Case Law[2024] ZAWCHC 207South Africa
Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa v Bisschoff N.O obo Reyners (13654/2013) [2024] ZAWCHC 207 (16 August 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
16 August 2024
Headnotes
the appeal, set aside the trial Court’s order, and substituted it with an order that PRASA’s special plea succeeds with costs[3].
Judgment
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## Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa v Bisschoff N.O obo Reyners (13654/2013) [2024] ZAWCHC 207 (16 August 2024)
Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa v Bisschoff N.O obo Reyners (13654/2013) [2024] ZAWCHC 207 (16 August 2024)
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sino date 16 August 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case
Number: 13654/2013
In
the matter between:
PASSENGER
RAIL AGENCY OF SOUTH AFRICA
Applicant
and
ADV.
C BISSCHOFF N.O. obo D J REYNERS
First Respondent
THE
SHERIFF OF CAPE TOWN WEST
Second Respondent
Date of hearing:
7 August 2024
Date of judgment:
16 August 2024
JUDGMENT
PANGARKER
AJ
Introduction
1. The dispute between
the parties revolves around a narrow issue: the calculation of
interest, the application of the
in duplum
rule, the date on
which post-judgment interest starts running on the judgment debt, and
the rate of post-judgment interest. As counsel
for the parties
submitted, the dispute is a legal issue.
2. The only participating
parties in this matter are PRASA, the defendant in the finalized
damages action and applicant in respect
of its Part B application,
and Advocate Christo Bisschoff NO, in his capacity as the Court
appointed curator
ad litem
for Denzil John Reyners. As there
are two applications before me, to simplify matters, the parties are
simply referred to herein
as
PRASA
and
the plaintiff
.
The Sheriff of Cape Town West, the second respondent, abides the
decision of the Court.
3. In Part B of the
application as contained in its Notice of Motion, PRASA seeks the
following relief:
PART
B:
8.
Declaring that the Applicant has satisfied the judgment debt handed
down by the Honourable Justice Goliath on 03 June 2020, in
the amount
of R 3 326 484.00 together with the interest thereon, when it paid
the amount of R3 589 397.32 on 16 April 2024;
9.
Setting aside the warrant of execution dated 05 February 2024;
10.
Costs of the application;
11.
Further and/or alternative relief.
4. The second application
is the plaintiff’s counter application for a declarator in the
following terms:
1. It is declared that
as at 7 August 2024 (and after taking into account all payments made
by the applicant to the first respondent
until such date pursuant to
the judgment delivered by the trial court on 3 June 2020 under the
above case number), the applicant
is presently obliged to pay the
first respondent a balance of R3 912 304,30 (alternatively,
a balance of R3 636 907,
58, which amount is presently due,
owing and payable.
2. The applicant shall
pay the first respondent’s costs of the counter-application
including the costs of two counsel, on
Scale C.
3.
Further and/or alternative relief.
5. Part A of PRASA’s
application was an urgent application on 19 April 2024 seeking the
following relief: suspension of the
execution of the June 2020 order
granted by the trial Court (“
the Goliath order”)
pending the determination of Part B; an interdict preventing the
sale in execution of its attached movable assets which were
advertised
to take place on 23 April 2024; the return of these
movable assets pending the determination of the relief in Part B, and
postponing
Part B while reserving PRASA’s right to supplement
its papers, and costs.
6. On 19 April 2024,
Lekhuleni J granted an order by agreement between the parties which
has the effect that the sale in execution
was suspended on condition
that PRASA provides security to the curator to the satisfaction of
the second respondent. The further
orders are not referred to herein.
The matter was consequently postponed for hearing of Part B to 7
August instant and all issues
of costs were to stand over for later
determination.
Common cause and
undisputed facts
7.
On 20 February 2001, Denzil John Reyners fell out of a moving train
while travelling to work. The incident occurred between Ysterplaat
and Mutual Stations in Cape Town. As a result of the incident, Mr
Reyners sustained various bodily injuries which included a right
compound depressed temporal skull fracture and severe traumatic brain
injury
[1]
. Subsequently, a
curator was appointed who issued Summons in August 2013 based on a
delictual claim against PRASA.
8. Several years passed
until the trial proceeded before Goliath DJP (as she then was). At
paragraph [36] of the judgment, the trial
Court found that the
parties had settled the merits of the matter on the basis that PRASA
was liable for 80% of the plaintiff’s
proven damages, in the
event that PRASA’s special plea on prescription was to be
dismissed. The Court indeed dismissed the
special plea of
prescription and found in favour of the plaintiff.
9.
On 3 June 2020, the trial Court made the following order
[2]
:
1. The defendant is
ordered to make payment to plaintiff in the amount of
R3 246 484.00,
together with interest thereon from the date of service of summons to
date of payment,
be awarded as damages in respect of:
1.1 R1 371 705. 00 for
past loss of earnings.
1.2 R1 786 400.00 for
future loss of earnings.
1.3 R500 000 for
future medical and other expenses.
1.4 R500 000 for
general damages.
(My emphasis)
10.
The Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA) later granted PRASA leave to appeal
to the Full Court of the Western Cape High Court in respect
of the
dismissal of its special plea. On 12 May 2022, the Full Court upheld
the appeal, set aside the trial Court’s order,
and substituted
it with an order that PRASA’s special plea succeeds with
costs
[3]
.
11.
Unhappy with the outcome of the appeal, Advocate Bisschoff NO on
behalf of Mr Reyners further appealed the decision of the Full
Court
to the SCA, and on 28 November 2023, the SCA handed down judgment in
Bisschoff
NO obo Reyners v Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa
[4]
.
In
its unanimous decision, the SCA upheld the curator’s appeal and
set aside the decision of the Full Court, which had the
effect that
the order of the trial Court as per Goliath DJP dated 3 June 2020,
was reinstated.
12. On 5 February 2024,
the plaintiff obtained a writ of execution from the Registrar of the
High Court which states as follows:
TO
THE SHERIFF
: Cape Town West
You are hereby
directed to attach and take into execution the movable goods of the
PASSANGER (sic) RAIL AGENCY OF SOUTH AFRICA
, the
above-mentioned Defendant of
Cape Metrorail, 1 Adderley Street,
Cape Town
, and of the same to cause to be realised by public
auction the sum of
R10 143 617.02
(TEN MILLION ONE HUNDRED
FORTY-THREE THOUSAND AND SIX HUNDRED AND SEVENTEEN RAND AND TWO CENTS
ONLY) being the Judgement Debt in
the sum of
R3 246 484.00
(THREE
MILLION TWO HUNDRED AND FORTY-SIX THOUSAND FOUR HUNDRED AND
EIGHTY-FOUR RANDS ONLY) and interest thereon at 15.5 percent
from
date of service of summons on 23 August 2013 to date of judgement as
per the In Duplum Rule in the sum of
R3 246 484.00
(THREE
MILLION TWO HUNDRED AND FORTY-SIX THOUSAND FOUR HUNDRED AND
EIGHTY-FOUR RANDS ONLY) plus further interest from date of judgement
to date of Writ in the sum of R3 650 649.02 (THREE MILLION SIX
HUNDRED AND FIFTY THOUSAND AND SIX HUNDRED AND FORTY-NINE RAND AND
TWO CENTS), totalling the sum of
R10 143 617.02
(TEN MILLION
ONE HUNDRED FORTY-THREE THOUSAND AND SIX HUNDRED AND SEVENTEEN RAND
AND TWO CENTS ONLY), which the Plaintiff recovered
by Judgement
delivered on 3 June 2020, and also all other costs and charges of the
Plaintiff for the issuing and service of this
Writ, besides all your
costs thereby incurred.
Further
pay to the said Plaintiff’s attorney the sum of
R10
143 617.02
(TEN MILLION ONE
HUNDRED FORTY-THREE THOUSAND AND SIX HUNDRED AND SEVENTEEN RAND AND
TWO CENTS ONLY) and for your doing so this
shall be your Writ.
And
return this Writ with what you have done thereupon.
13.
Consequent upon the issuing of the Writ, the Sheriff attached and
removed 23 vehicles belonging to PRASA as set out in the Sheriff’s
notice of attachment in execution
[5]
.
14. PRASA made the
following payments which it states, is in satisfaction of the
principal debt:
14.1
R3
326 484
on
15 March 2024
[6]
;
14.2
R3
589 397, 32
on
16 April 2024
[7]
,
in
total R6 835 881,32
.
15. The parties agree
that interest on the capital sum as awarded by the trial Court, of R3
246 484 commenced to run from the date
of service of Summons being
23
August 2013, at the rate of 15, 5% per annum
.
The
issues between the parties
16. There is a dispute
between PRASA and the curator as to the calculation of interest.
According to PRASA, it satisfied the judgment
debt with interest once
it made its last payment on 16 April 2024. The plaintiff calculates
the judgment debt plus interest as
being a total sum of R10 143
617,02, but PRASA’s view is that the plaintiff’s
calculation of interest is incorrect
as he has not suspended the
running of interest after it reached the
in duplum
amount of
R3 246 484 until the SCA’s judgment date of 28 November 2023.
The parties have provided their own calculations
indicating how, in
their view, the interest is and should be calculated. I set out these
calculations below.
17. The major dispute
revolves around the application of the
in duplum
rule and the
date when post-judgment interest on the judgment debt commences. A
secondary issue is whether the judgment debt comprises
the capital
sum awarded by the trial Court plus pre-judgment interest. In view of
these disputes, and because the plaintiff has
approached the matter
distinguishing between pre-and post-judgment interest, the judgment
thus hopes to address the issues in a
similar fashion.
PRASA’s
calculation of interest
18.
From paragraph 27 of the founding affidavit, it is apparent that
PRASA uses the incorrect capital amount upon which it bases
its
calculation. In the trial Court’s order, the capital amount
awarded is
R3
246 484
,
and not
R3
326 484
[8]
which PRASA uses throughout its calculation. Counsel for the
plaintiff points this out in his heads of argument, but
notwithstanding,
the main arguments in the matter do not revolve
around this issue and it does not form part of the principal
disagreement on the
interest calculation issue.
19.
PRASA’s
calculation
of interest and its indebtedness, as reflected in its
affidavit supporting relief in Part B and its heads of argument, is
set out
below:
15,5%
interest on R3 326 484
from
August 2013
[9]
to November 2023
R3
326 484 x 15,5% x 120 ÷ 12
Total
interest = R5 156 050, 20
End
balance R3 326 484 + R5 156 050, 20 =
R8
482 534, 20
Interest
became capped in terms of the
in
duplum rule
at R3 326 484 until
the date of the SCA’s judgment
(28
November 2023)
11,75%
interest
on R6 652 968 (= R3 326 484 x 2) from 28 November 2023 to 14 March
2024
[10]
calculated as follows:
Interest
from 28 November 2023 to 31 December 2023
11,75%
x R 652 968 = R781 723, 74
R781
723, 74 ÷ 365 x 100 = R2 141, 70(88)
[11]
R2
141, 70(88) x 33 days =
R70 676,
39(2)
Interest
from 1 January 2024 to 15 March 2024
11,75%
x R6 652 968 = R781 723, 74
R781
723, 74 ÷ 366 = R2 135, 85(7)
R2
135, 85(7) x 75 days =
R160 189,
27(5)
Total
post-judgment interest from 28 November 2023 to 15 March 2024
=
R230 865, 66(7)
(R70 676, 392 +
R160 189, 275)
Total
end balances as at 14 March 2024 on R6 652 968 + R230 865, 66(7)
=
R6 883 833, 66(7) - R3 326 484
(amount paid on 15 March 2024)
=
R3 557 349, 66(7)
11,75%
interest applied on
R3
557 349, 67
between 15 March and
16 April 2024 (date of second PRASA payment)
11,75%
interest
from 16 to 31 March 2024 on R3 557 349, 66(7)
[12]
Interest
accumulated from 15 to 31 March 2024 = R18 272, 72(5)
Total
interest from 1 to 30 April 2024
[13]
=
R34
437, 34(6)
[14]
End
balance as at 31 March 2024 =
R3
557 349, 67 + R18 272, 72(5)
=
R3 575 622, 392
Interest
accumulates on R3 575 622, 392 at R1 147, 91(1) per day
20. In light of its
calculations as set out above, PRASA concludes and submits that when
it made its second payment on 16 April
2024, it had then satisfied
the judgment debt and the
in duplum
interest together with the
post-judgment interest and does not have an outstanding balance in
respect of the judgment debt. Having
regard to the above calculation,
the following pertinent aspects in PRASA’s calculations must be
highlighted and were indeed
emphasized by the plaintiff’s
counsel:
20.1 The capital sum in
the Goliath order is not R3 326 484, the figure upon which PRASA
bases its calculations, but R3 246 484;
20.2 PRASA applies the
in
duplum
rule to the calculation of pre-judgment interest with the
result that it caps and suspends the pre-judgment interest;
20.3 Insofar as
post-judgment interest on the amount of the judgment debt is
concerned, PRASA commences the running of such interest
from 28
November 2023, being the date on which the SCA delivered its appeal
judgment and order in the plaintiff’s successful
appeal;
20.4 PRASA applies a
prescribed interest rate of 11,75% per annum to post-judgment
interest, which the parties agree was the prescribed
rate of interest
on 28 November 2023.
The plaintiff’s
calculation of interest
21.
The plaintiff’s affidavit in support of its counter-application
delivered on 4 June 2020 constitutes simultaneously an
answering
affidavit to the Part B application. In support of the plaintiff’s
contention that PRASA’s calculation is
incorrect, the plaintiff
attaches two calculations to the affidavit but has requested that I
nonetheless consider the additional
calculations which are attached
as annexures to the heads of argument
[15]
.
22.
For the sake of not overburdening this judgment, only the main
calculation as set out in annexure
JC1A
,
is set out below as it is the calculation which the plaintiff seeks
to convince the Court is correct, and should be accepted.
In total,
four calculations are presented and relied upon and the following
must be noted from these annexures or schedules
[16]
:
22.1
JC1A,
which
is a duplicate of
JC1
– an interest rate of 15,5% per
annum is applied throughout, in respect of pre-and post-judgment
interest, and the
in duplum
rule is not applied;
22.2
JC1B
–
an interest rate of 9,75% per annum is applied to the post-judgment
interest calculation and the
in duplum
rule is not applied;
22.3
JC2A
–
JC2A is presented only in the event that it is found that the
in
duplum
rule does apply as needed to the calculation of
pre-judgment interest and the rate of interest applied is 15,5%
throughout;
22.4
JC2B
–
similar to JC2A, except that the post-judgment interest is calculated
at 9,75% per annum.
23. The plaintiff’s
case is that the
in duplum
rule finds no application to
pre-judgment interest and while the rule applies to post-judgment
interest, it is not applicable in
these circumstances set out later
in the judgment. There is thus a request that a declaration be made
that the calculation in
JC1A
be determined as the correct
interest and outstanding balance, alternatively,
JC1B
, which
applies the rate of interest of 9,75% being the prescribed rate as at
3 June 2020, when the trial Court granted its order.
Whether JC1A or
JC1B, the plaintiff’s contention is that the debt has not been
satisfied and that there is a balance owing
by PRASA. The reference
to “
current date”
on
JC1A
below, and on all
the annexures, is a reference to the hearing date of 7 August 2024.
24.
The plaintiff’s calculation of the net amount still due as at
the current date (7 August 2024) as per
JC1A
[17]
is as follows:
Date
of service of Summons
23
Aug 2013
A
= Judgment amount
3
246 484,00
Judgment
date
3
June 2020
No.
of days from service of Summons to Judgment date
2
476
Applicable
Interest Rate
15,50%
No.
of leap years between service of Summons and Judgment date
2,00
B
= Pre-judgment interest on the capital sum from
date
orf service of Summons to Judgment date
3
410 764,98
C
= (A + B) = The capital sum + adjusted
pre-judgment
interest thereon (as at the Judgment date)
6
657 248,98
First
Payment date
15/03/24
Amount
paid
3
326 484
No.
of days from the Judgment date until the First Payment date
1
381
No.
of leap years between the Judgment date and the First Payment date
1,00
D
= Interest accrued on amount C until the First
Payment
date
3
901 330,30
E
= (C + D) = Total amount due on the First
Payment
date
10 558 79,28
Less:
Amount of the first payment
3
326 484
F
= Net amount still due on First Payment date, after
First
Payment made
7
232 095
Second
Payment Date
16-Apr-24
Amount
Paid by PRASA
3
589 397,32
No.
of days from the First Payment date to the
Second
Payment date
32,00
G
= Interest accrued on amount F until the
Second
Payment date
90
465,63
H
= (F + G) = Total amount due on the Second
Payment
date
7
322 560,91
Less:
Amount of the second payment
3
589 397,32
I
= Net amount still due on the Second Payment
date,
after Second Payment made
3
733 163,59
Current
Date
7
August 2024
J
= Interest accrued on amount I until current date
179
140,71
No.
of days since Second Payment
113
No.
of leap years in between
0,00
K
= (I + J) = Net amount still due on Current date (NO in duplum
rule applied )
3
912 304,30
Interest
on an unliquidated debt
25. It is common cause
that the plaintiff’s action which was instituted in 2013 was
based in delict and that the curator on
behalf of Mr Reyners sued
PRASA for delictual damages. PRASA had admitted liability for 80% of
the plaintiff’s damages and
at the conclusion of its judgment,
the trial Court awarded the plaintiff damages in the amounts as set
out in paragraph 1 of its
order.
26. The plaintiff submits
that a distinction must be drawn between a liquidated and an
unliquidated debt, and submissions were made
regarding the moment
when an unliquidated debt becomes liquidated. The argument is that
prior to the trial Court’s judgment
and fixing of the quantum
of damages to be awarded to the plaintiff, PRASA owed an obligation
to the plaintiff as the quantum of
such obligation had not been
reduced to a definite sum of money, hence, it was an unliquidated
debt. The significance of the distinction
if the plaintiff’s
argument is followed, relates to pre-judgment interest, which I
proceed to consider, commencing with the
common law approach.
27.
In
Victoria
Falls & Transvaal Power Co. Ltd v Consolidated Langlaagte Mines
Ltd
[18]
,
Innes
CJ stated the following with regard to the characteristic attaching
to a claim for unliquidated damages:
“
But
it is not necessary to pursue that line of enquiry, because the
question with which we are concerned is whether in a claim for
unliquidated damages only ascertainable as to amount,
after
a long and intricate investigation
,
the defendant can properly be held liable for interest, prior to
judgment upon the sum finally.”
(My emphasis)
28.
Several years later, the Appellate Division in
Union
Government v Jackson and Others
[19]
described an unliquidated debt as “
an
obligation which has not yet been reduced to a definite sum of
money”.
Furthermore,
in an appeal against a final sequestration order, the Court in
Kleynhans
v Van der Westhuizen NO
[20]
,
considered
the difference between a liquidated and unliquidated claim, and with
reference to various earlier authorities
[21]
,
concluded that in respect of a claim for damages, it is usually
unliquidated as the amount thereof is “
uncertain
and has to be determined by the Court”
[22]
.
Thus,
I accept the submission that an unliquidated debt owed by a debtor
becomes liquidated upon the trial Court’s fixing
of the quantum
of such damages.
29.
The common law approach to interest on an unliquidated debt then
envisages a consideration of what is meant by
mora,
a
term often used when discussing the liability of a debtor for the
payment of interest. Returning to the
Victoria
Falls
judgment, one sees that a distinction is drawn between
mora
ex re
,
wrongful default arising out of a transaction and
mora
ex persona,
default
arising out of a debtor’s conduct
[23]
.
In the more recent judgment of
Griffiths
v Janse van Rensburg and Another
[24]
,
the concept of
mora
is described as relating to “
the
time at which an obligation is due”
[25]
and
that Court stated further that “…
the
debtor is not in mora until the payment is due”.
30.
This approach and findings support similar findings in the
Victoria
Falls
and
Union
Government
judgments because it follows that if a debtor did not know and could
not ascertain the amount of his indebtedness to another, it
must be
that he would not be in
mora
until the payment is due by him. Put another way, in respect of an
unliquidated damages claim under the common law,
mora
interest or pre-judgment interest could not be awarded as the amount
had not been determined or fixed by a Court. This common law
principle was again recognized by the SCA in
Adel
Builders (Pty) Ltd v Thompson
[26]
.
31. This brings me to the
Prescribed Rate of Interest Act 55 of 1975 (the Act) which provides
for the calculation of interest in
certain circumstances, at a
prescribed rate on certain judgment debts. Section 2A was introduced
into the aforementioned Act by
the
Prescribed Rate of Interest
Amendment Act 7 of 1997
, and it provides Courts with the authority to
award pre-judgment interest on unliquidated debts. The following
sections of the
Act are highlighted:
1.
Rate at which interest on debt is calculated in certain circumstances
(1)
If a debt bears interest
and the rate at which the interest is to be calculated is not
governed by any other law or by an agreement or a trade custom or
in
any other manner, such interest shall be calculated at the rate
contemplated in subsection (2)(a) as at the time when such interest
begins to run, unless a court of law, on the ground of special
circumstances relating to that debt, orders otherwise.
(2)
(a)…
(b)…
(c
)…
2.
Interest on a judgment debt
(1)
Every judgment debt which
, but for the provisions of this
subsection, would not bear any interest after the date of the
judgment or order by virtue of which
it is due, shall bear interest
from the day on which such judgment debt is payable, unless that
judgment or order provides otherwise.
(2)
Any interest payable in terms of
subsection (1) may be recovered as if it
formed part of the judgment debt
on which it is due
.
(3)
In this section “judgment debt” means a sum of money due
in terms of a judgment or an order, including an order
as to costs,
of a court of law, and includes any part of such a sum of money, but
does not include any interest not forming part
of the principal sum
of a judgment debt.
2A.
Interest on unliquidated debts
(1)
Subject to the provisions of this
section the amount of every unliquidated debt as determined by a
court of law, or an arbitrator
or an arbitration tribunal or by
agreement between the creditor and the debtor, shall bear interest as
contemplated in section
1.
(2)
(a)
Subject to any other agreement between the parties and the provisions
of the
National Credit Act, 2005
the interest contemplated in
subsection (1) shall run from the date on which payment of the debt
is claimed by the service on the
debtor of a demand or summons,
whichever date is the earlier
.
[S
2A(2)(a) am by
s 172(2)
(Sch
2
) of Act 34 of 2005.]
(b)
In the case of arbitration proceedings and subject to any other
agreement between the parties, interest shall run from the date
on
which the creditor takes steps to commence arbitration proceedings,
or any of the dates contemplated in paragraph (a), whichever
date is
the earlier.
(3)
The interest on that part of a debt which consists of the present
value of a loss which will occur in the future shall not commence
to
run until the date upon which the quantum of that part is determined
by judgment, arbitration or agreement and any such part
determined by
arbitration or agreement shall for the purposes of this Act be deemed
to be a judgment debt.
(4)
Where a debtor offers to settle a debt by making a payment into court
or a tender and the creditor accepts the payment or tender,
or a
court of law awards an amount not exceeding such payment or tender,
the running of interest shall be interrupted from the
date of the
payment into court or the tender until the date of the said
acceptance or award.
(5)
Notwithstanding the provisions of
this Act but subject to any other law or an agreement between the
parties, a court of law, or
an arbitrator or an arbitration tribunal
may make such order as appears just in respect of the payment of
interest on an unliquidated
debt, the rate at which interest shall
accrue and the date from which interest shall run.
(6)
The provisions of section 2(2)
shall apply mutatis mutandis to interest recoverable under this
section.
[S
2A ins by s 1 of Act 7 of 1997.]
(My
emphasis)
32. Following on from the
authorities referred to above and the Act, the plaintiff argues that
the award of pre-judgment interest
on unliquidated damages in terms
of section 2A(1) is interest that was not due until the date of the
Court’s judgment, which
is when the capital amount was
determined and upon which capital sum, pre-judgment interest is
awarded. The further submission
is that such interest cannot be
called arrear interest as it was not in arrears until the judgment
date when the capital was fixed
by the trial Court.
33. The plaintiff thus
holds the view that because an unliquidated debt is not due until the
Court’s judgment fixes or grants
it, thus the
in duplum
rule
does not apply to pre-judgment interest on unliquidated debts but
only applies to arrear interest and post-judgment interest.
PRASA’s
argument on this point is that in terms of the common law, the debt
bears
mora
interest and thus section 1(1) of the Act applies,
and furthermore, that the
in duplum
rule applies
ex lege
.
Pre-judgment
interest and the
in duplum
rule in this matter
34. With reference to the
Act, it is important to note that section 2A(1) refers to “
the
amount of every unliquidated debt
as determined by a court
of law
… shall bear interest as contemplated in
section 1”.
In my view, section 2A must be read with
section 2 which deals with interest on a judgment debt generally.
35. Pre-judgment interest
would refer to the period from service of the Summons on 23 August
2013 to judgment on 3 June 2020, and
I shall accept that the
pre-judgment interest award was made in terms of section 2A of the
Act on an unliquidated debt, which then
became liquid when the Court
fixed the quantum of damages owed by PRASA.
36.
The
in
duplum
rule, simply put, is that interest stops running once unpaid interest
equals the capital sum
[27]
, or
as the plaintiff’s counsel submitted, once “the double”
has been reached. Insofar as the application of the
in
duplum
rule
is concerned,
Sanlam
Life Insurance Ltd v South African Breweries
[28]
is
authority for the view that the rule applies to arrear interest only.
Arrear interest would be interest which accrued because
it already
became due and payable at the time of it being claimed, in other
words, prior to the Court’s judgment
[29]
.
37.
In this matter, given that the plaintiff’s claim was for
unliquidated damages, which then became fixed when the trial
Court
assessed and then awarded damages as set out in its order, plus
interest payable thereon from the date of service of the
Summons, it
cannot be said nor held that such pre-judgment interest is or was
arrear interest. Prior to the fixing of the quantum,
at best for the
plaintiff, PRASA had an obligation to the plaintiff on behalf of Mr
Reyners in respect of the unliquidated damages.
I emphasise that
PRASA’s obligation was not due until the payment was due hence
it cannot be said that PRASA was in
mora
[30]
until the payment was due. Put differently, and having regard to the
discussion and reference to the authorities earlier in the
judgment,
PRASA’s payment was not due until such time that the trial
Court pronounced upon and fixed the quantum of damages.
38. Turning to the Act,
and having regard to the wording of the trial Court’s order, I
share the view held by counsel for
the plaintiff, that the trial
Court awarded pre-judgment interest in terms of section 2A(2) of the
Act as it awarded interest on
the capital sum as from date of service
of the Summons on PRASA.
39.
The plaintiff relies on
Drake
Flemmer & Orsmond Inc and Another v Gajjar
[31]
,
a judgment of the SCA, while PRASA has tellingly not addressed this
judgment in its submissions. I point out that most, if not
all, the
recent authorities which PRASA rely upon, relate to interest and the
in
duplum
rule on liquid claims as opposed to an unliquidated debt such as the
plaintiff’s damages claim. In
Drake
Flemmer
,
Rogers AJA (as he then was) writing for the Court, considered the
application of the
in
duplum
rule
to pre-judgment interest on an unliquidated debt.
40.
At paragraph [83] of
Drake
Flemmer
,
the SCA stated that interest is not ordinarily awarded from a date
earlier than demand or service of Summons. Furthermore, having
regard
to
Da
Cruz v Barnardo
[32]
and
Watson
and Another v Renasa Insurance Company Limited
[33]
,
it
is evident that the
in
duplum
rule applies to pre-judgment interest which is arrear interest and
that not all debts that attract interest are hit by the
in
duplum
rule.
The important point is that these factors are not considered nor
addressed in PRASA’s argument which advances the view
that the
in
duplum
rule
applies in this matter because it operates
ex
lege
.
41.
In my view, PRASA’s reliance on the Constitutional Court
judgment of
Paulsen
v Slip Knot Investment 777
[34]
for
its contention that the
in
duplum
rule applies to pre-judgment interest attaching to all judgment debts
loses sight of the fact that here we are dealing with an
unliquidated
debt, where there was no arrear interest, and in
Paulsen,
the Court considered a loan agreement between the parties in terms of
which the Paulsens had bound themselves as sureties. Furthermore,
while the general principles regarding the
in
duplum
rule were addressed in
Paulsen
[35]
,
the Constitutional Court did not address the application of the rule
to pre-judgment interest, in relation to an unliquidated
debt.
42. Thus, the argument
that the
in duplum
rule does apply to pre-judgment interest in
this matter, without addressing authorities such as
Drake
Flemmer
, is unconvincing. Having regard to the above
discussion and findings, I hold a similar view as counsel for the
plaintiff, that
there was no arrear interest in that interest had not
accrued and was not due prior to the trial Court’s judgment.
43. It is not necessary,
in my view, to determine whether the pre-judgment interest awarded by
the trial Court in its order was
also awarded having exercised a
discretion in terms of section 2A(5) of the Act, because as stated
above, my finding is that the
trial Court did so in terms of section
2A(2), read with section 2A(1) and (6). To conclude this point, I
find that the
in duplum
rule is not applicable to the award of
pre-judgment interest in this matter.
Post-judgment
interest
44. The parties are
agreed that the
in duplum
rule does apply to post-judgment
interest, however, they differ on the date from which to calculate
that interest and also the prescribed
rate at which interest is to be
calculated. In this regard, I refer to the parties’ respective
calculations earlier in the
judgment. The plaintiff is of the view
that post-judgment interest is calculated and runs from the date of
the trial Court’s
judgment on 3 June 2020, while PRASA submits
that it runs from the date of the SCA judgment which upheld the
plaintiff’s
appeal, being 28 November 2023.
45.
In order to solve this dispute, the question is whether post-judgment
interest is calculated on the capital sum only or on the
judgment
debt. Turning to
Paulsen
[36]
yet
again, the Constitutional Court, when determining whether
post-judgment interest ran on the whole judgment debt or only the
capital amount, did not disagree with the SCA’s findings in the
earlier appeal to the effect that post-judgment interest
ran on the
whole of the judgment debt including accrued interest. This is echoed
in various authorities such as
Drake
Flemmer
,
which makes it clear that the interest runs on the capital plus
pre-judgment interest awarded thereon
[37]
.
Thus, the capital sum plus pre-judgment interest constitute the
judgment debt.
46.
Secondly, in respect of the date of commencement of the running of
post-judgment interest, Mdlanga J in Paulsen writing for
the
majority, stated the following
[38]
:
“
Post-judgment
interest
[96]
It is settled law that the in duplum rule permits interest to run
anew from the date that the judgment debt is due and payable.
[39]
The
usual practice for appellate courts, including this Court, is to
retain the date on which the court of first instance handed
down
judgment as the date on which judgment debts are due and payable
.
[40]
In
oral argument, counsel for both the Paulsens and Slip Knot accepted
that in the order, for the purposes of calculating post-judgment
interest, the date on which the High Court entered judgment should be
replaced with the date on which this Court hands down judgment
.
[97] Were the High
Court’s date of judgment to be used as the date from which the
judgment debt is due and payable, this would
have the effect of
suspending the in duplum rule for the pendency of the appellate
litigation, thus allowing interest to accrue
during this period.
The
same reasons that led me to conclude that the rule applies pendente
lite, lead to the conclusion that the date this Court hands
down
judgment should be the date from which the running of interest
recommences. I am, therefore, of the view that we should oblige
the
request of the parties
.
[98]
However,
I emphasise that this logic applies because the Paulsens’
appeal was meritorious, and indeed the order I propose
differs
materially from that of the High Court and Supreme Court of
Appeal. I am here not concerned with totally unmeritorious,
unsuccessful appeals brought as a dilatory tactic. In such instances,
different considerations must apply, for the reasons explained
by
Labe J in Certain Underwriters
.
[41]
”
47.
From the above paragraphs in
Paulsen,
it is evident
that the Constitutional Court recognised that judgment debts are due
and payable from the date on which the trial
Court or Court of first
instance gave judgment. Moreover, the Paulsens’ circumstances
were very specific and peculiar in
that as debtors, the capital in
respect of a loan agreement was R12 million but due to accrued
interest, it had ballooned to R72
million by the time the matter came
before the Constitutional Court. They were the successful debtors to
a large extent and it
is apparent from the quoted paragraphs, that
before the Constitutional Court, the parties had either agreed or
accepted, that for
purposes of calculating post-judgment interest,
the High Court (Court a quo) judgment date would be replaced with the
date of the
Constitutional Court’s judgment. Thus, in doing so,
the Constitutional Court departed from the “usual practice”
that post-judgment interest was calculated from the date of the trial
Court’s judgment, that is, the date when the judgment
debt
becomes due and payable.
48.
PRASA’s submission is that the date of the SCA’s appeal
judgment should be used to commence the running of post-judgment
interest because, it argues,
Paulsen
says that it is
the date of the appeal judgment which should be the commencement date
of the interest calculation. I disagree with
this view because the
point must be made that the Constitutional Court’s decision to
use its judgment date to calculate post-judgment
interest was based
on the parties’ agreement/acknowledgement to do so, the
Paulsen’s massive judgment debt which was
largely made up of
accrued interest and that the Paulsens were the successful debtors in
that Court. Furthermore, the circumstances
which led the
Constitutional Court to use its own judgment date instead of the High
Court judgment date was the exception to the
general rule and
practice regarding the commencement date of post-judgment interest,
as seen from the above discussion of the judgment.
49.
Significantly,
Paulsen
,
in my view, did not do away with the rule or practice, as referred to
in
General
Accident Versekeringsmaatskappy SA BK v Bailey NO
[42]
,
that the date on which the trial Court handed down judgment, is the
date upon which the debt is due, and it follows, that it is
that date
(when the debt is due) which constitutes the commencement date for
the running of post-judgment interest, in this instance,
3 June 2020.
Lastly, section 2(1) of the Act makes it clear that every judgment
debt “
shall
bear interest from the day on which such judgment debt is payable”.
There can thus be no doubt that the day on which the judgment debt
becomes due and payable is the day on which the trial Court’s
judgment is handed down.
50.
Insofar as the rate of interest applicable, the 11,75% used by PRASA
is unsustainable as it relates to the prescribed rate of
interest as
at the SCA appeal judgment date, which I have already found is not
the commencement date for the calculation of post-judgment
interest.
I have considered the plaintiff’s submissions that he has
continued to apply 15,5% interest per annum from the
trial Court’s
judgment date to date of payment. In doing so, he relies on
Davehill
(Pty) Ltd v Community Development Board
[43]
which states that:
“
The
rate prescribed under subsection (2) at the time when interest begins
run governs the calculation of interest.
The
rate is fixed at that time and remains constant
.
Subsection (1) does not provide for the rate to vary from time
to time in accordance with adjustments made to the prescribed
rate.by
the Minister of Justice in terms of subsection (2). The fact
that the Minister may from time to time prescribe different
rates of
interest therefore has no effect on the rate applicable to interest
which has already begun to run.”
51.
By all accounts the reliance on
Davehill
seems to suggest that the 15,5% interest rate awarded in the trial
Court’s order in respect of pre-judgment interest should
be
constant and applicable to the calculation of post-judgment interest
as well. Thus,
Davehill
is authority that the rate of interest which applied at the
commencement of the matter, should apply throughout. However, the
recent SCA judgment of
Member
of Executive Council Police, Roads and Transport, Free State
Provincial Government v Bovicon Consulting Engineer CC and
Others
[44]
,
which does not refer to
Davehill,
holds
at paragraph [11] that:
“
Accordingly,
the appropriate rate of interest would be that prevailing at the time
when judgment was granted in the high court
”
[45]
.
(my emphasis)
52.
In
Bovicon
,
the SCA replaced the High Court’s order of 15,5% with the
prescribed interest rate applicable at the time when the High
Court
judgment was granted. Having regard to the above authorities and the
provisions of section 1(1) read with sub-section 1(2)
of the Act, I
am more inclined to align myself with the
Bovicon
judgment that the applicable rate to apply to post-judgment interest
is the rate of interest applicable at the time that the trial
Court
delivered its judgment, on 3 June 2020, as opposed to the 15,5% per
annum applicable when the matter commenced. Accordingly,
the rate of
interest applicable on the 3 June 2020 was 9,75% which I find
applicable to post-judgment interest
[46]
.
Conclusion and
costs
53. The submission by
PRASA in reply that regard must be had to the definition of “
debt”
and the
Prescription Act 68 of 1969
in that a delictual claim will
give rise to a debt, does not advance PRASA’s case in this
matter. In view of my findings
above, the calculation submitted by
PRASA in its Part B application is thus incorrect for a number of
reasons apparent from my
discussion and findings in this judgment.
Furthermore, my finding is that the
in duplum
rule is not
applicable to the pre-judgment interest and that the post-judgment
interest rate of 9,75% is applicable as from 3 June
2020. I have had
regard to the plaintiff’s calculations as set out in its
annexures referred to in the judgment and given
the finding on the
interest rate, I agree that the calculation of the amount still due
to the plaintiff is as set out in schedule/annexure
JC1B
(copy
attached hereto).
54.
Furthermore, the
in
duplum
rule finds no application because the post-judgment interest has not
yet reached the double of the judgment debt which is
R6
657 248,98
[47]
.
To clarify, the post-judgment interest which has accrued on the
judgment debt as at 7 August 2024 is
R2
454 062, 61 + R56 905, 80 + R67 986,61 = R2 578 955, 02
[48]
,
hence the running of such interest has not yet become capped and
suspended by the
in
duplum
rule. On the calculation as per
JC1B
,
I find that PRASA’s net amount still due to the plaintiff is
R2
320 322, 68
.
55. On the issue of
costs, I have considered the submissions of the parties and see no
reason why the merits related to Part A should
be considered in light
of the fact that the parties reached agreement on 19 April 2024 as to
the conduct of the matter. Given the
disparity in calculations and
disputes on material issues such as the applicability of the
in
duplum
rule, the commencement date of the running of
post-judgment interest, and the rate of interest, I disagree with
PRASA’s view
that the Plaintiff’s decalarator application
was not necessary. As costs are in the discretion of the Court, and
the plaintiff
is successful, the costs awarded shall include costs
related to Part A which stood over on 19 April 2024.
Order
56. In the result, the
following order is granted:
56.1 The application for
relief claimed in Part B of the application is dismissed with costs
(see paragraph 56.3 below).
56.2 The
counter-application is granted in the following terms:
It is declared that as at
7 August 2024, and after taking into account payments made by the
applicant (PRASA) pursuant to the judgment
of the trial Court dated 3
June 2020 under the above case number, the applicant is presently
obliged to pay the first respondent
(plaintiff) a balance of
R2
320 322, 68
, which amount is presently due, owing and payable,
together with interest thereon at the rate of 9,75% per annum from
such date
to date of payment.
56.3 The applicant is
ordered to pay the first respondent’s costs of Part A and Part
B of the application which shall include
costs of 19 April 2024 and
costs related to steps taken in execution of the trial Court’s
judgment, as well as costs of the
counter application. Costs include
the costs of two counsel where so employed on scale C.
M PANGARKER
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
For
Applicant
F
Nalane SC
E
Muller
Instructed
by:
AMMM
Attorneys Inc.
Mr
E Malapane
For
Respondents:
M
Crowe SC
P
McKenzie
Instructed
by:
Jonathan
Cohen & Associates Attorneys
Mr
J Cohen
JC 1B
WCHC Case No. 13654/13:
calculation of net amount still due as at current date, being
7 August 2024
(15.5%
until Judgment,9,75% thereafter on the capital sum
+
pre-judgment interest )
Date
of service of Summons
23
August 2013
A
= The capital sum of the trial court's judgment
3
246 484,00
Judgment
date
03
June 2020
No.
of days from service of Summons to Judgment date
2
476
Applicable
Interest Rate
15,50%
No.
of leap years between service of Summons and
Judgment
date
B
= Pre-judgment interest on the capital sum from the
date
of service of the summons to
2,00
the
judgment date
3
410 764,98
C
= (A + B) = The capital sum + pre-judgment interest
thereon
(as at the judgment date
6
657 248,98
First
Payment date
15-Mar-24
First
amount paid by PRASA
3
326 484
Applicable
Interest Rate
9,75%
No.
of days from Judgment date until First Payment date
1
381
No.
of leap years between Judgment date and First
Payment
date
1,00
D
= Interest accrued on amount C until First Payment date
2
454 062,61
E
= (C + D) = Total amount due on First Payment date
9
111 311,59
Less:
Amount of first payment
3
326 484
F
= Net amount still due on First Payment date,
after
First Payment made
5
784 828
Second
Payment Date
16-Apr-24
Second
amount paid by PRASA
3
589 397,32
Applicable
Interest Rate
9,75%
No.
of days from First Payment date to Second
Payment
date
32,00
G
= Interest accrued on amount F until Second
Payment
date
56
905,80
H
= (F + G) = Total amount due on Second
Payment
date
5
841 733,39
Less:
Amount of the second payment
3
589 397,32
I
= Net amount still due on Second Payment date,
after
Second Payment made
2
252 336,07
Current
date
07
August 2024
J
= Interest accrued on amount I until current date
67
986,61
No.
of days since Second Payment
113
No.
of leap years in between
0,00
K
= (I + J) = Net amount still due on Current date (in duplum rule
NOT applied)
2
320 322,68
[1]
PRASA
2, p42
[2]
PRASA
2, par [52] 1., p65 – “
the
Goliath order”
as
referred to during the hearing (note, the further orders at page 24
of the trial Court’s judgment are not repeated herein)
[3]
PRASA
3, p67-115 – Mantame and Nuku JJ concurring (though for
different reasons), Le Grange J dissenting
[4]
[2023]
ZASCA 160
– see PRASA 4, p116-127
[5]
PRASA
6, p132-133
[6]
PRASA
7, p134
[7]
JC15.1,
p218
[8]
Par
27.2, p13
[9]
Service
of
the Summons
[10]
Note,
14 March 2024 is the day before PRASA made its first payment to the
plaintiff in respect of its indebtedness as per the
Goliath AJP
order
[11]
Brackets
are inserted in PRASA’s calculation as reflected in the
judgment merely to round off – no other changes have
been made
to its calculations
[12]
See
p
ara
28 – 29, PRASA’s heads of argument
[13]
See
calculation at par 29, PRASA’s heads of argument
[14]
Interest
accumulates at R1 147, 911 per day from 1 to 30 April 2024 as per
PRASA’s calculation
[15]
Including
alternative calculations in the event that it is found that the
in
duplum
rule applies
[16]
JC1
and JC1A are the same; JC2 and JC2A are the same; JC1B and JC2B are
not attached to the founding papers in the counter-application
but
are presented as calculations to consider depending on findings
regarding the application of the in duplum rule and the rate
of
prescribed interest
[17]
Certain
parts of the heading to JC1A have been deleted, and dates
abbreviated
[18]
1915
AD 1
at 31-32
[19]
1956
(2) AD 412
E-F
[20]
1970
(1) SA (O) at 567A-568B
[21]
See
authorities referred to on pages 567 to 568, for example, SA Fire &
Accident Insurance Co. Ltd v Hickman
1955 (2) SA 131
(C), Toucher v
Stinnes (SA) Ltd
1934 CPD 184
at 189
[22]
Kleynhans
supra a
t
568A
[23]
Victoria
Falls supra, p31
[24]
2016
(3) SA 389
(SCA) par 35
[25]
Par
35 of the judgment
[26]
2000
(4) SA 1027
(SCA) at par 11
[27]
LTA
Construction BPK v Administrator, Transvaal
[1991] ZASCA 147
;
1992 (1) SA 473
(A
482A-B; Sanlam Life Insurance Ltd v South African Breweries Ltd 2000
(2) SA647 WLD 655 D-E
[28]
Supra
footnote 28 at 655D-E
[29]
Sanlam
Life supra at 654F-I
[30]
Griffiths
v Janse van Rensburg supra par 35
[31]
2018
(3) SA 353 (SCA)
[32]
[2022]
1 All SA 414
(GJ) para 41-43
[33]
[2019]
ZAWCHC 7
par 71
[34]
2015
(3) SA 479 (CC)
[35]
From
par [43] of the judgment
[36]
2015
(3) SA 479
(CC) at para 99-100
[37]
Supra
par 87
[38]
I
have retained the citations and references as they appear in the
footnotes to paragraphs [96] to [98] of the Paulsen judgment
[39]
See
Oneanate
above n 15 at 834H;
Stroebel
above n 74 at 139D-E;
Commercial
Bank of Zimbabwe
above n 64 at 300B-C; and
Absa
Bank Ltd v Erasmus
[2006] ZAWHCC 25;
2007 (2) SA 545
(C) (
Erasmus
)
at paras 29-30.
[40]
See
Occupiers
of Saratoga Avenue v City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality
and Another
[2012] ZACC 9
;
2012 (9) BCLR 951
(CC) at paras 7-8 which quoted,
with approval,
General
Accident Versekeringsmaatskappy Suid-Afrika Bpk v Bailey NO
1988 (4) SA 353
(A) at 358H I.
[41]
In
a dissent in
Certain
Underwriters at Lloyds v South African Special Risks Association
[2000] ZAGPHC 2
;
2001 (1) SA 744
at para 15, Labe J explained that
it is “common sense” that interest should run from the
date of judgment in the
court of first instance and not from the
date of the judgment in the court of appeal because “it is
unthinkable that a
[losing] party . . . should be entitled to lodge
a frivolous appeal against an award, and thereby delay the period
from which
interest should run on the award”. This reasoning
plainly does not apply to meritorious, successful appeals.
[42]
1988
(4) SA 353 (A) 358-359
[43]
1988
(1) SA 290
AD 301A-B
[44]
2023
JDR 2090 (SCA) para 11, 18
[45]
The
judgment emanated from the High Court
[46]
GNR
397 of 27 March 2020 (GG No. 43146)
[47]
C
on annexure JC1B
[48]
D+G+J
on annexure JC1B
sino noindex
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