Case Law[2025] ZAWCHC 43South Africa
ABSA Bank Limited v Boltman and Another (16025/2021) [2025] ZAWCHC 43 (13 February 2025)
Headnotes
judgment and for a special execution order in terms of rule 46 and 46A (the capital sum claimed in the summary judgment application was reduced to R2 682 427.52). In the affidavit filed in support of the application for summary judgment, the deponent alleged
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
>>
2025
>>
[2025] ZAWCHC 43
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## ABSA Bank Limited v Boltman and Another (16025/2021) [2025] ZAWCHC 43 (13 February 2025)
ABSA Bank Limited v Boltman and Another (16025/2021) [2025] ZAWCHC 43 (13 February 2025)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAWCHC/Data/2025_43.html
sino date 13 February 2025
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case No:
16025/2021
In
the matter between:
ABSA
BANK LIMITED
Plaintiff/Applicant
and
LINDA
BOLTMAN
First Defendant/Respondent
FREDERIK
HENDRICUS BOLTMAN
Second Defendant/Respondent
Coram:
Justice J
Cloete
Heard:
29 November 2024
Delivered
electronically:
13 February 2025
JUDGMENT
CLOETE
J
:
[1]
This is an
opposed application in terms of s 27(1)(b) of the Superior
Courts Act
[1]
in which the
applicant (plaintiff) seeks the removal (transfer) of the main action
pending in this Division under the above case
number to the North
Gauteng High Court, Pretoria. For convenience I will refer to the
parties as they are in the main action.
[2]
On 17 September 2021 the plaintiff issued summons against the
defendants,
jointly and severally, for payment of R3 706 192.44
plus interest and costs on the attorney and client scale, as well
as
for an order declaring a certain immovable property, which is
registered in the name of the first defendant and situated at
2[…] M[…] Avenue, Farm T[…] (the “Pretoria
address”) specially executable. The plaintiff’s
claim
arises out of the alleged breach by the first defendant of a written
overdraft facility agreement and whose indebtedness
thereunder was
secured by three mortgage bonds registered in favour of the plaintiff
over the Pretoria address, as well as a written
deed of suretyship in
which the second defendant bound himself as surety and co-principal
debtor for all amounts owed by the first
defendant to the plaintiff.
[3]
Prior to the institution of action the plaintiff obtained a tracer
report
which reflected that the defendants’ ‘
home
address’
was The Farm L[…] (Portion 26 of the
Farm Doornrivier 98), Herold, George (the “George address”).
In paragraph
2 of the plaintiff’s particulars of claim it was
alleged that both defendants were residing at the George address. The
summons
was served on the defendants by the Sheriff at the George
address on 23 September 2021 (personally on the second
defendant,
and on the second defendant on behalf of the first
defendant). On 6 October 2021, they entered an appearance to
defend in
which their attorney (based in Limpopo) notified the
plaintiff that their ‘
full residential address'
is the
Pretoria address.
[4]
A mediation process followed, which was unsuccessful. On 17 January
2023 the defendants delivered their plea. In regard to paragraph 2 of
the plaintiff’s particulars of claim they made identical
allegations, and I thus quote only those made by the first
defendant:
‘
Save to admit
the name and identity number of the first defendant, the remainder of
the contents of this paragraph, relating to
the first defendant’s
place of residence are denied. It is pleaded that the first defendant
alternates her residency between
her primary residence situated at
[the Pretoria address]
and
[the George address]
which
she looks after on behalf of the owner.’
[5]
On 3 March 2023 the plaintiff served a notice of intention to
amend
its particulars of claim but in respect of allegations other
than those pertaining to paragraph 2 thereof. The defendants did
not object to that notice, and on 15 March 2023 the plaintiff
delivered the amended pages of its particulars of claim. On
4 April
2023 the defendants appointed new attorneys based in Pretoria, and on
24 April 2023 they delivered their consequentially
amended plea.
In regard to paragraph 2 of the plaintiff's particulars of
claim, each alleged in identical terms (and again
I thus quote only
that portion pertaining to the first defendant) that:
‘
2.1
Save to admit the name and identity number of the first defendant,
the remainder of the content of this
paragraph, relating to the first
defendant’s place of residence are denied.
2.2
The first defendant specifically pleads that her primary residence is
situated at
[the Pretoria address]
and that merely for
employment purposes she acts as a caretaker of an immovable property
in George
[the George address].
Due to the aforesaid the first
defendant is duty bound to occupy the immovable property in George
for a period of time.
2.3
The first defendant however further specifically pleads that this
does not detract from the fact
that the property situated at
[the
Pretoria address]
remains her primary residence.’
[6]
On 16 May 2023 the plaintiff delivered applications for summary
judgment
and for a special execution order in terms of rule 46 and
46A (the capital sum claimed in the summary judgment application was
reduced to R2 682 427.52). In the affidavit filed in
support of the application for summary judgment, the deponent alleged
that:
‘
4.
From the Respondents’
plea it is evident that the following are
common cause between the
parties alternatively not seriously disputed
: …
4.3
The identity of the
Respondents, (note paragraphs 2 and 3 of the plea read with paragraph
2 of the particulars of claim). Save that
the Respondents deny that
the George address cited is their permanent residential address.
Pleading that the said address is only
resided in on a temporary
basis, whilst the encumbered property is their permanent residence…’
[7]
After delivering notices of opposition to both applications, the
defendants
served a notice of intention to amend their plea to
introduce a special plea of lack of jurisdiction. After pleading that
the facility
agreement was concluded at or near Pretoria; the
Pretoria address is situated within Pretoria; the mortgage bonds
pertaining thereto
are registered in the Pretoria Deeds Office; and
that both defendants chose the Pretoria address as their
domicilium
in terms of the agreements with the plaintiff, they alleged that:
‘
A.7
The Defendants specifically plead that in terms of Section 21 of the
Superior Court’s Act 10 of
2013 jurisdiction of this Court to
adjudicate the matter in casu will be established by either the cause
of action relied upon
by the Plaintiff having arisen within this
Honourable Court’s area of jurisdiction (or a portion thereof)
or the Defendants to be regarded as a person over whom the Court has
jurisdiction and as such being persons residing within the
Court’s
area of jurisdiction
.
A.8
It is patently clear that the cause of action or simply a portion
thereof has not arisen within
this Honourable Court’s area of
jurisdiction.
A.9
The Defendants specifically plead that they are not resident within
the Honourable Court’s
area of jurisdiction and that they are
resident in the Gauteng Province with their specific address being
that of the mortgaged
property. The Defendants further plead that
they have always regarded the mortgaged property as their primary
residence.
The address utilised by the Plaintiff in order to
attempt to establish jurisdiction in this Honourable Court is not a
residential
address of the Defendants and has at no stage whatsoever
been regarded by the Defendants as their residential address or
address
of permanent residence
.
A.10 In
extrapolation of the aforesaid the Defendants specifically plead that
the address utilised by the Plaintiff
is simply an address of a
property at which the Defendants, from time to time and on an ad hoc
basis attend to as caregivers. The
Defendants specifically plead that
the fact that they attend to the aforesaid property on an ad hoc
basis from time to time to
effect and oversee maintenance and that
same is indeed maintained in no way constitute residence for the
purpose of establishing
jurisdiction in the abovementioned Honourable
court.
WHEREFORE
the First and Second Defendants pray that the Plaintiff’s
action be dismissed with costs
, alternatively that the
action be transferred to the North Gauteng High Court
.’
(emphasis supplied)
[8]
The defendants annexed their notice of intention to amend to the
affidavit
filed in opposition to the summary judgment application.
However no mention was made in the affidavit itself of the
alternative
prayer that the action be transferred to the North
Gauteng High Court. Instead the defendants adopted the stance that
the issue
of lack of jurisdiction of this court was one that entitled
them to leave to defend ‘
in order to ventilate’
it
at trial (along with 4 other defences raised which have no bearing on
the s 27 application before me – these will
be dealt with
by the court hearing the summary judgment application in due course).
The special plea was subsequently delivered
on 24 July 2023.
[9]
On 25 July 2023 the plaintiff’s attorney wrote to the
defendants’
attorney and the relevant portion thereof reads as
follows:
‘
3.
Secondly, in respect of the procedural continuation of the matter:
3.1
Our client will not at the moment be amenable to grant leave to
defend.
3.2
It was noted that your client’s special plea (inserted by way
of amendment) alludes to the possibility
that the matter be
transferred from the Western Cape, Cape Town Division of the High
Court to the Gauteng, Pretoria Division of
the High Court. Our client
is desirous to institute an application for the transfer of the
matter. In light of the fact that your
client also alludes to the
possibility of transfer and to avoid the incurrence of costs, will
your client be amenable to consent
to the transfer of the matter?’
[10]
In her response dated 7 August 2023, the defendants’
attorney strongly condemned
the plaintiff for not being amenable to
grant leave to defend the action ‘
notwithstanding the patent
lack of jurisdiction’
of this court, which the plaintiff
was alleged to have conceded (clearly not the case); of having made
‘
false and incorrect’
allegations under oath on
this score in the summary judgment application; and of being ‘
highly
opportunistic’
in making such a request. She even
threatened the plaintiff with a punitive costs order after informing
its attorney that any such
application brought by the plaintiff would
be opposed unless the plaintiff agreed to the defendants being given
leave to defend.
[11]
The current application was launched on 19 March 2024 in terms of
s 27(1)(b) of the
Superior Courts Act which reads as follows:
‘
27
Removal of proceedings from one Division to another or from one seat
to another in same Division
(1)
If
any proceedings have been instituted in a Division or at a seat of a
Division, and it appears to the court that such proceedings
--- …
(b)
would
be more conveniently or more appropriately heard or determined ---
(i)
at
another seat of that Division; or
(ii)by another
Division;
that court may, upon
application by any party thereto and after hearing all other parties
thereto, order such proceedings to be
removed to that other Division
or seat, as the case may be…’
[12]
Given the contents of the (amended) particulars of claim read with
the defendants’
special plea, there can be little doubt that it
would be both appropriate and convenient for the action to be
transferred to the
North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria. The defendants
themselves allege they are primarily resident within that court’s
area
of jurisdiction; the agreements were concluded there; the
overdraft facility which is the subject matter of the main action is
operated from one of the plaintiff's Pretoria branches, the relevant
witnesses for all the parties will be located in Pretoria including
the defendants who can quite easily travel there on their own
version; the immovable property (the Pretoria address) in respect
of
which the plaintiff seeks a special execution order is also situated
within that court’s area of jurisdiction; and both
sets of
instructing attorneys, as well as counsel who appeared before me, are
based there.
[13]
However,
ignoring their own alternative prayer in the special plea, the
defendants now contend that this court has no jurisdiction
to
entertain
the
present application
since it has no jurisdiction in the main action. In my view the
defendants misconstrue the legal position. Section 21(1) of the
Superior Courts Act provides that a Division has jurisdiction ‘
over
all persons
residing
or being in
’
its area of jurisdiction (my emphasis). No mention is made in the
subsection of “primary residence” or “permanent
residence”. It is well-established that: (a) the question
is not one of
domicile
but of
residence; a person may have his or her
domicile
at one
place and temporary residence at another; and (b) a person may
have more than one residence; and where that is the case,
this
jurisdictional requirement is met if he (or she) is sued in the court
having jurisdiction at the place where he (or she) is
residing at the
time when the summons is served:
Mayne
v Main
[2]
where it was also stated, referring to the previous equivalent
s 19(1)(a) of the now repealed Supreme Court Act
[3]
:
‘
[5]
Amongst the more appropriate and apt definitions of residence (in the
sense of “residing”) are those in
Hogsett v Buys
1913
CPD 200
at 205 (quoted with approval in
Ex parte Minister of
Native Affairs
(
supra
at 59)), namely there must be “some
good reason for regarding it as his place of ordinary habitation at
the date of service”
and
Beedle & Co v Bowley
(1895)
12 SC 401
at 403 to the effect that
“
(w)hen it is
said of an individual that he resides at a place it is obviously
meant that it is his home, his place of abode, the
place where he
generally sleeps after the work of the day is done”.
In
Tick v Broude
and Another
1973 (1) SA 462
(T) at 469 F-G it was said that
residence is a concept which conveys “some sense of stability
or something of a settled nature”.
A presence which is merely
fleeting or transient would not satisfy the requirement for
residence; some greater degree of permanence
is necessary.
[6] Without
detracting from the principles enunciated, one needs, in my view, to
adopt a common-sense and realistic approach
when deciding whether,
having regard to all the relevant circumstances, a person can be said
to be residing at a particular place
for the purpose of s 19(1)(a).
This is all the more so because of modern-day conditions and
attitudes and the tendency towards
a more itinerant lifestyle,
particularly amongst business people, of whom the respondent, as will
presently be apparent, is a striking
example. Not to do so might
allow certain persons habitually to avoid the jurisdictional nets of
the courts and thereby escape
legal accountability for their wrongful
actions.’
[14]
Applying these principles to the facts relevant to this issue, on the
defendants’
own version: (a) they alternate their
residency between the Pretoria and George addresses (as set out in
their initial plea);
(b) in terms of s 21 of the Superior
Courts Act this court has jurisdiction over persons residing within
its area of
jurisdiction (as contained in their special plea) and
(c) they are caretakers of the George address and are thus ‘
duty
bound’
to occupy it ‘
for a period of time’
(as set out in their first consequentially amended plea). This all
supports residency by the defendants at the George address which
is
neither ‘
fleeting’
nor ‘
transient’
.
In any event s 27(1)(b) makes provision, not only for
‘
residing’
, but also for ‘
being’
in this court’s area of jurisdiction at the time when the
summons was served. It follows that their attempt to escape the
‘
jurisdictional net’
of this court must fail.
[15]
Of course, this finding in no way detracts from the other, separate
defences raised by
them in both their plea and affidavits filed in
opposition to the summary judgment and rule 46A applications. They
profess to have
great confidence in those defences. That being the
case, the court hearing them may grant leave to defend, and the trial
will thereafter
take place in that Division as well.
[16]
The plaintiff asks for costs on the attorney and client scale. I have
given this careful
consideration, but notwithstanding the quite
unnecessarily dramatic,
ad hominem
attacks made on the
plaintiff, it seems to me more appropriate that at this stage, I
should order that costs be costs in the cause.
The court dealing with
the summary judgment and rule 46A applications, or the trial, will be
better placed to determine whether
a punitive costs order is
warranted. Put differently, although the costs of this application
will follow the result in the main
proceedings, that court will
nonetheless retain the discretion as to the scale of costs and/or
whether they should be awarded on
a punitive basis.
[17]
The following order is made:
1.
The action instituted under the abovementioned case number
(and including the pending applications for summary judgment and in
terms
of uniform rules 46 and 46A) are removed from this Division and
transferred to the North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria;
2.
The Registrar of this Court is directed to give effect to the
Order at paragraph 1 above; and
3.
The costs of this application shall be costs in the main
action.
J I CLOETE
For
applicant
: Adv C L Markram-Jooste
Instructed
by
: VZLR Inc. (Ms E Niemand) c/o Brink De Beer Potgieter Inc. (Ms
R Lategan)
For
first and second respondents
: Adv C Sevenster
Instructed
by
: LLR Inc (Ms M Le Roux) c/o Ashersons Attorneys (Mr A
Goldschmidt)
[1]
No 10 of 2013.
[2]
2001 (2) SA 1239
(SCA) at para [3].
[3]
No 59 of 1959.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
ABSA Bank Limited v Kebeni and Another (19782/2012) [2025] ZAWCHC 315 (28 May 2025)
[2025] ZAWCHC 315High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)99% similar
ABSA Bank Limited v Shaw N.O. and Others (14436/2015) [2022] ZAWCHC 153 (29 July 2022)
[2022] ZAWCHC 153High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)99% similar
ABSA Bank Limited v Wilson and Another (1868/2012) [2022] ZAWCHC 165 (30 August 2022)
[2022] ZAWCHC 165High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)99% similar
Absa Bank Limited v Frans (2169/2024) [2025] ZAWCHC 154; [2025] 3 All SA 679 (WCC) (28 March 2025)
[2025] ZAWCHC 154High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)99% similar
ABSA Bank Limited v Cupido N.O and Another (8898/2023) [2024] ZAWCHC 19 (31 January 2024)
[2024] ZAWCHC 19High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)99% similar