Case Law[2024] ZAWCHC 322South Africa
Standard Bank of South Africa Limited and Another v Mandlakomoya Trade and Projects CC and Another (3788/2023) [2024] ZAWCHC 322 (18 October 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
18 October 2024
Headnotes
herself out as guarantor, her obligation was a primary one, and excussion would in any event not be available as a defence.
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Standard Bank of South Africa Limited and Another v Mandlakomoya Trade and Projects CC and Another (3788/2023) [2024] ZAWCHC 322 (18 October 2024)
Standard Bank of South Africa Limited and Another v Mandlakomoya Trade and Projects CC and Another (3788/2023) [2024] ZAWCHC 322 (18 October 2024)
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sino date 18 October 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN
Case
Number: 3788/2023
In
the matter between:
The
Standard Bank of South Africa Limited
First Applicant
SB
Guarantee Company RF (Pty) Limited
Second Applicant
and
Mandlakomoya
Trade and Projects CC
First Respondent
Nonele
Mathe
Second Respondent
JUDGMENT ON COUNTER-APPLICATION
JANISCH AJ:
INTRODUCTION
[1]
The first and second applicants have
applied for judgment against the second respondent in respect of
monies advanced by the first
applicant to the first respondent under
a home loan agreement, a business revolving credit plan and an
overdraft. The second
respondent has bound herself, in various
agreements, as a guarantor as well as a surety and co-principal
debtor towards the first
applicant in respect of the debts of the
first respondent (of which she was the sole member). She has also
bound herself as a surety
and co-principal debtor towards the second
applicant in respect of any indebtedness of the second applicant (as
guarantor) to the
first applicant under the terms of a mortgage bond
arrangement.
[2]
The notice of motion reflects claims
against both the first and second respondents. On 24 April 2023, this
Court granted orders
against the first respondent in favour of the
first applicant for payment of the amounts as prayed. Because it was
not clear that
the application papers had been properly served on the
second respondent, no order was taken against her and the matter was
postponed
for service to occur. The application became opposed and on
15 August 2024 was postponed to the semi-urgent roll on 16 October
2024.
[3]
Prior to the application for a money
judgment against the respondents being launched, the second applicant
(which was the mortgagee
of the property under the home loan)
launched an application in the KwaZulu-Natal High Court for the
liquidation of the first respondent.
The liquidation proceedings
still were not complete when the application for the money judgment
was brought. The first respondent
was placed in final liquidation on
3 September 2024 (after the order of this Court had been made against
it).
[4]
As stated, the applicants’ money
claims against the second respondent on the basis of the guarantees
and suretyships was set
down for hearing on 16 October 2024.
[5]
A month before the set-down date, the
second respondent brought a counter-application, praying
inter
alia
that the main proceedings against her in
relation to money judgments and costs be “
temporarily
stayed pending the finalisation of the liquidation proceedings of the
first respondent
”. She also sought an
order entitling the applicants to re-enrol the main application when
the liquidation proceedings had
been finalised provided that amounts
were still owed to the applicants.
[6]
By way of the stay application the second
respondent wished this Court, in the exercise of its inherent
discretion to regulate its
process, to stop the applicants from
pursuing their money orders against her pursuant to the guarantees
and suretyships until it
was known what the shortfall was after the
liquidation process was complete.
[7]
The application for a stay was opposed.
[8]
At the commencement of the hearing of the
matter on 16 October 2024, I permitted the second respondent first to
move her counter-application,
since if a stay was granted there would
be no basis to proceed at that time with the main application.
[9]
After hearing argument, I made an order
dismissing the counter-application to stay the proceedings, with
costs. I indicated that
my reasons would follow.
[10]
My reasons for making the order are as
follows.
[11]
This court has an inherent discretion, now
entrenched in section 173 of the Constitution, to regulate its own
process. This includes
a power to stay proceedings in an appropriate
case. But like all discretions, it must be exercised
judiciously and based
on proper principles.
[12]
Various circumstances have been identified
in which proceedings brought in this Court may be stayed. For
example, a matter may be
stayed where a similar or identical dispute
is pending before another court and allowing them both to proceed
could lead to conflicting
judgments (
lis alibi
pendens
), or to combat an abuse of process
(such as vexatious litigation), or pending compliance with an order
to provide security for
costs. The list is not a closed one. However,
it is clear that the power should only be exercised where there is a
proper reason
to delay a claimant in pursuing relief to which he or
she is in principle entitled (whatever the inherent merits of the
claim may
be).
[13]
The application for a stay in this case
was not based on any of the recognised categories in which such
relief has typically been
granted. Although it was suggested
that the present case has some similarity to
lis
alibi pendens
, the circumstances are very
different. The liquidation proceedings in respect of the first
respondent, to which the second respondent
was never a party, are
complete, and no further judgment of another Court is awaited. In any
event, a liquidation application is
something very different from a
money claim. The process of winding up the first respondent’s
estate is not a judicial one.
In my view there is no reason why the
fact that the principal debtor is in liquidation should preclude this
Court from determining
a separate claim against a different party
based on guarantees or suretyships in relation to the principal
debtor. Nothing that
happens in an ordinary liquidation process can
alter the creditor’s independent rights to call up its
security.
[14]
Indeed, money claims against those who
have put up security for persons or entities that have become
insolvent are entertained practically
every day in this Court.
[15]
The crux of the Second Respondent’s
case for a stay was that she was hopeful that the main asset of the
first respondent (the
mortgaged property, which this Court had
declared to be especially executable) would realise a sufficient
amount in the liquidation
process to settle the applicants’
claims, thus reducing or even eliminating what could be claimed
against her as guarantor
or surety. If orders were taken
against her now, the applicants may take steps to execute against
her, possibly even leading
to her sequestration, all of which may
prove unnecessary if the applicants are settled out of the insolvent
estate.
[16]
It is important to note that, in the
suretyships on which the claim against the second respondent is
partly based, she had expressly
waived the benefit of excussion. This
meant that, in the ordinary course, she could not raise the dilatory
plea that judgment could
not be taken until the applicants had
completed recovery steps against the principal debtor. She could,
under the suretyship agreements
voluntarily concluded, be required to
pay immediately as co-principal debtor. Moreover, to the extent that
she held herself out
as guarantor, her obligation was a primary one,
and excussion would in any event not be available as a defence.
[17]
It appeared to me that, if the main
application were stayed to allow the liquidation process to run its
course and for the application
only to be re-enrolled if there is a
shortfall, this would effectively be reinstating the Second
Respondent’s benefit of
excussion, which she expressly waived.
It would also run counter to her primary obligation as guarantor,
which again she voluntarily
assumed.
[18]
In the face of these concerns, counsel for
the Second Respondent submitted that the differentiating factor
between the ordinary
position of a surety or guarantor, who cannot
delay judgment pending the excussion of the principal debtor, and the
Second Respondent
is the nature of the principal debtor (the First
Respondent). As I understood the submission, the First Respondent was
the source
of the Second Respondent’s income. Now that it has
been placed in liquidation, she has lost control of it and cannot now
employ it to generate income which may have assisted her in settling
her obligations towards the applicants. A stay would redress
that.
[19]
I do not see this as a factor which would
justify granting a stay. The Second Respondent would have been aware
of the risks of incurring
debt within her business entity (including
property debt which may or may not have been associated with the
business), and of the
risks of putting up security for that debt in
her personal capacity. The fact that she may now have lost a source
of income to
enable her to deal extraneously with the applicants to
attempt to ward off judgment is unfortunate but is the result of
defaults
in payment by the very entity on which she was relying for
income. This is not a factor which in my view should preclude the
applicants
from protecting their rights by moving for judgment in the
ordinary course.
ORDER
[20]
In the premises, I was not persuaded that
there were proper grounds to stay the main application, and I granted
the following order:
“
The
counter-application for a stay is dismissed with costs, such costs to
include the costs of counsel on the tariff as per Scale
A.”
M W JANISCH
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Western Cape
Division
APPEARANCES:
For
the Applicants:
Adv G Slingers
Instructed
by:
Werksman Inc
For
the Second Respondent: Adv
C Fehr
Instructed
by:
Attorneys Zumpt
Date
of hearing: 16 October 2024
Date
of judgment: 18 October 2024
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