Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 237South Africa
Nedbank Limited v Muskat (22207/21) [2022] ZAGPPHC 237 (19 April 2022)
Headnotes
BY DEED OF TRANSFER NO. T32804/2012
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Nedbank Limited v Muskat (22207/21) [2022] ZAGPPHC 237 (19 April 2022)
Nedbank Limited v Muskat (22207/21) [2022] ZAGPPHC 237 (19 April 2022)
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sino date 19 April 2022
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IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA
(1)
REPORTABLE:
YES
/ NO
(2)
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
YES
/NO
(3)
REVISED.
19/04/2022
.
Case No.: 22207/21
In
the matter between:
NEDBANK
LIMITED
Plaintiff/Respondent
and
LIMOR
MUSKAT
Defendant/Excipient
IDENTITY NUMBER: [….]
JUDGMENT
MNGQIBISA-THUSI
J
[1]
The defendant, Mrs Limor
Muskat, is excepting to the plaintiff’s particulars of claim, as
amended, on the ground that the particulars
of claim do not contain
the necessary averments to sustain the plaintiff’s claim.
[2]
In its particulars of
claim the plaintiff alleges the following. On 12 June 2015 it
and the defendant and Mr Shaun Muskat (Mr
Muskat), who is married to
the defendant out of community of property, concluded a written loan
agreement. As security for
their indebtedness to the plaintiff,
the defendant and Mr Muskat registered a covering mortgage bond in
favour of the plaintiff and
specially hypothecated their jointly
owned immovable property. Due to the defendant and Mr Muskat
defaulting on their monthly
instalment payments, the plaintiff
instituted an action against the defendant, claiming repayment of the
money owed under the loan
agreement. Mr Muskat’s estate has
been finally sequestrated.
[3]
For the relief sought
against the defendant, the plaintiff’s prayer in its amended
particulars of claim dated 11 August 2021, reads
as follows:
“
WHEREFORE
Plaintiff prays for judgment against the Defendant, jointly and
severally with any indebtedness recovered from the insolvent estate
of SHAUN MUSKAT, if any, the one paying the other to be absolved, in
the following terms:-
1.
Payment
of the sum of
R3
214 352.15
;
2.
Payment
of interest on the amount of
R3
214 352.15
calculated at the rate of 7.00% per annum, compounded monthly in
arrear from the
1
st
May 2021
to date of final payment, both days inclusive (being the base rate of
7.00%
as at the 1
st
May 2021
);
3.
An
order declaring the defendant’s half share in the ownership of the
immovable property known as
PORTION [….] (FIVE HUNDRED
AND TWENTY TWO) SQUARE METRES HELD BY DEED OF TRANSFER NO.
T32804/2012
SUBJECT TO THE CONDITIONS
THEREIN CONTAINED
is declared specially
executable;
4.
An
order in terms of Rule 46 to authorize the Registrar to issue a
Warrant of Execution against the immovable property to obtain an
attachment over the property and an ultimate sale in execution;
5.
That
the Defendant be ordered to pay the cost of suit and execution of the
said property, on the scale as between attorney and own
client;
(section 129 letter at R126.50 per letter, Summons at R4427.50 per
summons, Judgment at R9200.00, appearance at court at
R1500.00, Writ
of attachment at R4025.00, sale in execution at R3450.00, Attendance
at sale in execution at R1150.00 and all disbursements
incurred,
which will include sheriff’s fees;
6.
Further
and/or alternative relief.”
[4]
On 16 August 2018 the
defendant filed a notice in terms of Rule 23(1), in which the
defendant gave notice of its intention to except
to the plaintiff’s
particulars of claim. The defendant’s notice of exception
reads as follows:
“
BE PLEASED TO TAKE NOTICE
that the Defendant hereby notes an exception to the Plaintiff’s
particulars of claim on the grounds that it does not disclose a
cause
of action, for the following reason:
1.
The
Plaintiff’s Prayer of its Particulars of Claim reads as follows:
“
WHEREFORE Plaintiff prays
for judgment against the Defendant, jointly and severally with any
indebtedness recovered from the insolvent
estate of Shaun Muskat, if
any, the one paying the other to be absolved”
2.
The
Plaintiff has failed to institute action as and against Mr Shaun
Muskat and/or his trustee.”
[5]
In terms of Rule 23(1) a
litigant may raise an exception against an opponent’s pleading on
the basis,
inter alia
,
that the pleading does not disclose either a cause of action or a
defence. This means that the court must look at the pleading
excepted to as it stands and cannot take into account any facts
outside those stated in the pleading except those stated in the
pleading
and cannot refer to any other document.
[6]
To succeed an excipient
has to convince the court that upon every interpretation which the
pleading in question can reasonably bear
no cause of action or
defence is disclosed.
[7]
An exception on the basis
that the particulars of claim do not disclose any cause of action is
designed to obtain a determination
of a point of law which will
dispose of the case either in whole or in part, thereby avoiding the
leading of unnecessary evidence
at a trial.
Alphina
Investments Ltd v Blacher
[1]
.
[8]
Further, in
McKenzie
v Farmers’ Co-operative Meat Industries Ltd
[2]
the court described “cause of action” in the following terms:
“
Every fact which it will be
necessary for the plaintiff to prove, if traversed, in order to
support his right to judgment of the court.
It does not
comprise every piece of evidence which is necessary to prove each
fact, but every fact which is necessary to be proved.”
[9]
It was submitted on behalf
of the defendant that the particulars of claim do not disclose any
cause of action in view of the fact
that the prayer therein refers to
the defendant being jointly and severally liable for the plaintiff’s
claim, in circumstances
where Mr Muskat has not been cited as a party
to the action even though he has an interest in the matter.
Further that the
plaintiff should have pleaded that it has instituted
an action against Mr Muskat or lodged a claim with the trustee of the
insolvent
estate. Counsel for the defendant contended that the
plaintiff’s prayer as it appears in its original particulars of
claim
before it was amended makes it clear that the relief sought is
against the defendant only.
[10]
The plaintiff’s prayer
before the particulars of claim was amended, reads, in part, as
follows:
“
WHEREFORE
,
Plaintiff prays for judgment against Defendant, for:..”
[11]
On behalf of the plaintiff
it was submitted that the particulars of claim clearly indicates that
the defendant and Mr Muskat are co-principal
debtors and are
therefore jointly and severally liable for the debt owed to the
plaintiff. Counsel for the plaintiff argued
that since a
creditor was entitled, in circumstances where two or more debtors are
jointly and severally liable, to pursue any of
the co-debtors for the
payment of the full amount of the judgment. Counsel further
argued that the plaintiff’s amended prayer
as it stands, makes it
clear that whatever amount is recovered from the insolvent estate of
Mr Muskat would be deducted from the
judgment obtained against the
defendant. It is the plaintiff’s contention that for the
plaintiff to pursue judgment against
the defendant for the payment of
the full amount of the judgment, it was not a pre-requisite that an
action should have been pursued
against Mr Muskat or the trustee of
the insolvent estate or for a claim to have been lodged with the
insolvent estate.
[12]
In its heads of argument,
the plaintiff makes reference to the following quotations from
Christie’s
Law of
Contract in South Africa
7
th
edition, in relation to (i) the nature of liability incurred by
co-debtors who are held to be jointly and severally liable and (ii)
the remedy a co-debtor who has been held liable for the full amount
of indebtedness against the other co-debtor:
“
Each
is liable to the creditor for the full amount of the debt, and the
creditor can at his or her option claim the full debt or any
lesser
amount from any of them, provided of course he or she does not
recover in total more than the full amount of the debt, since
by
definition there is only one debt due. By electing to sue one
debtor for the full amount, or more than one for equal or
varying
amounts, the creditor does not thereby commit to recovering from that
debtor, or those debtors, alone and abandoning the
right to claim
against the others. This is so even if the creditor pursues his
or her claim to judgment, because while the
judgment remains
unsatisfied the debt remains owing by all the debtors jointly and
severally. Similarly, if the creditor receives
less than the
full amount of the debt from any one co-debtor, the creditor is not
thereby debarred from claiming the balance from
that debtor or the
others
[3]
.
…
.
A
joint and several debtor who has been obliged to pay the full debt or
more than his or her proportionate share will naturally wish
to
redistribute the burden that has thus fallen entirely or
predominately on his or her own shoulders….’it is nowadays
commonly
laid down by the lawyers’ that any joint and several
debtor who has paid more than his share has a right of contribution
without
taking cession of actions.”
[4]
[13]
As correctly pointed out
by Counsel for the plaintiff, co-debtors are individually responsible
for making sure that the total amount
of the debt is repaid to the
creditor. In this case, the plaintiff, in the event of the loan
being in default, may choose to
pursue the defendant or Mr Muskat or
the trustee of the insolvent estate for repayment of the full
outstanding balance.
[14]
From the reading of the
particulars of claim as a whole, it cannot be disputed that the
plaintiff’s claim is based on the defendant
and Mr Muskat’s
indebtedness under the loan agreement and that the Muskats are
jointly liable for the debt owed. Further,
because the Muskats
are jointly and severally liable, and although the plaintiff is
claiming the full outstanding amount from the
defendant, as it is
entitled to, the plaintiff seeks execution only against the
defendant’s half share ownership of the property.
On any
reasonable interpretation of the whole pleading it is clear that the
action is against the defendant as a co-principal debtor.
[15]
In
Jowell
v Bramwell-Jones and Others
[5]
the court stated that:
“
Minor blemishes are
irrelevant: pleadings must be read as a whole; no paragraph can
be read in isolation…
A distinction must be drawn
between facta probanda or primary factual allegations which every
plaintiff must make, and the facta probantia,
which are secondary
allegations upon which the plaintiff will rely in support of his
primary factual allegations. Generally
speaking, the latter
matters for particulars for trial and even then are limited.
For the rest, they are matters of evidence.
Only facts need be pleaded;
conclusions of law need not be pleaded”.
[16]
The fact that Mr Muskat
has not been cited as a party to the action or no claim has been
lodged with the trustee of the insolvent
estate is of no moment as
the plaintiff has the choice to pursue either of the co-debtors for
the full amount of the outstanding
debt as in law the defendant and
Mr Muskat are individually liable for payment of the full amount.
[17]
In the event of the
defendant paying the full amount claimed by the plaintiff, it is up
to her to pursue a claim for a proportionate
contribution from Mr
Muskat or the insolvent estate.
[18]
As a result, I am of the
view that there is no basis for the exception noted by the defendant
and make the following order:
‘The exception is dismissed with costs on an attorney and client
scale.’
NP MNGQIBISA-THUSI
Judge of the Gauteng High Court
Date of hearing
: 13 April 2022
Date of Judgement
: 19 April 2022
Appearances:
For Excipient/Defendant: Adv N Riley (instructed by Darryl
Furman & Associates)
For the Respondent/Plaintiff: Adv CL Markram-Jooste (instructed
by Hack Stupel & Ross Attorneys)
[1]
2008 (5) SA 479
(C) at 483B
[2]
1922
AD 16.
[3]
At
296.
[4]
At
298.
[5]
1998 (1) SA 836
at 902J-903B.
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