Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 495South Africa
Motshwane v Nedbank Limited (66890/2010) [2022] ZAGPPHC 495 (12 July 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
12 July 2022
Headnotes
Summary of substantial facts
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Motshwane v Nedbank Limited (66890/2010) [2022] ZAGPPHC 495 (12 July 2022)
Motshwane v Nedbank Limited (66890/2010) [2022] ZAGPPHC 495 (12 July 2022)
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
Number: 66890/2010
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
REVISED:
NO
Date:
12 July 2022
In
the matter between:
SOLOMON
MOTSHWANE
Applicant
and
NEDBANK
LMITED
Respondent
JUDGMENT
NYATHI
J
Introduction
[1]
The Applicant is before court seeking a rescission of a court order
that was granted
against him on 13 August 2012. The Applicant is a
qualified medical doctor of many years standing.
[2]
The Applicant bases his application on the fact that:
2.1 He
had not read the documents presented to him when he signed as surety
and was not aware of their significance;
2.2 He had
received summons, but assumed it was not against him in his personal
capacity and elected not to read it;
and
2.3 He
was legally represented at the time and assumed his lawyer would
handle the matter.
Summary
of substantial facts
[3]
The Applicant was a shareholder of a company called Interlink
Airlines (Pty) Ltd (“Interlink”).
Interlink entered into
three instalment sale agreements on 27 June 2006, 30 June 2006 and 21
August 2006 (the “Instalment
Agreements”)
[4]
On 27 June 2006, the Applicant entered into a suretyship agreement
wherein he bound
himself as surety and co-principal debtor in solidum
for the repayment on demand of all amounts that Interlink owed to the
Respondent
(the “Suretyship Agreement.)”
[5]
Interlink defaulted in its payment obligations. The Respondent
instituted proceedings
against the three parties who signed surety on
behalf of Interlink, for the payment of the amounts owing plus
interest, in terms
of the 3 instalment sale agreements, the one
paying, the others to be absolved. Applicant is one of the three
parties.
[6]
On
13 August 2012
the Honourable Justice Ebersohn AJ granted
an order wherein the Applicant (the Third Defendant in the
proceedings before Acting
Judge Ebersohn) was ordered to effect
payment to the Respondent in respect of three instalment sale
agreements (“the Order”).
[7]
The Applicant applied to rescind the Order during or about
May
2021.
His explanation for the delay, gleaned from his replying
affidavit, is that:
7.1 He
did not know he could apply for rescission;
7.2 His
erstwhile attorney of record that assisted him in 2013 did not advise
him of this option and instead assisted
him with an interpleader;
7.3 He
assumed because the Respondent took no further steps to execute on
the Order for the years 2014 to 2019
that the matter was moot;
7.4 His
second set of attorneys also did not advise him of this possibility
when they assisted him in 2020.
[8]
The Applicant states in his founding affidavit that whilst he had
paid an attorney
a deposit. This attorney drafted a plea. On the face
of it, the plea is in respect of all the defendants to the
proceedings. The
Applicant then avers that he was never consulted by
the attorney who on his own included an averment that Applicant was
married
in community of property and was therefore not bound by the
deed of suretyship which was allegedly void due to provisions of the
Matrimonial Property Act.
[1]
Applicant appears to rely on this fact to support his version that
the said attorney acted without his direct instruction because
in
actual fact he was married out of community of property with accrual.
[9]
The Applicant states that he had assumed, incorrectly, that the
summons claimed payment
from him personally. He had assumed that the
matter pertained only to Interlink and did not attend court. He also
did not enquire
from the attorneys who represented him whether he
should attend court.
[10]
The Applicant is thus raising a defence of
iustus error
. In
this regard:
10.1 He admits
signing the Suretyship Agreement;
10.2 He does not
recognise the handwriting of the portions which were filled in
manuscript, yet he admits to having initialled
next to it; and
10.3 He did not
read the Suretyship Agreement and had not intended entering into such
agreement.
The
law on rescission applied to the facts
[11]
In
Colyn v Tiger Food Industries Ltd t/a Meadow Feed Mills (Cape)
2003 (6) SA 1
(SCA)
the Supreme Court of Appeal (“SCA”)
held that:
“
With
that as the underlying approach the Courts generally expect an
applicant to show good cause (a) by giving a reasonable explanation
of his default; (b) by showing that his application is made bona
fide; and (c) by showing that he has a bona fide defence to the
plaintiffs claim which prima facie has some prospect of success...”
[12]
In
Grant v Plumbers (Pty) Ltd
1949 (2) SA 470
(O)
Brink J held
that in order to show good cause an Applicant should comply with the
following requirements:
(a) He must give a
reasonable explanation of his default;
(b) His application must
be made bona fide;
(c) He
must show that he has a bona fide defence to the plaintiff’s
claim.
[2]
[13]
The Applicant’s explanation of his default is rather lacking in
substance, to start with,
he elected not to read the summons which
were properly served. He is an intelligent, well-educated
professional who is not deficient
of the ability to read and
appreciate a document placed before him. His decision not to read the
summons therefore amounts to negligence
on his part.
[14]
On the Applicant’s defence that he had signed the Suretyship
Agreement without reading
it and had not intended to enter into such
an agreement, and obviously be bound by it, there is a decision which
is on point. It
is the matter of
Slip Knot Investments 777 (Pty)
Ltd v Du Toit
2011 (4) SA 72
(SCA)
at paragraph [9]
, where
the SCA held:
"The respondent’s
defence is that he lacked the intention to be bound and therefore
that no agreement of suretyship was
concluded. Contractual liability
however arises not only in cases where there is consensus or a real
meeting of the minds but also
by virtue of the doctrine of
quasi-mutual assent: Even where there is no consensus, contractual
liability may nevertheless ensue.
The respondent's mistake is a
unilateral one. Referring to the mistake of the kind the respondent
laboured under, it was said in
National and Overseas Distributors
Corporation (Pty) Ltd v Potato Board:
‘
Our
law allows a party to set up his own mistake in certain circumstances
in order to escape liability under a contract into which
he has
entered but where the other party has not made any misrepresentation
and has not appreciated at the time of acceptance that
his offer was
being accepted under a misapprehension, the scope for a defence of
unilateral mistake is very narrow, if it exists
at all. At least the
mistake (error) would have to be reasonable (justus) and it would
have to be pleaded.’
‘
the
decisive question to be asked in cases such as this has been
formulated as follows:
‘
Did
the party whose actual intention did not conform to the common
intention expressed, lead the other party, as a reasonable man,
to
believe that his declared intention represented his actual
intention?... To answer this question, a three-fold enquiry is
usually
necessary, namely, firstly was there a misrepresentation as
to one's intention secondly who made that misrepresentation and
thirdly
was the other misled thereby? ... The last question
postulates two possibilities: Was he actually misled and would a
reasonable
man have been misled?
[15]
The Applicant did not make any averments as to having been misled due
to a misrepresentation.
Instead, the Applicant states that he would
sign documents placed before him by the First Defendant which
“related to the
affairs of Interlink.” This is not a
reasonable explanation, nor does it constitute a valid basis to rely
upon
iustus error
.
[16]
The legally recognized defences which could help a signatory to a
contract avoid liability are:
misrepresentation, fraud, duress and
undue influence. Absent any of these, liability will follow.
[3]
[17]
What flows from the above is that the Applicant was not able to
present and sustain a bona fide
defence. What seems to have spurred
the Applicant on to launch this application is when the Sheriff came
knocking to attach his
assets.
[18]
Similarly in
Rieks
Towing (Pty) Ltd v Nienaber
[4]
,
after the judgment was obtained against the Respondents, it took them
eight (8) months to bring an Application for rescission
of judgment.
This was after the Sheriff attended to their property to remove
attached assets. In the Rieks Towing matter the application
for
rescission was successful, the Applicants having proffered a defence
which was found by the court to be valid.
[19]
I reiterate the fact that in casu the Applicant’s evidence as
presented, did not persuade
me that he has a bona fide defence with
good prospects of success.
[20]
I accordingly make the following order:
The application is
dismissed with costs.
J.S.
NYATHI
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION
PRETORIA
CASE
NUMBER: 66890/2010
HEARD
ON: 15 March 2022
DATE
OF JUDGMENT: 12 July 2022
FOR
THE APPLICANT: Adv. K.A.R Thobakgale
Applicant’s
attorneys: Barter Mckellar
e-mail:
caleb@bartermckellarlaw.law
C/O
Tim Du Toit & Co.: Pretoria.
e-mail:
Ksoffberg@timdutoit.co.za
FOR
THE RESPONDENT: Adv. B. Brammer
Respondent’s
attorneys: Victor & Partners
Constantia
Kloof
e-mail:
melissa@victorandpartners.co.za
[1]
Section
15 (2) (h) of
Act
88 of 1984.
[2]
Excerpt
from Rieks Towing (Pty) Ltd & Another v Nienaber & Another
ZAGPJHC/2020/437 (Case No. 8553/2019) at Paragraph
19 per Vukeya AJ
(as she then was).
[3]
The
Law of Contract – RH Christie (5
th
Edition)
Chapters
7, 8 and 9
[4]
Rieks
Towing (Pty) Ltd & Another v Nienaber & Another
ZAGPJHC/2020/437 (Case No. 8553/2019) at Paragraph 8.
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