Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 26South Africa
Mercedes-Benz Financial Services v M Magome Incorporated (55323/20) [2022] ZAGPPHC 26 (28 January 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
28 January 2022
Headnotes
Judgment application based on a written instalment sale agreement (“the agreement”) for the return of a motor vehicle and postponing the quantum portion thereof sine die. [3] In terms of the agreement the applicant sold a motor vehicle to the respondent (duly represented by Mr M Magome). Despite delivery of the vehicle to the respondent, ownership remains vested with the applicant.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Mercedes-Benz Financial Services v M Magome Incorporated (55323/20) [2022] ZAGPPHC 26 (28 January 2022)
Mercedes-Benz Financial Services v M Magome Incorporated (55323/20) [2022] ZAGPPHC 26 (28 January 2022)
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sino date 28 January 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
Case
no: 55323/20
In the matter
between:
MERCEDES-BENZ
FINANCIAL SERVICES
APPLICANT/PLAINTIFF
and
M MAGOME
INCORPORATED
RESPONDENT/DEFENDANT
CONCISE REASONS
FOR ORDER
AC
BASSON, J
The parties
[1]
The applicant is
Mercedes-Benz Financial Services and the respondent is M Magome
Incorporated.
Nature
of the application
[2]
This
is an opposed Summary Judgment application based on a written
instalment sale agreement (“
the
agreement”
)
for the return of a motor vehicle and postponing the quantum portion
thereof
sine
die
.
[3]
In
terms of the agreement the applicant sold a motor vehicle to the
respondent (duly represented by Mr M Magome). Despite delivery
of the
vehicle to the respondent, ownership remains vested with the
applicant.
[4]
In terms of the
agreement, the respondent shall pay to the applicant the monthly
installments as specified in the agreement by way
of debit order
without withholding or deferring payment for any reason whatsoever.
[5]
The agreement further
states that should the respondent fail to pay the monthly instalments
on the due date, the applicant shall be
entitled to cancel the
agreement and claim return and possession of the vehicle, which the
applicant duly did by the issuing of the
summons on 28 October 2020.
[6]
When summons was issued
and the application for summary judgment was issued, it was common
cause that the respondent was in arrears.
The applicant submitted
that the cancellation is therefore lawful.
The respondent’s
plea
[7]
Apart from the fact
that the plea of the respondent was filed late (and only after a
notice of bar had been served), the defendant
raises no triable
issue. The agreement is admitted and the terms thereof. The balance
of the plea is simply a bare denial and does
not satisfy the
requirements of Rule 32.
[8]
The
only defence raised by the respondent in the plea is that it is
simply boldly denied that the respondent had breached the contract.
This purported defence has no merit for the following reasons:
Firstly, this is a bare denial that the contract was not breached
without setting out “
the
material facts upon which it is based with sufficient particularity
and completeness to enable the court to decide whether the
affidavit
discloses a bona fide defence”
.
[1]
Secondly, if regard is had to the belated opposing affidavit, there
is now an allegation that the arrears have been paid which in
itself
belies the purported defence that the respondent did not breach the
contract. Moreover, the respondent specifically refers
to the
“
financial
woes”
which the respondent experienced as a result of COVID 19.
[9]
There is therefore not
triable defence raised on the papers and the application should
therefore succeed.
Disclosure of a
bona fide defence
[10]
The
principles applicable to summary judgment proceedings have been
succinctly summarized by the Supreme Court of Appeal in
South
African Land Arrangements CC v Nedbank Limited
:
[2]
“
[13]
The legal principles governing summary judgment proceedings are
well-established. In Maharaj v Barclays National
Bank Ltd, Corbett JA
outlined the principles and what is required from a defendant in
order to successfully oppose a claim for summary
judgment as follows:
‘…
[One] of
the ways in which a defendant may successfully oppose a claim for
summary judgment is by satisfying the Court by affidavit
that he has
a bona fide defence to the claim. Where the defence is based upon
facts, in the sense that material facts alleged by
the plaintiff in
his summons, or combined summons, are disputed or new facts are
alleged constituting a defence, the Court does not
attempt to decide
these issues or to determine whether or not there is a balance of
probabilities in favour of the one party or the
other. All that the
Court enquires into is: (a) whether the defendant had “fully”
disclosed the nature and grounds of his defence
and the material
facts upon which it is founded, and (b) whether on the facts so
disclosed the defendant appears to have, as to either
the whole or
part of the claim, a defence which is both bona fide and good in law.
If satisfied on these matters the Court must refuse
summary judgment
either wholly or in part, as the case may be. The word “fully”,
as used in the context of the Rule (and its
predecessors), has been
the cause of some judicial controversy in the past. It connotes, in
my view, that, while the defendant need
not deal exhaustively with
the facts and the evidence relied upon to substantiate them, he must
at least disclose his defence and
the material facts upon which it is
based with sufficient particularity and completeness to enable the
court to decide whether the
affidavit discloses a bona fide defence.’
[14]
Regarding the remedy provided by summary judgment proceedings, Navsa
JA said in Joob Joob Investments
(Pty) Ltd v Stocks Mavundla Zek
Joint Venture
[3]
:
‘
[31]…The
summary judgment procedure was not intended to “shut a defendant
out from defending”, unless it was very clear indeed
that he had no
case in the action. It was intended to prevent sham defences from
defeating the rights of parties by delay, and at
the same time
causing great loss to plaintiffs who were endeavouring to enforce
their rights. [32] The rationale for summary judgment
proceedings is
impeccable. The procedure is not intended to deprive a defendant with
a triable issue or a sustainable defence of
her/his day in court.
After almost a century of successful applications in our courts,
summary judgment proceedings can hardly continue
to be described as
extraordinary.’”
[11]
The
Full Court in
Raumix
Aggregates (Pty) Ltd v Richter Sand CC
[4]
explains
what is required of a respondent in summary judgment
:
“
[15]
Under the amended rule the applicant is required, 15 days after the
date of delivery of a plea or an exception, to deliver a
notice of
application for summary judgment, together with an affidavit
identifying any point of law relied upon and the facts underpinning
the claim, briefly explaining why the defence as pleaded does not
raise any triable issue. Under the old rule the plaintiff was
required
to file a brief affidavit 'verifying a cause of action' and
opining that the defendant has no bona fide defence. These
requirements
are no longer applicable under the new procedure. The
question is whether this change in procedure would, if applied
retrospectively,
adversely affect substantive rights.
[16]
The purpose of a summary judgment application is to allow the court
to summarily dispense with actions that ought not to proceed
to trial
because they do not raise a genuine triable issue, thereby conserving
scarce judicial resources and improving access to
justice. Once an
application for summary judgment is brought, the applicant obtains a
substantive right for that application to be
heard, and, bearing in
mind the purpose of summary judgment, that hearing should be as soon
as possible. That right is protected
under s 34 of the
Constitution.”
See also Nedbank
v Maredi
[5]
where the
Supreme Court of Appeal confirmed the importance of disclosing a
bona
fide
defence failing which the application would be dismissed:
“
[3]
Before I consider the contentions on behalf of the parties, I deem it
pertinent to set out the jurisprudential
framework within which an
application for summary judgment should be considered, which is trite
and established. In order to
stave off summary judgment, the
defendant has to disclose a bona fide defence, which means a defence
set up bona fide or honestly,
which if proved at the trial, would
constitute a defence to the plaintiff’s claim (Bentley Maudesley &
Co. Ltd v “Carburol”(
Pty) Ltd and Another
1949 (4) SA 873
(C);
Lombard v Van der Westhuizen
1953 (4) SA 84
(C) at 88). The defendant
must satisfy the court that he has a bona fide defence to the
plaintiff’s claim and the full nature and
grounds thereof.
[4] In
Oos-Raandse Bantoesake Administrasieraad v Santam
Versekeringsmaatskappy Bpk
1978 (1) SA 164
(W) at 171 it
was stated that not a great deal is required of a defendant but that
he or she must lay enough before the court to
persuade it that he or
she has a genuine desire and intention of adducing at the trial,
evidence of facts which, if true, would constitute
a valid defence.
All that the court enquires into is whether the defendant has ‘fully’
disclosed the nature and grounds of his
defence and the material
facts upon which it is founded and whether, on the facts disclosed so
disclosed the defendant appears to
have a defence which is bona fide
and good in law. See also, Maharaj v Barclays National Bank
1976
(1) 418 (A) at 426.”
New
defence raised during argument
[12]
The respondent only
filed its opposing affidavit after 17H00 on the eve of the hearing.
This is unacceptable. The applicant had served
the application for
summary judgment on 22 November 2021. The respondent was also advised
that the matter was set down for 25 January
2022. The respondent
therefore had ample time to file an opposing affidavit yet elected to
wait until the last minute.
[13]
During argument, the
respondent suddenly raised a new defence that is nowhere to be found
on the papers and that is that the agreement
had not been cancelled.
There is no merit in this submission. It is clear from the summons
that the applicant (plaintiff) exercised
its election to cancel the
agreement by stating;
“
11.
Due to the Defendant’s breach of the agreement the Plaintiff
terminated the agreement; alternatively,
the agreement is terminated
herewith.”
[14]
The applicant therefore
cancelled the agreement
before
the payment of any arrears when the summons was served. The contract
cannot thereafter be revived and/or be reinstated by the Court.
The
respondent’s submission that, because he paid the arrears, the
applicant is not entitled to the relief sought, is misplaced.
The
legal nexus of the lawful possession of the respondent had been
terminated and the vehicle must consequently be returned to the
applicant.
[15]
Section
129(3) of the National Credit Act
[6]
(“
the
NCA”
)
finds no application in this matter as the agreement is exempted from
this Act. In any event, section 129(4)
[7]
of
the NCA also precludes reinstatement
after
cancellation and is of no assistance to the respondent.
[16]
The
fact of the matter is that the agreement was cancelled upon the
service of the summons. Once an agreement is cancelled it cannot
be
revived.
[8]
There is simply no
substantive law or case law for
authority that an agreement
can simply revive
after it came to an end through breach or otherwise. The act of
cancellation may be performed by the innocent party
without the
assistance of the Court, in which case, technically, a subsequent
court order would
simply
confirm the cancellation that he already had carried out.
A case in point is
ABSA
Bank Ltd v Cooper NO and others
[9]
where
the court held as follows:
“
On
the papers it is clear that the applicant did cancel the agreements.
It was entitled to do so. It had only to give notice of cancellation.
That it did by serving the summonses in the magistrate's court
cases. The subsequent withdrawal of the action could not undo
the
contents and effect of the notices of cancellation contained in the
summonses. In any event the process of notification was repeated
when
the High Court action was served.
It is important
to bear in mind that whereas the cancellation of a contract is a
unilateral act, of which notice has admittedly
to be given, the
withdrawal of a cancellation and the concomitant revival of a
contract is not. It has to be consensual. See Van
Schalkwyk v
Griesel
1948
(1) SA 460
(A)
at
473, Neethling v Klopper en Andere
1967
(4) SA 459
(A)
at
466C - 467C and T G Bradfield Coastal Properties (Pty) Ltd and
Another v Toogood
1977 (2) SA 724
(E) at 730D - H.”
Order
[17]
Summary judgment is granted as
follows:
1.
An order confirming the
termination of the agreement;
2.
An order directing the Respondent, or anybody
else who’s in possession it may be, to forthwith deliver to the
Applicant a
MERCEDES BENZ ML 500 BE,
with
engine number
27892830222616
and chassis number
WDC1660732A496192
to
the Applicant forthwith
;
3.
An order authorizing the Applicant to apply to
the court on the same papers, supplemented insofar as may be
necessary, for judgment
in respect of any damages and further
expenses incurred by the Applicant in the repossession of the said
vehicle, which amount can
only be determined once the vehicle has
been repossessed by the Applicant and has been sold.
4.
Costs of suit on a scale as between attorney and
client.
A.C. BASSON
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION OF THE HIGH COURT, PRETORIA
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected and is handed down electronically by
circulation to the
Parties/their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on CaseLines.
The date for
hand-down is deemed to be 28 January 2022.
Appearances
For
the plaintiff / respondent
:
Adv CJ Welgemoed
Instructed
by:
Strauss Daly Inc
For
the defendant / applicant:
Mr
M Magome
Instructed
by:
Magome Inc
[1]
See the case law quoted in paragraph [10]
infra.
[2]
2015 JDR 2364 (SCA).
[3]
Joob Joob Investments
(Pty) Ltd
v
Stocks
Mavundla Zek Joint Venture
2009
(5) SA 1 (SCA).
[4]
Raumix Aggregates
(Pty) Ltd v Richter Sand CC
2020
(1) SA 532 (GJ).
[5]
Nedbank v Maredi
SCA Case no 25205/2013 28 February 2014 ad paragraph.
[6]
Act 34 of 2005. The respondent is a juristic person with an annual
turnover of asset value exceeding R 1 000 000.00.
This was
not disputed by the respondent.
[7]
“
Section
129 Required procedures before debt enforcement
(4)
A
credit provider may not reinstate or revive a credit agreement
after-
(c)
the
termination thereof in accordance with section 123.”
[8]
See:
Edwards
v Firstrand Bank Ltd t/a Wesbank
2017 (1) SA 316 (SCA)
[9]
2001
(4) SA 876
(T).
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