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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## SB Guarantee Company (RF) (Pty) Ltd v Franzsen (21674/2023)
[2025] ZAWCHC 209 (19 May 2025)
SB Guarantee Company (RF) (Pty) Ltd v Franzsen (21674/2023)
[2025] ZAWCHC 209 (19 May 2025)
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sino date 19 May 2025
SAFLII Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
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IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE
DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case
number: 21674/2023
In the matter between:
SB
GUARANTEE COMPANY (RF) (PTY)
LTD
Plaintiff
and
TERTIUS
JOHANNES
FRANZSEN
Defendant
JUDGMENT DELIVERED ON
19 MAY 2025
VAN
ZYL AJ
:
Introduction
1.
The plaintiff seeks summary judgment
against the defendant, as well as an order in terms of Rule 46A·of
the Uniform Rules
of Court, declaring the defendant's immovable
property specially executable so as to settle the judgment debt.
2.
The
plaintiff’s monetary claim is for the payment of R1 045 319,94
(plus interest and costs) on the basis of monies lent and
advanced by
Standard Bank Limited
[1]
to the
defendant under a home loan agreement concluded in November 2019.
Pursuant to the conclusion of the home loan agreement
the
defendant caused a mortgage bond to be registered in the plaintiff’s
favour over the immovable property situated at Erf
2[...] George,
Western Cape. The property is the defendant’s primary
residence.
3.
The provisions of the National Credit Act
34 of 2005 (“NCA”) are applicable in the circumstances.
4.
The defendant failed to keep up with the
monthly payments due under the mortgage bond, and in November 2023
the plaintiff instituted
action against the defendant. The
defendant delivered a plea in March 2024 after service of a notice of
bar, and opposed
the summary judgment and Rule 46A applications
subsequently brought.
5.
The
matter limped along and was finally set down for argument on 15 May
2025, with directives as to the delivery of further affidavits
and
heads of argument. On 14 May 2025 the defendant delivered an
affidavit in which he sought a postponement of the applications
pending the final determination of a complaint that he had lodged
with the Ombudsman under the National Financial Ombud Scheme
South
Africa. There was no substantive application for a postponement
attached to the affidavit. Counsel briefed on
the defendant’s
behalf indicated that she had received instructions the evening
before, and was not in a position to argue
the matter. I
accordingly postponed the hearing of the applications to 19 May
2025.
[2]
The summary
judgment application
6.
Counsel’s heads of argument indicated
that the only submission to be pursued at the hearing in relation to
the summary judgment
application would be a request that the
application be postponed for a period fixed by the Court to enable
the Ombudsman to consider
the matter and to resolve the dispute
before it. That was because the defendant hoped that, should
the Ombudsman find his
complaints to be valid, a settlement could be
reached between the parties which would obviate the need for further
litigation.
There was still no formal application for
postponement before the Court.
7.
This
issue can be dealt with swiftly. The plaintiff’s action
was instituted in April 2023. The complaint to the
Ombudsman
upon which the defendant relies was submitted in October 2024, after
the institution of the action, and in fact months
after the delivery
of the defendant’s plea. Section 130(3) of the NCA
provides that:
[3]
“
(3)
Despite any provision of law or contract to the contrary, in any
proceedings commenced in a court
in respect of a credit agreement to
which this Act applies,
the court may determine the matter
only if the court is satisfied that-
(a)
in
the case of proceedings to which sections 127, 129 or 131 apply, the
procedures required by those sections have been complied
with;
(b)
there
is no matter arising under that credit agreement, and pending before
the Tribunal, that could result in an order affecting
the issues to
be determined by the court; and
(c)
that
the credit provider has not approached the court-
(i)
during the time that the matter was before a debt
counsellor, alternative dispute resolution agent, consumer court or
the ombud
with jurisdiction; or
(ii)
despite the consumer having-
(aa)
surrendered property to the credit provider, and before that property
has been sold;
(bb)
agreed to a proposal made in terms of section 129(1)(a) and
acted in good faith in fulfilment
of that agreement;
(cc)
complied with an agreed plan as contemplated in section 129(1)(a); or
(dd)
brought the payments under the credit agreement up to date, as
contemplated in section 129(1)(a)
.”
8.
it is clear from these provisions that
complaints belatedly (after the institution of the action) brought to
the Ombudsman do not
stand in the way of a court considering a credit
provider’s claim for enforcement of a credit agreement. There
is no justification
for the postponement of the application in the
hope that the parties would reach a settlement, and this Court am not
empowered
under the NCA to do so. The defendant is seeking to
delay the inevitable.
9.
The relief sought from the Ombudsman is in
any event of such a nature that it would not address the issues in
the summary judgment
application. The defendant seeks the
reinstatement of a cancelled debit order facility with the bank and
damages arising
from the cancellation of the facility, as well as an
order directing the bank to renegotiate the terms of the home loan.
The defendant’s issues with his debit order facility do not
address the fact that he is in arrears with his mortgage bond
payments, and neither the Court nor the Ombudsman can order the bank
to conclude a new contract with the defendant. While
section
60(1) of the NCA does afford a person the right to apply for credit,
this right is qualified by sections 60(2) and 60(3)
which state,
inter alia,
that
a credit provider cannot be compelled to enter into a credit
agreement, at least not without it having done an affordability
analysis and a risk assessment. Section 60 reads as follows:
“
60
Right to apply for credit
(1)
Every adult natural person, and every juristic person or
association of persons, has a right to apply to a credit provider for
credit.
(2)
Subject to sections 61 and 66, a credit provider has a right to
refuse to enter into a credit
agreement with any prospective consumer
on reasonable commercial grounds that are consistent with its
customary risk management
and underwriting practices.
(3)
Subject to sections 61 and 92(3),
nothing
in this Act establishes a right of any person to require a credit
provider to enter into a credit agreement with that person
.”
[4]
10.
The informal application for postponement –
insofar as there is such an application before me – can
therefore not be
granted.
11.
I refer briefly to the defences raised in
the defendant’s plea. They are that the plaintiff
wrongfully charged the defendant
a monthly life insurance premium,
that the suspensive conditions to which the loan agreement was
subject had not been fulfilled,
and that the defendant was prevented,
through
force majeure
,
from complying with his obligations under the mortgage bond.
12.
In relation to the first defence, the
defendant argues that the plaintiff charged a monthly amount for
insurance despite the fact
that the defendant had his own insurance.
In concluding the loan agreement, however, the defendant had signed
an insurance
declaration which entitled the bank to take out life
insurance on the defendant’s behalf should the defendant not
provide
the bank with proof of his own insurance within a specific
period of time. A similar provision occurs in the plaintiff’s
standard terms and conditions. It is common cause on the papers
that the defendant failed to provide the bank with proof
of his own
life insurance policy. The charge was therefore raised in
accordance with the contractual arrangement between
the parties.
13.
The second defence is similarly without
merit. The signed indemnity given by the defendant was executed
and became unconditional,
and the mortgage bond that was granted by
the defendant was registered in favour of the plaintiff. Both
of these documents
are before the Court. There are no
suspensive conditions that have remained unfulfilled.
14.
The defendant’s third defence is that
he fell into arrears as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic. He
relies on the defence
of
force majeure
as justification for failing to make the requisite payments.
However, the defendant fell into arrears in April 2020, and
he has
not made any effort since then to negotiate a viable payment
arrangement with the plaintiff, despite various invitations
from the
plaintiff to the defendant to make settlement proposals. As at
May 2024 his arrears were R197 000,00. The
arrears have grown
to almost R350 000,00 in April 2025. The defendant last made a
payment in November 2023. There are
no facts placed before the
Court to sustain a defence of supervening impossibility, either under
the parties’ agreement or
in common law:
“
Applying
these principles to the facts, it cannot be concluded that the
defendant has established impossibility of performance as
a legally
cognisable defence. First, the defendant put up no cogent documentary
evidence in support of its contentions. Second
and more importantly,
the impossibility on which the defendant relies is subjective and
specific to itself. The change in the defendant’s
financial
position is not, as required by law, absolute. The obligation to
render performance even during lockdown can, in general,
be performed
by parties in the position of the defendant. The defendant’s
personal incapability does not render the instalment
sale agreement
void.
”
[5]
15.
The
plaintiff argues in relation to the summary judgment application that
the defendant’s plea fails to set out facts which,
if proven at
trial, will constitute
bona
fide
defences
to the plaintiff's claim: they fail genuinely to raise issues for
trial
.
[6]
I agree.
16.
The
object of Rule 32 is to prevent a plaintiff’s claim, when based
upon certain causes of action, from being delayed by what
amounts to
an abuse of the process of the court. The plaintiff is allowed to
apply for judgment to be entered summarily against
the defendant,
thus disposing of the matter without putting the plaintiff to the
expense of a trial. The procedure is not intended
to shut out a
defendant who can show that there is a triable issue applicable to
the claim as a whole from placing his or her defence
before the
court
.
[7]
17.
Rule 32(3)(b) provides that a defendant in
summary judgment proceedings may “
satisfy
the court by affidavit …, or with the leave of the court by
oral evidence of such defendant or of any other person
who can swear
positively to the fact that the defendant has a bona
fide defence to the action; such affidavit or evidence
shall
disclose fully the nature and grounds of the defence and the material
facts relied upon therefor
”.
18.
In
Breitenbach
v Fiat SA (Edms) Bpk
[8]
the Court held as follows in relation to the defendant’s
affidavit:
“…
no
more is called for than this:
that
the statement of material facts be sufficiently full to persuade the
Court that what the defendant has alleged, if it is proved
at the
trial, will constitute a defence to the plaintiff's claim
.
What I would add, however, is that
if
the defence is averred in a manner which appears in all the
circumstances to be needlessly bald, vague or sketchy, that will
constitute material for the Court to consider in relation to the
requirement of bona fides”
.
19.
The
defendant who elects to deliver an affidavit in opposition to a
summary judgment application must thus show that they have a
bona
fide
defence to the action. They must fully disclose the nature and
grounds of the defence, and the material facts relied upon
and which
they genuinely desire and intend to adduce at trial. The facts
should not be inherently and seriously unconvincing
and should, if
true, constitute a valid defence.
[9]
A
bona
fide
defence is accordingly one that is good in law, and that is pleaded
with sufficient particularity.
[10]
20.
In
considering the now amended Rule 32, the Court in
Tumileng
Trading CC v National Security and Fire (Pty) Ltd
[11]
held that:
“…
Rule
32(3), which regulates what is required from a defendant in its
opposing affidavit, has been left substantively unamended in
the
overhauled procedure. That means that the test remains what it always
was: has the defendant disclosed a bona fide (ie an apparently
genuinely advanced, as distinct from sham) defence? There is no
indication in the amended rule that the method of determining that
has changed.
The
classical formulations in Maharaj and Breitenbach v
Fiat SA as to what is expected of a defendant seeking
to
successfully oppose an application for summary judgment, therefore
remain of application. A defendant is not required to show
that its
defence is likely to prevail. If a defendant can show that it has a
legally cognisable defence on the face of it, and
that the defence is
genuine or bona fide, summary judgment must be refused.
The defendant's prospects of success are irrelevant
”.
21.
Considering the defences raises by the
defendant against this background, they fall woefully short.
Conclusion on the
summary judgment application
22.
In the premises, the plaintiff has made out
a proper case for summary judgment to be granted against the
defendant.
The application in
terms of Rule
46A
23.
An application in
terms of Rule 46A comprises of two parts.
The
Court must consider whether a case is made out for an order declaring
the immovable property in question executable
in
terms of Rule
46A(2)
.
If so, the Court must
consider whether a reserve price should be set in terms of Rule
46A(9)
.
24.
I have considered the
evidence available in relation to this application, and am satisfied
in relation to both merits and procedural
requirements that a case is
made out for an order declaring the defendant’s property
specially executable
.
25.
Counsel for the
defendant indicated at the hearing that the Rule 46A application is
not opposed, save in respect of the reserve
price proposed by the
plaintiff.
The
market value of the property is relevant for the purpose of setting
the reserve price under Rule 46A(9)
.
The plaintiff has included a
valuation
report as part of its papers, from which the market value and forced
sale value that it relies upon are evident.
26.
The valuation was
done in May 2024. The defendant argues in his opposing
affidavit deposed to in November 2024 that he has
made various
alterations to the property “
since
your evaluation was done
”.
He indicates that he has added more bedrooms to the building, as well
as several other features. No further
details are given.
I agree with the submission made by the plaintiff’s counsel
that the plaintiff’s valuation
report should be preferred over
the defendant's mere assertion that the market value of his property
is higher than indicated in
the report
.
27.
In
Standard
Bank
of South Africa Ltd v Hendricks and another and related cases
[12]
this
Division shared the approach taken in
Absa
Bank Ltd v Mokebe and related cases
,
[13]
namely
that the benefits of setting a reserve price in most instances
outweigh any prejudice which may arise in doing so. It is
only in
exceptional circumstances that the court should exercise its
discretion against setting a reserve price
.
28.
In considering
whether to set a reserve price, and what such reserve price should
be, the Court must take into account the factors
set out in Rule
46A(9):
“
(b)
In deciding whether to set a reserve price and the amount at which
the reserve is to be set, the
court shall take into account—
(i)
the market value of the immovable property;
(ii)
the amounts owing as rates or levies;
(iii)
the amounts owing on registered mortgage bonds;
(iv)
any equity which may be realised between the reserve price and
the market value of the property;
(v)
reduction of the judgment debtor’s indebtedness on the
judgment debt and as contemplated in subrule (5)(a) to (e),
whether or not equity may be found in the immovable property, as
referred to in subparagraph (iv);
(vi)
whether the immovable property is occupied, the persons
occupying the property and the circumstances of such occupation;
(vii)
the likelihood of the reserve price not being realised and the
likelihood of the immovable property not being sold;
(viii)
any prejudice which any party may suffer if the reserve price
is not achieved; and
(ix)
any other factor which in the opinion of the court is
necessary for the protection of the interests of the
execution
creditor and the judgment debtor.”
29.
I
propose the following formula for calculating the suggested reserve
price
:
take
the average
[14]
of the market
valuation
[15]
and of the
municipal valuation
[16]
of the
property, then deduct 30%
[17]
from the average to determine the forced sale value of the
property.
[18]
The outstanding
rates and taxes
[19]
should
then be subtracted from the forced sale value to arrive at the
reserve price.
This
leaves one with the amount of R844 353.00.
30.
The
defendant’s arrears have increased since May
2024, and the outstanding rates and taxes fluctuate, but on the
available evidence
it seems to me that a rounded-off reserve price of
R850 000,00 is reasonable in the circumstances. This is less
than the
total amount outstanding on the mortgage bond, but it takes
account of expenses necessarily incurred in the sale in execution of
the property. The risk of setting an unrealistic reserve price,
and the delays consequent upon the failure to sell the property
to
settle the defendant’s debt, is that the defendant will
continue to incur further debt as time goes by. The probability
of the defendant being able to settle this debt at all is fast
diminishing.
Conclusion
on the Rule 46A application
31.
In all of these
circumstances, I am of the view that an order
declaring
the defendant's property specially executable is justified.
Costs
32.
The defendant argues that each party should
their own costs, but there is no reason why costs should not follow
the result.
The mortgage bond provides for costs to be taxed on
the attorney and client scale. No facts have been placed before
me to
justify a deviation from this contractual arrangement.
Order
In the circumstances, I
grant the following orders:
33.
The application for the postponement of the
summary judgment application is refused.
34.
Summary judgment is granted in favour of the plaintiff against
the defendant, for:
34.1.
Payment of the amount of R1,045,319.94; and
34.1.1.
Interest on such
amount at the rate
of 13.350% per
annum on the first R690,000.00; 13.450% per annum on the balance
between R690,000.00 and R920,000.00; and 13.650%
per annum on the
balance exceeding R920,000.00, from 29 August 2023 to date of
payment, both dates inclusive.
35.
The immovable property described as
ERF
2[...] GEORGE, IN THE MUNICIPALITY AND DIVISION OF GEORGE, WESTERN
CAPE PROVINCE, IN EXTENT 1000 (ONE THOUSAND) SQUARE METRES,
HELD BY
DEED OF TRANSFER NUMBER T[...], SUBJECT TO THE CONDITIONS THEREIN
CONTAINED
(“the property”)
is declared executable for the aforesaid amounts.
36.
The Registrar of this Court is authorised
and directed to issue a warrant of execution to enable the Sheriff to
attach and execute
upon the property in satisfaction of the judgment
debt, interest, and costs,
in
terms of Rule 46 as read with Rule 46A.
37.
In terms of
section 129(3)
of the
National
Credit Act 34 of 2005
the defendant may, at any time prior to the
sale in execution of the property, reinstate the credit agreement by
paying to the
plaintiff all amounts that are overdue (i.e., in
arrears), together with the plaintiff’s permitted default
charges and reasonable
costs of enforcing the agreement up to the
time of reinstatement, which amounts, charges and costs the plaintiff
must on enquiry
from the defendants furnish to her.
38.
If the credit agreement is reinstated by
payment as contemplated in paragraph 37, the property may not be sold
in execution.
39.
The property shall be sold subject to a
reserve price of
R850
000,00.
40.
The plaintiff shall be entitled to approach
this Court on the same papers (duly supplemented) for a variation of
the reserve price
if a change in the factors influencing the reserve
price necessitates a change of the reserve price. The application may
be brought
before any Judge in this Division.
41.
The defendant shall pay the costs of these
proceedings on the scale as between attorney and client.
P. S. VAN ZYL
Acting judge of the
High Court
Appearances:
For
the plaintiff:
Ms C. Francis, instructed by Tim du Toit Attorneys
For
the defendant:
Ms L. B. Hodson, instructed by Lionel
G. Marx Attorney
[1]
The
plaintiff litigates on the basis of a common terms guarantee
agreement concluded between Standard Bank and the plaintiff in
March
2015. It is not necessary for present purposes to discuss the
details of this agreement.
[2]
With
the defendant to pay the wasted costs occasioned by the postponement
on the scale as between attorney and client.
[3]
Emphasis
supplied.
[4]
Emphasis
added. Neither
section 61
nor
section 92(3)
is relevant for
present purposes.
[5]
See
Wesbank,
a Division of Firstrand Bank Limited v PSG Haulers CC
[2022]
ZAGPJHC 603 (25 August 2022) para 21.
[6]
See
Tumileng
Trading
CC
v
National Security and Fire (Pty) Ltd
2020
(6) SA 624
(WCC) para 12.
[7]
Majola
v Nitro Securitisation 1 (Pty) Ltd
2012
(1) SA 226 (SCA)
at
232F–G.
[8]
1976
(2) SA 226
(T) at 228D-E. Emphasis added.
[9]
See
Breitenbach
supra
at 227G-228B;
Standard
Bank of South Africa v Friedman
1999 (2) SA 456
(C) at 461I-462G.
[10]
Maharaj
v Barclays National Bank Ltd
1976
(1) SA 418
(A) at 426C-D.
[11]
Supra
para 13. Emphasis added.
[12]
2019
(2) SA 620
(WCC) paras 57-63.
[13]
2018
(6) SA 492 (GJ).
[14]
R1
260 000.00.
[15]
R1
300 000,00.
[16]
R1
220 000,00.
[17]
R378
000.00.
[18]
R882
000,00.
[19]
About
R37 647.00.
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