent entered into, secured
by the mortgage
bond. Putting much reliance on Trinity's case is flawed in law
especially in wanting it to assist the Court in deciding
totally
different facts of the case. In this ABSA case, a prescription will
only run after 30 years, as stated in the
Prescription Act section
11, but in Trinity, prescription run after three years because of the
loan advanced, which is not secured by a mortgage.
[13]
The respondents further argued citing the case of
Standard
Bank v Miracle Mile Investments
[2016] ZASCA 91
,
2017 (1) SA 185
(SCA), where he said that the
Standard Bank's reliance on the thirty (30) years prescription period
in respect of a debt which was
secured by a mortgage bond was
rejected on the basis that the Court should first check when is the
debt due. Again, this is the misinterpretation
of the facts on which
the Supreme Court of Appeal decided. Even though there were other
points which the Standard Bank has raised,
including to
rely
on the 30-year prescription period in respect of a debt secured by a
mortgage bond in terms of s 11 of the Act;
the Supreme Court of Appeal on para 27
of the judgment of
Standard Bank v
Miracle Mile Investments
[2016]
ZASCA 91
,
2017 (1) SA 185
(SCA),
Mbha
JA
writing
for the majority
stated
that:
‘
The
balance owing on the facility, excluding the outstanding arrear
payments, was not due as Standard Bank did not elect to terminate
the
facility and claim repayment of the outstanding balance. It,
therefore, follows that prescription did not commence to run on
the
so-called 'critical date' or 'decisive date' of 21 October 2008. The
finding of the Court a quo in this respect was erroneous,
falls to be
set aside, and the appeal must succeed.
Before
us, it was agreed that the determination of this issue would be
dispositive of the appeal. Accordingly, it will not be necessary
to
determine the additional issues raised by Standard Bank referred to
in para 4 above
(my underlining).'
[14]
The point raised by Standard Bank of prescription of the claim within
30 years on para 4 of the judgment
was never decided by the Supreme
Court of Appeal because the majority decision found that the issue of
the dueness of the claim will
dispose of the appeal.
The
decisions in Standard Bank is distinguishable from this ABSA
case on the basis that in ABSA, there was no term of the contract
which states that ABSA should first give notice to the debtor to
remedy a default and a failure by the debtor to comply with such
notice the creditor will claim the entire payment owed. This was a
condition precedent to the creditor's right to claim the entire
balance owing under the contract at the Standard Bank case. This is
the difference between the Standard Bank and this ABSA case.
[15]
I found that the second respondent was obligated to perform
immediately when the bank advanced the money.
This also applies to
the first respondent when Erf 1027 Kosmosdal was transferred to her;
she was still obligated to continue with
the payment to the
applicant. In conclusion, this debt between ABSA and the respondents
had become due in 2005.
[16]
However, the loan secured by a registered mortgage bond as security
would definitely give the parties
at least thirty (30) years before
the debt prescribes. There is no dispute that the bond was
registered. The fact that they had such
kind of security over their
loan agreement means that they intended the
Prescription Act 68 of
1969
to be the Act that would guide their prescription period.
[17]
The only issue which the respondents wanted to contest was
prescription; the other issues were the common
cause.
The issue of
costs
[18]
I found no reason why the respondents should not pay costs in this
application.
Order
[19]
As a result, the following order is made:
1.
The applicant is granted leave to institute legal
proceedings against the first and the second respondent in terms of
section 84(1A)(b)(ii)
of the Bank Act 94 of 1990.
2.
The 5
th
respondent is directed to uplift the interdict endorsed over the
Tittle Deed relating to the property more fully described as Erf
1027
Kosmosdal, Extension 16, Tswane.
3.
The second respondent is to pay the costs of this
application.
M. Munzhelele
Judge of the High
Court, Pretoria
Virtually Heard: 18
November 2021
Electronically
Delivered:
18 January 2022
Appearances:
For the Applicant:
Adv N Alli
Instructed by: Jay
Mothobi Incorporated
For the Respondents:
Adv Karabo Mbvubu
Instructed
by: Mbuyisa Moleele INC
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