Case Law[2023] ZAWCHC 323South Africa
Buechel v South African Securitisation Programme (RF) Limited and Others (3450/2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 323 (5 December 2023)
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Buechel v South African Securitisation Programme (RF) Limited and Others (3450/2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 323 (5 December 2023)
Buechel v South African Securitisation Programme (RF) Limited and Others (3450/2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 323 (5 December 2023)
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sino date 5 December 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
CASE
NO: 3450/2022
In the matter between:
GAIL FRANCIS
BUECHEL
and
SOUTH AFRICAN
SECURITISATION
PROGRAMME (RF)
LIMITED
SASFIN BANK
LIMITED
SUNLYN (PTY)
LTD
Applicant
First
Respondent
Second
Respondent
Third
Respondent
IN RE:
SOUTH AFRICAN
SECURITISATION
PROGRAMME (RF)
LIMITED
SASFIN BANK
LIMITED
SUNLYN (PTY)
LTD
First Plaintiff
Second
Plaintiff
Third Plaintiff
and
GAIL FRANCIS
BUECHEL
Defendant
Coram:
Bishop, AJ
Dates
of Hearing:
2 November 2023
Date
of Judgment: 5
December 2023
JUDGMENT
BISHOP,
AJ
[1]
This is an application for rescission in terms of rule
31(2)(b). Its genesis is three agreements to lease printers. The
agreements
were concluded in August 2020 between the Third Respondent
(
Sunlyn
) and Gragood Development (Pty) Ltd, through a supplier
called Custom Cut IT Solutions (Pty) Ltd. The Applicant has
been sued
because she signed a written guarantee binding herself as
guarantor and co-principal debtor.
[2]
Sunlyn acted as an originator for the
Second Respondent (
Sasfin
).
They operated in the realm of equipment finance. Suppliers who had
customers that required financing for equipment would approach
Sunlyn. It would put together applications for finance to Sasfin
which would decide whether to finance the agreements. If the
financing was approved, Sunlyn would provide the agreements to the
supplier, who would arrange for the customer to sign and return
the
agreements to Sunlyn. The agreements are ultimately between Sunlyn
and the customer.
The rights under the lease agreements would
be ceded by Sunlyn to the Second Respondent, who in turn would cede
them to the Third
Respondent (
SASP
).
[3]
That is what happened with the lease agreements in this case.
Custom Cut approached Sunlyn for financing on behalf of Gragood.
After
approval (more on that below), Sunlyn signed the leases with
Gragood, and guarantees with the Applicant. The circumstances in
which
the lease agreements and the guarantees were signed are of some
moment.
[4]
Gragood was the developer of two sectional
title schemes – the Palm Gardens Retreat Sectional Title
Scheme, and the Palm Gardens
Retreat (Helen Zille Wing). Both schemes
regularly procured goods and services through Gragood. The Applicant
was a director of
Gragood.
[5]
During 2020, she was caring for her late
husband and was persuaded by a Mr Koegelenberg to let him manage
Gragood’s affairs.
It was Koegelenberg who advised her that
Gragood required printers as did the Palm Gardens Body Corporate
(
PGBC
). He
planned to procure those printers through Custom Cut, and to finance
them through Sunlyn. Koegelenberg advised her that the
PGBC would pay
for the printers. Based on Mr Koegelenberg’s representations,
she agreed to Gragood renting the printers.
[6]
Sunlyn initially rejected Gragood’s
application for financing. It was approved only after Gragood
submitted additional documents,
and subject to the Applicant agreeing
to stand as a guarantor. She did so, signing the lease agreements as
director of Gragood,
and the guarantees in her personal capacity. The
leases included an acceleration clause; if Gragood failed to pay the
rent, Sunlyn
could claim the full outstanding amount for the
five-year term.
[7]
The printers were duly delivered. But it turned out that
neither PGBC nor Gragood needed the printers. PGBC refused to pay for
them.
Gragood barely used them.
[8]
Why were these printers rented and hardly used? The Applicant
alleges that she was “fraudulently induced by Willem
Koegelenberg
(a convicted fraudster, now deceased) to provide the
Guarantees”. She also alleges that “Sunlyn’s Sales
Representative
in respect of the Agreements relied upon by the
Plaintiffs, was a friend of Koegelenberg and unbeknown to me at the
time, the leasing
charges were exorbitant and completely out of
kilter with leasing charges for similar equipment.” She claims
that if she
had known that the printers were not needed, that PGBC
would not pay for them, that the prices were exorbitant, and that
Koegelenberg
“was setting me up to take the fall”, she
would not have signed the lease agreements or the guarantees.
[9]
The Respondents deny any knowledge of any
fraud. Sunlyn’s representative was Mr Gary Kalt, its Asset
Finance Regional Manager
for Cape Town. He deposed to an affidavit
confirming he had no contact with Koegelenberg or the Applicant, and
does not know Koegelenberg.
His interaction was through the supplier
– Custom Cut. Its representative in the deal was Mr Jan Nel.
Any fraud, the Respondents
claim, had nothing to do with them.
[10]
Gragood failed to pay its regular monthly
rentals. Precisely when and how it failed is not clear, but there is
no dispute that it
did not pay.
[11]
For reasons that are not directly relevant, Gragood was placed
in business rescue on 25 September 2020. A business rescue plan for
Gragood was adopted on 9 March 2021. The Respondents ultimately
received R37 061.14 from the business rescue process, which
constituted just 6c in the Rand. The business rescue released Gragood
from its obligations; whether that release extended to the
Applicant
as guarantor is in debate between the parties.
[12]
Because Gragood was in arrears, the rental agreement permitted
the Respondents to repossess the printers. The printers were
collected
from Gragood on 2 June 2021. They were sold at auction on 8
July 2021 for just R 1 495. That was less than the cost of
collection
and storage and sale, which amounted to R3 369.50.
[13]
The Respondents only cancelled the various agreements between
November 2021 and February 2022. In terms of the acceleration clause,
the Respondents claimed the full outstanding five years of rental,
plus interest from the Applicant under the guarantees. A summons
to
that effect was served on the Applicant’s chosen domicilium on
21 April 2022.
[14]
But the Applicant did not receive the summons, as she had by
then moved to a new address. No appearance to defend was entered, and
the Respondents obtained default judgment on 4 August 2022.
[15]
The Applicant first became aware that there
might be litigation on 25 November 2022 when the sheriff attempted to
serve a writ of
execution. It took until 2 December 2022 for her to
determine that the basis for the writ was the Respondents’
action. Her
attorneys asked for an indulgence to launch an
application for rescission by 20 January 2023. The Respondents’
attorneys
granted the indulgence. This application for rescission was
launched a few days late on 24 January 2023.
Condonation was
not opposed, and it is granted.
[16]
The application explains that, had she been
aware of the action, the Applicant would have defended it. It was
only because she did
not receive the summons that she did not defend.
The Applicant also raises a number of defences, three of which were
persisted
with in argument:
[16.1]
The business rescue proceedings compromised
the debt Gragood owed the Respondents. As there was no underlying
debt, the Respondents
had no claim against the Applicant under the
guarantees.
[16.2]
The agreements had been induced by fraud,
and were therefore invalid because “fraud unravels all”.
[16.3]
The claim constituted a penalty under the
Conventional Penalties Act 15 of 1962, and should be reduced as it
was “out of proportion
to the prejudice suffered by the
creditor”.
[17]
The Respondents opposed rescission. They
initially contended that the Applicant failed to show she was not in
wilful default, although
that argument was not pressed with much
vigour in oral argument. But they contended strongly that the
Applicants’ defences
were not bona fide because:
[17.1]
The business rescue plan expressly
preserved the creditors’ rights to pursue guarantors;
[17.2]
The Respondents were not involved in any
fraud; and
[17.3]
Their prejudice was the full outstanding
value of the rental agreements because they had not recovered any
value from the repossessed
machines.
[18]
To determine whether the Applicant has made
a case for rescission, I first briefly set out the standard she must
meet. I then consider
whether she is in wilful default. I next
discuss each of the three defences. Finally, I deal with costs.
### The Standard for
Rescission
The Standard for
Rescission
[19]
Rescission
of judgment under rule 31(2)(b) is in the discretion of the Court.
The defendant seeking rescission must generally establish:
(a) that
she was not in wilful default; (b) that the application is brought in
good faith to allow her to defend the action; and
(c) that she has a
bona fide defence to the claim.
[1]
The last two elements are related. The defendant must identify a bona
fide defence
and
convince the court that she honestly intends to pursue that defence.
These are not strict requirements. Rather they are factors
the court
will consider in exercising its discretion to rescind.
[2]
[20]
The
main issue in this application is whether the Applicant has a bona
fide defence. She does not need to show that her defence
is likely to
succeed; but she must demonstrate an issue that, if proved at trial,
would be a defence to all or part of the claim.
[3]
###
### Wilful Default
Wilful Default
[21]
The Applicant was not aware of the summons
or the application for default judgment. Once she became aware, she
immediately took
steps to have the default judgment rescinded. While
summons may have been served on her domicilium consistently with the
rules,
that does not mean she was in wilful default.
[22]
Wilful
default exists where a litigant is in fact aware of the litigation
and does nothing to defend it.
[4]
That is not the case here. While there may have been proper service,
there is no evidence that the Applicant knew of the action
until
November 2022. Her actions thereafter evince a real intent to oppose.
[23]
The first element for rescission is met.
### Surety and Business
Rescue
Surety and Business
Rescue
[24]
The Applicant’s first defence is that
the business rescue plan extinguished her obligations as guarantor.
She contends that
the business rescue constituted a compromise of the
Respondents’ claims against Gragood, and that her secondary
liability
as guarantor cannot survive that compromise.
[25]
It
is so that, absent any indication to the contrary in a business
rescue plan, the termination of a primary debt extinguishes a
guarantor’s liability.
[5]
That is the effect of 154(1) of the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
, at
least for those creditors who accede to the discharge.
[6]
But that is not an absolute rule; as
s 154(2)
of the
Companies Act
makes
clear, it depends on the business rescue plan.
[7]
The position was set out in
Van
Zyl v Auto Commodities (Pty) Ltd
.
[8]
It is possible for a creditor and a principal debtor to conclude an
agreement where “the creditor’s right to pursue
the
surety remains extant.”
[9]
It takes the form of an agreement that the creditor will not sue the
principal debtor – a
pactum
de non petendo
–
without compromising the underlying debt. The creditor is then free
to pursue the surety or guarantor because the primary
debt has not
been discharged.
[26]
That is what happened here. The business
rescue plan expressly preserves the creditors’ right to act
against any sureties
and guarantors. Paragraph 29 reads: “The
adoption of the Business Rescue Plan shall not affect the right of
any Creditor
to pursue any party who bound itself as guarantor,
surety and co-principal debtor and/or indemnity with the Company for
any debt
owing, of whatsoever nature and howsoever arising, by the
Company to such party.” The creditors – the Respondents –
have not abandoned any right they have against the Applicant. They
have, instead, agreed not to sue Gragood, while making no such
agreement not to sue its guarantor. For this reason alone, the
defence is bad.
[27]
The Respondents also contend that clause 2
of each of the guarantees oblige her to indemnify Sunlyn even if any
of the guaranteed
obligation becomes “void, voidable,
unenforceable or ineffective for any reason whatsoever”. The
argument was that,
even if the business rescue rendered the primary
obligations unenforceable, it did not affect the Applicant’s
obligations
under clause 2 of the guarantees. Given my view that
paragraph 29 of the business rescue plan in any event does not
preclude the
Respondents from seeking to recover from the Applicant,
I prefer not to express an opinion on this argument.
[28]
The Applicant’s reliance on the
business rescue plan is not, therefore, a bona fide defence.
### Fraud
Fraud
[29]
The fraud – as initially pleaded –
involved Koegelenberg and an unnamed sales representative of Sunlyn
who was a friend
of Koegelenberg’s. They had induced the
Applicant to rent the unneeded printers.
[30]
The Respondents’ answer was simple:
Koegelenberg had no connection to them. Jan Nel worked for the
supplier, not for Sunlyn.
Sunlyn’s sales representative –
Kalt – denied in an affidavit that he had any involvement in
fraud and denied
knowing Koegelenberg. Put bluntly, the Respondents
had no connection to any fraud Koegelenberg had perpetrated, and
could not be
responsible for it.
[31]
In reply, the Applicant said that she “was
defrauded by Koegelenberg and Jan Nel”. Her counsel appeared to
accept that
the sales representative referred to in the founding
papers was Nel, not Kalt. But she sought to drag Kalt into the
conspiracy
by alleging that he “must surely have been aware of
the true value of the machines and of what Custom Cut and Jan Nel
were
seeking to do to Gragood (and to me).”
[32]
I am willing to accept that the Applicant
may well have been fraudulently induced to sign the leases and the
guarantees. But the
key question is who is responsible for the fraud.
[33]
The
identity of the fraudster(s) matters because “if the fraud
which induces a contract does not proceed from one of the parties,
but from an independent third person, it will have no effect upon the
contract. The fraud must be the fraud of one of the parties
or of a
third party acing in collusion with, or as the agent of, one of the
parties.”
[10]
As Cameron J put it, the maxim that “fraud unravels all”
is not “a flame-thrower, withering all within reach.
Fraud unravels all directly within its compass, but only between
victim and perpetrator, at the instance of the victim.”
[11]
[34]
So, if only Koegelenberg and Nel were
involved in the alleged fraud, the Applicant would have no basis to
set aside the contract,
and no bona fide defence against the
Respondents’ action. She may have a separate claim against
Koegelenberg and Nel, but
that is of no moment here. But if Kalt
was
involved in the fraud, then the
Applicant would be entitled to set aside the leases and the
guarantees, and would have a bona fide
defence to the action.
[35]
On the evidence in the founding papers,
there is no basis to conclude that Kalt was involved. While the
Applicant refers to a sales
representative of Sunlyn, she is plainly
referring to Nel, not Kalt. That is because she alleges that person
was known to Koegelenberg.
Kalt denies knowing Koegelenberg, and
there is no reason to disbelieve him. Kalt is only linked to the
fraud in reply, and not
by evidence but by inference. The argument is
that he must have known of the fraud, and therefore been complicit in
it, because
the charges were exorbitant.
[36]
The
problem with this case is that it was only made in reply. As a
general rule, applicants “must stand or fall by their founding
papers”,
[12]
and cannot make a new case in reply. The Applicant did not do so
here. The only question is whether to relax that rule in this
case.
[37]
I do not think it should be. If the
Applicant had made the case properly in her founding papers, the
Respondents and Kalt would
have had a chance to answer it. Instead,
they quite reasonably answered the charge of fraud by explaining that
Kalt had never met
Koegelenberg, could not have been the unnamed
sales representative, and therefore was not involved in the fraud the
Applicant alleged.
[38]
It is so that the Applicant alleged in her
founding papers that the rental charges were exorbitant. The
Respondents denied this,
but did not elaborate on the denial. They
did not, for example, show that the rates charged to Gragood were
consistent with the
rates Sunlyn ordinarily charged in similar
agreements. But that silence is understandable given the way the case
was pleaded. The
allegedly exorbitant charges were not the evidence
on which a claim of fraud was levelled against the Respondents. The
evidence
was that Koegelenberg and Nel conspired to defraud. The
Respondents were entitled to answer that claim by pointing out that,
even
if there was a fraud, it did not involve them.
[39]
Absent some evidence of individualized
price-gouging or collusion in the fraud by the Respondents, it seems
inherently unlikely
to me that Kalt would have increased the rates
for this one deal. It seems more likely to me that – if the
rates are exorbitant
– it is because the Respondents charge
extremely high rates and take advantage of all customers, while
carefully avoiding
both the
National Credit Act 34 of 2005
and the
Consumer Protection Act 68 of 2008
. If that is the case, it would be
reprehensible; but it would not be evidence of fraud in this case.
[40]
To infer fraud by the Respondents, the
Applicant would have to show not only that the rates were
unreasonably high, but also that
they were made higher in her
specific case, or that there were charged as part of a practice of
fraudulent activity to take advantage
of vulnerable consumers. There
is no evidence of that before me, and therefore no basis to believe
that the Applicant will be able
to prove her allegation at trial.
[41]
I am sympathetic to the Applicant’s
position. It does seem she was duped into signing the agreements and
has now been landed
with a debt for which neither she nor Gragood
received any meaningful benefit. But the remedy the law affords her
is not to escape
her contractual obligations, but to pursue those she
alleges are responsible for defrauding her.
### Conventional Penalties
Conventional Penalties
[42]
The Applicant’s final defence is
that, by relying on the acceleration clause, the Respondents are
enforcing a penalty as defined
in the Conventional Penalties Act.
Section 3 of that Act grants a Court a discretion to reduce the
penalty if it is disproportionate
to the prejudice actually suffered.
Section 3 reads:
If upon the hearing of a
claim for a penalty, it appears to the court that such penalty is out
of proportion to the prejudice suffered
by the creditor by reason of
the act or omission in respect of which the penalty was stipulated,
the court may reduce the penalty
to such extent as it may consider
equitable in the circumstances: Provided that in determining the
extent of such prejudice the
court shall take into consideration not
only the creditor's proprietary interest, but every other rightful
interest which may be
affected by the act or omission in question.
The
Applicant contends that the penalty here is out of proportion with
the Respondents’ loss.
[43]
Mr
Wessels – who appeared for the Respondent – accepted that
in light of Bozalek J’s decision in
Plumbago
,
[13]
the damages granted in the default judgment constituted a “penalty”
for purposes of the Act.
[44]
The
debate was about whether the Applicant had a bona fide defence on the
basis that the penalty was “out of proportion to
the prejudice
suffered by the creditor”. I am, of course, not called to
decide that issue – only whether it is a triable
issue. But to
determine that question, it is important to know where the onus to
show disproportionality between the penalty and
the prejudice lies.
If the matter goes to trial, “in order to reduce the amount of
the forfeiture, the actual prejudice suffered
by the creditor must be
proved by the debtor”, that is, the Applicant.
[14]
She will have to establish the Respondents’ actual prejudice,
and then show that the penalty is out of proportion to the
prejudice.
[45]
The Applicant initially contended that the
Respondents’ prejudice was less than the penalty because they
could have let out
the machines after they repossessed them. The
Respondents, she argued, “made no reasonable effort to collect
and re-let the
equipment timeously.” Had the printers been
collected earlier they could have been re-let for longer. While the
Applicant
emphasised the delay, it seems to me that the real
complaint is the failure to re-let the printers at all, not the delay
in collecting
them. The delay would affect only the extent of value
the Respondents could realise from the printers.
[46]
In answer, the Respondents explained the
delay in collecting the printers. More importantly, they
explained that that they
had sold the printers shortly after
collection for virtually nothing (R1 495); less even than the
cost of collection and sale.
So their prejudice was the full
outstanding rental, which they had claimed.
[47]
In reply, the Applicant complained that it
was abusive for the printers to have been sold at such a low value –
less than
1% of their value after only having been used for a few
weeks. She argued that it was incumbent on the Respondent to seek to
realise
greater value for the sale of the equipment.
[48]
There
are different approaches to assessing prejudice in this type of case.
In
Plumbago
Bozalek J considered a claim for reduction of a penalty flowing from
an accelerated clause in a contract for the hire of photocopy
machines. There, the plaintiff had made income from the machines
after they were re-possessed. Bozalek J reduced the penalty by
that
amount. Here, no income was made from the sale. But Bozalek’s
reasons went further. He held that it would be out of
proportion with
the loss suffered to award the plaintiff the full accelerated rental
“even if the repossessed equipment earned
no additional
income.”
[15]
He did not explain when or why that reduction would be justified. As
he concluded there was additional income, the remark is obiter.
[49]
In
Plumbago
,
the creditor was a supplier of photocopy machines. Here, the
Respondents are financiers, not suppliers. In
Corner
Savings
,
Murphy J concluded that the financier in this type of equipment
leasing contract “normally should not be expected to become
a
dealer in second hand equipment.”
[16]
It cannot be expected to re-let equipment that it re possesses
from a defaulting debtor. But it can be expected to sell the
equipment, and its prejudice is reduced by whatever the residual
value of the goods are. In
Corner
Savings
,
Murphy J did not grant a deduction in the penalty because the
defendant had not met its onus to establish the residual value of
the
equipment.
[50]
Where does that leave the Applicant in this
case? Its initial case resting on the failure to rehire is bad in
law. On the authority
of
Corner Savings
,
the Respondents – who are financiers not suppliers – are
not required to rehire the equipment. That seems correct
to me.
Financiers cannot be expected to set up shop as suppliers of
equipment rather than to recover what is owed to them. It is
bad in
fact because the Respondents explained their delay and realised no
value from their sale of the equipment.
[51]
That leaves the case made in reply –
that the Respondents
should
have
realised value from the sale of the equipment, and that their failure
to do so would justify a reduction in the penalty. That
may be a
basis to reduce the penalty, if the Applicant could show that the
Respondents could, through reasonable care, have achieved
a higher
value when they sold the printers.
[52]
But that case could and should have been
made in the founding papers. The Applicant attached to her own
founding affidavit a letter
the Respondents’ attorneys sent on
19 January 2023. It informed her that “the costs in relation to
the sale of the
goods exceeded the value which the goods were sold
for.” This was also set out in the particulars of claim, where
the Respondents
pleaded: “the cost of sale of the goods
exceeded the amount the goods were sold for”. The Applicant
therefore knew,
when she brought the application for rescission, that
the sale of the printers realised R0.
[53]
If the Applicant wished to rely on the
failure to obtain a better price for the sale of the goods, she
should have made that case
in her founding papers. That would have
allowed the Respondents a fair opportunity to deal with it and to
explain why the goods
were sold for such a low value. The Applicant
did not do so, despite being aware of the key fact that R0 was
realised in selling
the goods. There is no reason to suspect that the
Respondents would intentionally sell the printers for less than they
could; there
would be no advantage to them in doing so.
[54]
The
Respondent referred me to the decision of this Court in
Manley
Communications
.
[17]
A similar defence was raised in the context of summary judgment. Nuku
J held that the consumer in that case did “not set
out the
facts to be relied upon in support of their contention that the
penalty falls to be reduced”.
[18]
It relied only on a request for further information to determine
prejudice to which the applicant had not responded. The same is
true
here, except that the Applicant had the facts to make the argument,
and did not address them in the founding papers.
[55]
Once again, I understand the Applicant’s
frustration. The Respondents appear to achieve a massive windfall –
the full
value of the contracts even though the printers were barely
used. But that is the consequence of the guarantees she signed, our
law which permits the recovery of this type of accelerated rental,
and her failure to deal with the price for which they were sold
in
her founding affidavit.
[56]
I conclude that the Applicant has not
established a bona fide defence.
### Conclusion
Conclusion
[57]
In conclusion, I find that the late
launching of the application should be condoned, that the Applicant
was not in wilful default,
but that she has not established any bona
fide defence.
[58]
I
reach this conclusion with a few misgivings. It does seem likely to
me that the Applicant was induced into signing the agreements
by
Koegelenberg and Nel. She may have a claim against them or their
estates to offset what she may owe the Respondents. The rental
rates
do seem high, and the failure to realise any value from the printers
after they were repossessed compounds the unfairness.
But a contract
is a contract, and holding parties to their agreements is a
“
profoundly
moral principle, on which the coherence of any society relies”.
[19]
[59]
On
that note, the Respondents have sought costs on an attorney and
client scale
[20]
because the guarantees entitle them to seek costs on that scale.
Courts will ordinarily enforce that type of agreement.
[21]
While a court can depart from that rule, the mere fact that the
successful party is enforcing an agreement that may seem unfair
to a
judge, is not a sufficient reason. The Respondents have done nothing
in this case to justify a departure from the agreement.
[60]
Accordingly, I make the following order:
1.
The application for condonation is granted.
2.
The application for rescission is
dismissed.
3.
The Applicant shall pay the Respondents’
costs on an attorney and client scale.
M
J BISHOP
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Counsel
for Applicant:
Adv
M Nowitz
Attorneys
for Applicant
STBB|Smith
Tabata Buchanan Boyes
Counsel
for Fourth
Applicant:
Adv
L Wessels (heads of argument prepared by Adv S Aucamp)
Attorneys
for Applicant
Smith
Jones & Pratt Inc
[1]
Morkel
v Absa Bank Bpk en ’n Ander
1996 (1) SA 899
(C) at 903D-E.
[2]
Wahl v
Prinswil Beleggings (Edms) Bpk
1984 (1) SA 457 (T).
[3]
Colyn v
Tiger Food Industries Ltd t/a Meadow Feed Mills (Cape)
2003 (6) SA 1
(SCA) at para 11.
[4]
Morkel
(n 1
above) at 905C-D.
[5]
See
Tuning
Fork (Pty) Ltd t/a Balanced Audio v Greeff & Another
2014
(4) SA 521 (C).
[6]
Section 154(1) reads: “A business rescue plan may provide
that, if it is implemented in accordance with its terms and
conditions, a creditor who has acceded to the discharge of the whole
or part of a debt owing to that creditor will lose the right
to
enforce the relevant debt or part of it.”
[7]
Section 154(2) reads: “If a business rescue plan has been
approved and implemented in accordance with this Chapter, a creditor
is not entitled to enforce any debt owed by the company immediately
before the beginning of the business rescue process, except
to the
extent provided for in the business rescue plan.”
[8]
2021 (5) SA 171 (SCA).
[9]
Ibid at para 31.
[10]
Karabus
Motors (1959) Ltd v Van Eck
1962
(1) SA 451
(C) at 453.
[11]
Absa
Bank Limited v Moore and Another
[2016] ZACC 34
;
2017 (1) SA 255
(CC);
2017 (2) BCLR 131
(CC) at para
39.
[12]
Pilane
and Another v Pilane and Another
[2013] ZACC 3
;
2013 (4) BCLR 431
(CC) at para 40.
[13]
Plumbago
Financial Services (Pty) Ltd t/a Toshiba Rentals v Janap Joseph t/a
Project Finance
2008 (3) SA 47 (C).
[14]
National
Sorghum Breweries v International Liquor Distributors
[2000] ZASCA 159
;
2001 (2) SA 232
(SCA) para 8 and
Steinberg
v Lazard
[2006] ZASCA 55
;
2006 (5) SA 42
(SCA) at para 10.
[15]
Plumbago
(n 11
above) at para 36.
[16]
ABSA
Technology Finance Solutions (Pty) Ltd v Leon Hattingh t/a Corner
Savings Supermarket
[2009] ZAGPPHC 37 at para 33.
[17]
South
African Securitisation Programme (RF) Ltd & Others v Manley
Communications – Publicity and Public Relations Consultants
CC
& Another
unreported
judgment of the Western Cape High Court, Case No. 15549/2020 (16
August 2021).
[18]
Ibid at para 21.
[19]
Barkhuizen
v Napier
[2007] ZACC 5
;
2007 (5) SA 323
(CC);
2007 (7) BCLR 691
(CC), quoted
with approval in
Beadica
231 CC and Others v Trustees for the time being of the Oregon Trust
and Others
[2020] ZACC 13
;
2020 (5) SA 247
(CC);
2020 (9) BCLR 1098
(CC) at
para 35.
[20]
The agreement actually refers to costs on an “attorney and own
client scale”, but the Respondents only a sought attorney
and
client costs. Whether there is a difference between the two seems to
be a fraught issue (see
Aircraft
Completions Centre (Pty) Ltd v Rossouw and Others
2004 (1) SA 123
(W)) that fortunately I need not address.
[21]
Claude
Neon Lights (SA) Ltd v Peroglou
1977 (1) SA 575
(C).
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