Case Law[2024] ZAWCHC 49South Africa
Standard Bank of South Africa Limited v Friedman (21244/2023) [2024] ZAWCHC 49; 2024 (3) SA 171 (WCC) (20 February 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Standard Bank of South Africa Limited v Friedman (21244/2023) [2024] ZAWCHC 49; 2024 (3) SA 171 (WCC) (20 February 2024)
Standard Bank of South Africa Limited v Friedman (21244/2023) [2024] ZAWCHC 49; 2024 (3) SA 171 (WCC) (20 February 2024)
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FLYNOTES:
CONTRACT – Guarantee –
Indebtedness
–
Respondent
guaranteed obligations of company to limited amount – Bank
seeking monetary judgment – Respondent contending
that bank
cancelled contract without having executed acceleration clause –
Acceleration and cancellation occurred simultaneously
in letter
sent by bank’s attorneys – Nothing in law precluding
parties from exercising rights simultaneous with
cancellation –
Agreement incorporating cancellation as permissible election under
heading “acceleration”
– Bank proved that at
launch of application the respondent was indebted to it under the
guarantee.
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
WESTERN CAPE DIVISION,
CAPE TOWN
CASE
NO: 21244/2023
In
the matter between:
THE
STANDARD BANK OF SOUTH AFRICA LIMITED
Applicant
and
JONATHAN
NICHOLAS FRIEDMAN
Respondent
Hearing: Wednesday 14
February 2024
Judgment: Tuesday 20
February 2024
JUDGMENT
KATZ AJ:
[1]
On
19 June 2023
Standard Bank of South Africa Limited made
application for a monetary judgment against the respondent, Jonathan
Nicholas Friedman
(“
Friedman
”
),
in the amount of R110 000 000 (one hundred and ten million
rand), plus interest and costs.
[2]
Standard
Bank claims Friedman’s indebtedness to it is in terms of a
Guarantee, limited up to the amount of R110 million
plus
interests and costs, in terms of which Friedman guaranteed the
obligations of Urban Lime Properties (South Africa) (Pty) Ltd
[1]
(registration no: 2006/023754/07) (“
Urban
Lime
”
)
[2]
to Standard Bank in respect of a loan facility agreement granted by
Standard Bank to it.
[3]
Friedman filed his answering affidavit on 31
August 2023. Standard Bank filed its replying affidavit on 31
October 2023.
[4]
Standard
bank launched the application in the High Court, Gauteng Local
Division, Johannesburg. Friedman applied in terms of
section 27
of
the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
for the application to be
transferred to the Western Cape Division as a matter of convenience
and cost-effectiveness because Standard
Bank were also seeking an
order of liquidation against Urban Lime in this Division.
[3]
[5]
The Acting Judge President on 18 December 2023 set
the application down for hearing on the semi-urgent roll to be heard
simultaneously
on 14 February 2024 with the liquidation application
brought by Standard Bank against Urban Lime under case no. 9696/2023
(“
the liquidation application
”
).
There was no consolidation in terms of Uniform
Rule 11
and the two
applications were and are not consolidated into one application.
[6]
On Friday
9 February
2024
the respondent in the liquidation
application (Urban Lime) provided me with a copy of an application
issued out of the High Court,
Kwazulu-Natal Local Division, Durban
under case number D 1740/2024 in the matter of
Rivertown
Central (Pty) Ltd v UL Prop SA (Pty) LTD
.
The KZN application seeks to place Urban Lime under supervision to
commence business rescue proceedings in terms of
section 131(1)
of
the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
.
[7]
Section
131(6)
of the
Companies Act effectively
requires the liquidation
application to be suspended subject to various conditions.
[4]
[8]
I thus only heard the monetary judgment
application and removed the liquidation application from the roll.
This judgment only deals
with the monetary judgment application.
[9]
In the monetary claim Friedman raised a number of
defences, including what was described by Standard Bank as an
eccentric interpretation
of a particular clause of the Guarantee.
Standard Bank dealt with the defences in its replying affidavit and
in its heads of argument.
As the case developed Friedman’s
defence ultimately boiled down to a single point. His other
defences had fallen away.
[10]
It appears that Friedman’s remaining single
point was not completely covered by Standard Bank’s heads of
argument.
So, when Mr
Woodland
SC (who appeared with Ms
Morgan
)
on behalf of Standard Bank commenced oral argument he developed what
I may call a fresh argument and handed in a bundle of authorities
which included three cases not previously referred to, to deal with
the single point. Mr Woodland’s fresh argument
seemed not
to have arisen on the papers and it was not contained in the heads of
argument. Mr
Goodman
(who appeared with Mr
Crookes
)
for Friedman had been provided by Mr Woodland with the new cases on
the previous day.
[11]
Mr Goodman, quite correctly in my view, suggested
that Friedman’s defence to the monetary claim effectively
turned on what
could be regarded as the single point, which he
described as a point
in limine.
He accepted that he would be hard pressed to argue
that the monetary judgment claim should not be granted if the
in
limine
point didn’t succeed.
[12]
The point
in limine
amounted to what may be described as a “pleading
point.” Standard Bank, so it was argued, had not pleaded
a case
in its founding affidavit that should lead to the relief being
granted.
[13]
The point was that on 19 June 2023, when the
application was launched, Standard Bank in its founding affidavit
could not –
and did not – demonstrate that Friedman was
indebted to Standard Bank in any amount. The reason for
this was
that at that date it was not proved that Urban Lime was
indebted to Standard Bank. Thus, if Urban Lime was not so
indebted,
Friedman was similarly not indebted.
[14]
Friedman accepts the Guarantee was executed by
him. He effectively accepted that were Urban Lime to have been
indebted as
at 19 June 2023 to Standard Bank under the loan facility
agreement for the amount (some R 357 million) as claimed by Standard
Bank
he would be liable for the full amount of the Guarantee.
[15]
I agree with Friedman’s position.
[16]
The material terms of the Guarantee are,
inter
alia:
16.1.
As a principal and primary obligation, Friedman
irrevocably and unconditionally guaranteed the due and full
performance by the Borrower
(Urban Lime) of the “Guaranteed
Obligations”.
16.2.
The Guaranteed Obligations refer to all present
and future indebtedness of whatsoever nature and howsoever arising
which was or
may become owing by Urban Lime to Standard Bank, up to
the amount of R110 million, plus interest and certain costs, fees,
charges
and expenses.
16.3.
The Guaranteed Obligations include all items which
would be Guaranteed Obligations but for the winding-up or business
rescue of
Urban Lime.
16.4.
Friedman undertook to pay Standard Bank,
inter
alia,
whenever Urban Lime did not pay
any amount or perform any obligation as Borrower in terms of the
Urban Lime Facility Agreement (“
the
Facility Agreement
”
).
16.5.
A default on the facility agreement is defined as
a default on the Guarantee.
[17]
Standard Bank correctly states the Guarantee gives
rise to a principal obligation.
[18]
The nature of a guarantee is to be determined by
its terms.
[19]
The
Guarantee is not a suretyship but a principal undertaking.
[5]
[20]
In
this regard, a guarantor’s liability is independent of that of
the principal debtor, (in this case Urban Lime), and wholly
independent of the underlying loan agreement. Caney
[6]
explains this as one of the differences between suretyship and
guarantee:
“
[T]he
guarantor’s obligation, as an obligation independent of that of
the debtor, is to indemnify the creditor in respect
of losses
suffered through the debtor’s non-performance, whereas the
surety, as we have seen, is only liable for losses resulting
from the
debtor’s breach of contract. Thus if the creditor suffers grave
losses when it turns out that the debtor’s
contract is invalid,
the guarantor’s obligation remains in force and he will have to
pay those losses but the surety’s
obligation falls away and he
will not have to pay a penny.”
[21]
It is apparent from the terms of the Guarantee, in
particular clause 4.1, that the Guarantee is an agreement
indemnifying Standard
Bank from losses caused to it by Friedman
whether those losses arise,
inter alia,
from Urban Lime not paying an amount owed in terms
of the underlying loan agreement or whether any obligation in terms
thereof becomes
unenforceable, invalid or illegal.
[22]
There
is no accessory relationship between the Guarantee and the underlying
loan agreement, and the rights and obligations of the
parties are
determined by having reference to the Guarantee, not the underlying
loan agreement.
[7]
[23]
As stated above, Friedman denies that he is liable
to Standard Bank under the Guarantee, other than for any amount due
and payable
by Urban Lime to Standard Bank
at
the time
this application was made.
Friedman says that on 19 June 2023, when this application was
launched, his indebtedness didn’t
arise because Standard Bank
had cancelled the contract with Urban Lime without having executed an
acceleration clause (clause 21.19)
contained in the Facility
agreement.
[24]
The point advanced is that in the face of the
alleged breaches by Urban Lime, Standard Bank made an election not to
uphold their
contract (the loan facility agreement), but to cancel
it. Friedman avers that when Standard Bank’s founding
affidavit
was deposed to on 19 June 2023 all accrued amounts of
interest that were subject to the Guarantee had been paid in full by
Urban
Lime.
[25]
The facility agreement (clause 7 read with clause
2.1.24) between Urban Lime and Standard Bank required,
inter
alia
, all amounts owing to be paid by
29 September 2023. On default by Urban Lime of any its obligations
under the facility Standard
Bank had the right to accelerate Urban
lime’s obligations.
[26]
Standard Bank cancelled the facility agreement on
17 April 2023.
[27]
Mr Woodland’s fresh point seems to be that
when
Standard
Bank cancelled its contract with Urban Lime the acceleration clause
contained in the facility agreement had already accrued.
[28]
Reliance
was placed on
Nash
v Golden Dumps
,
[8]
with reference to
Crest
Enterprises (Pty) Ltd v Rycklof Beleggings (Edms) Bpk
[9]
and
Walker’s
Fruit Farms Ltd v Sumner
,
[10]
where the following was stated:
“
"....
the rule in the Walker case, supra, is confined to cases where,
prior
to
the
rescission of a contract by one party's acceptance of the other's
repudiation,
there
exists a right which is accrued, due, and enforceable as a cause of
action independent of any executory part of the contract
“
[29]
So, the argument followed that when Standard Bank
cancelled the facility agreement (on 17 April 2023) its right to
accelerate the
date for payment had accrued. Standard Bank
could even
after
cancellation
accelerate the date for Urban Lime’s performance and thus the R
357 million had become due and payable.
[30]
Friedman
did not take issue with Standard Bank’s right to rely (as a
matter of principle or on the facts)
[11]
on the acceleration clause in the facility agreement. His issue was
when
that
right was exercised. He claimed that once the contract was cancelled
by Standard Bank it was too late for it to rely on any
provision
(such as the acceleration clause) in what was now a non-extant
contract.
[31]
To quote from the heads of argument:
“
17.
Accepting as correct that ULPSA
[Urban
Lime]
was
in breach of the agreement, the remedy available to the applicant, as
the innocent party, was to elect to uphold the agreement
and claim
specific performance and/or damages, or to cancel the agreement and
claim restitution and damages.
13 Swart v Vosloo
1965
(1) SA 100
(A) at 104H-105A
18.
The election is one that is taken once and takes effect upon
communication of the election.
14 As was said
by Nicholas AJA in Culverwell v Brown
1990 (1) SA 7
(A) at 17B:
“
Having
once made his election, the injured party was bound by it - the
choice of one remedy necessarily involves the abandonment
of the
other inconsistent remedy. He cannot both approbate and reprobate.
Quod semel placuit in electionibus amplius displicere
non potest.
Plainly, where a party
elects to terminate the contract, he cannot thereafter change his
mind: the contract is gone. ”
19.
According to the founding affidavit, in the face of the alleged
breaches, the applicant made an election,
not to uphold the contract,
but to cancel the contract.”
[32]
In the founding affidavit, Standard Bank’s
deponent (at par 34) stated:
“
Given
Urban Lime’s continuing defaults, and its failure to remedy its
breaches of the Agreement, the applicant exercised its
rights in
terms of clause 2.19 of the Facility Agreement and (i) cancelled the
Agreement, and (ii) declared that the full amount
together with
accrued interest became immediately due and payable
.”
[33]
The exercise of Standard Bank’s rights was
contained in a letter sent by its attorneys to Friedman on
17
April 2023
.
Paragraph 8 of the letter
states:
“
We
have been instructed by our client to notify you (as we hereby do)
that in the exercise of our client’s rights in terms
of clause
2.19 of the agreement, the Agreement is hereby and immediately
cancelled, and the full amount of the Loan, in the amount
of R 370,
296, 379.85 (three hundred and seventy million two hundred and
ninety-six thousand three hundred and seventy nine rand
and
eighty-five cents is immediately due and payable
.”
[34]
Accepting the letter may not be a model of legal
clarity, the question that strikes me, leaving aside the
Walker’s
Fruit Farm
“
accrued point,”
that arises is whether Standard Bank’s “election”
in the manner and timing of its cancellation
precluded it from
relying on the acceleration clause when it did so in the same
letter.
[35]
In other words, had Standard Bank executed the
acceleration option at some point earlier than the exercise of the
cancellation clause,
there would have been no problem.
[36]
But because acceleration and cancellation occurred
simultaneously in the same letter of 17 April 2023 it was too late
for acceleration.
The agreement had been cancelled and in the
words of
Culverwell
the
contract “was gone.”
[37]
In
resolving this issue, I have had regard to the terms of the Facility
agreement as a whole,
[12]
and
in particular the clause dealing with acceleration (21.19). Indeed,
clause 21.19.1.1 provides that upon the occurrence of a
default
(which is what occurred in this case) Standard Bank as Lender may:
“
Acceleration
21.19.1.1
cancel all or any part of the Facility whereupon it shall
immediately be cancelled
.”
[38]
The acceleration clause itself contemplates
cancellation.
[39]
Friedman argues in paragraph 23 of his heads of
argument that: “It is clear that the remedy asserted against
Urban Lime is
one for an acceleration of benefits under the contract
– a claim for the primary future obligations under the contract
to
be immediately performed. In law, that remedy is not
available to the applicant after communication of its election to
cancel
the agreement (as opposed to the cancellation of the facility,
which would have given rise to the election in clause 21.19 of the
facility agreement).”
[40]
And he explains that the remedies in clause 21.19
are primary contractual remedies.
[41]
As I understand Friedman’s argument, he
could not have complained if Standard Bank had accelerated on, say 16
April 2023,
and cancelled on 17 April 2023. Or if the acceleration
had occurred on the same day, but a few hours or even minutes earlier
than
the cancellation. But they occurred at the same time and
were communicated in the same letter.
[42]
The interpretation contended for by Friedman is
inconsistent with the principles governing the interpretation of
contracts. Common
sense and a business- like approach to the matter
reveal the fault lines in Friedman’s argument.
[43]
For
more than a century, the Courts have held that an interpretation that
promotes an absurd result will not be given effect to.
[13]
And relatedly, an interpretation that is sensible, will be preferred
over one that is not.
[14]
[44]
Of
course, if an agreement is cancelled, a party may not
later
seek
to invoke the rights that exist under the contract. The reason for
this is that the contract is dead. But there is nothing
in law that
precludes parties from exercising their rights simultaneous with
cancellation. Here, Standard Bank sought to invoke
its right to
acceleration
not
after
cancellation,
but at the same time as cancellation. It was entitled to do so in
terms of clause 21.19 of the agreement which incorporates
the right
of cancellation under the heading “acceleration”.
[15]
[45]
But quite apart from the fact that the agreement
incorporates cancellation as a permissible election that may be made
under the
heading “acceleration”, it would also be
placing form over substance to insist on acceleration taking place a
minute
before cancellation, but not simultaneously in the same
letter.
[46]
Friedman’s approach requires this Court to
conclude that Standard Bank would have been entitled to cancel in a
separate letter
sent hours or indeed minutes after exercising the
right of acceleration, but not simultaneously. What purpose is served
by this
formality? In my view, there is none. It does not promote the
purpose of the agreement, nor does it advance any of the policy
considerations
that underlie the law of contract.
[47]
In
some cases, there are tensions between various policy considerations
that inform the law of contract under the Constitution.
Cases such as
Beadica
231
[16]
and
Pridwin Preparatory School
[17]
illustrate the tension that can exist between legal certainty and
predictability on the one hand (both values of the rule of law),
and
fairness, dignity, and equality on the other hand (also values of the
rule of law). But unlike
Beadica
and
Pridwin,
this
case does not give rise to the same difficulty because the formality
insisted on by Friedman does not promote one or more of
the
traditional justifications associated with formality (i.e. certainty,
predictability and clarity).
[48]
Friedman does not complain there was anything
unfair or prejudicial to him in Standard Bank simultaneously
accelerating and cancelling
its Urban Lime agreement. Indeed, how
could he?
[49]
Standard Bank acted within its rights in terms of
the contract at all times, and accordingly, there can be and is
nothing problematic
about it executing acceleration and cancellation
in the same letter.
[50]
In conclusion, I am of the view that Standard Bank
proved that at the date of the launch of this application that
Friedman was indebted
to it under the Guarantee in the amount
claimed.
[51]
I therefore make the following orders:
51.1.
The respondent must pay the applicant the sum of
R110,000,000.00 (one hundred and ten million rands), together with
interest calculated
at the prime rate of interest published by the
applicant from time to time as being its prime rate plus 2% (per
annum, compounded
monthly in arrears and quoted on the basis of a
365-day year), from 9 May 2023 to date of payment, both days
inclusive.
51.2.
The
respondent must pay applicant’s costs of suit on the attorney
and own client scale,
[18]
including the costs of two counsel.
KATZ AJ
Appearances
For
the applicant:
Mr
G Woodland SC
with
Ms Claire Morgan
instructed
by Mr A Harris of Bowman Gilfillan Inc
For
the respondent:
Mr
R Goodman SC
with
Mr T Crookes
instructed
by Mr J Aukett of Aukett Attorneys
[1]
Urban
Lime changed its name on 3 October 2023 to UL Prop SA.
[2]
The
respondent is a director and the chief executive officer of Urban
Lime.
[3]
On 3
October 2023 the Johannesburg High Court ordered the removal of the
application from that court to the Western Cape Division
for hearing
and determination
[4]
Section
131 (6) states: “If liquidation proceedings have already been
commenced by or against the company at the time an
application is
made in terms of subsection (1), the application will suspend those
liquidation proceedings until- (a) the
court has adjudicated
upon the application; or (b) the business rescue
proceedings end, if the court makes the order
applied for.”
[5]
See
List
v Jungers
1979 (3) SA 106 (A).
[6]
Forsyth
& Pretorius,
Caneys
The Law of Suretyship
6
th
ed
(2010) at 33.
[7]
Lombard
Insurance v Landmark Holdings (Pty) Ltd & Others
2010
(2) SA 86
(SCA) at paras [19] and [20].
[8]
[1985]
ZASCA 6
;
[1985] 2 All SA 161
(A) (27 March 1985)
[9]
1972
(2) SA 853 (A)
[10]
!930
TPD 394
[11]
Friedman
appears to have acknowledged that Urban Lime was at 17 April 2023 in
default and Standard Bank was entitled to accelerate
in terms of
clause 21.19 because Urban Lime had defaulted.
[12]
In
doing so I have had regard to the text, context and purpose of the
facility agreement.
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
2012
(4) SA 593 (SCA).
[13]
See
for example,
Venter
v Rex
1907
TS 910
at 914 – 5, cited with approval a majority of the
Constitutional Court in
Smit
v Minister of Justice and Correctional Services and Others
2021
(1) SACR 482(CC).
Although both cases deal with the interpretation
of statutes,
Endumeni
makes
it clear that all written documents are to be interpreted through
the same iterative process.
[14]
Endumeni
above
n.12 at para [18].
[15]
Reliance
on the heading of a clause is a permissible tool in the
interpretation exercise. See
Nelson
Mandela Foundation v AfriForum NPC and Others
2019
(6) SA 327(EqC)
;
[2019] 4 All SA 237
(EqC). This interpretation of
the Equality Court was upheld by the Constitutional Court in
Qwelane
v South African Human Rights Commission
2021
(6) SA 579
(CC) at [113].
[16]
2020
(5) SA 247
(CC).
[17]
2020
(5) SA 327 (CC).
[18]
Clause
14 of the Guarantee provides for a costs order to this effect.
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