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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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[2025] ZAWCHC 241
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## Nedbank Limited v Varoyi (9102/2024)
[2025] ZAWCHC 241 (3 June 2025)
Nedbank Limited v Varoyi (9102/2024)
[2025] ZAWCHC 241 (3 June 2025)
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sino date 3 June 2025
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE
DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case number: 9102/2024
In the matter between:
NEDBANK
LIMITED
Plaintiff
and
SIMPHIWE
VAROYI
Defendant
JUDGMENT
DELIVERED ON 3 JUNE 2025
VAN
ZYL AJ
:
Introduction
1.
This is an opposed application for summary
judgment. The plaintiff’s claim arises from the
defendant's breach of a written
credit agreement concluded in
November 2017, in terms of which the defendant purchased a motor
vehicle described as a 2015 Hyundai
H-1 2.5 CRDI (VGT) Wagon A/T.
2.
It is common cause that the agreement is
standard in form, and compliant with the provisions of the National
Credit Act 34 of 2005
(“the NCA”). It provides that
ownership of the vehicle would remain vested in the plaintiff until
the full collectable
amount was paid. The total collectable amount
agreed to was R 713 714.62, payable by way of structured instalments
over a defined
term. The plaintiff duly delivered the vehicle
to the defendant and complied with all of its obligations under the
agreement
and the NCA, including the delivery of pre-agreement
statements and statutory notices.
3.
It is also not in dispute that the
defendant has been in default of his obligations under the agreement
since February 2020, and
has failed to remedy the breach despite
amendment of the repayment terms and the further indulgences granted
by the plaintiff from
time to time. The plaintiff, as it was
entitled to do under the agreement, and after having met the NCA’s
requirements,
elected to cancel the agreement. It wrote off the
vehicle, because it could not be traced. The plaintiff’s “
Loss
and write off report
” attached to
the summons indicates that the vehicle was not recovered.
4.
The
plaintiff's claim is for what remains outstanding under the credit
agreement, as verified by a certificate of balance annexed
to the
summons. In terms of the parties’ agreement,
[1]
a certificate from one of the plaintiff’s managers, indicating
the amount that is due and how it is calculated, is
prima
facie
proof of the plaintiff’s claim in the event of legal action
being taken.
5.
The plaintiff instituted action in May
2024. In November 2024 the defendant delivered a plea which contains
various admissions and
which, so the plaintiff submits, raises no
bona fide
triable defence – hence the application for summary judgment.
6.
The defendant takes no issue with any of
the procedural or technical aspects regulating summary judgment
applications, but opposes
the application on other bases, which will
be discussed below.
The relevant legal
principles
7.
The purpose of Rule 32 is to afford a
plaintiff, in clear cases where the defendant cannot demonstrate a
bona fide
defence, a remedy to avoid the costs and delay of unnecessary trial
proceedings. The Court must be satisfied that the plaintiff’s
claim is unassailable on the merits, and that the defendant's
opposition is not genuine, but merely a delaying tactic.
8.
It
is well-established through authorities such as
Breitenbach
v Fiat SA (Edms) Bpk,
[2]
Joob Joob Investments (Pty) Ltd v Stocks Mavundla Zek Joint
Venture,
[3]
and
Tumileng
Trading
CC
v
National Security and Fire (Pty) Ltd
[4]
that the summary judgment procedure is aimed at distinguishing
between genuine and sham defences. The Court is not obliged
to
indulge a defendant who merely seeks to delay the inevitable
enforcement of a liquid claim.
9.
In
Breitenbach,
the
Court remarked that that summary judgment should not be refused on
the basis of mere technical denials or hypothetical defences,
but
only where the defendant places before the court sufficient facts
which, if proven at trial, would constitute a valid defence.
The
defendant must
''fully
disclose the nature and grounds of the defence and the material facts
relied upon.
"
[5]
10.
The
Supreme Court of Appeal (“SCA”) in
Joob
Joob
held
that the rationale for summary judgment is to provide a remedy for a
plaintiff who can demonstrate that the defendant's opposition
is a
stratagem for delay and that, in the words of Rule 32,
"there
is no bona fide defence and appearance is entered solely for the
purpose of delay."
The
SCA affirmed that the procedure is not meant to deprive a defendant
of his day in court, but provides a tool for the expeditious
disposal
of cases where the defendant has no reasonable prospect of
success.
[6]
11.
Similarly,
in
Tumileng
the Court restated that the amended Rule 32 does not represent a
dilution of the summary judgment procedure, but continues to serve
its vital function in the expeditious disposal of claims where no
genuine dispute of fact exists. The Court observed that summary
judgment may and should be granted where a defendant's plea consists
only of
"hollow
denials, technical points, or hypothetical defences”.
The
evidentiary burden on the defendant to set out the facts relied upon
for any triable defence is a substantive one.
[7]
He needs to set out in clear and unequivocal terms the nature and
grounds of any defence, with sufficient detail to satisfy
the Court
that such defence, if proven at trial, would be a legally cognisable
defence. His prospects of success are irrelevant.
The defences raised
in the defendant’s plea
12.
As indicated, the defendant admits both the
existence of the credit agreement and the fact that a balance remains
owing to the plaintiff.
The defences advanced are limited to:
12.1.
a challenge to the correctness of the
outstanding balance claimed, based on an allegation that the vehicle
was repossessed and sold
at auction, with the proceeds allegedly not
allocated or accounted for by the plaintiff, and
12.2.
a request for a repayment arrangement under
the agreement due to the defendant’s changed health
circumstances.
13.
The plaintiff's claim in this matter is for
a liquidated amount, and is supported by a certificate of balance
which constitutes
prima facie
proof
of the amount owed in the absence of cogent evidence to the contrary.
The defendant's recourse, if genuinely aggrieved by
the calculation
of the outstanding balance, would be to place specific facts or
figures before the Court.
14.
In
his plea, the defendant denies that the
quantum
of the outstanding balance as claimed by the plaintiff is
correct.
[8]
The plea
frames the issue as follows:
“
11.
…the defendant pleads that plaintiff repossessed the vehicle
and sold it at an auction.
The sale amount of the vehicle at an
auction offset some of the outstanding balance.
12.
Notwithstanding the aforesaid however, the
defendant admits that there is an outstanding amount owing
towards
settling the outstanding debt. The defendant is willing to
enter into a repayment arrangement with the plaintiff
subject to
reasonable terms and conditions agreed t between the parties, taking
into account the defendant’s changed health
condition.
”
15.
This is repeated later in the plea, as
follows:
“
17.
….the defendant pleads that the plaintiff repossessed the
vehicle.
18.
…the defendant denies that he refused to voluntarily surrender
the vehicle.
It was repossessed by the plaintiff and sold at an
auction….
”
16.
This,
in my view, amounts to a bare denial.
[9]
The defendant provides no factual foundation for his dispute of the
quantum
.
He provides no details in support of the assertion – in the
face of the plaintiff’s “
Loss
and write off report”
- that the vehicle was repossessed and sold at auction. At
least some of these details would be within his knowledge,
because he
expressly pleads that he did not refuse to hand the vehicle over to
the plaintiff.
17.
In the case of repossession, moreover, the
plaintiff would have had to comply with the notice, valuation, and
statement requirements
set out in section 127 of the NCA. There
would have been a record of the documents generated throughout the
process, which
the plaintiff would have been obliged to provide to
the court. It is clear from the papers that no such documents
exist because,
as the plaintiff avers, the vehicle was not
repossessed. It was not sold at an auction, and there is no
amount arising from
any such sale that would reduce the plaintiff’s
claim.
18.
The affidavit opposing summary judgment is
equally bare. Counsel for the defendant submitted that there
was no time to take
proper instructions from the defendant in
relation to his affidavit, which was delivered one court day prior to
the hearing of
the summary judgment application. This
submission does not assist the defendant. At the time of the drafting
of his plea
in November 2024 – a period in respect of which no
time constraints have been alleged - he would surely have been able
to
provide instructions to his legal representatives in relation to
when and how the vehicle had been repossessed.
19.
I
agree with the submission made by the plaintiff’s counsel that
the defendant’s case in relation to the alleged auction
falls
woefully short of the threshold articulated in
Breitenbach.
In
any event, the plaintiff's claim is supported by a certificate of
balance, which stands as
prima
facie
proof in the absence of cogent evidence to the contrary:
[10]
“
[61]
It was submitted on behalf of the defendant that, at best, the
plaintiff’s first claim was based on a liquidated claim
in
money since the continuing covering bond “annexure a”
itself did not constitute a liquid document within the meaning
of the
rule. That the bond document per se
does
not constitute a liquid document is undoubtedly correct.
However, the bond document was
not the sole basis of the first claim. The bond document (annexure a)
was substantially amplified
by the certificate of balance (annexure
c). The latter, unlike the former, was a perfectly liquid document.
It derived its liquid character
from clause 9 of “annexure a”.
[62]
It was an express term upon which
the parties had agreed that such a certificate (annexure c)
would prima facie
constitute
proof of the defendant’s indebtedness to the plaintiff.
Therefore, the onus of proving the contrary squarely rested
upon the
defendant. He unsuccessfully tried to show that the plaintiff had
failed to comply with clause 9. Since he has failed
to do so,
the prima facie
proof
tendered by the plaintiff became conclusive proof
,
not only of the averments contained in the certificate, but also of
the legal nature of the document itself.
”
20.
The defendant’s counsel submitted
that the plaintiff approached the court in bad faith because the
plaintiff had been well
aware that the defendant wished to settle the
matter. The matter should therefore not have been before the
court at all for
argument of an opposed application. I agree
with the submission that the matter should not have reached summary
judgment
stage, incurring the costs of yet another day which the
defendant will have to bear, but this is not only of the plaintiff’s
doing. The defendant's willingness to enter into a repayment
arrangement, motivated by his changed health circumstances, is
neither
a defence to liability nor a bar to the grant of summary
judgment. The NCA does not entitle a debtor, post-default and
cancellation,
to dictate new repayment terms or postpone enforcement
on the strength of personal circumstances and because of his wish to
settle.
21.
The
defendant offers R1 500,00 per month to the plaintiff in what he
regards as a reasonable rearrangement. The plaintiff
disagrees,
seeing that it will take years to pay off the debt, while interest
continues to run. The
in
duplum
stage will inevitably be reached. It is not for this Court to
tell the plaintiff to conclude a contract with the defendant
on the
proposed basis. The defendant’s stance is essentially a
plea
ad
misericordiam
,
[11]
seeking to play on the emotions of the plaintiff and the Court.
He is delaying the inevitable.
Conclusion
22.
In the premises, I am of the view that the
plaintiff has demonstrated a clear and enforceable claim founded on a
written credit
agreement, full statutory and contractual compliance,
and the production of an undisputed certificate of balance. The
defendant's
plea is devoid of any factual or legal foundation capable
of sustaining a defence at trial.
23.
It follows that the plaintiff is entitled
to summary judgment in its favour. Counsel for the plaintiff
handed up an updated
certificate of balance at the hearing of the
application. Judgment will thus be granted in the amount
specified on the updated
certificate.
Costs
24.
The
plaintiff’s claim falls within the jurisdiction of the
magistrates’ court.
[12]
Costs will thus be awarded on the scale applicable in that court.
Order
25.
In the circumstances, summary judgment is
granted against the defendant in favour of the plaintiff for:
25.1.
Payment of the amount of R208 324,96, plus
interest thereon at 10,25% per annum, calculated and capitalized from
22 May 2025 to
date of payment, both days inclusive.
25.2.
Costs of suit, to be taxed on the
magistrates’ court tariff.
P. S. VAN ZYL
Acting Judge of the
High Court
Appearances:
For
the plaintiff:
Ms G. Slingers, instructed by Bornman &
Hayward Inc.
For
the defendant:
Mr N. Sibanda, instructed by Namane
Attorneys Inc.
[1]
Clause
17.4 of the agreement.
[2]
1976
(2) SA 226 (T).
[3]
2009
(5) SA 1 (SCA).
[4]
2020
(6) SA 624
(WCC).
[5]
Breitenbach
supra
at 229F.
[6]
Joob
Joob supra
para 32.
[7]
See
the discussion in
Tumileng
supra
para 13ff.
[8]
The
denial appears at various instances in the plea. In other
instances the plaintiff’s allegations are answered by
the
meaningless (and unhelpful, as far as the defendant’s case is
concerned) formulation that the defendant “
neither
admits nor denies
”
the position as pleaded by the plaintiff.
[9]
Counsel
for the defendant’s invocation of the
Plascon
Evans
rule in relation to disputes of fact on the affidavits delivered in
the summary judgment application does not assist the defendant.
[10]
ABSA
Bank Ltd v Malherbe
[2013] ZAFSHC 78
(16 May 2013) paras 62-63. Emphasis supplied.
[11]
See
Jili
v FirstRand Bank Ltd t/a Wesbank
2015
(3) SA 586
(SCA) para 7.
[12]
The
parties’ agreement provides in clause 20 that legal
proceedings may be brought in the High Court regardless of the
amount claimed.
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