Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 303South Africa
Erf 23 Magaliesig CC v Firstrand Bank Limited and Another (39085/2016) [2022] ZAGPPHC 303 (29 April 2022)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Erf 23 Magaliesig CC v Firstrand Bank Limited and Another (39085/2016) [2022] ZAGPPHC 303 (29 April 2022)
Erf 23 Magaliesig CC v Firstrand Bank Limited and Another (39085/2016) [2022] ZAGPPHC 303 (29 April 2022)
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sino date 29 April 2022
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION PRETORIA)
CASE
NO: 39085/2016
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED
In
the matter between:
ERF
23 MAGALIESIG
CC
APPLICANT
AND
FIRSTRAND
BANK LIMITED
FIRST RESPONDENT
SHERIFF,
SANDTON NORTH
SECOND RESPONDENT
This
judgment is issued by the Judge whose name is reflected herein and is
submitted electronically to the parties/their legal representatives
by email. The judgment is further uploaded to the electronic file of
this matter on Caselines by the Judge or his/her secretary.
The date
of this judgment is deemed to be 29 April 2022.
JUDGMENT
NDLOKOVANE
A J
INTRODUCTION
[1.]
This is an application for a declaratory order that the sale in
execution of the immovable property of the applicant be declared
unlawful and invalid as well as other ancillary relief, alternatively
be set aside.
THE
PARTIES
[2.]
The applicant is a close corporation with its place of business
situated at [....] Jaynic Mews,Troupand Avenue,Magaliesig;
[3.]
The first respondent is FirstRand bank Limited, a public company and
credit provider registered in terms of the laws of the
Republic of
South Africa and in terms of
National Credit Act 34 of 2005
(“the
NCA”), with its registered offices situated at FNB Towers,27
Diagonal Street, Johannesburg, Gauteng Province.
The second
respondent is the Sheriff of this honourable court, operating in the
Sandton North jurisdiction with its registered
offices situated at 24
Rhodes Street, Kensignton B, Randburg, Gauteng Province.
FACTUAL
BACKGROUND
[4.]
The salient factual background to this matter is as follows. The
applicant, duly represented by Ms. Jacqueline Motshekgwa,
its sole
member, through a mortgage loan granted to her by the first
respondent bank purchased the immovable property situated
at [....]
Jaynic Mews,Troupand Avenue,Magaliesig.
[5.]
The applicant experienced some difficulties with regard her monthly
earnings. This brought some financial hardships to bear.
On 17 May
2016, court processes were instituted against the applicant and the
court on 8 October 2016, granted an order against
the applicant in
terms whereof, the property was declared specially executable. At the
time of the order the amount owing on the
bond to the first
respondent was R1 195 236,83.
[6.]
The first respondent through second respondent sold the property to a
third party, Mr. Harbans Ashley Singh who is not joined
to these
proceedings for an amount of R1.2 million, without the reserve price.
I hasten to mention that before me, is another application
to join
Mr. Singh and/or the new owner as the third respondent, which I shall
revert to later in my judgement.
[7.]
The declaratory application is opposed by the first respondent only
and the joinder application remain unopposed.
[8.]
The relief sought by the applicant in the Notice of Motion is to the
following effect:
“
a)
Setting aside the sale of the property known as [....] Jaynic
Mews,Troupand Avenue,Magaliesig,
sold
by
the
Second
Respondent
to
the
First
Respondent
for
R1,2million.
b)
Ordering that the Second Respondent- re-auction the property at the
premises of the second respondent for an amount of not less
than
R1,6million.
c)
costs of suit against the first respondent”.
POINT
IN LIMINE
[9.]
In its answering affidavit, the first respondent raised a point
in
limine
of non- joinder, in that it sold the property to Mr. Singh
for either for R1.1 million or R1.2 million as it is not clear in the
papers. The latter had complied with its obligations in terms of the
conditions of sale, and as such, he has a direct and substantial
interest in the relief which the applicant seeks herein but has not
been joined as a party hereto. This contention is conceded
to by the
applicant and in the same application before me, the applicant seeks
to address this and had filed a joinder application
for my
consideration.
[10.]
From the founding papers
ex
facio
,
it is clear that Mr. Singh has a direct and substantial interest in
the application but is not a party hereto. Failure to join
an
interested party is sometimes a fatal shortcoming, but the court may,
in any event, not grant an order in the absence of such
party.
[1]
I shall return to this point later in my judgement. In
SA
Riding for the Disabled Association v Regional Land Claims
Comissioner:2017(5) SA1 (CC) at 5A-D
,
it was said,
“
[10] If the
applicant shows that it has some right which is affected by the order
issued, permission to intervene must be granted.
For it is a basic
principle of our law that no order should be granted against a party
without affording such party a predecision
hearing. This is so
fundamental that an order is generally taken to be binding only on
parties to the litigation.
[11] Once the
applicant for intervention shows a direct and substantial interest in
the subject-matter of the case, the court ought
to grant leave to
intervene…”.
[11.]
Another point
in limine
was raised by the applicant in its
replying affidavit, relating to the authority to depose on behalf of
the first respondent by
Mr Roy Gomes. The grounds of the attack lies
in the absence of an appointment of Gomes from a certificate as set
out from paragraphs
3.1.1-3.1.3 of the applicants’ replying
affidavit. The first respondent is accordingly challenged to provide
evidence of
the authority of Gomes in accordance with the
authorisation signed by one Singh of the first respondent.
[12.]
It is trite that where matters involve corporate bodies or
associations, as it is the case in the present matter, there is
no
need for the deponent to an affidavit to be authorised to depose to
an affidavit in motion proceedings. However, the institution
of the
proceedings thereof must be authorised by the legal entity purporting
to sue.
[13.]
There are various cases
dealing with the issue of authority. I shall simply highlight a few
relevant ones for purposes of determining
the issue
in
casu
.
In
Eskom
v Soweto City Council
[2]
,
the
court held as follows:
“
The
care displayed in the past about proof of authority to bring legal
proceedings appeared to have been inspired by the fear that
a person
might deny that he was a party to the litigation carried on in his
name.
The
later view, reflected in Rule 7(1) of the Uniform Rules of Court, is
that, if the attorney concerned is authorised to bring
an application
on behalf of the applicant, the application necessarily is that of
the applicant. There is no need for any other
person, whether (s)he
is a witness or someone who becomes involved especially in the
context of authority, to be additionally authorised.
It is thus
sufficient to know whether the attorney acts with authority
.
Apart
from more informal requests or enquiries, Rule 7(1) provides the
machinery for challenging an attorney's authority to act.
Use should
not be made of heads of argument, textual analysis and submissions
about the adequacy of the words used by a deponent
about his own
authority”.
[14.]
In the present case, Mr. Roy Games, a legal manager employed by the
first respondent deposed to an answering affidavit on
behalf of the
first respondent. Further, he states that by virtue of his employment
with the first respondent, he has access to
the books and accounts
and other records relating to the matter and have perused same. He is
not the attorney of record. From the
principles held in above
authorities, he need not do any more than what is stated in the
answering affidavit as set out in its
paragraphs 1-5. I find
therefore no merit in the point in
limine
raised by the
applicant in its replying affidavit and same must fail.
ISSUE
FOR DETERMINATION
[15.]
In her heads of argument on behalf of the applicant and also during
oral submissions, Ms Lesipa, counsel for the applicant
submitted that
auctioning of the property which is utilised by the applicant as
residential property and in fact resides with her
two minor children,
without a reserve price was not in compliant with the full bench
decision of Mokebe
[3]
, wherein
the court held that unless exceptional circumstances are placed
before the court, by the bond holder, the property must
be sold at a
reserve price.
It
is common cause that the property was indeed sold without a reserve
price and was also sold below the market value and same has
caused
Ms. Jacqueline Motshegwa, irreparable prejudice. Further, Ms Lesiba
impressed that although the property is in the name
of a close
corporation, Ms Motshekgwa is the only sole member thereof and
utilises the property for residential purposes and in
fact resides
with her two minor children.
[16.]
In contrast, Mr. Minnaar on behalf of the first respondent and its
answering affidavit and during oral submissions contends
that the
applicant’s understanding of the correct legal position in this
regard is contrived and flawed. In that, the judgement,
declaring the
property executable, was granted on 20 October 2016, whereas, the
sale, in terms of which the property was sold,
was conducted on 4
June 2019. Also that rule 46A came into operation on 22 December 2017
and that the Mokebe judgement was delivered
on the 12
th
September 2018.Therefore, at the time the judgement, declaring the
property executable was granted, the provisions of rule 46A
were not
applicable as same only came into operation on 22 December 2017. In
light of the aforesaid, the first respondent submits
that there was
no obligation on them to place any facts before the honourable court
regarding the setting of a reserve price, same
is conceded by the
applicant in its replying affidavit. Also, that the first respondent
contends that when the executability judgement
was granted on 20
October 2016, that court became
functus officio
: and that
there was no way to retrospectively approach the honourable court to
set the alleged applicable facts before court.
[17.]
This brings me to consider the crisp questions raised in the papers
before me, whether, it was necessary for the first respondent
to have
applied the provisions of uniform rule 46A when the sale was
conducted? Put differently, does the provisions of uniform
rule 46A
have retrospective effect and whether rule 46A is applicable where
the property is registered in the name of a legal p
ersona
as
it is the case in the present matter?
THE
APPLICABLE LAW
[18.]
Prior to the amendment of Uniform Rule 46 and the promulgation of
Rule 46A, the execution procedure that lenders followed
was
prescribed by the former Rule 46, the latter which did not
per se
require the intervention of a court. It was an administrative
process controlled by the judgment creditor with the assistance of
the Sheriff and the Registrar. The substitution of Rule 46 in 2010
introduced specific and detailed provisions applicable to court
oversight. This, in turn, requires full disclosure of all relevant
facts to the Court when judgment is sought as any monetary judgment
may impact on the discretion which a court is required to exercise
when execution is sought. The executionary relief has become
an
integral part of the lender’s cause of action and is required
to be set out when it makes its claim or, at least, it forms
part of
the relief when it makes a claim.
[19.]
Variations in foreclosure practice had grown in the various
jurisdictions. In particular, a practice had arisen in several
jurisdictions to postpone applications for leave to execute against
immovable property, usually for a period of six months, in
order to
allow the defendant, the opportunity to bring arrear bond amounts up
to date.
[20.]
In other jurisdictions, evidence that attempts had been made to
execute against movables (ordinarily, a
nulla bona
sheriff's
return) would be required by the court before it would allow
execution against immovable property. As such, a creditor
was obliged
to seek a monetary judgment and thereafter execute against movables
despite it being more time consuming and costly
to do so, and the
proceeds of the sale of movables very rarely, if ever, being
sufficient to satisfy the debt. This approach was
criticised by some
commentators, perhaps rightly so, as it resulted in the loss of a
debtor's worldly possessions and did little
to avoid the inevitable
sale of immovable property.
[21.]
Clearly, an intervention was required to achieve a consistent and
fair approach. Enter the Mokebe and Hendricks judgments.
The
Judgments
[22.]
On Friday, 13 April 2018, four unopposed applications relating to
foreclosure of bonds
over
primary
residences
where
the
NCA
was
applicable,
were
selected
at
random and referred to a full bench of the South Gauteng High Court.
The judgment was handed down on 12 September 2018 and was
reported as
ABSA
Bank Limited v Mokebe
and
three related matters
[4]
)(“Mokebe
judgement”)
[23.]
A day after the full bench judgment of the Gauteng Local Division was
delivered, the Western Cape High Court referred a number
of
foreclosure matters for hearing before a full bench, reported as
Standard
Bank of South Africa Limited v Hendricks and Another and related
matters
[5]
(‘the
Hendricks judgement”).
[24.]
It is important to note that both the Mokebe and Hendricks judgments
come about in the context of, and the findings are accordingly
restricted to, matters where the property in question is the primary
residence of the debtor.
[25.]
The
Mokebe
and
Hendricks
judgments have brought
considerable consistency and certainty to the foreclosures practice.
In particular, the court's emphasis
on the importance of it being in
the interests of both debtors and bondholders to dispose of
foreclosure matters quickly and cost
effectively, rather than in a
protracted and expensive "piecemeal “fashion, is to be
welcomed.
[26.]
An interesting additional issue, which the Western Cape bench
explored, was whether Rule 46A constitutes a substantive change
to
the law and was therefore beyond the authority of the Rules Board to
implement, as it had purported to do. The court in this
regard
concluded that setting of reserve price is a matter of procedural law
in that it is concerned with the manner in which the
judgment is
executed (the conduct and procedure of the sale) and it is therefore
within the authority of the Rules Board to introduce
rules to this
effect. Further, the stance adopted in
Mokebe
regarding the
setting of reserve prices, namely that courts should always have
regard to the circumstances; that they should generally
set a reserve
price; and that it will be the exception that courts do not do so. It
was noted however that the court is not obliged
to set a reserve
price but it must consider the factors set out in rule 46A(9)(b) when
it makes this determination. This is so
since as a matter of
substantive law, the court has judicial oversight concerning the
declaration of executability of immovable
property that is the
primary residence of a debtor. Rule 46A(9) provides a mechanism
through which the court exercises such judicial
oversight and does
not amend or add to the substantive law.
EVALUATION
[27.]
To answer the crisp question(s) in the present case, whether, on a
proper interpretation, the introduction of Rule 46(A) had
retroactive
effect? It is common cause that the execution order was granted in
2016, where no intervention of court was needed
to set the reserve
price in matters relating to primary residence.
In
National
Director of Public Prosecutions v Carolus
[6]
,
where
the following was said: “
An
important legal rule forming part of what may be described as our
legal culture provides that no statute is to be construed as
having
retrospective operation (in the sense of taking away or impairing a
vested right acquired under existing laws) unless the
legislature
clearly intended the statute to have effect
.
See:
Peterson
v Cuthbert and Company Ltd
1945 AD 420
at 430
”
.In
Bellairs
v Hodnett and Another
1978 (1) SA 1109
A
,
it was
said that not only is there a presumption against retrospective
activity, but “even where a statutory provision is
expressly
stated to be retrospective in its operation it is an accepted rule
that, in the absence of contrary intention appearing
from the
statute, it is not treated as affecting completed transactions
…”
(at 1148 F – G).
The
basis of this presumption was stated in
Carolus
(supra at par. 36)
to
be elementary considerations of fairness which dictate that
individuals should have an opportunity to know what the law is and
to
conform their conduct accordingly. Reference was also made to
Du
Toit v Minister of Safety and Security
[2008] ZASCA 125
;
2009 (1) SA 176
SCA in par. 10
with
reference to an English decision that “generally there is a
strong presumption that a legislature does not intend to
impose a new
liability in respect of something that has already happened, because
generally it would not be reasonable for a legislature
to do that…”.
[28.]
Similarly, in the present matter, a careful consideration of the
introduction of uniform Rule 46A does not indicate any provision
that
is expressly stated to be retrospective in its operation. Therefore,
from the authorities above mentioned it is an accepted
rule that, in
the absence of contrary intention appearing from the statute, it is
not treated as affecting completed transactions.
I accordingly find
that rule 46A does not apply retrospectively.
I
therefore agree with the submissions made on behalf of the first
respondent that under the circumstances, at the time of approaching
the court for execution order, they had no obligation in law to
approach the court to set a reserve price where the property is
a
primary residence.
[29.]
This then brings me to the next question for determination whether
the protection as aforesaid is extended to juristic persons
as the
applicant in the present. I hasten to mention that the applicant
indeed is a juristic person and the property under review
was bought
by it. However, it is common cause that at the time of the sale of
the property the sole member of the applicant was
utilising the same
for residential purposes. Nonetheless, considering the discussion of
the authorities above, whether or not the
protection extends to
juristic entities in this case is neither here nor there, as rule 46A
will not apply retrospectively.
[30.]
Based on the finding I have made in respect of the main application
relating to the retrospective application of rule 46A,
I see no need
to deal further with the issue of joinder discussed
supra
as
it has become mute.
[31.]
With regards to costs, it cannot be disputed that issues of
executability of primary residence have constitutional connotations
and therefore, litigants that seek judicial intervention cannot be
penalised. Accordingly, despite the first respondent being successful
in the main, I make no order as to costs.
ORDER:
[32.1]
In the result, the applicant is not entitled to the declaratory order
she seeks and accordingly the main application is dismissed.
[32.2]
No order as to costs.
N.NDLOKOVANE
A J
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Appearances
Applicant
Counsel
Adv. Lesipa
Attorney
for the Applicant
:
Ledwaba Attorneys
Counsel
for the First Respondent :
Adv. J Minaar
Attorney
for the First Respondent
Hammond Pole Majola Attorneys
Date
of Hearing
: 17 February 2022
Date
of Judgment
: 29 April 2022
Judgment
transmitted electronically
[1]
Mahlangu
v Mahlangu and Another (1339/2020) [2020] ZAMPMHC 5 (14 May 2020)
para 4.
[2]
1992 (2) SA 703
(W) at 705
[3]
2018(6) SA 492(GJ)
[4]
[2018] 4 All SA 306 (GJ
[5]
2019] 1 All SA 839(WCC)
(14 December 2018)
[6]
2000(1)ALL SA 302(A)(1December 1999)
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