Case Law[2024] ZAWCHC 142South Africa
Standard Bank of South Africa Limited v Van Staden and Another (10690/2023) [2024] ZAWCHC 142 (28 May 2024)
Headnotes
Summary judgment is granted against the defendants, jointly and severally, the one paying the other to be absolved, in favour of the plaintiff, as follows:
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Standard Bank of South Africa Limited v Van Staden and Another (10690/2023) [2024] ZAWCHC 142 (28 May 2024)
Standard Bank of South Africa Limited v Van Staden and Another (10690/2023) [2024] ZAWCHC 142 (28 May 2024)
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sino date 28 May 2024
SAFLII Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case
No.: 10690/2023
In
the matter between:
THE
STANDARD BANK OF SOUTH AFRICA LIMITED
Plaintiff
and
WESSEL
JACOBUS JOHANNES VAN STADEN
First
Defendant
(ID:
560[…])
ANNA
MARIA MAGDALEN VAN STADEN
Second
Defendant
(ID:
590[…])
Coram:
Gassner AJ
Heard:
21 May 2024; supplementary submissions on 24 May 2024
Delivered:
28 May 2024 (by email to the parties and released to SAFLII)
JUDGMENT
GASSNER,
AJ
Introduction
[1]
This is an opposed application for summary
judgment.
[2]
The plaintiff, The Standard Bank of South
Africa Limited ('Standard Bank'), entered into a home loan agreement
('the loan agreement')
with the trustees of the Daenedes Family Trust
('the trust') on or about 17 May 2007 in terms of which it advanced
to the trust
a loan in the
amount
of
R1
720 000
('the
loan')
repayable
in
240
monthly
instalments
together
with
interest thereon.
The
loan was secured by way of a mortgage bond, executed by the
trust as mortgagor, for an amount of R1 720
000 and an additional sum of R430 000, registered over Erf 9[…]
Cape Town at
Newlands ('the property').
[3]
On 19 July 2007 the first defendant, a
co-trustee of the trust, executed a deed of suretyship in favour of
Standard Bank in terms
of which he bound himself as surety and co
principal debtor for any debts that the trust may owe to Standard
Bank ('the suretyship').
[4]
The suretyship records that (i) the defendants are married in
community of property and (ii) the
second defendant consented to the
first defendant binding himself as surety and co-principal debtor for
the indebtedness of the
trust to Standard Bank.
[5]
The trust was sequestrated,
according to the first defendant, during approximately 2010/2011. In
terms of the suretyship the defendants
renounced the benefits of
excussion (clause 3).
Further,
in terms of clause 10.1, as read with clauses 12.6 and 12.7, the
trust's insolvency did not terminate the defendants'
liability in terms of the suretyship.
[6]
Standard Bank claims payment from
the defendants, as surety and co-principal debtor, in the amount of
R1 446 961.97 as well as interest
thereon from 2 July 2020 at the
rate of 8.55% per annum calculated daily and capitalised monthly
('Standard Bank's claim').
[7]
Standard Bank provided a certificate
of balance in terms of clause 15 of the suretyship as proof of the
amount claimed from the
defendants.
The
defendants' plea
[8]
The defendants have raised a special
plea of prescription and have further pleaded over on the merits.
In the plea on the merits the defendants
(i) deny that they are parties to the loan agreement, (ii) admit
signing the suretyship,
(iii) deny that the consent of spouse has
been completed and signed, (iv) deny that Standard Bank explained the
contents of the
suretyship (v) deny reading the suretyship and
understanding its contents and (vi) plead non compliance with
the National
Credit Act 34 of 2005 ('the NCA') and the extension of
'reckless credit'.
The
affidavit opposing summary judgment
[9]
In the affidavit opposing summary
judgment, deposed to by the first defendant, the defendants' plea on
the merits is not dealt with
in any detail. All the first defendant
states regarding the plea, is the following:
'3.
I deny that
–
3.1
I do not have a bona fide defence to
the Plaintiffs claim herein; and
3.2
My defences as pleaded do not raise
a
trialable
issue between the Plaintiff and me.
'
[10]
The first defendant further alleges
in the opposing affidavit that he has been discharged as surety
because the principal obligation
has been terminated in
the following circumstances:
10.1
After the trust was sequestrated the
first defendant and Mr de Oliveira,
in
their capacity as trustees of the trust, attended the first creditors
meeting, convened by the joint liquidators.
10.2
The liquidators advised the trustees
that the property was going to be sold and that
'the
proceeds would be paid to [Standard Bank] in settlement of the
trust's indebtedness to the Plaintiff.
'
10.3
In April 2016 the property was sold
for R2 910 000.
10.4
As the plaintiff received the
proceeds of the sale of the property, the underlying debt has been
settled in its entirety.
10.5
During the meetings of creditors,
Standard Bank did not communicate that it would proceed against the
first defendant in terms of
the suretyship.
10.6
The mortgage bond
over the property
in
favour
of Standard
Bank
has been cancelled.
10.7
Given the accessory
nature of a suretyship,
on cancellation of the mortgage bond the
obligations
of
the trust to the plaintiff were extinguished.
The
plea of prescription
[11]
The defendants pleaded that Standard
Bank's claim has prescribed inasmuch as the debt arose on 22 April
2016 when the property was
sold and the mortgage bond was cancelled
giving rise to a three year prescription period instead of thirty
years applicable to
debts secured by a mortgage bond.
In essence, the defendants plead that the
cancellation of the mortgage bond destroyed the security and altered
the prescription
period to three years as for any other debt.
[12]
During argument the defendants'
counsel, Mr Banderker, did not press the prescription defence.
Given the SCA's decision in
Botha
v
Standard
Bank of South Africa Limited
2019 (6)
SA 388
(SCA) this concession,
in
my view, was well made.
In
Botha
the
court held that the cancellation of a mortgage bond, after a mortgage
debt is due and prescription has begun to run, does not
have the
effect of changing the prescription period of the debt from thirty
years to three years.
In
that case, the principal debtor registered several mortgage bonds
over his property in favour of the bank to secure the loan
and his
indebtedness to the bank arising from a home loan agreement.
The principal debtor's wife bound herself
in favour of the bank as surety and co-principal debtor. When the
principal debtor was
sequestrated the bank sought to recover the full
outstanding balance then owing to it from the insolvent estate.
After the property was sold to a third
party and the bonds were cancelled, a balance of approximately R1.2
million was still owing
by the principal debtor.
The court confirmed that if the debt was
due before the bond was cancelled (as is the case in the present
matter) it would be classified
as a debt secured by a bond and the
thirty year period of prescription was applicable in terms of
section
11(a)(i)
of the
Prescription Act 68 of 1969
.
Accordingly,
the
SCA upheld the court a quo's judgment against the surety for the
shortfall of the debt previously secured by mortgage bonds
over the
principal debtor's immovable property.
[13]
In the present matter clause 14 of
the suretyship provides that the prescription period for the
principal debt and the surety obligation
overlap. The clause reads as
follows:
'If
the Bank's claims against me/us are at any time due to prescribe
(become unenforceable because of the lapse of time) before
the Bank's
claims against the Debtor prescribe, I/we agree that the claims
against me/us will prescribe on the same day
as
the claims against the Debtor
prescribe.'
[14]
In light of
Botha
and the specific provisions of the
suretyship the defendants' special plea of prescription is
unsustainable in law and does not
constitute a
bona
fide
defence.
Reckless
credit
[15]
In paragraph 11 of the plea the
defendants plead the following regarding the NCA:
'It is vehemently
denied that there was due and proper compliance with the various
provisions of the National Credit Act and the
Plaintiff is put to the
proof thereof in that:
11.1
The Defendants had never
submitted proof of income to the Plaintiff;
11.2
The Defendants were never
subjected to
a
credit
scoring affordability test;
11.3
The Defendants were never
assessed as being able to pay the debt of the principal debtor.
Accordingly
it is pleaded that the extension of credit to the principal debtor
where the Defendants have bound themselves to being
personally liable
for the debtors of the principal debtor in the event of the principal
debtor not being able to pay the debt
or
being in breach of the debt, is
tantamount to reckless credit being extended
as
contemplated in the National Credit
Act.'
[16]
The NCA defines reckless credit to
mean
'the credit granted to
a
consumer under
a
credit agreement concluded in
circumstances described in section 80.'
Section
80 in turn provides that a credit agreement is reckless if the
necessary affordability and credit history assessments were
not done.
[17]
The NCA came into effect on 1 June
2007.
The loan
agreement was concluded on 17 May 2007 before the implementation of
the NCA. The suretyship, however,
was
executed on 19 July 2007 after the NGA came into effect.
[18]
Part D of the NGA, more particularly sections 78 - 88, deal,
inter
alia,
with over indebtedness and reckless credit. Item 4(2)
of the transitional provisions, set out in schedule 3, provides that
the provisions of the NCA only apply to pre-existing agreements to
the extent indicated in the table which specifically excludes
provisions relating to reckless credit. It follows that the
provisions of the NCA relating to reckless credit did not apply to
the pre-existing loan agreement in this matter.
[19]
The question arises whether the reckless credit provisions of the NCA
nevertheless apply to the suretyship inasmuch
as it was executed
after the NCA came into force.
[20]
The NCA does not make specific reference to suretyships but to
'credit guarantees' as defined in section
1 with reference to section
8(5) of the NCA which reads as follows:
'An
agreement,
irrespective
of its form but not including an agreement
contemplated in subsection (2),
constitutes
a
credit
guarantee if, in terms of that agreement, a person undertakes or
promises to satisfy upon demand any obligation of another
consumer in
terms of
a
credit
facility or a credit transaction to which this Act applies.
'
(The agreements referred to section 8(2) are not relevant in the
present matter).
It is well established
that a credit guarantee, as contemplated in section 8(5) of the NCA.
encompasses a suretyship (see
Structured Mezzanine Investments
(Pty) Limited v Bestvest 153 (Pty) Ltd 2013 JDR 0862 (WCC)
paras
27 - 33;
The Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd v Essa and Others
(18994/2009)
[2012] ZAWCHC 265
paras 13-17).
[21]
In terms of section 8(1) of the NCA a
credit guarantee constitutes a credit agreement for the purposes
of the NCA.
Section
4
of the NCA
sets
out in
sub-sections
4(1){a)
-
(d) categories of credit agreements which
are exempt from the provisions
of
the NCA.
Section
4(2)(c) provides that the NCA applies to a credit guarantee
'only
to the extent that this Act applies to
a
credit facility or credit transaction in
respect of which the credit guarantee is granted.'
As mentioned earlier, the NCA
provisions regulating over-indebtedness and reckless credit (sections
77 -
88) do not
operate retrospectively in respect of the loan agreement in the
present matter which existed before the NCA came into
force.
It follows that in terms of section 4(2){c)
of the NCA the suretyship is similarly exempt from the reckless
credit provisions of
the NCA (see
Standard
Bank of South Africa Ltd v Essa
supra
para 17;
First Rand Bank Ltd v Carl Beck
Estates (Pty) Ltd and Another
2009 (3)
.SA 384 (T) paras 16 - 24;
Nedbank Ltd v
Wizard Asset Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Three Others
2010
(5) SA 523
(GSJ) para 4;
Ribeiro and
Another v Slip Knot Investments
777
(Ply) Ltd
2011
(1) SA 575
(SCA) para 8).
[22]
Inasmuch as the provisions of the NCA
dealing with reckless credit do not apply to the suretyship, the
defendants' plea based on
reckless credit does not constitute a valid
defence in law.
The
remaining defences
[23]
In terms of Rule 32(3)(b) an opposing
affidavit resisting summary judgment must
'disclose
fully the nature and grounds of the defence and the material facts
relied upon therefor.'
The
purpose of the opposing affidavit is to demonstrate that defendant
has a
'bona fide defence to the action.'
(See
Breff.enbach
v Fiat
SA
(Edms)
Bpk
1976 (2) SA 226
(T) at 228B -
H;
Tumileng
Trading v National Security and Fire
2020
(6) SA 624
(WCC) paras 24 and 25). As Binns-Ward J pointed out in
Tumileng
when
discussing the post-amendment summary judgment regime, in some cases
the defendant can be expected to engage with the plaintiff's
averments in the broader supporting affidavit contemplated in terms
of the amended Rule 32(2)(b}
(Tumileng
at 635E -
F
and 6351).
(See
also
Volkswagen Financial Services v
Pi/lay
2022 (5) SA 639
(KZP) para 38).
[24]
The allegations
in the defendants'
plea that the necessary
spouse's consent to the suretyship was not
obtained is evidently incorrect as on the face of the suretyship the
spouses consent
form was completed and signed.
In this regard it is noteworthy that the
defendants did not plead that the signature appearing on the spousal
consent form was not
the signature of the second defendant but merely
asserted that the consent form was not signed nor completed.
[25]
In my view, the bare assertion in the plea
that the provisions of the suretyship were not explained to the
defendants and that they
did not understand them, absent any material
facts in the opposing affidavit regarding the circumstances under
which the suretyship
was signed, falls
far
short
of the
requirements
of
Rule 32(3)(b)
having
to fully
disclose
'the nature
and grounds of the defence and the
material facts relied upon therefor.'
Ms
Francis, the
plaintiff's
counsel, highlighted in argument that the first defendant was not a
disinterested surety.
He
was a co-trustee of the principal debtor.
It was a condition of the loan agreement
that the first defendant would execute a suretyship in favour of
Standard Bank (as per
the special conditions of the loan agreement).
As such the first defendant was
'the
typical surety in modern society'
referred
to by Scott JA in
Jans v Nedcor Bank Ltd
2003 (6) SA 646
(SCA) at 6611 -
662 who binds himself as co-principal
debtor for an 'entity' in which he was involved to obtain credit for
it.
The first
defendant confirmed in the opposing affidavit that when the trust was
sequestrated his co-trustee and he attended credit
meetings in their
capacity as trustees. There is no suggestion in the first defendant's
opposing affidavit that Standard Bank's
claim against the trust was
disputed or that the first defendant did not have an understanding
of the personal security he provided for
the loan.
Further,
the plaintiff's allegations in the supporting affidavit that its
agent explained the terms of the suretyship to the first
defendant
was not traversed in the first defendant's
opposing affidavit.
In the circumstances, I am of the view that
a bald allegation that the first defendant did not understand the
provisions of the
suretyship does not comply with the provisions of
Rule 32(3)(b).
[26]
It is also not a valid defence in law not
to have read the suretyship in that as a general rule
a surety is bound by the provisions of the
suretyship which he has signed, even in circumstances where he
alleges that he failed
to read the deed of suretyship (see
Airports
Company SA Ltd v Masiphuze Trading (Ply) Ltd and Others
(1120/2018)
[2019] ZASCA 150
;
Slip Knot Investments
777
(Ply)
Ltd v Du Toit
2011 (4) SA 72
(SCA)
paras 11 -
12).
As the defendants have not alleged a iustus
error which may call into question the enforceability of the
suretyship,
they
are bound by the suretyship.
[27]
The
additional
defences
the
first
defendant
raises
in
the
opposing
affidavit, summarised in paragraph 10
above, were not raised in the defendants' plea.
Given the drastic remedy of summary
judgement, I will nevertheless consider whether these constitute
bona
fide
defences.
[28]
Botha,
referred
to earlier in dealing with the prescription plea, is clear authority
to the effect that the cancellation of a mortgage
bond securing a
loan in respect of which a surety bound himself as co-principal
debtor does not extinguish the suretyship obligation.
The creditor remains entitled to proceed
against the surety for payment of any balance which remains
outstanding on the mortgage
bond.
It
follows that the first defendant's argument that on cancellation of
the mortgage bond the surety was extinguished does not constitute
a
valid defence in law.
[29]
The first defendant also seems to rely on a
tacit understanding (although this is not clearly set out in the
opposing affidavit)
that Standard Bank would not proceed against the
surety as it did not expressly convey during the sequestration
process that it
would claim any shortfall from the surety.
The express provisions of the suretyship,
however, preclude the first defendant from relying on such a tacit
understanding.
Clauses
12.6.2 and 12.6.3 stipulate that the suretyship liability will only
end when Standard Bank cancels the suretyship in writing
or gives the
surety a written release.
In
the circumstances, any silence on the part of Standard Bank during
the sequestration process regarding its intention to proceed
against
the surety does not constitute a valid release of the first
defendant's suretyship obligation.
[30]
There seems to be some suggestion in the
opposing affidavit that the realisation proceeds of the property
which were paid to Standard
Bank in 2016 should have been sufficient
to pay the balance outstanding on the mortgage bond in full. The
plaintiff has produced
a certificate of balance in support of the
amount outstanding.
In
terms of clause 15 of the suretyship the defendants have to prove
that the debt and interest specified in the certificate
of balance were incorrect and more
specifically,
the
mortgage bond indebtedness at the time the property proceeds were
received. The mortgage bond was registered in 2007 and the
property
proceeds were only received in 2016.
Substantial interest and arrears could have
accumulated during that period.
The
trust was also liable for any legal costs that Standard Bank may have
incurred to enforce the mortgage bond. Given the first
defendant's
involvement in the sequestration process as co-trustee, he must have
sufficient knowledge and access to information
about the approximate
capital and interest owing on the mortgage bond when the realisation
proceeds of the property were received.
Notwithstanding such personal knowledge,
the first defendant has failed to set out any particulars regarding
the capital and accrued
interest owing on the mortgage bond in 2016
before the net realisation proceeds of the property were received
from which the court
could consider whether his contention regarding
payment has any factual basis. Given the lack of disclosure regarding
the mortgage
bond indebtedness before the sale proceeds were
received, I am of the view that the vague allegations the first
defendant made,
belatedly, in the opposing affidavit that the debt
has been settled, does not constitute a
bona
fide
defence.
[31]
In light of the above, I conclude that the defendants have failed to
establish a
bona fide
defence to Standard Bank's claim.
[32]
It is so that the court has a general discretion to refuse summary
judgment even if the opposing affidavit does
not measure up fully to
the requirements of Rule 32(3)(b). However, having regard to facts
involved in this case, the specific
provisions of the loan agreement,
the mortgage bond and the suretyship as well as the sketchy and vague
opposing affidavit, I am
of the view that this is not an appropriate
case to exercise such a general discretion in favour of the
defendants.
Conclusion
[33]
In the circumstances, I grant summary judgment.
[34]
I make the following order:
Summary judgment is
granted against the defendants, jointly and severally, the one paying
the other to be absolved, in favour of
the plaintiff, as follows:
1.
payment of the amount of R1 446
961.97;
2.
interest on the amount referred to
in paragraph 1, calculated daily and capitalised monthly at the rate
of 8.55% per annum from
2 July 2020 to date of payment;
3.
the defendants to pay the costs on
the scale as between attorney
and
client.
GASSNER,
AJ
Appearances:
Plaintiff's
Counsel:
Advocate
Chloe Francis
Instructed
by:
Stauss
Daly Attorneys
Defendants'
Counsel:
Advocate
M S Banderker
Instructed
by:
Elmes
& Elmes Attorneys
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