Case Law[2025] ZAWCHC 58South Africa
Merchant Commercial Finance 1 (Pty) Ltd t/a Merchant Factors v Valoworx 33 CC and Others (Leave to Appeal) (16399/2023) [2025] ZAWCHC 58 (21 February 2025)
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Merchant Commercial Finance 1 (Pty) Ltd t/a Merchant Factors v Valoworx 33 CC and Others (Leave to Appeal) (16399/2023) [2025] ZAWCHC 58 (21 February 2025)
Merchant Commercial Finance 1 (Pty) Ltd t/a Merchant Factors v Valoworx 33 CC and Others (Leave to Appeal) (16399/2023) [2025] ZAWCHC 58 (21 February 2025)
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sino date 21 February 2025
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN
CASE
NO: 16399/2023
In
the application between
MERCHANT
COMMERCIAL FINANCE 1 (PTY) LTD
TRADING
AS MERCHANT FACTORS
(REGISTRATION
NUMBER: 2014/075671/07)
APPLICANT
And
VALOWORX
33 CC
FIRST
RESPONDENT
ARCHAR
COLYER HEAD N.O.
SECOND
RESPONDENT
ARCHAR
ALEXANDER BROWNLEE N.O.
THIRD
RESPONDENT
ANDREW
GRANT KIRKMAN N.O.
ACTING
IN THEIR CAPACITIES AS THE
JOINT
TRUSTEES OF THE CAPE LEOPARD
TRUST
(IT 1382/2002)
FOURTH
RESPONDENT
ARCHAR
COLYER HEAD
FIFTH
RESPONDENT
Date
of hearing (application for
leave
to
appeal):
17 February 2025
Date
of judgment: Judgment was handed down electronically by
circulation to the parties’ representatives by email and
released to SAFLII. The date for hand down is deemed to be 21
February 2025
JUDGMENT:
APPLICATION FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL
VAN DEN BERG, AJ
[1]
The applicants (cited as the respondents in
the main application) apply for leave to appeal against the judgment
handed down on
19 November 2024. The parties are referred to herein
as cited in the opposed application (i.e. the applicants in the
application
for leave to appeal are referred to as the respondents).
The respondents were ordered to pay, jointly and severally, the
amount
of R944,919.85 with interest and the applicant’s party
and party costs.
THE LEGAL POSITION IN
DECIDING IF LEAVE TO APPEAL SHOULD BE GRANTED
[2]
Section 17(1) of the Superior Courts Act provides that leave
to appeal may only be given where the Judge is of the opinion that:
[2.1]
The appeal would have reasonable prospects of success;
or
[2.2]
There is some other compelling reason why the appeal should be
heard, including conflicting judgments on the matter under
consideration.
[3]
The
prospect of success required in terms of Section 17(1)(a)(i) is to be
decided without reference to the parties’ wishes.
[1]
Inn
Mont
Chevaux Trust v Goosen
[2]
the Court held that:
“
It
is clear that the threshold for granting leave to appeal against a
judgment of a High Court has been raised in the new Act. The
former
test whether leave to appeal should be granted was a reasonable
prospect that another court might come to a different conclusion,
...The use of the word "would" in the new statute indicates
a measure of certainty that another court will differ from
the court
whose judgment is sought to be appealed against. ...”
[3]
[4]
The
test of reasonable prospects of success postulates a dispassionate
decision based on the facts and the law, that a Court of
Appeal could
reasonably arrive at a conclusion different to that of the trial
Court. In order to succeed, the applicant must
convince the
Court on proper grounds that he has prospects of success on appeal
and that those prospects are not remote but have
a realistic chance
of succeeding. There must be a sound, rational basis for the
conclusion that there are prospects of success.
[4]
[5]
Leave
to appeal is further granted not in respect of the reasons for the
judgment but in respect of the order itself. Therefore,
the success
of the application for leave to appeal must be related to the outcome
of the case and not an argument that fails to
dispose of the case in
the Appellant's favour.
[5]
[6]
In
the matter of
Tecmed
Africa v Minister of Health
[6]
the Supreme Court of Appeal held:
“
[17]
First, appeals do not lie against the reasons for judgment but
against the substantive order of a lower
court. Thus, whether or not
a court of appeal agrees with a lower court’s reasoning would
be of no consequence if the result
would remain the same (Western
Johannesburg Rent Board v Ursula Mansions (Pty) Ltd
1948 (3) SA 353
(A) at 354).”
GROUNDS UPON WHICH TO
LEAVE TO APPEAL IS SOUGHT
[7]
The respondents base their notice of leave
to appeal on the following grounds:
[7.1]
That the settlement agreement concluded at
Cape Town on 14 December 2020 between the applicant, the first
respondent, the Cape Leopard
Trust and the fifth respondent is not
valid because:
[7.1.1]
the fifth respondent only signed the
settlement agreement as “
Member
for Valoworx CC”
and not in his
personal capacity;
[7.1.2]
that no resolution was placed before the
Court authorising Valoworx 33 CC and/or the Cape Leopard Trust to
enter into this settlement
agreement;
[7.1.3]
that the fifth respondent only became a
member of the first respondent on 18 March 2022;
[7.2]
That the Court erred in finding that the
fifth respondent was liable based upon the suretyship dated 24
December 2012 because the
suretyship was signed between the fifth
respondent and Merchant Commercial Finance (Pty) Ltd, registration
number 1998/018914/07
and not the applicant,
[7.3]
that the finding that monies were and/or
are due by the first to fifth respondents was incorrect becasue it is
not possible to cede
an obligation or debt that does not exist.
VALIDITY OF SETTLEMENT
AGREEMENT
[8]
The
applicant alleges in paragraphs 29 and 30 of the founding affidavit
that the parties entered into the settlement agreement and
the terms
thereof. The respondent admitted, as per paragraph 82 of the
answering affidavit, the conclusion of the settlement agreement
but
denied its validity and binding nature, arguing that the term loan
agreements are not valid and binding due to non-compliance
with the
National Credit Act (Act 34 of 2015), and that Valoworx could never
have breached an invalid and unenforceable agreement.
[7]
[9]
The respondents did not dispute or allege
in their answering affidavit that the fifth respondent signed the
settlement agreement
solely in his capacity as a member of Valoworx,
nor do they deny the authority of Valoworx or the Cape Leopard Trust
to have concluded
the settlement agreement. Most importantly no
evidence was presented by the respondents that the fifth respondent
only became
a member of the first respondent on 18 March 2022.
In this regard the respondents, for the first time, alleged in
paragraph
1.4 of the application for leave to appeal that:
“…
even
if the resolutions in respect of the first respondent were signed –
which they were not – as per annexure “ACH1”
attached hereto it is self-evident that the fifth respondent only
became the member of the first respondent on 18 March 2022, some
16
months after the settlement agreement was signed and as such the
fifth respondent was not authorised on behalf of the first
respondent
to enter into the said agreement.”
[10]
In motion proceedings, the affidavits
constitute the evidence and pleadings. It is trite that the
parties must allege the
required facts and adduce the admissible
evidence in support thereof in their affidavits. Moreover, the
respondents admitted the
conclusion of the settlement agreement,
although they denied its validity on grounds different from those
contended for now in
the application for leave to appeal. It is
trite that an admission may not merely be withdrawn, and the Court
cannot go behind
the admission, especially in the absence of any
allegation that it was made in error.
FIFTH RESPONDENT’S
SURETYSHIP
[11]
The respondents in the application for
leave to appeal referred to the signature of the fifth respondent on
paginated page 94, where
he signed on behalf of Valoworx CC. It
is contended in the application for leave to appeal that he did not
sign the settlement
agreement in his personal capacity.
However, no explanation is offered regarding the two signatures on
paginated page 95,
where the fifth respondent apparently signed as
trustee of the Cape Leopard Trust and, second, in his personal
capacity.
CASE NOT MADE OUT IN
FOUNDING AFFIDAVIT
[12]
Mr Wilkin, who appears for the first to
fifth respondents correctly, did not persist in argument with the
aforementioned grounds
of leave to appeal. He limited his
argument to seeking leave to appeal on behalf of the fifth respondent
only and not all
the respondents. He submitted that the
suretyship by the fifth respondent is invalid and unenforceable and
that the Court
erred in finding differently. Mr Wilkin argues
that the applicant does not make out a case in its founding affidavit
regarding
the validity of the fifth respondent’s suretyship.
[13]
The argument goes that the applicant
alleges in paragraph 26 of the founding affidavit, that the fifth
respondent ‘
in writing, jointly
and severally, irrevocably as surety for and co-principal debtor in
solidum with the first respondent [bound
himself] for the due and
punctual payment of all and any monies which now is or may
hereinafter being owing for which the first
respondent may or from
time to time owe to the ‘applicant’ from whatsoever cause
and howsoever arising…
’.
Mr Wikin’s argument turns on the meaning of the word
‘applicant’ as used in paragraph 26. He submits
that no
amount was owed to the ‘applicant’ when the suretyship
was concluding in 2012 since the applicant was only
registered in
2014.
[14]
It is common cause that the fifth
respondent executed his suretyship in favour of the applicant’s
predecessor in title, Merchant
Commercial Finance (Pty) Limited
(Registration Number 1998/018914/07). In terms of clause 27 of the
suretyship executed by the
fifth respondent, the applicant’s
predecessor was entitled to cede the suretyship to the applicant at
any time, without reference
to the fifth respondent, who acknowledged
that he would, upon such cession, be liable to the applicant in terms
thereof. Mr Wilkin
submits now that the fifth respondent signed the
settlement agreement in “
error”
.
This error relates only to the fact that his suretyship was granted
in favour of the applicant’s predecessor and not
the applicant
with whom the settlement agreement was concluded.
[15]
The fifth respondent disputes the validity
of his suretyship in the answering affidavit but on grounds different
from the alleged
error that he now seeks to rely upon. In the
answering affidavit, the fifth respondent confined his opposition to
alleging
that the term loan agreements, suretyships and settlement
agreement are void based upon the NCA defences referred to in the
judgment.
On a conspectus of the evidence, there was never any
doubt concerning the identity of the parties involved in the
settlement agreement
or the applicant’s predecessor's rights
and title. I cannot see how any other court could conclude that the
first respondent
was under any misapprehension of the facts.
[16]
In
Shabangu
v Land and Agricultural Development Bank of South Africa
[8]
the Constitutional Court also dealt with the validity of a settlement
agreement and suretyship. In the Shabangu matter, the
suretyship's wording clearly showed that the surety intended to be
bound only for the “
indebtedness”
arising
out of a specific agreement. However, the facts in Shabangu are
distinguishable from the Supreme Court of Appeal’s
judgment in
Panamo
Properties 103 (Pty) Ltd v Land and Agricultural Development Bank of
South Africa
[9]
in
which case the wording of a bond that secured the claim was wider and
provided for payment by the debtor of “
all
amounts whatsoever already owed or may be owed hereafter in terms of
advances, cash, credit accounts, fixed loans, credit, promissory
notes, loan agreements, instalment sale agreements, lease agreements,
other agreements, any facilities granted to the mortgagor.”
[10]
[17]
The wording of the fifth respondent’s
suretyship is similarly broad in nature, akin to working in Panamo.
I cannot see
how another court could conclude that the explicit
wording of the fifth respondent’s suretyship does not provide
for such
a situation, where the claim is ceded and transferred from
the original creditor to its successor title.
[18]
The settlement agreement in this matter
relates directly to an issue or lis between the parties and is not
objectionable from a
legal or practical point of view. The
settlement agreement is not at odds with public policy and achieved a
practical and
legitimate advantage.
[19]
The applicant indeed presented only in its
replying affidavit the evidence of having entered into a sale
agreement with its predecessor,
under which it acquired the
predecessor’s business as a going concern, including all its
assets, liabilities, and securities,
which encompass the suretyship
executed by the fifth respondent. This was, however, in response to
the respondents highlighting
the discrepancy between the description
of the applicant and that of its predecessor as a basis for
opposition. The fact remains
that the applicant (not its predecessor)
and the respondents concluded the settlement agreement. This
settlement agreement forms
the foundation of the applicant’s
claim and serves as a valid cause of liability, encapsulated in the
express wording of
the fifth respondent’s suretyship.
[20]
In the premises, there is no reasonable
prospect of another Court coming to a different conclusion on the
totality of the evidence
before the Court or as a matter of law.
[21]
The Court cannot enquire into details that
fall outside the scope of the pleadings or the admitted facts.
The grounds of appeal
and the argument presented do not demonstrate
that the legal issues raised are of substantial importance or of
public importance.
There is no compelling reason why an appeal
should be heard or that it is necessary to attain legal certainty
regarding these issues.
COSTS
[22]
At the commencement of the proceedings,
both Counsels requested me by agreement to correct a patent error in
the judgment handed
down on 19 November 2024 and the order issued
consequently by the registrar on 21 November 2024 regarding the Scale
of costs recorded
in paragraph 4 to provide for costs on Scale A
instead of Scale B. I will grant an order accordingly.
[23]
The following order is granted:
[23.1]
The Court corrects the patent error in
paragraph 4 of the order at the end of the judgment handed down on 19
November 2024 and the
subsequently issued order, dated 21 November
2024, to provide for costs on Scale A instead of Scale B.
[23.2]
The application for leave to appeal is
dismissed.
[23.3]
The respondents are ordered to pay the
costs of the application for leave to appeal on Scale A.
VAN
DEN BERG, AJ
For
applicant
:
Adv A Newton
BPD
Inc
For
respondents
:
Adv L Wilkin
R
Allom Attorneys
[1]
Rail Commuter
Action Group v Transnet Limited trading as Metrorail (Number
2) 2003
(5) SA 593 (C)
[2]
2014 JDR 2325
(LCC)
[3]
At para 6
[4]
S
v Smith
2012 (1) SACR 567
at 570, para 7
[5]
Goodwin
Stable Trust v Duohex (Pty) Ltd
(2) [1996] 3 All SA 119 (C)
[6]
[2012] 4 All
SA 149
(SCA)
[7]
Answering
Affidavit [81], pp 126
[8]
2020
(1) SA 305
(CC) at [32] to [36]
[9]
2016
(1) SA 202 (SCA)
[10]
Panamo at [41]
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