Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 234South Africa
Rangaka v First Rand Bank Limited (24898/18) [2022] ZAGPPHC 234 (13 April 2022)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Rangaka v First Rand Bank Limited (24898/18) [2022] ZAGPPHC 234 (13 April 2022)
Rangaka v First Rand Bank Limited (24898/18) [2022] ZAGPPHC 234 (13 April 2022)
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sino date 13 April 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
PROVINCIAL DIVISION
CASE
NO: 24898/18
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
YES
13/4/2022
In
the matter between:
MILLY
LERATO
RANGAKA
Applicant
and
FIRST
RAND BANK LIMITED
Coram:
Sardiwalla J
Rescission
application - existence or non- existence of a defence on the
merits is an irrelevant consideration and, if subsequently
disclosed,
cannot transform a validly obtained judgment into an erroneous
judgment in terms of requirements of 42(1)(a).
JUDGMENT
Sardiwalla
J;
Introduction
[1]
:
[1]
This is an application for rescission brought
in terms of Uniform
Rules 42 (1) alternatively common law of an order granted against the
Respondent on the 21 June 2018 by this
honorable court.
[2]
The Rule 42 (1) provides that a court may
mero motu
or on
application, rescind or vary;
(a) An
order or judgment erroneously sought or erroneously granted in the
absence of any party affected thereby;
(b) An
order or judgment in which there is an ambiguity, error or omission;
(c) An
order or judgment granted as a result of a mistake common to the
parties.
Background
[3]
The Respondent defaulted on her mortgage
payments owing to the
Applicant.
[4]
The Applicant served a letter in terms of
Section 129 (1) of the
National Credit Act (hereinafter referred to as the “Notice”)
per registered post to the Respondent’s
elected
domicillium
for letters and as well as her traced address. However, no
notification slip for collection was obtained for the Respondent’s
traced address and as a result the Applicant also served the Section
129 (1) Notice by way of Sheriff to the Respondent’s
traced
address on 12 March 2018.
[5]
On 30 April 2018 the Applicant issued and
served summons against the
Respondent at her elected
domicilium
. The Sheriff’s
return confirms that the summons was placed on the outer principal
door of the Respondent’s elected
domicilium
. On 21 June
2018 default judgment was granted against the Respondent. It is this
default judgment that the Respondent seeks to
have rescinded.
[6]
On 9 July 2018 the Sheriff visited the traced
address of the
Respondent to attach movable property of the Respondent to satisfy
the default judgment but none could be secured.
[7]
On 16 August 2018 the Applicant made an application
in terms of
Uniform Rule 46(1) and 46A (8) to have the Respondent’s home
especially executable and was set down for hearing
on 13 September
2018.
[8]
The Respondent served and filed for a rescission
in October 2018.
Respondent’s
Submissions
[9]
The Respondent in her founding affidavit
submitted that she launched
this application for rescission in terms of Rule 42 and the common
law which requires such application
to be brought within a reasonable
time and as the application was brought within 29 days of her
becoming aware of the default judgment,
it should be considered
reasonable time. Of significance it must be noted that the Respondent
vaguely implied that she did not
bring her application in terms of
Rule 31 due to the 20-day time limit and therefore was making her
application in terms of Rule
42 instead on the basis of a reasonable
time.
[10]
The crisp question is whether in these circumstances that an order
can be properly being rescinded in terms of Rule 42 (1) (a), (b), (c)
of the Uniform Rules of Court. The issue is also whether
the facts on
which applicant relies give rise to any sort of error for which the
rule provides and, if so, whether the order was
erroneously sought or
erroneously granted because of it.
[11]
It is clear from the Respondent’s founding affidavit that
the
error on which the application is based on is that the letters of
demand and summons were not properly served on her and therefore
there was non-compliance with the National Credit Act.
[12]
It is trite that in order to succeed in an application for rescission
of judgement taken by default, an applicant must show good cause.
''This generally
entails that the applicant must:
(i)
Give
a reasonable
(and obviously acceptable)
explanation for his default.
(ii)
Show that his application is made bona
fide; and
(iii)
Show that on the merits he has a
bona
fide defence
which prima faice carries some prospects of success”3.
[13]
Moseneke J in
Harris v Absa Bank Ltd t/a Volkskas4
commented
as follows:
“
The test
whether 'sufficient cause' has been shown by
a
party seeking
relief, is dual in
nature,
it
is
conjunctive
and
not
disjunctive.
An
acceptable
explanation
of
the default
must
co-exist
with
the
evidence
of
reasonable
prospects
of
success
on
the merits".
[14]
In
casu,
the letters of demand and the summons were served on
the Respondent’s elected
domicilium
and the Applicant
even went a step further to ensure compliance by tracing the
Respondent’s address to serve the Notice in
terms of Section
129 (1) of the National Credit Act. The Respondent although alleges
that it no longer resides at the elected
domicilium
as it was
her parental address before the home was purchased, does not deny
that the traced address was incorrect. In fact, the
Respondent in her
affidavit clearly states that the Sheriff was able to place her at
the traced address when the Sheriff attempted
to satisfy the default
judgment by executing movable property. It is clear from this
statement that the Notice served on the traced
address should have
reached the Respondent and she should have reasonably been aware of
it. In any event she admits that her mother
resides at her elected
domicilium
and therefore it is implausible that the summons or
the letters of demand would not have been brought to her attention.
The Respondent’s
founding affidavit does not give an
explanation that is acceptable for her delay in attending to this
matter. It is my opinion
that she is disingenuous with the truth and
simply avers that she did not have knowledge.
Applicant’s
submission
[15]
It is the applicant’s submission that the Respondent has failed
to meet the requirements for rescission or variation under rule 42
and does not even set out clearly on which specific sub-rule
she
relies on to justify the order being granted in error in her absence.
Further that it has failed to put up a defense that has
good
prospects of success.
[16]
I turn now to deal with Rule 42. This rule is confined by its wording
and context to the rescission or variation of an ambiguous order or
an order containing a patent error, or omission5.
16.1
Rule 42 (1) (a) - an order resulting from a mistake common to the
parties; or erroneously sought or
granted in the absence of a party
affected thereby6.
16.2
Rule 42 (1) (b) and (c) has no application in the present case.
[17]
In the dictum from Streicher JA in Lohdi
2 Property Investments CC
& Another
v Bonder Development (Pty) Ltd7
dealing with
a Rule 42 (1) (a) application remarked as follows:
"Similarly, in a
case where a plaintiff is entitled to judgment in the absence of the
defendant the judgment if granted cannot
be said to have been granted
erroneously in the light of a subsequently disclosed defence. A court
which grants judgment by default
does not grant judgment on the basis
that the defendant does not have a defence: it grants judgment on the
basis that the defendant
has been notified of the plaintiff’s
claim as required by the rules, that the defendant not having given
notice of intention
to defend, is not defending the matter and that
the plaintiff is in terms of the rules entitled to the order sought.
The existence
or non- existence of a defence on the merits is an
irrelevant consideration and, if subsequently disclosed, cannot
transform a
validly obtained judgment into an erroneous judgment".
[18]
In the circumstances of the case before me, no mistake on the part
of
anyone of the parties or the court has been established. It follows
therefore that no basis has been shown to exist for the
application
of Rule 42 1 (a).
Further that
the
circumstances of the case before this court are clearly not in line
with the requirements Rule 42 (1), (a), (b), (c) or even
common law.
[19]
I therefore make the following order:
19.1 The application for
rescission of the order dated 21 June 2018 is dismissed with costs.
SARDIWALLA
J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
APPEARANCES
Date
of hearing
: 20 August 2020
Date
of judgment
:
13 April 2022
Applicant’s
Counsel
:
ADV.: M SKHOSANA
Applicant’s
Attorneys
: M T RASELO
ATTORNEYS INC
Respondent’s
Counsel :
ADV.: L PRETORIUS
Respondent’s
Attorneys :
VEZI & DE BEER ATTORNEYS INC
[1]
In the
interests of brevity, the parties will be referred to as they were
in the court a quo.
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