Case Law[2023] ZAWCHC 230South Africa
Nedbank Limited v Xanita (Pty) Limited (Previously Great Ideas Production Company (Pty) Limited) (885/2019) [2023] ZAWCHC 230 (1 September 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
1 September 2023
Headnotes
the applicant had paid its own debt when it paid the Absa guarantees. The applicant held counter guarantees as security for its Absa obligation from Mr Beattie, the respondent's former director. It was common cause that Mr Beattie had been sequestrated and was therefore unable to satisfy the applicant's claim when it called up the counter guarantees he had given in respect of the Absa guarantees. I held that the applicant's failure to have secured sufficient security for the Absa guarantees did not entitle it to call on the respondent. The following appears from the guarantees: (paras 3 and 5 of the June
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Nedbank Limited v Xanita (Pty) Limited (Previously Great Ideas Production Company (Pty) Limited) (885/2019) [2023] ZAWCHC 230 (1 September 2023)
Nedbank Limited v Xanita (Pty) Limited (Previously Great Ideas Production Company (Pty) Limited) (885/2019) [2023] ZAWCHC 230 (1 September 2023)
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sino date 1 September 2023
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case
Number: 885/2019
In
the matter between
:
NEDBANK
LIMITED
Plaintiff/Applicant
(Registration
number:1951[…])
And
XANITA
(PTY) LIMITED
Defendant/Respondent
(Previously
Great Ideas Production Company (Pty)
Limited)
(Registration number
:
2005[…])
JUDGMENT
ELECTRONICALLY DELIVERED
1
SEPTEMBER
2023
Baartman
,
J
[1]
On 12 June 2023, in the June judgment, I
dismissed, the plaintiff's (the applicant) claim for payment of R4
935 000 plus interest
from the defendant
(the
respondent)
.
The alternative claim based on
enrichment suffered the same fate
.
This
is an application for leave to appeal that finding.
[2]
In dismissing the applicant's claim, I
found that the applicant had issued demand guarantees in favour of
Absa, which it duly paid
when Absa called up the guarantees.
I further held that the applicant had
paid its own debt when it paid the Absa guarantees. The applicant
held counter guarantees
as security for its Absa obligation from Mr
Beattie
,
the
respondent's former director. It was common cause that Mr Beattie had
been sequestrated and was therefore unable to satisfy
the applicant
'
s
claim when it called up the counter guarantees he had given in
respect of the Absa guarantees
.
I
held that the applicant's failure to have secured sufficient security
for the Absa guarantees did not entitle it to call on the
respondent.
The following appears from
the
guarantees: (paras 3 and 5 of the June
judgment)
'
26
January 2006
Letter
of guarantee NO
...
for
R3 435
.
000
.
00
on behalf of
James
Beattie
ID
No
...
We
..
.
in
our capacities as senior credit managers ... hereby undertake to pay
[Absa] on first written demand an amount up to the maximum
...
R3
435
.
000
.
00
...
Any
claim hereunder must be received in writing
...
accompanied by your signed statement
that Great Ideas [the respondent]
...
has
failed
to make payment.
'
[3]
At the time
,
Mr Beattie, the defendant's sole
director
,
signed
a counter guarantee from which the following appears
:
'
NEDBANK
COUNTER
GUARANTEE
31/01/2006
Nedbank
...
has
at my/our request undertaken liability
to
or in favour of
ABSA
BANK........... R3 435 000.00
I/we
JAMES WILLIAM BEATTIE
Irrevocably
authorise the bank without further reference to me/us
pay
or comply with any claim against the bank by the guarantee party
which may be made under the said instrument irrespective of
i)
the correctness of
the
amount claimed
;
ii)
the terms and conditions of the
underlying contract
;
iii)
the validity of the grounds on which it
is based
;
and
iv)
any other cause and
recover
from me/us
,
by
charging against my/our account and against any separate cover held
for my/our account or otherwise
,
any
sum or sums it may pay in terms of this authority
'
[4]
The second guarantee was issued on 16
January 2008.
It
differed
from
the
first in that the guarantee amount was R1 500 000 and
"
in
respect of
paymen
t
due by
Great
Ideas Production Company
.
.
.
"
instead
of payment due by Mr Beattie,
who again gave a counter guarantee binding himself personally as
before.
[5]
The applicant pleaded as follows
:
'
3
.
On or about 26 January 2006 and at Cape
Town the
Plaintiff, duly
represented
...
.
,
furnished to and in favour of ABSA Bank
Limited
("Absa")
a
written guarantee
,
in
terms
of
which
,
inter
alia
,
the
Plaintiff
undertook
to pay ABSA on written demand an
amount up to a maximum aggregate amount of R3 435 000
in
the event that
the
Defendant defaulted on
loan
facilities granted by Absa to the
Defendant
("the first
guarantee")"
[6]
The applicant made similar allegations
in respect of
the
second
guarantee and annexed both guarantees referred
to
above.
The
respondent
,
in its plea, denied that it was liable
as claimed and stressed
that:
'2.3.4
.
2.
Mr Beattie authorised the plaintiff to pay or comply with any claim
against it by ABSA which may be made under the first guarantee
.
2
.
3.4.3
.
Beattie agreed that any sum or sums that
the plaintiff paid to ABSA by reason of the first guarantee would be
recovered from
him
including interest.
..
'
[7]
The respondent made similar allegations
in respect of the second guarantee. In correspondence, dated 26
August 2013, the applicant
said the following to Mr Beattie:
'...
From
our point of view we cannot cancel the guarantee on our system until
Absa returns the guarantees to us or they formally release
us from
all obligations under the guarantees
.
The exposure or R1
.
Sm
+ R3.435 therefore remains against your name
.'
[8]
It
is apparent from the guarantees that Absa was entitled to payment on
demand accompanied by
'
a
signed statement' alleging that
the
respondent
had failed to make payment on its facility with Absa.
[1]
I held that the guarantees constituted demand guarantees and that
they
were
different from those discussed in Zanbuild
[2]
where the court held that the bonds in issue gave
'
...
rise
to liability... akin to suretyship
.
The
first indicator
in
that
direction
is the assertion at the outset that the guarantees provide
"security
for
the compliance of the contractor
'
s
performance of obligations in accordance with the contract", and
in
the
body
of the document the bank guarantees
"due
and
faithful
performance
by the contractor". This accords with the
language
associated
with suretyships.'
[9]
I
further held
that
the
applicant had undertaken an obligation
to
Absa
independent
of
the respondent's obligation;
therefore,
it
had
paid its
own
debt for which it had counter security. In its application for leave
to appeal, the applicant relied on sections 17(1)(a)(i)
and
17(1)(a)(ii).
[3]
# Section
17(1)(a)(i) ground
Section
17(1)(a)(i) ground
[10]
The applicant alleged that the guarantees were conditional guarantees
'
where
similar principles of rights of recourse to those applicable to
suretyships would apply'. I have dealt with the issue in the
June
judgment, paragraphs 14-17 and above
.
[11]
I have found that the applicant led no evidence that Mr Beattie acted
on a mandate from the respondent.
[4]
That is factually correct. However
,
I
was prepared to accept that he did but held that it did not assist.
In the circumstances of this matter, the guarantees at issue
are not
conditional guarantees akin to a surety. I am persuaded that the
guarantees in issue are demand guarantees
.
[12]
In
the June judgment
,
I
also dismissed the applicant
'
s
alternative claim based on enrichment. I held that the applicant had
settled its own debt in terms of its obligation to
[5]
Absa.
The respondent benefitted from the payment although that does not
detract from the fact that the applicant settled its own
debt.
Therefore
,
the
claim based on enrichment was dismissed.
#
# Section
17(1)(a)(ii) ground
Section
17(1)(a)(ii) ground
[13]
The applicant further submitted that leave should be granted as
follows
:
'
19.1
As
noted
earlier
,
there
is
a dearth
of
case
law
directly
on
po
i
nt. It
manifestly involves important questions of law
;
19
.
2
The issue in question concerns a matter of commercial significance
,
generally, and in the banking world, in
particular
.
It
is clearly of public importance
,
in
addition to being of great importance to one of South Africa
'
s
well-known banks
.
'
[14]
There
is no merit in the above ground. It is apparent from the evidence
that both banks
,
significant
role players in the South African banking world, held similar views
in respect of the import of security Absa held and
the obligation the
applicant had incurred
.
That
is apparent from the correspondence referred to above
.
In
addition, the evidence showed that the applicant had enlisted Mr
Beattie to persuade the respondent's directors to provide additional
security through suretyship or other means when it became clear that
Mr Beattie was a man of straw.
[6]
The distinction between suretyship and guarantees has crystalised
,
as
indicated in paragraphs 14-20 of the June judgment.
[15]
I, for the reasons stated above am
persuaded that the applicant has not met the test for leave to
appeal. Therefore
,
I
make the following order
:
(a)
The application is dismissed with costs;
(b)
Costs to include the costs of 2 counsel
where so employed.
Baartman
,
J'
[1]
Paras
15-17 of the June
judgment.
[2]
Minister
of Transport
&
Public
Works
,
Western
Cape and Another v Zanbu
i
ld
Construction
(Pty)
Ltd
2011
(5) SA 528
(SCA)
.
[3]
Superior
Courts Ac
t
No
.
1
O
of 2013
.
[4]
Para
23 of the June judgment.
[5]
Paras
28-32 of the June judgment.
[6]
Paras
6- 13 of the June judgment.
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