Case Law[2024] ZAWCHC 250South Africa
Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd v Higgs and Another (11521/2021) [2024] ZAWCHC 250 (5 September 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
5 September 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd v Higgs and Another (11521/2021) [2024] ZAWCHC 250 (5 September 2024)
Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd v Higgs and Another (11521/2021) [2024] ZAWCHC 250 (5 September 2024)
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sino date 5 September 2024
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE
DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
“
Reportable”
CASE NO: 11521/2021
In the matter between:
STANDARD BANK OF SOUTH
AFRICA LTD
Applicant
(Registration Number:
1962/000738/06)
And
BRIAN CHARLES
HIGGS
First Respondent
JOHANNA MAGRIETA
HIGGS
Second Respondent
Coram: Parker, AJ
Matter heard on Thursday
29 August 2024
Judgment delivered on
Thursday
05 September 2024
, electronically b
y
circulation to the parties’ representatives via email.
JUDGMENT
PARKER,
AJ
Introduction
Background
[1]
For ease of reference the parties shall be cited as Applicant and
First Respondent.
I had to consider whether to grant a final order of
sequestration or to discharge the provisional order of sequestration
granted
on 3 March 2023. This is a leave to appeal against the whole
judgment and order granted by me on 10 January 2024, for the estate
of the First Respondent to be placed under a final order of
sequestration.
[2]
For the sake of clarification, the First Respondent is married to
Second Respondent
out of community of property.
Timeline
[3]
In order to contextualise this appeal, it is most appropriate for me
to provide a
comprehensive overview of the chronology of events which
resulted in my decision. to grant the final order of sequestration:
3.1.
On 24 November 2006 – a home loan was
advanced in the amount of R2 000 000.00.
3.2.
During July 2008 – consolidation of
loans
in the amount of R 6 490 000.00.
3.3.
By late 2016 – several payment
moratoriums later, First Respondent was placed under Debt Review.
3.4.
During April 2017 – First Respondent
terminated the Debt Review and a reckless credit application was
rejected.
3.5.
On 10 September 2018 – judgment was
granted against First Respondent in the amount of R7 359 064.44.
3.6.
The period 19 March 2019 to 16 November
2019 – sales in execution ensued. After the Application in
terms of Rule 49A(9)(c)
for the reconsideration of the reserve price
of R13 000 000.00, First Respondent was granted another opportunity
to sell the property
in the open market for R17 500 000.00 with
reserve price of R10 000 000.00 set. Following First Respondent’s
intention to
sell the property the second sale in execution was by
default scheduled for 16 November 2019 which led the First Respondent
to
bring an urgent application to stay the second sale in execution.
3.7.
On 29 April 2020 – the third sale in
execution was postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
3.8.
On 28 October 2020 – the fourth sale
in execution was postponed to 31 March 2021, the First Respondent
sought an urgent application
to postpone, on the basis that the
Stellenbosch property is his primary residence and accommodates a
minor and three elderly persons.
This application was dismissed with
costs.
3.9.
At the fifth sale in execution, the highest
bid for the Stellenbosch property was R2 900 000.00, which was
significantly lower than
the reserve price set in the sum of R10 000
000.00. This bid was declined.
3.10.
On 3 March 2023 – a Provisional order
of sequestration was granted.
[4]
The reasons for granting the final order of sequestration on 10
January 2024 were
set out in detail in my judgment and I will not
repeat it save where necessary.
Much of the
same arguments presented to me were dealt with in the Provisional
order of sequestration and repeated before me and
now reiterated in
the appeal.
Appeal
[5]
When First Respondent served and filed the leave to appeal, it was
initially appealed
against the whole judgment on three grounds,
including the introduction of new evidence. However, after the
Applicant addressed
this specific ground in its replying affidavit,
the First Respondent sensibly withdrew the purported new evidence at
the hearing
of the appeal. The grounds of appeal are summarized as:
5.1. The court erred in
finding First Respondent factually insolvent.
5.2. The court erred when
granting the final order of sequestration, failed to recognize that
sequestration was a means to circumvent
the provisions of Rule 46(A).
5. 3. The sequestration
order impacts First Respondent’s rights under section 26 of the
Constitution.
The condonation
application
[6]
First Respondent’s leave to appeal was filed late, and a
condonation application
for the late filing of the appeal ensued. It
is trite that there are strict time periods within which to apply for
leave to appeal.
The leave to appeal ought to have been brought by
the First Respondent on or before 31 January 2024, however on 24 May
2024, First
Respondent served its application for leave to appeal.
[7]
In so far as the court’s discretion to condone the late filing
of pleadings
in respect of a leave to appeal, the test is whether the
condonation, if granted, is in the interests of justice, and for a
successful
condonation
[1]
application,
in exercising the discretion whether to condone the late filing of
the appeal, includes considerations such as,
inter
alia
:
7.1
The extent and the cause of the delay,
7.2
The reasonableness of the explanation of
such delay,
7.3
The effect of the delay on the
administration of justice and the litigants and, lastly,
7.4
The prospects of success.
[8]
It is important to note that since the granting of the final order,
the sequestration
proceedings have advanced to a stage where the
first and second meetings of creditors have progressed wherein the
joint trustees
of the First Respondent’s estate have been
appointed. The trustees have already taken steps to realise the First
Respondent's
property, which is the sore point for First Respondent,
pointing to nothing else, other than the reason for First
Respondent's
conduct being dilatory and clutching at straws.
[9]
The Applicant contends that following a notice to vacate dated 15
March 2024 addressed
to the First Respondent, it was only then that
he took steps to pursue the application for leave to appeal. In the
Applicant’s
view it was simply another strategy to gain more
time to occupy the property and frustrate the administration process
of the sequestration
proceedings.
[10]
The First Respondent's two primary justifications for the delay in
prosecuting the appeal are
that it was caused by his ill health and
financial circumstances.
[11]
The initial reason for the late filing of the leave to appeal, which
was due to ill health, was
not elaborated upon beyond a letter dated
March 22, 2024, from an unnamed employer of Louis Leipoldt Hospital
informing the individual
that he had undergone an emergency
procedure. It is noteworthy to mention that this letter was sent one
week after the First Respondent
received the notice to vacate (15
March 2024). The second letter provided was by a Doctor JH. Visser
dated 7 May 2024, which records
that the First Respondent cancelled
an unknown procedure. No details were however provided.
[12]
What was required from the First Respondent was a full and frank
[2]
disclosure
of the reasons for the delay. This did not happen. The delay was not
adequately justified by the uncorroborated health
issues that the
First Respondent purportedly experienced.
[13]
The second reason advanced for the delay is that First Respondent
experienced financial difficulties.
I am mindful that First
Respondent has been experiencing financial difficulties since 2018. I
could not disagree with the Applicant
that if the alleged financial
constraints alone were sufficient grounds for litigants to bring late
applications for leave to appeal,
it will cause chaos. Certainly, it
will be a platform to circumvent the procedures and the rules,
undermine the justice system
and render the period within which to
lodge the leave to appeal, that being 15 days, meaningless.
[14]
The Constitutional Court has stipulated in
Van
Wyk
that “
an
inordinate delay induces the reasonable belief that the order had
become unassailable
”
and that a litigant is entitled to assume that the losing party has
accepted the finality of the order and does not intend
to pursue the
matter any further.
[3]
The
Applicant did not pursue the appeal until 22 April 2024, which was
another month after 22 March 2024.
[15]
I concur with Applicant’s submission that First Respondent’s
conduct is dilatory,
as is evidenced by his conduct when he
approached his attorneys of record on 2 April 2024 in order to
“
discuss
the prospect of an appeal as well as to obtain advice in respect of
the trustee of my estate’s insistence that I provide
the
trustee vacant occupation of my home prior to my house having been
advertised and sold”
[4]
.
He
only in effect managed to appoint attorneys about 26 April 2024.
[16]
I cannot disagree with Applicant’s submission that the
inference to be drawn is that the
First Respondent’s true
motivation for the belated application for the leave to appeal is
solely due to the impending and
imminent eviction process. The
explanation for the delay failed to cover the entire period of the
delay which was wanting.
[5]
[17]
The First Respondent implored the court to consider the condonation
application, arguing that
there was relatively no prejudice to the
Applicant. He also urged Applicant to wait it out a bit longer, in
order to reach finality
in the litigation and allow the appeal
process to unfold. The First Respondent also argued that it was in
the interest of justice
for the court to exercise a wide discretion
for the noncompliance in favour of him, given his right to housing
extended beyond
himself, to his wife, his major son and tenants who,
according to him, occupied the property. The Applicant argued that it
took
this eviction step when no appeal was noted because it was
entitled to seek satisfaction of its claim.
[18]
Bearing in mind that this court plays an oversight role as it did,
when countered with a Rule
46A, such oversight was exercised when the
property was declared specially executable and when the court
reconsidered the matter
in terms of Rule 46A(9)(c). All the
requirements of Rule 46A were met. It was also argued by the
Applicant, that despite no payment
being made to the applicant for
approximately three years, the First Respondent has somehow managed
to obtain funds to pay his
previous legal representatives and his
current attorneys but not towards this debt owed to the Applicant.
[19]
I am unable to exercise the discretion to excuse the late filing of
the leave to appeal
application in the circumstances described in the
submissions that have been presented to me. The cause for the delay
has not been
sufficiently explained to warrant the exercise of a
discretion in favour of the First Respondent.
[20]
I am fortified by the finding in
Van
Wyk
[6]
,
not to grant condonation after such an inordinate delay, and the
absence of a reasonable explanation would undermine the principle
of
finality. It cannot be in the interest of justice for a litigant to
wait it out year on year for satisfaction of its relief
and
determination of what is entitled to closure
[7]
.
The
First Respondent’s explanation is rejected as sufficient cause
has not been shown for condonation to be granted. Consequently,
condonation for the late filing of the appeal is accordingly refused.
Grounds of Appeal
[21]
Given that I refused the condonation application and the First
Respondent's non-compliance with
Uniform Rule of Court 49 (1)(b),
there is no need for me to consider the merits of the appeal and the
grounds that relate to it.
[22]
For the sake of completeness the grounds of appeal are summarized as:
2.1.
The court erred in finding First Respondent factually insolvent
2.2.
The court erred when granting the final order of sequestration,
failed to recognize that sequestration was
a means to circumvent the
provisions of Rule 46(A).
2.3.
The sequestration order impacts First Respondent’s rights under
section 26 of the Constitution.
[23]
Needless to say, had I granted condonation for the late filing of the
leave to appeal, I would
nevertheless have arrived at the conclusion
that there are no compelling reasons for the appeal, as there would
be no reasonable
prospects of success, alternatively compelling
reasons why the appeal should be heard.
[8]
[24]
The threshold for leave to appeal has lifted, the bar is higher and
First Respondent would in
any event have been unsuccessful to
convince the court on proper grounds that there is a reasonable
prospect or a realistic chance
of success on appeal.
[25]
As stated earlier, I was presented with very much of a stale argument
since I had dealt with
the grounds of appeal in the judgment and no
new grounds were placed before me on appeal to consider. The judgment
dealt with the
grounds of appeal as it dealt with factual insolvency
and Rule 46(A) comprehensively
[9]
.
[26]
A mere prospect of success, an arguable case, or one that is not
hopeless is not enough. “
There
must be a sound, rational basis to conclude that there is a
reasonable prospect of success on appeal
.
[10]
Costs
[27]
What has unfolded over a protracted period points me to conclude that
First Respondent’s
conduct constitutes an abuse of the process.
He had numerous indulgences and was determined upon delaying
Applicant in its relief.
Applicant employed two counsel, a senior and
a junior to oppose the appeal. The appeal itself was not complex as
the same arguments
which were presented in this appeal served before
me previously. I am mindful that costs occasioned will be borne from
the insolvent
estate, however in considering what is reasonable, I am
of the view that costs of this appeal need to be curtailed and fair.
To
burden the estate with the highest scale of fees would be
unreasonable given that the arguments were not new, save for the
alleged
new evidence.
[28]
Accordingly it is ordered:
a)
The condonation application is dismissed.
b)
Costs are granted in favour of Applicant, which costs are to be borne
from the insolvent estate of the First Respondent, including the Cost
of two Counsel, on Scale B for Senior Counsel and Scale A
for junior
Counsel where so employed.
R
K PARKER
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE
DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
“
Reportable”
CASE
NO: 11521/2021
In the matter between:
STANDARD BANK OF SOUTH
AFRICA LTD
Applicant
(Registration Number:
1962/000738/06)
And
BRIAN CHARLES
HIGGS
First Respondent
JOHANNA MAGRIETA
HIGGS
Second Respondent
CORAM
:
RK PARKER, AJ
JUDGMENT
BY
:
RK PARKER, AJ
Counsel
for Applicant
:
Adv. J Muller (SC) and Adv. C Morgan
Instructing
Attorney
:
Edward Nathan Sonnenbergs Inc
Ms
L Davids
Counsel
for First Respondent
:
Adv. G Ruther
Instructing
Attorney
:
Suné van der Merwe Attorneys
Ms
S van der Merwe/ Ms D Humphris
c/o
Rapp van Zyl Attorneys
Matter heard
:
Thursday 29 August 2024
Judgment
delivered
:
Thursday
05 September 2024
, electronically b
y
circulation to the parties’ representatives via email.
[1]
Grootboom
v National Prosecuting Authority and Another
2014 (2) SA 68
(CC) paras [20] - [23] and [50].
[2]
Von
Abo v President of the Republic of SA
2009
(5) SA 345
(CC) at para [20].
[3]
Van Wyk
v Unitas Hospital and Another (Open Democratic Advice Centre as
Amicus Curiae)
[2007] ZACC 24
;
2008 (2) SA 472
(CC) para [31].
[4]
Condonation Affidavit at p
ara
[12] record page 32.
[5]
Van
Wyk, supra
at para [22].
[6]
Van
Wyk, supra
[31].
[7]
Van
Wyk,
s
upra
[23] – [24].
[8]
MEC
for Health, Eastern Cape v Mkhitha
2016
JDR 2214 (SCA) at paras [16] – [17].
[9]
Judgment
paras [35] – [39].
[10]
MEC
v Health,
supra
at
para [17].
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