Case Law[2023] ZAWCHC 143South Africa
IPH Finance (Pty) v Masilela (19877/2021) [2023] ZAWCHC 143 (13 June 2023)
Headnotes
judgment in which the plaintiff seeks payment from the defendant of R1 966 417.65 with interest and costs. The claim arise from a loan agreement that was entered into between the plaintiff and the defendant on 27 February 2020. [2] The defendant entered an appearance to defend and filed a plea and a special plea on 6 July 2022. On 28 July 2022, the plaintiff proceeded with an application for summary judgment. An affidavit resisting summary judgment was filed by the defendant on 31 January 2023.
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## IPH Finance (Pty) v Masilela (19877/2021) [2023] ZAWCHC 143 (13 June 2023)
IPH Finance (Pty) v Masilela (19877/2021) [2023] ZAWCHC 143 (13 June 2023)
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sino date 13 June 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE
DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case No: 19877/2021
In the matter between:
IPH
FINANCE (PTY)
Applicant
vs
MAKWE
WINDSOR MASILELA
Respondent
Matter Heard: 1 June
2023
Judgment Delivered: 13
June 2023
JUDGMENT
MANTAME
J
Introduction
[1]
This is an application for summary judgment in which the plaintiff
seeks payment from the defendant
of R1 966 417.65 with interest and
costs. The claim arise from a loan agreement that was entered
into between the plaintiff
and the defendant on 27 February 2020.
[
2]
The defendant entered an appearance to defend and filed a plea and a
special plea on 6 July 2022.
On 28 July 2022, the plaintiff
proceeded with an application for summary judgment. An
affidavit resisting summary judgment
was filed by the defendant on 31
January 2023.
Background summary
[3]
In summary, the plaintiff asserts that on / or about 27 February 2020
the plaintiff and the defendant
entered into a written loan
agreement. The terms thereof were that:
3.1
The plaintiff would loan and advance R1 500 000.00 to the defendant
to enable him to purchase subscription
shares.
3.2
In terms of the agreement, the said loan would be paid by the
plaintiff directly to the venture capital
company, Pepperclub Hotel
Investments (Pty) Ltd (“
the Pepperclub
”), and this
would constitute due, valid and final advance of the monies to the
defendant by the plaintiff.
3.3
The monies were dealt with as a R675 000.00 “bridge loan”
and R835 000.00 “term
loan.”
3.4
The “bridge loan” amount was repayable by 30 September
2020 and the “term loan”
would be repaid by way of
instalments over a period of five (5) years out of distributions made
to the defendant by the Pepperclub
based on the shareholding
obtained.
3.5
In the event of the defendant failing to make payment of any amount
due to the plaintiff in time or
in full, the full amount outstanding
on the loan would become immediately due and payable, and
3.6
A certificate signed by a director or manager of the plaintiff would
be
prima facie
proof of the outstanding amount on the loan.
[4]
The defendant denied the assertions made by the plaintiff on the
basis that the agreement from
the outset is unusual for the
following:
4.1
The plaintiff did not advance the loan directly to the defendant, but
instead deposited the funds into
the Pepperclub account.
4.2
The terms of the “bridge loan” are such that the
defendant had to make payment of a “bridge
loan amount”
of R675 000.00 plus interest by 30 September 2020, where after
he had to make additional monthly instalments.
The quantum of
the aforesaid instalments is in turn linked to the distributions that
the Pepperclub was to make from time to time.
4.3
That failure to make a due payment will afford the plaintiff a right
to accelerated payment, which is
to include the capital, interest and
costs.
.
[5]
According to the plaintiff, the defendant failed to repay the full
amount that was due and payable
by 30 September 2020 and the full
amount of the loan accordingly became due and payable.
Essentially, the plaintiff’s
claim is premised on the
defendant’s default, which activated the said acceleration
clause.
Defences
[6]
In resisting this application for summary judgment the defendant
raised three (3) defences, that:
6.1
First
, that this Court lacks jurisdiction as the defendant
does not reside in the Western Cape and that the agreement central to
this
application was not concluded in the Western Cape;
6.2
Second
, that the agreement was induced by material
misrepresentation by the plaintiff and that the defendant has chosen
to cancel the
agreement;
6.3
Third
, that the defendant has a counterclaim against the
plaintiff.
Jurisdiction
[7]
The plaintiff contended that the plaintiff’s defences are not
bona
fide
or valid in law. With regard to the first defence, it was
argued that in terms of
Section 21
of the
Superior Courts’ Act
10 of 2013
, a High Court has jurisdiction in respect of all causes
arising within its area of jurisdiction. This does not only
include
contractual matters where it can be said that the contract
has been concluded in the area of the court’s jurisdiction, but
also where performance in terms of that agreement has to take place
in the court’s area of jurisdiction. In
IPH
Finance Proprietary Limited v Agrizest Proprietary Limited,
[1]
the
plaintiff submitted that a similar defence was put forward and the
Court said:
“
21
Section
21
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
provides that a high court
has jurisdiction over in relation to “all causes of action
arising … within its jurisdiction.
”
In
setting out the grounds upon which the High Court will exercise
jurisdiction, the Court in Van Wyk t/a Skydive Mossel Bay v UPS
SCS
South Africa (Pty) Ltd
[2]
held as follows at para [53].
”
“
The
jurisdiction of the High Court, therefore, under
Section 21
of the
[Supreme Court] Act, is also determined by reference to the common
law. And in such determination regard must be had
to: (a) the
jurisdictional connecting factors, or rationes jurisdictionis,
recognised by common law; and (b) attachment to found
or confirm
jurisdiction. According to the learned authors, at A2 –
103 to 104, which also finds application in this
case: “The
jurisdictional connecting factors or rationes jurisdictionis
recognized by the common law include residence, domicile
(ratio
domicilii), the situation of the subject-matter of the action within
the jurisdiction (ration reisitae) cause of action
(ratio rei gestae)
which includes the conclusion or
performance of a contract (ratio contractus)
and the commission of a delict within the jurisdiction (ratio
delicti) (Emphasis in the original).
22.
It is trite that, in the case of High Courts, the cause of action
need not arise wholly within the jurisdiction
of the relevant Court
in order for that Court to have jurisdiction based on the ratio rei
gestae (Gallo Africa Ltd v Sting Music
(Pty) Ltd
2020 (6) SA 392
(SCA) at 333 C; Vital Sales Cape Town (Pty) Ltd vs Vital Engineering
(Pty) Ltd and Others
2021 (6) SA 309
(WCC) at para [19].
23.
There is a factual dispute between the parties as to whether the
contract was concluded in Cape Town.
The plaintiff says that it
was concluded in Cape Town; the defendant contends that it was
concluded in Gauteng. I do not
have to resolve this dispute.
Performance of the defendant’s obligations under the loan
agreement was clearly to be
made in Cape Town as the defendant was
required to make repayments of the loan into the plaintiff’s
bank account situated
in Cape Town.
…
25.
I am in agreement, however, with Counsel for the plaintiff’s
submission that the place of performance
of part of the agreement
constitutes a jurisdictional connecting factor, even if the contract
was concluded outside of the jurisdiction
of the Court: see Travelex
Limited v Maloney ZASCA 128 (27 September 2016) at para [22]: “A
court in whose area of jurisdiction
a contract must be performed has
jurisdiction, as well as the court in whose area of jurisdiction part
of a contract has to be
performed.”
[8]
In this instance, it was said, the defendant had an obligation to
make payment of the amounts
due to the plaintiff who is in Cape Town;
the plaintiff had effected loan payment to the Pepperclub in terms of
the loan agreement
in Cape Town. In fact, it was argued that
the defendant submitted to the jurisdiction of this Court by filing
his notice
of intention to defend, he filed an exception without
raising the issue of jurisdiction. As such, it was submitted
that the
jurisdiction defence is bad in law and shows that the
defendant has no
bona fide
defence.
[9]
Despite the defendant not having abandoned this defence, it elected
not to make any submissions
in this regard.
Misrepresentation
[10]
The defendant relied in the main on the misrepresentation defence.
He stated that the loan agreement
was induced by way of intentional
material
misrepresentation
, and as a result thereof he
cancelled the agreement. In essence, the plaintiff and
Pepperclub are running a joint venture
in terms of which it persuades
would-be “investors” to commit to a “loan” in
which is evidently not a loan
in the true sense of the word, but in
fact a scheme to defraud the fiscus and the unwitting participants in
the scheme. For
instance, instead of making payment directly to
the so-called recipients of the loans, the monies are deposited into
Pepperclub
account. Moreover, the repayment terms are premised
on the distributions made by the Pepperclub and are not based on the
actual amount owing. In return, the plaintiff would gain a
direct benefit from the earning of the investment. The scheme
is a far cry from the run-of-the-mill bridging finance where there is
an arm’s length between the financier and the subject
of the
investment.
[11]
Most instructive, is that both entities at some point shared the same
notable director, Mr Jeffrey Solomon
(“Mr Solomon”)
.
Mr Solomon is the common denominator in the scheme. The
defendant, in addition stated that the respective entities
share the
same shareholders. These are the hallmarks of entities acting
as
alter egos
of each other.
[12] In
substantiation of the claim, it was stated that Mr Solomon
represented both the plaintiff and Pepperclub
at a seminar where the
products were marketed. The misrepresentations were made by Mr
Solomon and Mr Amaresh Chetty
(“Mr Chetty”)
.
They both procured that the defendant act as a “distributor”
or agent of the scheme that was run by the plaintiff
and Pepperclub,
so as to entice the would-be investors. This was done using a
seminar and a brochure. It is for this
reason that the
defendant stated that he had a counterclaim against the plaintiff for
unpaid commission.
[13]
When the plaintiff proceeded to demand immediate payment of the loan,
on 27 November 2021, Mr Chetty wrote
an email to apologise. The
defendant observed that if this was not a joint scheme, there would
be no need for Mr Chetty to
apologise. The promise by Mr Chetty
to speak to Mr Solomon in order not to hold investors and those
procured by the defendant
liable, underscores the defendant’s
version that this was in fact a joint venture scheme between the
plaintiff and Pepperclub.
[14]
The defendant alluded to this credit agreement as a “
simulated
transaction
”
to which the defendant was an unwitting party. A “
simulated
transaction”
was defined as a transaction where the parties to the transaction do
not intend it to have as between them the legal effect it
purports to
convey. The purpose thereof is to deceive by concealing the
real transaction – substance rather than form
determines the
nature of a transaction (
plus
valet
quod agitur quam quod simulate concipitur
).
[3]
[15]
In canvassing this point further, the defendant submitted that where
the purpose of a transaction is to achieve
an object that allows tax
invasion, the transaction will be regarded as simulated. The
fact that the parties performed in
terms of the contact does not show
that it is not simulated : the charade of performance may be to give
credence to their simulation.
[4]
Reckless Credit
[16]
Moreover, the plaintiff it was said purported to prove that a credit
assessment was performed and the defendant
was able to meet his
financial obligations in terms of the credit agreement. In
fact, the affordability assessment merely
shows that the defendant’s
disposable income was R41 322.62 after expenses. A
substantial lump sum was repayable
by a certain date. In such
circumstances, it was incumbent upon the plaintiff to satisfy itself
that the defendant would
be able to make the repayment of the lump
sum and not just the monthly repayment. The plaintiff in its
own version, illustrates
that the defendant did not have the
financial means to repay the lump sum. In addition, the
plaintiff had to ensure that
the defendant could meet the payment for
the entire outstanding sum, in order to satisfy itself as required by
Sections 81(2) and
83(1)of the National Credit Act 34 of 2005 (“
the
Act
”). However, the plaintiff failed to do so.
[17] In
the said circumstances, it was submitted that the defendant has
presented the Court with triable,
bona fide
defences.
The application for summary judgment should be refused and the
defendant be granted leave to defend.
Discussion
[18]
The plaintiff stated that this Court should discard the argument
related to the link between the loan company
and the investment
company, as it was not afforded an opportunity to address this
aspect.
[19]
Further, the defendant has not complied with the principles of
misrepresentation as a defence. For
instance, where a contract
is induced by a material misrepresentation of the other party, the
innocent party will have an election
to rescind (cancel) the contract
upon becoming aware of the true facts.
[5]
The innocent party has to make such election within a reasonable time
and may not change her mind once it has made such election
(either by
way of conduct or expressly).
[6]
Upon cancelling a contract on the basis of misrepresentation, the
innocent party is no longer bound to the provisions of
the agreement
but as a general rule is obliged to return that which she received in
terms of the contract or at least tender such
return.
[7]
[20]
Furthermore, the allegation that the defendant acted as an agent and
a distributor in this scheme, entitled
him to a full statement of
account and debatement thereof, by both the plaintiff and Pepperclub
in respect of the investors who
were referred by him, so that the
outstanding commissions due to him may be calculated and claimed, was
raised for the first time
in the defendant’s answering
affidavit and had no opportunity to deal with it. Similarly,
the contention that there
was no proper assessment done on the
defendant’s affordability of the loan, this was therefore a
reckless credit was made
herein for the first time.
Equally, the allegation that the scheme was made to evade tax was not
made either
in the defendant’s plea nor in his answering
affidavit resisting summary judgment, the Court should therefore
reject the
allegations and grant summary judgment.
[21]
Rule 32 of the Uniform Rules of Court requires the plaintiff to
identify any point in law and facts relied
upon which his claim is
based. In addition, for it to secure the order, it has to
explain why the defence pleaded does not
raise any issues for trial.
It appears that it is not enough to simply allege that the defendant
does not have a
bona fide
defence in this amended rule.
[22]
With regard to the first defence that the Court lacks jurisdiction as
the defendant does not reside in the
Western Cape and that the
agreement central to this application was not
concluded in the Western Cape, this Court
is compelled to deal with
it as it was not withdrawn. The only omission is that, the
defendant elected not to address this
defence.
[23]
As the plaintiff has pointed out, it is trite that the cause of
action need not arise wholly within the jurisdiction
of the relevant
Court in order for that Court to have jurisdiction.
[8]
Besides, Section 21 of the Superior Court Act is instructional in
this instance. In
Travelex
Ltd (supra)
,
it was clearly stated that a court in whose area of jurisdiction a
contract must be performed has jurisdiction, as well as the
court in
whose area of jurisdiction part of a contract has to be performed.
It appears that the defendant’s defence
that he does not reside
in the Western Cape does not hold. It is my considered view
that this Court has jurisdiction to hear
the matter.
[24]
Gathering from the submissions by both parties, it appears that there
is a dispute on the second defence
which in fact is the main defence.
The question on whether there was an intentional material
misrepresentation by the plaintiff
and whether the agreement was
indeed cancelled by the defendant. That alone raises a question
of whether there is a triable
issue.
[25]
The defendant in resisting an application for summary judgment filed
a comprehensive affidavit. Much
of what the defendant relied on
in its attempt to resist summary judgment is that there was
misrepresentation of facts when this
investment opportunity was
presented to him. In fact, the whole transaction was a
“
simulated scheme”.
The scheme enabled
Pepperclub and the plaintiff to benefit from the tax deductions or
refunds which SARS would owe various investors
who earned R1 million
or more per annum, which would be channelled to the plaintiff by way
of the repayment of the bridging loan
and from which the plaintiff
and Pepperclub would ultimately both benefit by means of the
subscription of shares in Pepperclub.
Further, because the
plaintiff earns interest on the terms loan over a 5-year period, to
be paid by investors from profits generated
by Pepperclub, the
plaintiff would gain a direct benefit from the earnings on the
investments, from the Application of the Section
12(J) refunds or
deductions and from the profits which Pepperclub generated from time
to time to enable repayment of the term loan.
[26]
The defendant entered this investment scheme with the hope that he
would benefit. He proceeded to submit
his tax return to SARS as
was advised. No refund was allowed by SARS on his R1,5 million
investment. He would never
have entered the investment if the
representations of “no cash outlay” and of the
applicability of Section 12(J) had
not been made or had somehow been
qualified as uncertain. However, that the loan agreement was a scheme
– more so a simulated
transaction as the defendant put it, was
denied by the plaintiff.
[27]
The Court agrees with the plaintiff that further defences were raised
at a later stage and the plaintiff
had no time to deal with them.
In light of the fact that the defendant’s main defence is
heavily disputed, that is
a call for this matter to proceed to
trial. For instance, in
Tumileng
Trading CC v Nation Security and Fire (Pty) Ltd,
[9]
the Court restated the test in summary judgment application as
follows:
“…
the
test remains what it always was: has the defendant disclosed bona
fide (i.e. an apparently genuinely advanced, as distinct from
sham)
defence? There is no indication in the amended rule that the
method of determining that has changed. The classical
formulations in Maharaj and Breitenbach v Fiat SA as to what is
expected of a defendant seeking to successfully oppose an application
for summary judgment, therefore remain of application. A
defendant is not required to show that its defence is likely to
prevail. If a defendant can show that it has a legally
cognisable defence on the face of it, and that the defence is
genuinely
or bona fide, summary judgment must be refused. The
defendant’s prospect of success are irrelevant.
”
[28]
The defendant in its defence made serious allegations as to the
legitimacy and / or the status of the loan
agreement. This
Court cannot close its eyes and shut out a defendant who can
demonstrate that there is a triable issue.
[29]
Much was said that the defendant did not set out all its defences in
a plea, more especially the third defence
that the defendant has
counter-claim against the plaintiff, the plaintiff had no opportunity
to deal with them. In
Absa
Bank Ltd v Meiring,
[10]
the Court said:
”
It
follows that a defendant in a summary judgment application which has
failed to plead all its defences will be required to apply
to amend
its plea if it seeks to add any for the purposes of its opposition to
summary judgment. A defendant’s failure
to have pleaded
such defence initially will be material and, in addition to all the
usual requirements to obtain the indulgence
of being granted leave to
amend, will require convincing explanation if it is to exclude the
possibility that a court might infer
the delaying tactics and a lack
of bona fides. An additional effect will be that such a
defendant will ordinarily have to
bear the wasted costs of the
application for leave to amend and those occasioned by any attendant
postponement of the summary judgment
application.
”
[30] It
is indeed so that this Court has found that the defendant has a
triable issue based on the misrepresentation
defence. It is my
considered view that if leave to defend is granted, the defendant
will still have an opportunity to amend
his plea and advance his
further defences. Whether that application to amend the plea
will be granted or not at that stage
is not something this Court
should concern with.
[31]
The plaintiff has poked some holes in the plaintiff’s stated
case. It appears that the new procedure
in the summary judgment
applications creates some certainty on whether the defendant has a
bona fide
defence hence the need to file a plea before it is
set down for hearing. In this case, the main defence is indeed
bona fide
.
[32] As
stated above an allegation of misrepresentation is serious and should
not be left uninterrogated.
To grant summary judgment and
thereby subject the defendant in a disputed contract in my view would
be a travesty for justice.
It is appropriate at this point that
the allegation relating to the intentional material misrepresentation
be tested at trial.
Order
[33]
The following order is made:
33.1
The summary judgment is refused;
33.2
The defendant is granted leave to defend the action; and
33.3
Costs will be the costs in the action proceedings.
MANTAME
J
WESTERN CAPE HIGH
In the High Court of
South Africa
(Western
Cape Division, Cape Town)
Case No: 19877/2021
In the matter between:
IPH
FINANCE (PTY)
Applicant
vs
MAKWE
WINDSOR MASILELA
Respondent
Coram:
B
P MANTAME, J
Judgment
by:
B
P MANTAME, J
FOR
APPLICANT:
ADV
L N WESSELS
082 940
7685
wesselsln@capebar.co.za
Instructed
by:
Oosthuizen
& Co Attorneys
021 872
3014
nathan@oostco.co.za
FOR
RESPONDENT:
ADV
J P STEENKAMP
084 356
1904
jpsteenkamp@capebar.co.za
Instructed
by:
Tumagole
Ramfudi Inc
012 346
2080
info@tumagoleramofudi.co.za
Date
(s) of Hearing:
06/01/23
Judgment
Delivered on:
06/13/23
[1]
(21771/2021)
[2023] ZAWCHC 38
paras 21-25 (28 February 2023)
[2]
[2020]
1 All SA 857
(WCC) para [53]
[3]
S
v De Jager (1965)(2) SA616(A) pg 627-628 Skjelbreds Rederi AS v
Hartless (Pty) Ltd 1982(2) SA710(A) pg 733
[4]
Commissioner
of SARS v NWK Ltd 2011(2) SA67 (SCA) para 55; Roshcon (Pty) Ltd v
Anchor Auto Body Builders CC and Others 2014(4)
SA319 (SCA);
Commissioner, South African Revenue Services v Bosch & Another
2015(2) SA 174 (SCA) paras 38-41
[5]
See
Christie’s Law of Contract in South Africa, 7
th
Ed, p 315 - 316
[6]
See
Bowditch v Peel and Magil
1921 AD 56
at 572 – 3; Thomas v
Henry 1985(3) SA 889(A) at 896E; Brink v Adbramhovitz
1942 CPD 189
at 193 - 194
[7]
See
Feinstein v Niggli 1981(2) SA 684(A) at 700 F - H
[8]
See
paragraph 7 above
[9]
2020
(6) SA 624
(WCC) at para [13]
[10]
2022(3)
SA 449 (WCC) para [20]
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