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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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[2022] ZAGPPHC 533
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## Reyakopele Trading 117 CC v Velocity Finance (RF) Ltd (47143/2020)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 533 (12 July 2022)
Reyakopele Trading 117 CC v Velocity Finance (RF) Ltd (47143/2020)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 533 (12 July 2022)
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sino date 12 July 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
No: 47143/2020
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHERS JUDGES: NO
REVISED
12
July 2022
In
the matter between:
REYAKOPELE
TRADING 117 CC
APPLICANT
and
VELOCITY
FINANCE (RF) LTD
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
MOLEFE
J
[1]
This is an application for rescission of the judgment granted against
the applicant (the defendant in the main action) on 22 December 2020,
on the ground that such order was granted in the absence of
the
applicant, and that pending the outcome of the rescission
application, the execution or operation of the default judgment be
stayed and/or suspended.
[2]
The application is brought in terms of the provisions of rule 31(2),
alternatively
rule 42(1)(b) of the Uniform Rules of Court,
alternatively the common law.
[3]
The requirements that a rescission application in terms of rule
31(2)(b)
must satisfy are well established in
Colyn v Tiger Food
Industries Ltd t/a Meadow Feed Mills (Cape):
“…
the courts
generally expect an applicant to show good cause
by
(a) giving a reasonable explanation of the default; (b) showing that
his application is made bona fide; and (c) by showing that
there is a
bona fide defence to the plaintiff’s claim which prima facie
has some prospects of success.
”
[1]
[4]
Rule 42(1) of the Uniform Rules of Court provides that the court may
in
addition to any other powers it may have,
mero moto
or upon
application of any party affected, rescind or vary:
4.1 an
order or judgment erroneously granted in the absence of any party
affected thereby;
4.2 an
order or judgment in which there is an ambiguity or a patent error or
omission, but only to the extent
of such ambiguity, error or
omission;
4.3 an
order or judgment granted as a result of a mistake common to the
parties.
An order is erroneously
granted as a result of a procedural irregularity
[2]
or if it was not legally competent for the court to have granted such
an order.
[3]
Once the court
holds that an order or judgment was erroneously sought of granted, it
should without further enquiry rescind or
vary the order, and it is
not necessary for a party to show good cause.
[4]
[5]
For a rescission of an order in terms of the common law, sufficient
cause
must be shown; which means that:
5.1
there must be reasonable explanation for the default;
5.2 the
applicant must show that the applicant is made
bona fide;
and
5.3 the
applicant must show that he has a
bona fide
defence which
prima facie
has some prospects of success.
Background
[6]
The factual background is common cause. On 07 November 2018, the
applicant
and Volkswagen Financial Services (SA)(Pty)(Ltd) (VW)
entered into a written instalment sale agreement in terms of which
the applicant
purchased a 2016 Volkswagen Amarok motor vehicle from
VW. Thereafter, VW ceded all its rights, title and interest in the
instalment
sale agreement to the respondent, Velocity Finance (the
plaintiff in the main action). The terms of the agreement are not
disputed.
The applicant fell in arrears with its payment obligations,
and the respondent instituted legal action for cancellation of the
instalment sale agreement, the attachment of the motor vehicle and
the return thereof to the respondent due to the applicant being
in
breach of the agreement. The sheriff served summons at the
applicant’s chosen
domicilium
on 01 October 2020.
[7]
The applicant contends that he learned of the legal action in January
2021 and became aware of the default judgment on 26 January 2021. It
is the applicant’s submission that:
7.1
he was not aware of the summons/legal proceedings as the sheriff did
not serve the summons
on him;
7.2
no section 129 notice as envisaged in the National Credit Act, 34 of
2005 (‘the NCA’)
was served by the respondent;
7.3
there was an oral agreement between the applicant and the respondent
which varied the repayment
terms of the agreement.
Point
in limine
[8]
The applicant in its replying affidavit raised a
point in
limine
that the deponent to the respondent’s answering
affidavit had no authority to depose to the affidavit on behalf of
the respondent.
[9]
The legal principle is that a deponent to an affidavit does not need
to
be authorised to depose to an affidavit. Rule 7(1) of the Uniform
Rules of Court provides that:
“
(1) Subject to
the provisions of subrules (2) and (3) a power of attorney to act
need to be filed, but the authority of anyone acting
on behalf of a
party, may, within 10 (ten) days after it has come to the notice of a
party that such person is so acting or with
the leave of the court on
good cause shown at any time before judgment, be disputed, whereafter
such person may no longer act unless
he is authorised so to act, and
to enable him to do so the court may postpone the hearing of the
action or application
.”
[10]
Since
the inception of the above-mentioned rule 7(1), any issue with the
authority of a party representing another in legal
proceedings held
in the High Court should be raised in the context of rule 7(1). If
the legal practitioner is duly authorised,
it follows that the legal
proceedings are authorised, and any witness (or affidavit) relied
upon by the legal practitioner in such
proceedings is so relied upon
at the behest of the legal practitioner. As such, any challenge to
the authority of a party begins
and ends with the authority of the
legal practitioner, and is in this case, not in the replying
affidavit or heads of argument.
[5]
Only a legal practitioner needs authority to act on behalf of a
party. There is therefore no merit in the
point
in limine
and
it should fail.
Service
of the summons
[11]
The highwater mark of the application for rescission of judgment is
that the applicant
did not receive the summons nor the notice of set
down for the default judgment application. Counsel for the applicant
submitted
that according to the sheriff’s return of service the
applicant’s business premises are kept locked and the
applicant’s
business is no longer at the given address, and
service was therefore effected by affixing. It is therefore argued
that the sheriff
should have made a return of non-service as the
applicant’s business is no longer at the given address.
[12]
Rule 4 of the Uniform Rules of Court provides for different manners
in which summons may
be served. Rule 4(1)(a)(iv) states that:
“
(1)(a) Service
of any process of the court directed to the sheriff and subject to
the provisions of paragraph (aA) any document
initiating application
proceedings shall be effected by the sheriff in one or other of the
following manner-
…
(iv) if the person so
to be served has chosen a domicilium citandi; by delivering or
leaving a copy thereof at the domicilium so
chosen;
”
[13]
The
applicant’s chosen
domicilium
citandi
in
the instalment sale agreement is 82 Edwards Avenue, Office no 2,
Westonaria, and this is the address where the sheriff effected
service of the summons on 01 October 2020, in terms of rule
4(1)(a)(iv). Our courts have held that if the debtor was not there
at
the chosen
domicilium
citandi
address,
it does not alter the fact that there was adequate service.
[6]
Even if the defendant did not get knowledge of the summons, service
would be proper if the rules of service were followed.
[7]
[14]
I am satisfied that the sheriff
in casu
properly served the
summons in terms of the rule 4(1)(a)(iv), and the default judgment
was properly granted even without the applicant’s
knowledge. It
cannot be argued that there existed a procedural irregularity in
terms of rule 42(1) and in my view, the rescission
application cannot
succeed on this basis.
[15]
Furthermore, in terms of the instalment sale agreement, the applicant
must immediately
notify the respondent in writing of any change to
the chosen
domicilium
address and failure to do so the
respondent will for all purposes use the address it has even if the
applicant is no longer there.
Although the judgment was granted in
the applicant’s absence, it is not in my view a default
judgment as envisaged in rule
31, and such judgment cannot be
rescinded in terms of rule 31(2)(b) of the Uniform Rules of Court.
Section
129 notice
[16]
Section 129 read with section 130 of the NCA stipulates that a credit
provider should deliver
a section 129(1)(a) notice to a consumer,
informing such consumer of their rights under NCA prior to taking
legal action. Counsel
for the respondent however submitted that the
respondent is exempt from such obligation as the instalment sale
agreement does not
fall within the ambit of the NCA by the workings
of section 4(1) of the NCA.
[17]
Section 4(1) of the NCA states that:
“
Subject to
sections 5 and 6, this Act applies to every credit agreement between
parties dealing at arm’s length and made within
or having an
effect within the Republic except-
(a)
a credit agreement in terms of which the consumer is-
(i)
a juristic person whose asset value or annual turnover,
together with the combined asset value or annual turnover of all
related
juristic persons, at the time the agreement is made, equals
or exceeds the threshold value determined by the Minister in terms of
Section 7(1) …
(b)
a large
agreement, as described in section 9(4), in terms of which the
consumer is a juristic person whose asset value or annual
turnover
is, at the time the agreement is made, below the threshold value
determined by the Minister in terms of section 7(1) …
”
[8]
[18]
It is the respondent’s submission that the instalment sale
agreement falls within
the scope of section (4)(a)(i) of the NCA,
causing the agreement to fall outside the ambit of the NCA, making
section 129 (1) redundant
to this matter. Therefore, there is no
requirement to send out a section 129 notice to the applicant.
[19]
In interpreting section 4(1) of the NCA, the Supreme Court of Appeal
held that:
“
If Clear Creek
[a juristic person] had an asset or annual turnover greater than the
threshold set by the Minister under the Act
[NCA], it was excluded in
terms of s4(1)(a)(i). If it had an asset value or annual turnover
below that threshold, s4(1)(b) made
s9(4) applicable and mortgage
bonds [large agreements] were excluded. So, regardless of the asset
value or annual turnover of Clear
Creek, the Act did not by law,
apply to the agreement.
”
[9]
[20]
Accordingly, the applicant
in casu
cannot rely on the
provisions of the NCA for not receiving a section 129 notice in order
to show a
bona fide
defence to the respondent’s claim as
the NCA does not regulate the instalment sale agreement.
Oral
agreement
[21]
The
applicant submitted that there was an oral agreement made between the
parties varying the repayment terms of the instalment
sale agreement.
The respondent denied that such oral agreement and/or variation
existed and argued that the applicant makes vague
allegations of an
oral agreement without any particularities of exactly when, where and
with whom the oral variation was agreed.
Counsel for the respondent
submitted that the instalment sale agreement contains a
‘non-variation clause’ also known
as a ‘Shifren
clause’ which limits the parties’ ability to informally
vary the terms of the agreement.
[10]
[22]
I agree with the submission made by the respondent’s counsel
that in the absence
of compliance with the non-variation clause, the
oral agreement defence should fail since the parties are bound by
clause 14 of
the instalment sale agreement which has not been
complied with in order to give effect to any variation to the
agreement.
[23]
To rescind a judgment under common law, the ‘sufficient clause’
must be shown.
In
Chetty v Law Society, Transvaal,
sufficient
cause was described as having two essential elements:
23.1 that the party
seeking relief must present a reasonable and acceptable explanation
for his default.
23.2 that on the
merits such party has a
bona
fide
defence which
prima
facie
carries
some prospects of success.
[11]
[24]
I have already given reasons for dismissing the explanation given by
the applicant that
he defaulted because he was not aware of the
service of the summons. Regarding the merits of the application, the
applicant’s
defences are that the NCA section 129 notice was
not complied with, and that there was an oral variation agreement of
the repayment
terms. As above-mentioned these defences have no merit.
I agree with the respondent’s counsel that covid-19 or other
financial
hardships are not
bona fide
defences. I have also
noted that at no stage has the applicant denied that he was not in
arrears with his payment obligations when
default judgment was
granted.
[25]
I am not satisfied that the applicant’s defences are sufficient
to establish a
bona fide
defence that
prima
facie
carries some prospects of success. The applicant has not made out a
good case for the relief sought.
[26]
In the premises the following order is made:
1.
The application for rescission of judgment is dismissed with costs.
D
S MOLEFE
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
This
judgment by the Judge whose name is reflected herein, is delivered
and submitted electronically to the parties/their legal
representatives by e-mail. This judgment is further uploaded to the
electronic file on this matter on Caselines by the Judge or
his / her
secretary. The date of the judgment deemed to be 12 July 2022.
APPEARANCES
Counsel
for the Applicants: Adv.
L Matshidza
Instructed
by: Mr
M Yokwe (in person)
Counsel
for the Respondents: Adv.
R Carvalheira
Instructed
by:
Glover Kannieappan
Inc
Date
heard: 04
May 2022
Date
of Judgment:
12 July 2022
[1]
Colyn v
Tiger Food Industries Ltd t/a Meadow Feed Mills (Cape)
2003 (6) SA 1(SCA)
(2003) ZA11 SA 113 at para 11. The court in Colyn
was concerned with an application for rescission in terms of rule
42(1)(a).
This applicable approach is the same.
[2]
De
Wet v Western Bank Ltd
1979 (2) SA 103
1
(A) at 1038D.
[3]
Athmaran
v Singh
1989
(3) SA 953D.
[4]
Rossiter
v Nedbank Ltd
SCA
unreported 96/2014 dated 01 December 2015.
[5]
Eskom
v Soweto City Council
1992 (2) SA 703
(W) at 705A-706G.
[6]
Gerber
v Stolze and Others
1951
(2) SA 166
(T) at 170G.
[7]
Hardroad
(Pty) Ltd v Oribi Motors (Pty) Ltd
1977
(2) SA 576
(W) at 580G.
[8]
The Minister determined the “turnover” threshold to be
R1 000 000.00 and the “large credit agreement”
to be R250 000.00 0r above.
[9]
Firstrand
Bank Ltd v Clear Creek Trading 12 (Pty) Ltd and Another
2018
(5) SA 300
(SCA) at 302 para 2.
[10]
SA
Sentrial Ko-Op Graanmply Bpk v Shifren
1964
(4) SA 760 (A).
[11]
Chetty
v Law Society, Transvaal
1985 (2) SA 756
at 764I- 765E.
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