Case Law[2024] ZAWCHC 68South Africa
Buechel v South African Securitisation Programme (RF) Limited and Others (3450/2022) [2024] ZAWCHC 68 (5 March 2024)
Headnotes
“The discretion of the Court in granting rescission at common law is fairly wide.”[6] I understand the discretion under rule 31(2)(b) to be similar to the common law discretion.
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Buechel v South African Securitisation Programme (RF) Limited and Others (3450/2022) [2024] ZAWCHC 68 (5 March 2024)
Buechel v South African Securitisation Programme (RF) Limited and Others (3450/2022) [2024] ZAWCHC 68 (5 March 2024)
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sino date 5 March 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
CASE NO: 3450/2022
In the matter between:
gail francis
buechel
and
SOUTH
AFRICAN SECURITISATION
PROGRAMME
(RF) LIMITED
SASFIN
BANK LIMITED
SUNLYN
(PTY) LTD
Applicant
First
Respondent
Second
Respondent
Third
Respondent
IN
RE:
SOUTH
AFRICAN SECURITISATION
PROGRAMME
(RF) LIMITED
SASFIN
BANK LIMITED
SUNLYN
(PTY) LTD
First
Plaintiff
Second
Plaintiff
Third
Plaintiff
and
gail francis
buechel
Defendant
Coram:
Bishop, AJ
Dates
of Hearing:
15 February 2024
Date
of Judgment:
5 March 2024
LEAVE TO APPEAL
JUDGMENT
BISHOP,
AJ
[1]
The Applicant sought the rescission of a default judgment in
terms of rule 32(1)(b). I refused the rescission because, while she
was not in wilful default, she failed to establish a bona fide
defence. The Applicant seeks leave to appeal my order dismissing
her
application.
[2]
Leave
should be granted if the appeal “would have reasonable
prospects of success” or there is another compelling reason
to
grant it.
[1]
Leave to appeal is not there for the asking.
It
should be granted “only when there is ‘a sound, rational
basis for the conclusion that there are prospects of success
on
appeal’.”
[2]
[3]
To my mind the prospect of another court
coming to a different conclusion from mine depends on the nature of
the discretion that
a court exercises when it decides an application
for rescission under rule 31(2)(b). There is ample authority for the
proposition
that a court under rule 32(1)(b) exercises a discretion:
[3.1]
Herbstein
and Van Winsen
cite
a Rhodesian and a Namibian case for the proposition that “[t]he
court has a very wide discretion”.
[3]
[3.2]
Similarly,
Erasmus
says:
“The court has a wide discretion in evaluating ‘good
cause’ in order to ensure that justice is done.”
[4]
It
cites a recent Full Bench decision in Pretoria in support.
[5]
[3.3]
The
Constitutional Court has held that “The discretion of the Court
in granting rescission at common law is fairly wide.”
[6]
I
understand the discretion under rule 31(2)(b) to be similar to the
common law discretion.
[4]
But none of these cases or authorities
specifically deal with the nature or type of the discretion. Beyond
these general descriptions,
I could find no authority on the point,
and counsel could refer me to none.
[5]
The
question matters because “the approach of an appellate court to
an appeal against the exercise of a discretion by another
court will
depend upon the nature of the discretion concerned.”
[7]
If
it is a discretion in the strict sense
[8]
–
where
the court could legitimately choose from different options –
the appellate court will only interfere if “the discretion
has
not been exercised judicially or has been exercised based on a wrong
appreciation of the facts or wrong principles of law”.
[9]
[6]
But
sometimes the term “discretion” is used merely to convey
that a court “is entitled to have regard to a number
of
disparate and incommensurable features in coming to a decision”.
[10]
If
it is this type of discretion – a discretion in the ordinary
sense – an appellate court is entitled to interfere
simply
because it disagrees with the outcome, even if the original court
acted judicially.
[7]
There
is also case law that suggests this neat boundary between discretion
in the strict sense and the ordinary sense is not rigid
and binary,
but that there are gradations of discretion. The scope for legitimate
appellate interference will depend on the precise
nature of each
discretion, rather than its categorization.
[11]
[8]
For reasons I set out more fully below, if
the discretion to grant or refuse rescission is one in the strict
sense, then I see no
reasonable prospects that an appellate court
will interfere with my judgment. The Applicant has not convinced me
that my decision
to refuse the application for rescission was based
on wrong application of law or facts, or that I did not act
judiciously.
[9]
However, if I exercised a discretion in the
ordinary sense, then I can readily see another court coming to a
different conclusion.
I refused to grant rescission because, in my
view, the Applicant had failed to establish a bona fide defence in
her founding papers.
However, an appellate court may legitimately
take a broader view, consider the allegations in reply, venture into
possible defences
not made out in the application, and decide to
rescind.
[10]
As I do not think there is a clear answer
on the nature of the discretion, and as the Applicant will have
reasonable prospects of
success if it is a discretion in the ordinary
sense, there are reasonable prospects of success. I intend to grant
leave to appeal
for that reason.
[11]
As it may aid the appellate court, I intend
to nonetheless briefly set out my own view on the nature of the
discretion, and on the
merits of the various arguments raised in the
application for leave to appeal.
### The Nature of the
Discretion
The Nature of the
Discretion
[12]
Whether a discretion is on in the true or
the ordinary sense appears to depend on the type of issue a court is
deciding (procedural
or substantive), whether policy should encourage
or discourage appeals, and the nature of the factors the court must
consider and
the question it must answer.
[13]
Issues
that go primarily to a court’s process are ordinarily regarded
as discretions in the strict sense – costs,
[12]
condonation,
[13]
postponement,
[14]
the
admission of evidence,
[15]
and
just and equitable remedy
[16]
are
classic examples. Questions that determine the substantive outcome of
a dispute, are generally discretions in the ordinary sense.
So the
grant or refusal of an interim interdict,
[17]
or
an eviction
[18]
is
subject to full appellate re-evaluation.
[14]
The decision to grant or refuse rescission
has elements of both. It is a procedural issue – should a case
that was finalized
be re-opened? That is an issue that affects the
operation of the court that granted it. That is why a decision to
grant rescission
is not appealable. But an order refusing rescission
is also a decision that can finally close the door to a party and so
can be
determinative of their substantive rights and obligations. If
rescission is refused, the judgment stands.
[15]
Judgments
on this issue refer to the question of whether, as a matter of
policy, appeals should be allowed.
[19]
This
is particularly the case with interlocutory decisions. While the
grant of rescission is unappealable because it is not final,
the
refusal of rescission is final. It does not seem to me that there is
any policy reason to avoid appeals against the refusal
of rescission.
[16]
Finally, the nature of the issues to be
considered – was there wilful default and is there a bona fide
defence – are
issues where a court can either be right or
wrong. The Court must apply the appropriate test. It seems that a
court may have some
discretion where the scales are finely balanced –
where it is debatable whether there was wilful default, and the bona
fides
of any defence is uncertain. But where an applicant shows she
is not in wilful default and establishes a bona fide defence, a court
has limited if any scope to refuse rescission for other reasons.
[17]
On balance, despite the cases and academic
authorities that describe it as a “wide discretion”, in
my view it is a discretion
in the ordinary sense. But that is
ultimately an issue the court on appeal will need to determine.
### Grounds of Appeal
Grounds of Appeal
[18]
With regard to the Applicant’s
grounds of appeal, I address them only briefly. As I intimated above,
I am not convinced that
any of them demonstrate that I acted
injudiciously or on wrong facts or law. But I do accept that an
appellate court may evaluate
the pleadings and the facts differently.
The reasons arise from the Applicant’s grounds of appeal.
[19]
First
, the
Applicant submitted that the Court ought to have considered that she
was sued as a guarantor, not as a principl debtor. This
did not
affect the nature of her defences; but, she argued, it meant that she
was only placed in a position to fully analyse the
facts when she
received the answering affidavit. I was therefore wrong to insist
that the case should have been made in founding,
and could not be
made in reply. I do not think this ground has merit. An applicant for
rescission either has a bona fide defence
or she does not. She can
either make out that defence in founding papers or she cannot. If she
does not know facts that would establish
a bona fide defence, then
rescission should be refused. It is of course true that sometimes
defendants only identify a defence
through pleading and discovery.
But rescission is for parties who already have a bona fide defence,
not for those who have none
but hope to identify one at trial.
[20]
Second
,
the Applicant pointed out that I erred in concluding that it was not
clear when Gragood was placed in business rescue. I admit
the error,
but I do not see how it affects my evaluation of the Applicant’s
defences. She also alleged I was wrong about
the date on which the
agreements were cancelled. I do not believe I erred in this regard,
but in any event I fail to see why it
would matter if I had.
[21]
Third
, the
Applicant contends that I failed to adequately consider the role of
Kalt in insisting she sign as a guarantor, and in approving
the
transaction for “astronomical” amounts. Neither argument
addresses my fundamental difficulty – there is no
basis laid in
the founding papers to explain how the Respondent was involved in any
fraud. These two facts – that the applicant
was a guarantor and
that the prices were high –would not justify an inference of
fraud even if proved at trial. They do not
give rise to a bona fide
defence.
[22]
Fourth
,
the Applicant alleges that I wrongly sought to enter into the
probabilities. I do not believe that I did so. Where a defence relies
on inference, a court must inevitably consider some degree of
probabilities in order to assess whether it is a bona fide defence
or
not. It must ask whether, if the facts alleged are established,
the inference the applicant seeks to draw would follow.
Here the
argument was that the rates were exorbitant, therefore there was
fraud. The difficulty I saw was that even if the Applicant
could
establish that the rates were exorbitant, that could not, without
more, lead to an inference of fraud. As no additional fact
was
alleged – that the rates were increased for her specific
transaction – there was no bona fide defence.
[23]
Fifth
, I
was wrong, the Applicant claims, to hold her to her founding papers
on the basis that Kalt had been denied an opportunity to
provide an
answer because he had given his full version in answering papers. But
he answered the case that was made. The case was
that one of Sunlyn’s
agents was directly involved in the fraud. As the Applicant accepted
in reply, that was not the case.
Kalt and the Respondents were not
called to answer a case that, despite Kalt having never met the
Plaintiff or Koegelenberg, fraud
could be inferred from other facts.
That is also the reason that, despite alleging the rentals were
exorbitant, the Respondents
were not afforded a fair opportunity to
answer – because the fraud was not inferred from the exorbitant
rentals but directly
alleged through the connivance of an unnamed
agent. That allegation was abandoned. It was not necessary, given the
nature of the
case in the founding papers, for the Respondents to
have shown that their rentals were not increased for the Applicant.
And it
would have been unfair to grant rescission in those
circumstances.
[24]
Sixth
,
the Applicant referred to various judgments that rely on ubuntu or
good faith in contracts. But the law on this is clear –
parties
must be held to their contracts unless to do so would be contrary to
public policy, or unconstitutional.
[20]
The
Applicant did not raise, as one of her defences, that the leases or
her guarantees were contrary to public policy, or unconstitutional.
Nor did she argue that enforcing them in these circumstances would
violate the Constitution or public norms. She cannot, in an
application for leave to appeal, seek to introduce a new defence.
[25]
Seventh
,
the Applicant pointed out that the letter of 19 January 2023 arrived
just a day before she launched her application for rescission.
That
is so. But the same allegation – that “the cost of sale
of the goods exceeded the amount the goods were sold for”
–
appeared in the particulars of claim. The Applicant knew this fact,
yet sought to advance a defence that failed to take
it into account.
[26]
For these reasons, I see no fundamental
error in my judgment. Rescission demands fairness to both parties. A
party that properly
served a summons and obtained a default judgment
is entitled to rely on the finality of that judgment unless a case is
made for
rescission. I took the view that it would be unfair to the
Respondents – and almost certainly of no benefit to the
Applicant
– to reopen a case which would still end in her being
liable as guarantor, however unfair that may seem.
[27]
But I accept that another court may
be more lenient to the way the Applicant’s case morphed from
founding to reply, or may
see the equities differently. Therefore, as
an appellate court may have the ability to reconsider how I exercised
my discretion,
I grant leave to appeal.
[28]
I make the following order:
[28.1]
Leave to appeal is granted to the Full
Bench.
[28.2]
Costs of this application will be costs in
the appeal. If the Applicant does not prosecute the appeal, she shall
pay the Respondents’
costs in this application.
____________________
M
J BISHOP
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Counsel
for Applicant:
Adv M Nowitz
Attorneys
for Applicant
STBB|Smith Tabata Buchanan Boyes
Counsel
for Respondents:
Adv L Wessels (heads of argument prepared by Adv S Aucamp)
Attorneys
for Respondents
Smith Jones & Pratt Inc
[1]
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
s 17(1)(a).
[2]
Four
Wheel Drive Accessory Distributors CC v Rattan NO
[2018] ZASCA 124
;
2019 (3) SA 451
(SCA) at para 34, quoting
S
v Smith
[2011] ZASCA 15
;
2012 (1) SACR 567
(SCA) para 7.
[3]
Cilliers, Loots & Nel
Herbstein
and Van Winsen: Civil Practice of the High Courts and the Supreme
Court of Appeal of South Africa
(5th
Ed, 2009) ch27-p715, fn 98, citing
Du
Preez v Hughes NO
1958 (1) PH F17 (SR);
Krauer
v Metzger (2)
1990 NR 135
(HC) at 139G–140F, 141G–J.
[4]
D Van Loggerenberg
Erasmus:
Superior Court Practice
(2022, RS 20) D1-365.
[5]
Ibid fn 66, citing
Hossein
N.O and Others v Adinolfi and Others
[2022] ZAGPPHC 857 at para 19.
[6]
Occupiers
of Erven 87 and 88 Berea v De Wet N.O. and Another
[2017] ZACC 18
;
2017 (8) BCLR 1015
(CC);
2017 (5) SA 346
(CC) at
para 71.
[7]
Giddey
NO v JC Barnard and Partners
[2006] ZACC 13
;
2007 (5) SA 525
(CC);
2007 (2) BCLR 125
(CC) at para
19.
[8]
As O’Regan J notes in
Giddey
at fn
17, various terms are used to describe this type of discretion –
a “strong” discretion a discretion “in
the narrow
sense” or a “true” discretion. I use her
descriptor of a discretion “in the strict sense”.
[9]
Giddey
(n 7)
at para 19.
[10]
Knox
D'Arcy Ltd and Others v Jamieson and Others
[1996] ZASCA 58
;
1996 (4) SA 348
(A) at 361H-I.
[11]
Giddey
(n 7)
at para 19, referring to
S
v Basson
2007 (3) SA 582
(CC);
2005 (12) BCLR 1192
(CC) at paras 110-1.
[12]
Giddey
(n 7).
[13]
Mabaso
v Law Society of the Northern Provinces
[2004] ZACC 8
;
2005 (2) SA 117
(CC);
2005 (2) BCLR 129
(CC) at para
20.
[14]
National
Coalition for Gay and Lesbian Equality and Others v Minister of Home
Affairs and Others
[1999] ZACC 17
;
2000 (2) SA 1
(CC);
2000 (1) BCLR 39
(CC) at para
11.
[15]
Basson
(n 11)
[16]
Trencon
Construction (Pty) Limited v Industrial Development Corporation of
South Africa Limited and Another
[2015] ZACC 22; 2015 (5) SA 245 (CC); 2015 (10) BCLR 1199 (CC).
[17]
Knox
D’Arcy
(n
10).
[18]
Ndlovu
v Ngcobo; Bekker and Another v Jika
2003
(1) SA 113
(SCA) at para 18.
[19]
See, for example,
Giddey
(n 7)
at para 22.
[20]
Beadica
231 CC and Others v Trustees for the time being of the Oregon Trust
and Others
[2020] ZACC 13
;
2020 (5) SA 247
(CC);
2020 (9) BCLR 1098
(CC).
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